OEEGOM CITY COUfflffi "A MILE OF MILLS" and more coming Is what makes Oregon City the best on the coast outside of Portland. Oregon City ship 300 tons of goods every day and receives 700 tons. That's why Its the best olty In the state. 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY, .OREGON. FRDAY. OCT. 18, I? 12. No. 23 A STORY OF A . SORE TOE CORN. IT SMARTED AND THE OWNER WANTED RELIEF. "DON'T TOUCH IT" IS ADVICE. "Don't Try any Remedies, for the Corn Might Spread." Ever have a corn on top of one of your toes, about in the middle of the row one of those big red callouses that shines like a man's bald-head? Aren't they the real noise when it (Mimes to concentrated agony? Take one of them that has the proper age and irritation and draw a handkerchief over it and you'll wince. It's the real scream all right this thickening of the epidermis or rather it is a real scream producer. . v And some day, after perhaps years of pain and profanity, a man comes along and says ho can cure that horny induration and relieve the pain; that he will take it out by the roots; that it will be painless, and that if it does not cure you do not pay. And then along comes another man and he tells you not to try it; that if you put that corn salve on the callous it will spread the irri tation all over your foot; that you will have to cut away your shoe; that you will soon be all corn, and to just let it alone and it will go away after a while. And the fellow with the smart begins to wonder why two men should present such widely dif ferent remedies. Why one man should say try a new remedy and the other should say "stand pal and let it wear off." And the fellow with the burning smarting agonizing corn will be gin to get busy with his head. Like the fellow with the toothache you have got to do same tall convin cing to make him let the oil of cloves bottle alone. He wants to know WHAT the fellow's object is in keeping him away from try ing a remedy. So he begins to look this man up and see if he can find his interest. And ho finds he is a stand-pat corn doctor, a specilist, one who makes his money off of corns from operating on them about once every so often, and getting a fee. See any local application? At See any corn doctors in Ore gon You fellows who have homes and cultivated farms are the corns. The millionaires, the specula tes, the idle rich are the corn doctors who perforin operations on you every year, cause a counter-irritant to make you forget the sting of the corn, and then tell you to suffer it out and you will - get well some day and DON'T try so-called remedies. You men on the under side $10,000, I want to ask you of a question: WHO is plugging this fight against trying a remedy on your sore corn? Is it YOUR class that is fight ing it? Or is it the men who do not work and don't want to? If I were a newcomer to Ore gon and knew something of the graduated single tax, the million aires opposing it would settle me. They have never played your game and they never will. You can't find a big business concern or a man who gets plenty of coin without work, in all Oregon, but what is fighting the graduated tax; you can't find a franchise holder or a corporation but what is fighting it? And I want to tell any man who works, the thing big business fights, is just what he wants to fight FOR. Don't let them work the scare crow on you. You are going to get just what you vote for. Hen ry George and land coirfiscation are not the issue. As much nonsense in this as to tell you that if you voted for Tafl you elected William McKin ley, or a vole for Wilson was to help resurrect Grover Cleveland. Here's article IX, Sec. la, un der which you may try the corn remedy. "No bill regulating taxation or exemptions throughout the state shall become a law until approv ed by the people of the state at a general election." You will never have "confisca-' lion" until you ask it. And the law further provides that anyj time you want to repeal this graduated, tax law you may call a special election on a petition of 15 per cent of the voters. I The proposed remedy will dis- tribute taxation make some ofi IV.n K.'it' frtlliil.ro 111inH fl flUlT rtf f h ' callouses. Try it. Running for Governor. Bourne cannot justify his in dependent candidacy. In entering the contest for the Governor ship, he proves himself an enemy of the direct primary of which he is the professional friend arid de- fender. Enterprise. A IT mm the Lowest Cost ELECTRIC LIGHT is the most suitable for homes, offices, shops and other places needing light. Elec tricity can be used in any quantity, larg1 or small, thereby furnishing any required amount of light. Furthermore, electric lamps car be located in any place, thus affording any desiiet! i:strlbuti :i of light. No other lamps possess tVe oualificatio.i i, there fore it is not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly replacing all others in modern establishments. Portland Railway, Light & Powe Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH (Sb ALDER. PORTLAND Phones Main 6688 and A. 6131 MURDERED GIRL'S FATHERIITES. COMMENDS SHERIFF MASS FOR HIS UNTIRING WORK. ECHO OF HILL FAMILY MURDER "Honesty and Efficiency Above Ly. Ing and Selfish Motives. " TO THE LAW ABIDING CITIZ ENS OF CLACKAMAS COUN "TY: On account of recent attacks made for political purposes on the standing and official worth of Sheriff E. T. Mass, I am impelled by a sense of fairness and just ness make reference in this public manner to the revolting crime that robbed me of a belov ed' daughter and her husband and two beautiful and innocent grandchildren that were the joy and sunshine of my declining years. I refer" to the murder of William Hill, his wife and two children. I desire to say as emphatically as it is possible for human utter ance to make it, that in the of ficial investigation undertaken by Sheriff Mass imediately fol lowing that foul crime, and which has been pursued with dogged de termination and without inter mission 'up to the present time, he has done all and more than could be expected of an honest, intelligent and efficient officer. More than this, he has accomp lished that which, had he been given the support and assistance to which he was entitled by right and by law from the state's of ficials, would have enabled him to bring to justice the perpetrator of the foulest crime ever commit ed in the state. These statements are made by me with a full and . intimate knowlege of the facts. That which is done cannot be undone, and no human agency can return to me and mine the loved ones so brut ally slain. But I can and do ren der the tribute of appreciation to the honest worth of Sheriff Mass. As a sorrowing father and grandfather I thank and honor him; as an old lime resident of Clackamas County I commend' him to my friends and to those residents of the county who hold honesty and efficiency in an of ficial above the lying utterances ight and selfish motives of petty pol iticians. Thomas F. Cowing. No. 334 Worcester Bldg. Portland, Ore. October 12, 1912. r'A .;'--M'.J TO THE LEGAL VOTERS OF CLACKAMAS COUNTY: Being a candidate for re-election and believing my first dutv to bo to attend to the duties of the office to which I was elected and therefore being unable to inter view the voters in person, I take this method of familiarizing the public of an outline of what has transpired in the sheriff's office. I desire to call attention to the fact that the 1910 tax roll was $75,000 larger than 1909, the 1911 tax roll $150,000 larger than 19f0 that owing to the increase of population , etc., of the county, 1,000 more lax receipts were is sued in 1910 than in 1909 and 3,500 more than when my oppon ent was last chief deputy sheriff. Therefore this ofllce waited on 1,000 more tax payers than did the sheriff of . 1910, and 3,500 more tax payers than when my opponent was last chief deputy. There were 30 more cases in the Circuit Court in 191 1, not in cluding County Court cases, such as non-support of Tamily or con tributing to the delinguency of minors, etc., that there were 20 more in jail in 1911 than in '1910. As shown by the records kept by my opponent, there were only T01E EiQTIE'S TADL ; There has been some criticism of the Courier be cause it is supporting a Progressive candidaate for congress and the Courier always likes to explain. Go out on-the street and ask the first dozen men you meet who the Democratic nominee is, and not one of them can tell you. They don't know not ten in one hundred DO know. When the Democrat was nominated it wasn't in tended anyone SHOULD know. lie was NOT nominated to be elected. He had no hopes to be in fact did not even file his acceptance until 11 :30 when John W. Campbell was nominated by the Progressives at Itoseburg. The Democratic nomination was simply an aM society to Congressman Hawley's stand pat machine, and the nominee was simply a tail to Hawley's kite. And the Courier isn't very strong on kite tails. The nomination put up to the Democratic papers of this district a bucketful of whitewash and a brush and told them to use it. It was a situation forced on them, one in which they could have no sympathy and mighty little inter est. You know Mr. Hawley's rexmf. irou know how he got into Joe Cannon's Sunday school class in less than fifteen minutes after he got down to Washing ton, and how he forgot Oregon under the smile of the politicians and became a Big Business Preacher. His record published last week speaks for him and for itself. And now when the Republicans nominate J. W. Campbell a man who stands for what we all stand for is it the duty of this sheet to hang onto Hawley's kite tail? Well, not the way the roads are! We are not that quality of a politician not quite "regular" enough yet. The Courier editor wrote the Democratic nomi nee July 27, asking if there was any truth in the rum or that he had not qualified for the nomination; as suring him that if he was in the race to win the Cour ier would work hard for him, but if he was not going to make a canvas there was no use. This paper never got the courtesy of a reply from Mr. Smith. Before the Roseburg convention nominated Mr. Campbell, this office phoned to the secretary of state and was informed the Democratic nominee had NOT. filed his acceptance at that time. Four months after the primaries, and he hadn't made up his mind wheth er he would accept or not ! And now with a voice that sounds as if it needs machine oil on it, once in a while a Democrat will moan "the Courier isn't standing by." If you Democrats can pull any pathos out o fthis situation go to it. . The Courier is out for a man for congress who will stand by the voters of Oregon. He's a ReRpublican a Bull Mooser, if you will but he towers a mile over the Big Business Handy Man we are sending down to Washington. It's time to slip the halter, pull off the tag and vote for men who ring true. Give Ilawley the" harpoon and elect John W. CamplH'll. Rend a man to Washington who will rep resent Oregon. four men in jail in four years when he was last deputy sheriff, against 81 in my first year. The les for serving civil papers in one year were one half more than the whole four years my oppon ent was deputy last. That owing to the increase of population there was a general increase in crime. There were t.wn blind mnrdnr eases, one very brutal and atrocious, in which I made every honest and possible effort to apprehend the. guilty parties, for which effort I was commended by the grand jury in their final report and the forogo ing letter which I herewith submit If you approve of this record, I solicit your support for re-election. E. T. MASS. Sheriff. , (Paid Adv.) Whose Turn Next Week? The political campaign is between President Taft and Professor Wilson. This fact is absolutely established. Rosevelt is out of it. Ore gon City Enterprise, Oct. 2. One of the most encour aging features of the cam paign is the fact that thou sands of democrats have an nounced their intention of suporting President Taft and the Republican ticket. Ore gon City Enterprise, Oct. 13. We reprint the above as significant statements, an nouncements of vital im portance to this country. Just think if the Enterprise should take Taft out of the race next week and give the country to Debs. This matter has gone far enough. The editor should leave us a little something to guess on. Presidential campaigns only come once in four years. J S SNAKE. HELP KILL IT. IF YOU DON'T IT WILL KILL THE OREGON SYSTE.M TAKES AWAY VOTERS POWER And will Put State Back In the Hands of the Looters. Editor Courier: There are some people in Ore gon who do not like the great common citizen to have any pow er in the making of laws. Oregon City has several almost states men who are hoping that the Glafke League in Portland will succeed in putting over the fake "majority" rule amendments, numbers 311 and 323 on the bal lot. In every state where every' worthless citizen, every indiffer ent citizen and every uninformed citizen who does not vote one way or the other on a proposition put before him is counted as voting NO provided he votes for some candidate- the constitutions go unamended for 40 years at a time. In a Cincinnati, Ohio precinct mostly inhabited by illiterate blacks and whites, out of 300 voters but one voted on an inm portant. tax measure, and we are asked to so change our constit ution as to count the remaining 200 as against a proposition in such a case. The measures with the above numbers, if the people will carry them, wril effectually kill the in itiative as if it was wiped off the face of the earth and forgotten. Perhaps about the year 1052 an amendment might be passed, or a law, by the people, the old po litical machine would be in the saddle and the old game of an ir- 'esponsible legislature passing aws for the higgest bidder at public auction be the rule in Ore gon once more. That .is why a small-fry commission merchant and a real estate capper are pushing the infamous, sneaking and lying things. Where do they get their enthusiasm? Out of the same bottle that the Beast al ways puts to the lips of its ser vants. If this commission mer chant lands the pelt of the initia tive with this trick, the commis sion paid will beat skinning farm ers. A commission merchant, some commission merchants sent the farmers back a bill for the freight and confiscate the entire ship ment for their commission in handling it. Here Is a shipment for which the returns will run for wheh the returns will run somothing like this: 'Messrs. Big Business Grafters of Oregon: Gentlemen We regret to state that your consignment of two fake majority rule initiative amendments were so rotten they spoiled on our hands. We shipp ed them up Salt River November 5. Please remit expenses for freight as follows: For securing initiative pe tition 115,000.00 For literature and travel ing expenses 25,000.00 For etceteras, incidentals and other office expen ses not otherwise men tioned 100,000.00 Have drawn sight draft on Wall street for the amount which we expect you to cover without question. Better luck next tune. Respectfully, Fake Majority Rule League & Co. Tt. in nil right to have a good time at the expense of the farm ers when they make snipmenis for, produce, but it is blankety blank robbery to make such re turns to Big Business. People of Oregon, are you so easily fooled by a commission morchant, or has Big Business gone to the right commission merchants to got your hido nung on the fence? A. C. CHILDS A LOSS OF NERVE. Mr. U'Ren Says Mayor Dlmlok Dare not Faoe Issue. Hon. Grant B. Dirnick: I read a few days ago in the En terprise and in the Sunday ore gonian that you will not hold any debate with me on the lax ques tion. I am sorry to see you have lost your nerve. The boys told me not to drive you too hard at Beaver Creek last spring lest 1 should never get another chance at you. It seems they knew your weakness better than I did. I hoped and expected you would have courage to meet me in Ore gon City as you promised then. I don't see any reason for your refusing, because the debate could not hurt any chance you really have to succeed Governor West. The fictitious reasons you give are not good. Any half grown boy who read your letter would know that if half the things you charged me with are true you would be only too eager to met me on the platform. Sincerely yours, W. S. U'Ren A 8HIELDS FORCED TO STAND W. 8. U'Ren Expresses Pleasure at His Late Aooeptanoe. . Oregon City, Ore., Oct. 14, 1912. . Mr. Chas. H. Shields, Secretary Oregon Equal Tax ation League, Board of Trade Building, Portland, Oregon: Dear Sir: Your acceptance of my propos al to debate The Graduated Single Tax Amendment, as published in the Sunday Oregonian, gives me very great pleasure. I certainly shall not offer any objection to your talking about the Henry George theory, the Fels fund, the election of Taft or anything else that pleases you during the de bate. I now desire to have this de bate in as many towns as possible and suggest Ashland, Medford, Grants Pass, Roseburg, Albany, Corvallis, Salem, McMinnville, Oregon City, Portland, Hood Ri ver and The Dalles, beginning on Monday, the 21st, isnt, at any town that pleases you. As it will be a series I suggest that we take turns for the opening and closing. The fact that you have spoken in many of these towns need not deter you, because the debate will attract at least ten times as many voters as came out to hear you alone. For insance, you had sixty-five voters present in Oregon City, but a debate will bring at least ten times that many. Sincerely yours, W. S. U'Ren. WHAT MAKES IT? Think It Over and Then Play Fair With the Wheels. Everybody says Oregon City is a "good town." The traveling men say it is the "best town" in the state outside of Portland, and from the droves who "make" it daily, it must be be so. Ever stop to think WHY it is a "good town?" Ever think out why we do business, property increas es and every man is on the jump while several other valley cities are as quiet as an under taker's? It's the wheels turning 'round that makes it the big mills that line both sides of the Willamette. Let them quit turning and your property would shrink faster than a flannel shirt in hot suds. This day it la in the air to de nouce big business and corpor ations but there's a difference in , big business and corporations' and you should play fair. There Is the dishonest big business that fattens off the prices it controls on necessities, ana mere s Dig business that is run fairly and employs labor. This city wasn't much of a squash until it got the mills, and the grass would grow on Main street if they would quit. When I hear a man damn the mills I wonder what he would do if there woren't any. When I hear a man want to tax them more, I wonder what his home would be worth if the wheels should stop. Think these things over and play fair. TAKING A JUMP. Wilson Campaign Fund Is Finish ing Strong. The Wilson fund takes a jump this week. Friends of the govern or are beginning to realize what a few dollars may mean at this close of the game, and the list of loyal Democrats has lengthen ed out, as you not ebelow. Now there s one more weeK. Come in with a dollar. The nat ional Committee is short of cash. A few dollars are a big help now. Judge Beatie, Oregon City, $10.00 J. W. S. Owens, Oregon City $1.00 O. D. Robbins, Route 3.... 81. 00 E. Frost Oregon City. . ..11.00 E. E. Baker, Parkplace. . . .$1.00 W. H. Timmon8, Gladstone$1.00 A. S. Brown, Oregon City, . .$1.00 M. E. Gaffnoy, Gladstone. . .$1.00 V. Groon, Oregon City ..i.oo Miss Lonora Beatie $ -50 S. R. Groon, Oregon City ..$1.00 H. W. Croason l-PO. B. J. Staats L00. E. T. Mass 2.00. F. A. Miles LOO. Casey Jones 60. V. R. Clyde 1.00. E. Jack 2.00. M. C. Strickland . .5.00. M. Justin 50 C. H. Meissner 2.50 E. L. Shaw L00. C. I). Latourette 5.00 R. Petzold 2.00 J. Myer L00 Cash LOO E. G. Caufield L00 A. J. Knightly L00 L. A. Noble l.uu W. E. Myers LOO Jim Petty 1-00 II. Burgoyne 50 A. L. Beatie 1.00 U'Ren Shields Debate Dates. There certainly will be some groat crowds at the coming joint debates botween W. S. U'Ren of this city and Charles H. Shields of Portland, on the issue of the single tax. Following are the dates: Portland, October 23. Hood River, October 25. Oregon City, October 26. Salem, October 28. Portland, October 29.