G ; 'Enterpkibe. . . - 9s' VOL. 39. NO. 4. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1905. ESTABLISHED 1866 C. D. and D. C. LATOURETTE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT MW. Main Street, -Oregon City, Oregon. Furnish Abstracts of Title. Loan Money, Foreclose Mortgage, and transact General Lawn Business. INTO THE RIVER W. 8. U'Ren 0. Sohuebel U'REN & SCHUEBEL Attorneys at Law. QeixtTdjev htrahaU Will practice in all courts, make collec tions and settlements of estates. Furnish abstracts of title, lend you mon ey, lend you money on first mortgage. Office in Enterprise Building:, Oregon City, Oregon. FREIGHT TRAIN DERAILED AT CANEMAH. Three Cars Become Unballanced and Leave Track in Rounding Sharp Curve. Tj1 VY STIPP Attorney at Law. Justice of the Peace. f Office in Jagger Building, Oregon City, J. U. CAMPBELL ATTORNEY AT LAW Oregon City, -Oregon Will practice in all the courts of the state Office in Caufleld Building. ROBERT A. MILLER ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. Practice in all courts of the state. Federal and United States Supreme Courts. Room 306 Commercial , Building. Portland, Oregon. Oa W. EASTHAM ATTORNEY AT LAW Collections, Mortgage Foreclosures, Ab stracts of Title and General Law Bus iness. Office over Bank of Oregon City, Oregon City, Or. I L. PORTER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Abstracts of Property Furnished. Office with Oregon City Enterprise. CLACKAMAS TITLE CO Your Clackamas County abstracts of Title should be prepared by the Clackamas Title Company, incor porated, Chamber of Comni?rce building, Portland. This company is the builder and owner of the best and most complete plant of Clack amas county titles. As tracts from its office s-e enm r-tted "by experts of long experience, competent attor neys aiid draughtsmen, and are of guaranteed accuracy. Clackamas County Lands, Mortgage Loans, Estates managed, Taxes ex amined and paid. E. F. Riley, pres F. B. Riley, "sec. Three freight cars and a caboose, attached to a heavy southbound extra freight, left the track in rounding a sharp curve at Canemah, one mile south of this city, at 1:40 o'clock last Friday afternoon, and were badly de molished. The track was torn up for a distance of 300 feet but the damages' were repaired by a wrecking crew so that traffic was delayed only a few hours. None of the members of the train crew were injured, the men leap ing from the upper window of theca boose as it left the track. K. Bagby and B. Hill, two young lads, who were standing on the sidewaly immediately alongside the track, where the wreck occurred, escaped serious Injuries by leaping into the Willamette River basin. The train consisted of fourteen cars and the caboose, eleven of the cars passing safely over the place of the accident. Two of the damaged cars, contained structural iron work for railroad bridges. They were complete-1 ly demolished and their contents were scattered along he track. The third car was loaded with wheat which land ed upside down in the upper end of the river basin, being submerged and its cargo ruined. Considerable damage also resulted to the caboose which came within but a few feet of being precipitated in to the river also. One of the wrecked cars landed within three feet of the residence of Mr. Quinn which borders very closely on the ' track at the scene of the acci dent. The engineer claims that the train was traveling at a rate of about 12 miles. He accounts for the wreck by claiming that the swaying of the heavy structural iron overbalanced one of the cars which carried with it the other three cars. This is the first accident that has ever happened in the vicinity of Canemah although the track at that point consists of a suc cession of curves along the bank of the Willamette. than 500 telephone subscribers to mutual lines in the southern part of the county will be afforded connection with Oregon City. The , metallic cir cuit will be operated as a main line through the association's agents at Molalla and Oregon City, with an in termediate station" at Beaver Creek. . The members of the Molalla Mutual Association have refused to have any business relations with the Pacific States Company and if the rural ser vice is extended into Oregon City as planned there will necessarily have to De iormea in this city a mutual associ ation tor the operation of an exchange here. There is being organized a com pany for that purpose, more than one- half of the capital stock of $7,500 having been subscribed by Oregon Ctiy business and professional men. HOW IT WILL WORK. W. S. U'Ren Explains Some Features of Direct Primary TO CONNECT WITH THIS CITY. Molalla Telephone Association recting Connecting Line. Is E- JOHN YOUNGER, JT3ES fJZJr Jm ZEES iNear Huntley's Drug Store, FORTY YEARSEXPRIENCE IN jrreat Britain and America. H ELLO 15- Work on the construction 'of a me tallic circuit between Molalla and Or egon City was begun Wednesday by the Molalla Mutual Telephone Associ ation. It is expected that the line will be stretched and ready for con nection with a local exchange, reports Dr. J. W. Thomas,- by January 1. The Molalla Mutual telephone sub scribers will extend the line to the Oregon. City corporate limits and it will then be up to the Oregon City people to afford the desired connec tion with business houses and resi dences in this city as been assured the rural mutual associations by the Ore gon City Board of Trade. When this line is completed more 2,000 miles of long dis tance telephone wire ic Oregon, Washington , Cali fornia and Idaho now in operation by the Pacific Station Telephone Com pany, covering 2,250 towns r Quick, accurate, cheaj All the satisfaction of a persona communication. Distance no effect to a clear' understanding. Spo kane and San Francisco as easily heard as Port land. Oregon City office at Hardmsr's Ihnsr Store We Carry Fine Bath Tabs and everything else in the line of first class Plumbing Equipment. The val ue of modern, absolutely sanitary Plumbing is inestimable; it saves much work and worry and may save your life. Don't endanger health and happiness by living in the house that is equipped with old fashioned fix tures. Get our prices on refitting your entire house with good Plumbing. F.C. GADKE The Plumber, A Few New Things In Dentistry Have you seen the new fill ing material, Porcelain Inlaid Filling? They are the same color as the natural teeth, and they last longer than gold. We insert gold fillings without the rubber dam. We make those combina tion metal plates for artificial teeth. They never crack or break like rubber. We make bridges of porcelain, remov able bridges, bridges that you can replace a tooth easily if broken without removing the bridge. We have a new and per fectly safe method of extract ing teeth without hurting you in the least. Call and see some specimens of the new work. Dr: Hir stel) of Portland, is with us. He is an expert in all gold and porcelain work. L. L. PICKENS Dentist ' Rooms 6. 7 and 8, Weinhard Building, Opposite Court House. 'Democrats cannot help to nomi nate Republicans by writing Republi can names on Democratic tickets at the Primary election," said W. S. U'Ren this week in discussing the question that has been raised rela tive to the new. law fbr nominating candidates. Mr. U'Ren contends that the objection is not tenable and that there are provisions in the Direct Pri mary law covering that very contin 'The tally sheets, ' ne says, "are separate. Suppose Mr. Blank is the weak Republican and some Democrats scratch Governor Chamberlain and write Mr. Blank on their ballot. Then suppose Mr. Blank has 1000 votes on Republican ballots and 100 are writ ten 'for him instead of for Governor Chamberlain on the Democrat bal lots.;: The 100 Votes for Mr. Blank on the 'Democrat ballots will be counted for him on the Democrat tally sheet and can no more be added to his 1000 votes on the Republican tally sheet than that 1000 votes could be added to his 100 on the Democrat tally sheet. A Republican can be nominated only by votes marked for him on Republi can ballots." In considering the two defects in the primary nominating system that have been pointed out by Judge Wood ward, of Portland, viz: First, that "no bodies" can get the nomination of a great party, and second, that men must announce themselves as candi dates for office, Mr. U'Ren said: "As to the first" objection, it seems to happen sometimes under every plan yet devised for choosing candidates. Experience will show whether the people will make more of these mis takes than delegates and bosses did. Yet I do not think Judge Woodward means to say that the men nominated in Portland last Spring at the Primary election were 'self suffiicent indi viduals having not other sufficiency. It is true the candidate of the minority party was elected Mayor but this has happened before under the conven tion system and it is true even now of the Governor of Oregon. "What proof is there that 'the men best qualified to serve the public in office are those who are most disin clined to push themselves forward?' When did that class of men ever hold office? Is it not possible we have tak en to story of Cincinnatus too serious ly? Roosevelt and Jerome, LaFollette and Folk are generally believed to be very good officers, but it is not re corded, that they were ever backward about pushing forward, even to mak ing public proclamation that they wanted office. "Is not the desire to serve the peo ple in public office an honorable ambi tion? And if it is why should .any man be more ashamed to announce his wish to hold office than he would i to proclaim his desire to practice law or shovel sand? I am asking these ; questions for information and I trust ' Judge Woodward, or some one who knows, will answer." WOULD MAKE LAWS MANY CANDIDATES WOULD GO TO LEGISLATURE. A Partial List of Those Who Would Go to Salem Another Man for Sheriff. Even at this early date there has appeared an abundance of material for the making of an excellent legis lative ticket from this county. Espec ially numerous are the candidates for the lower House. Friends of the three gentlemen who so satisfactorily represented their con stituency during, the last session, are urging them to accept the same hon ors for another term. They were C. G. Huntley, of this city; Frank Jaggar, of Cams ; and J. N. Bramhall, of Aims. If these gentlemen are not the suc cessful nominees, there are numerous other men in the-county who are will ing to sacrifice their time to the neg lect of their business for forty days in oi;der that they may go to Salem and assist in matters of legislation and incidentally in the election of a United States Senator. Among those who have decided .to enter the race for a place on the rep resentative ticket is W. W. Smith, of Parkplace. Everybody knows Bill Smith, the deputy fish warden. Mr. Smith has resided in and around Ore gon City for the greater part of his life. He has always been a Republi can, has always stood by the party has supported and worked for the par ty's candidates at all times. His friends think that it would not be un reasonable to reverse the conditions somewhat and do some work for Bill to the end at least that he is nominat ed for representative at this time. They think that Mr. Smith, having served as doorkeeper of the State Sen ate for four terms, is more or less familiar with the details of law mak ing as it is carried on at the State Capitol and is a perfectly safe man to send to represent the people in that capacity. Bill says he is going after the nomination and those who know him realize that he will prosecute his campaign with the same degree or diligence he has shown when in pur suit of an illegal fisherman. Henry Stevens, who is just conclud ing his second term as County Re corder, will ask for the nomination as 'one of the representatives from this county. Henry is perhaps one of the best known young men in the county He has a host of friends in vfc-y J- ctipn who- are already en- which the levy will be made. Last year's county tax levy was 20 mills but it is expected this year's levy will not exceed 18 mills. The total is made of the following items: 83,694 acres tillable land..$ 2,670,810 521,232 acres non-tillable land 3,240,840 Improvements on patented and deeded lands 961,920 Value of lots 1,119,610 Improvements on lots 599,075 201.75 miles railroad and telegraph lines of value of 298,555 Rolling stock 33,890 Manufacturing machinery. 430,995 Merchandise 143,740 Farming implements .. 86,495 f Money 21,370 Notes and accounts . . . 18,060 500 shares of stock Household furniture. ...... 4714 horses 12,790 cattle 13,500 sheep 6121 hogs . . v TO REACH MOLALLA Telegram CORRESPONDENT TELLS OF ANOTHER PRO-ECT. Local Capitalists Said to Be Interested in Proposed Oregon City- Molalla Road. 164,770 115,160 122,355 13,500 6,675 Total , . . $10,057,820 ARE YOU A FARMER? If you are, then you need a good farm paper. The Enterprise has a splendid offer. We will furnish the Enterprise and the Oregon Agricul turist and Rural Northwest, the best agricultural paper in the large section it serves, both one year for only $1.50 the price of the Enterprise alone. This farm paper Is highly recommend ed by the leading experts on farming, stock raising and fruit growing. This offer is a snap. Gall at the office or mail us your subscription. MOLALLA. I IN TIME OF PEACE. In the first months of the Russia Japan war we had a striking example of the necessity for preparation and the early advantage of those, who, so to speak, "have shingled their rdofs in dry weather." The virtue ,of prep aration has made history and given to us our greatest men. The individ ual as well as the nation should be prepared for any emergency. Are you prepared to successfully combat the first cold you take? A cold can be cured much more quickly when treat ed as soon as it has been contracted and before it has become settled in the system. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is famous for its cures of colds and it should be kept at hand ready for instant use. For sale by Howell & Jones. Little Figuring Necessary. "Senator," asked the inquisitive girl, would you accept a railroad pass?" "No. I always insist on having mileage books. They make it so much easier for me to figure 'up the mileage charge against the government. ARE YOU A FARMER? If you are, then ycot need a good farm paper. The Enterprise has a splendid offer. We will furnish the Enterprise and the Oregon Agricultur ist and Rural Northwest, the best ag ricultural paper in the large section it serves both one year for only $1.50 the price of the Enterprise alone. This farm paper is highly recommend ed by the leading experts on farming. stock raising and fruit growing. This offer is a snap. Call at the office or mail us your subscription. In Kansas. "I see the feller that opened that new drug store over, in town the other day calls it a pharmacy on the sign he's had put up." "Yes, I reckon it's a slick scheme hes thought "of for catching the trade of "the farmers." thusiarl; c in their support of him in his cindidacy. His friends properly represent that he has made an ideal county officer and they feel no hesi- tency in suggesting him as a proper I and deserving man lor legislative honors. With his strong ..personal following and his popular standing throughout the county, coupled with his rustling qualities, Mr. Stevens may be expected to give all other contesting candidates for the nomi nation an interesting race. C. H. Dye's friends have urged him to become a candidate for the legis lature and form the strength that Mr. Dye has shown in the past conven tions, the probabilities are that he will hustle anybody else that may be against him. Mr. Dye has practiced law at Oregon City for many years and is well and1 favorably known throughout the county. George Randall, a substantial farm er of the New Era precinct, has decid ed to become "a candidate for the lower house. Mr. Randall is known throuh out the county as a progressive and enterprising farmer. H. Paulsen, of George; J. L. Kruse, of Stafford and J. A. Talbert, of Clack amas, are also mentioned as legis lative possibilities at this time. All three of these gentlemen have served in the House of Representatives from this county and in their candidacy at this time they will have the advant age of the experience acquired in one term. Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year to the Enterprise staff, "devil" and all. Fred Schafe has purchased the Rus- sell sawmill, -we wish Fred success in" the enterprise, in fact, he has had something to do with logs for some time past, come to think of it. Guess he will make it go O. K. any way. The Enterprise is usually a week old by the time it reaches Molalla, and our mail schedule is not giving the people the service it should. The Molalla Central switch board has recently been enlarged to accom modate the growing demand for bet ter and more service. Cole and Everhart have their saw mill ready for running, and will start up this week. Every member of the Molalla Mu tual Telephone Association has been . sent an invitation notice to attend the third annual meeting of the Associa tion on New Years Day at 11 o'clock a. m. (instead of 2 p. m.) either in person or by proxy cards. All mem bers should be present if possible, and present their "good ideas" and also any irregularities that may have come under their observation during the year in the operation of the mutual system, for the improvement of the service. In a recent issue of that paper, the 20,000 LPortland Telegram contains the fol- luwiug xauiuuu etuij Alum ita vregun City correspondent: "Connecting Oregon City and Mo lalla with bands of steel is the pro ject of four Oregon City men, whose names are kept in the background un til the scheme matures. A prominent laweyr is a leader in the movement, and a well-known surveyor and a lead ing merchant have also become in terested. . They plan to leave Oregon City from its southern portion, and go up the Abernethy to Newell Creek, tapping the rich Beaver Creek dis trict, and passing through Mulino, with the ultimate idea of getting into the timber country around Scott's Mills. "The schene is said to be perfectly feasible, land the promoters have been making a close study of the proposi tion for months. They have the notes of the survey that was taken for Mc Laughlin several years ago, and will go over the proposed route carefully In the Spring. They propose to organize a company and capitalize it at $500,000. "It is anticipated by those interest ed that the farmers along the route will welcome the road with open arms, and that the right of way can be se cured for little or nothing, as a rail- ' road through the county would do much to enhance the value of the farm land that is tributary. - -f "While the plans of . the promoters are not being shouted from the house tops, they give every assurance that the road will be built, and offer argu ments to prove that it will be a money maker for its stockholders. "More than once have announce ments been made that railroads would tap the country between this city and Molalla, but they have never material ized. This time there is $65,000 in sight to begin work, with assurances from several sources that the neces sary balance would be forthcoming when necessary. The route covers a distance of about 20 miles, and the grades are not heavy. . The trade around the Marquam country is going to Silverton and Woodburn at present, and there has been talk of a raijroad through that: I section, but the local men feel that a road out of Oregon City would swing a large amount of patronage to Ore gon City that is now and may be here- . after diverted elsewhere." THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITY Oregon pity, Oregon AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000 D. C. LATOURETTE F. J. MEYER President Cashier Transacts a general banking business. Open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. (Continued on Page 5) TORTURE OF A PREACHER. ESS I n TllfiTOBK COIPOI The story of the torture of Rev. O. D. Moore, pastor of the Baptist church of Haroersville. N. Y., will interest you. He says: "I suffered agonies, because of a persistent cough, result ing from the grip. I had to sleep sit ting up in bed. I tried many remedies without relief, until I took Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Colds and Coughs, which entirely cured my cough, ' and saved me from consump tion." A grand cure for diseased con ditions of Throat and Lungs. At How ell & Jones, druggists; price 50c and $1.00, guaranteed. Trial bottle free. "Promise me. Jack that you will not go to the dogs just because I haVe refused you." "Oh, pshaw, of course not." "You mean thing." Life. . INCREASE IN VALUES. Roll Represents of $10,057,820 Grand Assessment Total I Assessor J. F Nelson has completed i summary of the 1905 assessment roll showing the aggregate of the as sessment of the county to be $10,- 057,820 as against only $9,364,000 for the preceding year. This represents an increase m as sessable values in the county of $693,- 820 over that of last year when there were allowed no exemptions. Deduct ing the legal exemptions this year's roll represents an increase of $200,000 in the total taxable values and on Drepn City Enten ise BOTH ONE YEAR This offer is open only to new subscribers to The Youths' Companion. Subscribers to that period ical desiring to renew their subscription, will be given the Enterprise and the Companion for $3.00 TMs is a Siii iiiiiiiiiliiiiilf to get your country weekly and one of the standard magazines for a little more than the price of one. Remember, new subscribers to The Youths', Com panion will receive that publication and the Enterprise, both one year, for. the reasonable price of only $2.50- - Address ENTERPRISE Oregon City, - Oregon