Ore CITY The Courier ia the Official State paper for Oregon for the Farmers So ciety of Equity, and has the largest circulation from Portland to Salem. If you want to buy, tell or trade, try small ad in The Courier the best ad vertizing medium in Clackamat County and you will get. the desired results. 31st YEAR OREGON CITY, ORE., THURSDAY, NOVJ27, 1913. No. 27 OREGON THE SNAKE DICE OF TIE 5 WIERD, BARBARIC CUSTOM OF OUR SAVAGE DAYS HQLO RATTLESNAKES IN MOUTH Wonderful Religious Ceremony Dat . ing Back Before Conquest (M. J. Brown, Courier, Oregon City.) The Moqui snake dance js a relic of ancient savagery, more weird and horrible than anything that can be seen in darkest Africa. Yet it is per formed by our native sons, our first Americans. Roosevelt wrote it up in the Satur day Evening Post. He saw it last August. I never saw it, but I am go ing to write of it. I have visited two of the Mqui cliff cities. I have seen the flat rock where the snake dances are held; the ceremonial rooms where the actors make their preparations; the Indians who have taken part in the mystic rite and I have talked with many a white man who has seen the famous rattlesnake dance. But first let me locate the Moqui land. It is the most remote of any of the Indian reservations, with the pos sible exception of Zuni, and the Hupi people remain the nearest to what they were before Columbus landed, of any of the American Indians. Far from any other tribe (except the wandering Navajos) and seldom visited by white men, these Indians retain their old customs and ways of life are practically as they were when Coronada found them 375 years ago. And how many hundreds of years they had lived there before this adventurous Spaniard ran onto their villages, none can tell, but many claim at least a thousand years. But I was locating their Moqui towns. The petrified forest is about the only place of beginning, thence due north 100 miles., be the same more or less, and before you get there you will say it is about 50 miles more. That Arizona desert is some desert, and when you have traveled along its edge, 100 miles from a railroad, you will know it. The wonderful places of our country are pretty well hidden. There are seven cities in the Moqui country, so I am told, I saw two of them, and when a white man told me how they spelled the second one I dared not tackle the third. Si-chom-wi. You pronounce it. The first was not so bad Hualpi. These Indian villages are all built on the top of mesas (hills) of solid rock, built up of dobi blocks, and built in just the same way they were built hundreds of years before the conquest. The houses are all one great house, all built adjoining, and cut up with partitions like stock yard pens. They are wonderful sights the first time American eyes see them and the American has to pinch him self to be sure he is not dreaming. xThere are, I am told, from 1,500 to 1,200 Indians in these several towns. And far out in this remote corner of the U. S. way back where the Am erican desert forbids many to go, here is held, once in two years, one . of the most barbaric ceremonies the world has ever seen and right here almost in the center of our country, and in the year 1913. The man who started that slogan "See America First,", had probably been to the snake dance. I intended to have seen this year's rattlesnake dance. A friend at Espa nola, N. M., wrote, me it would be held about the middle of September. But it was, in August, and I missed it There is no particular date for it. It is held once in two years at a cer tain time when the moon does a cer tain thing, but only a Moqui Indian can tell the day a month in advance. He can. You don't care about the legends and the religious ceremonies that go with this weird dance, so I will cut it short and get down to the snake danc ing and snake eating. But I will say that in every one of the seven pueblos I have visited, Santa Clara, Isleta, Acoma, Laguni, Zuni and Moqui, the deadly rattlesnake is held sacred by the Indians. For about two weeks before the snake dance the priests who are to take part in the ceremony, begin to train, and that training is drinking daily large quantities of bitter medi cine made from secret herb, and for a week before the ceremony not to touch food in any form. It is also said the Indians rub their bodies with this medicine. It is said if an Indian is bitten dur ing the dance, the effect of the snake poison on his system, full of the herb tea, is only a stomach sickness and that after the dance many of the In dians may bee seen, bending over a trough, vomiting. There are from 15 to 20 of the priests who take part in the cere mony. They march into the court and do a few preliminary stunts, and then the game starts. One after another, they reach into buckskin bags, grab a huge rattler, lift it to the mouth, fastened to it with their teeth, about six or eight inches from the reptile's ugly head, and with the huge snake hanging from their jaws they hippity-hop pus ami 'jpoi oxbus air punojs again. Mind you there are six or eight in ches of the business end of this dead ly snake free to act, free to strike into the Indiun'se face, and may do. HoweVer the dancers do not try to be bitten, in fact they try not to to be. They dance in pairs and an at tendant whisks feathers in the sake's face to tickle it and prevent it from biting. But often the snake will drive jts fangs into the Indian's cheek, MODUI another Indian will unhook the snake, and the bitten man will continue to dance on as if nothing had happen ed. ' After about so many turns around the court, the Indians will., swing their heads, give the snake a snap, open their jaws and deposit them in a writhing mass on the rocks, while they get fresh snakes, and it is up to the attendants not to let these snakes run into the crowds. If the rat tler coils they wilk never grab him. but tickle him or prod him to strike, and the instant he lengthens out then they grab . One Indian will sometimes have a half dozen of these huge snakes at a time, and I have seen many a rattler in this country from three to six inches thru. This is about all there is to the dance just grabbing a great, writh ing reptile, putting it in the mouth, dancing around with it, dropping it. getting' a fresh one, and occasioally being bitten. But only those who have seen the big, deadly diamond desert rattlers, can fully appreciate these barbaric rites. It is often printed that one Indian will hold a snake and purposely let it strike the bare breast of his part ner, but those 1 have, talked with, who have seen several of the dances, say this is not in any way true, The fangs are not withdrawn from these snakes, this is established. They are as deadly at these dances as when sleeping on the hot sand. The secret is in the medKine the Indian drinks. an herb that counteracts the deadly poison and the Indian has kept that secret tor about lour hundred years that Americans know of. On three sides of this dance rock or court are the Indian houses or cere- monial rooms, and on one side there is a perpendicular descent of many feet just a straight drop down, and without any railing or protection whatever. I was shown the spot where an In dian girl fell over this bluff and was killed and mangled on the rocks be low. Four years ago at the dance there was a large crowd, many Navajos be ing present. The girl was standing on the very edge of the bluff, and when the dancers let go of the snakes one huge fellow started directly for the girl, and in trying to avoid be ing bitten, she fell over the bluff and was instantly killed. Up to a few years ago but very few white men ever saw the rattlesnake dance, but today the Moquis are get ting wise, they are beginning to ad' vertise and to combine business with religion they are beginning to com' mercialize the dance, beginning to welcome the white men and sell them the choice seats for "5 cents per. The The Moqui is about the last man on earth to fall for the white man's ways and influence, but he is falling. Roo sevelt was a great ad for the show, and hundreds of tourists are expected at the next meeting. Make your res ervations early. I expected to see the usual marks of degeneracy among the Moquis, but I did not. In Zuni, I saw sights one could hardly believe, as results of intermarriage, but at that pueblo the 1600 people have lived in one house for so many hundreds of years that they are all more or less relatives. There I saw perfect albinos, with pink cheeks, red eyes and white hair, full blooded Indians, and I saw luna tics, deformed Indians, and no end to strange freaks. But nothing of the like in the Moqui villages, altho they are as ancient as any pueblo m Amer- ica. This I account for because the villages are scattered, and the tribes mix more or less with their neighbors on the east the roving Navajos. I had long heard that the Moquis had the handsomest girls and the ug liest old squaws in the southwest, but I could not find the beauties. However beauty is 'from custom and viewpoint. They say the Indians think our women are hideous. A freighter said after one became ac customed to the Moqui belles they were as handsome as white women. The girls and women have a most peculiar way of doing up their hair, and that gives them an odd appear ance to unaccustomed eyes. Unmar ried girls wear it in a big ring, about the size of a sauce dish, over sach ear. This indicates they are single, while the married squaws wear it in a roll over the ears. And the fashions in Hulpi land never change. Health, you see it everywhere. The girls are perfect specimens of devel opement, of trained developement, and the men are like iron. It is said it is not uncommon to find Indians who have lived one hundred years and over. And I found among the Moquis so many living examples that raise the Dickens with our modern rules of hy giene and science of sanitation. There are probably hundreds of In dians on this reservation who never have and never will take a bath, and yet we down-and-out white men go to him at the last resort, live his life and get well. Their homes are filthy, and dur ing cold weather they close up and cord up without any ventilation. Yet they are the1 finest specimens of health and endurance in our country. Probably there was never a tooth brush on the reservation, yet men and women have beautiful and perfect teeth. I have seen men whose wrin kles and hair indicated extreme age, with almost perfect teeth. And never a dentist opened a Moqui mouth . No appendicitis, rheumatism, spi nal meningitis, or any of our fash ionable ' diseases. No surgeons, op erations or hospitals. And none are needed. Yet the Indians are horribly dirty positively filthy. I never rub up against them. Nearly all of them have body lice, big fat "seam squirrels," bred from filth. When they get too thick, and bite too fierce, they will wet their clothes and rub their bod ies with sheep dip. The southwest reservations are strange lands, inhabited by strange people. Just think, in four days one can go back to the days before the conquest, he can go to a land where the people live just as they lived before Colum bus ever thought of a western con tinent, back before history, before iron. The land is almost in the center of our great United States. Any per- INTERESTING OLD HISTORY How I. O. O .F. Order here was De- prived of Being First Coast Lodge One of the social events of the season that is leoked forward to is the celebration of the 60th anniver sary of Oregon Lodge No. 3, I. O. O. F., to be celebrated at Busch's Hall December 31, when the old year will be given a farewell, and the New Year welcomed. On that day it will be 60 years since the organization of the lodge in Oregon City, and several lodges of Clackamas County have been invited to attend to assist in celebrating this notable event, and there will probably be about 500 people in attendance. Oregon City Lodge No. 3 should should have been Oregon City Lodge No. 1, but the folowing accounts for it not being such: The charter of the lodge was applied for and granted in 1850, and was forwarded by mail on a sailing. vessel to San Francisco, but for some reason the ship failed to stop at San Francisco, but proceed ed to Honolulu, where the charter was removed from the ship, and where the name of Oregon Lodge was removed from the charter, and in its place inserted "Excelsior" Lodge No. 1, of Honolulu. Before Oregon could procure a new chrter, a lodge in saiem naa been organized, this be ing named "Chemeka Lodge No. 1," and this was granted the first charter in Oregon, while Samaritan Lodge of rortiand was organized and given the second place, and by that time the second charter was granted Oreeron L.ity ixiage. The charter members of the Local order are now deceased and were the following: William P. Burns, Mosse Kahn, Simon Kahn, Charles McCue, Charles rope and Kmiores Holbrook. The oldest members living are: John T. Apperson. initiated into the order May 27, 1857; John Meldrum, initi ated July 15, 1857. Mr. Apperson re sides at Parkplace, and Mr. Meldrum -at Meldrum Station. William P. Burns who recently died in Portland, was the first Grand Master, and was the father of Charles Burns of this city. The records were destroyed bv fire January 1859. The only articles sav ed at that time were the Bible and charter, the former saved by the late D. J. Slover and the latter by the late J. M. Bacon. At the time of the fire the building was located on lower south Main street, now the site of the- Oregon City Manufacturing Co's plant. "lhe present building was erected inl860 by the I. O. 0. F. Lodge, and has been the home of the order since that. time. The-property is owned by the order and is located in the center of the city, the lower floor of the building being occupied bv the Dost office. The lodge is in a flourishing condition, and has a membership of ioo, an oi whom are in good standing. Since, the organization the' local or ganization has paid In benefits to sick members, widows - and orphans aoout siuu.uuu. This is probably the only order that has a home in the state of Oregon for the orphans and widows of members, and this is lo- cated at Portland. Mrs. W. H. Howell, of this city, is superintendent of the home. In observing the 60th anniversary oi mis oroer judge urant a. LUmick J.1 ' .1... T 1 ft n r. . of this city will give the opening ad dress, and Judge Thomas F. Ryan, of Salem, will give the history of the lodge. There will also be a literarv and musical programme, preceding the grand ball, the music for danc ing of which will be furnished bv a local orchestra. Some of the best mu sical and literary talent will be se cured for this occasion. L. G. Lageson of this city, who has been a member of the I. O.- O. F. Lodge of the East for many years, and is at the present time a member of the Oregon City Lodge, is. chairman of the entertain. ment committee. During the evening a banquet will be served. The hall is to be elaborately decorated for the occasion. PROPOSED MEASURES Amendments and Ordinances to be Voted on at Coming Election There will be three charter amend ments and one ordinance to be voted on by the people at the coming city election, as follows: One is that the council shall, fix the salary of th chief of police here after. Now it is fixed by charter, and it is said the council is paying this onicial more than the charter authorizes. Another would take away from the mayor the right to remove or sus pend any police officer and give the right to the council. The proposed amendment does not read this way, but it provides for this just the same. It provides that the mayor may re move or suspend, but kills the au thority by following with the provis ion that the mayor's action shall not take effect until approved by a ma jority of tne council. The third amendment proposes that city bonds shall be issued in denom inations of $50, the purpose being that home people may invest in them. The proposed ordinance is for an appropriation of $2,500 to purchase four acres of land known as the Englebrecht tract, to be used for public purposes. Up Against It Oregon City has gone dry, the water has typhoid germs and the milk is condemned. What is a fellow to do there ? Molalla Pioneer. Dr. Morey, of Liberal, was in this city Saturday. son who can stand a little roughing, can see. It is a safer locality than the streets of our cities. Yet how pitifully few of us ever see the wonders at home, and how many of us rush across the big drink to ancient Pompeii and other less in teresting places abroad ? America is just as old as any old corner of our country, and Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Cali fornia and Old Mexico are literally crowded with wonderful and ancient museums. M. J. Brown. MURDER, FIRST DEGREE Grand Jury Indicts Harry Clark for Murder of Chief Henry In September Indian Henry, last chief of the Molallas, was killed. Sus picion was strong sgainst Harry Clark, an Indian well known in police court circles of this county. Enough evidence was presented to the grand jury to warrant his indictment. The trial will probably come off at the theft of brass from the plant of the Six other indictments have been re ported. S. Hoffman was held for the alleg ed concealing and purchasing of stol en brass that had been taken from the plant of the Crown-Columbia Pa- per company. Worn Bo is held on a charge of assault with intent to kill Wong iing, a laborer on the Port land Eugene & Eastern at Canby, September 11; Alonzo Haskins. per forming acts that tend to contribute to the delinquency of Bula Barcum James McDonald and Rov Labouix theft of brass fro mthe plant of tne Crown-Columbia company: Enric Po. lo, daylight burglary in the house of Marie V. Gehnsky at Lakewood: Jam es V. Reece, threatening to kill Ailene Keece. A WORTHLESS SYSTEM How. Much Longer will we Dump Good Money Into Poor Roads? How much longer will it be before the people of this county will- square away on some system that will stop burying hundreds of thousands of dol lars into mud dumps, called roads? Clackamas county is laughed at as the worst road county in northwest ern Oregon. We have 59 roads upervisors, all working independently, . spending a barrel of money each year, and yet our roads do not improve, and it is pretty much money thrown away. Good roads are the bicreest orob- lems in the United States today, and an over tne country states and coun- ties are facing thenr and workinsr tnem out. The Courier has no system to pro pose, but it does know that we have men capable of working out a sys tem ana erettinir this countv started on PERMANENT roads, if we only build a mile a, year. ihe supervisor system, iudmner from results, is all wrong. Fifty-nine men, without any definite policy, aren t getting us ahead any. we are spending huere sums on roads. If we had commenced 20 veartt ago to build little, built hard surface and maintained the work, today we could have had hard surfaced, splen did thoroughfares on all the princi pal roaas oi tne county. ' It costs producers three times what it would under good roads, to get their stuff in. v '-"k It holds back develope'meht of the county as nothing else can. It holds back the cities and towns of the county. We ought to get at this proposi tion and work out a remedy. We should stop sinking good mon ey into roads that are very little im provement. We should commence to build the roads that last. Remember the Little Ones Among the many and necessary charitable institions in and around Portland, a more worthy one cannot be found than the home to which these few lines of appeal have refer ence. Anyone, who could spend an hour or two enjoying the prattle of its tiny inmates, would certainly come away with the conscious feeliner of how much is being done for these helpless uttie ones. Yes, and much more could be ac complished with the co-operation of tne charitable men and women of Portland and surrounding country, Ihe Home is a haven for all it mat ters not the race or creed. Now, when within a very few days, we will re joice in the great "Day of Thanks giving," let us hope the little orphans will be remembered generously by their old friends, and that many new ones will be among the number of tnose who send donations to gladden their young hearts on that happy day. Ten Days to Amend When the matter of the complaint asking for, an injunction -against County Judge Anderson declaring Oregon City dry in 1914, came before Circuit Judge Campbell Saturday, he granted the liquor people ten days' time in which to amend their com plaint. Straws that Show Wind's Direction The Hillsboro "Drys" have won the second battle over the "Wets," Judge Campbell having made a de cision in their favor on the recent election contest. Every straw would indicate that Oregon is coiner to eret into the "Dry" column before long even if it does rain "occasionally." Forest Grove News-Times. Swedish Thanksgiving Festival A Thanksgiving festival will be held by the Scandinavians at G. O. Molins, Fallview, Oregon Citv. on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Nov. 27. The programme will begin in the afternoon. The Rev. John Ovall and others from Portland will take part in the programme. The ladies Aid Society "Vorkas" will meet at same time. All Scandinavians are most cordially invited to attend. Had Sand to Stand By The Oregon City Courier and The News-Reporter are two of the news papers that did not receive a compli mentary letter from President Camp bell of the state university, for sup port given to the university meas ures at the last election. These two papers knew how the people of their respective counties stood on these ap propriations. They knew that the ma jority of their readers were opposed to them. McMinnville News-Report- - I HOUSE WAS RANSACKED Burglars Loot Fred Swift's Residence And Carry Away Much Stuff Friday, Saturday or Sunday night, the home of Fred Swift, manager of theClackamas Southern railroad, at Risley, was broken into, thoroughly ransacked in every room, and many articles of value taken. The residence is owned bv Mrs Vernah Shewman, who is now with her parents at Tionesta, Pa., and was leased furnished to Mr. Swift. Mr. and Mrs. Swift were away at the time. The burglars forced an en trance through the bathroom window, and once inside the house it appears tney wok tneir time and did a thor ough job of turning things over. Al most everything in the front part of tne nouse was carried to the back rooms and examined and rifled, Drawers, boxes, trunks, hand baei everything was dumped, and sorted, and what was wanted was taken. A clothes room, where Mrs. Shew man had stored a trunk, grips, cloth ing, etc., was lockea. This was pried open, tne door ruined and the con tents of the room scattered and rifled, Ihe housebreakers carried off medley of plunder, including cloth ing, boots, silverware, sheets and nil low cases, a revolver, canned fruit. conee, etc. Mr. swift had a full suit in clothes room. The coat and vest were taken and the trousers left. As a box or drawer was examined the contents were scattered over the floor, and the house was indeed a sight. Mrs. Tyra Warren. who lives across the street, first discovered the house had been broken into, and after a hasty examination she reported it A. til ' If IK I i r l.v lo onerin mass, put as Mr. and Mrs, Swift were away and it was impos sible to determine just what had been taken, there has been little to work on. 1 DOESN'T LOOK SAFE Why Was not Salary Fixed in Pro posed Charter Amendment? It seems to us if the salarv for the chief of police had been definitalv fixed in the proposed charter amend ment, it would have been more satis factory to the voters. The present charter fixes the sal. ary of the chief of police at $60. This was adopted years ago. This is not salary enough for today. The pay should at least be $100.00. But it would seem that the salary should be uemiaeiy svaieu Derore tne people are asked to raise it that it should be as specific as are the salaries of the other city otticers. Should the proposed amendment. pass, five men, a majority of the city council, could, if they willed, defeat any appointee of the mayor, by fix ing a salary so low that he could not accept it, and they could, if they will ed, pay some man they wanted, two or mree times nis worth. If we always had a harmonious council and a mayor in accord with it. the lirpnRf wnnM A tin ham k..- nistory, which often repeats, tells us we may have a lot of scrappers run ning things some day in the future, ana we mignt sadly regret this salary-fixing power, after we had given it away. ihe people of this city are will ing, to pay any eood chief of police a good salary, and if the council had fixed a maximum and minimum, lib eral enough to provide for a good man, the people would have sustained it with their votes. But we very much doubt if thev will give over their rights, and vote to give live men the unrestricted power to fix a salary so small a man can't accept it, or so high it becomes a gratt snap. As the propositions is presented. tne people shu ULiD VOTlS IT DOWN. Turn Your Ring Over Any number of you would give a quarter or more to make the babies at the home happy if someone would can on you personally. A few have dropped into the Cour. ier office and started a little fund to be expended for the little ones at St Agnes home, but so many forget it. Turn your ring over and wear It so until you remember. We want to gather together a few dollars and make the children happy want to give them a few of the things that children love best, which the home cannot give them. Help this along. You wouldn't forget your own children. A quarter will make a little one happy for a long day. , Drop in. The Precinct Boundaries. Following are the boundaries of the three precincts for the city elec tion Monday: Wo. 1. All the city west of John Q. Adams and south of Seventh st. No. 2 All the city north of Sev enth and west of John Q. Adams. no. a ah the city west of John Adams street. Seventh Street Doings Work is well under way on Sev enth street for an 18 inch sewer, which is the commencement of a general sewer system of the city. This sewer is nine feet under ground, lower than the deepest basement of that locality. Couldn't Have Been Worse Torn up streets are bad enough at any time, but it does seem as if the worst possible time was selected to put Seventh street into a mud hole just as the rainy season has set in. Wanted! H (over 18 years of age) o operate SEWING Machines ' in garment factory Oregon City Woolen Mills FRANCHISE BEFORE COUNCIL. City Fathers Look Favorably Toward New Era of Competition. Ihe Oregon City council peeled their coats and delved tnto a thor ough examination of the proposed Carver franchise at a special meet ing Monday evening. The opposition peeled their coats, too, and while the session was not quite as warm as one or two of the previous franchise meetings, nevertheless ,it was a little exciting at times. No definite action was taken in re gard to the franchise, which Mr. Carver desires as the completing link to his Portland-Oregon City electric line. The sections of the franchise were gone over one by one, with Mr. carver and ins attorney, 11. JE. Cross, It is probable that some definite ac tion may be taken when tho matter again comes up Friday evening. The feeling prevailed at the meet ing that Oregon City needs another electric line between here and Port land, and needs it badly, and the city iatners, wnue considering tne active opponents of the line along Water street, for the -most part, looked at the general good to the city as a whole, that the new line would mean. As Councilman Horton wisely said: "I believe it would be a great mis take if the council should do anything that would cause them to lose this road. I belive we need a new line and ought to encourage, rather than prevent the construction of every line mat wants to enter nere." Council men Tooze, Metzner and others also argued favorably, on the ground that tne general interest of the city de manded that the new line be allowed to enter. The opponents of the road are the owners of Water street property, ov er which the line, if granted will run. Outside of private interests the peo ple of Orecjm City very naturally welcome the line with outstretched arms, and feel that a competing line between Oregon City and Portland will build up Oregon City faster than any other influence. The merchants along Main street want the line to come clear through, as it would be an unfair advantage to stop the line at Twelfth or Fifteenth. As the franchise to the P. R. L. & P. on Main street does not permit of a common-user Water street is the only means by which the new line can enter Oregon City. The hill so lution is entirely out of the question, as no railroad would want an inter- urban franchise with a terminal point on the mil, and it would be grossly unfair to ask a road to come in on the hill section. The Courier editor will bet a new hat that there's not a city in the Uni ted States that would turn down the Carver franchise, after due considera tion of its merits and faults. The franchise is fair, if ever there was one. Mr. Carver is a man of action. and has embodied his spirit in the! ordinance he asks the council to pass. Carver delivers the goods and with in eighteen months; otherwise he for feits his rights. Already Mr. Carver has about five miles of his line graded, has started on the Clackamas River bridge, and has franchises through Milwaukie, Gladstone and Portland, from Eust Portland clear into the very hea.t of the west side. Every citizen of Oregon City who is interested in the ultimate good of the town, should be a booster for the new Poitland & Oregon City Rail way LOOK THEM OVER. Six Men to Pick Three Council Mem bers from Next Monday. Next Monday is the city election, to elect mayor, councilmen and pass on three or four charter amendments. Mayor Jones has a clear field. There is no candidate against him, and the chances are he will have al'out as much of a cinch as M. D. LatcuruUe had for treasurer iait year. The wet and dry factions are tax Ing some part in the councilmen con tests. In Ward 1. J. O. Staats and H. M Templeton are the nominees. This is the city's only wet ward and no doubt the hardest fight in the city will center here, as Mr. Staats has plainly stated where he stands on the matter of saloons, and that he would not vote to grant any license in the city, so as long as tne people vote dry. Just what position Mr. Temnleton takes on the liquor ques tion the Courier rloes not know. In Ward 2 Phil Sorghon and E. C. Hackett are the nominees. Mr. Hackett is said to be a no-license man. He was formerly a candi date for sheriff and is a man of good business ideas. Mr. Sorghon is an emnlovee of the P. R. L. & P. Co., and regardless of whether he is for or against license the Courier does not believe it eood policy to elect any man connected with any corporation to the city council. It places him in a position where his every act would be subjected to criticism. In Ward 8. E. B. Andrews and O. W. Gri'fir. are the nominees. Mr. An drews is a, architect, a man well known, ar.d a "dry" candidate. Mr. Griffin it a contractor and is a "wet candidate. Logan and Evergreen Sermons. Rev. E. A. Smith will preach next Sunday, December 7, at Logan at 11 a. m.. and at 3 o'clock he will preach at Evergreen school house. Subject at Logan "Home inanKsgiv ing Heroes.' At Evergreen will be "A Voice Behind You." All the com munity invited to these meetings. S. S. District Convention at Canby. Becrinninar with an address Tues day evening, December 9th, 1913, and continuing Wednesday, December 10, until 3:00 p. m., there will be held at Canby in the M. E. church the Dis trict Sabbath school convention. All Sabbath workers are cordially invited to be present. There will be good Frogram and entertainment will be urnished delegates. This is the con vention of all the Sabbath schools in the Canby district, but workers out side our district will be welcomed. C. F. ROMIG, President MRS. W. H. LUCKE, Secy. GEO. C. HELL FOR GOVERNOR REPUBLICAN RUNNING ON PROHIBITION PLAFORM THIS IS EXPECTED DECISION Story is He Will Make Announcement Saturday of This Week. Oregon City is very likely to have a third candidate for governor. ueorge c. .Brownell is very likely to announce as a candidate for gov ernor, on a state wide prohibition platform. r lhis is more than "political ru mor." The Courier gets it from those connected with the state prohibition headquarters in Portland and from local prohibition workers in the city. Mr. isrowneii is considering the call, 8eriojusly considering it, and it is said that within a few days he wilt give a definite answer will either jump into the fight and make an ag gressive campaign, or will refuse to take any part in next year's contest. . it is reported that Mr. Brownelf made the prediction some months ago that in his judgement the next governor of Oregon would be the man who came out squarely against the booze. Whether Mr. Brownell would be a Republican candidate for the primar ies on a prohibition platform, or whether he wov.. i run as an indepen dent on a dry y, form, or whether he would run at ai., remains to be Been. The state organization we are told believe the chances for making Ore gon dry would be much better in 1914 if Republicans, Democrats or In dependents were candidates on a dry plaform, than if they were to place the regular line of Prohibition nom inees in the field. They think other party nominees would poll a larger vote. , Should Mr. Brownell kick in and play, Oregon City would have three Republicans for governor, and there would doubtless be some warm times in the old town. GIVE THE CITY A CHANCE Give Her Good Water, Good Govern ment and Let Her Spread A dispatch from this city to tha Journal says Oregon City is the de fendant in seven suits in the circuit court. . . - - - These embrace street improvemnts, two public elevator actions, the wa tr commissioner suit, and so on. How many of these actions would have been brought if we had had commission government? Three or four of these actions are the outgrowth of factions, matters that could have been and should have been settled without going to court. You may bet and win your bet that these actions will cost the city a snug little expense bill before they are finished, whichever way they are de cided. Perhaps you did not know that Oregon City is paying out over $800 per month in salaries under the pres ent so-called "free government." Add the cost of expensive mistakes to this salary roll and give it to about three capable, common sense, business men, or adopt the business manager plan and put a big boss on the job, and Oregon City would go ahead and be some city. Given good water and good gov ernment, and this city should bound ahead. We have everything to make a city a great water power, great mills, great payrolls and the richest , sur rounding country. What this city wants now is a CHANCE TO GROW. Let us square away, put in a man aging system as big as the city, cut out the everlasting warfare and grow. HANDSOME CLACKAMAS AD Immigration Commission's Album Has Clackamas Well to Front The Oregon Immigration Commis sion has just issued its foreign book lets which may be seen at the public ity office of the Commercial club. Tha set contains three volumes, one book of 64 pages, one of 92 and an album of 194 pages and are printed in the German, Swedish and Norwegian languages. The album contains 18 photos of Clackamas county, which is seven more cuts than is shown by any other county. This is due to the publicity department having secured photos and seeing that Clackamas county had its snare of publicity. These books will be sent out in sets to parties who do not read the Eng lish language. The following cuts are subjects in the album: Al Gribble, Aurora Dairy scene. P. O. Chindgren, Meadow Brook, field of oats. Geo. Lazelle, Oregon City, field of rye. Henry Babler, Logan .harvest scene. Mrs. Kate Spulak, New Era, wheat field in shocks. E. P. Schedens, Damascus oat field. A. R. Cummings, Canby, field of corn. A. H. Anthony, New Era, apiary. Josi Sherebele. Oregon Citv. hon field. General Farming Landscape. Tu- alitan Meadows. Farm in Scandinavian Colony, (Carlsborg). J. W. Smith, Macksburg, residence. Franz Kraxbereer. Aurora Farm home. Hon. Gustav Schnoerr, Willamette Home. ........ R. Petzold, Oregon City, residence. German Church, Macksburg. Celebration of German Society of Clackamas county with Gustav Schnoerr as central figure; picture ta ken at Schnoerr's Park.