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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1903)
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 10vw Oregon City Enterprise CUV AMI I'OIXTY Ol'FK I VI, VXVtM. Published Evoiy Friday. Subscription Iates. One year $2 00 Six months 1 (X.) Trial subscription, two months "J") A discount of T0 cents on all subscriptions for one yenr, 25 cents for eix months", if paid in advance. APVKKTISINO RATKS OX AVTI.ICAT10N. Subscribers will find the date of expiration stamped on their papers following their name. If this is not changed within two weeks after a payment kindly no tify us and the matter will receive our attention. Entered at the postofliee at Oregon City, Oregon, as second-class matter. The city council Monday night performed a grace ful service in appropriating $ 100 to the Heppner relief fund. Oregon City has certainly done handsomely by the sufferers of the Eastern Oregon flood. In ad dition to this cash subscription from the city council, the citizens have subscribed more than $225 beside a great amount of clothing. Every community owes the prime duty of support to its local press. If a man can afford to take only one paper he should take his home paper. If he can go further and take a daily, let that be but the supple ment to his county paper. The old Greek adage, 4'know thyself," should be expanded into "know thy neighbors," and the way to do that Is to support your borne paper. There is no better or more helpful asset to any county than a good newspaper, filled with neighborhood news, and dealings with all issues of common interest as the weekly press usually does fairly and honestly. Atlanta Constitution. The Jocal baseball team continues, unchallenged, to maintain its position in the interstate league that of the foot of the column. Easeball is not unlike a business undertaking in at least one respect. A suc cessful and winning team cannot exist on wind alone. It requires money to keep good players, and the Ore gon City team has this year not received the proper support. If a reasonable purse had been raised at the beginning of the season, such players as Nefzger, Ca liff, Martin and Graham could have beery retained and this quartet, with the available material to be found in this city, would make a team that would prove the peer of any other amateur nine in the state. Under these circumstances, the present management of the baseball team is to be commended rather than criti cised for the showing that has been made. The order of the President directing an investiga tion of that branch of the postal service which has charge of the transportation of the mails will naturally revive discussion of the much debated question of rail, way mail pay. At no time since 18S4 have the receipts of the Post office Department equaled the expenditures. In 11)02 the total expenditures of the department were $12-1,-7S5,C!7, while the revenue amounted to 1121,818,047, leaving a deficit for the year of frl,'K',7 ,'S0, which was small compared to some of the deficits of previous years. Of the total expenditures of the department $G0, 33,217 was paid to the railroads for the transporta tion of the mails. The annual recurrence of a postal .deficit has naturally led to an agitation for a reduction in the rate of compensation for carrying the mails. It has been claimed that the rates received by the roads are excessive, that they average more per ton per mile than they receive for hauling express matter, and more in some instances than is received for transnortine passengers. It is noted, for example, that in many instances newspapers may be sent by express at half a cent a pound, though the mail rate is a cent, and this certainly raises the presumption that the express companies have a better contract with the roads than the government. The railroads claim that the rates of compensation are not excessive; that under the law of 1873 the rates rapidly decline as the volume of mail increases; that it is practically impossible to ascertain the exact cost per ton per mile of the hauling of the mails on account of the introduction of the modern railway mail car of "moving postoffice" in which the mail is received, sep- arated and distributed as the car travels from station to station; that the distribution of the mails in this way makes a comparison with passenger, freight or express traffic unjust and unscientific; that over half the mails transported go free; that the costly equip ment furnished by the roads for the fast railway mail service is not charged against the government; that the wiping out of the abuses of the second class mail privileges would not only do away with the annual de ficit but would leave the department with a handsome eurplus each year. The subject is one that has been gone into exten sively by postmasters general, postal commissions and expert statisticians. If the investigation should result in a more scientific ard satisfactory method of estab lishing a basis of compensation through the weighing of the mails it would be well worth the trouble and expense, to say nothing of the irregularities it might disclose. Kvi'uvTiuxu is in readiness for the celebration of the Nation's birthday in Oregon City tomorrow. In view of the unusually large crowds that are expect ed to visit th'i city on this occasion, since Portland does not celebrate, ample arrangements have been made- for the entertainment of nil who mav bo the city's guest vited to join with Oregon City in making the local celebration a creditable success. .xiik i: or aisii:.t e'or ficwiT In Mevior IMMrlct . 3 of Oregon H) , Oregon, ! N miccta hereby given that Hie ('mini nl Oregon Cny, On gon, at nu'i ting helu oil The ,Hoplo of the entire county are in-! Zll 'ft K alini'timi (ii wwcM iii Sewer District No. 3, In thi' manner ( rovl.led !' Uri'inane No. 21, upon ei ti lot, pail nt' Lt and lr.it t vil unlit, Hindi are liciiclitid, to lie as tot lows, via: , UT Hl.K NIMH AM.'l'NT Kilna I' rorlvi'H, triMc $17 fto Oregon City M Oregon City ,S M Mrs S K I'M' I tirt ,n SI Teach the Boys a Trade. :2 June is over. Almost all the papers big ones in . J roaring cities and boilerplaters in quiet hamlets have 5 printed their annual high school "Conitnenoeinent" 1 7 editorials. According to their mood, they have oiler- j J ed the graduate their honeyed and uncritical congtat - - illations or, perchance, have mildly ridiculed the fa tuous bumptiousness of young men who fairly stag ger 'neath the burden of their brains or, possibly, indeed, have been moved to pity rather than to smiles iu retlecting on their awful and inevitable disillusion ment. It may be these last, are nearest right. One kindly editor of this sort remarks, we note, that "there is no more forlorn, no more dazed and lost creature on earth, than the young man who has gone through the schools, and now conies out into the world to hunt a job." True enough; still, there are institutions whose product is neither pitiable nor ridiculous, even for a moment the schools where boys learn trades in this city for example, the Cogs well Polytechnic, the Lick, the Wilnierding. The last of these this yea" sent forth its maiden class a small one yet including young men skilled in carjientry, cabinet-making, forge-work, architectural drawing. Next year there will be electricians, plumbers, brick layers, mechanics artisans of every kind. Here are, and will be, no "dazed" or "forlorn" young men These go into the world well equipped. Why not more of these trade schools? Granting that an academic high-school education is the thing for the superior boy who will direct a business, enter a profession, go to college, what of the mediocre boy, he who graduates and he who finds the pace too hot and drops out? For what is he fitted? A clerkship? a place behind the counter? a high office stool? Put there are already too many clerks, too many seekers for "white-shirt" jobs. Every business man knows it. Let him advertise for a well-educated young man of good address, salary sixty dollars a month, and what) an army clamors at his door. Let him advertise for a dozen first -class artisans of any sort, and will he get them? It is very unlikely. Yet tho pay to the ave rage clerk is not so good as to the craftsman. How many hundreds of intelligent young in white collars are earning $8, $10 or 1 12 a week in this city? Brick layers., carpenters, plumbers, respectively, get $6, 14 and $4.50 a day. The young fellows who hold or hunt ten-dollar-a-week jobs lack not in ability, but in train ing. Once they might have learned their trades as apprentices. Today there is no apprentice system in many trades. Why should not the public schools take up the abandoned task of training our young men to manual efficiency? The world for its work needs skilled hands, as well as trained minds; wh cultivate only the brain and let the hands lie fallow? It is true, perhaps, that the national vanity is in a measure responsible for the glut in the "gentlemanly" occupations. We want to wear our Sunday clothes all the time. The native son is apt 10 be enamored of a high collar and a red cravat. lie is likely to agree, reluctantly or not at all, with the dictum that it is better to be a good pluiutner with a bank account than a penniless lawyer or a patientle.-s medico. Put what will become of the trades if all but the riff-rall' desert them? Is it not significant that the Mosley commis sion of British workmen, while they praised the enter prise of our business men, found our machinery bet ter than theirs, and envied the comfort in which the American workmen lives, were still unanimous in the opinion that American workingmen are careless crafts men? They affirmed that American bricklayers scamp their work. They found bad plastering even in the White House. One of them declared that En glish and Continental workmen are the backbone of American trades. If these things be true, what better remedy for such a condition than trade schools, where theory and practice go hand in hand, where the boy is taught to work as well as to talk about working? It is not a question of whether or not an academic education is a good thing. It is whether it is a better thing for the average boy than teaching him a trade. Again, might not the thousands without intellectual ambition, who drop out during the years of the high school course because they "hate study," be kept in schools by the fascination which tools have for a boy? There is keen pleasure in being able to "make some thing," actually to create out of formless materials a serviceable, a beautiful, thing. All our schools are crowded, but the long waiting list at each of our too few trade schools indicates that many boys who would not attend the regular schools at all would gladly learn a trade at a trade school. Surely it is better to have a boy learning a trade than running the streets or driving a delivery wagon. The teaching of trades in schools is a thing which should interest every householder who has suffered from ignorant plumbers; every business man who hasj paid good money for botch jobs in lathing, bncklay ing, wiring; every owner of furniture showing with wear careless workmanship. We are said to be a practical people; yet if, while the apprentice system decays, we take no steps to replace it, we shall not deserve the title. It is time we got a move on. There are toojnany college graduates hunting cheap jobs. There are too many job vacant of efficient craftsmen. leach the boys a trade! a. F. Argonaut. i to m in m m in 10 in 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 a ii1 12 1 ' 12 12 12 1 j 12 1.1 1:1 in in 17 17 17 17 17 17 Clara Muivy ;.s si Then ygiiiil M SI I itco vs yuani .'is ;;n This Dully ,V A Millhlea.. Ill :'ii lit 11 naming 47 30 li II HllMli.g 47 .ill J.iiin WiIkii.miii 1; :iii Julia lii.hard IT .'III Thus Dully A A M it 'Hi ms... I'.l JO III.. Dully ,y A Multhlcs... Ill .11 Hill Hurling Ill .HI Hell Hurling in '.ii Mnv A Maddook 17 30 Mary A .Haddock 47 30 .Mm K A I'aine 17 :ki Mrs K A l'alne 17 30 Mury A Ma.tdork Ill '.H Mary A Maddix k I'.l '.M Marv A .Maddock Ill 2u Mary A Madd.ick Ill 2(1 James I'.'liin Ml James Dolan in 2u Jane Wilkinson ,17 II J a no Wilkinson .til M Jau.ci Henley..,. 41 In J mni'9 Healey 4.1 111 Mary F Cross 43 III Mary t Cioss 4:1 III J 1 A.c ric.n, t rn.-lre XI ;to j T Aii ron. trustee M 30 W v lot 7 blk 17 V Harris 31 lift K y mi 7 blk 17 Jamra Healey :il W S i"l 1 llk 17 V Harna 20 Oft K , lot 8 blk 17 Jamra Henley 3i t. 1 IS O N Oreeniiian . . 41 in 2 IS O N Ureeni.ian '. W 3 IS C N Urevtiinan 4.1 10 4 IS O N Greeiiinan MM A IS 11 K Harris M :ui ti IS 1 lirreninail M 3ti 8 lot 7 hlk ISC N Urrviiinan '.ti tin N lot 7 blk IS Jobn WeiMiiamlH . . W ll1) N S lot 7 blk ISjotin Wviainaiidrl .. M tV N teel loi S blk IS Howard llrow- lieu 40 10 8 lt.Slret lot Sblk IS Joliu WeUiiian del H 20 1 111 Aaron K Wait 4i M 2 111 Aaron K Wait 4:1 10 3 ID Kllen 8 Warren 43 10 All ol (hat portion ol lot 4 blk 111 lyliiK rant ol the O ,t C H K eicvft tl north II (et th reol C llariinaii. . :'4 li All ol lot 4 blk 111 excet'l the 1011111 !2 Irel of that iHiritmi Ivlnir laul ol the U A (J It It Kllen gUarren ... 1M It 111 111 111 ID JO :n 40 40 40 40 41 41 41 41 4' 42 42 42 4)1 47 47 47 47 4S 48 48 Mary J llail.iw I"i IM Mary J Harlow So so 11 K I. Inn and J W l.o.lrr... .'i IKI II Kl.lnn ami J W l.mler.... M si Sarah J Henderson 4:1 HI Sarah J Henderson I i isi Oregon l.'ity . . 72 .11 tlrrKoii I'lty 7.' :il t 'Jofoii City !H 40 Oregon C ty II .11 Viiinte II WaldtMi IS tm Vmnie II WaMen I'i nU l larj K .Morey 42 SI Clara K Mnrry i.l tft Helen I. Miration tl 00 Helen 1, ntralion 1) 00 Helen l.Hiratuin 10 ho HeienJ, 8iraiton 12 bo Jobn OleaHu 1 .1 til James Mi'.Samara estate 41' 10 James McNamaraesia'.e 411 In John (ileaaon 40 lo John Cleason 40 10 J (I Zinser M ti'.' Ait A lioetMii'g it) ( W H W ik irina ii i;2 ti X loll blk 48 1M. r l'aii.t fsiate.. 30 31 N H lot 4 blk 48 C C Hancock 30 31 48 W Ii WiUk'Uix ... 411 HI W II WinKUi" 411 10 4S 48 4S 40 411 411 A it A (iiwtiltng 40 10 J C Zilifer.. KamiiR I. t'oclirnn Krtiiiue 1. Cochran Urin e C ami Mamie Curry N 30 left ol 4:i Catherine1 K Milev 8 30 lect O'. 411 Catherine K M ilcy. . . 411 Kdaanl It Whitln k. Ill Kdwurd It Whilloek. 40 l.ilwant It Whitloik 40 Carrie liicharda '10 J T Algernon : J T A..ersnii oO J T A i,.i ruri ro J I' Ai'iTon .'i'i J T A erin fid J T A .n ron M J T A i.e.M.in M J T A I'l'erson Id J T A 1 . 1 i huh ft I J T A I'licrsoii M J 1 Api.ersiiii hi .1 T A iierxiiii ft I J T A .ierjn ftl J T A .. roii ft.' It A Miller ft2 It A Miller ft2 K A Miller ft2 It A Miller.. , ft-' It A Miller Ill III I0 112 tm t.' .tl 00 ."7 112 no i;2 III In 41 lo ill lo Hi Hi Mi 112 t 1,2 t;o 1,2 2ft II 10 II 11 10 i'i 12 ft 22 ftT 1)2 Ml 12 20 i'i'2 20 ft.' 20 ft2 2'i ft-; ftl Itt :i3 i;2 U 31 Mi 31 in; 31 FOR SYSTEA1IC CATARRH Peculiar to Cummer Pe-ru-na Gives Prompt and Permanent Relief. C. S, Ttlmada, ImlliumiMdla, I nil., write I "Vortho piinl two yen I hwvo linnlly ktinwn wliat It a to lmvr 11 iwrft, r-ftiul nliHil'a ulecp. ('un a nml fvrrin k aocninl ! ncIi;Ii in" ilowu morn limn li i.IioiiKI or woulil liml 1 Im cii nhl lonol my pinpi r rel. My lU'lnr mm iiii!. 1 1 help tun mid (iidei. il mo Houlli for a ..ini! rn mnl i hann". AatlilMi Klmply out of the iiii'allnli, niul lis I had li-iird acviTal ! Hi" mull muter tn apcitk of li..v miirli lVrtiim liml lirlpiil (hem, I ilci ldrd to try It mnl 11111 nl'l linl--l Hint I villi. Six liotll,. inn. In ftliuw luutl of lite 1 flit well, hlc p W ell HU.l fcet Up fool tit; rcrii nlii'd mid r. Hii'd, " My idtli inl iIiimci iir. not linlf ho hard and I cci Utlnly liavo good rouaou to Loartlly eudorao rcrunii." C. S. Klmiula. pom. in 'VKX A Prominent Business ; tiSi(?SWW : Ma" of Indianapolis Re- Ife? vi'Sj) ; stored to Health and ; M$I i'Vllor by Pe-rn-na. Me : r""'' " 1 says: "Pe ru na made a L C'S'RjOadS' J j New Man of Me.M C rvT J Judno Wm, T. 7.1'nor, of VajhlnnUin, D. C, writes from 13 N. Capital stxeet, Washington, I). C.t " 1 tnka ptewnro In aaylng that I ran cheerfully reeoiiimcnd the use of l'eruna a a remedy for catarrhal trouMe and a innat exec Hint toiiln for general eotidl Hon. "-W in. T. Zeimr Mrs. Amanda Morrill, WO IUild atroet, Kllzal etli, N'. J., wrlleat " I havo tn eti alek over two year, with nervous prornl.m ami Ketieral dehll Itv, and heart tmiiMo, Have had four diH'tora) all u!d that I could not ;et well, l Ii nil not vaiki'd a Ktcp la iiliin 1 tnonthn, nufTeriiit; with partial punil.Vhl 1 j and pnlplt.itnn of the heart every j othor day, and tail become no minced 1 In fleth mx to tm 4 mere skeleton, le Krails, neighing only 63 pound. Address rr. f Cp to this data X li'ive taken l'eruna I Tl." llariin.ai tor tevan uioutLa. It baa aayed luy llfu ' Ohio. ma I can tttely tentlty, I hay not felt mo well In five ye art, having walked over on wile without III retult, and have aho gained thirty pound aluuo roinmeiii'lnif to t iko l'eruna. In fact I cannot praUo 11 too highly." Mr a. Amanda MorrllL l'eruna never falla to prfTont ayatnmlo eatarrhor liervoua proatrntloti If taker lit time. lVruna la the moat prompt an J permanent euro for all raeaof nxrvoti priwtnitloil euuaed hy ay atemlo calarrbi known to the tnedieal profeaidott. If yon il ii,,t derive prompt and aatl fuet.iry p'Kiili front tho nnof l'eruna, write nti'tn i to lr. lUrtmnn, i;lvlnir a full Mhit' inent of your enae. und ha will I p'.i ii.id t K.voyou hWaluuhla ad Itartninn, Prealdcnt ol HaiilUrldiii, Coltuubua, 1 08 Wtrly Sft fet of J A Thar H si 2 IM Kamerly 70 feet of Harali Koakr :w 7t) 2 IM Nnrtherlv 33 feel of wmtrr- ly :Vi leet ol. J A I haver 7 ti7 2 lw Houilierly S3 leet of westerly Xi left of, Chaa H Hnnklni 7 ti7 3 IM Kamerly TO fret ol harah K Koake . 30 "II 3 IW Westerly 3ft feel of t hai U Ilo'kln 4 iw Westerly 70 leet ol AlniaC llrowm II 1 lis Kastrrly .'1.1 feet of ('has ti Hopkins IW Westerly 70 led ol AlinaC llrownell lift Hoiilheily 3.1 leet ol ea'teily '.V leet of, Chas H lloHkina Iii Northerly .11 of raitrrly 3ft feel or, J A I haver !M Westerly 70 leet ol Alma t: ft2 It A Miller 4H 31 ft2 K A Mi ler Ift On ft2 It A Miller 20 .V2 ii K H M II. r W 31 H K 11 Miller 42 31 (i It H Miller ft.'i 41 (i K 11 Miller Ol 31 Caleb K Cioaa 00 31 Cahleb K Cross 1ft 00 J II A Nellie V Walker 42 31 J H it Nellie V Walker.... do :ui Hercules Kellv ftll 12 Hercules Kelly ftll 12 Caiherine Keiiy ftli 12 Catheriim Kt liy in; 31 Caiherine Kelly Mi 31 Catherine Kelly 4S 31 Hercules Kelly 37 Kl Hercules Kelly r7 02 Henry Mi l Iriiin 17 7! Henry Meldriiiu II 71 A I lee K I'aiternin 37 H.I Alice K I'ntterson ft7 02 Alice K I'ailersiiii ftll 12 Alice K I'atiersou ft7 02 Ci Huntley f7 2 C O Huntley ftl 02 J 'f Appereon 47 73 J T Apperson 47 73 J T ApersoM 47 73 J T Apperson M 02 W A Huntley ftl 00 W A Huntley ft4 02 Henry Meldrurn ftl 02 Jennie Meldrurn 61 64 A D Fntrow 61 ftl A U I'utrow 61 64 A I) I'utrow ft4 02 A D Fulmar 61 0'2 May (I l.a Forest ftl 02 May U l,a Forest f4 02 Frederick Oadke 33 24 Frederick Gadke 64 02 Mary K Harlow 64 02 Mary K Harlow 64 02 Cha C Bahcock 64 02 63 63 63 6:i (A M (A 01 0.) nr IA IA I A I A Oft 00 li 00 li 00 00 w Hi til 07 07 07 07 07 W tm (iH tiH m M 0! m m m Of) m !i im m w !7 !(7 1)7 !7 !(7 Il7 H7 7 Koake I Ur..w JO lis er ... 1 Kl 2 n 3 Oil 1 111 ft Kl 0 in ! 7 in t S ir.l I I Ion 2 loo 3 100 1 I'll ft Ion 0 Inn 7 il H mi 7 lo H I0 1 1 13 2 111 3 113 4 113 5 113 0 113 7 1'.3 8 113 1 114 2 114 3 III 4 114 ft 111 ti 114 7 114 H 111 1 1 Ift 2 lift Kaslerly 3ft leet of J A Thay. 16 31 31 H2 10 HI 31 2 7 02 7 Oil 31 N2 I II V. I' Hand I'I p h I' Hands 41; o I 1 Jennie I-; Wnile Hi o 1 Jennie K While 37 10 I I A H ir..ser Is i.j 2 Kiiiihe'h .Minns ;,( 1,1 ' 3 Viol 1 M in.llr.-y ;.; I 11. in ,M iiuiiirey 17 7 ; V, I' liiinile 1 1 73 June t; Run. Is 02 72 fiiirali J Henderson...., ... ii. urllll J llenileisoii nsiall J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - r -1 1 1 7,1 nurjli J llenih rsuti ii; Hiirnh .1 II f. .Mi rese W W Marrs .1 0 Henner Carrie M Cheney C and Anes Hchiichel. W Alien White W Alien While WAIIen White W Allen While A W Cheney A W Cheney 41 7:1 1 li Andre 1. H Andrew Ift DO K T Harlow 1ft 1 si FT Har.ow 33 03 Kva lye 37 10 hva Dye I. 11 Andrews 10 lu li H Andrews 10 i C II live trustee 47 01 C 11 Dye. triLlce. northerly 41 leet of lot 2 hlk lift (I 32 lift Houtherly 2ft fe'-t of Thus. ami iiiMKi-i Knoles ft tin lift Tims and HHilct Knowles Ift Oo 11 1 I lion and Hrn!!ei Knowles. Hi 10 Ho I tins and Hruh'et Knowles southerly 2ft leet lot ft hlk lift 17 127 127 127 127 127 127 127 12 12S 12 12 12S 12 12 I2S 1211 120 I 10 Mo 110 lio 111 III III 111 I II III III III I 12 I 12 I 12 112 I 12 Karri ,S I) 0 l.atou sUs.. tiertruoa Hock,, tieririute Hock . i C l.ai.uireiia . I) C l.aloiiretia . DC l.alourette. . 1) (' Lalourette AO 01 , ol i til H2 , 20 h i Xi Tl I'i (III Ift ! VtlllKni anil Marie Hheahan 01 H2 K A loepelinan 01 2 Martha Hlankeiislnp ol 2 J I. and M A Waldren Ill K2 U It II Miller 33 72 KiiKene Hotierta . . .. Frank K Weed C I' Andrews Virginia Muir Mury It Cnulleld . . . . F K and John K Morris F. H llnrker Nellie V (llasi 'itto Krlikson Jas M l.aarence l;,l.illielh CsliM ( airie S Hutiiplireys a 1 1 r-. I II 1 1 uiiiphreys . . , Allied II II iini.lirrya A I red II Humphreys I'.oil F re vi an .Mury I. It. ml Rule I. Newton , , , , Hide I. Newlon June Younger. Jiiiid Younger N.i rati . a I'M l 11 tl and KoherlN Mur- 43 Ki 611 12- Ml 02 ftl XI IU H3 til 2 Id H'2 4( I h'2 01 K'. fti s2 01 2 01 h2 i. 2 07 '. 1.7 2 (.7 h'2 1.7 .-2 HI In :a 11 ..ft 11 33 21 07 K2 ui'ersnn 112 i ftl 1 . I 'i 00 Ift 00 02 72 03 02 ti.' I; 20 6'J 41 73 02 7: Chas C Ifahcock. Oregon City Oregon Cjiy Oregon City Oregon City Martha N Howell Martha N Howell lViahela F.u'ori (Simmons luis Dieckelinan Thomazi'ie Ku.lv Mahnla Kjton hirnmons Mnhala Kaion Hmimuin Martha N Howell Ks'O rly 70 teet of Hanh K 1 13 31 11 411 10 411 10 31 II 43 10 2ft II 3ft 04 ft l 04 63 01 4 64 4 64 4 64 30 70 SO 5 lift Northerly 41 ol A W Cheney 2 Wi 0 lift AW Cheney -HI lo 1 110 O W Ka'thain 13 10 110 O W Kastliaiii 2ft 11 3 IK! 8 F Hcripture 3ft hi 4 110 8 F Hcripture 63 01 ft 110 8 F hcnp.ura 63 04 110 H K Bcriptur 3ft hi 1 HO Anna lloweli 2ft II H ll Anna Howell.. 41 10 1 117 Hchool District No. 02 1ft 00 2 117 Wchool District No. 02 1ft 00 3 117 School District No. 02 31 11 117 richool District No. 02 40 10 & 117 Hchixil District No. 02 Ill 10 0 117 BchoolUistrict No. 02 Sill 1 117 HcIhkiI District No. 02 1ft ho H 117 8chool District No 02 Ift (si 3 124 HaraliJ Henderson SI II 4 124 barah J Henderson 40)0 ft 121 Harah J Henderson 41110 124 Harah J Henderson 31 11 1 12i William riteover 40 10 2 12fl William Hteovar 40 10 3 12ft Alhert () Kruse 40 10 4 12ft AlhertO Kruse ... .T7 to ft 12.) 1ouisa A and J W Noble 63 (H 0 12ft Ixnuia A and J W Nohle 3ft 01 7 12 8 8 Walker 2ft II 125 88 Walker 43 10 1 120 1) C i.atoiirette 3ft 00 I 2 120 D C Latotirette 1ft 00 3 120 DChabiurette 2ft Ml 4 120 D C hatinirette Ift Ml ft I2i D C hatoureiie I.j Mi 0 12 D C l.atourelU) 'At Ml 1 127 11 C Latourelle ftu 01 112 S.irali a. K Iwin 11 and M.ir- g'lrcl H lloherts ft". II Kilt.. I. Newton 6ft 1 1 Kiit'i I. Neat. in .'Kl Ol DC l.iitonrette, trustee Id H lit; l.iitonrette, trustee., 40 10 Clara I Calill ... 40 10 HeiiJ Jiiygiir .'id til I. A Nohei I 61 I. A Nohel II 111 I) M Whiiniore 43 HI Commercial Hunk 2ft II lleo J Moore 37 H) tieo J MiMire 40 10 M M (,'harman 37 Id Mrs a A Wilcox 40 H Daniel Fisher 40 Id Anna Hand 40 III Hsrah J llenderaoii ..31 II Hatuh J Henderson .... 411 Id harah J Henderson .. 411 III Kurah J Henderson 31 It Oregon City 31 II Oregon City 41) 10 Oregon City Ill Id Oregon City 31 II Dan Lyons 43 10 Dun Lyons ftd 2 D in Lyons .'si 2 Hun Lyons fto Hun Lyons HI Id Ihin Lyons 37 In Dun Lyons 2ft II Dan Lyons 41 Id M It Howell 60 2 M II Howell 6t i 2H M H Howell ftd 24 F M Hall 40 t F M Hall 40 Id M R Howell 411 o Busan McKee estate 60 2H 8usan MeKee estate 6ft 14 Una icler 6ft U i.ena Klgler 60 24 W J Kaoch 3ft 31 W J Ranch 6ft U Maggie Hosklna ftft II (1 B Dirulck 40 10 Charlotte Dresser 60 2H HenJ Jaggar 60 2H Hiinset Land Company 60 2H Hunset Land Coinpany .... 61 2H German Kvamrelical Lulh- ran Kmaiiuel Church 01 fc Charlotte Dresser 01 W John Hliannoii W 82 John Shannon ftft H2 Minnie Orahaiu 60 2 ugiist Holden 47 2H Thos K Ryan . . 40 Kl Iiiisa Mct;ausland fi7 33 0 II Dimick 47 '2 James W Chase ftll 2H James W Chase 60 2H James W Chase Wi 2H James W Chase 6d 2 K K and T C Howell i 2 K K and T C Howell 60 2 1' FMcdee Hi 2S 1' K McUee 60 2H Carolit.e Urasier 60 2 7 1 12 142 II lit ' 2 I 13 I 3 I II ! 1 1 1.1 0 lit ft I 13 1 III 2 III 3 1 II 4 III ft III 0 III 7 114 8 III 3 I Ift 4 lift ft I Ift ti lift 3 162 1 1.2 ft lft2 tl I.V2 1 16.1 2 I'..! 3 I ftl 4 1,3 ft Ift.'! 0 1.3 7 I .VI li lft.t 1 I.l 2 I ftl 3 164 4 iftl ft 164 0 Iftl 1 I ftft 2 I ftft 3 Iftft 4 Iftft 5 Iftft il Iftft 7 Iftft 8 iftft 1 I ftd 2 I ftd 3 I ftll 4 Ifttl ft Iftd ran Ki 0 Iftd 7 l.ftO H I. ftu 1 IV7 2 Ift7 3 J..7 8 I.V7 7 li.- ift loo ! IMI 7 lut H lr, 1 107 0 107 7 107 H H.7 '4 IOU