OREGON CITY COURIER- FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1902. OREGON CITY COURIER Published Every Friday by OREGON CTY COURIER PUBLISHING CO. 3. H. WESTrtvEit, Editor and Business Manager. K. Lee Wshtovhb, Local Editor. Altered in Oregon City Postofficeas Sid-chns matter . SUBSCRIPTION BATES. "Paid in advance, per year 1 50 Six roontnV 75 lSfereemon(hB'trial 25 . . Clubbing Hate. ""Oregon City Courier and Weekly Oregonian 42.25 Ores-on City Courier and Weekly Courier- ' t .Journal'. 2.00 Oregon City Courier and, Weekly Examiner... 2.50 Oregon City Courier and the Cosmopolitan..- 2 5 Oregon City ,Oourier and the,Commoner .. 2. TO SWFTThe date opposite your addreBS on the paper denotes the time to which you hae paid. I thisliotioe it marked yonr subscription is due. OREGON CITY, NOV. 5, 1902. In Virginia a well of magnetic water Lae been discovered. In Kentucky they .Lave to manufacture it. "THE.President'a advisers are fearful 'that his strong position on the trust question will but serve to emphasize the servitude of the Republican majority to the trusts. Trick is to give Pittsburg a university that will far eclipse Carnegie's $5,000,000 polytechnic school. If this keeps up education may cease to be an unknown -qu mtity in "the fair city." Preh. Mitchell and his union seek ' the privilege of saying who shall be at 1 liberty to work ; Pres. Baer and his as sociates desire to monopolize the ma . terial on .which alone non-union and union laborers can find an opportunity -to work. Much friction, but no heat. Between his own conviction that the tariff is too high and his desire to avoid 'saying what his political advisers tell him will defeat his chances for nomina tion in 1904, President Roosevelt is ex jneriencing what the French call "a bad quarter of an hour." Two hundred corporations in this cocntry represent an aggregate capital of$3,6OO,e00,OOO. They employ 400,000 .workers, pay $250,000,000 In wages and have -an annual outof $2,000,000,000. i Does' anyone seriously believe that the 5 labor represented by thU output was worthonty one-eighth its value? 'A'GRbat opportunity confronts the Democratic minority in Congress. They Lave only 'to unite on a single, reason able policy, be frank and consistent and .earn tbe respect of the country and they -ill deserve victory in 1904. The great responsibilities are all with the Repub licans. 'The report of Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock sets forth the fact that the bears In Yellowstone park are so gentle that they follow the tourists iu the hope of pie. But with his nomination in the balance, Mr. Roosevelt will not have the temerity to m ike war on bruin with auch strongly-marked republican ten- dencies. "No higher tribute to Gompers' hon eety could be anted than the fact that at the Denyer convention, where he was defeated, he had to borrow money to get home on," says a writer in the Nash ville News. If borrowing nvjney to get home on is a proof of honesty, there are lots of us who have never been, given credit for our virtues. AwonnrNU to Engineer James O. Stewart, the British bricklayer lays an average of 450 to COO bricks per day, while the American lays 2,000 to 2,700 bricks per Jay. When the American bricklayer gets flft per day, which Is what he earns as compared with the liritiuli Ulwrer, wages in the United States will bo as high as those paid in Kngland. Nowjthat the Republican party con ironte a demand for anti-trust legisla tion, -Henator Cullom has found that the present law la all sufficient. We have Ireqntfitly remarked that (act and have asserted Usui faw prosecutions under the cwinirial provisions of the law would mcvt- respect, but no Republican attor ry g 'ucral dare enforce it. JThk financial failure of "Swift," tbe (Sail Man," is Attributed to the enact . ment 4 the) nta-oleomargarine law, but ra tb en&etinont ot tnatlaw worked to (thai tternieut of the butter men, the caw ais'nod lor the assignment of .$w'4 akesonthe appearance of what tba doiana sti,matie aa a "non se- The President's choice for chairman 'leghanies. Our centre of population, in of the Republican National Committee jclu()ing Ala9ka Porto Iico and the in the 1904 campaign ie said to lie be- Philippines, is somewhere in Kansas .wCB v,,arKson, me spoilsman, and Payne, the dictator of the policy which i removes competent men from office on the sole ground of political expediency. And his supporters in chief are Piatt, Quay and Addicks, three men who stand charged with every crime on the politi cal calendar. Wasn't it Mr. Roosevelt who advocated civil service reform? Such fidelity to principle creates abso lute belief in the good faith of his atti tude of antagonism to the trusts. Standing on the crest of the Blue mountains of Eastern Oregon where the Oregon Short Line Rail Road eacl es the summit of that great divide and watershed, there was erected when the railroad was constructed, now twenty years gone, an eating house or rail road hotel. It was built of Blue moun tain pine, of logs with the. bark uncut, in picturesque, pioneer style. For twenty years it stood an imposing and lovely monument attractive from the exterior and more than attractive with in. Within its walls was conducted an eating hoase that was a marvel to the traveler in all this Western world. No better cuisine could be found in the best hotels ot New York. No more lovely place was to be seen in a trip across the continent. The writer well remembers that on a Sunday morning in March, now eighteen years ago, with the snow four feet deep on the level and the temperature ten degrees below zero his train pulled to the top of the Blue mountains, and at daylight he had one of the best breakfasts he has enjoyed in a life time at this summit eating station. The"old eating house has burned down" its memories and its beauties remain. The railroad people owe it to the traveling public to rebuild it on precisely the same lines as before. We are promised that it will be done. CANNON FOR SPEAKER. It Beems that "Uncle Joe" Cannon is to have an easy victory in the speaker ship contest. Mr, Babcock, who in tended to run on his tariff reform record scarcely got started in the race, and Mr. Littlefield, who trusted to his anti-trust record, was entirely distanced. "Uncle Joe" is simply a republican; he is perfectly satisfied with the Repub lican party ; he has implicit faith that the crops will be good when the repub lican party is in power, that prices will be high to those who want high prices, and low to those wantlovv prices, pro vided Republican rule is not disturbed. There is nothing that be wants to re form, and therefore he does not have to worry about platforms or promises. He is the natural and logical candidate of those who accept Mr. Hanna' s doctrine of "let well enough alone." If he is chosen speaker, as now seems certain, we may count on the Republicans adopt ing a policy of masterly inactivity. MITCHELL ON VIOLENCE. Mr. Mitchell rendered a distinct serv ice to the causa of labor when he de clared in answer to an inquiry relative to the influence of violence upon the suc cess of a strike: "I should Bay that its success would not be dependent upon it at all. The very conditions alleged would reduce the chances of winning the strike. In my judgment, violence never contributed to the success of a strike, because it loses for those on a strike the sentiment of the public." Mr. Mitchell is entirely right. Vio lence hurts the strikers infinitely more than it does the employers. In fact, the employers so well understand the in fluence which a display of violence ex erts upon tho public that they have been accused of instigating the violence themselves In order to profit by the in dignation aroused. Mr, Mitchell hag done much to strengthen the cause of labor, but nothing that he has said has shown a clearer discernment of a more just appreciation of the forces that move society. THE WESTWARD COURSE OF EMPIRE. A monument placed last Wednesday in a lone field between Wigg's Station and Elizabethtown, seven miles south east of Columbus, Ind marks the cen tre of population of the United States proper at the end ot the nineteenth cen tury. It also commemorates the folly of those who at the centuiy's beginning thought it impossible that seaboard civi lization would ever paea beyoud the Al- exactlv where is unknown , as we have n0 cenfmf; of the FiHDjnos. In 100 years, the centre travelled west ward 478 miles, or about three teet per hour. The line made by its progress was drawn to its southernmost point in 1830 by the development of Kentucky, Tennessee and the lower Mississippi re gion, wavered north until 1870, went south in 1880 and north wardagain in 1890 and 1900 . Its longest jump was eighty one miles between 1850 and 1860 because of the California gold fever ; the short est was from 1890 to 1900, when because of the growth of the Eastern cities it travelled but 'ourteen miles west, and when the devt pment of Texas, which gains as many I ngressmen in the new apportionment as . ew York, and of Ok lahoma and the In 'an Territory, de flected it three miles south. At the end of the century it is very nearly due west of where it started. Where will the centre be in A. D. 2000? Eastern prophets see it crawling slowly into Illinois and there pausing. Far Western men say that it will con tinue to go rapidly westward. System atic irrigation, with its small farms and compact civilization, they say, is only beginning the transformation of the west into plains as rich and populous as Babylon's of old; and they may not be dreaming. If the centre were to move westward in this century just as it did in the last, the year 2000' would find it in Missouri a little southeast of Leavenworth, Kan., where it would still be considerably east of the geo graphical centre. For this is indeed a yery big country! N. Y. World. ( FEAR POLITICAL EFFECT. During the course of the examination of Mr. Mitchell, Mr. MacVeagh, attor. ney for the mine owners, referred to the strike which was settled just before the election of 1900 and developed the fact that Mr. Mitchell waa in telephonic communication with Mr. Hanna just be fore the settlement. Continuing Mr. MacVeagh said : "Mr. Bryan was again a candidate for the presidency, and you were conscious .of the great apprehensions entertained by the financial interests as to the pos sibility of his election?" "I believe," replied Mr. Mitchell, "that the fact that an election was pend ing had something to do with the early settlement of the strike." Here is pi oof, brought out by the at torney of the mine owners, first, that the financial interests of the country were arrayed on the republican aide in the campaign of 1900, and, second, that the mine owners settled with the miners because they feared that a continuance of the strike would do political harm to the Republican party. If Mr. MacVeagh had pursued the same line of inquiry and asked in re gard to the present strike he might have shown that '.he fact that a congressional election was pending had something to do with the appointment of the board of arbitration that is now conducting the examination. And yet the rank and file of the Republican party continue to credit the president and Mr. Hanna with disinterested patriotism in settling strikes just before the election, and the Republican laboring men and farmers continue to vote with the financial in terests that control the Republican party and can make and settle strikes and panics according to their pleasure. This blind faith will be shattered some (lav. In the meantime those who are aware of the dangerous tendency of Re publican policies and methods must redouble their efforts both to maintain the integrity of the Democratic party and to make converts among those wh o have had such implicit faith in Rerub lican leaders. THE CARDIFF GIANT. In the recent death of George Hull, of Binghamton, N. Y., is recalled the moHt famous hoax of the nineteenth cen tury. The giant was twelve feet long and apparently the petrified body of a roan. Such men as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Emerson and Dr. Weecott (the ' author of David Harum), were deceived by it. Cardiff, where the giant was found, is in Onondago county, N. Y., a few miles lrom Syracuse. Near by is a depression in the earth ; in thts hollow are found petrified fish and reptiles, Geologiste say this hollow once formed the bed of the ocean. It was here the giant was found in 1869, while men were digging a well. The news of the finding of the giant Bpread across the country in a short time, and soon vehicles of all kinds were headed for the pit loaded with people anxious to look upon the face of the wonderful giant. Soon a tent was erected over the giant and an ad mission fee of fifty cents was charged. In this way $7000 was made in a few weeks. Immediately a three-quarters interest was sold ' to business men of Syracuse, one of whom was Dr. Wes cott, for $3000. The giant attracted the attention of many eminent scientific men and by them was pronounced the pdUified body of a man. Hull got his idea of the giant from an argument he had with a Methodist preacher, in which the minister claimed the earth was at one time peopled with giants. Immedi ately he Bet about to materialize a great and grand sell. After a long search for the proper kind of stone he at last found one to answer his purpose at Fort Dodge( Iowa, in a gypsum bed. After many difficulties in transporting the very heavy stone over 45 miles across the Des Moines river to a railroad, he finally succeeded in having it housed in an out of the way place in Chicago. He then secured the services of an Italian sculp tor to carve a gigantic figure of a man ; the marks of the chisel were removed and the figure treated to a wire brush and acid to give an old appearance. It waa then packed marked "machinery' and sent to Union, N. Y., in 1808. From there it was taken by wagon in the uight to Cardiff, where "Stub" Newell, a cousin of Hull, had a farm. They had fixed it up between them to bury it.which they did, and planted a crop of grain over tiie spot. The next year Newell had some neighbors dig a well on the spot and they discovered the giant and thus a fortune was made. Dr. Wescott was a gentleman of the hignest respect ability in Syracuse, and when the giant was finally shown to have been a fraud, his health gave way and he died shortly after, it is said, of a broken heart. TO YOUR TENTS OH! ISRAEL. The time is now propitious for the Democrats of Oregon and the county of Clackamas to get together. We should burry the hatchet and stifle all party quarrels. We should forget the dif ferences of the past. We should all get together on a broad and liberal platform of Democratic principals and be pre pared to meet the enemy in battle array with every soldier in his place prepared to do or die in the "ffort to defeat the common enemy. In "Ways that are dark and tricks that are vain" the Republicans have had long and ex cellent schooling. We can not beat them with a half hearted fight or a half hearted organization. Every Demo- crate must become a trained soldier. The Republican party at the next election, in 1904 will stand for all that it stands for now, for centralization of power, for corporate wealth and private greed, for the rich against the poor, for the few against the many, for the plutocracy against the common man. It will in J904 justify the formation of trusts and levy tribute on wealth and capital, in every village in the land. It will seek to destroy the individual in business and in all of the affairsof life . It will put the dollar mark above the man and Marcus Alonzo Hannah will direct its affairs and marshall its assett. The Democratic party will stand for all that is clean in politics and honest in government, believing that the "country is governed best that ie governed least." The Democratic party will appeal to the common man, to the man "who sweats and toils," who earns his right to live by the sweat of his face. It will appeal to the home builders and the firesides of America, it will stand for the perpetuity of a simple form of government, for the greatest individual liberty to each and every citizen, for the rights and the pro tection of all. On such a platform and fighting in auch a cause it ought to win. We believe that it will win. The tru th and the right will in the end prevail. There have been many years, of darkness and doubt. There has been a season of corruption and fraud. Men have been betrayed on the one side and sold on the other. Honor has been b rtered for gold and the Declaration ot Independ ence and the human rights forgotten. Theee things can not last. It is said that error will get half way a-e.ind the world while truth is getting its boots on. The Democratic party will have its boots on iu 1904 and it will stride across the American continent, with the torch of liberty i". one hand the Declaration of Independent in the other and appeal to every honeBt man who loves his country and his home to join with us in hurryng from power this plutocracy of wealth ind imperilism which seeks to subvert the very foundations of our government. The right and the truth will win. "Truth crushed to earth will rise again, The enternal years of God are hers, While error wounded writhes in pain, And dies amongst her worshippers. " Every man who loves his country can join with us in the fight. The platform will be big and broad and generous, The burden of the fight will of necessity fall on the old soldiers of the Democratic party. Then "To your tents Oh 1 Israel," for the next battle is a battle to the death a battle for the preservation of American liberty. In the election of Grant B. Dimi ck for mayor of Oregon City on Monday Of this week for the third consecutive term, there may be much of interest to the politicians of this county, especially those of Republican persuasion. It may mean that Dimick ia a new power in the Republican politics of the county. It may mean and possibly does mean the passing of some cf the old leaders. Senator Brownell has probably asked the voters of Clackamas county for tbe last elective office at their hands. He has made some bitter personal enemies in his own party as well as out of it. He may be willing now to lay down the reins of leadership, o? rather turn them over to a younger if not a more skillful politician. Browneli's leadership has not always been for the interest of the Republican party. He has used his power as a leader in many instances for his own advancement.' Dimick is a younger man. That he is ambitious, there caa be no doubt. That there are some good things in Clackamas county politics that he would like to have is certain. He is fairly popular with the members of his own party. More ao possibly than Brownell has ever been. What he wants, we have no means of knowing. What his leadership will produce time alone can tell. The Re publicans of Clackamas county are by ho means a majority party. They are dis rupted by internal dissensions anl have been torn by factional fights. They are in power now for the first time in many years. It will take able leadership, and excellent and honest organization to keep the party in power. The Demo Brunswick House and Restaurant FURNISHED ROOMS Meals at All Hours j 0 Pricea Reasonable Only First Class Restaurant in the City CHAS CATTA, Prop. Opposite Suspension, Bridge OREGON GIT Y, 0 RE. CHARM AN Saves You fflomy There is not an item in the drug liue but that you can save money oy getting it here. If we sold you a poor grade at 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 sdUMdcnon in Duying anything of us it is right as to quality. The next; satisfaction is, you pay less for the pure ' an.ucnere man you do cetter get what you want SOME EVERYDAY PI? ICES:' "BrontO Lax"'? . ... . ... d,,u ia Snppe, a box, ' To the users of BROMO LAX we are goino-'to mVe a ' 8 GUARANTEED GOLD WATCIT vuvv Call and get particulars. CHAJRMAjST & CO. City Drug Store, Cut Price Druggists. Mail orders solicited crats will be camping on their trail a every day. of the next two years. In the mean time, the bystander and the looker on, we Democrats and others will watch the political sky w ith much interest. We do not now know whether the recent election means the setting of one political star and the rising of another in theG. O. P. firtnanent or whether it means additional factional fights and a struggle for leadership and party supremacy. And while we watch the leaders of the opposition fight out their battles, let us as Democrats get closer together, gird on our armor and prepare for fray and by ruaking Olack amas county a Democratic county at the next election we can do much to dis concert the enemy and ' tumble around the heads of some leaders ou the other side their castle of broken promises, and disreputable politics. 2000 sacks of first-class . potatoe s wanted. Shank & Bissell. We sell the greatest of blood purifiers, Acker's Klooil Elixir, under a positive guar antee. It will oure all chronic and other blood poisona. If you have eruptions or sores on your body, or are pale, wenk or run down, it is Just what you need. We refund money if you are not satisfied ; 50c and $1. Howell & JonfS, druggists. A new Royal and a new Queen draw head sewing machines will be given a way to customers of Parkplace Cash Store on Christmas. Luck in Thirteen. By sending 13 mileaWm. Spirey, of Walton Furnace, Vt., got a box of Buckleu'a Arnica Salve, that wholy cured a horrible Fever Sore on his leg. Nothing else could. Positively curea Bruises, Felons, Ulcers, Eruptions, Boils, Burns, Corns and Piles. Only 25c. Guaranteed by Geo. A. Harding druggist. Timber Men Wanted. Two hundred timber men to make piling. Twenty foremen. Highest wages. Steady job. Pacific Timber Company, Cottage Grove, Oregon. Yours Truly, PACIFIC TIMBER CO., Bv M. H. Silsby, AsB't Acc't. Oregon City Secoiul-IIancl & Junk Store HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR SECOND-HAND GOODS, HIDES, JUNK METALS OF ALL KINDS, ETC. Large lot of Sacka for Bale cheap. Second-Hand Goods Bought and Sold RING PHONE 416 FOR JUNK. Sngarman & Co. New Plumbing and Tin Shop A. MIHLSTIN . JOBBING AND REPAIRING a Specialty Opposite Oaufleld.BIock OREGON CITY ODen Dav and Ninht a less price vou would he . you want. That is the Greatest tor the poor article elsewhere. , by getting it here. dt C01 co,ds Price, 2Sc. Phone 13.,