THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 191H TACK KM I'll THE ONTARIO ARCH'S THE ONTARIO ARGUS ( Established 1886) t.KO. K. AIKKN, Kditor and Publisher Published Thursdays at Ontario, Oregon nnd entered at the Ontario post offlct for distribution as 2nd class matter One year Six Months SUBSCRIPTIONS: $1.00 Three Months .6 Single copies $ .86 06 that tin mnri they argue politics or ((inimunlly advantages with Is "a pretty Reed follow." To foster hucIi a feeling is a mighty i-ii(l thing for any romiiiiiiiily. It makes lilo more woith the li vine and ll.nl a ft or nil lu I Iw. i.rlmn mnllvn tnr ! bofofe It IB (Wllllll IbIi(I OYPn aH , government, and tlio agencies con nected directly and Indirectly with It. WAS LABOR OOIiDBlUOKRDT Tim legislation which Mr. WllsOB has ho wrongly called the "eight hour-a-day" Mil will undouhtcdlv liavn to run the gauntlet of I h rom i I "basic" principle In railroad employ ment. If the, measure la held to be constitutional, thorn will yet remain Now (hat tho 1910 fair la punt the Lgj qu,tUma regarding IU oper ation citizens of Malhi'tir county in general. and of Ontario In particular, Hhnuld NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS All copy for display advertising should he at this office by Wednesday noon. To insure position copy should be in this office on Tuesday. TIIK I-Will. Tin- Fair Is over After month of strenuous work the officials, di rectors, superintendents of various departments and the citizens genornl Iv who assisted are hy this time reiov iired from (lie reaction of l lie loot nervous effort which made the I 't I r, fair ho great a success I.Ike every public Institution tho niannRomcnt of the fair and the lair den of maklliR it a success falls upon the ahoulders of a few, generous, forward lookliiR men and women who i -lent to make a venture of this mug nitude sucessful from a financial view point from attendance alone, nut financial Rain Is not the only view point from which to Judge tho fair, nor Ih it the logical view to take of Ihe Inatlttillon There are othei anil erenier olijeets to he attained than the mere makltiR of money for the fair association, and In these (hlnRS the fair VM a deehlecl success. Aa a educational Institution the Malheur county fair la In a class by Itself It is unanimously declared by the law to prevent tho railroads from working their men ten, twelve, even sixteen hours a da, providing tho pny Is ris-konod upon tho "basic" elght- and in that case the run. dlred their attention to that of I 91 7 "r '""lance, u,oro is notninR in with I firm determination to hack the offUlals to the limit that from every Staid point It will he a greater than UlS fair of 1916 Thla can only ire iione ny uniieii errori. I Tlin Miami V will I, nek (Int.irlii w l.n- hour scale iiee. ir the saprssatum he. mi on the of -' ' l vlliibuluvl iii street are a fair criterion by which ,tl probable result that Home train- to Judge, hut It la Ontario'a duty to lead the way. The fair cannot be permitted to take n backward atop, and It will not, ho long as the energy of Ontario's huslness men Ih directed toward Its succohh. Hive their time and their energy to tail who are In a position to know the the up-building of the community. It la too bad that thin la the case, for In many Insances the effort demanded Is more than somej-un afford to give More often than not, as in the case of the local institution, those who to I facta, that our fair here la the beat fair In Oregon, with the exception of the state fair at Salem This being I eit is a constant and pciina nent asset of the county. The fact that the fair Is held each a large portion of the work receive year ,K ,, of Vlllu to ,,,,, counly )n no direct, and In many Instance no Indirect benefit; unless the aatlsfac- brlnglng together the citizens of all sections In friendly rivalry and turn lion of having performed a service ,,,, f()rum w.r0n ,. ,eas for their community be so con Ider ,, ,,V. ,!,.,. of t1(. j,..,, ,.,, ,. "' exchanged The value to the inillv The phenomenal access of Ihe fair ldual farmers cannot be accurately this vein can he directly attributed to ., ureil in one year or two, but In the energy of President A W Trow the steady advance in methods where and those Inn Ilalely iissociuted h the land becomes more productive, with him on the hoard of directors 'and thus mole valuable to the Indlv- t'rt'dit, loo, should be linen the III ldual and to society. dividual exhibitors who year in and Then there Is the social value of ear out come forward to cnmpeio ami the fair as the fostering Influence (pi by arousing a coiutiiiinlt v Interest M the general upbuilding of a conunun- llvens the eMtOSU and materially Itv iplril during fair tune lliere oovenumra taxm. (IwIiik to the fact that the question of valuations on Malheur county lands has been raised It might he well for property owners to remember that: If the valuations are decreased the tax levy will have to be rained; That the coat or administrating the county government is more apt to be Increased than decronned and that money munt be provided; That If one citizen Is given an un justly low valuation some other citi zen In getting an unjustly high valu ation; Thai equality before the assessor la aa much every man's right, an equality before the rourtn of Justice; That If you are getting an unjust ly low valuation this year, and know It. someone else In getting an unjust ly high valuation, while next year It i.i n lie reversed and you will suffer; That a square deal Is all that any man should ask; That Malheur county lands will never be sought by settlers if they feel Hint tax valuations are not made according to accepted principles and with Justice to all; Thai the value of a piece of land depend! entirely upon what It will the fair each tre no "Malheur count) republicans" While the attendance tills year was or "Malheur count democrats," or produce commercially; large, and in many respects record ma other hrand of citizens save "Mai- That there should not he two val bleak inc. it did toil return a Im.iioial lour Boosters." When citizens get lies oil hinds, one for sale purposes prom to the lair association It is together at the fair and rub elbows and Ihe oilier for tax dodging mil lo lie evpecled that it should A, while watching the race-, or viewing a matter of (act, there ut m, within a (lie prize exhibits they lorget petty reasonable radius, a population suffl- differences and realize that after all Hlw fQ. Sasfl gXi .. 5fcJv ;l H fT"v """ isT J "Br" T .rll;; V B S. loAjaO s V The First-Born The Genuine,Oriinil Round Oak Is Still Supreme Look for the Earmarks If you will look closely you will have no difficulty in dis covering the original. It al ways has the name "Round Oak" on the leg. Tho Ash Pit is a seamless one-piece con struction. The Fire Tot is double, and the cold rolled reiined Boiler Iron Hody is extra heavy. There are so many advantages in the Genuini that W9 want you to call at our store and see for yourself. Sold Onlyby McNULTY & CO. l It OlsTltHT 1TTORNKVNHIP One of Ih, ..It i. In lie tilled by the electroale this rail is that of the District Attorney, and we cannot over estimate the importance of this office nor Its far reaching affM on i ie taxpayers All efficient district attorney can save the county thous ands of dollars that must be raised by diteci tuxutlon, and the least Inatten tion to the affairs of the office mat ' coat large sums. The republicans have selected as. their candidate fur this office Hubert M Duncan, s former resident of this cit, who now resides at Vals. As proof of the pudding la the eating thereof, so in all probability Mr Dun can needs no introduction to our readers, for his long residence in thla .unity and his known ability baa long since won linn a wide acquaint ance, and assures him of election, but we desire to ,iciiiaint those not knowing li i in with his record. "Hob" as he is known by all. was horn in Cohdeii. Illinois, In 1882. Ills parents relinking to Sulein, Oregon, in ISSii. where they still reside, he therefore claims to be a real "Ore BOalM " After gruduuting from Hie puhlic .cliools of Salem he look a thorough course in our lumher in du-try, haviun worked in the logging amps, saw nulls and planning fac lories of Ihe coast, and so efficient ut this work was that in 1905 at the age of twenty-three we find him the manager of a large saw mill In Wash Ington, dally turning out over 100,000 leet of lumber n uncle, who is Judce on the su perior bench of Illinois, earh tired him with an ambition to BOSOM a lawyer, and in June LMti "Hob" gra duated from Willamette I'niversity Law College at Salem and was ad mitted to practice by the Supreme Court of this state, the same month Ilia enemy was gfSlO In evidence (01 m Jtll I $01 "Hob" lauded in Ontario, and for several vears was as tOStatOd Willi Hon J W Mci'ulloch, and became Deputy In-liut Attorn ey for Malheur, Harney and (irant counties in which position he served Willi distinction for over three years. without salary from either county, for the experience thereby gained .January 1911 Mr Duncan moved to Vale in order to more efficiently handle the work coming under Ins el argS as deputy district attorney and has since resided lliere During his residence in Malheur county he has hud charge of some of tin most Importunt litigation before our SOttfU mid his laoOSsa hi well known to all No man in Malheur county la a closer student of social men will find themselves without work for any number of hours a day. Moreover, If the eight hour scale Is to be "basic," the railroads may content! with no little force that no mini shall be paid anything unless he works eight hours, or that If ho works lees than eight hours he shall be paid for the time pro rats according to the "basic" scale. There are many trainmen now run ning on the milage basis who com plete their day's work In leaa than eight hours but who receive a full day's wage I'pon the "basic" prin ciple, thnae men could be required to run the additional time to make up the eight hours or to have their pay reduced accordingly leglslatlon without Investigation Often resulta in some very Interest ing by-products and It appeara that labor has received a gold brick by the Ad Km law. Conditions after war form a con alderable part of Mr Hughe's topic aa he Journeys about the country He presents the picture anil ho emhod lea the remedy. U hen Hughes takes office he will know the country from actual con tact, and the country will know him No cloistered theories will shape his policies. Toward the closing days of the campaign of till the wife of llen Jannn Harrison died Her liusluind was pri'-iileni of the 1'nlted Slates and a candidate for re election Their marred I i I had been long and bap py She iiad stood beside him when us a wiling lawyer, he began the 'ml lis of life. SI..- had walked by ils side through the sunshine of MOM and through the shadow of failure Uvr death made a real rupture In the presidents life. Yet we do not recall that the repuhlicuu caiepalgn managers or the republican party preaa agents made any attempt to capitalize President Harrisons grief for the benefit of bis canvass for re . I. , tlotl Why I Quit the Democratic Car ty" Is the subject of uu uddreas de livered before the repuhlicuu con '..mi. hi at Chandler, Oklahoma, a few days ago, by Judge H J. Slnve, wlio baa been a war horse of the par ty for more than twenty ears. He confines his reasons chiefly to state isauea, and charges his former poll ticul associates with extravagance, in efficiency, broken pledges, needless Increase in the number of office running the state in debt, wasteful, ness , etc., all of which is true of na tional as well as local democratic ad ministration And there ure thous aii. is of other democrats who, for the sume reasons, have quit the party Just us predicted. I'resident Wil son is finding that Ins uon-Jurlisuu plea is a two edged sword that cuts both ways Editor George Harvey, of the North American Heview, the original Wilson man, aays that Wil son has absolved him from the obli gation of party loyalty and ii two ways: first, by his appeal for re election as a non parti-an. and, sec ond, by his abandonment of demo cratic doctrine. And Harvey puts the logic of the situation lu a way that will appeal to thousands of men who have been affiliated with the democratic party all their Uvea Just us Harvey has been nor more interested in the welfare of the county, which combined with iiis absolute fairness in all trial work makes the proper qualifications for the important office to which he as pires, aud not only the republican party but thee ouuty is to be con gratulated in having the oppuituuity of placing such a man in office We have confidence to believe that he will make every effort to keep his pledge of careful and prudent en forcement of all laws, vigorous aud ust prosecutions, at the least possi ble cost to the tax payers. His rec ord Justifies tins belief, aud we cheer- onditions fully recommend him to our friends. Experienced officials are worth money to Mai heur County Taxpayers VOTE FOR VIRGIL B. STAPLES Republican Nominee for COUNTY CLERK Eighten Tears Business Experience in Malheur County For an economical administration of public business VOTE FOR C. C. MUELLER Republican Nominee COUNTY TREASURER VALE OREGON VOTE FOR R. W. SWAGLER Candidate for DISTRICT ATTORNEY Considers a public office a position of trust VOTE FOR L. E. HILL Republican nominee for COUNTY ASSESSOR Second Term Your support will be appreciated