Page Four IHE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1922 THE BANNER COURIER The Clackamas County Banner and the Oregon City Courier, Consolidated July 8th, 1919, and Published by the Clackamas County Banner Publishing Company, Incorporated. - F. J. TOOZE. Editor Published Thursdays from the Banner Building at Ninth and Main Streets and Entered in the Postoffice at Oregon City. Oregon as Second Class Mail Matter. Subscription Price, $1.50 per year in advance. Telephone 417 MEMBER OF WILLAMETTE VALLEY EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION MEMBER OF OREGON STATE EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Official Paper of City of Oregon City AN INDUSTRIAL BARRIER Private capital is now experiencing great difficulty in financing itself, and this difficulty curtails expansion and increases the number of the unemployed. New m dustries cannot start and many of those already estab lished find expansion and even continuous operation out of the question on account of the lack of capital. And during these times when money is needed for industry including farm and factory vast sums of money are being absorbed by tax exempt bonds of the govern' ment, states, counties and cities, ieanwhile these gov. ernments are losing millions in t vus which should be paid on the incomes from these bonds and industry suf fers from lack of funds which rrught be put into them. This exemption of bonds from taxation discriminates against industry, and is an economic injustice. Jb or ex ample a wealthy man invests $50,000 in tax exempt bonds and thus escapes taxes on his investment. Another man invests $50,000 in a factory or other industry which"" jives employment to laboring people and assumes large risks also. The latter must pay all kinds cf taxes devised by congress and the various legislatures. The result is to discourage industry. Surely the security of government bonds is the safest in the world and as such should ap nea! to the investor, and still be taxed as are "other securities. . OUT OF BALANCE A BIG SUBJECT At the recent meeting of Pomona Grange of this county the membership present went on record of cen sure of the State Tax Commission. This is one 01 the many protests being launched against both condition and system of taxation at this time of high and increasing taxes. The grange is insistent upon the proposition that water power and other natural values employed in profit producing enterprises shall pay the same ratio of "taxes on productive values that the farmers have to pay on heir farms. The tax commission has this year reduced taxes on ome water power values while the local assessments on arm property is higher than ever before. It is general comment among the grange folk that this attitude of the commission favors the corporations while the farms must help make up his decrease. The Banner-Courier looks upon the wnoie present patchwork svstem of taxation in which one assessor places values on one unit of property and othersjon others, some at the ratio of one half value other at other ratios; some at less even than one-tenth values and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of taxable values in Clack amas county and in other counties of the state paying no taxes at all asneedmg complete revolution and revision. And when revision of our tax system is thus under way, equitable readjustment will extend to other sources of wealth as well as to water power and other natural re of earlier days and make a bran new i one short and providing a business administration such as makes a suc cess of great industrial and economic undertakings. WILSONVILLE, Jan. 18. The Wil sonville Farm Bureau committee has ordered 40 tons of lime- and is now making up another car, 20 tons of Which is already sold. Land plaster will be ordered soon and those desir ing lime or landplaster, will ha - e to act quickly. W. C. Young and F. Wiedemann will take the orders. They also handle tiles now on hand. RUPTURE EXPERT HERE SEELEY, FAMOUS "IN THIS SPECIALTY CALL ED TO PORTLAND COST OF HIGH LIVING The notable Mrs. Stokes pitifully pleads for $100,000 alimony per annum from her millionaire husband as nec essary for family support. And yet there are several dames extant who could manage to get along iainy wen on half this amount. F. H. Seeley, of Chicago and Phila delphia, the no.ted truss expert, will personally be at the Benson Hotel, and will remain, in Portland this Mon day, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, Jan. 23, 24, 25, 26 27. Mr. Seeley says: "The Spermatic Shield will not only retain any case of rup ture perfectly but contracts, the open ing in 10 days on the average case. Being a vast advancement over all former methods exemplifying instan taneous effects, immediately apprecia ble and withstanding any strain or po sition no matter the size or location. Large or difficult cases, or incissronal ruptures following operations) special ly solicited. This instrument receiv ed the only award in England and in Spain, producing results without sur gery, injections, medical treatments or prescriptions. Mr. Seeley has docu ments from the United States Govern ments, Washington, D. C, for inspec- I tion. He will be glad to demonstrate 1 What Every Business Needs Is it wise to attempt to solve all your " business problems without unbiased ad- . vice? This bank has a long history of , ' service to the business interests of this community. V" Never has its broad and intimate know- . ledge of business conditions been more helpful to its clients than in the years of reconstruction. .When you need friendly advice come in and talk things over with us without obligation to yourself. s ' The Bank of Oregon City Oldest Bank in Clackamas County fFEDERAL ksebvc .SYSTEM. without charge or fit them if desired. Business demands prevent stopping at any other place in this section. P. S. Every statement in this notice has been verified before the Federal and State Courts. F. H. Seeley. Home Office, 117 No. Dearborn St., Chicago THE REVOKING CLAUSE Senator Norris of Nebraska declared in the senate a few days ago that a farmer in Nebraska shipped a car load of corn to Billings, Montana, where they have no corn and after paying over what he received for his corn still owed the railroad company fifty-one cents freigh charge. Another example of shipping rates exorbitant when compared with the price of the products is in the case where a man in Florida shipped to a merchant in Vir ginia seven crates of cabbages. These seven crates of cabbages sold for $34.00. Charged against this sale price was $22.20 express. The commission to the salesman was $3.40. After these two deductions the producer had $8. 37 left for his seven crates or a little less than $1.20 a crate for the seed, planting, cultivation, gathering, crat ing and hauling to the railroad station. It would have beefr better for the raiser of those cab bages to have allowed his land to lie in idleness and to have devoted his time to something else. But not so for those who must have cabbages for food and who live off their earnings from industry m the cities. Food should not go higher but those factors which make transporta tion costs so high as now should be made to conform to the welfare of both the producer and consumer who are the first and greatest suffers from exorbitant freight rates on produce. If the railroads which must depend on production for their profits are guaranteed by this gov ernment a profit why this howl by the politicians in con gress about the efforts of the farm "bloc" to force condi tions which will obtain for the agricultural people fair returns in comparison on their investment and work? Such instances as theSe are thorns in the sides of the producers. They force them into farm blocs. They array the shipper against the railroads and other trans portation companies. They are rank injustice which calls tor the loudest condemnation of congress and even the government itself for class and industrial discrimination These exhorbitant rates are due in part to the guar antee of profits to the railroads without an equal guar antee to them who produce these necessities and in part due to the wages paid in transportation and which are out oi all proportion to the earnings of the producers. It's high time that the farmers unite in bloc or otherwise to force a fair system of distribution as advantageous to themselves as it is to the railroads or to the brotherhoods. The city council did the courageous and proper thing when it inserted in the pool room ordinance the section providing for . authority to revoke li censes at any time wnen tne places ; are -not conducted properly. Hereafter ! the power which grants the license j may for good reason take it away. This is as it should be. The poolroom proprietors who in tend to obey the regulations of the city will no doubt welcome this fea ture of the ordinance as it will put on guard those who now give the whole business a "black eye" by their disregard of order and decency. The council should be commended for this ordinance. AM OMMERC IT'S better to invest your savings at 4 per cent with the Bank of Commerce than it is to put your hard-earned money in some doubtful scheme paying a high rate, and be sorry afterward. First Bank in Oregofri City to pay 4 per cent Interest on Savings Accounts Bank of Comme rce Oregon City, Ore . TH0S FRYAN ksibnt DfcHUGH S MOUNTvice ores JOHN R HUMPHRYS Cashier KE.BAUERSFELD.Asst Caster -OWNED. MANAGED AND CONTROLLED BV CLACKAMAS COUNTY PEOPLE VOTING DOWN BONDS .As a final basis for higher and higher taxes people in many parts of j the west are beginning to vote down indiscriminate bond issues." It is a fact that bond issues invite extravagance and waste in public af fairs and bind people to future bur dens of taxation they must pay. Many people are always ready to favor something being done and do not inquire how much of the burden is to be placed on the future taxpayers. If instead of bond issues, it were proposed to levy a direct tax or a tax over a period of years many of the same people would not vote it. There is a lot of camouflage in the argument "let the next generation that shares the benefit of this also share the cost and let them pay." One western state wanted to vote $30,000,000 bonus to its ex-service men but instead, by a long time bond is sue makes the taxpayers dig up $87,- 000,000, for principal and interest. What is still worse if that state had proposed to raise the money $30, 000,000 by a direct tax, the bonus pro position would have lost out. Doing by indirection what would not have been done directly means in this case self-glorification by the present generation by imposing upon the com ing generations the task of paying $87,000,000. Cheap patriotism! Bond issues for improvements that are going to add to production of wealth and paying their own way over jjid over are a different proposition. WAIT A MINUTE From the United States Dpartment of Agriculture we obtain the following records showing the levels of prices covering about five years before the war, the highest point during the war and the present time. Oats were 35 cents before the war, 85 cents at the highest point during the war and 27 cents now. Hay runs $14, $28, $13. Hogs, $7.50, $20.50, and $6.50. Potatoes 70 cents, $5.'20and $1.50. Farm help wages $25, $53, $35. In the good old fitate of "Oregon my Oregon" the price of oats during the war went to 60 cents and are now 40; potatoes were $8.50 a sack and now $1.50; hogs dressed $20.50, now 12.00 per cent; and hay then $40.00, now $12 to $1-5.00. Farm wages reached as high as $75.00 with board and have gone back to $30 and the same incidentals. Farm lands that sold as high as three dollar wheat could send them are now, according to realtor esti mates, twenty-five or thirty dollars less per acre. And the man who bought this high-priced land, paying down his savings and giving a mort gage for the remainder is under the present price of his crops "strictly up against it" May the good Lord help him! And may the readjustment be speedy. With this conditions and with taxes leaping higher and higher it's high time to cut expenses. It's the time for every state and county institution to take a breathing spell from the wild scramble to spend the taxpayers' money on non-essentials. It's time even to hold up on improvements not absolutely necessary while price ad justments are going on and while farmers and others are trying to catch a normal breath. NEW WINE IN OLD BOTTLES NO And when the committee begiP9 to revise the present city charter it would better Imitate the forefathers A We Now Feature: n Enormous Presentation of A Bleached HONOR Muslin (J. C. Penney Co. Brand) After months of earnest effort to produce a grade and finish of "bleached" muslin which would permit affixing the J. C. Penney Company label, our buyers have been extremely successful In offering our own b-anded HONOR Muslin,' it is with our full recommendation. We are confi. aent you will agree with us that its excellent quality makes it the best muslin on the market at the price. Be sure to ask for J. C. Penney Co. HONOR Muslin, at, per yard '"if V N early offering of Muslins, Cambrics, Sheetings, Towels, Crashes Damans and Dress Fabrics, bought at a tune when the markei was at its lowest ebb and now offered to you At Surprisingly Attractive Prices. This is an exceptional opportunity to provide snowy white fabrics of dependable quality for personal and household use for both tht present and the future. The following items will demonstrate the extent to which we have gone to provide economies for this remarkable and early White Goods Event: MUSLINS Unbleached Muslin, 36 inches wide; made of selected cotton and a serviceable quality. Yard 10c, 12C and 15c Fine Cambric Muslin, Berkeley quality; popular everywhere for its finish and wearing ability. Yard 24c Indian Head Muslin, soft finish, shrunk the popular cloth that finishes like linen, 33, 36, 44 and 54 inches wide. Reasonably priced. SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES 81x90 Sheets, full standard size, popular . weight. Each 1.4 a 42x36 Pillow Cases, serviceable quality. Each o3c SHEETINGS . Standard Quality Sheeting, 9-4 or 81 inches wide. The kind that will wash and wear well. e Unbleached yard, 53c. Bleached, yard, . OoC Other widths priced in proportion. PEQUOT SHEETING, SHEETS AND CASES Through our direct mill connection, we can supply you with this popular Pequot brand of high grade goods in all widths, at material savings of money. CRASHES Bleached Crash, 17-inch, red border. Ser- ft viceable grade. Yard 9c Bleached Crash, 17-inch. Exceptional grade. , . Yard 14c TOWELS Muck Towels with white or. red borders; full size and- e good wearing quality. Pair ' Z5c Huck Towels, a heavier grade. 18x36 inches. Red or Q white border. Pair o9c Bath Towels, substantial quality and a good size. 0 Pair o6c Bath Towels, large size. Splendid weight for service, . suggesting several pairs at, pair 4bC LAWNS AND FLAXONS Dundee Part-Linen Crashes, bleached and un bleached the kind you like to use. Yard 10c, 17c, 23c Steven's Crashes both bleached and unbleached. Our buying arrangement permits us to sell this popular line at a big saving to you. - PILLOW TUBING 42 inches, admirable quality. Yard 33c Also carried in 36, 40 and 45-inch widths. DAMASKS - Mercerized Poplin, Nurses' Uniform Cloth, Galatea Cloth, Middy Twill and a variety of Skirtings and Suitings representative J. C Penney Co. values. ORGANDIES NAINSOOKS Here are items that recom mend themselves to the thrifty housewife. Exceptional qual ity, Exceptionally priced. India Linons the quality you want. Yard 15c, 19c, 23c Persian Lawns sheer, fir-"'-slity. Yard 40-in. 39c New, sheer, crisp, popular Long Cloth Nainsooks, '? 49c Organdies at such low prices 36-inch, fane English hn- :ns sheer and as to suggest several new ores- isn. lard for many uses. ses. Make up beautifully for r y OU in. 17C, turning wcujLU wcauici ncu. 40 -in wide 29c, 33c Domestic Organdies. . " fancy Flaxons neat ef- yard 25c, 39c fects in the tiny checks or the larger plaids, also ' Imported Organdies, s'.ppcs. Yard 39c, 43c Yard 49c, 69c Table Damask, standard grade of colored damask; blue and white, red and white or buff. Yard Mercerized Damask.rich patterns, 58-inch. Ser viceable quality. Yard Mercerized Damask, heavy quality; wrought in rich damask patterns. 15c, 19c, 23c Yard pinoh width. I 11 II II VVlUI.il Nainsook, DIMTTTES 36-inch sheer fine French Dimities in dainty checks finish, Yard 23c and stripes. Yard 14c, 19a Japanese Nainsook, WHITE VOILE sheer beautiful mercerized, Superior quality of 39-in. of tine texture. Yard 25c Voile. Yard 89c 53c. 6M 75f OUR POLICY: ; ONE PEICE TO EVERY ' BODY, lip lste w-wi it i h i j i ii zzzr incorporated 312 DEPARTMENT. STORES' OUR POLICY: ONE PRICE TO