i OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD FRIDAY, FEBRUARY .8, 1901. Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY . I ill Oragcn City pantofflce M 2nd-cla.i matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. fa In advance, per year 1 50 month. 75 ihe monlhs'trlal 25 flTThe date opposite your address on the per denotes the time to which you hate paid. XI thin notice is marked your subscription Is due. CLUBBINQ KATES. With Weekly Oregonlau 12 00 Tri-Weekly N. Y. World I K ' National Watchman 1 75 " Appeal to Knasoa 160 ' Weekly Examiner 2 25 " Bryan a Commoner 1 75 ADVERTISING RATES. Standing business advertisements: Permonth wrofi'Hali) ial cardx.il pel year): 1 to 10 Inches tu per inch, 12 Inches (or $5, 20 inches (column) tj, 80 inches, $12. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 Inch '40o, 2 inohee 75c, 8 inches $1,4 Inches (1.25,5 'inches 11.50. 10 inches 12.50. 20 inches 5 LcKal advertisements: Per in"h first inser 'Jon $1, each additional Insertion 50c. Affilavils of publication will not be furnished until pub location fees are paid. Local notices; Five cents per line per week Oar month 20o, PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. -.OREGON OITY, FEB. 8, 1901. Thr military bill increasing the army -which recently passed the house of rep resentatives provides for a regular btand ang army costing $113,000,000 a year. This expansion is a permanent onn, The annual cost, $113,000,000, is $13,000, '000 more than the British army costs, and only $12,000,000 less than France tpays for her huge military machine. Germany's army costs only $13,000,000 .more. It 1b a simple problem In arithmetic," aays the Johnston (Pa.) Democrat, "When Mr. Rockefeller will be the whole thing. Day before yesterday it -was the copper mines, yesterday the : great banks of the metropolis, today it is the railroads. What will he Buy tomor row? And the significant part of his operations is that the more money he spends on dividend-paying investments rthe more money he has to spend." rfiN!E August 6, 1898, we have sold to Hhe people in the Philippine islands goods to the amount of $20,000,000. To effect this sale we have expended up wards of $200,000,000 and sacrificed 3,251 American soldiers. How long will it v take this nation to bankrupt itBelf by flecaring trade and commerce at such a 08tT And how much more would Imve sold to the Philippine islands In the same length of time if we had treated the Filipinos on American lines? Oma- ha World-Herald. It appears that the Filipinos are not easily influenced by the ballot. During 'the presidential campaign of last year it was eolemly promised that the re election of William McKinley would have the effect of Immediately br'nging the war in the Philippine islands to a close; that the "rebels" were only holding out In the hope that the election of a new administration would result in he immediate withdrawal of the United Stales troops from the islands. Possibly mot as many people were foolish enough to believe this theory as the administra tion supposed. What the country needs is not fewer presidential campaigns, but luoto dignified ones. Campaign lying ought to be made as reprehensible as cheating in buBinoas transactions. Cincinnati Enquirer. AocoiiniNu to the war correspondent f the London Times, the Brilmh have an immense amount of work ye t to do in H .uth Atrium. He writes: "We Imve to furnish from the ranks of the army political organizations for the tem porary government of the two new colo nies, municipal police for Pretoria, Jo liaunenhnrg and Woemfontein, a large portion of the staff necessary for working over 1000 miles of railway, garrisons for about thirty towns and villages, guards lor about foity bridges, and a long line of duleneo for the railway, of which nearly 1800 miles has to be either pa trolled or strongly held. Not a single man thus employed is available for active operations against the enemy.' Io add to those burdens already borne by the army the Orange River drifts have been UUl and the line of fortified posts between Thabanuhn and Lady brand." Last your the gro.-s earnings of the railroads in the United States were $1, 480,(i73,0f14. The not earnings were $i23,8o8,l)l2. Operated as Bcoies of lit 4lo competing systems the clear profit was more than five hundred million dol lars. That aggregate of profit from one year's operation of the roads is enough to make live hundred millionaires, and the ex prop iution ot that amount from the working chins might well make a mil lion tramp. If all the roads wore united in one compact nystem the ex punsea would be greatly reduced and wiih all competition eliminated tlw in come would be largely increased. If the government owned the roads it would operate thorn at about the actual cost That is.it would transport all the freight, jpncMttigera, etc., in a eaier Htid more sat. iafactory way than private companies do, with regard to safety of employes and conveniences of the public rather than the paying of dividends, and for this service would charge the people $523,828,912 less than the railroad com panies cl a re them for each year's ser vice, leaving in the pockets of the Amer ican people that much money which now goes to the railway magnates. ANOTHER HOLD-UP. If $26 a ton for steel rails is too high a price, as has repeatedly been shown the past four months, $28 would be simply extortion. Yet the steel pool announces that the higher price will be fixed on and after February 1 . It expects to sell au aggregate of 2,000,000 tons ol rails during the year 1901, and coolly notifies the railroad companies to hand over to it an extra $4,000,000.' There is no fairness or justice in this staud-and-deliver policy. There is lit tle reason or sense in it. Its tendency if not a direct result of it, must inevitably be to check railroad construction and improvement. It establishes a bad re lation between two great industries that muHt end in reprisals-matters that should have no place in legitimate busi ness. And it may lead to advance, but unwarranted, prices in other branches of the iron industry and thus unsettle trade to a degree that would be calami tous. That the steel pool means to wring from the railroads every dollar that the business will stand is as plain as sun light. It would put the price of rails at $30 if it dared. The spectacle of an American philan thropist participating in a hold-up for WUU.uuu ia not an inspiriting one at the threshold of the new century. N. Y. Commercial. SCALP BOUNTY TAX. The legislature has passed and the governor has approved a law imposing a tax of one mill on all the assessable property of the state to pay a few scalp bounty speculators and grafters of east ern Oregotjand importers from Northern California and other countries who have already secured $100,000 of warrants and will soon have several hundred thousand more. Of all the grafts ever imposed o i tbe people under cover of law this is the least excusable. It adds another mill or about $5000 to the taxes of the people of Lane county this year, and an equal pro portion to the taxes of all western Ore gon, and will not benefit the people of this county or any other county west of the Cascades one cent, and is not of much benefit, if any, to the people of Eastern Oregon other than scalp graftera. It is class legislation and is clearly useless and extravagant and should be resisted in the courts if there be any legal grounds for such action. Killingcoyotes does not decrease the number any more man killing fleas would exterminate them. They breed bo fast that there will be all the time as many as can live in a given tract of country, and be ex terminated only by Bottling up the country and removing the means of snbsistance. In this acalp bounty busi ness the last legislature took the cake for raw grafting and the present legisla ture has some excuse foi trying to carry out the mistake of Its predecessor. Ore gon State Journal. PROBATE REFORMS. Curtain bills have been introduced into the legislature designed to lessen the cost of proceedings in probato. 1 This is a praiseworthy purpose, end these projects ought to be considered carefully by the legislators in the interest of vhe people who are necessitated to have re course to the courts. Manv of these matters inllict hardship upon women and children already sorely tried by the loss. of their bread winner, and it seems cruel to add to their agonv. alreadv acute enough, bv taking from their mouths their morsel of meat ami be stowing it upoit the probate parasites. It is literally another terror added to death for a poor widow with a mite of property, some little homestead, a lot and cubin, perhaps, to he compelled to go into the funeral forum to be fleeced by tho taxes of that tribunal which could be cut short by an act of legit la tion. The waste of smalt properties in this way is to he deplored, but It can be corrected in the manner indicated. We allude to small estates particularly, be cause the wealthy can usually protect themselves ; but the poor are mostly at the mercy of legal sharks' A distinguished minister of the Gospel the Rev, Horatio Stabbing, in commned ing the bills now before the legislature, writes that he funis "it will not bo out of place to express mv earnest, unselfish hope that the bills will hcimn law." Dr. Stebbins sa s t'mt he has had con siderable experience in this line of af fairs, and he has been again and ngain Impressed with the almost barbaric wronmhat is perpetrated under the present law. An estate in his care was wrrsieu irom li'iu through a sheer tech- nical construction of t " existing statute ami he was mulcted in i4onu where In his own care $400 would have sufficed. Moved by this sense of in justice Dr. Stebbins exclaims: "Weap plandthe benefactors of society, the founders of charaties, schools and eol leges; but no benefaction, charity or -.bool can diffuse the good that a wise and just law confer." 8. V Call RECENT IMMIGRATION. Professor Hall in the Forum has analyzed our recent immigration, which presents some astonishing features. Last year we received 400,000 immi grants from Europe. Of these 100,000 were from Austria-Hungary, 100,000 from Russia, 40,000 only from Ireland, 10,000 from England. The three principal elements in the yeat's accession to our population were: South Italians, 84,346 ; Hebrew, 60,764; Polish, 46,938 ; the Irish rank next, and below them Scandinavians, 32,952, and Germans, 29,682. Aa recently as 1869 our immigration from the British Isles, France, Germany and Scandiuavia was three-quarters of the whole. It has been said that India is a mu seum of races. But if each of the many races now flocking to the United States should preserve its national type and remain racially isolated and non-assimilative, this country would present a greater diversity and be more of a race museum than India. It is a tenable theory that our institu tions require for their maintenance a homogeneous people, and it may well be feared ..that the diversity of races and nationalities now pouring in upon us may soon begin to overtax our power of assimilation and produce a case of national indigestion. The first Bign of non-assimilation is the appearance of their ancestral national customs and racial habits in the second and third generations of these immigrants. Whenever we have distinct Polish, Slo vak, Oroatian and Lithuanian groups in ouc population the danger line will have been reached. It ia believed by Borne statisticians and observers that this al ready appears. In some parts of Penn sylvania the Huns and Slavs aire remain- ing apart lrom each other and distinct from the American community. The same is true of the Syrians and Arme nians. It ia noteworthy that many of these nationalities, tbe Huns, Magyars, Syr ians, Armenians and Slavs, are of not re mote Oriental origin. They are com mon stock with the Siberian, Scythian and the Tartars. WOPLD PROBLEMS. Henri de Blowitz, the noted Paris cor- respondent of the London Times, ex presses hia opinions on "Coming Events and Present Problems" in the current number of the North American Review. His prophecy is pessimis tic. "I catch," he writes, "glimpses in the twentieth century of Wars on wars throughout its entire swn. If the United States is swept aw L by the wind of imperialism it miuttejj ready (o sustain during the coming cen tury formidable struggles in order to as similate what is still wanting to the sat isfaction of its imperialist dreams, and no time should be lost in the prepara tion of the means which will perm.t the serious realization of this ideal." The source from which Blowitz ex pects the first wars to arise is Austria. He says : "In the center of Europe I Bee war break out on the morrow of the death of Francis Joseph. There is not a single reflecting being who can sup pose that at Francis Jobeph's death the marvelous mosaic which from the Aub tria of yesterday has become the Aus tria-Ilungary of today, will continue to remain what it now is." "The struggle for the partition of the Austrian empire when once it begins to go to pieces will involve all the nations of the continent. Germans, Slavs, Hungarians and Italians will each de mand a province, and the French and the Russians will be irresistibly drawn into the contest. One of the greatest wars of history will follow, and when it is ended there will be a new Euroi e. " Such is the forecast in the century made by one of the ncuteet observers of the times. It closes with the statement that the supreme work of the twentieth century will be the discovery of the full meaning and potency of electricity. Biowitz pays: "The solution of all the problem, which are tormenting the hu man mind is bound up in this one. This solution will sni press frontiers, change the aim of armies, subject tl.e planetary spaces to the human will, modify alto gether the faith of the race, and give in general to tbe efforts of its intelligence a fresh direction and an object as yet un dreamed of." For over Fifty Years An Old and Well-Tried Remedy. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions, of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, soitens tho gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrluea. Is pleasant to the taste, Sold l.y Drug gists in every part of the World. Twentv-tive cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. He sure and ask for Mrs. 'Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. A Fireman's. Close Call. "I stuck to my engine, althougheverv joint ache I and every nerve was racked ; with pain,' writes u. . ueuaiuy, a lo comotive fireman, of Burlington, Iowa., "1 was weak and pale, without any ap petite and all run down. As 1 was about to give up, 1 got a bottle of Elec tric Bitters, and, alter taking it, I felt as well as I ever did in my lite " Weak, sickly, run down people alwajsgain new life, strength and vigor from their use. Try them. Satisfaction guaranteed by 50 cents. LOCAL SUMMARY The finest bon bon boxes in town al '.beK.K. K. Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on home-made candies. T The latest in chocolate of all kinds at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, Dr. R. B. Beatie, dental offices, rooms 15 and 16, Weinhard building.) A few watches for sale cheap at Younger's. Watches cleaned, $1. When in town get your dinner at the Red Front House. MealB 15 cents. The latest out Try the inarshmallow kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, v R. L. Holman, leading undertaker two doora south of court house, Oregon City A brand new top b'iggy for sale at a sacrifice. Inquire at Courier-Herald office. $500 to loan at 6 per cent on farm property. Address A A, care Courier Herald. Shank & Bissell carry the 'most com plete line of undertakers' suppliej in Oregon City. $20 to $100 to loan on cha tel or per sonal security. -Dimick & Eastham, Agts. If you want good wood from large yel low fir timber, order of O. E. Stewart, Cams, or E. H. Cooper, Oregon City. For Sale Cheap Good house of seven rooms; 2yi lots; barn, fruit, etc. At Ely villa. See the owner, Adam Haas, who lives on place. Dr. J. Burt Moore is now prepared to answer prolessional calls. Office tem porally at residence,, 10th street, near Jefferson, Oregon City. To Loan on Farm Property $500, $1000, $1500, at 7 per cent, one, two or three years. Dimick & KaBtham, law yers, Oregon Oity Oregon. For Sale or Trade. House and lot on Madison, near Third; good well; will rent for $8 ; cheap at $800, or will trade for farm ueartowo. Address M. Ek strand, Oregon City. Fcr Sale 75 acrea of timber land 1 mile from Oregon City. Price $75 per acre. Will take partly in exchange some desirable farming land. Address Wm. Beard, Ely, Or. When you visit Portland don't fail to get your meals at the Royal Restaurant, First and Madison. They serve an ex cellent meal at a moderate price; a good square meal, with pudding and pie, 15c. Those 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 cleared ; only $225 each, $100 cash, alance to suit at 7 per cent . 504, Gold 8 niilh street, Lower Albina, Ponland. When you want a good square meal go to the ifrunsA'ick restaurant, oppo site suspension bridge, L. Ruconich, proprietor. Everything fresh and clean indwell cooked; just like you get at home. This is the only brut-clues res taurant in Oregon City and where you can get a good meal for the price of a poor one el where. WANTED! Reliable man for manager of branch office we wish te open in this vicinity. If your record ia O K. here is an oppor tunity. Kindly give good reference when writing. Tub A. T. Morris Wholesale House. Cincinnati, Ohio. Illustrated catalogue 4 cents stamps. Is destruction of lung by a growing germ, precisely as moldy cheese is destruction of cheese by a growing germ. If you kill the germ, you stop the consumption. You can or can't, according to when you begin. Take Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil : take a little at first. It acts as a food ; it is the easi est food. Seems not to be food ; makes you hunfjTv ; eatinsj is comfortable. You grow stronp:- r 'I i'h. '-H iiuute liiis tliis pi. -tine on it, gj l:.Uc no other. 1 alee more; not too much ; enough is as much as you like and agrees with you. Satisfy hunger with usual food ; whatever you like and agrees with you. , When you are strong again, have recovered your strength the germs are dead ; you have killed them. If you have not tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., New York. 50c. and $1.00; all druggists. consmnpiion r Special Values in u annAtfi in Mr YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT But tht Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARRIS' GROCERY t 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 r ana oraer ratent riour made Dy tne rort- land Flouring Mills at Oregon City and . sold by all grocers. Patronize I Home Industry H. Bethke's Meat Market Opposite Huntley's First-Class pleats of 11 Kinds' Satisfaction Guaranteed ive irg a Call aijd be Treated ?i&jt 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 poo? 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 norrlson Street, PORTLAND, OREGON Ahaiotn il Mining' Co. 456 Parrott Building, San Fran.sisco, Cal. CAPITAL STOCK $250,000. SHARES PAR VALUE $1 STOCK NOT ASSESSABLE. Lands in the Center of the 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. LEMUHIEU, Agent at Oregon City. v7 I! S G, SKIDMORE & CO., CUT PATE DRUGG'STS 151 3rd Street fORTI-AHD OREGON Headquarters for , Drugs and Chemicals, Compounding of Pre scriptions and Receipts. Lowest Prices on Patent Medicines, Brushes, Soap and Rubber Goods A. Merbii 7 til Street m i sal .. j fMW xrv : v ; .MAX S IV Brown & Welch -Proprietors op thb Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON 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. 7