OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 191-f OREGON CITY COURIER Published Thursdays from the Courier Building, Eighth and Main streets, and entered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as 2d class mail matter OREGON CITr COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. Subscription Price $1.50. Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 5-1 Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co M. J. BR.OYVN, EDITOR "TO HELL WITH TOMORROW." The Courier editor was at Beau mont, Tex., when the great oil gush ers came in as fast as the drill could be pushed down to the oil lake. Some of the producers seeing the awful danger should a fire get to one of these gushers and uncap the others, called a meeting one Sunday to enact some tringent precautions. One big producer Jiointpd out the dangers of the carelessness and con cluded with "Tomorrow we may have a fire here all Texas can't put out." An oil-crazed speculator who had just struck a gusher the men were trying to cap, and who had another well almost in, yelled out: ' ."To hell with tomorrow we may all be dead. Let's get the grease while it is running." It is but a matter of a few weeks when the Panama canal will open, and it presents a situation that the people of the Pacific coast seem to be absolutely side stepping. The hiehest estimate of the num ber of emigrants that will be brought here in the opening months is 3UU, 000. The lowest is 150,000. These people will "be distributed in California, Uregon and Washington Probably not one out of ten of these people can speak hngush. They are the poor people of Eu rope. They come here to get away from pauper conditions at home. Today we have bread lines march ine ud and down the coast. We haven't work enough for the men now here. Let 50.000 or 100,000 more come to Oregon, of a class to which a dol lar a day looks like- big wages, and where are uiegonians going to be.' Very few of these emigrants from southern Europe will be able to buy our waste land and make homes. They will be work hunters, and ig norant of our ways and standard of living. Oregonians cannot compete with them in the wage market. And what are Oregonians going to doY It's a matter of dead seriousness and should be met before it reaches us. "To hell with tomorrow" may find us with tomorrow and a hell. HOW WOULD THIS DO? $300 A DAY IN TAXES If 5,000 families should leave Port land it would make a big difference in the values of land and the market gardening business in Clackamas county. If 5,000 more families come to Portland it would make a big dif ference the other way. To exemnt the home from taxa tion up to $1,500 will undoubtedly result in that many new homeg being built in Portland within the yeur 1915. People who live in homes, and people who build them eat stuff that grows in the ground, . Clackamas county has stuff grow ing in the ground that it sells to Portland people. No eounty in the state will benefit more from the exemption of the home from taxation than Clackamas. Its people should rise unanimously and put that measure on the ballot, What is needed now is 6,000 more names and SliOO. In every rural neighborhood there should be one hustler, or more, se curing those signatures. The farm era of Clackamas county alone could furnish them, Their wives and sons and daughters could furnish signa tures enough to complete tho peti tion. Farmers will pay more than $300 every day to the tax collector of Clackamas .county in 1915 that this measure would save them if it Is adopted in Nov. 1914. The Courier will receive donations of money to help this measure out. It will furnish a list of volunteers to circulate tho petition to the secretary, Alfred D. Cridge, 954 East 2'id NORTH, Portland, Ore.; or any per son can send to him direct. Our attorney general wants to be governor, and comes out to say so. lie endorses the idea of exempting the home from taxation. Well, gen eral, send in a check to help along the Home-Tax Exemption amend ment. Practical sympathy NOW will do more than after the election. It won't need you, then, To exempt $1,500 of the home from taxation is none too much. One candidate for governor has contributed cash to help the measure along and lent his assistance to its drafting. He would have no objec tion to good company. Better get aboard. It rather looks as if there would be tilings doing at" tho coming state election. Here are the ideas of a young Re publican in Oregon City. Not so bad. Think them over. "Abolish the senate, re-apportion .the house with a smaller represen tation lown to 25 or 30. , "Have the house convene every 90 days, limit the sessions to 10 or 15 days,, and prohibit any bill introduced from being passed at the same ses sion it is introduced 90 days be tween introduction and passage." The people of Oregon might wait a long time and do a heap worse than adopt this outlined reform. If we had one house and it so small a man couldn't hide himself, there would be a line-up where every voter could see the standing. With no senate to duck behind and with the handy recall, there would be direct responsibility, and a lot less graft. But these changes will come. It Is a pretty sure bet the senate is going, and when once gone, the people will make the house sit up and be noticed. THE SCARE OF BONDS (Aurora Observer) The proposal to issue $850,000 in bonds to build hard surfaced roads is sure to arouse opposition from those who have an unreasonable prejudice against bonds for any and all pur poses. Just why this prejudice exists it is difficult to explain. Many public and semi-public works and enterprises could never have been carried on in any other way. Scarcely a railroad in the United States could have been built without issuing bonds. Many municipal corporations, to say nothing of counties and states have built thousands of miles of the finest roads in the world in the Eastern States, and all have been built by issuing bonds to supply the funds. This method distributes the cost over a number of years, making future as well as present users pay for the benefits re ceived. By this method only can hard surfaced roads be built for present use, for the small amount of yearly taxes is not sufficient when spent in annual driblets to make even a decent beginning. It may be of interest to know that $850,000, in 5 per cent bonds, can be repaid, principal and interest, by an annual levy of about 1 1-2 mills for the next 12 years. During these 12 years we should have the constant use of hard, smooth, dustless, mudless roads, good in summer and winter alike, roads that will reduce hauling expenses and at the same time en hance the value of our land ten times th amount of our road taxes for the 12 years. A considerable few of the promi nent politicians of Oreiron are irointr out of their way to say that they are opposed to single tax, and some of them in the next breath, or the breath previous, will tell you that they are in favor of exempting the home from taxation to a "reasonable amount." The flip-flop some gentlemen took a few years ago on the silver question nas kept them flip-Hopping ever since. The time will come when we will hear from every side the earnest as surance of candidates for office that they are and always have been de voted singletaxers and read Henry George's Progress and Poverty at moir momeis Knee. This may sound weird,' but it will prove true. CAN'T YOU SEE IT? The wise ones now have it that tho plan is for the Oregoninn and the Re publican machine to drop Booth at the last moment and run Bourne. It sounds strange, but Oregon politics knows stranger things. Cornelius Tribune. And if this change should come to pass some horrid fellow would jump and say Pou rod's proposition to cur tail the initiative and his stand against public ownership of railroads and tele graphs might have had somethine- to do with the change. Three hundred cases of typhoid and 20 deaths have awakened the people of Contntliti to tho need of a pure water supply, and the present well system will bo abandoned and u $150,000 gravity system will be in stalled. Four of the Supreme Court iudees go out this year, Mollride, Bean, Mc Nary and Ramsey. Circuit Judge Benson of Lake county has an nounced his candidacy for one of the vacancies. i no Aurora unsorver comni the platform of G. B. Dimick city, as "broad and ideal." ents on of this A DROP OF QUICKSILVER Scatters in all directions, when ( you touch it with your finger. Quicksilver doesn't fly away any quicker when a drop of it is broken than the silver dol lar vanishes when once it is brokeu into small change. Kach piece seems to melt into the air. As jlong as it is iu your pocket it is likely to be scattered; but put away iu our vault it remains a dollar as long as you wish. The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY "Single Tax!" gasps out some of our exchanges at the sight of the Home-Tax Exemption amendment. Some of them are throwing connip tion cat fits in an fcndeavor to scare the farmers into the brush by telling them cf the a-w-f-u-1 results of ex empting from tax the house and barn, live stock, tools, etc., to $1,500. The opponents of the measure say it will exempt one-sixth of the pro perty from taxation. That is when you can get them down to any esti mates whatever. In fact the amount it will exempt is different in different counties. In a county like Douglass, where land and franchise values and rights of way amount to five-sixths of the total assessed values, it could not possibly increase taxes more than one-twelfth. ' Old Granny Oregonian assumes that it will exempt one-sixth in Wash ington county; and it would probably do as much for Clackamas as it would for Washington. The indications are that it would exempt about one-tenth of the assessment roll, however. If it did exempt one-sixth any 12 year old girl can figure out what the effect will be on the farmer having a total assessed value of $6,000, of which $1,000 would be exempt. The example would run like this: If "John Henshaw" pays $120 in taxes now on $6,000 what taxes would he pay if he was exempted one hundred per cent on one-sixth of it and had one-fifth added to the remainder? But "John Henshaw" might have $10,000 in land values on the assess ment rolls and nothing worth speak ing of aside from that patch of land. Well, in that case, this amendment will greatly encourage him, for it will bring him buyers and neighbors for half his land and enable him to de velop the rest with the capitaK Most of farmers in Clackama3 who work their own land for a living have about $2,000 in assessed values on the average. Their improvements and labor values exempted by this measure would be about half that at the very outside estimate; the figures indicate less than $750, The small farmer with $1,500 of exemptions allowed could have $7,500 of land values in addition and still be about even on tho taxes he paid. If he had much more property than that he could afford to pay more taxes better than his neighbor having per haps $300 in exempted property and land assessed for $1,000. The small farmer pays very heavily on his property in proportion to values. A score of corporations in Illinois dodge taxes every year on more property than all the farmers in Oregon own. We have a score of corporations doing the same thing in Oregon but the figures are not fully compiled. i AN OPENING Three Democrats of Coos county are said to be out after Representative Hawley's politi cal scalp. They are John D. Goss, Hugh McLain and Judge John F. Hull, of Marshfield. It seems as if any live man ought to be elected this year, as the present representative of this district appears to have about as much influence in Washing- ' ton as a snow man. Salem Messenger. If a man of some prominence and more principle would come out and make an aggressive campaign, he could down Hawley, but of late this Salem politician has had splendid luck in having the weakest of men go against him so weak that it has seemed more than luck. So far as Oregon is concerned, Hawley has been a dead one, but as to representing big business and stumping the New England states for high tariff, he has been a lurid and handy success. Now see the newspapers and the West haters "explain. Judire Ander son of Baker, in a decision rendered Tuesday, upholds Governor West's action in the Copperfield matter, and declares the courts have no power to enjoin the governor trom pro claiming martial law, when in his judgement such action is necessary. Here's about tho hottest one ever handed out. The Richmond, Cal., Her ald' never misses a chance to hand one -to Chet. Rowell of the Fresno Re publican. Here is the last chance: The students of the Univer sity of Wisconsin, states a dis patch", are staging a dramatic version of the book of Job. There is a chance for Chet. Rowell. He could go on there and take the part of the boil. Let the matter of the sale of cigar ettes be put up to the people of Ore gon tor a vote and the little stinkers will lose their place on the tobacco shelves and it is coming at the next session. Newherg Graphic. It should come and will come when wo have some representatives at halem whoso children ties are stroncr er than tho tobacco trust.' It is said one representative is going to intro duce a bill, and it will certainly be inteiesting to see how the boys line up. That word "fate" is a relic of su perstition that I have little time for. Its the coward's slip out and the quitters clinch. That misfortune will drop on onesman in bunches and the l. - A. - i I- ui-xi oi overyimng come in easy suces to ins neigmior, are instances wo very often see. but fate never willed it so no over-ruling power ever iramea up tne circumstances to give you the worst of it. Darn this ramui, s root nonsence. Nature gave you Drains to overcome the circum stances that line up against you. .The man who is too shiftless to 'cart the rotten cabbage leaves out of his cel lar and then wails at a fate which di rected typhoid fever to his home, is of the class who prate of "luck." These men go down wfth the first inb on the jaw and stay down for the count. A man has a rigjit to buy booze enough to get properly and thor oughly soused. The law says he may buy it and drink it from any licensed bar. Then when he gets the jag nicely to working, the law says he must not irot drunk, and arrests him. Justice tells him to pay a fine of five dol lars for getting drunk at a place where the law savs he may got drunk. He has spent five dollars for his drunk material, but must pay five more for using it. If he can't he goes to iail and the tax payers buck it up. It is a great system, and its work- inrs arc beautiful. The government irets the coin from the man who makes booze (in revenue,) from the man who sells it (in licence) aid th man who drinks it (in fines.) Nice bvsinjss. Clackamas county is going to mako a noise like less taxes this year. It doesn't appear'there will be any senate for the elected to go to this fall. There will be little use for the Republicans to hold a National con vention in 1916. Ex-Senator Bourn suggests that the nation borrow a billion and lend it to the states to build good roads. To many that would seem like get ting something for nothing. Buffalo N. Y. Courier. About 50 of our road districts will expend over $1,000 on road work this year. The last legislature passed a law which plainly states such dis tricts shall advertise for bids, let the work by contracts and that the coun ty surveyor is the county engineer to prepare the specifications. This is plain law. Now what? Week after week come the load ex penses from nearlv every district in the county, and the question arises, what CAN supervisors be doing to the roads during the rainy season? And the conclusion also arises that our system is dead wrong. Control of our railroad securities separation of production and trans portation, that individuals, not bus iness be prosecuted and prohibition of holding companies. These are the big four of President Wilson's message to Congress, and he is a big enough man to see them through. This paper is as open as a barn door to any man or woman who has anything to say from president to supervisor. Honest criticism, backed up with reason, will find a place, but pin-sticking and personal revflnges don't go. If you can write something that will make people think, whether it is toothpicks or the Mexican situ ation, we will gladly print it. One Courier reader will understand this reference. This paper may be inde pendent in general matters, but it won't pull chestnuts out of the fire for any individual. It is to be hoped that the agita tion for cheaper insurance for the poor man will come to something that the workingman may have a policy at actual cost, without graft, dividends, big salaries and big ex penses. The trouble with the pres ent day insurance is that the man who can afford to carry it doesn't need it, and those who need it can't afford it. A man came in the office last week, a man close to the sev enty mark, a poor man and in poor health. He is rounding out his life in a struggle between work, sickness and meeting monthly payments rang ing as high as $9 a month. He has paid in for years and years, depriv ing himself of the little Jcomforts that help to make life enjoyable, and now must die to win or that a wife or child may win. It isn't worth the struggle. More happiness would have come from the spending of the assessment money than the family will ever get from the use of policy money. CASTOR I A . For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature FOR SHERIFF va Ay ' ft Henry K. Koehler, of Oswego, has announced his candidacy for Sheriff of Clackamas County on the Demo cratic ticket. Mr. Koehler is a blacksmith by oc cupation and has been a resident of Clackamas county for over twenty years. He has served as Constable, and is under no obligations except the duties of the Sheriff's office, if nom inated and elected. Paid Adv. Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always Bonglit, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has bonethe signature of i ana nas ucen maae unuer ma per- The "Mischief Quartette" and It's Work Vf .j sonal supervision since its infancy. 'ecZcul! Allow no one to deceive you In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Chuoren .experience against xpeiimci What is CASTORIA Castorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-, goric, Props and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and aUays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, . Flatulency, "Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Each year the month of January numbers its list of victims from influ enzia, la grippe, bronchitis and pneu monia. The prompt use of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound will check the onset of a cold and stop a cough, preventing the developement to more serious conditions. Keep it on hand. Huntley Bros. Co. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MOBRAV TRT, NtW YORK CITY. m of CeC& A Torpid Liver Is a fine field for the Malarial Germ and It thrives wonderfully. The cer tain result In. such cases Is a spell of Chills. HERBINE la a Powerful Chill Tonic and Liver Regulator. V It puts the liver In healthy, Vigorous condition and cures the chills by destroying the disease germs which Infest the System. Herblne Is a fine anti periodic medicine, more effec tive than the syrupy mixtures that sicken tb,e stomach; be cause It not only kills the dis ease germs, but acts effectively In the liver, stomach and bow els, thus putting the system In condition to successfully resist the usual third or seventh day return of the chill. Herbine Is a cleansing and Invigorating Medicine for the whole body. Price 50c per Bottle. JamesF.Ballard.Prop. St.Louls.Mt. Stephens Eye Salve Is a healing L ointment for Sore Eyes, Jones Drug Co., Oregon City. Officephones: Main 50, A50; Res. phones, M. 2524, 1751 Home B2ol, D251 WILLIAMS BROS. TRANSFER & STORAGE Office (512 Main Street Safe, Piano, and Furniture Moving a Specialty , Sand, Gravel, Cement, Lime, Plaster, Common' Brick, Kace Brick, Five Brick Women and Wet Feet Cold and wet feet are a dangerous combination especially to women, and congested kidneys often result. Bach ache, urinary irregularities and rheu matic fevers are not unusual results. Foley Kidney Pills restoe the regu lar and normal action of kidneys and bladder and remove the cause of the trouble. Contain no habit forming drugs. Huntley Bros. Co. Sneffels, Col., A. J. Walsh was badly done up with rheumatism and sent for Foley Kidney Pills which was the only thing that would cure him. Geo. Potter of Pontiac Mo., was down on his back with kidney and bladder trouble and Foley Kidney Pills made him well and able to work. It is a splendid medicine and always helps. Just try it. Huntley Bros. Co. BROWNELL & STONE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Oregon City, Oregon b Rea Our ifM v, r.n im jf Persons!, jgg r"7 fh" I? I Money-D mnBSgmW l Remedy ; L' Rik YOU know what that means Misery Worry Big Bills Debts! You know vou can't afford to cct sick - avLiii. hi uuu iiciuui means ioou anci ciotnmg tor yoirana your lamily. it s up to you of yourself. It's up to you, whenever you don't feel right, to take something to make vou right. , 1.. "1,1 j n i . . . o to take care to strengthen villi, nil fi vim nil. w irn mr wako cintnootj rtMtA iiaii wn rr . . m 'i'ui. j k : i i a ui,u.tiu,oo, r1! wisvk jwm uuiu wui iciiiiiijfi xiiitL uung we nave, ana in -! ottering it to you we protect you against money risk, by personally promising you that if it doesn't protect I you against sickness, we'll give you bsck your money without a word or question. It is , ., fSfflpI fefOTI f It Is the Best Remedy When you are run-down, no matter what the cause. It doesn t merely stimulate you and make you foci pood for a few hours, but takes hold of the weakness, and builds you up to a healthy, normal condition. It is a real nerve-food tonic, a real builder of healthy nerves, rich blood, strong muscles, good digestion. It contains the Hypophosphites, to tono tho nerves and give energy, and pure Olive Oil, to nourish the nerves, the blood, the entire system, and give vitality, strength and health. 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