COTOII 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 more. 30th YEAR. OREGON CITY, ORE., FRIDAY, MAR. 21 1313. No. 45 OREGON CITY IS NOT THIS H EG LEGTGRINi I HAL DIDN'T SOMEONE PLAY BALL WITH HUMAN LIFE? TWELVE MILES, SIX WEEKS Gather Slow Time When City Was Stricken with Fever. Recently it was reported to this of fice that in the recent typhoid epidem ic here the state laws were openly vi olated in not complying with the fol lowing state law: It shall be the duty of each county health officer to furnish to the secretary of the State Board of Health, on or before the tenth day of each month, a re port of all marriages, contagious diseases, births and deaths, (se curing within the limits of the county during the next preceding calendar month. All cases of smallpox or other contagious dis ease of alarming proportions must be reported at once. To verify or prove false hese charges the following letter was writ ten to the State Board of Health by the Courier: Oregon City March 14. Dr. Calvin S. White: Will you kindly inform this office whether or not you were, notified of the epidemic of typhoid fever in Ore gon City this fall, and if so how long after it broke out ? Also how long had your board to wait for samples of water for analysis ? yours truly, M. J. BROWN. Portland, March 15. M. J. Brown: Answering your inquiry, the infor mation I got of the epidemic of ty phoid in Oregon City was first thru the public press and the analysis of infected water sent December 3rd and completed' December 6. Yours very truly, CALVIN S. WHITE. State Health Officer. Typhoid fever broke out in this city IN OCTOBER and the water was not received for analysis until December 6, about SIX WEEKS AFTER WARDS. j In the first issue of the Courier in' December we made "the open charge that physicians HAD HELD BACK THEIR REPORTS and we called upon the officials to take up this matter. What do you think about it now ? What do you think of the lax and criminally carelessness under which the state board of health has to de pend on newspaper reports, published a full month after the outbreak, for is information of ' a dangerous epi de.Vc? ' L-'n't you think there is something bes: les pure water and sanitary con ditions that need investigating while we are at it ? A Wrong Inference. Editor Courier: An article has been called to my attention which appeared in your is sue of Friday, March 14th, and from which the inference was drawn that net fishing could be carried on in the Willamette River until April 15th. For the information of your sub scribers will say that Section 5239 of Lord's Oregon Laws closes the Will amette River and it stributaries be low the falls at Oregon City from noon on March 15th to noon on April 15th, and the notice of the board pub lished in your paper merely provides for an additional closed season from noon on April 15th until noon on May 1st. If you will kindly give this mat ter publicity, same will be greatly ap preciated. R. E. CLANTON. Master Fish Warden. LIKE TO BE SKINNED? Are you a Bunch of Lambs and Like to Feel the Big Shears? Last fall the voters of Oregon pass ed a law putting, the telephone com panies under the jurisdiction of the railroad commission, and this law ex pressly provided that the rates should be no higher than the rates charged in 1911. But absolutely no observance xs made and the companies tr,o right on charging higher rates nnd discrimin ating rates, and you cf.n find such vi olations right here in Oregon City. Now what earthly use is there in passing laws, of what earthly use is the commission, of what use are dis trict attorneys and grand juries when the plain provisions of a law made a law by the voters of a state are sim ply winked at and ignored? The Courier can cite any district at tnman tn wIiato in one case a tele phone patron would not stand for the gaff at $1.5U per montn ior a iuui ar4T line fwhen his neiehbor was paying $1.25 and where the company accepted his i.zo ana conunueu u show-where a new renter who refused to pay the extra 25 cents was informed he should pay u Vila nVinnft would be taken out. In the home of the editor of this paper is a two-party line phone lor t Kft nor month is oaid. and across the street the Pacific Company demands the same rental lor a iour party line, which service is 25 cents a month less. . .. The city has full power under its charter to stop this abuse, and the council should stop it. Why doesn't it? The state commission has full pow er given it by the voters last fall. Why doesn't it? The district attorney has the right and it is his duty, to take up such vi olations of the law. Why doesn't he? The grand jury has the right, and it is its duty, to take up such cases and investigate them. Why doesn t it ? And the common mutt has a right to tender the Pacific Co. what the law says he shall pay, no more and defy the company to remove his phone or stop his service. Why doesn't he ? Mt. Pleasant Local. The Mt. Pleasant Equity Local will meet this (Friday) night, and there is important business to come up. Lest Wa Forget. The trout season is from April 1 to Oct. 31, the limit being 75 fish or 50 pounds in one day. Catching trout un der six inches is unlawful. Wait for the Decision. The county court has forbidden the road supervisors to draw special road tax money until the courts shall pass on a law passed by the recent legis lature. Old Pioneer Gone. Mrs. Mary Rickmarry, a former resident and pioneer of this county, died at Eugene last week and the re mains were brought to Clackamas Monday for burial. Down Again. Hope springs eternal, and if we hope long enough and prod our repre sentatives sharp enough, perhaps we will get a postofflce building some day. Mr. McBaine reported Tuesday that a letter from tJongTessman tiawiey said our hoped for national aid was lost. Gun Club Organized. Monday night a bunch of gunmen got together and elected officers for the Rod and Gun Club as follows: President, Tom Myers: vice presi dent, Ed Schwab; secretary and treas treasurer, C. F. Bollinger, Exeuctive committee: Theodore Osmund, Lharles Wright, Dr. Ice, J. C. Pollonz, John Clark and George Pusey. The club has over 100 members. Crowded Out. From the Christian Science Monit or, published in Massachusetts and by the way one of the highest grade, .leanest, hest edited newsDaners Pub lished today we clipped and re-set a splendid article on the beauty, maus t.rv and tirocress ifi.' Orison City, but for want of room it has had to join others in a weeKs lay over. It Won't Down. At the Live Wires Tuesdav Record er Stipp presented a long petition of names asking that the city provide hitching posts for horses and the men groaned. It seemed so strange that this matter could not be settled once and forever, but it always ends in the same old way. The matter was referr ed to L. Adams, Frank Busch and Clyde Huntley. Commercial Club's Mask Ball. The 5th annual ball of the Commer cial Club of Oregon City to be held Tuesdav. March 25th. Bromises to be a record breaker in every way. The com mittee in charge has arranged lor prizes as .follows: Best original char acter, team or couple $10.00; best or dinal character woman 85.00; best or iginal character man $5.00 There will he the best music obtain- able and plenty of it as well as a good time for all whether masKed or not, although the floor will be reserved for maskers until the grand march at 10 M. Refreshments will be served. The committee in charge is: M. D. Latourette, Dr. Clyde Mount, C. W. Evans and B. T. McBain. , " SHOWING THE GOODS Clackamas Southern Is Making Good . and Proving It. Two vears aeo in Live Wires Har vey Cross started something. Those of vou who went on the in spection trip over the completed por tion oi the uacKamas aoutnern rail road last week or last night saw what he started. Nearly four miles of the worst and most expensive part of road building is completed, except balasting and ready for service. The road started without a dollar in the treasury but with millions of faith in the country and the people. Today, every rod built and all work done is paid for and the construct ion is almost to tne level country oi Mania T.ane. from which on. the ex pense will be small and the work will go so much faster. From Oretron City to Maple Lane the road bed covers a continuous ser ies of cuts, fills, curves and bridges. Vnr 9K vears railroad man have looked over the rich Molalla country laid out railroads on paper, men sizea un the only way to get up to this rich country, and quit A dozen men in uregon uty tacK ioi it withnnt a dollar and have sur mounted the obstacles the capitalists have backed up on ior zd years. KnA here is tellintr vou these men deserve much from Orgon City and the time will come when tney win get it mnra rredit tnan tnev ret now. MpRain. Cross and Dimick told the t iv Wires little about the present nt tha nrmmects Tuesday at the Live Wires. McBain said it was not a case of charity . but one of city and county HUNDREDS OF CLACKAMAS CDHNTY VOTERS ASK FOR INVESTIGATION OF COUNTY COURT AND OFFICERS WANT TO KNOW ALL ABOUT THE BRIDGE CONTRACTS, TIMBER CRUISING AND THE DISCRIMI- NAITON CHARGED IN THE A PUBLIC MASS MEETING WILL Petition is Signed Largely by the Far mers of the Different Parts of the County. Considerable Public Sentiment has Been Stirred up Against County Court, and Much Criticism has been Expressed . TO THE TAXPAYERS OF CLACKAMAS COUNTY: WE, THE UNDERSIGNED TAXPAYERS and legal voters of Clackamas County, respectfully petition that a mass meeting be called in Oregon City, Ore., in the near future, for the purpose of formulating plans for an investigation of the County Court and other public officers of the county, the financial management of the taxpayers' funds, and that general invitation be extended to all taxpayers and legal voters of the county to attend said meeting. WE ASK THAT THIS MEETING be called, because of the charges made of mismanagement of the public funds in the purchase of county bridges, and that a thorough investigation of these charges be made. And further that the contract recently entered into with Mr. Nease, of Portland, for timber crulslgn, be inves tigated and the reasons for this work be shown. And further, that the matter of discrimination in the use of the court house for farmers' meetings be taken up and discussed: P. W. Meredith, Oregon City. . John Christensen, Oregon, City. M. C. Reopelle, Oregon City. L. R. Pulen, Oregon City. A. A. Pease, Oregon City. S. M. McDonald, Oregon City. - E. F. Portouw, Oregon City. W. R. Osburn, Oregon City. M. C. Strickland, Oregon City. H. C. Stevens, Oregon City. H. W. Trembatt, Oregon City. J. A. Roake, Oregon City. J. D .Taylor, Oregon City. T. A. Pope, Oregon City. L. L. Pickens, Oregon City. S. S. Walker, Oregon City. J. H. Darling, Oregon City. Jno. W. Loder, Oregon Cit.y G. A. Schubel, Oregon City, R4. Elmer Swope, Oregon City. Hugo Hansen, Oregon City. Jas. B. Beeson, Oregon City. Chas. A. Menke, Oregon City. Robert Moehnke, Oregon City. D'. F. Moehnke, Oregon City. H. Hettman, Oregon City. Chas. Hall, Gladstone. J. M. McFarland, Gladstone. S. H. Zrich, Gladstone. S. Gray ,Canemah, Oregon. A. H. Mulkey, Gladstone. A. V. Wicklun, Clackamas. J. B. Ford, Gladstone. R. P. Burns, Gladstone. T. N. Burns, Gladstone. J. N. Wallace, Gladstone. W. R. Wilson, Gladstone. Nathan Plate,, Gladstone. C. W. Parrish, Gladstone. W. R. U'Ren, Gladstone. F. J. U'Ren. Gladstone. W. R. Dann, Gladstone. Levi Stehman, Gladstone. O. C. Chas. Gelbrich, Macksburg. J. S. Roberts, Jennings Lodge. G. M. Rose, Jennings Lodge. J. E. Seeley, Gladstone. R. T. Stover, Jennings Lodge. A. D. Soesbe. B. S. Sosey. J. H. Batdorf, Jennings. R. Hinds, Jennings Lodge. Henry Suter, Oak Grove. G. H. Hanson, Oak Grove. G. H. Skoog, Oak Grove. W. A. Snoivelli, Oak Grove. Isaac Hill, Oak Grove. R. E. Emmonson, Oak Grove. G. H. Dedrick, Oak Grove. John Feldman, Oak Grove. B. Warren, Oak Grove. W. Knehl, Oak Grove. S. C. Alexander, Oak Grove. B. Lee Paget. Oak Grove. E. Shubert, Oak Grove. . F. E. Goodman, Oak Grove. L. A. Bullard, Oak Grove. T. R. Blackesby, Oak Grove. Guy M. Headley, Oak Grove. Jas. R. Kahler, Oak Grove. J. H. McArthur, Oak Grove. A. L. Kuebl, Oak Grove. A. T. Skovy, Oak Grove. Jas.jCplqskyf OakJSrove J. H. Shupe, Oak Grove. G. L. Gibbs, Milwuie.ka. G. li. Gibbs, Milwaukie. C. A. Lewis, Oak Grove. W. R. Allen, Oak Grove. G. A. Jahn, Oak Grove. Chas. F. Terrill, Maple Lane. W. A. Rivers, Gladstone. Joe Frominger, Oak Grove. A. E. Goetz. The foregoing is only a partial list of the petitioners, the only ones available at the time the paper went to press, and there are several papers yet in circulation. On the strength of the above list of names of taxpayers and voters, and because of the county-wide senti ment for an investigation of the matters outlined in the petition, a public mass meeting has been aranged for, to be held in Woodman hall, Oregon City, on Saturday, April 5, where the propositions will be taken up, dis cussed and some action taken. NOTE The signatures to the above may not all be literally correct in the spelling, as many are difficult to read, but they may be verified by the original petitions. benefit as well as investment. He stat ed the road could be completed to Mt. Angel by winter and that it would not cost over $10,000 a mile; that the Or egon Electric was bonded for $63,000 nAr mile and Daid a net profit of $4,- 000 a mile; that the Clackamas South ern would run through, a much richer than the Orecron Electric that the people could do their own fig uring as to whether our roao roaa would be investment or not Mr .McBaine said if the city would only do half as well as the country the rest of the worK would De easy, and that his judgment was that ev ery man who invested a dollar in the Clackamas Southern would get i back. Mr. Cross stated that the money was provided for the entire grading to Molalla; that all the steel was pro kaa tnr tn ML An eel: that the di rectors wanted the people to own this road instead of having to bond it, ana that if wa would all take a hand in the work of selling a little more stock the rest would be e asy. He showed up the cord wood industry, how a half million cords would be ready for Port land as soon as the road was ready for the wood; how the big Atkins Mill was ready to start as soon as the MATTER OF WHO SHALL USE BE HELD IN WOODMAN HALL L. S. Johnson, Clackamas. J. P. Davis, Clackamas. Geo. Johnson, Clackamas. Frank Otter, Clackamas. J. H. Reed, Clackamas. Lawrence Gibson, Clackamas S. Ed Ott, Clackamas. C. Berner, Clackamas. W. Licht, Clackamas. M. C. Colson, Clackamas. J. A. Liebon, Clackamas. F. Schoppert, Clackamas. ' R. P. Grady, Clackamas. E. E. Oehlschlaeger, Clackamas. J. N. Berselben, Clackamas. John Heinz Macksburg. -F. J. Kraxberger, Macksburg. C. J. Cameron, Macksburg. . Chas. E. Sevens. H. Jacksen, Macksburg. FF. P. Bennsch, Macksburg. A. B. McCoy, Macksburg. P. H. Miller, Macksburg. E. M. Koebel, Macksburg. E. N. Koebel, Macksburg. Mike Walch, MacKsburg. ,J. W. Willbroad, Macksburg. C. H. Lorenz, Macksburg. H. B. Dreier, Macksburg. , G. E. Pottratz, Macksburg. S. S. Siemling, Macksburg. Johnnie Brusik, Macksburg. C. D. Keesling, Macksburg. Geo. Kalb, Macksburg. Geo. E. Oglesby, Macksburg. Aug. Rottenberg, Macksburg. F. W. Barth, Macksburg. P. M. Graves, Macksburg. G. F. Pottratz, Macksburg. J. B. Hepler, Macksburg. Leonard Wehner, Macksburg. John Bradbury, Macksburg. Peter Nortz, Macksburg. ' N. P. Adams, Macksburg. H. T. Kfster, Mackbsurg. F. M. Mathews, Macksburg. D. Harms, Macksburg. L. E. Bowers, Macksburg. J. E. Wells, Macksburg. J. W. Smith, Macksburg. A. J. Lewis, Maple Lane. C. W. Swallow, Maple Lane. B. A. Anderson, Maple Lane. W. M. Rumery, Maple Lane. G. H. Mighells, Maple Lane. Chas. E. Reynolds, Maple Lane. Jos. Thaas, Maple Lane. K. Swiatkowshi, Maple Lane. Don Lewellyn, Milwaukie F. E. Olson, Milwaukie. F. C. Harlow, Milwaukie. Lydia A. Harlow, Milwaukie. J. W. Kinzel, Milwaukie. M. A. Johnson, Milwaukie. E. P. Houser, Milwaukie. F. N. Birkemeier, Milwaukie. Don Quant, Milwaukie. J. E. Wetzler, Milwaukie. Mrs. M. Wetzler, Milwaukie. G. W. Comert, Milwaukie. J. 1.V Stevans, Ai W. S. Hauberan, Milwaukie. E. L. M-. W. S. Gorbett, Colton. "T.Er3efghmd,-;oltom 0. G. Nyquist, Colton. A. E. Anderson, Colon. A. N. Swanson. J. J. Jones, Colton. J. G. Erickson, Colton. Emil Potterson, Colton. Math Peterson. J. A. Johnson. U. S. Dix, Colton. road could bring the logs, and that the money for all the Molalla country output would come back to this coun ty and be used over alld over again. He stated that G. B. Dimick alone had put $9,000 in cash into this road. G. B. Dimick outlined the conditions that this county would be In if the rinpkamnR Southern was not in pros pect; showing how this city would lose to Canby all the Molalla business which would have to come over the P. hniMinc in from Canbv: that we needed but $50,000 to comp- nioa tha mad; that wmie rort ana .nnif-al was hecominz interested in the; road, yet we wanted most of the road ! owned here; that tne directors were nirirf in ask for an advisory commit tee to go through the books and let everybody know the lull condition oi the work. Mr. Dimick closed by say ing that the work itself would take the doubt out of any man who would see enough of it, and that the earnings in two years would pay back every dollar invested. And the work goes on. Eveyr day it looks brighter because the hardest of the work is over. It is now but a question of days almost when the road win ha finished to Maole Lane and from the hour it is finished to there THE COURT HOUSE SATURDAY, APRIL 5 AT 2 P. M. J. E. Sandall, Colton. Alfred Wall, Colton. G. A. Gottberg, Colton. Otto Sorenson, Colton. W. E. Bonney, Colton. D. Barney, Maple Lane. John Waldow, Maple Lane. J. K. Morris, Oregon City. W. W. Myers, Oregon City. Thos. Meyrick, Oregon City. August Splinter, Oregon City. S. H. Derrick, Maple Lane. D. J. Thome, Maple Lane. F. A. Schmidt, Maple Lane. F. E. Parker, Maple Lane. W. N. Horton, Maple Lane. G. F. Mighells, Maple Lane. H. Olson, Maple Lane. Geo. Bliss, Oregon City, R. 3. Noah Christner, Oregon City, 3. C. Piepka, Canby, R. 1. H. Dietrick, Canby, R. 1. R. Schuebel, R. 1, Canby." S. L. Casto, Oregon City, R.3. Robert Vorpahl, Carus. P. Heilman, Carus. F. Geilman, Carus. H. Johnson, Carus. M. Strejc, Carus. F. P. Grimes, Carus. Almon Johnson, Carus. M. Irish, Carus. M. M. Richter, Carus. . F. W. Blanchard, Carus. Chas. Bannon, Carus. C. H. Wilson, Carus. J. M. Evans, Carus. M. Hniras, Carus. R. Streji, Carus. R. L. Inglis, Carus. E. Gellrieh, Carus. Christ Kraft, Carus. M. Poveletz, Carus. A. G: Phelps, Carus. Siver Olson, Carus,. ' S. W. Bonny; Carus. John Satter, Carus. Frank Thiel, Carus. C. F. Stetz, Carus. Roy A. Caviness, Carus. F. G. Holynan, Carus. Peter Krast, Carus. Wm. Tice, Carus. E. C. Brown, Carus. J. Rapp, Carus. F. J. Reese, Carus. J. Aug. Kristenson, Carus. O. F. Frentuss, Carus. Jno. Robbins, Carus. A. W. Blanchard, Carus. H. D. Harms, Carus. J. Zelk, Carus. A. B. Johnson, Carus. A. J. Kehnhofer, Carus. L. C. S. Kellensger, Boring. G. R. Hunter, Boring. John Abborehl, Boring. Adolph Russer, Boring. Fritz Burns, Boring. Frank Donley, Burns. Eunice Bevan, Boring. B. M. Deardorff, Boring. F. O. Cooke, Clackamas. J. A. Stolle, Jr., Boring. O. O. Parret, Boring. Otto Vogel, Boring. W. J. Arnett, Boring. A. C. Hunt, Boring. John Glarner, Boring. M. Hemrich, Boring. E. Thebo, Boring. and there on, the road will commence to do business and earn money. It's the cheapest standard road ever built in Oregon. There is not a gill of water in it. It opens the richest sec tion of Oregon. It's simply GOT to pay, because the business is there to MAKE it pay. A PURE WATER SESSION. Citizens Back Makes Report- Council Engineer -Work to Go On. That eternal pure water matter came in for three hous discussion Wednesday night at the council meet ing, and the result was $1,000 was ap propriated to put down a test well at Mt. Pleasant for a deep water supply. Eng'neer Robert Dieck, who has been working two weeks on the matter of available water sources, reported that Mt. Pleasant was the most fav orable proposition with Canby next He advised that $1,000 be used to sink a test well 250 feet at Mt Pleasant, that such a sourc would eliminate much pumping and that ht was san guine of success. The report was most comprehensive and of much value for the city. After the report the public dock matter came up, when Chris Schuebel asked that while he favored the dock proposition, he thought that the wat er matter should be settled first; that it should not be side-tracked and should take the council just on 3 min ute to favor the engineer's suggestion. a. I. McBain backed Mr. Schuebel He said we had had 154 cases of ty phoid, 12 smallpox, 35 scarlet fever: that last year we had 12 typhoid cases that conditions were worse now than when the filter was put in 12 years ago, and if it continued so for anoth er 12 years we would not hav eany- body here to catch It; that $1,000 was a small sum as measured against one death. Councilmen Long and Metzner urged this same action. Councilman Albright proposed that before the Mt. Pleasant should be tak en up that the people vote on it, and Councilman Holman urged the same action. Albright said it would only cost $60 and that he was not convinc ed the people wanted to spend any more money. Councilman Horton opposed this, "Make the test, the people expect it of us," and Long stated he knew the people would back the action. Rev. George Edwards said we could not afford to take the risk of going on with our present system; that the people are not coming here, they are frightened. Dr VanBrakle stated that there was any amount of backing behind the council to go ahead for a pure water test. Mr. Fuge said there was no hope from Alteration and that his part of the city would back a new water sup- Pty- .. . Mr. Schuebel asked the council what they got the engineer for if it was to halt now; asked why they did not sub mit hiring him to the vtoers. He said he would pay the expenses of a spec ial election if over 10 per cent of the people voted against investigating Mt Pleasant water. Rev. Milliken said it would be stop ping in the middle of an investigation. C. H. Dye said the cost on $1,000 val uation would be put 40c to expend $1,000; that it was up to the council to go ahead; that the city was being injured $l,OC0 a day by typhoid con ditions, and we could not afford this. T. W. Sullivan said the by-chloride plant had been purchased, was being installed; that he thought we would get reasonably good water but that we should go ahead with Mt Pleasant proposition, and later on let the peo ple decide by vote on present or new system. The vote was unanimous lor the appropriation of the $1,000. Mr. McBain made a strong talK lor favorable action in the public dock, and V. Harris and J. J. Cooke oppos ed it. The matter went to a committee. ISN'T THIS SPLENDID? Portland Offers this Cuonty a $60,- 000 White Elephant Free of Charge About the richest one ever proposed to old Clackamas county came out in the sections of the Sunday Oregonian the 15th. It wasn't in a very conspicious po sition and you might not have noticed it. It was a proposition from E. Henry Wemme, vice president of the Portl and Automobile Club to the county court here to please accept from Wem me the Barlow road free of charge, an absolute gift, and all the county court has to do is to expend $12,000 a year on it for five years and there after keep the road in a passible con dition. The Oregonian refers to this offer as a "generosity which his friends say you can expect from him. Isn't it grand, magnanimous, gen erous ? All we have to do is to take this Mount Hood auto road off the handB private parties who have fallen down on running it, pay them $60,000 in five years and forever thereafter keep it in good shape for the tourists. Grab it. fellows, before the silk stockings change their minds. Hop to it while it is cold, for it will be a real one later. And if the county court does not think best to accept this splendid gift and the string tied to it, Mr. Wemme asks that they assist him in dumping it onto the state or getting he forest reserve to please father it. But we should NOT let the state beat us to it. We have the first chance at this white elephant and we want to get it into our menagerie just as quick as the county court will permit it. How we would feel if the state beat us to it and we could only pay a part of this $60,000 and perpetual main tenance, when it was offered to us at first. Get it Wire acceptance of the great offer, and then let us call a ratificat ion meeting and have red fire the sane as Oregon City did years ago when we succeeded in giving away in our great water power. Call up Judge Beatie and the Com missioners and urge immediate ac ceptance of this offer the magnam ity of which almost chokes one. WANTED! Girls and Women To operate Sewing Machines in garment factory. Oregon City woolen Mills IS THERE ANY DIRECT EVIDENCE OF NEGLECT OR CARELESNESS OF HEALTH LAWS? HERE IS THE TESTIMONY Read it, and See if the Courier is the Liar as Charged. Last week the Courier had an ar ticle regarding the State Board of Health's investigation of the scarlet fever epidemic at Clackamas. The article quoted from the Enter prise a statement which read in part: No evidence was" introduced which showed that Dr. Norris was guilty of willful neglect and that he had been careless." To which the Courier made this comment: 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 ne glect or carelessness, and there is no use in the Enterprise trying, to dump a barrel of whitewash over evidence that is a matter of record. Because of this comment the Cour ier editor has been vigorously round ed up. Flat denial has been made that this office had any truthful report of the evidence that showed neglect or care lessness and the statement was made that the Enterprise's report of the in vestigation was truthful, and that the evidence this office secured of the trial was false. There was only one - action to take under these circumstances and we took that action. From the office of the state board of health we pro curred a copy of the testimony and we herewith re-produce the evidence of the prosecution and submit the matter to the readers for a verdict as to whether or not there has been neglect or carelessness. That readers may better judge from the evidence, we herewith give you in substance the laws of the state . board of health and Lord's Oregon laws regarding contagious diseases: The county judge, county commis sioners, mayor and common council shall constitute a county board of health, ex-officio, whose duty it is to remove all causes of disease, to take prompt action to arrest spread of con tagious and infectious diseases. State Board of Health has power to remove any officer for intemperance, failure to collect vital statistcis, obey health laws, keep records, make re-. ports or answer letters of inquiry. All books and records kept by tne secretary of the county board oi health shall be filed with county clerk and open to free public inspection. That county board o fheaitn snail at once have a quarantine flag dis played in case of scarlet fever and other diseases. That health officer may employ as many persons as is nceessary to ex ecute his orders. No nerson in a house where there is scarlet fever shall be permitted to at tend school or public gathering until quarantine has been removed. Duty 01 every pnysiciun in nmw i report to health officer witnin a hours cases of scarlet fever, small pox, typhoid fever, etc. Duty of county health officer to re port to state bpard of health before the-iOth-day of each month all con tagious diseases, marriages, births etc., and all alarming diseases at once. No person can return to scnooi ai- ter havinir had a communicable dis ease without having a certificate from physician that all danger of commun icating disease is past. Quarantine card must be piacea at both front and rear of premises where there is a case of scarlet fever. Everv house having scarlet lever, typhoid fever, etc., shall be disinfected under supervision of health officer or deputy. Scarlet fever shall be quarantined 30 days, and isolation of patients for 10 days after removal or quarantine; not re-enter school until 21 days after quarantine is removed. Following are the questions and answers or prosecution. . witnesses, which we submit In proof of the statement made that there WAS evi dence to show carelessness or neglect There are 21 typewritten pages of the comblete evidence, and it is too lengthy to be printed entire in one Is sue. Testimony of E. H. Sarchet: Ex amined by John Sievers. Q Did you have Scarlet iever in your family? A Yes, one case. Q Were you in quarantine? A Yes. Q Who was your physician ? A M. C. Strickland. Q Who fumigated your house? A Mr. Doucher. Q Was the County Health Officer there? A No. Q Was he ever there? A No. . , Q When he went back and forth to Clackamas, would he necessarily have to pass your house? A Yes, he would nave to pass. Q When your house was fumigat- (Continued on Page 2.)