OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY OCT. 25, 1912. Four new style Victor-Victrolas Victor-Victrola X $75 Victor-Victrola XI $100 Ifift Victor-Victrola XIV $150 Victor-Victrola XVI $200 - Wonderful are the improvements made in these four new style Victor-Victrolas. One of the most wonderful things about them is that there has been no increase in price. Come in and see and hear these new instru ments. We'll 'gladly demonstrate thenTto you at any time. Other styles $15 to $50. Victors o to $100. Terms to suit your convenience if desired. BURMEISSER & ANDRESEN VICTOR. B EDISON DEALERS Suspension Bridge Corner OREGON CITY, ORECON OREGON CITY. U'Ren-Shields. Shiveley's opera house. Saturday night at eight. Greek' will meet Greek at the opera house Saturday night, but both will talk English. . Richard Beich of Portland, will speak for woman's suffrage at Seventh and Tenth streets Sat urday night. Brick laying is now well under way on the new Carnegie library and with dry weather the building will go up fast. William Andreson's new resi dence on Jefferson street, facing the park, is nearly enclosed and will be a hansonie home. Saturday night is green Point Hose Company's annual dance, a Hallowe'en party, and a splendid time is a certainly. Master Sidney Brown enter tained a dozen of his young friends at his home at 509 Third street Monday. It was his seventh birthday. The drugstores of the city have agreed to close their stores at eight o'clock each night, ex cept Saturday nights and pay ''days. Wanted Boy over 16 to do general farm work and able to milk. Address Charles Menke, Oregon City, Rt. 4. For months Messrs. U'Ren and Shields lmve been trying to ar range articles of agreement. Now they have signed up, and at the opera house Saturday night you will hear arguments on both sides of the single tax issue that you cannot afford to miss. Next Wednesday night is the one night in the year the small boy thinks the policeman should go home and to bed, and let him run things. It's Hallowe'en. But like Fourth of July, this license date is wearing out and kids have to behave themselves. W. A. White of Jefferson St. sent an apple to the Courier of. fice this week that shows what old Oregon can do when she spreads herself. The apple was picked in his yard, is a perfect specimen, and measures an even fifteen inches . It is the Wolf River variety. H. C. Clyde of Meade Post G. A. R., has some rare old " relics of "the days that tried men's souls," which were sent to the post by the secreary of the treasury, Mr. McVaigh. They are confederate bills, money that was in actual circulation during the war 20's, 10's and 5's, issued by "the Con federate States of America." Mayor Dimick was in Salem Wednesday where he argued for an appeal to the supreme court the case of William Hardin of this county, who was found guilty of a criminal charge against his step daughter several monins ago. Hardin was sentenced to 20 years in the Salem penitentiary. This (Friday) evening will oc cur the annual banquet of the church brotherhoods at the Bap tist Church and preparations are being made for 200 men. The banquet is public and supper will be 35 cents per plate. It will be held in the basement, beginning at 6:30. Dr. Charles M Sheldon will be the principle speaker, and others on the program will be 1. J. Tooze, C. H. Dye, J. W. Loder and Dr. T. B. Ford. DR. CLYDE MOUNT, Dentist, Masonio Temple. ( Hear the U'Ren-Shields single tax dobate Saturday night. Roy B. Taylor and i,ydia Starr of this city were - married by Judge Beatie Tuesday. Fresh strawberries, green cu cumbers and fruit galore. Aren't you glad you live in old Oregon? The local news has been some what neglected this week, but pol itical news is local news, these days. Only the man who gets there early will be sure of a seat at the U'Ren-Shields single tax debate Saturday night. This is jus to keep it before you that we will have another campaign as soon as this" one is over a campaign for an elevator long wanted. Miss Kate Vonderahe, an em ployee of the Pacific' Telephone Co., while on her way to the of fice Tuesday, slipped on the wet walk and broke her left arm. B. T. McBain, F. A. Olmstead and John Lewthwaite are home from a two months trip through New York, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, where they have visited all the paper mills of the country. And the boys are all glad to get back to the sun set land. R. II. Bradshaw, a resident of the eastern part of the county, has brought suit against Clack amas county for $2,000 damages as he alleged, for injuries re ceived because of the dangerous condition of the road between Ames and Bull Run. He claims he was thrown from his wagon, the wagon passing over his leg, and that the leg had to be am putated. The opinion seems to be gener al that county division doesn't stand a 100 to 1 chance, and it probably does not, but at the same time it should be remember, ed that security was lost a lot of big things in this old ward. JEv ery voter wants to vote, and get the other fellow to vote, and ev ery voter wants to do all-he can to stop this attempt to spli old Clackamas. Three Car Loads of White Rlb bonera Here Friday. Friday forenoon three carloads of W. C. T. U. members, now in national convention in Portland, will visit Oregon City and the big paper and woolen mills. The cars will leave Portland at nine a. m., arriving here at 10. There will be from 15 Oto 200 ladies, from 40 different states. The Live Wires took this mat ter up Tuesday and unanimously voted a welcome to the ladies, vo ted a few dollars to help defray expense of cars and appointed the following committees to meet them: W. F. Sullivan, Recorder Stipp, Dr. Hugh Mount and Prof. Tooze. Saw Mill Men or Farmers. Will trade for lumber or for sale: 1 farm horse, weight l.lOOlbs. 1 good set blacksmith tools. 1 set of harness. 1 three-inch wagon. 1 three-horse power Fairbanks Morse gasoline engine, good as new. 1 Bull-dog pump; capacity 19 50 gallons per hour; good as new. H. E. CROSS. Oregon City, Beaver Bldg. Coming too Fast. This week's Courier is loaded for all the chases will stand, yet there are columns and columns simply forced out for want of room. Each communication 'has been given its turn, and they have been used as received, but the last oncs are waiters until next week. NO FRIEND TO THE Sandy Orange Objects. At a recent meeting of Sandy Grange. No. 392, that body adopt ed resolutions condemning a do vision of the county; that such action was unwise at this , time; that it would cause unnecessary expense to tax payers, and it strongly urges all taxpayers of the county not to take on this extra tax hnrdon. hut. In vnl down the proposition. Against Single Tax. Hon. Grant B. Dimick of Oreg on City, who is a prominent granger, will speak at New Era next Saturday at the regular meeting of Warner Grange upon the merits of single tax and wo man suffr age. A large attendance is expected, as this is one of tho slrnncpsl granges in the county and is not ed for its big meetings. Cartel Beatie Wedding. At the homo of the bride's sis ter, Mrs. John Cook, Sunday af ternoon, the wedding of E. P. Carter of Gladstone and Miss Laura E. Beatie of this city were united in marriage by Rev. E. S. Bollinger of the Highland Cong regational Church of Portland. Mr. Carter was formerly Re publican representative from this county; has been a resident of this county for 25 years, and is a man who stands high in the co mmunity. Mrs. Carter is a sister of Judge Beatie, a graduate of the State university and is well known in this city and Portland as a teach er. They will live in Gladstone. GREEK VS. GREEK. U'Ren and Shields will Meet at the Opera House Saturday Night. Charles W. Shields and W. S. U'Ren will meet Saturday night in me opera nouse. For weeks Mr. U'Ren has been challenging the anti-single taxer and now a series of joint debates has at last been settled. It doesn't matter how a man thinks on this question, he wants to hear both sides of it and think more. It is the biggest issue in Oregon today, and when a voter gets a chance to hear these two big chiefs, he wants to jump at it. That the opera house will be jambed there isn't a bit of doubt. Everybody Is going, and it will be a scrap between master minds who don't agree. If you want to get a seat you will want to get there early. The donate will start at eight o clock. You will know a whole lot more about this taxation matter if you will hear these men present both sides ol it ana a man who won t learn ought never to kick. Hedges' Good Scheme. At the Live Wire luncheon Tuesday, J. E. Hedges asked the men present how many men pres ent were prepared to vote intel ligently on the many measures before them? He stated that there would be many bills on the ballot that ought not to be there; that there were some good bills that should be there, but that unless a man was dead sure that the bill was what Oregon wanted, that the voter should vote them down. And then Mr. Hedges made the practical suggestion, which pass. ed in the form ot a motion, mat President Sullivan assign to each member one bill, which it would be his duty to become familiar with, and each member should re port the result of his study at the next meeting, which will be an evening session Tuesday night at 6:30. The Courier believes this is a cracker-jack idea, and that a bet ter understanding of the meas ures will come of it. MR. U'REN TO MR. GILL. Caustic Letter of Criticism of the Estacada Candidate. Editor Courier: I notice that Hon. F. M. Gill, candidate for the-Legislature, is very active in writing letters against. single tax. He is canaia also, and says he is opposed to it because he fears it will reduce the selling values of land. He is not candid in pretending that his rears are excitea Jor poor men. Mr. Gill owns 160 acres of un improved land in Clackamas county. His tax for 1910 was 820.80 and under the county sin gle tax bill it would haye been 826.03. This would nave Keen a raise of 85.23 and Mr. Gill fears that it might go still higher and render it unproiitaDie lor mm to hold this land until some poor man who wants to use it. instead of speculating, will gladly pay him a nign price. Mr. Gill talks much like the Duke of Devonshire does in Eng land, and evidently feels that his interests are the same as the in terests of the Ladd, Feckheimer, Corbett and other great estate in Porland. There are about 300 little speculators in Clackamas county besides Mr. GilLwho are opposed to the single tax because they hope to get rich on the rise in value of 160 acres. In the state of Oregon about one voter in twenty i3 in Mr. Gill's class. Few of them are so candid as Mr. Gill, and neither he nor any of the others, whose writings I have seen, are so candid as the Duke of Devonshire. Nineteen out of twenty farm ers and others workers in Oregon will actually pay less tax under the county single tax bills and very much less under the gradua ted single tax amendment than they pay now. It is nonsense to talk about this measure reducing the values of farm lands. It re duces farmers' taxes and of course must increase the tax on idle lands held for speculation. W. S. U'Ren. SYSTEM W. S. U'REN SHOWS WHERE MR. , SELLING STANDS. Should Lose Vote of Every Man who Believes in Initiative, Referendum and Recall (BY W. S. U'REN.) Mr. Selling has been President of the People's Power League since 1900 and I have been its Secretary during the same period. I am sorry that it is my duty to say anything for publication about his records since he was elected President of the vState Senate last year. Until that time he had certainly rendered valu able sorvico in obtaining for the people more efficient power in government. Some of the mem bers of the People's Power League and their friends, myself among the number, helped in so far as we could, to secure Mr. Selling's election as President of the State Senate. President Selling voted for sub mission by the Legislature to the people, of a Big Business Amend ment to the Constitution to kill the initiative, by providing that no Constitutional amendment can be adopted unless it is ap proved by more than one half of all those who go to the polls, even though not one man votes no. This amendment is 311 x No, and ano'her is submitted by Initiative petition 323 x No, to accomplish tne same end. it tnese amend ments are carried, and at the election of 1914 or an time after, ward, any measure is submitted to the people, and suppose that 130,000 votes are cast for Gov ernor, no such measure will.be adopted unless more than 65,000 vote yes on tho measure, even though not one person votes no against it. This is the Oklahoma method and they have never yet adopted an Initiative measure at a general election, though some of such measures have had a clear majority of more than 58,- ouu or tne. wnoie nuniDer who voted on the question, voting in favor of the measure. Last May Mr. Selling presided at the meeting of the People's Power League when the final form of an amendment to the Constitution was agreed upon to be offered by that Organization by Initiative petition this year. As President of the League he ap proved of that amendment with enthusiasm and instructed the of ficers to go ahead with the init iative petition and submit the amendment, saying that he prob acy could not fie present at an other meeting because of his po litical engagements its a candi date. The facts were published August 8th over the signatures of George M. Orton, Vice President, B. Lee Paget, Treasurer, and W. b. u Ken secretary or the League, M. C. Eggleston , A. D. Cridge, Harry Yanckwich, W. G. Houser and other members of the League who were present. That publicat ion was in answer to a telegram from Mr. Selling sent from Salt Lake to Secretary of State Olcott on July 29th, demanding the re moval ot nis name and stating that he had not authorized the use of his name in any way with that amendment or any measure of the people's Power League this year. This statement by Mr. Sol ling is untrue and is flatly con tradicted by the men above named and Dy others. I believe, as do many others, that Mr. Selling violated tho Corrupt Practices Act by spend ing largo sums or money m per fecting his campaign organizat ion and at the same time offering alleged reasons why Senator Bourne should not be nominated, pretending that he, Mr. Selling. was only making up his mind whether or not he would be a candidate. When he was charged with this violation of the law ho refused to answer, because he said the charge was made one or two days later than the law re quired. He always pretended to favor the initiative, and it was not com monly known, nor did I know, un. til this summer that he nad voted in the Legislature for an amend ment to kill the Initiative. Some politicians will allow much for Mr. Selling's repudiat ing of the people's Power League amendment and his denial of any responsibility for it; and they will forgive his vote against the Initiative, because he was seeking the support of the standpatters and Re-actionaries of Oregon for his election in November. Some other politicians will overtook his campaign expenses because the Courts or Uregon had not de cided that his action was con trary to the law. But such a de cision-has been made by the Brit ish Courts on practically the same language in tne English Corrupt Practices Act. I do not criticize the Stand patters and Rc-aotioriarics for supporting Mr. Selling. I think the facts above staled prove that he is their kind of man and is in sympathy with them in their at tacks on the people's Power in Oregon. But I do respectfully submit that he should lose the support of every voter in this State who believes in the Initiat. ive, Referendum and Recall. The men who obtained these measures for Oregon did not barter their principles or repudiate their friends for the hope of public of fice. Sincerely yours, W. S. U'REN. Mrs. I. C. Hastier, Grand Is land, Nev., has something she wishes to say about Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. "My three children had a very severe attack of whooping cough and suffered greatly. A friend recommended Foley's Honey and Tar Compound and it did them more good than anything 'I gave them. I am glad to recommend it." For sale by Huntley Bros. Co., Oregon City, Ore. Hear the U'Ren-Shields single tax debate Saturday night. A Bargain. A 'fine 4-room house with base? merit, all furnished; good large ba n; chicken house; over 1-2 ac re of land; plenty of fruit trees; in a good town on railroad and street car line; 1 block to store, postoffice and church; 2 blocks from high school. A good home for only $1200. Terms. See H. S. Clyde, Weinhardt bldg., oppo site court house, Oregon City. PIANO for sale, or will trade for cattle, milch cows preferred. Ad dress Jennings Lodge, Box 57. Phone Oak Grove, Black 757. Dyspopsia is America's curse. Burdock Blood Bitters conqers dyspepsia every time. It drives out impurities, tones the stomach restores perfect digestion, normal weight and good health. Doan'sRegulets cure constip ation without griping nausea, nor any weakening effect. "Ask your druggist for them. 25 cents per box. ' ; 7 Money to Loan. 'Oregon City Abstract Co., 617 Main street. Buy Property in tI Mow You must purchase your lots in Gladstone within the next two weeks if you would benefit hy the generous offer of the Glad stone Real Estate Association which so many Oregon City people have taken ad- vantage of during the past month and half. Our Generous Offer: Our property is the VERY HEART of this progressive little town, and we have been offering the finest of these lots at prices ranging from $200 to $400 and at terms that are arranged wholly for the convenience of the buyer. $10 cash and the balance in monthly payments of $5 per, month. That's all the cash it takes and the buyer can take possession at once. Two Special Clauses for your benefit And in addition if the purchaser gets sick, a clause on is contract will permit him to 1 FORGET his payments for a period of three months; and wj2 will forget them, too. Isnt that fair? And further, should you die before your ! place is paid for, your legal representatives may continue your contract, if they desire to do so, or if they prefer it we will pay back every penny and interest, and annul the contract. Isnt this more than reason able? You Can't beat Gladstone Any where And then, on- top of these generous terms which so many have taken advantage of during the past month, the fact remains that you can't beat Gladstone anyplace for the ideal homesite. You know that as well as we do. Every modern convenience can be enjoyed in Gladstone, and the water sys 'tem of the little city is one of the finest in the state, no matter where you go. Glad stone is a city of progressiveness, and when you invest in Gladstone property you breathe deeply of that spirit of progress .. which has made this ideal little city what it is today and with every improvement the value of your investment mechanically in creases. The fundamental idea is thisi- No Speculation-Gladstone is here now No vague dreams of a town way off in the future. The little city is here, on the ground now, where you can see for yourself, and it; takes only a look to convince even thehmost skeptical that Gladstone property is worth while. Our phone is Pacific States 1982. Mr. P. A. Cross has charge of our Gladstone property; our office is opposite the Gladstone postoffice. Come down and he will be glad to take you all over these beautiful lots. 4 Gladstone Real Estate Association Beaver Building H. , CROSS, President Oregon Cits, Ore. i