r OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 231899. OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. CHENEY Publisher Oatiaias County Inftejenflent, Canly ABSORBED MAT, 1899 legal and Official Newspaper Of Clackamas County. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Eteit 1 In Oregon City poitofflce H 2nd-clss matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. . niUln advance, per year.... 1 50 x aintbi 75 trae mo nlhi' trial - 25 lTBW"The date opposite your address on the pjer acnoies me time to wmcn you nave paia. If (his notice is marked your subscription It due. r : ADVERTISING SATES. fltandine business adrertlsemeota: Per month I inch SI, 2 inches 11.50, 8 Indies 11.75, 4 inches S2, ft inches (column) r2.25, 10 inehes(colnmn) 4, 20 inches (column) tit, yearly contracts 10 per cent lees. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 Inch Oe. 2 inchee 75c, 8 inches 11,4 Inches 11.26,6 inches S1.60, 10 Inches 12.50, 20 inches S5. Legal advertisements: Per inch first Inser tlon SI. each additional insertion 50c. Affllavils of publication will not be furnished until pub lication Ices are paid. . Local notices; Five cents per line per week per month 20o, PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON OITY, JUNE 23, 1899. An American Internal Policy. Tibst Public ownership ol public franchises. The values crea'.ed by the community should be long to the caminunity. .Second Destruction of criminal trusts. No monopolization of the national resources by law less private combinations more powerful than tbe people's government. Third A graduated luoome tax. Every oitlson to contribute to the support of the government it cording to his means, anil not aqpordlng to his ne cessities. Toubtii Eleotlon of senators by the people. The senate, now beoomlngthe private property of corporations aud bosses, to be made truly ropre i sentathe, and lie state legislatures lo be redeemed frs recurring soandals. Twin National, state and municipal Improve ment of the public school system . As the duties ol citizenship are both general and local, every government, both general and looal, should do Its share toward fitting every individual to per. form them. Sixth Currency reform. All the nation's money to be Issued by the nation's government, and Its supply to be rogulated by the people and not by the banks. Direct LxaisLATioN-Lawnrnklng by the voters. The Initutivb The proposal of a law by a per Cfiiitage of the voters, which must then go to the referendum. Ta RxFEHKNDUM- The vote at the polls of a law proposed through the Initiative, or on any law passed by a lawmaking body, whose refer ence Is petitioned lor by a percentage of the Voters. ' " 1 DOUBLE-L. P. The senator from Marion county tie votes about half of last week's editorial column in his personal organ to the Courier-Herald. He made several state ments which he cannot prove, and which he knows are false, just because he is still sore over the county printing which he did not get. We all know that the new commissioner bill was passed because Lawyer Porter wanted the printing and Brownell didn't want Judge Ryan. Bro, Porter is crying "stop thief" to cover up his dirty work in connection with the aforesaid bill. If he thinks that he has a larger sub scrlption list than this paper, or does more'legitimate business,let him put up $100 to cover our $100, and we will com pare lists with him, the loser to give his money to some charitable institution. Put up or shut up. ( t He talks about our paying low wages when at the rate we pay our men make $1.60 per day, while ha pays one of his hands but 60 cents a day, after working three years' in the office. Perhaps $1.) a day does seem small .beside of $2500 for a single vote in the legislature. i Pity we can't all, be lawyers and politicians so we can feather our nests. ' We are surprised to learn that Bro. P. has gone back on the idea of building a house "bigger'n Tom Ryan's," because lie lost the county printing. Why don't you show 'em that you got the stuff, senator? It appears that Mark M'Kinley and luuney uags are Haying a rather hard tussle with Bryan, bravery, and brains, .i..iair prospect that the B's will win m tiio end. ... is mere in the record of the "Duuiican party for the last twenty years to induce the people to believe it in earnest m its fight against the trusts? speak at once. Don't all The grand old republican ship of state with Mark Hanna as captain. Alger as wato, and with an unsavory cargo of embalmod beef, will have a very hard time trying to avoid Bryan snags in its next journey to the White House. 1.' . . t .1 r. oumooi me influential dailies of the country are very much worried at the present attitude of the adralnislr.it.inn towards civil eorviee reform. Evidently v.. i.uloUians oi uio public conscience .iave not yet learned that the present is nut a reionn administration. THE BULL PEN. The following resolutions were adopted and sent to President M'Kinley by a tremendous mass meeting held in San Francisco last week, to protest against the usurption of civil power and tbe trampling upon the constitutional rights by the federal military forces at Ward- ner and Shoshone county, Idaho : Whereas, The horrors of the Wardner "Bull Pen" and the unconstitutional acts of Governor Steunen berg and Brigadier General Merriam in their treatment of the parties suspected of complicity in the destruction of the Bunker Hill and Sul livan mill at Wardner, Idaho, continue in spite of protests from all parts of the country j and, Whereas, it is evident irom tne most reliable sourceB that Governor Steunen bere is a pliant tool of the mine-owners, emibined to e tablish industrial feuda' ism in Idaho; therefore, be it Resolved, By the Citizens' mass meet ing, called by the Labor Council and Building Trades' Council of San Francis co, that weuprotest against the suspen sion of the writ of habeas corpus in time of peace ; that we denounce the suppres sion of free speech and free press and the denial of "the right of combination ;" that we condemn the wanton brutalities of the "Bull Pen," and that we call up on all trades unionists and citizens in general to make similar protest; and, farther, be it Resolved. That we call upon President "c rriiiiBSt Ulfi I A for. nia Rnnrpaonfotit.Ac ..i wi. n . on lne assem bling of Congress, for a Congressional invea lga ion of the Wardner brutalities and, further, be it ' Resolved, That the Secretary of this r'K'I? fhese resolutions to Pres.- President McKinley says Cuba is held "in trnot ' TTrt -I i i . , "D mioum go to jew Jersey fl fobo nt.t- : .. J - ,, incorporation ninn,. "a. uie noiuing elTecti ve.-Denver Pnr As a politician Premdant M-.rrii-.. has always been ready to shift hi. n? tion whenever such a change promised the slightest advantage.-Chicago Dem- lib, The United States supreme court is ompes 'd of nine men, congress over 400 yet five members of the former body can annul the action ot the majority of con gres having the sanction of the prei. dent. Isn't this very nearly one man rule? Lift high the banner) Let angels sing! For on tho way from Manila, fs mother's uncrowned kins- wmW' ''"""'.well upheld er son. The republicans in nlmm., ot: , ii.,, "a w-u uai fu. in tneir platform show they be- nuumeiaie f. T. Barnum the American people love to be bugged." THE ELEVENTH HOUR. Under the above head the Ortgonian of June 19, published the following edi torial. It shows that the republicans are fearful of the result next year if they do not keep a few of their many prom ises: "It is exaperating to find republican politicians at this late day deprecating assertion of the gold standard and meas ures in its behalf. There might have been some excuse for their intelligence once when the gold standard was not popularly understood, though there was no excuse for their falseness. But the man who turns pale at the word "gold" today is a fool as well as a coward.' '- 'J The republican party was elected to power in 1896 to reform the currency. Bryan preached 16 to 1, which was onlv one line of assault upon the gold stand ard. But the republican Dartv stnnd inr something positive. It pledged itself to more than; resistance to free silver. It said : All our silver and paper currency must be maintained at parity with gold; and we favor all measures designed to main tain inviolably the obligations of the United States, and all our. money, wheth er coin or paper, at the piesent standard, the standard of the most enlightened na tions of the earth. It is three years ago yesterday since that pledge was given to the American people, and what has been done to re deem it? Absolutely nothing. "All our silver and paper currency must be main tained at parity with gold." But the currency cannot maintain itself. Under present laws, it is maintained only with great difficulty and cost. Sometimes the strain has all but broken the cable that bound us to a gold parity. The danger is with us yet. Something must be done to enact the gold standard safely and surely. Otherwise a panic or an election may send us to the silver basis. How do we know the United States intends to maintain its obligations invi olably at the present gold standard? We don't know it. Congress has been in ses sion much of the time in the past three years, and the only indication furnished as to the standard is the declaration of the senate that our obligations are paya ble in silver. The party that sought and obtained votes on its pledge to maintain the currency at parity with gold, its pledge in behalf of reformatory meas ures, has made no sign. It has been afraid to declare that the standard of value is the dollar of 23.22 grains of gold It has been afraid to say that the debts of the United States, bonds and curren-, cy, shall be paid in gold values. It has been afraid, and is afraid today, to say that the government should pay its green back war debt as soon as it can and turn - - . v uuuai iur dollar against the bonds thev ara ram,;,. ed to buy and deposit as security it afraid to permit establishment of hnb iu siiip.ii piaces where a capital of only $25,000 is required. It is airaid of all uneuB jnsi ana necessary thines it has promised to do because flatist delusions still exist among the voters. Men shrink from their duty through fear of losing a few votes, and they are credulous enough to suppose that those who believed in their pledges are unable to see thev hva been betrayed, and too spiritless to re sent the perfidy. For fear of losing a few silver votes that are out of their reach anyway, they are willing to offend the Roads and Politics. Hubbard, June 18. Editor Courier-Herald : I cannot refrain from complimenting you on the increasing interest your pa per is arousing in its correspondence columns. Whether it be a carefully thought out article on some important political subject from Mr. Ogle, letters like those in your last issue on impor tant local matters, or even those from irate medical men who are overflowing with jealousy and esthetic literature, these your readers relish much more than columns of personalities. The leading article of a paper express es the opinion of one' man "we," the editor, the' letter of a correspondent only his individual opinion, but when these evoke further correspondence from various sources it becomes possible to arrive at the sentiment of a community, and hence the increased space you are giving to correspondence should be of much value to present aDd prospective political leaders." 1 , ; ' ' :,v,:! "" There is also a public body entrusted with considerable power and responsi bility which ought to give heed to public sentiment, but this body (the board of commissioners) does not seem to regard the public very much. True when a man is elected to this board he is not thereby changed ; the voters cannot en dow him with sense or ability, and if incompetents are elected or appointed, the voters or appointors are to blame. If a commissioner sanctions the opening of a new road which should not, be opened, the costly repair of a road which a trifling outlay would repair, he is not fit for the office, as lit is lacking in sense or honesty, or both. Well, it is to be hoped that the actions of commissioners and other officials will be carefully scrutinized by the public and that fair criticism will find a place in your columns. Opinions will differ on men and matters, and when they be come fixed in type, it is not so difficult to get at the average or preponderating opinion. Take the present road system in the county as an example. One of your correspondents condemns it and in the same column another upholds it. You will doubtless hear more of this matter and may get sufficient data to deduct the average sentiment of the county on the subject. Perhaps I might venture here to ex press my individual opinion. I think the present road law is very unsatisfac tory and would prefer a return to the old system. I think, too, that every where in the county, with the exception of Oregon City and vicinity, the system generally looked upon with disfavor. As now carried out, it is both unjust aud wTrTf.T-j " a road tax were evled and expended by supervis- ... creation the roads in the county would be materially rmproved. He was not content with the ordinary v,soral system, but divided 2 , .uw lar8e restricts, appointing SUDervianro - . "'"""g I GREAT CLEARANCE SALE We realize that the summer season in our line of goods f is nearly over and not wishing to carry any stock over for another season especially as we need room for our Fall and Winter Stock which is now ready to be shipped from Eastern Manufacturers and will arrive about July ioth we will sell all our summer Stock at Manufacturing Prices. Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Shoes, Etc A Fine Line of Ties for Ladles' or Gent s The Latest We will call your attention to our line of Fine Pants the best in the city and will e sold at cost of manufacturing.! Don't miss the opportunity. . ; , ; , i . v -. -. ...,'.. A Specialty in Ladies' and Children's Shoes ' . Fine Ladies' Vici Kid Shoes Vesting Top, black or choclate, a good value $2.50, our price $2.00. . " , -, A very Fine Kid Hand Turn, black or choclate, the very latest style, a good i value $3.50, our price $2.50. 5 . . , , Otiwn in proportion. Come and see them. Alwavs willing to show goods, no matter if you buy today or not. Money refunded if goods not satisfactory. . ' ; - The Star Cotking House Strictly One Price House Harding; Block, Opposite Commercial Bank. Oregon City, Or. A. HECHTMAN, Manager big debt of gratitude to Mr. Meldrum for his introduction of the present road system. I did not admire the system which the present one replaced, but under it less harm was done, social relations were not embittered and the roads were a trifle better than they are now, and the over-taxed farmer could afford his labor better than his money. A. T. On Cariby Plains. Every maiden has her troubles, Every man likewise has his, But there's naught can match the agony Of the following story, viz : Ed. Up on Oanby plains, Where it rains, The water in the ditch did gather. I got some plank and put them together And took water one side of the road to the other, But it could not get no farther. The county paid my bill, But the water would not run up hill. It is no sin To put a bill in After work is begun If it is not half done. All supervisors are honest men, They do not know ThatontheIr8tonew r.nd And they pay fhe taxes. They think they must Dig in the duBt With eyes a blinking While we do thfiir ihf..i,s.. ...luniug, "upervisors of a hieh Pr,la .V " " salaries for these districts. The dZ T?" men we nomi are up to dat. . -j " lney want office thev Mm . that hum- About the only thing President McKin ley s Peace Commission seems to have accomplished in the Pl.ilin.,i... i i ,. . rr,,,,w o u vury uieunct potjtponemtof The man who expects to ton ti, croachmonts of the trusts by electing men to office who are interested in , f corporations, must hn a i,n.. iiu l : ".uiucr iu me fellow who, to appease his hunger, rub bed a loaf of bread across hi f,a,.i. loyal gold-standard democrats who 1896 left their party the better to firvB tneir country. Three years have passed since the pledges of 1890 were made, and inanoth, er year the issues will be made up again 11 i..o republican party meant anything 01 ot. mollis except promises that . 10 pe oroken, congress should beconven OH DUU" as me summer is over, and create some evidence of good faith. It is uie eleventh hour. .IIOL lfir'H llnai.t K....... t To WBlnm- I W"U,y ...v, iumiid 1 Otis, Lawton and the other generals In he I hilippinpg Rre (ll)in(? work and their army should have been reinforced before this. The trouble is that there is entirely too much politics at home The president's other name is Good-M.1-Af1aidf-His.t;la(low xuriiuuu leiograin (rep.) Every reformer in the county should l a patron of his home paperj not a grower, but a cash paying subscriber. It is a most deplorable fact, but it is a fact for all that, that republican papers s a rule, are bettor patronizod than democratic or populist papers. The per aon that does not patronise hi i,01nft" paper ought to be ashamed of himself His personal likes or ditdikes of theedi' tors ought to have no bearing in the matter. Tl. . r ."O UOl'RIHR-I KRAI. n la 1. In, I 1 ... "til, l IV IlflVH At Mia U 1 j. . ocuoim uregon at -.v u,. uieir wav home. The whole of -nu pro,,,, 01 tne regiment and will v - sucn a welcome as nas not hefo been am n l. i... .. . u , Dl"- nie boys have earned everything that can be done for S . . they hae 1m2 ' . T mon,,, fever 3 Kws little and cares about civilized method. off,. gon will dojier very best for the boy Tl.- I . . . me last legislature di.l u .. .:.,. nllllli... : '"J "e n .t... . orlrom M"on and of X r !'n,,."ao,Iol!lce rial ,or Mlmoniah and Clackamas. Now we would like to know how Brother Porter is J "eW mnn.h. i .u ... w ""'n as ' " less Ore of the Guess he'll have to nifitroi ii i he could not be eloci; : 1' " 88 y lrt year, and it is l he has raised himself ln .1 "I,ulner hia constituents d l nt 9SeM f which has r-rovpn . ?,... m him. and hi , , KWU tot pmn..lA 11.. 1 "l w reuee em" himself. anoth er Xo Apology Necessary. Editor Courikr-Hebai.d : Under the meek apolotrv of tho aoctor Inst wool- tl.n , . . . '""or wouia again inflict another line of "scattering es sence" upon your "readers and type stickers." Throughout former and thn ,,., I railings of the county doctor, the writer has said nothing eallinn for an n,ii,i and still insists that no statement about nun is overdrawn or unwarranted. His "most humble apology" 0f last week black with cowardly sarcasm. :,. iQ.' ly a subtle and tacit admission of mv accusations against him, and if further disclosures of his infamous practices might be made, we would And. .n f.,., 1.:., ui..i. ...... ., o ciiiiKorptjarian Dioie, that 11 1 . ..icon cnier supervisors maA f- in riding about their dis b and generally to supervise their suhoJ.- supervisors. These chiefs wer :! "riarf'he"a8 "-renow.espec- were no more qualified to conductor maintain roads than n,,. ""u less fortunate subordinatBa u:. Ane me" we nominate j.. into wunn. Tt..' ""F.viuatn? Common People Don't Count. Editor Courier-Hbeald: In your issue of the 16th inst., under the head "Greenbacks or Government Money," you quote the London Times at the close of the civil war as saying : "If that mischievous financial policy which had its origin in the North Amer ican republic during the late civil war in that country should become indurated down to a fixture then that government will furnish its money without cost. It will have all the money that is necessary to carry on its trade and commerce. It will become prosperous beyond prece dent in the history of civilized nations of the world. The brain and wealth of all countries will go to North America. That government must be destroyed or it will destroy every monarchy on this globe." That editor of the Times was a clear seeing prophet. He saw the danger which threatened monarchy from our then present financial system and gave warning to all those who wished to op press labor and to curtail the liberties of the great common people that then or never was the time to strike to strength en oppression's chains. The fatal blow was struck. The coin- co n was leased out to a banking syndi- v LTfn- 8m fU"y P-uadedythat every wtelhgent voter-in the United lowln T the 8ad o'tsthatfo!. lowed as the result of .-..i lation. Not onlv did :: ,J B'8; such legislation fi. T"1 !"!"" w linm. . j "ur own vines ana on our i office thev com! " ,: : swif mv r v0?16' Dut tliey " ue j vAreuum o tne o M So we get in While they stand and grin. We live in the city, nnere things are pretty; They live in the hills And foot the bills. 7" "Penment of Mr. Meldrum cost Hunt ti nttie sum name8 re on the polifical slate! Brownell did th Hr thorn n..i . Mr. Hayes succeeded Mr ' ?hey are in his political hnnt' and, though his administration of counl iSStoAS h& iy anairs is said to have been t.h I .!.: '. "?pe and not fori nrn on record, he certainl v - hl.T;" A afl nZ "ol, ?le- of how road work should be looked after ?t" when f,819 "as lost its rudder neer to t.iilra tlm !,... .- .vF,D ol uienveoraiv supervisors. Under the old system the suirw.. was empowered to call on ta contribute their quota of labor on the lllllilw. rnn.la .l . . c r llu u ,8 notor nim tu..i. some of those so called did nnf. ... their share of work honpst ti .. . . 'v ma- on y however, did not only do their urK nonestiy, out often volunteered to - mnra Minn I, .. ... - unu uVy Were caned on to dn i hG COmmifiainn 1 l8eebythepaper Braeaa' They will mt i.t. And with the roads will rustle Enough to shako nff ,uf,l,le, bustle. 8 ff a" olJ maid'8 ow we all know the rnn,lo . .... . "eiore te snft. u Z 7, . V wl" nx .1! 1 . win ratu p... DtlCKS. ou uo . ."e 0111 of lumber hhbw I n ot Ik... U: 1 Close to the hedge. in order to put the i,la .... e llave sticks a few. ivi 1 j ,u otsuer as we we knew . W hat IS dona nr,,.,9 mm . Tk uew, 1 . . , ' ""yi the i"7 were too short class furnishes the snn;0. s" some mors , 8unervisnra a.ome more we mna better nor wnro. u- Arnd Plled "'em uo for l.v '"tin lye arn nr. ...i ,- . -. unau UUCIf. mi mere is a short piled Parrot creek south of lot of timber that "This outward saintml .).,m. IT 1 .. . 'T' "nose seitlea v saire am.1 ,).,!; .. worn Nips youth i' the head and foll!. ,i.,. . vl V.W1.1J emmew As falcon doth the fowl, is yet a devil ; His filth within beinur cast, ha " vniM nu pear A pond as deep as hell." In i.W!.. .. -.. u,0 wruer. in ha it..... r 1 ' """"I . s i .anuy, win hereafter gratuitously provide medicine and reuder medicl sistance wherever needed for the unfor tunate paupers of Clackamas countv ery respectfully, M. O. Strickland, M. D., Coroner of Clackamas County. same ho are neither tl.Pir rirAflapmian.ci nf 1A m . .... t. 0 , 1J or lf) yearg the same quality and intelligence of V bor is expended as before, but there is less of it. No one ever vniimf. , road work now. As the amount of travel has increased with the increasing p0p. lation, the roads in many parts now are worse than they were 15 years airo. and this in spite of all the taxes lovii J crease: in ti n.n.i .1 . . . 1 - - om- -ut ""a is not the worst system of the present road system Much demoralization has resulted from' its operation. For a month or six weeks previous to the appointment of super visors there is no end of petty mean in triie on the part of those anxious to uD .Wu.ua ; no end of secrf ing between tin 'wiv-un Mil MUri-inn I m Oil Mr minst- . . . and his supporters as to how much work of EuroP.) lliow wholl ... f.. .;... . . . K I .... 61....U.U n.m. And this han. " ' Have mad tl, .1 . pens in every district nrnhKi .r. show in th. 'quotat r-w"vTa i no 01411 11 MMr supervisor is paid better waees th.n urgent deman,! Can eet at nnviliinc oi 1 . Lu...in C- ' en)P'oys his ' ,e Present was too lengthened the powers Je;. army on the face of the globe. But, on the contrary, had that "mis chievous financial nniin.. u adhered to by our government, we had long ago as a trovrnm0nt u . . ilnKl .1 , "-".I. UCGU UUl OI debt, bonds would not have been issued to continually cmaw t ti,Q .:.... . , - iiO USUUII I vnais, nor a door opened thrnnoh o,i.i-.h our government could swing into line w th monarchies where she is today, but rather the mon,i,iu Jl nm.11 1. . -.. ui hid um would have weakened And SAVPrnl new republics had doubtless been estab liehod before this. uur present financial system must be broken up, and tha tr, . : .. .! . '""w; unpen alism one of ,ts effects.be obliterated from the minds of tha .i. u i .1 rvur,u "j i .ciuiu o the government to the Lincoln system When editors of our leading papers speak of our newly acquired territory as our colomes," when our political speak ers proclaim from the platform that "we a People have outgrown the constitu n, when our mnr.in i n j,.i ,, o""""1" iu 1110 aruiv declare "we will compel the natives o'f the islands wo have cainaH in t . cept the good eovammont it... ji n 1 " -".v... ,td uuer mem e have to kill halt of them to do it," it seems to me I can hear th. n.iL UPattl,nal,.:J Of T.ih,t 1- flonti. 7 ur,ue across T eK 01U with alarm. Nor HOUtn Of m w m, Cftn I norn 1.. was a big mistaka l ti . lliere for th r"'V0"0 la lllese things deference s UJI8take in the lumber hm 'or those who won fn. . , . . . "o ..uui jnmanu s M. F. M. ue8po,1 hand the libertma .. . tM. Restricted Current ?. 8ub8elently enjoyed. Then, to can lonttausd fr0m Ut P " .le climax of perfid v. w tn Rn 1 the rBn(.t;n ... . 'and, or some of n. h intr." . f. relations of enci.tv ZT "l e adopt your " " weight of feudalism cast ;.he adoP' J'our imperial rights of man established many concurring Pired to bring about th. "on, tne most Among the 'hich ""gncy con- or colonial evstem: establish aristocratic fmi. lies or titloo t .... which con. h . as you Dave v 1,11 hitherto the least obsarLT " .h0U.h 11 " "ems to , llfltromni: 1 "iiiuiiuif Un lpr fnnf a nnr- er"rnt by nd for the people. It seems tn ; . ... .1 .. v uia it ue nmno mo n ry of Mexico and e upon and seZ and B,uer mines.-f Alii,., u:.?10 .undamental principles of llha,t i,.i -ory down by our fri-,i.- . 7. ' mn .... IT . .".",B "le constitu- n. "" ",o un.ted States. The nerthe an'Ply ufflcien, to secure to , clique, and he does woH. J 1 Z L" !! rJ !"?old alone to spite hi, 0pponenU. lSlfSS this and no doubt more tha nau ' currency thtTlhyrunons restrict Clackamas county owe a debt, a nXhtv and 0tkiD n. ! ,IOgevr3r Pucer or.. DUnf "..I""VU '"js. ine pnnci-. conclusive mnn.., 4nw.f; T'mfut the 'aid down are .? much tectlheVa 8U me no ,! t- . """.co iq anv emarvanrv .-uco JHCKsnn'o ...:.! - J I T , - ". IV vim- -ery leBitima,e bu8i: of ivZ ZZT own team, his relativa .n.i ,u ' . . . larger volnma .. '"U8 . r a mnr-h tB., r' " ,.r.u,e'.auiPly sufficient to nm. Bress in 1832. rT"' ,.3aS? lo. Pressing the rebellion .. 8 moUe 01 8up form oommS1 '.0"' aleo !'.ur P?wer lo tiansandtosuppr?:"'?' Saxds Browseil. tions. - . -.. . l(.l msurrec- Clackamas, June 18, Wm. Phii.ups