OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE TIM Weekly Intarprtes It worth tht prloe. Cam Mr It with ether and hn ubtcrib Ths EntcrprlM l M only ClMiumM County Nowopopor that print oil of tho now of till growing County. firrVTOURTH YIAR Nd jjjj OREGON CITY. OREGON. 'FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1920. itTAiUiMio m PRESIDENT MAY DECIDE TO GO IN FOR THIRD TERN IS BELIEF chicauo, Jim -fmumi wu- luuy be candidate. In an ad dro mad at Boulevard hall laat night, Jatnea llatiiilion IaiwU. for uer winter frani ! llnols and i ma Hmn close to Ih. , Mitf executive of ih country, declared it depended largely on curtain thin. "Wilson an n third term candidal of ih Democracy U in the bmifla of the ltepuhllcn leader In the onn- atn," h tald. "aud to be d .1 of y Hi. condui t of Itepublluan party master Them- ( an make him a can dldate and destroy themselves--a they hav donn In two pant election In making Wilson their political an t agonist." I FOR LIBRARIES ARE The county acbool library book 'ought (or the u of the county t-hool by Superintendent J I aran have arrived it hla otflc at the court house and the office force are busily engaged In cheeking thorn up with the Invoke and sorting them in to package When thU work In completed the book wilt bo distributed to their proper dlttrlct throughout the count It will probably be about ten 'day before Oil work will be finished. Hupetintendent Calavan ha not yet (turned from his trips to I'nrtlano ind Halem. In the former city ho wan one of thl county's delegate at the convention of the Or (00 State Teach er'a Association, On the adjournment (if tin- conven tion he went to Halm to attend the meeting of the county school super intendent from the vuriou counties of the state It Was stated at hi of fice thut Mr. t'uluvan will be borne by Monday and In the harness again, MORE THAN THREE E RLED HERE LAST YEAT County Recorder 0. J, Noe give out the tabulation o' the number of Instruments filed in his office during 1919. Thi8 tabulation shows that Ih. r were a total of 6.213 Instruments of all kinds put Into Die records of this county during the year Just closed, The fees received amounted to $fi, SC3.2G. In 1918 there were .10r Instruments of all kind filed and tin- (MM nninimt od to $4,740.22 More than fifty per cent or the In struments filed in 1919 were deeds mowing transfers of properly within Clackama county. Abstractors of this county are un animous In the statement that the year of 1920 will set more than 10, 000 Instruments filed for record IS E AI SAME LOCATION The trustees of the Methodist church have accepted plans submitted by Tourtellotto ft Hummel of Port land to build the church over the store, which Ih to be put up for Price Prothers. At first the trustee considered plan to put the church on a ground l" vol at the back of the store; they alio considered the poisiblllty of He curing a site on the hill, but for tl uncial reasons and on account of the high cost of building material they have decided to go back us they were. The outside of the upper story of the new building will have no ec coleslastlcal appearance whatever; it will simply be a plain business block. The auditorium will be constructed so that the Sunday school room can be opened into It on extra occasions, nccomodatng a large audience. Later It a church Is built on a new site these rooms can readily be par titioned off into office for rental. SOCIALISTS SORRY FOR REDS CHICAGO, Jan. 8. The Socialist party from Its national headquarters today Issued a statement deploring the raid against radicals. The ar rests were termed "the greatest blow yet struck at the pennanence 01 HERE FOR DfSTRIBUTIfON OF hOVER HIS SAFETY r t'npial. jm B. Abtirnalhy, of Sou t He in partner, who was as sistant to ,i (llennon with the rank uf Hot. " coinuinder during the world wal .ho. was connected with the Fael. v Steamship Company for several year, I the son of Mr. May Aliernethy. a former resident ot Clackamas county, und whose home win at Jennings l odge. Captain Abernethy' home was also formerly of that place, and Is the grandson of the late Mr and Mrs Her rlmaii Jennings, early Oregon pioneers, from which the little settlement of Jen nlngs Udge receive Its name Hi mother Is a resident of Seattle, and I a cousin ot I'm.) M. , Vuru and Nellie Cautield, of this city Captain Abernethy, whose home is at Suuttle, was in command of the 5,500-ton tee steamship Kerwood of the Kerr Steamship Company of Nw York when she struck a mine and wa lost off the Netherlands coast Decem ber 8. but all lives were saved from word received by Hie anxious mother and brother, Don Abernethy, who hi Just returned to Seattle after serving as .0. 1 mate In the Shipping Hoard steamship West Imboden during a voyage to Italy He made the trip to tlenoa. This Is the second marine casualty experienced by Captain Abernethy, as he was mat on the teamer Stat of California when tht veisel wn wrecked in Hainbler llay, AUika, In 1 913 He Ion Hostile nearly a yeur ago, sailing the Amos steamship Western Ally. After arriving on the Eastern coast, Csptaln Abernethy took com mand of the Kerwood. a former Aus trian carrier. At the time of attending the I'urk place chool near Oregon City little did the young man ever realise he would ever command a big vessel al though at that time he had the desire to go to aa at ome future dat. The steamship In which he wa In command and sunk b y a mine went to It destruction an hour after striking the mine, and the crew wus saved by fishermen and landed at h'mdeu. The young man Is well remembered by hi many friend at Parkplace and at Jennings I .ode... who were pleased to bear of hi aafety. IS CUT OUT BY 1 Nearly $100,000 Increase will be rulsed by taxation In Clackamas equi ty, according to figures madd public Monday, the total or the 1920 budget being $647,XN5, a against $550,402.03 Inst year. The heavy Increase Is due to the market mads measure, under which the county made a levy of one mill for the slate, equal to about $29,000, and a county levy of $.16,000 to more than match It. The county court, In its final tie termination of the budget, made sev eral alternations from the orlglnul budget that was presented to the tax payer meeting The Item of $500 each for the home demonstration agent and the Hoys nntl Olrls Club work, increased nl the taxpayers meeting to $1500, were eliminated en tirely, as was the $200 increase for traveling expenses of the county school superintendent, the original Item of $300 being fixed by law. The salaries of the second deputy In the tax collecting department and the second and third deputies in tno county clerk's office were increased from $85 to $90 per mouth. From the budget of the sheriff's office a special deputy allowance of $900 was eliminated, and the traffic officer wa transferred to the sheriff's office, with nn allowance of $2000. The Horn for investigating crime, automobile hire and traveling ex penses was Increased from $1400 to $2300. All other recommendations made by the taxpayers at the budget meeting were approved by the county court, including the half mill levy for engineering on roads to bo im proved under the bonding act. The court learned that there will be approximately $12,000 on hand In the general fund when the taxes be gin to come in next spring, and this surplus enabled the court to find funds to meet this recommendation. The state tax for Clackamas county amounts to $149,907. M'ADOO 18 OUT OF IT WASHINGTON, Jan. 6. William Q. McAdoo will not enter the Democratic primary for the presidential nomina tion. He is not even in a receptive mood and will shun the party mantle If he sees it falling his way. Though the position of the former secretary of the treasury and director general of railways has been causing much speculation in Democratic ranks and much concern to the Democratic aspirants, it Is learned that he has determined to stay out of politick. Mr McAdoo is- the only Democratic alblll Y Concerning Mr. Hagemann H. W. Hagemann, who is evidently losing sleep over his ambition to become deputy road master for District No. 5, waxes wroth over a news story in a rec ent issue of The Enterprise, in which it was stated that many of his neighbors were opposed to his aspirations and he requires one and one-half columns in the last is sue of our esteemed contemporary, the Banner-Courier, to tell the people the real situation. Let us say at the outset, for the benefit of Mr. Hage mann and those who play his game, that we have the same interest in the welfare of District No. 5 as we have in other districts, and no more. We certainly have no personal interest in the appointment of any deputy road master. That is the business and the responsibility of the county court. It is our duty, however, as as newspaper, to print from time to time any matters of concern to the people of this county, and we shall be forced to disregard, al together, the feelings of Mr. Hagemann. We will leave that gentleman to the tender mercies of his neighbors, who know him better than we do and who have been keeping this office hot with protests ever since he was known to be a candidate. We never did like a quibbler. The tact that Mr. Hagemann personally did not file a petition for his ap pointment has little to do with the statement. The peti tion was filed by Mr. Kohl and we have yet to hear from Hagemann that he was not fully aware of what was going on in his' behalf. Hagemann may have a right as a citizen, to be an aspirant for deputy road master. The fact that he has fought every special tax levy in his district for years makes him poor timber. The fact that he does not en joy the confidence of his neighbors is nothing to his credit. His hide is so thin that he rises in his indignation because it was stated in a newspaper that his own peo ple are protesting against his political activity. The people of Logan district question his conduct and his attitude in relation to very recent events, which is a question we do not care to pass upon without investiga tion. Mr. Hagemann does not deny that he attempts to control the road district meeting, nor does he deny he seeks to control the road affairs of his district. We be lieve that the general atttitude of his own immediate neighbors is such that he would at least lack the co operation necessary to do efficient work. HEARING HELD MONDAY ON BRIDGE PLANS At a hearing in the Commercial club rooms Monday morning before the district United Slate engineer and hlti assistants, the plans ot the new bridge acroes the Willamette river connecting Oregon City and West Linn were submitted, with reference to the clearance above water ot the proposed structure. Capt. R J. Young, of the Willamette Navigation Co.. and Captain I, W. Exou represented the river steamboat interest. The new bridge will have about the same clearance a the present struc ture, with probably a greater clear ance at the west end. where the chan nel runs. The hearing was largely a formal ity that is usual pending the con. st ruction of a new bridge over ja navigable stream. PRINTER IS INVENTOR RAYMOND, Wash., Jan. 5. O. E. Kennedy, mechanical superintendent of the Raymond Herald, has perfect ed nn automatic space-band cleaner to attach to the linotype machine which he says will clean and polish a full set ot thirty spacebauds in five min utes. Mr. Kenedy has applied for a patent. General Pershing Surrounded by Crowd in Laclede, Mo., has welcomed Gener - al John J. Porshln, M'NARY SUGAR BILL SIGNED BY PRESIDENT WASHINGTON. Jan. 1. President Wilson has signed the McNary bill ex tending for one year the life of the sugar equalisation board, it was an nounced at the White House today. At the same time a statement was is sued at the White House saying that it is doubtful whether It will be prac icable for the president to use the power conferred so far as to the pur chase and distribution ot sugar are concerned. This would still leave in operation the power to control prices, which, according to the statement is sued by Secretary Tumulty, have reached their peaks. Unless the president had approved the McNary bill .the sugar equaliza tion board would have passed out of existence today. At the White House it was said the president had signed the measure before midnight. ISLANDS FEEL QUAKE MADRID. Jan. 5. Earthquake shocks were felt in the interior of the Canary islands yesterday, ac cording to dispatches from Las Palmos. Great crevices were opened in the earth, from which columns of smoke are Issuing. A volcanic erup tion is feared. 1 monies and formalities, but the com - ... i t to 111 Old nnme i mann-- . - r.---L Can Run Autos With Residue of Wood Pulp, Says Canadian Official That Canadians soon will be run ning 'heir automobiles on denatured alcohol instead of gasoline is the pre diction ot Professor A. B Macallum, administrative chairman of the Honor ary Advisory Council for ScienUc and Industrial Research. He says that Canada's pulp mills, by ptillxing the sulphite liquor, could supply 5,000.000 gallons annually. T A 'PRETTY PENNY' WASHINGTON. Jan. 3 A grand total of 127.920.300 for prohibition en forcement and to carry the campaign into other countries of the world is what the budget of the anti-saloon league provides for the next year, ac cording to the American Issue. Of this sum 118.360.000 will be ex pended within the United States in law enforcement periodicals, books, pamphlets, personal canvassing, mass meetings and other details; $6,860. 300 will go for pan-American prohibi tion in Mexico, the West ludies. Cen tra, and South America and $2.00.000 will be expended for world prohibi tion. The world league against alcohol ism will undertake the . crusade in Scotland, Scandinavian countries, Japan, South Africa and other nations. KAISER AND FAMILY EXTRADITION PLANS LONDON. Jan. 3. The former Ger man crown prince, who has been spending the holidays with his par ents, the ex-kaiser and kalserin, near Amerongen, took part in family coun cils which reached decisions regard ing the extradition of the former em peror for trial, said a dispatch from The Hague to the Daily Mail today. The ex-kaiserin's hope tor recon ciliation between the former kaiser and his son has been blocked by the meager allowance which William is giving his son. Home Town in Missouri 1 here, the centre ot an admiring crowd YOUNG PEOPLE ESCAPE BIF DEATH AS Walter I .arson, Lloyd Junken and Mis Elie Snidow, well known young people of Willamette, met with a miraculous escape from death at Sa lem on Sunday afternoon, when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by a Southern Pacific train. The young men were accompanying Mi Snidow to Monmouth, where i.he was to resume her studies at the Ore gon SUte oNrmal, having but on more month to complete her ourse at the institution, and as the road runs parallel along the S. P. track until it reaches the crossing near the fair grounds. The curtain of the automobile woto drawn and the weather being some what foggy, the young man driving the car failed to see the train coming toward the crossing, and was not aware of the incoming train until he had driven his car onto the track in making the crossing. He endeavored to clear the track, but the engine struck the rear wheels of the automo bile, and threw the car about 125 feet from the track, throwing the young people from the car. l.ar-on and Junken received pain ful bruises, the former receiving a severe gash on the head, necessitat ing a number of stitches to close the weund. Miss Snidow suffered two fracture of the arm, and it was first thought she wa internally Injured, but after a thorough examination at the Salem hospital, where she was conveyed soon after the accident occurred, it was found that she wa suffering from a broken arm and from the shock. She is reported to be resting easily at the hospital and will be able to re turn to her home at Willamette about Wednesday afternoon. Miss Snidow is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Snidow, of Will amette, whose brother. George Sni dow, was killed in France about two years ago. Mr. Larson ly the son of Mr. and Mr. Olaf Larson, of Willamette. Mr. Junken is the son of Mr. and Mrs R A Junken, being a well known contractor of Willamette. The Chevrolet car is demolished. and is owned by the Larson family. January Looks Like Big Taxpaying Month January being considered a dull month in the tax collection office ot the sheriff office. Tuesday's mail brought in $1200 for the payment ot taxe on property in Clackamas county. I. I). Taylor, tax collector, and his assistants. Miss Jessie Paddock and Miss Ona Renner, have been busily engaged in checking up since the last rush in the tax department. Miss Renner will commence her duties again in February when the first payment of the 1919 taxes are to be received at the office. The tax levy for 1919 will be 48 mills. 42 hav ing been for the year of 1918. During the month of Decembei $1 2.000 was received in the office for taxes LAUREN KNOPP SERIOUSLY HURT IN COLLISION ljuren Knopp. about 19 years old, is at his home with a fractured skull and in a serious condition as the re sult of a collision between his motor cycle and a Clackamas county road auto truck Saturday morning at Fourteenth and Main streets Gerald Warner, a county employe, was driv ing the truck. According to George Morey of Clack amas station and others who saw the accident, Knopp approached Main street at high speed. He was taken to his home where an examination was made. Knopp, according to the police, has a record for speeding, aud about a year ago his motorcycle was taken away from him and kept at the city hall for a time. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Knopp of Fifteenth and Washington streets. He is an employe of the Miller-Parker company. At a late hour Saturday night the father said the son was resting easier than in the afternoon but that he haa not yet regained coscioueess. Lauren Knopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Knopp, who met with ser ious injuries on Saturday when he was riding a motorcycle and was struck by one of the county's heavy trucks, is still in a precarious condition at the Oregon City hospital, and still re mains unconscious. Knopp has many friends in this city who have been much interested in his condition. He was removed from the Knopp home on Washington and Fifteenth street Sunday morning to the hospital, and is being attended by Drs. Mount BUBONIC PLAQUE IN UKRAINE BUCHAREST, Jan. 5. Bubonic plague is epidemic in The Ukraine, according to report BIG FORTUNE EACH DAY GOES OUT WITH IE IN PULP WATER Not many people In Oregon realize that there are more than $5,000 float ing down the Willamette river Into the Columbia and out to the sea ev -ry day, and yet that Is just what I happening every time the hands of the clock spin around the hours of a day. Every place where wood pulp mills are located with the exception of one in Kimberly. Wisconsin, the same condition obtain, and the only reas on that it Is not happening In this one place Is because that mill is utilising to some extent at least the waste water from their sulphite mill. Canadian mill experts and the chemists in paper mills throughout this country and Canada know of these condition and right now are working to the end that this wastage be stopped. One Canadian authority whose picture ia nsed herewith state that in Canada alone the pulp mills could produce 5.000,000 gallon of ethyl or wood alcohol annually from the waste sulphite water. Mr. H. R Heuer. chemist of the Hawley Pulp & Paper company was seen Tuesday by a representative ot the Enterprise and was asked about this matter. He then gave out the fol lowing statement. 'It is very true that a great deal ot valuable material is contained in the waste sulphite water from the pulp mills. The wood is put Into re torts in small granulated particles and here It is treated chemically to extract obnoxious substances such as turpentine. Great quantities of water are used in this process. In the Kimb erly mill this water is drawn off into vats, fermented and distilled and this process gives the by-product commercially known as wood alcohol. "Wood alcohol. It is estimated by some of the great chemists of the country, can be produced by distilla tion at a cost not to exceed 18 cents per gallon, whereas it is now quoted locally at $1.50 per gallon. "It is estimated also that about one per cent denatured alcohol can be secured by distilling the sulphite water. In our own mill this would amount to about 1.200 gallons of alcohol per day and at the Crown Willamette the utput would be In the neighborhood of 1.600 gallons per day. "Wood alcohol is only one of the numerous by-products which could be taken from this waste water that is now going out into the river. Not many people know that the famous TNT perhaps the most powerful ex plosive known to mankind, is one of the by-products from this sulphite water Manufacturers even make per fumery from this water. "The great hindrance to the sav ing of these by-products is the great expense attached to the Installing of a plant to effect the saving ot the by-products. In the wool alcohol mat ter, with out output it would be neces sary to build hundreds of tanks in which to store the water for a suf ficient length of time to permit it fermentation before being distilled. "The saving of these by-products, however, is one of the big things that the paper men of this nation are now seriously considering and I predict that the day Is not far distant when raipd strides in the elimination of this? waste will be taken." TAX LEVY FOR OREGON CITY IS FORTY EIGHT MILLS Clackamas county's tax levy will be 22.2 mills, an increase of 3.3mills over last year, and the tax levy In Oregon City will be 48 mills, while that of West Linn will be 50.2 mills. All road districts of the county, ex cept District No. 1, will have a levy of 32.2 mills, plus the special school district levy and the general high school levy of .002 mills on all prop erty outside of high school districts. Gladstone will have a levy of 40.2 mills, and Milwaukie 49.2 mills. West Unn has not only the general county levy, but a special city levy, a spec ial school district levy and a special union high school levy. CAMPAIGN OPENED ..CHICAGO, Jan. 5 N H. Fairbanks, chairman of the Ohio Republican State Central committee, opened tem porary headquarters here yesterday for the campaign of Senator Warren G. Harding, of Ohio, for the pres idential nomination, and announced