Image provided by: Oregon City Public Library; Oregon City, OR
About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1902)
r-(Tnn CitV KntPrnrlQf 'th,r PUn" ,0 nm,u"y HIr,Hsbl,, j "ut based. A mirnrulotiK UHtKniiimn i OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY. AUGUST 20. 1002 NtRVtS GAVt WAY (It) ami Con ii I j OflKlul Paper Pnbltshed ttvery Kriduy. L. I.. roKTEK, Paora.xToa. Cuban Uovernment ha not complied!,. At the present time we are ap- with the requirement in lira respect with ,,,001,1, millennium condition., slowly and by steps unattended with nonaations. 8UBCH!PTION RATES, )ueyr $2 00 iii months I 00 "rial subscription two months .j 3 A .liscounl ul 50 cents on all subscriptions or one year, 25 cents (or six months, it aid m advance. A iwrtising rates (riven on application. Subscribers will t'nnl the t1ut of expira .Kin stamped on their papers following .heir name. It this date is not changed f limit two weeKs after a payment, kindly lotifv us and we w ill look afier it. itit-red at the postotrlce in Oregon City, Or., as second ciass matter. V 5ENTS FOR THE ESTEKPKISE. 3eyer Creek. L'a'iliy Va-'iiHiiias Mil tnkie Pnion Mills... Mes-iow Brook New Kra Pvolace 'ni M'liino the l'latt amendment. The iiitiinatlon has been throw n out, however, tliat the advocatea of animation may titnl in the slight increase in (he death rale ground (or the assumption that in tune Cuba under native rule would relapse into something like ita old conditions. Tina aHFiimption, however, has no more solid basis than that relating to the industrial future of Cuba. The ardent advocatea of animation are not readily convinced that Cuba can resist the intliieiicea which mh'Iii lo be drafting her into donor rela tionship with the United States. We see evidences of ita approach w hen ever a good man or a good woman per- Teachera Certificate. Kotlowlnii h a list of the naiiiea ol leathers who were granted certillcalea to teach, as a result ol the recent exam inations conducted here by Snpeiintt'ii dent .inner: First tirade Kslella V. liicliey, Har ton; Cora N.-at. Ale; II. H. M. Kinear- PE-RU-NA CURED. forma , act w hid. lenda to elevate the Uv,u l"i,y 1 M'"."1" r"U'' 0!'T" , , , Cilv; Anna T. Miuiti, uii'gon i n , ...asses of the ,H.orle. There are more ' j ,,,,,. M,ltiall such acta now being performed tlmn j sulv, C'nuby ; Ivlna Urn kner, Pint- ever before, and perhaps there are more j land ; 0 D liradlnrd, Portland; Anna acts the teaching of which la in an oppo- Thompson, lualatm. Second tirade Alice Kilter, .vitiy, TIIK DK1FT TO CAN A OA. There is a chance that the .rciort of American immigration to Canada are ex aggerated, yet there is undoubtedly a movement of considerable proportions in that direction. A bulletin from the land ollice of the dominion at Ottawa says that "5,000,000 acres in the Canidian Northwest have been purchased it. recent lr. T. I? Thomas K. I. Sias A. Mather Oscar tsunirer 1! J TrulliiiL'er Chas. lloluian years ny persona tioin the I nitctl Mates, site direction. Hut the general move ment la upward, and evidence may be found of the fact In the more general education of the poor at public expense, in the endowment of orphan asylums Fannie M. Voder, Hubbard; Inir. Mur ray, lVitlund ; Aueita tileaon, Oregon City; Alice M. Shannon, Oregon Cny , (iiace U. Marshall, Oregon City; F.velyn Olson, TortUm!; Fiuina M. l.euti, Fort .. . , . ....... . . I Ian, I : Christina Hamilton. Viola: Tdlic ami rciormaioriea, ami in me somewi.al .... .. A, Foss, Silverton ; Sheba (. lulds, Ore geuerni muveineui 10 i-ronue lor inn on. age of workmen whose forty years of toil have not enabled lliein to provide (or themselves. women are paving the way for the mil- .' W..I .1 .. .! ..! " ". "'"o,u u. preoici.on oi . Allnil,HlllS p4r 1 1 , I. . 1 , the Warsaw infant that it is close at ; K.lnh ArniMruna, PoitUnd ; Ada 1'erce- gon City. Thirtl tirade Alma Stone, Powells Valley ; Ilertha Oheist. Sandy; Mertie Thousands, of men and I ragiio, Lents ; r dna l.owern.an, funny- side; Irene McCown, (begun (ily; Fdith Toon, Lents; Leuly lluitou, V.- V v. rpnlar Nealile Trip i:xiMir.ii.n it,,,, MM X ('olmnlila HI.,raiiJ llegliiiilng S,itiii,l,. i , ' a r. it it win,,.,,,,,,; ,r7;Hb,iu ndii acliediilii ami ev,,t. w . alter .luilng t, Se,,,,.', " lu " pi... I, r Ion Pep it at .ill p M .. , nliir lecl Without 1 1 (.', " . u"ll,, ... .,..1 i , ' lii ; bsrl and Seal,lu excollinit aoiviii. I u .m i.. ... . no, Mil Mm (,H.,, , . t'lslxili lleach hi. "'""U ' ad.ln, aMin '"1 In . Una . . irons o sniiiii M, , in, , "I (or liaveblig Im.Imim eIU l. en lM. ...i. . 1 . Ill i iiiiiie. Inni miii. ii... . seui.e, loiiud tup ., 'f """'W fee., P.,,1 land a,,,! , "'. . N-rlli Head, imi,,, " '"H, sold evert hiindav -i ,i .' lor the round Inn h. ..... f a C eluiiige4ldn with all l,4 j lle.l g.ssl In Mum ,s,v fv l'loi application j ..'"'"I A.. Aatoiui. an ..I.! '.'"H Mist AM iieth llntd), ( nr. Si c. Illl. nils omaii's Vllliune, liml lleinbii lie, Itm km lie anil si-iiiniH I ii.Hi;i-s in. I side view a and I'omU ol . l ower Colilmhu bun ,,11 ,w Volir addiris dee. 1 i.n,liii.' . i' Allniii'-e, writ.- I lil.-aeii, III. not Hill M Mpi,,; l. .... ..... t'.. ..... "n mi i uiiiriir V-iiii (j, band. W. f. Newberry , 11. O. Holmes and 5,000,000 acres of this area have ...... J. Q. face Leo,, gold in PXU. One-lifth o( this pur- . C. T. Howard ' K. M. 1'itoper chase Ijr the present year has been set' . . ... j.V. Maripiini I ''ei' "I100. 'hilo the rest of it is in the Jelinlt'.gS llrtM lj nf A,wr!,.n lun.l .u,,iiania I t. Hunrv A Knvilr ' FaIe Creek.'.'..' '. .H. Wii'bern Damaiiciis S , , 'v C irr'nsville Marmot full, Tualatin. v-lt'la.... Mart)uam.. 3-1 tt vine. which are expecting to tlisnose of a large ...j. y.. r.uiou ... , , . F. Go'tsch section of it soon. According to this bub Geo. J.fnrrin I. , ,. .,.;.., ; i iviiii .i,ow 4itui iv.au.1 nave luinivu iu ....Adolph Aschotl' PACIFIC CABLE TKOJK.CT, President Roosevelt has imposed nu merous and stringent conditions on the company that proposes to build a Facific cable. It is not believed, however, that t'ipse restrictions will inteifere with or postpone the construction. They are intended to safeguard the interests of the people and the government, and will not restrict the freedom of the company's ; management un'ess it tries to infringe i on the public's rights. It is expected I hat the conditions will be accepted and ' the work of building the cable aoon be-1 gun. Completion of the nroj tct w ill be i an event of great importance. It will put the government in closer touch with Hawaii and the Philippines, and give American merchants much better con nection with the markets of the east. Heretofore it has ben necessary to de pend chiefly on the mails for news from Hawaii. Dispatches from the Philip pines and Asia have been eent at heavy expense by a circuitous route from Hong Kong across Europe, Asia, and the At lantic ocean. The mails are far too slow for the purposes of either modern gov ernments or business; and the telegraph and cable service, under present condi-1 tions, is extremely expensive. In case j ol war with some great power, also, it! might, as things now are, eaaily become j impossible for the United States to get any information of what was taking place in the Pacific or the east for weeks at a time. If England, for example, should want tn cut off our cable connection with the east, she could do it with very little effort. But if we had a cable to the I'iiiiippines, touching at Hawaii, and not touching at any point not owned by this country, fcuth as it is proposed to build, the expense of communication for both government and private citizens would be very materially reduced, and it j would be much harder, is not practically irr possible, for any other country to cut us off. the province of Manitoba and neighbor ing terr.tory between January 1 of this year and June 1. If these figures are approximately cor rect they show a condition uf things w hich is far from being agreeable lo the United States. It is, of course, true that most of the vacant lands w hich are still left in the United States are in the arid section, and without irrigation they are j of little value. The uatioual irrigation I act which passed Congress a short time before the end of the recent session will furnish a partial remedy for this state of things, but the work of reclamation will necessarily be slow. Some absurd re ports attributed to government officials were current recently to the effect that it will take 100 years to irrigate the w hole of t lie lands which irrigation would benefit. It is reasonable to assume, however, that a good start in the work can be made long before the time, ten or fifteen years hence, that was given in those forecasts. Canada has been very slow in tilling up ita waste spaces. The dominion is at this moment, w ith regard to uopulation, in about the Bame condition as the United State was in 1.. It has about the tame lumber of inhabitants that this country had then, in a territory not greatly different in area. There is an immense wilderness in the western part of Canada w hich will, at the rate of progress which has thus far been made, require a century to fill. Its higher lat itude, of course, and the comparative ab- eence ot gold and silver fields, so far as! knowB, will pievent western Canada from ever being as productive as the cor responding section of the United States is. But many millions of people will find homes there, and it will be a com petitor hereafter with our own West for settlers from Europe, and may attract many from this country. The irrigation law can not bu put in operation in the Uoittd States too early. .MUIIINH1V (OMHINK. While the consolidation of the great harvester companies represents a meig- ing of colossal res. urcei and power, the' presumption that this power is to be i I.eller List. Miss A. Hr.tdt . ' ..r- llll - N i "l.Mt c:ir inun nunuuirn irn... ... . ., ,,,,, UV( lltcmn- miii tv.anic rr intuitu- side ie,,n. in il, ii, trusted, mr.es srcrnrJ fic '-' I"'-'1'1" '" all l, ) ... Sr..!,. -"toapiM.d then t a, ,,, ., 1 war, ann i r.nn - The lollow ing ia the list of letters re maining in the posti tlice at Oregon City, Oie., oil Aug. L'Slh, I'M.' : womkn's l ir. llnhlaiider I.uie Miss I'aukoii M Mrs ' I ' . I , 1 1 . . . t. : I 1 1 j naaer : .urn niters .11 .tun used for raising the price of the product j s (, Mm Kit.K-t..,rv Clara Mis. is combated by the statement ol the new Kiause Orletta Miss Smith W W Mra directorate. According to this the con. bine was formed to prevent an increase Antrim John mk a i.isr. .Nelson Foley Claik C O of price to (he farmer for agricultural t '"rl l-) machinery. It is claimed that I he prices j of raw materials used in thn ni!nl't.rliirii I of hai vesting machinery having steadily advamed during the past few years and that prices of product to the farmers would have to be increased unless "the methods of manufacture and business culd be materially improved and largo economies effected." That it is possible to cheapen the coat of production and distribution through a consolidation ol smaller plants into a larger one and through a combination of resources and capital is not to be denied. It is also patent that the merging of all the plants in one line of mainline lure into one gives the combine vast power and makes it almost absolute master of Osborn J F. Pircblord J J ( lister '.; V Ktlev John Chipmai. Clarence II Klnling John I. Howell F II Snyder l ied Malheur Merc Co Thomas llenrv Marshall C W Watson John Wynne Hamilton OKI). F. HotUO.V, P. M. It L A I. KM A IF. Tlt.lM KUV Furnished Fiery Meek by Hie ( lucka mis .instruct A I'rusl (unpin). iJ M'rltwi ii'xcsiorf 'OlIC uf my trU-iul: MifV try Vrui.i. It irrtalnl) flMtfi' on ". . ' ' wates, II... ,Si,i., ;tll. .. III conn. 1 In. n w n, ( 1 t.n!l, '1 ,(.- Ihnl I can Uailr.wd, will ,u. on . , , " like J"'"' " I' "kn. i,;,' ,.lnl III Uiexoii on , s,,.,t ,. " lo NeW poll, good ,,t I..1IUU Ul Within ten iC..vi hit " I He and bet loili. al -cuiiv i.dn... health ghen me: ami h ink Inn an ih tailonal iosr "ft anj on hfn I i t extra tired, I keep my rcii In per iff order. "MISS . 1,'tOV. Mrs. Fanin K l it i,lal... ln 1 . '.f Sum niltavllle, N. V.. r a (Ih'tta: "For I ) 1 r ' in.i'lh- I ufT.rid with pain 111 the hack ,.1. I in the i.-gi..ii il.e kldliev , and a doll o. . til ihe ttU..in. n, and ..llo-r p, l ic catarrh. " Hut nft. r in!. In:-, lw t- nh - t Peru Oa I am rntir. ' v tt . I' I ' ll' r than I ev.-r tu."-Mr. I' tniiv K hit aiial-. h.-r. Semi f,,r "lb-a! ill a 11. 1 tut y ," r it t. .. (M-lallv f "T W..I11.-H I t I'l. s. It. I l.trt man, lr-.i.l- iit ll.trtmau S..uili nun, Columbus, 1 1. Fur full inb-iiiuli hi 1. (raw your hs l agent . i-t 1 It epil h 1'iinlr, T hen, ate tlluea vuii Iili, a (uiic. pou'l gae "igitivni,,tr and weaken. HeWill a .,n;, 'iii. ra etpel all . iU.,n n,iii and act aa tnulc lo the liter. Vf t., tuipt.'iua id 'VI Highland in... Mi!l..tj Pa.. tin liavn carried I'rWiU a I ittlr Kirljk w lib tun lor ant eial ye,tr aid t n'i be Itliotit tbem." Small and Nir lake. Purely v.g.'(t,i. f. h, gl l. or ilia) resn. 1 i,-,i A IIi!:-( O' A big t i III ..T de l in I Hi,. COIitV I being cl I Ui bv I' intern men ubi II Jewell to H Meiton, Iota 15 A 1(1, b'k (ihnlstone $1000 1 ill " vol t. an v r n I Hii-e ,.f a ball a C Strahn to J K Hilderbach, n'; of 1 million d..ll irs 1 h" ..( the deal is sw A sw of lie A ntt of se, setr In, ; that Ihe F i-'eniera ate to lake an entire t .'! s, r li e I!.m tract ..I I hi, I at t'.' I an a. le, O P Miller I., M A M addis k, lots I i, 'i, , 7 A k, t.ik 12, (c :;,im -, , , ., i II Mil.... ... M II I'M. . . that particular industry. In the case of I " "" ' " " ' " Uriclihis ye.tr tiiecn l imit , () I" iimin J Shaver, sh'ir, to II Holtgiiete, h w of n of sec If) A w 1 . of se of the harvester combine it is simply a question of whether it will share the benefits of decreased cost ol production w ith the 'armer or whether it w ill use its vast power to maintain prices that are not justified by the cost of materials, manufacture and distribution. THE HEALTH OF Ct'15 A. The stamping out of disease in Cuba was conducted by the American War Department with such energy and suc cess that the Cuban government has been unable to maintain the low death rate established. When Havana was handed over to the Cubans its dtath rate compared favorably with that of cities which create the average. If there ha been a slight increase In the death rate in the two month since the Cubans have had control, the fact should not cause alarm. Almost any American city would show au increase in the death rate, other things being equal, on passing from the control of the War Department to that of the civil authorities. The War Depart ment cao resort to method of sanitation which a civil government could find no authority for. The maintenance of the lanltory conditions established by the American Government wa deemed of uch importance that a provision was in corporated in the Piatt amendment that the government of Cuba should execute, bo far a necessity should extend, the plan of sanitation already devised of APPICOACHINU SIILI.KN.VIIM. A prediction comes fiom Warsaw, Russia, that the millennium will come in 1905. .The fact that the prediction comes from the lips of a three-months-old child does not greatly add to the probability that it will prove true. While we may not be able to account for a prophecy uf such importance coming from an infant, we may reject the proph ecy without accounting for the gift of speech by which it is announced. Most of us are called upon at short intervals to listen to tests given by spirit mediums and asked either to account for them or to accept them a true revelations. We save time by declining to do either. So we shall save (Ime by declining to be lieve that the Warsaw infant knows more about the future than the average infant of ita age. The approach of the millennium has been so often announced and its coming so often deferred that it baa ceased to be a fruitful subject for prophecy. The millennium, if it come at all, will come opon us by degrees. The world will be prepared for it by a growing appreciation of the conditions of life upon which it II BA'S Ml (i.Wl'I'KOSFM'T. Cuba's dependence on sugar appears I to have brought thu island to the verge of a great industrial disaster, but it does not follow that the way out of the trouble is through a diversification of industries. The truth is that the de pression is part of a general though tem porary depression of the trade. Thu ex periment In self-government began un fortunately during this crisis, which gives the worst possible basis for sweep- ing deduction against any single j country. In Hawaii plantations which wen paying enormous dividens but a short time ago are now a sorrow to their stock holders, and a period of great prosperity has been ucceeded by hard times, in which all business is seriously affected. There is, however, no general disposition to abandon the plantations, whose ex pansion has made a new record in land values. The men who have secured not only hug uncultivated areas, but who have paid a premium on lands devoted to other crops than cane, so as to in crease their sugar holdings, hope for a favorable turn of fortune's wheel in the future. In Europe the situation resulted in the calling of the Brussels conference, and if its program should be carried out there would be a brighter prospect in all cane countries. Cuba would then be able to compete on better term, and nature ia so favorable to the production of cane in the island that she has only to take advantage of the natural condi tions in order to make a satisfactory showing. Her weakness lies in her in ferior industrial methods. With up-to-date machinery and management and the reciprocity which has been promised her she should make her plantations pay better than they ever have in the past. I III the M.ii.k l di " ei i oia'.' I I., Ih- .11 i.i lit less than Ihe pack ol lat wtr. sec 11, t h. r ,ri e i e',. of nil of sec chak, i ;;'i I: lo i0 Kmltb'f Dandruff Pomade stops itching scalp upon one application, three to six removes all dandruff and will stop falling hair. Price 50 cents at all druggist. F Kath to N Katl IU, t s, rf e II K ilintiier to Win Kon acres in t ." s, r I e . . P P s,ii.uit to w ii poi;, k, lot i, A-:;, bik ss, n.,,.,,, Win Parker to V. Adkins, 1.7.' acres in Wright Claim J A Montgomery to I! Marshall, lie of sec L' l, t ,') H, r 8 e A S Koberbton to J Elliott, et ill, w'.j of n w of sec 1 1, t I h, r e. . J I Howk to J ii Mumpowcr, '.. in terest in ne of lie, w '.. of ne.v lot .1, sec IK, t L' , r .'I e, except L' ) A I I. PonaldH.iii to .1 F Clark, lots 11, 7 A H, blk H, Sunset City Carlton A Uom c runs to F lioth. l.'iil h rd in P Lee CI, t II s. r 1 e . . . Sellwood I.d A I Co lo A T V.iiiI.im- kirk, lots 8, II, ID., , :,;;Oak (irove Same to A J A Ueinhold, lots 11 A 15, in blk Hit, Oak (iiovn MAT Vaiibii-kiik to A J A l:-in- brild, lots s, !, 10 A II in blk !i I, Oak l irove I M Taylor to C F Miley, lot I and part of.'!, blk III, (); C Phehm (o I K Hodge, w of sw, sec I ; iv'.j of mr of s.-c t 2 s r I e L'i.OO THE CLACKAMAS A liSTKACT Si TKL'ST CO. urn the owners of the copy right to the TLorne, system of abstract indexes, for Clackamas county, and have the only complete set of abstracts in the County, can liirmsli iiifomiHtioii as to title (o land at once, on application Loans, Investmenls.real estate, abstract) etc. Ollice oer Hank of Oregon City, Call and investigate. Address box 37. President Eooseveit in a speech in Net1 England, pays a glowing tribute to the ex-Kpeaker of the House, Thomas B. Reed. The president receive' the plaudits of li'iO.hOO people. A f.irce uf men i at ..rk lepairing t In revetment ai'inia th. Willamette n C,,r I vallis The .ii i p, pii'V.-nt r ll i change in the channel ,,l (, n I It'er, i A. Moldeii, of Stt'ertnii, ha. c,,i,. tract.i l ,, I. 1,,-hin iii A Co.. .,1 Cincin nalli, b i.iki p,indi of ,, pi,'. ,,,,, ,, hops ut I'll cntM a p .on I. War hew, tii n,e M,,rnnv rmintv stockmen mid hI pmeii h n boik.-n out e . A sl i herd.-r b IS been Hl.ol and great ccciti'incnt pre uU OREGON'S Blue Ribbon STATE FAIR SALEM Sept. I5th to 20th 1902 You an- invited to attrii'l it. c the j;rratrt ncliitlrul n; ntluii and livr..n, k tmw tte held nil the I'l. llu' t n.itt. lacing rv.ry allelic".!!. t, ground flee. Coim- an.l 1: your (.milieu I ': any infwr tl'.u, tt ill. M. D. WISDOM, Sl0 Portland, 0r i' iiry lre niiil.,,1. j I on "t neglect a eld. It is wnre Hum l.'i'.O j llliplc.lN..,,! , I. ,.., .,,,,, P,y IIMhg .One Minnie Con..', I ,,. , , , :, I loo at once. Allay-. n,t Iui l head, suotln ins and treiuObiM,. ,,. 111 0" men, h lane. Cures e.,n,.hs Ab-o Club croup, throat mid niit' troubh .0 Int'ly sale. drell like i(. A. i'l in.inedia'ely. A Harding. Mliitllrr H ltirnnl. Twice III bospi'al, F. A. fillip eibeliii, Ala., paid a va-t n U i he I. OS to ciir a aevete i a-e ol I'll'. f, . . , I.I II T lug Illinois. W hell nil lane". ."-I.-ii'h Arnica Salve cuicl M Subdues Inll.immatnin, i-n '""' ,!" kills Pains. Ilest Salve i H "' '.T.C at lieu. A. Harding'" drim!11"- l.'iOO Mil IB III Night I hr-atenel. "While picnicing last inonth my 11- year-old hoy was poisoned by some weed or plant," eav W. II. Dibble, of Hioux ! City, la. "He rubied the poison off his ' hands Into his eyes and for a while we1 were afraid he would lose his sight.) Finally a neighbor recommended I)e- Witt's Witch Hazel Halve. The first I application helped him and in a few day he was as well as ever." For skin dis-1 eases, cuts, burns. scaldH, wounds, insect 1 bites, f)e Witt's Witch Hazel Salve, is sure cure. Kelieves piles at once. lie-; ware ol counterfeits. Geo. A. Harding .luat Look At IIr. Wnence came that sprightly step, faultless skin, rich, rosy complexion, smiling face? Hhe looks good, feels good. Here her secret. She uses Dr. King's New Life pills. Result-all organs art ive, digestion uood. chance for "blues." Try them youself. Only at (ieo. A. Harding's. I'or the next nixty dfiyn FOR CASH HI raw an.l Crauli lints Jlelotv Od Shirt V:ii.-tH from H."c u Ifi-inch I'. rciili'H now Ujc yJ Taldo Cliitli From I hick SkirtH in colorH From 7' Mei,'H anil I',(,yH' Cum r-KuInr jiricii 2.rjn now tf Men'H Fancy )renH ShirtH, regular price "w Nccktii.'H, r.'nular price L'oit .now l'rc Mnn'H Swcati-rH, regular price H'm now C'k Hoys' Swi.'iitcrH, regular price W)c ' Men's Heavy ShirtH, regulitr price (i()c to 7f)0. . . .now Fancy SockH Tic J"'if We are iiiakiiijr alig cut in prices in every thing in the lino of SIhm-h, Dry (ioods and Fur niHhing (JoimIh. Call and examine goods and get our price. RED FRONT THADING Cl Court House Block OREGON CITY, OREGON.