Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, July 19, 1901, Page 4, Image 4

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OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1901
Oregon City Courier-Herald
By A. W. CHENEY
ute. 1 1 iii Oregon City pestofllce as 2nd-class matter
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
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lix monthi 7S-
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ADVERTISING, RATES.
Standing business advert! 4emeutss Per month
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Uinni advertisBmonts: Per Inrh first lnser
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Itcatton fees are paid.
Local noticis: Kive cents per line per week
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PATK'INIZtC HOME INDUSTRY
OREGON CITY, JULY 19, 1901.
Charity creates a multitude of sins.
It in both immoral and unfair lo ue
private property in order to alleviate the
horrible evils that result from the insti
tution of private property, Ex.
Tub St Lou's Post-Dispatch siys sig
n fbantly: "JJjiirly evjiy patient taken
to the ;ity h ispital prostrated by the
beat is a steady drinker. The fact may
well be note 1 by young nun whose hab
its are forming.
AsdrbiV 0'na?ie stys the entire
profit on E iglatid's tra U with China is
not over $3,500,00.) a year, and perti
nmtly asks hor if it would be worth a
great war, costing probably a thousand
millions, to keep it,"
It is not all lomsntlc glamour and
sunshine in Southern California. Near
Laman la a urn hid a poach orchard.
One ye ir ha puk j 1 inl hauled six car
roads of peaches to Lamsnda Station,
handed them over to a commission firm
and nevi r received a dollar for the whole
lot. Now the C lifurnia fruit growers
are cinched not by the commission men,
but by the railroad tyrants.
The following anecdote is sent to the
London Mail by an officer serving in the
Transvaal, where it has gone the rounds
of the camps: "They tell a story of
Botha and Kitchener meeting about the
terms of peace last. week. At the end
Botha Sid I, 'Well, I must be going'
Kitchener replied, 'No hurry j yon
haven't got to catch a train ' 'But that's
j 1st whit I've got to do,' said Botha,
and two days afterward a train was held
up and looted on the Delagoa line, Hot
yery far from the place of meeting."
In the July North American Review,
Harold Cox, an Englishman, points to
the figures f British commerce for the
paat 47 years as conclusive refutation of
the theory that excass of imports spills
ruin. Since 1854 Great Britain's im
ports have exceeded her exports by the
almost inconcaivalile amount of sixteen
and a half billions of dollars. Yet
within the same period Great Britain's
assessed wealth has much more than
doubled, her national debt has been re
duced one-fourth and the con tints of
her working people's saving' banks have
been multiplied nearly five times.
What promise of success do the pro
fessions nffer the aspiring young man?
Prest. Harper, of Rockefeller's Chicago
University, said in an address to a gradu
ating clasB : "You, who are now enter
ing the world, will find that pov
erty will bi tli a a'nnjeat op
ponent to overcome. Yon, who are
entering life as lawyers, need only to
look at the papers today to find that the
average lawyer does not earn his salt.
Those who will become physicians will
find that their only companion for a few
y ars to come will be the wolf at the door ;
whiie those who go forth to teach need
only to witness the struggles of the
school teachers in this city. The school
board 1b beset with bowls and wails for
an Increase of salaries."
The decisions of the supreme court iu
the insular cases are bewildering. The
new possessions are declared to be parti
of the United States for some pu r poses,
not for others. They are dom estio in
aoino senses, nit in ot'uri. T he line is
drawn at the tariff. The trusts win out.
Whether accidentally or "hot, this great
ciurt always in great rases takes the
side of great capital. It d id this in the
Dred Scott case, which, as Justice
Brown states, was oven u'ed by public
sentiment and war, It tobk the side of
capital in the greenback case. So it did
iu the income tax case, and it is now
supporting by a majority of one the
trusts and the tariff. Birmingham Age
ltorald. While the Chautauqua Assembly at
Gladstone Park waa not a financial suc
cess, the program was carried out as ad
vertised and the campers and those tak
ing in the elapses and the lectures were
well satisfied. The baseball ganns
seemed to help out wonderfully by
bringing the oecasional visitor to the'
grounds. The broader the program t he
UCIICI llic VIQIMUg puulfU Will 11KH nllll pal "
ronize it. Those who are not interested
in the Chautauqua idea will not attend
unless they are entertained, and the
management should cater t" them if it
wants their patronage. The election of
H.E. Cross, who has been connectrd
with the association since the beginning,
as secretary, wae a good move and with
a broader program the aesembly will no
doubt be a success in the tuture.
The citizens of Oregon City and Clack
amas county should do all possible to
help along the Portland gentlemen who
are pushing the Lewis & Clark Centen
nial for 1905. This p ogressive spirit
and desire to let the East know that
there is such a region as Oregon is a step
in the right direction and although a
big undertaking it will be of unto.ld bene
fit to Oregon. TheenterUinraent of the
editors in Poitland two years ago has
helped Oregon along wonderfully, and
this world's fair will rap the climax and
bring Oregon and the Nurthwett coast
before the eyes of the world in a light
that can not but benefit every resi
dent of this section. Feople is what w
want and the best w ay is they come and
see for themselves. By judicious adver
tising of this fair we should fill up all
the vacant land on the Pacific coast in
the next few years. ,
"Mjtheb Jones" says: "Some years
ago the silk manufacturers hap
pened to noticj that the daughters of
the Pennsylvania coal miners had noth
ing to do. 'Such laziness must not be
be permitted,' said they, 'and anyway
we feel it our duty to provide a means
for the m iner's family to have a larger
income by g iving his daughters work. '
Silk factories were established in ' the
coal mining district to take advantage of
the cheap girl labor . The natural eco
nomic result followed. The waes ' re
quired by the miner to Bupport his fam
ily were reduced by the amount of the
wages his daughters could earn throw
ing Bilk. His wages fell just that much,
and the result is that the miner and his
family have exactly the same income
today as before his daughter's 1 abor was
given to the eilk factory. It is simply
a duplication of the story of the wages
of the New Erwland cotton mill opera
tives. At first the mm alone wrked,
and his waes were enough to support
the family, but as soon as bis wife and
children went into the mill to help him
increase hia income, his own wages fell
off just that much, bo that today his
wages alone are inefficient to support
the family, and his wife and childien
must work "
BRUTAL ENGLAND.
Iu the Pennsylvania Journal of Octo
ber 18, 1775. Thomas Paine wrote:
"When I reflect on the horrid cruelties
excerised by Britain in the East Indies
how thousands perished by artificial
famine how religion and every manly
principleof honor and honesty were sac
rificed to luxury and pride when I read
of the wretched natives being blown
away, for no other crime than because,
sickened with the miserable Beetle, they
refused to fight when I reflect on these
and a thousand instances of similar
barbarity, I firmly believe that the Al
mighty, in compassion to mankind, will
curtail the power of Britain."
More than a century of time does not
suem to have humanized John Bull
Says the N. Y. World: "Of the Boer
prisoners expatriated to Bermuda in de
fiance of the laws of war and of human
ity, two were so old and feeble that they
had to crawl ashore and several were
children of eight and ten 1 Add to this
the admitted horrors of those pest
camps where the British are permitting
disease and exposure to ravage the
women and the children of the foea they
cannot conquer in such war as manly
men wage, and you get some measuie
of the despicable and the abhoirent
phases of Britain's great crime and
shame."
APPEAL TO WOMAN.
The socialift program is so simple so
highly moral and so supremely neces
sary Now a few people control all the
capital of the country. Now a few rich
persons gain a personal benefit from our
social power then, the whole people
would gain the benefits snd advance
ment of our national economic and po
liticul power. Now social injustice
reigns, then equity would be established.
Now our national life perishes, then it
would be awakened to new life .
I want to aisk you women of these
United States one question. Is there so
base a mother in this country who
would choose a slave's life for her child'
renT Is there a mother in her high-born
piivilege so untrue in all this land that
she will not aid in the emancipation of
the working class? Is there a mother
who so mocks and blasphemes the Most
High God that she will not heed the
universal call to save mankind from
crimes bo monstrous as these times do
put upon the race? I think not. I know
the mother's heart; I know the
mother's agony over the dread future of
her children ; I know the bounty of the
universal mother love. Ask and ye shall
receive, seek anil ye - shall find. Do not
think the finding shall come in the un-
seen future. It Is in the everlasting now
that the stream of the noble enthusiasm,
the privilege of the lofty work, the at-j
tainment to impersonal endeavor is its ,
owu reward. Martha Moore-Avery, of
Boston.
An Exposition Magazine.
The July number qf "The National
Magazine," printed on the Pan Ameri
can Exposition grounds, is superb in
contents and appearance, and is filled
from cover to cover with beautiful illus
trations. The opening article, "Affairs
at Washington," by Joe Mitchell Chap
pie, gives a brilliant resume of the
month's doings at the national capital,
and seveial interesting and profusely il
lustrated articles are devoted to various 1
phases of the exposition. In "American '
Life The Life of Action" is contrasted
European college graduate. "The
Texas Oil Fields" tells of the recent ex
ploitation of the oil regions of the Lone
Star State; "The Rise of Thomas W.
Lawson" treats biogia phically of the
career of a picturesque figure in New
England financial circles; and "The Fu
ture of Cut-Over Timber Lands" shows
present day possibilities for hon e build
ing in the middle west.
A WORTHY SUCCESSOR.
"Something New Under the Sun."
All Doctors have tried to cure CA
TARRH by the use of powders, acid
cases inhalers tind drugs in paste form.
The powders dry up the mucuous mem
branes caus'ng them to crack open and
bleed, The powerful acids used in the
inhalers have entirely eaten away the
same membranes that their makers have
aimed to cure, while pastes and oint
ments cannot reach the disease. An old
and experienced practitioner who has
for many years made a close study mid
specialty of the treatment of CATARRH,
has at taut perfected a Treatment which
when faithfully used, not. only relieves
at once, but permanently cures CA
TARUH, by removing the cause, stop
ping the discharges, and curing all in
flammation. It is the only remedy
known to ecience that-actually reaches
the afflicted parts This wonderful
remedy is known as "SNUFFLES the
GUARANTEED CATARRH CURE"
and is sold at the extremely low price of
One Dollar, each package containing'in
ternal and external medicine sufficient
for a full month's treatment and every
thing necessary to its perfect use.
"SNUFFLES'" is the only perfect CA
TARRH CURE ever made and is now
recognized as the only safe and positive
cure for that annoying and disgusting
disease. It cures all inflammation
quickly and permanently and is nlso
wonderfully quick to relieve HAT FE
VER or COLD in the HEAD.
CATARRH when neglected often
leads to- CONSUMPTION "SNUF
FLES" will save you if you use it at
once. It is no ordinary remedy, but a
complete treatment which is positively
guaranteed to Cure CATARRH in any
form or stage if used . according to the
directions which accompany each pack
age. Don't delay but send for it at once
and writn full particulars as to your con
dition, and y o will receive special a I
vice Irom the discoverer of this wonder
ful remedy regarding - your case without
cost to vou bevond the regular price of
"SNUFFLES" the GUARANTEED
CATARRH CURE."
Sent prepaid to any address in the
United States or Canada on receipt of
One Dollar. Address Dent. E 594, ED
WIN B. GILE8 A COMPANY. 2330 and
2332 Market Street, Philadelphia.
MARKET REPORTS.
. PORTLAND.
' (Corrected on Thursday.)
Flour Best 2.903.40; graham
$2.60.
Wheat Walla Walla 6061c: valley
58c 59; blueBtem 61c.
Oats White, 1 85 per cental ; tray,
1 29 1 Z2 per cental.
Barley Feed $17; brewing f 17 tier t.
Millstuffs Bran $17; middlings 21J$ ;
shorts $20; chop )16.
Hay Timothy $1214; clover, 79;
Oregon wild $7.
Butter Fanoy creamery 3) and 45c ;
store, 20 and 25.
Egga 17 1-2 and 18 cents per doz.
Poultry Mixed chickens $3.50(34.00:
hens $4.505; springs $34 60; geese.
$(i7; ducks $56(; live turkeys HQ
14c; dreBsed, 14$16c.
Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers
and ewes, sheared, $4 50; dressed, 6
nd 7 cents per ponnd.
Hogs choice heavy, $5 50 and $5 75;
light, $5 ; dressed, 6 1-2 and 7 cents per
pound.
Veal Large, 81-Sf and 7 cents per
pound.
Beef Gross, top steers, $4 50 and $5
dressed beef, 7 and 8 cents per pound.
Ohese Full cream 13)0 per pound
Young America 14a.
Potatoes 60 and 65 cents per busnel.
Vegetables Beeta $1; turnips 75c
per sack ; garlic 7c per lb ; cabbage $1.25
($1.60 per 100 pounds; cauliflower 75c
per dozen ; parsnips 85c per tack ; celery
8085c per dozen: asparagus 78c;
peas S4e per pound.
Dried fruit Apples evaporated 56 ;
sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; pear
sun and evaporated 89c ; pitless plums
78c; Italian prunes 57c; extra
silver choice 607.
OREGON CITY.
Corrected on Thursday.
Wheat, wagon, 68.
Oats, 1 25 per cental.
Potatoes, $1 and H 20 per sack.
Eggs 18 cents pet dor.en.
Butter, country, 20 to 25c per roll;
creamery, 40c.
Dried apples, 6 to 6c per pound.
Dried prunes Italians, 5c; petite
and German, 4c.
DOCTORS
say "Consumption can be cured."
Naturealonewon'tdolt. Itneeds
help. Doctors say
"Scott's Emulsion
is the best help." But you must
continue its use eveu in hot
weather.
If you hart not tried it, send for free sample.
SCOTT A BOWNB, Chemists,
409415 l"earl Street, hew York.
50c. snd $1.00; all druggist
FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION
"I am so thankful for what Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription has
done for me," writes Mrs. John T.
Smith, of Slocan, B. C, Box 50.
"It cured me of a disease which
was taking away all my strength,
helped me through the long months
before baby came and I have a big
strong baby girl, the most healthy
and happy of all my three."
HAKES THE DIFFERENCE.
LOCAL SUMMARY
The finest bon bon boxes in town at
tl.p K.K K
Shaving only 10 cita at the first
class shop of P. G. Shark.
' The latest in chocolate of all kinds at
the Kozy Kandy Kitchen,
New goods a', bottom price at Klem
en's Electric Cash Grocery.
Three good milk cows for sale Apply
to Thomas Davis, Beaver Creek,
A few watches for sale cheap at
Younger'a. Watches cleaned, $1.
The latest ont Try the marshmallow
kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen.
Ladies, if your sewing machine is out
of order, take it to Johnson & Lamb's.
A slightly used parlor organ for sale
by W, L. Block, the liomefurnlBher.
Shank & Bissell carry the roost com
plete line of undertakers' supplier in
Oregon City.
If your back is broke the place to get
it fixed is at Johnson & Lamb's bicycle
repair shop.
: For Sale Four milch cows and one
heifer. Enquire of Mr. Harriaberger,
Mount Pleasant,
Lost One Lewellen Belter bitch. Re
ward for return to Western Union Tele
graph office, Oregon City,
$20 to 9100 to loan on cha tel or per
sonal security,
Dl.MICK & Eaotham, Agts.
Will keen mv Durham hull. McKin
ley on ny West Site farm nntil further
not ce. Service, $1. 1-w Ford. -
The latest ai d best braads of cigars
and tobaccos are kept by r. G. Shark
Smokers' goods and confectionery, also
Moore's Seventh Street Pharmacy oa
the hilk New store, new goods, new
prices, Dt J. Bdrtt Moaii, Proprie
tor. I and titles examined, abstracts made
and money llutned at lowest rates.
Dimick .St Easthani, Lawyers, Oregon
City.
Lumber Leave orders at this office
for first-claes lumber of all kinds, or ad
dress W. F. Harris. Beaver Creek,
Oregon..
The Weekly Oregonian gives all the
national news and the Courier-herald
gives alL local and county news. Both
one year for Two Dollars.
The P. C & O. T. line will until
further notice make a 25 cent round trip
ate trom Uaneman and Uregnn Uity to
Portland on Sundays, wfth cara every
30 minutes.
George Anderson, expett piano tuner
and tone regulator, with Eiler piano
house,. Portland, Ore. Leave orders
witli BitrinaiBter oc Andnesen, or com
municate direct with houe.
When you visit Portland don't fail to
get your meals at the Royal Restauraut,
First and Madison. They serve an ex
cellent meal at a moderate price; a good
square meal, 15a. .
When you want a good square meal
go to the Brunswick restaurant, oppo
site (suspension unugw, u. xvucuiucu,
proprietor. Everything fresh and clean
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 ewhere.
The greatest Bkin specialist in America
originated the formula for Banner Salve.
tor all Bkin diseases, a. I cuts or Bores,
and for piies, it's the most healing medi
cine. Beware of substitutes. Oharman
A Co.
For Sale 240 acres of land 12 miles
Oregon City; 40 cleared house, barn
orchard ; price, $2350 : $500 down, bal
ance on easy terms. Have yourovn
time to pay balance. Apply to J. W
McAntlty, office on Main street, oppo
site Albright a meat market.
Dr. George Ewing, a practicing physi
cian of Smith's Grove, Ky., for over
30 years, writes his personal experience
wiih Foley'a Kidney Cure : "For years I
have been greatly bothered with kidney
trouble and enlarged prostrate gland.
I used everything known to the profes
sion without relief, until I was induced
to use Foley's Kidney Cure. After using
three bottles I was entirely relieved and
cured. I prescribe it now daily in my
practice and heartily recommend its use
to all physicians for such troubles, for I
can honestly state I have prescribed it
in bundaeds of cases with perfect suc
cess. " CharmauACo.
I YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT
I " ' '
But the Best Stock of First-Class ,
Goods to be .Found .at Bottom
f Prices in Oregon City is at
I 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
and order Patent Flour made by the Port
land Flouring Mills at Oregon City "and
sold by all grocers. . Patronize
Home Industry
CITY MARKET
opposite Huntley's
first-Glass lyleats of 11 LJigds
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Give y irg a Sail aQd be Treated ?ig?jt
Foresight Means Good Sight
If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the
above headline. Lack oi foresight in attending to the
eyes in time means in the end foot 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 Horrlson Street, PORTLAND, OREQON
For all kinds of Building Material
CALL AT THE
Oregon City Planing Mill
F. S. BAKER, PROP.
SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC.
BECKER'S
220 FIRST STREET,
Great Bargains
Magnificent Design
Also a Consignment of very Cheap Hats
Hair Switches at Very Low Figures
R. L. HOLM AN, Undertaker
Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court House.
Are Bought and
Appreciated by
THE BEST PEOPLE
-. -
of Oregon City
A.IRobcrtson
The 7th St. Grocer
.
Brown & Welch
Proprietors or the
Seventh Street
Meat Market
A. O. U. W. Building
OREGON CITY, OREGON -
MILLINERY5
PORTLAND, OREGON
in Trimmed Hats I
We carry the largest stockof Caskets,
Coffins, Robes and Lining in Clackamas
county.
We are the only undertakers in the
county owning a hearse, which we fur
nish for les3 than can ba had elsewhere.
V'e are under small expense and do
not ask large profits.
' Calls promptly attended night or day.