Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896, September 20, 1895, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f.S.'flW3iiJ(rM!j;,f,..
COURIER
OREGON
C'itvt.ftrarv
VOL. XIII.
, V 1 Woe5'
CHOICE CUTS and TENDER MEATS 00 TO
PETZOLD & GALE'S CASH MARKETS.
Seventh Street, Corner of Center, on the Hill.
Main.
St.
OPPOSITE CAU
-- OPENS....
Expositiono I
Portland, Ore. j
The Largest and Most Complete Display ever made of the Resources,
Industries, Commerce. Business. Agriculture, I; orestB. Mines, fruit.
Fisheries. Manufactures and Transportation 1-aeilties of the Ureal
Northwest.
Fine U'mc. Special Attractions Every Day. Rbduckd Kates
on all Transportation Lines.
ADMISSION".
Rinsle AdmlRBion ....ilBo
Children Under l
fcSeanon XioKets if J-w
E. t. MASTIC, Secretary
r
OLD HICXOKTTr
Best on
I CARRY A FULL LINE OF
FARM TOOLS, including Hay Presses, Feed
Cutters, Choppers, Plows, Harrows, Seed
ers, Spring Tooth Harrows, Potato Diggers,
ALSO. .
SraN(i Wagons, Carts, Buggies, Etc
Be sure and call when you are iu the city whether you
want to buy or not.
EDWARD HUGHES,
IH5JKK- PROFITS SmaU laments.
IJl mak0 " m"ch w"hln 1 shrt
$10.00
FOR EACH DOLLAR INVESTED can be made by our
Systematic Plan of Speculation
' orieinated by us. All .uccessf ul speculators operate on a regular nystem .
TH woll known fact tnat. mere are inuusainm m wcu luiiimm- . ,"',,;,
v.tematTc tmXniro(fh Chicago brokers, make larKe .mount every year, rang lug from a few
53 i dollars for the man who Invent a hundred or two hundred dollar, up to M,000 or 10u,OJO
or more by those who Invest a few thousand.
It la also a fact that those who make the largest profl ts from compamt ivcly iraa 1 Investments on
thU plan are perVons who live away from Chicago aud Invest through brokers who thoroughly un
derstand systematic trading.
n,lan does not risk the whole amount Invested on any trade, but covers bolhsldcs.so tlia
whether toe Market rises or fall. It brings a steady profit that piles up enormously in a shor
"writf- FOR CONVINCING TKlTTHS.alioour Mnnnal on successul specnlatlon and onr
n2fMarketIcpor"'ftillof money-making pointers. AtL fliEE. Our Manual explain, mar
gin trading fully. Digest references in regard to our standing aud succcs.
For further Information address
THOMAS & CO , Bankers and Brokers,
241-242 Rlalto Bnilding, Chicago, HI.
TMIE IWA
$
V
pomm o?.e cos.
Wmm
Two or a Kind
Make a strong pair. It's aa plain as
dav. though, lliat there lire no pairs to
our rockers. We liave the chairs anil
the public of Oregon City find it best
to come to us (or eats. There's a'cliair
(or everybody in our furniture house
anil a superb all around display of up
to dale furniture, too, at prices that up
to date are without a parallel In Oregon.
The people enjey sitting on us, and we
don't mind it a particle. We meet the
procession with chairs and are prepared
to rock this town to its foundations.
Bellamy & Butch,
The Home Furnlnheri.
FIELD BLOCK.
Oreson
City.
FOR F.XIIIIIIT SPACE APPLY AT THE
KXPOSILIOS HVUDINQ
TO Jm.
C. II. HUNT, Snperlntendentj
Earth-
cobnkp fbokt and
Taylor,
Portland, Or
JEWEILIEM
A. N. WRIGHT.
Watch Repairing a Specialty
lft ORKfSOX
'O Hk.LT.
OPPOSITE POSTOFriCW
J
OREGON CITY, OREGON'fRIDAY, SEPTEMBER
Specialities
Fresh Fruit....
Creamery Butter....
Breakfast Bacon..
Hams and Lard....
Teas and Coffees....
CHEESE,
CANDY,
NUTS
IN FACT WE MAKE A
SPECIALTY OF EVERYTHING
WE SELL.
E. E. WILLIAMS,
The Grocer-i
"1:
o
....GO TO ...
WILSON & COOKE
FOR
1L0 W 31
Oregon City Transportation Co.
Str. RAMONA.
TIME TABLE OREGON CITY HOA1
Leave
Portland
Foot Taylor St.
11:30 a.m.
4:00 p. m.
Leave
OrkoonCitt
Foot 8 th St.
9 :00 a. m.
2 :00 P. M.
No Sunday Trips.
Str. ALTONA.
Leaves Portland Tuesdays, Thursdays
and Saturdays.
Leave Independence and Salem Mon
days, Wednesdays and Fridays.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
1895.
AND
EXTRAS--p.
FALL CLOAKS
Black Fur Capes, 30 inches long, ico inches sweep. Si'EClAL,
$7.30, $9 and $10.50.
Black Astrachan Capes, 30 inches long, 100 inches sweep
$12.50, $13.50 and $16.50 worth $25.
Black Baltic Seal Capes, 30 inches long, 100 inches sweep,
just as handsome and rich as REAL SEAL, heavily lined
with Peau De Soil Silk. Special, $13.50, $15 a"d
$20.
Cloth Capes from $3.50 to $10.50.
Misses and Children's School Cloaks, $3.50, $4.50 and $5.
All Wool Dress Goods, 25c, 35c, 40c and 50c yard.
tgrScnd in your orders at once. O
HcAueh &
THE CONGREGATION ALISTS.
Association of Oregon at Oregon City
Next Week.
The forty-seventh annual meeting of
the CuntireKiiticiiial Association of Ore
con will meet with the church at Oregon
Ciiy. Key. John W. Cowan, D. D., pastor,
on Tuesday. September 24. The exer
cises will be conducted according to the
following programme:
TUESDAY EVENING.
Praise service, conducted by Rev. J.
J. Staub, Portland.
Association sermon, Rev. W C Curtis
The Dalles.
Social greetings.
WEDNESDAY MORNINO.
Organization.
Reports of standing committees: Cor
respondence, J. J. Staub; interdenomin
ational comity, VV. (J. Kantner; visiting
committee, C. F.Clapp, G. R. Wallace;
ministerial relief, George II. Hiines.
Appointment of committees.
. Narrative of the churches, Rev. Daniel
St aver, Astoria.
Devotional service, led by Rev. Dora
U. Barber, Wilsonville.
Congregational Christian Endeavor,
'Mr. W. U. Morrow, Portland.
L Nineteenth Century Conscience, Pro
J tensor H- L. Bates, Forest Grove.
Discussion, led by Rev. D. V. Poling,
Albany.
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
OurSun lay schools: Interdenomina
tional. Mr. F. R. Cook. Portland; de
nominational, Rev. R. A. Rowley,state
superintendent; report of committee,
Rev. C. a . Curtis. Portland .
Oreuon Woman's Home Missionary
Union! '
Devotional service. ''The Great Com
mission," conducted by Mrs. H. W.
Young, Portland .
"Our Mission," Mrs. F. Exgert, Port
land. Paper, Mrs. 8. F. Gibbs, Eugene .
"Personal . Reminiscences of Work
Among the Negroes," Mrs. L. A. Parker,
Portland.
'Paper.ilrs. E. M. Wilson, The Dalles.
"Our Greatest Need," Rev. Dors R.
Barber. Wilsonville.
Woman's Board of the Pacific : Re
port 'of the meeting of the woman's
board, Mrs. Thomas McClelland, Forest
Grove. 1 .
Children's missionary exercises, in
costume.
; WEDNESDAY EVENING .
Missionary rally, platform addresses .
Singing.
Rev. II. II . Wickoff, San Francisco,
Rpnrntarv. C. C. B. S .
Rev. J. R. McLean, D. V., presiaen i
Pacific seminary, Oakland, Cal.
Rev. J. B. Clark, D. D., secretary L
H. M. 8., New York.
THURSDAY MORNING.
Treasurer's report and business.
Devotional service, led by Rev. A
Rocfira. Forest Grove.
"The Relieious Paper and the Home"
President T. McClulland, D. D., Forest
(?rove.
Discussion, led by Rev. E. P. Hughes,
Hubbard.
"Interdenominational Co-operation in
the Local Community," Rev.C. H.Curtis
Portland.
"Church Loyalty," Rev. II. W. Young,
Portland.
Free parliament.
, 'THURSDAY AFTERNOON.
Annual meeting of the Oregon Home
Missionary Society.
'Pacific University and the Educa
tional Alliance," Mr. F. McKercher,
Portland, and President McUelland
Communion service, Rev. D.B. Gray,
1896.
AND
FALL DRESS COODS...
McDonnell.
l'ortlnnil,
Ore
20, 1898.
Portland; Rev. John L. Ilershner,
Hood River.
THURSDAY EVENING.
Platform meeting. "The Church and
Present-Day Problems."
Singing.
"The Problem' of the Workshop," Mr.
John T. Whal ley, Portland.
"The Problem of the Street,' ' Rev. W.
C. Kantner, D. D. , Salem.
'The Problem of theCity Hall," Key.
Georue It. Wallace, D. D., Portland.
HARMONY.
August Kanhie has built a new grain.
ery.
School began the 9th Inst, and is pros-
pering. Jliss K. Biurciuer anu aim.
Marshall are the teachers.
There has been quite an exodus from
this community to the hop fields. .
The Southern Pacific is having a lot
of wood cut near the Zeller place.
Wm Rosenan has built a new chicken
house.
Mrs. Sarah'jones, of LaUentre, Wash.,
is visiting relatives here.
Mrs. Ella Colson has returned to
Seattle Seminary to resume her duties
as matron of the school.
The Dicnic given at Mllwaukie by the
Harmony and Milwankie Evimgelicat
Sunday schools was quite a success.
Hiram Battin has bought a now span
of horses.
The prune crop Is unusually good this
. !! II
year. Apples are not aomg ou wen.
Miss Etta Karr has returned to Port
land again, to remain indefinitely.
Louis Lagrande was working for Byer
and Schmidt last weeK, as r. Byer
was unable to do much work on ac-
couutof a fall he recieved some time
since, but is better now.
The Misses Kannie have been visit
ing their sister, Mrs. C. F. Zinser ol
Happy Hollow.
Rev. E. Maurer. the new Evangelical
pastor, preaches the first Sunday in the
month at 11 a. m. and the Becond anil
fourth Rundays at 3 p. m.
Mrs. B. F. Tyler has been quite 111 but
is a little better now.
A Bans' otmen has beerrtotrsy for some
time clearing the drift-wood and debris
from Johnson creek below the McGrego r
slaughter house. The Work Was much
needed, as the stream had become so
much obstructed that it over flowed Its
banks during the high water, to the
detriment and Injury of tend adjoining.
Geo. Tarris has finished working for
Mr. Tyler and has gone to Washington,
nearEllensburg. '
There will be a Wednesday evening
prayer meeting held at the church ere
long.
Mrs. Geo. B. Wise is quite sick at
present.
We wish to congratulate the Coubie
on its new form aud neat appearance.
We wish it success !
September 10. Juxta.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Furnished Every Week by the Clackamas
Abstract & Trust Company.
T 1? Rvnn In J W Mnffltt. M lots 1. 2.
7 and 8 of blk 45, Co Add O O ; $040 .
J W Moftittto Cluua Aitams, same;
$040.
Jas W Shaw to Geo Munch, lots 19
and 20 of blk 7, Annex Add toOC;$250.
U 8 Q Marquara et al to Amer Oen
Mtg Co, 198 a in the Hector Campbell
DLC;t3444 . t
Croivston & Cress to John Harris, n 3
of se i and se i of ne ii and lot 1 of
sec0,t28, r5e; $1867.
Ada and Wm Doores to John Doores,
220 a in Robt Allen cl. t 0 s, r 1 e ; $1 .
Patrick Duffy to C W Fredrick s,
03-100 a in sec o. t 3 s, r 2 e ; 540.
E and N J White to B Fallert, lotH
8 and 6 in blk 7, Edgewood Add to O C ;
$540.
II C Stevens to Louis Feurer, lot 8 of
blk 20 O C ; ISO0O.
Seth Lewelling to Sophrina Lewelling,
LewellingPark;$l. ,.
Shaw & Gesner to F C DeGuire, 8 i
ne U and n hi oI e U Bec 22, t 5 s, r 1
e; $21)00. . . ,
L M Dickenson to A G 8inith, lots 5
and 6 in blk 31, First Add to Oswego : l.
State to James Surman, sw i of nw
H and w of sw se M of aw , w
of se Yi and se of sec 30. 1 5 s, r 2 e;
$350.
Jas Surman to G W R Vosburg, same
land; $420.
J M Brown to E M Mortimore, w V of
se of sec 15, t 6 s, r 2 e; $350.
C Beal to J W Blain, se M of se U of
sec 38, 1 1 8, r 4 e; $1
Visitors to the Exposition that opens
in Portland October 5th will see more of
interest in the exhibits than in former
years. Nearly every exhibits will have
something going on to instruct and in
terest those who see it. Especially will
the manufacturing exhibits have sncb
special attractions. Machinery will be
at work and mechanics will display
their skill. It will be an industrial bee
hive. It will bo impossible in one visit
to see everything contained In the huge
bnilding and enjoy the music and other
entertainment olfered.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
NO. 20.
INSTRUCTIONS TO PUPILS.
The School Directors Have Changed Divi
sion Line of District.
The public schools of Oregon City be
gins on next Monday, September 23d
and the school board to mre evonlj
divided up the pupils of the two school
has established the following riivhioi
line lor the ensuing year :
Beginning at the bluff on the southern
boundary of the district, thence along
bluff to Fifth street; easterly n Fifth
street to Adams street; northerly on
Adams street to Seventh street ; eaMeriy
on Seventh street to J. Q. Adams street;
northerly on J. Q. Adsuis street to
Ninth street ; easterly on Ninth street to
Htirrlson street and northerly on Har
rison street to the city limits near the
Abernethy river.
Those pupils belonging to the 1st, 2d,
3d, 4th or 5th grades and living south
and east of the above line are to attend
the Eastliam school ; those belonging to
the same grades and living north and
west of this line are to attend the Bar
cliiy school.
All miDils of the Oth A. 7lh B and Otli .
grades are to attend the Eastham school.
All pupils of the Oth B, 7th A. 8th and
10th grades are to report at the B trclay
school.
The sssigment of classes to the differ
ent teachers is as follows :
BARCLAY SCHOOL.'
Prof 8 W Holmes, Supt.. ..lOth and 8th
Prof PM Weddell..... 7th
Gertrude Finley B class 0 li
Haltie monroe
Hattie Wetherell 'h
Laura Beattie 3d
Hattie Cochran... 2d
May Kelly :
BASTHAM SCHOOL.
Prof L W McAdams. Oth
Mrs McAdams.... B class 7th and A 0th
Eima Lawrence 5th and 4th
Ana Ruin) 3d
Ora Spangler -2d
Mollie Hankins.... 1st
Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder
World's Pair HlghMt Medal art DlpUma.
50 Reward. I will pay the above
imnnnt Inr thn nrrAst and conviction of
the parties that robbed the Wilhoit
stage on August 12th, 1895, near Mulino,
rnn:-lr.maaliriMTff-rfl!fftHI. Ill1 flHf'tlll -1
information that may convict. ' E.
Mappock, Sherifl of Clackamas Coun
Oregon. . (.
To Tbade. To exchange for reside
or business property in Oregon City.
The whole or part of a fruit farm of 80
acres, all under cultivation, 10 acres of
prunes four years old. Good house,
barn and well. Inquire at the Blue
Front grocery, corner Seventh and
Cente streets.
Old People.
Old people who require ihmlioine to
regulate the bowels and kidneys will
find the true remedy in Electric Bitters.
This meoicine does not stimulate and
contains uo whisky nor other intoxicant,
but acts as a tonic aud alturative. It
acts mildly on the stomach and bowels,
adding strength and giving tone to tne
organs, thereby aiding Nature in the
performance of the functions. Electric
Bitters is an excellent appetizer and aids
digestion. Old People find it just exactly
what they need. Price fifty cents per
bottle at Charman & Co.'s Drug Store.-
vi.i.n i.onr.la qi-j nMiuHil to take medi
cine they want thfttitshull give quick
relief and not add. discomfort to thuir
sufferings. Three reasons why people
who suffer with Constipation and Bilious
ness should take Simmons ijiver insu
lator: "It is Better than Pills, it does
not gripe ; it gives quick ruliuf, and does
not weaken but strengthens and re
freshes the whole system. J. K.
Hiland, Monroe, la.
SIM M OH 3
REGULATOK
Reader, did you ever take 8u;
Liveb Regulator, the "Kixu
Liveb Medicines?" Everybody nee
tike a liver lemedy. It is a sluggish or
diseased liver that impairs digestion
and causes constipation, when the waste
that should be carried off remains in
the body and poisons the whnle system.
That dull, heavy feeling is due to a
torpid liver. Biliousness, Headache,
Malaria and Indigestion are all liver
diseaHca. Keep the liver active by an
occasional dose of Simmons Liver Reg
ulator and you'll get rid of these trou
bles, and give tone to tho whole sys
tem. For a laxative Simmons Llvrr
Iiegulator is bkttkr than Pili-s. It
doeg not gripe, r.or wwlcn, but greatly
refn-shes and strengthens.
Kvery pafSC ',a'4
stamp on th wrnprM'r. J. II.
Zeiliu & Co., I'fiiladi li.hia.
lflii