i - OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1906. Oregon Qty Enterprise CITY AND COUNTY PAPER. OFFICIAL. Published Every Friday. Subscription' Rates: One year '.' $1.60 BIx months 75 .Trial subscription, two months.. 25 Advertising rates on - application. Subscribers will find the date pf ex plration stamped on their papers fol lowing their name. If this is not payment, 'kindly notify us, and the matter will receive our attention. ed in the past and by them Brownell has succeeded in winning out in the face pf popular indignation within his own party. Can he win out again when the corrupt methods by which victory- has been attained are so evi dent in the pending contest? .We think not. The limit to which Clack amas County voters have been con strained to permit this sort of thing to be carried has been reached'. Voters will Hot consent to be made a party to this form of corruption any longer. They demand and are going to in sist on a new deal. o . CONTRIBUTE THEIR SERVICES! Entered at the postoffice at Oregon .City, Oregon, as second-class matter. FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1906. r.NO ATTEMPT TO HIDE HANDS. THEIR In previous campaigns when Brow ' uell has been a candidate to succeed himself, the railroads and other cor 'porations in the county have always been active in the support of this man who has always proved so valuable to them in matters of important legisla tion. But for the sake of policy, these corporations have kept in the back ' ground, although continuing none the less loyal in their support of the Clack- amas County Senator. But in this campaign these corpora tions are making no attempt to hide their hands.. They are speaking "right out in meeting" in support of their salaried agent and attorney whose re-nomination and re-election they in sist upon and demand in the face of a righteous popular indignation. They are perfectly frank to admit that they ' want Brownell and besides are writ ing letters as campaign ammunition for their faithful attorney-legislator' in waging his campaign. Brownell is the man they want at any cost and they are coughing up liberally in, his sup , port.r In glowing terms do they eulo gize his past record as a legislator and none the less enthusiastic are they in advising and trying to persuade the voters of Clackamas County . to lend their suffrages that this man may be again returned to the State Senate not withstanding the extent to which he has abused, outraged and misrepre sented the every vital interest of a patient and long-suffering constituency- Again, we inquire are the voters of this county going to longer tolerate this sort of thing even though it may he "according to programme?" There is no such thing as compro mising the situation as it is presented at this time. Brownell stands for the corporations. He is their agent and tool. He has labored faithfully in their interests in the past and the same loyal service to corporations is only to be expected by further con tinuing this man in the state's legis lative body. Openly and publicly are the corporations supporting Brownell. They need him in the legislature and at any cost they propose to have him retained in the Senate. Each voter has a responsibility in the situation. This responsibility is not to be shirked. The nominating of candidates this year lies with the voters themselves. If corrupt men are named for public office, the blame is traceable directly to the voters themselves. If unscrupulous politi cians are nominated and elected, the placed to any political convention other than that consisting of the whole peo ple whose choice will be voiced at the direct primary nominating election on the 20th of this month. Jf it is the desire of the voters of Clackamas county to terminate the corrupt deal in this county it is with in their power so to do. xiothing of remedial legislation has been enacted in the direct interest of the people of Clackamas county. Cor porations have never been, assessed at anything like their true value and the burden of taxation has always been borne by the farmer and produc er. As a natural result of these con ditions the tax rate has necessarily been heavy and continues to remain at such a rate as to work a hardship on the individual taxpayer. Relief can only be expected by terminating the career of the political dictator of the county who is directly responsible for existing conditions. o WHO PAYS THE FREIGHT? It is really amusing to note the ex tent to which Brownell recklessly bandies the truth. Of course, it is only a small thing, but at his Eagle Creek meeting Saturday night Senator Brownell, without so much as blush ing, informed his audience that the members of the' quartette vthat is ac companying him throughout the cpun ty, belong to the same lodge of which he is a member, that it is the Maccabee quartette, that the young men are all friends of his and volunteered their services during the campaign if he would pay1 their actual expenses. In the first place the old Maccabee quartette is disorganized and no one for an instant thinks that the members of the quartette that assists Brownell at his meetings are contributing their services gratis. The next thing in order will be for Brownell to make the statement that the Milwaukie Band contributes its services for nothing and even begs for the privilege of playing at his meetings. Musicians, as well as the boosters Brownell al ways takes with him, cannot subsist entirely on hot air even if it is of the Brownell product. o The registration books for the pri mary election will be closed at 5 p. m. next Tuesday. Clackamas County voters who have not yet registered should be sure and register before this date in order to participate in the primary election. v o Is it possible that the voters of Clackamas County consider a federal indictment an evidence of virtue, rath- ! er than of inefficiency? i There is a great deal f hot air be ing wasted over the question of whether the- Census Bureau or the Department of Agriculture was right in its guess as to the amount of the cotton and other crops. The mighty Keep Commission has been put on the train of both departments to see which one was right and so far as anyone can see, the only way the two guesses can be compared is by compar ing them with each other. There does not seem to be any other standard of comparison in the country unless the Keep Commission wants to go into the crop reporting business itself. It I would seem to the outsider that both j of the Departments in question have j a good deal better work to do than ; guessing at future crops for the bene- j fit of a lot of stock gamblers. The ' Department of Agriculture has done ' a lot of good recently in soil inocula- j tion, though that is a little understood ' matter up to date so far as the general j public is concerned. It has done good J work in plant breeding, increased the j corn crop, brought in new and valu- ' able breeds of wheat and other grains ; and paved the way to doubling the cotton crop. It has helped the farmer in many very practical ways and it i looks as though the department could put in its time and spend the govern ment's money to better advantage than in speculating on the size of the crops that are going to be raised for the benefit of a lot of men who deal in grain and cotton that they never see and make paper fortunes by see ing who can come nearest to the de partment's next guess. In the same way the Census Bureau has done and is doing a valuable work. - It is es sential that vital statistics be com piled and that a record of the manufac tures be kept and that tally should be made of the population of the cities and of the country. The Census Bu Teau serves no better end by guessing at the crop conditions than does the Department of Agriculture, and the question of which is nearer the mark really matters very little. The best thing the government could do would be to settle the dispute by abolishing the crop collecting business in both departments and let each keep to some legitimate work and help along the prosperity of the country instead of catering to the activity of the Pro duce Exchange. CORPORATIONS WANT BROWNELL Brownell in conducting his canvass of the county in his candidacy for re Homination and re-election as State Senator is spending a great amount of money. At his recent meeting at Es tacada, where he was accompanied by the Milwaukie Band and a quartet from this city, the expense in connec tion therewith exceeded the total amount of $120 salary that is receiv ed by legislators at Salem for the en tire forty days' session. And he is nolding a number of other meetings in connection with which the expenses closely approximate that of the Esta--cada meeting. i. Who is furnishing this money? This is a pertinent question we will admit, limt it is one to which an intelligent j answer is aue tne people oi uiacnamas county. Brownell is always maintain ing that he is a poor-man,, has nothing, etc, so it is to be assumed that these expenses are being provided from some other source.. And from what Source? Where does he getjthis money With which he is always plentifully supplied during his campaigns? It is entirely reasonable to presume that these funds are contributed by the corporations who are directly interest ed in the retention of Mr. Brownell as Senator from this county. This pre sumption is the more justifiable since these corporations with which Brow nell has always been identified are Issuing letters in support of his can didacy and are exerting every influ ence at their command to bring about Sis re-nomlnation and re-election. .These same . methods have prevail- Senator Brownell, in addressing the voters of this county, reads letters from two of the prin cipal corporations having interests in Clackamas county. In both of these communications, Mr, Brownell is indorsed and recommended as the only logical candidate for State Senator from this county. Not only this but the authors of the letters intimate, in as many words that Brownell is the only man that is desired by them to rep resent these corporations in the legislative halls and for that reason his renomination and re-election at this time must be accomplished. One of these letters was written by Fred Morris, who is known ,to be closely connected with the Oregon "Water Power & Railway Com pany. This company not only indorses Mr. Brownell but pledges him its support in the pending contest. The other letter referred to, was written by Superintendent Fields, of the Southern Pacific Company, and the purport of this letter is to show that the schedule of the S. P. trains between this city and Salem during the legislative session of 1905 was such that it would be impossible for Senator Brownell tojbe at Oregon City on the 10th of January, the dateon which he is charged by a Federal indictment with having committed subornation of perjury and at the same time be at Salem in the legislature. The purpose of this letter is to strengthen Brownell's attempted alibi that is being pleaded in his defense of the charge that is still pending against him. Brownell's return to the State Senate at this time . is being demanded . by the railroads and other corporations, whose interests he has always strongly supported to the sacrifice of those of the farmer and producer, whom he has repeatedly fooled. But now the issue is clean cut. The cor porations not only want Brownell, but they are openly indorsing him and pledging him their un qualified support. Are the voters of Clackamas county going to stand for this sort of thing any longer ? Backed as Brownell is .by these corporations in his desperate fight to continue in the role of dic tator and right hand man of these interests, what are the people to expect from him? Surely nothing more than the past has yielded. - Our charge that Brownell is the salaried hireling of corporate interests has been denied by Mr. Brownell. But what more convincing proof . of our assertion could be asked than is offered in the reading of these letters by Mr. Brownell? - We reiterate: Brownell is the tool of corpor ations and stands for every interest that is opposed to the best interest of the taxpayers, the farmers and the producers of Clackamas county. We Trust Doctors If you are suffering from impure blood, thin blood, de bility, nervousness, .exhaus tion, you should begin at once with Ayer's Sarsaparilla, the Sarsaparilla you have known all your "life. Your doctor knows it, too. Ask him about it. Unless there Is daily action of the bowels, poisonous products are absorbed, causing head ache, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsia, aud thus preventing the Sarsaparilla from doing its best work. Ayer's FiUs are liver pills. Act gently, all vegetable. I A' yf&yers by J- O. syer Co., Lowell, Uasa. an mo jnannfaotuxers of HAIR VIGOR. AGUE CURE. CHERRY PECTORAL. We nave no secrets 1 We publish the formula of all our medicine. Mr. H. H. Rogers can no longer hope to draw a pension for pro lapsus mem ory. . . 1 o : It is now up to the Department of Agriculture to invent a wevil proof cotton boll. - ' : o Russia will now hold a general elec tion to decide which party shall go to Siberia. o Many unkind people will now begin to wonder how much District Attorney Jerome got for experiencing a change of heart. o Justice Duel of New York has now resigned from the Bar Association. There is nothing to show that he has resigned from his bar associates. o . " An esteemed contemporary y com menting on Col. Pete Hepburn, says that he looks like a retired prize fight er. But he isn't retired, by consider able. - o Dispatches from Russia say the Czar has issued a decree abolishing capital - punishment. He would prob ably like to issue another abolishing assassination. o ' Mississippi passed a law adopting the electric chair for legal executions. But it failed to make any appropria tion, evidently not expecting to have any executions of that sort. "A Stitch In Time SavcsNinc" can nowhere be more truthfully applied than to your teethe You cannot afford to neglect them. Each month of neglect increases the amount of repair work twenty-five per cent, besides, poor teeth mean poor health. You cannot afford to neglect your health. By the latest methods used bus we can fill your teeth without pain, and do it well. !T An expert eastern graduate dentist employed all the time L. Li PICKENS Dentist Weinhard Building, Opposite Court House There are some compensations in the trans-atlantic passenger Reports. The most of the immigrants are of a class we are loath to get, but the most financiers going abroad are of a class we are glad to lose O WILL MAKE PRESSED BRICK. Company Secured Land for Plant at Milwaukie. Large Milwaukie will have a large pres sed brick manufacturing concern, with an investment of $30,000. Yesterday the Pressed Brick Company, just formed by some eastern men, closed a deal for a tract of land oft D H. Hen dee's farm, 6n the Willamette river, northwest of and adjoining Milwaukie, 125 feet wide by about 200 feet long. This piece extends from the Oregon Water Power & Railway Company s track, to the , Willamette River just south of the Knight Summer home. The intention of the new company is to ship at once pressed brick mak ing machinery costing $12,000 to Port land for use in this new plant. Build ings and docks will be erected suit able for the-turning out of large quan tities of pressed brick. . The company will have both rail and water trans portation facilities. The factory will employ many men, and will be an im portant industry for Milwaukie. Ore- pnn ian . 0 I i m i I i - . . pneumonia. i his is ui sueii cuumiuu .T IS DANGEROUS TO NEGLECT A gould not "r8 Chamb COLD. . j Iain's Cough Remedy counteracts any i tendency of a cold to result in pneumo- How often do we hear the remark: !nla and has gained its great popular "It's only a cold," and a few days later j y and extensive sale by its prompt learn that the man is on his back with cures of this most common ailment. Sx$ S- ' "Pixxxiz Column---WEo Is It? CANDIDATE FOR TREASURER . (Continued from page 1.) of the county so well and economically that the cost has been reduced the last few years more than one half, and today the business of our county is conduct ed at less expense by a large percent than any other county in the state of its size and inhabitants? While for the first time in over a Quarter of a cental rv Clackamas County is practically out of debt, I am well aware that this very satisfactory state of affairs has not been attained without some sacrifice and denial and the refusal by your County Court at times to enter into every laud able project or undertaking, has subjected us to criticism. Never, my friends, have we refused to enter into any of-these projects without regret on the part of us all, but you as well as we knew, that we could not pay off our large indebtedness, and at the same time spend our entire income on other undertak ings, however laudable they were laudable they were. As it is now, my fellow citizen, I can congratulate you and also myself, that no County in all our great State stands higher in the matter of financial credit and. modern Improvements and conditions than old Clackamas. I have endeavored to con duct the business intrusted by you to me economically, wisely and well, and appreciate the fact that the loyal support and good will that I have received from nearly all "of you has enabled me to make the showing outlined above. I am a candidate for the Republican, nomination as State Treasurer and j with the united and loyal support of you men of Clackamas I can get it. As j boy and man for 25 years I have been with you, never for one instant forget ting that the interests of Clackamas County and its inhabitants were mine, nor losing sight of the fact that I have always had the respect and support of so many of you. In this contest for nomination as State Treasurer I am op posed by Bankers and interested Corporations who want the funds of the State controlled by their employees, so that they may have the use of the same, without giving the state any return. None of them stand on the platform that I do, and which I believe is the one that the people have a right to de mand, and which is simply this: "The moneys of the State belong to the people of the State, and when used by Bank or Corporation should draw in terest, which interest should be paid into the State Treasury, and not be di vided between the State Treasurer and the officers and stockholders of Banks, That the State Treeasurer should be prohibited from receiving anything mpre for his services than the salary allowed him under the law; that, he should not be interested either as officer, stockholder, agent or employee of any bank or Institution, where the funds of the state are deposited or loaned." None of the other candidates for this nomination, with the exception of A. C. Jennings are in favor of either working for the salary fixed by law or the payment of the interest received from the banks where state funds are deposited, into the State Treasury; -with great pleasure would I meet them or either of them upon the platform and defend the stand that I have taken in this matter; I feel that you and every disinterested citizen of the State will agree with me that the position I have taken is right. In conclusion I desire to state, that if I am fortunate enough to be elected as your-State Treasurer, that I will perform every duty in connection with saidoffice so faithfully and well, that it will give satisfaction to every citizen of our county, and will make the State at large admit that the men of Clackamas are all right. Trusting that I may have your support at the primaries on. the 20th day nf Anrll T remain as pvpr sinerelv vnnrs. THOMAS V. RYAN. r - r V It always cures and take. Howell & Jones. is pleasant to NOT IF AS RICH AS ROCKEFELLER If you had the wealth of Rockefeller the Standard Oil magnate, you could not buy- a better medicine for bowel coiaplaints than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The most eminent physician can -not pre scribe a better preparation for colic; and diarrhoea, both for children and adults. The uniform success of this remedy has shown it to be superior to all others. It never fails, and when reduced with water and sweetened, is pleasant to take. Every family should be supplied with it. Sold by Howell & Jones.' Nasal CATARRH In all its stages. ' Ely's Cream Balm Cleanses, soothes and heals the diseased membrane. It -cures catarrh aud drives away a cold in the head quickly. Cream Balm is placed into the nostrils, spreads over the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is im mediate and a cure follows. It is not drying does not produce sneezing. Large Size, 50 cents at Drug- Has he put his arm around your neck and whispered words of love in your ear? Has he whispered to. you andasked how that dear old father was? Has he asked you what office you want? Has he given your hand a soft gentle squeeze and whispered in your ear that your daughter should have a clerkship in the next legislature? , Has he promised you a pass on the S. P.? Has he told you how poor he is? Has he told you how expensive it is to make a first-class campaign in Clack amas County? - Has he invited you 'to ride on the O. W. P. and have dinner at Estacada at his expense? Has he told you how his dearest friends have 'abandoned him or how they try to work him -for campaign expenses? Has he told you how much he has benefitted you and all of your relatives land what he has done for the poor? , '1 Has he told you how many great men he has made? Has he told you with tears in his eyes and a gentle little tremble of his lips gistB or by mau-, Trial Size, 10 cents. that you are the only friend he has on eartn, tnat is, tne only real true ett brothers. 66 Warren street. New Tots; one? v I ' " Has he told you how he has tried for years to retire from politics, but that his friends by the hundreds have prevailed upon him and insisted that he allow his name to be again voted for by the dear, dear pople? Has he promised you a job? " ! Has he" patted the dog and remarked with a dreamy faraway look in his eyes that 'he once owned a dog that was just like yours, but that the poor; fellow was killed in a railroad accident? Has he told you how good he is and how bad everybody else Is or what he would like to do to your enemies? " " If he hasn't there is something wrong with you, you must not be popular or you may have said something that hurt his feelings, or you mayhave spoken, in an unguarded moment, a good word for the other man, yes, that is surely it, you must have spoken a good word for the other man.' PROCURED AND DEFENDED. Send modal, drawing orphoto. lor expert search and free reports Free advice, how to obtain paumte, trade ".t copyright, etc, )N ALL COUNTRIES. Business direct naitk Washington saves time, money and often Ike patent. Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively. Write or come to us at 613 Hlnth strwt, opp. Unltad statss Patent Otto. WASHINGTON, D. C.