0 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE VoL 38. No. 50. Oregon Gty, Oregon, Friday, November 10, 1905. STAFFORD. This community was shocked last . Saturday evening Dy me suuueu of Clarence Larson. He and yo?S er brother Leo had loaded the eled with sacks filled with potatoes they had been picking up to haul to the house, Leo stepped upon the sled and took the lines, and Clarence was get ting on behind when Leo heard the report of the gun which they had taken to the field, and glancing back was horrified to ee his brother just falling. ; - ; ' He screamed loudly for help, then dragged him on to the sled and hur ried for the house with such speed that twice the body slipped off, and the terrified boy managed to get it on again. His mother heard him and ran to meet him, and still no one came, and they two carried him somehow into the kitchen and laid him on the floor, when Leo stripped the harness from one of the horses and went as fast as he could urge the horse after his brother Charlie, who immediately phoned for another brother at Tua latin and others, and hastened to his father's house, where neighbors had arrived and "were doing what they could. The mother could not be quiet ed, and wa,s upon the verge of insanity when Dr. Mount arrived and admin istered a sedative which undoubtedly saved her from nervous prostration. The poor father, who Is disabled by noraivtiK etrnkf received a number of years ago, and just able to get about slowly, seemed at nrst aazea. uui be began to realize his loss his grief was pitiful. It is thought that the hammer of the gun must have caught on the sled and discharged it, th-ball entering the left eye and coming out the back of the head. The funeral was held on Monday at the Baptist Church at 10 a. m., and the services conducted by Rev. Weahlte. and he was laid to rest in the Stafford Ceme tery. His school mates were his pall bearers, and a long procession fol lowed him to the grave. The grave was heaped with flowers. The death leaves the old father with but the one son a boy of 14 at home, but the married sons came to finish up the fall work we understand. The weather has been delightful for the last couple of weeks, and people are burning brush, plowing and hur rying in spuds, in anticipation of the inevitable Oregon rainy spell. The schoolmaster laments so many of his pupils absent. The Delkar boys have begun their plowing on the Henry Schaltz place, Julia Delkar has taken her "sister-in-law's baby girl to care for, as the mother is ill, and it is difficult to ob .tain reliable help inthe country. We don't spend much time wonder ing where we will get on when the proposed R. R. crosses the Willamette at Willsonville. Little Bettie Nimic who had her leg broken while playing at school about .three weeks ago, is doing finely, ap parently under the care of Dr. Mount. f.. .flriala.u.re rdlodl odlo dlo dlo dlo Gua Gebhardt is burning out the -line fence between him and the Gage place. The Rev. Weahte is suffering from an attack of lumbago caused by stand ing on damp ground. CLARKES. - tonic . on sale at the Clarkes Drug Store at 25 cents per bottle.) Ben Marshell was seen last Sunday taking a buggy ride, well, that is all right, Bennie. Chris Kunnzy has come home to run the farm as his brother Gottlieb is going to move to town again. Kleinsmith Boys are going to seed the Kern place this year. We have a piece or uneievaieu iracn. between here and town near the 10 v.ifir fhnrrh. Comine this way and being below the ground the Motor- man and I decked tne car to see n the track was clear; we saw what seemed to be the top of a car almost sunk, beneath mother earth, near the top of the grade. When we arrived at the top, the section hands told us that they lqst their hand car, so that must have been what we saw, well, we hope that the piece of road will be planked before rain sets in. Tk romnina of Mrs. Katherinne Kellogg are expected ui,w on Friday, from Huntsvtlle, Alabama, where shhe died last aiuraay. w. tii wa in her eiehtv-third year and was an old resident of ML Pleas ant. CROUP. Well, Clarkes is on the program this ' week. Last week there were no news or street - car accidents. We had a strong wind a few days agor the tele phone posts are all down, but the wind did not blow them down, be cause they were never put up Well, what about the telephone? Peter Kern went to Oregon City last Monday, as he is on the grand Jury this term. Tfie boys all Blept 12 hours last Tuesday night as all the gates were In working order In the morning. There will be a mask ball at the Clarkes Grange Hall on Thanksgiving Eve, Everybody invited. (Schuster's A reliable medicine and one that should always be kept in the home for immediate use is Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It will prevent the attack if given as soon as the child becomes hoarse, or even after the croupy cough appears For sale by Howell & Jones. VIOLA. The sick folks of Viola are improv ing nicely. A L. Copeland's fever was normal on Monday for the first time since hop picking. - Antone Aberstaner is mamus of the good weather clearing land. Mr Jubb has oeen using puwuc. to get rid of a lot of large fir stumps. Several of our farmers are .busy hauling lumber to the factory at Es- William Hincinbothom and James Sevier have been helping Loren Ten ny dig potatoes. Mrs. Martin, sister of Rev. Patton. has returned to her home near Forest GrCharles Miller and V. H. Mattoon made- a business trip to the metropolis Mr. Ward has completed a creditable picket fence. REDLAND MT. PLEASANT. v Simrtav. the 5th of November, Rose Farm, the home of Mrs. D. O'Neill and Miss M. L. Holmes was the scene of an event of great interest to Cali fornians. The old farm was visited by a party of twenty, from Portland, California, New York, Vermont. New Jersey, and other places, and there at the historical old home of William Livingston Holmes, Mrs. Samuel Jay Hensley, of San Jose, California, now a guest of her nieces at Rose Farm, presented to Mr. J. A. Filcher, com missioner to the Lewis and Clark Fair from San Francisco, the blue silk um brella with which she sheltered the papers admitting California to state, hood fifty-five years ago. These pa pers were entrusted to her care from New York to California, and during seven days and nights spent in a canoe on the Charges river, crossing the Isthmus, when it rained almost con tinuously, the blue umbrella was car ried over them by Mrs. Hensley, then Miss Helen Crosby, and so it became entitled to a place in California .his tory. It will be placed by Mr. Filcher in the Museum at Sutters Fort with other antiquities. Among those of the narty at Rose Farm were Mr. Filcher, Commissioner from San Francisco. Mr.' Frank Wiggins, Commissioner from Los Angeles. Mr. G. A. Dennison, Sec retary of -the California Commission; Dr. E. A. Rocky and wife, of Portland; Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Hoge, of Portland; Mrs. Julia B. Esterly, of New York: Mrs. Goodwin, of Hartland, Vt.; and others. At parting all Joined hands and standing in a semjUcircle around the old piano Sang "Auld Lang Syne" and with many kindly good byes left for Portland. Miss Mona King visited relatives here last Monday. Miss Jessie Hart, accompanied by Miss Laura Montgomery, a public school teacher of Makon, 111., spent last Friday visiting L. H. Andrews and family. Mrs. Lewis Williams of the" Portland Academy, was a guest at The Lilacs last Monday. Miss Katherine Warnock spent Tuesday with friends at Milwaukie. Miss Mary Holmes entertained the Avon Club at Rose Farm last Tues day. Those present were Mrs. Geo. C. Brownell, Mrs. T. W. Clark, Mrs. C. A Caufield, Mrs. W." A. Huntley, Mrs. P. K. Hammond, Mrs. W. E. Ptatt, Mrs. E. A. Sommer, Mrs.4U'Ren, Mrs. Dan O'Neir, Mrs. M. H. Hensley, Mrs. W. M. Thornton and Miss Mary L. Holmes. Miss Holmes was the re cipient of a beautiful volume of Shakespeare's Heroines, presented by the members of the Avon Club.- All of those sick with typhoid fe ver are getting along nicely under the care of Drs. Mount and Sommer. Mr. Ed. Barrett recently bought him a new drill. Mr. Hollingsworth is busily engaged in digging his potatoes, an occupation which is a-closed incident with most farmers. Miss Kleib, of Highland, was re ently visiting friends in Redland. Mr. Gottleib Schneider is reported as having a contracted the typhoid fever. Mr. George' Hincinbothom is working at carpentering in Portland. Miss Nettie Gaskill is working for Mr. Browtl, of Viola. School is expected to commence soon in district No. 75. Ms. S. S. Mosher and family have moved from Redland to Salem. Miss Polehn was recently visiting friends in Highland. Mr. Carl Gray, one of our estimable young men. announces that he is to be married Christmas. UNION HALL. Nov. 7. Every body in this com munity is busy while the good weath er holds out. Mr. Perringer visited at Mr. Alf Smith's last Sunday. John Burns is cutting wood far Mr. Jno. Robins. Mr. J. D. Wilkerson went to Oregon City last Monday with a load of squashes for the market. Our school is progressing nicely, with Miss Word as teacher. , Mr. Otto Striker made, a business trip to Canby last Monday. John Molzan was putting the school house wood in the shed last week. Albert Wing,-of Portland, was vis iting his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Levine Riggs Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Jolyi Thomas is clearing land this nice weather. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Moshbarger went to Canby on business last Mon day. " To School Officers and Teachers. A communication from the State Health Officer calls attention to Rule oa t-ho state TViard of Health, re quiring all school boards to insist on vaccination or an scnooi cuum who have not been vaccinated and to oil teachers to see that this rule is enforced. The board desires to know how , many ennaren emereu 0v,nni it the hee-lnnine of the school OLUWl v - a - year vaccinated, and the number of children who nave Deen tsccjuuku since that time. J. C. ZINSER, Supt- of Schools. SUMMARY OF ELECTION. Hearst Defeated in New York Ohio Goes Democratic Washineton. Nov. 8. The election of John M. Pattison, Democrat, as Governor of Ohio, by approximately 40.000 plurality over Myron T. Mer rick, the present Republican Governor; a" Democratic working majority in both houses of the Ohio Legislature: an- immediate appeal of William R. Hearst, the Municipal Ownership can didate for the New York Mayoralty to the Supreme Court to contest McClel lan's election in that city on the basis of alleged evidence of wholesale il legal acts at the polls; a plurality oi 3485 vots for McClellan. and Immedi ate contest by the fusionists in Louis ville in the courts against the election of Democratic municipal officers and members of the Legislature were tne developments in today's election af termath. McClellan's plurality is the mini mum on record for a successful candi date in New York. Mr. Hearst's man agers claim evidence of illegal acts against 1000 inspectors of election and that 30,000 of his adherents were turn ed back Irom the polls because their names already had been voted. Dis trict Attorney Jerome has announced that he will make a searching investi gation of the alleged wholesale frauds and has ordered the returns from the Eighteenth and Sixteenth Assembly Districts to be carefully guarded. These are the home divisions of the Tammany leader, Murphy, and Timo thy Sullivan. In Louisville the Fusion party man-1 agers claim a non-election in 14 pre cincts because of disappearance of election paraphernalia; that Demo cratic workers confiscated the ballot boxes in 14 other precincts and al- . lowed falsification of returns and al lege activity of "thugs" and repeaters. All through the belated returns showed Republican losses and the Re publicans concede that Pattison's plurality reaches 25,000. The Demo crats claim that Pattison's plurality approximates 55.000, which would elect the entire Democratic ticket. Re publicans concede the Democrats be tween two and five majority in the Senate and from 10 to 15 in the House, while the Democrats claim five in the Senate and 27 in the House. The city party (reform) plurality in Philadelphia is 43.333 for sheriff, and the Fusionist candidate for State Treasurer (Berry) carried the -lty by over 36,000 plurality. The upheav al was the greatest in Pennsylvania for many years. In Rhode Island , the Republican Gubernatorial candidate has a plural ity estimated at 5,000, and Providence elects a Republican Mayor for the first time in many years. In Massachusetts Democratic threats are made of a recount of the vote for Lieutenant Governor. The Republicans in Massacvhusetts have 23.116 plurality for Gould for Governor, though Draper, for Lieutenant-Governor, got less than 2000 plurality. The Democrats gained three Senators and one Representative in the Legislature, ture. Every candidate of the Union Lanor riarty in San Francisco was elected by a substantial majority. In Salt Lake the anti-Mormon vic tory is made complete by the election of the entire American party city tick et. The Kentucky Legislature, which will elect a successor to Senator Black burn, apparently will include 31 Dem ocrats, five Republicans and two doubtful in the Senate, and 79 Demo crats, 14 Republicans and seven doubt- ful in the House. The Democrats elected a Mayor in Louisville by about 2500. Nebraska was carried by the Repub licans. Returns from other states and citiesshow notable changes.