12 "REGON CITY COURIER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1902. BMW JtVeee fable Preparationfor As similating uteFoodandBeguIa ting the Stomachs and Bowels cf Promotes Digestion.Ciicerful ness andRest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. Keafit ofOldllrSAMUELimnEB IunpJan Srtil ' JlxJenna Seed Jimermtnt - ftimSeed -rlnrifitd Sugar -h'i&yrm flavor. A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms ,Convulsions,Feverish oess andLoss OF SLEEP. facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. r --- I s- 3ii I ' ' .i3. TH, CCNTM1H COMMNV, HIW YORK 01TV. Cooperative Organ Buying Why not buy an Organ that way? Join the Co-Operative Club and save money. An Organ-Selling Plan of Eiler's Piano House that gives you wholesale prices. IF YOU BUY in large quantities or at wholesale, you get a better price than if you buy in a small or retail way, therefore, if a large number of people buy all at once they get a better figure than if they buy single. That's the idea of these organ buyers' clubs. By joining the clubs at EILER'S PIANO HOUSE you can get wholesale prices on the very finest organs by paying such small sums as 3.00 and $5.00 and making weekly pay ments of 60c to $i.oo, and the discount you get on the price is far beyond anything you have ever before known. All the regular $65, $75 and $80 organs, wifh two sets of reeds, go to club members, at prices ranging at $38, $46 and $52. They are all organs that are fully guaranteed by the manufacturers and by this house. This sale includes the very finest toned organs in cases of fancy walnut and mahogany and quarter-sawed oak. Parlor styles that sell at retail for 135 and 150 are reduced in the same proportion as other organs. 1 Bear in mind, you get your organ in your house as soon as you make your first payment, and begin at once enjoying the pleasure of music in your home. The winter is just begin ning, and a fine organ will be a great help to while away the long evenings. Then, when you want to buy a piano yon can turn your organ in to us as a payment on the new piano. Onr or5an clubs are two, and each is limited to 100 members. ORGAN CLUB "OA." Members secure their organs by paying down the small sum ef 3.00 and making small weekly payments of 50c. ORGAN CLUB "OB." This co-operative or club method of buying organs, and also pianos, has met with remarkable success elsewhere as well as in Portland. People here are continually joining under this plan, and both organ and piano clubs are growing fast. Our Oregon Club limit has been placed at 200, and the way joiners are coming in we cannot promise you the cluhs will be open very much longer. We would like to have you come in and see our instru ments and judi 'f the "snap" you are now in a position to get. If you cannot da this, write us. Full information will be forwarded you immediately, and your purchase will be looked after as carefully as if you made your selection yourself. Eiler's Piano House, 351 Washington St., Opposite Cordray's Theater. Other Stores: San Francisco, Sacramento and Spokane t 0 : Manufacturing JLTJL WATCH REPAIRING .A SPECIALTY. Fitting Spectacles and Ejo Glasses By Up-to-Date Methods. Examinaon Free, by an Exper Optician A, N. WRIGHT The Iowa Jeweler, 293 Morrison, near 5Ui For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Clubs 4 t AND.. . Ad .ah A Ait MOVE AGAINST TIPPING! Railway Porters Unite to Fight the System. A NEW YOEI LODGE ORGANIZED. Sixty Men Met In a Private Car to Demand Living Wages Delegates Will Be Sent to a Katlonal Conven tion to Meet In Chicago Kext Jan nary. One of the most surprising develop ments of convention week at Saratoga came near being overlooked In the ex citement and interest surrounding the New York Democratic state conven tion, says the Now York World. An association of sixty Pullman porters was organized at Saratoga the other day with the avowed purpose of abol ishing the tipping system. The porters say they don't want tips; they want living wages. The New York lodge, which was formed at Sar atoga, will send delegates to a conven tion in Chicago next January, when the National Colored Men's llailroad asso ciation will be revived and a strong ef fort made to organize the porters on every railroad system in the country. The porters seldom get such an op portunity to gather together as wns afforded by the presence of so many special trains in the railroad yards at Saratoga. They took advantage of their chance, and every Pullman por ter in the yards, sixty in all, assembled in ex-Police Chief William S. Devery's private car, the Elzevir, which headed his special train. They listened to an address by Wil liam II. Green, a tall orator, who had taken excellent care of the Devery party on the trip to Saratoga from New York and who had received a substantial tip from the Ninth district leader. . "We porters must organize," he said. "In 110 other way can we raise the standard of our service to the travel ing public and wipe out the system of tips, which makes beggars of every one of us men. We don't want tips. We want the Pullman company to pay us wages that we can live on. "We are paid $1.23 for a trip be tween New York and Chicago. The company makes perhaps $200 out of that same run. "You all know what sort of service some porters give. If a man gives one of us a dollar tip, he is very likely to get particular attention paid to him, and the rest of the passengers are neglected. The public gets the worst of It, aud our profession suffers from these individual cases. "If we raise the standard of service, we can get more out of the Pullman company, auu we can uo it in no outer way. We must organize, and In a very short time we can wipe out the tips and draw living wages." The speech was cheered. Otljer por ters talked in the same way. The New York lodge was organized with a hurrah, and the following temporary olllcers were elected: President, William II. Green; vice president, William Graudy; secretary, C. T. Green; treasurer, George Wray. President Green went to Devery Just before the Devery special train left for home and told him about the new or ganization. Ho said the porters want ed to get announcement in the news papers. "Do you realize what you're doing" asked the big chict. "Yes," said Porter Green "I know that I'm liable in loe my position with the Putlintiti oii(Wli.v, hut 1 in a man, and I've t Hie right to express my convictions." "Shake," said Devery, extending his hand. "Go ahead. You'ivall right." Au Hsuert'a len on Tip". The "Colored WaiteW Chesterfield," a book on the duties and responsibili ties of waiters, was issued the other day, says a Chicago dispatch to the New York World. The author Is John B. Goins, au old time Chicago waiter. A waiter should never place himself In a position of expectancy In the mat ter of receiving a tip," says Coins, and should avoid approaching a guest If he sees him In the act of drawing change from Ills pocket. A waiter should never pose'as an object of pity with a view to securing a tip. If he deserves a tip, he should lot the guest feel within himself that he deserves it. Should the waiter receive a tip previ ous to waiting on the guest ho should knve It lying ou the table and then do his level best to earn it. A waiter should never make any demonstration of gratitude when receiving a tip be yond a polite acknowledgment. Monument For lllxtorlenl Spot. There Is a movement on foot to erect a monument on the outer point of c'ape Cod to commemorate the adop tion of the pilgrim compact of govern ment, says the New York Tribune. The pilgrim compact was probably the earliest charter of a democratic government adopted by the people known to the world. A rugged obelisk 200 feet in height placed upon au em inence on the outermost point of Cape Cod, where all passing and repassing at son may see it, will be, It Is thought, a fitting memorial of such a landmark, of history. New Millinery llevioe. As a substitute for birds in hat gar niture, says Bird Love, a dealer eta tish, "the latest Parisian creation." Not Improbable that another soasou may find fashion supporting the finny tribe-uot in parlor aquariums, but upon my lady's crown, says the Now Yorl. l'ios. No end of color schemes may be found in the proper Juxtaiosl tion of crabs, lobsters, eels and gold fish, not to forget the lovely mluuovri! WORK OF COAL MINERS Light on the Conditions In the Mines. ALLEGED CAUSE OF THE STRIKE. Scranton Editor Saya It Wii Precip itated by ' the Miners to Prevent Laborers From Revolting Miners Earn From IfllO to $100 a Month. One of Their Jokes., A Boston business man recently wrote to the editor of the Scranton Tribune, the leading paper of north eastern 'Pennsylvania, asking him for some light on the conditions of the work of the coal miners, says the New York Times. The following is the re ply: "Replying to your inquiry of Oct. 1, I will try to explain mining conditions to you as briefly as possible. "The miner drills the hole in the coal seam, inserts the powder, tires the blast which knocks the coal down and then takes a rest, while his helper pulls the coal out and loads it Into the mine car. A miner in four to six hours, with easy work, can ordinarily knock down enough coal to keep his helper busy for eight to ten hours or longer. The miner is paid by the car In this region, averaging about a dol lar a car, and the usual day's work is six ears, holding about 3,000 pounds of lump coal, rock 'bony' and slate. "Of this $0 gross earnings the miner pays $2 to the laborer and keeps $4 for himself, out of which he must pay for the powder he uses, oil, wicks, fuses and the sharpening of his picks. In some places the unit of pay is the square yard of coal in the seam and In others a weight unit of 2,750 pounds, j it being claimed by the operators that on' an average it will take from 2,700 j to 3,000 pounds of gross coal that is, coal as it conies from the seam to net I one ton of 2.2."i0 pounds of coal as pre-. pared at the breaker for market. "The miners claim that where the unit of payment is the mine car the car of today is bigger than In years ' gous by and continually growing. One of their Jokes Is that the mine car is made of live oak. "However this may be (and my per sonal belief Is that there Is just about as much honesty ou one side as on the other), it is a fact that the industrious miner averages, net, per month, for about tweuty days' work of from four to six hours a day all the way from $00 to $100 a month and could make twice as much if he would blow enough coal to keep two laborers employed instead of one. Today miners who are 'scabbing' work ns high as ten cham bers apiece and earn in sume cases $20 a day. But it is a peculiar fact that under normal conditions the miner does not seem to be ambitious to do more than one chamber at a time or to work beyond five or six hours a day. "The real cause of this strike was that the miners' helpers, who are most ly foreigners, had got it into their heads that the miners were not making a fair divide. They were organizing a mine laborers' movement to force the miners to divide even. The operators have nothing to do with hiring the helpers. They are hired by the miners themselves. To avert a substrike among their 'butties,' as the laborers are called, the miners swung the gen eral strike, ostensibly for the points set forth in their published demands, but In reality to enable the union to con trol discipline and thus put it beyond the power of the laborer to revolt. "In the mines also are many 'com pany hands,' men paid by the month to run engines, act as firemen, attend to the pumps, etc. The union's demand for au eight hour day was to enlist them In the strike. They are getting good wnges engineers, $00 to $80 a month for long hours, but light work, aud others In proportion, Nine-tenths of these men were entirely satisfied, and many of them refused to go out. , "When the coal In big lumps comes from the mine' or pit, it Is passed through a high structure called the breaker, where it is broken by steam machinery into the various sizes and the impurities arepleked out. Much of the labor In the breaker is done by boys, who average 75 cents a day. They have no complaint, for their pay is better than that of the average lad In a city oliice. But they belong to the union and have votes In the calling of strikes, and the Idea of striking has de veloped among them rapidly. Last year In this end of the coalfields there were a hundred odd local strikes, mostly over the pettiest conceivable things, and the breaker boy and barroom loafer element had a good deal to do with de claring them. "I have lived in the anthracite region fourteen years, and I know that in the year 1001 the miners earned more money than ever before during my time. Our banks are full of their savings. very little of which has yet been drawn out, In spite of their five mouths' Idle ness. There is no similar grade of labor in the country which is better paid than the anthracite coal mtuer, ! and no workman more Independent. because the law of the state practically gives him a monopoly of the labor of minim; hv forbidding any but a !) censed miner to work at mining In the mines. To get a license, or certificate, as it is called, he must first have worked at least two years In the mines as a laborer and then pass an examina tion to show that he knows enough about the peculiar requirements of mining to be a safe man to admit to a chamber." An Advance In FrUco. The police commissioners of SaD Francisco have recommended to the supervisors the adoption of an ordi nance which will prohibit the sale ot liquors as drugs. Asleep Amid Flames. Breaking into a blazing home, some firemar lately dragged the sleeping in mates from death. Fancied security, and death near. It's that way when you neglect coughs and colds. Don't do it. Dr. King's .New Diecovery for con sumption gives perfect protection againet all Thaoat, Chest and Lung Troubles. Keep it Dear, and avoid suffering, death, and doctor's bills. A teaepoonful stopB a late cough, persistent use the most stubborn. Harmless and nice tasting, it s guaranteed to satisfy by Geo A Harding, Druggist. Price 50c and $1. Trial bottles free. When you wake up with a bad taBte in your mouth, go at once to G. A. Hard ing s drug store and get a free sample of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. One or two doses will make you well. They also cure biliousness, sick headache and constipation. ' liooms for Jieut. Furnished and unfurnished rooms for rent. Enquire of Mrs. J. Schramm, cor ner Sixth and Water streets. Oregon City, Or. PORTLAND-ANTORIA ROUTE STR. BAILEY GATZERT . Daily Round Trips, except Sunday , TIME CARD Leave Portland 7A jj Leave Astoria .7 p' M THE DALLES-POR TLAN U ROUTE STBS. TAHOJIA and METLAKO Daily Trips Except Sunday STR. TAHOMA Leave Portland, Mon., Wed. and Iri 7AM Leave The Dalles, Tues., Thurs. and Sat. .7 A.' U. STR. METLAKO Leave Portland, Tues., Thurs. and Sat 7 A. M Leave Dalles, Mon., Wed. and Fri 7 A, M Landing, Foot Alder Street BOTH PHONES, MAIN 851 PORTLAND, OKEGON AGENTS A. J. Taylor Astoria, Ore. J. w. Crichton The Dalles, Ore. A. K. fuller .Hood River. Ore. Wolford & Wyers. White Salmon, Wash. Heniy Olmstead Carson, Wash. John T.Totten Stevenson, Wash. J 0. Wyatt .... Vancouver, Wash. K. W. CRICHTON, PORTLAND, ORE $150 IN To be Given toCourier Subscribers Absolutely FREE TO ALL The Courier will distribute among its subscribers $150.00 in gold on the afternoon of New Year day next. We have secured a mammoth pumpkin which is on exhibition in the window of the Courier office. Its weighs exactly 100 pounds. Every subscriber to the Oregon City Courier who pays one years subscription will be en titled to make one estimate upon the number of seed in this splendid specimen of the genus pumpkin.'An additional guess may be made for each additional subscription paid. Subscribers who have paid their subscriptions and made one estimate may take additional estimates at fifty cents each. To the subscribers making the closest estimates as to the number of seeds in the pumpkin the following prizes will be awardad : For the First Best Guess $50.00 in gold For the Second Best Guess 25.00 in gold For the Third Best Guess 15.00 in gold For the Fourth Best Guess IO.00 in gold For the Fifth Best Guess 10.00 in gold For the Sixth Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Seventh Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Eighth Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Ninth Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Tenth Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Eleventh Best Guess 5.00 in gold For the Twelfth Best Guess 2 50 in gold For the Thirteenth Best Guess 2.50 in gold For the Fourteenth Best Guess 2.50 in gold For the Fifteenth Best Guess. , 2.50 in gold In event of two or more persons guessing any wining num ber that prize will bejdevided . On the after noon of New Year day at two oclock P. M. the pumpkin will be cut and the seeds counted by a committee of well known citizens of Oregon City and the prizes awarded to the success ful estimators. We want 2,000 paid up in advance subscribers to the Courier by the first day of January, 1903. Can't you help us to get them. We are giving you an elegant opportunity. Drop into the office, take a look at the pumpkin and leave us an estimate on the number of seeds that it contains together with your subscription. If not convenient to come to the office send us a check or money order for the amount you want to invest in the Courier All subscriptions in arrears are entitled to participate to the extent of one estimate for each subscription paid. If you are already a subscriber, pay up the old score if behind and renew for one year in advance and make as many estimates as you pay subscriptions, if you are not on our list get on as soon as you can, and take a lessen in agriculture by estimating the number of seed in the pumpkin. Send in your esti mate on the coupon attached hereto or estimating blanks will be furn ished at this office. All persons who have paid the new management are entitled to participate. No Name Address Date 1902. Address all communications to The Courier Publishing Company, Oregon City, Oregon 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 th work is done by F. C. GADKE E. E. G. SEOL Will give you a Bargain in Wall Paper Wall Tinting and in General House Painting Paint Shop near Depot Hotel The nest Prescription for Malaria Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure no pay. Price 50c. New Plumbing and Tin Shop !a. mihlstin JOBBING AKD BEFAIR1NG GT"'1' ;ii"i tuccs city GOLD