Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, March 22, 1901, Page 4, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY, MARCH 22,1901.
(Oregon City Courier-Herald
By A. W. CHENEY
24iiWiMm Oltypeitoffloess 2nd-clMimattr
-
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IUDI
ntTb date opposite your address on the
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MI this notice Is marked jour subscription Uus.
CLUBBING RATSS.
With W1y Oregonln; 2
' Tri-Weelilv N. Y. World j i?
National Watchman i ij
' " Anpeal to Reason '
Weekly Biamluar "' i ?k
Bryan's Commoner 1 lu
jlDVMBTISim BATES.
Mandlntf business advertisements: Permonth
nfol nal cards.tt i) pel year : 1 to 10 Inches
roflnoM2 incl.es for $rj20 Inches (column)
30 inches, Sl'i.
Transient advertisements: Per weck-1 Inch
,,-, 2 inches 75c, 8 inches 1, 4 Inches 11.46, 6
t;--tt'ne 11.60, 10 Inches 82.50, 20 Inches la .
a I ad vertieements: Per inru-flrs . inser
U?l, each additional Insertion ,to. Affll.vits
-of luhlioation will not be fiirnW.ed until pub-
!iS5fft cents per line per week
i'-.s ot month 20c, '
I
for naught that the "Great Pyramid" ia
the center of the world's land surfa ;e,
and that in it are expressed the science
and the lofty monotheism of the half
mythical people who built it?
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY.
OREGON OITY, MAR. 22, 1901.
Cmzmi George Francis Train de
nounces tht'canteen civilization" in
troduced Into the Philippines by Uncle
S iiii with 500 saloons.
-
Av Olrio minister when called to ac-
,'Dunt by bis-church for kissing a female
-tjemberof bU congregation explained
"Do not blame me; blame God, for
"roraliim I received divine revelation
(,o do as I have done." An Oregon
.niuister would have the nerve to admit
-'(hat be kissed the dear s'lBter because he
1 1 iked such sweet meats.
All the resources that can be imagined
by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and
his distressed collagues will not half fill
in the prospective deficiency, and there
fore we must expect further large addi
tions to the nation's debt, how large it
is useless now to attempt to estime. It
might be 50,000,000 an J p ssibly enough
half as much again. The prospect is
declded'y other than brilliant, however
viewed; and we cannot help wondering
what the war party expects the nation
to gain by all thjs outpouring of its
means and mortgaging of its future.
Where does the profit come in in the
balance-? heet? We see none, not a far
thing, but only a steady disappearance
of our wealth, of our power over mar
kets and over communities that were
our customers and good ones. But we
cannot expect the government and its
apporters to acknowledge this. They
ive and move in a world of illusions.
nd will do so to the end. To help In
sustaining fiction as supreme lord of and
over our destinies, we may even have no
honest budge tat all, but only a budget
f dribbles and supplements like that of
the current year; for is not the war over
orjuetabout; DeWet sick of it, and dy
ing to surrendt-r; Botha beaten, and the
mines about to re-open? All the war
journals say so, anu tney nave been so
conspicuously right in the past that, we
must perforce believe them. Investor's
Review, London, England.
vanced 1 25, and if this policy succeeds,
will treble in value. But reduced duties
on tropical products will close up every
cigar factory and every leaf tobacco
farm in the United States. It will an
nihilate the domestic beet sugar indus
try that otherwise promises millions to
our domestic farmers. It will encour
age disastrous competition with the
fruit, vegetable and trucking indu stries
of a continent. Rice and even cotton
will be affected.
Our deliberate judgment is that no
greater danger ever confronted domestic
agriculture and labor than the policy
toward the tropics now undappily in
augurated. The American farmer will
not submit to it. -Orange Judd Farmer,
Chicago.
"Ncx Vomica," in Enterprise of last
week jumps onto George Ogle, and his
article in the Courier-Herald, because
he ctitieized the democrats who voted
lor Mitchell. Why did he not sign hie
name. as Mr Onle did? That orjran edi
tonally is patting theMilchell democrats
on the back with hope of still further
disruptfngVthe democratic party, the
;populiet party having been formally dis
sbanded by its leaders the day before
.Mitchell waB elected,
TPkr disturbance in our commercial
"relatiuns with RtiBsia that has been
caused by a cargo of Russian sugar
.uiakee that particular foreign product
nan object of more than passing import
'nce to the luaerican people. In 'Rub
'-eia every sugar manufacturer is re
i quired by law to export a fixed amount
of liia, product on which he receives
i rebate of one ruble 85 kopeks per pood
xciee tax. There are 280 manufacturers
of sugar in Russia, but only 20 of them
.are refiners ; They 'supply the home
'market, the refined article being too
lhard.for other countries, it being the
Jiabit Of the peasant class, the largest
-consumers of sugar, to hold a lump in
their mouths while drinking tea. Rus
sian sugar is said to be 09 per cent pure,
rand 'for that reaBon the best in the
vworld. Russian sugar stocks pay from
lib per cent to 50 pur cent dividends an
mually. '
AS IT WILL BE.
"After a while, governments will be
operated, congress and legislatures will
be maintained and continued for the ex
press purpose of legislating for and set
tling the controversies of the mighty fi
nancial, commercial, and industrial cor
porations. Individuals, save where
uiey appear in me criminal court as
prisoners and defendants, will cease to
be considered. A man will then be des
ignated merely according to his rela
tions as an employe of some vast cor
poration and will he known only by
number, his name and social condition
being el no consequence to any other
than himself and others like him
uttierwise lie will only be a mere atom
or item in a vast system.
"lhenitmay be imagined, through
the buying up subsidizing or establish
ing oi newspapers to advocate ttie In
terests of the tremendous corporations
an me independent or opposition press
will be crushed out, and the human
atoms in the vast system will have
voice iu declaring their views and wishes
and there will be no real public opinion
wlnle the elections will be manipulate
in the interests of the monopolies,
After that, what? N. O. Picaynne.
It Is not necessary that one's memory
Should go back more than filteen years
tin order to discover how ell'ectnally
JMotgan has changed the character of
rt he United States. We are not the
usatne, people we were then ; our ideals
lare'difleront; our industrial methods
(.have been entirely transformed;
our political tendencies have all been
changed ; our dependence on fixed eeo
.tioniic principles has generally come to
b ftMcognized as an absurdity ; the old
61 afmctionB of society have been aban
Kloned; liberty, equality and fraternity
tare uo longer words to stir the blood;
'the personal equation is no longer con
littered an essential factor in life; the
relation between man and man is no
Hunger defined in terms of justice and
ihuicttii sympathy, but in such terms as
'"capital" and '"labor" and "the survival
of the fittest," the latter being construed
strictly in the sense in which it is Used
in connection with the struggle for exist
ence among the brute creation. United
.States Investor.
euvluisiastu predict a marvelous
future for Africa. Again it will become
"the at of Empire, as it once was. but
at Uitaturn of the great wheel of fortune,
under-the aegis ot the isntisn crown.
Onu sten toward the goal to which the
ages have trended since the sceptre de
parted from the land of Egypt, will be
the building of the I ape-to-Lam rail
troad. A gigantic revolution is about to
take-place in the agricultural produc
tions of the Nile country ; it will increase
iv leans and bounds. Not alone has
J - -a
the great dam across the liver added a
vast aiea to the tillable soil, but above
it, in the Soudan, an immense swamp
it ironic veirctation unlerlaid by the
Slackest of soils which has for untol
ze been enriched by the teeming car-
raaHf of reptiles and varmints, hnl
been canalired by English gunboats and
drained. The Nile country seems des
- tined to supplant the United States as
.he granary of the British isles. May
.ft not become a second Albion ? Is it
LOCAL SUMMARY
1
lhe Cause of the Toilers.
of A. Robertson, 7th
boxes in town at
THE PAPER MONEY.
JSotwitiihtandino the large produc
tion of gold an unlimited number
banks are authorized under the act
March last to issue paper currency; and
they are constantly increasing the vol
ume of this form of currency. On what
principle is such currency regulated?
It must be admitted that it is regulated
on no principle whatever but the in
terests of those who issue it. If banks
an make a profit by issuing such cur-
retcy, they will issueit. Think of regu
lating the currency of a people, upon
which the prices of all products, the
wages of labor and the relations of debtor
and creditor depend, upon such a prin
ciple 1 The power to control a part of a
volume of money is virtually the power
to control tho whole. To put this power
uto the hands of individuals or corpora-
ions is to create a power outside of the
government almost greater than the
power of the government itself. It will
result in a money trust that will in time
swallow up all other trusts and dictate
the conditions under which production.
trade and commerce may he carried on.
A few years ago greenbackers were
charged with being inflationists. But
that charue can no longer lie against
them. It is not the greenbacker that
ia the intlationiet now it is the "greeu-banker."
The currency question increases In
importance and is destined at no dis
tant day to become an absorbing issue
with us Gen. A. J. Warner.
DANG tiR AHEAD
Tub United States started in to free
Cuba. The job was done with "nnatnofw
and dispatch." The Cubans are Per-
cting a government of their own. onlv
to have the United States Hs.nm a
a written and perhaps ollensive protect
orate or dictatorship over In. As to the
immorality of this action by the United
piates, niter its lolty protestations, this
is not the place to speak, further than to
say that congregss has thus altered the
whole policy of this government without
debate.
This sudden action is the first step to
ward free trade with Cuba. The next
step will be an attempted reduction (at
tho next session of congress in Decern
bor) of 25 to 50 ptr cent in duties on
juuan prouucts imported into the
United States. The third and last step
will be annexation, forcible if need be.
The second step may be taken within
a twelve mouth. In anticipation thereof
sugar trust shares have already ad-
Seeing all other callings organize for
self interest, why don't the tillers of the
soil learn wisdom and organize for their
nterestf Suiely, the farmers who sup
port the world are justly entitled to the
first consideration as regards full pay
for their arduous labor. Yet, we find,
while other callings demand a certain
price for their goods, the farmers ask
the dealers what they will pay for their
produce. If the farmers were properly
orgsnized, they would be enabled to set
a fair price upon their productions, as
do oilier callings on tneir goous, ana as
the farmer's goods support lite, ttie
farmer's demand for a fair piice could
not be overcome by any combination of
designing men.
It seems to be the aim oi the aristo
cracy of wealth to get every advantage
possible ot ttie working classes, tviio
nave earned every dollar of their wealth.
It is evident that low prices tort pro
ductions of all kinds is just what non-
workers want, because then a small
sum ot their dear money will buy valu
able property. Herein is the cause of
the monstrous deceptions tnat are Deing
perpetrated upon the honest toilers of
our beloved country, by telling the hon
est voters that the dear high priced
irold dollars are best for the toil- rs, when
cheap money has always been by far
beet for the working class. By cneap
money we mean good legal tender
money, it may oe gold, so pientnui mat
it becomes cheap compared with other
things. What makes legal money
dear is its scarcity. Legal tender paper
money, if we had no other money in cir
culation and no greater volume of it
than we have of gold, would be just as
dear money tB the gold is now. Every
body ought to know that the govern
ment stamp is what makes legal tender
money. That paper stamped like gold,
would transact business the same hi
gold. Well informed persons know that
the history ot former times, has aemon
strated again and again that good times
for the laboring classes have always
been ushered in by a large volume of
money, and contra, that hard times have
always prevailed when money became
scarce.
Simple reason or common sense tells
us that a plentiful supply of currency
would be a great blessing to industry.
Then what can we think of the law
makers who sit unmoved while the
working classes are suffering for the
want of profitable employment? It is
true, at the present time, that labor is
in better demand than it was a few
years ago, because the government is
putting large sums of money in circula
tion on account of the war. Good times
don't depend on who is president, but
entirely upon a large circulation of legal
tender money. Neither do good times
depend upon gold and silver money.
'J he most prosperous times our people
ever saw, were during aud for several
years after the civil war, when neither
goldorBilver was seen in circulation.
The wriier remembers too well when
the change from prosperity to adversity
came to the producers; it was when tlm
legal tender greenbacks were put in o
interest beariim b mds, and the legal
money was burned up. Although the
scheming aristocracy of that day pur
posely depreciated the greenbacks by
putting the exception clause on their
back; business failures were seldom
heard of. Mark the coi.trast. The
nearer the approach to the specie re
demption system the greater was the
number of failures.
The rich aristocracy has always been
contriving some echeme whereby it
could fleece the producing classes.
Those parasites who live off the pro
ducers, flourish when they can mislead
the workers most. At one time they
tell the workers that hard times ate
caused by low tariff; at another tune,
high tariff is to blame; again over-production,
or general crop failure, causes
the unpleasantness. The toilers are be
ing told anything and most everything,
but ttie true and only cause of low pi ices
and hard times that of a great lack of
leual money in circulation. The creditor
class tell the people that the banks are
full of money. If they nre full why do
they charge ten per cent for a loan? It
the circulating medium was multiplied
by four and the interest was cut down to
S per cent, we would ceas hearing the
cry of overproduction, for the people's
prosperity would so enlarge their buying
capacity that good prices would every
where prevail, as every working man
would have pleuty of money to spend.
Oh I That toilers would wake up from
their hypnotic state in which they have
been placed by the hoodwinking of de
signing men.
Sanps Brownkll,
Salem, Or.
Money to loan at lowest rates. C. H.
Dye.
School report cards for sale at this office
Get your Seeds
Street Grocer.
The finest bon bon
the K. K. K.
Kuerten's Boston bread, five cents a
loaf ; all eastern flour.
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 18, Weinhard building.
A few watches for sale cheap at
Younger's. Watches cleaned, $1.
The latest out Try the inarshmallow
kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen.
When in tow n get your dinner at the
Red Front ;touse. Meals 15 cent.
First-class board at reasonable rates
can be obtained at the Red Front House.
A brand new top b ii;gy for sale at a
sacrifice. Inquire at Courier-Herald
office.
Go to Cheney's and get small photos ;
retouched and finished on platinum ; lb'
for 35c.
at Cheney's art
No extra charge
First class stamps
gallerv, 16 for 2oc.
for two heads.
If you want good wood from large yel
low fir timber, order of C. E. Stewart,
Carus, or E. H. Cooper, Oregon City.
The latest ai d best brands of cigars
and tobaccos are kept by f. G. Shark
Smokers' goods and confectionery, also
Several tracts of timber land for sale
cheap in large and small bodies O. A.
Cheney, Oregon City, opposite Hunt
ley's. Two nice houses to rent and one not
quite so nice. Rents, d.5l), $7 and f 10
per montti. U. A. Cheney, opposite
Huntleys.
For Sale Cheat) Good house of seven
rooms; Vi lots; barn, fruit, eic. At
Elyville. See the owner, Adam Haas,
who lives on place.
To Loan on Farm Property $500,
$1000, $1500, at 7 per cent, one, two or
three years. Dimick & Kasthara, law
yera, Oregon Uity Oregon.
Seeds! Red clover, alsike, timothy,
orchard grass, blue grass, garden seeds,
nil kinds, bulk or in pm knifeg.
A. KOP.ERTSON ,
For Sale 75 acres of timber land
mile from Oregon City. Price J7o per
acre. Will take partly in exchange
some desirable fannina land. Address
Wm, Beaid, Ely, Or.
When you visit Portland don't fail to
get your meals at the Hoyal Kesiauraui,
First and Madison. Ihey serve an ex
cellent meal at a moderate price; a good
square meal, with pudding and pie, 15c
Stock for sale in the American Mines
Development Company of Minneapolis
Minn., by O. A. Cheney, Oregon City,
When you want a good square meal
goto the trunsAlck rertaurant, oppo
site suspension bridge, L. Ruconich
proprietor. Everything fresh and clean
and well cooked; jusi like you get a
home. This is tlin only brst-clnss res
taurant in Oregon t it v and where you
can get a good meal for the price of
poor one el where.
: YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT
I Bat the Best Stock of First-Class
Goods to be Found at Bottom
t , Prices in Oregon City is at
HARRIS' GROCERY
Rheumatism
Itoanl of Commissioners.
(Continued from page 1.) .
In the matter of mileage and per diem
oftbecountv commissioners. It is or
dered by the" board that the per diem
and mileage of the commissioners oe ai
lmvd n a follows :
.1 K Mortin. 5 davs. 20 miles $17 0;)
.Tnlm I.wa en "10 ttavs. 3 miles. . mi
T. B. Klllin, 7 days, 20 miles. . . . 25
Tfc w&a ordered that the matter of the
Werlein road be laid over for the ttrm
This space reserved for
J. M. PRICE, Clothier
Successor' to Price Bros.
Fifth and Main Sts. . OREGON CITY
l.4(4MIllSMt4A
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
Proprietors of the
Seventh Street
Meat Market
A
ORE
O.
u. w.-
CITY,
Building
OREGON
Lenten Season begins Feb. 20th and ends April 6th.
FISH, FISH, FISH, FISH.
Salt Fisb, Smoked Fish, Dried Fish
DEAD FISH AT LIVE PRICES
Codfish from New Lngland
Codfish from Alaska
Salmon from Columbia River
Salmon from Alaska
Salmon Bellies
Mackerel from Norway
Mackerel from New England
Herring from Alaska
Spiced Anchovies from Norway
Bloaters "Cromarty" Smoked
Nobody knows all about it:
and nothine. now known, will
always cure it.
Doctors try Scott's Emul-
sion or L.oa L.iver uii. wnen
they think it is caused by im
perfect digestion of food.
You can do the same.
It may or may not be caused
by the' failure of stomach and
bowels to do their work. If
it is, you will cure it; if not,
vou will do no harm.
The wav, to cure a disease
is to stop its cause, and help
the body get back to its habit
of health.
When Scott's Emulsion of
Cod Liver Oil docs that, it
cures; when it don't, it don't
It never dcvs harm
, Sardines, Findon Haddocks, Soused Mackerel, Etc., in tins
Large Assortment to select from.. Prices right.
A. ROBERTSON, The 7th Street Grocer
H. Bcthke's Meat Market
Opposite Huntley's
first-Glass tyleats of $11 ids
Satistaction Guaranteed
Sive a Call arjd be Treated ?itjt
A Horrible Outbreak
"Of large sores on my little daughter's
head developed into a case of scaldhead"
writes 0. 1). Isbill of Morganton, Tenn.,
but Bucklen's Arnica Salve completely
cured her. It's a guaranteed cure for
Eciema, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pimples,
Sores, Ulcers and Piles. Only oo at
Geo. A. Harding's.
1 ' 5C
me gentune naa
this picture on it, take
no other.
If you have not
tried it, send for free
sample, its agreeable
taste will surprise
you.
SCOTT &BOWNK,
Chemists,
dooTearl St., X. Y.
aud $i,oo ; all druggists.
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. Phillipa,
an expert graduate oculist and optican, has charge of our
optical department.
A. N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler
393 norrlson Street. PORTLAND, OREGON
Fine Angel
Wine and
Gold Cakes
You Know
AND
t All kinds of
Layer, Fruit
Cakes, Jelly
(( KOHS
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 Confectionery fresh and
made out of the best materials.
The best
Cream Puffs
Ladvfineers
S flacaroons
5
P. 0. Box 359. Telephone 394
OREGON CITY. OREGON
Fresh
Doughnuts
Cookies and
Coffee Loafs