. . . . .. , ... ......... .. . - ; . - ' - " " - --- -- L ! I i I t I 5 I if i ( i I f 1 1 OREGON CITY COURIER ORJKiON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. ' A. W.CHENEY Publisher legal and Official Kewspape Cf Clackamas County. t'UBLISHED WEEKLY. il . in Jrejun Cityp.Mtu31ceu iuJ-olM mutter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. -Muiitu luuev, pr jrir 1 so 3ialtu ............. 75 Meaouthtrt:ii " t0-Jh Jst oppoait your addrc-ss on Ihe wvt tu mot ii wkm you v paid I muh i4 mcliw J..jiJ iMSw ( T 4 irflxx ' Wi tucbwa iojlumu) l jwi wasrws to pr Triietit a WertHeawntsr Pw wvk 1 ii-cti St, .' inch- ?v. 3; hu'tbw It. 4 in-ks ft .inches ll.W. lUnnlri4iiH-h 141 a.treniieiueutu: iyr in l rjrl inser lllnl, mch arfilttlonal Insertion 50e. Affl!vii .of publication will not b tfurubheU until pub jllcauou fees arf paid. Loth! nutfivs; Kiire csntj pr line per week ,per month 2uo, JMTRONISE UOME INDUSTRY. OREGON OITY. MAY IS), 1899. An lineriain Internal Policy. Frast -Public ow.ierehlp ot publh fr.tnohlsee. The valuos croi'od by the community should be Siiug to the cammuul'.y . Sbcjond l)J8tr;i illon of criminal Iru.-ts. Ko ltwviopjlizalion nf the national resources by law Hew prlvnto combinations mire powerful tlinn t-lie people's Bovorinn:ut. Tmu-A gral'.nl jil lueiraaUx. Every olthmi 'to coalrlb'iitii tu tha sujipirt of His govariunuiit c nirJiu ; to his in miis, n'.il n t ikmt Vuvj t hU ne cessities. Fourth Elooti.m of senators by the people. The intiale, now bccoinlUK the private property njf corporations an J bosses, to be inaJe truly repre sentative, mid ihet.ite legislatures to be redeemed )from recurring soiiinliils. Jimt Nutional, state and municipal Impr ve vnottt of tlie publlo. utihool syxlom. As the duties of oitlznusliip urn b it'i i(iieral and local , every ?iivonim botli g neral an I looil, should do iltsshara toward fittl'ig evary Individual to per form them. Sixth 'Jurroncjr reform. All tha nation's nouey to be Issned by the nation's goveniniTi t, nnd Its supply to bj rejiilatod by the people and mot by tbu b.inkM. Why has the agitation for postal sav Sngs bnlcs been dropped? Why did not congress pass the postal savings bank rbill? Was it becausb the bankers' lobby Maid no? It is no.v conoeeded that Win. J Kryau will be the nominee for president an 1900.' Of course be will be, and he will be elects 1, toj in spite of the trust boodle fund. Binou the whitewashing of Dojs Quay, of Pennsylvania, how can a thinking man iongor doubt that the otirts of that state are "hypnotized" by the g. o. p. machine in the interest of the plunder ers? Gn u tlie people of this nation the ini tiative nud referendum and retire the .professional ctook, otherwise known as the politician, and conditions will in stantly chance for the be'.terment of the sraasHes of the people. Tub great department stores of the Wg cities that are fast driving tlie one Jine merchants out of business and into bankruptcy are a ipecios of trusts that are more pittnt for evil than many peo- )le are yet prepared to believe. Tun gold standard means low wages and a shrinkage in values. The free coinage of silver means more money in circulation, more woik and better wages Jorthe workingmen and mire demand at better prices for the products of the farm, dairy, mills and workshops. Which do you prefer, Mr. Workingman? Wiikn some corporation that has sev eral hundred slaves working for it at "wages too low to decently starve a man, say from three and one half to seven 'dollars a week, then raise these wagea tfrom five to ten per cent, the gold-bug ;press begins to shout prosperity. Oh, yes, here is an abundance of prosperity in a rnihe of 35 centa a week. Tub wealth producers of the United vStates the laboring people, who pro--duceall the wealth do not receive at 'the present time over lb" per cent of the ' wealth they annually produce. In 1840, of the wealth produced by labor, out t side of tho slave states, laboring people received (10 per cent. Government sta tistics prove this. How can there be general prosperity in a country where a laborer only receives Hi cents for each "dollar's worth of wealth he produces? iSome goldbug please answer. EviiRY revolution that history reveals or records sprang from an unjust cen tralization of wealth and power in the .hands of a greody few and never in the history of the world was there such vast concentration of stolen wealth as there is today in the hands of a very ifew people in the United States. Hut ithis great evil can be remedied without : bloody revolution of bullets it can be '-remedied .by the ballots of the people, provided it is done before the people are deprived of the ballot . SlU "'ILI.IAM TiTT, Of England, OllfC a!fi : "If tlie Americans adopt our bank i'cjind ftsn'Hri)? i-ystein, their libertif s ate gone." Well, the Americans didn't adopt them, but the sell-outs in Chicago did Tor the price they received. Uncle Sam paid Spain that $20,000,000 Monday, with no discount for cash. This recalls a little story. "Jobh," said Mrs. Hayseed, "we must get something i-r u iDy to cut Lus teeth on." "What's the matter with givin' him that gold brick I bought in New York last spring? i cut tny teeth on it." Ex. Wsgive you a quiet tip right now thai trust-owned g. o. p. bosses will have the unlimited gall to sail into the next nati nal campaign on an anti-trust war cry nd another international hi-metalic agreement and the trusts will furnish the hoodie to befuddle all the weak- minded suckers that will swallow the bait. It is a Bhame to the people of this conntry that the government paid Spain M.OW.PO-) fir the privilege of wh'pping the fenrvy little nation. It is bad enough to fend her lousy, greasy sol iers home free of charge. It is verv evident that some unpatriotic American, a latter-day copperhead, got a good rake off. Merc trrv. Tub Oanby Independent was closed out Wednesday by creditors. There was eome $500 due the paper, but col lections were bad and the creditora teppt'din. The plant is held by Miss Olfen and the good will, subserintion list, etc., goes to tho Courier Herald. The populists ate now forced to fall bark on the Courier-Herald. J, D. Ste vens has furnished additional evidenue that a populist paper will not be sup ported in this county. Fitch paid for the same experience. Press. Goon people, let us remind you o f this all-powerful fact, no matter what political party you affiliate wiih just so long as you elect fleecers to office, just so long will you be fleced. The fleecer is the fellow that has been a standing candidate for any office, in any party. And the majority of officials now in office are from the ranks of the fleecers. Hon. W. J. BavAN gave those assist ant republicans calling themselves gold democrats a hard rap over the noin, in a very poire way when he said in his speech at the New York banquet that the silver republicans who left the party at St. Louis had not assumed to write platfouns for the g. o. p. since leaving 1 it i . ih. vuiuuei nryan nas a way oi saying things that are both truthful and con vincing. CANHY PATER DIES. Thr Canby Independent like Dun can "After life's fitful fever it sleeps well." ISro Stevens finds that run mug a quarterly in Clackamas county wont go. W ith Ave hundred dollars on the books and no payments he has con cluded discretion the better part of valor, and will quit. His creditors came down "like a wolf on the fold" and closed the scene. Brother Stevens says, like Hamlet, "the rest is silence." The subscription list and good will has been turned over to the Coubieb Hbkald by the creditors, who recognize the fact that the Courikr-Hkrald is the only reform paper in Clackamas county that can live. This paper will fill out all paid up subscriptions and collect ail accounts due, and subscribers that owe are urgently requested to call and settle as soon as possible as we need money to run our paper as badly as Bro. Stevens. To the Independent subectibers we extend our hand and hope to merit a continuance of your patronage. We will continue to furnish the best paper in Clackamas county at the same price you pay for inferior papers, $1.50 per year, and you will always find us advocating reforms for the common people without fear or favor. We have no axes to grind, neither are we running for office. We are publishing a newspaper on bus iness principles while advocating our principles. Our readers number over twice that of any psper in the county, and our advertising columns are more liberally patronized than any other. The paper speaks for itself We have always felt charitably in clined toward Bro. Stevens, and are sorry that his newspaper venture was a losing one. We could have told him so at the outset, as we have been through tlie mill ' and know the working there of. Bro. Stevens did nobly and will, no doubt, receive his reward in the next world, but that would not pay his bills in this world, and he was obliged to sub mit to the inevitable. This also shows that a reform paper has no politicians to depend on or to "whack up" 'till next election as the g. o. p. organs have. It now behoves the reformers to unite for principles rather than party, as "united we stand, divided we fall." VLA VKAMAS CO UXTX HANTS. tl'A ti tle inty a pi'emiuinfor warrants. It will be to your interest to act our , price before wlUny. i The Hank of Oregon City, OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 191890. bQClALI.SU CUM IS CI. S. M. .lone', who was recently elected mayor of To'edo, Ohio, on a socialist platform over both republican and dem ocrat candidates, in a recent interview in New York, said : "This public ownership will extend to the state and nation, and 1 believe that in 19-50 it will hardly be possible to find a railroad in the country in piivate hands. Tho telegraph will be the first to pass into public control. The taxa tion of the franchises is simply a make shift compromise. , Development of.the trusts is the most remarkable feature, in my opinion, of the closing years of the century. I don't regard them as bad in so far as they do away with labor, which they make useless, so that all can bene fit, but they benefit only a few; their organization snd labor-saving machinery have not made the hours of labor shorter, nor have they increase wages, and thev have made it harder fur men to find Viork." mayor jones is very conseivaiive HI 7 , " when he gives us 50 years in which to nationalize our public utilities. If he had put it 30 years he would have been walking on pretty safe ground. There is no question before the public today that is making such rapid growth as that of public ownership, and all close observers are well aware that it is not a spasmodic growth that springs up like a muehroo.-n and is cut down as easily. The only thing that has kept it back so long is the odium which the money power has succeeded in attaching to tlie word socialism and the fact that we have so few men (comparatively) who are brave enough to champion a cause until il becomes popular. Thus it is that the spirit of brother hood (-ocialism) has been pent up in the hearts of millions of men and wo men like a smoldering volcano wailing for a suitable iime to burst forth, and the trust era has brought forth that time. As we have believed all along, the giant trusts are blessings in disguise, proving, as they do, two things: First, that co-operation is practicable. Sicond, that it is necessary for tlie welfare of the human race. The trusts prove that a few men, by co-operating together instead of compet ing against each other, can be mutually benefitted in the Baving of cost, and in some instances furnish their product at a lower price than when in competition. If this can be done by a few men co operating, there is no good reason why all the people cannot, by forming them selves into a brotherhoo I, work to geth- . . .. r. . . . . er ior mutual oeneiu ana Happiness, in stead of continuing this strife for private wealth and place. The fact that each week sees thous ands of men and women turned out into the streets by the closing of mills and factories brought about by the organiza tion of trusts and V e concentration of capital, only to be added to the already over-supplied labor maiket, is opening the eyes of humanitarians as they never have been opened before, and when they cast about thein for a remedy, socialiem (co operation) seems to be the only one in sight. The cause is embraced by such noble and intelligent men and women as Prof. George D. Herron, professor of applied Christianity in Iowa College; Prof. Ely, of Wisconsin University; Ridpath, the great historian; Mayor Jones, of Toledo; Governor Tingree, of Michigan; Bev. Lyman Abbott, D. D., of New York ; B. Fay Mills, the great Boston evangelist; Mayor Quincy. of Boston ; Prof. Frank Parsons, of Kansas Col'ege; Walter Thomas Mills, of Chicago; Chief Justice Walter Clark, of North Carolina; the sainted Frances E. Willard ; Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Ella Wheeler Wilcox and hundreds and thousands of the grand est and best men and women of the world. None of the persons named are in any sense politicians except Mayor Jones and Governor Pingree, and they tower head and shoulders above the average politician. When such men and women take up and battle for a cause it means some thing. Even some of the great daily newspa pers are coming out squarely for social istic principles. Among these are the San Francisco Examiner, Ney York! Journal and Chicago Record. ben all the editors and preachers who believe in it but lack the moral courage to say bo, fall into line, as they will, the little stream which started from the fountain head of pure thought in the mind of the lowly Nazirine 1900 years ago will swell and broaden and deepen until it will sweep everything be fore u. So we need only watch, work and wait. The leaven is working. "God's in his heaven; all's well on earth." Teople are reading and thinking and cannot be deluded much longer by the cry anarchy 1 anarchy I People are beginning to know that so cialism and anarchy are as far apart as east and west. Socialism means government of all the people by all the people; anarchism means no government at all. ' Socialism means harmony ; anarchism means chaos. , Socialism would settle all deputes by ai'Wira'i'-n ; anarchism would settle dis putes by bloodshed. In fact, when rightly understood, so cialism means the brotherhood of hu manity, the kingdom of heaven on earth. Pray for it, work for it; wait for it. Al bany Press. Our Money System. Written for the Courier-Herald by Argus.J In thebe days of evolution? with our college and university text books filled with disproved and preposperous theo ries regarding the ordinary forces of na ture, but which are upheld for want of a positive constructive science to replace them, we should be careful how we ac cept the so-called financial laws, and es pecially the fierce dogmatism of the gold standard. While it is difficult to get an exact definition of money and its functions, we may yet easily understand the nature and general use of money. All money can be considered under two divMons, which we may define as- "real" and "representative," the essen tial nature and difference of which must be understood before we can have any true conception of the science of money, Real or aset money, or standard money, is that metallic money selected as a standard or measure of rallies. I Various kinds of material, at different ' limaj l.Ui.a knur, l.o.wl tr.- .kin ' liiiico, iia.o ui,cii u-cu iui una pui pi'OC, from the sea shells of the aborigines of Africa to the coon skins of our back- wood states, but gold and silver are so much better adapted for this purpose that their use has become universal. A recognized ratio of value between Ihe two nietais was established first by custom and more recently by law, until 1873. After the adoption of the consti tution by the United States, it was found necessary to establish a money of uniform value to supercede the widely diversified monies of the different states. After elaborate inquiries, a double standard at the rate of 15 ounces of silver to one ounce of gold was selected as our basis of measurement, which, with slight changes, was in force until 1873, when the single gold standard was sub stituted. Representative money, token money, or credit money, depends for its value on two things : 1. The metallic rates on which it is founded. , 5. The ability of the government to keep up the parity. If I own real t state, say a farm, that farm would be represented by a dud. ' The value of the deed fluctuates with the value of the farm, but without the estate behind it, a deed would be valueless. ... Fyc. , wauo iu rep.c- odiii. iciu uiuiioy, or speu e, wincii may l II.. . .1 1... . T I ue caneu nie estate, ji i deposit money with the bank, I can issue checks for all or part. These checks may purchase values and discharge debts, so long aa the real money lasts, but wiih thetstate of real money all gone, the checks would be worthless. A man of large psses tions of real estate might be allowed to overrun his account, which would make a charge on other estate, but this is not considered good business, as it often leads to financial difficulties which may end in bankruptcy itself. Of courso a large government like the United Slates has such immense resour ces in the taxable properties of the peo ple that in ordinary times of peace its paper or other representative of money is never questioned, but as every note or bond issued is an increased charge on the taxable liabilities of the people, it is wise for a government, as for an indi vidual, to issue no more representative money than is absolutely necessary with out the metallic storage to back it. It is astonishing how many otherwise intelligent people see no difference be tween real and representative money. They look on the dollar and its frac tional parts as purely abstract in its na ture, a piece of monetary nomenclature only, and argue that as the government can put 57 cents value in a silver dollar, it could equally put all the value in it. (Continued next week.) The Enclyclopielia Britanica says: "The theory of the intrinsic value of money has been abandoned by the best writers and speakers." Certainly it has. No one but a knave or a tool of Sol omon Iraac's adheres to the Jerusalem theory of finance that is advocated by the republican administration. What good to humanity can reason ably be expected to be taught in a col lege that is endowed by some rich rob berthat is supported by the money stolen from laborers by some capalistic king who allows his slaves to barely earn enough to feed them and is backed up in his greed and tyranny by the state militia or soldiers of the reg ular army should his slaves refuse to be plundered? This is a fair question. Wk have known of some people so bi ased against free speech and free press as to refuse to subscribe for or to adver tise in a newspaper on account of the views expressed by the editors. One of the features many people who are only not posted, object to is the advocating of the free coinage of silver. Come, gentlemen, this shows bad for you, for you will have to take it in 1900, for its coming aod when it does come it will be a blessing to you. A NTT-TRUST LAWS. Texas has added the most drastic of all anti-trust me istires to the statutes of the year. The bill that, has now passed both houses of the legislature, arid is now in the hands of the governor, goas even further tlmn the MUpouri and Ar kansas laws, being thus described in the dispatches 'rom the Texas capital : "It absolutely debars any pool or trust from doing business in the state and prevents their goods from being used in the state, for the reason lhat it clearly specifies that goods bought from any trust or corporation which may prove to be a trust, need not be paid for. It also provides that no corporation can fix a price on its goods and force me" chants to sell at such a price. It pro vides further lhat pooling is strictly prohibited and that any corporation giving away its goods with a view of crushing competition shall be adjudged a member of a trust and shall be debar red from doing business in the Btate." The measure is apparency severe enough to accomplish its purposes,,, but experience witli previous anli-trnst leg islation does not encourage the expecta tion that it will turn out to be just wha.t It seems at first glance. The trusts are poweiful ; their lawyers are ing-nious in getting about the legal restrictions, and the inherent difficulties in the way of determining what is a trust and what is uot make it probib le that there will have to bd a go id dial of experimenting before the right remedy is found. The experiments in the virions s tates are worth close attention. Tlie trust evil must be met, or the system of indi vidualism is at an end. The govern ment must control the trusts, or the trusts will exercise i " - i vi -" people tint no modern government ditre ! attempt to exercise. It is the duty of uongress and the state legislatures to act within their respective spheres of in fluence to surpress the vast combination s that overshadiw all industry, and threaten the pa iple an 1 theg)vernin ent alike. Every step to this cm 1 is to b e watched with eager interest. The mo st pressing question of the day is THE DESTRUCTION OF CRIMI NAL TRUSTS. The Bicycle Trust. New York, May 16. R. L. Coleman, president of tlie Western Wheel Works, of Chicago, today rendered his option lor the sale of tl.e bicycle plant to A. G. Spalding. The combination being engi neered by the Spahiings will, by the ac Spalding, control a large percentage of the output in tlie United Stat, s. It will pos8esa facili;ie8 for maki ft lete ( bIcyce evory fiye Beconds, working ten 1 hours a dav i ' The company is financed by the United States Mortgage and Trust Company, of this city, and Lee, Higg:'n son & Co., of Boston. The capital of Ihe company is to be $35,000,000 pre ferred stock and $45,000,000 common stock. Within the next few days 106 of the manufacturers upon whose plants Mr Spalding has obtained options will come here to make their transfers. Af ter all the transfers have been made the organization of the new company! will v,an v i ' c To Albany and return for $1 on May 28. Turners' excursion. A Good Thing 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 .QO TO G. H. run DOORS, WINDOWS, MOULDING and BUILDING MATERIAL. LOWEST CASH PRICES EVER OFFERED FOR FIRST-CLASS GOODS. j ouvp vppmii vong-revntlonal Chnroh, Main Weekly Oregon Oregon City Courier-Herald Lctlcr to reunion Attorney. .Following is a copy of a letter to Washington pension attorney from a cli cut in Clackamas county : Mr. Stephens, May2'99" Dear Sir: Yours at hand you have done jU8t to snte me we must foller them op when our legislature makes laws that a pension come shiner rejects I think they ought to got put out. Mr. Stephens they have a new bord of Docters at Ori gon City I think they are good men and are Republicans I hope they are better men than Evans all he cares for is him. self & the salery he gets lie is going to hurt our party I now a man near me that has left the party he sould get an increas he is intitled to an increas as to myself I have a very bad back one eid is decaid fell away so that a person will notice it through my vest it is no good I try to work I have to I get tire out it, the back have to go to bed as to my ail ments goon shot wound Mi hand broken nuckle piles rheumatism di-interry quite frequent kidney truble up from 2 to 4 times a night all so have ba I veins I think thev are called veracooae I have had pile every since I cun.e out of the army lain Doe'nrei, t,!l of the time for piles h ive o keep a round bu my bark bothers me most of all b'lt my Didneys bother n.e a erate M,e (T havo to run mak water or wet my pants I kan not hold it) Mr. S I am not a fooling nor trieing to get an injust pension god nows I am strate about it I don my duty for the government & stood up to the rack A did not show any white feathers when I was discharged I was o'erd a com mishionment to went back after I visit ed my folk & took It but my father was an oald man he cried & stonk to me so hard I coold not get back I was hit 3 times in one fight had my gun hit won & our regtraen went through some hani fights 1 had the name staing rite with them I have been allwase sorry I did not go back & take the comisliion then I woold of got a pension increase all rite Milo pleas see Mackinly I have herd of lincon going to the pension com & making him git I understand you was in the war all so was Mackinlew'was there all so I was there he woold talk to us if urn I . ,i nnn I. .' p r ..u ..oiiv v.. nro mm oc i am neauing an I ;nc,ea8 tne lord nows I am entitled to il 1 wial1 1 had 8taid wit" the oald law I ' novv of ?e man that Kiting $24 Dol iars inai is oetter than i oe our oresi- dent remarked before he was elected that the oald soldiers ware not geting here Just dies but I th'nk h"t s for got I think I have riiten enough to tucker y u out good by yours &o Disease of San Jose Ssale. The Oregon experiment station "has succeeded in destroying the San Jose scale by inocul tting it with a fungti3 disease. Pure cultures of this fungis will be prepared and so far as possible will be furnished free of charge to those fruit growers who wish to test this method of destroying the scale. Full directions for carrying on the work will be sent out with each sample of the dis ' Zn, a 7' 7 7 , 6 mateml8 should be made to the Oreeon exnnri- mnnt nl.ll rfl 11" t uiDut autiiun, ixirvauiM, ure. Correct styles and popular prices in all kinds of millinery. Miss Goldsmith. BESTOW" Htreet, Oregon City, Or. R. L HOLM AN Undertaker and Embalmei Carries a complete line of caskets, coffins, robes, etc. Superior goods, Superiof services at most moderate prices. Nex' door to' "straight s grocfRX Oregon City - - Obmoi ian and FOR ONE YEAR Two Dollars