ORECKJBJ CITY COURIER , The Farmers Society of Equity is spreading over this county and the Courier is spreading with it. Its ad vertising columns are good as gold. A factory pay roll of $100,000 a month makes some town. Oregon City is the best city in the state outride of Portland. Keep it on the move. 30th YEAR. -OREGON CITY, ORE., FRIDAY, FEB. 21", 1313. No. 41 Tiir nnnniTi run IHk 1. 1 1 II III I 1 h K mil uuuiii i mill, DON'T KILL IT TOO SPLENDID A PUBLIC MAT TER TO SCRAP OVER. GET TOGETHER, AND FORGET It Has Taken Years to Make it, Now Don't Spoil It. That there is dissension in the man agement of the county fair is most deplorable. It is too splendid an undertaking to have trouble and sectional differences over; too big an enterprise for Clack amas county men to fight over, but NOT too big to be permanently crip pled over. If ever there was ever a county that should have a yearly exhibit and ever a county that produces the goods to make such an exhibit worth while, it Is our county one of the richest of the Willamette Valley. , And must we see this association that is just getting onto its feet fi nancially; this fair which has strug gled through the tight places and is getting where it gets the crowds and has sunshine ahead, must we see this get a set-back and be a matter to scrap over because we can't agree? , President Smith and Director O. E. Freytag have resigned, and there is talk of forming a new association and having other grounds laid out and an other fair started at Beaver Creek on the new route of the Clackamas Southern. The trouble, so far as we can learn, if; a sectional difference, and that largely between Oregon City and Canby. As to the matters which have led up to this we know little and care less. But we DO know that it would be i j. i i... luuy ttiiu ruin tu iiaitiunm uuumy fairs to start a second one, or. even split up and fight over the present one. The association has splendid grounds, fine buildings and the best half-mile track in the state and a lot of money invested in the grounds at Canby, and it would simply be folly to endeavor to start a counter at traction. It has taken a struggle of years td bring the Canby fair up to where it is, as the ONE fair of the county, and with two, it would simply result in killing both. The trouble as we understand it is over who shall or shall not govern, i i i j j. i : ii a iL. dui lb seems to me courier uiai, me RESULTS ot the government should be the only matter over which there should ever be any dissension that, it doesn't so much matter WHO gov ern if the fair continues a success and grows. When it does not give the people entertainment;; when it runs behind in attendance Bnd shows a weak spot THEN is there a time to take up the matter and change .gov ernors. ; : But until that time and while every thing is running finely and the fair growing bigger and better each year, men SHOULD mt fight and endanger its future. This fair doesn't belong to any ring of men. It isn't Oregon City's, Canby's or Molalla's. It is a COUNTY fair, an exhibition the people of this county make, and the Courier wants to warn any man or any clique of men that it will be a mighty unpopular move for any such jnf luences to try to hin der, cripple or kill the county fair, for the backing behind this fair is, CLACKAMAS COUNTY, and this county is big enough to make any little ring of men look like nine cents. The thing to do is to forget a lot and have a fair. Burn up the big stick, get some olive branches and get in the game. Let Oregon City go half way, Canby meet us, and any other sore spots in the county put on some, salve and get in. The Courier believes that Secretary M. J. Lee will put on a splendid fair this fall if the rest of the organizat ion will co-operate. The secretary can't do it alone and he can't do it with half of the officers and direct ors fighting him.' And the Courier believes that any director or officer who cannot forget petty differences ana" give him hearty and loyal support owes it to the fair and county to RESIGN AT ONCE. But it DOES seem that these men are big enough and broad,enough to give and take and not jepordize the success of Clackamas county's fair over personal maters. And the Cour ier believes that they are this cal ibre of men, and that these matters will adjust and the boys all come down the home stretch together next September. . The Big Event of the Year. The Oregon State Sunday School Convention will be held in Oregon City April 24-26 next. The various committees are being made up rapidly and their member ship will be completed this week when preparations for the big meeting will be in full swing. It is estimated that several hundred persons will be in this city from all portions of the -state for this conven tion and Oregon City will do her best to prove a royal hostess. Nine What? Man from near S&ppoose wants a law to make hens lay; he has nine. Portland Journal. Nine what, poor hens or poor laws? An Ounce of Prevention. The Civic Improvement committee advises that a fence be built along the bluff when the elevator is completed. Why this should not have been done years ago is what hew comers cannot understand, as during the ..summer months scores of little children play along the bluff front and the wonder is that none have fallen over to death. After a little boy was drowned in the basin a year ago, we rose up and demanded that better protection be given to the Canemah sidewalk, but there is more danger in one day along the Bluffs than in twenty years along the Canemah walk. , . Some day when a child falls over to its death, then we will demand that this dangerous condition be abated, but it seems too bad that we should have to wait to pay the big price. Good Move, Sustain It. The city council wants to improve the city parks this summer ' and change them from the present eye sores we are ashamed of into places of beauty, and it is a movement the people should heartily endorse. Such improvements as these are I not expensive and they are certainly investments. One has but to remember the mud hole that once was and the beauty spot that now is at the head of the Seventh street' stairway, ' and should then say to the council "we are with you." The Woman's club made this McLaughlin park what it is and the whole city is proud of it. Our other parks 'can be made equally as hand some spots, and they should be. In the Some Day. Oregon City can't do all that ev erybody would like to see done in the way of improvement and beautifying, for these improvements cost money, and we must take them one by. one, but some of these days when the city gets on strong financial" legs and we have more people to help to do the paying, what a beautiful places the bluff fronts can be made into. And this work would not cost so much, especially if we go at it a lit tle at a time, in the, way the Woman's club went after McLaughlin park. - With a little landscaping, and with the training of vines and roses over rustic stairways we could make the tourist rave over this city and its bluffs and scenic points. . ' We men will never do it, but if the Woman's club would just start it we men would have to help boost it along. .- ,' As Others See Us. The Courier editor was talking with a booster from McMinnville the other aay, ana as we swoaon nu aim looked down on the big mills he said , nu?a WiMinnri la half whafr ilmcPAn " , " - : n j City has in the way of pay rolls and she will be as big as Salem in five years. , .... - . i It does 'one good to talk with the, outside fellows ' occasionally for it makes one appreciate what he has. We are so familiar with' the turn ings of the wheels that never stop and the pay rolls that go to the $100, 000 mark every month, that we take it as a matter of course as if the big mills simply growed there. . ' Oregon City doesn't have to watch the weather and the1 crops for 'busi ness. The factories guarantee us a permanent and steady business, and thev give this city a hard times in surance that'pther city's can't buy. But we should, get some McMinn- ville glasses once in a while and look over what we have. If that hustling little city could grow to a, Salem with half what we have, why can't we grow to 15,000 as we are. vAnd there are plenty of other in dustries that we can get. We have everything that any manufatory wants, the power, the railroads, the electric lines and water transporta tion. Their Justification. Editor Courier: In regard to the reason "Why the Clackamas Delagation voted for the Widow's Pension Bill, I desire to say, that Mr. Schuebel and I read your ed itorial before we cast our votes. We looked the matter up and found there was a criminal statute which provides that1" a man who failsto support his wife shall be imprisoned and made ton be worked upon the roads and the sum of one dollar per day is paid to his wife. We thought this would off set some of the disadvantages that the deserted wife has to work under. The erreat difficulty is to determine just; exactly who would be deserving. It will put quite a burden on tne tax payers to support the children of wid ows but is so clearly a duty of society to care for the widows -nd orphans that we thought it best to grant the relief which the bill provided. We did not see the matter from the angle which you did. We tried to vote for the best interests of the entire people as we thought it at the moment I hone our general conduct is meeting with the approval of the people of Clackamas County-" Sincerely yours, F. M. GILL. Many Loose Spokes. While the granting of pensions may be right in principle and from a hu mane standpoint, those who are post ed claim it is so drawn as to permit many abuses and it will impose a fi nancial burden that may prove stag gering. The claim is also justly made that the bill will prove an entering wedge, for with the principle of pen sions for the needy once established, there are other classes perhaps equ ally deserving of state assistance. Hiiliboro Independent. LETBIG BUSINESS HAVE OGLE MINE WALL STREET NEEDS WEALTH, OREGON DOESN'T. LET EASTERNERS GOBBLE IT They Have Our Water Falls Them Our Mines. Give One of the stockholders of the Ogle Mining Co. made the surprising state ment to the' Courier the , other ' day that the movement to finance the smelting proposition was coming slow . ., -, s and that unless some means were tak- en to awaken the people and get them to take hold of the matter faster, the proposition would have to go over for another yeaf. , This seems strange in face of the general confidence in the proposition. The man is yet to be fourrd who fver saw Ogle mine that is not thoroughly convinced it has unlimited wealth be hind it. Everybody believes in the richness of the mine." For years it has been developed until there is ab solutely no doubt about the matter. The gold and silver are there; they are there for anybody to see, for any body to see or assay, and there is enough of it in sight to last years and years. And isn't it an odd proposition that with full confidence behind a proposi tion of this kind that it should be such hard work to raise the necessary capital to install-a 'smelter? - The Courier believes the people are overlopking something when they re fuse to take any interest in this mat ter. It is a lead pipe cinch that where there is a mine that is rich and can show its richness, there will be cap-1 ital to get it out. ( -' . . - The point we should consider is whether we can afford to let some eastern concern come in and run this, and ship the coin back to New York as fast as it is extracted, or whether we want to have this richness and this enterprise for Oregon? The men who have stayed with that mine. out there in the mountains for nine years are not goint to let it lay undeveloped another pine years to wait for Clackamas county to make up its' mind whether it had better run it' or not. The men who have worked and proved to the mining worM th HAVE something are t , to b , f . . . V -J? nome people to take it, Those nine flf r hi it haVe been ard M Thfi haye mad(ood aj now t,hev want results. And thev ara . . . tWo .. ' have to sell it 'to a New York syndi cate to get them. It is not because of confidence in the proposition that our people do not take hold of this matter it appears to be pure apathy, Nine out of ten business men you talk with will tell you they "guess the boys have got something out there." They all know it. They know the mine has the met al anfl- that1' it '. is one of the safe propositions in mining, but they all seem to think thatbecause it is good that there will be no trouble in financ ing it, and they let the other fellow put up the coin. The old stockholders, the original investors who took a chance when the proposition wa3 full of chances, are loyal almost to a man, but these men have for years put up the money to develop the mine and show it up as it stands today, and while they are do ing all they can to help the smelter proposition, yet they have done much and can't do it all. Everybody thought it would be an easy task to raise the money neces sary for this smelter, but it is not proving so, and naturally the men at the head of it want to see it move. And nataurally these men are going to move it. They won't wait another nine years. . This it would seem is a matter our people should come alive on. This mine is going to bring a world of money into Oregon if Oregon runs it, and it will take a world of wealth out if eastern capitalists control it. The best mining engineers in the country have pronounced the mine as a rich proposition. The Fairclough boys who have drilled tunnels out there for years stand as high in the community as men can stand and they know that the mine is a bonanza. They have hall many chances to sell out but have refused. They have for years lived in the hope of seeing this property developed and controlled by our home people. Hadn't we better take hold of this matter and save this proportion for Cla&amas county. Once under way it will be a big thing, not only for the wealth that it will produce but for the labor it will employ and from the development of other mineral deposits in that part of the state. Once let eastern mining men get hold of this mine and it will be all off so far as an asset to this 'county and state, and once let the home people get it to working and it will be a never-ending supply of new wealth for the county and state. Hadn't our Commercial club and the Live Wires better get behind this matter and help the boys to get the needed amchinery? Wouldn't it be one of the best propositions they ev er boosted? It seems mighty strange when a proposition that people KNOW is the goods cannot find enough encourage ment at home to deliver the goods, but must be turned over to tome for- eign corporation in order to" get it to1 , working. I This is a matter that we had bet- ; ter recognize and take hold of.' It is so much easier to be careful than to I be sorry. A CLEAN CITY. One of the Biggest Assets Any City Can Have. There is a fascination about boost ing for a bigger and finer home" city that sooner or later seizes upon every citizen who has the least particle of local patriotism. If for no other reas onn, we boost for our own city in a spirit of rivalry with neighboring towns. No man likes to admit, or have some one else to do it for him, that his home is not quite as good as that of some more fortunately located per son. So our merchants get together and contribute liberally, to the publicity funds of the commercial clubs and such organizations. Booster days and Llve b?ows are T no 0 her , purpose than to persuade ourselves and others that we live in the best place ihere is to inhabit. Unfortunately however, the voices on the opposite side of the fence, those that raise doubts as to the ab solute truth of these boostirtg state ments, are often so loud that the world outside does not hear our opti mistic protests. , - The news value of a fever epidemic is so much greater than even the most valiant of publicity proclamat ions that it necessarily carries far ther and has greater weight in the opinion of strangers. Untidy cliffs and tangled riversides that are otherwise naturally beautiful, a predominat- ln certain sections of yards littered with rubbish, and barns surrounded with manure-piles do much to offset the remarks of approval which the visitor to our city gives us because of the" waterfalls and other scenic features of the town. . . If we have so many acknowledged advantages then why do we not cash in on them fully, instead of receiving but a small percentage of their val ue? We are spending thousands of dollars laying out and improving the streets which will some day trans verse th confines of a city several times the size of the present one. We are spending money and brains on the problem of obtaining a certain, supply of pure water, not only for ourselves but for 'those who will join us in making a greater Oregon City. '. Buibefore we can hope to realize this larger city of the future, we must absolutely solve one very near-at-home problem. We must first have a CLEAN city." On this foundation we may build a greater city, a more beautiful city, a healthier one. With out this basis, we simply gamble with the future and the chances are against us.' - The signs of the times in Oregon City se'em to point forward. Let us go ahead then, but let us do it right. First CLEAN UP. Going Some.. , 4 Almost every mail brings in a list of news ubscribers, sent in through the secretaries of the different Equity unions of Clackamas county. They, come in bunches of from five to twenty and the Courier subscrip tion list is growing faster ; than any county paper in Oregon ever grew. These subscribers are the county's readers and thinkers, the county's substantial men. The Courier is the official repre sentative of the Society of Equity. The Society is having a phenomnnal growth. Starting a few months ago with one -little, local, it has grown to the proportion, of a state .organiza tion, and -a call for this organization has been made. And as the Society grows, the Courier grows. DIMICK'S TOBASCO SAUCE Tells the Senate What He Thinks of ; Oregon's Naval Militia. Senator Dimick is nothing if not sandy, and he backs his convictions with effective action and vigorous English. .When he is convinced of a position he' takes it and he holds it, and he is right there by his gun when the smoke blows away and some times the ONLY man there. In the matter over the state militia he made one of his characteristic fights and speeches the other day, and here is assuring the senator that Clackamas county won't call any pro test or indignation meeting because of it. Dimick told the senate the water militia should be abolished and no fur ther appropriations made. He cited that the officials have been crooned or incompetent and the whole outfit in a continual uproar through graft- ine. booze, fighting and bickering for authority among the higher offi cers. He said the money so far spent had been worse than thrown away and he can see no excuse for the Bos ton being used as a plaything by a bunch of tinsel-loving near-soldiers at the. expense of the taxpayers, who have to foot the bill, tne senate said the militia should live. , Corporations Take Notice. The state laws provide that every corporation in Oregon must make a reiort of the annual net-income to the internal revenue bureau on or before March 1, and the penalty for failure to do so is a fine of from ?1, 000 to $10,000. Getting in the Game. The Mt. Pleasant Base Ball Club gave a basket supper at the school house Saturday night. A very entertaining programme was rendered and a good time was en joyed by everybody. The receipts of the evening amounted to 40.15. Play ball! NOf'JST A GILL" . GILL 'TWOULD KILL THE AD. AND SAVE THE LAD. THAT'S WHAT MR. GILL THINKS And Following His Letter is What the Courier Thinks. . Editor Courier: I notice that you have been criti cising in your peculiar Dietrich Knickerbocker style my bill regulat ing the advertising of the sale of cig arettes. Apparently you have read only the calendar title of the bill. The bill provides that it shall be unlawful to advertise, not only in the news papers and magazines, but in any cir cular or poster or in any public place whatever. It shall be unlawful for any person to solicit, ask or request any one to purchase any make or brand of cigarettes. Personally I would fav or a bill prohibiting the sale of cigar ettes in the State of Oregon but I doubt if such a law could be passed through this legislature. There is a larger demand for the enactment of this kind of a law than you think. I have in my hand the res olutions adopted y the Oregon State Editorial Association. Resolution four reads, "The Oregon State Editorial Association wishes to go on record as condemning large, alluring cigar ette advertisements in newspapers, magazines and on bill boards got up to educate the young to use this per nicious form of nicotine poison. "So apparently the brothers of your own cloth" are very strongly in favor of the measure I have introduced. I did not know 'that Kansas had a prohibitory law. I wish to say to the people of Clackamas County through the columns of your paper that for two weeks ending last Saturday night I got an average of five and one half hours sleep each night. I worked one night until 2.00 A. M. on the commit ee of Roads and Highways and anoth er night until 1:00 A. M. and have not been able to get to bed until after' 12:00 any night during this period. It was, therefore, impossible for me to look up the laws of other states or to go into the question of constitution ality of the law, prohibitting the sale 6f cigarettes. Such a law might be constitutional in Kansas and still con flict with our constitaution. I am of the opinion now, however, since get ting an opportunity to talk the matter over with some attorneys, that it would be as consitutional to prohibit the sale of cigarettes as to prohibit the -Sale of alcoholic beverages but there is a large number of cigarette users in the membership of either body and I doubt if the bill could pass either house as a strictly, prohibitory law.- ' - Jbu say this bill will only- adver tise Gill. I agree with you that it v411 advertise Gill and advertise him to the favorable attention of people who believe in protecting the youths of our land. I received a letter from Phil. S. Bates, Secretary of the Editorial As sociation, heartily commending this bill. He called " my attention to the fact that girl students in our high schools, colleges and universities were urging their young men friends to purchase certain brands of cigarettes in order that they might win pennants whichwere offered as premiums by the companies making these cigaret tes. This bill will have a tendency to stop this thing which seems to me to be a very pernicious practise. I am enclosing a copy of the bill and inasmuch as it is very short, I hope that you will publish it in full in your paper. You can rest assured that when I introduce a bill, I have mighty good reasons for putting it in or it wouldn't go in. Of -course, I un derstand your method of editorial style is to attract attention and make the -matter readable.' At the same time it is impossible to judge what is in a bill by tis calendar title. This bill has the hearty support of the editor of the Enterprise. Sincerely yours, F. M. GILL. Imagine a thing so vicious, so per nitious, that it is made illegal by a special statute to advertise it . in a newspapers or bill board, and yet per mit dealers to sell it to any man that has the change!, Isn't that inverting tying, Mr.Gill ? Before I would strip an. advertise ment from a bill board, I would strip the obnoxious article from the dealer -and then you would not HAVE to legislate against advertising. But perhaps Oregon needs a few more laws. Last week we stated that this was "Just a bill." It is no more. If it be comes a law" it will never lessen the cigarette sales a box. Newspapers do not advertise them only the magazines. There are no popular magazines published in Oregon, and Mr. Gill can npt tell the foreign magazines what to or not to print. Oregon is some state for legislation, but she can har dly go this far. Henee there is nothing for the bill to work on but the bill boards Phil Bates and the Enterprise to the con trary, notwithstanding But I had forgotten the naughty college girls who urge the boys to boy the horrid paper things. If they persist, why the great grand jury would indict them and District sa Attorney Tongue vould have to pro secute them. And just think of the bare, possibility of sending these sweet girl graduates to jail. Mr. Gill, Withdraw that bill! Mr. Gill doubts the constitutional ity of a law which would proohibit cigarette smoking. I don't. Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Washington have such laws, and they stick. If he does not think so, let him try to buy a box of Turkish Trophies in any of these domains. And he doesn't think the legisla ture would pass such a law. I don't either, but I would like to line the fellows up and see which had the hardest drag with them, boyhood or the tobacco trust. This publicity would mighty soon put men in the legislature who WOULD pass such a law. . You started at the wrong end of the reform, Mr. Gill. We want a law that will stop SMOKING cigarettes, not stop advertisingthem . f advertising them. Start over and go after the tobac co trust the next time. Never mind if it doesn't pass the first time. Wom an suffrage didn't. MATTERS FOR CITY'S GOOD Splendid Suggestions Made By Civic Improvement Club. the A recent number of the Courier print ed the report of the Civic Improve ment Committee of the Live Wires, and you were somewhat startled over the fact that this committee found 121 violations of the laws of cleanliness and health. At Tuesday's Live Wire luncheon the committee, through its chairman, Dr. van Brakle, made the following additional report: Copies of th.e detailed Inspection Report together with notes of expla nation have been sent to the Health and Police Committee of the Council and to the Woman's Club. Several sub-committte have beert appointed, among which is one on sewers and one on parks. An incom plete sewer opening into the gulch at the head of Monroe Street has been complained of as being exceedingly malodorous and has been inspected by the committee. We understand that the council intend to have this sewer district completed as soon as weather conditions permit, and we heartily indorse this action. The committee also recommends that a private sewer opening into the Willamette just north of the suspension bridge at least be so constructed as to open into the stream below low water level. Increased activity in regard to Darks is to be noted in the papers. The immediate future is considered a good time to plant the necessary or namcntel trees in the undeveloped, park near the High School at the corner-of Jackson and Twelfth Streets, as these trees can get in several years growth in anticipation of the time when this park will be more fully de veloped . . It has been suggested that as the elevator will shortly,. be in operation, a fence of proper construction be erected along the upper edge of the bluff and that some sort of parking along this natural promenade and beauty spot be arranged for. Che committee in its weekly meet ings is gradually maturing plana for increased activities and again . asks the hearty co-operation of not only the. Live Wires but of all progressive citieens who are interested in a clean er and more beautiful Oregon City. LAZELLE DAIRY COMPANY Organization of Registered Stock Co. with M. J. Lazellc, Manager Another evidence that Clackamas county is going ahead in up-to-date methods is the organization of the Lazelle Dairy Co., starting with a herd of registered Jersey cattle on the Lazelle farm, two miles south of this city, and the company will keep fifty cows and manufacture their own butter. ... The latest addition to the herd is a high-class bull from the Green Meadows farm at Albany, being of tha fnmnna Kinc Mclia Ann strain, and several cows and heifers from the Molalla stock farm, managed by Jonn Cole of Molalla. This herd will be nf rriAt imnortance to the dairy in dustry in this county, as the manager, M. J. Lazelle, Is especially nweu ior dairying and herd management. Little, Girl Horribly Burned. The little two-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. Hasbrook, occupying rooms in the Nash building on Sev enth street, met with a serious ac cident Tuesday afternoon, which near i ut tha littl onn its life. The lit tle child was playing in front of a stove and a spark irom tne uro i una in a few minut- HHCU li" -..r es the little girl was a mass of flam es. The frightened motner rusneu w l.. ViiM'a aRRiHtance and us ing her presence of mind, smothered the flames, Dut Dciore mo were extinguished the child was fear fully burned about the body and T-.l onnllraMnnll of Oil WCr6 ItttC. - used by the distracted mother and neighbors until the arrival oi pny- f- tnuornl hnlirn the child iciaii- . writhed in agony, and It was feared that the accident would prove iauu. cv,o wo. taken to the hospital a few hours after the accident occured. Born, Wednesday, February 19, to Stout, of Port- LUC tvij.w r land, twins, daughter and son. Mrs. Stout was formerly miss Anwuiew t Ctreaan Citv. and is a niece of Mrs. George H. Wishart t.nd Mrs. Lena Charman of this city. Mrs. George Brfenner and sister, of Cams, were Oregon City visitors Wednesday. DEATH CLAIMS EDWIN T. FIELDS A LONG AND HONORED RESID ENT OF OREGON CITY. WAS S. P. AGENT FOR YEARS A Man Who Had Legions of Stead fast Friends. Edwin Thomas Fields, one of the most popular and prominent men in Oregon City, died at his home on Twelfth and Main street Tuesday morning at 5 o'clock of Bright's dis ease. Mr. Fields has been ill for over a yar and about one year ago was compelled to give up his position as agent of the Southern Pacific of this city, which he held over 20 years. The patrons of the Railroad Company, as well as the officials and employees of that company had looked forward to Mr. Fields regaining his health and that he would agar. re':me his posit ion, but. during the past six months his health gradually failed, and altho he had consulted the best of physic ians and specialists, only temporary relief was effected. His death, is re gretted by his host of friends. No man has made more friends and held their respect and friendship than Mr. Fields. He was a member of the Elks. Lodge of Oregon City, being a charter member of that order, also member of the Knights of Pythias Lodge and Oregon City Commercial Club. Mr. Fields has always taken an active in terest in the city in which he has resided all of his life. On many occas ions he has taken part in entertain ments for charity, as he possessed an excellent voice, and was always ready to give his assistance. Edwin Thomas Fields was born Oc tober 24, 1807, at Canemah Clacka mas county, making his home at that, place until his marriage to Miss Jos ephine Sinsheimer, of this city,. Jan uary 25, 1893, residing In Oregon City since that time. He was the son of the late Thomas Fields, a leading pioneer of Oregon City and of Mrs. Clara Fields, who still resides at the old home in Canemah. Mr. Fields is survived by his wife, Josephine Fields, of this city, and a daughter, . Miss Clara Fields of this city, his mother, Mrs. Clara Fields of Canemah, one brother Clarence Fields of Meldrum, Clackamas county, Mrs. D. C. Lattourette and E. L. Shaw, of this city, who are cousins. The funeral services were held in the Elk Temple Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock, this being the first fun eral held at the ElkB new home. Mr. Fields had taken much pride in the new home of the order, to which he belonged and- there enjoyed many . day ivith his numerous. Elk friends during his last illness. The impress ive services of the Lodge, were con ducted by Rev. C. W. Robinson, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, who is chaplain of the order. This was One of the largest attended funerals ever held in Oregon City, when young and old attended to pay their lust respects to the departed; The floral tributes were in profusion and exquisite. The active pall bearers were Harry S. Moody, William R. Logus, William H. Howell, Gilbert L. Hedges, John J. Tobin and E. L.- Johnson. The honor ary pall bearers were Henry E. Stev ens, of. SellwowdJ A. M. White, Will iam Andre,son, B. T. McBuin. E. G. Caufied, J. U. Campbell. The inter ment was Kn Mountain View Ceme tery. Many attended the last sad rites at the cemetery. The business houses closed during the services from two to three o'clock Business Before the Council. At the council meeting Wednesday night the elevator committee reported that plans were being drawn and would be submitted to the council the 2Gth. Mayor Jones appointed Messrs. Tooze, Beard and Albright a commit- on park improvement. The city engineer was instructed to tiiiIib pst.imates for the imnroveinent of Seventh street from l.:gh to Divis ion street; also that ur.ision street ue rvfvpH hftck of tha Ea3tnian schooi to see if -vhVs and fmn encroaclu '. An (.:d.nance for the cost i.T ri.- creio fii" v.se at i.c bell tower was .n-deied li uv n. .T W. Swafford. O. D. Ebv and Mr. Lewfillvr. were aDDointed a committee to appraise High street. March 12 was fixed as the last date for remonstrance against accepting Main street paving. Born, February 12, to the wife of C. F. Kendall, at 507 Baldwin St., Portland, a son, weight seven pounds. The little fellow has been given the name of Theodore Robert, bein,r nam- d after his two grandfathers, Theo dore Kendall and Robert Brown, both former residents of Oregon City. Ihia is the first grandson on both sides. Mrs. Kendall was formerly Miss Grace Brown, of Oregon City, where she is well known. WANTED! Girls and Women To operate Sewing Machines in garment factory. Oregon City Woolen Mills