4 J OREGON CITV COURIER, FRIDAY, JAN 3 1913 ) 4 OREGON CITY COURIER Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter. OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 5-1 M. J. BROWN, EDITOR Thomas Tobin of Portland was arrested Friday last for being drunk, and Thomas gave his ago as 92. Thomas is about old enough to cut out this wild oat business, brace up and be a man. Nature made this part of Oregon an apple country, and yet you will go into the stores of this city and see some of about as scrub by fruit as you will see anywhere. No reason for it in the world but lack of attention. We should be supplying a large part of the courf- try with the llnest apples on earth. Let us spray. Governor West is going to ask the incoming legislature to make the Portland "tin plate" law a state law, and force the owner of every public building in the state to put his name on the door, so that the public may know who is responsive mr me propenj. o ... right proposition. Giving the right of ballot to women continues to bring out pre plexing situations. The latest one is a decision by Attorney General Crawford that those making applications to the count ycourts for li censes inu'st have I heir petitions signed by a majority of all the voters in the precinct, and not as heretoiore by a majority of all the men voters. This will no uouoi mane n u na namui w COi,u..0h new saloons in the rural districts. - o:u, ..,., UQn,i inn. f,f mil.! Kioraca butter was found by detec lives in Chicago. This holding out of this great supply practically furnished a corner on the market and allowed the schemers to pull .i,v nnn mm of ihe mnnev of the consumers, It takes a lot or rubbing in before the American people will come alive and protest, v.... ...., o.... ,.,., ;u,r niiv,. these davs. and there is certainly going to be a stop out to this cornering, or there is going to be some heavy trouble in this country. ' When the Oregon City Courier man gets real excited about any proposition, he drops into Welsh. For instance this from last week's issue of that paper The way to handle postollices the mfawyp rdakoflffq wfamfw der tho civil service get a good man and keep him and this should apply to ail postollices. Woodburn Independ cnt. And an editor fresh from the plains of Kansas calls this Welsh. -And I have my opinion of an editor that doesn't know Yiddish from Welsh. Last week at a convention of school teachers in Portland that body took a step backward (or rather forward) in the recommenda lion that the classics be eliminated from-high school subjects and that practical studies be substiluded the studies that deal with ev ery day life. ' What our schools need is more of the practlical and less of the useless education. I know a man who is a graduate from Yale coU lege who is a teamster working by the day, and I know another who is tho head of one of Buffalo's biggest manufacturing industries who never went to school after he was thirteen years old. The teamster did not need the college education. The manufacturer needed a part There is an article in this issue regarding the county court ana bridges, it is not bublished with any view of "getting even with any official. It is published along the lines of the policy of this paper to publish any signed and substantiated article that is of interest to tho people and the same space will be given to any person who wishes to make reply to same. And by the way, is not this article a pretty good argument for a change of our county ccourt system for a change to more representation and closer tab cn county matters 1 Almost every man in Oregon will admit that the one big want of Oretcon is better roads, and it would seem with this general sen timent that something along these lines could be done. And yet we talk and vote and agitate and nothing comes of it all. The incoming legislature has its opportunity. If the men will only get together and frame un a good roads system for the common good, for the trrenipsi. crnod of the state, the people will surely ratify it. But if ihpv start it out with boulevards and trunk lines between the cities the people will as surely turn it down. Instead of trunk lines first that the rural roads will come after, this should be reversed. Get the roads through trie country auu lurimng uisiricis anu me mam lines will come.f. , IF U. 8. WHY NOT US? ( Contra Costan, Richmond, Cal.) The Oregon City Courier digs up something new under the sun on tho high cost of living, or rather the -low cost of living this time, which is the same thing, that is interesting and suggests a number'of questions one would like to ask. Speaking of a nephew of the editor the Courier says: Young Brown has been working for Uncle Sam out in Wallowa county for the past six months, making maps of that section of the state, and he says the average cost of boarding a camp of six men for the first four monhs was nine cents per day per man, the next two months seven cents per day and the last two weeks four cents per day. Ho says the camp had plenty of good wholesome food.'pota toes, bacon, canned goods, etc. Of curse this did not in 'elude fresh meat, for they only had this when it was killed, but it did include about all the average family had with this exception.; It is evident that Uulcle Sam must get bargains on food supplies and that he has a cook who is onto his job. We have read that the cost of boarding the army of men on the government works of the Panama canal was also less than half what it costs the average person, and here is food for thought in these facts. If it only costs from four to nine cents per day for the government to feed a man, there is no sense on earth why it should cost all the rest of us the biggest part of our pay checks, and it oc curs to us that it would be a good scheme for this to be investigated and the government's plan be made public in order that the rest of us may take advantage of it. If it is necessary for a lot of us to band together in a community of interests to bring this about, why, all rigni, let s uo it., if Undo Sam refuses to be bled by the food trusts wny snouid otner people?. WHAT IS THE REMEDY? Go into a drug store' in this city, ask for a certain prescription to be filled. If the druggist makes a mistake and gives you some- thing that causes you sickness or death, that druggist is liable lor Ihe damages he is liable civally and criminally. Go the city and ask for water to be delivered to you for a year, and if the city or water board gives you something with that water that causes you sickness or death, isn't the city as liable for the re sults as is the druggist , Sentiment to undo the mistakes of the past in tho way ot a pure water supply for this city is crystalizing, and out of it is going to come some relief. ': Men are beginnig to look this matter in the face and demand that it be remedied. of what the teamster was throwing away.' I If the people of this' city take hold of this matter and provide The proper Ming is to ascenaun ir you can, wnicn way me twig - pure water, there is little liability of damage suits, ir tney do not, is inclined und train it accordingly. If a boy wants to bo a mining engineer there is no uso cramming him with astromony. ihe cronological cycles are of no account to the boy who wants to be a llsh warden. There is too much cramming with sluh that one nev er uses to much waste education. Educate along the lines of re quirements and cut out the Groek Hero are four bunches of trouble that Woodrow Wilson will have o stack up against about as soon as he gets squarod away in the white ouso chair, und if he gets away with them with satisfaction to the merican people, I will think he is some president: Tho Mexican situation will be about the first one ho will fall hoir to. President Taft has been saving this for Woodrow, and has been keeping it warm all this while. Tho administration has been insisting that Americans and American interests bo protected by tho Mexican government., while any school' kid knows that tho Mexican government cannot protect anything. And Mr. Wilson must handle this delicate one. Another one he will have to scratch his head about, and which has been saved for him is that Hussian treaty. This country insits on a treaty that Russia will not grant, and Mr. Wilson is supposed to be able to hypnotize them into taking something they do not want. Then will come the Panama canal trouble with Great Britain and adjusting this so that, wo peoplo who built the big ditch can run it to suit themselves, and at the same tune so run it that John Bull will be happy and crack an English joke, And if Mr. Wilson can do1 that he will sure be .some president. And then comes tariff lcgislatiomyind currency reform, and the administration that can handle these disturbers with bare hands and do a satisfactory job, will sure go down in history as some noise. The incoming congross has certainly got some nice ones to go right or wrung on. I nolo that the postmaster general is advocating that tho gov ernment now tako over the expdess business of the country. The ex press companies are beginning to see that tho parcels post is going to put the cleaner on them, and I hey want to get in, and of course this handy postmaster general will plug for them as ho always has. My view is that ultimately the government should lake ovor the entire business of the express companies, and tho express companies should receive a fair price for their bus iness and equipment, and their entire plants should bo trans ferred to I ho government control. That's t he way I ho head of tho mail servico puts it up. Ho is so considerate of those express companies that aro now up against what they have been giving Ihe people for these many years. If those companies hud not levied such high Iributo on American business here would not have been any parcels post. These companies sim ply plundered Ihe people until they would not longor stand for it. and the parcels post was the result. And now when wo havo good hot competition pushed up to these fellows, and have them whoro they won't declare any more 800 per cent dividends in a hurry, then tho P. M. G. would step in and ask the government to buy them out, ask Ibis country to pay millions for something it has no earthly use for. Might just as well have asked the government to havo bought out all the banks of this country when it established the postal bank ing system, because it would compete with the banks. lllC I'Mlt'l'SH Cllinnn Ilii.U linvil Im.l II. io n.n.nl..., I... V,n nnilr f,M i no past fitly years, now let them go up against a littlo competition, n they can drive the government out of tho carrying business (as l ey have threatened) (hon let them hop to it, and if they can't, uif , ils "' misin'ss- Hut buying out tho express companies Jhn i,e , iv" V l.1H0 for thorn that Is tho rankest nonsense' and "10 t"g''Ht "K 1'UM.iess play that was ever attempted. it is a dead certainty actions will be filed. And if one case sticks, there will be many that will stick, and it will be mighty expensive for the city, both financially and in the way of advertising that hurts. If we can get the Bull. Run water, and get enough of it and for a long time to come, then that is probably the best solution of the mat ter, but the writer is told by Portland people that this will be impos sible, for in the sprinklii$ months of the summer Portland now has to limit the use for want of water, and that as the city grows it will In later years noed every quart of the Bull Run supply. Tho state proposition, to supply water to the whole Willam ette valley from Clear Lake in the Cascades, is one that is far in the future and not to bo depended on for early relief. This paper is in formed that the railroads have this lake tied up on an option for two years to come, and even if this could be overcome and the stale leg islature should grant tho .big appropriation,, it would be four or five years before the big project could be put through. And this city cannot wait this long. , . - . It would seem that the most practical plan and the one that would build solidly for tho future, would bo to go back into tho foot hills, group a bunch of springs, build a reservoir, and put in a grav ity system then we would have something. Such a water system would come high, but we would havo some thing,. and in the years to come it would be a good financial invest ment. Once installed, it does not cost much to have water run down hill. It does away with pumping plants, big salaries and a lot of municipal business. And it is the best dividend-paying scheme that any city ever undertook for people will come where absolute pure water is guaranteed if that locality has what Clackamas county has to back the water., -' But certainly we cannot afford to let this matter go to sleep after what has occured. It has been mighty expensive to tho city and we must remedy it. That something will come out of the mat ter thoro is littlo doubt hie question is how best and what is best. It's easy to plod aloug to spend as you go without a thought of the future but it means everlasting plodding. The Savings Department of this institution pays 3 per cent interest compounded semi-annually on savings deposits. By systematic saving you will gradually eliminate the wasteful, careless habits that keep so many men down. A dol lar starts an cccount with us. Are you the man to do it? THE BANK Of OREGON CUT Oldest Bank in Clackomas County Let Us Wage a Relentless War Against Consumption By HENRY T. HUNT, Mayor of Cincinnati ft, f if ' ' $ LQOKNG JIT CLACKAMAS U8 WAGE A RELENTLESS WAR AGAIN ST CONSUMPTION. THE DI8EASS 16 A MENACE THAT THREATENS TO FILL OUR PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS WITH WIDOWS AND ORPHANS. Tubofculosis annually reaps a toll of nearly one thousand lives in Cincinnati alone. Thousands of others aro victims of the dread diacaso, and many of them will shortly bo added to the death list. In tho United Statos, statistics show, the annual deaths from con sumption number two hundred thousand. There are said to be at loast ONE MILLION : PEOPLE SUFFERING FROM THK DISEASE. The economio loss ia estimated at more than five hundred million dollars a year in loss of life and labor to the country. It devastates whole families. Public institutions which have le oome filled with widows and orphans would not bo necessary were the propor preventive means taken against the dreaded white plague. It will thoreforo be seen that the people of the United States have an important task before them. EVERY MEANS IN OUR TOWER SHOULD BE UTILIZED LN' ERADICATING THIS DREAD DISEASE., . Bad living and working conditions, especially impure air, dark noss, dirt and dust, are among the principal causes of the disease. To wago a relentless war upon the disease and upon tho conditions making for tho disease is one of the moat important functions our people have before them today. RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF A FORMER RESIDENT. As He Sees the Changes that the Years Have Brought. Stafford. Ore.. Dec. 31. 1912 Ye Editor of the Oregon City uourier: It has now been more than a decade since the Courier first pressed me into service as ono of its many writers; for sixteen years "Lengthy"' was a visitor to your friends and chronicled the births, marriages and other events that come and go and make this life the routine it should be, and is willed to be. From the Happy New Year- to the one next Dreceedinir it. neigh bors and friends at the close of the week heard from 'Lengthy," and got as we now do with the comic sections of our dailies first, looked on with suronse. then tolerated, and lastly, but not in ine leasi, expecteu. As history is said to repeat it self, the past has been hinged wnn me present, and like the nimrod of the Ozark Mountains who was led astray by the sound of ma sive tenpins and shortly ien asleep in tne mountains to awaken twenty years later, with the place, people and conditions changed to such an extent that he was known of as one in a leg end; so returneth one of the past correspondents of your esteemed paper, from a seeming slumber, vhegun in the latter part of the Nineteentn century, to the home of his youth, and now takes the liberty, while spending a few days in company with the people and places well known of yore, to re new acquaintances and mention a Jew ol the changes. The people have changed, the farms have changed, tho buildings, the for ests, the roads and the ways have in many instances changed, Un til 1, in a retrospective, mood. pause, contemplate, and with ba ted breath think, ere I mention many things that crowd upon me. The major Dart of the livins: here now are to me strangers, having come to the community since my departure; the old and familiar faces consist principally of the older heads of the Bakers, Elligsons, Delkers, Sharps, Pet ers, uage, bchatz, Oldenstadts, and Mosers. Stopping at the school house which still "sits by tne roaa tnouen mucn cnanged and enlarged, 1 see the greatest change there, as I scan the faces of the now large school, not a face is one 01 tne past tne only ta miliar .thing about the place be- ng the sound ol tho good old hell. The postoffice is no more: the postman makes his rounds and no one need go to the corner post office to gather the news. Tele- nnones are now installed in most of the residences, and quick com munication is now had without tho necessity of wrapping1 udi tramping out and getting wet, but tne good old time cnats are not thus carried on. Turning to he City of the Dead, there with many thoughts that I must nave neen in many in stances occupied by those that should be in other places and under different conditions, I find there has been from nearly every family and hearth, some one led to that "long home from which no traveller e'er returns." someone 1 wished to see, to talk to; for the first time they have laued to re spond when I mentioned their name at tneir door, so 1 nave to say "Gone." Rambling about tho woods, the fields, and about the old time anes, 1 lind myself oil tne ngnt track. A house may be built in the place where the road used to be, the fences, formerly of split rails, are in som instances still i nulace, but badly decayed. Board lences tnat were, now are topp ling, wire leuces are leuiauiuK them 111 many places, melds are farmed dillerently than ol yore. Still with all these changes there is no place like home. Home it was and home it always will re main. With all these changes, and tho change I havo made, I can feel with the writer of yore, who said: An exile from Home, splendor dazzles in vain, on give me my ow v thatched cottaare atrain. J o those who are still living m Stafford that have made the place their home for a decade, I will say you are a happy, healthy lot; to those who like myseii, nave wan dered away, to you I will say, re trace your steps, and see what a thriving progressive community the place now is. The Mansard roof, otherwise known and spoken of as a mortgage, like many oth er roofs, has been swept out by the decay ol progression. Koaiis that they now call very poor are better than the best were a short time past. Knockers are un known, and "Boos" is written on all the undertakings. A neigh borly feeling prevails and each seems to think "there is so much bad in the best of us; so much good in the worst of us, it hardly behooves any of us to speak ill of the rest of us." "Lengthy Children Cry for Fletcher's m The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature ol a - and has been made under his per- Ir sfrf-t-if1- eonal supervision since its Infancy. -iaeZ7u2cJU Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " ore but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the hcaltn 01 Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless snbstitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is pleasant. It contains neither Opium,- Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverlshness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for tho relief of Constipation, Flatulency, AVlnd Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Dowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of y7 The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use Fop Over 30 Years THE CINTU COMPANY, TT MUMMY BTRCIT. NIW VOHK CITY. HOW TO RESIST Chronic Coughs and Colds. Strong, vigorous men and women hardly ever catch cold; It's only when the system is run down and vitality low that colds and coughs get a foot hold. Now Isn't it reasonable that the right way to cure a cough ia to build up your strength again? Mrs. Olivia Parham, of East Dur ham, N. C, Bays: "I took Vlnol for a chronic cough which had lasted two years, and the cough not only disap peared, but It built up my strength as well." The reason Vlnol is so efficacious in such cases Is because it contains In a delicious concentrated form all the medicinal curative elements of cod liver oil, with tonlo, blood-build tne Iron added. Chronic coughs and colds yield to Vlnol because It builds up the weak ened, run-down system. Tou can get your money back any time if Vlnol does not do all we say. Huntley Bros. Co., Druggists Oregon City Oregon. Methodist Minister Recommends Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Rev. James A. Lewis, Milaca, Minn., writes: "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been a needed and welcome guest in our home for a number of years. I highly recommend it to my follows as being a medicine worthy of trial in cases of colds, coughs and croup." Give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a trial and wo arc confident you will find it very ef fectual and continuo to use it as occasion requires for years to come, as many others have done. ror saye by Huntley Bros. (Jo. Hard to Please. "Why did Hhe dlvune bi'r.Brst him tin ml?" "He couldn't fci't'l' Mix mum-y." "And why is xhe siiIiik her present btixlinml fur divorce?" "lie's mich h tichtwml." - Elouston Pout. Two Good Ideas, Scott It's a ifoixl Irtdi when nnp:ry to count ten before yun spenk. Mott Tine: iilso when "touched" to count s tlmiiKiitid before yon lend Boston TriiiiNcript. Dixionient Is the w:mt of xelf rsll auce It Is tnttrmll.v of will - Kniersou. Don't You Believe It.' Some say that chronic consti pation cannot be cured. Don't you believe it. Chamberlain's Tablets iyme5$,N f..o aontw aontw aon believe it. Chamberlain's Tab lets have cured others why not you? . Give thorn a trial. They cost only a quarter. For sale by Huntley Bros. Co. Final Notice of Administrator. To Whom it May Concern: No tice is hereby given that the un dersigned, C V. Beckett, adminis trator of the estate of John R. Skervin, deceased, has this day li ltil his linal account in said estate and the Honorable County Court of Clackamas county, Oregon has lixod and appointed Monday, Feb ruary 3, 1913, at the hour of 10 a. m. of said day at the County court house in Clackamas county, Oregon as the time and place of hearing any objections to such liral account, and for the settle ment thereof. Dated December 30,1912. C. W. JJHuKETT, Administrator of the Estate John 11. Skirvin, deceased Carey !'. Martin, Attorney Estate. of for Notico to Creditors. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed executrix of the estate of L.Pierco llliams, deceased, by the Hon. County Court of Clackamas coun ty, Orgeon 1 All persons having claims against the said estate are hereby notilied and required to present the same to me for pay ment at my residence at Oregon City, Oregon, with proper vouch ers and duly verified within six months from the date hereof. Dated December 31st, 1912. Evelyn Scott Williams, Executrix of the Estate of L.Pierce .Williams, deceased. Gordeii E. Hayes, Attorney ifor Executrix. MAS AND THE SOIL..-; Dr. R. V. Pierce of Buffalo, author of the Common Sense Medioal Adviser, says " why does not the farmer treat his own body as he treats the land he cultivates, lie puts back in phos phate what he takes out in crops, or the land would grow poor. The farmer should put back into his body the vital elements exhausted by labor, or by ill-health induced by some chronio disease." Further, he says, " the great value of my Doctor . 1 lerce s Golden Medical Discovery is in its vitalizing power. It gives strength to the stomach and purity to the blood. It is like the phosphates which supply nature with the substances that build up the crops. The far-reaching action oi Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Is due to its effect on the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition. Dis eases that begin in the stomach are cured through the stomach. A bilious spell is simply the result of an effort made by the liver to catch up when over-worked and exhausted, I have lound the ' Discovery ' to be unsurpassed as liver reg ulator and rich blood-maker." Miss Lottie Kxirklt of Perth, Kansas, says: "I will hero ndd my testimony of the effectiveness of your remedy upon myself. I was troubled with indigestion for two years or more. Doctored with three diirerent doctors besides taking numer ous kinds of so-called ' stomach cures ' but received no permanent relief, f was run down, could not sleep at night with tho judn In my chest, caused by gas on tho stom ach. Was weak, could eat scarcely anything nl though I was hungry nearly all the time. About one year and a half ago I began taking vour ' Oolden Medical Discov ery,' and after having taken several bottles am nearly cured of stomach trouble. Can now eat without distress and have gnined fifteen pounds in weight. I thank you lor your remedy and wish yt.u all success in your good work." 1 17 SUNSET I IogdensshastaI I In this, our first message of the New Year, we wish to express our appreciation to the public, for their patronage during the past year, and of what we value even more, their confidence and cordial good will.. We realize that the pub lic's interests and our interests are mutual and that what ever helps one helps the other. In extending our thanks to the public for their patron age during the past year we pledge ourselves that during the . coming year we will use our most earnest efforts to merit the continuation of the pleasant relations which have exist, ed in the past. Accept our sincere wishes that the New Year may bring you happiness and prosperity. Southern Pacific Company