i OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1901 regon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY tute.ei In Oregon City patofllo u 2nd-claM mttr BUBaCBIPTIOH BATES. Paid ia advance, per year 1 J Vx month! .... W Tire moutbi'trial ... 2 4VTb date opposite your address on the paper denotes the time to which you hate paid. If this notice is marked your subscription is due. CLUBBING KATJCS. With Weekly Oregonlan -M 00 Tri-Weekly K. Y. World 1 ' National Watchman ... 1 '5 " Appeal to Keason 1 60 " Weeklv Examiner ,.H' " Bryan a Commoner 1 T5 ADVERTISING BATES. Standing business advertisements; Per month professional cards, 1 pel year): 1 to 10 Indies 50c per Inch, 12 inches for $5, 20 inches (Column) $8, 80 inches i page) $12. legal advertisements: Per inoh (minion) $2.50, diverse summons (7 50. Affidavits of publica tion will not be furnished until publication fees are paid. Local notlf; FIT J cents per line per week Per month 20o. obituar es, cards of tbanks, hnrohand lodce notices where admission fee is rhnrged or collected half price or '1 cents per line. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, SEPT. 13, 1901. According to the computation of the N. Y. Herald, S828 millionaires own $16,000,000,000, or nearly one fifth of the wealth of the country. Tub total cost or the municipal im provements which are projected and un der active construction at the present time in New York city is between $600, 000,000 and $700,000,000. Tub railroad commission of Texas has made a cut in the rate that makes it possible to ship oil to any part of the atate at 'ess than $2 for the equivalent o! a ton of coal. The state institutions have already made the change in fuel, as well as many factories, and a great revolution in the fuel trade is at hand. John Alexander Dowib, Chicago's "Modern Prophet of Zion," makes his religion pay. Starting less than ten years ago without a cent as an all-round "medicine man," he has amassed a for tune of between three and four million dollars. His religious zeal is excelled by his ability as a business man. There are 2,050 railroad corporations in this country; something like 800 roads or corporations run the 2)50; and it is perfectly safe to say that ten men in the IVaited State", whose nameB are famil iar, control the whole 2050 rods, either ttmecUy or indirectly ; and nearly ail of them live in the state of New York. Tjbx Oregonlan of the 2d insists on the necessity of reform in the "assessment methnds' in Oregon, Its kick is provr Take Clackamas county. For several months the cost of the assessor's office has been $850 a month, the total force employed being 10 persons, lnclud'ng the Assessor. Uncle Sam bought two transports, the McPberson and the Terry, for $350, 000; paid $500,000 In repairs, etc., un them.and has now sold them for $40,000. "Yet some people actually believe that nobody conoectel with the navy got rich during the war, but everyone who had anything to do with our Spanish unpleasantness, did so through pure love of the flag. Tub Ashland Tidings says the apple crop of the Rogue river valley promises ito be a great income producer this year. Not only is the yield a full one, but the quality is finer than usual. A number of contracts have already been made by growers to sell their crops at 90 and 95 cents per box, and in one or two in stances the figures bave been as high as $1.15. These prices do not include the packing and boxes which are paid for by the buyers. Co-orBRATivi insurance companies "e saving two-thirds of the coBt of insui- ance. In Minnesota the farmers have organized 2091 township co-operative "insurance companies. In the line of creameries, orange-growers' and raisin- (growers' and prune-growers' associations nearly all the great I M Indus' ies of California are now O 'SPni .ed on a co operative btsis. f.very where the pec- ;ple are learning to work together in their line of business or labor as brot'i ere. la is said that the king, cabinet, rigs d.tg and people of Denmark all approve the sale to the United States of the Dan ish West Indies, but that the proposed price, $3,750,000, is considered small. "J'lie islands are St. Thomas, St. Croix ;and St. John, with 223 square mires of area, and perhaps 5,000 inhabilants, About r ne for each $100 of the purchase rprioe. Thoy lie near Oulebra and other tsmaU Manila, which we acquired with Voto Tvico. They are not prosperous and would welcome a change of allegi jtrKe. A (Tub many years of investigation Into the social, moral and industrial condition of the people, I come to the conclusion that iu the adoption of the Philosophy of the religion of Chist as practical creed for the conduct J business, there is to be found tho surest and speediest solution of the dif ficulties which excite the minds of men, and which lead many to think social, industrial and political evolution is at hand Carroll D. Wright, U. 8. Com of Labor. Tbc total railway mileage in this coun try in 1900 was 259,788, capitalized at $61,490 a mile, or an aggregate of $11, 491,034,960, of which about $5,500,000, 000 was fuu Jed debt, and $5,500,000,000 stock, or, more correctly, slop. Oyer $3,000,000,000 of the capital Btock paid no dividend. The number of persons employed was 1,017.653. The number injured on the railroads during the year was 58,158, of whom 7865 were killed, 2550 of the latter number being railroad employes, and 4346 trespassers. There has never before been so much interest manifested in agricultural edu cation in the United States as is shown in the press at the present time. Agri cultural papers are giving more atten tion to it than ever before and other pa pers are now taking ud the subject. It is possible that we are about to enter upon a period of more rapid progress in agricultural education than the most sanguine have dared to hope. The far mer who wishes his sons to be in the lead should send them to the agricultural college and have them take the agricul tural course. From a commercial point of view, Germany is imensely hostile to the Unitbd States. Senator Chauncey De pew, who recently returned from Eu rope, says : "We are coming to be con sidered a common enemy to the extent that we actually supplant foreign manu facture, and the feeling is intensified by every concern which goes bankrupt, or reducss wages, or lays off a portion of its employes, ascribing it all to American competition. Germany has both tariff and trusts. Everything there is svnd cated. The trusts refuse to sell any thing to a merchant who deals in an im po ted article. This makes it more dif ficult for the Impo' ter, because the boy cott mans ruin. Where the American opens his own warehouse, as the shoe dealers did in Vienna, the native shoe makers mob the place, and the police 1 iook me on er way. SCHOOL SAVINGS BANKS. A prominent educator calls attention to the fact that the school savin us bank has gradually come to occupy a most prominent and important place in this country's public educational system. In California the system has been estab lished in a large number of places, and there are indications thnt the practical teaching of thrift will become general in the near future. It is stated that there are now no less than 35S3 scuool banks in the United Stales, and that these -have an anny of 63,567 depositors. The amount depos ited in these banks since their begin ning is placed at$S67,000, but the writer says these figures must be far irom com plete as the school banks in the one county of Montgomery, in Philadelphia, bave received $175,300 , from children, and have no less than 4,019 depositors. In Atlantic City the deposits in the banks there last year reached a total of $0,876, and the youngest are showing great interest in the idea. Now, instead of spending their pen nies and nicke's for useless trinkels.they put their money into the bank and take great pride in showing their l.ttle de posit books. The only objection against the movement is that it increases the work of the school teacher. Once or twice a week the teacher cails for de posits and the pupils then bring forward whatever they have, from one cent up. They a-e given due credit on the bunk books, and the teacher then deposits the amount in some reliable banking in stitution. The Bys'eii lias long been in vogue in France and Belli urn and is a great suc cess there. The young American can be taught to take care of his money at none too early an age, in order that habits of economy may become firmly fixed in his character. THE C A FIT At PROBi AND EM. LA BOP In another century a few hundred boys muy be ab'e, as machine-tenders, to do all the work of Nevt York, and there will be nothing human left except small boys and stockholders. Mean while what shall we do with such a thing as f ie five thousand p:irs of work men's socks produced in one day in a mill I visited, by 50 boys with 400 ma chines, with no woikuiei to wear them, or, what amounts to the same thing, with no money to buy them? It is not clear that we are netting into an indus trial hole? We must find a market for the product which our unemployed can not buy, and that is the reason why we are bagging the Philippines and Cuba and Porto Rico, and any old island that comes along. If you explore the jungles of Luzon a year hence I have no doubt you will see half-naked Bavages gliding among the trees wearing blue socks with white toes and heels. The Stale Socialist says that the dif ficulties of overproduction and lack of employment are the natural results of competition, and that the only way out competition, and that the only way out is for the people to take over the land is for the people to take oyer the land and all means of production and organ- ize the industries from Washington. This solution is called "scientific," and it seems very simple ; but I must con fess that the idea of it "gives me pause." There is a Teutonic love of government implied in the suggestion which seems to me unlikely to attract any large por tion of the American people, and I do not anticipate the adoption of any such programme, unless the industrial chiefs of the country by their refusal to give up their privileges, bring it upon us as a punishment for our sins. Tf 1.! III! 1 J . t !1 i uiuiu-umiionairesanu irampg,orioe- j taking legislators and party bosses, the Stock Exchange and Tammany Hall are the natural result of ordinary business competition, the State Socialists may be . right, and it may become necessary for the people to absorb and organize politi cally the productive energies of the land, although it is a task which might make a giant stagger ; but I doubt their major premise. America is supposed tu be a free country, but we have not given freedom a fair trial in industrial matters, and until we do I shall not be satisfied tkat nature cannot cure evils for which monopoly of one kind or other is respon sible. The fundamental justice of the wage earner's Cise the importance of accord ing bim his just . dues is. forcibly borne ont by the religion which most of us profess. Christianity sprang from the Jewish church, and the Jewish church bad its origin in a strike the strike of the He brew brickmakers in Egypt and Moses and Aaron were the first walking dele gates on record. Our political faith as well as our relig ion sets up the standard of equal rights and equal opportunities. The Declara tion of Independence is going out of fashion in our foreign dependencies, but we should keep it for home consump tion. The equal right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness can hardly be said to exist in a land of slums and pal aces, of child labor and unemployed and unexampled luxury. To accept the pres ent divided condition of society as a finality is to be untrue, not only in our Christianity, but to our democracy. Our political democracy is nothing but a mask behind which our industrial oli- garchy hardly tries to hide itself, The real power has passed from out state houses and city halls, and is now cen tered in the counting room and cham ber of commerce. Unless we can de mocratize these, oar constitutions haye become useless trappings, and we may as well admit that they give us no more assurance of freedom than did their sen ates and consulships to the subjects of the Csesars. Ernest Crosby. ' A fine Uprigui, Piano at Block' A Shocking Calamity "Lately befell a railroad laborer," writes Dr. A. Kellett, of Wlliiford, Ark. "His foot was badly crushed, but Bucklen's Arnica. Salve quickly cured him. It's simplv wonderful for burns, boils, piles and all skin eruptions. It's the world's champion healer, Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold by Geo. A. Harding. Sagamore Sour Mash. It you want a liquor that is chem ically pure direct from the distillery, try the Sagamore sour mash. Kelly & Noblltt, direct purchasers. Carnival Coming On. On Wednesday evening, Sept. 18, the Portland Carnival will open in a brill iant array of splendor such as is seldom seen in the Northwest. The great expo sition building will be illuminated by nearly S800 electric lights, while the ad joining Multnomah Field, with its five ac es, will have lights equaling 40,000 candle power. The Carnival will afford a whole month of pleasure and interest ing instruction . The railroads and steam boats are going to carry people to and fro.n the Carnival at one and one-third fare for the round trip, and their excur sion tickets will be good for 7 days. There will not be a dull moment at the Carnival; some sort of entertainment will be going on all the time, afternoon and evening, with two full military bands discoursing music. 1 he array of attractions will be unsurpassed, and the Carnival will last a month. OH for tho Children. Give them oil cod-liver oil. It's curicus to sec the result. Give it to the peevish, fret iul child, and l.c kuhs. Giw it to the pale, ancemtc cr-:io, and his face becomes rosy aiu full of health. Take aflat- chested child, or a child that has stopped crowing, eive him the oil, and he will grow big and strong like the rest. This is not a new scheme. It has been done for years. Of course you must use the right oil. Scott's Emulsion is the one. Scott's Emulsion neither looks nor tastes like oil becrvse wc are so careful in making it K J bend for free sample. BW41 " u,iu drJ3iii7 ' Does not make the man. " Tht blood it the life," the vital force of the body. So it not infrequently happens that the man who looks to be a picture of physical strength fails a sudden victim to disease. A proper care lor the blood would prevent many a serious sickness. The cleansing of the blood is per fectly accomplish ed by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discov ery. It drives out the Impurities and poisonous sub stances which cor rupt the blood and breed disease. It incres es the ac tivity of the blood in a ki n g glands, and so increases the supply of pure blood. It builds up the entire body with good sound flesh. There is no al cohol ia "Golden Medical Discov ery" and it is en tirely free from opium, cocaine and all other narcotics. The dealer who offers a substitute for the " Discovery " does so to gain the lit tle more profit paid by interior medi cines. . There is nothing "just as good" for the blood as "Golden Medical Dis covery" therefore accept no substitute. I took five bottles of ' Golden Medical Discov ery' for my blood," writes Mr. William D.Shamb lin, of Reray, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory. " I had ' ring worms ' on me and 1 would burn them off ana they would come right back, and they were on me when I commenced using 'Gold en Medical Discovery,' and they went away and I haven't been bothered any more." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. A Knight of Terror. "Awful anxiety was felt for the widow of the brave General Burnham of Ma cbias, Me., when the doctors said she would, die from pneumonia before morn ing," writes Mrs. S. H. Lincoln, who attended her that fearful night, but she begged for Dr. King s New Discovery, which had more than once saved her life, and cured her of consumption. Af ter taking, Bhe slept all night. Further use entirely cured her." This marvel lous medicine is guaranteed to cure all throat, chest and lung diseases. Only 50c and $1 00. Trial bottles free at Geo. A. Harding's drug Store. MARKET REPORTS. PORTLAND. (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best $2 65(33.50; graham $2.60. Wheat Walla Walla 5556c: valley 56c57 ; bluestem 57c. Oats White, 1 10 per cental; gray, 1 10 1 12 percental. Barley Feed $15 ; brewing $16 per t . Millstuffs Bran $27 ; middlings 21 ; shorts $20; chop $16. Hay Timothy $11(313: clover. 7(89: Oregon wild $6. Butter Fanny creamery 45 and 30c ; store, 20 and 25. Eggs 17 1 2 cents per doz. Poultry Mixed chickens $3.503.75: hens $4.505; springs $33 60; geese. ducks $33; live turkeys 8 10c ; dressed, 10($12c. Mutton Gross, best sheep, weathers and ewes, sheared, $3 25; dressed, 6 and 6 cents per pound. Hoes choice heavy, lb 75 and SS 00 : light, $5 ; dressed, 6 1-2 and 7 cents per pound. Veal Large, 7 and 7 1-Z cents per pound. Beef (iross, top steers, $3 50 and $4. dressed beef, 6 and 7 cents per pound. unese null cream 11J40 per pound Young America 12c. Potatoes $1.001.10 per hundred. Vegetables Beets $1.50; turnips 90c per sack ; garlic 7c per lb ; cabbage $1.25 (gl.oU per 1UU pounds; cauliflower 75c per dozen ; parsnips 85c per sack ; celery 8085c per dozen; asparagus 78c; peas 23c per pound. Dried truit Apples evapora.ed b7: sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; pears sun and evaporated 8gc; pitless plums 78c; Italian 'prunes 67c; extra silver choice 5(27. . OBEOON CITY. Corrected on Thursday. Wheat, wagon, 66. Oats, 1 10 per cental. Potatoes, 95 cents per sack. Eggs 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. Girl wanted for upstairs work. Good wages paid. Apply at store of I. Selling. To Trade 100 acres of land six milts south of Oregon City ; timber enough to pay for place ; running water, orchard, about 100 acres cleared. Will trade for Oregon City or Portland improved prop erty. Inquire at Courier-Herald otlice. Want to rent farm land and pasture lor sheep and g"ats, and taxe them on shares. Adaress C. O. Warmoth, 356 ban Katael street, Portland, Oregon. Working Night and Day. The busiest aud mightest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into strength, listlessneas into energy , brain-tag into mental power. They're wonderful in building up the health Only 25c per box. Sold by Geo. A. Harding. Parties haviug a farm to rent will do well to call on O. A. Cheney, real es tate and insurance agent, at Oregon Uty, wno has applicants. SrOPS THE COUOH AND WOKKS OFF T11K COLO. Laxative Bromo-Oumine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure no pay rnce m cents. WANTED TRUSTWORTAT MES AXD Wo men to travel nd ailTartlae fur old MUbllshed house of solid Suaoolal standii))?. Balary $70 year and expeosu, all payable hi cash. No cap Tasslng required. Dire referenoea and enli e eU-aiiilreed stamped eiiTelope. Address Man ager, goo vuuon mug., tuiuago. YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT t t t Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARRIS' GROCERY ft 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 MAKKJET ,SSSft. opposite auntiey s First-Glass iyteats of 11 Kirjds Satisfaction Guaranteed Give yiriQ a (Tall aQd be Treated Ri&ty Foresight Means Good Sight If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the above headline. Lack oi 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 florrlsou Street, PORTLAND, OREQON For all kinds of Building Material CALL AT THE Oregon City Planing Mill F. S. BAKER, Prop. SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC. R. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker Phones 476 and 305. Two 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 CIT? "Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City . A.llobei'tsoii The ;th St. Grocer Brown & Welch Pbopbiitoxs of thi Seventh Street t. Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY,. OREGON r0fflenaCaRyKthe lare8t.etock of Caskets, Coffins, Robes and Lining in Clackamas We are the only- undertakers in the county owning a hearse, which we fur nish for lens than can ba had elsewhere. 8i.a.re nnder small expense and do not ask large profits. Calls promptly attended night or day. Doors South of Court House.