The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current, October 17, 1912, Image 3

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    HAVE WE YOUR
----- BANK ACCOUNT ?
The hank that a young busin«-»» man seeks to place his
money with is of supreme importance.
with his chances for success.
It has much to do
We are serving some of
the largest concerns in the city
but don’t hesitate be­
cause your balance may be small.
Keep a few hundred
to the Rood all the time
show us that you are in earnest
and that you do business in the right way.
Then, when you need assistance, we’ll be pleased to have
you come to us.
W* loan money on good real estate to clients of this bank,
Stayton State Bank
WANT TO SELL?
Let Us List Your Property
SOLD ONE PIECE THIS WEEK
HAVE T W O MORE ON THE STRING
*
a
67 Mores, 1| miles from P. O., well
Improve«). Price $56 per acre. Terms.
Town Lots, Box 100. $60 to $60 each.
II down, f t a week.
119 acres 1 J mi. from U iwm .
Well
improved, best land In t h e valley.
Pries 117,260.
Terms.
Special- Nah It Qulek—140 screa 6
ml. from town, on R. F. D. and Cream
Router, 4 ml. to school, well improved,
good buildings, fine orchard, running
water, a n up-to-date farm, others
would ask batter than $100 per acre.
Our price only $86 pvr acre.|
Terms.
15 acres Inside corporate limits of
Slayton, all cleared. Price 12400,Terms.
8 acre tract, only a short distance
from main strrVt Stayton, well improv­
ed fine for aubdivison, can double your
in six months.
Price $4000 Terms.
9 room modern house, 4 big lots, all
well improve*!, only 4 blocks from post
office in city o f Slayton. A bargain at
$2800, one half down.
For Sale- 97 seres 3) miles south of
Stayton, 60 acres under cultivation,-
good buildings, hay, grain, stock and
farm tools complete goes with t h e
place. Well improved, running water.
Price $8500. Terms.
25 acre tarm 1 mile from town. Good
bottom land. One half under cultiva­
tion. Good improvements.
Price $4000. Terms.
r
103 acres, 6 miles from town.
Good
improvements.
Price $45 per acre.
94J acres 2 miles from town. One
half under cultivation. Balance valua­
ble timber. Well improved.
.
Price $70 per acre. Terms.
3J acres inside corporate limits. Close
in. well improved.
Price $1700.
33 acres, 4 mile from railroad, mar­
ket Hnd school. Good 6-room house and
outbuildings. Price $4000
Terms.
Good mill site, including water right
in town of Stayton. Price $550. Terms.
COME
IN
AND
TALK
Farmers Co-Operative
IT
Realty
OVER
Co.
S. H. HELTZEL, MANAGER
Over Stayton State Bank
Stayton, Oregon
REPUBLICANS’
THIRD TERMER'S
EXTRAVAGANCE JOKE ON LABOR
1 j
—
"
Government Cost More Than Brandéis Shows Right to Or­
Doubled Under Roosevelt.
ganize Is Not Recognized.
DEMOCRATS' GREAT RECORD. THE PLATFORM IS SILENT.
“ United We Stand
Divided We F a i r
N A T IO N A L REPUBLICAN
TIC K E T.
P r o id n t-
WIIH.IAM HOWARD TAFT,
Ohio.
Vice President -
JAMES S. SHERMAN, New
York.
Presidential Elector*
TINWORK and
PLUMBING
Bath Tubs, Lavatories and
all Lanitary fittings— Farm­
ers-W e carry a line of
pomps, leader water sys­
tems, etc. Gasoline engines.
E. V. CARTER, Ashland
M. J. M«;MAHON, Portland
PH IL. METSCHAN, Jr., Portland
JOHN L. RAND, Baker.
JACOB SPANIOL
S T A T E REPUBLICAN TIC K E T
Startling Figure* Which Show That the
Co*t of Our National Existence and
the High Co*t of Living Must Be
Noted Lawyer Expo*«* th* Flimcin***
of Prom-*** Mad* to Workingmen by
Porkin* and Hi* Candidate, Who
Stando Por Private Monopoly.
Reduced.
Under a proper downward revision
“The new party pledges Itself to so­
of the Republican tariff a*-b«.-dule» the cial and Industrial justice and specific­
people of tho Unltwl States would save ally to ‘ work nuceusingly for effective
$ 2 , 000 , 000,000 ouch year, or over $loo legislation looking to the prevention of
1 occupational diseases, overwork. Invol­
per family on manufactured goods
untary unemployment and other In-
alone.
Jurlous effects incident to modern In­
President Taft's veto«* of the wool dustry, • • • but nowhere in that
tariff bill and the steel tariff measure long and comprehensive platform
passed by a Democratic bouse COST * • • can there bo found one word
TU B PEO PLE OF TH E U N ITED approving the fundamental right of
S T A T E « ABOUT $050,000,000 PEIt labor tc organize or even recognizing
this right without which all other
ANNUM.
The cost o f conducting the federal grants and concessions for Improve­
ment of the condition of the working­
government MORE T H A N DOUBLED
man are futile. The platform promises
between the close o f President Cleve­
s*x.'ial and Industrial Justice, bnt d<x-s
land's second administration (Demo­ not promise Industrial democracy. The
cratic) and the beginning of President Justice which it offers Is that which
Roosevelt’s second administration (Re­ the tx-nevolcnt and wise corporation
publican).
la prone to administer through Its wel­
As the DIRECT RESULT OF HIGH fare department There Is no promise
REPUBLICAN
T A R IF F
SCHED­ of that Justice which free American
ULES the |>eu|i'e of the Unltorl States workingmen are striving to secure for
pay a tax FROM N IN E TO SEVEN­ themselves through organization. In­
deed. the Industrial policy advocated
TY-EIG H T PER CENT on food and
by the new party would result In the
ordinary household articles used In the denial o f labor's right to organize.
homo by every family, rich and poor.
“The new party stan«Is for the per­
Tho total cost of running the federal petuation and extension of private
government In I860 was $55,000,000.
monopoly In Industry—that private
Tlie amount appropriated at a single monopoly from which the few have
session o f the Hltty flrst congross for , ever profited at the expense of the
the fiscal year U til— $1,027,133,440.44— many and for the dethronement of
was inoro than double the amount— which the people have, in the past,
$054,400,055.13—appropriated for the fought so many valiant battles. That
fiscal years 1807 and 1808 at both ses­ cursed product of despotism, the new
sions of the Fifty-fourth congress, the party, proi>oses to domesticate In our
Inst congress of the sec-ond Cleveland republic, proclaiming. 'W e do not fear
administration.
commercial power.' Certainly organ­
Only eight years elapsed b«»tween the ized labor has had experience with the
close of the s«K-ond administration of great trusts which should teach all
President Clerelntwl and the beginning men that commercial power may be so
of the s«-o»nd administration «>f Presi­ groat that It Is tbo part of wisdom to
dent Roosevelt nnd yet the nmouut ap- fear I t ”
proprlntisl during the four y«*nrs of tho
The above declaration was made by
latter — $3.842.203,577.15 - was
more Louis D. Braudeis before the conven­
than double tbut appropriated In the tion of the American Federation of
four years Mr. Cleveland was nt the Labor. Massachusetts state branch, at
helm—vl*. $1,871.500.857.47
Fitchburg, Sept 18.
For 1010, the last fiscal year provided
O f Supreme Importance.
for In congress under President Roose­
lie urges a careful *tudy of the new
velt, the hlgbwatcr mnrk In appropria­ party platform, particularly Its effect
tions -$1,044,401.857.12—was reached
upon labor, noting not only YVILAT IT
President Taft's «»stliniite to the Inst CONTAINS, but W H A T IT OMITS,
session of «-engross for government
: adding. "When yon make that exanil-
support for the fiscal year was $ 1 , 040 .-
j
nation yon will find that there Is a
648.026.55.
i significant omission and that this skill-
In other words, governmental ex­
! fully «leviped platform T A K E S FROM
penses for the FOUR YEARS of Presi­
LABOR MORE T H A N IT GIVES.”
dent Cleveland's administration (Dem­
Labor Record of Tru*t*.
ocratic) were only $830.801,531.92 more
Mr. Brandéis then lays bare the la­
than President Taft's (Republican) esti­
mate of th«* amount necessary to cover bor record o f the mists, declaring that
the ex|>etises of ONE YEAR of Presi­ "great trusts—the ste«d trust, the sug­
ar trust the beef trust, the tolwcco
dent Taft's administration.
Congressman John J. Fitzgerald of trust, the smelter trust and a whole
New York, n Democrat nnd chairman troop of lesser trusts—have made.the
of tl>e committee on appropriations, in extermination o f orpiaized labor from
addressing the house Aug. 2<i. 1912, on their factories the v<ery foundation
tho subject of appropriations said. stone o f their labor policy. The abili­
“ Thoughtful men have watched with ty to defeat latxir's right to combine
nlnrni the rapid Increase iu the c«»t of I seems to hnve been regard«?«! by the
government In the United States.” He trust magnates as a | «roper test of the
further said that two onuses seein re­ efficiency of their cap Itallstlc «»tnbina-
Uon."
sponsible for many present evils:
Mr. Brandéis shows that In 1899.
“ One, the U N FAIR AND UNJUST
SYSTEM OF T A X A T IO N by which during the Colorado smelters' strike,
an undue share of iucome by those the American Smelting and Refining
whose circumstances in life are not company closed Its mIHs where the
considered more than reasonably com­ strikers hail been employed and trans­
fortable Is taken through our customs ferred the work to other mills, thus
laws for the support of our govern­ breaking th«' strike. Th e United Stnros
ment; the other, the difficulty or inabil­ 8L*el corporation had similar success
ity to rendjust our system of taxation In 1001 with the Amalgamated Asso­
and to remove many taxes from the ciation of Iron nnd Steel Workers.
necessaries of life, so long as the GOV­ Had tie- association l«e«'n dealing with
ERNM ENT IS E X T R A V A G A N T L Y 1 competing employer* the result \rouM
CONDUCTED, or tho Instrumentali­ have been different. The United States
ties provided for the comluct of the Steel trust was proi apt In Introducing
public service art- either Inefficient or this plan. June 17. 1001. stx weeks
nre not i..iliz«>«l so ns to render the after It began its operation. Us exc'ou-
most effective and comprehensive re- • Uve committee passe d this vote, ♦hicb
suits.’’
was offered by Char tes Steele, a part­
Mr. Fitzgerald then called attention ner o f Oeorge W. Pisriüns In the firm
to the fact that the Democratic party | of J. P. Morgan & C««.:
plt*lgc«l Itself If Intrusted with power
“ Tim.' we are unalterably opposed to
to do two things—REDUCE T A R IF F | any extension of uulon Inh'r and ad-
DUTIES A N I) RETRENCH PUB­ viso SYthsIdlnry companies to ,*nke firm
LIC EXPEND ITU RES L>y eliminating ' position when those qoratlons «'omeup
waste in administration nnd the aboil- I anti any that they are not going «‘o rec-
tlon o f useless. Inexcusable offices.
ogn'.zo lt-*-thnt Is. any extension o ' un­
ion In mills where tliey do not n.'w
The Republicans talk about tariff I exist."
revision, nnd yet when a Democratic
Union V,*n N ot Wanted.
house In fnlfflllng Democratic promises | The result was that the bnlk of
to the people re«luccd the tariff, a R«?- | American union laboring men In the
Iron nnd st<?el Industry were made to
publlcnn president veto«-«l the measure
"By their works shall ye know them ’’ understand that they were not wanted
at the wor ks of the United States Steel
Places once filie«! by
Democrats In every state of the corporation.
American laborer* loyal to their union
Union should organize and prepare
! were given to others, and. ns the Stan
for polling a record breaking v«ite Nov
ley cor.-imlttee found. "Hordes o f In
5. Ro It remember«*«! Hint no matter borers from southern Europe poured
how certnln victory seems# overconfl
Into
the Unltetl States."
* • •
denee Is always dnngerous.
Hence about 80 per cent of the un-
skll'.ed laborers In the Iron and steel
Is there any reason why the Demo­ bn« finest* nre foreigner* o f these classes,
cratic party should go out of existence the profits going to tho steel corpora­
»Imply beenuse Mr. Roosevelt Inis tak­ tion. Mr. Ilrnndels declared that "the
i Immediate and continuing result of
en up the Progressive mensures adopt-
the steel trust's triumph over organ­
eil by the Democrats eighteen yenvs
ized labor has been an extensive sys­
ago?—W. J. Bryan.
tem o f esphmage and repression.”
I
Mr. Roosevelt stood ns n guarantor
for Mr. Taft. Mr. Bryan says. “ Now.
when Roosevelt has failed so utterly
la his Judgment o f uieu. I ask can he
pass correct Judgment on himself?”
Unitod State* Senator •
FARM AND CITY BARGAINS
BEN SELLING. Portland.
Secretary of State
BEN W. OLCOTT, Salem.
Supreme Judge —
HUY NOW -Tnere will be
a rapid increase in land val­
ues and now is the time to
ROBERT E A K IN , La Grande.
Dairy and Food Commi**ioner -
B U Y .
JOHN D. MICKLE, Fore»t Grove.
Nothing more safe on earth
than earth itself.
Congreeeman, Fir*t District
W. C. H A W LE Y . Salem.
Railroad Commis*toner, Firet Dietrict —
J. T. KEARNS
THOS. K.CAMPBELL,Cottage Grove
The Reatestate Man o f Stayton
Dietrict Attorney .Third Judicial Dietrict —
G ALE S. H ILL, Albany.
M ARION CO. REPUB U C A N T IC K E T
Representative*
JAMES G. HELTZEL, Sdlem.
S. A. HUGHES. Salem.
GEORGE W. JOHNSON, Salem.
I). C. THOMAS. Jefftraon.
GEORGE WEEKS, Country.
County Judge —
W. M. BUSHEY, Mehama.
C o m m ission er
M O N U M EN TS
Now ll the time to order a monument
W* can furnish
Marble, Granite or Bronze
Also build Stone or Concrete Wafc te
order.
Don't fail to get price* before
-
J. T. BECKW ITH, Sidney.
Sheriff -
W IL L IA M ESCH. Salem.
L. L THOM AS,
STAYTON.
O R EG O N .
County C le r k -
MAX GEHLHAR, Salem.
F o r S a le
Recorder -
A. EUGENE AU FRA N C , Salem.
Treasurer-
BRICK,
J. G. MOORE, Salem.
C EM EN T,
P LA S T E R
School Superintendent -
W ALTE R M. SMITH, Salem.
Assessor —
B. F. WEST, Salem.
Surveyor -
B. B. HERRICK, Turner.
W. A. Weddle
Coroner
A. M. CLOUGH, Salem
Paid Adv.
H. A . B EA U C H A M P, M .D .
Physician and Surgeon
Vote For
Warren T . Riches
OREGON
STAYTO N.
o f Turner, Oregon
Independent candidate for Assessor .
For a business administration. Fair
treatment to all. Special favors to
none.
Paid Adv.
C. H. BREWER,
P H Y S IC IA N
AN D
M.
D.
SURGEON
Vote For
S t a y t o n . O reg on
H . L. C L A R K
Independent Democratic Candidate for
the office of County Recorder. The
candidate endorsed unanimously by the
Marion County Democratic Committee,
and the Marion County Independent
Tax payers League. I stand for courtesy
strict economy and the reduction of
taxes.
Paid Adv.
Dr. Frederick Anders
P H Y S IC IA N
and
SURGE;
PHONE 1584
S U B LIM ITY,
OREGON
SHERIFF’S SALE
e. F. KORINEK, V. S„ B V. Sc
Or REA L PROPERTY
V eterinarian
Notice is hereby given, That by vir­
also
Treats all domestic animals,
tue of an execution duly isaued out of
applies the Tuberculin teat.
the Circuit Court of the State of Ore­
Telephone 3x7
gon, for the County of Marion and to me
Office at Stayton Stables
directed on the 7 day o f October 1912
upon a judgment and decree duly en- j STA YTO N
- - • - OREGOt
dered, entered o f record and docketed ;
in and by said Court on the 28 day of j
December lu ll in a certain suit then in
said Court pending, wherein G. E. !
DENTIST
Unruh was plaintiff and C. A. Rain­
water and Mary Rainwater were de­
Office over Deidrich's Store
fendants in favor of plaintiff and
Phone
2162
Stavton. Ora
against said defendants by which e x - !
■
............................................................... .....
ecution I am commanded to sell the
property in said execution and herein­
after described to pay the sum due the
plaintiff of Two Hundred Dodars with
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
interest thereon at the rate o f six per
N O T A R Y PUBLIC
cent, per annum from the 28 day of
Abstract*
and
Probate
Work a Specialty
December 1911 until paid together with
the costs and disbursements of said suit ;
Office Over Stayton State Bank
taxed at........Dollars and coats and ex- j
penses of said execution. I will on
Saturday the 9 day o f November 1912
at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. of said
CONTRACTOR and B U I l DER
dav at the West door of the County j
Court House in Salem. Marion County, ■ Plans ami Specifications Made and FUri
Oregon, sell at public auction to the
¡shed on all Contract Work.
h.ghest bidder for cash in hand on the
Streff’s Hardware. Water F
day o f sale, all the right, title interest
AYTO N
OREGON
and e state which said defendants and
all persons claiming under them subse­
quent to the date of the attachment to-
M . R I N G U
wit the 1J th day o f November 1911, at
4 o’ clock p. m. in, of and to said Undertaker a n d
Embalmeff
premises hereinbefore mentioned are
described in said execution as follows, Third and Marion Streets
to-wit:
STAYTO N . OREGON
, The East one-half (J) o f the South-!
west quarter and the Southeast quarter
of the Northwest quarter of section
Thirty-two (32) in township Eight (8.) j
South of Range Four (4) East o f the
Willamette Meridian in Marion County, !
Oregon, containing 120 acres o f land.
N ew and up to date.
Said sale being made subject to re­
Clean and Sanitary.
There has; been no disturbance of demption in the manner provided by (
business lnl ercsts during this presiden­ law.
Dated this 7 day o f October 1912.
tial campaign. Why? Confidence In
3rd and High Streets. Staytc
H. P. M into
the Integrity o f the Democratic nomi­
Sheriff of Marion County, Oregon.
nees nml r utht purposes of the „party.
Casteel & Overlander, Proprietor!
By W m . E sch , Deputy.
Wilbur N. Pinller, D.M.D.
S. H. HELTZEL
W . A. W E D D L F
J.
Stayton ButcherShop