EOT H f- JUL. 0regon Historical ow ESTABLISHED 1866. VOL.. 32. NO. 47. OREGON CITY, OREGON, 6 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 2, 1906. k r STRONG MEN MONEY ADDED TO MILL PAID UP CAPITAL OF OREGON CITY M. & L. Co. NOW $40,000. n. R. LANG ELECTED PRESIDENT Capacity of Plant Will Be Doubled, Will Run Night and Day and Employ Fifty Men. The Oregon City Mill & Lumber company held a meeting last night that means much for the future pros perity of this city. That lusty young industry that is flourishing like a green bay tree by the river, was fur ther strengthened by the admission of strong business men and additional capital. The new men who subscribed liber ally to the capital stock last night are N. R. Lang, J. W. Moffitt, C. G. Hunt ley, J. E. Hedges and Franklin T. Griffith. The total, fully paid-up capital stock now issued amounts to $40,000, and still further capital will be ad ded. . . The mill will be doubled in capacity and will be run night and day, giv ing constant employment to 50 men at the mill, besides the large number employed in subsidary industries. It is the intention and plan of the enlarged company to use all the out put of the saw mills in the eastern part of the county, enabling those mills to run steadily at full capacity. The following board of directors was elected at last night's meeting: N. R. Lang, Franklin T. Griffith, W. A. Huntley, L. Adams, B. Kuppen bender. The board selected officers as follows: N. R. Lang, president; Franklin T. Griffith, vice-president; How much dp you wish to pay? Come here for a $1.00 Watch . s Or a $100.00 one ., Or atl prices in between. We are Watch specialists. U is a branch of our busi . ness that we think just about the most important of any. We personally select all our time pieces, and we mean it when we tell you that today we are able to meet your Watch needs with particular advantage to you. For years we have studied Watch values from one end to the other and you can safely trust to our experience. Would like to have you call at your convenience and give us the opportunity of placing our watches before you. Burmeister and Andrcsen Suspension Bridge Cor. The Oregon City Jewelers. AMD MORE W. A. Huntley, secretary; B. Kuppen bender mill superintendent; J. A. Moehnke, mill secretary. The .plant of the company ' is now taxed to its capacity. Hardly a day passes but what a car-load or more of lumber, moulding, doors, windows, etc., is shipped out. The company lately sent a car of mouldings to New York city. A car-load of builders' ma terial was shipped to Idaho Monday. There is no longer a shortage In cars and the company is able to handle their orders with prompt attention. VIOLA VOTES FOR COUNTY SEAT ROAD WANT GOOD HIGHWAY . TO ORE GON CITY CHEERS FOR JUDGE DIMICK. "Viola, Oct. 30. 'The taxpayers of this road . district voted Saturday to levy a 5 mill road tax that will be used to improve the road from Clear Creek bridge ' to the bridge - across Little Clear creek, a distance of about one mile. . From the Little Clear creek bridge to Oregon City the road is already improved, so we will have uninterrupted communication with the county seat all winter. Saturday's meeting was well attend ed and harmonious; the chairman be ing Road Supervisor James T. Fullam. The secretary was Alonzo Tenny. County Judge G. B. Dimick was pres ent at the meeting.- The vote was 24 to 18, most of the opposition coming from those living along the ' present improved stretch of the road. Judge Dimick was given an enthus iastic reception for his trouble in at tending the meeting and explaining the law, and was given a unanimous vote of thanks in, spite of his protest. Where Baby Salmon Receive Care Interesting Account of a Visit to the Clackamas Station of the United States Government Fish Hatcheries. No where in Clackamas county can be found a more busy place than the station of the U. S. Fish Hatcheries that is situated some four miles from the mouth of the Clackamas. A Star correspondent with a num ber of friends spent a most enjoy able afternoon Sunday in examining this station which is under the man agement of J. H. Wilson. Mr. Wilson was very courteous in explaining every detail of the business from the receiving of the eggs until they are distributed in every section of this northwest, to stock up streams with young salmon trout. On account of the very high water in the Clackamas rivr the work of getting the eggs from the female sal mon which go up the Clackamas to spawn, has been delayed about ten days. However, now the water has somewhat subsided 'and the work is going on in earnest. At present, only four sets of troughs are needed to handle the number of eggs that are already in the hatchery. These troughs contain over two mil lion eggs that are in all sstages of hatching. The full capacity of the hatchery is about ten million eggs and it is expected that the full num ber of . eggs will be placed in the hatchery about November 25. Sunday morning the Hatchery re- CHURCH VOTES TO CALL EUGENE PASTOR CONGREGATION AL1STS llNANI- MOUS IN DESIRE FOR REV. C. 'E. OAKLEY. The First Congregational church of this city unanimously voted Sun day to extend a call to Rev. C. E. Oak ley, pastor of the First Congregational church of Eugene, provided the mem bers were able to complete the finan cial conditions that his coming would mean. Rev. Oakley has a very high reputa tion both as a pastor and preacher. ceived 34 fish which yielded about" 190,000 eggs. To handle these eggs, to see that the temperature is right, to keep the troughs clean, and fresh water running all the time, is no mean task and great responsibility is placed an Mr. Wilson and his assist ants. A' careful record of the num ber of eggs in each trough, with the date when the eggs were first placed there, is kept and everything is run on a business basis. Fifty days are required to hatch eggs when the water has the tempera ture which the Clackamas has. After fifty days the small trout are free from the egg and it is then that the" most" infinite pains must be taken with the young fish. As it is, a large percentage of the eggs taken from the salmon die or are destroyed. It is . in April that the Hatchery sends the young fish away to be plant ed in the various streams of Oregon and Washington and Idaho. . . Some of the fish are retained at the hatchery for several months and when they are about a year old are turned loose in a small lake which lies near the main building. It is well worth any one's "time to take a trip up the Clackamas and study the transformation of the fish from a tiny egg till it gets old enough to be, turned loose, in some stream to take care of its self. GAME PROTECTION COSTS $30,000 A YEAR HUNTERS' LICENSE FEES WILL " AMOUNT TO OVER $20,000 ' THIS YEAR. A Salem dispatch gives the cost of game protection, or alleged protection, at $30,000 a year. The expenditures up to September 30 were $21,000 and at the same rate for remainder of year .will total $28,000, to which must be added $1700 salary and- expenses of the game and forestry warden. Practically all of the $28,000 go to the payment of deputies and their ex penses." The special game fund is derived from the hunters' license fees and fines collected from violators of the game laws. The license fees last year as stated recently in the Star, aggre gated $17,000 and are expected this year to amount to $20,000. The re mainder of the funds is derived from fines. OBSTINATE JURORS INCREASE THE TAXES All the jurors of the panel for the November term of the , circut court have been served now. As usual, Sheriff Beatie was compelled to serve several out-of-town jurors personally on account of their failure to accept service by mail. The sheriff regu larly runs across some of those chron ic kickers who raise a howl about tax es as soon as he appears on the scene. A gentle reminder of how they them selves contribute - to unnecessary , ex pense generally silences them. The jurors should remember that they accepted service by ntail, the expense to the county would be no more than a two-cent stamp, whereas if they compel the sheriff to get after them in person, just so much addition al expense is incurred by the county through their failure to answer. 3 MODEL ORCHARDS EOR CLACKAMAS One at Oregon City, One at Molalla, Third at Garfield or George. ' Following closely upon, the an nouncement that the Clackamas coun ty Horticultural society had passed resolutions empowering a committee to locate a model, ten-acre apple or chard in the county,- to be managed according to directions from state au thorities, comes the hews that three of these ten-acre tracts are to be lo cated here. One of them will be set out on Judge Ryan's place on the Rin earson donation land claim, below Oregon City.1 The other two will prob ably be located at Molalla and either Garfield or George. . 'r Horticultural Commissioner J. H. Reid of Milwaukie and Prof. Lewis of the Agricultural college have decid ed that they must prove, conclusively STRANUS OF BRIDGE CABLES ARE ROTTED APART UNDERGROUND apples . as . the Hood River district. Already individual fruit-growers, not ably Mr. Byers and Mr. Tisen, man ager of .Frank Busch's mountain ranch have demonstrated what scientific care can accomplish. These model orchards, then, are designated as great object lessons to the- farmers and horticulturists, demonstrating what can be accomplished by system atic methods. The state will furnish the trees under this arrangement, and the only condition is that the owner must care for the orchard according to the instructions furnished by the state authorities. Any persons in the Molalla, George or Garfield districts, who are willing to devote part of their farms to the experiment, the products of which remain the prop erty of the owner, should corres pond with, either Commissioner Reid of Milwaukie or Judge Ryan of Ore gon City. , FIRST CONVICTION IN "SAWDUST" CASE JURY. RETURNS A VERDICT OF GUILTY AGAINST CROWN- COLUMBIA CC. It took the jury in the Crown-Colum- bia Pulp & Paper company case Sat - urday about five minutes to reach a verdict' of guilty as charged in the complaint of permitting lumber waste and shavings tqbe discharged in the Willamette river. The case was opened at 1 o clock Saturday afternoon. The jury was tak en to the scene of the alleged viola tion, and the next three hours were taken up with the introduction of tes timony. The arguments of counsel occupied another hour, and the judge's charge to the jury, quite detailed, took about twenty. minutes. The jury re tired in charge of Sheriff Beatie at 10 minutes of six and by six o'clock lawyers and judge were ready to 're ceive the verdict. , Ten witnesses werei summoned in all. C. E. Dubois, W.' W.; Smith, G. Brown, H. -W. Trembath, and C. Rail, testified fo the state to the effect that lumber waste was -being discharged Into the river and that the fire which was supposed to consume the refuse was nothing short of-a "blind"-" For the defense W. E. Pratt, J. M. Douth it, W. Jackson, E. Daulton and H. A. Webster were called. The defense tried to, show that the matter com plained of was neither lumber , waste ) nor planer shavings withing the mean ing of the statute, that whatever vio lation of the statute there was was merely an accidental, technical vio lation, or was an act of the individual employed beyond the scope of their authority. The conviction of the Crown-Colum bia corporation lends increased inter est to the three cases still pending. Deputy District Attorney Schuebel ex pressed himself as satisfied with the resultof Saturday's case and declared that he intended to go right through with the res"t of the cases pending. "They are either going to fix up their places to conform with .the law, or take their medicine;- no matter who Or what they are.' a , A. Newell of was transacting City, Monday. Clackamas Toute 1 business in "Oregon A void alum and alum phos phate baking powders. The label la requires that all the ingredients be named on the labels. Look out for the alum compounds. NOTE. Self ety lies in buying only Royal Baking Powder, which is a pure, cream of tartar baking powder, - and the best that can be made. WORKMEN ON SEWER EXPOSE DANGEROUS CONDITION OF THE ANCHORED ENDS. OFFICIALS WILL ACT PROMPTLY County Judge Dimick Makes Personal Inspection Strands In ' . Every Cable Show Corrosion. . . When the county commissioners meet on Wednesday, November 7, a serious problem will confront the of ficials in connection with the suspen- sion bridge. In the past there has been some question as tq its safety so far as the piers are concerned, but now a greater danger threatens the cables are parting underground. Workmen employed in repairing the sewer on Seventh street In the rear of Burmeister & Andresen's' jewelry, and music store, reported that theyi discovered a number of the strands actually separated and rotted apart. Judge Dimick inspected the premis es, and other county officials looked over the ground to ascertain the ex tent of the danger which is threaten ing. What they found tallied with the report already given. j There are seven . two-inch cables i that support the bridge on each side. The south side is the one which is j exp0sed to view at present. In each 0f the seVen cables from ten to twelve , strands are actually rotted apart, and leave no connection whatever. The same condition exists every few inches on the two feet of cable now exposed. ? The chances . are that all along, wherever the able is underground, the same process of Jorrosion has been going on, leaving practically no hold whatsoever. . Though as yet no indication , can bo seen, of the cable giving away, the connection can only be very slight at the best. When it does, give, it will go with a snap, and the results are likely to be very dis astrous. It Is encouraging ' to learn that the authorities appreciate the situation and intend to take up the matter speedily. At the next meeting, means and methods of repairing the weak ness and circumventing the danger will be discussed, and some effort, made to take . prompt action in the matter- Books for School Libraries. Superintendent J. C. Zinser Monday received several boxes of books, con signed by the state librarytcommission to Clackamas county. The selection of these books was made last summer and the f work of distributing among the various districts in the county will now proceed. The books received Monday are valued at $800 and' weigh ed 1800 pounds. Sunflower Curiosity. Mrs. J, Howell of Canemah planted a lot of sunflowers this year, one of which is quite a curiosity." It "has twenty-one blossoms on the stalk. Shoots from the main stalk have put out blossoms which are perfect, some thing very uncommon for these flow ers.. The main stalk is about four j feet high. r J that Clackamas can pro3ucaas good