1 OREGON CITY Clackamas County Fair September 24, 25, 26, 27 Canby, Oregon The Farmers Society of Equity i spreading over this? county and thi Courier is spreading with it. Its ad vertising columns are good as gold OREGON CITY, ORE., FRIDAY, APR. 18 1313. No. 48 tl j 30th YEAR. T AT TIMBER CRUISE GONTKAG I JUST WHAT THERE IS AND IS NOT TO IT. AND THE POINTS CRITICIZED Copy of the Contract on File With County Clerk Answering several requests of sub scribers we herewith publish the tim ber cruising contract which the coun ty court made with M. G. Nease of the Nease Lumber Co. of Portland, that readers may know just what there is to it: This agreement, made and entered into this 23rd day of November, 1912, by and between Clackamas County, State of Oregon, hereinafter desig nated as the party of the first part, and M. G. Nease, of Portland, Oregon hereinafter designated as the party of the second part. Witnesseth, that for and in consid eration of the mutual promises and stipulations herein contained and the sums of money agreed to be paid as hereinafter particularly set forth, the party of the second par hereby agrees that he will: . 1 Make a careful cruise and esti mate of the timber upon all surveyed lands in Clackamas County, Oregon, lying outside of the Forest Reserves, which shall cruise not less than one million (1,000,000) feet B. M., or not less than one hundred thousand (100,000) lineal feet of piling to each section of land. , , 2. Make a careful cruise and es timate of the timber upon all patent ed lands situated within the boundar ies of forest reserves in Clackamas fmmtr Orpirnn. a. Make reports upon all lands prnioeH- s-.A reports to contain a top ographic sketch, showing elevation of land above sea level, taken by means of Aneroid Barometers; also showing all openings, clearings, burns marshes rivers, lakes, creeks, trails, roads waterfalls, coal, valuable stone, min eral outcroppings and all other top ographic features observed by the cruisers. Said reports to include a general description of the character of all land cruised, describing its adaptability for agricultural, grazing nthpr mirnoses. after the timber is removed. Said reports to describe the character of the dillerent varieties of timher. irivinir the average stump diameter, tne average number of six teen (It) inx logs p.T wee, me per oentai.e Oi r ui-.aer li.) numbei two (2) and number three (3) logs, and also describing logging condit ions including distance to outlet, simh a railroad or driving stream Said reports also to show damage by fire or otherwise, ana tne proDauim ips nf fire. 4. Use as a basis in estimating saw timber all trees having not less than a twenty (20) inch stump diam eter to a twelve (12) inch top. Use as a basis in estimating piling all trees having a stump diameter ofnot less than twelve (12) inches, nor greater than twenty (20) inches to an eight (8) inch top. 5 Begin cruising said lands on or before December fifteenth (15th) 19- 12, and continue the same subject to weather conditions and make reports to the Assessor of Clackamas County at intervals not exceeding thirty (30) days, and fully complete said cruising on or before July first, laid. 6. Furnish a bond with surety or sureties satisfactory to the County Court of Clackamas Countay, in the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,. 000.00) providing for the faithful per formance of the terms of this con. tract: said bond to remain in full force and effect until February first (1st) 1914. Said bond to be filed on or before December thirty first (31st) 1912. In consideration of the party of the second part cruising said lands and reporting on same in the time and in the manner as above set forth, the party of the first part hereby agrees that it will: 1. Pay to the party of the second part or assigns, in county warrants, drawn on Clackamas County, Oregon, the sum of eight cents (8c) per acre for all lands cruised a' id reported up on by said party of tne second part; said warrants to draw six per cent (6 per cent) interest from the date of their issuance until called or paid. 2. Pay to the party of the second part or assigns on or before the fif teenth day of March, 1913 eighty per cent (80 per. cent) of the amount due the party of the second part for lands cruised and reported upon prior to the first day of March, 1913, and make further payments to the party of the second part or assigns on the fifteen th (15th) day of each succeeding cal endar month after March 1913 of eighty per' cent (80 per cent) of the amount due the party of the second nart for lands cruised and reported upon during each preceeding month until the completion of said cruise, and make the final payment of the re- . maimng twenty per cent (20 per cent) to the party of the second part or as signs on or before thirty (30) days after the completion of said cruise. - It is hereby agreed by both parties to this contract that in case the cruise of the party of the second part shall be disputed and the owner of the tim ber so cruised shall desire to have the same re-cruised, and the County Court of Clackamas County shall make demand therefor, that both parties to this contract shall select some competent cruiser satisfactory to both parties, and the cruiser so se- lected shall go over and cruise the tract or tracts . in dispute, and the cruise of the party shall be taken as final. If the cruise of the party, so selected as arbitrator varies more than twenty per cent (20 per cent) above or below the cruise of the party of the second part, then the compen sation of said arbitrator and expense of such cruise of the arbitrator shall not be more than twenty per cent (20 ner cent) above or below the cruise of the party of the second part then the compensation of said arbi trator and expense of such cruise shall be paid by the party demanding the same. In witness whereof Clackamas County, State of Oregon, party of the first part, by its countay judge and county commissioners, comprising and constituting the County Court of said Clackamas county, uregon, nave hereunto set their hands and seals and have caused the seal of said county to be hereto affixed in duplicate, and M. O. Nease. the party of the second part has hereunto set his hand and seal in duplicate the day and year first above written. Clackamas County, State of Oreg on. . By R. B. BEATIE (Seal) County Judge. By W. rl. MAivUJN (SfJAiij coun ty Commissioner. " . -T . r .in t- T-. 1 T t- I Sy JN. iJUfVltt OEjAIj; i-uuiiior Commissioner. M. G. NEASE (SEAL) Attest W. L. MULVEY, County Clerk. The criticisms of this contract are That there are but few sections in Clackamas County but what will cruise a million feet, and under this contract farms would be cruised for the reasons that while the larm or section may have the million feet of timber, that it is in many locations valueless, for reasons timber is in bunches too small for a mill, too re mote from a railroad, and that owners of land offer to give the timber to anyone who will remove it. Judge Ueatie stated at tne mass meeting that the county court had employed Peter Boyles to check up the cruisers, at a salary of $175 per month. The criticism is that if Mr. Boyles verifies the cruisers' work he virtually makes a second cruise, and if so why should the county pay thou sands of dollars to the first cruisers and hundreds to Mr. Boyles ? If he does not verify the cruisers work, then his checking is of little value and a needless expense. That men are employed and nave been solicited who have very little if any knowledge of the work to be done. That the work could nave Deen done at a much lower price had tne county court let the contract on competitive bids. That much litigation will follow if the cruise is taken as a basis on which to fix taxation. That in order to have a final de termination under the contract, where cruise is disputed, provision is made for an arbitration cruise after Nease, the contractor, and Boyles the check er, have made their cruise. That the contract was let to m. J. Nease of the Nease Lumber Co., a cruiser interested in timber interests. That under the contract dead, rot ten, and fallen timber may be cruised. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Notice is hereby given that the committee appointed at the mass meeting held on the th inst, and also the committee appointed by the Live Wires to investigate charges made against the County Court will hold a joint public meeting in the County Court House, on Tuesday, April za, 1913, at 11 o'clock A. M., for the pur pose of receiving any information that may be in the possession of any person relative to the following mat ters: ' 1. Expense of recent improve ments on the Clackamas County Court House. 3. Expense of constructing bridees in Clackamas County. 3 Advisability and expense of cruising the timber of Clackamas County. 4. Any other matter relative to the expenditure of County funds. All persons with information are invited and urged to attend this meet inc and to submit such information which will be reduced to writing for the future use of the committee. M. J. BROWN R. SCHUEBEL S. L. CASTO Mass Meeting Committee. O. D. EBY JNO. W. LODER Live Wire Committee. m 1 we GET IN THE LINE AND KEEP Ur WITH UTHEK VALLEY TOWNS? HAVE THEM SKINNED A MILE Catching Oregon City's Civic improvement movement appears to be contagious, and we note in several exchanges that societies have been formed along these lines and good work is being done. Recall Talk Talk of recalling Judge Beatie and Commissioner Blair continues strong er than ever. It is said that ex-County Judge Llewellen will be the Farmers' Equity candidate for county judge and Geo. Oglesby for commissioner Aurora Observer. But We Won t Get in the Race and Take the Coin Corvallis. - McMinnville, Gresham, Sheridan, Medford and many other towns are going alter traoe Dy trade-bringing ideas and tney are breaking up the Portland drain." . Albany's commercial club (through an arrangement with the business men) pays the railroad is re oi any purchaser who shows a duplicate sales slip of a certain amount from any of the stores. . Sheridan people have arranged lor market days, where the seller brings in his stock, farm machinery or what ever he has to dispose of to the town and there buyer and seller meet for their mutual benefit and advantage. Town after town is organizing to keep the farming trade from going to Portland. Oreeon Citv. so situated that it is in greater danger of losing trade to Portland than any other town in the valley, seems to be asleep as to this drain, and makes no effort to stop it. If we could keep tne Dusiness nere that our mills and rich farms make this city would be an El Dorado. Can t we do it ienows ; uan t we go after some lines that will stop the cars being daily loaded with Portland shoppers and bundles ? It can be done, in a large measure, and it seems to us with our strong commercial club, our lively Live Wires, or publicity depart ment, our business men end our news papers we could frame up some lines that would do more for the city's growth and good than any other line we could work on. Our citv does not appear to be on good terms with the country. We can find out what the trouble is and we can do a lot to remedy it. It is not serious, but let it run and it spreads like itch. We have a steady stream of shoppers carrying Oregon City gold into Portland every day in the week. There is no good reason why they should not trade here. Give any of the towns of the Will amette Valley our mills and payroll and they would jump to 25,000. We ve got everything but the jump. This is a matter that our commerc ial organization could take up and work out and get bigger returns on than a hundred uboster celebrations or any other city benefit schemes. What we have to do is to find a means of keeping what we have, and when we find that scheme we'll be too blooming' busy to have time for special day stunts to bring people in. The Commercial Club, the Live Wires, the business men, the publicity office and the newspapers could turn this trick by pulling together. We could make this old town hum. Isn't it worth the effort? Did Kot Fill Vacancy J. W. Loder, a member of the coun ty probe committee appointed by the Live Wires, asked that organization to appoint another member to serve in the place of W .S. U'Ren, who was unable to act, but as no one put his suggestion in the form of a motion, no appointment was made. Rural Rout No. 7. Postmaster Randall reported to the Live Wires Tuesday that the Govern ment has taken up the matter of the proposed new rural route to serve the Stafford country from this office, and that it is now but a question of time when it will be established. Are your For or Against? Two referendum petitions have been left at the Courier office for sig natures. Une is tne rejection ot the $175,000 appropriations for building extensions to r the - university at Eu gene, and the other the rejection of the county salary increase bill. If you want to sign them, say so; if not say-nothing. "Prince," everybody's dog on the south end of the city, has been de ported to Vancouver, Wash., where ne nas a good nome on a larm. Prince" was a blue blood and cost $75 when a puppy, but he simply would not stay at home and was a city tramp. Friends kept him in food and licenses for several years, but with all his good nature he became a It was the judgement of the com mittee that the above action was the best means to crystalize this matter of investigation and bring it to a head to work on. Rumors are one thing and facts an other, and what the committee wants are facts, evidence, something defin ite. There has been no provision made for defraying any expense of this in vestigation, and it will be readily seen that the committee cannot go to every part of the county to investigate ru- Lest we Forget May 2, 1843, at a small trading post, on the banks of the Willamette river, about 12 miles west of this city a convention was held tor the purpose of deciding whether the Oregon ter ritory would become part of the Unit- Staves. At the time the "Oregon Country" included all of the present states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, and parts of the states of Mon tana and Wyoming, and a large part of the present Dominion of British Columbia. Thus 1913 marks the seventith anniversary of the Oregon country. The vote taken at the convention was a tie until F. X. Matthieu cast the deciding vote which made Oregon a part ot the United btates. Mr. Matthieu is living in Portland, and just last week celebrated his ninety-fifth birthday. He is the only sur vivor of the Champoeg convention. Woodburn Tribune. We Should Hurry It is evident the timber cruisers are not going to wait the outcome of any county probe on the timber cruising contract. They are sure going to it as if they were afraid it might not last or might be held up. Saturday last there were a dozen outfits piled up on the sidewalk on Main street, of men who had Prince the Tramp. Editor Farnsley Leaves the Enter prise Editor Farnsley ' of the Enterprise who has for two years past been news editor of the Enterprise, has resign ed his position and we understand will go on the Oregonian staff. Mr, Veteor, a New York newspaper man, will fill the position. Mr. Farnsley is a decidedly likeable and capable man and many friends here are sorry to nave nim leave. 1 May it Spread Long stretches of six foot wide ce ment sidewalks are being laid on both sides of Center street, doing away with dilapidated and unsafe wooden walks. Cement walks come hiirh. but thev are far cheaper than wood. A Center street property owner has just torn a wooden walk he laid new only five years ago. The rainy season and sprinkling during the summer put a snort nie on wood walks, while ce ment endures lorever. THE ENTERPRISE E GOUT AND ROBERT SCHUEBEL'S OPIN ION FF THE EDITORIAL UNFAIR AND YELLOW ACTION Findings will be Based on Facts and Records, not on . Prejudice Eldorado .Ore.. April 12. I notice that the editor of the Enterprise and others are Making various comments as to the motives of the men connect ed with the mass meeting held at Ore gon City April 6th. The editor' of the Enterprise seems to have everybody s motive figured out to a dot except mine; also that the committee ap pointed to investigate had already de cided what kind of a report they would make. Now I am perfectly willing to come out in the open and show my hand as I have nothing to be ashamed of so lar. 1 may have gotten mixed up in a bad mess and make some mistakes as we proceed further, but will not willingly wrong the court or anybody else and whenlcity, for the present system people ing plant was working periectly when the samples were taken, and no danger could arise from drinking the water therefrom. This was in answer to a request through the city council to determine whether or not the water was safe for the children in the public schools to drink:. And then we note under date of Ap ril 15 that the school directors have ordered signs to be put over the fau cets in the several scnoois, warning the pupils against drinking the water, and that all the fountains have been shut off. And the Question arises why this action was taken following the analy sis of the water by the state board oi health and its recommendation of same as safe? PerhaDs the school directors have private means of knowing the water is JNUT sate nor lit to drink. And if thev want any more infor mation along this line we would in vite them to come to the Courier of fice and see a glass of water drawn from a faucet in hourly use in a pri vate residence in this city. We would like to have them look at this concoction and determine if they think it would be safe to have a dog- drink it much less a school child. Twice during a forenoon the tau cets on Third street gave out this filthy mess, not in one house, but in several, and any man who has exam ined it would prefer sewer water to it. , , It may not have any "colon bacili but it certainly has the rest. ' It is to be hoped that this matter of a pure water supply may be push ed ahead of everything else in this ALL ROADS LEAD HERE NEXT WEEK TWO DAYS' STREET FAIR WILL DRAW BIG CROWDS CITY WILL GAILY DECORATE THE LADIES' COURIER been hired to go out on the cruising job. mors which may have no value when I and one of the men stated that sixty .. . j men nau ueeii mreu iu uui. ou win investigates . f. n 0:n to t on the What the above men want is in- . , . it . - f . h formation that can be Dankea on, Th contract calls for the comolet- . . 1 1 1 l 1 . . sometning men win pacts up, sume- ,on of tne worlc by Juiy 1 thing to work on and men tney win investigate it to the bottom, and this public meeting will shape things up to this end; it will give any man in Clackamas county an opportunity to put anything up to this committee that needs investigating and win close the door to any after charges that the committee was not thorough in its scope and did not take up all the matters it should. There has been some complaint made of the delay in getting into this matter. In explanation this paper would state that the call for the above meet ing would be worthless unless given full publicity in the newspapers 01 this county, and the 18th was the first date it could appear in the week ly papers. The following week is the state Sunday School convention and booster day celebration in Oregon City, when it would be impossible to have any attention given to this meeting, therefore ' the following Tuesday, April 29, was the earliest date this meeting could be made ef fective. Get a bargain in apples at The Hub Grocery. Nice red apples, all sound and good quality at su cents per dox, A Commercial View of It Regardless of the outcome of the investigations, one thing is certain, Oregon City merchants and business men are being benefited by those oc casional squalls as the 500 men who gathered there last Saturday would leave several dollars each there. It is a mighty good advertising scheme if nothing else and will draw more people to their own town than any bargain sale. Estacada Progress. Changing Three saloons have recently been put out of business in Oregon City because they were convicted of sell ing to minors, or of other violations of the law. City councils and the peo ple generally will not stand for that sort of thing as they used to. Wood- burn Independent. City Will Issue $70,000 Bonds A city ordinance now in passage authorizes two bond issues of Sou, 000 and $20,000 to refund city war rants. Morris Bros, of Portland will have the issues. The bonds will be $1,000 each and payable in 1913. All Kinds of Interest and Curiosity in the Issue of May 2. There are seventeen kinds of inter est in the ladies' edition of the Cour ier of May 2. The copy is already coming in; the ladies are very much interested in the work and it will be the most interesting sheet ever print ed in uregon uty. Last fall the men of Ore'eon Citv gave the women the right of ballot, and this, perhaps, more than anything else, is why the ladies want to make fully good on this edition of the Cour ier. They want to show the men they did not make any mistake in giving them the franchise; they propose to show them that they read, think, that they keep posted on state and nation al matters, and are capable of using ie ballot. And they want to show the men the woman's idea of what a newspaper should be. They will ask you to judge it not only by what is in it, but by what is LEFT OUT. They are go ing to print the kind of a paper they think should be printed, and the kind they think should be welcome in the homes. One fellow said the first page would have six columns of warmed-up W. C. T. U. notes and one column of protest against the divorce evil; that the inside pages would be new stunts on crocheting doilies and how to can cherries; the editorial page would be an even break on "Home Influences on the Girl." and "The Evils of In temperance," and the local page would be confined to items of rela tives and friends of the contributors; the legal page would be left out and the last page a medley of kicks and poems. While the present management has Bhsnliitelv no line on the material that will go in the woman's edition, but here is the prediction that this wag is as far off in his guess as was Mr. Taft's campaign manager, and that he will read every column and every line of the issue of May 7, Sealed communications are already coming in and again the ladies want . . 1 1 : i t : 1 li to extend a general inviwuuu w u thi ladies of Clackamas county to help with material to make this issue a paper men will be compelled to ad mit js good. Particularly they ask the farmers' wives and girls 01 tne iarm to conin k,,t tn this issue. They want th grange and equity ladies to take an intorpst and express themselves on the various subjects of farm life. Bear in mind that this issue of the r.,rior will be in every detail the work of the ladies, with the excep tion of the make-up ana press worn. ..,. lino will bo written bv them; the heads will be set, the linotype will 1 h ihem: the Droofs read in short the office will simply be turned over to the ladies ior mis wee. NO, It ISn l a courier uciici.i.. all is done with, if I have wronged anyone, I will make it right. I .had been out of the county about six years and when I returned the first things I heard were all kinds of reports about mismanagement on the part of the county court and that by men who had voted for Mr. Beatie. I always replied: "Can these things be proven.'" 1 had always considered Mr.tBeatie straight. When I was ap- proa-cneo aoout soliciting names lor the calling of a mass meeting at a certain date I obiected to the Dlan he- cause I did not know anything about the circumstances, so had nothing to do with it, but I did sign my name to a petition for this call for the mass meeting, believing that it would be the best way to uet at the facts, nnri if the court is straight they need fear notning as to tne oucome. I was in the court house the morn ing of the day the meeting was held, reading the timber cruising contract and gathering figures of the amount of money the 1910 court had on March 31st, to do business with and the 1913 court I thought, would give me a line on the conditions con fronting us and I found that the 1913 court had collected according to the figures given by the sheriff and clerk $328,103.37 more than the 1910 court, March 31st, and I thought there might be room for the investigation as the court admitted to me that the county was out of debt, but would likely be compelled to go in debt again by the first of May, which would mean almost a whole year to run on warrants again. I had also been told that the men composing the 1910 court had the indebtedness re duced to $40,000. If this is true the present court had $288,103.37 more money to do business with above the indebtedness as stated to have been the facts under the 1910 court. Now if the court can show that they have made improvemens that are worth to the people of the county $288,103.37, above what the 1910 court did, then I am ready to say the management is just as good as the former court or if sometning shows up that the fig ures are wrong, I will make allow ance for any possible mistake. I took the figures as given me by the sheriff and clerk. I was not at the meeting when it was called to order at 2:00 o'clock. I knew nothing of any resolution com mittee when I entered the hall some time later. was asked to write the resolutions and did so along the lines suggested by the members of the committee. The committee appointed to investigate so far show the disposi tion to want the truth to come out. They have set the 2i)th of April for a meeting to be held in the court house to hear any complaint or phm-CTA mrniriHt thfi court. This is OO- en for all, not spectators, but all who have anything detinue to cnarge which will be reduced to writing for the use of the committee. I think when we are through the editor of the Enterprise will be compelled to craw. fish and I could now show him up as not onlv havine a yellow streak but yellow clear through. I may do so later. As to my position on the timber cruise the statement 1 made in my article in the Courier on that matter I made before I knew the terms oi the contract except for hearsay, but have lived where it has Deen tried anu r Aid nnt mean the court when I said it was a graft pure and simple, but meant sucn men as mis vuuuei v-ium-er who go from county to county to ply their trade at tne expense oi wis people, and do not care a rap what the result will be. My opinion is that the actual cost of the cruise is not the only expense attached to this deal for I look for lawsuits on top of the cruise, and I had this in minu wnen I said it -might cost $75,000 or more. There has been a general complaint against the county court for years and it seems to get worse instead of better. Now I believe if a thorough investigation is made ana tne uuu brought forth as far as can be, it the court is innocent of any wrong or mismanagement in tne iw-u.i., ti.. nio will he more ready to work in harmony with the court iha ntmnsnhere for some 7- if ntherwise time wi tumci , believe it would be proper to be as charitable as conditions wm iic.....v As to such statements as n u, are afraid of and it does more to drive away newcomers than a thousand smnllnnx sitns. When we once get a system absoi lutely pure water we will have one as set we are shy on now we will have the one thing needed to go with a boom for Oreiron City a boom that nothing but dangerous water is hold ino1 hnck. And when we get this quality of water you can bet your life we will have less sickness in this city for you can bet your life again that ty- pnOld ISn l ail Hiai. uriu&lll dcvkci ria ter breeds. HOW THEY SKIN US Henry Hettman of Shubel, was the city Wednesday. in Fif- Parades, Bands, Stock Shows and all Kinds of Entertainment Next week we will have two holi days in Oregon City Friday and Sat urday, and if the weather only holds fine this occassion will be a good op portunity to take a county census. Hie booster day and street lair promises to be a splendid success, both in the way of a big attendance and in the splendid entertainment. The city will be gaily decorated. There will be two bands. There will be fine parades, exhibitions, and ev erything to entertain, instruct, edu cate and amuse. Take the two days off and come to Oretron Citv next week. A hundred years hence you will never know the difference, anil you will live nearer to one hundred years for the two day's off. ' Each year this event has grown bigger and more successful, and this year it was decided to add another day to the fair. If the second day proves a success, it will become perm anent, and the managers have full confidence that it will. Come early and stay ' late. There will be something doing all tne time. WORKING AT OGLE Gang Mr. J. W. Roots, I understand that he sucks the county's teat for his neigh borhood to the tune o $.),000, when others say they could, get noth ng. u this is true his position explains lt- self' R. SCHUEBEL. A Little Local Illustration of Trust Made Methods Here Is a little story that shows you the moves in the trust game, It's the same old story, and the same old game, but this time it is nlayed right here at home, and it may impress vou. H. C. Clyde runs a grocery store at Clackamas Heights, just outside the city. He doesn't have big rent to pay, does not hire $18-per-weck clerks nor does he run a delivery wagon. And that is his business. And because of these economies h concluded he could sell flour at $1.30 per sack, make 16 cents on it and be satisfied with this margin of profit. The flour was his. He paid spot cash for it from a Portland milling company and he THOUGHT it was his business to offer it at any price he thought best. But he soon found out this WAS NOT his business. The niilline company told him the selline price on that brand of flour was $1.40 at all stores and tnat ne must fix that price on it. And when Mr. Clyde argued nis constitutional right to do as he pleased with his own goods, the mill ing company showed him a little later an unprinted constitution business had framed up and adopted, ana torn him to get under it or get flour some where else. . . Mr. Clvde told them he would sell the flour at the constitutional price, because he HAD to, but that he would make every purchaser oi a sack a present of a dime. That was (Jlyue s consuiuuon. il was a little one, but so big the mill ing company will not dare try to stop It's those things that make the day worker raw. He hasn't any associa tion or trust standing guard over his wage scale. No combination steps in and tells the man who hires him he v,oll TIIM a certain price. No trust forbids the other fellow to take his job at ten cents less per day. Anil these combinations fix the price on the most of the standard ar ti.loa nf necessity today. They for bid competition. They fix the price the dealer shall pay und the price he shall sell at. . . And yet we have a great big joke of a federal law that says there shall not be combinations in restraint of trade and competition. Time to smile and swear. IN CRITICAL CONDITION .Doctors Give Little Hope for W. A. Shcwman's. Recovery W. A. Shcwman, who was operated on at St. Vincent's hospital Sunday last is in a critical condition, anu tne physicians state there is but little if any chance for recovery. This unexpected verdict came as a shock to this city, and the people .-,.!! nnt hf.linvfi it. That Mr. Sliew- man was ill was generally known, but it was not thought serious, and it wna fivnucted his trip to southern lfl imnrove his health And it was only when the report of v,i nritifal condition was confirmed time and time again by the physicians and the hospital that the people would believe the verdict. T.,,,1- r.rmrfjl frnm the hospital state' that he is resting easily and that he will soon be taken to his home ut Concord. Mr Showman has friends, worlds ? ti,m in thin pitv and vicinity and the Courier office is Besieged by tel ephone and personal calls enquiring 't u;u n,i!Un fnr it does not seem Ui. Ilia LWimi.iv.., - - , . to his friends here the reports cou.u be true. was Started at the Cyanide plant and Road Work It hardly seems possible that out in the mountains a few miles, at Ogle mine, there are three feet of snow and that men are working in snow to their hips, for the new cyanide plant, fell ing trees for lumber and making a road to Elkhorn. The summers are short at Ogle mine and the company must get an early start to put the plant in running order before winter. The people of Clackamas county have a lot of faith in Ogle mine, and they have reasons for having it. They have watched it develop lot eight years; they know the men behind it, know they have time and again put in their own money to keep the devel opment going, and they know there is a world of ore out there that one af ter another assayer and engineer has said was rich. It's been a hard pull to get the money necessary to put in this cyan ide plant, but when there is gold in a hill, it is a certainty there will be a means to get it out. And the plant the boys are working on is the means. A considerable of the cost of this cyanide process is in labor. Tanks have to be built, big tanks that take a pile of lumber, and the gang at the mine is now felling trees for the lum ber. The mine has its own sawmill. And by the way, now is a pretty good time to take a chance on Ogle mine, now when the money is needed for the work of development and the price of stock is low. When they get to taking gold out you wont be able to buy any. rincfi stock in the Independence ' mine in Colorado sold for a few cents a share, but later on otratton snui, iv down because he had eleven million dollars and didn't know what to do with any more. And once upon a time Bell Tele phone stock was traded for meal tickets in New York state. DOCTORS DISAGREE Health Board Says "Drink" and The School Board Says "Beware. March 28th the state board of i, "- j. ...M ..n nnt a nutillC report wiui nor rpnt OI tne Krosn uruteeuo vi i ueaitu bkh vv - . i. e r t"18 edition g . . I. !..! umnlrl nrftVfl that the filter ed by them in cnurcn anu oui vui. Bnoijom r May Head Portland Normal T. J Gary superintendent of schools of this county, has had the flattering offer ot the presidency oi a nuuum school to be opened in Portland soon Mr. Gary is considering tne oner. Soma finn annlcR. medium size, 80 cents a box at the Hub Grocery, 7th. and Center streets. HAVE WAITED 70 YEARS Now il is Time for the People to Rise up and Take Action Editor Courier: Seventy-two years ago in the polit ical campaign of 1840 tariffs and tax es were the themes of conversation among most of the men. And every .......... frnm thnt day to thlS. We have had more or less a repetition of the same agitation. Politicians were profuse with promises, but sucn promises invariably fell still-born up on the people. And today our prayers go up that we oe rouueu u w We thought we gained sonnam..B through the initiative and referend . tiu nnnnio. Hut men have abus ed the trust confided to them and to day I wonder U tne people uuvo ed really half as much as appears on the s. u face a ,'notfi nf libertv and justice is at all times sweet and the small tastes we have had from time to time uuu spur us on for more. And to legislate for the future becomes the question of the day. . . Some men are advocating the abol iftnn nf hnth the national congress and the state legislatures, and substi tuting a more direct expression oi the peoples' will in all that pertains to lawmaking matters. Such propositions sound well ana certainly not out of reach of the av erage American mind today. Reresentative tiiu s suggestion tnat we adopt precinct legislation is not without merit. In such a move the national con gress should lead the way by dividing the whole of our vast territory into just fifteen election districts, having care that each district contains an equal number of people as nearly as practicable as n. can ue. nnu bulu uij trict to send one member to a national council to meet at Washington City, there to frame national las to be submitted to the people tnrougn roi erendum. And I would suggest that the states adopt the same plan of district divis ion, only I would confine the division of a state to nine districts, yet each district to send one member to meet in council at Salem, there to frame state laws to be submitted to the peo ple either for adoption or rejection through referendum. vr, One prophet said "I saw Ephraim (Continued on Page 8, Col. 7) 'ft