Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, July 17, 1913, Page 6, Image 6

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY JULY 17, 1913.
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en.
tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter.
(HE GON CITY 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
Affidavit of Circulation
I, 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, 19
13, has exceeded 2,000 copies, and that
these papers have been printed ana
circulated from the Courier office in
the usual manner.
M. J. BROWN.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 6th day of May, 1913.
GILBERT L. HEDGES,
Notary Public for Oregon
PLAY IT SAFE
Here i3 a line of talk that has
nothing to do with indictments, bridge
contracts, county court or any other
political game, but it won't do you a
bit of harm to chase it down the col
umn, and I hope it will do you some
good.
But it has to do with a problem
that is too little considered a prop
osition that men flinch from.
How many men you will find to
day who will back up and refuse to
reason or think of a matter that is of
far more importance than all the is
sues in our country today.
Am not going to spring it just yet,
for you will catch the drift and drop
it like a hidden patent medicine ad
vertisement. But I'll lead you up to it.
There is no law, nor elixir nor any
any known means to stop a man
from growing old. If there was, we
would long since have had a national
statute making it a crime to run past
sixty.
Every man absolutely knows that
he must come down to the undertaker
and the hole in the ground, yet so very
many utterly refuse the attempt to
solve the riddle of life and unflinch
ingly meet the mystery of death.
They pass it up. Won't think of it.
Won't consider it.
How many, many men do you hear
say that they can't solve the problem
of the hereafter and they won't think
of it?
I heard a bright man say recently
that he would go insane if he allowed
himself to think of death and the
hereafter. And then this man, whom
I have called bright, added to his re
marks that when a man died that was
the end of him, and what was the
use of hastening that end by insanity.
I have respect for tho opinion of
any man who can sustain it.
But when a man sticks up his piti
ful, punny little intelect as an argu
ment against a wonderful universe,
against a sun that rises and sets
against the law that moves the mil
lions of stars in their courses, against
a power that makes life and motion
a power that makes a world teem
with vegetation, that dispenses heat
ana cola, showers and sunshine
when a man will look these wonders
of administration in the face and say
there is nothing behind them, I believe
the more he thinks of them and the
sooner he becomes insane the better.
It b human to dodge the hard prob
lems of this life as best we can and
take a chance on the next. What we
can t understand, manv of us won1
believe, yet because we can't believe
we have no right to condemn.
I don't care how you may reason.
what you believe or disbelieve. The
cold clamy facts that we can't get a
way from is that we must die.
Christianity tells us tl ? end is not
in the grave.
If you can believe you ure alive, you
you can believe in a power that gives
you ma.
If you can believe in that power you
can believe in a life and a hereafter
beyond the grave.
And where's tne wron in playing
if safe? Tho man who believes in a
uoa ana a hereafter plays it safe at
ootn enas.
In the judgement of the Courier
there was absolutely no excuse or jus
tification for the shooting down of the
Portland boy by the man with a star
last Sunday.
As we understand it the boy had a
gun in the pocket of his motorcycle
and when a dog attacked him on the
hiehwav he shot that dog.
He had a right to shoot that dog
It was an act of self -protection.
Mad dogs are running at large in
western Oregon. Only last week
man died in horrible convulsions in
Portland, the result of a dog bite.
Overtaken by the officials in an auto
the boy was arrested, his gun taken
away and he was taken in charge of
the deputy sheriff. The number of the
motor cycle was known, or should
have been known. The charge was
trivial, and in a point of fine law it
would be very doubtful if the deputy
had even the right to make the ar
rest, as he made it on hearsay evi.
dence of the man whose dog had been
shot.
And when the boy jumped onto his
motor, after he had been arrested
and started away, this deputy opened
hre on him, shooting him once thru
the leg an dagam through the back.
and one or more shots went wild.
This official had no authority to
shoot this boy. At its worst the
offense the boy had committed was
but a misdemeanor. There was ab
solutely no justification for shooting
him through the vitals or even shoot
ing at him.
And the story of the mother of the
boy is that the dog had been hit by
the first motorcycle and. injured and
that the second by (the one shot)
shot the dog to put him out of his
misery.
It is said that the deputy's defense
is that he did not intend to hit the
boy, but to cripple his wheel, but in
view or the serious consequences this
is absolutely no justification.
If the boy had shot a dozen dogs
and deliberately tried to escape there
would have been no justification for
an official to shoot him. Human life
is of more value than every dosr in
America, and this official should have
known it.
The matter is a serious one, and one
that should and we have no doubt
will, be probed to the very bottom
una lun justice De rendered.
A TIME TO LAUGH
When a man can satisfactorily ex
plain to me what is the dynamo to life
ana tne power that runs this great
world, explain to me thac ft is all run
liKe a gasoline engine or an auto
mobile, then I will say tonr down the
cnurcnes and burn the bib'es.
But until these thousand and one
wonders can be explainu 1 then will I
say piay sale.
When a business depending on the
patronage of Clackamas county for
support, and depending very largely
on tho farmers of this county tot
that, goes outside of its business to
try to injure the Courier's business
we want to give that manager a
gentle litttle tip that he had better
drop it. It's hot. And we would al
so tell this gentleman that the Cour
ier is now running two extra hands
in tho dullest months of the year.
(Emporium, Kan., Gazette. ) '
.Kansas City, Kan., has voted to con
struct a municipal lighting plant.
Judge Hook of the federal court has
approved a plan looking to the muni
cipal ownership of theKansas City
street car system.
Last week Attorney John Dawson
declared that ice, being a public ut
ility, should be controlled by the state.
Last month a bill favorably consid
ered by a committee in congress, pro
vided for the construction of a gov
ernment railroad in Alaska, and for
the government ownership and lease
operations of coal mines.
All these things have happened in
the past thirty days.
If you were a Socialist wouldn't you
hunt a cool shady spot between two
buildings where the air poured thru,
and sit down in a kitchen chair and
chuckle and chuckle and chuckle?
The really interesting part of the
situation is that about half of the
American Socialists platform for 1904
is now on the statute looks of one
third of the states, and much of it is
in the plaforms of at least two of the
great parties.
The Socialists are ecttinir too con
servative for this country. They will
have to get a move on themselves or
they will be without an issue in 1916,
for the Bull Moosers have stolen the
Socialists thunder, and the progress
ive Republicans declare they are just
as progressive as the Bull Moosers,
and the Democrats say they are more
progressive than the Progressives
themselves. Unless the Renublicans
and Progressives are lying about how
progressive they are, and unless the
Bull Moosers are as short-lived as
their enemies declare they are, the
IS MIGHT RIGHT?
I believe in justice, seven days in
every week, just as much if it were
the street sweeper as the millionair,
and no more.
Up in Coos county county last week
600 citizens waited on the editor of
a newspaper at Bandon and told him
to leave town at a certain date. The
news disuatches state the business
daces closel during the notification
I have seen conflicting statements
as to the charges against the editor.
What they were or were not doesn't
matter in this argument.
The editor said he was not guilty
of the charges and this DOES not
matter.
If he is guilty of violations of law,
if he is euiltv of inciting riot in con
nection with the lumbermen's strike
that has lone been on in that county:
if he is guilty of any unlawful acts
or violation of statutes, then he may
rot in iail for all the defense tnis
DaDer will eive him.
But this man says he is not guilty,
and until his defense is heard and a
jury of twelve men has rendered a
verdict on his guilt, that man has a
right to defy that six hundred, and
tne ngnt to protect nimseu.
Todav there is I. W. W. agitation
from Seattle to San Deago, and all
kinds of trouble and expense resulting
The main charge against the agita
tors is that they would get by force
instead of by law that they have
little or no regard for law.
That is the sentiment against this
organization that they council force,
that they advocate get what you are
after by numbers, by right of might.
And because ot tms, citizens rise up
and by exactly the same means by
right of might fight them and drive
them out.
Now what are we coming to when
both sides adopt this method.
The citizens of Bandon did just ex
actly what they are running I. W. W.'s
out of town tor doing using lorce in
stead of law or justice.
Editor Leach was entitled by the
laws of Oregon and by state and na
tional constitutions to trial 'by jury
to determine his guilt or innocence,
and when the citizens would force a
man to leave his home and business
would "run him out of town" without
trial, those citizens are advocating
and practicing plain anarchy.
This is no way a defense of Editor
Leach. I don't know what the charges
are. I only know he told the com
mittee who ordered him out of town
that he was not guilty, and I know he
has a right to defend that plea.
the one plain point sticks up like
a sore finger.
We have laws enough in Oregon to
put any man in jail when he goes
wrong or becomes dangerous to the
peace and security of the community.
And we always have laws that give
every man a right to prove .his innocence.
Are both sides going to lfass up
law on the Pacific Coast and fight it
out by right of might?
it seems to me the whole matter is
in bad, and that there is a different
TEAM WORK.
This summer strawberries sold
at White Salmon, Washington
perhaps 75 miles miles away as
the crow flies, for $2.75 a case;
while all the Woodburn growers
could realize was 75 cents. The
reason for the difference was that
the Washington folks had a fruit
growers association, and at Wood
burn it was every mar for him
self. Woodburn Indepcnden.
The Japs out at Gresham had the
Oregonians skinned a mile and a half
on prices and markets for the berries
they control a big acreage and they
an marketed together, while as the In
dependent says, with the farmer
was every man for himself.
blowly, but it now seems surely, the
larmers are comming alive and are
bunching up for protection. The
Equity Society in this county shows
the sentiment working out. With all
kinds of obstacles and drawbacks to
overcome this organization of farmers
has kept trying and today they are
becoming a power in Clackamas
county and are getting direct pocket
dook results. Ihey have been doing i
work and getting results that the gen
eral public does not know of, and they
now have under way and practically
working out some plans that will re
sult in a solid organization of the
farmers of this county.
Playing politics with human health
is a mighty dangerous game, and the
people of this county should stop it
once ior an.
Gladstone sets an example that
larger cities might follow with profit,
mat city does all its own street lm
provements, owns its own gravel pit.
street grader and other machinery
and making its own streets at actual
cost. The street contractor will not
get rich in Gladstone.
A $1500 exemption on improve
ments should look good to the man
who is improving and developing Ore
gon, it should look bad for the hold
er of idle lands, timber tracts rail
roads and big business generally. The
question is which are you and how
many are were of you.
Pomona Grange of this county has
gone on record in protest against ex
cessive taxation, and the manner in
which the county court is conducted,
And it looks as if Pomona Grange
had full cause. Clackamas county has
got to be run for less than six hun
dred thousand dollars a year or it will
soon be a good county to stay away
from.
President Wilson is trying as no
other president ever tried to make
good, and regardless of party the
people as a whole believe in his hon
est endeavors to bring about relief
to the little man. But he has against
him the power of money and the old
Kepub'lican party and they are a
power that will make any man go
some.
Senator Lane is making good. He
makes it his business to dig into the
vitals of every bill that carries coin
with it that comes before his com
mittee, and to know just where that
money is going and what it is going
for. For a new in the upper house he
has got onto the job with surprising
quickness, and the working class are
getting wise that he is on the job for
their benefit.
An initiative law that exempts a
man's improvements to the extent of
$1500 will do much to incourage
workers and develope the state. This
exemption from workers taxes will
have to be raised from some other
means, it is true, but it will be raised
from those who have means to pay it,
It is simply a bill for the working
class, for the little man that class
that does the bucking up for Oregon,
And that is the class that needs re
lief.
The words Democrat, Republican,
or Socialist never enter into the re
call matter. It is not n party fight.
Politics is never mentioned in connec
tion, and in the matter of considering
candidates to run against the county
court party has never been the least
considered, pr the party of the men
even known or asked. An illustra
tion of this is the signature of T. L.
Turner to the Pomona Grange pro
test printed on page 1. Mr. Turner is
one of Clackamas county's staunchest
Democrats.
Socialists might as well go out of
nusiness, for all the great parties will
uu swiping ine oociausts planus,
Which is funny. But it indicates
tho people have begun thinking along
economic lines, ana that the politic
ians are beginning to capitalize the
popular tendencies.
Men are up in rebellion all over the
country because they are paying far
too much tor the benefits they get. It
is a three shell game that is being
worked on them, and they are getting
wise ana wrntny. Ana out ot it will
come a weeding out of unnecessary
The more power the rulers have, the
less liberty the people have. Patrick
1 love.
Taxation has reached a piont where
t is almost public looting, and it is
time for men to stop it.
Nail It Down While You
Have It.
There is only one time to save your
money before it is spent. If you have
a feeling that you wish to accumulate
something for future needs, come to this
bank today and start a bank account.
One dollar will do for the first deposit.
The rest is easy deposit a part of your
earnings regularly and you will be sur
prised at the results No time like NOW
to begin.
The Bank of Oregon City
OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY
bureaus, departments, commissions
and "made jobs; out of it will come
a system that will force the man el
ected to office to do the work he is
elected to do, instead of appointing a
string of deputies to do the work; out
oi it win come more honest govern
ment and more economy in public af
mirs. Ana lacKumus county pre
sents tne nrst opportunity for
change m Oregon. You voters will
have a chance for a new countv court
ana a cnange in county management
next month. You will have an op
portunity to go on record for a chance
or as Deing satisnea with the pres
ent system and the present results.
Chautauqua lecturers are not
to be taken too seriously for they
usually give what will please their
audiences. What they may say
on public questions is not always
to be considered as expressions of
their real sentiments McMinn
ville Register.
In other words a plain bunco. T
that it ? . . And are the people of Ore
gon fish enough to lav down their
coin at the box office to hear not what
they should hear, but what they want
to hear? And are our celebrated Chau
tauoua speakers on the market with
any kind of a doctrine the manage
ment will pay for? Do they lay out a
variety of arguments, put a price on
mem, ana advocate tne ones paid for ?
Can this be so?
Rev. Henry Spies is handing out
some facta and questions that burn.
What do you voters think of them and
tho way public health has been made
politics of? Why do not some of the
otticials of this county defend them
selves against his charges if they
can? The reason is they cannot. Mr
Spies has the goods on them, and he
is showing up a condition that white
men should not long tolerate.
It makes men grit their teeth when
they read column after coulmn of the
disclosures of past congressional rot
tenness and worse than theft.
Look at the disclosures of that
manufacturers association, maintain
ing a great lobby at the capitol, ex
pending a quarter of a million dollars
yearly, buying and bribing represen
tatives, defeating just laws, and giv
ing the working class the worset of
it.
And then we wonder at the unrest
in this country.
LABOR.
So far as my observation goes, few
men work themselves to death.
They may worry themselves to death
or dissipate while working and so burn
the candle at both ends, but good,
hard, honest work Is a tonic rather
than a health destroyer.
Don't be afraid of doing too much.
If you get the work habit the exertion
will not exhaust you. It Is the men
who work by fits and starts that are
worn out by the unaccustomed effort
rather than those who keep plugging
at It all the time.
The only thing is to keep up your
Interest, buoyancy and spirit If your
work ever becomes drudgery, then It
will wenr you out. but not otherwise.
Moreover, we become capable to do
by doing. Man has an almost limit
less capacity to adjust himself to what
ever task Is before him.
We must economize In work as In all
other things, make no false motions
and conserve our nerve force. There
Is a secret about efficiency, and happy
Is he who finds It.
A man can Invent new and better
ways of doing things, Just as he can
Invent a machine. There are more la
bor saving devices than are made out
of wood nnd steel.
It is all right to talk about short cuts
to success. Even short outs require la
borlabor of the brain.
I have heard of a few Indolent great
men, but never of one who was great
because of his Indolence. Moreover, I
have suspected that even those men
who are seemingly averse to outward
effort keep up a prodigious thinking.
Did it ever occur to you that work.
will and win begin with the same let
ter? The same Is true of laziness, loaf
ins and loser.
The highway of achievement Is pavea
with labor. It Is the only way to keep
out of the mud.
Suprising Cure of Stomach Trouble
When you have trouble with your
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II. M. CKUOHS. President. Albaar CoUetre
Albany. Oregon
I note the Methodist conference
passed a resolution favoring direct
legislation, and I ' haven't seen any
protest that the church keep free from
pontics as yet.
Direct legislation is the people's
power and 1 don t know why the
Methodist church or any other church
should not endorse it and stand for it
just as earnestly as they would for a
temperence measure.
The action of the Methodist con
ference is to be commended. It is
simply an endorsement of majority
rule.
If ever a man went up against a
stone wall it is Governor Sulzer of
New York in going up against Mur
phy and the Tammany bunch in his
efforts to give New York a direct pri
mary law. Tammany Hall is some ma
chine. It controls the legislature, be
the members Republicans or Demo
crats, and the legislature will not al
low the people to have the laws and
the power they need to clean up. But
it will come. No power on earth can
long stand against a public senti
ment, lammany dies hard, but it has
got to die. Hughes had the bunch
against the ropes when he was gov
ernor, and the people thought they
had Tammany shaken loose, but Taft
tne handy man, cave him a judgeship
and Tammany and big politics tight
ened their hold for another run.
THE GOOD OLD SUMMER TIME.
When the green gits back on the trees an'
bees
Is hummln' aroun' ag'ln
In that sort of an easy, go as you please,
OI' way they bum roun' In,
When you ort to work an' you want to
not
An' you an' your wife agrees
It's time to spade up the garden lot.
An' the green gits back on the trees,
Why, I like, as I say, sich times as these
When the green, you know, gits back on
the trees.
James Whltcomb Riley.
I quote from memory, not having
seen the poem In fifteen years, so do
not mind If there should happen to be
a comma misplaced. Hut, at any rate.
the sentiment is there.
Well, It is coming again, the "good
old summer time." You can feel It la
the air right now.
And I like It don't you? Every sea
son Is good, but summer well, sum
mer Is the wine of the year.
Tbe bees like summer, and the bees
have more sense than some people,
The birds like summer. So do the
flowers. So does the small boy.
Some people picture heaven as a
place where summer never ends.
Well, they do not have to go to heaven
to find that condition. Tbey can get it
In southern California or down around
the- equator.
But there can be too much of even
as good a thing as summer.
These little winter absences heighten
our enjoyment of it, Just as we appre
ciate home the more when we have
been away.
Winter Is a good thing because
whets the appetite for summer.
The sun is a magician who by mere
ly looking upon tbe fields and trees
covers tbem with verdure and bios
soma.
He Is an artist who uses the earth
as a canvas and places thereon colors
co m pn red to which man's best crea
tlons are but weak imitations and
daubs.
He marches northward, and a belt of
green advances before him announcing
his coming.
When he has reached his farthest
north our bleak climate has the miracle
of June.
No wonder the ancients fell on their
faces before the rising sun.
When summer comes man would
cense work, so enraptured Is he with
the mere luxury of living.
Tbe sun looks upon the wbent fields
nnd they grow golden Into harvest
upon the flowers and they turn their
faces toward him with pleasure, upon
the fruits and they blush red In ripen
Ing.
The sun Is king ilud summer Is hh
queen. To this royal pair man ever I
a loyal subject.
rill 5
The Earning Power of a Man
Depends Upon Piysical Dondition
Restful Sleep Invigorates
Our Cotton
Ureses
it
If you voted or were registered at
the last general election you will not
have to register at the comino- romli
election. But if you did not vote or
was not registered in 1912, you will
have to register before you can vote
I GIVE THEE ETERNITY.
How many paltry, foolish, paint
ed things
That now In coaches trouble
every street
Shall be forgotten, whom no
poet sings,
Kro they will be wrapped In
their winding sheet,
Where I to thee eternity shall
give
When nothing else remalneth
of these duys
And (ulceus hereafter shall be
glad to live?
Upon the alms of thy superflu
ous praise
Virgins and matrons, reading
theso my rhymes,
Shall be so much delighted
with my story
That they shall grieve they lived
not In these times
To huve seen thee, thy sex's
only glory.
So shalt thou fly above the vul
gar throng,
Still to survive In my Immortal
song
Michael Drayton.
Impure blood runs you down mak
es you an easy victim for disease. For
mira Wood and sound digestion Bur
dock Blood Bitters. At all drug stores. I
n . - i aa '
METAPHY8IC8.
That the spirit of man will
ever wholly give up metaphysical
Investigations is just as little to
be expected as that In order not
always to be breathing bad air
we should stop breathing alto
gether. Metaphysics will always
exist In the world and, what's
more, exist with every one, but
more especially with reflective
men, who, in default of public
standard, will each fashion it in
his own way. Now, what has
hitherto been termed metaphys
ics con satisfy no acute mind,
but to renounce it entirely is
Impossible; hence a critic of
pure reason Itself must be at
Inst attempted and when obtain
ed must be investigated and sub
jected to the universal test, be
cause otherwise there are no
means of relieving this pressing
requirement, which means some
thing more than mere thirst for
knowledge. Immanuel Kant.
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Price 11.00.
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Promote sound, refreshign sleep. You get up in the morning refresh
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The worker who sleeps on a good mattress is always "on the job"
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A good mattress is not a luxury, it is an absolute necessity to the
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Made of pure, staple cotton processed into a big, billowy batt
encased in a high-grade tick; a pillow for the body.
Piice from $8 to $20
Frand Btisch
Farnitttie and Hardware
THE BEST WAY TO VISIT THE
Worlds Greatest Exposition
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
1915
is to use the plan of the
Northwest Panama-Pacific Tours Co
Get all information and pamphlets FREE
Make your reservations NOW. Write our local agent.
U'Ren & Schuebel's Office
Oregon City Bank Building
B. Kuppenbender
OREGON CITY, OREGON
SUMMERING AT
Tillamook County Beaches
"Nature's Playground," as these beaches have been called, are
now open for summer visitors. New hotels, with allm odern
conveniences, cosy cottages, camping grounds and
Double Daily Train Service
Leaving Portland daily 8.45 A. M.
" "daily except Sunday 1.20 P. M.
BEACHES REACHED IN FIVE HOURS
Business men can leave Saturdapoints in time fo rdinner, spend
y afternoon and arrive beach the evening and Sunday with
the family and return to Portland Sunday night without loss of
time from business.
Round Trij Fares Prom Portland
Season Tickets on sale daily $4 00
Week End (for return Monday) ' $3 00
Corresponding low fares from other points
Call for brand new folder "Tillamook County Beaches."
'In,
SUNSET t
lOGDENaSHASTAI
ROUTES
Folders and full information
from any S. P. Agent or at
Citq Ticket Office
AO Sixth St., Cor. Oak
JOHN M. SCOTT
General Passenger Agent
Portland, Oregon