OREGON CITY COURIER- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1902. t)REGON CITY COURIER Published by OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING CO. J. H. Wfstover, Editor and Bmlness Manager, R. LEE Wsstovhb, Local Editor. Watered In Oregon i:ity Puetoffloeas 2nd-cla8 matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. "Paid in advance, per year 1 50 -Six mintln 75 ' fliree monlhu'trial 25 Clubbing Rate. " Oregon City Courier and Weekly Orefronian .12.26 Oregon City Courier and Weekly Courier Journal 2.00 "Oregon City Courier and Weekly Examiner.. 2.50 Oregon-Clty Courier and the Cosmopolitan... 2.2o Oregon City Courier aud the Commoner...... lt.00 TTif'The, dale opposite your addresi on the pnper acnoies ine rime to wnio". you nare paia. k mis noticetg marked yonr subscription u due. OREGON OITY, NOV. 28, 1902. A Texas old maid lias adopted a girl baby.. Barely tlie necessity for such po tion couiu nave neen prevented. "Thk industry of President Roose "velt" says a repablican organ "is, re markable, lie tins already done most of 3iis work for 1904." He ought therefore o have considerable time now, to de vote t the work of his office. The new Republican senator from Utah will be a Mormon and a Republi can. With Mormonism in Utah, Tay 'iorism in Kentucky and Booker vVaBhingtonism in the White House, what Republicanism stands for is a plenty. Thk President now hopes to secure a tariff reduction of 25 per cent on Cuban imports while Cuba v ill in no instance lower her tariff but will advance it 50 per cent on imports from all coun tries except the United States. This is a specimen of the republican idea of "making Cuba free." ' A reader, asks authority for the state silent that lead pencils are sold to for 'eifin dealers for one half what they are .priced to American dealers. The figures :are taken from the catalogues of the Dixon Pencil Company, which is one of the four concerns which monopolize the Jfcrnde in this country. Attorney Wilcox attempted to BtU' ipify President Mitchell with the state' 'ment that the increased wages demand' d by the miners would amount to $12,' '000,000, added to the running expenses of the mines, but Mr. Mitchell promptly replied by calling the attorney's atten tion to the fact that that would mean vnot over 35 cents per ton (increase at most. 'Tub Oregonian with its usual lucid i'ity figures out that the Democrats will Lave no chance to carry a National elec tion and place a Democrat in the White House until 1908. It costs nothing to 'become a prophet in these days; but Hi ere are breakers ahead for the G. O P. and an united Democracy in 1904 may shove forward the date the Oregonian has fixed by a full four years. If Roose velt does not succeed in getting the Re publican party to reform itself within the next few months long before 1904 it will have pulled its temple of power 3own upon its own head. Abe Lincoln was wiser than his day aud generation when he enid "You can fool all of the people a '.part of the time and a part of the people all of the time; but you can't fool all ol the people all of the time." The Republican party has been trying to fool all of the people all of the time. The storm of righteous wrath by an out raged people whose luritagehas been sold to the money powe.' and to corpor ate greed inny break lonir before 1904, Theebt title of Republicanism is about to set in and we shall see what we shall ste. In itH comments upon the assessment roll of Clackamas county for the current year in the last ismie the Coi'iiikh did iK)t mean to cast any tellection upon the administration of the Assessor's ollice. We have no doubt that the Assessor's olltce in this county has been adminis tered accoiding to law and that Mr. Williams, the present Assessor, has per formed the duties of his ollice as well and possibly better than any Assessor in the state of Oregon. It is the results and not the work to which we call the attention of our readers. It is not criii vism of an oll'ic'ial's work. He is oily following in beaten paths. An Asnt'ssor who knows not hi mi of the value of rail road, telephone and telegraph property and franchise rights ouglit not to be re- quired to pass judgment thereon and lix values upon something of which he knows nothing. It is the law which makes the conditions possible that is to blame. If a citizen has $10,000 in coin of the realm and assesses but $100 there ought to be, if there is not some method uf rt aching his herd. Mr. Williams has no doubt followed in the footsteps of his predecessors in making his assessment and has done as others have done before him, The result reached, however, ought to put every intelligent man in Clackamas county to thinking and pos. e b'.y menus can be advised to remedy an evil that is apparent to all. A WORO TO WISE. We may not nudersMnJ the condi 'fioi s o' public sjniimeir .n this county nd as "stranger in a stMn.-e country" we ouuht not be expected to r.nderBtand them. There is no reason why we ought to criticise things we know to be palpa-1 bly wrong. We are not here to find fault. We believe "in living and let live." We have found the people here magnanimous and cosmopolitan. Wre like '.hem and will cultivate their ac quaintance more and more as the days go by. In the meantime we will pub lish the Courier along Democratic lines. We believe in Democracy straight. We think it 's the only salvation for the country in the future. We do not be lieve in isms and eide issues. Our pol icy shall be always to keep "in the mid dle of the road" politically speaking and keep this sheet clean and above reproach. We shtll not vilifv or abuse but will criticise as we see fit. Ifour Republican friends in office or out do anything they ought not to do, they n.ay find the Cour ier camping on their trail. We like to have our friends and political opponents come in and talk to us. Because we are a Democrat and publishing a Demo cratic paper, whose columns are not for sale and whoso influence can not be bought, is no reason why we should not treat the opposition with becoming court esy and give them all they are entitled to in a newspaper way. We shall only tell the truth about them and God knows that is bad enough. We hope to be helpful to the Democrats in this county, we have a right to expect them to help us. We desire to do all in our power to build up the waste places of this part of the earth and in this laudable enter prise we ought to have the help of all men regarf'esa of parly. We will do our part, w4,i you do yours? THE DEMOCRATIC LEADER. The immediate future will be largely occupied by the forgivings of demo cratic opinions as to the future leader ship of the party. It is already accept ed by the most influential newspapers of the party that the recent elections have served to eliminate from the list of ehgibles the names of a number of gen tlemen who have been boomed by their too partial friends as being of Moses Wisdom and dimensions. The democratic party is not hunting any Moses. It is neither bound in the brickyards of the Pharaohs nor wander ing in the wilderness without water or flesh for its po s. It is in the field, hand to hand with the Amalekites of auto cracy, aristocracy and up-Americanism. It has its courage with it in full fervor ; it knows now its issue of battle without further delineat and what it needs is a Joshua who can lead the host with confidence and even make the sun stand Btill while the foes of the people, the , destroyers of eqaal rights, and the per verters of American der.ocratic govern ment are put to consummate route 1 Whether that Joshua will be found in the ranks of some who have grown gray bearded in the service of the party or in some new man of recent significance as a J democat ot wisdom, conservatism and , public confidence, we do not yet know, Nobody does know. But that, when found, he will be acclaimed bv a united ! democracy we do uot allow ourselves to doubt. He will be one whose past rela tions to party questions will at least command the verdict that he was hon est and patriotic in purpose, And he will be one who has the principles and the character that will of themselves commend him to the American people as one worthy of leadership and safe to be trusted in the highest ollica ot the na tion. We do not here diverge to discuss in dividuals. The questions of the future with which the democracy has to grap ple and do are not those that will yield to hero-worship or bend their exigen cies to exalt personal ambitions. The public weal is involved in a most vital way in the great reforms of governme nt which the people are. increasingly rec ognizing as necessary aome of them of utmost urgency. It is our opinion that two years more of experience will co tvince them of the paltering and perfunctory purposes of the republican leaders and then the masses will turn to the democratic party as the only physician of their ills. When that day arrives the people should find ready a party united, dignified in pur poses and solidly committed to policies that are sound in Americanism and safe in all their p'ouuses. i-or such a party a leader will not be lacking who can command a conquering campaign and win a timely victory. THE REFUGE OF ROOSEVELT. Now comes the president with a plea of confession and avoidance with respect to the verdict of the late elections and the duty imposed upou himself, with impulsive truth, that tl e Republicans have been retaiued iu full power that they may be without excuse hereafter if they fail to afford the people relief from the oppressions of trusts and mo- nopolie.s. lie realizes tbat there is on that subject no divided responsibility, ! no chance of cross purposes, no escape by charging the evils of the case up to the Democrats. But how does the president propose to meet the situation? Most men would promptly say, judging from his vaunted courage and frankness of character, that he will at once commend to congress a j prompt revion o! the ta.m and the . . . . iel UK uut u. .!., oii.ruuia mm litis j too evideutly become the shelter of' trusts and monopolies I That is the plain, ' straightforward course that nine of any ten honest men would bukbhc and Dre- fer. But that is exactly what the nreei- dent announces he positively will not dol Prenideut Roosevelt says that the tar iff and the trust questions are two issues In his opinion they do not work under the same yoke and must only be dealt with separately each injts season and after methods essentially different. In fact, the president is already hedging and trying to postpone the evil day of having to do something radical and tangible to satisfy growing popular de mands. 4s to the tariff, the president intends to recommend a commission a vaue and irresponsible body of men who will absorb all the time they are commanded in making "investigations" and recom mending tariff'adjustments " Of course, this will be a most attractive tub to throw to the whale an' enable the presi dent and his party to claim immunity from taiiff action of any cort until after the next election. Clever scheme is it not? And, then, as to trusts, how excellent is the plan of setting the attorney gen eral after them in the courts courts that are happily selected for their abil ity to delay action on the real issues in the cases until after 1904 1 Aud with these thin and almost insultlr g subter fuges the Republican party will seek to escape doing anything for the relief of the people until the people shall have given them four years more of power, or bodily kicked them off the earth in sheer disgust of their duplicities ! GOOD ROADS. There is no more importaut question before the American public this day than the subject of good roads. It is a ques tion that apptala to every neighborhood and to every citizen alike. It is a ques tion that is non-political and non-sectarian. It has neither party nor creed, yet it appeals to all. The roads of every country are index to its civilisation, and a monument to its progressiveness. In older sections of the country, where the population i? dense and the people are rich, we of course expect to find better roads than in a new country where the population is sparse and the people have not become fixed to the soil. There is one thing that it always pays to do well in building roads in any country and that is to build them for the future, build them on the latest scientific prin ciples, with approved labor saving ma chinery, and build them for "keeps." Millions have b.en wasted in every eec- tion ot the country in building roads in a "slip shod" manner. Poorly built roads wear out in a few years and it costs more to maintain them and keep them in repair from year to year than the first cost of their construction, Clackamas county has much to learn in road building. Her territory is large and in many p'aces in the county the building of the roads is very expensive. Yet withal it pays to do what we do in this line well. Build for the future. Wherever a new road is put in build it of material that will stand for all time to come. Build it for our children and grandchildren. The old Romans knew something about the building of roads. In many parts of the Italian peninsula there are today roads in fairly go rd re pair built by them more than fifteen centuries ago. It is wasteful extrava gance to build poor roads. Money to put into them is money thtown away. It is bStter to build fewir miles end build what you do build well. It will take millions of dollars to build the right kind of roads In this valley. It is beet to begin now and build them r ight. Build slow but build for th.- generations yet unborn, for the hordes of people that will in time to come plant their homes iu this valley. That which is worth doing at all is worth doing well and it is cheaper in the long run. Turn pike aud gravel roads are possible in this conn y if built along scientific prin cipals and built to shed water: and pub lic sentiment should be crystalized around the question of good roads until their construction v ill be possible. County olliciala are not pioneers in this or any other line. They are as a rule content to follow in the beaten paths. Titey will not bla.e the way. If this county is to have better roads it will come because there is in the county a healthy public sentiment th.tt demands them. What say the people? Pro Bono Pulico. TuANKsiiIvino day is a blessing and a benediction. It is the time of harvest and nlentv. It. ifi Htl 1 11 Hi i t II 1 I rin it inn- alin character ami universal in ot- eervauce. v ell may we be thankful for all of the good thing the Loid has vouchsafed unto us. For health and happiness, fur abundant crops, for full granaries, (or abundance of woi k to do, for happy homes and contented families. In this year of our Lord ll02 the "Horn of Plenty " has been inverted over this valley and we should indeed be thankful and render praises unto him "Who doeth all things well." Timber Men Wanted. Tvto hundred timber men to make piliiH. Twentv foremen. Hurhest waees. '!! 1.. ! .1. !-..!. rn: " ; ''J Cottage Urove, On aim 1 V T...I., PACIFIC TIM'ltER CO I'v M. 1! Sii.snv, AVt Acc't. 0. D. & D. C. LATOURETTE ATTORNEYS AT LAW fhmmercial, Real Estate and Probate law Specialties Offlce In Commercial Bank Building OREGON CITY ; , OREGON COMMERCIAL BANK of OREGON CITY CAPITAL $100,000 Transacts a general banking business Makes loans and collections, discounts bllis boys and sells domestic and foreign exchange, and receives deposits subject to check. Open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. LiATOUBETTE, 1 1- ...dent F. J. Meteb Cashie C. N- THE GREENMAN PIONEER EXPRESSMAN (Established 1865) Prompt delivery to all parts of the city OREGON ClTt OREGON J)R. GEO. HOEYE DENTIST All work warranted and satisfaction guaranteed Crown and Bridge work a speoialty Oaufleld Building OREGON CITY OREGON )R. FRANCIS FREEMAN DENTIST Graduate of Northwestern University Dental School, also of American College of Dental Surgery. Chicago Willamette Block OREGON CITY OREGON E. H. COOPER, ' Notary Pudlic. Real Estate and Insurance, Titles Exam ined, Abstracts Made, Deeds, Mort gages, Etc., Drawn. With J. W. Loder, Stevens Building, Oregon Cky, Ore. Q E. HAYES ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Building, opp. OREGON CITY Bank of Oregon City OREGON QEO. T. HOWARD NOTARY PUBLIC REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE At Red Front OREGON CITY Court House Block OREGON QRANT B. DIMICK Attorney and Counselor at Law Will practice in all Courts In the State, Circuit and District Courts of the United States. Insolvent debtors taken through bankruptcy. Offloe in btevens Building, Oregon City, Or. J. W. Norms, M. D. J. W. Powell. M. D. flORRIS & POWELL, Physicians and Surgeons. Calls in city orcoutitry promptly attended Offlce: 1, 2, 17, Charman Bros. Block, Oregon City. JJOBERT A. MILLER ATTORNEY AT LAW O. D. EBY, NOTARY PUBLIC. Ral Estate bought and sold, money loaned titles examined and abstracts made cash paid or county warrants. Probate and commissioners' court business and Insurance. ROOM 3, WEINHARD BUILDING OREGON CITY, - - - - OREGON, 0. 8CHUEBEL W. S. U'REN JJREN & SCUUEBEL ATTORNEYS AT LAW $eutftr Slbnofal Will practice in all courts, make collections Mid settlements of estates, furnish abstracts of title, lend you uionw and lend your money on Srst mortgage. Offloe in Enterprise building. OREGON CITY OREGON E , I. SIAS DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY Silverware and Spectacles OANBY OREGON Vf. n. Youxcrs Livery & feed Stab.a FintstTurnouts in City O&EGON CITY. OREGON S. J. VAUGHAN'S Livery, Feed and Sale Stables Nearly opposite Suspension bridge First-Class Rigs of All Kinds OREGON CITY, OREGON ACKER'S j DYSPEPSIA TABLETS cures dyspepsia and all dieordpri arising from Ind gpstlon. Kudorsed by phwiciaus everywhere (old by all dronxistti. No otire no pay; 2Snt Trial packatre free by writing to W. H. looker & 0., Bultato, N. Y. DR. KINC'S try new DISCOVERY FOR THAT COLD. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Cures Consumption.Couerhs. Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, d. : ii r ri . ! i.llt :"iiiuiiia,liajrx ffr, 1 ! HSV. LatTrmnP. Iloai'SOnfiSS. ' " ' Throat, CfOlip and U :.u, n. fnrrf. NO CURE. tSOPAY. i les 50c. and $ t . TS'l BOTTLES FRE6 Brunswick Hi use and Restaurant NEWLY Fl'BNISHEP SQ0M8 Meals at All Hours Open Day and Night Prices Reasonable Only First Class Restaurant in the City CHAS CATTA, Prop. Opposite Suspension Bridge OREGON CITY, ORE. I POPE & CO. I HEADQUARTERS FOR Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, t Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles. PLUMBING A SPECIALTY Cor. Fourth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY : The Flour of the Family m w The flour of all the Oregon City families is "Patent" flour. The intelligent house wife always gets "Patent" flour because, it is better and more ecomonical to use Made in Oregon City by the Portland Flouring Mills Co. f I m m lamJjiiiiilfc.iiiiifr lit til. iHij.iMillli 'in i)flhmiimi;i,i' 1 MM SHANK & BISSELL, Und ERTAKERS ones4iianc! 304. "'"V w 'TF"i)T"l"ff flliyliffi'"iian''ifii CHARMAN t Saves You Money: c Thre is not an item in the money Dy getting it nere. If we sold you a poor grade at a less price you would be sav ing nothing. In fact, poor drugs at any price is the most expensive form of economy. Here you take no chances everything is of the quality you want. That1 is the greatest satisfaction in buying anything of us it is right as to quality. The next satisfaction is, you pay less for the pure article here than you do for the poor article elsewhere. Better get what you want by getting it here. SO EE E TiRYDAY PRI CES : "BrOtttO Eax"ccste,co'ds Price, 25c. and la grippe, a boy To the users of BROMO LAX we are going to "ive a 1 G U Alt AXTKIH ) GOLD WATCH FREE. Call and get particulars. criAimAr & co. City Drug Store, Cut Price Druggists. Mail orders solicited ."5 GET YOUR MONEY'S WORTH Money we're so often told is the root of all evil, ye; who of us have not wished at times we might have a few cords of the root. But instead of the idle wishing prudent people look closer after their expenditures. Right here we can help you. We covet confidence and challenge competition. A. Robertson, 7th St. Grocer. fl Min.1ili.iliiii,idlliii,i,iiai iH u,lti .nBi,rnllCt We carry the only complete line of Caskets, Coffins, Robes and Linings in Ulackamas County. We have the only Firs-t Class Hearse in the County, which we will furnish for less than can be had elsewhere. Embttlmirf? a Specialty. Our prices always reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed . Main St., Opp. Huntley's. , f pi piuf if i y''iyf'i.ipiHiiCTin p.i. yn Brown & Welch i PKOI'RIKTORS OF TflK Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON j drug liue but that you can save t Phone 13.