E:ON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1903 4 OREGON CITY COURIER Published Every Friday by OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING CO. J. H. Wentovkr, Editor and Bulnes Manager. B. Lie Wistovhb, Local Editor. tntored la Oregon City Pwtofflce u 2nd-clas natter SUBSCRIPTION KATES. Paid In advance, per year 1 M Six months 75 Clubbing Rate. Oregon City Courlor and Weekly Oregonian -S2.25 Oregon City Courier and- Weekly Courier Journal - 2.00 Oregon City Courier and Weekly ixamlner.. 2.50 ntf,n Cilv r.mlrlerflml the CoKTnODOlilan... 2.2o Ortgoo City Courier and the Commoner 2.00 OJTb.e date opposite your addreB on the aper demotes me time to wdict youae pe tals noticeia markedour lubsc.iption U due. OREGON CITY, JAN. 30, 1903. Secretary Hay has taken advantage of the Columbian treaty to express his opinion of the Monroe doctrine. Colorado Republicans are undecided whether to weep or fight over that spilled pail of Senatorial milk. If the president .is looking for an Other term he ought to drop eating so mnch dark meat and live on a more stimulating diet. The COURIER boarts of 1,800 circ illation which is more than the com. Lined circulation of all the other papers published in Clackamas County. The implication of Lemuel E. Quigg in a recont bribery charges in Congress strikes dangerously near to the Senior senator from New York, Mr. Thomas E. Piatt. t: "For every one of the 100,000 cattle Texas is exporting for the restocking of tba war-ravaged veldts of South Africa she hopes to receive in return a Boer emigre. It is by no means impossible that Germany will add to her other claims against Venezuela the demand for finawiitl compensation for the expense of shelling San Carlos. The Democrats in Congress have compiled the Republican majority to adopt a gold standard for the Phil liphies. What is sauce for the goose is Bauce for the gander so they say. . Some Labor Uuloit Troubles. "All is not harmony in the ranks of the Federated Trades' Union of Ore gon City. A reported in last week's Courier there was a mass meeting one night last week of the unions of Ore gon City to endorse an eight hour law and do other things. At that meeting there were only a small number of the various labor unions of Oregon City present. Nevertheless, the few mem- bers present went ahead and endorsed a candidate for labor commissioner, and now comes members of the Tex tile union and protest against the mo tion of the small body of members present. A protest has been filed by them which reads as f olows : To the Editor : When the Textile union assembled at their hall last Tuesday evening they found it well filled with people not members of their union. By request of J. H. Howard, he wanting the endorsement of the la bor unions for labor commissioner, and knowing that he could not get it from the Textile union, he packed the hall with people of his kind by repre senting that he had some resolutions he wanted put before" them. Of course, his labor ; resolutions were not objected to by any one, but when he sprung it on them that he was there to get their endorsement for labor com missioner, there was a lively time. The Textile members had already en dorsed that Stonewall Jackson of unionism, G. Y. Harry, for that po sition, and would not see him turned down. But they were voted down by Howard's crowd, he receiving sixteen votes out of a body of six hundred people, and was duly declard elected. The unioirs of Oregon City represent from 600 to 800 people, and lie was elected their choice by sixteen votes, the majority of the Textile members not voting, because they had already voted for G. Y. Harry. The Textile workers stand for unionism, not poli tics. H. F. MARBLE, E. E. HOWELL, water for manana beast aurmg au seasons. Here a man can make .more on a farm working one month in a year than a farmer with a like num ber of acres and opportunities can make in New England working twelve months in the year. Here there is no winter to freeze and de stroy, no Summer to burn and blister. This is indeed God's acre.on this land the hand of famine can never be laid as the Almighty in his wisdom has decreed otherwise. Governor Pennypacker makes a bad start by abusing the newspapers. Long exixirieuce in life ought to have taught him that politicians die of the dry rot when newspapers drop him. Having tested the Monroe doctrine and finding it sound in wind and limb, Kaiser Bill has roluctantly given his consent to concur with the other judges in awarding it the blue ribbon. The attompt to form a washerwom an's union in Chicago, has ended in a friilure because three negroes insisted on boing admitted. It is plain that the unionists do not intend that the clothes lino shall bo the only one drawn. It is a long time between canals. The French have wasted $340,000,000 iu monoy and much precious time on (ho Panama ditch, and Undo Sam's ilrst liberal allowance to himself for the completion of the great waterway is fourteen years and $170,000,000. Democratic sentiment in Washington and in fact in many parts of the country seems to bo drifting towards the Pres ident ial candidacy of Judgo Alton B. Parker of the groat state of New York. The party might go a great deal further jind do very much worse to bo sure. It is becoming more and more appar ent from day to day that the Republic wis in llo United states Senato do not intend that any reflect ivo trust legis lation shall bo enacted at this session. By and by perhaps they will hear the still small t'oico of the people telling them to step down and out. President Roosevelt invited a linm Vcr of negroes to the last White House reception and a Southern Senator sig nificantly remarked that "The Pres ident should be alloved to choose his own company mid his invited guests always have the privilege of staying away if they do not relish mingling V'itli a crowd of darkeys. Seventeen Republicans and thirty-' iour Dcumoerats, a total of fifty-one Senators, desire to vote for the admis sion to statehood of Oklohoma.Amoua and Now Mexico. Thirty-seven Re publicans opposo that desire and are ilUibustering to prevent a vote,. The Senate of the United States is thus stultifying the policy of majority rulo. Senator Hoar, the veteran Republican Senator from the great state of Mas sachusetts has administered a muchly merited rebuke to the President for attP' iptinj to dictate legislation. If 'Telly" can't lend he won't follow and he is going to run the Republican wagon if he runs it to the Dem-ni-tion- ov-wows. Hero strength to his right arm and may his strenuous pur poses help to pull down the temple of his p:u-ty and rostore the people to their own. The Hand of Famine. The present winter is remarkable for the unusually large number of human beings, in various parts of the world, who are the victims of famine. The sufferings resulting from the crimin ally inadequate distribution of coal in a large part of the United States is not a circumstance to that inflicted by the food faminos, though the do mestic situation is bad enough. The people wlw, as large communities, are perishing for physical subsistence, are residouts of the Philippines, Western China, Finland and Northern Sweden. Some facts connected with all of these famines save the last mentioned have been given in these columns, and it is but now that the widespread and an palling nature of the Swedish dearth has come to the knowledge of the out' side world. A special commission of the govom meut has just returned to Stockholm from the extreme northern part of the peninsula, making a report that con firms tho worst fears of the nation, Fully 75,000 Swedes are said to be on the vorge of starvation, many of them eating the bark of certain trees andre sorting to other expedients to sustain life until relief reaches them. From the detailed report of tho oflicial in vestigators, it seems that, along with a total crop failure, the fislifrom somo mysterious cause, disappeared from tho coast waters, and the same was true of tho native grouso, ordi narily abundant enough to afford the inhabitants daily meat. So bad is the situation that the Swedish authorities estiniato that fully $0,000,000 will he necessary to save tho people from actual starvation. Ac tivo efforts are being made through out the kingdom to raise the great sum required, somo $300,000 having thus far been subscribed and applied to the urgent work of relief. The Swedish residents of tho United Stares have sent some $15,000 to tho fatherland and are making an organized effort to help very materially. One phase of the fainino which men aces tho return of tho sufferers to their wonted condition of independence is the threatened extermination of the hardy breed of cattle upon which they so largely depend. It will soon bo too late to preserve tho breed, un less food is sent for cuttle as well as people. Amid all these calls upon tho uni versal heart of charity, those who. do sire to give of their abundance to a worthy cause are finding abundant op portunity, and Americans, as usual, are doing their part. In Oregon, and especially in tho Willamette valley, there can lie no scarcity of fuel, and there can bo no shortage of crops. Tho good Lord iu making this coast country lias provid ed against each of these dire calam ities to mankind. Here the crops are unfailing. Here there is neither wind nor cyclones nor tornadoes. It never lightnings and thunder is heard but once iu a life time. There are no snakes except those which a fellow sometimes finds iu his boots, no pois onous reptiles, no frogs and few mos-1 quitoes. Here timber grows in a single season, big enough for stove wood, aud there is an abund;uicoof ' Senator Walcott's counsel to accept without protest "the wicked and un forgivable wrong done the Republican party" is a highfalutm' but none the less recognizable way of "hollerin nuff." Will some microscopic expert search for the brains of the Governor of Penn sylvania who reproached Andrew Car negie for scattering the money he made in the state .of Pennsylvania into other states. If wealth had not poured into the state of Pennsylvania from the entire world Mr. Carnegie's broad munificence would have been impos' sible. Every honest man in every state of the union ought to rejoice over the election of Henry M. Teller as a Sen ator from the state of Colorado. Few men in public life have won a higher place in our country's history than hal Senator Teller. Honest and manly and able, he has made the Centennias state an ideal member of- the upper house of Congress. He in the later years of his life has become a Dem ocrat and that is all the better. rail r ad ties were teen floating down the liver and it was thought that Russell Bros., bad lost all their ties, but it prov ed to be a mistake, it was a few culls that had been thro vn into the water. X. Y.Z. Two hundred years ago people had small pox as we now have the measles. No class was exempt. From 1781 to 1805 in the city of Berlin 3,423 in a million died in every year of this dis ease j today, thanks to a rigid system of vaccintaion, the rate is less than one in two million. ' Our health laws jn many states are too lax in tins matter of vaccination as with a little more care on the part of the health officials and more drastio legislation ought to be able to lower the death rate from small pox to the Berlin proportion. Cariby. Hon. Thomas F. Ryan was in Can by last week. Mr. Lee Echerson is attending busi ness college in Portland. Gus Rock from Aurora was shaking hands with the boys last Monday, Edward Sawyer representing the Clackamas county Record, was iu our city - Monday in the interest of that paper. Mi. and Mrs. F. A. Sleight from Ore gon City came up last week to visit fiends and also to attend the I. 0. O. F. bail q net. A little child came to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Shank last wtek but only lived a few hours. The. little one was laid away in Canby cemetery. Weldon Shank and wife from Oregon City came up to visit with old friends and also to attend the I. O. O. F. cele bration. John Kohler and wife htve moved to Portland Mr. Kuhler will work at the carpentei's-trade. Mrs. Stalnaker died at her home in Canby last Thursday evening at G p. m . Ihe body was laid to rest in Zion cunetary lass Saturday. A little child came to the home of J. VVilkersou last week both mother and babe are doing well. Mrs. Dodge died at Ler home in Ore gon City last week, the body was brought to Canby last Saturday. Mr, Dodge and Ken Knights people came here from Michigan about two years ago. Fred and Gus Vorpahl formerly of Canby have opened a grocery store in Portland on the East side. Tlie boys report they are doing a tine business.' Canbv Lmlkie No. 150 I. O. O. F. celebrated its first anniversary last Fii uay evening at their hall. About 00 were preseut, ine sturouuuing iojges were well represented. The. lodge put on work of the second degree, followed by a banquet prepared with the help of the Rebekahs of Cant.y a program I wag rendered consisting of music sing ing and dancing , which lasted until about 2 o'clock, after which all returned to their homes well pleased with the entertainment. Molalla. There will be a big ball at the school nonce on the evening of the 13th. Several sports from this vicinity are in the mountain, since theisnow hunting lias been good. Several men are engaged in setting poles on the farmers telephone I'ne from V. P. Herman's place to Molalla, which will be iu operation in a short time. P. M Koyles has bwn called to the home of his fathei-in-law, who lives in Polk county. The old gentleman ia very tow and is not expected to recover. There has been about two thousand acres of timber land sold lately, situated a few miles east of here, bontiht by eastern men. The price paid le ng fif teen dollars per acre. It is reported that a c uip will be in operation on the fend in a short time. The basket social last Saturday even ing at the hall was well attended. The program waa not very extensive, but it was well rendered. The social wis given" by the Mola'la Grange for the jurpose ol laisiug money to purcnase . an organ for the new hall. j During the r.ceot high water, several . Eldorado. spent with a few Mrs. Stnrges is very sick. Our school' district voted a two-mill tax to pay interest on the bond. Ida Boyntori, of Union Mills, Saturday evening and Sunday friends here. Mrs. Emma Lyons is spending days at uroons to is weefc. Say, all yon folks who like to dance to be sure to come to Union Hall next Saturday night, Feb. 7th. School closes this Friday. Mr. Maricle, oar teacher; has the best wishes of all the scholars and parents. The dance at E. A. Howard's Saturday night was a grand success. The "boss" had a'bad chill, that was all. Lost. Highland. Mr. Nelson is on the sick list. Miss Mable Jones ia quite sick. The burnt horse is improving very slowly. , Mrs. North closed a very ajecessful term of school Friday. Mrs. and Mr. Jack Paterson were in town a few days last week. MrB. John Welsh was the guest of Mrs. M. E. Kandle Friday. Willie Trailer is making flying trips up to Mr. Jones quite often. Miss Ellen Ki:k and Myrtle Gard weie out horse back ridin g Suuday. There will be church a. the hall Sun d ty. Rev Dunlap will preach. The snow put a stop to the far mere work for a while, but we hope to see sunshine soon. Ely. Mrs. Moulton, of this city visited her nephew, Theo. Weed last Sunday, Retta Pierce has been employed in the courthouse during tl e past week. Mr. McGeehan and family visited at the home of Ed Andrews of Falls. View last Thursday. Rev. Craig, who has been very ill with pneumonia is expected home this week if the weather is favorable. The Salyation Army held a meeting Monday night in the church with a fairly good attendance and three conversions, The Methodist South, will hold meet ings in this place, commencing Friday evening and lasting over Sunday. Every body welcome. Melvin S, Smalley, who baa been in the employ of Ely Bros., for Ihe paBt lour years lelt lor Seattle Monday. Mrs S. and children will remain here for a Bhort time. 'What we need most in this place is t hall in which to bold socials and church entertainments. It is reported that Wiley May intends to remove the partitions fiom over bead in his store building and rent it for such purposes. Wiley May met with a painful accid ent last Tuesday night by falling on the back poich of his house. Threi ribs were broken and be was otherwise bruis ed and injured by the fall. Dr. Strick land was summoned and soon had Mr May resting oomfortably ; but it will be some time before be will be up and a round. Sprlnffwater. Snow five inches deep. Mercury 18 degrees. Kandle & Shibley's sawmill has shut down for a few days during the bad weatner. ihe sawmill at the power plant is running regularly aud employs quite a number ol men. The Y. P. S. O. E. recently elected the following ollicers: President, Earl blub- ley; vice-president, Charles Bard; treasurer, Mrs. Hatch : secretary, Miss Libbie Bard. Mrs. W. J. Lewellen, who has spent the past two months in f hoenix, Ariz , with her daughter, Miss Ora, is at home again, she came through California on her return, and was delighted with the orange grove, beautiful scenery, etc. About once a month Sprintwater is visited by a very strange character iu the form of a genus homouis. He usual ly appears at otie of the Btores jmt after dark to purchase provisions which coti' sist of a sack of flour, a dozon cod fish etc. The silver he gives in pavment for the groceries appears to have been very recently unearibed, or 10 h ve come in contact with quick silver. While mak ing his purchases he keeps his face to wards the door, or away from the met- chaut. He is a man about 55 years of age, blue eyes and hair streaked with gray. ALL SORTS OF WEATHER. Enjoyed by People of Clackamas Coun'y During the Week. A heavy fall of snow is reported from points out iu the eastern part of the county during the week. Out in the foot-hills of the Ca cade range the suow it more than a foot deep and sleigh-riding ia a sport that is much indulged in, and the snow is on ths ground to the dnpth of several inciter only a d' sen miles ont, but here in Oregon Oi'y which nestles like a cup in the Wil lamette valley at a much lower elevation only a few scattering: flukes have fallen and the ground hs not been whitened. As we write this Wednesday a'ternoon, the sun is roiring his effulgent rays down upon the city and river with gracious lavishness, the temperature in above forty In the shade and the air i redolent with the breath of spring. Tl e uuiy Uiiiuiauou that we have of tho wintry weather in the foothills is the; dioppinginto tbe office of a rancher fr m the eastern part of the county anil reporting tl.e heu-y sno -fall, while occasionally a btnv comes into town covered with the beautiful enow. Trul this is great county and it 1 as a wondeiful future. The Park Place CASH STORE Park Place Cash Store Park Place 'Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Offers for ;60 days only for SPOT CASH Their entire stock of Mens Women and Childrens SHOES at Special Reduced P r iees Now is your chance to get good shoes at a saving of from 15 to 20 per cent, which cuts off all my profit : : my the I must reduce stock and secure money for same in order to complete my arrangements for 1903 It costs me no more to do this way than if I borrowed money and . paid interest it's the same to me either way the difference is in the favor of my custo mers. See the point? I have the J. Miller, and the Wells & Co, Shoes. The names are a guarantee of quality. They are neat, stylish and unsurpassed for durability, and equal ed by none at the price I offer them : : : : : : Park Place Cash Store o You Need SHOE g.f Bo You Weed M 'W ETf Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park Place Cash Store Park" Place Cash Store then see W. A. Moliiie Proprietor of Park Place Cash Store The Park Place CASH STORE