CITY With $13,000,000 in Factories and $100,000 monthly Pay Roll with plenty of Power to sell, Oregon City can dou ble Its Population in Five Years. I The Courier is AGAINST injustice against the privileged classes, and FOR the; Weak Citizen; and the Common People. 20th YEAR. OREGON CITY, OREGON. FRIDAY, MARCH 8 19 12. OMGOM COURIER GET THE FACTORIES THE OTHER THINGS WILL FOL LOW WHERE THEY TURN. GO AFTER THE EASTERN MEN And Tell Them of the Cheap Pow er This City Has. When you stop to think of it, don't you know that, the Commer cial club of this city is a power a moans through which almost anything is possible of accom plishment? .lust think of over two hundred and II fly men all going up against the line together. .Something is bound to come of it. The speakers at the Commer cial club's meeting last week all made the same rosey predictions for the future of this city, and they backed up their talk. Oregon City ia today the great est manufacturing city in Oregon, and that it can be made twice what it is now in this line is plain to the man who digs into the possibilities. We have a great water power at our doors that will be power as long as it snows in the mountains and as long as water runs down hill. And in this country, where coal is too high priced for fuel, such power is almost priceless The electric company has lots of power to sell, every mill has it to spare and to sell, and there is no limit to the factories this city may have, if these 250 men will all go after it. There is just one weak snot in so big a bunch of men the weak spot or great strength indifierT of thinking that the work of the organization is the other fellow's to do and through this indiffer ence to have neglect. Senator Dimick told us that we could have the banks of the Wil lamette lined with factories if we would go after them, and he said this city might have four times its present population There is a very true old saying that a factory may be started in the heart of the forest, and that workmen will make a path to it. The matter of the growth of our city is of minor importance. Get the factories and the people and the homes will come. This paper isn't posing as the director of the Commercial club, nor presuming to tell them where, they are heading in wrong, but we do believe if this great body of men would go after the manufac urei j a li.'Us harder, and tho pub licity end a little easier, we would accomplish lor more tor tho city, and boom it faster than through any other means we have. - All eyes are on the Pacific coast these days. The big canal is doing for this country what mon ey could not do, and thousands of capitalists are driving their stakes out hero in the Sunset The Pleasure of At Home IS ENHANCED when the home is brightened like sunlight by the brilliant rays of the Mazda Lamp. Its restful rays impart the effect of a flood of sunlight--the oniy light for which the eye has a natural affinity. Not only does the Mazda Lamp give this Superior Quality of light, but it gives nearly Three Times as much light as the com mon carbon incandescent-and Costs No More to operate. country. Manufacturers all over the east are noting the future of tho Pacilic coast, and they want to get, in. If the Commercial club will go after tho manufacturers, there is a lot of the other work that will take care of itself, that will fol low the factories without effort on anybody's part. If you knew how pitifully few people of the east slates ever hoard of the falls here, and how lew even know where the old Wil lamette rises or empties, then we would better realize wherein lay promising Held for missionary work. Eastern capital is thirsty for tho power the Willamette makes here, and if our Commercial club would go after those manufac tories, take ill e ii i up systematical ly and thoroughly, we would sure ly get other big labor-employing mills, and when you get them the rest comes of its own accord. (Jet after the terminal rates, for they are worth as much as factor ies, but in the meantime get a line on new industries, have them on the string, and when we get Port land's shipping rates we will be all ready to tie them up. Make an appropriation for this work. Put a certain amount in advertising in the manufacturing periodicals and the trade journals and stay with it nnd it is bound to win out. We want 25 000 people in Ore gon City. We want tho river's banks lined with factories. Let's get them. QUIT KIDDING. Estacada Now Wants a Piece of This County, Too. If the people of Clackamas county are to vote at the coin ing election on a nestion of a division of the county it is lime that action preliminary to a decision, should be un der way. Petitions for divis ion must be tiled at Salem four months before election which would bring the date about July 1 .Estacada Pro gress. i'oes to the east of us, foes to the south ol usl Marion county wanls a chunk and now Estacada wants to seceed with the wish bone and a piece of the wnite meat. - , The right thing to do is to com mence the spanking of the babies. There comes a time when such constant crying gets on one's nerves, and then the proper act is the woodshed and the strap. Now here s notice to you fel lows that we will resent any more talk about carving up this old county and we will resent it just as loud and long as Texas did the proposition to divide that state. Once Clackamas county extend ed from Alaska to California, and it has been pared down and cut in to chunks until we are simply go ing to get a cannon and stand off any further depredations. And if you fellows don't want to get hurt, better quit your fool ing, for we are no longer going to stand for any more kicking this dog around. if Portland Railway, Light & Power Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH: ALDER. PORTLAND Phones Main 6G88 and A. 6131 ONLY IN MONTHS AND TRAINS WILL BE RUNNING TO MOLALLA EVERYBODY SHOULD BOOST. People Should Have a Say As to Its Location Lay two streaks of steel across the country, any old country, gar den spot or desert, and people will go to n, ana stay with it. First the little grocery store. men a doctor, another store, i lawyer, a postoffice, a newspa per and you're off. And these streaks of steel start ed something. Business follows, just as naturally as a duck finds a slough. And now conies the pleasing news that four months of steady work and ttie Clackamas Southern will be in full operation from Oregon City to Molalla, and Sup erintendent Swift says if the weather is settled, work will com inence in two weeks. And when trains aro running regularly between here and Mol alia, what will be the result? Hero's our guess: You will see great quantities of cord wood, lumber and farm pro ducts coming to this city: you will see settlers buying and locating along ther oad; you will see prop erty changing hands and land cleaned up; you will see mills start up, stores opened, and you will see Oregon City and this part of Clackamas county boom as it hasn't boomed since Dr. Mc Loughlin's days. Saturday night the directors met and planned to resume work this month and every blue-blood in Oregon City, every member of the Commercial club, every farm er and every business man should get right in behind this work and render every possible- assistance, that you may be able to ride in the varnished cars, out to Molalla lor a fourth ol July celebration. Ten and a half miles of grad ing is completed today; tools and equipment are bought and paid for; bridges are built, everything is in splendid shape and the com pany doesn't owe a doli-i'. A large part of the bond issue is subscribed for, but none has been delivered, for the reason that interest will have to be met, and the directors wisely decide not to issue any until tho greater part, or all, are placed. Bo a booster for the no i ail road, get the habit and stay by it like a dude to a cigarette. The road is a booster for you, and will do you more good than a dozen public buildings. Coii'o back at it, and do all you can to hurry its completion. Dr. J. V. Norris has been ser iously ill with bronchitis for sev eral days, but is now a little im proved. Dining ONLY DIE SflREET OREGON CITY IS BUNCHING UP TOO MUCH THAT POSTOFFICE MATTER, Clackamas Southern Should Have, A World of Friends Don't know what you may think of it, but here's a matter we seem to be sleeping on, and one which it seems we should come alive to and take a stick in. The probabilities aro that we will have $75,000 of the govern ment's money to put into a post office building here in fact the matter seems to bo pretty well cinched and is as certain as any thing in politics. And now what aro we going to do with it? That's the question. Because tho government,, through Senator Bourne, sees fit to give us this ball of fodder, we shouldn't accept it as if it didn't cost us anything, as if we were so much ahead anyway, and then let a few fellows plant the federal building any old place they intent pick out. Let vi a suppose the natrons of this office had to go down into their jeans and dig up this $75, 000. ' Do you suppose wo would pay for it and then go home and for get it until a committee picked out a lot that suited them, and uunt something? iNoi on your breaklast food. If the taxpayers paid for the new postoflice "bui diner thev would be on the job every hour, and its location wouldn't be decid ed upon until a majority decided u. And do you know that Oregon City is going in for a one-street city' with altogether too much vim with more enthusiasm than sanity. At the big booster liieelinir tlie other night, speaker after speak speaker made the prediction that mis city was nut in ns miancy, that it was bound to reach five times its present size, and that will terminal rales we would have the greatest manufacturing citv on the Pacific coast. Senator Dimick told us that, trl- ven terminal rates the banks of the Willamette would bo lined with factories as the electric people had plenty of power to sell. And the present mills have plen ty to sell. too. They would e:eii- erato it into electricity And if dreams como true, what would a postoffice building look UKe on ttie river tront. ' If they come true, what would I it look like anywhere down town where the government would con sent to have it. j Main street isn t all there is to Oregon City it is less than a ouarter ot it and why don t we recognize that the real city is on the heights and that is where the people live and own homes aud the logical placet or a nostotlice. a library or any public building.' Talkinar with a nrominent. nffi- icial of Salem a few weeks ago, he asked u anyone lived on the bluffs, and when told that three or four thousand people lived there, he simply stared in aston ishment. We don't want a postoffice thai will have to bo torn down i ecause it will be in tho way in a few years, and we want to recognize that Main street isn't so big a tail that it can wag the whole city.' This handsome and expensive building will bef or tho people, and not for Main street exclusive ly, and the people have just as much right to decide its locution as they l'Te to uccido any nn Iter that itiLei Is I hen. And if ho people want a .-ay, let them demand it, let them ask for a public meeting and the ref erendum vole as to the location of this public building. You have a say in this matter politics should not be the whole thing. ..,.. Do you want it? If so, let us hear from you. THE COURIER'S SOLO. A Spring Song to Our Own companiment. Without any boosting but Ao- its columns, without any premiums voting contests or other means of persuasion, the Courier is stead ily enlarging its field and finding homes in every nook in Clacka mas counly. And notwithstanding this gain we have taken from the list a large number of delinquents, and slow-pays and no-pays, and we have now a list of readers who are payers, who take the Courier be cause they want it for what it is, and not for what they get with it. And by the way, this is the class of people to talk to through ad vertising. If you want to reach the out side people, the farmers who have goods to buy and goods to sell, the people who go somewhere to buy and somewhere to sell well, the Courier reacnes them, covers the territory and can deliver your goods to the people who read. There is a neap or difference in the circulation of a periodical whether it is taken because a family wants it, or whether the premium was purchased and the paper thrown in. Did you ever think of it in this way? And we want to ask our friends those who favor a paper that dares if they will kindly send this office names of men in their locality who favor a paper that dares to lake a chance, that we may send them a few sample copies of the Courier. It, will help us and we will greatly appreciate it. Will you? Thanks. Class ads do the business at small expense. One cent a word. LORE IS DOWNED. COUNCIL REFUSED TO CON FIRM POPULAR MAN WAS A VERY FOOLISH ACTION Now Commences the Expensive Legal Actions Mayor Dimick offered an olive "ranch to the city council Tues- I l'uv n'8ht, when alter they had re fused to confirm Charles E. Burns as chief of police, he then named W. A. Long, one of the city's most popular men, but the council would not confirm. A short time ago certain per sons, including a council mem ber and the Courier editor was present, went to Mayor Dimick, and asked him if he would not go entirely outside the men in dis pute and name a candidate both sides could agree on. Mayor Dimick said he would do so if thee ouncil would confirm, but men did not like the Hu miliation of being turned down, lie said at this time he would ap point W. A. Long, if the council wanted to cut out tho fight and do business. And you see what the council did to Mr. Long and you can draw your own conclusions. The mayor told tho council they acteu iiKe cniidren, and when such appointments as W. A. Long's aro turned down, the people will very soon see tho mayor is right and that tho position of the council is more kid play and spite work than eusiness. It is a cinch that clean, capable men will positively refuse an ap pointment which will humiliate. The city has loudly demanded a compromise, a get-together. Now, whose fault is it? What havo you council niem- Dors to say Now hero are results wo have told you would follow. A taxpayer has applied for an injunction against the payment of double chief of police salary, on the grounds that the city's funds aro being dissipated. Chief of Police Burns has brought suit against the city for his salary as police, which tho council refuses to pay him. The.se are but the begining of expensive litigations and the peo ple will begin to think that wo have a bunch of foolish kids try ing to start something they are not familiar with. Notice of Committee Meeting. Notice is hereby given that meeting of the democratic county central committee' will be held at the Willamette hall, Oregon City, Saturday, March 16, for the pur pose of electing officers and transacting such other business as may come before it. G. F. Johnson, Secy. Library Will be In City Park. Wednesday night the city coun cil ordered framed an ordinance which will place the $12,500 li brary in the city park on Seventh street. Several sites were consid ered, but Chairman Mcllain of the committee, said the park site was the one most easily agreed upon. The new building will be rushed. The class ads on page 8 have produced surprising results. Ono cent a word and a few words do the biz. LIVE WIRE'S WEEKLY SPARKS, THE HITCHING PROBLEM ONCE MORE. UP Governor West is Expected to be Present at Next Meeting. The Live Wires got together at their weekly meeting Tuesday and talked over several matters that are of public and private interest, and among them was that old, obi subject.tho mailer of public hitch ing posts. M. J. Leo of Canby said that his town had taken hold of the hitch ing matter, and they had to to keep the trade from going out of town, but ho said the merchants there each provided his own free shod for the lariners teams. Mr. -Sullivan thought that it would bo a better plan to provide largo barns or sheds, rather than outside hitching posts, but M. J. Lazelle did not at all agree with him, stating that he knew much trade went to other places for no other reason than that we did not have places for the farmers rigs, lie thought that posts could be arranged onTenlh street,, between Water and Main. Mr. Hedges said that this mat ter was one that had been repeat edly before the Commercial club, but that it was a very diflicult one to settle for the reason that this city was so differently situated than other towns, we having no waste land near the business part of the city. He said that where hitching room would be conven ient for the farmers, the residents would not permit them, and were it would be unobjectable to the citizens, would be where the farm ers would not want them. A. A. Price thought that some thing should be figured out in the way of public hitching posts, and although quite a hard proposition it could be accomplished. L. Adams thought that Fifth street might be secured for this purpose, from Main to the river. He said the farmers were loud in their demand for this convenience and that considerable trade went to Portland because we do not provide hitching room. A. L. Beaty of the Oregon City Commission Co. said his firm was going after this matter on their own account, and that at the next meeting of the council they would ask permission to establish posts onEleventh street at thoir own expense. Commencing with the flrstTues dav of next month the Live Wires will have one night meeting each Mium a, wnero more time can be had to talk over tho different mat ters. hr Mr. TOOZO savp a short Jnllr nn what the committee on health was doing, but ho said that the public iiu imh mho enougn interest in me mailer, and that in place of thepublic availing themselves of uie mommy meetings of tho com mittee to report unhealthful and unsanitary conditions in the city, that tho committee had to get its informal ion anil cnnmlainU fi-nm me i.ive ires. iext Tuesday noon if. is hvii. ted that, Governor West will be in attendance at the lunch eon HiiH give the club a talk, and no uoubt extra lames wilt bo spread and ev ery memiier will bo present. CHUNKS OF WISDOM. The Great Oregonlan Hands this Paper a Few Nice Ones. This paper has all kinds nf in spect for the honest opinions of uiose wnose opinions differ from its ways of soeiiur thinirs. nnd it never yet lias in any manner rid iculed anyone who saw things ih'mi h muereni viewpoint. nuL wueu we necomo cron . n circulation, and when we have an otllco home as big as the court house, we presume that then we too will swell un and disnute any one's right to see other than as ve see. Because the editor of this paper lout the tanners last weeii that their taxes couldn't be moio a Durocn under single (ax than they are now, tho groat Oref,or.ian said Ibis was tho only papti' in Oregon that had the audacity lo to think different than the own er of that paper, and then it wi,nt on with a lot of nasty, lying insin uations that this papor was con trolled by the Fels' fund hne l lo advocate single tax. Of coico it did not make a direct ciiare just a cowardly insinuation. If tho Oregonian's editor would accept a little real good advice from a country sheet it would bo to go sit on a tack. This paper is not its echo, and if it has tho distinction of being the only paper in Oregon that is for tho single tax amendment, it rivals the distinction of the Ore gonian, that it is tho only sheet in Oregon that has nerve enough to champion the political machines, big bad business, and the stand pat, administration. -And here is one of the argu ments (?) the Orettonian handed out fur wisdoinwhon it referred I.. II, li i.. :i :.. iu tut. vjuunri uuiiucuy ill position on the single tax. Hs If single tax shall confis cate all lands and turn them over to the state, and if tho stale shall go bankrupt, the way out is to have a grand free distribution all over again. And reading this bunch of "ifs" makes us think of tho rabbit story and that the loss of King Solomon and Daniel Webster is not being noted to any great extent in Ore gon. AND IT WON'T WORK Voters Will Back Up on Political Game. This It is said in political circles that there is a nuiet little srum- shoe game on with the republi cans, to defeat J. li. Jack for as sessor, and the announcements of I. r. Nelson of Mulino and li. P. Carter of Gladstone, aro part of the game. But, the Courier believes Asses sor Jack will bo a hard man to down, not because ho is a demo crat, but because be is a capable man, and party doesn't cut so big a gash as it once did. Mr. Jack is ono of tho most capable men in theo ourt house. lie is always on tho job. doesn t turn the work over to deputies, but earns his money. He is fair minded, qualified, knows his work and does his duty as be sees it. An assessor will always make enemies and he should bo en dorsed for tho enemies ho makes With property owners asking for tower assessments and tho coun ty court asking they bo kept up, a man must simply play the cards aa ia lliinlQ ii-hl anrl Hiia Mr Jack has done, and1 will do. Changing assessors is bad business, if you get a man who is square, and we don't believe there will be any change. 8ooiallsts will Moot April 7 A Socialist meeting Is called lo meet in Knapp's hall, Oregon City Sundny, April 7 at 10 a. m. This will be a meeting of Clackamas county locals, all card members, also all registered Socialists are requested to be present, for at this lime we will decide whether it. is advisable to put out. a county ticket for the coming elections. W. W. MVHKS, County Secy, FRESH DAILY Salmon. Halibut Etc. CRABS, cooked on the premises; OYS TERS, direct from the shell; CHICKEN, to order; No Cold Storage Stock in fish or fowl. Headquarter for OLYMPIA OYSTERS, the BEST on the Coast. MACDONALD'S MARKET Next Welln Fargo FISH! FISH E MEN WHO NEVER SAW THE WHITE MAN'S FACE. THE UNKNOWN CLIFFDWELLERS A Visit to the Ruins of This Onoe Great Desert City. Last summer this paper started a series of southwest travel let ters and the ilrst three of the ser ies were discriptions of the Cliff Dwellers' ruins nf th Pnv cliffs in Now Mexico. Those let- teres were written iust before tho editor came to OreKon. he havinur just returned from his fourth trip to the odd spots of the south- ewst. And anionff the letters and ndils and ends in an old grip I tlnd the iollowing letter, written just two years ago, from Barranca, N. M., uui which was never printed, it was my llrst trip, to the ruined homes of a forgotten people one under circumstances not at all conducive to poetic discriptions. nere it is: It was with the keenest and hit.- terest disappointment of my life that 1 turned back from the r.liir Dwellers' ruins and bought a tick et for the east. To me there is nothini? in the wonderland of the southwest that has so great a fascination as the abandoned homos nf this nnnnin we know not of this people of the lar dim days of the past our ancestors who lived in caves, lived much like beasts, wore only f.ho skins of animals, lived thousands of years for all we know, came from whore we do not know, and departed whence we do not know. But 1 am ahead of my story and have given out a disaonointment without a reason for it. I saved the Cliff Dwellers and the community houses for the lin ish of my trip, well knowing that 1 would llnd little to interest. m after I had seen these ruins rnins older than lire. And I saved them to lone. I saw them, some of them, but un der circumstances that cannot do half justice. I suppose I should have infor med myself that what little winter New Mexico has comes the lat ter part of February and the llrst ofMarch. and had I have done 1 done so, 1 would have wont llrst to these ruins and then to old Mex ico. But I didn't take tho Dains. and I lost out. But I saw the JilF ruins, des- pile tho deep a now and tire howl ing mountain blizzards. I saw them and climbed up into them, inspected parlor, bed-room and conservatory, sat there on the floor in the dust of ages, sat cross-legged, as some cliff-dweller had sat in the same place hun dreds, perhaps thousands of years ago sat there and looked across the gorge from the doorway of this pre-historio home, and into my eyes came a picture- And into my toes came the frost and into my ears came the call of tho driver below and that pic ture of a Forgotten Past faded, faded before I could catch tho col ors. Did you ever try to get senti mental in a blizzard? Try it. Did you ever try for poetry when the tnerrnomeier was about ten below and a freezing driver calling. Don t try it nothing to it. What of the Cliff Wellers? You tell. We Americans know little of them and the more I learn the less I know. Through Arizona and New Mex ico there are hundreds of ruins. Wo know people, human beings. once lived in thom, and that is about an we do know. Anybody can tell you who they were, where tney came irom and wnere tney went to, but no one will toll you anything that has even a speaking distance connect on with what the other fellow explained, so I read what little I can llnd about thom, hear a whole lot of what every body can tell and then guess. 1 realized what the suffering and danger might" mean to visit theso ruins in the lace of a bliz zard and deep snow, but I could not como home without sooing at least something of these homes or an extinct people So we drove it, wrapped to the ears in Navajo blankets and our foet on foot- warmers. And I saw some of the homes of this vanished people some of the cave monuments of the Doonle who populated this Ilio Grande valley and whose history has gone rrom on the race of the earth. Under favorable conditions a man could write his head off with these surroundings. Sitting in tho homes of these mysterious people, in the cruinblinar ruins of what were once the only human habitations of this great coun try of ours, sitting in the dust of ages and thinkim? of the First Americans who lived, loved and lanored here whore wouldn t this pencil run to if it were only spring time, if tho frost would let up on my great toe. and if the driver would stop wrecking my trains of thought by his yelling mat we must start back? three hours only in this great est of all great museums. J hree hours on v from tho cen turies before a white man's foot ever touched American soil to the days of Joe Cannon, 1 9 i 0. I can t attempt a story. It is all so great, so awesome, so myster ious, my pencil is so small. But it was fortunate we did not stay longer. As it was we were unable to return to our starting Elace, and I was never able to get ack to tho station where I nad left my grip, and it was weeks af ter that I received it, sent to me at Salamanca, N. Y. I had planned miles and nines EOT COLUMBUS (Continued on page two.)