OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY lutu.i ; In Oregon CitypostuiHoeas 2nI-claB matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Paid In advance. Der year 1 50 111 months 75 tttree monthe'trial 26 &The dale opposite your address on the sniper denotes Ihe rlmoto which youhaiepaid. si this notice is marked yonr subscription is due. CLUBBING RATES. With Weekly Oregon tall 12 00 ' Tri-Weekly N. Y. World 1 85 National Watchman i 1 76 " Appeal to Reason 1 60 Weekly Examiner -. 2 25 " Bryan's Commoner 1 75 ADVERTISING RATES. Standing business advertisements; Per month professional cards.ll (t), pei year): 1 to 10 inches Me per inoh, 12 inches for $5, 20 inches (column) IS, 80 Inches () i paKe) $12. Legal advertisements: Per Inoh (minion) $2.50, divorse summons 7 60. Affldavils of publica tion will not be furnished until publication fees are paid. Local notices; Fly cents per line per week Per month 20o. oniluar es, cards of tbanks, church and lodge notices where admission fee Is charged or culleoted half price or 2 cents per Hue. PATRONIZE HOME IMDUSTKY. OREGON CITY, AUG. 2, 1901. Reduced t i's list nti ilysis here is the whole question of trusts in a few worth: "To constitute a monopoly, to restrict production, to dispense with the services of labor so far as possible, to enhance prices, anil to piy dividends ou inflated capitalizition." Think over the w irdsof one who looks ahead and says: "If you have a farm (keep it : if not, get one ; for the time may tcome when the p ipulation of this coun try will be largely divided into monopo lists, deDendents and farmers; and the (farmer will be the most independent of all men, and will be the saving power of wnr institutions." ' ' That concrete is to take the place of fbrick and stone as a building m iteriil is the hopeful belief of .Mr. Edison, who lias discovered a cheap method of mak ing Portland cam int. Before many years, he says, a contractor will juat take his wooden form one of twenty or thirty standard shapes and go out and "pour a house" w'lieh will cost very little and will he fireproof. How ponderous are the thoughts se creted by the grey matter of latter day theologians I Here is Rev. Lavi L. Payne, professor in a down-east Congre gational seminary, accusing a brother professor of wanting to know if t here is difference between a miracle wrought by "a huir fron the tail of Peter the Her mitt's ass" and one "by handkerchiefs from the person of the Apostle Pul." This San Juan, Porto Rioo, News, 'Commenting on the supreme court decis ion in the insular cises, says: "We are and are not part of the United States. We are and are not a foreign country. We are and are not citizens ot the United States. We are and are not to have our money back. The tariff is and is not yoid. The constitution does and dojs not extend and its limitations do and do not apply. Upon these points the justices disagree, five in favor and four against. Are we or are we not, or are -we It?" One of the main reasons for the high levy of stute taxes is the fact that the common people are called upon to sup port four normal schools, a state univer sity and an agricultural college the lat ter getting soma support from the gen eral government. Very few of the pro ducers of wealth, the farmers, or of the class of laborers or ordinary huaine6S mon, ever send their children to any of these stat) fed institutions to be edu cated for the reason that not many boys or their parents can afford to pay board. --Oregon Independent. , Tub future nmy look gaudy enough for the big concerns the trusts com bined with the railroad consolidations but for small trailers and dealers and manufacturers it takes on a mort som bre hue and properly arounes alarm. The railroads of the country are sub stantially held by four great money syn dicates. The roads that have not been bought or leased by them are at their mercy. When they want to got them they'll run down their stock and take them in for a song. Practically four linos ot railway lire 11 there are in the United States today. Denver Daily News. "United we etand." Constantly ac cumulating are the facts which prove that in the grange farmers can by their intelligent, uuited ellorts secure good and defeat evil legislation. A writer "dowu in Maine" says: "A representa tive of a certain corporation in this state told our state master that they were ' n; kit to secure certain privileges through the state legislature at its last session. State Master Gardner replied that the citate grange objected to the measure, ".Oh, well,' remarked the man, 'you ssnay resolve all you please, but we are going to have it all the same.' The .grange took the matter In hand and when it came beforo the committee it was Wied under the remonstrances from all over the state. The enormous growth of the co-operative movement in Great Britain is shown in the annual report made at the re cent meeting of the co-operative con gress. There are now in exietence in England, Ireland and Scotland, 1741 so cieties with a total membership of 1,492, 371, with a share and loan capital of $23, 050,160. The total sales made by the societies during the past year amounted to $285,592, 130,an increase of 9 per cent. over the previous year. Reports re ceived from 727 retail distributive so cieties showed that the members re ceived a profit of 12) per cent in ad dition to the advantage -derived from ability to buy goods cheaper by means of a co-operation ; which does away with the unnecessary middleman. Hicks' Word ind Works, of St. Liuis, explains the present climatic eccentrici ties. Ten years afo he stated in his 'foundation Facts:" "We believe that the abnorra.il electrical condition of the atmosphere during the Jupiter period precipitates the rain into enormous cloudbursts and destructive -downpours in soma regions, and thus depriving the atmosphere of its qm us vip ir itio ns which should have normally been dis tributed over the land generally, floods result in some sections, while c msuin ing drouth prevails in others Abnor mal local rains, with great and general lack of moisture, seems to ma certain characteristic of the Jupiter distarbance . Much Btriking phenomena in the form of halosanl perihelia, and circles about the sun and moon, are witnessed during these Jovian periods. Great solar perturb itions ami beavy seismic shocks ara also among the characteris tics of Jupiter's disturbances.' Our storm charts for the year 19JI show that the Jupiter period conjunction with Saturn is central in the spring and summer of this year, covering the whole year with its peculiar power." Libut-Gov. Northcott, of Illinois, a straight-out republican and head officer of the Modern Woodmen of America, is reported to have said in aracent address to the bar association of that state that a membsr of the senate over which he presides controlled well nigh absolute! y all the legislation of the last sesnion of the Illinois legislature; that the man who exerted said control took little part in debates, , was rarely heard on the floor, and showed no outward manifesta tion of leadership, nevertheless his dic tation was virtually undisputed, and that, his power was due to the fact that he represented the political machine. Con cluding, Mr. Northcott said: "I want to say to you, ray brothers, that unless we go to the rescue of the government the politic.il future is very dark. Don't be satisfied with going to the polls and vot ing to ratify the choice of either one of the two party bosses. The citizens of this country must interest themselves in politics. He who strives for the ele vation and purification of the govern ment is as much a p.itriot as he wh o shoulders a musket in the defense of the nation." There are some thoughts for think ers in the following words from a farmer in South Dakota: "In my opinion, if the government never had given an acre of land to the roailroads, nor sold any land, nor opened government land to settlement under homestead or any other lawB, but instead had built its own rrilways, constructed and operated tele graph systems in connection with the postofiice, put public improvements wherever needed, and taxed the land (collected a rental?) for enough on which to inn the government, then had allowed every man and woman who wished to do so go on 100 acres of hind, not as owners in perpetuity, but having the privilege of holding so long as the tax (rent?) was paid, and owning all im provements made, and having right to sell them when they relinquished the land if this had been the policy from the foundation of the government, I be lieve we should not have such conditions as now exist. For out here, where we got free homes as a gift from the gov ernment, the title ha slipped away from the common people Into the hands of landlords, and fully three-fourths of iho common herd now are renters un der dear dollars and cheap farm pro ducts." The time is coming if it is not already here when one man will own or con trol all the oil fields in the country, and upon his individual fiat will depend the cost of illuminant to every household. The time is coming if it is not already here when every miner in tin country will be marshaled under the leadership of one man, and upon his sole fiat any day the mineral production of the coun try would cease indefinitely. One man will control all the railroads, another all the salmon canneries, another all the cotton factories, another all the steel and iron plants. In the hands of one man will be vosted authority to call out or to send back to work every street-car man in the country, or every tele grapher, or every printer, or every rail way enginoer and fireman , Man every where are sinking their own personali ties, signing away their independence, yielding their individual will to a cor porate will. It is not an evidence of strength, it is not a mark of progress, it is not an augury of achievement. It is the reversal of the principle of compete tive struggle ihat has made civilization what it is. Mr. Herbert Spencer lias ventured the opinion that ' this danger will yet be averted by universal educ cation. But since he said this our edu cational forces themselves are being bound hand and foot by. socialism, fac ultied by sentimentalists and led by trust endowed universities. It is more likely that the danger can only be out grown through bitter trial, or burned away in the fiery furnace of revolution. Oregonian, July 20. OREGON IAN ON UNIONS. "The Oregonian is requested to an swer whether it approves the purpose and effort of labor unions to compel workmen to become members o' them, against their will. The Oregonian does not approve of such purpose and effort, if any such there be. But it doubts whether there is any real unwillingness to join the unions. It supposes that he real motive of those who decline to join them is a fear or belief that the unions will fail, with a hope of better results for themselves, if they stand apart The Oregonian approves of no coercion, one way or another. But it does believe in labor unions the more so since the trusts 'are a capitalistic union, and there seems to it no present way of holding a check upon the trusts but through the labor unions." "It is complained that' the labor unions are endeavoring to compel men not in the unions to join them, and that this compulsion is without justification. Perhaps it is. But the methods of the trusts are entirely similar, and the la bor unions are only following an exam ple that they find necessary, in the cir cumstances, to their preservation. The trust compels similar establishments to merge their interests, under .penalty of ruin. It 'freezes out' those that refuse. If the trust is justified in its method of combination and means of enforcing it, labor is justified in its effort to unionize the workers in the mills. The purpose and the operation are essentially the LOCAL SUMMARY The finest bon bon boxes in town a) he K. K. hi. . Shtving only 10 onts at the first class shop of P. G. Shark. The latest in chocolate of all kinds at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, New goods at bottom price at Klein en's Electric CaBh Grocery. Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on home-made candies. A few watches for sale cheap at Younger'g. Watches cleaned, $1. The lateet out 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 bomefurnisher. Machine extras made to order on a turning lathe by Johnson & Lamb. Shank & Bissell carry the most com plete line of undertakers' supplier in Oregon City. If your bike is broke the place to get it fixed is at Johnson & Lamb's bicycle repair shop. $20 to (100 to loan on cha tal or per sonal security. DiMicrc & Eastham, Agts. . The latest ard best brands of cigars and tobaccos are kept by P. G. Shark Smokers' goods and confectionery, also Moore's Seventh Street Pharmacy oa the hill. New store, new goods, new prices. Dr. J. Burt Moore, Proprie tor. Land titles examined, abstracts made and money loaned at lowest rates. Dimick & Eastham, Lawyers, Oregon City. Lumber Leave orders at this office for first-class 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 rate from Cauemah and Oregon City to Portland on Sundays, with cars every 30 minutes. When you want a good square meal go to the 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 onlv first-class res taurant in Oregon City and where you can get a good meal for the price of a poor one el ewhere. 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 youron time to pay balance. Apply to J. W. Si cAni'lty, office on Main Btreet, oppo site Albright's meat market. For Sale. A second-hand hop stove, fett long, 11-mch pipe, 27 joints, 5 elbows and two T's. Virtually new, only 20 bales of hops having been dried with the the stove. Address Charles T. Pembroke, near Adkins mill, Canby. 1 Only 50 Cents I to make your baby strong and ' well. A fifty cent bottle of I Scott's Emulsion 1 will change a sickly baby to a plump, romping child. Only one cent a day, think of it. Its as nice as cream. Send for a free sample, and try it. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. 409415 Pearl Street, New York. 50c. and Ji.oo; all druggists. - Disease makes many a woman prema turely old. Dark-rimmed eyes, hollow cheeks and wasted form are accompan ied by listlessness and loss of ambition. Home duties are a weariness, and social pleasures have no attraction. One of the commonest expressions of women cured toy Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion is this: RIt has made a new woman of me." There's a world of meaning in the word. It means the sparkle brought back to the eyes; the com plexion tinted with the rosy hue of healthy blood: the form rounded out anew in graceful curves; the whole body radiant with health. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong and sick women well. It dries debilitating drains, heals inflammation and ulcera tion and cures female weakness. It makes new women of those prematurely aged by disease. "Dr. Pierce's medicines are the best I have ever used," writes Mrs. C. Nelson, of Chemawa, Marion Co., Oregon. "My health was badly run down when I consulted him by letter. My limbs were cold and ray head hurt me continu ally. I was so nervous that the least thing would startle me almost into convulsions. I had palpitation of the heart so bad that X could scarcely walk sometimes. I felt utterly discour aged, but two bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and one of 1 Golden Medical Dis covery ' made a new woman out of me." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for it in cloth bind ing. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. MARKET REPORTS. PORTLAND. (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best $2.903.40; . graham $2.60. . Wheat Walla Walla 5556c; valley 56c57j bluestem 57c. Oats White, 1 20 per cental ; eray, 1 20 1 22 per cental. Barley Feed $16; brewing $17 per t. Milrstuffs Bran $17; middlings 21fc ; shorts $20; chop $16. Hay Timothy $113; clover, 79; Oregon wild $6. Batter Fancy creamary 3o and 41c; store, 20 and 25. . Eggs 17 1-2 and 18 cents per rioz. Poultry Mixed thickens $3.50(34.00; hens $4.605; springs $34 50; geese. $67; ducks $56)6; live turkeys-11 14c; dressed, 14rt16c. Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers and ewes, sheared, $4 50; dressed, 6 nd 7 cents per pound. Hogs choice heavy, $5 75 and $6 00 ; light, $5 ; dressed, 6 1-2 and 7 cents per pound. - Veal Large, 7 and 7 1-2 cents per pound. Beef Gross, top steers $3 50 and $4 , dressed beef, 6 and 7 cents per pound. Ohe-se-Full cream lle per pound Young America 1 2c. Potatoes 60 and 65 cents per busnel. Vegetables Beets $1 ; turnips 75c per sack ; garlic 7c per lb ; cabbage $1.25 1.50 per 100 pounds; cauliflower 75c per dozen; parsnips 85c jer sack; celery 8085c per dozen; asparagus 78c; peas 23c per pound. Dried fruit Apples evapora'.ed 56; sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; pears sun and evaporated 89c; pitless plums 7Hc; Italian prunes 57c; extra silver choice 57. OREGON CITV. Corrected on Thursday. Wheat, wagon, 57. Oats, 1 25 per cental. Potatoes, $1 and $1 20 per sack. Eggs 20 cents per dozen. Butter, country, 25 to 35c per roll ; creamery, 40c. Dried apples, 5 to Be per pound, Dried prunes Italians, 5c; petite and German, 4c. A WORTIir SUCCESSOR. "Something New Vtuler tie Sun." All Doctors have tried to cure CA TARRH by the use of powders, acid gases inhalers and drugs in paste form. The powders dry up the mucuous mem branes causing them to crack open and bletd, 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. Anold and experienced practitioner who has for many years made a close study and specially of the treatment of CATARRH, has at last perfected a Treatment which when faithfully used, not only relieves at once, but permanently cures CA TARRH, by removing the cause, slop ping the discharges, and curing all in flammation. It is the only remedy known to science that actually reaches the aftlicted 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. "SNUFFLES1' 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 also wonderfully quick to relieve HAY 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 j complete treatment which is positively guaranteed to Cure CATARRH in any I form or stage if used according to the I directions which accompany each pack- ! ago. Don't delay but send for it at once and write full particulars as to your con dition, and you will receive special ad' , vice from the discoverer of this wonder- 1 ful remedy regarding your case without cost to von beyond the regular price of I "SNUFFLES" the GUARANTEED CATARRH CURE." j Sent prepaid to any address in the United States or Canadi on receipt of One Dollar. Address Dept. E 594, ED WIN B. GILES A COMPANY. 2330 and 2332 Market Street, Philadelphia. -SpSv , ' 59 'j?m VfaJ YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Z Prices in Oregon City is at I HARRIS' GROCERY s 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 ffijprops. Opposite Huntley's First-Glass Ieats ofll Iiids Satisfaction Guaranteed (Sive yirrj a all arjd be Treated IJijgb.t 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. Phillips, an expert graduate oculist and optican, has charge of our optical department. A. N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler 293 Horrison Street, PORTLAND, OREOON DO0000a0Cr0D00OCrC5 For all kinds of Building Material - CALL AT THE Oregon City Planing Mill F. S. BAKER, PROP. SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC. Ssososaooao B. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court House. 5 POPE & CO. HEADQUARTERS FOR Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles. PLUMBING A SPECIALTY Cor. Fourth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY v Are Bought and Appreciated by "1- sir- r- -r- i- r- i-i i- 1 mt mi mm of Oregon Citv A.iobeitoii The ;th St. Grocer ft i 4 ft Brown & Welch -Propkietors of thb- Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. ,U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON We carry the largest stbckof CaBke Coffins, Robes and Lining in Clackamas county. We are the only undertakers in the county owning a hearse, which we fur nish for less than can ba had elsewhere . vVe are under small expense and do not ask large profits. Calls promptly attended night or day. : : i