Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, January 17, 1902, Page 4, Image 4

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    OJtlGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17 1112
Oregon City Courier-Herald
By A. W. CHENEY
utsre 1 In Oregon City stofflce as 2nd-ola matter
80B8CEIPTIOS KATES.
,., .,. 1 60
six months I.
riiree months'trlal
fVThe dale opposite your address on the
paper donoles the time to wmcn you u ,
If this uotlcels markedyour subscription la lu.
CLUBBING BATES, ......
"With Weekly Oregonian $J 99
' ' Trl Woekly N. Y. World J go
" National Watchman J 76
" Appeal to Reason J J
" weekly Examiner J
" Bryan s Commoner... . . I '
ADVERTISING RATES.
Standing business advertisements: Permonth
nrofessloual cards,l V), pel year): 1 to 10 inches
file per Inch, 12 inches for $6, 20 inches (column)
8, 30 inches ('4 page) $12.
188,1 advertisements: Per Inch (minion) 12.60,
dlvorse summons $7 50. Affidavits of piiblica
ion will not be furnished until publication fees
are paid.
Local notices; Five cents per line per week
Per month 20o. Obituar es, cards of tbanks.
churoh and lodge notices where admission fee
Is charged or collected half price or 1 cents
per line.
FATBONIZE HOME INDUSTRY
0REO0N CITY, JAN. 17, 1902.
MUST BE CASH IN-ADVANCE
through the solid rock, hurl mountains
into the sea, or drive a steamship ro in J
the globe.
"It is the fashion of the day to cry lift
'breadth,' to Bound the praises of the
many-sided man. Breadth of mind is a
good thing, provided it does not hinder,
as it is too apt to do, unity of aim and
concentration of thought and action. But
all history shows that the highest suc
cess in any calling is reserved for minds
of one faculty, where no rival powers di
yide its empire.
"The.one prudence in life," says Em
erson, and he never said a wiser thing"
is concentration." It ii the agent of
single and determined purpose who is
the edged man and therefore cuts his
way through obstacles to nuccess. It is
only one great purpose, adhered to ob
stinately amid all discouragements and
hindrances, that can produce success,
that can unify all our powers, and by
binding them, like so many cords into
one cable, make them irresistible."
POLITICAL NOTES.
rontoff.ce Decree It to Be Unlaw
ful for PfibUthers to Exlentl
t Subscribers.
A new ruling of the Postal Depart
ment, or, to be more specific, that part
of it presided over by Third Assistant
Postmaster-General Edwin C. Madden,
is to the effect, that the mailing lists of
newspapers and periodicals must here
after include the names of only paid-up
subscribers. The text of the ruling is
s follows: ' '
"The department holds it to Le not
within a publisher's privilege to mail at
the pound rate of postage, as to sub scribers,
copies of his publication to
mersons whose subscriptions have ex
pired; and the inclusion within tlit
number presented for mailing as to le
gitimate subscribers.of copies addressed
- to Dersons who are not . legitimate sub
scribers, will deprive the publisher of
ihe rjound rate upon the whole, unless
the illegitimate portion be separated
ttberelrom,"
It will be seen that this means noth
ing else than that a newspaper publish
er may no longer give credit to bis sub
ecribers. It's to be "paid in advance"
or nothing. It may be thought that an
easy way out of the difficulty will be to
omit dates of expiration from address
labele, but there are rumors roundabout
of a deteeth e branch of the postoffioe
department that will devote itself to
publishers only. If there bo foundation
for the report and with Mr. Madden
in authority nothing is impossible nowa
dayswe may expect at some time
soon to receive a visit from a burly gen
tleman with authority from Mr. Mad
den to look over our lists and our
books to see if there be any names there
of persons who have not paid in advance
for the paper. If such be found we
will be Informed we cannot mail longer
to them, and, what is more, we cannot
mail to anybody, unless we first sepa
rate what to Mr. Madden is the chaff
from the wheal.
It's a bad state of affairs, this which
concerns the present management of the
postoffice department, and it bids fair to
grow worse. No publisher knows when
he Is safe from invasion j the depart
ment may swoop down upon him at any
moment and he will have to pay or suf
fer the consequences.
The Appeal to lteason, Wilshire's pa
per and other reform journals seem to
liaved riled Mr. Madden, and he has al
ready driven Mr. Wilshire from "free"
America to Canada, and it is no telling
when he'll bogin to harass the smaller
papers. Subscribers who wiBh their pa
per continued you should pay in advance
as soon as possible.
The county tax for this year is 33
mills and the city tax about 47 mills.
This is about 3 mills higher than last
year, and everyone knows it was high
enough then. The only way to reduce
taxes is to put goud men in office that
will look after the taxpayers some and
not after their own salary so much.
Col. R. A. Miller, G. L. Hedges, El
mer Dixon, G. W. Grace, John Cooke,
Dr. Strickland and 0. D. Latourette are
mentioned as available candidates for
senator on the democratic ticket.
E. D. Olds and E. Mass are mentioned
in connection with the democratic nomi
nation for sheriff.
ON FIRE.
An exploding lampj the clothing; in
a blaze; a paragraph in the paper tell
ing of horrible suffering from burns.
Tragedy in this form moves a man to
tears. But for
women who are
daily being con
sumed by the
smouldering fire
of disease there is
little sympathy.
Inflammation,
with its fierce
burning ; ulcera
tion, eating into
the tissues ; the
nervous system al
most shattered by
suffering , these
are only part of
the daily agonies
borne by many a
woman.
Dr. Pierce's Fa
vorite Prescription
puts out the fire
of inflammation,
heals ulceration,
and cures female
weakness. It tran-
quili2es the nerves, restores the appetite,
atftl gives refreshing sleep. "Favorite
Prescription " is the most reliable put-up
medicine offered as a cure for diseases
peculiar to women. It always helps.
It almost always cures.
"When I first commenced using Dr. Pierce's
medicines, tt writes Mrs. George A. Strong, of
Gansevoort, Saratoga Co., N. Y., "I was suffer
ing from female weakness, a disagreeable drain,
bearing-down pains, weak and tired feeling all
the time. 1 dragged around in that way for two
years, and I began taking your medicine. After
taking first bottle I began to feel better. 1 took
four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion, two of ' Golden Medical Discovery,' one
vial of the 'Pleasant Pellets,' also used one
bottle of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Now I
feel like a new person. I can't thank you
enough for your kind advice and the good your
medicine has done me.ff
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical
Adviser, paper bound, is sent free on
of 21 one-cent stamps to pay
Address Dr.
mi
ANNUAL
Clearance
Sale
30 Days
Great reductions on
all leather goods,
KRAUSE BROS.
receipt
expense of mailing only. 1
R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
John R. Shaver seemB to have the re'
publican nomination for sheriff sure .
The nomination for judge on the re
publican ticket seems to be between T,
F. Ryan and Mayor G. B. Dimick witn
odds in favor of Dituick. :
Deputy Sheriff Jack will probably get
the nomination for assessor on opposi
tion ticket.
Aa a general law in economics it may
be stated that the terfflency to combina
tion increases as the number o! competi
tors decreases and the amount of capital
for each competing plant increases. The
tendency for both these conditions to
manifest themselves in our industrial
world is too well known to mention. In
1880 there were 1943 plants with a com
bined capital of $62,000,000 manufactur
ing agricultural implements; in 1890
there were but 010 plants, while the
capital invested had more than doubled.
The number of plants engaged in manu
facture of leather decreased in the same
period from 5124 to 1596, while the capi
tal involved increased from 67 to 8L millions.
WM. MACK R ELL
DEALER IN
Harness, "Saddles, " Brushes,
Curry Combs, Sweat Pads, Etc.
Hand and Machine Made
Harness a Specialty.
MOLALLA.
ORE.
Brunswick House and Restaurant
NEWLY
Meals at All Honrs
FURNISHED ROOMS
Opon Day and Night
jrricea Reasonable ,
First Class reaurant in the City
CHAS. CATTA, Prop.
Opposite Suspension Bridge OREGON CITY, ORE.
Only
FotografSe.,. !
STAMPS
UNITY OF PURPOSE.
What is tho one Vital, all-important
secret of success, more imperative than
any other, however valuable that may
be?
We believe it is contained in Goethe's
motto, "Wo du bist, sei alies." What
ever thou art, be all there. As Emer
son says, "Tako what your brains can,
and drop all the rest." Only so can
that amount of vital force accumulate
which can make tho step from knowing
to doing.
It is Baid that the great philospher of
antiquity, Aristotle, who dominated the
world's thought for 3,000 years, once
said that he owed his vast acquirements
more to Ins having a command ovor his
mind, to his ability to hold it steadily
to a given object, than to any natural
superiority of intellect. Newton, like
wio, attributed his gie.it discoveries to
"patent concentrated thought."
If there, ia anything certain regarding
human achievements, it is that steady,
undivided attention is essential to the
accomplishment of all great undertak
ings. Any one, to be sueoisul, must
cet inspiration deep down in tho heart,
an undying longing, a resolute determi
nation to achieve a given result. What
is more powerless than the scattered
- drops of vapor in the sky? Yet, con
densed in a steam engine, they can cut
Frank H. Mason, consul-general at
Berlin, reports that "it Is recognized by
intelligent Germans that in future in
dustrial and trade competitions that
fine composite product of American ra
cial qualities, institutions and methods,
the workingman who thinks, will, in"
combination with our unequaied re
sources, turn tlie scale in lavor oi me
United States. Every Btep of American
progress and development is watched
and studied with the keenest interest,
and the report of the completion of the
steel makers' syndicate by which cer
taiu working expenses might be reduced
and consummate management secqred.
throughout-afe) k,a a pall upon Euro
pean industrials and gave the Berlin
Bourse one of its blackeet days in a
gloomy year."
Most Peopl
I Phone 393
Like a Grocery House A placet where they they
.can get what they want and feel sure that the
price will be right. They want to feel confident
in their Grocer. Now, you who are looking for
such a house, we most oordially invite you to try
I im and Center Sts.
Muir Bros, f
Drop in and see what
we have in the latest
photographs. ; We can
please all.
VIEWS
Ninety per cent of New England far
mers are members of the Grange. In
the stite of Maine alone it has 30,061
members, who carry over $11,000.00 of
Grange fire insurance on farm property;
have 260 grange halls worth nearly $600,
000, and a state grange store in Portland
which is one of the solid istitutions ot
the state. They exert a power in the fi
nancial management of Maine before
which politicians bow. Last year, by
their. influence in the legislature, they
saved the taxpapers $400,003. If Ore
gon had as many grangers in proportion
to population, as Maine, 14,000 to 15,000,
it could control both our state and
county administrations.
'Last month the United States treas
ury had in its vaults $500,000,000 in gold.
Piling up audi a mountain of cash is a
monstrous absurdity. It is proof of the
fact that the treasury, as a central re
serve bank, is miserably mismanaged.
That amount of money should not be
withdrawn from the channels of trade.
The treasury is on one side apt to be
bulldozod by Wall Street speculators,
and on the other is so hampered by con
gressional limitations that it cannot pro
tect either itielf or the country against
them. It has become an unwieldy,
cumbersome, meddlesome and partly
helpless old incubus .
Is not the public welfare identical
with the wealth of individuals? This is
the question we have put ourselves, and
we hitve answered it with the policy of
protection till we have difficulty in re
sisting a ship subsidy to redound to the
benefit of such corporations as the Stan
dard Oil Company. Patriotism cannot
thrive in the atmosphere we have pro
vided for it. If we would restore and
strengthen love of country, we must get
back to the prosperity of the masses of
men the people and the nation as the
true aim of government.
Rowland O. Hazard, of Teacedtile,
H. I., who ought to know what he is
talking about, being woolen manu
facturer, says: "There has beea ho defi
nite connection between the price of
wool and the tariff. There have been
high prices under low tariffs and low
tariffs and low prices under high tariffs.
"Wool-growers are dependent on wool
manufacturers for their market. "The
prosneritv of the manufacturer will be
tho prosperity ot the wool-grower.
The truth that special privilege, in
whatever form, whether it be a tariff tax
or a telephone franchise, is ' the real
enemy of good government, the real
enemy of the natural use of capital,
this truth mustcomehometo the Ameri
canlpeople if they would save themselves
from increasing corruption in public
life, from increasing concentration of
wealth, and from increasing social dis
content.
A manufacturer of Bhoddy in Cleve
land, Ohio, estimates that upwards of a
hundred million pounds of shoddy an
nually are made here, and that this alone
is equal to three hundred million pounds
of greasy wool, the clip of the entire
country. How much cotton is substi
tuted for wool 1b difficult to determine,
especially since improved machinery has
begun to facilitate its use.
It is generally recognized that the
beet-sugar industry of Central . Europe
aproaching a critical conjuncture.
Germany, Austria-Hungary, France and
Russia are now gathering a beet crop
which will yield an output of sugar far
surpassing in quantity that of any pre
vious year. The total beet sugar output
of Europe for last year is completed at
6,190,t JO tons.
A German consular report states that
whereas in 1894, the last year of the
peaceful Spanish control, the trade of
the Philippine Islands amounted to f 61,
600,000 Mexican, in 1900 it had increased
to $108,900,000 Mexican, military sup
plies not being included. This is proof
that the American with all his faults is
at least a bojer waster than the Spaniard.
THE MORNINQ TUB
cannot be enjoyed in a basin of limited
capacity nor where the water supply and
temperature is uncertain by reason of
defective plumbing or heating apparatus.
To have both put in thorough working
order will not prove expensive if the
work is done by
F. C. CADKE
4f-T
POPE & CO.
HEADQUART1BS FOB
Hardware, Sjroves, Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows,
Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr, Drills and
Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles.
PLUMBING A SPECIALTY
Oor. Fonrth and Main Sts. OREGON CITS'
YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT
Bat the Best Stock of First-Class
Goods to be Found at Bottom
: Prices In Oregon City is at 5
HARRIS' GROCERY
9t
CITY lIAKKET Sfi
Opposite Huntley's
Firet-glass Meats of 11 ids
Satisfaction Guaranteed
(Sivc irQ a (Sail arjd be Treated Eij&t
Wall Paper
Now is the time to buy your
wall paper and Murrow, the paper
hanger, will sell it to you cheaper
han you can buy it in Portland.
Drop a card in the postoffice and
have sample-book brought to your
house, or telephone Ely Bros.' store
J. MURROW, Oregon City
New Plumbing
and Tin Shop
A. MIHLSTON
JOBBING AND REPAIRING
a Specialty
Opposite Oaufleld Block OREGON CITY
Oregon City
Second-IIand & Jnnk Store
The president is strongly in favor of
reciprocity in trade with Cuba. As at
present nearly all the island's com
merce is in the hands of foreigners and
it? people will be financially swamped
unless they have niore favofable trade
relations with the United States' only
piirbllndness, like that of the Pelfisli,
hide-boiind republican protectlbnis'ts,
could favor a different policy.
Agriculture, commerce, and manu
factures are the triad supports of na
tional prosperity, and thrive btst in free
trade. "Protection" burdens the first,
throttles the second, and breeds -monopolies
with the third.
Germany will have to import 147,000,'
000 bushels of wheat and rye, the de
mand being greater than usual on ac
count of crop failure.
If Itmuicr Salvo
doesn't cure your piles, yortr money w'll
be returned. It is the most healing
medicine. Charman & Co.
srors tiik corm and works off
Tilt COLO.
Laxative Broiuo-Quinine' Tablets cure
a cold in one day. No Cure no pay
Price 2o cents.
Highest Prices Paid for Second-Hand
Goods, Hides, Junks, Metals of all
Kinds, Eto.
Second-Hand Goods Bought and Sold
Goldstofld, Sufjarman & Co.
ro VPARS'
INEXPERIENCE'
TRADE Ni.
Mi ' Designs
rrrf t" Copyrights Ac.
AnTnnw npndlng a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether aa
Invention Is probably patentable. Communica
tions otriotlyoonfldentlal. It and book on Patents
ent free. Oldest aiioncy for securing patents.
Patents taken ttirouirh Munu A Co. recelvfl
Pacini notket without cttanro, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. I-arcest elN
culation of anv srientitlo lournal. Terms, 3 a
year: foar month, fL Uold by all newsdealers.
IViUNN & Co.se,Broad"' New York
BraucU Oilico, KS F St, WuhiDiitou, 1. C.
$975.00 Locomobile Given Jlwap
With every $octs. invested with A. N. Wright, the Iowa
. Jeweler, 293 Morrison, St., Portland, Oregon, you get
a ticket on the $975.00 Locomobile to be given
.0 Some Lucky One
VMAS goods now every day. New and fresh from the factor
' Oualitv alwavs the best. Prices correct.
NEW SHOP . ftQOD MEAT
try meats from
Oregon City Butchering & Packing Co.
PETZOLD & BETHKE, Pbops.
New Strattotl Building, Oregon City
EVERYTHING NEAT CLEANEST SHOP
We carry the lareest stock of Caskets
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 be had elsewhere.
tVe are under small expense'and do
not ask large profits.
O.ilU promptly attended night or day
R. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker
Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court Mouse.
rhia .ignature is on cvory box of the genutn
Laxative Broiuo-Quinine Twen
Uie remedy that en re. a cold In nn da
Brown & Welch
Propribtors op thk-
Seventh Street
Meat Market
A. O. U. W. Building
OREGON CITY, OREGON
S3
MANHOOD RESTORED"
CUPIDENE
ThlR ffrpftt Va?.thta
Hon of famous French physician, will quickly cure you or all ner
ur uwwmui iu .,eumiu orsaiii, SUCH as Irfrat Mauhood.
t, liavl 'nthe&n-k.beminal Emission, Nervous lMUUv!
fe'V tnhiness to Marrv, tiuaustins Drains. Varicocele and
r n.ln " 1 ' slo''Vtt!' I" by day or night Prevents qulc.
loustipauo. -fte.vuKh it nut checked loads to Spermatorrhoea and
8EFORE and AFTiR
CTJPIDEXE strengthens and restores small wen..
discha.. Tnnnlen,
rorSOl- ...... j ..n , l!
kidneys and thenrin. "tr',,'""'u
" oreana.
aiwen.. . .. .
The reason snffere not nired hv Doctors Is bi "7 Per Pen:' mn nrnpieq WUB
Prostatitis cri'IOKS E Is the only known remedy to cnrOout an operation- " lestimor
la. A written (niarantee iven and tnonev returned if ix boxen dues no eHect a peit"uieuteur
il.00 a box, six for 5.u), by mail. Send for 'rails circular and testimonials.
Adilreal DtVO L. StDIUXE CO., F. U Box 3178, Ban iTanciaco, uu. or bom ot
G. A. HARDING, Druggist,
Oregon City OregC.tt