t OREGON CITT ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1905. 4 Oregon City Enterprise CITY AND COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. Published Every Friday. SubscriDtion Rates: ! One year 150 Bix months ' Trial subscription, two months.. 25 ; Advertising rates on application. Subscribers will find the date of ex Diration stamped on tneir papers iui irvarin? rneir name. u mio is not na-rmnnt.. kindly notify us and the matter will receive our attention. Entered at the postofflce at Oregon City. Oregon, as second-class matter. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1905. FRANCHISE IS PASSED. The Oregon City Council Saturday night by a vote of 6 to 2. one member being absent, passed the ordinance granting to the Oregon Water Power & Railway Co., a 35-year freight fran chise to Main street. The granting of the franchise fol lowed the unsuccessful application of dissatisfied citizens for an order of the courts restraining the members of the Council from voting on the ordinance which was vigorously op posel by more than a majority of the legal voters of the municipality. As to the correctness of their position and the justness of their representa tions, time alone will reveal. The op eration of the franchise, which con templates the extending of the elec tric railway system into the interior of the county, seems sure of material ly contributing to the development of the county as well as to the mutual growth and prosperity of Oregon City. But since the franchise has been granted, it seems as though the meas ure should have contained more ex acting provisions as pertaining to the company receiving the franchise. There should have been included in the ordinance a clause securing to the city the right of allowing the value of the franchise for each of the suc ceeding five year periods during the life of the franchise to be arbitrated. There should also have been a provi sion requiring of the street railway company the building of a certain mileage of its system into the county within a specified time. o SHOULD BE RECEIVED TERTAINED. AND EN- An excursion through the Willam ette Valley to be participated in by more than 100 of the prominent bus ines men of Portland will be made next week. The party will leave Portland by special train at noon, Tuesday, No vember 14, the inierary extending as far south as Ashland. Returning, the excursion will come to Albany and thence to Portland via Corvallis and West Side points. Oregon City will be the initial point visited. The party will reach this city at 12.40 o'clock noon, Tuesday, next, and will remain here until 1:10, thirty minutes. Some arrangement should be made for properly receiving and entertaining these visitors during their brief stay in the city. Since the excursionists will take their meals aboard the train, there will be noth ing in the way of lunches or dinners rto prepare, but it would be quite the proper thing if active committees were named to escort the visitors .about the city and acquaint them with -the extent and importance of the many manufacturing industries and other interests here represented, HENRY IRVING. The English stage contains no suc cessor to Henry Irving. When the prefix before his name the worm British Government stuck its llttle prefix before his name, the world knew that he deserved the bawble, if that method was to be taken to hnw nre-eminence. Others have had the label since, but it brings no mean ing Others will have it again, but it may be long before any player stands out above his fellows and makes a class alone. The only actor in Eng land who at all approached Irving in standing during his long pre-eminence was the woman whose path diverged from his only toward the close, when her powers were fading and the fickle public had proved unfaithful to her chief. Not altogether in the public is the cause, for the actor had done nil the creative work that lived in him, and tne manager nas jeitcu iu progress along the lines that he him self had laid out. Irving's genius found expression to the eye. It was in his face and plastic body that he koqttip the embodiment of great emo . i .. tions and ideas. His voice, that equal instrument in the actor's work, was an organ of lesser worth, but with the Tnotions of his face, Irving could tell stories of incomparably more signi ficance than any other living actor -who spoke his tongue. Death prob ably was not a horror to him. London had deserted him, the British prov inces are an unwelcome recompense, and he felt that the approach to seven ty was too near the end for a new be ginning as a resident of America. Had he been younger he thought he misrht have settled here and worked among the many publics in our large cities. But perhaps this was but an expression of regret for London's r.Aroaa for when he went to see several samples of what we call en tertainment in this country he was puzzled and discouraged. His ca reer was at least a rounded one. He began in obscurity, climbed steadily to the Dinacle of honor, and then slow temntuouslv of his opportunism. He lira or success, his manner had al ways grandeur. The most expressive thins about him as a person was his bearing. Off the stage also he was master of a noble ceremony. When lie died there ceased to England not only the highest acting, but also the most distinguished manners of her present day. Exchange. u WITTE, THE MAN FOR THE EMERGENCY. A year ago Sergius Witte, Russia's first "nremier" " by imperial appoint- . ment, was a statesman out of office jj and power. At court he was Qiscrea- ited, while the liberal and radical -j forces distrusted him and spoke con temptously of his opportunism. He had opposed the Manchurian policy of the Alexieffs, Plehves. and other reactionaries. He had incurred the dislike of the dominant clique by his candor and plainness of speech. He had criticized the repressive measures against the victims of racial and re " ' unions rreiudice. and had advicated equal rights for all the subjects of the czar. All this had offended the grand dukes and their ministerial allies, and Witte was "kicked up-stairs." But time vindicated him, and when the Portsmouth conference was about tn meet the czar was compelled to turn to the man he had humiliated. I What happened at Portsmouth is re- n cent history, but it is interesting 10 recall that when the chief envoy, fresh from his success in America and Europe, returned to St. Petersburg, he received a very chilly greeting from the bureaucrats. In the crisis brought about by the widespread strikes and passive insur- rection by the close co-operation be- tween the city workmen and the pro- j fessional and intellectual- elements, the czar once more had to appeal to the "strong man" for guidance. Witte urged constitutional reforms. He knew that physical force would but stimulate the zeal and activity ot the extremists and drive moderates and liberals into tne revuiuuuuaij camp. He knew that Russia was ripe for fundamental changes, and he gave hAnoct straightforward advice, the character of which we may gather J from his mssage to the American people. It is true that he is no idealist, that he did not espouse the cause of popu lar freedom when it was weak and un certain. Even as late as last Janu ary he doubted the need of a consti tution. But his very conservatism and opportunism make him the man for the hour, the leader for the crisis. He has energy, wide experience, also knowledge of western institutions and ideas, and organizing ability of a high order. Little is known as yet concerning the cabinet he is to preside over. But his level-headedness and practical statesmanship, his firmness and self confidence, warrant the belief that he will be no mere figurehead and that he will strive for the co-ordination and effective organization of the organs of the government which he knows to be indispensable. And on the other hand, the liberals know that he is free from hypocracy and double dealing in internal politics. He will not nullify laws he is supposed to execute. Chi cago Record-Herald. 0 ONE THING IS CLEAR. Mr. Jerome's election in the teeth of all three parties would be a revolu tion. It would be an example that would spread fire everywhere. Bosses would hate it from California to Maine It would mean that the people were able to shake off the system which, in their apathy, has been fastened on them by the politicians and the fi nancial magnates who are the politi cians' rulers. It would mean a revo lution back to democracy. We are not too hopeful, but a ray of hope we have, and it is all that gives a touch of principle to the situation. The poor, to whom he has been a friend and protector, want him. but they will hardly know how to vote for him, and the machines are out with all their' forces for his blood. Hearst hates him for personal reasons which do honor to Jerome. Murphy and Odell are believed to have agreed to keep him off the tickets and come as near killing him politically as they can. Certain big insurance men are also believed to have passed the quiet word, for they have no desire to have exposures followed by imprisonment, and they very much fear that Jerome might run amuck. Running amuck, or being erratic, as Tammany ex pressed it, means wielding the crimi nal machinery without sufficient care to save insiders. It means an equal willingness to offend labor, capital, or politicians, KepuDiicans or Demo crats, individuals or masses. Mr. Jerome has made such a record in his office that among those who most need protection his name is the symbol for the prompt service and unpolluted majesty of the law, and what is the result? "Down!" cries Tammany, Down!" cries Odell and "Down!" cries Hearst. "Let us get this thing out of the way and have a quiet life, where a man on the inside can call his soul his own." Can the people be enough awakened to elect, against every obstacle, a man whom the poli ticians and their wealthy owners are grimly determined to put once for all down and out? Colliers. Jerome was re-elected District At torney in Tuesday's election, success fully defeating his combined opposi tion. O THE SURRENDER OF THE AU- TOCRACY. The czar of all the Russias is no longer the Czar and Autocrat of All the Russias. He has bowed to the in evitable and surrendered his abso lute power. He h"as chosen the bet ter way, the way f peace, national concord and modern progress. His manifesto is a true Magna Charta of Russian rights and liberties. Written for him by Count Witte, it fully meets the immediate requirements of the demoralized and tottering empire. The extraordinary events of the past fortnight had formulated a grave, fateful alternative: Anarchy, with possible dismemberment and ceces sionist insurrections in various parts of the heterogeneous empire, or con solidation, unity and pacification by means of profound constitutional changes. The virtual prisoner of Pet erhof, after considerable and not un natural hesitation, decided, under Witte's earnest and forceful prompt- Aifers .What are your friends saying about you? That your gray hair makes you look old ? And yet, you are not forty ! Postpone this looking old. Hair Vigor Use Ayer's Hair Vigor and restore to your gray hair all the deep, dark, rich color of early life. Then be satisfied. 4 Ayer's Hair "Vigor restored the natural color to my gray liair, and I am greatly 5 teased. It is all you claim for it." Iks. E. J, Vamdkcab, Mechanicsville, N.Y. 8 $1.00 a bottle. All driietriti. J. C. AVER CO.. Lnwel 1 Mnss. for Dark air ing, to "efface himself" in the signi ficant words of the manifesto for tiio oal-o of the country's welfare and ! prestjge j Th Dhraseologv of the historic doc- i umenti as tne st. Petersburg dispatch- es justly say, leaves no doubt as to the ' , genuineness and comprehensiveness j I of the reforms extorted from the au- : j tocracy. Russia, in Mr. Dillon's words 1 , is now a constitutional power. men pureiy consultative "douma" has been ' converted into a real legislative as- semDy "Nc- law shall be enforced," gays the manifesto, "without the ap- i f Vii ctcito rlnnmfl " arid "it shall be poSsible for the elected of the j people to exercise real participation in the supervision ot tne legality oi the acts of the authorities" appointed by the emperor. Moreover, the "four freedoms" that are essential to the new regime are explicitly promised. The people of Russia have been granted "the im mutable foundations of civil liberty, based on the real inviolability of per son, freedom of conscience, speech, union and association." The use of the word "real" in this and other sentenc es indicates a clear appreciation of the emptiness and futility of previ ous concessions, as well as conscious ness of the fact that it is bad faith, trickery and bourbonisin of the' bu reaucracy that plunged the country in to the present crisis. In the short space of ten months Russia has traversed a distance which under ordinary circumstances, might have required decades. The disas trous war with Japan revealed the startling rottenness of the autocratic bureaucratic system, and its- bank ruptcy was complete. The- intelli gence and character of the cotnxtry, almost in a literal sense1, struck against the. government. The dis satisfaction penetrated even he- navy, the army and the departmeafcal em ployes. It is impossible for any guv- j ernment to survive the loss of Che rev spect and confidence of the tliinkiirg; and influential elements of the" pop-eolation. This is what Witte alludes to in the phrase about the "violation1 off the balance between the moral! as-- piration and the exterior forms- ot Russian society 7" The knell of the autocracy had Seen sounded by Russian society, and. it had to disappear. It has disappeared, and fortunately, so far, with little sac rifice of btood in internal strife. "She whole world rejoices at the glad tid ings. It bails the "real" dawn in a land that has all the elements of greatness. It welcomes a new mem ber to the council ol constitutional! government. Exehangje- O "Slats" Davis, a somewhat famous; umpire in" the Pacific Coast League;, is charged with stealing a diamond, from a San Francisco girl. "Slats" couldn't help it. He has beep, impli cated in more diamond robberies than any other man on the Coast. Lincoln County Leader. -O In Multnomah county the Portland Board of Trade adopts resolutions calling for the resignation of Senator Mitchell and Congressmen Hermann; and Williamson because of an alleged complicity in land frauds. The same situation is viewed differently by the people of Clackamas county who con sider that the attaining of this sort of distinction furnishes abundant justi fication for asking to be re-elected to the same office. O DONT BLAME HUNTLEY BROS. It's Your Own Fault if You Continue to Suffer With Indigestion. If we could only see and tell you personally of the number of Oregon City people who have been cured of indigestion within the last two years I Viv Pensikola Tablets vou wouldn't hesitate on trying this remedy one single minute. Our success with it has caused us to wonder, and the long er we sell it the more confidence we have. No one need have dizzy spells, sick headache, biliousness, nervous ness, loss of appetite, sour stomach, coated tongue, palpatation, restless nights or any other symptoms of in digestion and stomach trouble if they will only use Pepsikola Tablets. It is also a splendid nerve tonic, it im proves the general health, puts on firm, solid flesh, and if you are run down or emaciated it will almost sure ly increase your weight. There is not one case in a hundred that these tab lets will not cure. No matter how many remedies you have tried, don't give up, we know Pepsikola Tablets will cure you or we could not sell them for more than two years on a guarantee to return your twenty-five cents if they fail. WHERE IS E. PLUM? E. Plum, editor and publisher of the Boyd County Register, Butte, Ne hrasska for seven vears previous to July 1st, 1905, was last seen and heard F ksk aiadt A MACKEREL No. ; caught, about quality. SALT HERRING ity as I ever satisfaction. COD FISH 2 pound bricks made from select ed Cod Fish and contains no other inferor fish. HAMS AND BACON Choice cats, mild cured, very best in the market. H from at Portland: ,Oegmi, - July 22; 1905. As Mr. Plum was in rather poor health at that lime, ft is- feared he may have become temporarily derang ed, as no possible cause can be learn ed1 for his dissapfpearance. Mr. Plum is 6" feet felglr,. weighed 170 pounds, dark brown hair, slight ly gray, deep bliae eyear had broad shoulders and stoad erect; frad two small dark moles- on lift cheek; a small blue scar on foreiiead, quite heavy brown, slightly santfy mosrtache when last seen. anB would" have heavy teard if let grow. Mucb darfr hair on wrists, arms andf body; age1 3'S. Mr. Plum was a. practical! mechanic En all lines of newspaper Mrorkv A suitable rewari will tsa- paid' for any information which will' locate bis whereabouts. Address, FRANK MOTHERSEAD, IS-f3 Euclid Ave., tincoln;. Nebraska. WO POISON IN: CHAMERlAJ;N"S COUGH. REMEDY?. From Napier New Zealand Herald r Two- years ago the Pharmacy Board of New South Wales, Australia, had an analysis made of all the cough medicines that were so'Sd in that market. Out of the entire lis they found only one that they tSeclareif was entirely free from all poisons. This exception was- ChamberSain's Cough Remedy, made by the ChandJerlain Medicine Company, Des Moines, Iowa, U. S. A. The- absence otf all arootics makes this remedy the safest and best that can be had; and it is with a feeling of security that any mother cn give it to her little ones. Cham berlain's Cough Remedy is especially recommended by its makers for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough. This remedy is for sale by Geo. A. Harding. ' CATARRiHI HAY-FEVE& YUy Ely's Cream Balm This Remedy is a Specific, Sure to Give Satisfaction. GIVES RELIEF AT ONCE. It cleanses, soothes, heals, and protects the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Keatores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Easy to use. Contains no injurious drags. Applied into the nostrils and absorbed. Large Size, 50 cents at Druggist or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents Dy raw. ' ELY BROTHERS, 56 Wwrtn SL, New Yrk I Shore, these I 3-4 pound These are as good in qual had and will give entire In this line I can please you on price and quality P. BRIGHTBILL 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 Tuesday. 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. xn. p.m. 3:30 p.m. Leave Portland.. 8:00 a., m . .10:00 11:30 p. m. 1:30 Leave Oregon City 5:30 ROUND TRIP 45c Tickets exchanged with O. W. cars. P. & Ry. SPECIAL Sunday Excursions ROUND TRIP 25c Lea-re a.m. a.m. a.m. p Portland 8:30 9:30 11:30 1; p.m. 3:30 Leave a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. Or. City 10:00 11:30 1:30 3:30 5:30 OREGON CITY TRANSPORTATION CO. Office and Dock: Foot Taylor Street Phone Main 40. There is Money in it FORYOU to get our quotations on a good en during Plumbing Job. Why not take the hint and get our estimate before handing: out your contract 1 A. MIHLSTIN, Main Street, near Eighth ate fatt late each, finest JOHN YOUNGER, Near Huntley's Drug Store, FORTY TEARS EXPERIENCE IN Great Britain and America. C. I Green, PIONEER Transfer and Express Freight and parcels delivered to all parts of the city. RATES REASONABLE L-JELLOI 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 easily heard aa Port land. -Oregon City office at- Haj-dinff's Dru Store, 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 grlven 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 City 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 dally turning out work that is equal to any and 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 any part of the dty. Telephone 1204. I B. Li. Johnson, proprietor.