Cttr Ubrwf Court CIRCULATION GUARANTEED LARGER THAN ALL OTHER PAPERS IN COUNTY COMBINED COURIER ESTABLISHED MAY, 1883 HERALD ESTABLISHED JULY, 1893 CONSOLIDATED SEPTEMBER, 1898 OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 23 1899. 17th YEAR, NO. 6 Oregon ertierald. IS ray Your Trees... With Carbolic Compound. It kills moths, wooly aphis, Etc., Etc. Also for Spraying Hops and Shruberyy. We 4 are Agents for this County. ' T " We carry the largest line of Hardware, Stoves, Steel Ranges, Agricultural Machinery, and Wagons Wood Stock in the Oity. 1 Special attention given to all kinds of job work and plumbing POPE 4 UUIi. 4111 Anu MAin a I O., Our Money System. (6.) Written for the flourler-Herald by Argm.J The zealous advocates of the gold standard tell us that the new colonies as they come under the stars and stripes will have to be placed on the gold stand ard. Of course if it ia good for us it ought to he good for them, but will rais ing the standard to gold give them any advantage in the markets of the world witli their produce. We are told that changing the standard does not change values ; that they will get the same aver age values for wheat, tobacco, sugar fruit, stock, manufactured goods, etc., but taking it in gold they will get less of it, because gold is worth more than their present silver money. With silver at 43 cents on the dollar, they will of course only get $430 for wheat which brings them $1,000 in their present money, and as Bauce for the goose should be sauce for the gander, will these new colony farmers be able to turn round and pay a thousand dollar mortgage with the $430, or any other indebtedness at the same rates? Ask our farmers what is their experi ence. The people of the United States are selling in the open markets of the world af silver rates, i. e., at the same average rates according to supply and demand. On a gold standard they get only 43 cents on the dollar, but if they would pay their debts or taxes at the same rates the cry of repudiation is raised. What is extra good money for the worker is no longer extra good mon ey for the banker and his friends. Carlisleln his" gold pamphletTpage BELLOMY & THE How Can I Drape My Lace Curtains? Has been the question. This illustration shows a Ruffled Bobbinet Curtain with Point de Paris Late and Insertion, and shows what a handsome effect can be produced at small cost. Ruffled curtains should be used as Sill Curtains, not hanging over six inches below the sill, making a graceful, stylish, washable and in expensive drapery. Our Granite, Tin and Iron Ware is sold at Hard Time Prices. No advance. ig)ifHtl 0 CSZ3 The Habit of Buying Carpets at Bellomy & Busch's is a good habit. It Is a rapidly growing habit with all Clackamas Coun ty. It is a habit by which thousands save in their daily monthly and yearly expenditures. It is a habit that becomes more fixed the oftener people bay here, and the broad reason iB niisfa.-tion. PeoDle are satisfied with our goods. People are satisfied with our prices. People are ti. ntnre. its manners and methods. 2TO & CO., UKbUUIN CITY, OHE.. 13, 14, proves that the open markets of the world are at the old rates, that is, they are still supplied fiotn silver coun tries at the old rates, wages remaining about the same in silver countries. On page 15 he thus quotes the silver argu ment: "Tho manufacturers of certain kinds of goods in this country cannot continue to pay their laborers high wages in gold or its equivalent and compete success fully in the markets abroad with the manufacturers of similar goods in silver standard countries, who pay their labor ers low wages in depreciated silver." We thank Carlisle for stating the case for silver so clearly. His conclusion that the manufacturers want to sell for gold and pay their workmen in depre ciated silver is worthy of the man who, for the allurements of office, could turn mountebank on so serious a thing as the money question. The fact of receiving gold instead of silver is the reason they have got bo little, only 43 cents on the dollar. The leading statisticians show that the same amount of gold will purchase more than double the quantity of an average of our leading products than it would have purchased 25 years ago. Gold will also purchase more than a double quan tity of silver, and as halves of the same thing are equal, therefore silver equals the price of general products, or the gen eral markets of tho world are still at sil ver values. But our farmers have had enough experience to prove this; wheat is down again to 50 cents, cotton and wool, notwithstanding the Dingley bill, persist in a low level, and fruit is no where," bur "when our-tarmers get no HOUSEFURNISHERS Copy-"; Bowl and Pitcher, plain ware, $1.00 satisfied with the ways of Portieres, Pair $1-75 up. IIsT Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar Saf eguards the food against alum A.um baking powders are the greatest menacers to health of the present day. ROVAl BAKINQ POWDCR CO.. NEW YORK. so jnte for a bushel of wheat, a So-th American farmer gets $1.16 with silver 43 cents on the dollar. With bi-metal-ism we should get the same, but taking our money in gold we gut only 43 cents on the dollar and are told it is so much better money. Socrates on Argus, (2) We cloeed our laBt article by saying that value cannot be measured bv gold, silver or paper, and we purpose to hold strictly to the text. These substances within themselves are utterly valueless. I would like to ask Argus how his school teacher taught him to measure value when he first went to echool? Did he tell you that gold and gold make gold; that silver from silver and silver remains; that paper times paper are pa per? Oh, no, Argus will say, he never taught me any such nonsense aa that ! Well, sir, if ho had done so he would not have been any more nonsensical than a great many people are today. They talk of the intrinsic value of gold and silver, and gold and silver as a measure of values, when the truth ia they possets neither of these powers. But how did your teacher teach you to measure values? He taught you that 1 cent and 1 cent make 2 cents, did lie not? and 5 cents and 5 cents make 10 cents, and 10 times 10 cents make 100 cents and 100 cents make one dollar by which process you can measure as many, mm o doHArs as you choose. " " BUSCH Novelty Curtains With every purchase of at least one pair of Lace Curtains we give a little picture showing a simple but very artistic style of draping bay windows. Price ol Novelty Curtains: $1.50, $2.50, $2.75 and $4.00. Hammocks from 75c to $475 Extension Tables $3.73 up Fine Ash Side Boards $10.00 up ill SSife OUE; PRICES Now, sir, when this government, or any other government, places its stamp on gold, silver or paper for $100, then this metal or paper becomes a repre sentative measure of values to the amount of $100. Remember the metal or paper is not $100, but the figures it carries on its face is $100. But now Mr. Argus is ready to shout where is your bsis for this $100? Its basis is the government. This you nd all other intelligent men' ought to know without being told. A government that hasn't wealth enough to back up a cir cuiting medium sufficient to cary on its bus'ness is in a deplorable condition, something like the United States is at pre cent, and needs a band of long head ed blood-sucking gold bug's to take hold of it and straighten it out. Do you sf-k r n what do gold and sil ver depend for their value? They de pend on the demand, Tke all other com modities, and their value is measured by dollars and cents. This is a correct measure and can neWier Vie lengthened . 1 1 1 ,i ,. or Miunt-neu. Hence 11 we measure value by cents and dollars, everybody will get value in full. Now, aa paid before, this money be comes a representative of wealth and an infallible measure of value just as one legislator may represent hundreds of people in our legislative halls. So this $ 100 may represent hundreds of dollars of wealth ; indeed the more wealth the $100 has behind it, the better the $100, and it measures value just as this repre sentative measures out laws for the peo ple's needs. Now, Mr. Argus, don't missunder stand. I do not claim that intrinsic value is in this $100. No, sir; intrinsic value is altogether another thing. I will define intrinsic : Internal, genuine, inherent, essential, )eal. Then real value will cover the ground. Now, let us see : is there any -Veal value in $100 alone? Take everything out of the world but the figures 100, then try and see how much real value you can get out of them. You would get just about as much as you did out of goM and silver in our last article, for there is none in them, not a particle, nor neither do I claim that there is. They are only a correct measure for value, that is ad, and it makes no difference what kind of uiatifianthe government stamps them K"vCMI n T-rn Trrti: n i rmui up with its jdgnature, for then all sensi ble men kriow that the government's wealth is behind it and that it is good. ay, Argun, why do gold men clamor after United Stales bonds? Can you tell me? If they get gold in their pos session they convert it into bonds as qn.'ekly as possible. Why do they do this? Now I can take 100 cents of this measure of value and go and buy $1 worth of wheat, then, my dear sir, I am actually in possession of a dollar's worth i intrinsic value. It took us a long time to get here, but here we are. Yes, I can buy t. dollar's worth of coffee, sugar, bacon, rice, cloth- ng, land, even gold, silver or paper. But why go on? lean buy anything in the world with it. Why, my dear sir, all the business transactions of the world can bo carried oil with this repre sentative sgent, and yet it doesn't pos sess one iota of intiinsic value. There are thines in this world that do possess intrinsic value, and we purpose to discuss them next week. Socrates. Restricted Currency. Editor Courier-Hkram) : A few years after the panic of 1873, Congress appointed what was railed the Silver Commission, whose duty it was to investigate the ciuse of the hard times then prevailing all over our be loved country. The appointment of that commission by Congress has al ways seemed to the writer a very re markable display of ignoronce, If Con gress did not know what caused the hard times, when but a few years previous the best times ever known had prevailed when there was from forty to fifty dol lars per capita of legal tender money in circulation, but in the few years inter vening, by an act of congress, , a large volume of the circulating medium had been destroyed, hence the hard times. The commission was composed equally of republicans and democrats, who vis ited many if not all of the states and principle cities and took testimony from the people everywhere in regard to their condition. In their report to congress the commission declared without hesita tion that the hard times were caused bv the shrinkage in the volume of money in circulation. The commission made no claim of discovery that scarce money was the cause of panics and hard times. but simply stated the fact as known by every sensible person who has studied cause and effect of the money question We cannot believe that our congress is composed of such ninny heads as they by their acts, seem to , be when the money question is under discussion. It is evident that there is some powerful attraction or repulsion that causes our ones Lever This celebrated binder has gained an enviable reputation in the last four years in Oregon. It represents lever power as applied to binding grain. It wil run ugnier, last longer ana bind tighter than any other binder in the market. ine jones v-nain urive loot int mower uuittuie. v iu cut neavy grass wun ease. I also carry a full line of Hay Rakes, Tedders, Hay ToolsAdvance Thresh ers and Traction Engines, John Deere Plows, as well as a full lir e of Agricultural Implements and Vehicles. Call and see me before buying. " u,i"1"' 1 ... '"! EDWARD Corner Front and Taylor Streets, legislators to sway out of the line of equity toward capital and capitalists. If legislation was always Impartial, mo nopolies and trusts would not curse the land by a license to cheat honest indus try. Why do the voting masses, many of them, vote for what the Bharpers want? The sharpjrs want condition s in trade just opposite to what the pro ducers want. Moneved men generally advocate the gold standard, which coin pells low prices in everything except money, for then their high priced money will buy from two to four times more of valuable property than cheaper dollars would buy, consequently dear money compels the producer to work from two f ' -1 1 r. - -1 - 1 .1. n he would when the dollar was elicapeTT1cctrTennrnt The gold standard advocates accuse the advocates of a larger supply of thecircu luting medium of wanting to cheat their creditors by paying their debts in fifty cent dollars. Let us investigate the condition of affairs during and for several years after the civil war under the greenback sys tem, when money was plenty and prices were high, when Secretary McColloch announced "lhat the people were mostly out of debt." In those prosperous ties few if any mortgages cursed the farmers If a producer wished to buy more land or make improvements of any kind, he could safely borrow the required money with the assurance that tho high prices trWt cial Soe 1 Seven Of the Great Southerland Remedies Is Now Being Shown at Our Store You can see the ladies and their beautiful hair and talk to them. They will demonstrate to you how to properly care for your hair. This Exhibit closes Saturday Evening and you should not miss the opportunity to SEE AND TALK WITH THEM C. G. HUNTLEY ...... Druggist OREGON CITY, OREGON Binder has no back lash, runs light ai : and is very HUGHES P0RTLAMD, OREGON would surely liquidate thrt debt within a short time. There was no thought or talk of a metallic standard, there being an exclusive legal tender paper currency Then the newspapers were mostly free of advertisements of land sales under the sheriff's hammer, so different from the present practice under the gold standard. The declaration that the ad vocates of more money wish to cheat their creditors comes witli ill grace from the gold advocates, who have been guilty of unduly contracting the curren cy that the debtor have been com pelled to pay double the amount of money that they agreed to pay. It re quires tiow more than twice the labor to tion because prices for production has . been lessened more than one half. In reality the advocates of a larger volume of money are simply striving to estab lish a more humane system of exchange that will enable the unfortunato victims of the g"ld craze to pay their debts and save their homes. History informs us of the deplorable condition the people sank into during the dar'c ages became of the scarc'ty of t' e precious metals of money for the globe' was crippled, be- t jre a century h 1 1 olap'B I tho price ol every species of produce was quadrupled. The weivtht of debt and taxation insen ci:)ly worn off u ider that prodigious in Coutliiiiuil on 4ili Page. Exhibit 4 8 Results of Sisters'.