4 . OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1901 Oregon City Courier-Herald By A. W. CHENEY Intui t 1 in Oregon Cltypustolflceas 2nd-clae matter SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Paid In advance, per year 1 50 iix month a 75 Tttree months 'trial 25 tVThe date opposite your address on the taper denotes I he time to which yon haye paid. U this notice is marked your subscription Is due. CLUbBuw aTE8. eekly Oregonlan 42 00 l-WeeklyN.Y. World... 1 85 tional Watchman 1 75 ptal to Reason 16") ti eekly Examiner 2 25 Bryan a Commoner ' 1 '5 ADVERTISING RATES. Standing business advertisements: Per month profi'Ssionalcards,H(89, per year): 1 tolOinohes 60c per inch, 12 inches for $.5, 20 inches (column) $8, 30 inches C page) $12. Lcgiil advertisements: Per inch (minion) $2.50, divorse summons 7 50. . Affidavits of publica tion will not be furninLed until publication lees are paid. Local notices; Five cents per line per week Per month 20c. Obituar es, cards of tbauks, church and lodge notices where admission fee is chiirtted or collected half price or 2 cents per line. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. OREGON CITY, OCT. 25, 1001. OREGON'S TIMBER. Forestry Expert Johnson makts the fo'lowing estimate of the timber in Ore gon. This estimate applies only to trees 18 inches and over in diameter 30 feet from the ground : Feet. Yellow or red fir (Oregon pine) 255,000,000,000 Spruce 15,000,000,000 Hemlock 7,000,000,000 Yellow pine 20,000,000,000 Suguar pine 8,000,000,000 White pine 3,000.000,000 Noble fir . .... 2,000,000,000 Silver fir 1,000,000,000 Ked cedar.... 2,003,000,000 Wbite cedar 1,000,000,000 Tamarack 2,000,000,000 White fir 2,000,000.000 Miscellaneous oak, ash, maple, etc 17,000,000,000 Total 335,000,000,000 Oiio-uigh.h.ot the timber lands has been burned over. Two years ago it was not known there was any red wood in Oregon, but in Curry county there re 1000 acres. The Chicago Tribune says that people who urge that the proper sphere for wo man is the home may find much en couragement in the figures showing an iucrease'of 50 per cent in the number of marriages in Cook county since 1899. Still more to the point is the fact that the license books clearly show that an increasingly large percentuge of the brides are young women formerly en g iged as w.ie earners on their own ac count. Negative proof of the same fact is found in the reports which show that the number of young women seeking employment at stenograhers and clerks lias correspondingly decreased. Some declare that men are just begin ning to (ind.out that womon with a busi ness experience make better wives. All are inclined to think that the somewhat general reaction against the new woman has lui l a umsidorable influence. Cer tainly the t.ign is a healthy one. There are few who will deny that the ideal jilaca fur a woman is in n homo of her own, and there will he universal accept ance of the statement that a community where homes are yearly increasing and iiHi'iip!ying is likely to he safe, prosper ous and happy. A li'.'i.t.Em of the census ollice on the manufacture of paper and wood pulp in the United States shows there were in 1900 five paper factories in Oregon, rep resenting a capital of 2,irl,188. The aggregate value of the piper products fnnn these mills was f 1,305,09(1. Of the papers m inufactiued in the state, 21,410 tons, valued at ifS"Ki,310, were the kind used by newspapers; 82-17 tons were wrapping papVr, valued at $375,9(50, and 151i) tons were of various classes, valued at !"",. "S0. The total value ol the wood pulp in inufactiued in Oregon was $15, 510. The live paper factories of Oregon employed 710 men, to whom was paid in wages the sum of $282,8915. The inis CJllaiieous expenses of the mills is set at if 1 17,417, and the coat of materials used, $"82,07S. These figures place the profits of the live mills at $2iU,00j Any ene that knows anything abnitthi opera tions of the two paper mills at Oregon (City, nee Is no argument to make him believj that tho profits of the five mills are far greater, how ipnchy ttee pfoprie tors discreetly keep to tlienisijlves. Hi- tt f ii.m- iiiinv cliildrtM-.r'BeriiieJ-irl t'ie United StateJ dV tho ''alnf -"ct I'm id 1 of c lit ire tha cen sus n iver re.vflsfi hA' achangir asks: lb Anrii'W vJ.U andjrOjwu r n'izj that in five cities of our f "'itjv ulone there were during thlUtUdtJw terniaQr rtiu,rou K,tAV''" rjos or tMgliTnnd fourteen tiken out of the pOTle schools lueauso their nervous systems were wrecked, and their mtiijlj weraincaprtbto of going pu au further i,i the'intt'inarcrainiiiing system which exists today in our schools? And these Hl.OOO helpless little wrecks are eimply the children we know about. Conserva tive medical men, who have given their lives to the Btudy of children, place the number whose health is shattered by overstudy at more than 50,000 each year. It is putting the truth mildly to state that of all American institutions that which deals with the public educa tion of oui children is at ouce the most faulty, the most unintelligent, and the most cruel. In an address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard Universit y, Wayne McVeagh pointed out the grave dangers of continuing to substitute money for morals as the permanent and con. trolling force in American politics. "As one example," said he, "take our atti tude toward the corrupt use of money in our elections and in our representative bodies. Even the dullest intelligence must see that if we continue to destroy, as for borne time past we have been de stroying.the belief of the majority of our fellow-citizens that elections are hon estly made, we are destroying the best possible basis for the security of private property; for there can he no reverence lor law where laws and lawmakers are bought with money, and I fear we are rapidly destroying the possibility of such reverence in the minds of the masses of our countrymen." Tub Schley court of inquiry has proved those damnable counts in the indictment against the old sea dog, says the East Oregonian that he licked the Spanish fleet under Cervera ; that fie lost not one ship nor one men in so do ing; that he exercised his own discre tion, technically disobeying orders, and thereby insuring victory; that Sampson was not present at the battle of Santi ago, arriving after the auction ended ; that Schley said "damn the Texas," thereby injuring the feeling? of a mon strous engine of naval war; that he was somewhat '.stirred up and slightly agita ted at the prospect of a bigjfight, and did not lie in a hammock and smoke cigar ettes and allow the whole fighting busi ness to take care of itself. An Englishman secured a contract for building a section ol an elevated railway in Boston. Knowing that because of the curious operations of the American protective tariff he could buy American made steel cheaper in England than Americans could buy it at their own doors, he proceeded to take advantage of the fact. He wrote from England to several American structural iron works asking bids ou a certain lot of iron. H selected the best bid and closed the con tract. When the contract was properly signed he cabled the American iron manufacturer not to ship to Liverpool but to ship to Boston. The American carpetbaggers that compose the government of the Philip pine islands, draw an aggregate salary of over $121,030, which tha Filipinos have the privilege of paying. As a na tive workman earns the magnificent sal ary of 25 cants in gold per day, that sort of robbery in the name of American lib erty and , equality is not apt to instill very much loyalty in his breast. The loyal Filipinos would be all "rebels," if this country withdrew its troops. An artificial fuel that, according to the inventor, can be manufactured for 50 per cent less than coal is a new arti cle that is attracting much attention. Henry W. Morris, of Wilmington, Del., is the discoverer, after eighteen years of experiment. The artificial fuel is com posed of about 90 per cent cf common earth, which accounts for the cheap ness with which it can he prepared. A deiit in this county of neatly $2,000- 000, means that each man, woman and child in Clackamas county carries $8 indebtedness, and a county expendi ture of $150,000 annually means that $6 per head is spent by our county govern ment for each one of our 25,000 popula tion. The taxpayer may well take alarm and ask, When will this extravagance end ? Captain Koiiishon of the British steamer Easingwood, at Philadelphia, from Sourabaya, Java, reports that on Angust 0th, near Cejlon, the vessel passed through a strip of sea the color of blood, about 14 miles long and three oi four miles wide. The water for a depth of two feet was as thick as paHte and swarmed with siekers. The w hole of Cape Colony, by procla. niation published recently, is now placed under martial law. The British govern ment confesses by this act that its hold not only on.the two Boer republics but on its own colonists of Dutch bl.jod is lmstSQi4y .and wholly on armed force. , jsii'it iw-HENcu Milt reports (Eng.) fVhtmber cWoninierc&nhiit the stetl trust has agreed to deliver steel billets in liiiglud,' IP perr;'Un'v The 'SST'lH l'Sl'm'l-ei tcj27 for the same thing and there is no ocean raigflWhfVul Wither. By the consolidYtlblbf JfetP pltfiits" nnd the utilization of chemioat discov era's, Aiyiilable -,riyi;to . tho, .United Sta.te.3 steJ lorporaii m may he. formed ihEtlglrtid. ' ,: ';:V'-M V--; School books exchanged, at, Moore's 1 narniacy. ,; .... Out of 22,833 coal miners employed in the district of Liege, Belgium, 15,004 are idle. Collisions between the strikers and the gendarmes are becoming more frequent. In Germany one-fifth of the women, numbering over 20,000,000, are employed in some trade or profession, which shows that the wages of men are low. Russia's yield of petroleum is 68,000- 000 barrels a year, and that of the United States 59,000,000. Where Float the Stars and Stripes, Upon Atlantic's western shore Where JPilenms came in days of yore To build new homes beyond the sea To dwell in peace and worship free, There float the btars and btripes. Where once beside the wigwams smoke The Indians' tread the silence broke, And now is heard the plowman s song, Or presses on the eager throng, There float the StarB and Stripes. Where bluebirds call with mellow ring. And mocking birds most sweetly sing, Where robins' sweet enchanting song Is heard in spring the whole day long, There float the Stars and Stripes. Whereon the Southern cotton fields The darkey free his hre now wields, Is glad to be where all are tree, And sings the song of liberty There float the Stars and Stripes. Where deep are drawn the shadow lines Beneath the somber Northern pines That seem to Si retch to heaven h igh And touch at n'ghtthe Btarry sky, There float the Stars and Stripes. Where on the fertile Western plains The farmer reaps the golden grains Where on the Rocky mountain heights Atiove the clouds the eagle ligtits, There float the Stars and Stripes. On Mississippi's flowery lands O'er Sacramento's golden sands And on Columbia's rocky shore, Where sky and clouds their blessing pou r There float the Stars and Stripes. And o'er Alaska's glaring snow Where fierce and cold the winters blow Where midnight sun and northern light Dispel the gloom and cheer the sight, There float the Stars and Stripes. Upon the ocean's foamy waves, Where oft a bark the tempest braves, Are sailing ships the world around To foreign ports or homeward bound, There float the Stars and Stripes. O starry flag, we sing to thee, ' Where thou ait floating all so free, And glad we are the world to tell Of joy and pride, because we dwell Where float the Stars and Stripes. Andrew Tranzhn. Oregon City, Or. REALTY TRANSFERS. Furnished Every Week by Clacka mas Abstract & Trust Co. Thomas E Ryan to Frank E Weed. lot 7, blk 128, Oregon City $1250 E K May to K r Smith, lot 7,blk 7, Oanemah 300 W W Austin to W O Dickerson. 167 acres of sec, 6, t, 6 s, r 2 e. . 300 Bolton Land Co to A J Noble, lot 4, blk 29, Bolton 130 John J Cole to lvlwin ami Mary F 3 acres of Beo 25, 1 1 s, r 3 e 1000 B H Levy to R and VI F Cole, 1 as, of sec 25, t, 1 s, r 1 e 1 C W Armstrong to J Kraft, 30 as of of sec 29, 1 3 s, a 1 e 135 Edwin Cole to B H Levy, 1 acre, sec 25, t, 1 s, r 1 e 1 L Hostetler to Encs Hostetlor, e,!4 of nej, sec 8, t 5 s, r 1 e 2410 Edwin (Jole to J E Cole, 3 as in sec ?5, 1 1 s,r 1 e 11 II H Lone to WB Robinson, 5. 10 'as of sec.31, t 1 s, r 1 e, sec 0, t 2 s,r 2 e, seol. 1,2 s, r 1 e 700 Wm E Owens to M F Jones, of 11W.I4 of sw of ne,1 of sec 23, t 1 s, r 2 e O A Harding, trustee, to Fred Ma thins, lot 19, blk 1, E''gewood add to Jregon City 25 E E Sawtell to Ernest Lehman, 150 as in sec 28, t 3 s, r 2 e, and 10 as of sec 1, t 3 s, r 1 e G000 R B Nicholson to J V and A Hara malniann, eJa of ne, sec 2, t 4 s, r 1 e 3000 Resolutions. Fohowing are the resolutions adopted by Molalla Grange, No 40: Whereas, Co-operations in well doin, otherwise expressed in the words, broth erhood of man and fatherhood ot (xol,is the rule of action of the patrons of hus bandry, therefore, be, it Resolved, That Clackamas District Pomona Orange assembled at the Eagle Creek Orange hall deeply mournes over the assassination of the revered presi dent of our country, William McKinley, and hopes that the time may come when man shall no longer seek to revolution ize political institutions by murder or by war, which is hut leiraliz id mirier, and the maxims of the illustrious Prince of Peace thall be the guard the world over. Resolved. That this Pomona Grange utterly condemns anarchists, anarchism and would in unqualified terms express the conviction that no anarchists, which is hut another word for 'railor, can be a true granger, or in any m inner fit or worthy to be a member of 0 tr noble or der. Resolved. That this Grange is unani mously in favor of legislation by con gress and by the legislature of the sev eral states for the summary suppression of anarchists and the regulation of emi gration to prevent their landing on their shores. MORAM.A G RAMIE 11 ALL, Oct. 12, '01. We, your committee appointed todraft resolutions rn the death of our honored nresidrri.1 -William" 'MeKirt'ev: Would reeommettd .that the lorepoine preamble and resolutions were adopted by Clacka mas Pomona Grange' bo adopted as a whole by Molalla Grunge' Nt). ''),' fMyced on record. . . -- r .'K.it ;. !. I Mary tf. HiWARtV V' I-"" -'ll. R. rMl'AVKK, !s , 1- ' - 1 J . Fj'Nki.sos, " 'a a'.y-S V.'x una n 'Oorumittej. ' Ida Grave,' See;-1'! -J BearatV ItH Ui YOD Hail k'.KK Bfllgt 6!gnitur ' When li You Eat J !I Do you have a feeling cf undue fullness in the stomach, belchings, or sour or bitter risings? These are but a few of the symptoms of the diseased stomach. The worst thing which can be done for the stomach in such a case is to take some tablet or powder which merely gives temporary relief from discomfort. The best thing to do is to begin the cure of the disease by beginning the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It makes the "weak" stomach strong, and puts the body in a condition of vigorous health. " I was troubled a long time with dyspepsia, torpid liver, and constipation," writes Mrs. Julia E. Deal, oi Ostwalt, Iredell Co., N. C. "Could scarcely eat anything at all ; would have attacks of pain something like colic, and sometimes it seemed as though I could not live. I wrote to Dr. R. V, Pierce, stating my condition, and in a few days received a kind letter of advice, telling me to use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery. I took four bottles, and one vial of Dr. Pierce's Pellets, and now I can eat anything I want and it don't hurt me. I have not been in bed a day since I took your 'Golden Medical Discovery,' and I have not since felt any symp toms of disease. I have not taken any medicine in twelve mouths." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Tellets cure con stipation. Sagamore Sour Mash. It you want a liquor that is chem ically pure direct from the distillery, try the Sagamore sour mash. Kelly & Noblltt, direct purchasers. To Trade 100 acres of land six miles south of Oregon City ; timber enough to pay for place ; running water, orchard, about 100 acres cleared. Will trade for Oregon City or Portland imnroved prop erty. Inquire at Courier-Herald office. The Portland City & Oregon Railway Company will run cars every 30 minutes between Oregon City and Portland Sun day. A delightful ride for only 25 cents the round trip. The cars run cleat hrough to Canemah on that day. SfOPS THE COUGH AND WOKKS OFF THE COLD. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure no pay Price 25 cents. Brain-Food Kensenae. Another ridiculous food fad his been branded by the mot competent authori ties. They have dispelled the silly no tion that one kind of fond is needed for bones. A correct diet will not only nour ish a particular part of the body, but it will sustain every other part. Yet how ever good your food may be, its nutri ment is destroyed by indigestion or dys pepsia. You must prepare for their ap pearance or prevent thpir c .ming by tak ing regular doees of Green's August Flower, the favorite medicine of the healthy millions. A lew doses aids di gestion, stimulates the liver to healthy action, purifies the blood, and makes you feel buoyant and vigorous. You can get Dr. G. G. Green's reliable remedies at George A Harding's drugstore. For Over Fifty Yenrs. An Old and Well-Tried Remedy. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of uiothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy lor Diarrhoea. Js pleasant to the taste, Sold by Drug ifists in every part of the World. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. He sure and ask lor Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Symp, and take no other kind. 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 tood is a burden, it lifts the burden. When voulose flesh.it bnnsrs the plumpness of health. , When work is hard and duty is heavy, it makes life bright. It is the thin edsre of the wedge; the thick end is food. But what is the use of food, when you hate it, and can't di gest it? " Scott's Emulsion of Cod I.ivcr Oil is thefood that makes fpf tors.cL.yQur stomach. - h.iufl riftf -riH It, efnri for ,;a t pie ttf agreeable tsq -v it I COrT &'BOWNE, Chemists-.' VOll. ehrl Street. New York. &ncl Sl.OO 1 all druggists. W.SjTFp-TnrSTW(VJlTAY MEN AST -WO' Dion to trivel nd dTrtlse for old MWbifshed housQ of soUJ fiiiafliV. 4l.-lrT year nd expenses, nil pay-able in cash. No fan Yftssififf renolrrd. Hire rofi-rencs ami enclose elf-ad -lowa fell' oger, S"'Tij;oi lT.d j., l liicajo. POPE & CO. HEADQUARTERS FOR ;' Hardware, Stoves. Syracuse Chilled and Steel Plows, Marrows and Cultivators, Planet Jr., Drills and Hoes, Spray Pumps, Imperial Bicycles. PLUMBING ' A SPECIALTY i Oor. Fourth and Main Sts. YOU MAY NOT KNOW IT Bat the Best Stock of First-Class Goods to be Found at Bottom Prices in Oregon City is at HARBIS' GROCERY Good Bread Good Pastry If your bread and pastry is made with PATENT FLOUR it will give satisfaction to both cook and the eater. See that the order with your grocer reads "Patent Flour." Made in Oregon City by the Portland Flouring Mills Co. 4 M--H-4-f-f CITY MARKET SSsPf?,3. Opposite Hartley's FiKst-Glass Meats of 11 irds SatJs'action Guaranteed Give yirQ a Call arjd be Treated ?it R. L. HOLMAN, Undertaker Phones 476 and 305. Two Doors South of Court House. OREGON CITY GUN STORE H.W. Jackson Proprietor -. - i ( Largest Line of Shot I Guns in Oregon Gty , ; Prices to Suit. Remember the Place ' ' ' ' 1 ! I j Tackson's BifcvcreSli?rn Opposite iiuntifv s Are Bought and Appreciated by THE BEST PEOPLE of Oregon City A.Mobertgon The 7th St. Grocer g OREGON CITY 4 m GO TO MUIR BROS. FOR Fancy and Staple Groceries I Seventh and Center Sts. Brown & Welch Fkofriitom or the Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building UKIVaUiN C11Y, UHH.OUIN We cirry the larnst stock of Caskets Cclfins, Robis and Lining in Clackamas county. We are the only undertakers in the county owning a hearse, which wa fur nish for Ih.hs than can bj h id elsewhere Ve are under small expin.se and do not ask lare profits. Gills promptly attended night or day AMMUNITION SHELLS Main Street