OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD,, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1902. Oregon City Courier-Herald BY, A. W. CHENEY Sow red in Oregon City PortofBoe as 2nd-clus nutter 80BSCBIPTIOH BATES. Peifl in advance, per year 1 JJ Six months i&reemontns'trial 26 CThe date opposite your address on the yajper denotes (he timeto which youhare paid, fithis notice is marked your subscription is due. OREGON CITY, OCT. 3, 1902. Alaska has a population of 65,000. It lb said that it can famish homesteads of 320 acres each for 200,000 families. Dr. Lee, of Mississippi.declares that if man will eat raw onions and drink whisky he will nevir have malaria. Ortainly a pleasant remedy. Tun fortune of Alfred Beit, the South African millionaire and associate of the late Cecil Rhodes, is said to exceed $1,- 000.000.000. His income iB sufficient to make ten new millionaires every year. The whole of this colossal fortune was made within a period of 25 vears, and was founded on diamonds. Regardless of what the world thinks of John Alexander Dowie's religious principles, he must be recognized as a man of more than ordinary ability. He has been in this country less than a dozen years, yet he is the leader of thousands and has millions of money at his command. His latest and most im portant project is the building of Zion City on Lake Michigan about midway between Chicago and Milwaukee. He secured the mone7 for the enterprise by levying a tax of one-teath of the income of all his followers. Within a little over Bis mouths he has built a city of 10,000 people, and the influx continues as great as ever. Cottages have been built for all these people, public build- fogs have bee erected, and industries es tablished, among them the lace factory which covers five acres of ground and is the only factory of the kind in the United States. In Zion no individual can own his own land. He is only a lessee, al though, as the lease does not expire un til the year 3000, that causes little anxi ety. Ttie leases all specify that no lessee eh a 11 use his site "for any purpose con trary to the will of G id, aud particularly not for the sale of drugs, tobacco or al cohol in any form, for theaters, g.im bhng houses, or for the raising of hogs or Belling them." GOLD AND SILVER. Nothing could show more strikingly tho change in the monetary condition of this country than a comparison of the etock of gold and of the money in circu ation now and in 1896. A fortnight ago, the gold in the treas- iry amounted in round numbers to $57,000,000, an increase of nearly $80, 000,000 Bince Ju'.y 1, 1901,and the largest sum, with possibly one exception, ever held by any government. In October, 1896, at the height of the free-silver campaign, the treasury held less than $122,000,000 in gold, and the total amount in circulation was only $478,000,000 nearly $100,000,000 Ibbs than is now held by the treasury alone. Largely as a result of this increased gold supply the amount of money In cir culation has increased from $21.15, the per cipita average for 1898, to nearly $29 at the present time. Meanwhile the commercial ratio of silver to gold, which was 30.32 in 1896, is now about 38. The treasury now holds 54:1,000,000 Bilver dollars, and there are nearly 70,000,000 la circul a tion, against 380,000,000 in the treasury and 56,000,000 in circulation six years ago. DOIXG SOMETHING. Tho humorist who wrote the plat form and declaration of grievances for the populists of Illinois, in state conven tion assembled, makes them Bay : "We look upon the republican party, with its gold standard policy and bank ing policy, as our open enemy, without disposition to conceal its intentions, while -e look upon the democratic party us a pa'ty of barter a d sale, without a definite policy, save to gain olllea Its history is one of fusion, broken prom ises, intrigue, deceit, and therefose, it is the secret enemy of a people's party, and while the republican patty does something and raises hell, the demo cratic party raises hell and does noth ing." How "the republican party does some thingand raises hell" is best illustrated by theeiistigation which the republican iiovemer Cummins of Iowa iullicts on uat republican "captain of industry, John V. Gates, of Chicauo. Says the governor of this quick-rich trust mag nate, who, by the way way, was "fired" out of a respectable London hotel, on accouut of his vulgarity : "lie may not be any worse than scores of others, but to the masses o.' people in this western country he is a personification of trust greed, gambling, vulgarity, He is th nimble example who bus served to call popular attention to a system a system of stock jobbing, gambling iu industrial properties and taking out of the consumer the enormous prollts which enable bucu men to exist. The great majority of the people do not like vulgar gamblers, who brazenly flaunt their habits before the world, and Mr. Gates has managed to attract at tention to the system very much at the drunk and disorderly man howling throoah the streets serves to advertise ihexiBtence of open saloons in a towu.' f f Ay $ A CHAMP CLARK'S LETTER At T At J 4 r At Special Waahington Letter. T may be taken and actjpied as a : tome iuiuk luai uiuntuo is going Democratic this fall and that that veteran statesman Henry M. Teller will be returned to the senate, which he so greatly adorns and Where he Is so useful. The proof of all of which Is that ex-Senator Edward O. Wolcott Is about to shake the dust of the Centennial State from his shoes and to locate where his political pros pects will be brighter. Rats desert a sinking ship, and Wolcott deserts the Republican party of Colorado. Every body knows that he would stay there and. fight it out with Teller if he thought he had a ghost of a show. Teddy on His Ear. The press dispatches Inform us that President Roosevelt Is on his auricular appendix because Brothers Babcock and Overstreet, chairman and secre tary of the Republican congressional committee, in compiling their cam paign book left him and his adminis tration out in the cold, when he not unnaturally thought that he ought to occupy the center of the stage. On dit that Teddy, in a fit of anger, per emptorily ordered those palpitating pa triots to squelch their publication, which they could not do, inasmuch as they had mailed out 20,000 copies be fore Teddy discovered how scurvlly he had been treated. As Bab and Overstreet recently dined with the president, it may be assumed that they have agreed to issue a new edition. But Teddy may possess his soul in peace, for nobody reads Republican campaign books. A Sanguine Prophet. General David Breniner Henderson, speaker of the house of representa tives, has taken up the role of prophet and has assured tho world in an off hand sort of way that the country is going Republican this fall, which is important if true; but nobody ever ac cused General Henderson of being any kin to Isaiah or any of the rest of tho major prophets. All their mantles fell on the shoulders of General Charles Henry Grosvenor, prophet maximus of tho Hocking valley, who Is very quiet these days in his vaticination depart ment. No Democrat need be scared by General Henderson's prophecy. The wish is father to the thought. He is the most cheerful of mortals, the Mark Tapley of Auiericun politics. He's an optimist, which it Is a rattling good thing to be. If he had lived at tho time of the flood, when Noah was building the ark and predicting the de struction of all things by water, David would have said: "Boys, there isn't going to be much of a shower. Noah doesn't know what ho is talking about. So eat, drink and be merry!" And he and his cronies would have been caught out in that forty days and forty nights of rain, as they are likely to be caught in the ..flood this fall. If re ports from Iowa are not greatly over drawn, General Henderson had better quit wasting his breath and time in prophecy and get down to work or tho country is likely to lose the services of those great Republican statesmen Hepburn, Lacy and Smith. Whltelaw'a Sorrowful Homecoming. As Mark Antony remarked on a cele brated but doleful occasion, "If you have tears, prepare to shed them now." Wherefore? Becauso Whitelaw Reid, flunky extraordinary to the corona tion of King Edward VII., did not, aft er all, get to wear his knickerbockers and other royal finery that is, in pub lic a thing on which ho had set his heart. No doubt he donned them in private and exhibited his lean and pad ded calves to his wife, children and do mestic servants In that magnificent house in Grosvenor square, the ultra aristocratic quarter of London, "the modern Babylon," which he rented for that august occasion. But, God be praised, ho was defeated in his mean ambition to sport them in public, where the world's eye could feast on the deg radation of America and where lord with pedigrees running buck to Jhe conquest were walking backward aud making salaams to do honor to Albert Edward Wettln. That's the point on which all good Americans will congrat ulate themselves. Whitelaw RelJ, tho American aristocrat, did not have tin opportunity to cut Ills un-American and fantastic flunky capers before high heaven. Whitelaw did not get to march in tho royal and imperial pro cession and make a holy show of him self and of us. His spirit was willing, even eager, to thus abase himself ond his country and her Institutions, but fate Bpared that degradation, and Un cle Sam was not chained to the char lot wheels of the great-grandson of George HI. Yea, Whitelaw, the sou-in-law of his father-in-law, was uux lous. He spend thousands on his knickerbockers and other royol glni crncks. He quarreled with garter klng-nt-nrtns, or whatever the chief iiuich-a-chiK'u of the coronation cere monies is called, because he was as signed to rklo back foremost in the procession while the unspeakable Turk and the head of tho French flunkies, in the same carriage, rode face front. He roared so loud because tho flunkies of the effete monarchies of Europe, Asia and Africa should outrank our flunky In chief, the son-in-law of his father-in-law, that Anally, to stop his whin ing, they assigned him a carriage all to himself, wMch, after all, he did not Af " $) ' At At At . Ai ... At ts- w T "sr t 3r Ap At i At Roosevelt's Row With the Republican Con gressional Committee. Whitelaw Reid's Dis appointment V I At Aj Ap Ap At At At get to ride in, poor thing! Hence these tears. King Edward was sick, and conse quently flunky Whitelaw, with his knickerbockers and his finery, did not have a chance to overawe Cheapslde, Rotten row, Piccadilly, Whitechapel mid Bloomsbury square with his rib bons, gewgaws, state carriage, liveried outriders and other royal and Imperial paraphernalia. Ferhaps since the days when Sancho I'anza failed to secure his island throne or Blnce Darius Green and his flying machine came down to earth with a lull, sickening thud there never was a greater disap pointment in this world than White law's when he didn't get to ride in that royal carriage, solitary and alone, as chief of all American flunkies. He had planned, so it Is said, to have a band of hired boys hi livery, of course precede his carriage, shouting: "Io triumphe! Io triumphe!" In his mind's eye he saw himself knighted Sir Whitelaw of Ophlr Farm by King Ed ward. But all that has passed, and he returns to despised America with out a title and with his precious knick erbockers In his trunk. Wonder what the tariff is on knickerbockers and oth er royal outflttings! Whitelaw knows unless our customs officer at ihe port of New York failed to do his duty. This sore disappointment came to Whitelaw because a pestiferous berry seed sllnned Into King Edward's ver miform appendix. Great God! On what a slender thread Eternal matters hang! Over the entrance to the office of the New York Tribune, of which White law is editor in chief, thanks to his father-in-law's money, is the legend, "Founded by Horace Greeley." Won der what old Horace, who was an American from skin to core, would think of Whitelaw and his royal and imperialistic knickerbockers! "What a full was there, my countrymen!" A Pointer. Once upon a time I was engaged in a private jawing match with General Charles Henry Grosvenor. I was con tending that the Democrats would elect the house this fall and both a house and president in 1004. The gen eral said that the present prosperity, would prevent our doing any such thing. "But, general," I replied ar guendo, "there is no greater prosperity aow than there was in 1892, when the Democrats wiped the Republicans off the face of tho earth, even securing one electoral vote in Ohio, which goes to prove that prosperity has nothing to do with It." This seemed to nettle the venerable Buckeye warrior and statesman, and he exclaimed, "Oh, it was that blankety blanked Homestead strike that made the country go Dem- Deratic in 1802!" Of course the pro fanity is General Grosvenor's, not mine. But, while that conversation happened two years a;;o, 1 have been thinking about It a good deal lately and have concluded inevitably and nec essarily that if the good gray general Is correct in his diagnosis of the situa tion lu 181)2 we are dead sure to carry the country In l!)02, for psvei. ely what happened at Homestead, l'a.. in 1802 Is now happening In both l'onnsylva nla and West Virginia this ye.:r. Far Btrunger things have happened than that Judge Jackson and General Gobln should unwittingly and unintentionally elect a Democratic house of repre sentatives and n Democratic president of the United Slates, a consummation devoutly to be wished. Democrats who uro inclined to be timorous should re member General Grosvenor's words and cheer up. Republican Disintegration. The recent falling of the campanile at Venice, which both startled and in terested the entire civilized world, is not more thoroughly indicative of the ultimate destruction of that ancient city of story and of song thau is tho platform declaration of the Iowa Re publicans in favor of tariff revision as a remedy for the trust evil a presage of the dissolution of the Itepubllean party. The campanile was the glory of Venice; the Dlngley bill has been regarded as the Gibraltar of Repub licanism. True, Mr. McKinley in his remarkable Buffalo speech, which may bo regarded not unjustly as his fare well address to the American people, overthrew tho principle of the Dingley bill, sapped and mined its foundations, by declaring iu favor of a general pol icy of reciprocity, which is free trade In spots; but the trouble is that Mc Kinley did uot live to carry out by his tact and the weight of his great name the Democratic policy which lu kls Buffalo speech he borrowed from the Democrats. He is dead, and he nlone could wield "Excallbur." He is lu his grave, and the Republicans are wrangling and Jangling on every pub lic question, especially the tariff and Its daughters, the trusts. Even the Iowa Republicans, who were doing their best to walk In the light, lauded the tariff while they condemned the trusts, utterly oblivious to tho great truth uttered by Mr. Havemeyer when he declared that "the high protective tariff is the mother of trusts." Shaw Versus Gage. Lyman J. Gage, former secretary of the treasury aud wet nurse to the Fow ler bill, of which he and his bank ex pect to be the chief beneficiaries. Is lu a fair way to become the scapegoat of the Roosevelt-Shaw administration of the treasury affairs, and It serves Ly man right, for be it remembered that in 181)6 he deserted the Democrats and ratted to the Republicans in order to secure for himself high office, which he had never, been able to do while r training with the Democrats. He re ceived his mess of pottage namely, the secretaryship of the treasury. That he used the great powers of that of fice for the benefit of the plutocrats is generally believed; that he was offered and accepted a highly remunerative position at their hands when squeezed out of office by Tresldent Roosevelt is known of all men. He quit the treas ury when all was serene with the rep utation, self exploited, of being a great financier, but there are breakers ahead 'for Lyman. His successor In office, Leslie M. Shaw of Iowa, Is like Major Bagstock "sly, sir; devilish sly," if rot "tough, sir; devilish tough." There Is a growing deficiency in the revenues of the government, constantly growing larger, and Governor Shaw "sly, sir; devilish sly" is unloading the odium thereof on Lyman. He attributes this "woeful plight" of the treasury, to borrow your Uncle G rover's phrase, to Lyman's plan of paying more for bonds than they were worth, and he proposes to have It thoroughly under stood that Gage, and not Shaw, is the architect of tho treasury deficit. Shaw is running for president, don't you know, and must have a scapegoat; hence Lyman plays goat. Strange that it never occurs to a pub lic official so eminent, so astute and so ambitious as Mr. Secretary of the Treasury Shaw that there are two ways for the government to make buc kle and tongue meet the one is to in crease the revenues, the other to cur tail expenses. The latter method nev er suggests itself to a Republican. The present congress is the most extrava gant one that ever legislated for the American people. Its appropriations were wicked and wanton waste. Its motto nppeared to be "after us the deluge," and the chances nre that it will be a deluge Indeed. Personally I like Governor Shaw. He is tin nblo and amiable man. If he 1ms the cour age to act on old Pen Franklin's mot, "a penny saved is a pi any caned," and to insist that the e::;unxts i.f the government shall be retrenched. iva no knows they on:., lit to be, he will 'iass into history as a i.ivat financier r.lcng with Gallatin, V.";;I': ; i;:id Chrs: end ns a rreat public bnct'actor, w':e her he gets to be prcs'd.'iit or not. A mere petty squabble with Lyman J. ilaue as to which created ti.e deilcit in the revcnui s will ;:3t ::v; In his quest l'.;: public inrairr- !.; : 1: flee. If 1k has to U the money to i uu tl ';. ci :u.r Shaw .!,".; :ie. The He h lu of-ho-:i!s to raise ovenimeiii, ho will stand no more in;..i the White llor.;e tlia : )i iv;.iUing hail of be coming autocrat of nil the Ccsslas. Utopian. It is really refre-hlng to run across Bomebody who belle, es In Utopia' and the political millennium. The Minne apolis JouiT.nl proposes, apparently In good fulfil, to realize both by reviving the old scheme, the uik-rly oxploi.ed theory of a permantv'.t .nrlff commis sion as the solution of the ills that ihe body politic Is heir to, for it cays: When will the dny come when our rov ernment will be ready to adopt the plan which is quite generally regarded as cal culated to protect the count, y in a large degree from that disuu'bunce of business which periodical agHation of tariff re vision as a political issue is likely to produce? It Is to be hoped that some day we shall refer this matter of the tariff, which should be purely a business affair and never allowed to become a political Issue, to a strong commission In which business men of all political faiths would have confidence and which should be non partisan in character. Recommendations of such a commission made from time to time would commend themselves to the judgment of the country as a basl of congressional legislation, the modifications of the tariff being not general and sweep ing as the result of long agitation, with consequent hesitation and demoralization of business, but gradual and incidental, affecting but few articles at a time and Justified always by thorough investiga tion. (Such an administration of our protec tive principle and revenue policy by a permanent commission and the conse quent greater or less elimination of the subject from the field of practical politics is a consummation most devoutly to be wished. It has received the commenda tion of public men and Btudents of publlo affairs and the Indorsement of political conventions, but it has yet to be actual ized In legislation and intrusted with the discharge of a service of great impor tance to the commercial and industrial interests of the country. Certainly nothing more guileless than that has ever been printed since Faust Invented movable . type. Fancy the conclusions of a commission made up of such eminent business men ns Tom Johnson, Charles M. Schwab, Mr. Cramp, Mr. Sereno E. Tnyne and Sen ntor Aldrlch! Bah! A Missouri Humorist. Tom Lloyd, the young sou of Con gressman Lloyd of Missouri, bids fair to rival Mark Twalu as a humorist. Not long since he wrote his father as follows: June 2S, 1902. Hon. James T. Lloyd, Shelby ville. Mo.: Dear Sir I would like for you to look up my pension claim and If possible have my check sent to me immediately. I have served for about one, week In the First volunteer corps of the Lloyd House tleanlng brigade, commanded by Lieuten ant General H. H. Duckle (mamma). My back is nearly broken, and my hands are covered with blisters so that I am unfit for anv more active service. My number is 132,176,9S4,136,9sa. Trusting that you will have the check forwarded me. I remain, respectfully, THOMAS L. LLOYD, Private in Rear Rank. A Hot Factional Fight. The latest news from Nebraska is to the effect that lion. Edward Itosewa ter, editor of the Omnhn Bee, is hot foot after the flossy scalp lock of Da vid II. Mercer, present congressmaa Both are Republicans, and unfortunate ly so is the district. Brunswick Hiuse and Restaurant9 ' NEWLY FURNISHED r ROOMS 'T Meals at AH Honrs Open Day and Night Prices Reasonable Only First Class Restaurant in the City ' CHAS CATTA, Prop. Opposite Suspension, Bridie OREGON CITY, ORE. POPE & CO. X HEADQUARTERS FOR X Hardware, Stoves. Syiacuse Chilled and Steel Plows, Harrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and X Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles. PLUMBING Oor. Fourth and Main Sts. The Flour of the Family : GET Y0UR 1 i j; f&C MONEY'S WORTH , MM-kII IU Money we're so often told is the I Jm r00' ' a'l ev" yes who of us have not W " SZvyf wished at times we might have a few Sfi!r7k ' cords of the root. But inBtead of the niDOrs IJiP ''"e wishing prudent people look J fSsJbisisgQ J 'i closer after their expenditures. 4fmm 'i Kiuht here we csn help you. We ' ' JMfjy C ' covet confidence and challenge com- J Srf A- Rol)erlson. ;I A ' 7th St. Qrocer. 3 The flour of all the Oregon City families is "Patent" flour. The intelligent house wife always gets "Patent" flour because, it is better and more ecomonical to use Made in Oregon City by the Portland Flouring Mills Co. SHANK & BISSELL, Undertakers Phones 411 and 304. Lower fi"1 YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat tht Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARRIS' GROCERY Established 1870 FURRIERS G. P. RUMMELIN & SONS, 126 Second Street, near Washington, Portland, Ore. Our stock of Fur Garments is now complete, and intending purchasers will find it of value to call at our establishment and inspect our Eurs. We are showing new effects in Fur Coats and Capes. Our Collarettes and Boas are in entirely new designs and consist of a great variety. Mail Orders receive prompt attention. Send for Illustrated Catalogue. I Leading and Reliable Courier-Herald A SPECIALTY OREGON CITY 3 4 1 .lt&l lit IflliiuntJllimiiljlliii.iilllll t We carry the onlycompletellne of Caskets, Coffins, Robes aud Linings in Clackamas County. We have the only First-Class Hearee in the Ccunty, which we will furnish for less than can be had elsewhere. Embalming a Ppecialty. Our prices always reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. 7th St., Bet. Bridge and Depot. Ml ikTJi "iilti if iit:'"qi'"ini'i"niF if 1 miiiiiiiuinii'niip 'iii'ipi'i'iiy pnmy Brown & Welch t Proprietors op the Seventh Street Meat Market A. Q. U. W. Building OREGON CITY, OREGON Incorporated 1899 Farriers of the Nor ;h west Wm and Oregonian $2 x