! Historical Society, City Hall' , OREGON ITY CODE OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1903 20th YEAR, NO. 38 C COMMERCIAL BANK op OREGON CITY , capital $100,000 Transacts a general banking business Makes loan; and collections, discounts bills trayi ana sells domestic and foreign exchange end receives; deposits subject to check Open Irom 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. D, C. LiATOUBETTE, President F. J. Mkyeb . Cashie Jt N. GREENMAN THE PIONEER EXPRESSMAN (Established 1866) Prompt delivery to all partB of the city OREGON CITY OREGON Qt D, & D. C. LATOURETTE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Commercial, Beal Estate and Probate Law Specialties Office in Commercial Bank Building OREGON CITY OREGON J)R. GEO. HOE YE DENTIST All work'warranttd and, satisfaction guaranteed Crown and BrldRc work a specialty Canfleld Building OREGON CITY' OREGON p H. COOPER, Notary Public. Real Es'a'9 an1 I isurance, Titles Exam ined, Abs r eta Made, Deeds, Mort gages, T;r , Drawn. Rocm 16, Guide B'd'g. Oregon City, Ore; I. SI AS cxaleb in BATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY Silverware and Spectacles CANBY " OREGON Q E. HAYES ATTORNEY AT LAW Stevens Bu-lding, opp.'Bank of Oregon Cltj OREGON CITY OREGON QRANT B. D1MICK Atiobney and Counselor at Law Will Braclice In all Courts In lhe State, Circuit and District Courts ol the United States. Insolvent debtors taken through bankruptcy. ;Offloe in Gard Building, Oregon City, Or. (JEO. T. HOWARD NOTARY PUBLIC REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE At Red Front Court House Block OREGON CITY OREGON J C. STRICKLAND, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Does an Up-To Date General Practice Bpeclal atlention given to surgery and diseases ol women. Office in Garde Building, 7th and Main Sts. OREGON CITY, OREGON J. W. Nobbis, M. D. J. W. Powell. M. D. JfORRIS & POWELL, Physicians and Surgeons'; Calls in city orcountry promptly attended Garde Building, Oregon City. JJ F. CAUFIELD WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER All Work Warranted Watches that others have failed to make run properly especially solicited. Main Street, Opposite Huntley's OREGON CITY.' OREGON. OSTEOPATHY DR. C. D. LOVE OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Graduate of American School of Osteopathy, Kirksville, Mo. Successfully treats both acute and ehronlo an Buccesa eJas(jB Ca1 ,or lilerttture. Consultation and Examination Free. I 8 to 12 A. M. . ' OfflcejHours: ) i to 4 p, M. ' )Or by appointment at any tlma. Rooms No. and 5, Stevens Building, Main St OREGON CITY, OBEOOM. JJOBERT A. MILLER . ATTORNEY AT LAW O. D. EBY, NOTARY .PUBLIC. Ral Estate bought and sold, mony loaned Xexlmlnedand abstracts made 1 cash pjJd for eounty warrants. Probate and commissioner court business and insurance. BOOM 8, WTMBABD BOIIDIKO OREGON CITY, - - - - OB00' 0. SCHUEB.L W. 8. TJ'BEH JJREN & SCHUEBEL ATTORNEYS AT LAW SDcutfAtt tffbbotai . Wlll"praotice 3n all conrts, make collections and settlements of estates, furnish abstracts of title, lend vou money and land your money on first mortgage. Office In Enterprise building. OREGON CITY OREGON Choicest Meats AT R. PetZOlds Meat Market Opposite Suspension Bridge Oregon City. DEAD LOCKED. NO SIGNS OF A BREAK UP IN THE SENAIORIAL STRUGGLE. Fulton Lead! But Can't Win, Geer's Cliances. Hopeless. Fellotv Servant Act and Many Other Matters of Importance Before the Legislature . Bulem, Orsgon, January 30th, 1003. When adjournment of the Legislature comesion Saturday afternoon, eighteen tuii dayB of the legislative session will h ve ended and very little accomplished. There will remain twenty-two days of the session, time enough in plenty to finish the work of the body and to win the grateful regard of the people of Ore gon. Up to this time the struggle for United States Senator has overtopped in interest etery thing elBe and yet that momentu ous struggle is seemingly no nearer a conclusion than it was the first day of the Besaion. Senator Fulton of Clatsop county still leads with a total vote of 32 on joint ballot. He is yet fourteen votes away from a nomination. The general concensus of opinion is that he can not win, unless his party will con sent to a paity caucus and in that e vent he would likely be named as the caucus nominee. The fight for Geer is utterly hopeless and his friends while apparently strong in the faith realize the fact that their candidate is a deau one. Multnomah county with her usual perversity will only consent to the nomination of a Multnomah county man and her 17 votes are being fired into the air with becoming regularity. It lookB to "A man up a tree" that if any nomi nation is made it will be a "dark horse." There are dark horses in plenty, some of them are groomed and ready to be trotted out if the time ever comes, a mong them is a gentleman irom the county of Clackamas who in a pinch would agree to serve the good people of Oregon in the United State Senate for the next six years. He ib a brown horse, twelve years old, can go all of the gaits, but shows up best as a side wheeler. This horse will not be entered if at all, until the field is thoroughly tired out and the running is easy. Among the most important measures before the Legislature is the fellow ser vants act which was put to sleep quietly by corporate influences during the pro ceeding Legislature. This act has be come the law in a majority of the states of the union and merely seeks to make corporations liable in damages for ac cidents resulting in the injury of em ployes on account of the negligence and carelessness of fellow employes in the same line of duty. It is a good law and ought to pass, and it looks now that it will. Charter bills galore are being intro duced. It would seem that every town in the state wanted to have its charter amended. Very little attention is being paid to these bills except by the mem bers from the counties where the towns are located. They are ground through the Legislative hopper like grist through a mill and jutt about as fast. The bill to put all state officials on a fat salary is well on its was to become a law. It strikes a pretty hard blow at the "grafters club" and of course they are opposed to it as the bill if paesed will cut off some good thingB which have been coming their way. The public printer wiil suffer the most as his office has been a private snap for these many years. In fact it is currently reported that thb office of public printer in Ore gon has been good lit $20,000,00 a year for a good long time. Now that the Lewis and Clark and Oriental Fair bill has become a law and the city of Portland has a new charter after her own heart it would seem that the 17 members of the Legislature from the metropolis of the Btate would be happy, but not so. Portland and Multnomah county will never be happy until they have "swiped" the whole hoe. If thev could net the united States Senator and two or there other little things which they see lying around loose their cud of ioy would be full. One of the most important matters be fore the present session is the proposed change in the method 01 assessing cor porations. It is a notorious fact that the corporation of the state of Oregon are not paying more than one tenth of the laxes they ought to pay. More than that they never will pay any more until the method of assessment is chang ed. The average county Aassessor knows no more about assessing a rail road corporation or any other large corporation than "A hog knows about holiday." The only way to cure this evil is to create a state board of assess ment or a rail road commission whose duty it shall be to assess all of the cor porate property in the state. The tendency in the East and in fact in near ly every Btate in the union is taking the burden of taxation off the farmers and laboring classeB and placeing it more and more on the corporations and all of those interests enjoying special priviledges. It is hardly hoped that the Oregon Legislature will make this character of a law this session ; but the good people are keeping "their weather eye" open and are watching the boys at Salem. Some good may come out of Nazareth yet. The printers union wants a "little bill" passed making it a very heavy fine to use any printed matter for the state unless it has the printers union label on it . It probably will not paBR. The Federated TraJes of the state of Oregon are asking that a bill be passed making an eight hour day and that all laborer in mills, mines and factories be paid every week in cash instead of monthly. This bill will encounter some pretty rocky sledding on its way to the statute books as it touches a great many conflicting interests in every, part of the state. It may pass. but the issue ia auite doubtful. Mr. Kay'd bill in the bouse yesterday wrs vivisected before it was allowed to pass. It concerns the making of the salaries of state, county and city em ployes subject to garnishment. At present the man who works for the state can maintain any number of debts, and the creditor has no redress, the state not being an institution that can be garnished. Mr. Kay takes the stand that public employes are worthy of no more right in that line than the employes of a corporation or privat" individual. The bill, when introduced, went to the judiciary committee, who corrected all deficiencies and recommended that it pass, being unanimous in its favor. Only four people objected to its passage, but two of them were Marion county men. Davey andJuJd. The matter ia not so important elsewhere as in Salem, for state employes' debts are mostly contracted here, but the evident justice of the measure passed it on iis merits, and the only dissenters, besides the two Marion county gentlemen before named were Burleigh and Reed of Multnomah. Governor Chamberlain baa appointed L- P. W.Quimby, state fish and game warden as delegate from Oregon to at tend a meeting of the League of Ameii- can Sportmen, to be held at St. Paul, Minnesota, February 11 and 12. C. M. MASON, Enterprising and Energetic Citizen. The good-looking gentleman whose likeness illustrates this sketch. Is known to nearly everybody in Oregon City and to the larger part of the people of Clack; amas county. His name is C. M. Ma son, and he bas for the past several years been engaged by G. W. Grace in his general merchandise store on Mo lalla Avenue. Mr. Mason has recently become a prominent factor in Oregon City from the fact that at the last election of city officers hewa,s elected to the .important position of councilman from the third ward, Not that he hasn't held im portant officers before, for he has been a leading citizen of this city almost from the time ho became a resident in it and has at different times served in more or less important capacities. Mr. Mason was born in Hardin county, Iowa, tnd grew up on a farm, as many other young business men in these parts have and received such an education as the rural schools of his state afforded. Along about the year '85 he shook the soil of the 1 Hawkeye state from his shoes and went to Kansas, where he met Miss Clara Batdorf, and after a brief courtship was married to her. This happened in 1886. He lived in Kansas only a few years when he concluded that better opportunities were offered to an enterprising young man with plenty of brains and muscle in the Webfool state than elsewhere. Accordingly, he hiked thither and has been here ever since and Will likely remain here as long as he is permitted to live any here. Six children have been born to Mr. Mason and his good wifo, five of whom are yet living, bright girla and boys about the parental fireside. Mr. Mason is in no Bense of the word a politician, but he takes an active in terest i. the affairs of his town and county and Is always found fighting in the front ranks for anything pertaining to the good of either. He was the first paid chief of the fire department Oregon City ever had. In politics he is a demo crat and one who votes it straight with out asking any question?. He is an ac tive and working member of the A. 0. U.W..and K. 0. T. M . besides be longing to the International Retail Clerks' Union. Ab a man and a citizen he ranks high in Oregon Oity. "CLIMBING THE GOLDEN j STAIRS." COURIER'S LIST OF READ ERS GROWING IN SPITE OF THE RAIN. Will Reach the 2000 Mark Be fore "Roses Bloom Again." Notwithstanding the weather condi tions the Courier is almost daily increas ing its list of subscribers, reaching out and broadening its scope of influence. It ia conceded by all that 1 the Courier bas more circulation than all other pa pers in Clackamas county combined. It pays to advertise In its columns, be' cause we reach the people and bring re sults. Here is a list of those who have paid during the week. The star indi cates the new subscribers. R. B. Holcomb, Clackamas,Ore..$l 50 Albert Newkercher, LaGracdi.Ore 1 50 Merrill DaviB, Oregon City, Ore... 1 50 W. M. Shank, Oregon City, Ore. . . 3 00 Joseph C. Hedges, Oregon City. .. 1 50 Hermon Smitbx, Aurora, Ore I 50 M. H. Flanagan, Oregon City 3 00 A. T, Cochran, Hubbard, Ore.... 1 50 John Hammelman, Canby, Ore.. 1 50 Charles Alb ight, Oregon City, Or 1 50 J. H. Eton, Cams, Ore 1 50 Thomas Law, Marysville, Cal.... 1 50 J. L. Stewart, Stone, Ore 1 50 J. M, Marks, Oregon City, Ore. . . . 1 50 MIGHTY FLOOD 8 WEEPING DO WN THE OLD WILLAMETTE From the Headwaters to the Columbia the River lias Been Bank Full. Loss of Property All Along the Line. The Willamette river, which is usually a quiet and placid Btream, went en a rampage Sunday. For twenty-four hours, preceding 6 o'clock Saturday af tercoon, more than three and a half inches of water had fallen in nearly all parts of the valley and as a result the the river was coming up at a rapid rate on Saturday afternoon and evening. Re ports from Eugene, Albany and other places up the river indicated that the water would reach a very high Btate at Oregon City and the reporto were veri verified. Sunday morning the highest water ttiat had been experienced here thii year came and the river was ont of its batiks and over the street car line south of town and still rising. The Electric. Company ran several cars on to the low, places in the track, which is really tres tle work, and loaded them with rails in I order to kep the track from floating away. Hundreds of people viewed the falls Sunday, which weie indeed, a spectacular Bight. The water continued rising all day Sunday and Sunday night, and even Monday morning crept up a a few inches.- The Crown Paper mill was forced to lay off a large force of its men in the wet room Monday night on account of the high water. Indications are that the river will not go higher even if there ib heavy rain and snow in the mountains. The loci s were closed Monday afternoon on account of higer wattr. No damage of any gre t conse quence haslwen done in Oregon City and Clackamas county, though dispatch es from towns up the river indicate that they have not been so fortunate. Eugene, Ore., January 2 The big flood ol rain during tne 24 hours preced ing 3 o'Uock Saturday, when 3 51 inches of rain descended on a. Boaked surface of ground, brought the highest water in the Willamette river since the well-remembered fl"oods of 1890 and those of 1881 and 1801. The flood of the present year is the fifth in number of any con sidfrable consequence since the coun try bas been known to the white man. Sai.em, Or., Jan. 26. The Willamette at this point has risen to a height of 27.8.feeton account of recent heavy and wary "itins. The river is several feet out jrittf bankti, and is creating feat havoc upon property" along the water front. People on Water street were obliged to move to higher quarters Sun day night. The new fill to the west ap proach to the big steel bridge across the Willamette, but recently completed, is being washed away, and fears are enter tained for the treatlework. This is the greatest fl jod since 1890, when the river attained a height of 32 feet, and from reports of a still greater rise from upper river points, it is feared that the river has not attained its apex yet. All creeks of this section are rag ing torrents, and great ddmage is being wrought upon bridges throuhgout this and Polk counties. Albany, Or., Jan. 26. The flood at Albany began tc subside at 2 o'clock this afternoon At noon the Willametle river registered 31.6 feet above low water mark the highest point reached in 12 (years, and which has been sur passed but twice in 42 years. During the forenoon snow fjll, and later it changed to a light rain, which still con tinues. Reports of losses which will amount to thousands of dollars, are coming in rapidly tonight. Almost every one along the Willamette and Santiam rivers lost some livestock, and in some in stances individual losses will amount to several hundred dollars. The loss to Linn county in bridges alone will amount to $25,000, as far as present re ports go. Beside the Sanderson bridge, which is a total loss, many bridges were partly wrecked, among them being the Driages at Jttierson, btajton, Lebanon and Crawfordsville. A large number of small 50-foot bridges were washed out, rendering roads impassable. As far as the eye can reach on the Benton county Bide is an immense ex panse of turbid, rushing waters, freight ed with trees and drift, dealing destruc tion wherever they strike. Traffic is largely interfered with. - Miles of coun try roar's on the Benton county side are submerged, while damage to the South ern Pacific roadbed in Southern Linn county has shut off all travel south of Albany. Corvallis, Or., Jan. 26. The Wil lamette tonight ia 2i4 feet above low water. It has fallen three feet since 5 o'clock this morning, when for three hours it had stood at 27 feet. To the east of Corvallis is huge lake four miles wide and five miles long. In John Beache'a barn are nine horses that were midside deep in water all latt night. They have been standing in water for 36 hours. Thirty to 60 head of cattle stood most of yesterday after noon and all lust night huddled together on the highest part of the same farm, and were in two to three feet of vater. The overflow of Mary's river to the south of town makes another lake two or three miles long and a mile wide, with water two feet deep in the county toad for a mile to the southward. The lower end of Mary's river bridge is afloat and has swung lour foet oat of position. Ap proach to town baa been practically shut ofr since yesterday afternoon, save by the railroads. No damage beyond the desiruction of several small bridges is reported. 1 ' The water continued to rise all day Tuesday very alowly and Tuesday eve- THE OLD RELIABLE 11 . fill Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE 1 ning the Crown pater mill was com pelled to close down their eaiiie plan'.. The woolen mills, too, c'osed down Tuesday and the water n ada it exceed ingly uncomfortable for tie Willamette and Wednesday th greater part of that mill shut down. Navigation has ceased on the Willamette and will not be re sumed until the waters recede. ' The Clackamas near its month over flowed its banks caused by back water from the Willamette, and all the low lands between the Abcrrict y and and Clackamas is under water. Both Park Place and Clackamas Heights have been shut off from ' Oregon City by wagon roads, both roads- being under water. Some of the public road between Oregon City and Park Place is several feet deep in water. The water reached the tails of th Southern Pacific Rail road Company's trucks but did not in terfere with the traffu of the road. Several of the backyards o( the houses at Green Point were covered with water Wednesday and the Chinese gardens were entirely under water. The barri cade placed along the trestle by the O. W. P. and Railway Company, to be used when the bridge is to be filled, was washed away Monday evening, as was also a part of the bicycle path built of wood. The water reached its highest stage sometime in the afternoon Wednesday and is now slowly receding. The dam age in this city has! been light. Ine nu u of tlit latter psrt of the week was followed 1 by snow Monday which melted as fast aa it fell and it has snowed intermittently since Some of the highlands in sight of the cit are yet white with snow but norm has re mained on the ground in the city. This is the first snow-fall of the season. .OA8TOIIIA, Bean the Ttl9 Vou Have Always BodjJIi Ttia Kind Vou Have Always Signature of 8 Wilson & Cooke HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE SHIPMENT OF OLIVER - I' .iTi':. : jfc. . .n - .1 . .'.ivi . .4 . Wf r " - . ': i. ..null AND EXTRAS Also Harrows, Cultivators and Seeders WE ALSO CARRY Stoves, Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Woodchoppers' and Loggers' Supplies We have also added to our stock, a large shipment of STEEL ENAMELED WAKE. Lisk'a anti-rust Tinware. Jit Prices that Cannot Wilson e SECRET SOCIETIES. What Local Lodges Are Doing for the Betterment of Mankind. Robust Tent, No. 92, Knights of Mae cahees at Molalla, installed officers Sat urday night. State Commander Sher- wood, of Portland, and Sheriff Shaver, of Oregon City, were presenc. After the installation a program wai rendered by Mr. Wright, who was also a visitor. In strumental music was also rendered. Several amusing farces were given in a highly entertaining manlier. The eve ning's entertmn vnl was closed with dancing. The nilioers installed in the lodge were L. II Vutighan, commander; George L'ae. lieutenan commander; William Mackrell, reco d and finance keeper; R. W. Lewie, chaplain; George F. Frazer, sergeant; D. C. Bojles, first master of guards; H. N. Everhardt, secand master of guards; B. Perry, master-at-arms ; A. Moshberger, picket and N. O. Zweifel, sentinel. The Knights of Maccabees of Eagle Creek hold a public meeting last Saturday night and a very good lime was en joyed . The Wai&eno Trirm of Red Men of Oregon Oity conferred the warriors' de gree on two candidates last Saturday night. The chief's degree will be con ferred next Saturday night. A banquet was given Saturday night and a general good time was enjoyed. OASTOniA, Boan th Kind You Have Always The Kind Vou Have Always Signature of be Duplicated in the City & & Cooke P (?i