6 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 2, 1906. LtJLL i.n, gate J.A.Fober&C95 J. A. Pretty Program For State Solons Enviable Lot of Legislators "Who Have Nothing To Do Bat Look Wise, Draw Their Pay and Solve a Few Problems Like These. Who wouldn't be a state legislator!? It's a snap. Nothing to do but look wise, draw your pay and meditate on tp. few little things like these: Shall "we be good and obey the pri mary mandate by electing Jonathan Bourne, Jr., for the long term in the United States senate and F. "W. Mul key for the short term? To what use and to what extent may the waters in the streams of Or egon be diverted for irrigation and power? How can we fix up a state banking law and secure bank examiners who will examine before the doors are closed? How can we reapportion the legisla tive districts in accordance with the state law, so our county will lose no representation? Pass an anti-railroad pass law tnat will stay passed? How to compel railroad companies to furnish cars they don't have? How consolidate boards of normal school regents without depriving any good fellow of a job? How to make even convicts work at Salem sewing grain sacks to cir- AUTOMATIC PHONE AT THE CLACKAMAS COMPETING COMPANY CAMP IS PITCHED ON RIVER BANK TWO PHONE PROBLEM. The Automatic Home Telephone company, which is planning on enter ing Oregon City, has carried on the work of construction as far as the Clackamas river. The camp is pitch ed there now, and from present indi cations they will reach this city be fore very long. Just what the condi tion of the telephone business will be when they enter this place is some what uncertain. Whether a telephone war will result, or whether peaceable relations will exist between the com peting companies is a matter of con jecture, and will depend largely on the company making the inroad into this territory. The question of installing two tele phones is one that has come up in al most every community of any size in the country. That an economic waste Consumption C There is no specific for consumption. Fresh air, ex ercise, nourishing food and Scott's Emulsion will come pretty near curing it, if there is anything to build on. Mil lions of people throughout the world are living and in good health on one lung. Cfl From time immemorial the doctors prescribed cod liver oil for consumption. Of course the patient could not take it in its old form, hence it did very little good. They can take SCOTT'S EMULSION and tolerate it for a long time. There is no oil, not excepting butter, so easily ' digested and.absorbed by the system as cod liver oil in the form of Scott's Emulsion, and that is the reason it is so helpful in consumption where its use must be continuous. CJ We will send you . a : sample free. " J Be sure that this picture in the form of a label is on the wrap per of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. Scott & Bowne Chemists 409 Pearl Street New York 50c. and f I; all dragguu Absolutely Pure NO ADULTERATION , Pure Cream Tartar ' and fPure Bicarbonate Soda Only. i sSOLD on MERIT Folger & Co. saF, cumvent the trust and please' our farmer constituents? Also pass a ml- gratory stock law that will likewise stay passed? "Vote $50,000 eacb for Jamestown and Seattle expoes, Celilo portage road (whatever that is) and all the ther "good things" said to be hunger ing for state money? How to giye every school child a new book without raising taxes? How to pinch off the unearned in crement from the state printer's of fice without having to increase our own party assessment? Then there are about 79 other small matters, from a new tax code, including taxation of franchises, to creation of a new county by dividing Wasco, to engage the leisure moments of Messrs. Huntley, Dye, Jones, Camp bell. Hedges and their brothers-in- trouble between now and their move on Salem. If the. local solons are hard to find this fall, the foregoing may serve as a clue. Look for them in their li braries, wrestling with those big tomes that have all the pictures in the back. is incurred so far as the subscribers are concerned stands to reason. The divided profits make the business less lucrative for the telephone owners likewise. For that reason" the intro duction of competition in the tele phone industry has been limited in a good many places." It has been even rumored that doctors have organized and have decided as a body not to install another telephone. OVER TOUR INCHES RAIN AT STAFFORD Stafford, Oct. 25. Notwithstanding over four inches of water fell here during last week's rains, the thirsty ground absorbed it all and is ready for more. The small streams have not started yet. P. F. Larson died Saturday, morn ing. Funeral was held on Monday af ternoon in the little grove by the Staf ford cemetery. After much suffering a good husband and father, and kind neighbor and faithful friend lies at rest. He had been a resident of Staf ford for more than thirty years and was nearly sixty-eight years of age. Mrs. Henry Gage and daughter of Tillamook county arrived on Tues day. The daughter will enter schoqf at Beaverton. Sam Mosier has again put his threshing engine into the chop mill ready to grind. Oscar Barnes is plowing for Mr. Powell. Burned Child Dies. At 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon the funeral of the 4-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Foumal was held at West Oregon City. About three weeks ago the little girl was playing about a bon-fire in a hop yard near Mount Angel, when her clothes caught fire and she was burned in a fright ful manner. The child has been suf fering ,for some time and jexpired Wednesday afternoon. Her recovery was despaired of for some time. Estacada Butchers Sued. A complaint has been filed by D. N. Bridenstine against B. E. Block and Homer Groff, butchers at . Estacada, for the recovery of $166.01. yThe com plainant alleges that he furnished meat to defendants from September 1, U.906, to October 14, 1906, to the value 01 266.66, ana mat 01 tms amount but $100.65 has been paid, leaving a balance due of the amount sued for. Papers in attachment were issued Wednesday afternoon and served by Constable Ely Thursday morning. And Plenty of Room to Grow Them. From the Eugene Register. Come to Oregon where apples are big enough to make a pie for six per sons and strawberries can be had al most the year round. .. Possible Only In Oregon. According to a Southern Oregon story, Jasper Force, of Talent, aged 106 years, was recently issued a hunt er's license by the county clerk of Jackson county. Oregon Text Books Cheapest. While President P. L. Campbell of the University of Oregon, and a mem ber of the Textbook commission, was attending the annual meeting of the Yamhill county School Officers' as sociation at McMinnville the other day. he was asked why it was that in rnnco some states the primer costs only 10; cents, while it costs more here. He said that a man can buy a coat for $2, yet most of us pay more because we want a better Coat. The Oregon! Text-book commission, said he, looked-j into the quality as well as the price, 7 ESCAPED LUNATIC'S MERRY ADVENTURES "STRINGS" THE ENGLISH CONSUL AND MAKES PORTLAND POLICE LOOK FOOLISH. After three weeks of liberty James Bagnall, alias Charles Wilson, an es caped lunatic, was recaptured Thursday-morning by Night Officer Ed. Shaw, and taken to the city jail, from where he was taken back to Salem by an attendant Thursday night. When arrested the prisoner made un successful effort to tear away from the officer. Three weeks ago Wednesday, Bag nall and Ray Lawrence escaped from their cells in the insane asylum -at Salem by filing the lock on their win dow and the two have been at liberty ever since. Bagnall was sent to the penitentiary in 1901 for larceny com mitted at Astoria, but after four months he was removed to the insane asvlum. The other man was sent up for manslaughter and is still at lib erty. Bagnall is from New Zealand and comes from good parents, possessing more than an average education. The story of his escape and his subse quent adventures was interestingly related by him in the cell at the city jail. According to his statements he and his companions travelled by night going to Portland, and it took them three days to get there. Once there he declares he was kept busy "dodging the cops." About the wittiest thing the escaped patient did while at liberty, was to visit the En glish consul and upbraid him for not accomplishing the release of the pa tient. Bagnall's story was well told by himself. He said: "I went to Mr. Laidlow and told him I was a friend of Bagnall's and wanted to see why he did not have the patient dismissed from the asylum, that he was conducting himself properly and deserved to be let free. He 'hemmed and hawed' and (bold me that my friend's case was before the govern or now, and all that kind of truck. Then I said: 'Mr. Laidlow, you don t know a d thing. You . ain't as smart as I am. I'm the man myself.' Gee, old Laidlow jumped about a foot high for the telephone, and I banged for the door. I turned around and said, 'If you ring that telephone, I bang. He rang, and I banged.' .Now: do you think I'm crazy?" Bagnall talked very rationally and wittily while confined here' and took his recapture In a philosophical way. His efforts to get out of the way of the Portland authorities who later told him to leave the city were amus ing. He expressed his regret at hav ng to go back to Salem, since, as he alleges, the treatment accorded him there is not of the gentlest kind. What he wants is to be sent back to New Zealand, where his family is reputed to be well off.- MILD WINTER SURE SAYS BEECH TREE There is a beech tree in Milwau- kie, that is considered a ' weather prophet and it says the coming winter will be a mild one, notwithstanding the fact that the oak trees have pro duced a big crop of acorns. In early days Seth Lewelling sent to Indiana for different kinds of shade trees and among them was a nut bearing beech tree. . Mrs. Lewelling says: "In my time here in Oregon we have had two cold winters, of six weeks duration, regular Indiana weather, during which the Willamette river was frozen over. We noticed that be fore these cold" winters set in this beech tree was heavily loaded with nuts, enough for all the squirrels. This year our beech tree has not a nut on it, which we think indicates that the squirrels will not need nuts, but will have plenty of green fodder. So let no one get the shivers before hand thinking of what Is to come. We may not have to shiver. "This tree, which was born in Indi ana of ancestors that had to supply squirrels for a hard winter every year, surely ought to be more reliable than an Oregon oak, which has only to prepare for a real cold winter about once in 20 years. I believe the acorn trees have made a mistake this year. Anyhow we'll wait until the river is frozen over before we walk across it. Meanwhile I believe in the beech tree, and hold that no man or animal will suffer with cold this winter in Ore gon." 66 DIVORCE CASES STILL ON CALENDAR The divorce mill in Clackamas coun ty was busy enough when Judge Mc Bride heard 22 cases Saturday, but from the looks of the records at the present time, a busier time is promis ed when he comes again. In spite of the fact that such a large number was disposed of. there still remain 66 divorces on the calendar. All of these are cases that have been- filed within the year. STAND FIRM When you buy an OILED SUIT or SLICKER demand Tfs the easiest and only way to get the best Sold everywhere 1 A W tbD TOP 419 W RICH FROM CATTLE AND CRANBERRIES R. B. CROSS GIVES GLOWING AC COUNT OF TILLAMOOK COUNTRY. R. B. Cross, son of C. B. Cross, re turned Thursday from the Tillamook country where he has been spending the last two weeks. Cross assisted his brother trailing some cattle to a ranch which his brother runs in that region. From all accounts great things are in prospect for that country. Thurs day, five wagon loads of scrapers and other road implements were taken to Tillamook to start at the other end of the new railroad that5is under con struction. The eastern end is already built about 40 miles west from Hills boro, and the road will probably be completed soon. That will enable the ranchers in that region to send their calves to market instead of knocking them in the head. At pres ent it is too expensive to raise calves, with the creamery industry as promi nent, as it is in that country. Mr. Cross reports good fishing in that country, fine game and excellent opportunities for homestead lands. The farmers are prospering, 20 head of. cattle netting them $1000 a year. Several men cleared from $1000 to $2000 per year on their cranberry bogs. -Funds for Estacada Church. ' Over $500 has been raised towards building a Methodist church at Esta cada. The O. W. P Townsite company has given lots for church and parson age site. The church is to cost not less than $2000. Primitive Furnaces. ToTiJfm- Mehrn his arlrlerl worTter-in- iron to his other duties. He has im provised two furnaces at the foot of the stone pillars that flank the wagon gateway to the courthouse yard, and logs of wood blazing merrily to soft en the heavy iron hinges imbedded in the pillars. The hinges were bent filaor suit rhf chjino flnH AArvla YiV the big road roller when it was run into the yard last summer, and Mr. Nehren is endeavoring to straighten tnem so as to again hang the gate. Tucker Ranch Sold. B.Tucker has sold to Mr. and Mrs. Al. Lindsey 31 acres of ranch land of the old Tucker homestead at Spring water. But Only One Supreme Critic. From the Oregonlan. Oregon has two Supreme courts, one sitting at Salem, the other at Or egon City. A third; at Pendleton, may resume activity In time lor tne next campaign for governor. From a modest beginning to our present commercial position as leading furni ture and carpet dealer, our infallible method has carried us through to this great success, and that method ; just keeping faith with ths public, honest and reliable dealings, lower prices and better grade of furniture and carpets than , our competitors. v Folding Cots at Tin ISousirw!rinLSs!iLin mi 1 1. 1 i. 11. m .1 iil 1 l 1 .. 1 .wwi iiuiu 1.1.1 ji 11 l.iLui. 11111J11 wnmiiinm. maiimuiiiinnn ni-i mil .im. I 1 - - - - - - - " ffl mm I ' For Infants and Children. AVcgeJablePreparationfor As similating theToodandBeguIa ting theStamadis andBowels of BrMnotEsI5cstion,CheerfuI ressandEest.Contai'ns neither OptumiMorpbine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. iVU SmJ- 1,8 'J ' " A nefect Remedy for Constipa tion. Sour Stomacb.Diaixboea. Worms junvuisions.r evwisn ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Yac Simile Signature of TTEYV YORK. f.vtf jmmn'm- -t ft i EXACT COPY Of VHAPFEB. D. C. LATOTJEETTE, President. F. J. MEYEB, Cashier. THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITY, OREGON AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000 Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Our Competitors squeal because our prices Xn carpets ars to 16w, never mind. Mr. Bayer you know that 85c a yard will buy the best wool carpet and 35 c tie cheap-e.-t. Thisf chair! 'was no 'ItVfH at cor store 'and you cn see thejeonsequf n ces. We sell only ellT made, relia ble Rocking chairs full sizej'and high armsf;or ""$1.75 3 Irons and handle stand 85c $2 50 The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Use For Over Thirty Years 7.JW. ft tPv I" TPI MP mm VMS OBfmMin eoMMMT. HEW YOMK CITY. Our couches are made for com fort let us show you at $ 1 O one and be astonish ed at the value. $5 25 will buy this Parlor Lamp, ac tually one of the best lamps in the market Irk S 1 8 willbuy a regular $25 Sew ing Machine, 10 years guarantee.