OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY Eutme J In Oregon City pontofflce ai 2nd-clas matter SUBSCRIPTION BATES. PM In arivunnA. nnr vear 1 60 Six months 75 hree months trial i0 gtpTh date opposite your address on the aper donotes the time to which you hae paid. If this notice is marked your subscription la due. CLUBBING RATES. With Weekly Oregonlau 2 00 ' Tri-Weekly M. Y. World 1 85 ' National Watchman 1 75 " Appeal to Reason 16" " Weekly Kiamlner 2 2a " Bryan's Commoner 1 "5 ADVERTISING RATES. Standing business advertisements: Per month professional cards,ll(3) pei year): 1 to 10 inches Me per inch, 12 Inches for $5, 20 inches (column) J8, 80 inches, $12. Transient advertisements: Per week 1 inch 10c, 2 inches 75c, S inches $1,4 Inches 11.25,5 Inches il.M), 10 Inches 92.50, 20 inches tb Legal advertisements: Per Inch first tnser lenl, eHCh additional Insertion .flc Affilavlls of publication will not be fumisLed until pub lication lees arenaid. Local notices; Five cents per line per week per month 20o, ' PATRONIZE DOME INDUSTRY. OREGON OITY, MAY 17, 1901. In a public address issued by a com mittee of farmers in Oowley county, KansaB, they say : "The lesson of com bining for mutual benefit must be learned by the farmer or he is lost." Moke French champagne is consumed in New York City each year than is made In France. One is compelled to wonder where the rest of it comes from, that which is drunk in Oregon City for in stance. OiNK hundred and eleven ships of all classes are in this year's naval program for France. This keeps her far ahead of RuHsia and Germany and second only to England as to her navy. Consider ing the relative territory and resources of the two countries France is putting forth a greater effort even than England. Kkib Hardie, member of the British parliament, says: "Socialism offers the only way of escape. Monopoly is in evitable, and the question at issue all over the world is whether this monopoly in the means of life 1b to be 'privately owned and controlled and conducted soluly and exclusively with the object of p ming money in the pockets of the shareholders, or ia to be owiapJ and con trolled by the nation and conducted so as to produce the bigheBt possible happi ness and the greatest personal freedom." Rev, Dr. Parkhurbt, in a recent ad dress, thug expressed his opinion of New York City: "If Sodom and Go morrah were near New York City and I to move, I'd move to one of them in preference to living in New Yortt City." If the worthy doctor found the moral temperature of even these health resorts too frigid, he Bhould spend the dog days in that elyslum of which it haB been fit tingly said by Molalla's poet laureate: "When we've been there ten thousand years, Much hotter than the sun, We've no less days to roast and blaze TIihu when we first begun." 1 A special study of heredity has boon milo by Professor Fellmanof Bonn Uni versity, Germany. He traced the ca reers of children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren in all parts of the present German Empire until he was able to present tabulated biographies of the hundreds descended from some orig inal drunken vagabond. Notable among the persona described by him is Frau Ada Jurke, who was born in 1740, and was a drunkard, a thief, and a tramp for the last forty years of her life, which ended i n 1800. Hor di'scendan a num bered 834, of whom 709 were tiaced in local records from youth to death. One hundred and six out of the 709 were born out of wedlock. There were 144 beggars, and 62 more who lived from charity. Of the women, 181 led disrep utable lives. There were in this family 70 convicts, 7 of whom were sentenced for murder. In a period of Bourn 75 years this one family rollod up a bill of costs in almshouses, prisons, and cor rectional institutions amounting to about 11,250,000. OXE IilO LABOR VXIOX. With the idea of forming one big labor union of 2,000,000 members, President L, R. Thomas of the pattern-makers, Business Agent William A. Shaw of the machinists, District Master Workman John Fernau of the knights of labor, President Simon Burns of the window glass workers, President John Kunzler of the flint glass workers, President T. J. Shaffer of the iron, steel and tin work era, and BecreUry J. W. Pryle of the structural iron workers, met in Pittsburg last week. It is proposed to hold a national con vention, at which representatives of the various labor organizations will bo pres ent, ill Chicago, July I, for the purpose of formulating plans to bring all the trades unionists in this country under one federal head. The delegates at this convention will represent nearly 2,000,. 000 men directly aud iudirectly con Iiected. with the gigantic combinations that have been ushered into existence during the last two years. It is claimed tbe leaders of the work- ingmen are alarmed over tbe character and enormity of the combines, and they are inclined to the opinion that the com bination oi such vast capital bodes no good to them. IS THIS PPOSPERITYt 'The Philadelphia North American, re publican , in a recent issue gives a dis couraging desciiption of the depression which prevails in the textile trade It makes the following summary : No. of textile employes in Phila... 75,000 No. at steady work 20,000 No. on "half" or "three-quarter" time . 35,000 No. idle... 15,000 No unaccounted for 5,000 CAUSES OF DEPRESSION . 1. Overpiodoction during prosperity. 2. Underconsumption due to low wages. 3. The war in China. 4. Competition of "substitute" com modities. 5. Change in styles. 6. Change in centres of textile indus try. If we had a low tariff the protection ists wodld recommend a high tariff as a remedy ; if we bad bimetalism the gold standard would be proposed as a pana cea, but as we have a high tariff and a gold standard this depression will be ex plained as one of those natural and nec essary conditio ns which cannot be pre vented by foresight or remedied by legis lation. It comes, too, at a time when the stock markets are booming and when the speculators are boasting that rail road stocks have gained more than five hundred millions in market value within a few months, ' WALL STREET. Attracted by the stock speculations, reports from New York are to the ef fect that never before nad the city been so crowded with strangers for any con siderable length of time. The crowd had gathered not to make a holiday, but to get rich. It had been drawn from all parts of the country by reports of specu lative activity in Wall street, being made up almost wholly of speculators. One report says: "The extravagance of the time has never been equaled. The idea seems to be tiiat every thing will rise in value and keep on ris ing ; that there is no top notch, and no chance of falling. It is said that the old hands at the game have begun to be afraid and are standing aside, but they are not missed. Everybody wh can raise a margin is buying, and as so many are gathering in profit there is no dearth of spenders, The hotels, the restau rants, . the theaters, the ehops, are crowded with throngs who demand the best and pay for it. No holiday season has equaled the lavishness of spending on the part of those who have grown able to, so suddenly and easily." Lady patrons of the stock exchange were by no means few, nor are their pur chases on slight value. A representative of the N.Y. fciun who visited a "private office" where women assemble to spec ulate, found 75 of them there at one time. The visit was made on the invita tion of a member of the firm occupying the office, who had said: "You go down to the Btock exchange and you think that there is a good deal of activity. A stranger may be pardoned for thinking that hell had broken loose. If you'll come up into my office for a short time and take in what ia going ou you may be pardoned for concluding that a con siderable number of the Furies have gone on a picnic." Many of those women have speculated themselves rich and live ou the fat of the land in grand style. During the recent pandemonium of stock speculation, the way-downtown hotels were crowded nights to their ut most capacity. Not only were there many people attracted to town by it, but the overworked brokers' clerks and bookkeepers camped downtown nighta. Some of the largest downtown hotels had every available space filled with beds and cots night after night. It was a hot time in New York and some gut badly burned. It Is cooler now. Question Answered. Yes, August Flower still has the largest sale of any medicine iu the civ ilized world. Your mothers and grand mothers never thought of using any thing else for Indigestion or Biliousness. Doctors were scarce, and they seldom heard of Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra tion or Heart Failure, etc They used August Flower to clean out the system and stop fermentation of undigested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic action of the system, and that is all they took whon feeling dull and bad with headaches and other aches. Ym only need a few doses of Gren'a August Flower, in liquid form, to make you sat isfied there is nothing serious the matter with you. Get Green's Prize Almanac at George A. Harding's. Prvsidrnt McKinley. WW t0P' Salem, May 22. Portland, May 22. The Southern Pacific announces rate of one fare tor the round trip to Salem from stations between Turner aud Uoseburg. and to Portland, from sta tions between Oregon City and Rose burg. Excursion tickets will be on sale for trains arriving at Salera or Portland on the morning of May 22, and leaving same evening or following morning. The reception exercises have been so planned as to give to as many a? possible an opportunity to see and hear the presi dent. . The committee of arrangements will snare no effort to milia tha n.w,nn a memorable one. REALTY TRANSFERS. Furnished Every Week by Clacka . mas Abstract & Trust Co. , G A Harding to H Laboissere, lots land 2, blk 5, Edge wood. $ 52 r cyme to is m Howell, blk 10, Sellwood Add, lots 3 and 4, blk 28 Mitwaukie G H Ashton to C H Pauling, part lot 4, blk 6, Oswego 100 J Spangler to A A and B B Spang- ler, 38 acres and lots 3 and 4, sec 17, 3, 1 e 1800 H M Grant to F Eggert, se of Be of sec 26, 2, 5 e 1 F M Manning to. W O Craig, w of se of sec 12,4, 2 e 1500 H H Jutinsoc to E F Riley, 76 as in sec 10 and tract in elm 58, 2, 2 2 e 614 J P Warnock to O H Geiger, n of ne of sec 23,5, 1 e 1500 G F Beckstrum to J Guog, lots 4 and 5, blk 20, Oswego O&ORROo to PC Miller, w of sw of stc 35, 5, 2 e 280 L J Perdue to G O Perdue, 40 as in sec 7 and 18 in 5, 1 e 500 W A Miller to J A Talbert, 4.50 as , in Matlock elm.;. 500 S Calkins to O I Calkins, a of n of nw of nw of sec 4, 5, 1 w.. 5 H Roseufeldt to Oreloha, pt of Rob ertson & Milwaukie Heights,. .. . 600 E Struble to J P Cook, 1 acres in sec 16, 2, 1 e 60 G R H Miller to E Roberts, lot 6, blk 28, Oregon City 800 S Peterson to N U Hanson, 8 as in sec 36, 5, le.. 325 W J Lewellen to L Parmer, 80 as of J Stephenson elm 1200 T P Randall to 8 Smythe.pt Shaws' First Add, OC 1 J A Thayer to A Colie.te, 19.39 as in elm 43, 8, 2 e 5 0 Wolfia to G Keller, strip in sec 29,2, le 1 G R Miller to N Miller, n of se of sec 32, 3, a e 1 A H Lee to A P Barlow, 6 as in blk 16, barlow 1 Sailor and walking hats iust arrived. Miss O. Goldsmith. New trimmed hats at popular prices. Miss 0. Goldsmith. T.ll.'mhpv T,Aft vft nrrfpra nt t.Ma nfrirA fnr firkt.-nlflaa liimViAr nf all Irinrla nr url. dress W. F. Harris. Beaver Creek. Oregon. Kozy Kandy Kitchen, up to date on home-made candies. . SI 0(1(1 In In in Ku ( A f'.honou at 1 not- cent, on good farm property. Our motto: "High quality and low prices." Miss U. Uoldsmttn. The latest ar d best brands of cigars and tobaccos are kept by r. G. Shark Smokers' goods and confectionery, also When you want a goo:' square meal go to the Bruns wick restaurant, oppo site suspension bridge, L. Ruconich, proprietor. Everything fresh anof clean and well cooked; just like you get at home. This is the only first-class res taurant in Oregon City and where you can get a good meal for the price of a poor one el ewhere. $20 to $100 to loan on cha tel or per aonal security, - Dimick & Eastham, Agt.a For Sale-FreBh Jersey cow and2-veai- old JeiBey bull. Inquira ot M. J GroBhong on the Shannon place on West Bide. For sale cheap, a windmill, tank and tower, complete. Apply at this office. Second-Hand Bicycles Clieap. If you want to buy a good second-hand bicycle for little money, go to Huntley's book Store. Tney nave tbem Irons fo to $20 boys,' ladies' and men's styles. Everyone carefully overhauled and re paired and put in good running con dition. Farm for Sale. 19 miles south of Oregon City, 3 miles Bonth of Molalla. Knownaa the Teasel Farm. Contain ing 310 acres, 140 acres; clear plow lanil; 40 acres n creek bottom; 100 acres, upland; 7aores, or chard. All well watered and fenced with stake and wire fence, and drained with stone aud tile ditches; good buildings, 90 rods from school house; 115 rods from church; good location for taking stock to mountains Prioe tlO per acre; il'JUO down, balance to suit at 6 per cent interest. For further particulars apply to A. J, Sawtell, on the farm, or Dimick & Eastham, Oegon City. Demand for Formal Graduates. The State Normal School at Monmouth reports that the demand for its gradu ates during the past year has been much beyond the supply. Graduation from thia school practically assures a place worth from $40 to$75 per month. The students take the state examinations during the regular course, and are easily able to pass on all subjects required for state papers before graduation. The school has a well equipped training de' partment consisting of a nine-grade town i-chool aud of a typical country school. NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Pursuant to an order of the County Court of Jackson Couuty, Oregon, made and entered on the 8oth day of April, 1901, in the matter of the es tale and guardltuslilp ot Bessie Randall, Jr., mi nor child of O. P. Kaudall, deceased, licensing me so to do, I will, from aud after June 80th 1901, offer at privato sale, and sell thereat to the hlghes. bidder, tor cash In hand, the following described real property belonging to said (state and situated in the County of Clackamas, State ot Oregon, to-wlli Beginning 2.72 chains north of the southeast corner of section T, township 6 south of range 1 east Willamette Meridian; thence running north 18.62 chalusi thence west 41. ?8 chains; thence south 1861 chains; thence east 41.50 clmliis, to the place ot beginning; the same being a part of the of the D. h, C. of I. D. Murray and Maria T. Murray, containing 89 acre, more or less, save and except a right-of-way deeded to Israel Toder February 10th, 18iH, and recorded In Book 37 at page 89 of the deed of records of said Clackamas County. That bids for said property will be received by me at Woodvllle, Jackson County, Oregon, and after sold June SOth, 1901, 1 will sell and oonvcy the same to the highest cash bidder therefor. MRS. 1SKSSIE RANDAtX, Sr., Guardian oi the Person and Estate of Bessie Randall, Jr., Minor. Dated, May Uth, ltl. TALL CORN doesn't come by accident A fertile soil and careful cultiva tion are necessary to produce the towering stems ana heavy ears. Yet the fanner who under stands that he can't have a healthy corn crop without feeding and weeding, seems to think that he can have a healthy body without either care or culture. But the body fe built up just as the corn is, by the assimilation of the several chemical elements on which vitality depends. And what weeds are to the corn, diseases of the stomach and nutritive systems are to the body ; they divert the neces sary food supply from the proper channels, and the body becomes lean, sickly and ill-nourished. The proper digestion and assimilation of food is a pri mary essential of health. By healing diseases of the stom ach and organs of digestion and nutrition, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery increases the digestive and assimilative powers, stimulates the action of the blood making glands, and sends to every organ of the body the rich red-corpuscled blood on which physical vigor and vitality depend. "I took two bottles of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, for stomach trouble," writes Clarence Carnes, Esq., of Taylors town, Loudoun Co., Va. "It did me so much good that I didn't take any more. I can eat most anything now. I am so well pleased with it I hardly know how to thank you for your kind Infor mation. I tried a whole lot of things before I wrote to you. There was a gentleman told me about your medicine, how it had cured his wife. I thought I would try a bottle of it. Am now glad that I did, for I don't know what I would have done if it had not been for Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate the bowels and cure constipation. The Great Scourge of mcdern times is cc nsumption. Many cures ami discoveries from time to time are published but Foley's Honey and Tar does truthfully claim to secure all cases in the early stages and always af fords comfort and relief in the very worst cases. Take no substitutes. Charman & Co. Going East. If you intend to take a trip East, ask your agent to rvite you via The Great 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 New England points. All trains run via Niagara Falls and every through train has free reclining chair cars, sleep ing and dining cars. Stop over allowed on all tickets atNi agara Falls. Ross 0. Cline. Pacific Coast Pasa. Agent.' Los Angeles, Cal. C. S. Crane, Gen'l Pass Agent. 1 St. Louis, Mo.. LOCAL SUMMARY The finest bon bon boxes in town al theK.K. K. Baby caps and hata in the latest styles. Miss 0. Goldsmith. Shaving only 10 cents at the first class shop 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. ii. .Block, the nomelurnlsber. Shank & Bissell carry the most com plete line of undertakers' supplier in Oregon City. To Loan on Farm Property $500, $1000, $1500, at 7 per cent, one, two or three years. " Dimick & Eastham, law yers, Oregon City Oregon. George Anderson-, expeit piano tuner and tone regulator, with Eiler piano bouse, fortiano, ore. .Leave orders with Bur meister & Andresen, or com municate direct with houe. It Saved Hts Leg. P. A Danforth of LaGrnnge, Ga., suf fered for six months with a frightful running sore on his leg; but write that Bucklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured it in five days. For Ulcers, Wounds, Piles, it's the best salve in the world. Cure guaranteed. Only 25 cts. Sold by Geo. A. Harding, druggist. SCOTS OF COD-LIVER OIL WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES should always be kept in the house for the fol lowing reasons: FIRST Because, If any member of the family has a hard cold, it will cure It. SECOND Because, if the chil dren are delicate and sickly, It will mako them strong and well. ' THIRD Because, if the father or mother is losing flesh ana becom ing thin and emaciated, it will build them up and give them flesh and strength. FOURTH Because It Is the standard remedy in all throat and lung affections. No household should be without it. It can be taken In summer as well as in winter. 4oc and $1.00, ill druggists. SCOTT & BOWNB, Chcnmtt, Ntw York. YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARRIS' GROCERY s You Can Depend Upon 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 H. Bethke's Meat Market Opposite Huntley's first" Class fyleats of 11 iids Satisfaction Guaranteed Give yirrj a Sail arjd be Treated Bi&t Foresight Means Good Sight If there ever was a truism it. is exemplified in the above headline. Lack oi 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 Jeweler 293 Horrlson Street, PORTLAND, OREGON For all kinds of Building Material CALL AT THE Oregon City Planing Mill F. S. BAKER, Prop. SASH, DOORS, MOULDING, ETC. BECKER'S 220 FIRST STREET, PORTLAND, OREGON Great Bargains in Trimmed Hats Magnificent Design Also a Consignment Hair Switches at l 2 We enj i complet. lln. of Cofflna, CiAUt, Bobea and Lining. We hv. been la th. und taking botlaea orer ten yean. W.'ar. under null exptnse and do o uk brse proflta. W a han alwaja siren our best efforti to pleaae rar bereaTrt friends. Wo thor oughly uaderstand the prestation of the dead. Wo destroy contagious germ and off.n. sire odors when called upon to prepare the dead for burial. Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A. Robertson The 7th St. Grocer ttttlttt&ttm Brown & Welch PKOPRIETOBS OP THE Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. . Building OREGON CITY, OREGON MILLINERY of very Cheap Hats Very Low Figures R. L. Holman Undertaker Doors South o! Court House