4 OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. JANUARY 26, 1900. OREGON CITY COURIER OREJQON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. A. V.CHENEY. Publisher (Mamas County InflepeMent, AH-HMtliED MAY. 1800 legal and Official Newspaper Of Clackamas County. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Sutv.-i- (n Orojon Cltypostofrlceas 2nd-cle matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Paid In advance, per year 1 W HU month W Three moulha'lrlal... 25 gtfThn date opposite your address on the paper denotes tne time m waicn jmi om im. If thisnetlce 1 marked yonr subscription la due, ADVERTISING RATES. Standlim business adrcrtlsoraenU: Per month 1 Inch It, 2 Inches ll.SO, 8 Inohes 81.75, 4 inches ln.ka. llAlnmn 89 9A. lft infihftflf Ucolnmn) K M inches (column) 8, yearly contract 10 per cent lam. , , , . Transient advertisements! Per week 1 Ineh toe, 2 Inches 75c, t Inches $1,4 Inches 81 .2o, Inchesll.M), 10 inches 12.60,20 Inches 15 Legal advertisements: Per Inch first Inser tion $1, each additional Insertion 50c. Affllavlts of publication will not be furnished until pub lication fees are paid. Local notices; five cents per line per week per month 20o, PATRONIZE HOME INDU8TBY. OREGON CITY, JAN. 26, 1900. A MKRTiNQ of the populists will be held at Mulino Grange hall on Saturday, February 3rd. at one o'clock, p. m., to elect a precinct chairman. Cornemub Vandkrbilt haa just ex pended $25,000 in dogs. Twenty-five thousand little children go to school without any breakfast In New York city Tub British embargo of D-ilagoa bay does not decrease the bu -tineas of the makers of ammunition in New York city, who ship it as groceries or provis ions. Tub poor devil who steals some scrap iron from a railway track to buy bread Is locked up in jail. The genius who steals tin) wliole railroad we send to the United States senate to make laws fur us. Wives in Tanganyika are considered a luxury, and even in Zululand they cast from $ 19 to $'1J0, b it on the Ian ganyika plateau one can be had for Ave or six goats. One giat equals 15 to 20 cents, therefore o id wife eii'itls $1.20 J, Tun 100,0i)0 Biers, with over gOOjcan non, are mating in deadly onset the 123,000 roloats somewhere in the soiitliHTnnT" the Dirk Continent. Tint's about hII there is i the British Asiojiate I Press di-palchos for over a week. Whkat haa giue down to about 45 cents, at which Willamette valley farm ers cannot afl'ord to grow It. Freight rates to Europe are hiuh. Tho 3,000, 000 starvelings in British India are pray ing against hope fir our superabun dance. Tub town of Orea, Sweden, has an an nual income of $150,000 through munici pal ownership and operation of tree planting. As a result of this socialistic enterprise, there are no taxes. Kail ways, telephones, schools and many other things are free. The socialists of Germany form a power llmt the kai9er can intimidate but is powerless to control. They own 78 nowspnpors and at the last election cast 2,200,000 votes. Some of the ablest minds in the empire are at the head of the socialist movement. The Russian hoar U keeping his eye on the tail ol the British lion. If the Boers pull this a few mure times, the bear ia liable to Jump on his back through tho Afghanistan back door. The bear is certainly very wiiliugand has al ready sharpened his claws. ' Emperor William's new stables will cost $2,000,003 and will provide room for 270 horses and 300 vehicles. The aver age rate of wages in the German ompire is less than 40 cent a day, and oat of those starvation wages labor must pay for "Crazy Bill's" personal pleasure The Boers will make short work of tho property rights of the English mine owners, in case they conquer. They have formed plans for working as Btate monopolies both tho diamond and gold mines. That impersonation of the arch fiend, Cecil Rhodes, will thon bo only a five-cent devil if he isn't hanged. Ohboon City needs the public build ing that its leading citizens through Rep resentative Tongue have asked congress to give them. It will probably get it in due time, which the appropriation com mittee is likely to think is not this year. However, a good beginning has been made, and, on the hypothesis that "well begun is half done," our suburban neighbors of the city by the falls may well feel encouraged at the prospect. Oregonlan. The British claim the right to dictate ' in governmental affairs in the Transvaal ' because they outnumber the Boers in Johannesburg. Why, then, don't they allow the Americans to dictate the gov ernment of Dawson? There are twice as many United States citizens there as British subjects, yet the Canadian gov ernment hulds sway, and taxes miners heavier than they were ever taxed in South Africa. The Boera have little trouble in swell ing their army. When General Maijer entered the territory of Natal on tlie march to LadysmitU and followed ihe fugitives from -Dundee, he had but 700 men. When he arrived below Lady smith, where he headed off uny retreat from that town, he had over 7000 men in his little Laud, and had not been re cruiting from the Transvaal, but from the Natal farms as he passed them. On account of Gov. Ueer's folly, Clackamas county will pay this year a few thousand dollars more of state taxes than last year. He vetoed the billy of Senator Mulkey, of Polk, providing for a state board of equalization consisting of the governor and two other state of: ficials, who were to serve without pay. This left ihe equalization of taxes to the sweet will of the officials of each county. Multnomah took advantage of the situa tion by placing her taxable property last year at $11,000,000 less than in 1898, thus decreasing her state taxes. Tub recent announcement of the American Woolen Company that prices i f clay worsteds for the coming season will be increased 40 per cen tis in keep ing with the general advance that is be ing made in the price of articles con trolled by the industrial despotisms. The announcement has been made by the worsted combination that the price ot clay worsteds tor the coming year will be as follows: For 12 ounce goods, $1.25, against 90 cents a year ago; 16 ounce goods, $1.57, against $1.10; 18 ounce, 1.722, against $1.20. The ad vance in the price of kerseys ranges from 20 to 40 per cent. Iron has doubled in price, and paper is advancing so rapid ly that it is difficult to predict where the rapacity of the combination will ulti mately find its check. This Dalles Times-Mountaineer says We have a personal complaint against trustn especially the one which controls the paper output of the United States, The Internation.il Paper Company has gained control of the principal mills of the country, therefore preventing the possibility ot coinpntition in the piper market, It controls 35 per cent of the paper mills in the Unite! Statss, and has so manipulated aff tirs that through an understanding with mills it does not control, it has been able to advance the price of new s paper 60 per cent an the price of other papers from CO to 100 per cent. Because of this, we have an especial complaint against tho princi pies that make the papor trust possible the tariff of $9 a ton on plain news paper and a correspondingly higher tariff on wood pulp and other eommoli tics that enter into tho manufacture of piper. Now that John Myers has left us, we cannot refrain from reflecting on the rugged virtues of the man the old and familiar friend of thousands of citizens of Clackamas courty. In every contin gency, in public as well as in private life, in prosperity no less than in adver sity, he acted in accordance with duty : justice to his fellow men. If the affairs of mankind are kenned by (he denizens of the mysterious brighter world, it must be a solace to him that, resting from the toil and moil of earth, ho is remembered with affection and regret by those amongst whom his lot was cast. The good that this ptrong man wrought will never die. It will grow and expand in the minds of generations yet to be. Thnsevery great soul immortalizes him self by weaving threads of gold into the woof of human history. On tho other hand, the influence of the evil perishes, for evil is self-destructive. Right is always on ilijulhrone of the universe. "Tub Lord alone will determine the end. He is the Lord of heaven and earth. Tray that lie may give us wis dom and power for victory, in order that the devil and the whole world may ac knowledge that the hand of God is hold ing the sword." With those words Paul Kruger closed his address at the open grave of General Kock in the Pretoria cemetery, General Kock had been se verely but not dangorously wounded in the battlo of Elands Laagte and taken prisoner by the British soldiery. The English, savages that they are, killed him by slow torture. Roasting to death would have boon more merciful, because qul?ker than starvation. On the battle field the wounded general was robbed ot his clothes and money. Taken to a tent after a surgical operation, he re ceived no food f jr two days, and the British savages would allow no one to bring him any. He would have reeov ered if he had not fallen into their hands. They starved him to death. Other Boer prisoners received rations of raw meat, thrown to them as if they srere dogs. A civllization(T) whose pro gress depends on the success of the Brit ish armies has many of the traits of devilisra. WASHINGTON GLADDEN. Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden, one of the leading ministers of the Congrega tional church and a cloe student of so cial and political conditions, recently said : "With much of what the socialists are Saying, every philanthropist must be in closest accord. The criticisms which they have uttered upon the cruel and destructive tendencies of our industrial system have been timely and in part true. The competition, when wholly unrestrained, must tend to make the rich riche1- and the poor poorer; that the growth of plutocracy at one end of the social scale and a proletariat at the other, are the natural and inevitat le ie suit of being let alone all this is evi dent today and socialists have helped to keep it before our thought. "The growing chasms between employ er and employee; the increasing fre quency of depressions in trade, every one of which pushes a crowd of poor la borers into actual pauperism, all these ominous Bigns, to which the socialists keep pointing us, are evidences that something is wrong with the industrial machinery." . CAPTAISS OF INDUSTRY. Let as take Rockefeller as an exam ple. What we say of him is true also of Whitney and Sage and of the Goulds, Ynnderbilts, am1 all the other big capi talists. Rockefeller is, primarily, the head of the Standard Oil Company. It would seem that he had a large job on his hands in "directing" that business alone from the extraction of the crude petroleum from the earth to the delivery of the refined kerosene, gasolene, ben zine, naphtha, paraffin, and all the other products to the consumers. But Rockefeller does not confine himself to this. He is one of the great railroad kings.' To really "direct" the railroads that he controls would be quite sullicient to occupy his time. But he does not stop here. He is a street railway mag nate. He is a coal baron on a large scale. He is a great miner and manu facturer of iron and steel. He is at the hoad of the copper combine. He is a gold miner in the Coeur d'Alene district and incidentally he "directs" the Bull Pen there. In New York he "directs" the production and distribution of illu minating gas. Ai'd even this is only a partial list of his activities; for by means of hired men, he has multiplied himself as "director" a number of times. The wealth, amounting to $20,O00,0J0, that Rockefeller annually receives is created by the tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of men who work for wages. SOMETHING WRONG.. The country has had prosperity; is having it yet. It is actual, not fancied. But what sort of an age are we living in, and what sort of an industrial sys tem are we working under,that prosper ity should mean adversity, and that every brief teason of national welfare must beget its tragic reaction? It is easy to blame the recklessness of the speculators and gamblers. It is easy to say that the late unusual crash was caused by the folly of ao unusual number of peoj le who got drunk on the "good times" and plunged, and that they had no business to do it, and de served their punishment. But what of the innocent depositors who lost their money in the banks that failed, and what of the wives and children of the speculators on the wrong side ot the mar ket, who have been reduced to penury and want through no fault of theirs? Must a season ot prosperity always mean a speculative riot, with wasted cap- ital and mslirected credit? Must public welfare always haye its victims? Must the brief, unstable well-being of the few always demand the sacrifice of the many? Perhaps so; but recent occur rences in Wall street are almost enough to shake the confidence of the compla cent philosophers who hold that the ex isting industrial and social or- t be improved, that iudividu- j dors can1 ism, competition, is the tie plus ultra of civilization. A PEOPLE'S TflUST. At Burley, Washington, on J'mtet sound, a sochlist colony was started last summer, whose polity is receiving seri ous consideration of thinking men. Fi nancially it is a Buccess, for it is eelf Bustainiug. Its resident membership is 150, but non-resident members are found in many cities of (he Northwest. The fundamental principle of this movement being "indefinite expansion," it is the intention of the Burley colony to found similar colonies in many other localities ; in short, this is a socialistic advance "all along the lino" against the trusts a people's trust pitted against the million aires' trust; the proletariat aain-t the aristocracy. The Co-op-arative Brotherhood of Bur ley is managed by a board of trustees and a board of directors, both elected by the members. Full membership is se cured by tlia payment of $12',), hut the payment, of ?13 within one year's time after having joined the organization will secure the guarantee of employment and of support in case of misfortune. However, this guarantee carries the con dition that a certain limited time is needed in which to build homes for non resident members who wUh to become ! residents. The funds received from non resident members are expended for this purpose and in buying more implements and machinery. The colony has oleared 60 of its 1000 acres of laid, established a sawmill and work shops and will erect a flouring mill. A steamboat will soon he procured and the industry of ship build ing will be added. Excepting in transactions with the great world outside the colony (the en thusiastic founders cherish the idea that it is not going to remain outside), it has no use for metallic money. The paste hoard labor check, worth $1, is the only mediuiu of exchange. One of these checks will buy ten meals at the colony hotel. The organizers of the brotherhood are establishing "temples" in the cities and enlisting the interest of leading citizens. Dell Stuart, a promiuent attorney of Portland, is credited with expressing the opinion that the brotherhood "will ab sorb all wealth." The donation has been offered of 6000 acres of land in ianta Clara county, California, Social ist colonies are no longer Utopion creams. That at Ruskin, Tenn., is a success in every way. The financial possibilities of this so cialist polity are' staggering. During tlie past five years the fraternal organi zations of this country have paid out about $170,000,000, and the mutual in surance companies about $68,000,000, or together about $233,000,000. When the members of these orders once realize how much more profitable and how much more advantageous it would be for them to put their money into co-ope-istive Industry, which will enable them to enjoy it while they live and protect their loved ones after they are gone, is it not likely that "temples" and co-opera five communities will spring up in every part of the land? The Co-operative 3rotherhooJ guarantees real life insur- ace, its members not being compelled "to die to win," nor are payments to be continued over an indefinite period, ter minating when one's coffin is lowered into the grave. PUBLIC OWNERSHIP. The question i f public ownership of ! public utilities is fast absorbing atten- tion "nd ma,ny ttre "P1?1 reat'!,in the many problems. In the first ipstance, ' it would be one of the most effective' lUMlflUlUU lllttb Jb (h DvlU.IU II IV j means that could he adopted for doing away with much of the prevaletit politi cal cormption, by removing tho most prolific Bource of temptation. As long as as legi-latures have power to giant special privileges in the way of valuable public franchises, or havo control over corporations holdiug such franchises with power to extend or curtail their powers, the temptation on the part of corpora tions seeking Biich franchises to buy , them or extend privileges bv bribinir , i!0itro n,nai,m,i.tmn.nMrini the irresponsible legislatures to sandbag corporation will exist; also the temp tation on the part of such franchise cor porations to control elections in their own intt'iet will be prevalent. Then the temptation to corrupt juries and judges, to avoid payinn damages in damage suits, such as now exist, would be destroyed. These are tli9 most fruitful sources 0 corruption in our political system affec ting all legHative bodies, from tlie in significant town boards to congress it self. Secondly, the principal has 8 underly ing the success of monopoly namely, railway rebates and discriminations, without which but very few monopo lies could exist would be deftroyed. Standard Oil and the oil combine un doubtedly owe their existence to discrim ination in their favor by the 1 lilroads and other transportation lines. Thef same is true of others. Under public ownership it would le impouible for a few big films in Chicago to get together every light, as testimony before the industrial commission shows they now do, to fix the price of grain for the next day, which can only be done through co-operation of tlie rail ways. It is true the interstate com merce commission aud the laws are very pronounced : " giving rebates, but the railroads secretly violate these aws. It also stands to reason that public ownership) would greatly reduce the cost of service. The vast suras which every railway and other public corporations now provide for the purpose of influenc ing elections, maintaining lobbies and bribing legislators, also the salaries of the high-priced lawyers, many of whom draw ealaries equal to that of the presi dent of the United States, the waste of competition, and especially the money which the roads must now of necessity earn to pay big dividends on enormous issu.'s of watered stock, would be saved to the public. WHERE IS BROTHER If. S, VREX.t Hon. W. S. U'Ren. of Dregon City. the recognized leader of the popu lists of the state, was in Astoria last Sunday and called at this office. He is not taking a very active interest in poli tics, but is interested in the initiative and referendum amendment which passed the last legislature, and which must be ratified by the next legislature before it can be submitted to the people. He says, the populists are very anxious that (his amendment shall be adopted, and as both .branches of the last legis- lature were strongly republican, he hopesthrthe republican? will con;r 1 the next legisture. He is of the opinion tia all members of the last legislature that are renominated this year, will re ceive the almost solid vote of the popu lists. He came to Astoria to consult with th populist leaders here, Hon. J. N. ovendseth and sofua Jensen, and sev eral others, but both Mr. Svendseth and Jensen were out of the city. Jtut w hat instructions will be given the populists was not stated, but there is no doubt but that any member of the last legis lature who voted for the initiative and referendum amendment, will receive the support of the populists in the various countits. Clatsop delegation voted Bolid f rtheane idmeut. While not known that they favor such an amendment, yet they are willing that it Bhould be sub mitted to a vote of the people. Mr. U'Ren speaks in the highest terms of the record made by the repub licans in the last legislature and says he hopes to see everyjone of them returned. More and better laws were passed ; the expense of the state curtailed and an un usual economic spirit seemed to pervade the legislature, according to his views, and as he watched the legislature of the ttate, his opinion is worth considering. While Mr. U'Ren did not state so, in so many words, yet it is evident from his remarks.that he believes the reforms advocated by the populists stand a bet ter show of being enacted into laws through the republican party, than through the democratic party. He ex pressed the opinion that the republi cans will carry the state, and if the same members of the legislature are nomina ted, there will be no doubt of their elec tion in every county in the state, as they will no doubt receive the votes of the populists. There are about 400 populists in Clat sop county and that number of votes added to the republican ticket insures the election of the legislative ticket by an overwhelming majority. Astoria Herald. OUfi SHAKY FINANCES. The promise of revenue expansion and accumulation of a surplus of revenues in the treasury are causing alarm. For if the money representing such surplus be taken into its vaults, out of the financial marts, a strain must fall on the financial world such as men at the head of finan cial institutions, and who know the strain they are already under, dread, aye, feel with the deepest of conviction would maae inevitable the collapse, the linaucial crash, that threatens. "It is the unanimous opinion in financial cir cles," writes Holland, the New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Press, "that unless congress takes some action that will relieve the treasury depart ment ot the responsibility aud leniove the danger of liuancial stringency next summer, the administration will find itself compelled to accept one ot twoal natiyes. Either the secretary of the treasury will bo compelled to buy gov ernment bonds at the market price or else the administration must face the peril of entering a political campaign iu which its owu existence is at stake at the very moment when, owing to our financial system, there will be a severe monetary stringency entailing peruaps much more dangerous results than t'.e brief panic a few weeks ago, while at the same time there is a congestion of money in the treamiry department." The worried secretary of the treasury is called upon to put the money now in the treasury within the reach of Wall street. The speculative bubble has been so inflated, and inflated upon loans made upon the basis of moneys deposited by the country in New York when there was not demand for such money in in dustrial channels, that the drawing away of these moneys leaves the whole great bubble, supported on loans, in danger of collapse. Unless mouey can be pro vided from some sourcb to take the place of the money drawn away, so that contraction of loans may ba avoiJel, ti.ere mivt be collapse. Let the stock of money in the New York banks be increased, and they will build higher the inverted pyramid ot credit. It is upon this pyramid of credit that speculation rests. Without a broad ening of this inverted pyramid specula tive inflation must be impossible. So it is that with congestion of money in New York, a congestion that inevitably fol lows industrial depression in the rest of the country, there will come credit and speculative inflation. And following such inflation there must inevitably come collapse whenever there comes in dustrial revival and a drawing away of money from New York to the industrial centers, a collapse that must injuriously effect industry, give a setback to enter prise, aye, lead to industrial depression and a starting again of a cycle of conges tion of money in the financial centers, inflation, collapse and again depression, hat Throbbing Headache Would quickly leave you ifyon osed Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for sick and nervous headaches. They make pure blood and stronir nerves and build up your health. Easy to take. Try them. Only 25 cento. Money back if not cured. Sold by George A. Hard ing, druggist. Write or call for special price list at Parkplace cash store.