OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1903. OREGON CITY COURIER PublUhd Every Friday by BRECON CITV COURIER PUBLISHING CO. J. H. Westover, Editor and Buiinesn Manager. E. LEB Wsstoveb, Local Editor. lutereS in Oregon Oily Potofflce as 2nd-clss matter SUBSCRIPTION KATES. Paid la advance, per year 1 M Six months "8 Vlubbing Rate. Oregon City Courier and Weekly Oregonian 42.25 fill- I 1 rAtiptaw Oregon City CourieV and Weekly Examiner.. 2.50 Uregon Ulty courier aou me osraopoiiiu. Orpiron Citv Courier and the Commoner 2.00 tMTThe date opposite your addreaB on the .per denotes the tlmeto which youhaiepaid. this notion 1 B marked yonr eubsci iptlon it due. OREGON CITY, JAN. 16, 1903. The coal troubles will be settled about the time our quarrels with the iceman begin. The present policy of the Repub licans seems to be to spoil the anti trust broth with too many cooks. Reciprocity for the manufac turers at the expense of the farm ers is the motto of the administra tion. THAT Mississippi "colored lady," now drawing pay as postmistress may not be a good cook, but she has got the administration into hot water. JUDGING from the attitude of the Columbian minister to the United States, it is as dangerous to be a Colombian diplomat as to be a Chinese statesman. . According to the Honorable Perry Heath, the Mormons control the Utah legislature and will inev itably send a "saint" to the Sen ate. He will be a rara avis in that body. IT begins to look as if the sugar trust was absorbing the beet sugar industry. When the absorbtion is accomplished, God help the farmers engaged in raising sugar beets. LEMON juice is recommended as a destroyer of microbes. Lemon juice is good with or without "bug juice" and is a cure for snakes in the head and bugs in the intes tines. REPRESENTATIVE Cochran, of Missouri, ,will soon surprise the country with a financial bill which it is promised will place the Repub lican congressional financiers in a bad light. SINCE Christmas Day, 13 dead and 7 injured is the record of toy pistols in Norfolk, Va. Green Christmases always make" fat churchyards, particularly when the greenies have guns. Senator Cullom fears that he sees in the Hoar anti-trust bill an obstacle to the Cullom measure providing for fifty sinecures to draw salaries from the national treasury and the senator from Illinois is in dignant. THE anti-trust chorus of Roose velt, Hoar and Knox is so suddenly and harmoniously vociferous as to arouse a suspicion or rehearsal in the matter of '.'thundering in the index" prelude to another cam paign ollertory. THE decision of the Western Missouri Court of Appeals that the mule is a treacherous and vicious amimal and that, if an employe be injured as a result of these traits, the employer cannot plead ignor ance of the mule's nature as a de fense, is good horse sense. ' BEFORE they were sworn in by a supreme court justice the mem bers of the lower house of the Illi nois legislature were required to sign a wtitten pledge not to ac cept bribes; Perhaps as a condi tion precedent to his inauguration some future president will be re quired to solemnly promise not to tire the White House or the cpitol dome. THE illustrated edjtion of the Roselmrg Review wuich came to tour of'lke last week was indeed a compliment to the Review Publish ing Co., and its excellent editor L. Wimherly, H will dommch to ad vertise the wealth and resources of Douglas county and the city of Koseburg. We congratulate the Koseburg Review upon the excel lence and completeness of their work. Mr. Roosevelt is said to be op posed to the admission of Okla homa and Indian Territory as one State because the votes of the lat ter Territory would make the new State Democratic. The politician in the President is never 'swal lowed up by the statesman. A black cat, its feet shod with walnut shells, nearly caused a pan ic in'Saturday Hall in the national capitol about midnight on New Years. The noise caused by the one poor cat sounded to the sleepy watchman like a troop of cavalry and, only after the full guard was called out, was the actual trouble discovered. MR. OXNARADhas concluded that a 20 per cent reduction of the tar iff to Cuba will do the beet sugar industry less injury than continued agitation of the question of tariff reduction. His decision is a great disappointment to certain senators who would kill the Cuban treaty because it lowers some of the sacred Dingley statutes. THE Courier is under many ob ligations to Governor T. T. Geer for a handsomely bound volume of the history of the First Oregon Regiment in the Spanish American War and the war in the Philippine Islands. It is a volume of 500 pages bound in sheep and profuse ly illustrated with half tone pho tographs of the regiment at various times during its service. As an historical work the volume is in valuable. "When I read of the curbing of the trusts by President Roosevelt I am reminded of the conduct of my dear old father," said a merchant. "When I was a boy I was fond cf dog fights. My mother abhorred these brutal exhibitions and pun ished me whenever she learned of my being present at one. My father secretly sympathized with me, though, good man, he did not see fit for my mother to know it, it. Coming home one evening my mother presented proof of my pres ence at a canine scrap and sug gested immediate punishment. My father, pretending great wrath, ac cepted the suggestion and taking me into a bed room proceeded with a great stick to lash the furniture, saying, 'Howl, you rascal, howl.' Of course I howled and my mother hearing me was sorry and called to my rather to whip me lighter. When I see that the president is lashing the trusts I imagine that his blows are falling on the furni ture and that he is saying softly, 'Howl you rascals, howl.' Pekin (111.) Courier. THE HONORED DEAD. Death steals upon us like a snow storm- in the night. Thomas H. Tongue, congressman from the first Oregon district, died at his post of duty in Washington on Sunday af ternoon, Death came to him in its pleasantest form. While in the full possession of health and strength he was stricken down. There was neither pain nor suffering. The "Grim reaper" laid its hands upon him and he closed his eyes and passed over the dark river of death, into the unknown and unknowable beyond. His duties are donehis burden is lifted, his labors are end ed. Life's fitful dream is over. In his death Oregon loses one of her bestcitizens.one of her represen tative men. May his ashes sleep in peace. DEMOCRATIC HARMONY. From the gathering of the Demo cratic committee in this city on last Saturday the "Unterrilied" of this county can gather much encour agement. All elements of the party seem to manifest a strong dis position to get together. To forget past differences and work for party harmony and success. The watch word, as well put, by one of the leading Democrats should be "Get together for lool." The meeting was harmonious; thespirit and feel ing manifested was excellent and- the outlook for the future is good, It has not been many years ago since Clackamas county was a Democratic county. Properly or ganized and educated, with a union of all Democratic forces it is be lieved by many to be Democratic today. The thing to do is to quit fighting one another and fight the common enemy. The. Courier will do its part. A STERN ARRAIGNMENT. The Indianapolis News, although claiming to be an independent paper, has generally supported the Repub lican ticket, The news in a recent issue reads this lecture to the party whose fortunes it has so often helped to preserve: "It occurs to us that those who oppose any trust legislation as socialistic and who are so fearful lest we 6hould estab lish a paternal government are I guilty of a very grave inconsist J ency. They have been the most persistent advocates of paternalism through tariffs and subsides. They nave aaoptea tne socialistic uoe trine that competition is a bad thing, which they are in duty bound to check or kill. As far as they could do so they haVe made the govern ment a partner in their schemes. But when the people turn to the government for relief from their ex tortion and expression they cry out that our institutions are in danger and that the people ought to sub mit lest by resisting they lose the heritage of their fathers." "BLOW Y WINTRY WINDS." During the last week the ice king has laid his mailed hand upon all the country east of the Cascade mountains and eastward to the sea. Blizzards have swept down from the north carrying on their frozen breath desolation to the poor and death to all living things not properly housed and warmed, Mil lions or snowflakes have drifted down from the storm clouds and covered the land and the lakes and the rivers in a mantle of white while the wintry wind in, its mad spirit has piled the flakes into minature mountains,bIocked railroad travel, impeded business, chained thewheels of commerce and put all that great stretch of country under bondage to winter and his frozen satelites. While all this has been going on in the Eastern country, the Willamette valley has been blessed with a week of sunshine and spring weather. Flowers are in bloom in the yards, vegetables are growing the gardens and the grass is green in the fields, and the old timers talk of the budding of trees, the blooming of flowers and the early opening of Spring. The Willamette valley is a glorious country with glorious possibilities in the future. A WHOLE SERMON. A subscriber, without giving his name, sends an item from a paper, name not given, and suggests that it would form a text, It is not only a text, but a whole sermon. The argument which it presents would seem plain enough, and yet, strange to say, there are many honest and intelligent republicans who seem perfectly ignorant of the manner in which the syndicates administer the finances of the government for their own interest and profit. The Item is as follows: The hanks run short of money recently and the banker who heads the United States treasury rushes to their asBiatanoe with the people's money and loans to them without interest, mi llioni. When the people' to whom this belongs need money, do they get it from their dear, sweet gov ernment? ;Not on yonr penny. They Joan oto the banks and borrow their own m-ney and pay well for It. But the bankers understand the art of voting for their Interest, while the masses have no such understanding. When the rich need help they get it; when the poor need help they get it In the neck. What an odd arrangement. And the people 'go bluuderlng along and never see a thinR. The Commoner. A BALLADE OF THE OTHER AD. We've spent our onsh and our dance Is done, And the bUze of our glory fades fast to gray , We've tried for fame and we have not won, And now there's the agent and all to payl We've made mistakes, the wise folks say, And blundered a'ong like a drunken crews Our nmui is a name of the yesterday But another small ad. might have pulled us throl We've spoiled good paper and ton on ton Of sample packages we've thrown away; The world must nave thought we wore here for fun, And now there's the printer and all to pay! We'll foot things up III ths gjnd old way, (Just as the other ones had to du?) 1,,'s rough 011 us, for we're down to stay And another small ad. might've pulled us thro' Our friends are dropping us one by one, The specials, the iUent oh, where are they? They took our money when wj begun And now there's the devil and all to payl l'oor foolsl aud we dretmed of a golden day When wealth would come to us sou on sou, Alas, our riches went all tutinyl Yet another siumII ad. luight'vo pulled us thro'! Boys, remember: "ouch dog his day!'1 And now there's the devil aud all to payl But mry It never be said by you, "Auothor small ad. might've pulled us thro'!" Charles Sumnor Pike. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. W, A. l'arker.'l'lalnlitr, vs. Hattie Belle ParkerJ Defendant. lollsttle Belle Parker, the above flamed de fendant; In the name ol the state of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the coin plaint here iu on or before t!ie 2d dv of March, 118, which will b after the expiration ol six wii ks from the date of ,the first publication of this summons and if you fall so to appear and answer said complaint on or before said date, the plaiutilT will apply to the euuit (or the relief de manded iu said complaint to-wit: for a decree dissolving the boudsof mtUrlmouy now eiisting between you ami the plaintiff herein iul for such other further relief aa to the ouurt shall seeui just and equitable. This summons if published by order of the Hon. Thomas A. Mcliri-ie, judge of the above en titled court duly madeou the i'th day of Janu ary, P.KW The date of the. tlrat publication' of this sum mons is the loth da- of Janurv, I'.stt, NKATOn MoCOY Attorney tor l'luiiuitf Professor Edwin Ray Lankester was Bitting In his office In the Natural His tory museum, London, when be was visited by an elderly woman, evident ly from the country, who carried a parcel which she handled with the most exaggerated care. She was In a state of great excitement and ex claimed: "I've got two of 'em." - "Two tf what?" inquired the pro fessor. "Two 'awks' eggs," replied the wom an. "I'm told they're worth a thou sand pounds apiece." The professor, much interested, looked at the eggs. "These are not auks' eggs," he e 1. "T.y are 'awks' eggs," said his vis itor. "My son Joe found 'em." " A light dawned on the naturalist. "The kind of egg s which are so valu able," he remarked gently, ,Jare the eggs of an extinct bird called the auk a-u-k." 1 ' "Oh, hauk!" said the woman. "I'll pay out that 'Enry 'Obhouse as told me it was 'awks eggs as was wanted." And she went away." A Clever Pickpocket. In Paris two police officers recently got upon the track of a pickpocket They surprised him in the act at the omnibus bureau and followed him in hot pursuit He was a thin, poorly clad young fellow. In the Rue Roche chonaut, however, he suddenly disap peared. Judging that he had slipped into one of the houses they set them selves to watch for his reappearance. The thief In the meantime had entered a bathing establishment, and after a refreshing bath entered the box of an other bather and calmly clothed him self In the smart suit he found there, then passed proudly and peacefully out before the very eyes of his pur suers. The climax of humor came when the other bather, arrayed In the rags of the pickpocket, was grabbed by the officers of the law at the door and dragged off to the station house. With some difficulty the situation was ex plained; but the pickpocket Is still laughing. f The opera house was crowded last Sat urday niyrht with Oregon City people to witness the rendition of Peck's Bad Boy. The show was a very good one, considering. The character of Henry Peck, which was presented by one of the ladies, was especially well rendered, while that of Mr. Shultz, the grocery man, was all right. The house was kept in a constant roar of merriment during the entire performance, and the players were repeatedly encored. Sadie Hartt, in character songs and (lances, was per haps the most entertaining part of the show. Have You Looked Into the PIANO and ORGAN PRICES at Eiler's Piano House? They are so low now as to be simply startling and mean a good thing'for you at small cost. It is a quick cash raising proposition with this house, and we are letting superb instruments go at prices that have heretofore seemed impossible. K!am' Chickerings, Webers and Kimballs, our leaders and the pianos that lead the world over; the Pacific Queen, Kimball, Burdett. Needham, Peerless and Crown organs, all can be secured now for snail cash outlay. Write or 'phone for particulars. Eiler's Piano House, 351 Washington St., Portland, Or. Zbt Popular Pacific Coast Piano douse. Pianos the best and guaranteed. We send pianos everywhere, subject to examination. Money back if not absolutely satisfied. Large flourishing houses at San Francisco, Spokane and Sacramento. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine i Tablets, a Seven Million boxes sold in post 1 3 months. ThlS Signature, NATIONAL Declare Pe-ru-na to Be the Greatest Ca tarrh Remedy of The Age. ICMARRH COLDS GRIPPE COUGHS CROUP SORE HOARSE NESS . CHIBP JUSTICE CHAMBER?, OP SAMOA, Sayx "i can recommend Peruna as one of the very fca DC feui - ' H I recommend Ptruaato all tutferers." Senator John M. Thur Ston f Omaha, Neb., writes: "Peruna entirely relieved me of a veryjrritatlng cough. lama firm believer in its efficacy for any such trouble." unmxmmm, 91 ar i 1 -- ma I ts. How About It? To Cure a Cold in One Day CELEBRITIES V! Hon, William Young- blood, Auditor of the Interior, writes from Washington, D. C, to Dr. Hartman, Columbus, 0., as follows : "I've often heard of your great medicine and have persuad ed my wife, who has been much of a sufferer from catarrh, to try Peruna, and after using one bottle she has wonderfully improved. It has proved all you have claimed. Hon. RufusD. Merchant Superintendent and Dis bursing Officer, U. 5. Post office, Washington, D. C, says: "I take pleasure in commending your tonic, having taken a bottle of Peruna with very beneficial re suits. It is recommended to me as a very excellent catarrh cure. ti Congressman David F. Wilber, of Oneonta, N. Y writes: I am fully convinced that Peruna is all you claim for it after the use of a few bottles." 'o Congressman Irvine Dungan, of Jackson, O., writes: "J desire to Join with my many friends in recommending your Invaluable remedy Peruna to any one In need of an invigorating spring tonic, or whose system is run down by catarrhal troubles." We have letters from thirty eight members of Congress attest ing to the virtues of Peruna. Thousands of people In the com mon walks of life' use It as a family medicine. 4 For book of testimonials address The Peruna Medicine Co., Colum bus, O. -h..sHIJIu) :6 Days. tj Sf&yT on every box. 25c.