4 , OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1901. Oregon City Courier Herald By A. W. CHENEY Satort i In Ongon Oltjr pastofflce M 2id-clMi nutter i : ;. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Paid ta advance, per year 1 50 3U month! 76 ttrea momha'trial 26 tV'fhi) date opposite your address on the aper denotes the time to which you baie paid. If lain notice Is marked your subscription li due. CLUBBING RAT1S. With Wertly Oreifonlaii 12 00 ' Trl-Weekly N. Y. World 186 ' National Watchman 1 75 " Appeal to Keinon 1 60 " Weekly Eiamin.r 2 25 " Bryan's Commoner 175 ADVERTISING SATES. Nlanding business advertisement); Per month rofn8io al cards.ll (i'.l) pel year): 1 to 10 Inches Mc per inch, 12 lnehes for $5. 20 inchea (column) 18, 80 Inches, $12. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 Inch Se, 2 Inches 75c, 8 inches $1,4 Inches 11.26, 6 Inches 11.60, 10 inches 82.00, 20 Inches 16 Lemil advertisements: Per In rh first Inser lontl, each aiMltlmial Insertion 50c, A 111 Uv its f publication will not be uruished untilpub Ucation lees aropaid, liociil notion; Five cents per line per week per month 20o, PATRONIZE HOMK I&DCBTRY. OREGON CITY, FEB. 15, 1901. In the face of a $180,000,000 private sliipsubBidy proposal at Washington the $10,500,000 demands for private pen sions now confronting congress can hardly be classed as illogical. Jambs A. Garfield happily summed up the Bervice John Marshall performed for his country when he spoke of him as "that great judge who found the consti tution paper and made it power; who found it a skeleton and clothed it with flesh and blood," In 1890, convertible paper money to the face value of 744,000,000 was in cir culation in the European world (includ ing America and the colonies) and the stock of gold and silver coil was about JE800.000.000, of which about one-fourth was held as reserve. The gold standard evidently rests on a paper base. Im Edward VII's kingdom, despite the passing artificial aid to prosperity of a big war, there are 1,003,005 paupers supported by public taxation, a a cost of nearly $67,000,000 a year. With such an army of destitutes, over a million Btrong, it would seem ttiat British states men miitht find better use for their sur plus revenues than carrying on wars of conquest. Tin family that enjoys the throne of Gieat Britaiu is know as the Guelphs. They are a long-lived race ; one of them, George III, dying in the 60th year of his ruin n, the longest reign in English his tory, lie was 81 years, 7 months and 1(5 days old when he departed this life, and the same number of years, months and days vouchsafed to Queen Victoria would cause her death to fall on the 4th day ol February, 1901. George I died at 07, George II at 77, George III at nearly 82, George IV at 08 and William IV at 72. Unless some vigorous pruning shall be duue,of which there is no Bign,the ap propriations for the second session of the Fifty-sixth congress will reach $800, 000,0110. The appropriations for the first session were $710,150,802.88. The total appropriations will be greater tl.an they ever were before and will include approximately $77,000,000 for the navy, $113,0,10,000,000 for the army,$ti0,000,0u() for river and harbor improvements, $140,000 for pensions, and other tie- llHMldollH BlllllS. Between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 1000, American manufactures of iron and steel amounting in value to $120,0:13,180 wore sent abroad and profitably sold in foreign markets. This was more than twice the valuo of our exports of the s.imo manu factures for the year 1807. In f,e face of all these cumulative proofs that it is no longer needed, the Diugtey worse tlutu war taritr roumius un revised and the trusts formed under It continue to charge the American people more than they are selling their goods for in foreiga markets. Sinc 107b, when the world's stock of gold and silver coins was about $1,250, 000,000, three have been produced over $15,000,000,000 of the precious metals. Of this vast sum only about one-half re mains on hand in the world as money; the other half has gone into the arts, brenlont.or hoarded in Asia. Were it not that on the whole gold and silver havo beeu mined at a loss, as statistics prove, their consumption in the arts would have been far loss than it Ins been . Tiik raheal dill'orence between the .Eastern methods of raising Btoci and those o( the West, is shown by this ex cerpt from a contribution to the Breed er's Guxeite,uublibhedin Indiana: "The miooesHi ul feeder must mature his ani mal as rapidly as possible from birth to market, slid sell his beeves as yearlings, weighing 1200 to 1300 pounds; his pigs t six or eight mouths of age weighing 100 to 250 pound, aud his lambs at from three to five months of age, weigh- ing iromOO to 90 pounds. From the foregoing one can better camprehend why he selects 2500 to 3000-pound fin ished cattle to raise the 1200 to 1300 pound baby beef.or the 850 or 900-Dound hog to raise the 200 to 250-pound pig." If the re-organizers would spend more time opposing republican policies and less time denouncing the nonuliats. they would serve the cause better. The populists came to the help of the demo cratic party when the re-organizers abandoned it and the latter are not in a position to boast of superior attach ment to democratic principles. What is true ot the populists is also true of th silver republicans, who have for years vied with the democrats in their efforts to advance the doctrines set forth in the democratic platform. It will be an un fortunate day for the democracy if the bolting element on the outside or the cor poration element on the inside is able to so alter the party creed as to make it less acceptable to our populist and silver re publican allies. Bryan's Commoner. Oub age is retrospective. It build) the sepulchres of the fathers. It writes biographies, histories and criticism. The foregoing generations beheld God ana jn attire, face to face: we throueh their eyes. Why should not we also en joy an original relation to the universe? Why should not we have a omtrv an.i philosophy of insight and not of tradi tion and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs? Embos omed for a season in nature, whose floods of life stream around and through us. and invite us by the powers they supply to action proportioned to nature, why should we grope amoDg the dry bones of the past or put the living gen eration into masquerade out of its faded wardrobe? The sun shines today, also. There is more wool and flax in the fields. I here are new lands, new men. new thoughts. Let us ' demand our own works and laws and worship. Emer son. E L. Godkin, the eminent editor. says in the New York Evening Post, that ministers should not Drav for "the success of our armies." He thinks they might as well approach the throne of grace "with a petition that ilia finftm v might have his optic nerve cut by a ball ; mat ne might have his pelvis smashed J that he might be disemboweled : that h might lose one or two legs ; that he might He on the field 36 hours mortally wounded ; that he might die of enteric fever; that his provisions and water migut give out; that his house mieht be burned and his fami'v left roof- ltss and starving. " In this way the leal nature of the war would be laid before the public carrying it on, and something would be done to disabuse the minds of the young men and their parents of the idea that war is simply a kind of diver sion, of the nature of a football game, which will elevate their health and in- crease their business. Multituuinous are the plans for re form, and for every plan there is a spon sor. We seem to forget that the evils we would reform are of slow growth ; they have become a part of our national and social growth. To make radical change is but to bring in the wake of change evils as great as those we labored under before. Real reform consists not so much in tearing down institutions as in building up character. We must look to the individual as the source of all real progress. It is to the correct moral and intellectual development that we pin our laith for future generations. We know that we have Btumbled in th darkness. We build schools, we study philosophy and religion, that we may be enabled to so train the child that he may avoid the pitfalls we have dug. Let us not forget, in our fervid desue to edu cate the brain, the development of the moral nature. Moral purity and prob ity is tho bed-rock of all true reform. In 1783 the colonization of the unex plored continent of the Southern Seas began with the landing of Piiillin's Jloet at Port Jackson, now the great city ot Sydney, with a cargo of criminals. ow at the moment of their consoliilu. tion into a united commonwealth, the people of Australia find themselves, man lor man, the wealthiest of all na- tiona in the world. They are in the un questioned possession of a continental island, tich in land fit for settlement and industry of every kind practised in al most any part of the world by men of the race from which nearly all of thr.ni have sprung. They have already laid tiie foundations of a national prosperity dependent on uo single product or indus try, but embracing pastoral, agricultural and mining industries in almost equal degree; to which are rapidly liinr added manufactures of the kind most suited to the circumstances of the coun try. Last year the total value of the products of the colonies now forminir ih commonwealth amounted to fully $.550, 000,000, of which th.ir pastoral indus tries represented fully $150,000,000. their agriculture $140,000,000. tl eir in in . eral products fully $100,000,000 aud their manufacturing and other industries the remainder. This production was the fruit of the industry of a people num bering less than four million souls, and it therefore represents a sum of one hun dred and thirty-seven dollars for every inhabitant of the country a sum proba- ' bly twice as great as that representing the average earnings in any European nation, and at least half as great again as that in even this country COMMONER PARAGRAPHS. The following are excerptB from W. J. Bryan's newspaper: It is said that the new senator from Minnesota is an anti-imperialist and a Boer sympathizer. It remains to be seen whether the pie counter will im pair his mental digestion. The latest official report from Luzon conveyed the information that the "in surrection" is ended. It also conveyed the information that reinforcements were needed without delay. The Chicago Record says that Cuba's debt is a puzzle. There is nothing Btrange about this, however, the world is full of such puzzles. The banishment of the Manila editor who dared to criticise an army officer is calculated to make the Filipinos fall over each other in their haste to accept the liberal government proffered by the Taft commission. STATE SOCIALISM. The conservative party of England has proposed to the country an important measure of state socialism. In an ad dress at a recent conservative banquet, the premier, Lord Salisbury, insisted that if the conservatives were to keep their hold on London th6V must take up the housing question. "They should, " he said, "devote all the power they pos sess to getting rid of that which is really a scandal to our civilization the suffer ings which many of the working classes have to undergo in the most moderate, I might say, the most pitiable, accommo dation." They must not be frightened away from the remedies for social evils by the fact that they are made a cover or pretense for attacks upon property and other institutions. "You must rt pei these attacks, but at the same time you must not allow your attention to be diverted from the stern necessities which the vast social changes of our time are imposing upon all who cherish the pros perity of this country." It is a new matter altogether tor the imperial parliament to undertake social reform in the cities at the expense of the taxpayers of the whole kingdom . From all indications it appears the pro posed programme will be acceptable to the public. The Spectator in comment ing upon it says : "It is a vital problem. Unhappily, there are at thiB moment thousands of children growing up in London and the great towns under con ditions which do not allow them to be come good citizens, morally and physic ally. Unless that state of things is stopped, and we cease to produce a slum population, the state is in danger of an invasion of the worst possible kind the invasion of an unfit and demoralized population, not from outside, but from within. No doubt the destruction of slums is costly, but remember that the essential thing for getting rid of slums is not money, but care and trouble and keeping watch that England is not' fouled by recklessnes or laziness." NO GOLD STANDARD. The government of British India has failed in its attempt to establish the gold standard In the vast and populous country under its control, and has merely made gold coin a legal tender equally with silver. The present condition of scarcity of silver iii Mexico and China, as well as in India, forces the "Silver Question" again into prominence, in spite of the methods and policv that have been em ployed, notably during the last eight or nine years, to permanently break dovv n the equality of white metal with gold, as a standard money metal for use by tho mints of the world. The action of the Indian government is always subject to the approval of the British imperial government; and, as we are told "that there would be no currency questiou," in India, "if thoie were no home charges" (the sums which India must pay in Loudon for expenses of government and interest on loans), we must look rather to the policy dicta ted by the Indian council of the British government residing in London, favor ing the interests of Great Britain, than to the effect of that policy upon the in terests of the people of India. Alterna ting prosperity aud famine in the In dian dependency have pushed the home government to their wit's end to render effective the well-known assertion of Mr. Chamberlain, when he proclaimed in parliament, in advocating a tempo rary subsidy for the Vest Indian pos sessions: "This country al most lives upon its colonial empire." The Sir H. II. Fowler committee re ported in July, 1809: "Gold is not a le gal tender in India, though the govern ment will receive it ill payment of pub lic dues ; that, the rupee remains by law the only coin in which other than small payments can bo nude ; that there is no legal relation between rupees and gold ; but that the Indian government lias de clared (until further notice) a rate t which rupees can be purchased for gold coin or bullion such rate serving to de termine the maximum limit to which the sterling exchange can rise under present arrangements." LOCAL, SUMMARY The finest bon bon boxes in town al the K. K. K. Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on home-made candies. 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. The latest out Try the marshmallow kjsses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, R. L. Holman, leading undertaker two doors south of court house, Oregon City , A brand new top buggy for sale at a sacrifice. Inquire at Courier-Herald office. Sbank ,& 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 C. E. Stewart, Carus, or E. H. Cooper, Oregon City. For Sale Cheap Good house of seven rooms; 2)4 lots; barn, fruit, etc. At Elyville. See the owner, Adam Haas, who lives on place. Dr. J. Burt Moore is now prepared to answer professional calls. Office tem porally ai 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 & Eastham, 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 uear town. Address M. Ek strand, Oregon City. For Sale 75 acres 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, S and 4, of block 82 and 6, 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. 504, Gold smith street, Lower Albiua, Portland. When you want a good square meal go to the Brunswick restaurant, oppo site suspension bridge, L. liuconich, proprietor. Everything fresh and clea and well cooked ; just like you get at home. This is the only first-class 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 is 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. Si'OTS THE COUUU AND WOKKSOFF THE COLD. ' Laxative Brorao-Quinine Tablets cure a cold iii one day. No Cure no Pay Price 25 cents. !W-tw -m ;h m h-j i mmmm m 4jr xy ImLA Ynn tnjivio incod a!I ! sorts of cough reme-1 ! dies but it does not ! yield; it is too deep! j seated. It may wear J itself out in time, but f it is more liable to produce la grippe, pneumonia or a seri ous throat affection. You need something that will give you strength and build up the body. SCOTT'S EMULSION will do this when everything else fails. There is no doubt about it. It nourishes, strengthens, builds up and makes the body strong and healthy, not only to throw off this hard cough, but to fortify the system against further attacks. If you are run down or emaciated you should certainly take this nourishing food medicine. OC. and tr.no. .11 drure !,. SCOTT & BOWNE, Ch.muu, Ntw York. na m ? kJ3 I i ! To the Public: I desire to announce to the people of Oregon City and Clackamas County- that I have pnrchased the interest of H. L. Price in the firm of Price Bros. Thanking the patrons for past favors, I solicit a continuance of the same. I have enlarged the stock and will keep nothing but up-to-date goods. A few days more of "Dissolution Sale" prices. . Yours to serve, ' j. m. price: Successor to Price Bros. " Fifth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY we 5EL fth St. Grocer Special Values in Canned (Roods s 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 I gives satisfaction to the housewife, Be sure r and order Patent Flour made by the Port- land Flouring Mills at Oregon City and I sold by all grocers. Patronize Home Industry H. Bethke's Meat Market Opposite Huntley's fiFst-Glass fyleats of 11 irds Satistactiou Guaranteed Sivc IirQ a Sail arjd be Treated ?itt Foresight Means Good Sight ' If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the above headline. Lack ol 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 opiican, has charge of our optical department. A. N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler 293 Horrlson Street, PORTLAND, OREGON Fine Angel Wine and You Qold Cakes Everybody else will know, that Joseph Kuerten's Bakery and Confectionery Has the best of everything. All my Bread is like home-made; baked from best and strongest flour and no wind in it. Every day all kinds of Confer, tionery fresh and made out of the best materials. 1 The best P. 0. Box 359. Telephone 394 OREGON CITY, OREGON Cream Puffs I finirpr I Hacaroons Brown & Welch Proprietors op the Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON $ All kinds oTt . I .VHP P....2 Know ) Cakes, Jelly fi Polls AND Fresh Doughnuts Cookies and toffee Loafs