4 OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY i iSiit.-. t- lln Oregon City pustoluccm 2nil-cluia matter SUBSCRIPTION KATES. 'raid 'i-a gdrnce, per year .. 1 00 mouths 75 TflL'arcemonths'lrlal 25 W"The date opposite your address on the yaiver denotes Die timeto which you have paid. tf tljJs uutiooin marked your subscription 1b due. (CLUBBING RATES. Wfilh Weekly Orcgonlati 12 00 iYI-Wuekly N. Y. World J 85 ' Natiniiul Watchman 175 ' 1 Anwa! to Kasun I 6"J Weekly Giaminor 2 25 ' " Ilryau'a Commoner i 75 ' PIT77.S7A'U RATES. Standing Imsiness adrurtlteineuls: Per month r jrf8io.ialr4Ml 11) year): 1 to 10 inches f; 50o per inch, 12 inches (or $5, 20 inches (eolumnl 5 tit, 30 inches, $12. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 Inch sMo, t Inches lie, 8 Inches $1,4 Inches 5 ( inches SIM, 10 inches -!.J0, a) Indies & Lck vl advertUeinents: Per in. h first inRer- on i, each additional Insertion -flo. AlHlavitH if pu'olicatiou will not be turniI.ecl until pub ",'iicatiun lees are paid. Local nutlets; Five cents pr line per week I 3er month 20c, P ITB JNIZE IIOIilK IJKDUSTR OREGON CITY, JULY 20, 1901. t i Is the, latest edition of Do Moitillet's """OriKin ami Antiquity of nan" ueologi ll evidence i.i educed to prove that : 238,000 years have elapsed Bince man (first appeuel upn t in earth, O: this, " 78,003 years belong ti the preglauial epicli, lO'J.OJ) yeiM to the glacial, 41, ' 000 yeart to the internal between the glacial epoch and the protohistoric anil ..Neolithic, 10,000 years to the last-named pochs, and 00)0 years to the time -elapsed since the beginning of the his toric period in Egypt. Time was when there was an overplus especially in the technical trades and .professions, of the supply of qualified young men; but to-day conditions are .'intirely reversed. Clear pioof of this was shown at the recent annual com mnenceuieiit exercises of the Stevens In stitute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J., when, out of 40 graduates, only a dozen were present to receive their diplomas. This unprecedented condition of tilings was explained by President Morton i,n the ground that the demand for gradu ates to till bu.-inefS positions this year iial been the most urgent in the history of the iiintiUite, and that most of the Absentees had been induced to leave the institute a week or more before com- jrieneement, in order that they migh sbegiu their professional duties at once, President JMorton further stated that the whole of the 40 graduates could ha eeured positions at once if they had so desired. Twenty junk years ago, when the -monopolies and combines were but pul ing babes, Wendell Phillips said in a peech : "I hail the labor movement lor two reasons, and one is mat it is my on'y hope for democracy. At the time of the anti-slavery agitation I was not aure whether we would come out of the struggle with one republic or two, but republics I knew we should still be I am not so comment, uuleeu, that we li all come out of this storm as a repub lic unless the labor movement succeeds. "Take a power like the Pennsylvania Central Railroad ami the New York -Central Railroad, and there is no legis lature that can exist in its tight. As well expect a green vino to fl urish in a dark cellar as to expect honesty to exist under the shadow of those upas trees. Unless there is a power in your move ment, industrially and politically, the laBt knell of democratic liberty in this Union is struck ; for a.8 1 said, there is no power in the ttata to resist such a giant as the Pennsylvania, road. We ..have 38 one horse legislatures in this wunntry, and we have got a man like Tom Scott, with three hundred and fifty million dollars in his hand, and if he walks through th. states they have no jiower. Why, he teed not movent all. Ie smokes as Grant does; a puff of the wa' to f moke out of bis mouth upsets -the legislature." What would Wendell Thillips say now? Tun Vedieal World of Philadelphia, .is'iied a circular soliciting advertising, ;from which the following extract is made: "It is unfortunate that business lias to be so much disturbed every four -, ems by a piesidential election. After mil it is only a contest overmen. The eal issues are frequently hidden; they - ire always overshadowed, by the men who are candidates and false issues are frequently "trunipt up" for political Viii poses. If we had the Swiss system f voting for measures as well as for men, our campaigns would be more educa tional, less disturbing, and more definite iu results. For example, on the same ballot bearius the names of the candi dates, questions could be submitted for .direct vote, as follows : iShnll the Philippines be treated the ame an Cuba? Yes. No. Shall tVi tariff be removed from ar ticles made by trusts? Y'es. Xo. Shall U.S. senators bo elected by ulireet vote of the people? Yes. No. Shall government paper mouey (green backs) be destroyed aod replaced by IjanV notes? Yes. No. The vote on the questions submitted .would I imperative instructions to the candiiiates elected; and then it would uot make much difference which party would win. Til A SELF MADE MAX. What a sermonizing there is about the "self-made man!" Scarcely a pa per one reads but that a -Carnegie, a Yerkes, or some other nabob is held up to the youth of America as an example of the si lt-made man. We never hear of a poor man being a self-made man,' Edison, who is probably comfortably rich, but not wealthy, is not held be fore the eyes of the; struggling youth as a shining example that he might follow. Only ihe jobbers, stockbrokers, gam blers and labor sweaters are idolized, worshipped and pointed to as specimens of the highest attainments of laudable aspiration. We take strong exception to the theory that the self-made man is al ways a moneyed ruin. Efnest Jones, the great chartist leader, was born amid riches, lie was not a self made man until he separated himself from them, toolt Uj the fight for hurmin liberty and human rights, and suffered incarcera tion like a criminal because of his con victions. Had he never separated from his early environments he would have been unknown to history and to fame, but being possessed of a genorous heart and actuated by a noble, principle, he sprang into the arena where the fiht was raging between niiuhty w rong and feeble righ',, ra;igin hiinserf on the sido of the latter, and making it stronger because of h s efforts. Truly Ernest Jones was a self-made man. , Peter Krapotkin, the author, bore of one of the oldest Itussian families with the blood of a royal h'use flowing in his veins, is another self-made man. Had he been content to remain a Russian prince, the world would h ive laid itself at his feet, but like Ernest Jones, he knew the difference between right and wrong, and discarded his title and his aristocr atic associates so that lie could ally himself with the common people in their struggle for justice. This is suf ficient to prove the man's nobility ; a nobility acquneih but greater ban thai from which he voluntarily separated himself. Krapotkin is certainly a self- made man. Many o'her men could be cited as being self-made, who had but littldof this world's wealth. Lloyd Garri son and others were self made, and better made than the Carnegie', the Fricks.the Goulds, the Vanderbilts, the Rockefel lers, the Yerkes ami others of their kind. International Woodworker. SOCIALISM GROWING. John Hums, the English working man's friend and representative in parlia' merit, wlo is called a socialist, but is so only t a limited extent, predicts - that Ameiica will become socialistic, and hints that the effort to become so will result in another great war in thiscoun try. This is no wilder or more unreason able prediction than one of the war of 1801-5 would have been 20 years before it occurred, Up until that war broke out nay, even after it had been actu ally raging for months there were mil lions of p tople who refdsed to believe that such a tremendous tragedy had oc curred, or could occur. Men woke up every morning all over the North and rubbed their eyes thrice before they be- leved that t le great tragedy was uot a dream even though their elder sons' seats were vacant at the breakfast table. Let a plain, blunt statement bo mad'j icre and now, cames of a great war are making as suiily and rapidly now, if s miewhat more under the surface, as ley were made from 1820 to 1800. It, may not come; we are wiser; we look back now on the War i f Rebellion and ty it was inevitable; no aisdom' could ave avoided it, and this is true. So, very likody, in 1'JjJ, th ! 2 ).), 0.10,0)0 peo ple of this country will look back on blooditr fields than ever before iu the woild's history and say : "No, it could ot be helped." vV'hy ? It will-be asked. Answer: Beemise the government sold and surrendered itself to hogs, cormo rants, vampires, humbiigs,pwindlers,ra8- cals, grafters, gourmands, thieves and robbers. Mind, this is what thov will ay ; will they be right? It is easier to look backward than t look ahead ; bu t the wise mail looks ahead. Socialists and after awhile when the good times are overflown w ith the ava of a panic, they will be militant, engeful, not merely philosophical, ar gumentative socialists are being man ufactured by the scores or hundreds daily. Every time Morgan makes a new combination he makes a hundred so cialists. Every time Schwab draws his $100,000 once a month ha raises blood in a million hearts that boil f jr mischief. Every time Carnegie gives away a million dollars he sids a mil lion men to read their wrongs real or imagined evtr. in the best, freest and happiest land on earth. liryanisni will turn into socialism; populism has but a step to take to be come socialism. The democrats are go in ; I a k to bid for the support and fodder and fees of the plutocrats against the re publicans; nuny democratic voters will not go back ; many more will come over to the growing army of socialism. By 1020, perhaps sooner, it will lie a resist less tide. This is not a statement of what is de sirable or hoped lor ; merely a slight fore cast of things to be as surely as there is ni,t a speedy and radical change in the policy and conduct of the dominant party in this country But it is as imposssi Me for that party, when its Hannas, MrKinleye, Forakeis, Allisons, Elkin ees, Depews and the rest, to change its course, as it is for the leopard to change its spots. The children of this country will have even a heavie task to perform than any of their ancestors had . There is a cloud in the American sky, hand-broad, on which, with a spy-glass, one may de cipher the '.etteiing of Macauley's proph ecy Evening Telegram, July 18. Machine extras made to order on turnirg lathe by Johnson & Lamb. A Poor Millionaire Lately starved in London because he could nut digest his food. Early use of Dr. King's New Life Pills would liave saved him. They strengthen the stom ach, aid digestion, promote assimilation, improve appetite. Price 25c Money back if not satisfied. Sold by George A. Harding, druggist A WORTHY SUCCESSOR "Something New Under the Sun." All Doctors have tried to cure CA TAKRH bv the use of powdtrs, acid gases inhalers und 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 ihat their makers have aimed to cure, while pastes and oint ments cannot reach the disease. An oi l and experienc d practitioner who has for many years made a close study Hnd special iy of the treatment of CATARRH, has at last perfected a Treatment whi-h when faithfully used, not only relieves at once, but permanently cures CA TAliUH, by removing the cause, stop ping the discharges, and curing a'l in flammation. It is the only remedy known to science that actually reaches the afilicted 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 OA 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 HAY FE VER or COLD in the HEAD. CATARRH when neglected often leads to CONSUMPTION "SN U F FLES" will save yon if you use it at once. ItiH no ordinary remedy, but a complete treatment which is positively guaranteed to Cure CATARRH in any form or stage if used according tolhe directions which accompany each pick age. Don't delay but send for it at once and writ" full particulars as to your con dition, and y u will receive special a I vice from the discoverer of this wonder ful remedy regarding your case without cost to vo" Vwvond 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 Deot. E 694, ED WIN B. GILES & COMPANY. 2330 and 2332 Market Stieet, Philadelphia. MARKET REPORTS. PORTLAND. (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best 2.903.40; graham $2.60. Wheat W'alla Walla G061c: valley 58c,r)9; bluestem 61c. Oats White, 1 3- per cental : erav, 1 29 1 32 per cental. Barley ieed $17; brewing $17 ner t. Millstuffa Bran $17; middlings 21! ; shorts $20; chop $16. Hay Timothy $214; clover, 70; Oregon wild $7. Butter Fan 'V creamery 3) and 4 V ; store, 20 and 25. Eggs 17 1-2 and 18 cents per ooz. Poultry Mixed chickens $3.5O4.00; hens $4 505; springs $34 50; geese. $67; ducks $561; live turkeys 11 14; dressed, 14(o516c, Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers and ewes, sheared, $4 50; dressed, 6 nd 7 cents per pound. Hogs choice heavy, $5 50 and $5 75; light, $5; dressed, 6 1-2 and 7 cents pi r pound. Veal Large, 61-2 and 7 cen's pei pound. Beef Gross, top steers, $4 50 and $5 dressed beef, 7 and 8 cents per pound. Che se Full cream 13c per pound Young America 14 :. Potatoes 60 and 65 cents per btiBnel. Vegetables Beets $1; turnips 75 per sack; garlic 7c per lb; cabbage $1.25 1.50 per 100 pounds ; cauliflower 75c per dozen; parsnips 85c per sack; celery 80(285c per dozen: asparagus 7Sc; peas 3ig4c per pound. Dried fruit Apples evapora'ed 5(96 ; sun-dried sacks or boxes- 34c; pears sun and evaporated 89C J pitless plums 78c; 'Italian prunes 57c; extra silver choice 5(3)7. OREGON CITY. Corrected on Thursday. Wheat, wagon, 58. Oats, 1 23 per rental. Potatoes, $1 and $1 20 per sack. Eggs 18 cents per dozen. Butter, country, 20 to 2oc per roll; creamery, 40c. Dried apples, 5 to 6c per pound. Dried prunes Italians, 5c; petite and German, 4c. m CUBA where it Is hot all the year round Scott's Emulsion1 sells better than any where else in the world So don't stop taking it in summer, or you Will lW mil ivni i g what you have gained. 1, rL. Send for a free sample. 1 t'7 SCOTT & HOWNK, Chemists, a 40015 Pearl Street, New York. , L, 50c. and ti.co: all druggists. t Ml women who sniffer from chronEo diseases . to write to Dr. Pierce." That advice is based upon practical experience. After suffering for months, and finding no benefit result from the xrejmeni oi me locs'l physician, Miss Pelle Hedrick wrote to Dr. Pierce for advice. She acted on the advice, regained her appe tite, recovered her strength, and gain- ed several pounds r vviiie to .lioiilui masr J PA Pierce " is good ad- ce for" every ii woman to ionow. M It costs nothing. lit. rierce invites sick women to con sult him, by letter, free. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, In valids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. In a little over thirty years, Dr. rierce, assisted by his staff of nearly a score of physicians, has treated and cured over half a million women. "I suffered from female weakness for five months." writes Miss iielle Hedrick of Nyfr, Putnam Co., W. Va. "I was treated by a good physician, but he never seemed to do me any good. I wrote to nr. R. V. Pierce for advice, which I received, tellinjr me to take his ' Favorite Presentation ' and 'Golden Medical Discovery.' I took thirteen bottles of ' Favorite Prescription ' and eight of 'Golden Medical Discovery.' When I had used the medicine a month my health was much improved, It has continued to improve until now I can work at almost all kinds of housework. I had scarcely any appetite, but it is all right now. Have gained several pounds in weight. I advise all who suffer from chronic diseases to write to Dr. Pierce." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate the bowels. LOCAL SUMMARY The finest bon bon boxes in town al 'he K. K K. Sluving o-ilv 10 ciU at the first -class shop of P. G. Shark. The latent in chocolate of all kinds at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, New goods a', bottom price .at Klem en's Klectrii. Casli Grocery. Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on home-made candies. A few watches for sale cheap at Younger's, Watches cleaned, $1. The latest out Try the marshmallow kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen. Ladies, if your sewing machine is out of O'der, take it to Johnson & Lamb's. A slightly used parlor organ for sale by W. L. Block, the honiWurnisher. Shank & Bissell carry the most 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 Bhop. For Sale Four milch cows and one heifer. Enquire of Mr. Harrisberger, Mount Pleasant. Lost One Lewellen setier bitch. Re ward for return to Western Union Tele graph office, Oregon City. $20 to $100 to loan oa cha tel or par sonal security. Dimick & Eastham, Agts. Will keep my Durham bull, MeKin ley on my West Side f nm until further not ce. Service, $1. Lou Ford. The latest ai d best brands of cigars and tobaccos are kept bv ' P. G. Shark Smokers' goods and confectionery, also Moore's Seventh Stre t Pharmacy on the hill. N''W store, new goods, new prices. Dr J Burt Moork, Proprie tor. I and titles examined, abstracts made and money 1 .aned at lowest rates. Dimick & Eastham, Lawyers, Oregon uiiy. Lumber Leave orders at this office for first-class lumber of al) kinds, or ad dress v.. K Harris. Beaver Creek, Uregon. Ihe Weekly Oregonian gives all the national news and the Courier-Herald gives all local and county news. Both one year lor Two Dollars. The P. C. & O. T. line will until further notice make a 25 cent roui d trip rate from Caneiuah and Oreg m City to Portland on Sundajs, wfth cars every 30 minutes. George Audeison, expeit piano tuner and tone regulator, with Filer piano house, Portland, Ore. Leave orders with Burmeister & Andresen, or com municate direct with house. 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 eq iare meal, loc. When you want a good square meal gDtothe Brunswick restaurant, oppo site suspension bridge, L. Ruconich, 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 yoo can get a good meal for the price of a poor one el ewhere. The greatest skin specialist in America originated the formula for Banner Salve. For all skin diseases, ad cuts or sores, and for piies, it's the most healing medi cine. Beware of substitutes. Charman A Co. For Sale 240 acres of hind 12 miles Oregon City ; 40 cleared house, barn orchard; price, $2350; $500 down, bal ance on easy terms. Have your 011 time to pay balance. Apply to J. W. McAsriTY, office on Main street, oppo site Albright's meat market. Dr. George Ewing, a practicing physi cian of Smith's Grove, Ky., for over 30 years, writes his personal experience wiih Foley's 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 its5e toflll nhvsii'iana ttvr anpb tr.-Mililria fnr T can honestly state I have prescribed it j in nundaecis ot cases with perfect suc cess." Charm&n&Co. 1 Jrl, i YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT II A KRIS' . a? on Can Depend Upon Patent Flour, niace 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 CBTY MARKET ffiTfrs. Opposite Huntley's First-glass Meats of 11 irjds Satisiaction Guaranteed Give yirQ a Kali arjjd be Treated ?igrt 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 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 293 Horrison Street, PORTLAND, OREGON 5 - For all kinds of Building Material CALL AT THE Oregon City Planing Mill F..S. BAKER, PROP. . SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC. oooooorocooooa BECKER'S MILLINERY 220 FIRST STREET, PORTLAND, DREGON Great Bargains in Trimmed Hats Magnificent Design Also a Consignment of very Cheap Hats Hair Switches at Very Low Figures J AAA ar? - '"r-' 'f"v"V R. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker Thones 476 and 305. Two Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A.IIobcrfsoii The 7th St. Grocer But the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Trices in Oregon City is at GROCERY ft- Brown & Welch -Proprietors op the- Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. OREGON CITY, Building OREGO N We carry the largest stockof Caskets, Coffins, Robssand Lining in Clackamas county. We are' the only undertakers in the county owning a hearse, which we fur nish for less than can bi had elsewhere. vVe are under small expense and do not ask large profits. Calls promptly attended night or day. Doors South of Court House.