X 4 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FKIDAY, MARCH 3, 1905. Oregon City Enterprise CITY AND COUNTY OFFICIAL ' Published Every Friday. mended to the man who doubts its value to hi. . Gladstone called ,it "An enor mous power,' and the best substi tute for the mint." Macauley well termed it the "steam of the business machinery," while Samuel Smiles said it was "The lifeblood of pros perous trade." Cook and Sons said it was "the greatest modern won der," while Sir Thos. Lipton, than whom nn hetier pxamnle of its wnn- Subscribers will find the date of ex ,i.ci i ; - u a v, H . , . . , UCllUl ucucuts -O LU UC J l- lowing; their name. If this is not world, says it a a business, not a SubscriDtlon Rates: One year $1.50 Sir months 75 Trial subscription, two months.. 25 Advertising rates on application. Changed within two weeks after a payment, kindly notify us, and the matter will receive our attention. Entered at the postoffice at Oregon City, Oregon, as second-class matter. FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1905. GEORGE WASHINGTON. chance." John Wanamaker teems it "a business talk," while Joseph Chamberlain said "Advertising is and must be considered the news of the world." Brinsmead says it was the developer of our business. Blackwood declared it was the "only way to "get business," and Charles Austin Adams declares it "the only medicine for a sick business." Lord Roseberry refers to advertising as the most wonderful modern com mercial agency." Horace Greely, however, hit the nail on the head when he said that to neglect to advertise is like re It is well to remember George Washington. His name stands for all that is best in American history solving never to travel by steam or and tradition. It is a good name communicate by telegraph. and a good history to hold before the o- American vouth. The scenes and SEX AND IMMIGRATION associations that cluster around it are eloauent anneals to everv bov In glancing over an immigration to be a good man. The story of the table which gives the totals for the cherry tree, whether fact or fable, last eleven years and also separate has turned millions of Jads into figures for the sexes, one is struck paths of truth and sincerity. The by the relatively larger increase of RPnrpf nrnwr at VnHlev TYrc is the men. A computation shows pvpr-v-wTiprp and alwav? a vivid and that whereas the women constituted potential appeal to every man re- about 40 per cent of the arrivals gardless of his belief, to have the for the fiscal year ending June 30, deenest resDect for the Christian 1894, they furnished but 28 per cent side of life. When that man knelt of those who came over during the and nraved for his sufferins- troons. fiscal year ending June 30, 1903 and for the success of the cause of Generally speaking, it is clear freedom, why, when, and wherefore than an explanation for the change is prayer not to be cherished and win De iouna in tne cnanges oi respected? His refusal to be king, race and nationality. The last year his unwavering devotion in war and named was not only the fiscal year in peace to his country, his refusal m which immigration reached its to serve a third term in the presi- highest point, but was also a year in dency all these and a hundred which the immigration from Italy, other noble acts that cluster around Russia, and Austria-Hungary came his illustrious name and fame give to pretty near 70 per cent of the to his career a heroic character such total, as against 42 per cent in 1894. as belongs to no other American. I This great tide continued through Not a politician, but a patriot; not out the calendar year 1903, in which a partisan, but a pure statesman and the immigration amounted to ' 839,- Christian soldier, his life is the best, 830, and though it receded some in of all the mortal models to be set 1904 a very large percentage of the before children. If they learn him, foreign contributions to1 our popula- believe in him, and copy him, they tion continues to be from the three will always be able doubtless, if sources named. they go to congress, to occupy their The ratio of women to men for seats without fear of contaminatinar the greater European nations is other members by their presence- Exchange. o HOW TO THRIVE LOCALLY. smallest of all among the Italians. For the calendar year 1904 the fig ures were: Men, 121,428; women, 35,336 total, 156,764. The women it will be observed, constituted less than one-quarter of the whole. Among the Russians the percentage was somewhat higher, and it was still higher among the immigrants 33 Corvallis Gazette publishes the fol lowing editorially. It is a well timed article, and very appropriate: "The oupstion. ' What is neces sary to make a town or community f rom Austria-Hungary about thrive ?' is of vital imnortance and Per cent. one often in the minds of the think- Turning now to other countries, ing citizens. Many things accrue to we find a distinctly large percent the benefit of a people. The most es- age of women among the lmmi- sential thing is a good pay roll, grants fro Germany, Scandinavia, Without this there is no life, and and the British Isles. Sweden even of course without life the town is shows a slight excess of women over commenaea ior appointing one Democrat and one Republican to the two circuit judgships that were ere ated by legislative enactment at the recent session of the state's law- maJcers. J.n announcing trie ap pointments, Governor Chamberlain stated that he was opposed to car- rjyng partisanship into judjqiary matters. Hon L. T. Harris, of Eu gene, tne liepubiican appointee, served in the state legislature from Lane county in 1903 and was hon ored with election as speaker of the House. He is one of the cleanest young politicians in the state and will no doub, provet satisfactorily, his every qualification for the un usual honor that has been bestowed on him. The other nominee, Sam White, a particular political friend of the governor's will serve an East ern Oregon District. ; 01 One Oregon circuit judge always pays for his railroad tickets in cash. He is a queer sort of a man by the name of Tom McBride. Salem Journal. o i A newly married Oregon City couple were entejrtained by six dinerent cnarivan crowds during a single evening last week. o CENTENNIAL. NOTES. Band. granting of franchises to power com- see to Play at " among them parries. Still, New York has notibein8r Inne8'' Caprio-s. Eiiery-s and vpt tsiVpn onv irrefridTiiHv Tiiirmn- I tne Hawaiian Imperial steps. Its legislature, however, con tinuously assailed both directly and indirectly by capitalists eager to get the right to use the water. Ihe indi rect attempts are more dangerous than the direct, for the latter can be fought and defeated, but the for mer are apt to slip through the leg islature without detection at almost any time. If international action is not tak en New York should cause a care ful investigation to be made of the amount of water that can be taken from the Niagara River without in juring the falls, and it should then place m its constitution a provision which will make sure the protection of the falls for all time to come. o Governor Chamberlain is to be The Modern Washington. I wonder if long years from now. When I've grown old and gray. Schoolboys will still speak 'bout Wash ington, Like we boys do to-day. Pa thinks that it'll be Roosevelt The boys will talk of then As the champion of honesty. Best known and loved of men. I'm tired of the hatchet tale. Of George, who couldn't lie I say Hurrah for Roosevelt, Who made the Spanish fly! Who rules now as our President, At the whole nation's will;. Like George, he's always told the truth j And he's working at it still! Geneseo, III. E G. Harper. THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITY Oregon City, Oregon . AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000 D. C. LATOURETTE F. J. MEYER Transacts a general banking business. 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. President Cashier Open from OREGON'S FIRST LOCOMOTIVE. On Way to Portland to be Exhibited at Exposition. Portland, March 2. One exhibit at the Lewis & Clark Exposition, which will attract something more than usual in terest, will be the first locomotive used in this state, a mere pigmy when com pared with the massive engines of to day, weighing as it does, but ten tons. This "baby" Locomotive, was built in San Francisco, 1861-62, and' imported here. For two years it made daily runs on wooden rails over a seven mile track along the Columbia river. At the ex piration of that time, it was sold to David Heines, a 49'er, who returned it to the California metropolis. Mr. Heines now vouchsafes his inten- i i tion to exhibit the diminutive locomotive j at the World's Fair, where he will place it along side of a 90-ton leviathan, re cently constructed for the Oregon Rail way and Navigation Company, the com- Prices Reasonable LET US DO YOUr Work Work Guaranteed We do a General Baggage and Transfer Business. Safes, Pianos and Furniture Moved Office Opposite Masonic Building UZZZSI Williams Bros. Transfer Co. COLUMBIA RIVER SCEERY Portland and The Dalles . I.OTJTE Regulator Line Steamers n3 " BAILEY GAT2ERT" "DALLES CITV" "REQULATOR" - "METLA KO" "SADIE B." Str. "Bailey Gatsert" leaves Portland 7 A. M. Monday. Wednesdays and Fri days; leaves The Dalles 7 A. M. Tues days. Thusrsdays and Saturdays. Str. "Regulator" leaves Portland 7 A. pany that first owned the smaller en- jj Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays; gine. In so far as the latter is but 13 I leaves The Dalles 7 A. M. Mondays, 0JJEG0N ahd union Pacific THREE TR TO THE EAST DAILY Through Pullman standard and Tour ist sleeping cars daily to Omaha, Chicago, oyuwuie, luuiubl Bleeping cars a any to wrougn ruumaii tourlst feet long, the contrast will be marked. A miniature mint in full working op eration will be a part of the Government exhibit at the Lewis & Clark exposition. More than thirty national conventions e scheduled to convene in Portland during the Lewis & Clark Exposition. Electricity in its every conceivable ap plication, representing the most marvel ous achievements in modern science, may be seen at the Lewis & Clark Exposition. dead, so to speak. But how to se cure a pay roll ? "It is patent that the poor man the laborer cannot be expected to create a pay roll. So we must look to the rich and fadrly well-to-do man for this creation. But there is the sticking point. Such a man is already independent in a sense and is generally discreet enough to try and '"make sure" before he invests in any business that will provide means of substance for any number of people. He must exercise good judgment in determining what is a proper business in which to en , gage. Must consider the country, its -products, and community, less needs. "Having determined all this, he next gives attention to the temper of his fellow men. Here his heart may fail him, for few, if any will 'patronize home industry5 if the home manufactured article can be secured for a few cents elsewhere. "This sort of thing is what is re tarding the growth of Oregon, and all of the small towns, Corvallis among the rest. And the people are to blame. Never a week passes that orders do not go from this city to some other place for something that could have been secured here. In purchasing at home, you may pay out a few cents more for a given thing, but your money is here. Its presence is necessary to the life of the place in which you reside. You look to your home town to supply you a living you owe it something. In a degree the possibility of creat ing a pay roll is in your own hands, be you rich or poor." o men lor iy04, while Ireland con tributed considerably more women than men to her immigration in 1903 and 1904. The returns are so different from those of all other countries that they have exceptional interest and we present them as follows: 1903 1904. Men 17,477 21,308 Women 20,946 28,111 The figures as a whole suggest that the influence of the immigra tion that has been largest of late years is no properly gauged by he separate totals. Where the percent age of women is high there is a greater permanence that offsets mere members to a considerable extent. 0 THE DOOM OF NIAGARA. A native Filipino theatre, in which amusements peculiar to the inhabitants of our island territory will be presented, is to be one of the many excellent at tractions of the "Trail." The Government Fisheries exhibit at the Lewis & Clark Exposition will show the evolution of a Royal Chinopk Salmon, from the embryo to a well, matured fish. Some idea of the privations endured by Lewis & Clark in their expedition to the Great Northwest, may be gleaned by a careful examination of the exhibits characteristic of the earlier history of Oregon Territory. FOLDS COVERED WASHINGTON. Quilt of Historic Interest May Be Seen at Exposition. Portland, March 2. Secretary Henry Reed of the Lewis & Clark Fair is in receipt of a letter from Mrs. O. W. Saun ders of Kalama, Wash., in which . she states that she is desirous of exhibit ing at the World's Fair, a quilt used by the immortal George Washington dur ing the . revolution. - The quilt, claims Mrs. Saunders, is the handiwork of a woman who resided in Cortland county. New York, in the Revolutionary period. This woman danc ed with General Washington at many social functions, and during the strife among King George's and Washington's forces, distinguished herself by melting valuable pewter for use as bullets. Washington, it is said, wore the quilt through the war, and its folds are said to have protected him from the intense cold at Valley Forge. Wednesdays and Fr Jays. Steamers leaving Portland make dally connection at Lyle with C. R. & N. train for Goldendale and Klickitat Valley points. C. R. & N. train leaves Goldendale on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 6:30 A. M., making connection with steajner "Regulator" 'for Portland and way points. C. R. & N. train leaves Goldendale on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 8:30 A. M.. connecting at Tyle with steamer "Sadie B." for The Dalles, con necting there with O. R. & N. trains East and West. Str. "Sadie B." leaves Cascade Locks daily (except Sunday) at 7 A. M. for The Dalles and way points; arrives at 11 A. M. ; leaves The Dalles 2 P. M., arrives Cascade Locks P. M. Meals served on all' steamers. Fine accommodations tor teams and wagons. Landing at Portland at Alder Street Dock. H. C. CAMPBELL, Manager. Gen. Office. Portland. Oregon. Kansas City sleeping cars (personally conducted) weekly to Chicago. Kansas City, reclin ing chairs (seats free to the east daily.) 70 HOURS Portland to Chicago No Change of Cars. 70- The model dairy farm at the Lewis & Clark Exposition in which everything pertaining to scientific dairying methods the result of recent agricultural research, is to be shown, will prove of particular interest to those interested in dairying. Grange County Convention. Notice is hereby given that the Grange County Convention for Clackamas coun ty, will be held at the court house in Oregon City, Monday, March 13th. at 1:30 p.m. Said convention is called for the pur pose of choosing five Representatives and their alternates to attend the coming session of the Oregon" State Grange, which will convene at Forest Grove, Tuesday, May 23, 1905. Subordinate Granges will please fur nish their Delegates with proper cre dentials. No proxies accepted. MARY S. HOWARD, Mulino, Feb. 21, 1905. Deputy. Subscribe to The Enterprise. Daily River Schedule Oregon City Boats Dally Schedule: Steamers Altona and Pomona for Sa lem and way points, leave Portland daily (except Sunday) at 6:45 a. m.; leave Ore- on City, 8:16 a. m.; returning, leave alem, 7 a. m.; leave Oregon City, 4:8 p. m. Oregon City Transoortatlon Co. Depart. Time Schedules. Akbivb Chicago- Salt Lake. Denver, Portland Ft. Worth. Omaha, K.- Special Kansas City, St. 6w!6 P -8:16 a. m Louis, Chicago and East. Atlantic ,-,. Express Salt Lake, Denver, 8:16 p. m. Ft. Worth, Omaha, 8:00 a m. via. Runt- Kansas City, St. lngton. Louis, Chicago and East. St. Paul Fast Mall Walla Walla, Lew 6:16 p m iston, Spokane, Min- via Spo- ?fP" St. Paul, 7:16 a m. , Duluth. Milwaukee, Kane. Chicago and East. Astoria & Columbia River Railroad Co. Leaves. UNION DEPOT Arrives. I 1 :r - . WHAT IT IS. Many business men fail to ap preciate just what ad vertising real ly is and what it should be to them. Here "is what a few of the greater men of the world have said m re- According' to the geologist Nia gara Falls is doomed to disappear by natural process of erosion .after some tens of thousands of vears. According to the political scientist it is doomed to disappear within the present generation by the artificial operation of greed and graft un less some cheek can be put upon the predatory instincts of the New York legislature. The first danger cannot be averted. The second can, and must. A resolution has just been intro duced in the New York assembly requesting the federal government to enter into negotiations with Great Britain for a treaty which will pro vide a method of joint action be tween Canada and this country to preserve the falls. Such a treaty would necessarily involve ari agree ment as fo the amount of water each nation would allow its citizens to divert from the Niagara River for power plant purposes. A necessarv preliminary would doubtless be the conversion of the American shore from a state into a federal reserva tion. v Canada has been more careful The caressing melody of the chimes in the towers of the main Government Building will recall mental pictures of the missions founded by Junipero Serra and his intrepid followers in the seven teenth century. But seldom are some of us afforded an opportunity to hear the World's fam ous bands. Many of them have been en- Avers Ha---MMl 1 Give nature three helps, and nearly every case of con sumption will recover. Fresh air, most important of all. Cherry Pectoral Nourishing food comes next. Then, a medicine to control the cough and heal the lungs. Ask any good doctor. I first used Ayer't Cherry Pectoral 33 years afro. 1 litLve seen terrible euties of limit dis eases cured by it. 1 urn never without it." ALB it T U. Ham l lion. Marietta, Ohio. 25C..S0C.. P1.00. J.C. AVBROO.. All firmrmsts. . T.'w.-H . Mr,. jsi for sMsLiiJ Consumption! Home of Bwamp-RooC C3 S T . C . . writing mention this paofer and don't ... , Thp Kind You Havn Alware Rniiirti 1 - i i l w. x a- V lLlL UUL ICU1C1UUC1 Ll B. . 7W . r J , . . 'J .. . ,,. rw -;i,-i c,o---T?-r o- tugaainro x . -z-- , - Sara lO aavemsing, ana It IS -COm- than has pw York- Stnfp in Hip neonn aemanaa duiit acnon or ine I """"j , . ar.itiDug- iu j.i man nas ew xoriv orate m tne bowels. Aid nature wfthAyer's Pill. the address, Binghamton, N. Y. . " Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours ; a sediment or set tlingindicatesan unhealthy con dition of the kid neys ; if it stains your linen it "is evidence of kid ney trouble ; too frequent desire to pass it or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys j and bladder are out ot order. What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or ber, and overcomes that unpleasant ne- cessity of being compelled to go otten during the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most dis tressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drug gists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle and a 1 1- .V.(- -.il. -11 CsV about it, both sent free bv mail. Address ur. asEina5ilkaF5.i o T,r i3-li K f TTlr'r -V - f I nillUa I hamton, N. Y. When You Will Be Satisfied WITH YOUR JOURNEY If your tickets read over the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, the "Scenic Line of the World" BECAUSE There are so many scenic attractions and points of interest along the line between Ogden and Denver that the trip never becomes tiresome. 8:00 A.M. Daily. 7:00 P.M. For MavKers. Rainier. Clatskanie, Westport Clifton, Astoria, War- renton. navel, Ham mond, Fort Stevens, Gearhart Park, Sea side, Astoria and Seashore. Express Dally. Astoria n,xpress Dally. 11 :10A.M. 9:40 P.M. I C. A. STEWART, Comm'I Agrt.. ii Alder street. Phone Main 906. J. C. MATO. G. F. & P. A.. Astoria. Or. Ocean and River Schedule For San Francisco Every five days at 8 p. m. For Astoria, way points and General Passenger Agent, service Cwater permitting) on Willaxo- A. 1 CRAIO, ira m -d ot Xcpanj-s :-ui -d g Portland. Oregon. For detailed Information of ratea. The Oregon Kailroad & Navigation Co. b3ai (imuraj. pub 8))a JO 1U98S JSdJBdU JnOvC If you are going Hast, write for informa tion and get a pretty book that will tell you all abont It. W. C. McBRIDE, General Agent ' PORTLAND, OREGON GOOD MORNING Have you consulted A. Mihlstin about i that plumbing you need done? Main Street, near Eighth Oregon City - - - Oregon Movefl toil i Postoffice r. 0. GADKE THE PLUMBER OASTOXIXA. Bear the - ,4 f Kind You Havg Always Bougftj. Signature of