CITY ' The Farmers Society of Equity is spreading over this county and the Courier is spreading with it. Its ad vertising columns are good as gold. A factory pay roll of $100,000 a month makes some town. Oregon City is the best city in the state outside of Portland. .Keep it on the move. 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY, ORE., FRIDAY, FEB. 28, 1313. No. 42 OREGON Must be Full Weight. A bill passed, signed by the govern or and now a law, provides that po tatoes sold by the sack shall weigh a full 100 pounds. This will mean that potatoes will hereafter be sold by the pound. Nothing for Oregon City In the national senate public build ings bill are gifts to many Oregon cities, including Portland, The Dalles-, Albany, etc., but not a cent for a postoffice building in this city. What's the matter with our representatives? Getting Ready for S. S. Convention. The State Sunday School convent ion will be held in this city April 24 26, and the several Sunday School workers in the city now have plans and committees well under way with the work. From 300 to 400 delegates from different parts of the state will attend. Limits County Judges Work. A bill, which we understand has passed both houses, and which it is thought the governor will sign, takes away from the county judge the pro bate work and gives it to the circuit court, leaving only county matters to the lower court. It also provides for eight additional cicult court judges to be appointed by the governor. A Tribute to His Worth. Representative Schnoerr of Clack amas county, can well feel proud of the honor paid him by the house last night when it unanimously passed his bill raising the salary of the coun ty school superintendent in Clacka mas County. It was a tribute to the general worth and esteem in which his fellow members hold him. Now, if Mr. Schnoerr would only part with his long whiskers, he could have any thing he wanted from the legislat ure. Salem Capitol Journal. WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN. But we "Let George do it" and George Quit the Job.' The Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Co., with a big factory at Forest Grove and another at Hillsboro, pays out to farmers alone in this community sixty thousand dollars per month! That one thing is enough to con vince a prospective land buyer in this community that this is a fine . section in which to locate. Be sides this thousands of dollars are paid for butter and also milk shipped to Portland, and other wise consumed. Forest Grove News. Last summer this county, this city, had an opportunity to locate a half million products plant, and all it re quired, as we understand the propos ition, was a guarantee that there should be sufficient milk to supply the plant a matter that simply re quired some hustle. But we let the matter go by de fault. We refused to re interested. We had millions invested in the big mills here, and if anything further was to be done George could do it. George wouldn't do it, he was as un interested as our commercial bodies, so we lost out. ' ' And when a newcomer comes here looking-for land he asks "where are your da'iry markets?" and George has to answer. WANT MORE LIGHT. Want Explanations About Bridge Matters that Explain. To the Editor of the Courier: I have read with a good deal of in terest the controversy between Judge Beatie and E. D. Olds regarding the cost of four bridges built last year by the court, without advertising for bids. This taken in conjunction witn the discussion of the county books, de veloped during the recent county di vision campaign has forced home the conviction that Judge Beatie and his associates, Commissioners Matoon and Blair, have a fine opportunity to inaugurate reform in the matter of handling the county business. On the face of it, it seems to me, and also to my neighbors that the Portland expert accountants, were right when they say that business was handled in an exceedingly slack manner. I read with a good deal of amazement of the conditions in the county offices where on account of lack, of records, little if any details of the condition of the county finances can be obtained. This doesn't mean that the officials are dis honest, but it is evidently t the case that the method of bookeeping and the system of checking on county property are obsolete. Also, as the ex pert says, there is great temptation to officials to .become dishonest with out fear of detection, if they are in clined that way. It seems to me that the court would do well to finish what they have started out to do have the books thoroughly experted and a new system installed, so the taxpayers may secure information that is au thentic. The court made a good start. Why did it quit? If it is through an idea of economy, surely no better in vestment can be made than a change to modern methods of conducting the county's business. We are vitally in terested and Mr. Old's contention re garding bridge building is only one ' of several other objections that might rightfully be made to the system in vogue. Ed Olds determination to get to the bottom of the bridge matters, meets approval. He may be' wrong and the court right, but we are awaiting an explanation that will ex plain. L. S. WILSON. Estacada, Feb. 24, 1913. THE STATE TICS LOOSE OR SEND ONE MAN TO SALEM TO REPRESENT US. EITHER WOULD BE A BENEFIT A Good Roads Proposition that Looks a Good One. Editor Courier: In one of your recent issues of the Courier some farmer suggested the abolition of the Oregon senate and in its place have one man represent the the county in the legislature and it was suggested to find one man broad enough to do the job in better shape than is done at present. The idea is good if carried out under prop er arrangements but under our pres ent system would be as bad or worse than the present as it is easier to in fluence one man than many, either by argument or with money. If that is necessary. Now I would suggest the following remedy for our people to think over and would like to hear from others what, they think of it. My plan is for the people Jo organ ize in every school districts as citizens regardless of party politics; discuss the problems that confront us; pre pare bills to be enacted into law and then occasionally meet in the circuit court room in the court house when the room is not occupied for court business and discuss the problems by the people of the county and by a direct vote of the people endorse such laws as they can agree on, that are considered right and proper and then hire one man to go to the legislature and vte and work for what the peo ple have instructed him to do. And then have one session of 20 days to introduce the measures; then a vacat ion of 40 days and let the man from each county report to the people at once the bills presented by the var ious men throughout the state. Those matters should be again handled by the people as before and then they should again instruct their man what they want done. Now this plan or something along this line would bring the law making business somewhere near the way of doing businu.s as we do our private business. If a farmer, merchant, mill-man or any other man who employs another man to work for him in private life, he does not allow his hired man to dictate to him what he will do or how he will do it, but he gives his orders to the hired man and if the hired man will not obey those orders he looses his job. And if we ever suc ceed irthis Republican form of gov ernment and get good wholesome laws it will have to come in something along the line outlined as long as we let a few men who want the job tell us what they will do then send them to Salem and turn them loose to fol low their own inclinations and be in fluenced by the men with money, who have an axe to grind, so long will our legislatuve system be a total failure, as far as the best interests of the people are concerned. If this plan or something similar is not considered god then I would suggest the following: That we cut out the expense of having elections and make the vic tims of the asylum and the peniten tiary the legislative body, and I am ready to bet dollars to the holes in the doughnuts that we will get no more idiotic laws or more vicious,, than we do now. ' I might mention many of the idiotic and vicious meas ures proposed and passed in this and former sessions of the legislature. While this session looked like some thing good might come out of it but now it looks like it will not be any better if not worse than former ses sions. Good laws that were introduced were either killed outright or doctor ed so they are absolutely no good. The salary grafter has fared better apparently in this session than ever before. I here call attention to a few of the vicious laws passed in former sessions when Brownell was in the senate. They passed the infamous bill donat ing free the state's two hundred thousand dollar interest in the locks at Oregon City, to the Portland Gen eral Electric Co. I think Mr. Brownell favored this; he at least told me he voted for the bill and was at that time on very good terms with the con.pany. Or again what is more vicious than the 1909 law passed and engineered by the Portland General ElectricCo., in regard to tax on water power at- ter 1909 25 cents per horse power and again by the same crowd in this legislature defeating the water power bill that would tax all hands alike, but only 20 cents per horse power, which is 5 cents less than they had in the 1909 law, this still leaving the 19 09 law still in effect, which the vic tims of the penitentiary could not possibly outdo for viciousness, were they in control of the law making business. We have several thousand pages of law in this state that were passed by the legislature, and I am ready to prove that there is not one class out of twenty tried in the courts that the witnesses do not perjure themselves and can't help it. In another article I am going to prove that most lawyers are not fit to act as judges or attorn eys in the trials settling disputes be tween the people. The plan outlined in this article provides for the use of the court room by the people ana unaer pres I LUNA ent autocrats in control we may run against' a snag. I am told that Judge Campbell refused the use of the court room to the Farmers Equity people. Now this matter needs attention if this is true. I notice he is on deck for a raise of $1,000 in salary. Let us get busy to hold up this salary grab bill that seems to be general for all of ficials. Mr. Beatie also objected to the use of the court house Saturday. Now I suggest that the Farmers Equity people bring the matter up in their locals and then appoint a com mittee to wait on this county court and see if the tax payers have any right to use their property for the discussion' of public problems and in the mean time save your feathers and cut out some of your beer money. We may need it for tar. I have $5.00 that I have saved for such purposes for years and am willing to donate it where peaceable methods fail to get justice. As a sample of what kind of laws the people should get if they were working along the line of the plan I outlined, what is the matter with a law bonding the county for any am ount the people see fit to use for road purposes? Deposit those bonds with the government and get money at two per cent just the same as the banker does now. This would call for taking this into national politics, which can be done as well as matters that only the state has control over. The legislature has been flounder ing around trying to find a method of getting funds to build roads and here is so simple a method that no fair minded man can object to it. Let us try to put it into effect. R. SCHUEBEL. Can Such Things Be? Courier: Would you be interested to know under what conditions women are em ployed at wage work in Oregon, es pecially in Portland? If you are not interested in that important subject you should nevertheless read the re port of the Social Survey Committee of the Consumer's League, dealing with that subject. For instance on page 34 you read "Children of 12 and 13 employed in the factories have been seen crying in the evening because they were too tired to work, yet could not get home on account of locked doors." v. On page 27 you may read, "If she is a 'charity girl' who pays for her lunches with the loss of her virtue." Page 68 "Thinks that she lives with a man, as she has three meals a day now also, which she didn't have before." Yes much more than that, but take my word for it and send for the pamphlet to Miss Caroline Gleas on 206 Central building Portland. It is free, however if you wish you may send three cents for postage and you will get a full dollar's worth of read ing matter. HUMANITY. Some Cats. W. H. Thompson, Forest Ranger from Estacada, brought to this city Monday the largest amount of wild cat skins that has been brought to the county seat this season, he having brought 30 cat pelts and one coyote skin, most of which he caught with traps in the vicinity of Estacada. This catch netted him $61.50, the cat hides bringing him $2.00 each and the coy ote $1.50, and he informed the Cour ier reporter that the pelts would bring him as much more. These skins were procurred between the 15th of Dec ember and February 1, and were got mostly on Sunday as his duties of forest ranger will not permit of much Lime during the week days. And this is not much of a country for cats eith er. "DAMNABLE BILL PASSED." Governor May now Remove Officials Who Will Not Do their Duty. If the Courier should charge that a bill passed by the legislature was a "damnable piece of legislation," Speaker McArthur would probably bring a libel action and some one would ask the postoffice to have the paper excluded from the mails be cause of its profanity. But Speaker McArthur got down on the floor of the house and made this open charge, after he had failed to muster up strength enough to run the roller over the bill. McArthur charged Schuebel, Gill, Eaton and others with being "thin skinned" in allowing the most damn able piece of legislation ever enacted get by them. This "damnable" bill gives the gov ernor power to put a special sheriff, district attorney or other official in place of the regular official tempor arily, when the elected officer will not do his duty in bringing crime to justice. Isn t this worse than danmnable? isn't it heinous that is if heinious is worse than the damned word? An officer MUST do his duty or get out and let in one who will. Isn't this awful, unconstitutional, enlarge ment of official rights and lots of other things? Why don't men with red blod in their veins start a recall against Mc Arthur and that ways and means committee. Or would you rather bite your hang nails? "High Jinks" at Commercial Club. The committee is laying out a lot of fun and a big time for its annual smoker to be held at the club rooms Tuesday night of next week, March 4. There will be vaudeville, music. inauguration of President Wilson, talks, fun and a big dinner. Each member of the club has the privilege of bringing a friend, and if the friend insists on joining the club, there is no by-law to prevent This will be the biggest smoker ever attempted by the organisation. TET THE OLD VETS PULL IT THROUGH CONTEMPTIBLE TACTICS OF THE STEAM ROLLER GANG. PATRIOTISM AND POLITICS Scrambling Them is Safer Way to Get the Loot. Here's a little story of the way the Ways and Means Committee (the gov ernors of legislation) run things up to Salem. The Oregonian will call it "Carping Criticism," we will call it industry sitting in the shade, ' and after you have read it you may call it what you happy please. Mind you, this is but a little illus tration of scores just a bill almost picked up at random and this ar ticle is to show you how the mill grinds at Salem and how the "old guard politicians put things over on you and then fence them in so you can't get to them. It is one of scores of instances of rotten misrepresenta tion. The bill referred to is house bill No. 625, introduced b ythe ways and means committee. It starts out as an act for the old soldiers, as a means to provide for their maintenance and for as oldiers' home. Now the ways and means steam roller gang know the power of pat riotic sentiment; they know it would be hard to find an Oregonian who does not believe they are entitled to all a state or country can give them, and they know that trie man who would stand out and oppose any reas onable proposition for their aid would be hissed down by the sons of the old pariots. ' Therefore the bill leads off with an act to raise the support of the sol diers' home $13,000 in addition to the regular appropriation, and then an other item appropriating$20,000 to pay for "constructing, finishing and equipping additional buildings," etc. We are not criticising he above, al though the bill isn't much more in telligible than a Chinaman's laundry ticket. . -' Here follows the dirty work: The same bill (this Soldier's main tenance bill) then goes on and pro vides for $10,000 for the state board of agriculture to pay its warrant in debtedness. The same bill provides for making improvements to the amount of $5, 000 to the state fair grounds. The same bill provides for another bundled of $2,500 for tilling the state fair grounds. All this is tied around the neck of the old soldier's bill to pull it through I What do you think about it? The state fair has been running behind and they are' afraid Portland will take it over, so they tie to the tail of patriotism a bundle of appro priations they dare not put out into the open. They figure that Governor West will not veto the old soldiers' aid and they figure they will MAKE him bolster up a wobbly fair association when he signs it. And this isn t all come on down the column. 1 After putting the governor in a hole the committee figured they would have the PEOPLE to reckon with. They did not dare let the scrambled bill go to the people for fear of the referendum, so they tacked this onto the bunco bill: Section 3. It is hereby ad judged and declared that existing conditions are such that this Act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and owing to the urgent necessity of maintain ing the public credit an emergen cy is hereby declared to exist, and this Act shall take effect and be in full force and effect from and after the approval of the Govern or. This means the people CANNOT pass on it. An emergency is declared. It is URGENT that the debts of the stale fair be paid by the people, or Portland will get it. It is NECESSARY for the preser vation of public peace that the fair grounds be drained. It is URGENT for the public health and safety that the fair grounds be improved and repaired. Robert Schuebel suggests that the state bug houses be thrown open and the-inmates be allowed to run the legislature. It is worth considering. The legislature says the state does not need a governor, and the governor says the state does not need a leg islature. 4 The Oregonian says the Courier should not stone legislators and we would then get better men better men, but scared of stones. The Coouricr thinks the legislature stinks that it is rotten in results, or rather in want of needed results, There are many able and honest men in the legislature. We are glad to say that Schuebel, Gill and oth ers tried to cut off the fair ground tail to the soldiers' bill, and have them set up in separate bills. For sale Field peas, $1.50 per bu., clean and first class. L. Gaiger, on Mount Pleasant road, Oregon City, Rt 1, box 62. Gladstone School Closed. On account of the many severe cas es of scarletfever Gladstone school closed and every effort will be made to keep the epidemic from spreading further. . Mr. Gill is Considering. Salem news items give it out that Representative F. M. Gill of this county is considering the matter of becoming a Progressive candidate for governor in 1914. 21 'Bos in One Night. Monday night there were 21 men arrested as vagrants and corded up in the city jail over night. Seven of these were under 21 years of age, And yet we strive to solve the tramp nuisance." The Line-Up. When the pinch came as to whether the steam roller was more potent than the sentiment against vice, on the bill to give the governor power to enforce the laws, Gill, Lofgren and Schuebel stood by and voted for the bill. Mr. Schnoerr was absent. About the Year 1915. A wag opened the Courier office front door the other day and asked us to state that the elevator, a new water system, the canal locks and a public dock were all going to strike this city at the same time in the year 1915. The Idea That Worked. Do you know that the Courier is getting to be some paper these days? Not strictly as a NEWSpaper, but as a people's paper a medium through which any man who is decent may have a say. On almost every page you will find the most interesting letters from the men of this county who are ob servers and thinkers. The letters cover many topics; they open discus sion; they make men think, and you will .note that every last one of them is along the line of the best good for the most people the common class. Opening its columns to general dis cussion on any decent topic was the best hit The Courier ever made, as this paper is evident proof, and we invite any reader who uses his head to use the columns of the Courier to tell others his ideas, for out of this exchange of ideas, things for our better welfare are bound to come. A SECRET BURIAL. In An Obscure Alley in This City Lie Several Dead Bodies. Just to the north of the postoffice building is an alley that runs through to Water street. There is a gateway opening from this alley into a little square of ground back of the postoffice build ing. And in one end of this lot is a lit tle grave a grave that conceals sev eral dead bodies-the covering of which is yet loose dirt. The Courier knows what it is stat ing when it makes the positive asser tion that there was no certificate of death before these burials; that there were no burial permits issued by the city or other authorities, no inquest or investigation made; that but three men are aware of the burial and that one man alone: "Upturned the sod, And laid the dead there." Got you going? Well now for the tacks. The grave is there, and there is an inscribed marker over it a token of remembrance by Mall Clerk Spagel. One day there came by parcels post a box of smelt from a southern coun ty. Evidently the sender had held them over a glutted market for a time, and ice is scarce in southern Oregon. Or the parcel post was a few days slower than Wells-Fargo delivery. Whatever the reason they had be come mellow and mushy in ransit. Their gills had turned black and gangren had set in. The fishy smell was like ottar of roses in comparison. Thqse smelt smelt they STANK! They were rotton, putrid. Spagel got one whiff, when he dumped the pouch and yelled for a doctor or bartender. He saw Route 2 on the box, and with a long pole pushed it over to Frank Whiteman s stall. Whiteman bucked. He said he would stand for the government's order to paint his mail wagon a vivid red and would come up with a smile, if he lost out in the auto contest, but he would not, (and he swore by the third as sistant postmaster-general) that he wouldn't run a garbage wagon or glue factory cart for Uncle Sam, or any other old uncle, and if that box of smelling smelt was to go out on No. 2, it could deliver itself as it was strong enough. The carrier wouldn't carry it; the postmaster wouldn't hold it, and so right here was where Spagel shone. When the call for volunteers was made he responded. He didn't pro pose to have an outbreak of cholera as long as he had a strong right arm with four fingers on it, and could bor row a shovel. And he buried those smelling smelt out there in a little narrow grave. And he erected a little beautifully inscribed marker over the grave so the government can find the property I when it sends an inspector here to N . u I 1 L it.- mvstigate me matter aiong buuui. vue time the Panama fair will be held. Pathetic little story, isn't it? Lone ly graves always do get one. Take a little piece of Limburger cheese with you when 70U go to the postoffice and leave it for Mr. Ran dall to disinfect with. lit win ap predate your appreciation. OF SMALLPOX li CITY SEVERAL CASES DEVELOP IN DIFFERENT WARDS HEALTH OFFICERS ON THE JOB Many Exposures Because of Not Knowing The Disease Smallpox has broken out in the city and while the cases so far are receiv ing the closest possible attention and are in a light form, yet there is con siderable uneasiness. Ellery Baily, owner of a pool room on Main street, and who lives between Jefferson and Madison, was taken with the disease Wednesday and has been taken to the pest house in Port land. Rev. McComb, Fourth and Main streets, is down with the disease, and it is said that thirty persons have exposed from his home. There was no thought of it being smallpox and friends and relatives have been call ing on him. Mrs. Beagler, corner of Fifth and Monroe, is reported to have 'the dis ease, and Mrs. Morgan is recovering from it. ' Stringent quarantine and disinfect ing regulation are being enforcpJ and it is thought the cases may be confin ed to the present'ones. IF IT BECOMES A LAW Only the Little Conjunction "If" Be tween Hedges and Appointment If the Hill house bill becomes a law and it bids fair to, as the house passed it and the senate passed it amended each county in this state will have its own district or county attorney. The bill abolishes the as sistant district attorneys and it is stated the expense will be but little over the present system, and the state will have much better service. If the governor should sign the bill, he would have the appointment of the extra places, and G. L. Hedges' friends have it figured out that he would land the plum for this county in a walk. Mr. Hedges stands pretty close with Governor West for a starter; he is always a Democrat up on the firing line; he has held the office by ap pointment and knows the work; he is brainy and educated and last fall's vote in this county showed what the voters think of him. If the bill becomes a law G. L. Hedges looks like a cinch bet for the appointment from this county. Dis trict Attorney Tongue would then serve only Washington county. MR. OLDS AGAIN. Says Judge Beatie Overlooked Some Things in His Explanation. Editor Courier: What DID they' cost? Mr. Olds and Clackamas county taxpayers have not as yet found out what the four bridges really cost. Come again, Brother Beatie, and perhaps between you and me, we may solve the ques tion, which I note is interesting people in all sections of the county. Now Mr. Beatie, you were so keen to inform the taxpayers that you gave the Coast Bridge Co., $4,000 for the erection of the steel in those four bridges, after paying them an exorbi tant price for the steel, but why did you not read all of that page 151 of Journal 25, and let the public know of the complete contents, in thnt YOU FURTHER GAVE THE COAST BRIDGE CO. $1350 FOR ERECTING THE TUBES UNDER. THE. AUR ORA BRIDGE, which is one of the four. So you see, Mr. Taxpayer that the erection was $5,950 INSTEAD OF $4,600. It comes within $50 of what I said I would be willing to erect them for. You will note the difference, Mr. Taxpayer, in the wording of my arti cle of January 31, 1913, wherein 1 stated I would erect all of that steel for $6,000. You will also note, Mr. Taxpayer, that my price included the first cost and his was IN ADDITION to the first cost, making, according to his own statement: Cost of steel Erection .$17,965.00 . 4,600.00 Total $22,505.00 Now add the $1350 that he failed to read about, entered on the same page, and you have $23,915.00 cer tainly an astounding figure. Come again, Mr. Beatie; we now have these bridges standing in the air. with nothing to rest on. Then too, $1350.00 is a pretty good price to give a bridge company for driving a few pileing in those tubes at Aurora, and filling same with con crete. That is positively all they did, for the county had paid them for the tubes in the contract for the steel, and all the cement there is in them, according to Mr. Groo's report to me, is 60 yards. I quote these figures for the tax payers of Clackamas county, who seem to find difficulty in obtaining complete light 'on the subject. The cost of the steel according to Mr. Groo's report was $9,962.92. We have so far $23,915.00 for steel and erection. The difference would be $13,915.08. PRETTY GOOD PRICE FOR ER ECTING STEEL, IS IT NOT? Yourst truly, E. D. OLDS. OUTBREAK McAllister Gets Pen Sentence E. S. J. McAllister, one of the up per ten Portland attorneys, was found guilty in connection with the recent vice scandal, and given a sentence of from one to five years in the Salem penitentiary. He has appealed the case and furnished $5,000 bail. Shall We Try This One? The Mountain View correspondent, commenting on the doings of the pres ent legislature, suggests that we send some women to Salem next election. Not a bad idea. If they went to the capitol and absolutely did nothing, it would be an improvement, but there are plenty of women in Oregon cap able of doing hings. Commercial Club's Masquerade. March 25, Busch's hall, the Com mercial Club's annual dance will be given and this year it will be a masq uerade. M. D. Latourette, Clyde Mount and B. T. McBain are the com mittee, and hese gentlemen say they are going to have the biggest success ever held in the city. Invitations will be issued to club members and their friends. Hot Contests On. Next Monday is the anuual election of the fire department and there is a hot four-cornered contest on for chief between Fred Humphreys, Mi chael Long, Charles Gottberg, and Frank Schoenborn. For fire commis sioners the candidates are Ben Bax ter, Dr. A.L . Beatie and Louie No bel. Joseph Myers is a candidate for assistant chief. The election hours are from 2 to 7 p. m., at Fountain Hose Co. rooms. Eagles, Portland, 1914. Last year the Grand Aerie was held at Cleveland, and the coming session is to be held in Baltimore. It is to be expected that in 1911 the Grand Aerie will be held in one of the Paci fic coast cities. Seattle, Sun Francis co, and Los Angeles have already had the honor, and the slogan of he Pa cific coast birds will bo '"What's the matter with Portland? She's all right" D. M. Klemsen and John Low ry will represent Oregon City Aerie No. 993, and will line up for Portland. Spoke a Week Too Soon. Monday night's Portland Journal had a 24-inch ad of Zubelda cigar ettes, and when the Courier editor re called that criticism of Mr. Gill's cig arette bill, he knew there -was some thing due him. And Wednesday it came, just a little jog from Salem, in these words. You never saw a cigarette ad in Oregon. Take a look at this one in the Journal. GILL. We feel very much like the boy who spoke too soon, and we will -come up smiling and assure the representative from Clackamas that when he be comes governor and the Courier edi tor representative, that cigarette bill of his will be stood on its head and its prohibitive sections start on the other end. FARMERS UP IN ARMS. Grange Indignant Over- Refusal of Court House to Equity. Whereas the citizens and taxpayers of Clackamas county have erected in Oregon City and are maintaining at an enormous cost a building known as a county court house in which to conduct a county government and in which to transact the business of im portance to the wellfare of the citiz ens and taxpayers of said county, and Whereas Judges Campbell and Bea tie have of late refused the use of the public rooms of said court house to any and all bodies of said citizens and taxpayers and especially to the farmers who are he heaviest taxpay ers of tho county. Therefore be it resolved by the members of the Warner Grange, that we do most emphatically condemn his action and that said action is the most drastic of any that has ever been made by nny of our former pub lic servants. And be it further resol ved that a copy of these resolutions bs sent to Judge Beatie and one e ach to our county papers for the purpose of publication therein. This resolution was indorsed with out a dissenting vote and during the discussion it was suggosted that we have here sufficient cause to invoke the recall upon our county judge, in fact it was hinted pretty strongly that we do so. D. McARTHUR. Secretary Warner Grange. Only $10,000 Between $1,000,000 The Ogle Mining Co givei t out that only $10,000 stands between them and the cyanide plant at the mines, and that if this amount can be raised be tween now and April 1, the new plant can be installed and running before next winter. If the work cannot be started by April 1, there will not be time to finish it before the heavy snows in the mountains set in, and it will have to wait another full year. Friends of the company who abso lutely know the wealth of the mine are making every effort to sell the amount of stock required and get the work started. WANTED! Girls and Women To operate Sewing Machines in garment factory. Oregon City Woolen Mills