OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY tulei't 1 iii Oregon CitypostofflceM 2ad-claM matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Paid in advance, per year 1 SO Six mouths "5 Taree moiiihs'trial 25 gjtp-The date opposite your address on the paper denotes I lie rime to wnien you naye paiu. It this liutice is marked your subscription b due. CLUBBING RATES. With Weekly Oregoniau 2 00 Trl-Weekly N. Y. World J 85 ' Miitiuual Watchman 1 " ' Appeal to Reason 1 60 ' Weekly Examiner 2 " Bryan's Commoner 1 '5 ADVERTISING RATES. Standing business advertisements; Permonth professional eards,US J, pel year): 1 to 10 inches 60c per inch, 12 inches for $5, 20 inches (Column) $8, 80 inches (J4 pajfe) $12. Legal advertisements: Per inch (minion) 2.50, divorse summons 17 50. Affidavits of publica tion will not be furnished until publication fees are paid. Local notices; Flya cents per line per week Per month 20o. Obituar es, cards of thanks, church anil lodge notices where admission fee is churned or collected half price or cents per line. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, AUG. 30, 1901. Of the population of Canada, 41 per cent., or 2,000,000, is Roman Catholic, 1,300,000 of the 1,500,000 population of Ihe province ot Quebec beinn of that fnith. An exchange perpetrates this execra ble pun: Kaffir corn is proving an ex cellent feed for cattle in Kansas. A farmer out there fed one of bis cows the product last summer and last spring she .produced a Kaffir two. What, indeed, is natural law? No blind, mechanical, self-executing force. Your state taws are a dead letter, mere parchment, unless a living power giyes them force and vitality. Gravitation is no self-regulating clockwork, but the living force of Deity holding the uni Toise. What we call nature's laws are but the natural ways of the living God, who is infinite order no Ices than He is infinite freedom. Ex. Ik the Porto Rico Herald speaks only half the truth, the story it unfolds of American tyranny in the unhappy island, .reveals a condition that could hardly be paralleled in and part of Rus sia. And this under the aegis of the Stars and Stripes I Oiuelty and tyr anny ever go hand in band. The island ers received the United States forces with open arms, and for this they are exploited by carpetbaggers and the trusts. Engrossing scientific tteoriea and lilghly artistio maritime drawings do not always result in serviceable steam vessels. The two great French cruisers Jeanne d'Arc and the Chateau-Renault took six years in building. The one cost $-1,000,000, the other $3,200,000. Three hours after leaving port on her trial trip, the Jeanne d'Arc staggered back with her engine room and stoke room uninhabitable and her boilers used up. As for the Chateau-Renault, her engines melted with the heat where they Blood. Britain's ironclads have been pronounced so top hoavy as to be nnsafo. Tub French anthropologists, Gabriel and Ailrien do Mortilot.are authority for the Ktatement that in what is known as tho Chellean epoch.which is supposed to have ended 150,000 or 100,000 years ago, thore was junction between Europe and America by way of tho British Isles, tho Faroes, Iceland and Greenland. Dr. A. Kietli, of Great Britain, estimates that more than 5,000,000 years have elapsed since the separation of tho human stock ss a distinct animal form from the an thropoid animal, which he culls the pro trogloilyttf. In stuff and municipal administration reforms lies the whole question of the practicability of n juster and nobler so cial system than that which we enjoy today. The municipal problem is tho practical problem of tho whole human race at this moment. Ii contains within itsv li every possibility of a more just dis tribution of wealth, of a wider opportun ity for every ambitious individual. If the municipal problem can be solved the problem of a relative economic equality and the problem ol a relative social 1 equality can be solved also. If the mu nicipal problem is insoluble, republics are ft failure and "liberty, equality and fraternity" will be never attained by the human race. Wake up then and be a Citieu, in order that you also may be a Man. N. Y. Independent. Tim Methodist bishop, David II. Moore, of Frankfort, Iml., is in China us a representative of the Methodist church to study tho muses that led up to the Boxer outbreak, lie has trav eled 5000 n.iles in the Chinese empire and made nn exhaustive etudy ot the conditions which preceded the disturb Alice. Iu lttor llicu fore-shadows his report lie defends China in the most , .forcible language. After stating iu de lull the infamous treatment to which the -Western powers subjected that country ior sixty years, be says: "Great wrongs the Chines'? have committed, but with a 4enth part of tho provocation we would have done a thousand times more and greater." Though China is to helpless to avenge the thousand wrongs inflicted, she will nurture and cherish feelings of bitterest hatred for generations, and if ever, in the cycles of time, the oppor tunity comes for vengeance on the "for eign devils," her retribution will be in describably terrible. WrjRN one takes a country ramble on a pleasant summer's day, one may fitly ponder upon the wondrous significance of nature's law of the transformation of energy. It is wondrous to reflect that all the energy stored up in the timbers and farmhouses which we pass, as well as in the grindstone and the axe beside it, and in the iron axles and heavy tire of the cart tipped up by the roadside ; all the energy from moment to moment given out by the roaring cascade and the busy wheel that tumbles at its foot, by the undulating stalks of corn in the field and the swaying branches in the forest beyond, by the birds that sing in the tree-iops and the butterflies which they chase, by the coy? standing in the brook and the water that bathes her lazy feet, by ihe sportsmen who paBa shouting in the distance as well as by their dogs and guns; that all this multiform energy is nothing but metamorphosed solar ra diance, and that all these various objects giving life and cheerfulness to the land scape, have been built up into their cog nizable forms by the agency of sunbeams such as those by which the scene is now rendered visible. In the sense of illim itable vastness with which we are op pressed and saddened as we strive to fol low out in thought the eternal meta morphosis, we may recognize the mod ern phase of the feeling which led the ancient to fall upon his knees and adore after bis own crude, symbolic fashion the invisible Power whereof the infi nite web of phenomena is but the visible garment. Prof. John Fiske. HONEST BROTHER JASPER. In this age of scepticism and "higher criticism" and re-revision by Protestant churches of the creeds delivered to them by the her jic souls who stood ready to be burned alive lOrthem, it is really worth while to reflect on the stubborn. DIDN'T WANT TO SAVE. The Enterprise "in its issue of last week tries to shield the board of county commissioners for letting the printing to the highest bidder, the Enterprise, when there was a much lower bid on file (or was on file until it was conveniently- "lost" by the board.") The platforms of the two conventions in 1900 declared spe cifically for the letting of the bidder and not to the highest. The present board took charge of county affairs in July, 1900, and it is now August, 1901. Why did they wait 12 months before advertising for bids? They would not have asked for bids at all had not the Courier-Herald agreed to do work about one-third of former price, which set the board to thinking. Why discriminate on account of politics? If the board asked for bids for a bridge would it let contract to the highest bidder because the lowest X bidder was a democrat? simple loyalty to his religious and theo logical convictions of Rev. John Jasper, the distinguished black preachor whoso death, in the Southland, took place re cently. The Literary Digest published bis fa mous sermon on the topic that "do sun do move," based on the text, "The Lord is a man of war; the Lord is his name, (Ex. xv, 3,)tlie perorauou of which wus as follows : "3redren. ef de Bible say desnn rise an' sot, den it do rise an' set! An' how ken it rise an' set ef hit don' movo? In do tenth chapter o' de book on Joshwy, an' de twelf, thirteenth, an' fo'teenth versos, dar is proof strong ernuff for us all. Da Lawd slid, 'Sun, stand thou b till on Gideon, and thou moon in the valley of Ajalon. And the tun stood Btill and tho moon Btayed un til the people avenged thomselves upon their enemies. And thero was no day like that before it or after it.' "Bredren of de sun stood still once when 'twas a-movin' an' den stahted to hit is a moviu' now 1 Dey movin ergin say de earth am roun'. Dat aiu't bo, bredren j it can't be so, for the book 0' Revelation, chapter vii, verse 1, read: 'And I saw four angels standing on the four corners of the earth.' An' now, bredren an' sisters, wo ia livin' on afo' cornered earth ; an' ef de earth is got fo' corners, bow in the name 0' Gawd ken it be roun ? Ef de worl' is roun' an' turn over ev'y night, bow wo hoi' on ? Is wo got claws on our feet like wood peckers?" THE DEATH OF COMPETITION All the roAds in the middle west and northwest in which E. H. llarriman and J. P. Morgan, tho Van lerbilts and J. P. Hill are interested, hereafter will practically be under one management. The tratlio management of th is van combination, dealing potentially with the commerce and industry of more than ten million people, has been delivered to J. C. Stubbs.vice-presidentof the South ern Pacific, and Dariua Miller, second vice-president of the Great Northern. This is a dangerous power to entrust to two men, who are in no wise answer able to the public, whose sole responsi bilit.c rests with the railroad and finan cial kings in control of allied railway.'. It has been shown that the railroads take for their toll at least one-third of the productive resources of the state of Washington. They evade their just share of taxation. They can btftld up this Eectioi; or pull down that district. The profits of individuals, the prosper ity or the depression of towns and cities are in their keeping. They can enliven or depress the vast industries of sta'e and communities. The political power of a combination of this magnitude and daring is beyond calculation. It can dominate state leg islatures and crush the aspiration of ambitious citizens who refuse to do its imperious bidding. It would be trifling with a grave danger to say that these two men will exert their stupedeuous powers in moderation. That plea could be rdvanced with equal reason in support of the Russian gov ernment, where the czar's will be abso lute. ' President Hill and his associates have realized their dream of a decade. They have revolutionized ihe transportation business in the entire wet. They have eliminated competition. Their achieve mens brings new problems before the public. If government control of the railroads was advisable before it is now imperative. Thefe Northwestern states require powerful railway commissions. If the railway trust shall combat the creation of these commissions, the peo ple must organize for self preservation . Spokane Spokesman-Review. INCREASE OF CAPITALIZATION. Few will dispute that the rate of inter est has declined ; but that, at the same time, the capitalization of the great wealth-producing properties has vastly increased, has not been so manifest. I county printing to the lowest J This fact is of great importance to even the humblest wageworker. Along with these two facts, the falling of interest and the increase of capitalization, go two others, viz: the rate of profit is fall ing ; the volume of profit is rising. The last two facts present a paradox, which is explained by the two facts preceding, A practical illustration causes the seem ing contradiction to disappear. When interest was 6 per cent ., $0,000, 000 was the interest or income on $100, 000,000. Now, for large sums, interest has decreased to three per cent. ; hence, $9,000,000 is at present the income on a property valued at $300,000,000. If we investigate, we shall find that the great industries have increased their capital ization not in proportion to the lowered rate of interest, but far beyond this. A business that yields $1,000,000 is considered to be worth about $33,000, 000, though it may have cost but $10, 000,000. In short, as the rate of income decreases, capitalization increases, or, in other words, the volume of profit in- creases with the decrease of the rate of income. The conclusiw to which this brings us is rather startling. Finally, unless there be a change in the trend of busi ness, or capital's income do not recede below a certain minimum rate, interest might or would be reduced to zero and capital to a sum of infinite magnitude. Let us take the same amount given above and observe the colossal increase of capitalization as interest goes down . Rate per Cent. Principal. Income. (1 $ 100,000,000 $ 0,000,000 3 300,000,00il 0,000,000 2 750,000,000 15,000,000 1 1,800,01)0,000 18,000,000 It is useless to continue this series for the reason, principally, that capital ization increases not regularly but by leaps and bounds, at the fiat of the cap italist, and it is not possible to propl esy 1 1 A great many women are iubject to Bpells of dizziness, spots before the eyes, and a ringing noise in the head. These symptoms are commonly associated with liver "trouble " as the result of a diseased condition of the stomach and other or gans of digestion and nutrition. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery cures diseases of the stomach and the allied organs of digestion and nutrition. It cures through the stomach diseases seemingly remote from that organ, but which have their origin in a diseased rlitinn nf tlio stomach and ditrestive and nutritive system. Hence, cures of heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, and other organs are constantly effected by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. There is no alcohol in the Discovery" and it is free from opium, cocaine, and all other narcotics. Some dealers may offer a substitute as "just as good" as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. There's more profit in substitutes for the dealer. There's more health in the "Discovery" for your Don't be imposed on. "It is with the greatest pleasure I write you the benefit my mother has received from your 'Golden Medical Discovery,"' says Miss Carrie Johnson, of Lowesville, Amherst Co., Virginia. She suffered untold misery with uterint disease and nervousness, and had a constant roaring and ringing noise in her head. After taking ix bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery she was entirely cured." When a laxative is required use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. how enormous the capitalization at 2 per cent, of such a great corporation as Standard Oil will be a decade hence. What will have become of the small capitalists when the billionaire! have risen to the acme. of their glory in case they do not tumble while rising they may figure out to their own satisfaction. "I Never Knew Pain-Klller to FcV, before, what can the matter be? Where is the bottle? There, I thought s-;it is not Perry Davis' Pain-Killer at all, but something the druggist must have made himself and I did not notice it; I have used Pain Killer for years for diar rhoea, cramps anil stomach aches and it never failed." To Save Her Child From frightful disfigurement Mrs. Nannie Galleger, of La Grange, Ga., ap plied Bucklen's Arnica Salve to great sores on her head and face, and writes its quick cure exceedt-d all -her hopes. It works wonders in Sores, Bruises, Skin Eruptions, Outs, Burns, Scalds and Piles. 25c. Cure guaranteed by Geo! A. Harding, Druggist. MARKET REPORTS. POHTLANn, - (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best $2.G53.50; graham 82.60. Wheat Walla Walla 5556c; valley 56c57 j bluestem 57c. Oats White, 1 10 per cental ; gray, 1 10 1 12 per cental. Barley Feed $15; brewing $16 per t. Millstnffs Bran $27; middlings 21) ; shorts $20; chop $1(3. Hay Timothy $113; clover, 70; Oregon wild $0. Butter Fannv creamnry 45 and 53c J store, 20 and 25'. Kgijs 17 12 cents per doz. Poultry Mixed chickens $3.503.75; hena $4.505; springs $33 50;geee. $56; ducks $3a3'; live turkeys 8(3 10c; dressed, 10(ai2c. Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers and ewes, sheared, $3 25; dressed, 5 and 6 cents per pound. Hogs choice heavy, $5 75 and $0 00; light, $5; dresBett, 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, 0 and 7 cents oer pound. Cheese Full cream HJgC per pound Young America Pie Potatoes $1.00(gl. 10 per hundred. Vegetables Beets $1.50; turnips 90c per sack ; garlic 7c per lb ; cabbage $1.25 (i1.50 per 100 pounds; cauliflower 75c per dozen; parsnips 85c p?r sack ; celery 8085o per dozen; asparagus 78c; peas 23c per pound. Dried fruit Apples evapora'ed 67; sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; pears sun and evaporated 8gc; pitless plums 78c; Italian prunes 67c; extra silver choice 5(27. OltKOON CITY. Corrected on Thursday. Wheat, wagon, 56. Oats, 1 10 per cental. Potatoes, 95 cents per sack. Fugs 17 cents per dozen. Butter, country, 35 to 45c per roll; creamery, 45c. Dried apples, 5 to 6c per pound. Dried prunes Italians, 5c; petite and German, 4c. say "Consumption can be cured." Nature alone won'tdo it. Itneeds! nelp. Doctors say "Scott's Emulsion; is the best help." But you must continue Its use eveu la hot weather. If you have not tried it, send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNJJ, Chemists, 409415 l earl Street, Kew York. joe and fi.oo; all druggist. I rJ fs v "t '- r '1 1 i WmMa i 8 drug itofM. 2S D w 2St. j j SJBOTORS ! ! YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT But the Goods Prices ! You Can I 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 gold by all grocers. Patronize ( Home Industry lit Of" w CATTY -MABKET ffipv Opposite Hnntley's FiistZlass lyleats of 11 irjds Satisfaction Guaranteed Give yirrj a dall atjd be Treated ?it Foresight Means Good Sight If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the above headline. Lack ot foresight in attending to th 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 riorrison Street, PORTLAND, OREGON a For all kinds of CALL Oregon City Planing Mill F. S. BAKER, Prop. SASH, DOORS, R. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court House. ! POPE & CO. I t HEADQUARTERS FOR J Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, X X Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr, Drills and t Hoes, Spray Tumps, Imperial Bicycles. J I PLUMBING A SPECIALTY 1 Cor. Fourth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY X I X Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A. Holier tson The 7th St. Grocer Best Stock of First-Class to be Found at Bottom in Oregon City is at Brown & Welch Proprietors of the Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON 4 Building Material AT THE MOULDING, ETC. We cirry the largest stock of Caskets, Coflins, 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.