OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY JULY 24, 1913. OREGON CITY COURIER Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en tered in tlie Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter. 01: GON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANYPUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Pries $1.50. Telephones, Main 5 -1 ; Home A 5 Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J. BROWN, 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 and 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 JUST LICENSE. Punishment by fine is about the biggest bunco game that justice ever nut over. In the case of the poor it is pun ishment of the innocent, and in the case of the rich it is no punishment at all. A bunch of young bloods will go to town, hoist in a few and then start something. A cop gathers them in and a justice says $5 each. They are arrested for breaking the laws, but they are not punished, A father of a big family, addicted to the booze habit will get on one of his periodicals and a cop will pick him up. A justice sings a five or ten dollar song and the prisoner is de tained while the wife or boys go out and dig up the coin. The punishment is on the family, not the transgressor In high up circles some Napoleon sees a way to skin a community, tak ing the chances that he has a handi cap on justice and that he can beat it to the boodle. He plugs the game until they get him and then he give.-j back a part of the plunder in fines. Where's the punishment ? The justice scheme tf making a man lay down a certain number of dollars for crimes committed is little less than granting crime licenses. Lead a man into a jail cell for thir ty days and that man will have a think or two coming before he is nabbed a second time, and his neigh bors will have a thought or two com ing on the matter as well.. I remember back in New York state how it used to be when the grand jury had finished its work of indicting il legal liquor sellers in the county. They marched up before the judge like a postoffice line-up in a mining town, and as fast as the judge named the amounts they countermarched to he clerks desk and came down with a part of the profits they had made in their Sunday thirst parlors. Good stunt for the county treasurer but not the least bit of punishment. And one day the judge changed the program from fines to imprisonment in the Buffalo penitenitary, and the line of march didn't go by the clerk's desk. They couldn't settle that sen tence with a check book -a check that was usually furnished by the brewer ies. And the result: It stopped the illegal liquor selling. It was punishment. Be he bum or billionaire, no man likes to hear the bolts slide in the sockets when he is on the inside. It restrains him, deprives him of his freedom, puts a boss over him it is punishment. And more of punishment is what this country needs. Putting Morse be hind the bars at Atlanta (altho it was a parody on justice, because of lotting him right out again) did more to stop looting by the Big Squeeze than a string of $29,000,000 Standard Oil Co. fines which were never paid or a mile of "dissolution" fines. There are no doubt Instances of where justice should be tempered with mercy, but I do not believe in tem pering it with coin. I would let the man go free or give him the cell. 1 would not wedge in a few dollars as a compromise. When our courts hand out more im prisonment and less fines our courts will have less business. WHYT Don't you believe that before long there will be a legal medium devised through which the riots and strikes that are ripping up our country about every thirty days will be adjusted in much the same way that cur civil (in ferences are? Why congress does not take some action or make some attempt to stop these civil wars is what I cannot un derstand. Take a railroad strike for illustra tion. There is a grievance, a sore snot, and both sides line up, lock horns and fight it out. The road is tied up; the shops depending on the roads close: people must suffer indi rectly for necessities, shippers must lose, and so on with any amount of damage and loss to those not in any manner connected with the troubles Can't this great country have some means to try these riots and strikes and settle them with a verdict, the same as we settle our individual dif ferences ? Common sense tells any man these little civil wars can be adjusted, but congress does not move And if we don't stop them in peacible manner, they will keep on growing bigger and more numerous until some day there will come one that can t be stopped. ANOTHER SACRIFICE (Portland Journal) While an 18-year-old boy rode his motorcycle, a revolver nestled in his hip pocket. He used the weapon to shot a dog that barked at him as he passed. As a deputy sheriff went in per- suit of the boy a revolver reposed snugly in his hip pocket. When the boy sought to break away after being arrested, the deputy sheriff used the weapon to shoot the lad. Such is the brief history of two re volvers. Such is the sequel when boys and men go armed. If he had carried no weapon, the boy would be sound and well, and a deputy sheriff would not have been guilty of the inexcusable offense of shooting a fugitive prisoner accused of nothing worse than tilling a dog in self defense. An officer is supposed to go armed; but if this one had not carried a re volver, he would not now be guilty of playing the life of an 18-year-old boy against a dead dog, an offense for which he can never forgive himself and for which society can scarcely forgive him. The revolver is one of the greatest tragedies of civilization, because it is itself a survival of the jungle. Its trail from its invention down through the years to the -present is red with the lifeblood cf the sacn flee. The first use of the ballot tho ludies of Sacramento ever made was to turn the scales and recall a crooked mayor. Two years ago when the Courier ad vocated the muzzling of dogs, it was laughed at. The Journal is not informed as to the full provocation, but it doubts if the Marshfield and Bandon plan of dealing with agitators is the wisest way. It cannot avoid the conviction that Governor West was entirely right when he said to the Portland agita tors that nothing must be done out siue ine law, wnicn means that no governor, no sheriff, no "hief of police no mayor, no group of citizens, no authority of any kind should take the luw into its own hands. Portland Journal. The whole issue is summed down to one proposition in the recall, is the county managed for the best interests of the taxpayers. You who think it is, and you who are satisfied with present results and taxation, vote to retain Judge Bcatie. You who are not satisfied with the management, and who think the county could be run for far less money, voto to oust him for a change. A little straw signiflcent of the way the wind is blowing, is reported to this office. A volunteer circular of an initiative petition for the $1500 exemption of improvements reports that of 115 persons asked 100 of them signed the petition. It's a common man's bill. It's a move to make those able pay more of the tax burden. It's a bill the people will make a law. If We Sunshine $f Prosperity" shines brightest for those who. make reg ular additions to a sayings account in a good bank. Money in the bank makes life brighter for tho owners, relieving them of apprehension over the proverb ial "rainy day.' Savings accounts iu this bank earn 3 per cent interest com pounded twice a year. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY WATCH BEATIE "GET BROWN." Jud ge Beatie says he will get Brown." That's his object. He openly says it. We can prove it. He doesn't protest at the damage the Courier did to him. He doesn't proclaim that his saint-like character has been smutted by the typograph. ical error, or that his morals have gone down another peg in consequence He just boast he will "get Brown." Wouldn't "His Honor" like to have Brown tried before him? Wouldn't he like to have him found guilty and be able to pass sentence? Ninety-nine years in solitary con finement and with an "Oregon Boot" attached. But Judge Beatie. will not try the Courier editor and his nvilice will not be admitted as evidence: It won't be a proposition of "get ting Brown," but a question of whe ther the error of printing his name under the heading of tax rebates was done, as the indictment charges, with intent then and there to injure and de fame," or whether it wa. the result of an error and was printed because the Courier had every reason to think it was from the official records of the county court. If Judge Beatie thinks he can "get Brown" let him hop to it. Let him proclaim it in the saloons and make the most of it. While there are a lot of things he has been able to "get" it may not be so easy to "get Brown." The people will watch you get him, Judge. f The recall election is on now let us see what the voters will-do. BONEHEAD COPS (Estacada Progress) Authorities should use caution when selecting men for police duty and see that the men clothed with authority have sufficient brains not to draw, a gun and shoot indiscretely at the sli ghtest provocation. One accout of a wild eyed deputy sheriff's deesire to be officious, Earl McNoughton, a Portland boy, lies in a hospital in Ore gon City in a dying condition, and the officer, Wm. Mumpower; is lodged in jail. Last Sunday in the Estacada Park another brainless individual wearing a star as big as the bottom of a dish pan got mixed up with a bunch of young fellows of about the same cali ber as himself, and he too drew a re volver and fired a shot, butt before he could again shoot he was locked tightly in the embrace of Marshal Ames, who took the fhooting iron away from him. This "deputy sheriff" hailed from Multnomah county and had no author ity here without a warrant. Had not Marshal Ames been close at hand, this deputy too would in all probability continued firing as long as a cartridge remained in his revolver and somee in nocent bystander would have been in jured or killed. DIRTY. What this country needs is what every free country must set before it as the great goal toward which it works an equal opportunity for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for every ono of its citizens. To ach ieve this end, we must put a stop to the improper political domain, no less than the improper economic domain, of the great special interests. This country, its natural resources, its nat ural advantages, its opportunities, and its institutions, belong to all of its citizens. They cannot be enjoyed fully and freely under any govern ment in which the specia'. interests as such have a voice. The supreme poli tical task of our day, the indespen- sible condition of national efficiency and national welfare, is to drive the special interests out of our public life.-'lheodore Roosevelt at St. Paul two years ago. $100,000,000 Morgan left an estate of $100,000,- 000. He had no right to this great wealth no right to one-hundrdth part of it. Constitutional lawyers tell us that no law can be framed, and stick, that will prevent a man from earning all the money his ability and brains can pile up. Perhape so. But laws CAN be fram ed, and they will stick, that will pre vent a man from getting these mill ions dishonestly, and laws can be framed that will say whn a man dies and leaves such a bundle, all over a certain amount shull go to the government. No man has a moral right and should not have a legal light, to ac cumulate and own more money than his needs can possibly demand. There enough wealth m this, richest of all nations, but not enough for all when a few Morgans cop out one hun dred million dollars each, Men are thinking along these lines. and they are talking. And some of these days a Morgan with a hundred millions will be impossible. The newspapers quote J. E. Hedires in his speech at Molulla, as advocating that our government be mude more paternal, and that we should go back to more Bimple and more democratic principles. Mrt Hedges Is on the wrong side, if the Enterprise quotes him correctly. These tire the very principles the recall backers are com tending for a return to simpler and more democratic princip'es. But they know they will never get them through Judge Beaties' administration. How the Oregonian enjoys throw ing the harpoon into W. S. U'Ren. Monday it had a full heading, "U'Ren will Desert Roosevelt Party." Prob ably Mr. U'Ren voted for Roosevelt at the last election, and there is circum stantial evidence that two or three other Republicans in Oregon did the same. But what of it? They were far better Republicans fo r bolting Taft than standing with him. If the Oregonian undertakes to smoke out every Republican that voted for Roosevelt and Wilson, it had better get its smudge going early to get com plete erutrns by 1914 . Tuesday's Enterprise had a con temptible reference to the candidates that have been placed in nomination by the recall petitions, that will be resented by many a voter in Clacka mas County. Hard up for a defense, it made slur ring reference to H. S. Anderson and J. W. Smith, and its fling to Mr. Smith it prints: . They have nominated a man for county commissioner, who, when he ran once before for the office, some five years ago, could not muster enough votes to get the place at the hands of the people. That this man should be nomi nated by the disgruntled ones is not particularly surprising, as from the first peep of this re call fiasco it has been common gos sip that he was in the movement solely because he believed his van ity would be tickled by the nom-ina'tion. Any man who knows J, W. Smith of Macksburg, and the most of the men of the county do know him, know this is a cowardly, lying attack, and it shows the county cour. is mighty hard up for defense material. J. W. Smith was defeated for county commissioner, defeated because the Republican party was in high power and a Kepublica nnommation was equivalent to an election. Robert Beatie, Democratic county judge, would have also been defeated, but for the fact that Republican machine lead ers turned traitor to tho Republican party and elected him. It was a traitorous party deal, one that would take the halo from Tammany Hall, and today we see Frank Jaggar, Re publican central committeeman, George C. Brownell, posing as a Re publican leader and the Ftand-pat Re publican Enterprise, all pulling every party strong and working every par ty trick to keep a Democrat in office and keep the voters of the county from passing judgment on his admin istration. Of Mr. Anderson, the nominee for judge, the Enterprise says this: As to his running mate on the forlorn hope ticket, perhaps it is sufficient to say that the recall boosters desired to have him nom inated because he is believed to have some few simoleons that he will put at the disposal of those who will conduct the cam paign. What a CONTEMPTIBLE attack. Being absolutely unable to find a weak spot to strike Mr. Anderson, that cor poration sheet hits foul and insinuates that he was nominated for the money he will put into the campaign. The people who nominated Mr. An derson don't know whether he has a dollar or not, and they don't care. The people don't know to what par ty he belongs and don't care. Mr. Anderson won't go out and buy an election. He will go before the people as simply standing for clean politics, for an honest government for this county, for economy and as rec ognizing that if elected he would be the employee of the people, not the "boss." The Enterprise is more than dirty it is foul, unfair. The day was when such stuff went, but that day has long passed in Oregon, and here is tipping the Enterprise, and the gang that dictates the editorials, that its chickens will come home to roost thrive. Use the Oregon City way and they vanish. TWO ANNOUNCE FOR GOVERNOR Oregon City Has Two Candidates for Higheset State Office. Two Repudlican candidates in this city have announced for the govern orship of Oregon this week, G. B. Dimick and W. S .U'Ren. Mr. Dimick made his announce ment at the German Verein picnic in J. W. Smith's grove at Macksburg Sunday, and he came out square and plain for state economy in state ad ministration; the abolishing of need less officials and commissions; the curtailment of expenses in the two state colleges, and for bed-rock eco nomy and efficient service from pub lic officials. W. S. U'Ren announced his candi dacy through the Orego ,ian Monday, and while he did not ouf'ine his plat form, his friends know he stands for the proposed $1500 exemption amend ment on homes and improvements; the abolishing of the state senate and for a new system of government of the state, whereby every official will be di rectly responsible for the results of his office. There will be many other Repub lican candidates for governor; there will be Democratic candidates, and no doubt independent candidates, and next year will see one of the hottest campaigns in Oregon, not only over governor, but U. S. Sentar and legis lative candidates. LITERARY" QUALITIES. When in any nation an Individ ual is born who Is capable of producing a great thought an other Is born capable of compre hending and admiring It Between esteem and contempt there Is in literature a path which offers success without glory and is also obtained with out merit. It is worth a hundred times more to ihlapt a work to the na ture of u human mind than to what is called the state of so ciety. In man there Is some thing inimitable; thence it is that In the acts and works of art there are these fixed rules beau ties that will always please or else contrivances that will please but for a short time. Joubert Suprising Cure of Stomach Trouble When you have trouble with your stomach or chronic constipation, don't imagine that your case is beyound help just because your doctor fails to give you relief. Mrs. G. Stengle, Plainsfield, N. J., writes: "For over a month past I have been troubled with my stomach. Everything I ate upset it terribly. One of Chamberlain's adver tising booklets came to me. After reading a few of the letters from people who had been cured by Cham berlain's Tablets, I decided to try them. I have taken nearly three fourths of a package of them and can now eat almost everything that I want." For sale by Huntley Bros. CoT The Best Medicine in the World "My little girl had dysentery very bad. I thought she would die. Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy cured her, and I can truth fully say that I think it is the best medicine in the world," writes Mrs. William Orvis, Clare, Mich. For sale by Huntley Bros. Co. Imnure blood runs vou down mak es you an easy victim for disease. For nnre blood and sound digestion Bur dock Blood Bitters. At all drug stores. Price $1.00. In Seattle last week sailors, soldiers and a city mob wreked the I. W. W., socialist and Salvation Army head quarters, carried the office furniture into the street and burned it. The Oregonian's press dispatch states "the police offered not the slightest resistence." The details relate how the mob smashed in the plate glass windows of the socialist headquarters, while the police stood by and laughed. This was anarchy plain rebellion, revolution, riot, and any man who took part in it, or any official who countenanced ' it, denounced his flag and the constitution. This paper has ever and will ever stand for the law. It will never stand by a law violator, but every issue in the year it will stand for a jury trial for the man accused. Wrecking headquarters to even up with individuals is a dead wrong way to settle coast differences. Burning property in the street is anarchy in its worst form, and abetted by officials it is treason. Oregon City handled this matter and handled it right. Three men, street speakers were thrown into jail and the word went out to "come to Oregon City." Cool heads saw the consequences. The men were released and Mayor Jones publicly invited all I. W. W.'s to come to Oregon City, and so long as their talks were temperate they could talk their heads off. And our I. W. W. troubles ended in fifteen minutes. Up at Bandon the people deported an editor because they said he had reviled the flag. Over his own signa ture in the Oregonian the newspaper man says "I have never uttered a word against the flag, but on the con trary have a wholesome respect for it." This man was entitled to a fair trial. It was not granted to him, bu personal force was used and he was driven out of the country. the result will be trouble in Ban don. Today money is being raised to buy him a new printing plant, and the raisers say he will go back to Bandon and he will go back to stay. And no doubt martial law will pre vail, with no end of trouble and expense. In the rioting in Portland last week four girls were arrested, all under 20 years of age, one being but 14 They were attempting to talk in favor of the cannery strike they were engaged in. Any number of people who had absolutely no part in the riot, were clubbed and injured. As we have stated before there are laws enough to put any man in jail who should be put there without the people becoming anarchists and tramp ing. on tho constitution. Fight these agitators and they P. A. Efird, Conejo, Calif., gives a nointer for others to profit by. "I have sold Folev's Honey and Tar Compound also other lines of cough medicine for a number of years, but never used anvthiner but f oley's Hon ey and Tar Compound for myself or familv. as I find that it produces the best results, always cures severe colds and does not contain opiates." nuni- SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clacka mas. Loui B. Taylor, Plaintiff, vs. William G. Taylor, Defendant. To William G. Taylor, Defendant: In the name of thte State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap pear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff filed herein against you in the above entitled suit in or before the 8th day of September, 1913; said date being after the expiration of six weeks from the first publication of this summons, and if you fail to so ap pear and answer said complaint, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief prayed for in the complaint for a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant, and for such other relief as to the Court seems equitable. This summons is served upon you by publication in the Oregon City Courier, a weekly newspaper printed and published and having a general circulation in Clackamas County, Ore gon, pursuant to an order of the Hon. R. B. Beatie, County Judge, in the absence of the Circuit Judge, of the above entitled Court, duly made and entered on the 22nd day of July, 1913. Said summons will be published for six consecutive and sucessive weeks, and the date of the first publication is July 24, 1913. Walter G. Hayes, Attorney for Plaintiff, 616 Fenton Bldg., Portland, Oregon The Earning Power of a Man Depends Upon Piysical Condition Restful Sleep Invigorates Our Cotton iatfreses Promote sound, refreshign sleep. You get up in the morning refresh ed, your entire system replenished with the energy which makes you a "live wire." The worker who sleeps on a good mattress is always "on the job" ready for the day's task. A good mattress is not a luxury, it is an absolute necessity to the man who wants to make good, whether at the work bench, at the of fice desk or behind the plow. Made of pure" staple cotton processed into a big, billowy batt encased in a high-grade tick; a pillow for the body. Price from $8 to $20 Frank Bosch Furniture and Hardware THE BEST WAY TO VISIT Worlds Greatest Exposition SAN FRANCISCO, C4.L. 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. BKnnnenhpnfler u'Ren & scimebers office . IVUyyLllUUlUU OreeonCitv Bank Building OREGON CITY, OREGON Administratrix's Notice . Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed ad ministratrix of the estate of M. 11. Flanagan, deceased, and any and all persons having claims against saia estate mus present them, duly ven fied, at the office of my attorneys, Dimick & Dimick, in Oregon City, Ore gon, on or before the expiration of six months from the date of this notice, Dated this 17th day of July, 1913 Kate Flanagan, Administratrx. Dimick & Dimick, Attorneys for Administratrix. Notice to Creditors Notice is hereby given thnt the un dersigned has been duly appointed by the county court of the State of Ore gon, for Clackamas County, admin istrator of the estate of J. J. Gard, deceased. All persons having claims against the said estate are hereby re quired to present the san-e to me pro perly verified as by law required at the office of U'Ren & Schuebel, Ore gon City, Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Date of lirst publication, Thursday, July 24, IS 13. Roscoe Gard . Administrator of the Estate of J. J. Gard, Deceased. U'Ren & Schuebel, Attorneys for Administrator. , 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 3 45 . " : "daily except Sunday 1.20 P. M. BEACHES REACHED IN FIVE. HOURS Business men can leave Saturdapoints in time fo idinner spend y afternoon and arrive beach the evening and Sunday with the family and ret.irn to Portland Sunday night without loss of time from business. Round Trijj Tares From Portland Season Tickets on sale daily 4 00 Week End (for return Monday) 3'00 Corresponding low fares from other points Call for brand oew folder "Tillamook Coifnty Beaches." 'to, SUNSET 0GDEN&SHASTAI ROUTES Folders and full information from any S. P. Agent or at " Clh Ticket Office 80 Sixth St., Cor. Oak JOHN M. SCOTT General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon -f5