i I CltrUbrary A CITY GOURIEI 15 NO. A'i 16th YEAR. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1898. OREGON i J n 1 ii. r-w-"te"ie? 4 J-f! immm AN IRON BED' The prices at which we are selling iron vj beds, white enameled flinish, brass trim- med, is a revelation. These are safely goods to buy. ' : There are no defects in construction or A finish. Everything is as it should be. Price $4.00. J- BELLQFY & BUSCH The House Furnishers CANEMAH. 5 t OIU'OSITE COURT HOUSE CATS JM John Harrisburger loft this week for Honolulu, where he will continue to work as an electrican. The party consisting of Mrs. Jennie Binginan, Samuel Stevens, Mrs. Charles Midlam, Mrs. Julia Frost and Hattie, Ada and Oliver Frost returned from their outing at Wilhoit Springs Saturday. Samuel Stevens declares that he Saw (in his dreams) a large black bear. A good portion of the people of this place will soon leave for the hop fields. There has never been at any time in the past as much sickness in this place as there is at the present time. Mir.s Sadie Chase, of Oregon City, and Miss Livingstone, of 'Portland, have been engaged to teach the respective de partments of the Cauernah school for the ensuing term. 0, W.Ganong and Richard Allen left Monday for a two weeks' trip to the coast. Fred S. Smith left Tuesday for a trip to Colorado, for the benefit of his health. The war is over and people will begin to think of peaceful persuits of life. One thing, however, has been shown "that the affair was not such an inconsiderate brush after all." August 24. Pkogrebb. HARVEST NOTES. FROil CAVITE. I GARFIELD. Must be strictly pare WHITE, ful1 grown, and have painted in neat two inch black letters on either side the following words: "Have your fire insurance written by an agent who has had years of experience in writing policies and who represents only the largest and best companies in the world." F. E. DONALDSON, Agent OREGON CITY, OREGON : ...Bicycles With Wings. '1 The nearest approach to flying yet attained. The experts who perfect ed and the makers who produced the Chainless Bicycle are public bene factors. No noise. No breaks. No friction caused by exposed driving parts. No attention necessary. "You buy the wheel the Columbia Chainless does the rest." Not an hour of time taken to keep the Chainless in order for a year; More durable. More handsome in appearance. Less expensive "in the end." Absolutely satisfactory under all conditions of use. The Columbia Chainless stands tonay as the greatest achievement of ' a mnrina's nldPBt, and most modern and complete bicycle factory. "You U!3C 1 Uw vviuiu wiw viuuuivuu j n t . " America's oldest and most modern and complete bicycle factory see them everywhere." lhey are STANDARD OF THE WORLD. The roads are very dusty out here. There are so many going tothe mountains) some hunting and fishing, more are go ing for huckleberries. There has been several in this neigh borhood inquiring for hands to pick hops. William Covey, from Barlow, was visit ing his parents and brother's family here. He was also hunting around for hands to go pick hops near Barlow. Mr. and Mrs. Geo Kurgbaum's daugh ter, Mrs. Possor, and husband, have re turned to Oregon after being absent 8 years. We welcome you home Mr. and Mrs. Possor. Mrs. Emma Boyer was married last week to Mr. Keith, from Vancouver. She will go there to live as soon as her crop is taken care of. We wish them good luck. We think there will be another wedding at Garfield soon from the looks of things around. There is one couple here that is pretty sweet on each other. We won' t call any names. Mrs. 0. Kurgbaum has been on the sick list the last week. She is on the mend now. John Palraateer has been feeling worse the last few days. Mrs. Pierce, Mrs. John Palmateer's mother, is visiting here. She resides in Portland. Mrs. D. A. Jones was visiting her brother, J. A. Inglish, a few days last week. Miss Jessie Ourrin, of Currinsville, was the guest of Miss Ethel Jones last Friday and Saturday. We are anxiously waiting for the threshing machine here on the hill, so some of the folks can go to the huckle berry patch and also take a rest and catch some trout. Roxie. 1 August 20. Reports From Farmers Concerning Crop Yields, etc. F. A. Mattoon, of Viola, was in town Friday, and states that the wheat threshed in that neighborhood, has yielded from 20 to 25 bushels to the acre. ..' Josi Brothers, who conduct a dairy on the Apperson place at Mount Pleasant, have demonstrated that two crops can be raised off the same piece of ground in Clackamas county in one year. Last w'nter they sowed a piece of ground to rye, which was cut for hay early in June. The, stubble was immediately plowed under, and the ground planted to corn. The stalks of corn are now sev eral feet high, and will make excellent feed for the cows. Will Vaughan, who was in from Mo lalla, reports that wheat is yielding 18 bushel to the acre, and the oat crop is very short. Henry Wolfer, of Needy precinct, was in town Monday, and reports that the fheat crop is about one third short, Henry Will, of Aurora, was in town Monday, and states that the hop crop is very good in quality, but the quantity is. much less than last year. The hops are comparatively free from lice this year, and will remain so, unless there should be rainy weather between now and hop picking time. In some yards picking will begin next week, but the work will be more general on the fol lowing week. Hops will bring from to 9 cents, and several contracts have been filed in the county recorder's office for the latter figure. J. T.Woodward, of Carus, was in the city Monday, and reports that the aver age yield of wheat in that neighbor hood is about 15 bushel to the acre. Quite a number of Oregon City hop pickers are getting ready to go to the yards next week. This may account in some measure for the unusual num ber of recent weddings. ,Among the hop contracts recently filed in the recordei's oilice are Leonard Heinz, Macksburg, to E. Wattenberg & Co., 5000 pounds at 9 cents J John II. Daly, of Macksburg, 6,000 pounds to the same firm for same figure ; also Wil liam Thompson, of Needy, 5,000 pounds to the same firm for 9 cents. W. L. Starkweather, of Concord, was in town Wednesday, and states that the grain crop was very short in that neighborhood. J. S. Risley, the big farmer of that section of Clackamas county, only threshed 1500 bushels of wheat and oats combined. Brief Extracts from Interesting Let ters Written H9me by the Vol unteers In the Phillipines. Numerous letters were received from the Oregon City volunteers at Cavite on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last week. They are still doing garrison duty at Cavite, and luxuriating in ba nanas and other tropical fruits. The water is evidently worm, and they sigh for a drink of Willamette juico pumped out of the basin . Lieutenant W. A. Huntley wrote an interesting descriptive letter of the is lands, the peoplo and conditions there, to his brother, C. G. Huntley. Captain L. L. Pickens has written the following to Mrs. E. C. Protzman, of the Portland Emergency Corps: I wish to thank you and the ladies of the Ore gon Emergency Corps for the noble work you did in furnishing us with a fund. It has been of untold value to us in fact, I don't know what we would; have 'done without the money Much suffering has been relieved by its use. No Rick man could possibly have eaten the food prepared for the men on that voyage. Herman K. Jones writes an interest ing letter, but does not relish the idea of remaining on garrison duty at Cavite He says that if a vote was taken on the question of remaining there, or coming home, the vote would be overwhelmingly in favor of returning to Oregon. He thinks, however, that all the volunteers who do not wish to remain, will be mus' tored out, as 5,000 soldiers will likely be left in the Phillipines. Herman says that they are doing garrison duty there, and are living much better than they were on board the transports. He has not seen a white woman since reaching Royal makes the load pure, wholesome and delicious. flOYAl - MM: FQVDER Absolutely Pi.ro ROYAL BAK1NO POWDFR CO., NPW YORK. Columbia t:haln AVheels 75.00 Columbia Tandeiua 185.00 Itertfurris 50.00 Vedettes $35.00 40.00 Jack-Mon'i $30.00 Jill Women 3a. 80 i Second-hand Wheels , $130.00 to $50.00 CHARM AN & CO , Cut-rats Druggists, Agents. i A FIRST-CLASS COMPANY Died 11 months after passing the examination. $2000.00 Policy 6.12 Dividend FROQ POND. Hop picking is quickly approaching. Many grower3 will begin picking about the 28 inst., others about September 5th. Quite a number of Frog Pondites intend vacating this burg for the benefit of the hop yard, and the pocket-book. Carl Short was through the neighbor hood Sunday looking for hop pickers for his uncle, Charles Tooze, of Wilsonville The thresher belonging to Meint Peters and Co. began threshing the first of the week. Messrs. Aden, Peters & Co. have re- turned from the coaHt and report having a fine time. Mrs. B. F. Baker and daughter, Lizzie, Fossil, Okkoon, June 2, 1898 were visiting friends in this neighbor hood Sunday. Miss Lizzie expects to return to Monmonth again this fall to attend the State Normal. Mrs. J. Fiiester, 'Agnes and Georga, of Maple Lane, were visiting with Mrs. II. G. Colton, Manager Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurancs Co. Portland, Ohegos. Dear Sib: On July 13th, 1897, Mr. W R. Popplewell, of thia nlace. took out $2000 insurance through special agent H T. Booth. Mr Popplewell died suddenly of appendicits, and Edward Sharp Saturday and Sunday T wish tn thank vou for company's draft for $2O0b.l2 tiie August JH. in a Angelise." $2000 being the full amount insured for, and the $0.12 being a dividend added by the Company in accordance with its policy r,f sliariniMta nrofita with all policy holders. The claim has $2000.12 Total paid ien paid sixteen davs from the time proofs were filed, and your promptness in the matter proves that it is best to insure in a first-class company, and 1 shall be pleased to enuorse me Massachusetts Mutual whenever opportunity offers. Yours very truly, W. W. Hoover, Executor of the etate of W. R. Popplewell New niiilng Discoveries in Clacka mas County. John Mack and 0. P. Moore filed no tices of quartz locations in the county clerk's office Wednesday on two claims in the Bald Mountain mining district, near the headwaters of the Clackamas. Mr. Mack is a well known mining man of Spokane, and has tested 17 different quartz ledges in that section during the past 35 days. The two claims recently located are rich in gold, silver and cop per, and Mr. Mat, says that the only drawback is ihe distance from transpor tation facilities. Development work will be pushed on the properties, and the Bald Mountain district may yet be come an important mining camp A. dozen claims cr more have been lo cated on different ledges in this district during the past few months. John Confer returned a day or two ago from a prospecting tour in the Cas cade mountains, and located a very promising gold-bearing quartz ledge on the Kellawah creek, a tributary of the Clackamas. REALITY TRANSERS. Furnished Every Week by Clacka mas Abstract & Tiust Co. .INSURE IN. THE MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COEPAHY ci SpriBQileld, Massachusetts. (Incorporated 185 1) H. C. CO LTON, Manager Rooms, 312-313 Chamber of Commerce ' . POT LAND, OREGON It Was a Giil. The editor of the Malheur Gazette thus announces his first-born : Last Monday evening another charm was added to the life of the Gazette family. We have been childless, lonely and disconsolate these many years, but now w ith this irane we take a new hitch in our overals and begin life anew as the father of a bouncing baby, which nature has cheated of the opportunity of having tho name of Dewv or Samp son, bemuse it was not built that way , being a girl that will cause us to) swap our editorial chair for a pair o i rnflitKT irnnw anrl t.ilrft rluvA'in cum on ! Q - - o o subsciiption. Will Wove to Portland. Wednesday morning's Oregonian has the following : P. F. Morey. who hai had his resi dence on the bluff at Oregon City for the past five or six years, has leased for a term of three years, from September 15th, the R. B. Knanp residence, which occupieb a whole block on Seventeenth stieet, north. The house and grounds coBt about $125,000, and form one of the finest residences in the city. The Mo rey residence in Oregon City is the fin est there, beautifully situated on the brow of the bluff overlooking the city, the "falls of the Willamette and along stretch of that stream. His reasons for removing to Portland are to secure the advantage of better educational facili ties for his family. The house has not been occupied of late, and some $1500 will be expended in thoroughly reno vating it before the new tenant moves in. A family will be placed in tho Ore- the Phillipines, and the native women gon City residence to take chargo of it do not come up to the standard of until Mr. Morey removes there again. beauty read about. The water must be very bad at Cav ite, for Ilea Norris writes home to his mother, that he would give almost any thing for drink of Willamette river wa ter. Lee Harding writes that the destroyed Spanish vessels in Manilla bay indicate that many of the Spaniards were asleep when Dewey made his attack, as eomo of the craft are still fastened to the bot tom of the bay with anchors, iVccording to tho correspondent of the St. Louis Globe Democrat, the Oregon volunteers have not been at Cavite all the time. He says that they had unu sual honor in the surrender, and were detailed to receive the arms of Spanish troops, and were subsequently detailed to do police duty. Ben Smith, the well known con tractor of Portland, who is repairing the East Side Railway Company's trestle near this city, has received a letter from his son who is with the volunteers at Camp Merritt, near San Francisco. He states the published reports con cerning the ill-treatment and discom fort of the volunteers there is all bosh, That borne of the ladies of the Emer gency Corps are spreading such reports to gain notoriety. He further states that the volunteers are supplied with substantial, wholesomo food, and that thev have all tho liberty consistent with military discipline. A number of letters were also re ceived from the boys at Cavite on Wed nesday of this week, 'ihe boys ex- A Sure Thine for You. A transaction in which you cannot lose is a sure thing. .Biliousness, sick head ache, furred tongue, fever, piles anda thousand other ills are caused by coc stlpation and Bluggish liver. Oascarets Candy Cathartic, the wonderful new lver stimulant anu intestinal tonte are by all druggists guaranteed to cure or money rotuniieil.. V, V. U. are a sure thing. Try a box to-day; 10c. Hoc, til) Sample and booklet free, AllLviii J For Over Fifty Years An Old and Well-Tried Remedy. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by mil- ions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens tho gums allayB all pain, cuies wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhcea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the World. Twenty- five cent 8 a bottle. Its value is in calculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsow's 8oothing Syrup, and take no other kind. To Cure ConntipHtluii Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartcl 10c or 25c. If C. 0. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. 45 cents round trip from Oregon City to Portland and return via Southern Pacific trains. One way rate 25 cents. Tickets now on sale at railroad depot. Trains leave Oregon City at 8:40 a. m., and 3:35 p. in., and arrives Irom Port land at 9 :23 a. 111. and 0 :o2 p. in. bave time by using the quicker routo. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Tub Best Salvk in the .world for Cuts, n...,',o Un.ju Trli.n-.-u S..H If I win. i press MiemseivcB as ueuig ureu 01 uun - Fever jjores, Totter, Chapped O & C It H Co to O L Soderberg, nwj of ne.' and mt of nwj, sec 31, 1 5 s, 3 e;$210. j;S Robinson to B E Robinson, nwj of sc. sec 11, 2 s, 0 e ; $::00. A E Stern to B 15 Robinson, i of sw , bw qr of se qr, sec 14, 2 s, 0 e; $100. A 51 and J E Witzig to C Schmidecke, lot 2, b!k7, Edgewood; $100. O A Jones to J W Jones, 1 -5th of w'ij of ne qr and ey of nw qr, 1 g, 2e; $1. J G Foster to L M Foster, 8 acres, sue 24, 3 , 1 e; $1. P, and 0 Roland to F Rakel.lot 18, e 17, blk 3, Parkphice; $400. Notice to Dog Owners. . f ''ill aH.1 aft t" September 1st, all dogs itin-t wtur license tag to be procured f out thcty treasurer, II. E. Stkakjht, Chaui.ks E. Bl-IIXH, j Chief of Police. garrison life. Everet Hickman says that they now attire themselves like the natives so as to Btand tho climate, and dress very scant. George A. Harding has received a package of curios from his son, Leo, which were forwarded from San Fran cisco, having been taken there by a comrade, who returned home on ac count of illness. The articles are cn exhibition at Harding's drug storo, and among the articles is a photograph of the bay showing the walls of Cavite, va rious sea shells, including the transpar ent kind, used to take the place of win dow glass ; also a loaded Spanish cart ridge, and a human jaw tooth taken from one of tho wall prison cells. A very interesting Cavite letter writ ten by J. H. Black to his mother, will appear next week. It was received too late for this ibsue. When You are out of sorts, feel tired, languid and dull you need Hoods Sarsa parilla, Americas Greatest Medicine. Get only Hood's. liood'a Pills are the best family cath artic and liver tonic. Gentle, reliable, sure. Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Tiles, or no pay required. 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