OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 J. 1907. Oregon Gty Enterprise . Published Evtry Friday. '! By THJ1 STAR. PRESS.. Entered at Oregon City, Or., Post office at tecond class matter. Subscription Rate: On Year 8L50 Btx Months .75 Trial subscription, two months.. .15 Subscribers will find th data of ex piration stamped on their papers fol lowing their name. If last payment Is not credited, kindly notify us, and the matter will receive our attention. The weather man must have kept his warm weather for September. A Portland preacher is suing to tell his hearers how Satan would run a newspaper. Perhaps he knows. When through with , the. Panama "canal Uncle Sam will have all kinds of machinery with which to improve rivers and harbors In our several interiors. Burton might make a better Mayor of Cleveland than Tom Johnson Unie alone can tell Tom Johnson has the satisfaction of knowing that be has been a great improvement over pre decessors. - - " " One thing Is noticeable In, connec tion with anarchist outbreaks, , and that is that few anarchists are in places of danger when the fighting be gins. They generally know enough to hunt a cyclone cellar. The New York girl who is introduc ing the Roman toga and sandals on Fifth avenue just at the dose of a big Wall street cleanup, gave the shorn lambs an example of how they may curtail certain expenses for clothes. They have fined the harvester trust a million In Texas. The trusts ought to hare known when to quit; they should have known that the worm would turn, and the "turning" fad was certain to be contagious. Foraker has been endorsed by the Republican state league of Georgia. As the league is mostly negroes, and as Foraker has been playing to the colored side of the gallery for several months, this action Is not far to seek. Congressman Longworth, Roose . velt's son-in-law, seems to think that Pa Roosevelt might be inclined to run for President again if the people rise en masse and accomplish his nomination with something of unanimity. Report is out that the Democratic members of the Willamette Develop ment League are sore to think that they went to Portland to hear Secre tary Taft, and that he talked Repub lican politics. What Is the dif, boys? You'll never know In a thousand years perhaps In less time. Judge Dimlck has his war paint on and is after Fruit Inspector Reid's scalp with a sharp tomahawk and an unerring rifle. It Is fair to say, in Mr. Reid's defense, that the story In the Oregonlan was made from a few word Interview, and that Mr. Reld did not give vent to such drastic criticism. Let's "give the Devil his dues," In this disucssion. The news dispatches tell us that Congressman Burton, backed with the power of the National Administra tion, is to try and defeat Tom Johnson in a contest for Mayor of Cleveland. Tom must be mighty big game when it is necessary for such strenuous do ings in an effort to elect a Republi can candidate In a Republican city. Some enterprising Upper Willam ette transportation folk have In hand a project to establish a line of steam ers capable of running "on a heavy dew," to ply between Salemn and Portland. They want a craft that will carry a maximum of cargo on a min imum of draft, and they are liable to keep after it until they get It, PUBLIC WHARF LOOKS GOOD. The question" of a public wharf In Oregon City seems to h larger than the question of the good or some One Individual, or some set of Individuals., That a city the sUe of Oregon City, and with a stream of watr with the commercial' Interests of the Wlllsm-1 ette river, should have a public wharf goes without argument. And that the cltlsens of Oregon City should all prove loyal to that proposition should also receive unanimous acceptance without any necessity for argument. How then, Is the city to got such an Improvement? By all joining hands and pulling for the main chance. No one should hold back; it cannot prove profitable In the years to come for any one now at this time to hold back. ' And yet there seems to be a spirit of hold back on the part of .certain business men. and there are those who insist In pointing to fact that the dividing line Is Seventh street. It this Is the case it is not as It should be. The primary benefit may come to those who own property above Sev enth street, as some say; but In the end there Is certain to be profit for all the city in case the wharf is made a success. And If any one has been holding back because of the fact that his property was "below the line" at which a public wharf would benefit at the outset, now is the time for him to "back up" and get a new start: a start for the new wharf. The new wharf discussion takes In to consideration but one site that at the foot of Eleventh street. No other site Is under discussion and no other site Is said to be feasible. There are two private wharves that do consider able business but If they cannot com pete with the new wharf from the fact of Its superior location or facilities offered then that in itself Is an argu ment for the new wharf. Those who have given the new site consideration say that It Is an Ideal spot for such an Improvement. They say that nature certainly had in mind a public wharf when the land and surroundings were made. The water conditions are said to be Ideal, the approaches are the best In the city and boats can land at this new site when it is Impossible to land any where else along the river front. Water Is always to be found In abun dance and even now, when the water Is at its lowest, boats going up and down the river pass at stone's toss from the proposed site. One citizen asks: "What is the use to have a contention over this new wharf? Who cares where the 0. W. P. freight depot is; who cares when his freight is delivered, whether the delivery team backs up to his store from the north or the south? The question Is what 'is the rate rather than where did it land In the city. There is nothing to fear from the es tablishment of a new wharf, even if it is public. Even if it does prove a great convenience to people wishing to ship by river, that does not prove that it will take considerable portion of business from certain other sec tions of the business portion of the city. And what is for the good of one Is certain In the end In the matter of public improvements, at least to be for the good of all." The history of Oregon City and Its business men Is that there has been too much of Jealousy and contention In the past. The business men have often got together on a certain propo sition, and in those cases something of moment has been done, but at oth er times there has been a disunion and a consequent Injury to someET good business in consequence. But in the securing of a public wharf for the city we now have an opportunity for a pull all-together. An opportunity for citizens to show where they are at as regarding improve ments that shall be for the good of all. Here Is a chance for those be low Seventh street to show the busi ness men above that thoroughfare that the business men below that' line are as loyal to public Interests . as those above, even If present gain shall be largely In the Interest of the latter. Here Is a chance for magnan imous action and every one "found guilty" can rest assured that It will prove a good asset. , ' THE " PARCELS POST. ' ' The Enterprise favors a parcel post, tt Is high time that new methods are. adopted by our Postoffteo Department and methods that will bring in suffi cient revenue to make the department pay. At present there are few rural routes that pay more than ono-thlrd the cost. Vndor a wise system of par cols post there are few but would pay all expenses. There Is no good reason why the express companies of this country should pay large divi dends and the postal department stand to lose twenty millions a year, Postmaster General Meyer, In his annual report now In preparation, will recommend a more extensive use of the parcels post, with Improved facili ties and lower rates. The present treatment of parcels In the mails of the United States Is simply amazing, No package weighing over four poumla can be mailed and the postage on the four pounds Is 64 cents," or one cent an ounce. A comparison with par cels post regulations and rates abroad shows this country to bo so far be hind that the case is scarcely com prehensible. Germany has develop ed the parcels post more than any other country, and Its operations In this line have covered so many years that the general results are thorough ly understood. Around each distri buting center Is a series of tones with a radius of 10 miles, 20 miles, 50, 100 and 150. Within the first zone the postage on an eleven-pound package Is G cents, and a package of this weight can be mailed anywhere In the empire for 12 cents. In the United States the eleven pounds would have to bo divided Into three packages and the postage would be f 1.71. or four teen times the German rate. The German postofflce will carry pack ages up to 110 pounds, or twenty seven times the allowance In the Uni ted States. Parcels weighing eleven pounds or less can be mailed within a German city for 2 cents, or 5 cents If rural delivery Is required. Parcels may be registered, or sent special delivery or C. O. D. In the last case the govern ment collects and pays over the money for a small fee. For a small extra payment the parcel Is sent by the fastest train and delivered by a spe cial messenger. In 1904 the German postofflce handled 6.894.899.0O0 pieces of mail matter, and its surplus at the end of the year was $14,624.095.There was a postal deficit Jn the United States. In England a one-pound par cel Is carried by mall for 6 cents two pounds for 8 cents and eleven pound... the limit in weight, for 24 cents, or one-seventh tha charge In this coun try. In Japan a one and one. a. pound parcel Is mailed for 5 e JSd twelve pounds, the maximum, for 25 cents, again only one-seventh of the charge in the United States, to say nothing of the more liberal weight allowance. The postal rate on a par cel from Great Britain to Hong Kong Is 12 cents a pound. From St. Louis to East St. Louis, or any domestic postofflce, the rate Is 16 cents a pound, but the postage on the same parcel to London would be one fourth loss. King Edward was terribly shocked at some of the singing that ho heard when he recently visited a Venice music halt. King Edward reminds us of Solomon when he became too old for sinful pleasure bo, too, be came good and wroto Psalms In which ho told how naughty It was to bo naughty, and how disappointing It was to find yon could no longer be naugh ty. Wo prefer to alt under the preach ing of one who has not had so wide an experience In naughtiness, " In a 20-round fight for the welter weight championship,, Monday night (Jans put Drift out of business lu, tho fifth round. The negro had tho Cal Ifornlan at his mercy even In tho five rounds fought. ' , ' ' ; Honey says that when tho oais against the land fraud culprits are started there will To "no lack of ex- icltoment," That will suit tho Knral public, and the wtHhos of those guilty 'are not worth considering. No reply has been received from tho Southern Pacific In answer to Council's Instructions for that com pany to proceed to the erection of an overhead bridge or cut thler trains at that point. The people living on the bluff have rights In tho matter and Council Is determined that no long waits shall bo enforced on" patrons of that stairway In order that the 8. P. may save a trifling expense $r a now bridge. Fruit Inspector Reid's wish to get tho farmers angry st they would do something was accomplished as to tho first part of the statement. The farmers of the county are angry, sure and certain; now we will sen If the auger turns Into a destroying ven geance against tho things which miti gate against good fruit. Who says nature never intended beer for any uso? It Is now said that cactus watered with beer will grow four times as fast as the natural way. When some one solves tho mystery of turlng catus Into paper wo will have a new use for the product of our brew eries. Powers now says he knows who killed Goubol. If this ts true why has he not told the world a long time ago? It was his duty to do so even If the one who did it was his personal friend. Friendship has no right to hide a vll llan of that stripe. A Philadelphia court has decided the two-cent fare law unconstitutional. No othor proof Is needed of the really truly slowness of that staid old town. , The Phllllpplnes and the drink hab It 'cost the American people about tho same. Ana tne excitement is about the same, too. NEW STEAMER RACING PALACE S) Tho Lustluns, tho i now turbiuu steamer that Is racing across tho ocean has definitely settled tt that she wilt break all previous records, The Umltanla cost $(5,250,000. Hho Is simply a floating city. Her popula tion is .1000, uiatlo up as follows: Passengers, first cabin, 610; second. 400; third. 1200; crew, 800. There Is plenty of room, however, as the gross tonnage Is 33,500 tons; dis placement. 45,0H) tons; length, 785 feet; breadth. 88 foot; draft, loaded, 37H foot;. ., The engines turbines are 08.000 horse power. When lighted up at night with her 5000 electric lamps, tho splendid Cun ardor will appear a stalojy spectacle racing across the ocean, and tho 1200 windows will mark tho enormous out lino; while tho four huge funnels belching out smoke will In dsyllght bo sighted from afar. Family suites, elevators, telephones, nursery, gymnasium, Turkish, vapor and nevdlu baths are special features. So. too. am tho regal rooms for mil lionaires. Each regal suite has two room and a bathroom. All tho apart ments are 104 foot high and furn ished In shore hotel fashion. There are brass bedsteads and brocsded sut tees under tho largo sUed windows. Delicate papers are on tho walls, and the dressing tables are In Sheraton style. Interesting It Is to note that r.tl tho staterooms have their bed sheets warmed with electric bedwarmer,s. Threo times round tho promenade dock gives a mile, so tho passengers ran have their constitutional pedes trlan exercise under tho best condi tions. In fact, the only restriction placed upon the athletic disposed pas- tsenger Is that ho cannot play golf. TIME CARP. O. W. P. RAILWAY r.eavo" Arrive J Leave Arrive ' !' ' J w w hJlJ it- "" !i:6oTT4oTTTiO": UTa : oO : t i 4 6 23 7:20 7:30 0:25 8:85 7:20 7:00 7:66 8:05 7:00 7:10 8:04 7:35 8:30 8:40 7:36 7:45 8:39 , 8:10 9:06 9:15 8:in 8:20 9:14 8:45 9:40 9:50 8:45 8:56 9:49 9:20 10:15 10:25 9:20 9:30 10:24 9:65 10:60 11:00 9.66 10:06 10:69 . 10:30 11:25 11:35 10:30 10:40 11:34 11:05 12:00 12:10 11:05 11:15 12:09 , 11:40 12:35 12:45 ll:40!ll:60 12:44 12:15 1:10 1:20 12:15 12:25 1:19 12:10 1:45 1:55 12:50 1:00 1:54 1:26 2:20 2:30 1:25 1:35 2:29 2:00 2:65 3:05 2:00 2:10 3:04 2:35 3:30 3:40 t:3S 2:45 1:39 3:10 4:os 4:15 3:10 3:20 4:14 3:45 4:40 4:50 3:45 3:55 4:49 4:20 5:15 6:25 4:20 4:30 6:24 4:55 6:50 6:00 4:50 6:06 6:69 5:30 6:25 6:35 6:30 6:40 6:34 6:06 7:00 7:10 6:05 6:15 7:09 6:40 7iS5 7:45 6:40 6:50 7:40 7:15 8:10 8:20 7:15 7:25 8:19 7:50 8:45 0:55 7:50 8:00 8:54 8:25 9:20 9:30 8:25 :35 .9:29 9:00 9:52 9:00 9:55 10:00 10:52 9:35 11:00111:52 10:00 10:65 , 12:0513:52 11:00,11:55 12:00 1:00 To Mtlwaukle only. I Via Lent s Junction, dally except Sunday, leave on Sundays, 4:30 a. tn. A. M. figures In Roman; P. M. la black. 1 LETTER LIST. LHtt-r list for week ending Sept. 1J: Woman's list Mrs. I-surs Carr, Miss C. Johnson, Mrs. Iloso Owens, Mrs. Pearl Sams. Men's list K. M Addison, Floyd Clark. HORSE WANTED. Would like to hire a saddlo horse for two or threo days a week. Will be given good care and not overridden. Address, IX I,, rare Enterprise. Chester Prink and Hultla Ounder son were married Wednesday at the court houso by Judge Dimlck. MAIN STREET, CORNER 7TH OREGON CITY, OREGON A sweeping reduction in all our deport ments. I am going to put in new lines and must therefore sacrifice my entire stock in order to make room. ABSOIL17TIS1LY .NO FABLE The city press Is slow in Its pre scription department; It Is needlessly worried about Harriman and his Or egon acreage of timber lands. What do we care whether Harriman 'sells his lands to acutal settlers at $2.50 an acre, the price agreed upon between his company and the Government years ago, or not? Let him hold It for fifty years If he wishes to do so. But let's be, wise and if he decides to hold It we will simply pile on the taxes until he Is satisfied to let go. There Is no occasion to worry; all we need to do is to do right as between Mr. Harriman and the people that Is, put on the taxes and Mr. Harri man will see where he "comes across," so to speak. Following arc a few of the many lines w$ are trying to sacrifice : Report says that President Roose velt Is Interested In Inland waterways, and has in contemplation a trip down the Mississippi river to see what that stream needs. We would respectfully Invite the President to Oregon to see the Willamette and Columbia rivers he'll see something worth seeing then: he'll see rivers that look clean, smell clean, and are clean. The news that Heney will come to Oregon to try and convict the land fraud perpetrators will be good news to thousands who believe In fair play. Honest men have nothing to ; fear from land '. fraud ,1 prosecutions, , and those who 'have profited 'by crooked deals ought to be willing to "pay the fiddler" when caught with the goods on them. ...... , It makes all the difference in the world whose ox Is gored. A few weeks ago one Haywood was on trial for his life In Idaho and the only witness was a man named Orchard who confessed to much crime and tried to Implicate Haywood. Senator Borah was the prosecuting lawyer and he tried to hang Haywood on evidence given by I one who confessed part of the crime". Now this same Borah Is on trial for defrauding the government and the main wjtness Is a man who was Im plicated In the crime but confesses and puts part of the blame on Borah. And Borah and his friends cry out that the witness Is a liar. They would not concede that the self-Implicated witness against Haywood couldpoftsi bly lie, but wanted to hang Haywood on that kind of evidence. We hope Borah will get a full dose of the med icine he tried so hard to prescribe for Haywood. , ' The Oregonlan Is still picking at Mr. U'Ren. It says: "Mr. U'Ren's latest great Idea Is to enact a law under the Initiative to 'Instruct' members of the Oregon Leg islature to sign Statement No. 1 ex actly as it Is written In the primary law. Now suppose they don't and won't sign it, what Is Mr. U'Ren going to do about It? Of course bis scheme Is silly and entirely Ineffective, be cause contrary to the constitution of the United States. Mr. U'Ren seems determined to make a Joke of the Ini tiative and referendum." A large number of people met Sec retary Taft last week wheri he visited Portland, and he no doubt made many new friends on that occasion. Taft Is a large man In more than one sense of the word, and those who met him face to face on his recent visit were' made aware of that fact. There is no doubt that the Secretary Is good presidential timber, and there Is no doubt that his recent visit made him many votes In case he secures the nomination and the opportunity is given to vote one's preferences. CARPETS I GLASS CROCKERY now 35c per yd. jQxI2, 6c each JSc " " ;" 50c Half wool, 65c carpet now 45c ffW14 7earri -11 i j. i All wool ?0c carpit now 75c g -d all ou, stock accordingly, $I.25wool carpet now $1.00 UM 0c each , ... . 16x20, 20c each WALL PAPER LINOLEUMS fg$ g 10c paper, 5c per doMe roll 75c values now 50c per yard 24x32, 45c each iz u 4t tl $1.00 " " 75c " 2425. 40c each . $ , . 28x32, 60c each zZr an u DATWTC ; 30x30, 60c each 40c 30c ' . ' 24x36 55c each : : Impe1SyeafS 7 Kitchen Chairs. per quart 35c i p ( ., 75c values - 55c each I I III I $1.25 values - 1.00 " $1.25 screen doors for 75c each ' . - , $2.00 " " $1.25 " Inrs 25c val. window screens J 5c vui o AVCC , 35c" " " 20c4' "fWV" , Ul $1.25 values ' - - '75c each $3.50 top matress $2.25 " fS CSt Ranges and Stoves 3.50 " " 2.25 Ranges from - - $22.50 up "' f These are facts. If yoti see it in out ad it's so. Call and be convinced. T7 TO T7 TtS7Tfy 6 n-ao lumjuJv The Home Furnisher ' Main and Seventh Sts. VJW VV 4