OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. A. V.CHENEY;. Publisher Legal and. Official Newspaper Of Clackamas County. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Entured In Oregon Cltypoitoffloea. 2nd-clas matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. If paid In advance, per year. Six mouths . . three months' trial Thn ilafA nnnnsit.A vrtnr address on the taper denotes the time to which you have paid. V. W. Myers slates that he had nothing to do with the inspiration of the article in the Canby sheet attacking ex-Assessor Stout. A communication on this subject, from S. Hutchinson is published on page six of this issue. A republican state legislature met at Salem and passed a law Uking printing from democratic sheriff and putting it into the hands of a newly created board of commissioners. The said board let the printing to a reform paper, the low' est bidder. . .The graft didn't work at Oregon City as easily as at SaTem.' The board are to be congratulated for their straightforward honest dealing in this matter by not letting their political opinions get away with their better judgment, which would have cost the county some $2000. ADVERTISING SATES. ot.n4ln. hnslnAM iriTprtlfienienlj: Per month 1 Inch II , a inches S1.50, 8 inehe. S1.75, 4 inches 12, 6 iuches ("column) 2.25, UMnohealHcolunin) 4, 20 inches (column) as, yearly contract 10 p cent !en; , , Transient advertisements: Per week 1 inch 60o, 2 Inehw 7Sc, 8 inch. II. 4 Inches 1 M inches 11.60, 10 Inches "2.50, 20 Inches so i , i ...riiumanti- Pr Inrh first inser. .1 .. .. .1 .h ulHlltAn.l InaArtlnn fiflrt. AfhlaVitS of publication will not be furnished until pub lication tees are nam. k Local notices! rive cents per line per week per month 2Uo, PATRONIZE HOME IADDSTRY. OREGON OITY, MARCH 17, 1899. To Subscribers. The Ooukikr-Herald has put no ac counts in ny agent's hands tor collec tion, but we uuderstand Mr. Fitch has attempted to collect some of his back accounts in this way. We have nothing to do with these. The date opposite your name on the paper represents the time to which you have paid. If any errors occur we are ever ready to correct them. - What for? To coal our vessvli at in lime of war. What vessels? Why, you uimnecting soul, . Those we must sent) there to protect the cool. Wo need a coaling stat on, eh? Another great gob of prosperity has swept over Massachusetts and three thousand shoe workers are on a strike because their wages were to be cut 25 per cent. ' ' In order to be able to pay something the legislature even hunted up a man who loaned the state some jack screws Bixteen years ago and puid his bill with interest. Salem journal. Governor Pingrek is giving his party much trouble. At a meeting of the Michigan republican clubs, at Detroit, in the presence of Alger, he said : The tree is known by its fruits, and THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. The democratic party is the sheet anchor of the, republic, says the Silver Knight-Watchman. Its guiding , hand steered the republic through the first half century of its existence, during which time the world beheld, for the first time, theise of a nation to wealth, power and greatness, whose corner stones were universal suffrage and uni versal education. The author of the Declaration of Inde pendence was the founder of the demo cratic party. Its formation took place through a process of natural selection. While Americans generally were a unit in favor of independence and Great Britain, after their independence was achieved there existed a wide difference of opinion among the foremost men of that day regarding the character of gov ernment that should be established. Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jef ferion soon became the recognized lead ers of thought and opinion. Jefferson laid down the broad proposition that man la known by nis ueeas. menoiiiiie, uoeriy, ana me pursuit oi nappi wealth now control the republican I ne9s weie the natural rights of all men. party, corporations louna tneir inier Strong, steady nerves Are needed for success ;; Everywhere. ' Nerves ; Depend simply, solely, Upon the blood. Pure, rich, nourishing ; v Blood feeds the nerves .';; . And makes them strong. The great nerve tonic is , , , Hood's Sarsaparilla, Because it makes The, blood rich and ' " Pure, giving it power To feed the nerves. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures nervousness, Dyspepsia, rheumatism, Catarrh, scrofula, ' And all forms of 1 Impure blood. ests well cared for by men who were chosen to legislative bodies as republi cans. Now this has been going on so long that it has become notorious. All men who had schemes and the corpora tions (hat wanted privileges have joined the republican party, expecting it to bear tneir burdens and serve them. This has been going on for years, but it cannot last forever. The new words "graft" and "grafter" have come to stay. In Kansas a bill has been introduced defining the words and prescribing a punishment for a per son found guilty of "grafting." Accord ing to it a "grafter" is defined to benny person who loafs around legislative halls seeking employment by persons or cor porations interested in measures pend ing before the legislature, and any mem ber of the legislature who introduces bills of a prohibitory character for the purpose of extorting money and who as sists outside grafters in securing em ployment from intended victims. Any person convicted of "being a grafter shall be fined $10 to $500 and be disqualified for holding any office. , Spain never S'lewe led in - Branding sovereignty in the Philippines. , After SlOjears of unsuccessful war in those islands, she s .Id us a quit cuiim to the . fight at $2 a head for the Filipinos. i ' Tub next government census for spoils! There will be three thousand jobs, worth eight million dollars a year, t.n 4!ati.il,tnl attiMnoat tll fn 1 tit fill . ,VJ WCJ UIDbLLUUlVU .....wtiuv ....v. ...... This will no doubt be a tepetition of the "crime of 1800" Porter's census. The senate of the United States does many tdinss that tho people do not ap prove. Enterprise. .' ' Is that the reauon the senate of the state of Oregon did not try to do any thing for the pt-ople? Pretty lame ex How thankful the people ought to be tb the "law manufacturers" that they admit to this sountry.duty free, aconite, agates, analine salts, mother of pearl and shells, tapioca, tar, verdigris and raws these are all so necessary to our welfare and comfort. One-iialc of Mr. McKinley's adin inis tration is past. The republican con gress elected with him has ended its ex istence. Yet not one thing has been doue or attempted with a view to rescu ing our currency system from the obvi ous dangers that threaten it or from the evils plainly inherent in it. New York World. ' The postmaster general has made a docision in regard to postmasters who fail to notify the publishers of subscri bers who move or fail to take their pa pers from the oilice, to tho effect that such postmasters Bhall be held respon sible. The new postal law also says that any one subscribing for a paper and refusing to pay for it sh .ill be liable to criminal prosecution. COUNTY PRINTING. On Friday last the board of county commissioners designa'ed the Coukieb Herat.d as the legal and official news psper of, Clackamas county in which li-yal rioiices shall be published an-1 awarded it tlie contract for publishing Uie delinquent tax lists and furnishing the books, stationery, printing and sup plies for a term ending July 1, 1900, at ono half the former rate for publishing and three-fourths for former rate for printing, books,' etc. 1 This will save tho county about $2000 alone during the term mentioned, and the board deserves credit for letting the contract to the lowest bidder, especially when a repub lican editor of this city had a law passed for' his personal benefit and expectod to get the job at the about same old rates a clear case of graft. Some may want to know how we can do the work so cheaply, In the first place the Courier IIeuau) has a larger circulation than any other two papers in the county combined and can publish a better paper for less money. It also does more printing that any two offices in the county, discounts its bills and runs on' an economic plan and hence is able to moke a few dollars on a jib that a com petitor would lose money on. It is not controlled by any one but the editor and proprietor and has no vermiform appendage or political bloodsucker attached. MILLINERY OPENING. March 24th mid 85th si tile IUhI Front Store, Oregon Cltv, tine display of kraullful hats, ami a coidial In vI'Mliim to come rihI inspect them. Our usual rua-ioiiable prices. Mas. M. K. Hamilton. The Sewer. Will a man work "k!i " bis own liiterostst Then why ure Elmer Charman slid Dr. Powell In fHvor of the sewer on the hill? By the sera lull of the pen Hint the gritoe of the edito' I'll tell yon why. They pmfer to live lu a town liaviuir llit ootivHulenot-ii and sanitary con ditions of modern civlllZHtiou to living In so abo riginal oongioiiifraifon of houses in a frog ioiid like the "uuoillul city of llavanerot Cu by." C. Tint g. o. p. platform adopted at St. Louis in ISiHj contained this clause: "Wo proclaim our unqualified condem nation of the uncivilized and barbarous practice well known as lynching or killing of human beings suspected or charged with crime, without process of law." But it said nothing about Bund ing soldiers to a far-off country and brutally murdering a foreign people whose only "crime" is that they want their liberty. I? there is yet a voter left in this country who is so ignorant as to deny that legislation cannot and docs not regulate value, we would like to have him or his gold advocating tutor ex plain why it was that the bullion value of silver in tin silver dollar was always worth a premium until the silver dol lar was demonetized in 1873. Before 1873 the ratio between the bullion Rvalue of silver and gold was about 15 o 1. At the present time it is about 28 to 1 and it was "purchased" legisla tion that has caused this decrease in the value of silver. Restore it to its old time place as a money metal, by legislation, and It will at once rise to its old time bullion value. CherryviUe. Pnnw again after apoinlns; so much like sorlnir. Woll we have to lake the weather as tt comes, and tliore is no use grumbling about It. Mr Cudersby is on tin siok list, but she is Im proving. IVlo Stone who has been working near Tlgard- vllle lias relumed Home, O. Slinny has boon hauling hay from U. T. Beebes' place, ' 8. Oxhorn Is working for J. Mabee. March 14. , Jack Fkost. Try Couikrk-Ukkald six months for 75 centi. Varjlehl. Wo ate sorry to havo to reportj Mr. Paris' fami ly ureiiiudor the weather, e.HMliilly Richard, as the girls will miss liliu of ttvouinusai the singing school; alio the league nice. lugs; nope he will be reaily to go home witu his best girl again soju. (Jonard Krlghaiim returned to Salem yesterday. Ho has been out home for a few days. Frank Gill has gone to Kuescllvttlo for a two Weeks' slay Henry Falmaiecr went to Oregon City last Thursday, ho said he had special business too at tend to. J.J Pavis also had some special busi ness In Oregon City last week and Portland, also, think he was looking after teachers uuk tor tne soiiooi nouse. John IHirtcr went to Purkplaoe to meet his mother, she spviit the winter with her sister in California, Beth Austin hw been nn In the mountains looking after the upper hatchery. He was aloue all wlnier, while out hunting one day, he run on to a panther, sir. ausiiu says no nan a aespe. rat light with the brute and got one of his good aogs kinea, aim got a am or so uiuuoii. Math Patterson went to 8alein Monday to at- ttuu tne iuuorai oi nis lauier. Iter. Davtoa n reach 1 verv able sermon at tin school house baturday evening at 7;). He w ill preach there awry two wenks . Mr. 1m Willi aad wife, were the guest of Mrs uid ivrigoaun. Mlsa Its Williams, of Oregon City, If the gusat oi nrs. 4. r. irviu tor a row uays Mr. Emerson Surface is thinking of pulling up a large nne aryar inu suuiaier, as ns will nave line crop of prune if the fruit does well Marsh IS. Kox:i; and that the true province of govern ment was to conserve these natural, rights; that governments were just or unjust, in proportion as they succeeded or jailed, measured by bis test. Jeffer son solved the problem of all time. Christ proclaimed God to be the com mon father and that all men were broth ers. Jefferson, standing upon the natn ural rights of all men to be free, sought to so bind men together into common wealths that at last they . might melt into brothers. On the other hand, there was a large, wealthy and powerful class, of aristo cratic tendencies, who like the founders of the ancient Greek republics, thought they themselves were entitled to be free, but were unwilling to extend the free dom they claimed for themselves so as to embrace the whole. They favored a liberal government compared to others existing at the time, but opposed a gov ernment consisting of, and responsible to, the whole people. They struggled hard to establish a government giving the president a life tenure of office with power to appoint governors of the states The government of their choice was, in fact, a form of limited monarchy. Alex under Hamilton was the recognized leader of this class. Hamilton and Jefferson wero both men oi extraordinary power, tneir leadership was of that character . that foes unchallenged. Under the law of natural selection the people gravitated to one or the other, The cryatalizatinn of opinion in favor of the ideas that Jef ferson contended for, formed the demo cratic party at that time known by the name of republican party ; while those who held the views championed by Hamilton banded themt-elves together in tiieir support, and were known by the name of federalists. .; Jefferson and his followers prevailed and our republic with a constitution guaranteeing and safe-guarding the lib erties of the people was launched upon the sea of time. The American republic, hated by the rulers of the Old World and reviled by the sycophants who subsisted on the crumbs of favoritism that dropped from the tables of kings and emperors, at once became tiie hope of the world The success of the republic justified the claims of Jefferson. He and his follow ers were the constructive statesmen of the first half century of our national ex istence. Their courageous, aggressive and successful administration were char acterized by the moat rigid application of the principles expressed in the greatest good t the greatest number The tmditions of the democratic party continued to attract to its ranks the same class who rallied to the support of Jefferson in his day. ' The democratic party was the party of the people in its inception, and in spite of the assault of the money power and modern tories, it is the party of the people to dav . In 1800 when the party w8 in dis grace, with a president of its own selec tion in nower. corrupt dealing with foreign and domestic tium -y changers and usurers and trampling under foot morals and decency, the rank and file of the party rose in their might, repud ated and condemned the conduct of the administration and' demonstrated the vitality of a government of the people The Chicago platform reaffirms anew the Declaration of Independence. It assures us that the spirit of '76 still lives. Upon this platform in 100O the democratic party will attract to its fold a greater majority of the Ameneau voters than . , , ... . . rpL. ever Detore unitou m one party. iuo duty of all who believe in a government of tne people, for the people, and by the people, is to commence at once to assist Id bringing the people in the commu nity in which they live to a realizing sense of the true meaning.of the Chicago platform. We must not wait until n ext year. If we do all may be lost. The money power and the monopolies have their hired agents in every state at this time working for the overthrow of the Chicago platform, ihe decisive Dattie between plutocracy ana tne people win be fought witiun tne ranks oi tne dem ocratic party between now ana the as sembling, of the next democratic nation al convention. The readopiion of the Chicago platform means the triumph of the people. The defeat oi that platform means that those who supported Bryan in 189(3 will be divided into hopeless lac tions and the success ot tne people will be indefinitely postponed. Progressive Business lien ....HUi,-,,,!!! nlniliihulilllll liBll lii,,n-ftr.i 1 -New Arrivals 6ur store is rapidly filling up with all the " 1 1? J J: 6 1 Insure in a first-class companies With an experenced agent. Shall we tell you A why? l Novelties for Spring "."'" 7: '""This week' we are 'showing ' 7r T ' I , ' f'' the fbllowirnj Specialties...,; Men's Fancy Striped Hose Our own importation from Germany. Prices range from 5c to 50c. , Men's Latest Spring Hats 'In many New Styles and Colors. Prices $1.00 to "$3.00. Men's Fancy Ties In Puffs, Ticks, Four-in-hands and Bows Prices from 15c to $1.00. - PRICE BROS., Next to Harding's Drug Store , - "yifif ft" OREGON CITY Glassware ! Glassware! L. We have received a new line of Glassware at popular prices, and will be pleased to have the Ladies call and see our stock. A. PATERSON & CO., Sixth and Main Sts., Oregon City Just Received... NEW LINE OF F. E. Donaldson, Agent Fire and Accident insurance Sow IS THE TIME to clean house and repaper yout ' rooms ! and paint your house and ... Murrow IS THE MAN to do the painting and papering in a first-class shape at very low prices. Leave orders at Ely Bros, store on upper 7th streeth. BATH COMFORT Is unknown unless fveryllung connected with the bath tub Is In perleol order. The Plumbing dona bv us Is thoroughly satisfac tory because it is dune right. F. C. GADKE For First-Class i DDCAn ..J DAOTDV 1 I Diitnu hiiu mo in 1 i J Spring and Rummer Goods Shoes, Boots, Clothing, Gent's Furnishing Goods, Hats, Fancy Goods, Dry Goods. . YOKOHAMA CLOTHING COMPANY . No. 3 Commercial Blk. next door to P. O., OREGON CITY . A Good. Thins If you have a good thing the people want it. Their scales of living is many .; degrees higher than their fathers'; they want the necessities of ' life to be as good as possible for the money. MARR & MUIR gives the best groceries at the lowest price. A penny saved is two earned. I I Dealer In First-Class H. BETHKE' Fresh Meats of All Kinds Opposite Hnntley's, Oregon City. HARRIS' GROCERY... . Fresh Stock of First-Class- Depot fur HAT and FEED THE 1 ; s ; .-.' LEADER OF LOW PRICES GROCERIES Willamette Block, Oregon City -.GO IG. H. BESTOW FOR Seventh St. Bakery 1 Go to F. HENNINQS or Btop his wagon as it goes by. DOORS, WINDOWS, MOULDING and BUILDING MATERIAL. LOWEST CASH PBICKS EVER OFFERED FOR FIRST-CLASS GOODS.' v Shop Oppo.lt Congregational Chnreh, Main Street, Oregon City, Ore. VAN R. HYDE , LAW OFFICE Will praciloi in all the Courts ot the State. Ah atiacta made. Land Title. Quirted. Conveyance. nd all Lfital lKK'urannia drawn. iiivorcc-B a t peoialty. Ornct in Cauruu DuiU'iMi, OREGON CUT, OREGON. GEORGE LINCOLN STORY LAWYER Will practice In all th. Court, of thl. State and Waihlnaton. Forcloni ot Mortgagee and Pro bale Matter. Specialty. Title, examined and Atnt.acU made. Office, Caciuid Buu-dino. Remember that the opening days of the great display ol millinery goods are coming at Ansa boldsmiUrs. R. L. HOLM AN Undertaker and Embalmei Carries a complete line of caskets, coffinSt robes, etc. Superior goods, Buperiol services at most moderate prices. Sexl door to Commercial bank. Obeoon City - Obigo Leading Photographer OREQON CITY, OREGON J". -A.. IOA-KEI General Blacksmith, Opp.Charman's Store, OREGON CITY Special Atteit'on Given to all kinds of Tool Work. f. Oreconiaa and Courier-Herald $2