com 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 ontside of Portland. .Keep it on the more. 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY, ORE., FRIDAY, MAR. U 1313. No. 44 OREGON WHITEWASHING" SCARLET FEVER REV. SPIES SHOWS THE UNPUB LISHED SIDE OF CASE. WHY ONLY ONE SIDE GIYEN? Can They Deny the Charges He Makes Against Them? (When the state board of health was hni-e last '"eek investigating re ".igence of health laws,- a resented signed by the ..- of this city exonerating iiwi. . '.ivsician Dr. Norris. A report was published in the Enterprise stat ing that no evidence of carelessness was introduced, and Judge Beatie made the statement that complaints had been made to his office that health officer was too stringent in his en forcement of the health laws. The following letter by Henry Spies is in answer:) That paper, which came to Mr. Lat ourette without being solicited and which was signed by nearly every physician in Oregon City, was un doubtedly aimed at me first, and in the second place it came from men who had recently formed a medical association. The association was formed since this investigation was begun. Now why do I say that the paper was aimed at me? Because my name was signed to the complaint against Dr. Norris as health officer. In that paper they set forth that Dr. Norris was a careful, sincere and ef fective health officer, or words to that effect. Why did they introduce it? To help one of their number out of a bad scrape? Now Gentlemen, (my friends who signed this paper in order to influence the state board of health in their de cision,) I do not believe that the gen tlemen composing the State Board of Health will do otherwise than decide upon evidence introduced . at the in vestigation. The paper is well gotten up ana is a splendid eulogy, but con tains absolutely no information in the case pending. Just a word gentlemen, on some of your general statements in that great eulogy: when you stated that he was efficient, careful, etc., did you do so after an examination, or did yoa do it' on general principles? To be sure you made no special ex amination or you could not have writ ten as you did. Will the gentlemen kindly tell us if a man is careful, sincere, efficient, etc., as health officer when he is told that there is a case of scarlet fever, and after he goes to the place and finds it true, he does not even quar antine the. place, nor does he keep that patient from attending public school after fumigation as the law requires ? When he does not tell them what the law was ? If he had been careful he would have rigidly enforced the laws of quarantine in this, which was the first case. There is no other phys ician upon whom he can throw the blame. How does it happen that that case was not entered on record? Do you call that careful ? Now gentlemen: since .it appears from the testimony of at least one of you that the epidemic of scarlet fever at Clackamas was caused by the care lessness in these first cases; and he spoke as an expert how is it that in these cases which you attended you did not cause them to be quarantined ? The law makes every attending phys- ician a deputy health officer to take such precautions as are necessary un- til the health officer can be informed. See Rule 17 of State Board of Health: "It shall be the duty of every phys ician called to atttend a person sick or suspected of being sick, of a con tagious disease, to report in writing within 24 hours thereafter, naming residence, etc., to the health officer. Rule 18 makes it the duty of the coun ty health officer where a case of scar let fever or any other contagious dis ease is reported, to place, or cause to be placed, in a conspicious place at both front and rear of premises, a card or flag indicating the disease by color. . Also "It shall be the further duty duty of the county health officer to prohibit entrance to or exit from such house without his written permiss ion." Why is it that as physicians you re ported cases by phone and waited days before submitting any other re port? It is conclusively proven by the testimony given by two physicians of Oregon City, the Health Officer, and witnesses brought forward by Dr. Norris himself that at least three of the first cases of scarlet fever near Clackamas were attended by physic ians who signed above named paper and Health Officer Dr. Norris. That until recently nearly all were re-admitted to the public schools within a few days after being fumigated. Two of them came to school Monday when they had been fumigated the Satur day previous or about three days. And when these had been in school a few days the teacher dismissed them be cause they had come too soon the health officer gave them certificates which admitted them to school al though the required twenty one days days had not passed. Now honorable gentlemen, you who signed a paper, to nullify my charge against Dr. Norris as health officer, do you assume that the above cited flagrant violations of law is to be set aside by eulogy? If I did not know, or were tolerably certain that the law had been virtually set aside by the health officer, Dr. Norris, in his act- ions at Clackamas, I would not have made the charges. You are aware, no doubt, that the health officer is re quired to keep vital statistics as well as enforce rules of the State Board, Lords Oregon Laws 1905, C. 170 p, 296 (2) 4696. "The board of health of each county shall be subordinate to the State Board of health, and it shall be the duty of the secretary of such county boards to report such county tacts and statistics as may be requir ed under instructions from and in ac cordance with blanks furnished by said board: and it shall be the duty of the secretaries of city boards of health to make reports of such facts and statistics as may be required un der instructions and in accordance with blanks furnished by the State Board to the secretaries of the coun ty boards of health in which such city boards of health are subordinate. It shall be the duty of the county boards of health to enforce all rules and reg ulations of the State Board of Health in their respective counties which may be issued from time to time for the preservation of the public health and for the prevention of anv ep idemic, and contagious diseases: pro vided, that all books and records kept by the secretary of the county where such records are kept, and filed with the county clerk, where such records can be consulted without fee." Did Mr. Norris keep such records ? Did he keep such vital statistics ? Are they kept in the office of the county clerk? He has a few records, none com plete. Five cases of scarlet fever from Clackamas are not there three of the cases, his cases, where he was the only physician in attendance. Let anyone try to consult the rec ords at the clerks office. There are none there. Is that a violation of law gentlemen ? The duties of this officer are also: "To protect the public health by re moval of. causes of diseases when known, and in all cases to take prompt action to arrest the spread of contagious and infectious diseases." Did Dr. Norris do this? ' When within one-half mile of one case, one-fourth mile of another, and . the third case on his way home, why didn't he go to these places when there? The charges against Dr. Norris were based upon the following laws: "The State Board of Health shall have power to remove at any time any county, city, or town health officer for intemperance, failure to collect vital statistics, obey rules and by laws, keep records, make reports, or answer letters or inquiry of said State Board concerning the health of the people." AVhflf. is.mir mntivfl? H.arrvintr 1-rt its logical exclusion what some of your number said about the spread of the contagion.'AU the cases occur- mg in December and January could have been preventea. Did we sustain the charges made against Dr. Norris? That belongs to the Health Board to decide and I will not anticipate their decision. Is the task too much for the health officer? No indeed. So far as Clackamas is concerned Dr. Norris was the at tending physician as well as the health officer to three cases, and one of these was the earliest one reported. This first case - he failed to quaran tine or keep the patient out of school the required length of time. The other two were admitted into the public school within three days of fumigat ion. While traveling along the road he was met and stopped by two of the directors of the school, who asked him for information, yet he did not even give them a copy of the Rules of the State Board of Health, but told tliem to continue the school. He gave as surance that he had matters in hand and yet while halted at a crossroad wh - mile-would -have tak en him to one place of which the di rectors told him there was a case of scarlet fever without quarantine, a quarter of a mile would have taken him to another place where there was a case. In less than an hour both places could have been visited. All 17 cases could have been visited in one day with time to spare. They covered a period of three months. THAT the county is large we know. THAT THE PEOPLE OF THE COUNTY PAY HIM ($1,000.00) ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS WE ALSO KNOW. We also know that the health offic er is the one officer who has every physician by law as his deputy until quarantine is established. Also he has the right to as many deputies as he needs and guards without number if they are necessary. Only, last month his deputies had a fair amount al lowed them and I have never heard any complaint on the part of anyone against the cost of the health office if it is efficient. The people know that the various health boards of the state cost a con siderable sum of money. They also know the reason for their existence is the preservation of health and the prevention of contagious diseases. Is it too much to ask that the health of ficer does his duty and safeguard the health and life of the children? The people of Clackamas do not take kind ly to the statements of the health of ficer and other physicians that tr-y (the people) were to blame for the spread of scarlet fever. Especially now do they feel outraged when it is established that two of these phys icians and the health officer attended these cases and failed to quarantine the cases and thereby protect the community. Their only fault lay in trusting these men and the health officer, but now they know where they are. I have been censured and abused by the vilest language on the streets of Oregon City. Dr. Norris, meeting me on the street and giving me a pass to the regions where they shovel coal (Page 2, Seventh Column.) SGHEUBEL CIS WIS HOT STUFF VIGOROUSLY CONDEMNS THE PRESENT WATER SYSTEM CLEAN UP ALSO HAD If Tuesday's Session of Live Wires Live Wire Session. Pure water bobbed up again and came up hard at the Tuesday ses sion of the live Wires, and a clean city was a close follower for the lime light. B. T. McBain reported that the en gineer had been working all over the county, within the range that this city could use a water supply; that the city council members had been working with and assisting him, and that at the next meting of the Wires report would be made. Mr. Mc Bain stated that the committee of nine was unanimous for a pure source oj. waier lor me city, and tne only point to be carelully considered was to get an absolutely pure supply and build for the future something we would not have to tear down and do over again later on. George Randall stirred up a wasps' nest in a short and rather sarcastic talk defending the present water sys- tern. He said we were attributing measles, whooping cough and small pox to the water, and that he did not believe it was bad; that he thought the water under our filtering system was pure, etc. Mr. Hazel interrupted him to ask what brand of liquor he mixed with his water, and the crowd roared, and the impressiveness of Mr. Randall's defense of the water was spoiled. And then Chris. Scheubel went to him. He stated that the most im portant matter before Oregon City today was the matter of pure water; that the present water was vile, filthy and he personally and absolutely knew it to be such, for he had had water from his own faucets analyzed on his own account and had found it such; that he believed some- of the samples that had been sent away to be anal yzed had been boiled before it was sent;. He stated that 25 years ago the Willamette was comparatively a pure mountain river, but that today it was the largest sewer in Oregon, that Oregon City was at its mouth and that our people were drinking it. He made it emphatic that it was time for Oregon City to get busy and rem edy this condition, and if they did not that he would bring damage ac tions without charge for every per son in the city that had had typhoid. He said that he believed there had been inside work in this matter and efforts made to hide some of the men and conditions; that either the water is pure or that certain men were guilty of criminal negligence. He warned those in charge of the matter that unless something was done and done speedily to protect the people from the present water (conditions there would be a public indignation meeting called and the people would do something. Dr. van Brakle, : chairman of the civic committee, made the following report along the lines of the work undertaken for a clean city: "Friday evening, March 7, a joint meeting of the police and health com mittee of the Live Wires was held in the council chambers, and it was de- should be cleaned up, and that all le gitimate means should be used in se curing this resujt. Public sentiment is already being aroused to the fact that epidemic illness ts largely spread and maintained by unsanitary con ditions and we are sure that no in dividual owner will long persist in re fusing to remedy conditions which are recognized as a menace to com munity health. The committee will hold joint meetings on the Wednesday following the 15th of every month. John Albright was elected to serve as chairman of these meetings and r. A. Olmstead as secretary. "The county court has reported fav orably on a plan for a weekly cleaning of the suspension bridge and are now engaged in providing proper, equip ment for this purpose. The commit tee's clans for obtaining a better and more adequate lighting of this bridge has been turned in to the proper de partment of the lighting company and we hope to have a favorable re port at an early date." President Cross praised the sev eral committees and the city council for the harmonious work they were now doing along the cleaning up lines. He said he was one of the first to be jumped on by the civic commit tee, that he would obey orders, and that he wanted to see the whole city made clean and safe. G. L. Hedges gave a brief outline of the weights and measures law re cently passed by the legislature and which would take effect about the first of June. He said that if it was inforced it would be a good measure; that the fine for short weighting or for using false scales was from $5 to $50, and that a few inforcements would bring about a condition of hon est weights in Oregon. President Cross urged upon tne men present the importance of get ting a public dock for this city; that it would solve a good many of the questions before us and give us cheap er shipping rates. He strongly urged that the business men get togetner, forget sectional lines and all work for th project AFTER EIGHTEEN YEARS SLEEPING CITIZENS ARE COMING AWAKE TO AN OVERLOOK. AND NOW WATCH OUR SMOKE Enthusiastic Meeting to Boost Long Delayed Public Project. For eighteen years the matter has been in cold storage, and it now looks as if the new public sentiment that is stirring this old town, was going to take it out of the ice box and put it on final passage. . Twenty-five men, business men and shippers, met in the Commercial Club rooms Tuesday night and unanimously went on record that there was no pub lic matter that would do so much to build up the city, bring in new busi ness and force down lower freight rates than a public dock for Oregon City, and every man present joined in a resolution, which will no doubt be uanimously endorsed by the 300 mem bers of the Commrecial Club, asking the city council to take- immediate steps to give this city a public free dock for shipping and receiving pur poses. . ' The Panama Canal will soon be complete. The free government locks at the falls here will soon (we hope) be commenced. We nave a govern ment appropriation for deepening the river between here and Portland. And we have NOT anything that even smells like an adequate dock. Farmers and shippers go to Clacka mas and Canby, because they have, to stand their teams on their heads to get down to the present dump of a dock a privately owned concern from which our city gets the enormous in come of $15 a month. We are working for terminal rates; the Clackamas Southern will soon be bringing in great quantities of freight from the Molalla country; our city is rapidly growing; our c'ty ships in and out more freight than half of Oregon; plats are completed and plans ready for the building up of the west side by both the Moody and the Willamette companies AND YET WE HAVE NO DOCK. If we didn't have this magnificent river running through. . our city, we would want to spend a million or two to dig caanal from here to the Colum bia, and make a river. " But because it is here, as fine a navigable stream as ever ran, down hill because old nature made the channel, and the mountains furnish the water free; because it has not cost us anything, we simply refuse to use it for the value we might get out of it; we say "Let George do it," and go back to sleep. -s ., ; When the Panama canal gets into the shortcut business, potatoes won't be left for the hogs to dig in Clacka mas county, for want of a market, and the question is, whether we want to handle the increased business tnat this big canal will give to this whole coast country or whether we want to let the produce go to other town mar kets. Jesse Hazel said in the meeting that a member of the Chamber of Com merce in Portland, stated to him that with the great mills Oregon City did not seem to be alive to its possibili ties and future growth. Look at the cities up the valley which we have beaten seven ways for industries, yet they have us skinned for making the most of what iney have. Let's not embalm this proposition again. Let s Keep n aiive ana raise the dock. If we don't provide a public dock, the West side will let that soak in. The meeting had the right ring to it. Unanimously the men declared to let the city council fix the location and stand by them in whatever place they deemed best. UNDER PRIVATE CONTRACT. E. D. Olds Shows Three More Bridges Built in Same Old Way. Mr. Taxpayer: I do not wish to persecute any one, but when I showed you the method of bridge-building our county court has adopted, I refered to only four bridges. There are others I took for my il lustrations of the court's peculiar pro ceedure, the four largest bridges. Let me tell you of others. Under the same method, the court, on April 7, 1911, entered into a con tract with the Coast Bridge Company for the steel for three bridges: (1) The Johnson creek at Milwaukie, a 70- foot span; (2) the Bear creek bridge at Needy, a 60-ft. span; (3) the Rock creek bridge at Zion church, a 50-ft. span; and also a few feet of 30-inch tube work, for the sum of $6,850.00. Then again on a later day they gave the same bridge company $640 to add 20 feet on the Johnson creek bridge at Milwaukie, making a total of $7,480.00, and this was under a private contract. I do not know how many pounds of steel there are in these bridges, but I have seen them, and I will assure you they are not very heavy. The Johnson bridge is fairly good bridge. Now as to what they cost to erect, I haven't looked at Journal 25 as yet, but will if necessary, and also figure the weight of the steel. I do not know what you think of it, but I regard it as a very poor method of doing pulbic business. E. D; OLDS. -'HAS OUR CITY A ! DOCTORS' TRUST? ARE THEY HANGING TOGETHER ! FOR SELF PROTECTION? NOW UP TO THE PHYSICIANS Were they Afraid to Have the Full Evidence Given to People? This matter of the board of health coming to this city to investigate health conditions and health ficials; the report as puollsried in the Emtr- pnse exonerating the health offirer; the signed staeemimt of the physic ians of the city defending Dr. Morris; the statement of Judge Beatie that the complaints made to him were not that the healh officer was too lax. but too lenient, and the published report that there was no evidence that there had been carelessness or neglect of duty all seem very much at variance with the published and signed letter of Mr. Spies in this issue. When it comes to the matter of protecting human life and fighting disease, tne Courier doesn't plav anv favorites. It would condemn the edi tor's brother if he were negligent or tried to evade his duty. The letter in 1 his papt : find the ac count published ?n the Elite :-f rise, are as far apart as che tws po'ot., and the people have 4 right tc know, and liey should i 1 1 out. waethur we have a, phytic hue orga:i,..u'.'.i;i ai:d nty offiiii..s' pid society to hr.ng iip.-ther on lhi; matter, or whether Mr. Spies is falsifying the reports and misquoting the evidence on this hearing. It is such affairs as this that put Oregon City in bad, and it is one the physicians have got to defend and explain, or they have got to stand for the verdict the people will render of hanging together for protection. Now let us see what will come of the affair, and let us see if the peo ple are going to sit and twirl their thumbs while others play football with life and death conditions. The dead inside of this matter should be laid ' on the outside. The people should know all about it, and if it is not trotted out in the open, the grand jury should trot it out. Last Friday's Enterprise had a first page article on the state investigation under these heads: "EVIDENCE FAVORS HEALTH OFFICER. "WITNESSES TELL STATE BOARD DR. NORRIS IS FAITHFUL "JUDGE BEATIE PAYS HIGH TRIBUTE. "All Physicians of City Sign Statement Favorable to Offi cer Accused of Careless ness." And then the article opens with this paragraph: "Evidence was heard by a committee of the Oregon State Board of Health at the county court house Thursday, afternoon which was entirely favorable to Dr. J. W. Norris, the county health officer. Dr. Norris was accused by Rev. James Spiess of willful violation of the state health law in connection with the recent epidemic uf scarlet fever at Clackamas Station.. The prose cution endeavored to show that the physician did not attend to his duties and that his books did not show complete records of the diseases that were reported to him. No evidence was introduc ed which showed that Dr. Norris was guilty of willful neglect and that he had been careless." The Courier editor has before him the report of the evidence introduced, and certain it is that this evidence DOES show that someone was guilty of either neglect or carelessness, and there is no use in the Enterprise try ing to dump a barrel of whitewash over evidence that is sworn to and a matter of record. The physicians signed a statement in defense of Dr. Norris, and among other things, stated: "Dr. Norms has not only done his duty faithfully, working hard er than his physical condition would warrant, but he does the work for less than one-half the remuneration that he is entitled to; in fact it would be difficult to procure another that would be as competent and do the work that Dr. Norris does for twice the money he gets out of it." The health laws provide mighty liberally for health and the health of ficer has almost unlimited authority in the way of deputies and money. What he can't do he can hire deputies to do, and the following items, taken from the county records, would indi cate that he has had help, as his sal ary is $1,000 a year, or $85.63 per month. The county records show the following payments to Mr. Norris and his deputies: March, $117.68; April, $187.08; May $89.33; June, $96.68; July $88.13; August, $93.38; September, $85.63; October, $85.63; November, $93.63; December, $135.13; January $123.88; February $142.13. Dr. Norm is one Df the Courier editor's best friends. This article is not written to injure him or endanger his position, but health conditions are above everything and this paper has no favorites when it comes to human life conditions. Rev. Spies is a father who for days Dent over the cot of a baby girl and saw the fevpr rMih her vitalo oH take her young life. Scarlet fever was waged there since January. He is fighting the conditions under which it continues an epidemic. . We should sustain him. If we have a physician's combine to uphold each other's mistakes, or neglect, we should know it. If we have not, the physi cians should exonerate themselves, and do it out in the onpn without whitewash brush. 31 Years a Subscriber. jacoD uswait, oi Molalla, was in the city Tuesday, and a caller at the Courier, and he stated he had been a subscriber for this paper continously Nearly Ready for Business. The Hawley Pulp & Paper Co's fourth mill is nearly ready for install ing the machinery. The new mill will employ about 150 hands. The spur from the P. R. L. & P. Co's tracks is now completed to the mill. Parole Didn't Cure. Sheriff Mass arrested Henry Wal ters last week for breaking his parole. He was sentenced to a year in prison for contributing to the delinquency of a girl, but paroled by Judge Beatie. It is said he has served a sentence in jail in Salem since his parole here. Speed 25, Fined 25. Edward Reed, a chauffeur of Port land, hit the town at a 25-mile rate with a party of city friends. -Chief Shaw arrested him and Recorded Stipp fined him according to the de gree he broke the auto law a dollar a mile. He paid and protested. They are Biting. The' salmon run is now on, and every felow who can get a boat will get in the fishing game . Several early catches are reported, and the fish landed weighing from 30 to 65 pounds. Many outside fishermen find business at the county seat these days. Wait and Murmur Not. The deeds to the locks property were sent to Washington seven weeks ago, and some sweet day when the sinesure can't be worked another hour the matter will be wound up and work on the government canal here will start. But don't chafe. It will be only two years next month since news was wir ed to us from Washington that the project was a go. After the Grave Robbers. District Attorney Tongue and as sistant Livy Stipp propose to stop the robbing of Indian graves and they will have a careful watch kept and will vigorously prosecute any person caught opening any more graves. At Willamette and along the bluffs in this city any number of graves have been opened and the prosecuting attorneys say an Indian grave should be held as sacred as a white man s. There is hardly a week that ex cavations are not made on the bluffs here, and it is said the work is done during the full moon hours of the night. WAIT AND SMILE. The Library Commission Will Soon Treat You Far Better Since having to vacate its quarters and find a temporary home in the basement, the public library has been working against big odds, but a con siderate public has been very patient and charitable, and things have moved along so much better than it was though possible they could have mov ed under such circumstancse. But patrons know that a splendid Carnegie library is finished and lack ing only the acceptance by the com mission to be occupied by the library, and they accept the present quarters and limited service without a protest. The library movement in this city, which has in less than two years, grown from a few donated volumes to a splendid $12,000 free library build ing, is a monument that the few men and women who brought it about should ever be remembered for. It was just a little affair at first A few interested men and woman, without any funds, yet recognizing the great need, determined to start and found a public library. Public spirit ed men and women divided their books and it was starctd. From the opening day it was a success, and so rapidly did its patronage increase that the present Carnegie public li brary was a close-following result. The handsome library will soon be opened and then the patronage will no doubt increase. The new home is everybody's home and the books are for the poorest as well as the richest absolutely free to any person who can read and wants toin a sense a free school for all. So patronize the temporary base ment quarters and keep the smile on. In a short time there will be a pub lic opening at Andrew's home and then we will have a library homo we will all be proud of. WANTED! Girls and Women To operate Sewing Machines in garment factory. Oregon City Woolen Mills LET 1HE CITY WALKJNTO THIS LETS SWAT FILTH, CLEAN UP AND SHINE. . OUR EPIDEMICS ARE COSTLY Let Us Annihilate the Conditions That Breed Them. Here's what a certain clique of Ore gon City men will call another of Brown's knocks. Call It so if you will, but we are going to keep them com ing until we get enough public senti ment behind to force a change, or we are going to force the issue that Ore gon City wants to roll in filth, breed boils and play swine. One day in the Live Wires B. T. McBain told you typhoid fever and diseased water had torn down more in three months than the Commercial club could build up in five years. AND HE TOLD YOU A PLAIN, LITERAL TRUTH. The Portland Tetegram issues a year book, an almanac that goes all over the United States. This book tells its readers if they are interested in this section of Ore gon, the Oregon City Courier and other papers will send to any ad dresses free sample copies. From all over the east and middle west we have received postcards ask ing for sample copies, and for almost three months we have been advertis ing to these people that we have ty phoid, scarlet fever, measles and smallpax. This is just one little item in con nection with our filth and filthy wa ter. Pretty hot stuff when a city coun cil finds it necessary to publish col umn after column of names of per sons who have filthy disease-breeding, dangerous conditions in the city. Mighty expensive advertising when the state board of health has to come here to investigate conditions and of ficials for a continuous run of dan gerous and contagious diseases. , Isn t it about time these pimples came to a head and were lanced ? Do we want to have this city con stantly smelling like something the dog has dragged in and left? Do we want e give notice to out siders that Oregon City is a good city to stay away from, that we are un healthy, unclean and breed boils? Some blame the newspapers be cause they have put big heads on the typhoid and smallpox stories, and they say it is knocking business. Had the newspapers put big heads on the typhoid stories a month ear lier than they did last fall (as they should have done), they would have perhaps knocked the undertakers' business and we would have had more people'alive. Business comes too mighty high when typhoid and smallpox has to be hushed up to get it . Makes one think of the buzzard waiting for something to die. If dangerous health conditions are parasites on business, then remove the conditions. Its-the conditions, not business that needs the knife on the appendix. A Live Wire committee and the city council committee have formed a co-operative organization to stamp out the conditions that keep us almost constantly fighting some epidemic,, and any man who will not obey the health orders ought to be 1iandetfT)ver to Sheriff Mass and kept there until he grows a full beard and the laws of this city and the health laws of the state will stand behind putting vi olators there if necessary. The civic committee has started something In this city, and now, men, walk into it, and lot's get the job done and keep clean. This committee is not picking out marks it is picking out filth. The men on it are giving their time and tramping every block in this city and they are reporting conditions as they find them, regardless of where the conditions are. The thing to do is to back this play, stand behind these men and what they are doing. Public sentiment is forcing a new water supply on this city. It is now but a question of finding a pure and adequate source. Had we people kept quiet we wouia have had the present sewer source continued, with a little anti-toxine squirted in to restore confidence, and every year we would die off from the epidemic. Now make the same noise behind this clean-up campaign, and bring out a public sentiment that will make ev ery man clean up or put him in jail. And make a noite that will force the utmost precautions against this smallpox which has a foothold here and which is spreading. It is a loath some, horrible disease, and we warn to come alive to its danger, stamp it out and stamp out for all time the conditions which build it. Let's have a city that invites. Sentiment is behind an everlasting clean-up. Keep it alive and let's make Oregon City look like the youngest Sapolio twin. Climbing Up. Twenty-two new subscribers were added to the Courier's mail list Tues day. Every week we add from 80 to 60 new names. Tha Courier is covering Clackamas county and thera'a a reason.