Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, October 20, 1905, Page 4, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY ENTEBPEISB, FRIDAY, OCTOBEE 20, 1905.
Oregon City Enterprise
CITY AND COUNTY OFFICIAL
PAPER.
Published Every Friday.
Subscription Rates:
One year $1.50
Blx months 75
Trial subscription, two months.. 25
Advertising rates on application.
Subscribers will find the date of ex
oiration stamped on their papers Iol
lowine their name. If this is not
chanzed within two weeks after
payment, kindly notify us, and the
matter win receive our attention.
Entered at the postofflce at Oregon
City, Oregon, as second-class - matter.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1905.
MACHINE
METHODS
ED.
NOT WANT-
The people of Oregon, by an over
whelmine majority, some time ago
went on record as being opposed to
a further endurance of . machine poli
tics and the maniuplation or puDiic
affairs by an organized gang ol con
scienceless exafter-politicians.
In proportion as was the vote in
the state on this subject, so was me
expression of the voters of Clackamas
county who by a decisive majority de
clared for the direct primary law.
And it is not inopportune to remark
right here that it might be well for
Clackamas county politicians to take
cognizance of the public sentiment on
this auestion.
Those in charge of the machine in
this county, - though professing to be
Inval supporters of and earnest be
lievers in the justness and fairness
of the provisions of the direct primary
law, for the enactment of which some
have even dared to appropriate the
credit, have already practically decid
ed unon a slate for the success of
which the saner is already hard at
work. Ostensibly these very same
immaculate politicians sincere, of
course, in their advocacy of the di
rect primary are acting in good faith,
but it is true nevertheless they have
laid schemes and formed such alli
ances as will surely result in thwart
ing the wishes of the people and per
petuate the powers that be in control
for another term of years.
At this time the Enterprise desires
to go on record as opposed to this
sort of thing.
Peace conferences are all right, but
the Republican manipulators of Clack
amas county had better get closer to
the people than they have been ac
customed to.
There was a time when two or three
dictators in this county named the
entire ticket. That power is vested
with the people direct and any attempt
to deprive them of that right may
be far-reaching in its consequences.
Of course, it is hard to let go of a
good thing. But it is a safe guess
that it would prove a welcome inno
vation in Clackamas county to have
candidates for office named by the
people for once. .Experience has gone
to show that certainly there could
be expected from such nominees as
much as the people have been given
by office-holders" who owe their places
and everything to a handful of poli
tical dictators -who have for years
been fooling the people of Clackamas
county to their own pecuniary gain.
The same crowd that for years has
manipulated the county conventions
in ts own interests and has in the
past practically dictated -every nomi
nation is now actively engaged in put
ting un a ticket in this county in the
formation of which it is not the in
tention that any one save the mem
bers of the crowd shall have the
slightest look-in.
Better drop the fire cracker before
it explodes. It is a dangerous explosive.
ities being provided, these visitors
were taken to various places of in
terest and inspected our manufactur
ing institutions, rich and productive
agricultural lands and were afforded
some idea of the possibilities of the
mineral deposits of this section of the
Northwest. ,
As a natural result, there will be
witnessed an unprecedented advent
of eastern people to this section of
the Coast from this time on. It is in
evitable and the people of Clackamas
county must arrange to interest and
secure for this county its just propor
tion of these prospective residents.
Oregon City is fortunate in having a
live Board of Trade which is already
doing a great deal for both the city and
the county. It is a creditable organi
zation, capable of doing a great deal
more and should be generously sup
ported and encouraged in the work to
be undertaken, all of which has for
its purpose the development of this
city and Clackamas county.
O
NOW FOR THE COUNTY FAIR.
Members of the committee that had
charge of the agricultural exhibit from
this county at the Lewis & Clark Fair
are this week packing up the display
preparatory to removing it to this One Ayer's Pill at bedtime insures
Doctors first prescribed
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral over
60 years ago. They use it
today more than ever. They
Cherry
Pectoral
rely upon it for colds, cpughs,
bronchitis, consumption.
They will tell you how it
heals inflamed lungs.
" T hsd a Tory bmd couch for three year.
Then I tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Mysore
lungs were soon healed and my cough dropped
away."
Mbs. Psast. Htds. Guthrie Centre, la.
25c., 55c f l.oo. j. c. ATER CO..
All druetrists. 4?. T.'w-lt. Mas.
" 1UI SB I
Old Coughs
city. The perishable parts of the ex
hibit will be disposed. of at once, but
the rest of the display will be stored
away at the court house.
The exhibit from this county was
a creditable one lor the initial errort
by Clackamas to show its products in
competition with those of the other
counties of the states, many of which
have for years made a practice of
showing them either at district or
state fairs, something never before
undertaken by this county. The re
serve portion of the exhibit from
this county will form a splendid nu
cleus for a permanent exhibit from
this county at subsequent expositions.
It will form a creditable beginning
for a county fair. And that is what
Clackamas should have.
That such an institution would
prove not only a success, but a credit
was demonstrated on a somewhat
smaller scale this Fall by the Maple
Lane and Molalla Granges both of
which held successful agricultural
fairs.
We are glad to see this subject be
ing agitated by the Granges, for we
believe the resources of the county
and the enterprise and progressiveness
of the producers of this section are
ample to insure the holding of a rous
ing county fair every Fall. "With the
rapid settling up of this part of the
valley with new comers from the
East, there is .nothing that would
prove more educational and interest
ing to the new residents than the
annual exhibiting of the live stock
and agricultural products of the sec
tion in which they have become re
cent residents.
o
WILL SOON BE NO PHEASANTS.
natural action next morning.
There exists a question of some
wonder among the people of Oregon
City and Clackamas county as to who
furnishes the inspiration for the poli
tical articles in the Portland Journal
from Oregon City, that show a yearn
ing for the nomination by the Repub
licans of Brownell for State Senator
while in the next breath it is asserted
that in event Brownell does receiye
the nomination the Democrats are rea
sonably certain to elect their own
candidate.
O
THE FAIR A SUCCESS.
In the successful termination of
the Lewis and Clark Exposition last
Saturday night, the people of the
state of Oregon scored a success.
From the standopint of exhibits, the
Exposition was all that could have
been expected. More naturally beauti
ful grounds never served for a Fair
site. The buildings were attractive
and the entertaining features were
above the average. Of course, there
will be offered some criticisms. But it
must be remembered that it is the
misfortune of every community, no
matter how superbly ideal its every
condition may be, to have its knock
ers. But the real benefits that will sure
ly follow the Fair have scarcely be
gun to be felt. Never before in its
history has Oregon received the help
ful advertising that was afforded
through the agency of the Lewis and
Clark Fair. Thousands of Eastern
people, attracted by the Fair and rea
sonable transportation rates, came to
the Coast and experienced an entire
change of mind as to this country, its
resources and possibilities from that
they entertained before. Weather
I,ll .r Afintr tVta
lartta of"irwrMSttt honor pledges are less binding
LwrA .iv.0(it,lii colleges, centers -of culture and
i, w,rfr nd admwior. of the vis-; hght, than in the workaday world at
It does not require an expert mathe
matician to figure that except the
slaughter of Chinese Pheasants is pro
hibited in this state for a term of
years it will be but a short time until
this game bird will have been entire
ly exterminated.
For instance, there have been issu
ed in the state this year a total of
about 15,000 hunter's licenses. Figur
ing the success of each hunter on a
nominal basis of five birds, 75,000
pheasants may be considered a mini
mum estimate of this year's slaughter.
It is truethat this bird will not be
hunted by all the hunters who have
procured licenses for the reason that
the pheasant does not inhabit some
sections of the state. But it is be
lieved that the estimate as to the
slaughter is entirely within reason.
At mis rate it cannot pe long until
the Pheasant will be annihilated in
few short years. Some protection
hould be afforded this bird if its fur
ther propagation is to be encouraged
in the Valley.
o
A LESSON IN COLLEGE ETHICS.
necessarily associated with loose no
tions of personal honor and morality.
Chicago Record-Herald.
SPECIMEN OF TARIFF RIPPING.
A Canadian commission has been at
work for some time preparing
scheme of legislation to regulate the
tariff schedules of the Dominion for
the next eight or ten years, and it is
expected to report by next spring. An
Ottawa correspondent remarks that,
with so many conflicting views all
through the country, the commission
has a difficult task to please all in
terests, and that the government will
be lucky if it does not offend every
body. A policy of . compromise is
probable and it Is predicted that the
new lay will not differ greatly from
that now in force, which lays general
tariff duties of about 35 per cent.
No doubt the preferential duties on
British goods will continue the reduc
tion of one-third, but it is said that
the concession will be extended to
other countries that agree to place
Canada on a like favored basis.
In western Canada there is a clamor
for lower duties from farmers, who
want agricultural machinery from the
United States, while the lumbermen
ask higher duties to protect their
market. Miners, as well as tillers of
the soil, demand cheaper lumber. So
the Canadians in the western provinc
es are divided into two hostile tariff
camps, according to their interests,
and the commission is vainly trying
to devise a course that will satisfac
torily steer between them. Protec
tionist sentiment is strong in eastern
Canada, while the maritime provinces
have much to say for reciprocity,
though unable, as always happens in
the treatment of that subject, to de
fine it. The resulting schedules will
be a hodgepodge, without the slight
est assurance that they will be a bet
terment or materially differ from
those now in force. Meantime busi
ness in Canada will suffer from the
feeling of uncertainty. Exchange.
HINTS TO BEE KEEPERS.
The presidents of the various col
leges and universities in addressing
their incoming classes have made elo
quent appeals to the nobles and man
liest elements of youthful human na
ture. The exhortation and admoni
tion of the educators will not have
fallen on deaf ears, we hope, and the
worth and beauty of the principles
commended to the freshmen cannot
but impress the thoughtful mind.
President Eliot, for example, spoke
of the durable satisfaction yielded by
a clean, vigorous, wholesome life, by
the cultivation of intense mental work
and the acquisition of method and dis
cipline, by honest and generous con
duct. It should "go without saying"
that admission to colleges does not
operate as a license to commit dis
honest, dishonorable or vicious acts.
Unfortunately some students do
tacitly claim such license, and in their
case the eloquence of exhortation
needs to be reinforced by the elo
quence of summary action. The pres
ident of the University of Wisconsin
-was obliged some days ago to serve
notice on the rowdies among his stu
dents that no breaches of the law and
the peace of the community would be
tolerated. He did not expect the po
lice, he stated, to treat student rioters
as a privileged class; they were to be
arrested and punished like other dis
orderly persons.
President Butler of Columbia has
just suspended for a year three soph
omores who . had been convicted of
having. - It "is not charged that the
hazing was particularly rough and
brutal, but it was contrary to the
known and explicit rules of the uni
versity, and Dr. Butler intends to have
the rules obeyed. Moreover, the haz
ers were guilty of a breach of the
anti-hazing "honor agreement" made
a year ago with the authorities after
a sensational case of rowdyism, and
this was deemed even graver than the
violation of the general regulations.
Dr. Butler is not prepared to admit
in
5
-
Ma
U
YOUR
...-..-fc.-fc.-.-fr..-fct--4Si
" - - " "" . yP
attention!
IS CALLED TO A
EBJ (DOIPIFISIS
HERE IT IS! B Special Blend Roasted
Coffee, one of my most popular and fine flav
ored coffees, a beauty. Tnis is one of a few
genuine bargains. I ask you to remember that
here is an article of
REAL MERIT
To include a pound of this coffee in your next
order. This is a beautiful, targe bean of foil
flavored coffee, price per pound 25C
ip
-
.
4fiP
4iP
H
B R I G
HTB
ILL
2........4............................... ft...-.............-
itlng population, not a small portion
of which fully expected to see the
Indian in fighting regalia and for pas
time longed for a buffalo hunt in the
large.
Columbia has made it plain that the
presence of men who break honor
agreements is not desirable, and the
suburbs of the Exposition city. Such ; aiscipimary hZ Vn J,
Ideas were displaced by what they powerful effect. It will Jing home
Convenient transportation facll- " " w"c' D'"'" -
There is something very interest
ing in the matter of quality in regard
to the various kinds of food. The
Ben Davis apple sells because of its
fine appearance. All lovers of good
apples acknowledge that it is very
inferior in flavor, yet a friend said to
me the other day, "Give me a Ben
Davis of all apples." He was from
Missouri where the Ben Davis is much
grown. A taste built up on Grimes'
Golden, Northern Spy and Spitzen
berg, could hardly understand his po
sition. "Those who have been brought
up from their youth where maple I jtsejf
sji is jjiuuut.t;u uaic icai ucu lu ap
preciate the syrup made from first
run sap when all the apparatus is
sweet and clean, especially if made
rapidly and with the utmost painstak
ing. Such syrup is almost as white
and clear as water and has a flavor
that, can hardly be described, it is so
delicate and exquisite. I was speak
ing of this at the table of a friend
only a day or two since, when he re
marked that he did not like that kind
of syrup. He preferred a darker kind
and the pungency which goes with
it. I though of him as of the advocate
of the Ben Davis apple, "There is no
accounting for tastes."
We find similar experiences in mat
ters of honey. While those of culti
vated taste who are wonted to the
very best that the culinary art can
give us, much prefer, and praise only
the lighter grades of honey, like that
from basswood, clover, alfalfa, white
and black sage, and the mesquite, yet
there are others, and I have known
not a few such, who prefer and al
ways select the dark honey when they
can get it. Such people prefer the
flavor which is always present in the
darker grades of honey. I have one
friend, a college professor and long
a colleague who always preferred
buckwheat honey and laid In his sup
ply in the late fall when he could get
this kind. While I was glad to sup
ply him this, I always laughed at him
and expressed surprise at his taste.
The golden rod honey and other honey
from the autumn wild flowers in the
East, though not quite as dark as
that from the buckwheat, are highly
colored and somewhat pungent in
flavor. Here belong tke amber honey
of our wild buckwheat of California.
While most will prefer the white
grades of honey, and others will pre
fer honey of the darkest hue, like
buckwheat, the widewheat, the wide
awake bee keeper will be on the sharp
est lookout for customers, especially i
of these latter classes, for thus he
may gain a market for all kinds of
noney at good prices, ir a person
thinks that buckwheat honey is the
is first-class or of the best quality and
yet request that a lower price be ask
ed for it.
Another point of interest In this
relation has to do with the grading
of honey. The up-to-date beekeeper
will see to it that his white honey Is
kept by itself, for this will always
bring highest figure in market. La
ter in the season, as the bees com
mence to gather from sources which"
give amber colored honey, the whiter
grades will be extracted that the am
ber honey may be kept by itself. In
this way the grade of the lighter
honey will not be lowered. In Cali
fornia the bee keeper cannot be too
careful in extracting to keep his sage
and alfalfa honey entirely separate
from that of the wild buckwheat. It
Is even more important that the still
darker buckwheat honey be kept by
It is harly necessary to sug
gest that these darker grades are just
as suitable for wintering the bees as
is any that is produced. Thus it be
hooves the beekeeper to extract the
lighter honey and let the bees fill up
the combs with the darker varieties
in the latter part of the season, for
their own food during the winter.
With the beekeeper, as with those
in any department of agriculture, it
is important to grade carefully. There
are few points which the beekeeper
should study with more .thoroughness
than that of grading. If he is produc
ing extracted honey he has only color
to guide him in making up his grades.
If, on the other hand, he is working
for comb honey, then he must have a
lookout not only for color, but for the
number of uncapped cells, complete-
( ness of the sections and the general
appearance of the same. A. J. Cooke
in California Cultivator.
UPPER WILLAMETTE
RIVER ROUTE.
SALEM, INDEPENDENCE, ALBANY,
CORVALLIS AND WAY LANDINGS.
Leave Portland 6:45 a. m. daily (except
Sunday) for Salem and way points.
Leave Portland 6:45 Tjiesday, Thursday
and Saturday for Independence, Al
bany and Corvallis, stages of water
permitting.
DAILY
RIVER EXCURSIONS
OF
OREGON CITY BOATS
TIME CARD
Week Days
a. m.
8:00
11:30
p.m.
3:30
Leave Portland ....
a. m.
Leave Oregon City.. 10:00
ROUND TRIP 45c
Tickets exchanged with O. W. P. & Ry.
JOHN YOUNGER,
. Near Huntley's Drug Store,
FORTY TEARS EXPERIENCE IN
Great Britain and America.
P HT PnnniiTnnn
I. V It I n rill Mm II 4
KJ I XII Ul U U11JXLU.I1 j
PIONEER
Transfer and Express
Freight and parcels delivered
to all parts of the city.
RATES REASONABLE
p. zn. p.m.
1:30 5:30
SPECIAL
Sunday Excursions
ROUND TRIP 25o
Leave
Portland
Leave
Or. City
a.m.
8:30
a.m.
10:00
a.m.
9:30
a.m.
11:30
i.m. p.m.
11:30 1:30
p.m.
1:30
p.ra
3:30
p.m.
3:30
p.m.
5:30
OREGON CITY TRANSPORTATION CO.
Office and Dock:
Foot Taylor Street
Phone Main 40.
CATARRH
I am now located in mv new
ELY'S CREAM BALM building on Main street be-
I niss KBtneaj is a gpscmc, -m.-r. j r .i o,
svire to cive satisfaction. tween JNintn ana 1 entn ots.
Better prepared than ever to
'S"uro to. Give Satisfaction.
GIVES RELIEF AT ONCE.
It cleanses, soothes, heals, and protects the
(.xxiuao liiul Luvn. n uc;cav iiUiicj 10 Lilt. . - ft
best, or if he prefer the amber colored . diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh Mid d0 your plumbing;.
saw.
honeys, he will make no objection to
paying the best market price for hon
eys of these grades. The friend I re
ferred to above never objected to giv
ing me a first-class price for buck
wheat hone. Indeed, it would hard
ly be consistent to claim that a honey
drives away a Gold in the Head quickly.
Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell.
Easy to use. Contains no injurious drags.
Applied into the nostrils and absorbed.'
Large Size, 50 cents at Druggists or by
mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. . " .
ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warran St., New York.
F.C.GADKE
-The Plumber,
LELLOH
2,000 miles of long dis
tance telephone wire in
Oregon, Washington , Cali
fornia and Idaho now in
operation by the Pacific
Station Telephone Com
pany, covering 2,250
towns .
Quick, accurate, cheap
All the satisfaction of a
personal communication.
Distance no effect to a
clear understanding. Spo
kane and San Francisco
( as eaeily heard as Port
land. Oregon City office at
Harding's Draff Storp
Deserves Your Patronage.
The growth of a community and the
success of Its local institutions depends
entirely on the loyalty of its people. " It
Is well enough to preach "patronize home
industry" but except the service Given
at a home institution equals that of out-of-town
enterprises, this argument car
ries no weight and is entirely disregard
ed, as it should be. But with Oregon Citj
people it is different. A few months
ago E. L. Johnson established the Cas
cade Laundry. It is equipped with the
latest Improved machinery and is daily
turning out work that is equal to any
arid superior to much of the laundry
work that is being done in Portland.
Being a home institution and furnishing
employment for many Oregon City people
it Is enjoying- an Immense patronage.
The high standard of the work being
done commends It to the general public
Laundry left at the O. K. barber shop win
be promptly called for and delivered to
Llir DArt of ths cfrv T.l.niMA 1A4
I IS. I. Johnson, proprietor.