1 OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, APRIL 11 1913 OREGON CITY COURIER! Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en tered in tlie Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter. OREGON CITr COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 5-1 Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J. BR.OWN, EDITOR SUCKERS! Congress has opened and now comes the big scrap and the long scrap for free wool and free sugar. And we will have log-rolling button pulling and vote trading for weeks. You will see southern sugar senat ors swapping votes with western wool growers; you will see the sugar trust, the wool trust and the whole bunch get into this scrap; and no doubt when you get through with it you will see the senate compromise on a bill that won't be worth the fuss and a bill that the wool wearer won't notice. How much wool goes into the suit of clothes you take a chance on in this 1913? How much does the Oregon sheep grower get out of the wool that goes into a $25 suit of clothes sold today? He could stick the amount he got for the wool that went into that suit in his left ear and it would not bother him to hear or cause him earache. Colliers showed up that bunco deal two years ago, and showed up how the grafters were simply using the "poor wool grower" as the same old goat to hang a sympathy bunco game on. Won't we ever wise up ? When a manufacturer makes a but ter counterfeit he has to label that tub of grease for what it is. He has to tell the purchaser "this is counterfeit, and being such we sell it cheaper." The dealer has to tell his customer the same thing; that the grease is an imitation of butter, and the customer may take his choice. If the hotel or restaurant serves the oleo on its tables it must have signs on the walls telling the eater that the counterfeit is being served him. Now why not handle the wool bus iness in the same way and we won't need any tariff protection. Handle this way, let down the gates to Australia, and ' the result will be better prices for the growers' wool and better value for the wearer's coin. Pass a law that will make the man ufacturer label that suit of clothes and state just how much wool, cotton and shoddy it contains. Can't do it? SURE you can do it, and do it just as tight as the pure food law does it. The result? You know what it will be. You know you will buy the WOOL suit because it is cheaper in the end. You will get a WOOL suit when you pay for one. The cotton and shoddy will not sell as it sells now, because NOW you let them rob you, YOU can't tell the diff erence. When you GET what you pay for you will get wool. When you get wool the demand for wool will increase beyond all expec tations, and the result will be that - wool prices will go UP, at the same time the wearer will get double for the money he pays now, because he will get HIS MONEY'S WORTH. There is demand enoueh for wool in this country alone to take the coat off every sheep's back in the U. S. or Australia and yet keep the prices up and you may keep on your tar iff or you may take it off. The present system of clothing graft is a hundred times worse than passing counterfeit money. The man- uiacturers and the wholesalers and the jobbers get it, and the wool rais ers at one end and the wool wearers at the other pay the rotten steal which our government sanctions.- Never thought of getting together and telling Oregon's Washington bunch to frame up such a law and stand by it, or you would kill them off at the next election. Well, take the gaff, you suckers. Let them throw the spear in. Let them skin you, and swear you like it. The Chinaman still plows with a crooked stick. IN THE NEST OF THE FUTURE Some day, as we grow, learn and shake off mouldy precedents, cities of our size will have a city manager, and will be run as our big mills are run on a business plan. When that time comes, one man will run and be responsible for the city, just as a superintendent is re sponsible for the success of one of our mills. . Politics will not give him his job nor pull keep him. He will be hired because of what he has done and he may come from Portland, Ore., or Portland, Me. . It will be a business . idea, and a man who knows the business will car ry it out, just as one man who knows his business is putting through a work at Panama that the whole French government couldn't put thru on a political plan. Get one man, one good man, one who comes high because he knows the job, and hand over to him all the ex ecutive work of Oregon City, includ ing the appointments, and make him simply responsible for everything un der him, the framing and execution of policies, enforcement of laws in short, make him make good. Some day we will run our cities like this and we will look back and laugh at the haphazard present system of giving the jobs to men because their names are filed as candidates, who may not know any more about city government than a hog does about as tronomy, and to men who serve with out pay and who make the city gov ernment a side line a job to' be done at odd hours. Some day we will revise our form of government and our charter, we will make it business, and the people will vote on it. It seems that every move President Wilson makes and every word he says brings him closer to the people. Read ing his own message of eight min ute's length was his hits stand-in. The Enterprise must have run short of "O's" when it said there would be 50 farmers in to attend the mass meeting lust Saturday. WHY? Here's a new and novel one thi country will keep its eye on. Some will call it municipal expans ion and some will call it Socialism. Cleveland, Ohio's, city council has purchased 94 acres of land in the city, paid $122,000 for it, and will build' hundreds of moderate-priced houses for the laboring and poor people, the houses to be rented at a price that will pay the city an investment and at the same time much lowar than the rent of places owned by private par With honest and efficient manage ties. ment this idea is bound to be an eye opener. The Panama Canal has shown the world what government control and co-operation can do, and a city-controlled project can show just as pro portionally big benefits. The devil of it is, if the Ohio idea makes good, some fellow who does not know any better will stick his head up and ask if a municipality can operate 94 acres to the advantage of tne people, why can't it run and con trol the whole city? And there you go. If the people can run a city why not a state, why not the railroads, telephones, tele graphs, coal mines and manufacture their own necessities? YOU PAY THE LOSSES Some time ago when the state leg islature first convened, a bill was pre sented, or disiussed, regarding state fire insurance, and Governor West en dorsed it. Among the comments and criticisms I clipped one, which show ed deep thought, but . neglected to note from which paper it was taken. The publisher will doubtless recall, however. The criticism goes on to tell the taxpayers they have responsibilities and taxes enough, without having to pay the lire losses of Oregon and take over another loan --and along that line of bunk. It is to smile. Do you fire insurance policy payers think the insuranca companies pay fire losses? If you do forget it. The fire losses are absolutely paid by the men who have insurance polic ies. There is no argument on this point. The insurance companies are simply the agents that collect, and disburse your money, and as middle men they take a big rakeoff in sal aries, expenses and profits. State insurance would cut these out and you would get your insurance less the middleman's share, and you would have a policy that would be fully if not more secure. "THEY'RE OFF." LET POLITICIANS RULE Woodburn Independent) Because the initiative and refer endum have done away with the old log-iolling tactics by which appropri ations from the state treasury could be secured in almost any amount and for almost any amount and for.al most any purpose, the Eugene Guard, whose ox was badly gored bv the vot ers lust fall, wants the judge to be given power to say what measures shall be referred to the voters and which shall not. The voting down of the big university appropriation at the' last election, showed that the people did not want that half a mill ion spent for new buildings at the un iversity; but the Guard wants it fix ed so that the university will got the money whether the people are willing or not. In other words, it wunts some power in government superior to the will of the people. Our opinion is that it will have to wait manv a lone rlnv before the pcoplo will voluntarily di vest themselves of the powers they have taken into their own hands by the initiative 'and referendum provis ions of our laws and our constitution. Monday the Democratic tariff bill was introduced in the house and it is some bill in the way of letting down the tariff bars. It is the most sweeping bill in the history of the United States for free trade relations and the American people will watch every move and the move of the men who push it or hold back on it The time has come in this country when the masses have lost faith in protective policy which does not pro tect the masses, and last fall's vote was notice any man could read that our people want to try a change. And certain it is that if the admin istration tariff bill passed in anything like its present form the people of this country will soon after find out whether lowered tariffs will lower duties, or whether big business will even then be able to regulate supply. demand and prices. Here are a few of the changes the tariff bill includes: Congress, by a majority vote, may open reciprocity agreements with any country. On the free list are lumber, and a long list of manufactured arti cles from lumber. On the articles known as necessities there are sweep insr reductions on soap and flannel and the free list -embraces bicycles cutlery, hogs, bran, bread, eggs. meals, saddlery, leather goods, build ing stone, iron ore, nails, horse-shoes, typewriters, sewing machines, cash registers, posts, laths, pickets, shing les, timber, hewn, sided or squared, fish, milk, lard, flour, potatoes, salt. flax straw, wood, pulp, Bibles, coal coke, hides, boots and shoes and ag ricultural implements. Raw wool. goes in the free list, cot ton schedules are cut deep, all iron and steel get the ax, schedule "K" is shot to pieces, clothing goes down 30 per cent, carpets 35. An income tax clause provides for 1 per cent on all incomes of over $4,000 annually, and an additional surtax of 1 per cent on all incomes in excess of $50,000 with 8 per cent on all additional m excess of $100,000, Sugar, molasses, all chemicals, brick, tile, asphalt, etc., take a big fall; fruits get big cut; olives and olive oil, figs, raisins are on the down cut. Fish are free, all print paper and books are lowered; rice, hemp, flax and hundreds of other articles are re duced. DAGO DOINGS INDUSTRY usually lias its substantial reward, but all the industry in the world amounts to nothing if the reward is thoughtlessly squandered, A small portion of your earnings deposited regularly in this bank will by your mainstay in time of trouble. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY (Morning Enterprise) The interested public had its eyes opened Saturday at the meeting call ed for the purpose of condemning the Clackamas County Court. The frame up, for it was nothing else, was plan ned to a nicety, as was evidenced by the reading of the names of the mem bers of the resolutions committee from a paper that Chairman Smith promptly extracted from his pocket, It must be admitted that several hun dred farmers were in bad company but they did not see the game. Credit for the arrangements must be given E. D. Olds, who for years grew fat on the country pay roll, and who had a natural peevish disposition over be ing separated from the county exc-chequer. The Enterprise has no idea that the people of Clackamas county are going to let Olds, Bob Schuebel, S. L. Casto, et al do their thinking for them. The divorce of Olds from the pay roll is too recent for that. Mr. Casto, as president of the Society of Equity, has a deep rooted grievance because the County Court declined to permit the courtrooms to be Used as a meet ing place of the society. We don't know what pains Mr. Schuebel, but maybe his neighbors do. As we understand it the plot is to make a report scoring the members of the county court and to recommend their recall. Perhaps a sufficient number of signatures can be obtained in Clackamas county to bring about a recall election, but we don t think so. If the leaders in the movement had been disposed to have been fair, they would have appointed one of their own number of an investigating committee, permitted the county court choose one member and let the two choose a third. So the public will not sit by in eag er anticipation of the committees' re port. If it has not already been draft ed, it is not because the committee has not outlined its contents. The other day I saw a lank, lean hound, who had eaten too much from some garbage box, let nature and in digestion get the best of his stomach and he lost his dinner. He ran across the street, settled his stomach and went back to it again. And the above editorial made me think of the dog who returned to his vomit. It is hardly understandable that a paper would make such scurrilous charges against a committee which had never met or passed a word in re gard to the matter to be taken up. I tseems almost unbelievable that a paper which asks the public to take it for value received, would charge two men who have lived for many years in Oregon, and whose rep utations for honor and honesty have never been assailed, with deliberate dishonor in violating a public trust. Who wrote the above editorial you may guess, but it was unfair, dirty, and a disgrace to the sheet that moth ered it. Between the paragraphs of abuse it asks why the mass meeting -did not appoint one member, the county court another and let him choose a third. The county court already has its own appointed investigator at work in the court house Mr. Hackett. Mr. Smith, chairman of the mass meeting, appointed W. W. Myers of this city, a relative by marriage of Mr. Beaty, but he refused to serve and Mr. Casto was appointed in his place, Mr. Smith appointed Mr. Myers be cause he had faith in his dead honesty in a matter like the one under con sideration. On refusal of Mr. Myers to act, he appointed Mr. Casto for the same reasons and this paper would like to see the color of a man's hair who will stand up and say he will make a report in advance of investi gation. Only a vulture is happy in digging his beak in a carrion. The committee of three met at ten o'clock Tesday morning and an hour later took the matter of a larger com mittee up with Live Wire members and at noon, in the Live Wire meeting asked that body to appoint a committ ee of three to work with it in the in vestigations. O. D. Eby, W. S. U'Ren and John W. Loder were appointed. Does the Enterprise think these men will help to draw the findings in ad vance? Was this action of the first commit tee railroading? Was it a "plot?" Was this the apt of a committee which had already drafted its findings in ad vance? The Enterprise article quoted above is foul journalism a relic of the ways and means of the old days when men did not question but just believed. rCEE!3 PRINCIPAL PORTLAND AGENTS FOR LADIES HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS, ALL THE LATEST STYLES IN ALL SIZES AT 10c & 15c EACH FULL LINE OF EMBROIDERY PATTERNS PRICED AT 10c & 15c. MAIL ORDERS CAREFULLY FILLED PARCEL POST PACKAGES SENT PREPAID TO ALL POINTS WHERE CHARGES DO NOT EXCEED 5 PER CENT OF THE PURCHASE PRICE. LIVE WIRE CRITICISM Writer Thinks this Organization is in a Rather Embarassing Position Oregon City, April 7, 1913 Editor Courier: We find by refering to the Oregon Daily Journal of Friday evening, Feb ruary 7, 1913, under the heading of "Griffith Dinner Causes Comment which goes on to state that a little dinner was given in the grill room of the hotel Marion at Salem, the pre vious night -in honor of the birthday of Franklin T. Griffith, chief counsel for the Portland Railway Light and Power Co., said - comment came from the fact that prominent members of the Senate and House were present at .the feast, and it followed close up on the heels of a victory won by the R. R. Co, over Senator Dimick's bill to include the water power plant at Willamette Falls, within the limits of Oregon City .although the day be fore Dimick had won a fight, substi tuting a report in favor of the bill for a majority report against it. And it was noted that nearly all of the leg islators who participated at the feast were men opposed to Dimick 's law making ideas. bull lurtner significance was attached to the gathering because it was recalled that two years ago after the defeat of the Dimick eight hour bill in the senate a dinner was given to many members of the legislature Now we find, by referring to the Morning Enterprise of Oregon City, dated April 2d 1913 the article headed "Griffith Endorsed by Live Wires," said article states that at a weekly luncheon the Live Wires unanimously endorsed Mr. Griffith for the presi dency of the P. R. L. & P. Co., to succeed B. S. Josselyn. In a letter to the Board of Directors the Live Wirei state among other recommendations, that "you now have a man in your employ, known and respected by all and whom we believe would get re sults from the start IN THAT HE KNOWS WHAT THE PEOPLE WANT. Now we find by looking up the even ing papers of the 7th of April, that Mr. Griffith has been chosen vice- president all right. Mr. Griffith is a mighty nice man, a fine fellow and cordially liked by his intimate friends but is he the proper man for the Live Wires of Oregon City to worry about? Didn't he go to Salem to fight Dimick and wasn't Dimick fighting for Oregon City ? Didn't this same man Griffith come before the city council a short time ago at Ore gon City and ask for a franchise? Didn't some of his friends and relat ives get a franchise ready to his lik ing and had it ready for him ? Didnt a certain member of the coun cil say that as the ' corporation was represented by one of the best law yers they could get, it was up to the council to look after the interests of the people who elected them? Have we forgotten it? And didn't one of the old honest members of the council get up and pace the floor and remain firm and steadfast in his demands for ustice for the people ? No, we haven't forgotten it And are we ready to hand the river. falls and whatever else he wants to the Hon. Mr. Griffith? We guess not. We thought the Live Wires were trying to work for us for by the side of the article in the Enterprise en dorsing Griffith, was another headed Mills to Have Eight Hour Shift." We know what this means to Oregon City and to hundreds of tired women. and men who work at the mills. We know that Dimick did his level best while at Salem to help us in this matter and when his bill for 8 hours was again snowed under he went to Schuebel's aid and hebed Dull what was left of the Schuebel bill through. urinitn didn t help them or us either. ay referring back to last fall, iust about election time, we remembered that a meeting of the Live Wires ew Dress Goods Are Here The best of all the various weaves and colorings in accord with incoming styles for the new season. Among them are many surprising and pleasing novelties which we are glad to be able to show in advance of the demand, for it enables a woman to de cide leisurely after careful comparison and mature consideration, which is the only real ancTtrue way to buy dress goods satisfaction. Here you'll find satisfaction in style, quality and price. t1 Rfl YARD F0R WOOL CORDUROY Homespuns, Diagonals, Scotch Mix ) I .UU tures, and a great many other high-grade fabrics shown in the latest of Spring colorings. Pure wool fabrics that will give lasting satisfaction. . All are fully 60 inches wide. t9 flfl YARD FOR SILK AND WOOL iSOVELTlES Swivel Striped India )m..UU Twills, English Worsteds, etc., shown in the popular striped styles; also Homespuns, Cheviots and double weight Two-toned Diagonal Coatings, etc., in width from 54 to 58 inches. New Black and White Shepherd Checks; All Widths, AU Size Checks, All Prices. This popular fabric is shown here in all size checks and in all widths. It is a closely woven material that is very durable and one that washes well. The 36-inch width is priced at 45c a yard, 42-inch at 50c, the 60-inch at 75c, and 54-inch at $1.00 yard. J C p ARD FOR ENGLISH VOiLES shown in silk striped styles in the most Jii desired shades for evening wear. It is a very fashionable fabric full 40 inches wide. New Cream-Colored Serges 85c to $2.00 Yard An unsurpassed showing of the fashionable new Cream Colored Serges. They come in black and colored stripes in many styles pin stripes, Pekin etripes, novelty graduated stripes, etc You have choice of many qualities from 44 to 66 inches wide at 85c up to $2.00 a Yard. t1 9R YARD F0R SILK AND W00L POPLlNS-the genuine Killarneen P I a&U Poplins, shown in the new street and evening shades.. Extremely high grade fabric full 42 inches wide. Novelty Colored Fabrics at $1.00 a Yard. At this price you may choose from pure wool fabrics of medium weight in widths from 45 to 54 inches, and in all the new colorings. Especially attractive are the new silk striped styles, the new novelty Vigereant Suitings and Wool Crash Weaves. ' prominent members put up a strong talk against this 8 hour shift, claim ing that it must be hushed up as capital was being scared away from town and etc., that already the com panies were moving their mills away from here that it would be imposs ible to operate the mills here on an 8 hour day basis. Still, in spite of all that the Live Wires can do, we are to have an 8 hour shifts at the mills and the people rejoice that they are to be freed from the long hours of labor and have a chance to live while alive. So it seems to us once in a while a "nigger" gets into the woodpile at the Live Wire meetings and there are moves made that we 'don't believe the Live Wires themselves approve of. TOM, DICK and HARRY. The American voters are going to see Democratic promises fulfilled if Woodrow Wilson can force a govern. ment to make good. He is standing right, dead right and the masses are witn mm. Our Socialist friends say the tariff is only a scarecrow and a hoDe. It be gins to look as if we are going to be able to prove this contention Drettv soon and determine whether it has the key to a lower cost of living. T" 1. I I . . . . . rroDaDiy removing the- duty on Wool. Grain, hnna and Afhan .... ' O J . ' " f .J . . V. V.I1G1 lOVY materials," won't injure the producers one-ienin as much as they have imaar ined it would if at all. They have ueen trreativ fooled bv nrntpot. nniof pumiuiuiis mese many years roit- uwiu journal. For Loss of Hair W will pay for what you us tt Rexall "93" Hair Tonic does not promote the growth of your hair. In all our experience with half tonica th. one that haa don moit to gain our confidence i Rexall "93" Hair Tonic. Wa bar such well founded faith in it that wa want you to try it at our risk. If it does not satisfy you in every particular, we will pay for what you uaa to the extent of a 30 day treatment. If Rexall "93" Hair Tonlo does not remove dandruff, relieve scalp irritation, stop the hair from falling and promote a new growth e( hair, come back to us and aak us t return the money you paid for it, and we will promptly hand it back to you. You don't aign anything, promise any thing, bring anything back, or in any Way obligate yourself. Isn't that fair? Doesn't it stand to reason that we Would not make auch a liberal offer if we did not truly believe that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will do all we claim for it that it will do all and more than any other remedyf We have everything then is a de mand for, and ar able to judge the merits of the things w sell. Cus tomers tell us of their success. There are more satisfied usera of Rexall "63" Hair Tonio than any similes preparation re sell. Start a treatment of Rexall "(3", Hair Tonic today. If you do, wt believe you will thank us for this advice. Two sise bottles, iOe and 1 1. You can buy Rexall "93" Hair Tenia In this community only at our store: HUNTLEY RRflS fif). Oregon - City jyaauft jsari uregoa There la a Retail Store In nearly ever tewa and city In the United Stales, Canada sad Great Britain. There I a different KeiaU Remedy for nearly every ordinary human ill f wpeciilly dMlcned for the panieulst Ul for whioh it u reoommeoded. 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