f, M. J. BROWN, BEING DULY SWORN, SAY THAT I AM EDITOR AND PART OWNER OF THE OREGON CITY COURIER, AND THAT THE AVERAGE WEEKLY CIRCULATION OF THAT PAPER FROM MAY 1,1912 TO MAY 1, 1913, HAS EXCEEDED 2000 COPIES, AND THAT THESE PAPERS HAVE BEEN PRINTED AND CIRCULATED FROM THE COURIER OFFICE M. J. BROWN. Subscribed and sworn to before me. .this 5th day of May, 1913. Gilbert. L. Hedges, Notary Public. CTEL The Farmers Society of Equity ii spreading over this county and th Courier is spreading with it. Its ad vertising columns are good as gold Clackamas County Fair September 24, 25, 26, 27 Canby, Oregon 31st YEAR OREGON CITY, ORE., miURUlliU JUNEC 1313. No. 4 OEEGOM T E WEEK AFTER WEEK ARE IGNOR ED BY THE COURT TAXPAYERS DEMAND ANSWER And they Have a Right to a Full Ex planation of these Charges The Aurora Observer, a newspaper published in Marion county and which can have no personal or political bias, recently stated in an editorial that if one-tenth of the charges were true, there was sufficient ground to recall the county court. There were many matters found by the investigating committee that looked as if the business of the coun ty was not run for the interests of the taxpayers. They were set fourth, one after another and they were printed in the newspapers. Now we want to ask the readers of this paper, in all fairness, WHAT de fense has been made to these charg es? And we want to ask you what is a natural conclusion when no defense is made to charges? The only defense that has ever been made were O. D. Eby's report to the Live Wires, which ignored the real charges; George C. Brownell's declaration that it had not been shown that Judge Beatie was a thief, and the Enterprise defense that the charges were a "frame up." The charges are that the countj court has been extravagant in its management of the county business, and that taxes are unnecessarily high as a result of mismanagement. That the court let numerous con tracts for bridges 'without advertising for bids without having competition. That $163,000 has not been account ed for or explained in connection with the county courts claim that the coun ty is out of debt. That the county court, after re ceiving bids for remodeling the court house, rejected them all; had the work done according to architect's plans, and it cost from $7,000 to $9, 000 more than the architect's say it should have cost. That a contract was let to cruise the timber of this county to a per sonal friend of the judge, to, a man at the head of a tiHOser company in Portland; let without knowledge or consent of the taxpayers, and let for a price far in excess of what it could and should have been let for, had the matter been let under competition. That a franchise was given to a Portland gas company gor Clacka mas county; given without any com pensation or value received to the county; a perpetual franchise, with out any guarantee on the part of the gas company when it should com mence the work; given without any knowledge of the taxpayers and giv en without any demand for such a franchise. That lime was bought for ten cents per barrell more than the price given to Judge Beatie himself by a Port land concern, and that court house material was bought through a com mission house in' Oregon City in which Judge Beatie is financially in terested, and that it was bought in the name of a clerk to hide the trans actions. Then there are any number of oth er matters shown up of bridge build ing matters which looked as if the county was defrauded. There was the matter of road im plements that looked as if the county was up against the three-shell game; the matter of paying $350 for inspec tion of the suspension bridge in this city, and numerous smaller matters of county supplies, etc. What has been the defense to these charges ? George Brownell says it has not been shown that Beatie ever stole a dollar; asks why they hadn't recalled former county judges, and the .bnter- prise says the Courier editor, having lived here only two and a half years has no business to ask explanations from a judge who has always lived here. These, and Mr. Eby's famous Live Wire report, are all the defense that has ever been made. Now men who pay taxes and do their own thinking; men who are not in the "county court ring" and don't get any county court money, these are asking why these charges are not defended. They ask why the proposition to have the findings of the investigat ing committee and Mr. Eby's report submitted to a non-partisan commit tee was not answered. They ask why these charges are not taken up, one at a time, taken up by Messrs. Beatie, Blair and Mat- toon and defended, denied and ex plained. Week after week these chargs have been poked at them and explanations asked. If they could have satisfactorily ex plained them, there would have been few recall petitions signed. The taxpayers have a right to ask for a recall of pubile officials who cannot and do not explain these char ges not only a right but a duty. The taxpayers have the same right to discharge incompetent or dishon est officials that a manufacturing company has to discharge an incom petent manager. The county court needs a thorough reorganization and a getting down to a business basis. It wants men as managers who are capable, honest and who would have as much interest in getting results for the county and for the taxpayers as they would have in getting results from their own bus iness. Because the other fellow or other county has done these things ,is a weak excuse, and George C. Brown CHARGES T M. NEVER ell should be ashamed to look a tax payer in the face and make it. It s a time tor men with sand and backbone to line up and change con ditions. Fail now, and you'll get the hook proper. Rebating Their Own Taxes In last month's county court ex penses we find three interesting items under tax rebates: W. T. Mattoon $20.20 N. Blair 14.30 R. B. Beatie 4.00 The above rebates are to the three members of the county court, audited by themselves. Many Going to Aurora Quite a number from this city will attend the annual barbecue at Aurora Saturday of this week. The trains run very convenient, leaving here at about nine and returning about 4. It is expected there will be 4,000 or 5,000 people at this picnic, as it is an annual affair, with a fine pro gram, and people come from far and wide. W. S. U'Ren of this city will de liver the address. RECALL NOTICE The executive committee wants ev ery recall petition in the county sent in by Monday next, no matter wheth er they are filled or partially filled. He sure that every page on wnicn there are signatures be sworn to on on the back. If there are three or four pages with names on, swear to each page on the printed form on the back. Don't send them in without a not ary's signature and seal, for they will have to be sent oacK. Let each circulator give this mat ter prompt and careful attention and have all petitions in by Monday. Hixecutive committee ELLIOTT BROS. BUSY Take Over Ely Business and Will Conduct Big Department Store Elliott Bros, of Portland, have pur chased of D. C. Ely his stock of goods store and home on Seventh street and are now in active charge of the bus iness. The Elliott Bros, know the mer- cnnt.il business from the eround up and they propose to conduct a strict ly modern department store. For three years they have been looking for an opening in this city, and this purchase gives them the business and location they have been looking for. They are making many changes in .the store and stock and will become permanent residents here. They will buy all kinds of produce. Mr. my cari.ea large siuck. uj. goods. This stock has baen arranged in departments, added to with new summer goods. . Elliott Bros, are decidedly live ones. They are progressive business men, pleasant, courteous fellows, know buying and selling and they will do business in Oregon City. Mr. Ely will visit iriends in the east for some time. "WORTHY OF NOTE" A Point or Two the Enterprise Didn't Care to See It is worthy of note that when bids were opened for the con- . struction of a county bridge across Kellogg creek, near Mil waukie, that sterling patriot and earnest advocate of economy in county affairs, Ed Olds, submit ted the highest bid of all. His bid was exactly two hundred dollars and thirty-six cents above that of the successful contractor. Per haps Mr. Olds figured as "close ly" on this matter as he did on some of the other spans, for which he charged the county had paid extravagant sums. Enter nrise. It is also worthy of note that the bid of E. D. Olds on the public el evator up the hluffs was the LOWEST bid of all, yet the enterprise over looked it. Often the Enterprise has the high est and often the lowest bid on a printing job, but what does it signi Olds isn't kicking. He contended that the law irave him the right to bid on these bridges and that they should be let to the lowest bidder. They have been. That's all. Rut let us look back a little at this Kellogg creek bridge business while we are at it. Weeks aero the county court hid a little half-breed ad in a corner of the Enterprise asking for bids on this bridge, and providing that EACH BIDDER SUBMIT HIS OWN PLAN AND BID ON IT. This was clearly such a rank at tempt to pretend to obey the law, and vet erive the court a chance to give the contract where it pieasea, mat the Courier went after it, showed it up- as a bunco game on competition and a joke on Lord's Oregon laws, that the court DARED NOT PLUG IT THROUGH. When the day came to open bids THEY WERE NOT OPENED. They were handed back without explanat ion. It was evident they dared not go ahead with the deal. So thev re-advertised, this time re ally asked for competitive bids and the lowest Didder got ine joo. And mind vou. John Haft, a farmer, a taxpayer and a sawmill man of this county got it. IT DIDN'T GO TO THE SAME OLD COAST BRIDGE CO., WHEN THERE WAS COMPETITION. These points are also "worthy of note," Bro. Phonograph, but you would not note them. Grand Jury Investigate The crand iurv took up and con sidered the story that was publish ed in the Enterprise last week re- e-ardin? the attempt to burn the woolen mills, but for want of sub stantial evidence it was dropped. The erounds were that the matter was canard, a frame up .and no attempt was really made. is WHAT IS WRONG WITH THE WIL LAMETTE VALLEY? IT IS SIMPLY OVER -BOOMED Speculative Prices so High One Can not Make 6 Per Cent Interest Fifty real estate firms in Port land nave gone out of business dur ing the past six months. i'he reason they have quit is be cause they could not sell enough real estate to stay in the game. The reason they couldn't is because real estate has reached a price limit where people won't buy. It's the same condition in Clacka mas county and the whole Willam ette Valley today. If a manufacturer wants to locate in Portland, an industry that would give employment and help to make steady and staple values, the location necessarily is boosted to such a price the promoters won't take the chances. There are thousands of empty hous es in Portland today. "For rent" signs are thick on all the resident streets. The population of Portland is thousands less than it was a year ago. One might just as well plainly state these conditions as to know them. Portland speculators will call it "knocking," but it isn't .knocking. Portland wants more wheels turn ing round, more men employed and cheaper rents, and Portland won't get these until the money mad let the gas out of inflated values and create de mand. The same condition is true of any city or town in the whole Willamette Valley, except two or three manufac turing towns where business and val ues are made by manufacturing. This condition has got to be chang ed or there will be a heap of trouble out here on Balboa's Pacific coast. We send out literature by tons ask ing easterners to come to the Land of Promise. They come and can't live on promise. Our climate and our "Golden West" booklets entice thousands here. They are largely a class of poor people, who want to better conditions, lhey come expecting Opportunity will meet them at the st"V.n and drive them in free hack to Realization. Then they go up against high pric ed land, no demand for labor, hit the chutes and join the I. W. W's. The quicker the Pacific Coast blows up a few air castles, gets land values down where a man can make six per cent, and cuts out this five and ten acre tract bunco, the sooner will we see the thousands and thou sands who are needed here come here, stay here and get on the job. The sou here will produce anything, that isn't exaggerated, and the cli mate is about the best in this big country, but looking at soil won't pay the. rent, and climate can't be eaten. There is no use telling a man what wonderful spuds, apples, berries, cab bages, etc can be raised on a 10-acre tract, unless you tell that man what he can sell them for. boaking a ten acre tract on him that can't make a living from is the worst form of bunco and bad boosting. We want less 10-acre tracts and 1,000 acre tracts in Oreiron. We want to break up big idle, speculative hold ings and put 40 acre tracts where a man can afford to buy them. We want more factories, more pay rolls, more sound demand and more business. And until we work along these lin es and get results we had better send out tons of literature to the east ad vising easterners to stay east. We're boomed to the limit. JNow it is time to face it. Ten Indicted, One Released Ten of the men arrested in connect ion with the telephone strike riot at Oswego several weeks ago, at which time Fred Ream of Willamette was shot, have been indicted by the grand jury on a charge of rioting, and will have to stand trial. J. C. Ainsberry, the man who did the shooting, was not indicted and has been released for bail. To Go, or Not to Go At the time the Courier goes to press the elevator matter is being considered by the city council. Last week a bid for its construction was accepted, but no contract made, and since the Fourth street proposit ion has come up and various other matters, there seems to be a general opinion that the matter will be delay ed again. CHOKING METHODS Strangle Hold is not Barred, and Foul Tactics are Allowed The Courier was informed Tuesday that certain men and interest in this city had been looking up the records to determine the Courier's financial condition, in the hope of finding place where they could put on the squeeze. Several little circumstances have attracted our notice of late that bears out this tip. We would state for these persons and interests that they could have had all the information they got at the Courier office, and had it a whole lot easier. The Courier published this not long ago. It will publish it again, if it would please or convenience any body. And that isn't all it will do. Here's the rest: We know the people and interests behind this blackmail scheme, and if they try to carry it out; if they try m WRONG WITH 0 1 to use money to cripple this paper so it cannot publish what it wills; if they continue to try to clip its cor ners by keeping worK from it and hunting for places where money can be made to pinch and hush Well, we 11 print their names in pat ent medicine type in the middle of the front page; we'll put a frame around them and hold them up to th- CON TEMPT of fair-dealing people. We knew what we were stacking up eainst when we went into this re call fight, and we will take the con sequences and come up smiling. But at the same time we won't do any meek-and-lowly stunts when you try this sort of game. We'll play the string out we'll go up against you, and we'll go hard. The issues of the recall should be decided on their merits. If a man or official is falsely accused, he can very easily make himself good, and the law provides ample redress for dam ages for false charges. Malicious and false statements can t be made in Oregon and be gotten away with. And these are the lines to fight along. But when certain interests and men would try to cripple someone, to get strangle hold on a newspaper or ed itor and try to choke him off you bunch just go on with that game and see what tne verdict is. And we n make some of you ashamed to go home to your families if you do. And the Courier will come out right on tick every week. The gang can't stop it. We are doing far more business than we did a year ago and we 11 keep right on doing it, for there are plenty of men in this county who despise these tactics, and who believe this paper is not only honest, but right. ' ' Hop to it you fellows, go on with the program, and the very next move you make we will hold you up where the public can look at you and know you as Italians. BEATIE'S SWEET REVENGE, PUNISHING ENTIRE DISTRICT TO GET TO HENRICI What do the Taxpayers Think of Pet ty Acts of Judge Beatie? Editor Courier: Yes! Who owns the county rollers? Our conscientious county judge un dertakes to punish the users of the Highland road to gratify his personal grudge against a man who is doing his best in the interest of the taxpay ers. In answer to a civil question the judge gives a curt reply and leaves the phone. "Some dignity, eh what.'" The Highland road has been repair ed in district fourteen to the extent of having a top dressing put on the old foundation. Of course this loose rock should be rolled before it is all kicked out of place. Some of the suck ers we have had in the past would keep the roller continuously at work rolling a stretcn oi ten ieet at a time. Supervisor Henrici had his road all ready so that the whole could be rol led at once with the lease possible expense. Hut alas! wnen tne supervisor cans up the judge and asks what is the show of getting a roller he received the following reply: "No show at all. They're all busy. You might go and see your friends, Harris and Muralt, They may be able to get -one for you." With that he hung up. Wonder what the judge thinks he is Uf course nao tne request come from one of the suckers who are wil ling to stand by the court at all costs the roller would have been forthcom ing with all possible haste. As it is the judge is boosting his own recall with commendable enthusiasm. However, perhaps it would be m accordance with the advice of the worthy dignitary for Mr. Harris and Mr. Muralt to buy a roller through the Oregon Commission Co., and hire it out to the county at a rate or twenty-five dollars per twenty four hours, After using it for a year or two they could sell it to the county for more than it was worth new. It seems that some of the judge's pets have used this method of tapping the county treasury in the past. During his campaign for election the judge repeatedly amrmed his in tention of giving the strictest atten tion to the county business and that he would be found in his office at all times. Mr. Henrici states that he has had numerous business calls to make at the judges office but with the ex ception of one or two isolated in stances has never found him in his office. Mr. Henrici insists on his right to sign a recall petition without any ad vice from the county judge. It cer tainlv appears to a disinterested per son that he has that right without subjecting all the users of the nigh- land road to punishment. So far as the work of the present supervisor in this district Is -concerned he has accomplished about double as much with the money as some of the suckers did who were forced onto the taxpayers in the past. The judge is hereby challenged to disprove this. The Enterprise gloats facetiously over what it claims a fact, namely that a recall petition fell into a grave. It is the prediction or the writer that the Enterprise will welcome its own grave after the recall is over and its present subscriptions run out. Hayseed Fall Breaks Both Arms A serious and painful accident hap pened to Wallace Johnson Friday last, when shingling on Torn Kel land's new barn at Twilight, he fell with a sliding bunch of shingles, down the steep half-pitch roof over the staging to the ground . He fell head first, throwing out his arms for protection, breaking both arms at the wrist, and bruising and cutting his face. The left wrist was a clean break, but the right wrist was broken in two places. No danger of forest fires juat now. FACTS ABOUT THE E IS AS SOUND AND SAFE AS THE DAY IT WAS ERECTED. PRINTED CHARGES ARE LIBEL Mr. Olds Says he will Submit Same to any Fair Bridge Expert . Editor Courier: June 5 there was printed in the Ore gon City Enterprise (and afterwards in the Portland papers) a vicious, ly ing article, written for the solo pur pose of injuring me as a bridge build er and to take attention from the re call movement under way to remove the county court. The article stated that the bridge was seriously weakened, owing to structural faults, carried the impress ion that it was unsafe and was fall ing down, and that experts would be employed by the county to have same repaired, etc. 1 have built many bridges in Ore gon during the past 17 years, and 1 think I know something about the bridge business. It is my trade, my livelihood, and when a newspaper openly states that my work is unsafe "owing to structural faults," that is a charge I cannot allow to stand, if untrue and a charge that the news papers which published it may have an opportunity to prove, as it is of damage to my business and my rep utation as a bridge man. I wish to state that the charges as published in the Enterprise and sent from that office to the Portland dail ies, are absolute lies. Olds had been talking too much about the County Court and its flim-flam bridge con tracts THAT was the reason. He must be discredited. People were ask ing why my charges were not denied by the county court. They could NOT deny them, so something else must be done. The Enterprise was the ready and handy medium for this Dago work, so this damaging story was printed, printed without a name to substantiate it a sneaking, lying un derhand trick. Since this libel was printed, I have examined this bridge from end to end, top to bottom, not alone but with competent proof, and the bridge is as good as the day it was built seven years ago. The reports of its faulty construction is a frame up- a conspir acy to discredit me and my work, and this can be absolutely proven by any man who is an authority on bridge building. The only matter with the bridge is absolute neglect by the county court in not going over it and having the shrinkage tightened up a work that must be done to any and every Howe truss bridge. As a little circumstantial eviuence that should convince any reasoning man that this article is false and was printed for no other purpose than to injure me for the part I have tak en in the recall, I would state (and these statements can be backed up by official records in the clerk's office) that the plans and specifications for this bridge were furnished by the county court, were drawn by J. B. Tilliston, now of Portland; the bridge was built just as the plans and spec ifications required, and THE BRIDGE WAS ACCEPTED AND PAID FOR by the county court as fulfilling the contract. Do you think it would have been accepted if it was not according to contract? When it was accepted, was it not proof of a contract fulfilled? Was not the county court satisfied that it was according to their orders? Further. 1 would state that i am willine to submit this bridge as it stands today to J. is. inuston, tne man who drew the plans, for his de cision as to whether or not it was built as his plans, approved by the county court, required it to oe num. Further, 1 am willing to suumit this bridge today, after Beven years wear and tear, to any competent bridge man in Oregon, and let him de cide whether it is in a dungerous con dition as charged, whether or not it faulty from workmanship, and wheth er or not Olds and Reed are respons ible? I challenge the county court to make this test. I challenge them to submit the plans and specifications side by side by the Estacada bridge and let a competent bridge man de cide whether these vicious charges are true, or whether the whole mat ter is tint, a Anmnsrina. criminal libel. Who examined this bridge and found it faulty in workmanship? Do they tell you who the "expert was i Do thev tell vou it was a road sup ervisor or county court pet who was sent out there to obey orders and to drive wedges in to make the bridge look bad? W. T. Mattoon. with a husk in his voice and Bob Beatie tears in his eyes, met me one day and told me the bridge was ialling aown, unu no lied and knew he lied when he said it. Aside from rank negligence in not Innkinir after this bridge in the way of keeping the truss rods tightened, it is as good as the day it was duui, wear excepted. I defy any bridge builder, any com nptont man with a renutation (out- Ride of Bob Beatie's pets) to find thin hridire faultv in construction This is the county court's idea of defense against recall charges. It was told me months ago, when the recall movement was frst being agitated, that they would "get me." If they will do it in the open and iln it w ith truth, then I will take it, but the cowards who will stick a knife in a man from behind, who would ruin a man's reDutation and injure his business by publishing broadcast that his work is faulty and will not stand this class of assassins I will fight to the last ditch. E. D. Olds Bib Our Good Old Summer Time And while they are drying up and blowing away back east, the Oregon thermometer does steady work be tween 70 and 75. Only once this sum mer has it got up past the 80 mark. You Must Register Every man and woman in Oregon should get it thoroughly into their heads that they must register before they can vote again. Under the new law every voter must register, but after registering it will not be nec essary again unless he. or she moves from a precinct. But you must reg ister this year. Wonder What Next? Last week the Enterprise had a sensational story about an attempt to burn the woolen mills in this city and Sunday followed with a story of a "dark laid plot" to recall the entire city council. Wonder what next. For P. M. at Jennings Lodge There will be a civil service exam ination held in this city Saturday, July 26 to fill a contemplated vacancy as postmaster at Jennings Lodge. Blanks and full information can be secured from the postmaster at Jen nings Lodge and the local secretary in this city. LADIES GET TO JUDGE BEATIE He Accepts Their Invitation to De fend Recall Charges July 1 Tuesday afternoon, July 1, a com mittee of ladies representing the Civ ic Improvement League of Oak Grove, came before Judge Beatie with copies of the charges made by E. D. Olds, the farmers' mass meeting committee and others, and asked him if he would come before that organization and de fend and explain the charges. Judge Beatie received the ladies courteously and pleasantly, thanked them for the invitation, and expressed his willingness to attend the meet ing and make public explanation and defense of the charges. The meeting will be held in the school building at Oak Grove Tuesday night of next week, July 1. The meet ing will be public and all are invited to attend and hear Judge Beatie's de fense. He also stated he would speak in every precinct in the county dur ing tne recall campaign. . BEAT STATE TO IT County Court Didn't Wait for New Law to Change Things We are informed that Mr. Hackett and his assistant, who have been ex- perting the county books for months, nave about completed their work, and that tneir report will be used to de fend the recall charges. We are also informed that weeks and weeks have been spent by these experts in going over tax books that the county court has probably never seen, tax books that have not the least to do with the county court on the charges made, but which cover the work of Sheriff Mass, the assess or and deputies. ne charges have nothing to do with book experting, and this big ex pense to be borne by the taxpayers, looks like another useless, needless expense, from the fact that the last legislature passed a law, and it is now in force, providing a state Cor poration Commission to go over the accounts of every county, revise the system of account keeping and put every court house on a practical, business-like system, and publish a re port of the condition of every county. But the county court didn't mean to wait for the state, so they appointed he men to expert their own accounts. But what the neonle wan to know is WHY, not WHAT. It isn't figures tney want, but explanations. The Reason Editor Courier: Why I see the Enterprise is wondering why my bid on the Kellogg bridge was higher than others. I am glad to explain. The reason is that the plans and specifications furnished by the county court (either through incom petously or a loop holel vary so that a bidder must take a lot of chances on what they mean and must make his bid high enough to be sate espec ially when he does not "stand in" with the county court. To illustrate: The plans furnished by the County Court call for 10 x 10 posts and caps, while the specificat ions furnished by them call for 10 x 12 posts and caps. It is such matters as these that make a bidder on the outside play safe, for he wonders which they will hand him. The Enterprise might also have noted that W. F. Halderman's bid was next to mine in price. Mr. Hal- derman is the man who signed his name to a letter which I published, and who afterward went before the county court and apologized for doing it. E. D. Olds Millsburg Mass Meeting The residents of the proposed new city on the West Side will hold a meeting in Willamette Hall, Main St., Oregon City. Friday evening, June 27th. The meeting will be called at 8 o clock, and it is expected that all le gal voters, both men and women, will be present. A petition has been received by the committee in charge of incorporat ion, signed by 129 residents of the proposed city asking that the name be changed. A two-thirds vote of those Di-esent will be necessary to re consider the matter, and only legal resident voters will be allowed to vote on reconsideration. At the last session of the Legislat ure a law was passed making it nec essary for people to reside ninety davs in the district proposed to be in corporated before they have the right of franchise therein. Matter of boundary lines will final lv be decided upon and the incorpor ation papers signed, that all may be in readiness to present to the County Court at meeting of July 2nd. TIE GATHERING OF THE CLANS OLD GLADSTONE CHAUTAUQUA TO BE THE MECCA FROM JULY 8-20TH INCLUSIVE Portland and Clackamas County Peo ple Coming by Thousands Are you going to Chautauqua? That's the question one hears on every hand these days, and in almost all cases the answer seems to be an unqualified "yes." The big list of twenty-six after noon and evening programs, coupled with over fifty summer school morn ing lectures, the base ball games, the music, the ideal camp life all these features will prove so attractive that people will find it absolutely impos sible to stay at home. Already the "Chautauqua family" is falling into line here in Clackamas county, and it may surprise people to know that patrons are coming from as far over the mountain as Prineville from Seattle on the north, and from Eugene on the south, notwithstanding the fact that the lower Willamette Valley will be worked to death this year with one-horse commercialized Chautauquas. During the past two weeks 15,000 program-booklets have been sent out, one to every family in Clackamas county and the balance to the women of Portland who annually attend Chautauqua in "droves," literally speaking. The result of this onslaught of publicity is far-reaching and hun dreds of letters from "anxious en quirers," so to speak, are being effi ciently handled by Secretary . Cross and his assistants. Years ago, (for the Chautauqua, you know, is this year celebrating its 20th birthday), a few people used to attend the assem bly. More recently they came by the hundreds, but the year, of 1913 will mark an epoch in Chautauqua attend ance records, if early predictions count for anything. Maybe its the Portland ladies band, which is to give daily concerts on- the grounds; perhaps its the thought of good cooking "a la cafeteria," by the capable women of Canby; or it might be the baseball series to be played each day between the two Oregon City teams, Clackamas, Logan and Oswego; or perhaps the fireworks or perchance a combination of all these features which are added to the regular Chautauqua program. At any rate interest in the coming as sembly is becoming intense. Ihe rush for season tickets will be gin in earnest next Monday and will continue from then on until the 8th when the assembly opens. The" book" plan met with Buch success last year that this year the management will again permit books of 10 season tick ets to go for $2.00 each. This is a sav ing of 50c per ticket, as the regular price is $2.50. Under the book system the holder gets everything the Chau tauqua has to offer for $2.00. Simply get names of ten who are planning on attending the sessions, take their names, and two dollars from each of them, to Mr. E. G. Caufield at the Bank of Oregon City, or the office of the P. R. L. & P. Co., at First and Al der, Portland. They will fix you out in a hurry. Anytime after Monday next. But say if you plan on camping this year and wish the assembly to reserve a tent, phone or write Mr. Cross, the secretary at once. The assembly has only a limited number, and they are going fast. Not the Point Assessor Jack in the Enterprise shows him the county is a gainer of $800 by the timber cruising off a tim ber company's holdings. What the taxpayers want to know is the amount of gain the county could have made if this contract to cruise had been let out in the open. That is the point. Report of Civic Improvement Com mittee to the Live Wires June 24 At this time your committee wish es to report much satisfactory pro gress. A great deal of the work at tempted has been tiresome and tedi ous, much of it being done in spite of opposition from the most unlook ed for sources. However, we believe that slowly a sentiment for better sanitary conditions is being aroused in Oregon City and that already the town is beginning to show signs of improvement along certain lines. The work will be actively pushed thruout the summer months and as this is probably the final meeting of the Live Wires pending a short sum mer vacation, we will report regular ly to you and to the public thru the columns of the press. 1. At a meetinsr of the Committee held last night, it was decided to make an inspection trip covering the barns oi the city. We know that many of these have recently been greatly improved and the value of this single movement in the way of guarding the city health cannot be overestimated. Plans were also adopted for closing up several matters which have been hanging lire for a long time but which we believe are now ready to be consumated. Excursion and Picnic Sunday, June 29th, at Estacada Park, Dancing, Athletic Sports, good prizes, Best Union Music, Admission 25 cents to dance. Given by Kirkpat rick Council No. 2227, Knights and Ladies of Security. The public is cor dially invited to come and have a good time. The best of order will pre vail. "Jeff will make the coffee."