Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, September 06, 1907, Page 8, Image 8

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    OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1907.
16 Years
experience in the making
of the best class of Photo
graphs, will be at your
service on
Wednesday, Aug. 28
I have purchased the
Cheney Studio and am
thoroughly refitting it.
Commencing with Sunday,
Sept. I, I will be in my
studio each Sunday, pre
pared to give sittings.
Cojrie in and see sam
ples of my work.
BRADLEY
The Photographer
OREGON CITY
STATE NEWS.
he
caped from the Oregon Penitentiary
are definitely known to be working
their way across the mountains by
the wlgonrbad up the puth Santlam.
Four 'guards have been sent up the
road to Intercept them, and a clash
Is expeeb? atany time.
The convlois' course has been traced
from near Jefferson, where they turned
eastward, keeping up the north bank
of the South Santlam. To crots the
mountains they must turn Into the i rain.
lever before. Van Dran was one of
J the pioneer pheasant-raisers of Ore- (
'gon, but this is the largest brood he
ever raised in one season.
A report conies from Chicago that
the Trans-continental Passenger As- j
soclatlon will never again make colo
nist rates after those now in effect
and to continue until October SIst, bo
that the people of Oregon should
make the most of the present oppor
tunity. The Woodburn Commercial Club has
decided to have a creamery establish
ed there at some early date. With
this object In view, the club has Is
sued a call for a farmers' meeting In
that city on Saturday afternoon.
Eugene last week raised $700 with
which to send a man to Portland in
September and October to watch, for
desirable honieseokers coming Into
the state, to start them towards Lane
county.
The money drawer of an Albany
store was touched to the extent of
$100 on circus day there while. the
proprietor and the clerks were on the
front walk looking at the parade.
Aceordllng to the Salem Statesman,
J. K. Sears Is about to have H. R.
Kincald, of Eugene, sued for JGO.OOO
i in lees coitecieu oy mm as secretary
'of State.
I R. D. Hume, the salmon king of
i Rogue river, has been fined $500 for
conducting a fish hatchery without
paying the state license required by
law.
Miss Margurlte Chamberlain, daugh
ter of the Govertfor, will be married
Wednesday evening, September 11, to
H. R. Galther. of Natchez, Miss.
Rev. I. D. Driver, one of the pioneer
Methodist mlnlnsters who came t
Oregon in the early days. Is very 111
in Albany'and may not recover.
The city council of Albany has Just
closed a franchise for gas at 75 cents
per thousand feet, just one-half the
price paid in Vancouver.
Reports from east of the Cascades
show some damage has been done to
RAILWAY
FOR NEEDY
Lebanon-Prinville wagon road, where
officers are on guard. The convicts
are all staying together.
Rolando Parrish, one of Oregon's
best known and most respected pio
neer citizens died at the home of his
daughter, Mrs. Knox Cooper, Portland,
Monday of heart trouble after an Ill
ness of several weeks. He was born
In Andrew county, Missouri, October
7, 1847, and came with his father, Dr.
Heshbon Parrish, to California in 1849
and to Oregon In 1S30, settling near
Albany. In 1878 he moved with his
family to Crook county where he en
gaged In stockralslng and farming at
Hay Creek.
Mrs. Caroline Wright, wife of John
G. Wright, died Monday at Seattle of
heart failure. Deceased was a well-
known, highly-esteemed pioneer res
ident of Salem. Caroline Cross was
a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Cross, and was bora in Danville, 111.,
in 1841. She crossed the plains with
her parents in 1852, and lived in Salem
since that time. In 1859 she was mar
ried to John G. Wright, a pioneer Sa
lem merchant.
The latest promise is that cars on
the Salem-Portland electric lin will
be running by November 15. It is
said the Wilsonville bridge is nearly
completed, and but a few fills to finish.
There are four sub-stations being
built for the distribution of power, ose
near Brooks, one near Aurora, one
three miles below Wilsonville and one
seven miles out of Portland.
An even 900 hunters' licenses for
the year have been issued by the
county clerk of Lane county.
Albany college is to have a foot
ball team this year.
MARQUAM ANOTHER OBJECTIVE
POINT FOR THE PROMOTERS
OF THE PROJECT.
CEMENT. LIME AND COAL
Would Furnish Many Tons of Freight
for System of Electric Rail-
way Survey Has Been
Made.
Correspondence to the Cegtnlan
says: Reports from Marquatn indicate
the construction of a railway lino Into
the Scotts Mills country and through
the Marquam soeUon, passing near
needy and tapping rich deposits of
coal at Scotts Mills. nd lime, at Mar
quam. It Is said Swift & Company
of a line that will tap the Southern
Pacific at 'either Woodburn or Canby,
probably the former town.
It is known that a representative
of Swift & Company has recently ta
ken an option on about 160 acres of
land belonging to Mrs. Jason Johnson,
one mile east of Marquam, agreeing
to purchasa the property by Septem
ber 15 for $l0,00if? The reason for
this purchase is the character of the
land, which is well known for Its de
posits of lime, and It it said that the
lime, as it is called, makes excellent
mortarbelng.takeu out of the groujd
sofjj and hardening when slacked.
The material was used many years
the what crop through an excess of Lago in the construction of the Ladd &
Messrs. Androson and Pop wanted to
go slow in the matter, but as both
disclaimed any desire to hinder the
Improvement the chargo by friends of
the movement that these two men in
tended to block the project seems
somewhat overdrawn.
It Mooing the consensus of public
opinion that the wharf will bo a good
thing for the city and that there should
be no delay In building it.
Administrator's Final Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned, administrator of the os
tote of James K. Currlo, deceased,
has filed in the county court of Clack
amas county, State of Oregon, his final
account as such administrator, and
that Monday, the 14th day of October,
1907, at ten o'clock A. M at the
court room of said court, has been set
as the time and place for the hearing
of objections to said final account and
me sememew tnereor.
Dated this 6th day of September,
1907.'
A. M. CRAWFORD,
Administrator of the estate of James
B. Currle, deceased. 39-5t
W. S. U'REN TALKS.
COLTON.
Our burg Is rather dull, as all that
could get away have gone to the hop
fields to make a stake.
Gus Gottberg and Lou Hubbard of
Molalla were visiting in our midst on
the 1st.
Postmasters are kept busy nowdays
winding and unwinding the balls of
red tape that our dear old Uncle Sam
requires them to handle.
P. E. Bonney, George Robeson, Will
James and H. H. Eyman have gone
back to the headwaters of the dash
ing, roaring Colly Wash, presumably
for the benefit of their health. And
no doubt they will come back with a
much Improved appetite, as they will
be obliged to subsist on their own
cooking for a week or two.
Mr. Leeson and family, late from
the East, have moved on the Gardner
place.
Mrs. Lee Livingstone of Marcola
came home last Monday to visit with
her parents indefinitely.
H. H. Eyman of Ranier, Wash., is
the guest of P. E. Bonney.
Threshing is almost over here; the
grain is turning out pretty fair
Mr. and Mrs. Cusie Arquett, John
Arquett and Fritzle Miller are visiting
at the Arquett residence on . Pea
Bush block in Salem and there Is
about 100 acres of It in the Jones
place, besides other deposits along
Butte Creek In Clackamas county.
Swift & Company are planning the
construction of an immense plant be
low Portland and will be able to use
a great deal of this material.
It is not, however, for the sole use
of the lime that the road is to be
projected into the Interior of Clack
amas county. There are hundreds of
millions of feet of timber in that sec
tion that has never been touched, and
the Diamond Coal Company, a Port
land concern, now has a small force of
men at work sinking a shaft in their
propertied at Scotts Mills. Laborers
around coal mines are difficult to ob
tain at present, but there is little
doubt that the field offers great op
portunities in the future.
Surveys were made for a line Into
the section about two months ago.
oder'B sawmill, near Needy, will be
one of the points touched. As the
supply of lumber throughout the coun
try becomes less, the great Interests
are encroaching rapidly into Oregon,
and quite recently a branch has been
constructed from the Southern Pa
cific at SHverton Into the Abaqua j
timbered section and one of the larg
est sawmills In the state is going up
at Silverton in order to handle the
product
Gives Port of Columbia Commission a
Big Boost.
4
W. S. U'Ren, a prominent attorney
of this city, was Interviewed recently
by the Oregonlan on the question of
referendum and the Port of Columbia
Coramlatlon. He says that the people
of the state may enact a law providing
for the creation of a Port of Columbia
Commission, and ho also believes that
the people of Multnomah, Columbia
ami Clatsop counties may through the
Initiative enact a law providing for
sich a commission.
"I think." said Mr. U'Ren. "the
Icglslatuto can prepare a general law
and submit It to the people of the
state, providing a method by which
municipal districts or corporations
can be organized."
Mr. U'Ren referred to section 1 of
article IV of the constitution, which
has the following bearing on this par
ticular situation:
"The Initiative and referendum
powers reserved to the people by this
Constitution are hereby further re
served to the legal voters of every
municipality and district, as to all
local, special and municipal legisla
tion, of every character. In or for their
respective municipalities and districts.
The manner of exercising said powers
shall be prescribed by the general
laws, except that cities and towns
may provide for the manner of exer
cising the initiative and referendum
powers as to their municipal legislation."
We have a buyer for timber lands and for two ten
acre tracts.
We have for sale some fine river front properties.
Have made some nice additions to our list In la
days.
W. F. SCHOOLEY & CO.
606 MAIN STREET OREGON CITY.
I
DEATH FOLLOWS
SURGICAL OPERATION
PETER A. FAIRCLOUGH YIELDS
UP LIFE AT PORTLAND
HOSPITAL
Peter A. Falrclough tiled Tuesday
afternoon in the North Pacific Sani
tarium at Portland, following an op-
THE COURTS
Husband Charged with Abuse.
Hull for divorce has been filed by
Orpha Pendergias against Albert
Pendorgrass, to whom h was mar
ried In Lafayette, Ark., December 4
18S7. They have tbr children
George. ged 18 years; Daura, agct
15 years, and Oscar, sued II years.
She alleges that on September 1, 19ul.
her husband abused her and threaten
ed her with bodily harm, and again
eratlon for appendicitis, and the fun- cn August 27 of this year she says h
eral was held Thursday afternoon st
1:30 o'cliK-k from the hull of Oregon
Lodge, .No. 3, Independent Order of
Odd Fellows, of which, deceased was
a member.
Mr. Falrclough bad not been well
for months and ho was taken to the
hospital last week and an operation
threatened her and used abusive lang
uage toward her. Mrs. Pendergrasa
maiden name was Jon.es,
Wife Won't Live with Him.
K. C. Chapman, a promlnet farmer
of Clackamas, Wednesday filed suit
I for a decree of divorce from Grace V.
performed and for some time hope , nmmmn whlw nml(.n ,,, W(UI
was held out ror nis recovery, uui n i Ullt)lllN(ll1i ,m , whom , WM llir.
gradually sank and passed away at rt , F,.l)rU(iry ,lf t1.1i year. Meal
2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. K,. thBl ho tn,BU.tl ,lm ,,,,, ,,,
Ho was bom near Montreal. Cana-,,,, ,Iulff,.r,.,lt cm,.,,,,,!, ,hat h
da. July 24. 1870, and when about m:hM r).Kr,.j ml ,, mrrd him
year old his family moved to Missouri. mt ,,, ,ot wnl ln Uvo wlth
where he lived on a farm 90 miles
west of St. Ixiuls. Ho came to Ore
gon In ISM, and went Into business,
but In 1897 was seized with the Alas-
hlm any longer In Clad
Another Husband Oil
Charles William Mav
kan gold fever and joined In the rush jult ftir llhrt. llllht g
t . . V. .. .. I. I I
to the frozen north. Ho remained
to whom he was married ln Broken
The five-year close period for elk
ends September 15, and a very few
minutes after the expiration of that
long season of protection there will
be plenty of hunters in the forests in
search of the biggest game to be found
In Oregon. Fortunately the law per
mits the killing of but one elk by a
hunter in a season.
Chris Tan Dran of Albany has rais
ed 220 Chinese pheasants this season.
He has been more successful this year
in hatching and raising the birds than
Ridge.
Mr. Hult has his new house almost
completed.
Mr. Carlson is also building, a nice
new residence. ,
B. F. Bonney is going to build on
an addition to his house.
Wm. Bonney will start on the 5th;
to visit his son near Bellingham,
Wash,, who is in very poor health.
PUBLIC WHARF
WILL BE BUILT
"The people of the state have a
right to organize such a corporation
as the Port of Columbia Commission,"
said Mr. U'Ren. "and I have always
thought that the people of tho state
could do so either by 'a bill that wss
Initiated by the people or by a bill
that Initiated by the legislature. A
law that Is proposed by the legislature
and referred to tho people and a law
that Is Initiated by the people them
selves stand on the same footing, as
they are both acts of the people and
la municipal matters I believe the
people have powers that the legisla
ture does not possess. I believe that
an Initiative measure passed by the
The new public wharf, so long con
templated at the foot of Eleventh
street, seems an assured fact. At its
meeting Wednesday evening Council
ordered the 1 preliminary survey In
preparation for the Improvement, and
as nearly two thousand dollars have
about six months, returned again In ))W v(.,,r.Hkll. s,.,,,,.,.,,,,,, 22. mi.
1898. and this time he stayed two,,,,, ,hl (1H,.rt0( hlm ln
years,
With a good knowledge of mining
obtained ln the Klondike, Mr. Falr
clough prospected the Ogle Mountain
country and made Investigations that
convinced him of the advantages of
the field. He organized tho Ogle
Mountain Mining Company in 190,1
and was Its president and general
manager up to the time of his death.
Mr. Falrclough was well and favor
ably known and his death will be sin-
April, 1900. They have two children,
a married daughter, aged 19 years.
and a son, aged 18 years,
Notes.
J. J. Kuntjt, a former resident of
Heaver Creek, and now of Portland,
hns filed a suit In the Circuit Court
against John Schneider and lien F.
Llllls. to recover f .175 on a promissory
note. '
him friend. He Is survived by three
sisters and three brothers, Mrs. (.
W. Grace, Miss M. Gertrude Falr
clough and Mrs. R. W. Scott of Ore
gon City, Thomas II. and John II,
Falrclough of Oregon City and P
Falrclough of Missouri.
Tho Mount Hood Railway & ltwm
cereljr mourned by those who called r,,mpBny hM ,,, a wlU
Charles Adam Andrew el al., for the
condemnation of land fr a right of
way In township 2 south, range 5.
S.
east.
NO NEW BRIDGE;
Esfacada will not get a new bridge
this year. The !onrd has so decided.
It was reported to the board that both
people can create municipal dlHtrlctn. j partl to the controversy had Injune-
"It is possible that the people of
the three counties "Interested can pre
pare and present to themsejves such
a measure, and t do not see any rea
son ln public policy why they should
not."
The Mount Hood Hallway & Power
Company has filed a suit against H.
W. Jones, et al., for the condemnation
of land necessary for a right of way.
Wrn. Lawrenro vs. Lillian Iwrence.
action In divorce, Is the title of a
OLD ONE REPAIRED i"' CftM,, r"urt' Tho Lawrence
live in .Mc.Mlnnvlllo and have one child
a daughter Bged 8 years. The charge
Is desertion a year ago.
Mrs. Martha Johnson wants a di
vorce from Edward Johnson, whom
she says Is a very bad man. They
wero married In MSB. In Minnesota,
have ono child and for the last five
years she charges that Johnson has
not provided for her or their child.
Oregon Sa'gs & Trust Co.
Promise to Pay in Full
But the statement leaves
doubt, however, as to its
, fillment. But there's no doubt
as to our store
WE ALWAYS PAY IN FULL
And that on "very dollar ygn
leave with us full weight, full
' count, fresh goods and goods
that meet the requirements of
the pure food lav.
Teas, Coffees, Spices, Fruits,
Vegetables, Confections ev
erything kept in an Cp-to-Date
grocery and- provision store.
Have you ever tried trading
at our store? If so, we need
say no more; if not, we invite
you to giv us a trial order.
Phone us your order e;ly in
tho day; we're not so busy
then. . . '
ADVERTISED LETTER LIST
Women Mrs. Addllne Bonture,
Miss Anna Concklin, mThs Grace Davis,
Mrs. Kathern Dean, Miss Ellen Erick
son, Miss Leonie Flowers, Elma Gen
ini (2), Miss Josephine Gibson, Miss
Alice Harlan, Mrs. W. Harvey, Miss
jGerturde Kennedy, Miss Juanita Kent,
Miss Ida Lindback (2), Mrs. Myrtle
Massie, Miss Cora Methena, Mrs. S.
R. Miller, Miss Fances Totten, Miss
T. Zollner.
Men Gregory Bayer, Fred Boylan,
Edd Callahan, D. T. Castle, Willie
Chaptlom, W. H. Coffin, Guy Dwigglns, i
Albert Erickson f2),Tom Farmer, C.
H. Gaffney, Fred Hansen, Harrison
,Hughes, Happy Hulligan, M. S. John
json, D. P. Jones, J. H. Lander, W. H.
Lang, L. Lavish, John Leary, Phill ; A
Leyra,4 J. F. Mahon, Fred Malrngreni!
(2). L. D. Pearpoint. C. W. Piernolnt. l"
A. J. Price, W. S. Richardson, Robert
Root, Ben Rylbke, Joe Sears, Security
Savings Bank (2), Edward Sweetland
(2), T. H. B. Taylor, Charles Wallace,
John White, J. Zeiling.
T. P. RANDALL, P. M.
It is reported that tho apple crop
this year will be lighter than last In
England and France and will not
Tbeen subscribed for the wharf Itself, j amount to much In Germany and Aus-
tlons ready to file In case tho opposi
tion won tho decision, so tho board
decided to Improve the old bridge
and. not build a new one this year.
Tho old bridge will bo cleared of
dirt which Is said to bo four Inches
deep and enough of the present load
taken off so that when the bridge Is
strengthened and repaired It can ho
niade to do for two or threo years,
it is certain to go through.
trla. Holland and Belgulm have
No real opposition was outspoken fair crop but for Europe as a
at the Council meeting, although the the yield will bo light.
ve a
whole
t
A lofty building Is being erected by
the Singer company In New York city.
It Is now higher than the Washington
monument, which is 555 feet, and
when tho towering pile of steel and
The repairs will not cost to exceed "ittsonry is finished, It will be 47
$300, and In tho meantime the matter I "' les high and 012 feet from tho
of lorntlon run lu. throilml n l.u ,.. 'sidewalk On IlroildwHV to the nlnnnelii
parties Interested and tho court will J Thl glnnt skyscraper w'lll be tho
not be drawn Into a costly lawsuit. highest occupied building In tho world.
: : . .
V
I
6
A. ROBERTSON
WANTED.
A young man about 18 to work in,
grocery store., Kteaiu' .place, good
All Fence Wires, Nails, Stoves, Carpets, Chairs,
and Farm Tools SOLD at REDUCED PRICES.
OREGON CITY
9 OREGON
i : -...i.i ..i
waes; one wiu,
Box '3S2, Orego3 City.
ferred. Write Box
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