CITY . .The Courier has an average sworn circulation during the year 1912 of over 2,000 weekly. Its ad vertising columns are gold. No voting contests, premiums or other "Inducements.'The Cour ier stands on Its own bottom and Its subscription list talks. ' 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY. . OREGON. FRIDAY. JOV. 29, 19I2. No. 29 COURIER E THEGE PROVISIONS SHORT TERM AND COMMON USERf! CLAUSE LOOK TO THE CITY'S FUTURE A One Street City Should Be Care ful of its Frnachises This paper believes thai this franchise pending before the city council is a matter that should be taken up and weighed carefully and one to go very slow on. One great trouble with giving away or selling the future is that no man san see it, and he only guesses, or ignores what twenty years 'y bring forth., , Oregon City is a peculiarly sit uated city. There is probably not another like it in Oregon, in the way that we have ONE business street because we have no room below the bluffs for more.. i'f we had dozen of parallel streets, as many cities have, and where a dozen franchises could be granted if the future growth of the city warranted thern,. then it would not be such a highly inui . portant matter just what the pro visions of the pending franchise were, but with one business street and no chance lor any other prin cipal street, wo should get every thing that it is possible to get for the future growth of the city- : and in the position the city coun cil is in it is possible to get al most anything reasonable. The Courier believes that there should by all means be a common users' clause in the franchise. We don't know what the future may push up to us in the way of growl!; or necessity, but we DO know we have but one inlet and outlet on this side of the river and we should go slow about giving any one railroad or company the exclusive use of tkis one outlet and inlet. A common users clause will keep.. It won't do any harm , to have it around. It won't spoil or wear out, and the day might come when it would be of wonder fi l value in the way of affording a means of competition for. this city. This common users' clause, as we understand the provisions, al lows other to use the right of way by paying a proportion of the j expense ot tne work. Oregon City is growing and growing fast, and it will continue to grow because it has the big mills back of it, and they are ; in turn backed by the big water pow er. We want to look ahead and anticipate the . future,' and the more we can retain in the way of privilege, and the least we can At SHOULD The Best give away, the safer will be our future. The common users' clause is a safe bet for the future, and it would seem to the Courier it is the safe play for the city council if they are after the. city s future good, A one street city giving an exclusive lranchise to one cor poration is most too tight a fran chise. And another consideration is that of a short franchise. The day has gone by when men should contract for the rights of their children. Men have no business willing away privileges that will come after they are dead and for gotten. There is no gCDd argu men in a long franchise, and there is every argument for the short one the ten year lease. A com pany under the short form is go ing to do the right thing a hun dred times where they would not do it if they had fifty years, or even twenty ahead of them. A short franchise is a big club. The club may never be used, but it does. not. cost a, cent for storage. And the city can get just as much service and'just as much for the short form' as for the one that lies up your children. And if you are interested, the time to make the noise is before the franchise is granted. A pro test alterward doesn t get you anything. WHAT SHOULD BE, Central Freight Station for all three Roads on Thirteenth St Here'o what should he done. and with the right kind of agita tion and people behind it it might be done. There should be a: central freight depot at Fifteenth street, to be U"ed jointly by the Southern Pacific, the- P. R. L. & P. Co and the Clackamas Southern. Such a depot, with shipping yards and loading places is one of the serious Dig needs or tnis city and it will grow bigger every year, an the city grows bigger. Shipping is simply driven away lrom tnis city now because mere is simply not room to handle the stuff, and shippers take it to other places. The Southern Pacific has hardly room for a ,man to turn around, and conditions are not much better at ' the 0. W. R.N. . With a central depot at this lo cation the question of freighting through our streets would be largely done away with, leaving only the log trains. infill woypp kaftmobigwkyyup"u u This is a matter that should be taken up by the three companies. We have the tip that none of then would oppose it very hard, for they are all wise to the loss of bu iness through tne present sys- Inn. AU together they would give us shipping facilities that the city, er P'cked this railroad proposi needs.and individually each would 1 for winner, if enough sup have its separate depot in a diff-lP? cou,ld be &uar,a,nte.e.d1 lS ?et ll opmi innntinn , well under way. We didnt fore- erent location. The time is surely coming when the freight business will have to be done in this end of the city, and it would seem that the three companies could get together and do it right. : Oregon has been having some beautiful weather ... the Lowest Cost ELECTRIC LIGHT is the most suitable for homes, offices, shops and other places .neding light." Elec tricity can be used in any quantity, 'larr. or small, thereby furnishing .any requin-i amount of light. Furthermore, electric 'imps car be located in any place, thus affording any desned ("strlbut? :i of light. No other lamps possess tV oualiflcstio.t i, there fore it is' not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly replacing all others in modro establishments. Portland Railway. Light & Powe Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH (Si, ALDER. PORTLAND Phones Main C688 and A. 6131 WILL LAY THE RAILS NEXT WEEK STEEL FOR ROAD IS ON SIDE TRACK HERE. BEAVER CREEK BY JANUARY 1 Funds Now Available to Complete Road to Mount Angel The rails are in Oregon Citv ready to lay to Beaver Creek on the Clackamas Southern. two weeks ago when we stated they were on the way some doubt er said this shipment would be come side-tracked or lost, and would get along about next July. But the rails are hern, all t.hnf can tie handled at a tune, and the rest are in i'oruana. As soon as the connection with the P. R. L. & H. Co. can be made and the rails transferred to the Clackamas Southern, the laying will com mence. It is a matter of but a day or iwo. . The Clackamas Southern has purchased the Tooze block and is leveling and improving it for a terminal site, and l.ivinir a side track. Ihe company has now funds enough to complete the toad to Mt. Angel, all the steel is ordered and 600 tons are on the way. ' In raising money for railroad tiil.-ns.-w i ifihlly where: lb. are no big- capitalists . financing the project, it is always neces sary to guarantee that the . money subscribed in a certain locality shall be expended in that locality. And the Clackamas Southern has been more favored abroad than at home, in regard to this sup port, nence it is tnis end, Between this city and Beaver creek, .: that lunds are needed. v Mayor Dimick told the Live Wires Tuesday that $6,000 was subscribed in the vicinity of Mt. Angel last week, and that one man in Molalla had done more to make this road possible than all the men in Oregon City; He said $10,000 was needed to ballast the road to Beaver Creek, and he ask ed the Live Wires to help out on this end 'not as an act of char ity, but in the way of an invest ment that will bring good future returns. Nearly two years ago the Cour see the obstacles that would come and probably the officials and directors didn't either; that is, they didn't know they would come in bunches and quite so fast. But they have stayed by the woodpile and pushed the bucksaw and that means sawed wood. They have been up against the ight real sharp pricks but they have stayed on the job and kept on building a road out into that for bidden Molalla country. But the completion of the road is now certain, so certain that the interests have been fighting it for two years, have quit, and they say Swift now gets a natural sleep once in a while. And when the laving of the steel starts, Oregon City should have a rousing ratification meet ing. IT'S THE ONLY WAY And We Ask You Subscribers To Make It the Easy Wya There is one point that subsc ribers of the Courier might just as well understand, and get tho roughly into their heads, and that is they will have to pay their sub scription when they have had the paper twelve mouths or part company with us. . We appreciate your subscrip tions, and we want to hold them. We' are going to try to give you your moneys worth, and we will give any subscriber a year's time "Vh- 11 V ;t in iihmli In unit mis 10 an wo uau uu mmuui, mn. ing long chances and we simply Will 1101 lane litem, .remaps y0Uwek Anil fivurv hnnp nf th Hav j ,.i !., ii ,., uu nui, n.uuw jl, uui nicic 10 o guv- eminent ruling which forbids any publisher from sending a weekly publication to any suoscnhor longer than one year at the sec ond class rate, and we are not go ing to buck Uncle Sam or take any chances of . losing our mailing privilege.. - We will notily every suDserioer when he is one year behind, and we simply ask of you.to heed that nonce anu uoi compel us iu mop your paper. 1 here is only one way to run a newspaper and run it right and that is on the one year basis, and if you readers will play fair with us it will be dead easy and most satisfactory to us all to Tiave it on this footing. If you let the grocery account un a year and got a notice to send l check, you wouldn't get mad because you were "dunned" would you? Well, then, don't swell up be cause we send you a notice when your Courier account is twelve months old. We have worked a year revis ing, adding to and getting the sub scription list of this paper on live basis. Today we have readers not dead heads, but live ones and a bunch of them. They are men and women who want the paper and who read it. Now if you want to get under this unbrella, we want you to, but let it be definitely understood that twelve months is our longest terms. Just get the habit and you will thank us for it. It is so much easier to pay once a year than once in five years. It avoids all mistakes and misunderstandings, avoid big back subscription bills and enahies us to give you a Det ter newspaper So when you get your notice, be a Johnny, and send in the cnecK or money order. Help The Deserving Editor Courier: In the merchants' voting con test for an auto prize, I note there are young men candidates whose fathers could step out and buy autos for them and never miss the money. And I also note that there are men holdings public offices trying for the prize. There is no law to prevent this class from entering, if they are determined to, but it seems to me much like asking unneeded charity. And there are contestants for this prize who need it, to whom the auto would be of great prac tical good, and who are not able to purchase one. Help these . candidates, your voles where they will some one who needs help, office holders and sons of Give ' help The rich fathers don t need hem. FAIR PLAY. J. J. Cooke, who is an applicant for the postofllce at Oregon City, Oregon, to succeed T. P. Randall, was born at Damascus, Clacka mas County, Oregon, and came to Oregon City 32 years ago; for the past 22 years he has been the jun ior member of the firm of Wilson & Cooke. . , In 1898 he was elected sheriff of Clackamas County and inl900 was re-elected. He has always taken a great interest in politics and always worked for the suc cess ofhe democratic ticket. Anticipating. Here is the way an eastern paper relates a personal item: ' 'Our esteemed iellow citizen, John G. Harris, will go to the hos pital tomorrow to be operated upon for the removal of his app endix by Dr. Smith. He will leave .. -A. i -':' . . ( vV a wife and three cniiaren. LET HS CONTINUE TO CITY CANNOT AFFORD TO BACK UP AT THIS TIME ELEVATOR MEANS PROGRESS And Big Growth to Residence Seotlon Is Sure to Result. They say New York City has a greater uent man the govern ment. It's the Denaltv for benefit) of Dusiness or progress. Portland is the real live doings of the Northwest, but it has obli gations that will surprise you , when you see the totals. I . . AnV real 110186 0f a Clty' any , nusiiing, iaikea-or city, where ! thev do hnsmesa siv. rtnv in tho , - "". nas ooiigauons otherwise l ' wouldn't have business, I The ttwns where public im i provemenfcs are few and taxes low are the towns where trains stop on signal." ' ' v Wouldn't you rather be a live one, do more Business, pay more taxes and know you were living? It isn't st) much the expense, as the income. If you are doing the business, you will always have to pay a proportionate expense.' Oregon City hasn't got to have a public free elevator up the bluffs. yve oan get along without it We didn't have to have Main street paved; we didn't have to have a suspension bridge over the river. Our forefathers got along with a ferry. We' haven't got to have a commercial club, a oublic ity office, fire alarms. Dublic li brary, locks, canal, or any of the many public improvements, that we have now, and are going to have. ' Here's the nronosition: There will he submitted to you next Monday a ballot to say yes or no, on tne question or a public free elevator, for service to the residence section of this city. -n provides mat jpt 2,ooy or so much of this sum as is necessary, shall be issued in bonds of $500 a year for 24 years, to pay for this service. Now look at it. If you own a place that is worth $2,000 a year, your share of this tax to pay these yearly bonds will bo about eighty cents. How much more will it make your property worth, to say noth ing about personal convenience and public welfare? - Wouldnt it advance the Dnce of your property from 25 to 50 time. as much a your original taxes? . But you say the initial cost of tho elevator is only a part of the cost, that there must bo added to this the salary of a man to run it every day in the year. Certainly, it won t run itself. but add $100 a month to your as sessment on a $2,000 property and then you have less than $3 a year added to your taxes, a hun dred dollars or two added to the value of your property and a val ue added to it that is a market value if you want to sell for the heights will be a pretty good lo cality to live in then. mere s a hunch of men in the Live Wires who pay $12 a year dues to this Commercial Club in order to be eligible to the Live Wires, where they pay $60 a year more, and besides this $72, many of them pay $24 a year as a pub lic subscription to the Commerr cial club. -And there is a special tax of $100 a year. ir these men had to nay half this amount in a special tax lev ied on their property, they would leave the city. As near as it can be figured, av erage property owners would have to pay an extra tax or about $1.50 a year for the elevator. Why you would simply nop to it. if n public subscription paper were circulated for this purpose, and you were asked for this amount. ' - . We don t have much snow, but when we do have a fall, the stair ways are impassible to women and the older people. ine stairways are always im passible to baby carriages, and women have to go seven blocks to get one. in midsummer tne stairways are a dread to many men, who lake lunch down town rather than to make the climb. Old people and people with poor, health or weak hearts cannot climb them, and they live on the bluffs only because they cannot find houses elsewhere. The time saved by an elevator would pay for its. upkeep every year, if your time is worth any thing, j Some object to the project on! the ground that those -directly i t:nA ,.., f ;i """B"""" " ' ".oi.. name seuaumiiK uiticui; uu. v. I having a public dock. It is too narrow a view. li. T. McBain lives on the west side of the ri ver, his home and his interests are there, and he probably would not use the elevator a dozen times a year, but he is out working hard for it, because he looks at it as progress, for the best good of the many, as a means to a big ger city. That's the Idea. Now you ladies, this is as much your interests as your husbands for they say over half the homes in this city are your property. Look this matter over, and then VOTE. There is little con test over city officials and half your indolent husbands won t vote. You women of the woman's club take this matter and see if it is not along your line of work of doing things. If it is, organize and get your voters out. The Courier believes the ele- PRObRES vator would be a splendid invest ment for the city and would do wunoers to Duild up the residence secuon. ine yearly payments are no ioaa, ine ueniits are many Think it over. GLENN GAULT HELD. Young Man Bound Over to Grand Jury Without Bonds Glenn Oault. self-confessed murderer of his step-father, was bound over to the irrand inrv without bonds Tuesday, hnfm-n Justice Samson. Monday a cor. oner s jury over the skull o the murdered man found that, the deceased had come to his death by blows inflicted from an axe, in the hands of Glenn Gau t. ' Th young man will be kept in jail uiun ins iriai comes up. baturday last, he accompanied ine local omcers to tne iocs nv of his crime and pointed out the gruesome spot, where two years before he had dragged the body oi u. m. i.eitzei, out in the Crab apple Prairie country, 33 miles south of Oregon City, and buried the remains under a foot of dirt, anu a pno oi logs. The young man men, ior tne rirst time, dis played emotion over his crime and sobbed hysterically. Rumors have been floating about, among the people of the locality to the effect that there's another story connected with the killing, but the rumors are vague and Deputy Stipp has little infor mation, besides the confession of the boy, that would support the state's case. Deputy Davis, from out in that district is here con tending with the local officers in egard to the affair. He worked several months on the case, on the supposition that foul play had been committed, and even went so far as to excavate for the body at one suspicious looking place in that wild locality. Lest You forget. There are just throe more is ues of the Courier that will do a Christmas ad. any good. Last year some ol you waited until the Courier could not offer you any dosireable position for an ad and then you kicked. You want to come in early and stake out your claim. We have the readers in Clackamas county these days. You may look them over, count them for yourself. But if you want a holiday ad, you want to plant it next week. We will see that it comes up all over northern and western Clack- mas County. MRS. NEWTON CANDIDATE. - - . ft Will Run Against Linn E. Jones for Mayor of City. Two weeks ago we stated that Linn E. Jones would have no op position for mayor and that he would he a 100 to 1 shot on elec tion day. But Mr. Jones isn t going to oo lonesome starter he i going to have company, and you can't get quite so big odds at tho pad dock. . Mrs. Kate Newton of Tentn and (J. Adams street is a candidate. It is said the matter started as ioke. when several petition pa pers were circulated in the mills and on the streets, but when Mrs. ewton was informed or the mat ter, she said she would play the joke out, would play it for all it was worth, and would be a candi date against Mr. Jones. And then tho Portland newspa pers got busy horo, wired their eporters to roature it, and tnoy lave been making first page stor ies of it. Mr. Jonoa takes tho matter good naturedly, and they say he .started to say "may the best man win." He said the office was but bunch of trouble and worry and Mrs. Newton would relieve him ' it. he would certainly remem ber her witli a Christmas present. Mrs. Newton -is a well known lady of Oregon City and a large property owner. She has been a widow for thirty-five years, but, has carried out many successful business deals and is fully cap able of taking care of almost any thing in the lino or business. Mrs. Newton will not make an active campaign, leaving tho mat ter entirely in the hands of her friends. She does not believe in the constant inharmonious feel ing which has characterized tho work of tho council in the past. Bigger Rigs For Carriers. After January 1. the cost of shipping a parcel of merchandise out from town on a rural route will he live cents for the first pound, or fraction of a pound, and a cent a pound after that, up to eleven pounds, which is the limit. This makes it 15 cents for eleven pounds. Must Serve His Sentence. William Hardin of this county, convicted of intimacy with his sten dauKhter in the circuitt court here some months ago and sentenced to twenty years in the state prison at Salem, must serve his sentence. The case was ap pealed to the supreme court and its decision refuses a new trial. The rancher has been out on $10, 000 bail and will be surrendered to Sheriff Mass today. . ,j , .,... onr in Railroad Must Pay ZVi Per Cent Without a. dissenting vote the city council Wednesday evening voted that the new franchise for the V. R. L. & P. Co. must pya to the city 3 per cent of its gross earnings on its freight business in thiR city. Franklin T. Griflllh of the com pany strongly objected To this charge, which he declared was ex cessive and a greater charge than is exacted anywhere in the state. He declared the railroad would not and could not accept this franchise with this provision. -STORY HOTEL E THIS HOTEL NEED NOT EXPECT MUCH PATRONAGE. MUST KEEP UP WITH DATE Practical, Convincing Reasoning by 8. P. DAVIS. Editor Courier: A gentleman of my acauaint- anee was thinking of purchasing property for a home on the hill in this city; but he said he would not buy the place thought of un der any consideration if he knew tho talked-of elevator would not be built. And 1 have heard many other home-seekers express their ob jection to a location which would mean so much stair-climbing. We lose to Gladstone and oth er places even more distant, many good people whom we might have as citizens of our town, if we had tho proposed elevator. As to the question of debt about which a correspondent re cently tried to alarm our citizens let niti say that what should have been tne limit a quarter of a cen tury ago, need not be the. limit now. A man worth $50,000.00 may assume obligations which the man worth only $500 would not dare consider. If 1 owned a building with top floors as high above ground as s the top ol our biun from tne street near the railroad station, and had provided no better mode of ascent than the old time stair way, 1 would regard it as good business policy to. have something more modern, l would Know mat an elevator would be a good in vestment, even if I had to go in debt for it. It would enable me to get better prices for my floor space. And ir i duin t proviue tne elevator, everybody would need to make that ascent of six or eight stories, either daily or only oc casionally, would think of me as utterly lacking in humane consid eration for the comfort and con venience of others. Where is the building on this continent six or eight stories in height so much used that two thousand or more people go to its top floor every day, that doeg not have an elevator? And yet, what nobody would think of in case of a buildinsr. we are requiring in case of a bluff. To tho aged and infirm, to the lady with a baby carriage, to the weary workman at tne ciose oi his day's toil, to these and to all others, if we-vote against an ele vator, wo would thereby say: "Get up to the eighth floor the best way vou can. or else move to some other locality. We havn't room for you on the lowor stories, ana rather than provide anything so modern as an elevator, we will let you go to places where they care more ror you. , a. i'. uavis. Qinther-MoGahney Wedding. At the home of Mr. and Mrs. unk Schoonborn Wednesday evening occurred the marriage of Mis, Hazel uintner, aaugm.er oi Mr. and Mrs. Ernest lunthor of Schubel, to Frances McGahnoy nf this city. The wedding was attended by only a few near rel atives and friends of tho family and the ceremony was performed by Rev. Landsborough. City has Been Full of Teachers There have boon about 200 teachers of the county in the city during tho past three days, at tending tho institute that con vened in tho high school building County Superintendent T. J. Gary had charge of the program, and it has been one of the most success- fu institutes ever held in trie county. Gladstone Levies 7 Mill Tax. At a meeting of the taxpayers nf UladMlnne Wednesday night it was decided to levy a tax of 7 mills for school purposes, an in crease of four mills over the levy of last year. This tax will provide for several improvements in the way of larger grounds for the school and new departments in the school. Estacada Votes 7 Mill Tax Last week Estacada voted a 7 mill tax by the close vote of 19 to t6. Last year's tax was 12 mills. Find It On Pages 2 and 6. Pages 2 and 5 are local pages, and on every page you will find interesting matters, Flagged Train With Shirt. Tearing his shirt from his back an Ohio man flaggod a train and saved it from a wreck, but H. T. Alston, Raleigh, N. C, once prevented a wreck with Electrio Bitters. "I was in a terrible plight when I began to use them' he writes, "my stomach, bead, back and kidneys were all badly affected and my liver was in a bad condition, but four bottles of El ectric Bitters made me feel like a new man." A trial will convince you of their matchless mrit for any stomach, liver or kidney trouble. Price 50 cents at Hunt ley Bros, Oregon City, Canby, Hubbard and Molalla. Strayed from my place a moose colored Jersey heifer, 18 months old. Reward for return. Peter Sa ger, Orparon City Route 4, phone Bnaver Mutual. LEVATOR