4 OREGON CITY COURIER; THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1913 t 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. OREGON CITV 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. BROWN, EDITOR It was current gossip that George C. Brownell would announce as a can didate for tnvernor at McMinnvillc Sunday nitrht. Whether he wanted to spoil newspaper tips or think it over a little more, is not known, now ever he did not announce. A continuation of gambling in eggs and other foodstuffs by use of cold storage is liable to precipitate public ownership and operation of cold storage plants, Portland Journal. This seems to be the only remedy. Ihe government is the only compet itor these big fellows can't get to. And not only the cold storage plants need competition. Salem will present the managerial plan of city government to the people and a charter commission is working out a new charter that will place the state capital under the most progres sive and responsive of governments. When will Oregon City take this matter up? The people are almost un animous for a change to either a commission or managerial plan, yet we only talk it. The quickest way to start it would be by petition, then a public meeting and a commission to go ahead with the reform. The National Conservation Con gress should be abolished. It is be coming socialistic and un-American. Here is its last record, that Hereafter no water power now owned or controlled by the public should bo sold, granted or given away in perpetuity, or in any manner remove from the public ownership which alone can give sound basis of assured and per manent control in the interest of the people. This congress is dead right, and we all know it. It is deplorable that the country has already lost the most of these great water powers that nature provided, but we should hold onto what is left. THE NEXT STEP Eggs, beef and lumber went onto the free list, and prices have advanc ed. They should not have advanced, tl;ey should have lowered in price, Letting articles into a country free of cuty should never have raised the price. The trusts are bigger than our government that is the reason. When etfgs were admitted free the packers hid a half billion in cold slorage cornered the imports and put the price where they wanted it, regardless of duties. The same game is being played on meat supplies the same game that Sully played on cotton and Patton played on wheat. Control it, hold it out, and force the people to pay any price. The government has got to own or control these trusts and combines, or it has got to go into business in com pletion, and give the whole country what it has given the canal zone food at far less price than the com bines give it. NOT A BIG PROBLEM THE PLUNDKKERS There aro plenty of men in busi ness who would not think of holding a man up at the muzzle of a revolver and robbing him, yet they have no hestitancy ubout plundering the peo ple ,if they can do it within the law. That is what many of the trusts are organized for. They are composed of rich men who have no other pur pose in combining their interests, ex cept to extort from the people the greatest amount ot money possible. By stilling competition they hope to keep prices UD to the highest nosisililn limit and reap enormous profits at me peoples expense. The method differs from that of the holdun man but is nono of the less robbery on that account. Morally the pnnciplo in volved is the same, for it is just as dishonest to rob because it can be done by practices that are not pro hibited by law, as it is to rob them by force. Not all trusts are engaged in this nefarious business, but that some of them aro is too well known to admit of denial. They are holding the public up for the last cent it is possible to extort. They are plunders oi uie people ana nothing elso. Editor Wosrnll. nf tli A imtii'o nii- server, refused the free publication of uiu couniy u-acners examination, writing a letter to the superintendent explaining wny me paper could not cive the advei-l.iKinn- fmn uml olinnr ing the Observer had during the past yeur jiuunsneu uuriy-six columns of freo advertising for liko public pur poses. Mr. Westcott sent a copy of his iui,ht to me ncw.ipapers ot the Will amette Valley for opinions and com ments. Hero is ours. , We havo seriously contemplated issuing one Courier giving every pub lic concern that asked for it the free advertising they solicited. While there would be little In the paper but this line of stuff, yet it would be the best argument to turn down this free advertising that could be devised. Pay after day goes into the waste basket columns of all kinds of dodges to pay. Week after week every news paper in Oregon is asked to give a way its goods to help some charitable or public concern get its goods. Kvery kind of scheme is hidden under some public pretext to avoid payment of what a business man has to come thru with. The Courier would much rather come thru with a cash contribution for these needed causes, and be dealt with likewise. Never ceasing demands for freo publication are the hoodos of newspapers. Recently the Courier showed how seven counties of the state, pulling off a mutual appropriation deal, dom inated the legislature and forced six and a half million dollars onto the taxpayers of Oregon, to which the Uregonian says in part: The Courier lays the whole burden of large state taxes on the system of back-scratching and log-rolling in the Legisla ture. It is not true: but enough of the charge is true to make it necesstry to agree that log-roll- . ing for appropriations to benefit various localities is the curse of any Legislature. We are prepared to hear from Oregon City that the way out is commission government for the state and the single tax. The single tax is, indeed, a panacea. Under it nobody would have any taxes to pay but the landowners, which includes the farmers. Since when did the Oregonian take out a mind reader's license? The Courier has never said that a commission government was ne re medy, and it is silly for the big Ore gonian to drag in single tax. The Courier holds that there should be direct responsibility for appropri ations and that this combination should be broken up. We have the same curse in our rational capital, and we will have it in any big or little capital so long a. tho present system is tolerated. One head should introduce all op propriation bills, and the people should know that head, and it should be where they could use a club on that head. Let that head be the governor, a commission, the house speaker, the senate president, but let it be a source the people can see and a responsi bility that men cannot hide. And when we get some such a sys tem we will break up the spenders' combination. WHAT WOULD FOLLOW INTERVENTION? LEGALLY BUNCOED Here follows a part of an editorial from The Public on the Mexican situ ation. Will the Oregonian please copy: "Suppose a belligerent had oc cupied tho White House at this time, a man fond of notoriety and seek ing personal aggrandizement. A word would have been sufficient to bring on tho clash. And once started, the struggle would havo been drawn out until thousands of men had perished, vast amounts of property had been destroyed and tho national debt doubled, And after the miserable long drawn out war hud been brought to a close, we should havo had the inevi table crop of widows, cripples and pensioners, together with the undy ing hatred of a neighboring people. And for what? Merely because ambit ious chieftains in a partially civilized country had substituted the bayonet for the ballot. War thrust upon us at mis time would mean a display o noisy patriotism, big contracts for army and navy supplies, cheap null tary heroes, and a debauched Con gross. In a trice we should be in the passion and tumult of .he reconstruc tion days that followed the Civil War, The tariff wall would bo rebuilt, and (liiestions ot taxation, public utili ties ami political reform would be swept away by tho greed and sel fishness that iiccompnny military op orations." Where You Waste 11 cents a day you are throwing away what would amount to $ 11,000 by the time you are 70 years old. In saying this, we assutie that you are twenty now. If so small a start will make you inde pendent, why not open a savings account with this bank NOW, and lay the foun dation for future prosperity. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY Judge Galloway of Salem, says every local option election in Oregon held on November 4 is void, because the day in a tecnical sense was not a general election. It was a state wide election, gener al to every precinct in Oregon. Every voter in the state had an opportunity to vote, and the virdict of the voters is just as fully representative as if it was held on a day when a president was elected. But there was a "tech" and Judge Galloway saw it, and according to his ruling, only a half of the voice of the people November 4 should be listened to. . Isn't it petty, unreasonable, ab surd? The people had a full and legal right to pass on several referendum measures of big importance on this aay, and these virdicts stand. But on the matter of deciding whether or not liquor should be sold in certain localities in 1914 this is illegal, the voice of the people shall not count. The election should have been held on another day, when there would have been more expense. Here's another. The supreme court of the state has declared our recent expensive regis tration law void. Under it thousands of people reg. istered, and that registration is just as (rood as if the United btates sup reme court had held it valid because the object was registration and the people registered. The Supreme Court holds that the act is invalid because it is not con ititutional, and at the same time the court s decision becomes unconstitu tional, for under it thousands of vot- ers were practically disfranchised in many Oregon cities because the At torney General declared the only way they could vote would be by swear ing in. " The supreme court knew months fgo what the law was. They could have pointed out the unconstitutional tpots and saved the State of Oregon thousands of dollars. But no, they let it go, let the thirty-four counties of the state put in the expensive card system and let the thousands of peo ple be to the trouble to register, and then they declare the registration in valid.j If they had declared the parts of the law void that butted into the con stitution and the registration stand, but little harm would have been done, but they dumped the whole kettle out. Now we can register again, and the again will be no more a registration than the one dumped out, for both will be registrations. However, one will be, a distinctive registration. And once more. Up at Woodburn J. R, Landon was elected a dry mayor. For forty years he had held public office more or less and had sat on many juries. i But after the election as mavor. some person discovered that sixty or seventy years ago Landon's father came to this country and was never naturalized. Suit was brought to oust him and Circuit Judge Kelley held that he was technically not a citizen; P. A. Lives lay, defeated by Mr. Landon, was de clared mayor. The virdict of the people was set aside because Landon's father neg lected to become naturalized back in Wisconsin seventy years ago and the "drys" had to accept a "wet" mayor. It is said law and court decisions are based on reason. If you can find any reason in these three cases show them. The people are .very tired of courts defeating their expressions on teen meal points. The registrations at the county clerks office were good and you know it. The decision of the attorney, gen oral, that because of the obeying of the registration many people were de prived of their votes in the recent election was Daa ana you Know iu After tho people of Oregon had ex pressed themselves with secret ballot at a state wide election, Judge uai loway should not have declared the expressions void because in his con struction of the law the day was not technically a "general election day LOOKING 'EM OVER i Closing an editorial on the way it sees the governor situation to date, the Salem Messenger writes: "There is Mr U'Ren of Oregon City who knows more about the different forms of popular government than any man in Oregon or anywhere else, Then, hailiner from the same town is Grant B. Dimick, principally dis tinguished as a defeated candidate for the Republican nomination in 1910 but who made a irood run. "So far. Oreeon City has but three candidates out for the Governorship the latest being George C. Brownell, a reformed Republican who is lying awake nights considering the mat ter. His platform will be, in the event he is a candidate, 'using the Mate militia to keep out the Hindus.' He also believes in prohibition. It Clack amas county has any other candidates they have not yet reported. "Portland also has three men who are anxious to become public serv ants.. One of these, T. T. Geer, held the job once upon a time, though only a few can tell the exact date without going to history to refresh their memories. It is evident, though, that he liked the position of public serv ant. Another Portland man is Col Robert A. Miller, a Democrat, by the way. Col. Miller is firm in the belief that no once can serve the people so well as a Democrat, and no Democrat so well as Col. Miller. But the Colonel is going to have some opposition, for the Hon. John Manning, ex-prosecut ing attorney for Multnomah County, has openly and above board declared that he will be in the race for a chance to become a servant of all the people of the great State of Oregon. "But it is almost six months vet until the primaries; so if any of the gentlemen here mentioned are objec tionable to any, there will mobablv be plenty of others, for up to date, the surface only has been skimmed." WEST Tom Kay is reported to have said that Governor West would again run for governor if in his judgement the people wanted him that is if there was strong enough sentiment shown. t-, i.:i. .., .,i- it Hint if a V rom Wim:u vvu wwe petition with enough signatures was presented, Governor West would think it his duty to get in. The Democrats of Oregon will look long for a candidate who can come down to the polls with more votes than West. The criticism against him is that he gets too busy, that he tackles too many things he can't get away with, but many will reason that it is bet ter to have tried and failed than never to have tried. In the Courier's judgement there is not a Democrat in Oregon who can poll the women vote West can, and if he is a candidate for re-election he'll crivp his KenuDllcan opponent a iuu for the money. "MUST TOGETHER STICK" Banks Equity Man Says Members Must Follow German Proverb In an article of your boosting pa- ner of Nov. 28th. I saw a suggestion from Mr. W. S. Daywalt, where he is starting out in the right direction, Keep right on, Brother, ana aon 1 stop until you get to your destina tion. If all the locals that have to go to Oregon City for their necessities of life, would combine and build a ware house and store in Oregon City, they would then realize the benetit and the meaning of Equity. But as long as you are only members in name, you can not accomplish much. Clackamas County has about 25 locals, but we never can see that they do any business. Mountaindale Local has bought thru the Equity Warehouse Co., in the last six weeks, $1,503.00 worth of merchandise. And other locals have done the same. We saved from 15 to 25 per cent on a dollar and that ia only the beginning. If you members in Clackamas would come through how long would it take until we would be able to get our stuff direct from the manufactur ers and producers? We need no wholesaler to buy our coffee from Brazil, and other foods just like it, and pay a middleman's price. Our warehouse manager can do the same thing and save us all kinds ot money. Ihis will not be hard to do, But we Germans must together HT1CK. Rt. 3, Bx 36, Banks, Oregon. Maple Lane Local The Manle Lane Local nf Hie Far. Trier's Socipt.v nf Fnnifv mpt. in r.imi. j ...WW ... 'bH lar session Nov. 19th, with 3 officers and 14 memhprs nrpspnt. i - - , - The reports of delegates were read ana accepted, ine motion was made ana carnea, tnat utto M. riunzman he nccpnt.pH ne a mpmW nf fVila lnol The following articles are for sale by 4.U.. .1 me meiuuers; All sizes and aces nf hocro V V. Parker; one Jersey bull calf, register- eu slock, n. ivi. KoDDins; s. (J. K. 1 cockerells. G. F. Afiirhnlls This local also WlfihpS tn TlnrpVmen about 1,500 lbs .red clover seed. it you have any clover seed for saie, piease notuv the secretarv. n sn siaung price. G. F. Mighells, Sec. Oregon City, Rt. 3. mm Sffp k mm A Little Paris Shop Now in this City A LITTLE FRENCH SHOP has been opened in our store. A new section showing over Six Hun dred Pieces of Artistic Jewelry such as you see in the little shops in Paris. Here a dollar or two, and even fifty cents buys a piece of jewelry worthy to be worn with the most elaborate gowns. The Fact Remains No amount of misrepresentation by the peddlers of alum' baking powders, no jug gling with chemicals, or pretended analysis, or cooked-up certificates, or falsehoods of any kind, can change the fact that Royal Baking Powder has been found by the offi cial examinations to be of the highest leavening efficiency, free from alum, and of absolute purity and wholesomeness. Royal Baking Powder is indispensable for making finest and most economical food. FOR SALE work horse, also one 9x12 rug and one 8x10 nearly new. J. H Bellan, Route 6, Box 64 on Pa cific Highway on South road. Taken up Black mare, about five years old, weight about 700, taken up Wednesday, Nov. 26. J. S. Goulds, Oregon City, Rt. 2. Lost Red leather purse, containing something like $17.00 in gold and silver; a money order receipt for $7.15. Finder please leave at Courier office. Reward. FOR SALE 5-room house and twn lots; good well; fruit; bam and wood shed. Terms reasonable En quire at 507 Mt. Hood street!" city FOR SALE CHEAP-Fine grade Jersey cows and heifers. Two miles south of Oregon City on rivet Phone Main 2013. J. H. Zan Meter For any pain, burn, scald or bruise Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil-the C hold remedy. Two sizes, 25c and 60c at all drug stores. Special Announcement WILLIAM GARDNER the well known JEWELER of Oregon City announces to bis many patrons that he has succeeded in procuring the services of Hint n. Schilling Eye-Sight Specialist of portland Every Monday and Thursday, beginning Itionday, December i, m from 9 o'clock a. m. to 5 p. m. PRICES REASONABLE Full Holiday Line of Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry and Silverware Columbia Records 3 Famous for Its Beautiful Designs Of, all inexpensive jewelry, the MERITE is the most celebrated for its artistic designs. A dollar buys a piece of this fa mous jewelry as beautiful in de sign as though it had cost a hundred times the price. The wearing of this artistic but inexpensive jewelry has become the fashion. Many women of wealth buy and wear it because of its beauty. We have many surprises in store for you in our New Jewelry Department. Even) Piece Guaranteed The design and workmanship of this MERITE jewelry is so un usually good that the makers give a guarantee with every piece, even those costing a trifle. Thus you are sure of getting not only a beautiful brooch or neck lace or any other piece of jewelry, but one that will wear most satisfactorily. Wear the Latest Styles In buying this artistic but inex pensive jewelry you get the very latest of novelties and you get superior wearing quality. Thus you can "keep up with the chang ing styles without great expense. A dainty necklace or lovely brooch is almost a necessity to give the right finish to low collars. Short sleeves invite a bracelet to set off a pretty arm. What $1.00 Buys Here are a few of the many beautiful pieces you can choose for a dollar or even less. Apendantsetwithartificial pearls, diamonds, and amethysts on a dainty silver chain. Friendship circle pins with hand tracery designs. Cloisonne enamel brooches, collar sets of three pins plain or with artificial pearl and dia mond settings. Artistic cuff buttons and stiek pins for men and youths. .Fill this Out It Will Pay You Name Postoffice Address I live miles from on road near I have acres of land. There are acres Under cultivation. There is an incumbrance of $ against the property due on 191.... I would like to borrow $ for years, giving this prop erty as security. Do you want to sell your farm? If you have a mortgage on your farm, or if you wish to bor row money for development purposes, or if you want to sell your tarm, it will be to your advantage to fill this out and return to us at once. WILLAMETTE VALLEY MORTGAGE LOAN COMPANY Aurora State Bank Building Aurora, Oregon You are cordially invited to visit our Little Paris Shop and enjoy the beauty of the new MERITE JEWELRY uiiay. it ,wn xq worth waile coining, if only to posted in the NEWEST STYLES. ' get Swyi - t;w : it Qi AtkyonrdIer .bout th. now , )i PRESENTS f Hi V VV- "Olympic" WW He.rU Wi)' I'' w2J' J Just the dandiest, oatoh- 'h: aS'li'y I 3fjrL "Ml lest, most Interesting !, ': ff''i5lJ V-:' 1PS "nic" novelties lmagina- mm I1 n Mm&i Portland Flouring ffiilw-.. Miiisco.- ass MASONIC TEMPLE BLPG. OREGON CITY, ORC. Officephones:Main 50, A50; Res. phones, M. 2524, 1751 Home D251 WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE Office 612 Main Street Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common Brick, Face Brick, Fire Brick