t f V',TAt!'T:T'ifT V.nfWr f T T A ?T'H 1- ! ! '1 ! TO' 1 '"I'T . vn".'.'?r OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1901. Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY SuUrrllnOgoa 0ltyptofflceM2nd-cUMmtt.r SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Paid ta advance, per year 1 !Y 34 month! . 12 imemni'iriai.... , uldreia OB the per onotef the time to wmcn jpu " !'- ,U iliuuuel8 marked jonr iubserlptl.n H ai. CLUBBING RATIS. With Wekly Oregonlan.. J 00 ' Trl-Welly M. Y. World ' National Watchman J J appeal to Reasm 'Ilk Weekly Kxamtnor m Bryan'a Commoner 7I) f uw "ft"""-" . . , L 1- ADVERTISING BATES. Standing business advertisements: Per month rofesslonalcardMH) Pm year):l to 10 inches Mc pr inch, 12 inches tor $5, 20 Inches (column) JH, 30 inches, $12. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 Inch 60, 2 Inches 75c, 8 inches $1,4 inohes 11.26,6 4ches1.50, 10 Inches J2.60, 20 Inches $5 Legal advertisements: Per inch hrHt Inser ionsi, each additional Insertion 60c. Affllavils of publication will not be furnished until pub lication leeB are paid. Local notices; Kive cents per line per week pv month 20o, PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, FEB. 1, 1901. Tna golden ages of the world are bo called for their culture, art and litera turenot for their vaat accumulation of wealth. '"So Hell for three cent8,"is a heading in a religious weelclj. "Cheapest lake rates we ever heard of," exclaimed the ocean sailor. Bktwekn the Philippines and our Pacific coast is an oreanic abyss of vast xtent called Nero Deep, having the depth of 5279 fathoms or 31,714 feet. A bill has been introduced in the legis lature of California to prevent -egal sharks from robbing the estate of the dead in adminis tration. Says the Chinese minister, Mr. Wu Chinese merchants who "corner the market" are punished with eighty blows. This shows the necessity of "converting" China. u It ia reported that Rockefeller is go ing into the newspaper business on a rge scale and that he is particularly anxious to drive Hearst's New York, Chicago and San Francisco , papers off the earth. This then is what Mr. Hanna's Ship Subsidy bill would do, summed in a sentence : It would take from the pock -ets of 75,000,000 people $9,000 000 a year to put it into the pockets of less than two dozen private business concerns all 4old.-N. Y. World. A decrease of 60 per cent in the sup ply of range cattle, concurrent with a "0 per cent increase in population, im plies a difference of 80 per cent between the demand for and the supply of beef. The rise in the price of beef may be ac counted for by that difference. At Chicago the establishment ot a largo department store, to be owned and conducted as a co-operative enterprise of colored men, is planned and promises to be an interesting experiment. The company which 1b at the head of the undertaking has loen conducting a grocery and meat market for some months, witli gratifying success. Its patronage is not confined to colored cus tomers, but includes many white fam ilies. Tub report of the Interstate commerce commission to congress contains the following fignillcant paragraph, in which there is mure truth than poetry : "It needs no prophetic eye to see that in a very few years ull tho great railroads ot the United States will be gathered in two or throe great groups, all under the .harmonious control of the immensely jrieh men, who will have united them for their benefit and to destroy compe tition." A lkttkr frcm an American, officer in China publish d in the .London Tilling, brings out in a striking manner the main features of tho invasion of that healhen.country by the "Christian" na tions. He says; "Looting, murder, and outrage thin wan the stoiy on every side, and the whole campaign was to this witness discreditable to tho superior race," and very demoralising to all thohe who took part. "It is amauing how quickly the iiibtinets of tyranny, he worst characteristics of the slave driver, are developed in the aveiae man who finds his fellowmen under his unchecked control." In this sen tence the ollicer has put his finger upon the main reason why no man is good enough to rule unother againat his will, as Lincoln put it. When he is trans ferred to the Philippines, if he has not aliei dy been, he will rtcognUe the same attitude oil the part of tho invaders toward the invaded, and Id It will doubt less find the real reiisou why our "higher civilination" offers no attractions to the Filip.iu. "The fuitre of the Anglo Saxon Rate ' is the subject of a contribution to the North American Review for December from the pen of ord Charles Beres- lord . He savs : "There ftr rwln ahead which may wreck the Anglo-American barque. With moderately fair sales and smooth seas the supremacy of this great race has been built np, and with success have come all the evils which are so historically associated with the fall of empires and nations of the past. n the motherland the corruption of money has wrought fearful havoc in the ranks of society. In the United States there are ominous mutterings of the coming storm. The plutocrat is gaining powei each day on both sides of the At lantic, and the democrat is lisely to be crashed under the heel of a worse ty rant itaan a king who wore the Dumle. or any ecclesiastical dignitary who sets up claim to temporal power. This is the danger which threatens the Anglo Saxon race. The sea which threatens to overwhelm it Is n ot the angry waters of the Latin races, or of envious rivals. but the cankerine-worm in its . own heart, the sloth, the indolence, the lux urious immorality, the loss of manli-t-ess, chivalry, moral courage and fear lessness which that worm breeds. This danger, which overthrew Babylon, Per sia, Carthage, Athens, Rome, and many other mighty nations and races in the past, now threatens the race to which we belong; but to it we oppose what they never possessed on anything like the same principles or to the same ex tent as we the power of democracy." "HAUNTING COINCIDENCE." President McKinley's Dromotion nf Justice McKenna's son to the Inspector- ueneraiship of Porto Rico, and of Jue tice Harlan's son to the Attornev.fin. eralshipof that island, are acts so un- roriunate at this time that even so staunch an administration journal as the unicago limes-Herald sharply criticises them. It points out "the ugly and haunting coincidence" of mii-h dential appointments in Porto Rico "at the very moment when the policy of ineaaministretion toward the island is an issue before the court." But it. thinks that as "the damage is done" the only way to repair it is for the two jus tices whose sons have been thus un. seasonably favored to "decline to sit longer in the island cases." It is not forgotten that Mptfi lected two senators, both memr nt the Foreign Relations Committee, to go abroad and make a treaty with Spain, on which they were later on to pass judgment as senators. That the votes ot certain democratic senator hv whinh that treaty was ratified were notoriously icoiuou whu appointments to office, and that one democratic senator nH criminal indictment was rewarded for nis vote to ratify by the quashing of the indictmert, are also well remembered dub or History. That we are in the islands at all is due to the ratification of the Spanish treaty by one yote only, and that nil ft wnnlsl have been lacking but for Mr. McKin ley's flagrant miBuse of the power of pa trbnage. That he should now have ex posed our highest tribunal to pvpn t ho suspition of being swaved in favor nf tha view which Mr. McKinley and his party desiieto have it adopt of our status in the islands is, in view of his past record, to say the least, an amazing indiscre tion. RAILROAD TYRANNY, San Fraucisco is receiving a severe lesson in the private ownership of the highways of the country that ought to make many converts among her business men to the principle of government own ership of the Baiue. The Call says : "The process of making this city a way station on the road to the East has begun by the institution of a through rate, including car haul and ship haul, from uiid-contin.ntal and Atlantic points l'he land and water transportation being treated as one haul, and thnt haul af fected by the competition of the Suez Canal, San Francisco is side-tracked. "Aglaucoat the schedule discloses the destructive situation. The rate ou canned goods from all eastern poiuta to San Francisco is $1 per 100 pounds; on same goods from all eastern points to the Orient, by ea.ne schedule, only X) cents I As the water rate on canned goods from San Francisco is 40 cents, our joint rate to the Orient is $1.40, as against DO ce'Hs enjoyed b New York and other eastern points. Of course that advantage of 50 cents per against San Francisco shuts us out of the market, "Tho rate on alcohol from eastern points to San Francisco is 85 cents; from the same points to the Orient 80 cents. Liquors to San Francisco from New York and the east pay $1.15. and f'om the same points through San Francisco to the Orient only 80 cents. "The same disadvantage to San Fran cisco runs through the entire schedule, applying to agricultural Implements, machinery, manufactures of metal, fabrics and thd whole list of meichan dise that finds a market in the Orient. New York, Chicago, St. Louis and all eastern poiuts reach the Orient cheaper than San Fraucisco can. . We are de prived of the natural advantage of our geogrnghlcal position, and the ocean that washes our coast is of no benefit to us. The' Oriental market is closed to our jobbers and manufacturers, and we are left to stew in our own juice. "The situation is serious; it is start, ling, and a remedy must be Bought lm. mediately. One reflection that it in. duces is, that this is one result of the ownership of transcontinental lines in New York.". THE GOAT CURE. Lv San Francisco a young physician is meeting with astonishing success in what is termed "The new Animal Therapy," which consists of the treat ment of disease with extracts of organs and tissues of loweranimals, principally taken from the hardiest animals known, the Rocky Mountain goats. It is claimed that the cells and extracts in the lymphatic system of this animal are the most highly vitalized of any known animal. This is due to the goat being not only the hardiest, but the healthiest of all animals. It is said that he can not be inoculated with any microbic disease; that age produces less effect on bis organs and tissues than on any other animal, and that degenerative diseases are almost never found in his body. On the face of it, the lay mind naturally concludes that injecting goat juice into the human body to cure disease is a fraud and "fake," but the "proof of the pudding is in the eating thereof," and the virtue of juices from the festive Wil liam goat is pi oved by its effect upon disease. Those who have investigated the sys tem claim that it is almost miraculous in its results. Being new, and the pub lic being more or less suspicious of new methods, naturally the doctor gets only the worst of cases those far gone and beyond the reach of the skill of the ordi nary physician. For instance, a Clay street printer with locomotor ataxia in both legs and arms for sixteen years, and so far gone as to be beyond the ordi nary duties of life and business, would not be a very inviting patient for the average doctor. But such an one took the treatment for three months, re covered his general health, lost his "lightning pains" and is now attending to his business. A lady living in Alameda had consumption and had been pronounced beyoad hope after a consul tation of regular physicians. After two months' treatment with goat lymph every sign of tubeiculosis has disap peared and she now, with the exception of not having fully recovered her strength is a well woman. An old lady who had suffered for nearly a score of years with rheumatism, whose joints had become fixed and enlarged, whose fingers ha l become like bird's claws, and who wat hopeless, after sixty days' treatment Is as well as one of her age could expect to be, and her joints and fingers are appar ently normal. Doctors with incurable patients turn them over to the new treatment. One of the leading surgeons of San Franciscj with locomotor ataxia is taking the treatment, as are two of her best known attorneys. The wife of a minister, a newspaper writer, a musician, two com mercial travelers, and a score ot others aie patients now, and some are nearly cured, while all are improving. They are all locomotor ataxia cases and any physician who has the fear of the Lord in his soul will admit that he cannot cure this disease. The "goat doctor" asserts that he has had great success with those debilitated by old age, nervous prostration and ex haustion, nutritional diseases, geniittl debilitation, microbic diseases, epilepsy, chorea, hysteria, neuralgia, paralysis, neuritis, dementia, melancholy insanity, etc. Patients receive an injection of lymph once or twice a day and in doses from three to nine drops. It is said the treat ment cannot injure oiie even when care lessly used, and the treatment, it is claimed, cures by stimulating the vital centers and cells of the body, removing the degenerative results of disease, de posits, etc., and by reconstructing a new organism, improving the structure and functions of cell life. LITERARY MOTES. Twenty excellent stories and auec dotes of Theodore Roosevelt, never be fore priuted, and told anonymously 'y the "intimates" and closest friends of the vice-president-elect, will be pub lished in the next issue of The Ladies' Home Journal. What is canned life? The term occurs In J, P. Mowbray's article in Every body's Magazine on "The Making of a Country Home." "Canned life, domes ticity in tins. Every oy embalmed and labelled and kept on a Bhelf. Duties in a row, always needing the same old opener aud all having tho same taste. Pickled surprises, condensed amuse ments, concentrated religion, The same half-pint of ready-made felicity if we go out, and the same q'l.irt of refresh ment If Wesley and liia wife come in. Modern conveniences on wires. Immor tal stnils In mo lei prisons." Mr. Jacob A. Riis, the author of "How the Other Half Lives" and othtr books, and the man to whom the im provements in East Side condition in Ne-v York are largely due, has written for The Outlook a history of his active tin 1 varied life which is suid bv those who have read it to be quite extraordi nary in its story telling power, and also in its acuteness and humor, ($3 a year, The Outlook Company, 288 Fourth Ave nue, New York.) ' ' '" ' ' Readers of The Smart Set will doubt less agree that the February number is the brightest issue yet of this remarka bly original periodical. ' Tne leading story is a novelette entitled "Rumors and a Runaway," by Caroline Duer. This is Miss Duer's first long story. The short stories that she has published in The Smart Set during the past year met with almost sensational success, and gave her a great reputation for the piquancy and cleverness of her work. This longer story will prove a still greater triumph. It is deticiously smart; it scintillates with humor; it is fascinating to the last line. Some husbands are painfully particu lar. A Brooklyn man is asking for a di vorce on the ground that he doesn't like being crowded out of bed by his wife's pet doga. LOCAL SUMMARY When in town get your dinner at the Red Front House. Meals 15 cents. . The latest outTry the marshmallow kisses at the Kozy Kaudy Kitchen. $500 to loan at 6 per cent on farm property. Address A A, care Courier Herald. Rhanlr ,V RiarrII earrv t.tm moat nnm. plete line of undertakers' suppliej in 1 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 on cha tel or per sonal security, Dimick & Eabtham, Agts. If you want good wood from large yel low fir timber, order of C. E. Stewart, Carus, or E. H. Cooper, Oregon City. Those fine Oregon City lots : 1, 2, S and 4, of block 82 and 5, 6, 7 and 8, of block S3; lots 65 x 110, all fenced, level and cleared ; only $225 each, $100 cash, alance to suit at 7 per cent . 50 4, Gold smith street, Lower Album, Portland. Dr. J. Burt Moore is now prepared to answer professional calls. Office tem porally ai residence, 10th street, near Jefferson, On gon City. K o'.y Kan ly Kitchen, up to date on homi'-p.Hde rindies. Tr ti '.atm ia chocolate of all kinds at the Ivoz.y Kt;dy Kitchen, A ft-w washes tor sale cheap at Youi it'.-r. , f'atches cleaned, $1. Th :t ,niv,on bon boxes in town al the K.K Wb?ny a ijit Portland don't fail to get your meaU at the Royal Restaurant, First and Madison. They snrve an ex cellent meal at a moderate price; a good square meal, with pudding and pie, 15c. Dr. R. B. Beatie, den'al offices, rooms 15 and 16, Weinhurd building. To Loan on Farm Property $500, $1000, $1500, Bt 7 per cent, one, two or three years. Dimick & Easthara, law yers, Oregon City Oregon. . smfDaS The most beautiful thing in the world is the baby, all dimples and joy. The most pitiful thing is that same baby, thin and in pain. And the mother does not know that a little fat makes all the differ ence. , Dimples and joy have gone, and left hollows 'and fear; the fat, that was comfort and color and curvt-all but pity and love-is gone. The little one gets no fat from her food. There is some thing wrong; it is either her food or. food-mill. She has had no fat for .weeks; is living on what she had stored in that plump little body of hers; andt that is gone. She is starving for fat; it is dujith, be quick ! Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the fat she can take; it will save her. The genuine has this picture on it, take no other. If vou have not tried it. send for tree sample, ita agreeable taste will aurprise vou. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c. and $1.00 all druggists. yq r -p haw- v n I CI II Ir! I I. XI 111 IN WHr we stx Special Values in Canned (Roods. Villi MAY NOT lNOW IT ww iiifi iiui miuii ii 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 Glass Meats of -11 fids Satistactlon Guaranteed Give Jirg a Sail ad be Treated IJigtt 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 393 Horrison Street, PORTLAND, OREOON Alniota Oil Mining Co. 456 Parrott Building, San Fransisco, Cal. CAPITAL STOCK $250,000. SHARES PAR VALUE $1 STOCK NOT ASSESSABLE. ' Lands in the Center of tin 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 Oregon City. S G. SKIDMORE & CO., CUT PATE DRUGG'STS 151 3rd Street mil n AND OREGON Headquarter for Drugs and Chemicals, Compounding of Pre scriptions and Receipts. Lowest Prices on Patent Medicines, Brushes, Soap and Rubber Goods 7th Street ft ! It's Easy to Stand OR WALK, OR REST With your feet encased in our Floral Queen $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. w