OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. VV. CHENEY Julortl In Oregon CltypostofflceasSna-elasiinattai SUBSCRIPTION RATES. 1 80 76 25 Tald In advauce, per year aU( months . lire monlhs'trlal -Th date opposite your address on the aper aonoies ine ume vo wiuuu !"' K- IV tills notice is marked your subscription Is aue. CLUBBINQ RATES. Willi Weekly Oregoni&u...... J 00 ri'.i ur.:.l,l M V Wr.r M J DO i XutintiiLl WiLinhmaa 1 75 - Appeal to Keasott J WWKiy Bxailimer 'Bryau's Commoner 2 25 175 ADVERTISING RATES. ai.,,u,, hnsuip advertisement; Per month professional cards,UJ) pel year): ! to 10 inches 60e per lnoii, li luones ior u, iu iti i"""""" 8. 30 inches, $12. Tnjant Arivpritaamf'nts: Per week 1 inch too, 2 Incline 75c, 8 inches 1,4 iuclies 1 25,5 Inches 1.60, 10 inches 2.au,nu lucnes o iunui ouariiaumHiit.fi! Her lurh llrst loser- 4n(l, each additional Insertion .flo. Atlilavils of pultllcatlou will not be furnished until pub lication lues are paid. Lucal notices: Five cents per line per week per month 20c, PATRONIZE HOME IXDDSTRY OHEGON OITY, MAY 10, 1901. Is Cuba "marriage papers" cost from $20 to $200, which is undoubtedly the treason so few are purchased, lifty per jjent ol the Deonle kef p house without iliem . races better aoie iu uei mm " to survive the civilizing agenciesrum, opium and bhang. Tub Woonsocket, South Dakota, Im- provemint Association tias Deconie widelv known by reason ot trie laci inai it sank the largest artesian well in the world, throwing six thousand gallons ot water per nrnute, thereby changing a typical prairie town into a place of great beauty. Last year the association took up the construction of an artificial lake in the center of the town, to be sur rounded by trees and having an island in the center. Owing to heavy raira and continued floods it was impossible to finish the work in the fall, and the work will be completed thiiBpring. The banks will be seeded in grass, and trees planted on the island and around the banks. found in the gradual specialization of commerce and industry, according to the peculiar capacity of each competing nation the survival, in other words, of the fittest conditions for this or that country and the gradual subsidence of competition into healthful exchange." A STEEL WORKER!' COMBINiS. "Am'inq the workmen's leaders," the Philadelphia Record (Detn.) says, "the creation of a huge and overshadowing combination of capital in the steel in dustry has been generally accepted as a mandate for further and more compact labor organization Should the efforts to that end result in bringing the half million or more employees of the Bteet trust into a single association there would arise a Dew series of social and economic problems to be solved by the geniuses who have raised so high the Pekin must be an ideal place ol resi- fabric ot industrial consolidation. ine dence for a pessimist who wants to court possibility of voluntary idleness among dpath. An American physician thus so many thousand workers is fraught describes the effects of its unsanitary with consequences so distressful and ... .... condit'ona. "Cho'era it a requent visit- menacing to the community mat ine iwilrinn lives there, smallpox is mind recoils instinctively from their . .... I not epidemic, but resident; diphtheria contemplation is a dreaded foe, typhoid and typhus The New York Journal (Liem.), winch fevers with malignant malaria and dyo- assumes to speak for "labor," declares enterv are always present, and consump- that it has been shown that "the real tion slays its victims by thousands every head of the steel trust" is the leader of year. There is also a multitude of skin the steel makers. All the steel plants diseases. In short, every girrn-pro- have been put into one organization ; an duced disease, and the non-microbic as the steel workmen have been put into well, canable of flourishing in this lali- one organization. "The manufacturers Motliemood Mesas Mihs Grace Holler has been appointed an operator at the telephone exchange tude, find their home in metropolis. The infant enormous." this Chinese mortality is uf trustB have manufactured, without knowing it, a giant that may pursue them as Frankenstein's giant pursued him. A vast power is this power of la bor monopoly, and one that may be as The Boers, who are sustaining the in Portland, and it is said that she Hoi- cause of nationalities all the world over dangerous, more dangero is, than all the s!ers "hello" very Gracefully when and not merely the cause oi tneir own monopolies of finance. It is to be hoped -ailed. freedom, have decided that not nil the tuat wise leaders will be found by the sufferings ot their women and children, reftl armies brought together by trust Sam Smith of Copehart, W. Va., ate the devastation of their country and the ( formution. It is to be hoped that stock 1221iard boiled eggs with salt and vine- hardships of a protracted campaign are gpeculators may not succeed in manipu ar, and half an hour afterward died at comparable with the calajnty of a sur- iatina these forces, and that private am- tihH ace of 22. Had Door Sam only been render that involves the loss of their iMe to hold two more eggs he would Ubenies. The laBt tattered shred of in (SIS' Motherhood means either happiness or misery, mere is scant nappmew iui the mother, who in pain ami weaKness brings into the world a weakling babe which she can neither nurse nor nounstt. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription fits for motherhood. It strenpthsns the maternal organism. It tranquilizes the nerves, encourages the appetite and brings refreshing sleep. It makes the birth hour practially painless and gives the mother the nourishment to give her child. . There is no alcohol in " Favorite Pre scription," and it is absolutely free from opium, cocaine, and all other narcotics. Words cannot express how grateful I am for your kind advice and your ' Favorite Prescrip tion,' writes Mrs. D. B. Barricks, of Perrows, Campbell Co., Va. "I feel that it has cured me. I had been in poor health for four years. Sufj fired irreatlv with mv tteht side, also with Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A. Robertson The ;th St. Grocer ! YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT I Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom i ' ' Prices in Oregon City is at I HARRIS' GROCERY 1 bearing-down pains, and my nerves were in a dreadful state. After using four bottles of your ' Favorite Prescription I am now well. I am the mother of two children. With the first child I suffered twenty-eight hours, and with the second I used your medicine aud was sick Only three hours, f believe Dr. Pierce's Favor ite Presciption to be the best medicine tn the world for suffering females. I wish you great success, and hope that God will bless you in your noble work." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, in paper covers, is sent free on receipt of 21 one -cent stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Address Dr. K.. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. ft You Can Depend Upon CSsave won a dollar. 3x Colorado and Wyoming there is 'bitter strife between the cattle and theep jnen over the range, which is over v stocked. In the latter state thousands ot cattle have died during the winter be' cause of the latk f feed. Here is a -matter that demands Btringent regulft- (tion by the national government. dependence is a grim price to pay for peace. Nothing in all the tragedy of the war is quite so bitter as the thought that an English government could of fer such an alternative to a white people, and the decision of our enemy, however teirible in consequences, is one which Englishmen, whatever their views on the war, must respect. London Spectator. bition or conceit may not misuse them. Great new problems confront the people in this trust age. The greatest of these is not the problem of financial control. It is the problem presented by the pos sibilities of a labor trust more danger ous and aggressive than any other.' REALTY TRANSFERS. Tub people on whom the prosperity, the very existence, of a community de spends, are the farmer and the laborer, "The cunning brain may deise and plan, &ul without muscular toil, thought is t but Idle fancy. Let us therefor esteem i the labrring man at his value. We de I pend on him for a living. Ho supports i as. THE HORROR IN INDIA. Mai.i,qok, the English author, has ad .vised the people of England to emigrate when they have worked out their coal unities, which, at the ra'e of production oi the hint few years, will not take long. ' The duty on cjal, proposed by Michael Uiiks-Reach, would in the end be very iieneilciul to Great Britain, if it retard oal mining for export. Tim vice of cocainism is spreading salaruniigly as the drug is becoming cheaper. A one ounce package, which Juss than five years ago cost about fG, cau now bo purchased for 75 ceuts. One Jesuit of this cheapening is that the cj--CAino habit is becoming common -among tramps and paupers as well as l-butuiict)s i'iid professional men. In New Oi'leiuH and other parts of the South and West the drug is freely bought in five font packages. Capital is net an active principle of -wealth, only an instrument in the hands of labor. Capital cannot produce apart i from lalnr. One might have all the gold .jud silver in the world and yet ho would . perish without labor. Suppose all the workeis should die, what would become of the capitalists with their hoarded wealth. They would perish in sis months. Suppose, on the oilier hand, that all the capitalists were to die, the workers would still flourish, because - ithere would no one left to tleece them . Appalling are the conditions in India just'revealed by the new census. Many of the Southern Indian provinces with good crops have grown in numbers, but the central states, which would normally show an increase of 1,500,000, have lost 1,000,000-a total loss of 2,500,000. And these figures are dwarfed by the harvest of death in Oodeypur, where 45 per cent, of the people have peridhed, and in Bho- paul, whose population is less by 808, 000 than in 1891. Even Bombay is 50,000 less of a city than she was 10 years ag o These results are not all ; they are not even the worst that famine has left. Weakened bodies, mourning mothers, emaciated, ghastly "convalescents" who will never again be well, slaughtered buffalo that will plow no more, ruined villages, weed-grown fieldsall theie are due to the years of hunger and dis ease that money would have made im possible. Five million people have died prevent able deaths, twenty million more have suliercd beyond description, while the government directly responsible for In- A Botteniiller to E Bottemiller dia's ill-fare lus spent hundreds of mil- 'J't in estate ot I , . , ID J Brothers to IT uont-uowr e of sec 2s, , of in uiaaing war upon hiiuuiui peupie; in making South Africa a worse desert than lihopaul; in farm-burning and deportations i in more Buttering, more sorrows, more corpses. 230 1 400 800 900 10 EXPLOITING LABOR. Fakminq In Germany is conducted on unore improved and scientific principles ttlian anywhere else in the world. Ma cbinory playa a comparatively unim giortant part with thoGei man farim r,wl.o depends more on chemistry for results. The fertilization of the soil receives the closest attention. However, in spite of ttli advantage which knowledge be t stwa, Germany is unable to meet the demand of its population for bread TfltufTa. Abiut one-eighth of the demand ae lobe imported from abroad, and amounted In 189 J to more than 50,000,- 000 bushels of wheat alone. Is India, whero threo hundred mil lions ol quiet, rico eating, out-of-date Siuman beings present a "problem for olutiou," the British revenue from the -sale of rum, opium and "bhang" ia . enormoui aud constantly growing. Brit i isb energy spreads everywhere the ealo jf alcohol, opium aud hemp extract i among even the poorest populations ol ; India. That largo British sale means a solution of the problora of the popula- .iiccs of India. Drunkenness is spread--i.es, famine is widespread, populations iie off, and room will be made for whiter r uom all evidences it would appear that the significance of American trade expansion is the disorganized, or imper fectly organized, condition of the Ameri can workers. Such being the case, the advantage of the American manufacturer can only be maintained by a constant effort on his part to keep down wages, to combat the shorter workday, and in gen eral to prevent the improvement of in dustrial conditions. Such a policy, act ing and reacting upon the workers of all the nations concerned, as It necessarily must, can have but one result, namely, the utter demoralization of labor. It is a distinctly retrogressive policy, the ul timate result of which will tar outweigh the superficial and mainly private ad vantages of commercial supremacy. That the question is of concern to all classes may not be apparent at firtt blush. But that it is a serious matter of public policy is clearly shown by the fol lowing excerpt from "A General Survey of the Foreign Trade," recently issued by the State Department : "There is food for thought also in the possible consequences to our European trade of a rivalry on our part which may be so crushing as to greatly impair the purchasing power of those who are now our best customers. If we permanently cripple their chief industries, we deprive them to a greater or less extent, of ' the means of buying from us, and the con sumption of our food supplies and our raw materials, as well as of our finished goods, may be greatly curtailed. The solution of the problem may perhaps be Furnished Every Week by Clacka mas Abstract & Trust Co. F Luta to J M Tracy, 40.8 a in elm 44 and 60 a in Caleb Tracy elm. .3000 O & C R R to S Felter, w of sw of sec 23. 4.4e.... 280 Anton Stein to N Nelson, e of se of sec 4. 2. 4 e 1800 E II Carev to L Gerlinger, e of nw of and w of ne of sec 7, 2, 4 e ... 150 A I Eastman to J D Stalueker, 10 a in I'eudleton elm 625 II Rummer to C G Hoffman, tract in ne of sec 5, 5, 1 e M A Ducher to G J Moore, Its 3 and 4 in blk 104,0 C A W Butterfield to N R Howard, 86 a in sec 33, 3, 1 e R McCain to L Baker, n of sw of Bee 20, 4, 4 e M B Hoffman to J Hammeman 14 21 a in the Geo Brock cl J W Hauimelman toO. A. Heinz, 14.21 a in Geo Brock elm M F Miles to T F Ryan, Its 1 to 6 and 9 to 16, blk 7, Uswego, and 43? a in the Tryon elm, 2, 1 e. . P Hansen et al to P Hansen, Be of ne of e of se of aud nw of se of sec 21, 3, 4e D McArthur to J Brown, Its 6, 7 and s of Sin blk 7, New Era 200 M Etierman to H Tautfast, 5.5 a in sec 31. 3 . lw 1 H Tautfast to M TautfaBt, 5.34 a iu sec 31. 3. 1 w 1 E Nicholson to E C Nicholson, 2-3, 140 as in elm 43,6,1 e fGOO ail ipt in estate of 11 Bottemiller 200 T Waters, 1-3 of e of w of see 3(3, 4, 5e 250 II U Campbell to T Butler, 7.813 as in Matlock elm, 2, 2 e 1500 F M Sutford to Wm Anderson, 25 as in north west coiner of sec 26, 1, 2 e 1 J P Culler to A J Hodge, 25.64 as in pec 21, 3, 1 e 850 M 8 B Lawton to M Henkricks.3,32 as in elm 37, 3, 2 e 700 M Holverson to T Nilson,3 as in elm 56, 3, le 300 Lnion SavingB& Loan Association to H W Ktwhler, lots 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 in blk 45, Uwego 250 Willamette tails Co to M Rasmus sen. lot 10. blk 9, lot 6 in blk 12,of Willamette lalla 1 0 & C R R Co to H Koch, w of sw of sec 25. 1,4 e 280 T A Campau to W J Hitchman,8298 as in sec ii, 3, 1 w 47o L A ounx to O R James, w of ne of e of ne of sec 5, 5, 3 e 1150 S Maver to G Schmitke. 5 as in the sw of sec 31, 2, 1 e 725 State of Oregon to H B Tonner, sw1'. wi ' of ne of se of sec 25, 4,6 s 800 Oak Grove L A I Co to R Young, lot 4, tract 47, Oak Grove 500 Union Savings & Loan Association to M Meturher. lots 9. 10. U aud 12, blk 4u,08wego 350 O & C R R io C Rietn. sw of se of sec 29,2, 5 e I 340 II J Lund to T llolzntan. nw of ne of sec 3, 4, 1 e 500 8 E Humphrey to A Humphrey, part of Roots Addition 1 G Boese, sr., to G Boese, jr.. 40 a in sec 11, 2, 3 e 320 T F Rvan to 0 H Dye. part lis 5 and 6, blk 25, Oregon City .. ... 5000 J O Jordon to J I) Jordon, part see 30 and 310, 5, 2 e and part sec 36 in 5, 1 e ; 639 a 1 1 ah M C Califf t J M Lawrence. It 1. blk 141. Oregon City 650 F Olson to A D Cahill, about 1 a iu "Whitcctnb cl 230 J W Roots to S E Humphrey, part of Roots Addition 50 II M Jackson by stiff, to A Stein bach, 2.8 a iu Holms & Newell cl 1000 O vV C R K Co to L Gerlinger, sw of ne of and nw of se of sec 27; 2, ' 4e 440 O Birkenneiy to B Friedrich, 5 tracts in Parrott cl, 3, 1 e 300 J King to W M Lea, Its 17 an 1 18 in hlk 43. Minthorn 5 L Ackerman et al to J Putz, 15 a in bw of Bee 26. 4. 3e 125 E F Riley to J Hingley, Its 27 ard 28, blk 71, Minthorn 10 E F Riley to H Hingley, Its 25 and 26. blk 70, Minthorn 10 M Matlock et al to W H Pope, (4 deeds) part of the Ma lock cl .. , 1 Gladstone R E Asctn to K Johnson hlk 113. Gladstone 6 Going East. If you intend to take a trip East, ask your agent to ruite you via 1 he (jreat Wabash, a modern and up to-date rail road in every particular. Through trains from Chicago, Kansas City, Omaha or St. Louis to New York and JNew England points, an trams run via Niagara Falls and every through train has free reclining chair cars, s.eep ing and dining cars. 8lop over allowed on an ueaeis aun- agara Falls. nous vj. vi.ir-ii. Pacific Coast Pass. Agent. Lob Angeles, Cal. C. S. Crank, Gen'l Pass Agent. St. Louis, Mo. 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 Brown & Welch -Pbopriotobs of thb- Seventh Street Meat Market a. d. u. w. OREGON CITY, Building OREGON The finest bon the K.K K. LOCAL SUMMARY bon Loxes in town al caps and hats in Miss O. Goldsmith. the latest at the first- H. Bethke's Meat Market Opposite Huntley's piist Glass fyfeatsof .11 ids Satistaction Guaranteed (5ive yiriQ a gall arjd be Treated i&2t. Baby styles. Shiving oily 10 cints class shoD of P. G. Shark. The latest in chocolate of all kinds at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen, A few watches for sale cheap at Younger's. Watches cleaned, 1. The latest out Try the marshmallow kisses at the Kozy Kandy Kitchen. A slightly used parlor organ for sale by W. L. Block, the homefurnislier. Shank & Bissell carry the most com plete line of undertakers' suppuej in Oregon City. To Loan on Farm Property $500, tinon. 1S00. at 7 tier cent, one, two or three years, uiniicu & uasmam, law yers, uregon uiiy ureuu. It Saved Hli Lee. P. A Danforth of LaGrtnge, Ga., suf fered for six months with a frightful running sore on his leg; but write that Bucklen's Arnica Waive wnouy cureu it in five davs. For Ulcers, Wounds, files, it's the best salve in the world. Cure guaranteed. O.ily 25 cts. Sold by Geo. A. Harding, druggist. Foresight Means Good Sight If there ever was a truism it is exemplified in the above headline. Lack ot foresight in attending to the 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 Jewelef 393 norrison Street, PORTLAND, OREGON mm wmm s For all kinds of Building Material CALL AT THE Oregon City Planing Mill F. S. BAKER, PROP. SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC. of Cod Liver Oil is the means of life, and enjoyment of life to thousands: men women and children. When appetite fails, it re stores it. When tooa is burden, it lifts the burden. When youlose flesh.it brings the Dlumpncss ot health. When work is hard and rliitv is heavy, it makes life , 4 . bneht. It is the thin edc of the wedge; the thick end is food, But what is the use of food when you hate it, and can't di- eest it? .Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is thefood that makes vou fortret your stomach. it you nave nor iriea it, free sample. Its agreeable tasta will surprise you. . . SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. 409 Pearl Street. New York. 50c. and $1.00 ; all druggists. BECKER'S MILLINERY 220 FIRST STREET, PORTLAND, OREGON Great Bargains in Trimmed Hats-1 Magnificent Design Also a Consignment of very Cheap Hats Hair Switches at Very Low Figures 2 It R. L. Holman Undertaker 2 Doors South oi . Court House We eatrj complete li of Coffins, Caskets, Bobes and linings. We have txen in th undertaking tjuilnea orer ten years. Wi ai under small expanse and do ot ask large proflta. We haw always frWen our best effort to please our bereared friends. Wt thor oughly understand the preserraUon of the dead. Wa destroy contagious germs and offen. sive odors when called upon to prepare the dead for lurlal. ' mm