Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, January 11, 1901, Page 4, Image 4

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OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1901.
Oregon City Courier-Herald
By A. W. CHENEY
taint 1 In Oregon City psntofflceas 2nd-olM matter
. SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
1 BO
Mr month. 76
fbre monlhs'trial 26
F&rThn date opposite your address o the
per donotes I he time to which you hae paid .
tail notice Is marked your subscription li due.
' CLUBBING RATES.
th Weekly Oregonlau ? J?
' Trl-WeekW N. Y. World J J
' National Watchman - 1
" Appeal to Keawm 1 60
ADi'ERTlSim RATES.
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Transient advertisements! Per week 1 inch
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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 INDUSTRY.
OREGON CITY, JAN. 11, 1901.
BiSMARck predicted that the British
Empire would split on the rock of
South Africa, and it is not at all cer
tain that his prediction may not he veri
fied. In all aaes wealth, like all power, has
found that it rniiBt rule all or nothing.
Its destiny is rule or ruin, and rule is
but a slower ruin. Hencs we find
monopoly in America securing every
year, a firmer control of the central
power in the states and at the national
capitol.
Tub great packing houses of Chicago
have revolutionized the beef butchering
business. The by-products of a steer are
worth more than the meat. A sleer
costing $35, yields $40 in meat and $45
in by-products. No wonder that within
a few years, the beef packing firms have
grown enormously rich, at the expense
both of the farmer and the consumer.
Ex-SPKakKB of the House of Repre
lenlatives Thomas B. Reed, while in
Wellington recently, propounded the
fl owing conundrum to some of his old
ffiiindsi ''If the United Slates can kill
Ki,003 Filipinos in ten months and call
it benevolent assimilation, how many
I 1 Spain have to kill in three hundred
l rs to warrant the United States in
(I signatingSpuiitth rule as barbarism?"
Tun reelection of I'rHHiiiunt Mc.Ktn.
' is being accepted at Washington as
a liHiulatu to conquer the Filipinos at
v cost. The remark of an English
in.in becomes timtly : "Already Eng
i.i id in the Transvaal, and America in
It. 4 Philippines, have caught up with at
!; ml two-thirds of the atrocities of the
anish policy of coercion, and why
puld they not complete the course?"
Sewing machines munufactururs make
!vs of mouey. The Singer Company,
t! a oldest, or next to the oldest, maim
(uiturerof sewing machines, has just
(!. dared a 200 per cent stock dividend.
At a mooting lately hold at Elizabeth
I'urt, N, J.,a recommendation of the
(Erectors to increase the capital stock of
tho company from $10,000,000 to 30,(MO,
0 m), was adopted, the increase of f'.'O,
00 1,003 to go to stockholders as a Btock
lividend. Sewing mac'iine-i km roM in
Kurope for less than half thuir price
U re.
According to Brads'reut's, tin lead! ig
trusts which have been organized in
Falkland in the last few years are cap
italized at ,40,800.000. One of the
i'uits, the J. & P. Cnates Company,
Limited, absolutely contro's the world's
output of sewing cotton. During 1898
't paid dividends of 30 per cunt and
a mrther bonus ol 10 per cent to stuck
lut Iws. As to other trusts not directly
etfitalUed and advertised to the public,
ih't railroad companies havs long since
i' w ed to compete as regards rates,
i lie steamship lines have a freight agree
ment which, is strictly kept. The Lon-d-'H
coal dealer are in a pool. So are
.' joal dealers in qther districts, and a
trcvral coal trust is beved to exist.
fitB history of the allied occupation
n China is a record of shame, blot
iipoi! Christianity, a grimace to our
Vn'.v. ted civilization. We went there ih
U i guise of saviors and regunators
W.i ire there to-day in the undis
s;,! . d rolo of oppressors and spoliators.
C.t i ne pretext or another, the allies
ti,. oasted rjpresontiitives of Christian
iivY aittion have ravaged all Chinese
to .rory within their leieh, killing,
lun1 .1'g, murdering, devastating. We
Ji.t . kept aloof from the worst and most
1 : ' i ric of these infamies, but we have
m! 'i . d! and everybody, knows it. In
e:mi". on with the European pirates,
njash in a less degree of ferooity and
greed, wo have taken part in the ab Jin
iuable programme of barbarity. The
Chinese olllciuls now suggest that the
plunder seised iu Pekin alone is enough
to meet the claims of "indemnity" set
up by the allies all combined. We feel
ture that the Chinese proposition is
much too m )iK8t. Washingoon Post.
The words of Abraham Lincoln with
regard to twenty of the twenty-three
minieters of the'eity of Springfield who
voted against him in 1860, because he
reprefented the principles of human
liberty, are applicable today. He sid,
' These men will find they have not
read their Bible right." So it is with
thousands of conscientious Christian
men to-day who supported Hannaism at
the last election, an ism that seeks the
establishment of a worse slavery than
the slavery of the black race in 1860.
the slavery of the bluck, brown and
while races of the world, a universal
monarchy in which money is king, anil
few favored sons of fortune are the
people, and the balance of mankind are
slaves through the power of King Money
. R. E.French.
A group of mechanics now returning
from British India bring with them the
story of an American expansion in
which all can rejoice. They have com
pleted the construction of a great steel
bridge in the Shan Hills of Bui ma,
which is to be part of a railroad built by
tht government from Rangoon into
China. The steel was made by a Penn
sylvania firm, which secured the con
tract in competition with the world.
Three great freighters conveyed the
structural material across the seas, and
forty mechanics went out to do the
skilled work. Higher than the tallest
office hui'dings of Philadelphia and
nearly half a mile long, this bridge is a
fitting monument to American enter
prise and skill.
In applying the old militarv methods
to the solution of modern political prob
lems we may be as antiquated and out-
of-date as we should be in using the tac
tics or weapons of Wellington in a mod
ern battle. We may come to recognize
that even as the spasms and convulsions
of nature, though she works through
them, are less Important than the slow.
silent, everyday forces, so history is now
made less by the fire and .sword otthe
fighters than by the humble, prosaic
stay-at-home. Even if we regard the
fighters as the best means of expressing
the national force in a .crisis, Jlet us re
member that it is the national f.rce
that they express. For since thev
themselves "are in every sense a des
tructive, not a productive, element, the
very possibility of an effective fighting
force restB upon the commercial pros
perity of 'the country. I. Zangwell.
Last year Carnegie gave to colleie
an 1 churches over $3,000,000, and J. D.
Rockefeller during tlie past 15 years,
$15,000,000, They should have given
much more, as they gave only that
which, equitably, was not theirs. For
the dishonesty and hypocrisy they prac
ticed and the injustice and suffering
they inflicted on their fel'owmen dur
ing the years they were amassing the
millions f om which they made these
la g sacs, they omll not make atone
m 'tit even if thev bes'owed all that they
have on the pjor and joined the Salva
tion Armv. They have taught the
young men of Europe and America the
lesson that it is, morally, a matter of
indifference what means they use to be
come wealthy; that the end, millions,
having been attained, the means, how
ever wicked or lawless, will be sancti
fied by the worship of the "upper
crust" and the fawning of preachers
and college professors; iu short, tint
money is "ihe whole thing."
Tub New York Times, taking for its
text President McKinley's advice on the
subject of the reduction of taxation, that
thee should ba "remission of those
taxes which experience has shown to be
the most burdensome to the industries
of the people," palls attention to the
burdensome tax of $(l per ton on paper
suitable for newspapers and of $1.67 per
ton on mechanically good ground wood
pulp as a needless burden on a purely
domestic industry. It. is not threatened
by foreign competition snd needs no
protection. But it is taxed not only
on the raw maleritl, but on the mate
rial fr.uu which ihis is manufactured.
The duty is bo high that paper manu
facturers are able to agree on prices
amoiii: themselves free ivt only from all
danger of foreign competition, bu: from
the competition of new factories that
use imported pulp. They have become
a trust or monopoly very injurious to
the newspaper industry through favors
conferred by legislation. New Haven
Palladium.
JtKKAK Tllli 11001)00.
Huopose we hi I a people with ahnn
dance of fond, but who luve been hoo
dooed into a notion that before they can
eat they must be provided with knives
and forks; but the making and furnish
ing of knives and forks has been made a
government monopoly, and run in the
interest of a few who ate engaged in the '
business of loaning out knives and forks
for people to eat with. Now that would '
be an absurd situation, wouldn't it.' I
But it Is exactly the present situation
us to money. Here are people with
abundance of credit services rendered '
to society and property .'owned, u-ith
j boundless resources.unlimited powers of ,
production and the highest lonler of in.
tjlligenoe, who have been hoodooed into
the notion thatMor they can use that
credit, they must have certain tools
called money which have been ao
thorhed by the government; and then
when they complain of the scarcity of
those tools, they are set to quarrelling
among themselves as to what those
tools shall be made of .
It is like getting people, who are
starving for the want of knives and
forks, to quarrelling, as to whether those
knives and forks shall be made of gold,
or silver, or wood ; or what shall be the
standard of length to make them. For
God's sake, break the hoodoo 1 Adopt
some more rational and common sense
method of certifying credits, which will
take it out of the power of anybody to
levy toll upon .industry for the use of
the tools with which to carry on in
dustry, W. H. Van Ornum.
SALOON VS. CHURCH. !
Rkv. Geo. L. McNutt, late pastor of
the Fourth Presbyterian Church of In
dianapolis, a Princeton College student
and graduate of Northwest University,
has finished a two-year's post-graduate
course in the school of bard labor, mills
and factories. He has learned why the
workingmen of our great manufacturing
cities attend saloons";nstead of churches
and reading rooms. He says as re
ported in the New Yoik Sunday Jour
nal, Dec. 16:
"In Braddock there is a magnificent
big building known as the Carnegie li
brary. Sunday, the only rest day of
the seven, the only day when the work
ing people really had a chance to bene
fit by Mr. Carnegie's so-called philan
thropy, that institution was closed. I
entered a chnrch. It was a magnificent
stone structure. My appearance elicited
some attention for I was dreBsed in over
alls, jumper and sweater. Aside from
that curiosity wbich my appearance
created I was unnotice'd. The sermon
was a series of hair-splitting legal opin
ions concerning something in the creed,
and .failed to interest me. I had
worked hard all the week in the air
brake shops and was not in the humor
to listen to such dry theological dis
cussions. I could readily see why the
working men do not go to the churches.
"Most churches today are a sort of
refrigerator, where religion is kept on
week-davs when it is not in use. The
saloon keeper understands the art of
reaching the masses better than the
churchman. The saloon Is made the
workwoman's club. '
LOCAL SUMMARY
For Sale The Doolittle place at Green
Point fur $1050, nine rooms, large lot.
The la'est out Try the rnarshmallow
kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen. -
P;irt of house four rooms and water
for $) per month. Inquire at Oourier
Uerald office.
Shank & Bissell carry the most com
plete line of undertakers' supplied in
Oregon City.
A brand new top b iggy for sale at a
sacrifice. Inquire at Courier-Herald
office.
R. L. Holman, leading undertaker
two doors south of court house, Oregon
City
$20 to $100 to loan o n cha tel or per
sonal security.
JJimick & Eastham, Agts.
If you want good wo id from large yel
low fir timber, order of C. E. Stewart,
Carus, or E. H. Cooper, Oregon City.
Thosii fine Oregon City lots: 1, 2, 3
and 4, of block 82 and 5, 6, 7 and 8, of
block 83; lots 65 x 110, all fenced, level
and flviared; only $225 each, $100 cash,
alance tosuit at 7 per tent, f 04, Gold
smith street, Lower Albina, Portland.
Dr. J, Burt VIo ire is now prepared to
answer professional calls. Ollice tern
norally at residence, 10th street, near
Je Tenon, Oregon City.
Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on
home-made candies.
The latent in chocolate of all kinds at
the Kozy Kandy Kitchen,
A few watches tor sale cheap ai
Ynunger's. Watches cleaned, $1.
The finest bou bon lioxes in town at
'I- K K
Rancher, The Farmer and Mechanics
tore tax 's vour (arm produce, bides and
urs, Oregon City.
When you visit Portland don't fail to
fet your meals at the U yal Restaurant,
First and Madison. They serve an ex
cellent meal at a moderate price; a good
square meal, with pudding and pie, 15c.
Or. R. H. Beatie, dental offices, rooms
15 and 16, Weinhard building.
To Loan on Farm Property $500,
$1000, $1500, at 7 per cent, one, two ot
ttiree years. Oimick & l'.astham, law
yers, Oregon City Oregon.
You can be cured of iwrv mt lise tsea
iHinmering, bad labits, alcoholism,
drug habits and sexual diseases. Ab
sent treatment. Instruction in personal
mwte imi. Send for literature. Inst
tute of Psychology, 7th and Washington
streets, Portland.
4
When you went a good square n eal
gjtothe I'runsAirk restaurant, oppo
site suspension bridge, L. Ruconich
proprietor. Everything fresh and clean
and well cooked; just like you get at
home. This is the only tirst-rliss res
taurant in Oregon City and where ypn
can get a good meal for the price o' n
poor one el ewhere.
TO CI' RK X COI.U IN ONK IIAV
Take L ixative Broino Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund the money if it fails
to curer K. V. Grove's signa'tir- i- m,
efch Ids. Z',c.
The TarU Cab Driver.
Outside of many wine shops In Paris
and In the principal cities of France a
sign is often to be seen bearing the
words, Au cocher fldele ("To the faith
ful cocher"); beneath It a driver Is
pictured, bat In hand, restoring to a
gentleman and lady, the hirers of the
coach, a purse forgotten on the cush
ions of the vehicle. This Is not a con
ception of the artist, nor vile flattery
of the restaurant or wine shop to draw
thither the coachman with a foible for
the bottle, but a reality wbich ofteu oc
curs and of which the cocher has every
right to be proud.
Anybody who has lived any length
of time In Paris will Indorse the state
ment. Who has not forgotten au um
brella, a walking stick, a small satchel
or some little object on the seat or floor
of a public vehicle? And who has not
had his property restored without even
having taken the number of the ve
hicle, without any remembrance of the
physiognomy of the driver? By a sim
ple application to a special office at the
prefecture of police, Where all objects
found in public carriages are deposit
ed and arranged according to the date
and hour at which they were brought
In, one is able promptly to regain pos
session of his lost property.
This reflects great credit on the
Paris "cabbies," few of whom, by the
way, are born Parisians. Harper's
Weekly.
He Concentrated.
Professor Countemfast Is a small
man with a large mentality. His wife
is a tnll woman, who believes In the
power of matter over mind. The pro
fessor had been absorbed the whole
evening In a profound paper on the
mental ohiinicterlstlcs of people who
were unhappily married. Suddenly
looking up. he remarked:
"My dear, are you aware of the fact
that a man's brain weighs about 3
pounds?"
"Humph! You've Just read that
haven't you?"
. "Er-er why er oh. yes; certainly.
of course."
"Well, that article says a woman's
brain Is not so heavy, eh?"
"Er er yes. It certainly does, but"
"And It also states that a woman's
brain Is of much tiner quality, doesn't
It?"
"Er er well, yes; you are quite
right, my dear."
"Now. listen to me. Just concen
trate your 3Ms pound brain on that
scuttle and figure Out how much It will
weigh after you bring It full of coal
from the cellar." The professor meek
ly bowed his great head. and. as he de
parted for the lower regions in search
of abstract Information, he murmured:
"The man who thinks that mind Is
superior to matter Is . an illustrious
idiot!"-London Tit-Bits.
The Trunk Paid.
Some years ago a man rnn hp a bill
of $200 In the Tremont House, Chica
go, and t)ren ran away without settling
it. The trunk which remained In his
room was uuusunlly heavy and when
opened after his departure was found
to contain specimens of ore, brought
from the gold and silver mines of Col
orado, where presumably he had lost
all his mouey. After waiting out the
legal time Mr. Gage sent the contents
of the trunk to an assayer. who return
ed two bits of metal valued at more
than $100 iu excess of the bill after
deducting his own fees.
OOO
Maty ire
Babies and children need
proper food, rarely ever medi
cine. If they do not thrive
on their food something is
wrong. They need a little
help to get their digestive
machinery working properly.
COD LIVER OIL
WITH HYPOPHOSPHITfLS or LIME SODA
will generally correct this
I difficulty.
I If you will put from one-
f fourth to half a teaspoonful
in baby's bottle three or four
times a day you will soon see I
a marked improvement. For
larger children, from half to
a teaspoonful, according to
age, dissolved in their milk,
if you so desire, will very
soon show its great nourish
ing power. If the mother's
milk does not nourish the
baby, she needs the emul
sion. It will show an effect
at once both upon mother
and child.
toe ant m
i
I
cii?nmt.. New York.
Hlelp
An Edible
Man.
A. Robertson, the Seventh St.
Grocer, is not this kind of a man,
but is a Groceryman in every
sense of the word, and knows how
to look after the wants of his cus
tomers. ,
YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT
But the Best Stock of First-Class
Goods to be Found at Bottom
Prices in Oregon City is" at
HARRIS' GROCERY
You Can
Depend Upon
Patent Flour, made from old wheat. It
makes the best bread and pastry and always
gives satisfaction to the housewife, Be sure
and order Patent Flour made by the Port
land Flouring Mills at Oregon City and
sold by all grocers. Patronize
Home Industry
.
Brown & Welch
The Seventh Street Meat Market
Keeps nothing but first-class meats
and sells lower than others.
The Old Stand, Seventh Street, A. O. U. W. Building
OREGON CITY, OREGON.
H. Bethke's Meat Market
Opposite Huntley's
First-Class fyteats of $11 IJiQds
Satistaction Guaranteed
Give fjirg a (all agd be Treated itjt
Foresight Means Good Sight
If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the
above headline. Lack ot foresight in attending to the
eyes in time means in the end poor sight. We employ
the latest most scientific methods in testing the eyes,
and charge nothing for the examination. Dr. Phillips,
an expert graduate oculist and optican, has charge of our
optical department.
A. N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler
293 florrison Street, PORTLAND, OREGON
AM a jtVt. a WW! -Xl
456 Parrott Building, San Fransisco, Cal.
CAPITAL STOCK $250,000. SHARES PAR VALUE
STOCK NOT ASSESSABLE.
Lands in the Center cf tlu Vast Oil Fields of Kern County
Stock has doubled in price and now offered at fifty
cents a share. Stock sold on
installment plan.
I. LEMAHIEU, Agent at Oiegon City.
l!tW rt "3
S. G. SKIDMORE & CO.,
CUT RATE DRUGGISTS
151 3rd Street - PORTLAND,' OREGON
Headquarters for
Drugs and Chemicals, Compounding of Pre
scriptions and Receipts.
, Lowest Prices on Patent Medicines,
It's Easy to Stand
OR WALK, OR REST
With your feet encised in our
Floral Qm en $3.00 Shoes well
made, stylish, healthful, econo
mical. It's a 'wonder" in shoe
values. Ask to see it.
Dozen of other varieties foot
wear for all people and all purses
KRAUSSE BROS.
Brushes, Soap and Rub'er Godo