4 OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY Suture 1 lu Oregon City pustoWceas 2nd-class matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Paid la advance, per year 1 60 3il mouthi "5 Tttree mouths 'trial '. 25 i 9 lua utile iuui kuuicdb uuu VUCl UUUMICB lily l!ljltliu nuiru jwuuaTOfni. Jf tUis notice is marked your subscription ia due. CIAJUHiu rvATES. Wim Weekly Oregonian 2 03 Trl-Weekly N. Y. World 1 1 f ' National YVatchman 1 '5 " A npeal to rUusuti . '. 1 6o" " Weeklv JCxamlner 2 25 Bryan a Oomuinnor , 1 75 ADVERTISING BATES. Standing business advertisements; Per month professional cardi.il (8J, pel year): 1 to 10 inches 60c per inob, 12 Inches for $5, 20 Inches (column! 18, 30 Inches '4 pane) $12. Legal advertisements: Per inch (minion) flM, dtvome summons 7D0. Affidavits of publica tion will not be f urnUI.ed until publication fees are paid. lioeal notices; Flva cents per line per week Per mon'li 20c, Ohltuar ef, cards of tbanks, cunrohaml lode notices where admission fee is churned or collected half price or 2 cents per line. PATRONIZE HOMK INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, OCT. 11, 1901. SPREA D OF dOClA USM. One of two results is' certain. In pro tecting their investors the great trust companies will either succeed or fail. Let ua assume that they will fail that they will not bb able to maintain their monopolies, and that they will, there fore, be unable to pay dividends on their chares. The billions of dollars now be ing poured into their treasures will in that case be lost to the investors. Can any man estimate the suffering and dis- ' tress which such a default would entail? Is any prudent man willing to face the Indignation of these multitudes? Will any far-seeing man outline for us the so cial discontent and fermen tation likely to result from such'a colossal disaster? On the other hand, let us assume that the trusts will succeed in maintaining their monopolies, and thus in paying dividends on the masses of fictitious capital which they are now putting into circulation. In this case the investors , should be measurably content; but how .about the consumers? From them all this vast tribute will be extorted? Many of the necessaries of life will be made dearer to them by these monopolies. The drain upn their resources of this alupenoua over-capitalization will be constant and deadly, Does any sane man believe that they will continue to submit to it? It is not to be expected. The Ameiiean people are not slaves, nor will they endure such an imposition. If thobe combinations are protected by law, someway will be found of setting aside the law. Of course such mighty masses of wealth, with vested rights, and with their roots spreading so widely through out our society, will not yield tlioir power without a ttrugglo. These mammoth capitalists will be backed by a large number of share holders, whose interests have become adverse to the interests of the consum ing masses, and who possess enouoh in telligence and social influence to rauko the contest difficult and perhaps desper ate. They will maintain, and with some justice, that the state lias legitimated the property they hold, and encouraged them to invest their money in it, and that the stale must protect their inter, eetfl. Such is the conflict which wo are pre; paring for ourselves. I do not pretend to know exactly how it is coming out, but I know that tlio seeds of madness and violence are being sown broadcast every day, and tho harvest w coming sure ami soon. Such a gigantic attempt to bind burdens upon the whole com munity of consumers munt provoke a violent reaction. The billions of watered slock are simply a legalized demand upon the people for contributions of their sub stance to tho.o who have given them nothing in exchange. The feudal lords of tho olden tune m.ulo no more unjust demand. It will not bo endured. And there ia terrible danger that these in justices will bo swept away by a whirl wind of popular wrath. Is it not tiui" that sober men and wo men of ull classes wire trying to think this business through and siio what. the issue must lie? Can the enormous crea tion M lii'.titiotn capital which we are now witnessing have any other signitl vauco than this a determination to ex act from the industries of the country vast contributions for services not ren dered? Is tins consistent with justice or freedom? Is not this the very substance of feudal oppression? Will a free peoplo continue to Bubmit to it? "Universal corporate compulsion in tho interest of capital" is the goal toward which, in tho estimate of Professor Small, our econom ic wot Id Is moving. Of course- we shall not tarry at that goal ; probably w e shall never reach It. The swifter and tho stronger the movement toward it, tho more prompt and resolute will be the re volt. When the purpose becomes evi dent, these vast aggregations of capital vill be "seized, their holders will be ex propriated, B"1 t'ie propertied will pass under the control of the people. In dustrial feudalism, when it is finished, will be speedily transformed into in Jus trial democracy. Tims it is that the present tendencies in the business world are carrying us to ward socialism at a plunging pace. The shrewdest capitalists themselves recog-' the fact. Rev. Dr. Washington Gladden in Outlook. THE STEEL OCTOPUS. How vast and overpowering the Steel Trust is, is shown by this brief table.of the annu l output in tons of it3 princi pal constituents: Carnegie Steel Company 3,850,000 Federal Steel Company 2,500,000 National Steel Company 1,800,000 American Steel Hoop Company.. 1500,000 American Steel & Wire Co 700,000 American Sheet Steel Company 325,000 Total 11,375,000 This single corporation, controlled by comparatively few men and equipped with the most costly and complete ma chinery, makes more than one third of the steel products of the entire world. The Carnegie Company alone pro duces more than twice as much as all France; the Federal Company twice as much as all Russia ; all Great Britain itself a million tons less than these two companies combined. The English autkor, Frederic Harri 80n, writes in Current Literature: "No competent observer can doubt that in wealth, manufactures and material pro gress of all kinds tho United States in a very few years must Hold the first place in the world without dispute. Its popu lation will soon double that of any na tion of Western Europe. That popula tion will have an education second only to that of Germany and Switzerland, and superior to that of any other European nation. The natural resources of their country exceed those of al! E"rope put together. Their energy exceeds that of the Eritish; their intelligence is hardly second to that of Germany and France. And their social and political system is more favorable to the material develop ment than any other society ever devised by man. This extraordinary combina tion of national and social qualities.with vast numbers and unbounded physical resources, cannot fail to give America the undisputed lead in all material things. It is a curious instance of the power of national egotiem that Europe fails to grasp this truth that Germans, with their wretchedly poor country, nar row seaboard and scanty rivers, ports and minerals, alJ aspire to the first place ; that Frenchmen fail to see how their passion for art, rest and borne has handi capped them in the race for supremacy in things material ; that Britons, in their narrow island and comfortable traditions, will not recognize tiiat the industrial prizes must ultimately go to numbers, national unity, physical resources, geo graphical opportunities, trained intelli gence and restless ambition. Tub war department has given out a carefully prepared statement compar ing the imports and exports of the Phil ippine Islands for the seven months ending January 31, 1901, with the same period a year previous. This statement is intended, of course, to show that U. S. ownership and control of the islands, is benefitting our trade, but a careful study of the figures presented brings out little to encourage that idea. When the number of American soldiers and civil ians on the islands is considered, the in crease in the imports from the U, S from $89,1,010 to $1,49J,4SS seems absurd ly small, especially whtn tho increase during the same period ia imports from Europe was from $j,270,7iW to $3,97 1, 183. In the exports from tho islands the IT. S. makes a still poorer showing, the later seven months showing only $1,477,011 against $2,030,030 the same seven mouths of the previous year. What adds to the aggravation of these figures is that expoits to Europe show an increase from $3,201,0 )3 to $7,983,751. Even admitting that the commerce of the Phillipinos will in the course of time become as great aa the most sanguine predict, where will tho benefit to U. S. commerce como in, if Europe is to con tinue to control the lion's share of it? And there seems no way to shut the European way out. The treaty of Paris pledges the U.S. to give equal com mercial privileges to all nations cut an important figure in our future politics, should lose no time in taking another hard think on the subject. The pictures that most men form of this blissful existence are extremely curious; the immaterial soul is placed in tho midst of grossly m tterial pleasures. Tho imagination of each believer paints tho enduring splendor according to his personal taste. The American Indian trusts to tind in his Paradisj the finest hunting grounds with innumerable hordes of buffaloes and bears; the Es kimo looks forward to sun-tipped ico- bergs with an inexhaustible supp!y of bears, seals and other polar animals ; the effeminate Chingalese frames his Paradise on the wonderful island-paradise of Ceylon with its noble gardeus and forests adding that there will be unlimited supplies of rice and curry, of cocoanuts and o'her frait, always at hand; tho Moliamme.lau Arab believes it will be a place of shady gardens of (lowers, watered by cool springs and filled with lovely maidens; the fisher man of Sicily looks forward to a daily super-abundance of the most valuable fishes and the finest macaroni. In a word, each believer really expects his eternal life to be a direct continuation of his individual life on earth, Only in a "much improved and enlarged edition." C. G. Luce, past master of the Michigan- State Grange and ex-goverr.or of the state, said in a recent address : "The first great lesson to be learned in co-operation is confidence in ourselves confi dence in each other, confidence in our Order, and love for and confidence in our calling. If we entirely fail in this, we fail in all. This kind of :o-operation is not all embraced by membership, pay ing dues, or even attending the meetings of the Grange; something even broader than this is required. The farmers of the whole land ,need co-operation mere than any other portion of our people. In the very nature of our calling, we are of necessity more isolated than others. It isneeeded for social improvement as well as for intellectual achivement. . It is demanded for the protection of politi cal IMGrhta Tf la ranniraA Hit tVia Kt.l. est ana dearest Interests of all." According to Popular Science, imita tion new potatoes are now made, an in dustry peculiar to the Portuguese, Ital ians and Chinamen. Late in the season a crop of potatoes is planted . Before winter they attain a moderate size. They are dug and buried until new po tatoes begin to arrive from the South. Then they are unearthed and dipped into a large kettle contains hot water and lye. The process causes the skin of the potato to curl and also hardens the potato itself, making it much more firm. Upon removal from the solution the po tatoes are rinsed and spies 1 out to dry. So far as outward appearance is con cerned, the imitation is so good that it is next to impossible to pick out the doctored potatoes from among those that are genuine. California is said to be the home of this mode of gardening. From gold to grain. The transporta tion companies running steamships to Alaska are now in search of settlers for that country, and it is stated that that they are preparing to settle the valleys of Southern Alaska with thousands of hardy immigrants from Norway and other northern European countries. But even as far north as the valley of the lower Yukon farming will prove remu nerative, as experiments have demon strated that there potatoes and other vegetables grow to a large size and ma ture. Emkbson says that whoever puts a chain about the neck of his fellow fast ens the other end about his own neck, for we are of one flesh, and nothing is more clear than that no one can in the end really profit by injustice. LOCAL SUMMARY Chicago Cottage Organ at Block's. A bran new buguy for sale at a sacri fice. Inquire at this office. The finest bon bon boxes in town at theK.K. K. Shaving only 10 cmts at the first class shop of P. G. Shark. The latent in chocolate of all kinds at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up tq 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. $20 to $100 to loan on chat tel or pi r sonal security. Dimick & Eastuam, Agts. The latest ar.d best brands of cigars and tobaccos are kept by P. G. Shark Smokers' goods and confectionery, also Land titles examined, abstracts made and money loaned at lowest rates. Dimick & Eti8tbam, Lawyers, Oregon City. Lumlwr Leave orders at this office for tirst-elaBS lumber of all kinds, or ad dress W. F. ;1Iauris. 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. A O. T. line will until further notice make a 25 cent round trip 'ate from Caneniah 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 only first-cltiss res taurant in Oregon City and where you can get a good meal for the price of a poor one el ewhere. Good Investment River front lot 6Sxl05 feet, situate back of Charman's drugstore, sustable for modern flats or cottages, for sale. Price $1000. Also 2 lots corner of Jackson and Eighth streets, luquire at Commercial Bank. Farmsrt, bring "your chickens te Mc Glashan 1 Rakel. They pay spot cash. A slightly used parlor organ for sale by W, L. Block, the homefurnisher. Trespass notices at Courier-Herald office, 3 for 10 cents. School Books at Charman A Co, Tablets, Pencils and Rulers kkkk at Charman A Co., C ut Price Druggists. Everythinsr fresh and clean at the Willamette Market. Give it a call. Guckenheimer rye whiskey direct from the bonded warehouse. Sold by the gallon, bottle or drink by Kelly A Nob litt, Pure goods in orgiual packages. Prink Wilholm's beer. Kelly A Nob litt, sole agents. New Yeilings at Mis Goldsmith's. "Crgifig for HicMoon" Has become a pro verbial phrase to ex press the futility of mere desire. There are a great many peo ple who think it is as useless to hope tor health as to cry for the moon. They have tried many medicines and many doctors, but all in vain. A great many hopeless men and women have been cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery; people with obstinate coug-hs, bleeding; lungs, nig-ht-sweats and other symptoms of disease which if neglected or mmskillfully treated find a fatal termination in consumption. "Golden Medical Discovery " has a won derful healing power. It increases the nutrition of the body, and so gives strength to throw off disease. It cleanses the blood from poisonous impurities and enriches it with the red corpuscles of health. It is not a stimulant, but a strength giving mcdi cine. It contains no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine, nor any other narcotic. Sometimes the extra profit paid by inferior medicines tempts the dealer to offer a substitute as "just as good" as "Dis covery." If you are convinced that "Dis covery " will cure you accept nothing else. "I was In poor health when I commenced taking Dr. Pierce's medicine," writes Mr, Elmer Lawler, of Volga, Jefferson Co,, Indiana. "I had stomach, kidney, heart, and lime trouble. Was not able to do any work. 1 had a severe cousin and hemorrhage of the lungs, but after usiuk your mcuiciuc a wuuc a ..un............ w gain in strengtn ana nesn, ana sroppeo. cougn ine right away. Took about six bottleB of the Golden Medical Discovery ' then, and lust nrintr I hari RHnr. and it settled OU mv lunETS, leaving me with a severe cough. I had the doctor, but he didn't seem to help me any ; so I commenced your med icine again and took three or four bottles of the ' Discovery ' aud two vials of Dr. Pierce's Pel lets, and that straight ened me up. I feel Tike a different person. I gladly recommend your medicine to all suffer ers, for I know it cured me." Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant Pellets cure con stipation by curing its cause. Sagamore Sour Mash. If you want a liquor that is chem ically pure direct from the distillery, try theJSagamore sour mash. Kelly A Noblltt, direct purchasers. 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 imnroved prop erty. Inquire at Courier-Herald office. Pnrties having a farm to rent will do well to call on O. A. Cheney, real estate-and insurance agent, at Oregon City, who has applicants. STOPS THE COUGH AND WOKKS OFF THE COLD. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Oure no pay Price 25 cents. Portland Carnival. "The Great Carnival, which opens at Portland on Sept. 19th and continues till October 19th, 1901, will be well worth a visit to the metropolis. Exhibits of agricultural and horti cultural products, mining and manufac turing industries, athletic exercises, a horse show at which feats of horseman ship and the various forms of fancy rid ing will be seen, and a magnificent mil itary tournament, participated in by picked companies from the Oregon Na tional Guard, are a few of the attractions at the Carnival this year. The Southern Pacific Company will sell tickets at low rates for this occasion and will also run a special excursion from Ashland to Portland and return r stopping at all intermediate stations, the date and rates for which w ill be an nounced hereafter. For Over Fifty Fears. An Old and Well-Tried Rembdy. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrnoea. Is pleasant to the taste, Sold by Drug gists in every part of the World. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Pe sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. That's a good i.ar o Scott's Emulsion. C are like young plnr.;.-. will grow in oulir ; Othcrs.nccd fertilizer.-. The ncturc of ec:"c .1 :''-. prevents then from tl rr on ordinary food C vc h c drcn grow right if trcr.tal r:. All they need h v. litth tilizcr a little extra rich: Scott's Emulsion is the i. treatment. Fertilizers make thinr'-r That's juft what Scott s k sion docs. It makes r hi'-.-: grow in flesh, grow in stix-n; grow rich blood, grow in v' grow hr.ppy. That's vhav make it for. Send for free sample. SCOTT & flOWXE, Chemist. r-, P-arS St . : 50c du4 f i.oo; ail drugts. WAS r RI) TRrSTWORTAY MEN' ANT) WO men to travel and advertise for old established house o( solid flnanoial standing. Salary $7S4 a year and expenses, all payabls in cash. No an vassln? required. Give references and enclose el!-adtlresed stamped envelope. Address Mao sger, s:A Caiton Bldg., Chicago. llHi.lil mn mmmm jnunmiiswisi.P' J zzris 1 I t i YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARRIS' GROCERY 1 A 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 4 CfiW BIABKET SSmniW Opposite Huntley's First-Glass Meats of 11 lirjds Satisfaction Guaranteed Give yirQ a (Sail arjd be Titeated 5it Foresight Means Good Sight If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in th above headline. Lack ot foresight in attending to tht 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 393 riorrison 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 Thones 476 and 305. Two POPE & CO. HEADQUARTERS FOR Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and Hoes, Spray Tumps, Imperial Bicycles. PLUMBING A SPECIALTY Cor. Fourth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A.fSobcrfsoai The ;th St. Grocer . Brown & Welch FKorBivros or tm Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building . OREGON CITY, OREGON We carry the largest stock of Caskets, Coffins, Robes and Lining in Clackamas county. We are the only undertakers in the cruinty owning a hearse, which we fur nish for less than can ba had elsewhere. .ve are under small expanse and do not ask large profits. Calls promptly attended night or day. Doors South of Court House.