OREGON CITY'CJURIER, THURSDAY, JAN.l 1914 OREGON CITY COURIER Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and en ; ( ', tered in the Postoffice at Oregon Cit Ore., as second class mail matter. 03EG0N 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. 3R.OWN. EDITOR Next , year will make or break the Bull Moose party. It will be decisive because if will embrace many states and the choice of a new Congress and new state officersEvery thought ful man can see that next year will determine whether the Progressive party is coming: or going. A serious weakness in the Progressive move ment so far is that it has not been able to attract any of the restless Democrats. Old but fittingly popular "How Dry I Am." ' ; There is talk that the Progressives ' are going to bring action against the Stand Patters for alienating the af fections of Jonathan Bourne. ROSS' CHRISTMAS PRESENT ' It & common thief, with no posit . Ion or bank account should convert , the other fellow's property by means of a forged check, and get caught at it, he would be convicted by a jury and Judge Campbell would send him to the pen just where he would be long. And that would end the com mon thief. , But with J. Thornborn Ross, as head of the Title Guarantee & Trust Co., we have a different story. ' J. Thornborn was a Real Noise. ". He was a Big Business banker, i Six years ago his bank had $400,- 000 of school funds held in trust. . J. Thornborn was a trifle color ; blind. ' He couldn't distinguish the trust fund from the bank's money, and the bank failed. ; Ross had no more right to use it 'than the Common Thief had to forge the check. But J. T. R. had Coin and he had Influence and Pull. No Salem prison i for his Rtrine. He appealed to the Supreme Court.' mi . l ' t n i 1 T,1 'mat AUgusc (.or oeuiemuer; jouuy i reviewed the trial, said he was guilty, ;but that Marion County had found ;him Too Much Guilty. They lopped Joff the fine. Thornborn was Truly Grateful. That half million would come in Mi Ighty Handy in boosting his case to ,the Real Boss Court the U. S. su preme and it was duly Boosted, j Despite the battery of Celebrated 'Eastern Lawyers the half million bought and despite of all holds and , tricks known to Big Business, the ! Pa Court said the man with the Big i Middle Name would have to take half J the dose Marion County prescribed for him and the Warden at Salem should hold his nose until he swal lowed it. Then did J. Thornborn Cave In? Did he fall on someone's neck and weep ? . . Nitty. , . ', He,, or his Eastern Attorneys, re called precedent. - They remembered Another Buccan eer who the Big Court sent to a Pen and who is now at the head of a great .Navigation Company. ' They recalled Easy Bill Taft. ' A handy judge, Percy R. Kelly, , "granted Ross a parole, while his friends could think things over and .devise a Means o beat Three Court -Verdicts. ' j Miss Fern Hobbs, governor West's '.private secretary, was dragged into iitne uame. ' Breeches' influence had not been .iVery Potent so far, and they would ! try Dress Goods for a change. .;. She was private stenographer to f the Convicted Banker when he was ,:honest. ( And J, N. Teal, of Portland, he was 'some Dent in a Can, and he joined ; Miss iiouus m the Mercy Appeal, 'y But why drag it on. ' Governor West Fell for It. .' He pardoned the man who three courts found guilty. ii He never had served a day's time in the six years he had stood off Justice. Governor West justified his revers ,al of the United States Supreme iLourt on the ground that Ross had Been Sufficiently Punished. The same reasoning would turn i loose every man in the jail here, v It would open wide the doors of , Salem prison. '; And the Check Forger has long ago served his time and been set .free. He only tried to Convert a Hun dred Dollars, 'l And my old friend Ella Wheeler Wilcox said a mouthful- when she warbled: "Steal, if you get a million,- .' For you'll get out on bail. ; It's tho Great Big Thief Who gets out on lief, While the Little One goes to jail." Judge Campbell and Judge Gallo way seem to have different view points. "When the doctors disegree" why not let the people decide? Mc- Minnville Telephone Register. Any city that has once adopted the managerial plan of government will not return to the old form, because its citizens are well satisfied. It is business from start to finish. Eu gene Guard. The world is talking about the re covery of Mona Lisa. No doubt it is some picture but I would .like to see it stood up beside September Morn and see which would get the popu lar verdict. So often we hear it counselled "the recall is over, forget it," yet the cor respondents to the Portland papers improve each opportunity to drag in some little personal reference when ever it presents. The Oregonian doesn't approve of the Courier's suggestion of compul sory voting, and we are glad to state it doesn't approve of anything the Courier suggests. As we gather it, compulsory education is the Oregon ian's idea. Fine! Let it be made ob ligatory that every Republican in Oregon shall subscribe for the Ore gonian. GONE DRY Ten saloons in this city got the K. O. at 11 P. M. last night and stayed down for the count. For the first time in fifty years Oregon City is dry. , And it is going to BE dry until the people change their verdict, or the su the - supreme court changes it for them, for the ' same sentiment that voted booze out November 4 is going to see that it stays out don't make any mistake about that. ' It is very unlikely that the su preme court will decide against the counted votes of the people, for it would be neither law nor justice, and if it did, then there would be such a turning over of last fall's election re sults that none of us. would know where we are at. It's recent decision on the registration law has about half in the pickle now. Oregon City voted to try a tem perance town for a change, and the only thing to do is for every police officer and city official to get right in ahead of the majority vote of Ore gon City and see that any blind pig that tries to run a pen, does not last. as long as a snowball over a radia tor. We believe the officials of this city will do just t his. Five months ago Judge George Bingham, as justice of the peace at Oak Grove, Clackamas county, "en tenced R. W. Moore to six months in the county jail for beating his wife, Wednesday of this week Judge Bing ham was himself arrested on a sim ilar charge and lodged in the cell ad joining that of Moore. They had delightful Christmas, these two wife beaters, but it all goes to show that being judge does not make a man of a brute. Eugene Guard. R. A.. Booth's' announcement of his decision to run for senator reads more like a satire on an oldtime politic ian's reply to "the cawl uv the dear peepul" than like a dignified states man's dictum, to be taken in earnest. It has all the inherent marks of being conceived of political desperation. written in insincerity and timed for psychological effect. It should prove a key to the manner of the man'i statesmanship, and of those that stand behind him. Cornelius Tribune It is absolutely true that there is great waste and extravagance in gov ernment, state and national. Offices are multiplied, salaries increased. wanton extravagance in the purchase of supplies, endless red-tape in the management of departments and very little attention given to economy in the public service. This and govern mental policy in legislation is fast creating classes in this country which we once thought could never exist. But we have them and class hatred is growing, too, and it is being foster ed by those who think they have something to gain through it. The problem of the unemployed would soon be settled if Uncle Sam would start a few rairoads into the undeveloped districts now. When the railroads were completed the labor would still find employment in mill and factory and mine. Rogue River Courier. ! THE OTHER SIDE The newspapers relate hovr Villa, the . Mexican rebel general, has con fiscated the vast tracts of land, mines, houses, cattle and personal effects of former ambassador Creel and Luis Terranzas, and Villa rubs it in by serving notice on these millionaires that if the rebel cause succeeds they would not get a ccntavo of indem nity. ' ' . This is one side of it, and it makes an American tjiink it is a pretty raw greaser dcaL?'- When he,ets all the evidence he doesn t think' if quite so raw. Here's a. little in defence: Terranzae owns two thirds of the great state of. Chihuahua. The state has almost ninety square miles. It has a population of almost half a million. And one senor owns two-thrids of it. How did this Spaniard get these vast holdings? He never got them honestly. It is impossible. - He got them just as Villa proposes to take them by right of might. It is such men as Terranzae that has caused the rebellion in Mexico. Seven hundred famllilies own all the arable land in the great republic. Terranzas is one of them. I have ridden over miles of his great do mains and seen his vast irrigation undertakings. I wondered then how long the common class would stand for such conditions, conditions that were forcing them into literal slavery. Try the Experiment This Year 1 Possibly you who read this have never kept a bank account. If not, let ug stiKgcst that you try the experiment. You will find it helpful in many ways. Aside from the fact that your money will be safe from theft and fire, nuih..a habit tends to thrift, economy, discipline and a general understanding of business principles, all of which are essential to success. It also affords a convenient method for the payment of bills; and, as the checks are always preserved and returned to you, they serve as re- ceipts for the amounts paid. We offer you good ser vice, courtesy, liberality, and stability and every accommodation consistent with safety. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY There is just as much reason for and just as milch use for government owned railroads in Oregon, or any other undeveloped state, as in Alaska The one great need of our state is more railroads, but Wall Street money will only build these as the big in terests want them built until such time comes that the government will take over a railroad or two, make a big success of them, and public de mand will force the policy to be ex tended to the building of government roads into undeveloped states. It'i a way off, but it's coming. THE HOUSTON WAY Here is a little single tax sermon It will set the OregdTiian to bleating and George Hicinbotham will come in next week with an article blowing it all away, by his peculiar way of reas oning, but to men who do their own thinking, it is bound to sink in a lit tie for you can't get away from it, In 1912 Houston, Tex., adopted new plan of taxation, of lowering the assessments on buildings, factories etc. A few days ago the Courier ob tained the financial statistics- of the city for the year before and the year after the plan was udopted. ' Here is the summary: Building permits increased 65 per cent in the first six months af,ter the adoption. ' Deposits of cash in the six nat ional banks increased seven million dollars. The postoffice receipts increased 25 per cent. Can't dodge these facts. They are results. You can t explain them away, And then come the Houston boost ers with large post cards which they are sending . all over the United States. A perpetual bonus to manu facturers and merchants is offer . ed by the City of Houston, Tex as, through itg system of ex emption from taxation. Personal property, such as cash, household furniture, and evidences of debt,' are totally exempt from taxation. The Houston plan of taxation contemplates that merchandise, machinery of manufneturics and all other improvements upon . . land shall be assessed at only twenty-five per cent of their val ue. Land being assessed at its fair value. Take your money and brains to Houston, Texns, and get the full benefit of all that you create by your industry and enterprise. This Houston plan encourages rather than fines, industry. It taxes the vacant lots and the unimproved lands at what they are worth in use, and as they are improved, built upon and made to produce the taxation is NOT increased. Under this plan there is little in centive to hold idle lands for sur rounding industry to make valuable it is not an investment. Under it the minute any man improves a piece of land, be it a vacant lot or a logged off tract, his taxes do not increase. If he builds a house on a building lot he is not assessed because of the im provement. If ha builds a factory that gives employment to labor, he is not taxed out of the city. If a farmer clears a field, plants an. orchard and builds a home, he doesn't pay any more taxes than his neighbor who holds a dead piece of land for specu lation, or in other words, the dead land must pay as much taxes as the producing land. It seems to be hard for some peo ple to understand that taxation on land values only, would help the worker and tax the shirker. But it would do just this. lions of idle acres in Oregon come through for taxation on values that surrounding industry is putting on the speculative acres. It would en courage the building of mills and factories and it would put taxation where it belongs. A farmer wrote to this office last week proposing that the Live Wires give the flax mill exemption" from taxation for ten years to locate in this city. The flax mill would make a great er market for the farmers' acre pro duce. So would any mill or factory that employed help. Take Portland out of Oregon and land in this part of Oregon would drop 60 per cent. Typical of Christ' Sec ond Advent. L23rodklyn -v IIABERISACLEy -(4V- BIBLESTUDYON -D TABLES OF THE LAW REPLACED. Review Sept. 28. "Thou art a Qoi ready to pardon, graetout and merciful, !ow to anger, and abundant in loving kindnet."lchemtah 9:17, UOEVER falls to see that Moses, Israel and the Law were types, fulls to get the real lesson out of them. Moses-was a type, not only of Jesus, but of the entire Church, of which Je sus is the Head. This St. Peter ex plains, saying, "Moses truly said unto the fathers, A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me. "-Acts 3:24. Jesus was raised up first, and since Pentecost the raising up from amongst the brethren has progressed. The work will be consummated when the full number of the Church shall have been accepted to glory. Then the antl--typical Moses will begin His great work of delivering all desiring to re turn to harmony with God all of whom are represented in the twelve tribes of Israel. The Church of this Gospel Age is otherwise called the Church of the First-borns, typically represented In the tribe of Levi, nil of whom repre sented the first-borns of Israel, saved in the Passover. These were divid ed into two class es the priests and their ser vants. The priests represent ed The Chrlst- Hlgh Priest and under priests. The Levites rep resented the re mainder of the overcouiers. The antityplcal priests will become a Royal Priest hood. Jesus, the greut High Priest, in vested with kingly honors, will have associated with Himself the faithful Little Flock, His joint-heirs. The re mainder of the overcouiiug Church will be colaborers ou a less glorious plane, yet spiritual. Their work will be pri marily the blessing of mankind. The First Tables of the Law. The first tables of the Law were pre pared by the Lord Himself. This rep resents the fact that man was created a perfect Image of his Creator, In full accord with the Divine will and fully expressive of the Dlrlno Law. Adam needed uo other law than that which was In and of himself its a perfect niun dod'i law was written In his heart. But by reuson of sin .this Law was broken. Poor humanity has no longer proper Judgment respecting sin and righteousness. Man needs the great Meditator, to make reconciliation for his iniquity and to rewrite the Law of God in his flesh. i Then Moses was Instructed to hew out tho two tnbles of the Law. TIiIb represents that The Christ Is fully com missioned to prepare the hearts of mankind for the rewriting of the Di vine Law. To prepnre men to obey God's Law will require their Restitu tion their lifting up out of slu and degradation. This work, committed to Moses in the type, is in the antitype committed to Christ Moses' socond coming with the two tables of the Law was peculiarly dif ferent from the first. Ills face shone; and it was necessary for him to put on a veil, which thereafter he woro In the presence of the Israelites, but remov ed when entering the presence of God. Chest's work as Mediator, at His Second Comlnir. will he nccompunlod by a veiling of nix glory, so thuf the world will not see Jesus. This lie de clared. "Yet a little whllw. and the world seeth Me no more: but ye shall see Me." , The Apostle explains that the Church will be prepared to see Christ in Ills glory by being changed from enrtuly to Heavenly nature. At His Second Advent, our Lord will veil His glory from mankind, and speak to them through the veil, and not directly from the, snirit nlano- Poor Blood is Responsible or much sickness and suffer ing because its quality deter mines our resistive power. With poor blood we are lan guid, susceptible to colds, lack natural energy and. ambition, and the gradual decline cf strength makes prompt and careful treatment necessary. Drugs or alcohol cannot make blood and must be avoided. Scott's Emulsion is nature's grandest blood-maker because of its wholesome medical nourishment, so carefully predigested that it assimi late s without taxing digestion and quickly increases the red corpuscles of the blood, strengthens the organs and tissues and upbuilds the whole system. Absolutely nothing compares with Scott's Emulsion to purify and en rich the blood to overcome or avoid anaemia. It is totally free from al cohol or opiates and your health de mands tho purity of Scott's. . ScUt & Eowue. Bloonifield. N. . 13-S5 Slnnklud win see .testis no more. In stead, they nhall see His representa tivesthe Ancient Worthies as He de clared, saying. "Ye shall see Abraham, Isaac. Jacob and all 'the Prophets." The world will see them in human per fection, samples of what mankind- may attain during the restitution times. Other Features of the Type. The anointing of the Aaronie priest hood typified the anointing of the Koyal Priesthood As in the type sac rifices "were neces sary .before anoint ing and consecra tion to the priest ly , office, so in the antitype Jesus must offer nim self. thereby show ing Ills loyalty to God. by sacrinc lug even nnto death. Similarly, the un der priesthood con secrate to office only by sacrifice. In the case of the typical high priest, the sacrifice was a bullock. The antitype was our Lord's own body. In the case of the typical under priests, the sacri fice was a goat. The antitype Is, the human nature of the Church. He brews 13:11-13. The typical mediator offered typical sacrifices. The real Mediator offers "better sacrifices." The typical media tor led the typical people Into tb typi cal Promised Land. The antitypicnl Mediator, during the thousand years of His reign, will lead God's people bach to ' the blessings and privileges lost through Adam's disobedience, and re deemed by the Sacrifice on Calvary. NEW STABLE IS PALATIAL Aaron'a Anointing Typ teal. Elkhorn Barn .Rebuilt With Concrete is Most Sanitary Place in City There is an old saying that a good man is kind to his horse, and if this is so W. J. Wilson, proprietor of the Elkhorn Stables, is going to have more business than he can attend to, for his new Elkhorn barn is virtually an palace hotel for horses. Concrete from top to bottom, and equipped with every sanitary device, the new stable recently erected i on lower Main Street, and now ready for ser vice, is the last word in modern con struction Nfor this class of building. The stable complies with every re quirement of the drastic barn ordin ance passed by the city council, and then goes some further. , The new Elkhorn Stable replaces the forker structure, destroyed last year by fire. Built of reinforced concrete, the new barn is absolutely fireproof, there being but a minimum of wood in the interior fittings. Each stall is individually drained, and other culverts are so placed as to take off any surface water or waste. A special system of ventilation will keep the air in the stable sweet and clean constantly; while the extra large size of all stalls will assure comfort to all animals boarded in the place. Mr. Wilson has in the past built up a large patronage among local business houses, many of wMch kept their teams in his former establish ment, while among farmers for miles around the Elkhorn was known as the best barn in the city. In its new guise the Elkhorn will continue its former success, and its perfect sani tation and obsolute fireproof con struction will cause it to appeal still more to the driving public. Aside from its business of a board ing and feed barn, th eElkhorn is also the home of a number of excellent livery rigs, and those desiring driving or riding horses for a jaunt through the surrounding county will be able to have their wants promptly and satisfactorily fulfilled. GRANT B. DIMICK Owner E. J. LANKINS Manager Oregon City, Ore. Hubbard, Oregon miclt Stock Farm Importers and Breeders of High Grade Poland China Swine Best Foundation Stock in the West ALL STOCK REGISTERED IN THE NAME OF PURCHASER YOUNG STOCK FOR. SALE Dimick Stock Farm R. F. D. No. 2 HUBBARD, ORE. 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..:. t 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 farm, 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 Wi I i'1 F f) I Art your dealer about the nw J,.l Ph A 3 presents ' m $VJ''if tiMl " JET S$ "Olympic Went Heart. tM flroi Jr "Olympic" Pancake Flour Ml "tyiW t li; It U ' j Juit the dandinst, oatoh- "JMl ''A')1 ill -JS II it, most interesting ','ijSf. j.CTP;' li li I, J "nto" novelties iinagiua. Y'ijW I'MfS 12 11 H We esPeoiil'y Sported f MM Si II !( 1 from Germany. ) '11 B A 1 Portland Flouring if urn iiirn iuimhii ifWiiiriV'Mtilriiifcw "Upstairs, Downstairs, In My Lady's Chamber" This familiar line from "Mother Goose" suggests one of the greatest advantages of the Perfection Oil Heater. It is so light and Handy it can easily be carried about the house-wherever heat is needed. WjERFETll(D)rsT Smokeless J Light it in the bedroom and dress in comfort. Take it to the bath-room-the breakfast room-the sewing room. It keeps the house warm aim cuz,y. Burns oil-the cheap est fuel. Easy to light and care for. Can't Smoke. Doesn't smell. Finished in plain steel or blue enamel ed drums. Ask to see it at your dealers. Standard Oil Company PORTLAND For Best Results Use Pearl Oil - t . v s s, WTLI 111 Gil lit 1 It would make millions and mil