EGOH n fVi7 TTCJ) tntf "O ..The Courier has an average worn circulation during the year 1912 or over 2,000 weekly. Its ad vertising columns are gold. No voting oontests, premiums or other "Induoements.'The Cour ier stands on its own bottom and Its subscription list talks. . tUUfilft 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY, OREGON. FRIDAY. DEC. 13, 1912. No. 31 OR CITY OF OREGON CITY COULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN THIS MATTER? WOULD MEAN MUCH TO YOU Could't You Fellows Pull Togeth er for a Year's Trial? Here is a mailer the Courier editor has long had his eye on, and when he saw how Gresham had sprung it, he wished he had lighted the fuse a little earlier. Would it be possible to round up the merchants of Oregon City and get them all into a project that would bring them a line of business from all over Clackamas county, bring hundreds of people here to trade and stop the money cars that carry gold into Portland and bring back goods? Would you fellows forget your jealousy, give an inch to agree wilh Lbe other fellow, and all come in on a deal that would bo un questionably for your gqpd, and for the city's good? Would you? Would you talk it over and consider its proposi tions? Or will you simply glance over it, and forget it, and expect the newspaper men to yell themselves into quinsy because Portland gets a big part of our city's trade and Canby a big part of the farmer's business? Well, here it is. Every merchant in Oregon City to get together first, and every man must take the other fellow on honor keep his hand off his watch and not growl, bite or pull hair. Form an organization and tie it up tighter than an Oregon wed ding for one year. One day every week have a sale day, where every merchant agrees to sell a certain list of articles at one and the same bargain price no matter to which store the cus tomer goes. Once a week have a merchants' meet, a week in advance, and line up a list of goods that they will all give the same reduced prices on. Work out a system of collective advertising for this day. Adver tise and advertise right, but let every merchant in the associa tion pay his part, and pay in pro portion to the extent of his busi ness, or what he might gain from enlarged business. And in the organization work out a credit organization and a collection system; get up close and touch elbows, and find out whaL co-operation can do. Do this, fellows, organize along these or similar lines, and you will get trade from Sandy. The editor of this paper has Fhe At MERCHANTS seen it worked out and knows it will work. Gresham knows it will work, and has formed a Retail Merch ants' Association, entered into an agreement for one year to work it. If Oregon City could only keep its own it would Jiave the most 1 lively and prosperous city if its 1 size in this country. I The trouble is Portland gets too much of money earned here, 1 and that farming trade that' should come here doesn't. i Get together you fellows, call a meeting, talk it over and see if something won't come of it. These trade days would grow; they could be added to and made to grow as big as you want them anu once a week we "could make this city look as it. looks on horse show days and carnivals. W hatdoyousay? A CONFUSING PAIR. Oregon City's Twins Keep Hospi tal Doctors Guessing. The Misses Ruby and Pearl Francis, the popular daughters of Mr: and Mrs. S. V. Francis of this city, who are taking a training course in nursing at the Good hamaruan Hospital in Portland, are a puzzle to the pnysicians at the institution. , These two young ladies are twins, resembling each other very much, so much tluit it has caused considerable confusion when they nave ueen piaceu on cases Dy the different physicians. A lew uays ago Miss Ruby was placed in charge of a natient in ward No. 30, and after the phys ician had given her instructions he hurried .to another room and entering ward No. 35 was sur prised to llnd Miss Franceis, who he thought he' had placed in ward No. 30, and then he was puzzled, thinking the nurse had not obeyed his orders by remaining: in the ward he had just assigned to her. After talking of a certain patient, of whom the sister knew nothing, she stated to the physician that this must be her sister's patient. But even now the physician is wondering "who's who." The Mises Francis completed their high schol in this ci.ty in June last and took up their duties in the hospital in September. They are well known in Oregon City as "The Twins," while at the hos pital they are as familarly called "The Gems." FIRST WOMAN OFFICEHOLDER Tull Family of Barlow are Pretty Much the Whole Works. Mrs. M. E. Tull of Barlow was elected to the city council of that city by a large majority, she be ing the first and only women in the council of that citv. Mrs. Tull is well known in, the southern part of this county. Mr. Tull, her hu-sband, is mayor.while William Tull is treasurer and Cass Tull is councilman. Mrs Tull has the distinction of being the first woman in Clackamas county to hold public office while Gladstone boasts of the second woman office holder, Mrs. G. W. Church, who was elected to the office of city treasurer. Best Light,' the Lowest Cost ELECTRIC LIGHT is the most suitable for homes, offices, shops and other places ceding' iisrhl. Elec tricity can be used in nny quantity, lar'. or small, thereby furnishing any requin-d amount of light Furthermore, electric .'amps car be located in any place, thus affording any desiml t1!strlbut.5 :i of light. No other lamps possess Vmw oualiflcatio.i i, there fore it is not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly replacing all others in modern establishments. Portland Railway, Light & Power Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH ALDER. PORTLAND Phones Main 6688 and A. 6131 GET AFTER THE S CAUSE QUIT SERVING. THE DANGER OUS CITY WATER. DO MORE THAN LOCATE DANGER Get a Pure Water Supply for the City If It Costs a Million. I read with keen interest the solution of the typhoid problem in the Enterprise and the won der is how all . we great thinkers overlooked it. How simple I Just employ an other public official at $400 per to take little drops of water after our $60,000 filter plant has fil tered them pure, analyze them daily and warn our thirsty peo ple when NOT to drink it when it is NOT pure. To be sure we have a state health department, hired and paid for the very purpose, a depart ment which will analyze samples of water sent them at ANY time, free of charge; a board of men picked for their fitness for this very purpose, and who will make tests every month, every week, every day, if we will only be to the trouble to put a little bottle under the faucet. But that" isn't the idea. We should paronize home first. Our city needs more jobs and what a typhoid 'outbreak good for if it won't get someone something. By all means hire a local, chemist and pay him $400 a year to do what the water commis sioners or board of health are elected to do. And for. fear he might get" a little careless and forget some day to tell us the quantity and quality of germs that are running races in- our water mains, let us have another "made in Oregon City" official as assistant, and pay him, say $200 a year to make tests and semi-weekly germ re ports, in the event the board of health, water commissioners or "official city tester" should skip a day or two. It's a splendid scheme. It deals entirely with effects. It would be like the label Linn Jones puts on poison bottles. We might have a. set of signals on the Dluff and every morning have the bulletins warn the people whether or not (he fluid would be poison for that day. :...', -$ Now let's blow away the non sense and meet conditions. We don't want to know how OFTEN our water is dangerous WE WANT T OKNOW THAT I" IS SAFE, want to know it is pure every happy minute of the year. How often do you have typhoid in Oregon CityT Every single year. Had it every year for twenty TYPHOID years, haven't you? And you'll have it for twenty years more unless you remove the cause. You put in a $60,000 filtering Elant five years ago, but you ave grim old typhoid doing busi ness at the same old stand. The water commissioners make a public statement that the reservoir is cleaned every year and was cleaned in August this year. . ,- Then what? Then they admit that the filter DOES NOT eliminate the germs of typhoid. I have asked opinions of doc tors in Portland, in Oregon City, and have talked with several nurses, and every one of them declares that typhoid cannot be filtered out of water. The Doctors Mount emphatic ally state that as long as we take our water from the state's sewer, the Willamette river, just so long will we have fevers to a greater or less extent. Medical books will tell you that typhoid germs will permeate an earthen dish and contaminate water on the inside of that dish. Why did New York City expend millions of dollars for a water system when it could have filter ed it out Of the Hudson? . . Why did Portland go to Bull Run instead of taking it out of the Willamette or Columbia? ' Because these cities knew they would be right up against the conditions we now have. Jbuifalo filters water out of big Lane iM-ie, but that city has sel dom a year that misses an out break. Oregon City has got to settle this matter and settle it right, or it will have- fevers every time the siate sewer rises ana brings down tne filth lor us to drink. There are several ways to set tle it right, but they all get right Iiuck to the one point remove Hie cause, get a pure supply. . "But we wouiu burn up the $60,000 we have put into our wa ter plant," a citizen protested the olher day. Sure nough, but would this man enlist as a martyr? Would he die lor Oregon City? Any of you leliows want to put your names down as volunteers to run -up against typhoid to save a'$60, ouu water plant? If so come in we want to see how many there o.i e. if it means o back In t he font- hills to get mountain snrinirs. tnen hop to it, and don't stack up the cost against human life. If it means pay Portland good mon ey to tap Bull Run mains, then pay and tap. In a few weeks the epidemic will have passed, a few will have uiea and we will havef orgotten it until next November. nut let me teu you there is something the OTHER fellow nasn t forgotten. Almost every newsDaner that comes to the Courier office has given Oregon City some mighty expensive advertising free of expense. from 3-heads ' down to the condensed state news items they nave told hundreds of thousands of people of the typhoid out- Dreak here. They have done more in one month to hurt Orecron Citv .than the commercial bodies can do in a year to get back. And this is too exnensive ad vertising we can't afford it. un my way to Oregon Citv a year and a half ago, a Portlander, on nis way nome trom Chicago, advised nie not to locate in the Willamette Valley, for he said most or tne cities and towns used river water and they all had ty phoid. lo an easterner tyDhoid is deadly and to him the word car ries fear. They don't know that the disease here is mild. I know one of the most beauti ful spots in Texas, the richest valley on the Brazos river, that is almost depopulated because of yearly typhoid outbreaks and mat section cannot get pure wa ter. . Eliminate typhoid and it will do more for advertising purposes for this city than anything could possibly be done. I know two families in-this city, both came here less than a year ago, one has typhoid and the oth er lives in daily dread of it. Both men declare they will leave Ore- gun "as quick as God will let them." And can we afford to let these kind of missionaries go back east and preach? Can we? Let's go after the matter right, face conditions and remedy them. Getting another chemist to tell us howoften our water is danger ous is kid nonsense. Getting a pure supply of water is men's talk. Boiling water week after week is only half a preventative. Washing a hunch of celery un der a faucet will undo it. Wet ting a toothbrush under a faucet will give the fever to the right person. And our boys and girls will drink water where they can get it when they are thirsty. The plan is to get a supply of water that does not have to be doctored before it is safe no matter the expense. You can't measure human life by dollar signs and figures you can't put a price on your boy or girl. Typhoid is worse than con sumption. Let us fight it as we fight the white plague. What say you? The Two Big Items. Two of the largest individual items of expenditures of Clacka mas county for October, accord ing to the published procedings of the county court, were Coast Bridsre Co. $2,342.73 and the Ore gon City Enterprise, $745.62 for printing. Estacada .progress. Only 8een in Oregon. The first of the week there was a heavy white frost and it was an unusual sight to an easterner to see the young lads coasting and sliding on white sidewalks, fring ed with budding and ful blown roses. THE FIRST SPIKEJS DRIVEN RAILROAD RATIFICATION DAY A SPLENDID SUCCESS. BIG CROWDS IN ATTENDANCE. People Show Hearty Approval of Work of the Directors. ClackamaS Southern day was a great big success. The weather man plugged the success along by handing out one of the balmiest sunniest days, and everything worked together to make the day a big ratillcation meeting. The Live Wires did a deserved thing when they started this cel ebration meeting, but one cannot but think if we had taken hold of this project with this vim and en thusiasm two years ago, how much easier it would have made the work for those who have had their noses on the grindstone. But the past is gone. 'If there was ever a skeptic as lo the final and quick completion of the road Tuesday convinced him he was lugging the wrong fancy. The road is far beyond the speculation. It IS a railroad, it is ready for the ties, it will be extended as fast as workmen and the weather will permit to Mount Angel for the money is in the bank to extend it, and the rails are in the yards here ready to lay lo Beaver Qreek. The Courier is not going to print the details and program of the big day of Tuesday, for the most of the Courier's subscribers were present and to them it would be a twice told tale. The golden spike was driven by that loyal old veteran to the cause, George A. Harding; speaches were made by many of the prominent men of the county; there was music, eat ing, decorations, delegations, and everything to cause enthusiasm and make the people fully realize that the long-hoped-for railroad into the Molalla country has come. . . The Courier would rather talk of the future of this railroad than of the details of the celebra tion day. It is going to boom every part of Clackamas county that it will provide an outlet for. It has al ready greatly-advanced the values of real estate ' through Beaver Creek, Liberal. Molalla and the other places along the route. It will boom Oregon City. It will open the big Atkins lumber mill n this city. It will bring the en tire output of the country served to this city. It will develon and start townsites along the rich country it traverses, whoso busi ness will largely come to this city. It spells progress and growth for this part of the coun ty-. . . And when wo see the road in full operation and developing the richest section of country that lays in any state, then will we look back and wonder why it was not built thirty years ago. When tnere is a demand a railroad us ually finds a way to it. The de mand has long laid out here and many a financier has acknowledg ed it, but it has waited for 450 of just the farmers and business men to reach the demand to sav we can build a railroad without New York s money. Ano tney nave. Tuesday's meeting has been worth more to the men who have worried and worked for two years man siock suuscrinuons. it nas sh,own them that the people of this city and the surrounding country appreciate and recognize men eiioiis. CLEAR CASE OF LIBEL. Ladies of Oregon City, Rise up and Go After this Editor. There are still many who think that woman suffrage is not the best thing for the country, and their sentiment will be most eas ily and wisely overcome by show ing distinct betterment in gov ernment in states where women vote. We observe that the wom en in Oregon City have made a bad start in this direction. They urged the men associated with them on the election board to smoke.Clenliness in public places was one of the reforms hoped to be accomplished. The Oregon City example is a poor beginning. McMinnville Register. It seems very strange now such an absolutely truthless story could gain enough credanco !U the newspapers to get into the editorial columns. Thore isn't a woman on the el ection boards of any ward in Or- egon City, nor never was, nor a woman in any possible manner connected with the voting places 1 he Telephone Register had better label his shear clippings or the women of historic old Oregon City will bo over there and pull his hair out. rur TVDunin stiTHATinN City Is Full of Fever, but It Is Thought Crisis Is Passed. The tvnhoid outbreak presents a serious asnect. and the neonle are very much in earnest that has an eucaliptus tree, probably immediate steps be taken to stop the only one in the state of its the epidemic and end the causes kind. It was while on a visit to that have started it. California that Mr. Walker pur One of the scrius conditions Is chased tho tree, bringing it to that of the poor families, who cannot hire trained nurses, and ili said that because of the lack of sanitary knowledge of these people the danger of con- laglon is great. A movement is on foot to have Portland nurses come here, visit every home in the city that has the fever and see that needed aid and the necessary precau tions are available. Hundreds of men are having the typhoid scurum injected, and ii is said to be an almost sure preventative if taken before the fever sets in. The published reports tha there are but 50 cases in the city is anything but true there are many more and the situation is certainly grave. There is high indignation that the condition of the water was not made known to the people at the beginning of and before this outbreak. The people hold that the cily is responsible for this neglect, and that it was the duty of someone to havo had the water tested and the condition of the water made public. Hal this been done the fever would have been confined to a few cases. There are many who threaten damage actions for I nis neglect. And out of it all grows a strong sentiment for a change in the water supply a protest against the present contaminated Wil lamette water and a demand that the city take immediate steps to this end. There are talks of starting petitions to the city council asking for immed iate action. The fact that can't be gotten away from is that this comliti'm of the water should never have been allowed to be served to an unsuspecting public. Had the people been warned of the danger I ho epidemic could have been prevented. Whose neglect it is, we do not know, but certain it is that it should be fixed, for the city is in our judgment as liable for the results of this condition as would be the power company for the damage resulting from al lowing a hundred live wires to hang down where people could unconsciously come in contact with them and be killed or in jured. , " - No doubt the worst 'of the out break is now over, for very little unboiled water has boen used in the past two weeks, and it is not expected there will be many more cases. But the people should not let thiis lesson be ' forgotten wtien I he epidemic passes. We should see that none follow. Give the Nurse Full Credit There are two little girls, both under two years of age, both very ill with typhoid on Fourth street. The Courier editor called at the house a few days ago and talked with the nurse regarding them. "Do you think they will pull through," asked the newspaper man, and quickly came back the confident answer "oh yes, they've GOT TO." . ... A man should take off his hat every time he meets one of these faithful trained nurses. And how few of us give them the credit that is theirs. If the patient lives, we praise the physician, while the nurse, the faithful attendant who stands ov er the bed night and day, day af ter day, is where the big end of the credit is due. These nurses go for weeks at a lime without a nicrht's sleen. just catching a few minutos here and there in their chairs. They wai.cn every symptom, almost ev ery heartbeat, and when the doc tor comes the exact condition of the patient is before him. Ono good nurse is worth a doz en doctors in typhoid, for this fever is one where nursing counts for more than drugs. And when ono of these low-voiced, confident nurses comes to the baby's bed and says the little ono has GOT to get well oh, what a load of worry and anxiety. she takes off. FIRST TYPHOID VICTIM. Edna Prater of Gladstone, Died Tuesday from Dread Fever. Miss Edna Prater, a well known young lady of Gladstone, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Prater, is the first victim from the effects of typhoid fever. Miss Prater, who had been employed in the woolen mills in this city, was taken ill about a week ago, and while everything that could pos sibly be done for her was done, yet death came Tuesday after noon at 5 :20. MisR. Prater camo to Oregon City with her parents from Mace, Idaho, last June and the family settled in Gladstone. li.s Prater was held in the highest esteem-by all who knew her. At the time of her death she was 23 years and 5 month old. She is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Prater; two sis ters, Mrs. Edwards of Gladstone, Mrs. Carrie Conneoke of Missoula, Mont.; two Brothers, A. G. Prater of Dutch Flat, Gal and Chester Prater of Gladstone. A Portland View. Editor Courier: I like tho Courier better every week and your plain manner of sneaking out. I am glad that Lynn ( Jones has been elected mayor, as he is the right man in the right place, and 1 am also glad or tne nig free elevator you are going to build. It looks a if the people were going to do things m Oregon Gity now Let the Courier continue to stand for what it now stands for w. i.. muuiijr 8ome Grower, This Tree. 8. H. Walker, who resides on S. S. Walker, who resides Twelfth and Madison streets. Oregon with him. The trcei snow 12 feet high, and during tho pest year it has grown si feet. The leaves have a peculiar odor and are used for medicinal purposes. u mases a very nanusome orui- mental tree as well. I50JOOP1T FOR OGLE MINE S3MVIM J.U0d3U 8.U33NION3 NIV1U33 NOIXOV 83MVIM RICHER THAN WAS HOPED FOR Meeting Tomorrow will Take Im mediate Action for Big Plant There is going to be a 100-ton cyanide mining plant put in at Ogle mine, and that old mountain is going to give up his gold and silver. For eight years Tom and John Fairclough have worked on that hill to convince the people that the yellow and white stuff was there, and a company of loyal lo cal fellows has stood behind them and helped-put up the cash when Hie gold seemed elusive and far in the future. But tney held on like bulldogs and Englishman and plugged a mile of tunnels into the old hill, -and when they had laid- bear the ore that was hidden there, they then proved their judgment anu sand. r.iWM t hey secured the services of Charles F. Spaulding, one pf the best mining engineers in the country and took him to Ogle mine six weeks ago. This engineer is from a big cy anide plant in Mexico. He knows mines and mining. He had not a dollar in Ogle mine, nor had he ever heard of it. He was brought here because money could bring him. And after four weeks of inves- Ligaiiuii ui me ujjiu nunc, 110 simply says the metal is there, gold and silver in paying quanti ties, and ore in sight to last far into the future; that a 100 ton cy anide plant should be installed; that tne ore will run from $7 to ID per ton; that the cost of mill ing will be $3 per ton; that in la ter years a bigger plant can be installed to work up the poorer quality of ore, and that the mine is a rich one. That is all there is to it in a very few words. The assays and findings of the engineer show the mine To be ev en richer than the Fairclough Bros, have ever claimed for it, and one hundred tons a day cap- awi wfctii in (J l uiiuiUB Alum 91 to S'J per ton; is sure some prof its. The Wells-Fargo company isn't in it. And the peauty of a paying mine is that it simply brings more wealth into the world. It does not take it from the other fellow but simply makes it produces it. The stockholders of the com pany will hold a special meeting dI l?nn.,rvo V. 1 1 CI. ,..,).,.. .U. at jviiui'ij a nun ouiuiuajr alim noon, hut already the matter Is practically certain that thoy will simply go head at once on the ninllur it miltino in thiu nlani and that with the opening of spring everything will be ready to mine Ogle mountain. : . The engineer has made com plete blue prints of the process, which the company has at its of fice at 1003 Main street. The Fairclough boys say the plant will be run from water power, which is available in that vicinity, which will greatly reduce the ex pense. The proposed plant will cost $50,000 installed. The stockholders of the com pany are jubilant over the report of the engineer, and there will be no trouble in raising the mon ey for the plant. And the stockholders' meeting Saturday will be some ratification meeting, too. Canby Man on 8erlous Charge. On a charge of criminal inti macy with his step daughter Geo. Taylor, a farmer who lives near Canby, was arrested by Sheriff Mass Wednesday. The girl is but fourteen years old. The farmer is about fifty and married. The complaint is made by the neigh. ors. He was brought to this city and the girl is in charge of the court matron. Notice of Stockholders' Meeting. Notice is hereby given that there will he a meeting of the stockholders of the Ogle Mining CO. at Knanp's hall, Oregon City, Saturday, December 14 at 1:30 at which tune tho matter of the en gineer's report will be read and tho proposition of installing a cyanide mining system will be taken up. Don't Take Chano&s. Superintendent Howell is re ported in the Enterprise as stat ing iiu is coniiuuni me waier nere is pure. In the face of the present epi demic such a statement is very unwise. No matter who says it is pure, don't you drink a drop of it until it si thoroughly boiled. Confidence on the part of the superintendent or the water com missioners won t filter typhoid germs. Don't take anybody's con- ridence just nut tne rir-wooa under the tea kettle. Chris. Schuebel Dangerously III. We learn at the time of going to press that the condition of Chris Schuebel, who underwent an op eration while ill with typhoid, is very grave, but that the physi cians think he will recover. Frank McCafferty, a black smith, was sentenced to a year's imprisonment in the county Jail Wednesday for non-support of his family.