Oregon City Courier-Herald BY A. W. CHENEY Erftemxl ill Ongon City Putoffioe as 2nd-class matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Tatid In advance, per fear 1 60 K months 75 Hires mouths 25 rVIVi( opposite your address on the paper doaotesthe tiraeto which youhave paid. I tiia notice is marked your subscription is due. OREGON CITY, SEPT. 5. 1902. The anministration is averse to a full investigation of affairs in the hili p pinne Islands. Tub government by injunction in the coal regions of Pennsylvania and West Virginia demonstrates that federal judges should be elected by the people, and n t selected by the president. Prosperity has struck the Des Chutes Echo. I printed in its last number seven columns of land notices. Con siderable timber land has been taken in that section this season. And now the Beef Trust proposes a separate "selling company" to market its 25-cents-a-pound-in-America-and-10 cents a pound-in - England product. Merely a good excuse for printing more etock certificates on which the public must pay interest. The tariff is the "mother of trustB," with two exceptions, the coal-oil and anthracite-coil trust. "They owe their pernicious power as trusts to railroad discrimination. But as all are of the same breed, to say that thesa two aie mephews of the tariff will correctly de note their relationship to the remain der of the family. In Cuba business establishments are closing, plantations are ceasing to be op erated, laborers by the thousand are nut of employment and peasants are killing and eating their work animals. This condition of things in the new republic at our doors is due to the republican cougress at Washington, which, in obedi ence to the orders of the sugar trust and the beet sugar lobby, threw the national honor overboard and left Cuba to suffer. Ovbr at Rockey Point, according to Peoples Press, the farmers (they called it a pool) pooled several thousand bushels of wheat, and then invited the grain buyers to bid on the lot. They iicld a meeting on the 18th opened the bids and found them all alike. You see grain dealers were smart enough to f jrm m pool too, bo there you have it, trust against trust. Of course, the grain deal era will come out ahead, for the elevator companies and railroad companies are practically one, and if the farmers try to ' ship their own wheat, there will be a "scarcity ol cars?" as usual. How do you like it farmers? An EiiBtern authority offers to the obese an "anti-fat" prescription which lie calls the "hot-water and rare-beef treatment." It is claimed that nothing t drink but hot water before meals, no drink whatever witli the meals, and nothing to eat at meals but half-broiled beefsteak and dry toaet or lUBks, and nothing between meals but cold water or weak tea without sugar or milk, will consume surplus fat at the rate of seven ptunda a week easily; that a month of this diet will usually take off all the flesh that can be safely spared ; sometimes a fortnight will suffice. After that an or dinarily careful diet, avoiding those things that are known to make fat fast, euch as sugar and potatoes, with regu lar but light exercise, will keep him "down to weight." An Arkansas mechanic has invented a machine which he claims means per petual motion. The inventor, J. S. Grimes, says he has devoted twelve years to its development, lie took a circular piece cut from a thick hour', and trimmed down the edge to represent a circular switchback railway. In the center of this beard he fastened a second circular board on a steel post which fit into a ball-bearing bicycle axle . To the top board was fasteued, by means of a rod, a small wheel which was so fixed that it would strike at eacu revolution of the upper Aboard at a point near the top of the incline plane of the lower bwrd.the lower board being nightly inclined. Grimes thon placed a weight ii top of the other disc, placed the heel nt the top of the incliued plane, released it and the machine began to move and contiuued in motion, until estopped by its inventor. It started by the wheel running down the incline on one side. This tnkes the weight on the opposite side away from the center of gravity aud it carries the machine around until the wheel strikes the top of the incline again, when force is impart ed to the revolving upper disc. The in ventor says he worked for six years be fore he discovered a way to force the carrier wheel over the highest point of the circular track, although the distance to overcome in this machine was less than an inch. Sonio western capitalists Lave organized a company to exploit the invention. OAS TO XT I A. 9 11,1 Kini1 you Haffl klm OREGON CITY -COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,. 1902. FINANCIAL BALOONING. That staunchest of republican organs, The Philadelphia . Press, sounds a note of warning against inflation. The Press is edited by Charles Emory Smith, who has not a Bingle pessimistic hair in bis head. Yet Mr. Smith finds conditions warranting some pretty plain talk about "tulip beds." . The transaction Ly which Charles M. Schwab "made" $18,500,000 out of the Bethlehem steel works is taken as a text for a strong editorial utterance. Mr. Schwab is reported to have bought these works for $7,500,003 and to have sold them to the ship-building trust for $26,000,000 in its securities, receiving $10,000,000 in trust deed certiflcatep, $8,000,000 of preferred and $8,000,000 of common stock. "This," says The Press, "is the way people once 'made' money in the tulip mania in Holland. Everyone concerned 'made' a lot of money until some foolish man tried to realize. Even Mr. Schwab,' The Press adds, "cannot eat the shares and bond of the shipbuilding trust. They will not do for wall paper. The trust can make no more money than the business of its separate plants can make united, and there is not one of them but, to the knowledge of all men, has had and not long ago the dryest of dry years. This money can be 'made' only by selling these securities to the public. Will the public buy? It has seen asphalt smash, it has watched rub ber go down, and it sees even the great steel. trust hanging at prices which are ridiculous if people only believed that full ytars in iron and steel can last," From which the press draws the con elusion that if the public does not buy, this money cannot be "made." "It will go," according to The Press prophecy, "where went the money 'made' in tulips, in South Sea securi ties, in mines and the New York realty craze, in the western realty booms about Indianapolis and other western cities in 1873, in California lands in 1883, and in a great array of southern land sites and mines in 1893." EACH FOR ALL: ALL FOR EACH. Rev. Dr. Waihiugton Gladden, a clergyman of national reputation, con tributes an article to the February num ber of Forward, a Sunday school publi cation of the Presbyterian Board, which is remarkable for its vivid re-statement of the fact that love, or to be more ex plicit, helping others to bear their bur dens, is the law of social life. He says: "A convenient statement of the law is ti e maxim, "Each for,; all and all for each." This signifies that we are living together In community ; that we have vast interests in common ; that the com munity as a whole Bhould administer all the public resources tor the equal bene fit of every "citizen ; that every citizen should hold his abilities and resources as tributary to the good of the whole community. Where each citizen con siders his time and his talents aud his property as held ;in trust for the general good, it is evident that there will be a great fund of social good for distribu tion among the members of the com munity ; and when the fund of social good is freely and equitably put at the disposal of the community eery one will have an abundance. "This is our scheme, but its succcess Is not yet so sure as we couli wibIi , and its failure, BO far as it is failing, is dus to our inability to recognize the other half of the maxim, which tells us that each must live for all. We all are ready enough to take our contribution out of the common fund, but we all are not ready to make our contribution to it. Our practical reading of the maxim Is apt to be, "all for each and each for him self." We want this collective neigh bor otou's to love us freely, to think of us and provide for us aud protect us and give us liberty and light aud happiness, but we do not realize that if we expect this we must love him too, and hold our selves and our possessions in trust for his service. "It is not money that we lack for our common needs so much as it is intelli gence. aud conscience and consecrated te-viee. Most of us are faiu to think that men can be lT.red o furnish these ; but money will never hire the kind of service that is needed in the adminis tration of public affairs. "It the motto of the average citizen is "All for each and each man for himself," those whom we ' employ to administer our common funds will be sure to adopt the same motto; their chief interest will be to enrich themselves, and they will find many opportunities for bo doing. The public funds will thus be turned into private cha.inels, and our collective neighbor will become a colossal robber. Those who are employed to dispense the bounty of the community and who ought to dispense it equally and impar tially to those to whom it belongs, come to regard it as plunder which they may keep for themselves or distribute among their friends. "What a glorious thing it would be to live in a community where this law was recognized and obeyed ; where the citi ten was aa eager to promote th com mon weal as the members of a loving family are to minister to its welfare; where those who served the state served more for love than for lucre; where the man who sought to make gain of office, or who plotted by legalized extortion t o enrich himself at the expense of the community was shunned as a social leper; where a happy people, working together to increase the common good, and dispensing it with justice and wis dom, filled their borders with plenty and with beauty, with gladness and with peace!" This synoptic presentation of Christ ian socialism cannot but meet with the heaviest approval of the veriest social ist, who seems but too often unaware of the historic fact that the Nazirene Carpenter who was the founder of Christianity, was, in his day and gener ation, the herald of social change, of progre ss of revolution. rYVW NEWS OF THE WEEK. Monday, September 1st. London papers oppose further con cessions to Boer Generals. More volcanic activity in Lesser Antil les causes much alarm. Government reinforcements arrive at the Isthmus of Panama. King of Italy takes leaves of Empsror of Germany; Italy said to have re ceived commercial concessions. Coos Bay is waiting for the railroad to Salt Lake City. Governor Taft says United States will hold Philippine Islands indefinitely, with view to educating people to self government. Soldiers are in sympathy with strikers in West Virginia. Annual report of Superintendent Ackerman shows large gain in school population of Oregon. Portland shipments to South Africa show enormous increase, Tuesday, September 2nd. Thirty persons were killed by a train wreck in Alabama. Labor day was observed throughou t the East. National Securities Company files its answer in the merger suit. The latest eruption of Mount Pelee lilled several hundred persons. Contractor for Portland drydock pre pares for work at Vancouver, Wash. August lumber shipments from the Columbia exceeded 8,500,000 feet. Labor day celebrated with 7500 men in line at Portland. Wednesday, September "3rd. Presidential boom of Tom L, Johnson opened. Democratic campaign book published. Waldemar Ljndgren says the world's gold Bupply will soon give out. The situation in the West Viiginia coal fields is critical. In the latest eruption of Mount Pelee, 1000 persons were killed and 1500 injur ed. Anti-Servian riots are renewed in Hungary. Great Britinn will not treat officially with the Boer Generals. Charles L. Fay of Portland, arrested as Wisconsin fugitive, is given his liberty iu North Dakota. Coos Bay country rich in native woods. Coming Oregon state fair is certain to be better than ever be'ore. Mrs. II. D. Green, of Portland, will be taken iuto custody on the charge of smuggling. A number of stocks made good advances Al.ddle Atlantic apple crop will be short. Eastern grain markets are dull, with a nervous undertone. Dock laborers atTacoma secure an ad vance in wages. LAB Oil DAY. A Great Success, Crowds Throng Streets. Monday dawned fair, with a cool northerly breeze from the mountains and before the sun had risen high above the horizon, the people of the city and country, began to appear on the streets. The occasion being the observance, for the first time in Oregon City of "Labor Day." The mills were all closed and the store doors locked aud the hum of industry hushed, and for the first time in nine years men in all walks of life, were free from the cares of grinding toil. All along the street flags, all sizes, bunting and ribbons were in evidence. From Dr. Oarll's window hung, as usual OLD GLOHY. At 10:30 the procession started from the mill headed by thirty battle scarred veterans dressed in blue, remnants of the days of 65, following closely came the popular Woodman band and the no less popular Milwaukie baud. The music which they furnished was ex ceedingly enjoyable aud well renured. The Oregon City boys were tastely dress ed in white Bints and Milwaukie men wore very becomingsuitsof blue. Then c'osely following the bands came twenty five ot the most beautiful floats every seen on the streets of this city. Time and spice will not admit of the mention ing of each individual ti at but suffice it to say that every industry from the smallest to the largest was beautifully presented and perfectly depictured. This pageant of art and beauty extend ed Irom the woolen mills to the Congregational church embracing one thousand people and over. It passed from south to north twice and at 10:45 dispersed, the people then going to the park where a literary program was rendered, consisting of an excellent read ing by R. II. Miller, an oration on Labor by J. II. Morgan, from the East, and two fine selection by that ever pleasing quartet of the Maccabees. At 1 o'clock the people ate their luncheons at the paik and at 1:30 the Oregon City and the Fifeis Union cross ed bats on the park diamond. The same was a little loose on the part of Portland but the home team with Califf in the box displayed the usual txcelleut work. The game was for nine inning and resulted in a score of 9 to 1 in favor of Oregon City. In the evening occurred a dance which was largely attended by the young ele ment of thU city. Manager Howard deserves special mention for the pains taking effort which he exerted iu or ganizing this movement. NERVES GAVE WAY- PE-RU-NA CURED. Miss Aseneth Brady, Cor. Sec. Illi- j nois Woman's Alliance, had j Headache, Backache and j Serious Indigestion. j Miss A. Brady, Corresponding Secre tary Illinois Woman's Alliance, writes from 2725 Indiana avenue, Chicago, 111. "Last year from continued strain it literary work I became very much ex hausted, my nerves seemed to givt way, and I bad backache, headacht and serious indigestion. "One of my friends suggested that j try Peruna. It certainly acted llkt magic on my system. , "Within ten days I felt new life ano health given me; and by taking an oc casional dose off and on when I fee: extra tired, I keep my system In per fed order. ".-MISS A. BRADY. Mrs. Fanny Klavadatscher, of Sum' mltsville, N. Y., -writes as follows : "For three months I suffered with pain in the back and in the region of the kidneys, and a dull pressing sensation in the abdomen, and other symptoms oi pelvic catarrh. "But after taking two bottles of Peru na I am entirely well, better than I evei was." Mrs. Fanny Klavadatscher. Send for "Health and Beauty," written especially for women by Dr. S. B. Hart man, President Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. THE MORN1NQ 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 E. E. G. SEOL Will give you a Bargain in Wall Paper Wall Tinting and in General Hou3e Painting Paint Shop near Depot Hotel New Plumbing and Tin Shop A. MIHLSTIN JOBBING AND REPAIRING a Specialty Opposite Caufleld Block OREGON OITY INDIGESTION Is tho oauso of more dUcomrort than any other ailment. If you eat the things that you want, and that are good for you, you are distressed. Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets will maks your digestion perfect and preieul dyspepsia and Its attendant disagreeable symptoms. You can safely eat anything, at any time, if you take one ot these taniets anorvvarai. ttoia ny an druggists under a positive guarantee ; 23 cents. Money refunded If von are not satisfied. Bend lojus for a free sam ple. W. H. Hooker & Co., Buffalo, N. .Y or Howell &)Jones, druggists. F. VICTOR AUSTIN, Concert Violinist and Soloist Graduate of Paris and Brussels. Di rector of Music Columbia University. A limited number of pupils received. For terms, etc., apply Burmeister & Andresen. WANTHD.-A trustworthy gentleman or lady in each couutv to manage business for an old entab llshoil house of solid financial standing. A straight, bona tide weekly cash salary of 18 paid by check each Wednesday with all expenses direct from headquarters. Money advanced for expenses. Manager, 340 Caxton Bldg., Chicago. Oregon City Second-Haml & Junk Store HIGHEST TRICES TAID FOR SECOND-HAND GOODS, HIDES, JUNK, METALS OF ALL KINDS, ETC. Large lot of Sacks for sale cheap. Second-Hand Goods Bought and Sold RING rilONE 116 FOR JUNK. Sngarman & Co. Brunswick House andR estaurant NEWLY FURNISHED ROOMS Meals at All Honrs Open Day and Night Prices Reasonable Only First Class Restaurant in the City CHAS CATTA, Prop. Opposite Suspension Bridge OREGON CITY, ORE. POPE & CO. HEADQUARTERS FOR ' ! Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, ; Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and 1 Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles. ; PLUMBING A SPECIALTY Cor. Fourth and Main Sts. OREGON CITY ; Housr Keeper and SHANK & BISSELL, Undertakers i Phones 411 and 304. Lower Niipi"iifPHfiiiiiiipMiipmiifiiii . . I YUU MAY NOT KNOW IT $ Bat the Besl Stock of First-Class $ Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at I HARRIS' GROCERY New Machine Shop IWith New Machinery HAS BEEN OPENED BY Philipp ISucklciii, .AT Old Roake Stand, Rear of Pope's Store All kinds of Saw Mill, Farmlnz and Other Machinery Hade and Repaired. Newly Furnished and Refitted. Open Day and Night. GEORGE BROS. ...RESTAURANT... and Lunch Counter Opp. Electric Hotel, Oregon City lias No Superior in the City. Meals at All Hours. CANNED GOODS- - Oh, yes; oh, yes; come this way for the fullest and freshest siork of canned goods in town. We have just receive 1 a large lot of the very best fruits and vegetables in cans. Try our sliced peaches, our fancy corn, or oui tender melting peas I Go away, you make my mouth water. Oh, no; come round aud buy. Prices very low. A. ROBERTSON, 7TH ST. GROCER. t Usnig the PATENT FLOUR speak of it in a ringing choru praise. The bread consequences that follow its s i.-; fine enough to ilease the most fastidious. We can ot permit our reputation to suffer by t tting anything below our high r dard on the market. What the nt brand is at its best it is all the in .. Made by Portland Flouring v ; To. and sold by all grocer. iHtl.,1,11111111,,,1111111 lHlli,iiitllJi,iiillillii,illtlii,.lllllil.illDli II Hi, 4 m.illlllinMilfflb, We carry the only complete line j, ' of Caskets, Coffins, Robes and Linings in Clackamas County. We have the only First-Class Hearse in the County, which we will furnish for less than can be had elsewhere. Embalming a Specialty. Our prices always reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. 7th St., Bet. Bridge and Depot t. w ipwiiiiii'iiiyi ip rtfpn' 'nrrpiinitirap iipiii'iiipiMipiir Brown & Welch -Proprietors op the Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON 3 THE.