4 Oregon City Enterprise 'TV AND COUNTY . OFFICIAL PAPER. Published Every Friday. Rates: Subscription ( vear ...... . P months ..... . nl subscription, two months. .$1.50 75 25 overusing rates on application. Subscribers will find the date of ex (-ation stamped on their papers fol i wing their name. Tf this - is not i.ivment. kindly notify us, and the utter will receive our attention. STRICTLY A LOCAL SITUATION Bantered at ihe postofflce at Oregon Oregon, as second-class matter FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1906. BROWNELL'S INDICTMENT. There is being vigorously circulated throusrhout the county by either Sen ator Brownell himself, or by some of his faithful lieutenants, the report that there is pending against him no fed eral indictment in the United States Circuit Court or any indictement in anv- other court. This story is being given the most vigorous publicity in the more re mote sections of the county and also largely among the Germans who are too busy to keep in close toucn witn the general news. To such Brownell -poses as a man possessing angelic dualities who is being much persecut- ,edand abused. But to other audiences ithat know of the indictment and know further that the fact of this indict- tnent hanging over him causes Senator Brownell more trouble than has any XJther one thing or combination of things in his preceding campaigns, the wily senator resorts to the ridiculous jextremity of attempting to prove an alibi, the last resort of an accused criminal. His defense thus offered is plainly absurd, of a most flimsy con Struetion and a reflection on his own alleged and reputed political shrewdness. V Statements of Senator Brownell and bis per diem boosters to the contrary Notwithstanding, there is pending in the "United States Circuit Court at Portland an indictment charging the Senator with subornation of perjury. Pending the trial of his case. Senator Brownell is out on bonds in the sum Of $4000. If these statements are not suffic iently convincing and any reader does $ot care to accept them as the plain and unpleasant truth, we will De pleased to present for his inspection, and we will do so if he will call at this office, a certified copy of the bond on ivhich the Senator is now awaiting trial. I But the Senator would have the people of Clackamas County think that there is "nothing in" the indict ment that has been filed against him. If there is "nothing in" the indictment, if the accused man is entirely inno cent of any wrong doing as he claims to be,, if a crime has not been com mitted against the Government, if the Senator is unfortunately a victim of circumstances or mistaken identity why does he not secure a dismissal of the charge? If either of the forego ing propositions is the fact, why has not the "influential" corporation Sen ator caused the charge against him self to be dismissed? Failing to ac complish a dismissal of the indictment although he has invited every influ ence at his command to attain that result; it must be presumed that there is something in the indictment after air. When a man gets himself in volved in a case in the United States Circuit Court, it is no laughing matter. He is strictly up against it and the guilt or innocence of the ac cused is invariably established only after the regular procedure of a jury trial. In such a predicament Senator Brownell finds himself. He stands in dicted by a Federal grand jury on a charge of subornation of perjury in directly conspiring to defraud the Government. But he does not consid er it necessary to clear himself of this charge before he goes before the people and ask them to continue him for still another term in the official capacity he has faithlessly ' filled for the last twelve years. The Senator says he submits his record as his platform for renomina tion and re-election. And of what does that record consist? Innumerable broken pledges, faithful and loyal ser vice to the corporations in whose salaried employ he is to the utter disregard of a tax-burdened constitu - ency; a constant dodging of all impor tant matters of legislation wherein the interests of the common people and the corporations were brought face to face, and lastly, Confronted by a federal indictment. Is this such a record as should com mend any public official to the favor able consideration of a long-suffering constituency? Is such a record as this even though, "according to pro- gramme," going to be forever tolerated in Clackamas county? There is certainly a limit to the ex tent to which Clackamas county people will allow themselves to be buncoed and the sentiment throughout the county audibly declares that that limit has been reached. The voters have tired of buying this Brownell gold brick which .has been found to be ex ceedingly long on promises and dis couragingly short in actual results. They have been fooled long enough. 0 - Count Boni is now wondering why .- he fooled himself out of a steady job. o The chief difference between grand , larceny and high finance is that the latter includes enough to pay the law yers. o Can any other county than Clacka- mas be imagined in which a public of ficial under indictment for assisting to defraud the Government would have the effrontery to seek further contin uance in his official capacity? Or can you conceive of any other public man than George C. Brownell, the gentle man from Clackamas, who possesses the unblushing nerve and surprising audacity that is required even in his case to brace up a candidacy before constituency he has so grossly out ragedand betrayed, who would dare go before the people and ask for their suffrage before he had first establish ed his innocence of any crime charged in a Federal indictment that stands against him? ' But it remains to be seen if the peo ple of this county are going to endorse such conditions. They have been re peatedly fooled by this wily politician the salaried hireling of corporations until their patience has no further en durance. Now, with a federal indict ment facing him along with his other short-comings, thepe is presented to the voters of Clackamas county a dose that is too bitter to take, especially when the prospects of receiving any benefit, as past experience has demon- started, is so extremely remote. o COME AGAIN, SENATOR. Brownell in his desperation must find some charge against his opponent therefore he charges grafting in the county printing. A grafting charge comes with good grace from Brownell but so long as he can only show that the Enterprise received the entire county printing for 1905, about one- third what it cost to print the delin quent tax list a few years ago, he will have to hunt up a new accusation. The Enterprise received for .1905 $1188.27 for all printing including the printing of the delinquent tax list while under Ganong's administration more than $2800 was paid for print ing the delinquent tax list alone. Last year the delinquent tax list cost the taxpayers $156.75. Come again, Senator. o- NO FREE SEEDS FOR POLITICS ONLY. The question as to the propriety of discontinuing the "free seed" prac tice, or the objectless and promiscu ous distribution of vegetable seeds, promises to cause a lively fight in the House of Representatives. Strictly speaking, there is nothing complicated about it, bu it involves a congression al perquisite, and doubtless some of the advocates of the practice in ' the form it has so lately assumed are imperfectly acquainted with its '"evolution." Here are the facts in- a nutshell. The House ' committee on agriculture, in considering the agricultural appro priation bill, decided by a bare majori ty to strike out the item covering the cost of the seeds distributed by the senators and representatives. It had been inserted ' as a matter of routine, the appropriation amounting, as in previous bills, to $240,000. The major ity of the committee voted as it did because the free seed business had assumed the form of petty official graft and was no longer meeting the need which originally called it into being. Secretary Wilson, who certainly cannot be accused of indifferdtoce to agriculture or of ignorance of the true interests of the farmers, says that "the purpose of the early legislation for the introduction and distribution of seeds was to introduce into the country seeds of new and improved varities and of new crops in order to increase the horticultural and agricultural pro ducts of the United States." There is no intention of abandoning this pur pose or of refusing a suitable appropri ation enabling the department to carry out. But the number of requests, as Mr. Wilson further says, for seed packages has become so great that it is simply impossible to supply new varities or any seed having exeprimen- tal value, and therefore, large quant ities of packages of ordinary farm and garden seeds have for some years been sent out, congressmen, we may add, thinking more of the political crops than of the agricultural or'hort? icultural H .- It is. clear from Secertary Wilson's statement that he would not be sorry to see the graft element of the free seed business reformed altogether. The majority of the committee voted right on the question, and the House should indorse its position. Useful and scientific experiments should be encouraged by the government, but not a cent for tribute to congress men should De appropriated. rney might as well ask for free hay or free barbed wire or free brooms. Chicago Record- Herald. OUR COASTWISE LIGHTS. Three investigations of the wreck of the-steamer Valencia have been com pleted, and the American public has thrice been told that if there had been life-saving station near the scene of the disaster, had there been xa tele phone line a signal station, even the loss of life would have been far less. But it has been shown, also, that the negligence of the Federal government is failing t provide, aids to navigation on the Pacific Coast, has been worthy of a Central American ictatorship. In fact, there 'are -a great many, matters concerning this alencia wreck that are worth think ing about. They are not novelties, extract the .roots, and make it navig able. The creeks, guts, sloughs, and esturaries on the Atlantic Coast that have not been made navigable defy enumeration, computation, or any thing except admiration for the gall of the congressman and the senator who demanded, engineered, and got the hill for it all through Congress. And every one ' of these made-by-hand riv ers has a lighthouse at its mouth, and buoys on its mudbanks, and beacons by day and flashes by night, and its beels and whistles and sirens. Here skippers have to climb out on the how spirit and peek over and smell and taste and think what in tophet they've run into now. San Francisco has a commerce which makes Atlantic cities outside of New York look mean md pitiful. And you can hunt around for six days outside when the weather is thick, trying to find the Golden Gate. You can investigate Montara Point, and run forty miles to Point Reyes, and go fifteen miles more and hail the lightship, and miles more and listen to the siren on the South-East Farral- lone, or the bellow of the "calf" on Noonday Rock, or of that on Duxbury Reef; that's what you can do if you earnestly ' desire to know just where you are in a fog.' What you really do sometimes is what the captain of the Rio de Janeiro did, or the now for gotten skippers of the endless craft that have, piled up on the beach south of the Gate. It's different on the Atlantic. You are met. way oat at sea by a big light ship, and she passes you in to the next one, and the lighthouses poke - up wherever you see land, and you are handed in like a lady with flashes, flares, and flames to port and star board, each (at government expense) telling you just where you are. And let the fog come down any where from Cape Sable to Jupiter Light, and instantly forty sirens bel low out, and endless gas-buoys flare out, and if a lady drops her pocket handkerchief over the rail, there are life-boats and launches, and tugs ready to come out of the fog and return the article and say "You really must be more careful." ' All because the senators and con gressmen of that State went to Wash ington and got what they asked for. Why is it that the entrance to Puget Sound has to be hunted for as a wo man hunts for her pocket? Why is it that the entrance to the Columbia River can be missed if one isn't quite wideawake? Why is it thatthe mo ment a coastwise vessel leaves the Golden Gate in thick weather she has nothing to guide her in her way ex cept lights so far apart that, having lost one, it may be hours before you pick the next one? Don't just as fine ships ply here as on the Atlantic? When' we run on reefs and the seas sweep us into the rigging and we pray through shivering lips for help) haven't we got a right to see the roc kets of the life-saving crew and their boat coming for us? Why is it? Don't we pay enough? The Argonaut. o Does Your Heart Beat Yes. 100,000 times each day. Does it send out good blood or bad blood?' You know, for good blood is good health ; bad blood, bad Jiealth. And you know precisely what to take for bad blood Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Doctors have endorsed it for 60 years. One frequent canae of bad blood is a sluggish liver. This produces constipation. Poisonous substances are then absorbed into the blood. Keep the bowels open with Ayer's Pills. byJ. O. Ayw Co., Iowll, Mass. All o mtnuAotareri of f HAIR VIGOR. AGUE CURE. CHERRU PECTORAL. yers We have t e seorets I We publish, the formulas) of all our medicines. Senator Tillman's hasty flare-un in the Senate7 over what he considered the unjust criticism of the President anent the Tillman-Gillispie rate in quiry resolution, is just a sample of what may happen at any time when Senator Tillman has charge of the rate bill in which is centered so much of the aspiration of the administra tion. It was probably with malice aforethought that the Republican mem bers allowed Senator Tillman to handle the rate bill. Any opponent of the measure who did not want to show his own hand, knew that there stood Dener cnance or open rupture De- tween the President and Senator Till man than between the President and any man in the Senate or the. world who could have been entrusted with the management of the bill. If there a complete severance of relations and rate legislation goes all to the bad, then the Democratic leader and the rank and file of the paVty will be forc ed to shoulder the blame and if the bill by any chance would emerge eith er unscathed or still in recognizable form, the leaders who are apparently playing for a rupture will be able to point with pride to their magnanimity in turning the measure over to a Dem ocrat with the explanation that they knew all the while that Senator Till man's personality and party affiliations would make Democratic votes for the measure when they were most needed. The details of Senator Tillman's com plaint was that the President had treated the Sentate flippantly. This was a thing that numerous Senators ave wanted, to say at various times in the past bu t none of them had ever gotten up the courage. Senator Till man, however, is not lacking in fight ing courage. That Is one. of the things the President admires in him, and while it is a quality that naturally may often tend to a rupture, it may also help to mutual tolerance that will make for peace. It does not much matter whether it was the President or Senator Tillman who was at fault in the difference over the joint reso lution. It would have suited a large number of senators equally well to see them at cross purposes whether both or neither of . them had been wrong. The trouble was principally significant in showing what is liable to happen between the President and his strange Senate champion at any stage of the rate legislation and .it shows what some of the covert ene mies of such legislation must have forseen and hoped for when Senator Tillman was allowed to have charge of the bill. only that promise to buld macadam ized roads, and even then he is only willing to appropriate a comparatively small percentage of the cost of the undertaking. But we are not blam ing Judge Scott for other than his failure to emulate the example set by Clackamas. Because districts do not macadamize is no reason why they should not get their money back for the purpose of fixing the roads. The policy needed too, is township gov ernment. If Judge Scott had agitated this in connenction with the good roads idea there would be a brighter good roads prospect. Woodburn In dependent. o The Senate is now busily engaged in showing the House the virtue In having the last whack at a bill. o If railroad passes. frankiner nrivi- leges and free seed distribution are all ! ! cut off, what will be the use in being i A a congressman anyway. ! o .. , If There is no prospect that the Sen-1 A ate messenger that carries back the ? rate bill will be lugging enough, to !0 make him round shouldered. "A Stitch In Time Saves Nine" can nowhere be more truthfully applied than to your teeth. You cannot afford to neglect - them. Each month of neglect increases the c amount of repair work twenty-five per cent, besides, poor teeth mean poor health. You . ' cannot afford to neglect your, health. .By the latest methods used by us we can fill your teeth without pain, and do it well. If An expert . eastern graduate dentist employed all the time L. L. PICKENS Dentist Weinhard Building, Opposite Court House ' w -o- A great many people are wondering whether free acholol for use in the arts will include the brand utilized in painting the town. , ' o Just as like as not Gen. Wood was trying to get even with the lot of Moros who conferred the title of datto on the Hon. William Jennings Bryan. ) : o ' The Secretary of State explained to a caller the other day that a "modus Vivendi" was the sort of a treaty that did not have to get killed in the Senate. a . Although it has not yet been stated, it may be explained that the visit of the Standard Oil magnates to the White House was for the purpose of "making a purely personal visit to the President. o Clackamas court; y is in the throes of a demand for a "new deal", and rhe fight is on to down the Browne!! io gime: L. L. -Porter is out for the scalp of Brownell and has dared to "beard the lion in his den"," so is a candidate for the nomination for Sen ator against Brownell, who desires to be renominated. Roseburg Spokesman. New Clubbing Rates Hereafter the Enterprise offers the following Subscription Clubbing Rates :: :: :; :: -o- MARION MIGHT FOLLOW SUIT. either; they are abuses so old, so rat- 1 , . ified by long custom, that we have al- A recent good roads meeting at most a reverence for them, a kind of Macleay did not prove one of enthu awed feeling whenever we acknow- siasm. The farmers would like to ledge that they are abuses. The first thing is that, while Atlantic Coast has one hundred ninety-four Ufe-saving stations, The Chiness do not want to make the slightest trouble for any foreign ers who stay out of China. have good roads without helping to the ' pay for the improvement. That is the and greatest drawback to the movement, the Yet the farmers icannot be altogether Pacific Coast boasts of .only fifteen, censured for pursuing such a negative There are fourteen in the State of course. They are not rolling in Maine. Another thing to recall is wealth and know, that, while good that while the Atlantic is lTghted like roads are important to the welfare of Market street, the Pacific is lighted a section, the system is a very poor like a lodging house hallway. On the one. Instead--of dividing the money Atlantic, when the congressman or among the several road districts, as senator snags his fishing line in a in the case of Clackamas county, The teachers of public schools in Oregon, as in other progressive states, are becoming interested in the sub ject of teaching elementary agricul ture in the public schools. The ques tion is one of prime importance. Thoae who have studied the matter the most throughly have not yet reached very definite " conclusions a-3 to the extent to which agriculture should be taught in the common schools. There is a quite general agreement that there is need of one radical chano and that is in preparing text bJOs of. all kinds in such a way that the will give the rural side of affairs a fair chance Rural Northwest. o Attorney General Crawford on Tues day rendered an opinionco-inciding with that recently rendered by Dist rict Attorney Harrison Allen in Clat sop county, in holding that a woman cannot legally hold the office of County Superintendent of Schools. The opin ion was written in answer to. an in quiry frpm Superintendent of Public Instruction J. H. Ackerman. This of course, is the opinion of the attorney-general and not of the Supreme Court. There will be no one so mean as to take official notice of this section of our outgrown constitution. The constitution is ignored by unanimous consent in the matter .of the salaries of State officials, county indebtedness, location of state institutions and sev eral other points less familar to the reading public. The teaching profes sion is almost wholly in the hands of women and since the Oregon consti tution was adopted the employment of women has been revolutionized in our industrial civilization. Exchange. . 1 Enterprise and ( Weekly Oregonian ( Enterprise and Bothfor$2.25 9 I 9 Q 0 Semi-Weekly Journal Bothfor$2.00 Call at the Enterprise Office or mail you order at once newspaper a combination of a modern Sunday newspaper aid a humorous weekly periodical in eolors.- The mechanical work involved in the making of this colored supplement is a marvel of skill. The harmonious arrangements and perfect blending of the many colors used in its make up portray artistic taste of the highest order. GRESHAM PUPILS ORGANIZE Fall Into Line Under Direction of Supt. R. F. Robinson. A SCIENTIFIC WONDER. The cures that stand to its credit make Bucklen's Arnica Salve a scien tific wonder. It cured E. R. Mulford, lecturer for the Patrons of Husbandry, Waynesboro, Pa., of a distressing case of Piles. It heals the worst Burns, Sores, Boils, Ulcers, Cuts, Wounds, Chilblains and Salt Rheum. Only 25e at Howell & Jones drug store. CATARRH -o- PROVOKI NGLY FUNNY. Have you eVer had a long, weary Sunday before you apparently a never-ending day when nothing imag inable would provoke one of those full, hearty, ""whole-souled laughs from which is derived the old, favorite adage, "Laugh and grow fat"? If such a day comes to you again and you want a merry laugh for the pleasure it gives turn to the Comic Colored Supplement of The Chicago Record-Herald's Sun day edition. It is certainly an exter minator of the "blues." Filled com pleters' with fresh, breezy jokes and ir resistibly comic illustrations in colors, sparkling with and humor of an enterprising as well as instructive nature, it is a paper to amuse all who creek, there is instantly an appropria- where roads are far better than in j see it. Four pages in colors and fonr tion made to dredge that creek, and Marion, it seems to be Judge Scott's in black-and-white, this the best embank it, and revetment it, and determination to pay out the taxes colored supplement issued by any raet jetty it, and poke holes in the bars and paid by all districts in those districts ropolitan newspaper make? of that The school and home agricultural movement inaugrated by the Multno mah Teachers' Progress Club and the Principals' Association took definite form in the Gresham school Friday, March 9th. ' County Superintendent 'Robinson was present, and outlined the plans to the pupils of the three upper rooms. - The country boys are to grow pota- toes this year under the of the experiment department State Agricultural College. The girls will grow fl6wers, sweet peas and as ters, under the same supervisions. The pollege, at the request of Supt.v Robin Son has arranged the experiments and are publishing a leaflet carefully set ting forth the plans and benefits to be derived therefrom. Prizes have been arranged for each of the five competi tive districts into which the county is divided, also general county prizes. To facilitate this work and to carry out other similar movements the pu pils have organized two clubs. The boys' organization being known as the Boys' Experiment Club, while the girls organization is known as a Home Cul ture Club. These are the officers elected : Experiment Club ; president, George Cummings; vice-president, Joe Ross; secretary, Emory Roberts; treasurer, George Faris; Home Cul ture Club; president Grace Lawrence; vice-president, Edith Gordon; secre tary, Janie Ross; treasurer, Alta Fox. East Multnomah Record. (Gresham.) THE CT.KANSIXO aYND HEALING CUKE FOB CATARRH ! ' la Ely's Cream Balm Eaey and pleasant to oae. Contains no in jurious drug. It is quickly absorbed. Gives Belief at once. &2SSSZ COLD 'M H EAD Heals and Protects the Membrane. Restores the BAU SLEEPLESSNESS. . Disorders of the stomach produce a nervous condition and often prevent sleep. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets stimulate the digestive organs,- restore the system to a healthy condition and make sleep pos sible. For sale by Howell & Jones. 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 4ife. 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 Plumb ing. F.C.GADKE The Plumber,