OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 26 1899. OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. K V. CHENEY Publisher legal and Official Newspape Of Cla?kama) County. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. . InOrogoo Oltypoatofflce2nd-clM matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Paid In advance, per year : l 1 months ree moiuhs'trial ... ""The date nnnnflltA inn. nAAraa An uuuuicaius line 10 wmen you na?e paid ADVERTISING RATES. Standing buotntjiifl ativartUemAnlji- Par mnnln -llnoril,S! Inches 11.50, 8 inches 11.75, 4 Inches 12,6 Inches (uoliimn) fi.25, lOinohes(Jeolumn) S4, 20 Inches (coluaiu) Is, yearly contracts 10 per Transient advertisements! Per week 1 Innfc 0o, 2 Inches 75c, 8 Inches $1.4 Irolies II 25,5 uicnBi.wi, iu incnes z.lw, u Inches 15 Lgal a.ivortUements: Her in h tirst inser- linn 1, i ach additional insertion 50c. Atlllavits pi pnnucation win not be furnished until pub licaiion fees are paid. Local notices; Five cents per line per week PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. CITY, M I Y 20, 1899. An American Internal Policy. Fmsi Public ownership of publio franchises. The values created Jiy the community hhould be Joug to the caminunl'.y. Skcosd Daslructlon of criminal trusts. No Knopoll!'itlon of the national resources by law Icse private combinations more powerful than i'Slie people's governmsnt. Thiu--. gralukted iiioinelax. Every oltizon 1 So coutiliMteto the suppirt of the governm mt ac--eonHni to his m;ans, an) n H aojor Jlng t) lib ne TOssltleg. Iouktii Klootlon of senators by the people. Too senate, now becoming the private properly Vt corporations aud bosses, to be made truly repre sentative, ami the state legislatures to be redeemed from recurring scandals, flFrH Nutlonal, state and municipal Impr vc eent of the publlo sehool system. As the duties of citizenship are b t li general and local, every jwernm nit, both gmeral and local, should do Iteshare toward Bttl ig evjry Individual to per form them. SiXTiifiurrericy reform. All the nation's Knney to bo issued by the nation's governuien t. Hid Its supply to be reflated by the people and lot by the banks. Bad beef, bad whiskey, and bad po',i lies are making iurouds on the popula tion. The follow that talks the most ahout ''honest money" is neually the biggest tax dodger, The commonest enemy we know is the fellow that is trying to deceive you with promises. Tim bunkers seem to think bank pa per money a mighty good currency, but government paper money, oh my I Twenty million dollars for ten mil lion people looks like a bargain-counter price, but the Filipinos lire dear at that price. The men who "know all about fi nance" simply copy the errors of the past, I men use it is money in their pock I'tB to do so. A man mny possess the right to vote and yet be au industrial slave. A man in debt is a slave just to the extent of hia indebtedness. rtiiii.ic sentiment is in favor of the lection of United States senators by the people, but itdont seem to be exerting itself very much. The most prosperous period in the history of this country was when there was no gold or silver in circulation; only paper money. Tub United States has spent $;!00,000 000 on war in a little over 12 months Just passed. The army has lost more men than it has killed. Why dont they put salt on Agitinal do's tail, if they want to catch him? He's been "salted" twice with Spanish gold, and might be caught again. Gov, Pinukek makes a fine plea for Ihe republican party to be good, but he night as well plead with the devil. The republican party thinks it is good now, and it is to the corporations and trusts. The JiiDanese language does not con itin a single cuss word. That Is pretty gold evidence that they have never vot ed for a man like Cleveland, nor eaten rmued army beef of American manufac ture. Simultaneously with the increase of wages of the employes of the tin trust ten per cent, the price of its goods was advanced 100 per cent. That uuy be considered as a beautiful exampliflcation of "preserving the equities," with 'downweight" in favor of the trust. It is estimated that the Spanish war Will cost us about $500,000,000. Suppose we had paid out that amount in this country to have good roads built. It would have given employment to the thousands of poor men aud put money in circulation that woulp have leiulted in some real prosperity. But, no, wo must kill a few people and get Utile glory. Ir would he in'eresting ti know if Alger ever taste 1 any of that army heef. During the last six years the interest ing debt of the U. 8. A. has jumped from $585,000,000 to $1,200,000,000, and the interest charge has increased $14,. 000! Tub first fruits of imperialism a cen sored cable to Manila to prevent the American people from receiving any in formation regarding conditions there, and censored mails in the United States to prevent Americans in the Philippines learning the opinions of the people at home, me traveling salesmen wno were so solicitous in 1896 to have money that fill. - A li , . was good all over the .world, but have since lost their jobs on account of the formation of trusts, would undoubtedly rather have their j ibs back again and take their pay in money that wag good in this country. - Some fellow who has a most delight ful "pull," a lovely lead pipe cinch on the administration, has a contract for shipping wo xi to Cuba for l lie use of the government, at flj a cord. Wood is plentiful in Cuba and could be supplied at i o' more than $2 per cord, but our Uncle Sam is such a generous old cuss! The average American workingtnan is a gny bird. He gives more than half the producis of his labor away in order lat he may vote a straight ticket for the grand old party, and the privilege of working some more, lie's the softest inp on two continents und so green that the devil will hve to dry hirn a thousand years before he will burn. The board of iDquiry says : "The beef was good." "Eagan bought too much of an un tried ration." "Miles is a liar, Alger is an angel." "The beef contractors were patriots." "The soldiers were traitors to their country for refusing to eat the beef." We are in favor of tl.o initiative and referendum first, last and all the time, but we don't like the idea of being turned ovei to the republicans because they passed a constitutional amend ment favoring such at the recent session the state legislature to catch votes and fool the fool people at the next elec tion. The average voter is a sort of a jase- ack for the politicians to ride. Ha was just as enthusiastic in supporting Cleve- ind us he was McKinley, because the politician was in the saddle and putting ne spurs to iuuv. It all meant the same thing to the politician office. The vo er never reaches that part of the lane where promises leave off and perform ances begin, but he keeps pegging away aim voting er Hiraiglll. Dully DOy, is he. The gold bug iaction of the g. o. p, saem to be willing to waive every thing they nave contended for if they can sue ceed in gottinga law passed making all contracts heretofore payable in money payable in gold. Poor deluded lunatics, know you not that if debts cm ba made payable in one com nudity the way is clear for making them payable in all commodities. thus eliminating money entirely and getting back to the barter system of exchanging value for value direct. 1 This is not a pleasant picture to contem plate coming as it does from the so called brainy men of our matchless American financiers, but it is nothing more than could be expected from a class of brainless idiots who immagine that a nice little shell game like the present national banking system could become a perpetual institution . Over Semitlve. Oregon City, Or., May 6, 99'. Editor Courier-Herald: On the editorial page of the Courier Hkrald of yesterday, I see an allegation that murder is being committed daily in the Philippines, and that the adminis tration is "propigsting" a brutal policy of tyranny. Now I have a son in the Philippines who is a party to this illegal murder a party in the enforcement of this "brutal policy of tyranny." Iam proud of the boy, and proud of the fact that he is there, doing his part of what the ad ministration desires to accomplish. In my judgment the sentiments ex pressed in the said editorial, are per nicious, and should be condemned by patriotic citizens, and I bave no use for paper engaged in this dissemination. You will please discontinue the Oour-ier-Herald to my address. Respectfully yours, J. W. Norris, M. D. The above communication shows what a foolish view people, that are otherwise intelligent, take of certain events. The article mentioned did not in any way re flect on any one personally, and referred in a general way to the un-American policy now being pursued in regard to the Philippine, and there was no fiction about the article either, and the facta are a we stated. We have nothing to say against the boya that are lying down their lives for their country at the re quest of a boodle government policy. NO ROYALTY FOR AMERICANS. Andrew Carnegie announces hit re. tirement from business, having sold his iron industries to the great steel com hi nation for one hundred and fifty mil lions. Tins amount he mve?ts in first mortgage bonds of the combine at 5 interest, which will produce him an in- tumo ui 9 ,ouu,uuu a year, or fZU.UUU a day, which is a pretty good salary to do iiothing being 150 times as much as the president of the United States re ceives. It is a sum greater than is paid to the kings of Bavaria, Spain, Servia, Wurtemberg, Saxony, Roumania, Port ugal, Norway, Bweeden, Greece, Den mark and Belgium, COMBINED, and Carnegie would have enough left to pay the salary of every president on the face of the earth ! That is what the fools of America pay to one man, and not the richest one by any means. And yet these fools would never, never, never submit to support royalityl But this speculation in comparative royal in comes was not what I started to call your attenuaii to. It was this that struck me so forcibly -when I read the dispatch refeiing to the deal by which the Carnegie properties passed into the hands of the trust. The situation is, that Carnegie had possessed himself of the position to tax the people to the ex tent of millions a year. The combine wanted to exercise this power and they bought the power of Carnegie, paying him $20,000 a day for all time to come , he and his heirs, fer the privelege. They expect to tax the people to pay thin and a profit for themselves on tup of it. Carnegie simply sold the privilege of taxing the people only that and nothing more. Just as kings sold the privilege of taxing the people to the highest cash bidder, which was the cause of the Wyat Tyler insurrection in England and all other revolutions. When you come to consider that the steel trust is capitalized atone thousand millions (one billion dollars) and that Oaruagie's contribution to is less than one sixth of the whole, you will com prehend to some extent, if you have a mathematical turn of lniod, what this one trust means in the way of taxing the people. It will suck from the labor of the people of the Jnited States more money than all the kings, emperors, dukes, lords, barons, presidents and royal families on earth suck from the world's workers 1 The robbery of roy alty sinks into insignificance beside this one trust. And then to know that the copper trust is of the same size and power and that there are over 4 JO other trusts, you must be dull indeed if you cannot Bee where this thing is leading to. All these vast, incomprehensible incomes could be saved to the people if it some scheme to rob the industrious or divide up the property, of which it is neither. It will not take many years at the present rate of combination to so re duce the people to poverty that they cannot stand the private ownership of industries, even if they would. There fore let us rejoice that the concentration is making such rapid headway, because it will shorten the time and lessen the sum of human misery. Incidentall, Carnegie announces his intention of re tiring from commercial affairs and de voting his life and fortune to philan thropy and the fighting of trusts. All of which can be taken with more or less salt but time will tell whether he means it or has the intelligence to com prehend the only remedy. And we are nearing the Twentieth Century. Ap peal to Reason. Why? EOITOR-COURIER-H ERAI.D. Why do rich men generally cleave to gold standard, aud persistently oppose free silver coinage and clamor for the destruction of the greenbacks? History informs us that whenever a large supply of legal-tender money has been furnished the people, thev invari ably became prosperous. And when ever a scarcity of legal money occurred the people suffered adversity, showing plainly that the main cause of prosper ity was a large volume of money in cir- culation, and the cause of adversity was a small volume of money in circu lation. History informs us further that it matters not of what material the money is made, if it is a full legal-ten- der. The intrinsic value of monev has been many times proven to be a fallacy notably by England, when Napoleon Bonaparte threatened the subjection of all Europe. Napoleon Aonaparte be ing a believer in intrinsic value, had ab sorbed much of the gold and silver nf Europe by conquest. England and Germany became greatly alarmed at the attitude of Bonaparte, and not having but little gold and silver on hand, Eng land volunteered to issue a large volume of legal-tender paper money with which to combat, and if possible to conquer the ambitions. Bonaparte. "Sir Archibald Allison", in hit histojy of Europe, tells ui that the issuing of fiat money carried Eng. land to the highest pitch of power and prosperity ever known to any nation since the beginning of time. Again the United States congress resorted to a legal-tender paper money with which to combat, and conquer the alave-holders rebellion. We here quote from Judge Tiffany "On Constitutional Law," a work that is authority in our courts. It was written before the war. He says, Chap. 12, Sec. 40:): "The authoiity, which coins or stamps itBelf upon the article, can select what substance it deems pui table to receive the stamp and pass it as money, and it can affix hat value it deems proper, independent of intrinsic volue. The value is in the stamp and not in the metal or material it is evident that the money-loaning class is opposed to an increase of the money supply. Therefore, the creditor class seem to cling to the gold standard, they fearing an increase of the currency would lessen the indebtedness of the people, and would stop interest collec tion. Because, if money should be plenty, prices would so increase that many would be able to pay their debts and stop interest. Let us investigate tliest creditor and debtor classes and ascertain, if possible, the cause of the well-nifch universal indebtedness that is robbing the producers eyerywhere of more than half of their earnings. In the first place, I suppose it will . be con ceded iliac ine cretin or classes are gen- e ally elected to our legislatures, and to congress, and, therefore, they make the laws to suit themselves, without much r.gardtolhe welfare of the producing classes. Consequently the wealthy class is resuont-ible for all the bad laws that are enacted. Instead of legislating in behalf of honest industry as Abraham Lincoln wished congress to do, we find gigantic monopolies, formed and form ing, which are destined to rob the indus trious classes of a large share of their hard-earned incomes. We find, by re stricting the currency to a small volume, the into lie of all producers is verv Bmall indeed, something less than the cost of production, and propeny of every kind becomes ruinously low-priced. No mar vel that the creditor classes, as a rule, are extrenuous advocates of the single gold-standard, for the rich want high priced money and low-priced commodi ties; for then, their high-priced dollars will buy two to four times more of val uable properly than they would if the dollars were more plentiful. Why can't every worker, regardless of property, se through the mazy errors that poli ticians have so long taught the people for truth ! Sands Bkownell, Criticizes the Road Syxtem. New Era, Or., May 10, '99. Editor Courier-Herald. Dear Sir I herewith write an open letter to the county commissioners of Clackamas county, they now having full control of the roads and bridges of this county, aud knowing that a county judge and a lawyer .cannot know much about roads and bridges, am glad that the care of them is taken from liim, and hope the task of keeping the county roads in traveling order will be bet'er at tended to. A few days ago I had occasion to drive to Canby on the river or lower road and such a road is a disgrace to a civilized community. It is actually impassable and should be repaired immediately, as there will be sccidents, and the county will have a law suit on its hands. The road running east from New Era is not safe to drive on in the night time and hardly in the day time. There was a little mishap at New Era a short time ago; a team backed off a bridge, the railing being a flimsy affair. The school teacher has often cautioned the children not to lean against it. It was put up by our supervisor or his aids, and it might as well been laid flat on the bridge. I have nothing to say against the supervisor as a man, but, as a supervisor, he, I think, lacked judg ment and I draw my conclusion from observation. He put in a plank water culvert across the road, east and south of my place on the new grade east of Ihe bridge across Parrot Creek, the water running acoss the road about 20 to 30 feet north of the spout that he put in. There came a rain and I dug a ditch about 30 feet long and turned Ihn water i ito it, a id this is about a sample of all the road work in this district and many others. There is money raised to have good roads if we can have a road builder to have charge of it and see that the money is judiciously "spent. Political pulls and rings and an Over thirst for county warrants will not build good roads, some hiring non-tax payers and lazy relatives to work on them. This branch of business needs a thorough overhauling. Respectfully yours, M. F. Moores. It is a peculiar fact that the four regi ments that have done the hardest fight ing in the Pkilippines were organized and sent out by demo-populist adminis trations, viz : Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Washington. Governor Leedy, of Kansas was ridiculed and abused for disbanding the national guard of the state and calling for volun teers to go to the front, and yet the Kansas boya, under Colonel Funstan, have carried off the laurels for hard fighting. The other democratic states of Montana, Idaho and Utah have fought well, as have the volunteers sent from the republican states of Oregon and California, although the efficiency of the latter state is due very much to the thorough organization of the nation al guard by Governor Jim Budd, a dem ocrat. Roeeburg Review. I Our First Week's Battle : A Great Victory Our first week's sale proved a great success and gives us enough encouragement to see that the people appreciate a Straightforward Legitimate Business House Which you can do your trading without fear that you will not be treated right.or goods will be misrepresented. Our reputation is well known in Portland and we shall do our best to make it the same in Oregon City. There are reasons why people appreciate this NEW STORE ist Because you buy goods fully 25 cheaper than elsewhere. .1 . . WHY? Because we are buying goods direct from the ; factory in large quantities; not from jobbers, as others do. 2d We do not buy Chinese . made goods. Our goods ' are made by WHITE UNION LABOR. ! It Fits Better Its Workmanship is Better It Wears Better It Gives a Better Appearance The Star V Clothing House A. HECHTM AN Harding's Block, Opposite Commercial Bank, Oregon City The Best Money. Minto, Or., May 16, '99. Editor Courier-Herald. , A few years ago 1 wrote many arti cles for different papers on reform sub jects, several of which were published in the Herald, but lately I have not written much, and the money has been so good that I have been unable to see the Courier Herald, or write much for the press. But, I am more interested in monetary reform than any other sub ject, and believe that now, when there is no campaign on deck, is the time to educate the people by presenting argu ments and facts, facts and more facts. We have had lhetoric, oratory, denun ciation and agitation galore, especially . during a hot campaign, but these do not j always educate. It is education the : people need, and this can be secured J only by repeated recitation of unim ' peachable facts facts that cannot be ! contradicted from the official record, li the people have these they will reason for themselves, and I have faith that they will come to a just conclusion. If you will accord me space, I will send you, weekly, a short article, reciting many facts now not known to the ma j irily of the voters. the best money. We are told by the gold advocates that we, the people of the United States, I and especially the laboring people, should haye the very "best money." Ihat the "best money" is none too good for "our working people." See Mc Kinley's speeches. How they do love our working people 1 They think they own them. Then they assume that the "best money" is the money that will buy the most food and the most clothing." John Sherman. That is the dearest money the costliest money the money that will buy the most produces of labor, or the most labor, is the "best money." Yet these same inconBistant politicians tells us with great glee, that the prices of products and wages are rising that is, that a dollar will not now purchase as much as it did three or four years ago, during the Cleveland administra tion. If this is so, money is deprecia tingit is not the "best money" not as good as it was under Cleveland. History tolls us that at one time in England, alter Cresar had invaded the island, and taken away nearly all their! nrA n n .1 n!t.. . I. .. A ... . I 6" u iivcr, mm money was so scarce, and so near being the "best money" that a man could be bought for less than $15; a horse, for less than $5; a cow, for $2; a sheep, for 5 cents and a Buai. lur i. rents, ui course tiiat was better money than we ever had even under a democratic administration. Just think how happy "our working people" would be if they could get to work for that kind of the "best money 1" Would they not pay off their mortgages and taxes in a jiffy? Then surely confidence would be restored I So you see we are a long distance yet from having the "best money" according to these wiseacres, but we are gaining that. But what fools were the republi cans, who, nominated Lincoln in 1860, when they declared in their platform that: "We commend that policy of na tional exchange, which secures to the working men liberal wages, to agricul ture remunerative pricei, to mechanics and manufacturers on adequate reward for their skill, labor, and enterprise, and to the nation commercial ity and independence." prosper- Next week, from a populist point of view, I will tell you what is really the "best money." J. P. Robertson. North Dakota has an "anti-tramp law." Railway employes in the state are endowed with police power and au thorized to arrest anyone found riding on freight trains. The penalty for this terrible crime is thirty to ninety days imprisonment or a fine of $25 to $75. More Prosperity. "The organization of trusts has re duced the army of commercial men fully 7000 since the 1st of January," said L. S. Read, the representative 'of a Balti more hat manufactury, at the Perkins Sunday, "and the continued formation of these big combines is going to cut the number down still further. Then the jolly commercial man, who has lived up his salary as he went along, will begin to realize in large number that he must change his occupation. No longer can he put up at fine hotels, no more can he telegraph to the landlord: "Save me the bridal chamber,' as of yore." Mr. Read has been on the road for 30 years, but has, unlike the majority of his brethren, saved something for a rainy day, and will probably open up a hat jobbing establishment in Portland. He savs hats have not yet been included in anv big combine, but indications are now pointing that way. St. Louis alone sends out 700 hat drummers, and four fifths of these will have to join the army of the unemployed when the hat trust is consumated." The foregoing item of news which ap peared in the Oregonian of May 15th, may prove interesting, though somewhat alarming, reading for this class of flash-ly-drossed, nilv-tongued gentry, whose salary and traveling expenses have formed part of the cost of nearly every article of merchandise. But to the student of social problems, who has marked the trend of vents of recent years this appears as only one more step in the economic evolution that is rapidly weeding out the middleman and email producer and, which, if fol lowed to its logical conclusion, must re sult in one of two things, viz : concentra tion of our manufacturing and distribu ting industries in the hands of one "trust" or combine of capitalists with the great laboring and consuming pop ulation at their absolute mercy, or sec ond, on the establishment of some form of that terrible bugaboo "socialism" where every able-bodied, able-brained man and woman will be a sharer in the national output of wealth to the full ex tent of their willingness to perform use ful labor. One of these two alterna tives seem to be almost certain. Which do we prefer? Merely talking against trusts as the gold standard New .York World is doing so vigorously nor even passing anti-trust laws will help us. I have a sincere admiration for Mr. Bryan, and believe him to be one of the purest politicians of our day, but have no faith in his "anti-trust" ideas and have never seen a suggestion from him of a real, genuine remedy for the trust eil. Some of my socialist friends may con tend that the trust is not an evil. T maintain that it is, though it might be designated by that anomalous term a "necessary evil ;" necessary in the pro gress of natural law ia order to teach the people the necessities for, and the benefits of a better system, just as the child's first growth of teeth must de velop and then decay, with the accom oanying inconvenience, before a better set is provided. Our jolly drummer has merely got in front of the car of evolution and is be ing run over, and no class of middle men deserve or will receive much less sympathy, for most of them have im agined themselves to be the ' upper class" (whatever that may mean.) Yet there are noble exceptions as for in stance: Eltweed Pomroy, the presi dent of the National Direct Legislation League, who utilizes the spare moments of his busy life to edit the D. L. Record and in additions contributes to several other magazines and reform papers; his writings composing one of the most val uable contributions to economic litera ture extant. Some of his articles would prove excellent food for thought for those of his fellow craftsman who now, (thanks tothe obliging trust) have been granted a leave of absence," though (un like Eagan), they are not on full pay. And, while they are in the reading hu mor it would be well for them to peruse and digest that mine of sarcastic truths "President John Smith" bv F. U. Ad ams, and at least the "Parable of the Water Tank" chapter of Bellamy's Equality. " Gso. Ogle.