OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. AUGUST 9, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY rfutorei In Oregon City pwatofflce as 2nd-cl&M matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. P&ld tti Rdvunnp. tmr var 1 50 Six months 75 Niresmonlrn'trtttl 25 The date opposite your address on the paper denotes I he time to which you have paid . 1 this notice is marked your subscription is due. CLUBBING RATK8. With Weekly Oregoniaii ' 12 00 ' Trl-Weeklv N. Y. World. . 1 85 ' National Watchman 1 75 Appeal to Reason , 1 60 " Weekly Kiaralner 2 25 " Bryan's Commoner 1 75 ADVERTISING BATES. Standing business advertisements; Per month professional cards,l (.j;), pel year):l to 10 inches 60c per Inch, 12 Inches (or $5, 20 inches (column! S3, 80 Inches ('i puge) $12. Legal advertisements: Per lnoh (minion) 12.50, dlvorse summons (7 50. Affidavits of publica tion will not be furnished until publication fees are paid. Local notices; FItj cents per line per week Per month 20o. unituar es, cards of tbanks, church and lodge notices where admission fee is chnrgcd or collected half price or '2 cents per lino. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON OITY, AUG. 9, 1901. Ex-Mayor Hewitt, of Now York, de clares thai to be rich and not to use riches lor the general good is to be dis graced, "because after all riches are but the result cf general co-operation." That is exactly whut the socialists con tend. Tub extension cf trolley lines in the East amounts now to something like a formidable rival to the steam roads It is announced that Detroit and Pitts burg will soon have trolley connection by way of Cleveland which will give a road of 375 miles under one management. A contributor to the Contemporary Review for May says that Great Lrit ain has ceased to bo (he ' banker of the world." "If we sum up Ue facts and figures given," he i-ays, "evtry symp torn points unmist.'.kenbly to the fact that the British nation is living on its capital." In 1893 its excess of imports over exports was 207 ,019,843.- In 1898 the trade of Great Britain's cotton, iron and woolen indus' ties was rAi, 500,000 less than in 11(73, while the annual im ports of food were JC02.800,0(K greatfr. J. J. McCarthy, president of the Iowa Bar Association, in a recent address at a meeting of that body said : ' One of long experience on the be rich writes me that in his opinion about one-half of all evi dence received on behalf of the defense of criminal cases is falte. Another judge tit equally high repute writes that he be lieves 73 pi r cent of the tvidence offered in divorce eases approaehts deliberate perjury. Another writes that per jury is committed in a majority of important lawtuils and that the crime is rapidly h en asinp." To do a geod ael because one is to get something for it is to destroy all that makes the doing of it good. To puisue godliness because it is profitable, either for this lile or some lifo to come, is to thoroughly discredit godliness, and to le!mo it i..to a coin of exchange. The universe has nothing wherewith to pay a man for doing right or for loving his brother, because it has nothing of eo,ua! or comparative worth. . The reward of doing right is in being right ; the reward of love is in loving; tho re ward of service is in serving; Ihe reward of telii ig the truth is the joy of being tiue. Ex. What si ciulists want: All to be well Jiuused, clothed, fe. I and educated. A pystem lliat will end all profit, interest and rent. '!1 the means of production and di.-tribu i l and all tho available foiees of iiainiM Ik' o v od by, and op. r Hted for, the bei.elit of I lie) whole peo ple The abiliiou of all listless and nou-pruductive toil A woik day mm short as the needs of the people will per mit. No child labor. Kvery one U te ecive the full value of his or her labor. A higher ttu.dirdof livriur and a higher I l.u.eof mo'aUasiher. suit. To be gained liv org;in..'tu;i, iigit.ition.edocAilui and an iutulligetit excrei-o of Hie ballot. Tun farm'T 1 1 reach the iighest sue- coss must he n geologist, a chemist, rt i peais lor justice are mocked hy our ur-UulogL-t, an ent .miol',gist, a hacteri lo-j dustiial masters, and m ;t by inj i:ic- gist, and last but not least, a political economist. Who of all professionitlists aiv so intimately in touch with nature as the farmer? Who e working mati rials are so mighty, mysterious and Iwiulifnl as his? What is the field, the garden, lhegrienluu.se, but a vast laboratory , wbeio nature makes her ixperiuunta continually on a scale so grand, by methods so delicate, with precision so perfect, with Miccess so infallible, that wan, with ill t! e ; cmmulaU d tn amies cf know ledge, with all the resources cf vipeiied wisdom, can imitate her feebly, and beholds her wonders with mingled sensations of awe, delight and despair? Ex. At the present day, the devout peas antry of Europe and the French peas ants of Quobec use the same rude mi )lenienls as their forefathers. On the ether bund, the farmers of America have in two hundrd and fifty years perfected the most elaborate and scientific sys tem of agriculture ever known. In stead of the aooden plow and the hand spade they have invented the steam plow and harrow, the automatic seeder, harvester, binder and thresher, the milk separator, and a hosUof handy labor saving contrivances. Every year, in the United States alone, our farmers buy 125,000 self-binders and 175,000 mowers. We have fifty agricultural colleges and sixty government experiment stations. Agricultural chemistry, a science un known prior to the nineteenth century, is now engaging the attention of brilliant thinkers, and being popularized through the medium of over three hundred farmers' papers and magazines. With the American Book Company to pull the strings, the msnagement of the text book business in the past by the re publican party has been an outrage, says the Capital Journal, and but for the hot fight waged by Rev. Horace S. Lyman, when he was a candidate for state su perintendent on the union ticket in 1898, this change would never have heen brought, about. It took a populist of so cialistic proclivity to air the enormous wrong done the schools of this state by the republican managers, bring them to the mourners' bench, and make them cry ou, "Oh I my soul deliver me from my associations. Give me a new heart and a cleaner record than I had when I was simply the political sgent of a mer cenary trust." As a result of that fight Ackerman was elected t tate superintend ent by a majority several thousand less than the rest of the ticket. He repudi ated all his connection with the trust. for whose entire list of books, he had voted twice. The trust . has still a grip on the educational department of this tate and the people may look to see its workers still co-operating with a large and powerful faction of the republican party. THE LABORER'S PLIGHT. "A long as there are millions of un employed men in the United States, only to glad to get a chance to work for wage that will afford them the bare ne cessities of life, wages cannot rise above the minimum rate." It is the pressure of the unemployed that is the cause of all the strikes that are lost. It is more effective to unions defeats than than the policemen's clubs, the militiamen's bayonets, or the stand ing army's galling guns. It is this pres sure that forces men into the army st $13 a month to shoot down their fellow men t nd devour one another; that iri ses them rash the life out of each other ; that drives men mud, tj aban don their children and curse women into beasts of burden or instruments of lust. When a scab appears on any part of your body, you say that it is an indica tion Unit your system is out of order. The industrial scab is the product of thu same cause, and cannot be removed by oppressive or repressive means. The social system is out of order, What is the caune of the increasing number of scabs, tramps hovels and .beggars, un known a few years ago, whose appear ance saps ihd vitality and threatens the very life and existence of the trades union movement? It is ealy ascertained. It is caused by the industrial changes that have revolutionized Ihe world in the pa: t tvventy-fivo years. Every scien tific discovery, labor-saving device and mechanical invention, tends t ) render physical labor unnecessary. Men are const quoiitly discharged to shift fir themselves, endeavoring to secure em ployment on a labor m.tikot already overcrowded, resulting in the condition described ab ive. "Wo are informed by unchallenged and ineontrovcrtahle statistics, that hy the development of the ste un enirine anil lab a' saving machinery, the labor of ouo mull can produce c unmo.lities, food, cl. 'thing, lodgiiiL', etc., to nure than c imfortably provide for twenty. We are bitterly conscious of a grave injustice and monitions in qudities by which the wealth of iho nation is ag gregated into the hands of a few and the masses are pauperized. The hi cieasing number of trades unioni.-ts is but a protest against existing conditions, liow then can we make our protest ef fective, thai we may tnj y the full shaie of the product of our l.tbor? Our Hp- lions from the courts. The strike is rendered ineffective by the policeman's club and th.i si.Mier's yuu since the boycott, the picket anil even the usj of moral suasion is declared unlawful and unconstitutional by the c mrts. Our proV-ts will become effective, our de- mands w ill be enforced and our appeals will be heeded, only when the wage workers themselves have developed suf ficient intelligence on economic con ditions to register their protest at the ballot box, by voting with tlie social istic party, whice stands for the masses interest . It shonl 1 be evident to Vm dullest intellect that if you would be industrially free, you must control the means by which you must live. The capitalist class understand the powers of having tho people read their literature. They own and control al most the entire press of the country and it is the most effective instrument in their possession. They poison, confuse, deceive and befuddle the public minds, in order to facilitate their operations in robbing, cheating, swindling and skin ning the producing masses. If we would preserve the remaining manhood and honor which is left un crushed in the wageworker's breast, by capitalist coercion and oppression, we too, would educate and promote the in telligence of our class, by having them rtad our literature, published for their interests Ernest Dugas in Painters' Union Journal. Slolalla Prairie. , (The following is an extract from a pamphlet, now under preparation, show ing the resources and advantages of Clackamas county. The work of raising funds for an edition of ten thousand copies, estimated cost $500, has been assigned by . the Oregon City Board of Trade to a com mittee of three Thomas F. Eyan, W. A. Huntley and O. W. Eastham. Subscrip tion blanks for the Molalla locality have been placed in the hands of Bobbins & Son, but the committee has not yet had a report of the amount subscribed. Bar low precinct has come forward with the most liberal subscription yet reported of $40. It is expected that Oregon City will subscribe an amount equal to the combined subscriptions of other parts of the county.) . Some fifty years ago an emigrant train passed down the western slope of the ('ascada mountains. On the eave of a tedious journey, the exhausted frontiers men pitched their tents, where now through a garden spot of farm land beauty, the sparkling Molalla ttireads its way. Here, in its picturesque ex panse of shaded groves and broad green pastures, they saw the long sought Western Paradise. They would build a home here, where was neither church nor school, nor town nor neighbors habitation. They would turn to the use of man, the lands en dowed by nature with abundant waters and soil of unsurpassed richness. A thriving people should arise here, where, for unnumbered years, an untu tored Indian tribe had joined in the festive chase, where its proud hunters had danced their mad dance in com memoration of their skill and prowess, where at night all had gathered round the smouldering camp fire to listen to their boasting tales of brave adventure. Haifa century is gone and only a name is left of the proud Molallas. Their hunting grounds are nqw rich fields of of prosperous farmers. Their beaten trails have become broad highways. A schoolbouse stands now, where thu canipfire's curling smoke floated up ward in pillowy folds. The great herds of deer and elk are slain or have tied to the mountains. After them the silent retl man lias pressed his lonely trail. Such was the plan of Providence that a way bo made for their progress and growth. Here were destined to stand tho wi ndei fill grain fields of 01 ckamas count v, the pride of the Willameue val ley. There is coming now yet another re generation. Tho pioneer was a huuter or a warrior, not a farmer. His son, by a course ol nature, passed into the whirl pool of city hie and gaiety. The rich farms of 320 or 040 acres are many lying idle, many indifferently tilled hy their pioneer owners who are now passing into life's afternoon, a time that U deserving of rest. Enterprising, up to date farm ers from the East are beginning to see the wealth lying idle here. Just as these lands fifty years ago had no value at all because of their being entirely un known, bo now, because of their heing little known, they are secu-e I by East ern buyers at a tost of about $20 an acre. Gulden opportunities are still awaiting enterprises in this beautiful violalla prai rie. An abundant harve-t rewinds him who sows. When Bummer suns have made the fields a waving, gilden sea, stop in passing and look upon these farm homes of plenty and ease. Here, in the growing West, seek a home free fiom the Bummer's binning sun, irt-e from the winter's bitter cold, seek a home free from insects and pests that infui-t ihe middle states, find here un bounded opportunities for the growing boy . To Heal a Kurt Use Satintr Salve, the great healer. I'ts guaranteed for cuts, wounds, sores, piles j and ail skin diseases, Use no subsii- j lute. Cluirman & Co. I Viie Justifiable Liar A preach T once K.ii I to an s htor : "Newspap. rs d..re not tell thu truth. If they Old iliey coiil 1 not live. Your iif w.-'papi r would ho a f.iitnre." 'Pun H,lir.iir lenlicd : "You are rinht. aird the minister who will tell Ihe truth nr. all times about ino members of ids church, alive or dead, will not occupy the pulpit more than one Muuiay. ria uiuii.t iivh lii li'iLVtt town between daa. This true the press aud pulpit go hand . T . i. i . i t : l in hand with wnuewasn urusii aim kiuu wur.ls, maiiiidyln little virtues into big outs, ilu tact is that tlie press and ihe pulpit are in partnership in the s.iiimiiakin btioiis. No doubt, too, lifter the above conver sation tlie good minister wen; away look i,,. ,,...,. u ..I u,., I i li,, n 'Infill, thinking about the wickedness oi being truthful, and no doiitu the cmor tiirueu ins crowding work to tell of tlie fascinating beauty oi the brida, while as a mat er oi tact the was uly as a mud (dice, and to speak of the groom as be'ng one of the city's foremost business men. Ex, For Sale A go. d house and lot cheap and on unheard id terms. Also $300 in money to loan on good security. O. A. Cheney, opposite ilu itley's Uujk store, OiegonCity, )i . ft JtJ niaw.i ; In summer can bo pravetitcJ .; by taking Scott's Enidsjo Its as beneficial In summer as f In winter. If you are W33K or Pj run dnun. It will build vou lil:. r nd for fr sample. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, 4094rs Pearl Street, New York. 50c. ana i.w; 111 utokkims. consiffliDtion Is a disease of civilization. When the Indian was a stranger to the white man he had no name ia his vocabulary for this dreaded malady. Without arguing as to the curability of consumption, it may be stated posi tively in at Doctor Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery cures weak lungs, hemor rhages, bronchitis, deep-seated and stubborn cough, and other diseases which if neglected or un skillfully treated find a fatal termination in consumption. There is no alcohol In the "Discovery," and it is entirely free from opium, cocaine, and all other nar cotics. Persons suffering from chronic dis ease are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All correspondence is conducted under the seal of sacred secrecy. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. In a little over thirty years, Dr. Pierce, assisted by his medical staft" of nearly a score of physicians, has treated and cured thousands of men and women who had been given up as incurable by local physicians. Your medicine is the best I have ever taken." writes Mrs. Jennie Dinffman, of Rapid City. Kalkaska Co., Mich. "Last spring I had a bad cough , got so bad I had to be in bed all the time. My husband thought I had con sumption. He wanted me to get a doctor, but thought we would try Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery, and before I had taken one bottle the cough stopped and X have since had no sign of its returning " Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. MARKET REPORTS. , PORTLAND. (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best 2.903.40; graham $2.60. Wheat Walla Walla 5556c; valley 56c57.; bluesteTi 57e. Oats White, 1 20 per cental; eray, 1 20 1 22)4 per cental. Barlev Feed $16; brewing $17 per t. MillstViffs Bran $17; middlings 21 ; shorts $20; chop $16. I lav Timothy $H13; clover, 70; Oregon wild $6. . Butter Fancy oreiinry 3") and 40c store, 20 and 25. Kgt'S 17 cents per doz. Poultry Mixed thickens $3.50(54.00; hens $4.505; springs $34 50;geepe. WmT, uucks $o6 : li vo t.nrkpvR 1 1 Ht 14.:; dressed, 14(ffll6c, x , J Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers and ewes, sheared, $4 50; dressed, 61 nd 7 cents per pound. Hogs ehoice heavy, $5 75 and $6 00 : 1 light, $5; dressed, 6 1-2 and 7 cents per pound. Veal Large, 7 and 71-2 conts per p lund. Heel Gross, top steers, $3 50 and $4, dressed beef, 6 and 7 cents oer pound. (Jhe se Full cream lljc per pound Young Ameriea 12e. Potatoes 75 cents per hundred. Vegetables Beets $1 ; turnips 75c per sack; garlic 7c per lb; cabbagp$l.'i!j 1.6D per 100 pounds ; cauliflower 76c per dozen; parsnips 85c per sack; celery 8085c per dozen ; asparagus 7(crJ8c"; peas 2(a!3o per pound. Dried fruit Apples evaporated 5tg6j sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; penis sun anil evaporated 89e; pitleiis plums 7S; ; Italian prunes 57c; extra silver ehoice 67. OHKaON CITY. Corrected on Thursday. Wheat, wagon, 57. " Oats, 1 25 per cental. Potatoes, 7o cents per sack. F'nys 17 tents per dozen. butter, coju'ry, 25 to 35o per cri'iitrrjry, 40o. 1 lie I apples, 5 to tic per pound. I'riiid pruiiis It alians, 5c; arm t-eruiaa, 4o. roll; pet le A WORTHY SUCCESSOR. "Stuiitlhin; New Under the Sun.'' All Doctors have tried to cure CA TAKRilby thu use of powdi rs, acid gases inhalers -und drills in paste form. Tlie powders dry up the mucuous mem I 'in 11 caus'ng ihein 10 craek ripen arid l,leii, The powerful aiids ued in the inhalers have entirely eaten away the same membranes ih it their makers have aimed to curt", while pastes and oint ments c innot reach ihe disease. An oil und experienc m1 practitioner who has for many years made a dote study and specialty of the treatment of UATAKRtl, has nt last perfected a Treatment which when faithfully used, not only relieves at once, but permanently cures CA TARltll, by removing the caue, stop ping ihe discharges, and enrirg a'l in flammation. It is the only remedy known to cdenee that ac'tially reaches the Hlllicted parts Tins wonderful remedy ia known as "NUFtLES the liU AUAN I'KKI) CATARRH CURE" and is suld at the extremely low price of One I) lliir, eat h package containing in ternal and external medicine sutlieient IV.r a full month's treatment and every thing necessary to its perfect use. "SN I'KKI. KS" is the only perfect CA TARRH CURE ever made and is now recognized as the only safe and positive cure tor that annoying and disuusung disease. It cures all inflammation quickly and permanently and is idso ; wonderfully quick to relieve HAY KE-i YKR orC(')l.l) in tlie HEAD. i CATARRH when neglected often! leads to CONSUMPTION "SN UF- j FLKS" will save you if you use it, atj once, it is no oruinary remedy, inn 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 writo full particulars as to your con dition, and y m will receive special a 1 vice from the discoverer of this wonder ful remedy regarding your case without cost to von bevond the regular price of "SNUFFLES" Ihe GUARANTEED CATARRH CURE." Sent prepaid to any addnss in the United Mates or Canadi on receipt of One Dollar. Address Deut. E 694. EI? WIN B. GILES & COMPANY. 2330 aud 2332 Market Street, Philadelphia. ! YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat the Best Stock of First-Class S Goods to be Found at Bottom Z . Prices in Oregon City is at i HARRIS' GROCERY t -IT i 1UU VjcUI 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 i M 7 1 Ojposi'iQ Firet-Slass Meats oi? $11 IiQds Satisiastion Gasraateed . Give yirg a gall ar)d be Treated Bigtjt 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 fur the examination. Dr. Phillips, an expert graduate oculist and optican, has ch rg of our optical depaitment. A. N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler 333 Horrison Street, PORTLAND, OREGON I For ail kinds of t CALL o Oregon City Planing Mil! F. S. BAKER, Prop. SASH, DOORS, ff v, , R. 1. HOLM AN, Undertaker Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court Mouse. t t 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 Sta. OREGON CITY x i Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City Hobertson The 7th St. Grocer Brown & Welch PROI'IUKTORS OP THE Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. VV. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON SCHULTZ & CARLS, Props. Huntley's Building Material AT THE MOULDING, ETC. t i y We cirry the largest ntockof Oi.ike Collins, Robes and Lining in Clackamas county , We are the onlv undertakers in the county owning a hearse, which wh fur nish for less than can bj had elwewhfiM Ve are under small expnse and do not ask lure profits. Calls promptly attended night or day. t t