TIRED MOTHERS. A little elbow leans upon your knee. Your tired knee, that has so much to bear; A child'a dear eyes are looking lovingly from underneath a thatch ol tangled hair. Perbapa you do not heed the velvet touch 01 warm, moiat Angers, folding youra to tight; Tou do not prize thia blessing overmuch ; You are almost too tired to pray tonight. Sut It la blessedness I A year ago I did not see it as I do today; We are so dull and thankless and too alow To catch the aunshine till it slips away," And now it seema surpassing strange to me That, while 1 wore the badge of motherhood, 1 did not kiss more oft and tenderly , The little child that brought me only good. And if some night, when you sit down to rest. You miss the elbow from your tired knee. This restless, curling head from off your breast. This lisping tongue that clatters constantly; If from your own the dimpled Jgands had slipped And ne'er would nestle in your palm again; If the white feet Into their grave had tripped, .. I could not blame you tor your heartache then! I wonder so that mothers ever fret At little children clinging to their gown. Or that the footprints, when the days are wet. Are ever black enough to make them frown. If 1 could kiss a rosy, restless foot And hear a patter in my home once more; If I could mend a broken cart today, - Tomorrow make a kite to reach the sky, There la no woman in God's world could say 1 h She was more bliasfully content than L But, ah, the dainty pillow next my own Is never rumpled by a shining head I My singing birdllng from Its nest baa flown; The little boy I used to kiss Is dead 1 -Mrs. Hay Riley Smith in Baltimore News. 00000000000000000000000000 "It's a troublesome thing to have, Is conscience abnormally developed," ruminated Olivia. "Next to being com monsuuible or trying to be dignified there's nothing bo likely to render one ridiculous and unpopular. I almost Wish It was possible to have one's con science shaved like a beard, or ampu tated like a corn, or pulled out like a defective tooth. Personally, I'm rath er tired of being a perpetual slave to the thing called conscience." "What's the matter now?" I queried. Xou see, I knew Olivia very well have known her since she was an Infant In arms, In fact and I could read the signs of her mental unrest. I knew she had been "opening her mouth and put ting her foot Into It" once more, as the Irishman said. Olivia Is rather unfor tunate that way always. If there's any tongue troublo going any aere, she's pretty sure to pick It up some how or other. "Oh, It's nothing hew at least not more than a half a dozen hew brain pangs or uoiiucltuiv pnlus," she replied, 'i have ruoroly uwii reflecting rather saiUy upon tlixJ tlrilpfulness of poese-su-Ing a conscience iu good working order . - . J ... . .1 1 . . 1 1 .. , 1 -nA WUl'li HUCU IHI UIIIIMU IS UiBLUIUliy ttliU ueciueuiy qui oi uisuiuu auu wueu uuo (loosn l Know now to control it. iu iu least." A dear little girl Is Olivia, all the more lovable, perhaps, because of the Inconsequence which Is naturally bers. She "rambleB on sweetly," as her sis ter says of her when conversing with her Intimates Just thinking aloud. I knew I should get to the bottom of her latest troublo presently If only I didn't Interrupt and send her oft on another track at a tangent, so I merely smiled sympathetically and waited In silence. vi ucy a tt am u vuuu, .wv Biguvu presently, "I don't believe I was a bit popular, although I think most people liked me. And I know I didn't havo half the fun some of the other girls did, and all because my conscience was lloated,' as my older brother said. "I never left my Sunday school les son unlearned or my music lesson uu practiced because I wanted to go violet turning or coasting Saturday after noon," she continued, with a sigh. "I was too conscientious for that. And I always owned up to the mischief I'd done and refused to share In the tri fling cousequences of the mischief I Hadn't done for the very same reason. When I became a trifle older, I passed low In many an examination Iwcause I wouldn't make use of borrowed lan guage or look at my books the very last thing. A little later I earned unpopu larity among my follows because I never would say I was glad to see any ene when I could not say so honestly," And now "And the worst of It all Is that I don't believe. I ever was or ever will be one bit the better for all these con science troubles," was the commence ment of the nest "ramble," for the sake of which she left the previous one unfinished. "As a tittle child worrying over my Sunday school lesson 1 cor- ' talnly sinned just as nmrh on the side of spiritual pride and childish 'puffed- . upedness' as I would have done on the grounds of neglect of duty had I enjoyed my Saturday afternoons as the other children did. It Is on open ques tion If I wouldn't have been a really belter girl. bad 1 sometimes kept still, shout mv own Rinnll wrontrdolmrs n well ns tacitly owned up to a few which I hadn't committed. The slightly plmilsaleal attitude of mind came injti:i. imu jnu.v uv;tuu over im v am. :h!m' J wouldn't borrow and the frih knowledge I would have none of. and, Hltlniujrli I never did say I was fdad to siv tiny one falsely. I've strain ed the truth and cracked my con science's futmy bone many a time try ing to think of some other convention ally plcnsint thins! to say. And now" "Well, what Is Itr I pressed her, de termined to fathom the trouble at last "What has happened 'nowf " 'But she merely shook her head mournfully and rambled on. "It's a point of conscience with me. It always has been, to look at all things from both sides, and. In consequence, auay time I've looked at a given tjaeatlon from both sides of the fenc4 fencf jcsffl I've Impaled myself upon WOMAN WITH I A CONSCIENCE. I 1 1 It Was Too Nice For Practical X 1 1 Purposes. X have writhed under thi knowledge that people thought I was sailing with the wind, and so on. " 'You run with the bare and hunt with the hounds, don't you?' a girl said to me last week, and, mean as she was, I understood Just how she thought It was true. And yet I was only follow ing out the dictates of my abnormal conscience and trying to be just "Another girl last week asked me If the powder on her face showed, and When I said yes she fairly hated me. My conscience didn't allow me to say no, and It never occurred to me until long afterward that I might have pleasantly brushed off the powder for her which did show and left the pow der which didn't show alone without saying anything at all. Two days ago my brother's wife asked me what I thought of her complexion, and be cause my conscience . compelled me to tell her the truth she went home with out bidding me good night or speaking to me again. She hasn't spoken, to me since, In fact. And things have gone on after this fashion until I am tired of it. "When 'Robert Elsmere' first came out, It was a point of conscience with me not to read It, and every one called me 'saint' and 'prig' until life was a weary burden. A week or two ago some of us were talking of It and It oc curred to me that it was a point of conscience not to condemn a thing un read. The consequence was that I suf fered tortures on account of dislocated religious principles for a whole week. Then It occurred to me that It was a point of conscience not to let anything shake my faith or Interfere with my religious stability, and that particular conscience trouble gave way to an other. I always have one or more on hand, as you know." I did know. I never knew Olivia when she didn't have a whole sheaf of such trials and tribulations on band. I was dying to hear all about the last new conscience wrench, and she would not come to the point I did not dare to hurry her for fear of never hearing of It at all. ' ' "Wnen my friends and relatives make fun of Delsarte exercises or the new est form of athletics, my relentless conscience always Impels me to try these things personally, just so that I can discuss them Intelligently and without prejudice. In consequence I'm seldom without a backache or a sprain ed muscle or something equally pleas ant. Let a politician, a private Indi vidual, a cause or .anything else, for that matter, become unpopular, and my tyrannical conscience compels me to champion It or him or them. As a result bnlf the people I know are con tinually writing me down as a miser ably disputatious and disagreeable per son." Which was putting the matter entire ly too strong. But then that's Olivia's way. It's a point of conscience with her to make the trorot -of hovoolf toe fear she should be untruthfully com plimentary. "It's always been so," she moaned now, beginning to sob a little, "but now It's worse than ever. Now" "If you don't- come out with It now," I broke In, unable to restrain my Impa tience much longer, "I shall go stark, staring, raging, raving mad and either kill you or myself. Now" "Now," said Olivia, breaking down utterly and crying as though her heart would break, "now Charley and Harry have both proposed to me. Tbey did It a month ago. I put them both on pro bation because I liked them both, and It was a point of conscience with me to treat them both just alike and fairly, although I can't help saying that I really like Barry a little bit the better, and now they botb accuse me of flirt ing, and neither of them will speak to me at all. And It's all because my unfortunate conscience won't let me alone." " . ' , "Well, dearie, there's one recompense anyhow,", I volunteered consolingly when I had comforted her by promis ing to set matters right with the one she "liked a little bit the best." "Peo ple can't help respecting any one who's so Intensely conscientious and so very much In earnest about It as you are." "Oh, I don't know about that." re torted Olivia, relapsing Into a modified condition of gloominess again. "I don't know about that at all. Of course, the men who like you say that sort of thing to your face very often, but they're a great deal likely to call you tt silly little priggish Idiot behind your back, and the girls one knows don't even pretend to respect t one. They simply say you're a miserable, contemptible little prig to try to be so much better than other folks and that you make everybody uncomfortable about you and let It go at that. No: there Isn't much comfort In being more conscientious than other people, and I sometimes wonder If the best people In the world, as well as the happiest, aren't the people who have only just enough conscience to keep them rea sonably honest and klud aud not too Mg an allowance to live comfortably with." And really, despite Hie fact that I firmly believe Ironclad consciences to be necessary. In great numbers, to the proper conduct and salvation of this gay and sinful but altogether adorable world, at least In this present day and generation. It seemed to me that Olivia had either proved her case or some thing very like. I don't In the least know how to reconcile the two aspects of the subject, however. Perhaps some of the rest of you can help me out Chicago Evening Post. Abraham' Hlatory, A schoolboy at a prize examination furnished the following biography of the patriarch Abraham: "He was the father of Lot and bad two wives. One fwas called Ishtnale ajthe other Ha- ar. tie sept one Lt jjjme, and ne rned the other lntortlie g-ert. where i -v orenrae a puiar oj, mjj in me aay' 1 , a and splllnrofJBrey night .-- NJtn's Journal ) ' INVOCATION TO SLEEP. r . ! 4 Come, Sleep, and with thy sweet .iM5ig Lock me in deUght awhile; '' Let tome pleasing dreamt beguile All my (ancles, that from thence 1 may feel an influence, All my powera of care bereaving! Though but a ahadow, but a eliding. Let me know tome little joy I We that suffer long annoy Are contented with k thought Through an idle fancy wrought; Oh, let my joys have ome abiding! i John 1- Metier. OToToToTofoyooVoToYofoToTo BOX CAR l0. 114. , BY' SI. QXAD. o ' . COPTEIQHT, 1900, BVC. B. UT A la, .1 0A0AOA0 AOAOAO OA'pAoAO AOAoAa i You have read, of iadveatures and mysteries connected witU loci-motives, but on the B. and Q.-road we had a plain, ordinary frelghtvcar watch camel to be talked about more than all the rest of the rolling stotk put together. It was a stoutly built box car, painted a dark brown, and the huiubei on sides and ends was 1414. 'he first trip of the car was down to Petersburg, to be! loaded with wheat (There' yere six empty cars In all on the fain, all wheat cars, and they ere in -the 'mid dle of a string of 30 cars.- Flit ?n miles! north of Petersburg was thex-rossingj of the M. P. road. At, the crying all trains had to slacken speed, a.'d whem this particular train d)-ew uer stearaj was shut off, and the sjpeed of 20 miles! an hour was reduced jto ten, . No car! had ever jumped the track at the cross-: ing, but on this occnslod o. 1414 broke away from the car shea I ant? be hind, jumped the track's and in a dis tance of 50 feet over jthe hasjj baked earth, to bring up against h' sv!t'h man's shanty and demolish It-; No oth er car left he tracks. The division su perintendent and mister , oechnuic swore that it was utjter norsense to talk of a single car cutting itself out of a train In that fashion, but they bad to swallow their words. Tha only dam age to No. 1414 was the broleri coup lings and when pulled bacfc n the tracks she was ready; to in'e 1ght qff. No reason could tj given Whj she had cut loose, and thei-e was ?onsP' r- able gossip over the Incident j, Y The next affair In th hi "; ' -li box car occurred aboiji :."" it and gave her a ghostly smiling the whole length of the Hue. She jpud bton unloaded at Beamer's Station and left on the siding to be picked up.: It Uv. ri pened that she was the only cjar there, i and when the station agent cjjosed for ! the night he saw thai her wlrJeis v ere I securely Diocuea against uie ; rising f wind. At midnight, uniierJitJodrhliig Influence of a gale, that ciirt'jlluilied; over a tie with all her wheel:, rau 'up: to the switch, jumped the track- at tht j frog, and after plowiug aloins for 5 feet she took fhe rails of he main) track and went scooting to the ;m ;J She had a clear road to Elraer, 30 ru'.U'.i away, but she didn't travel jhe whe'e" distance. If she bad, she wiuld buvii smashed Into the express, hive inil-t from Elmer No. 1414 left trj; rails tit what was called the B!g Culvert, to ik a header off the stone bridge into the creek and next day was foui,d a quar ter of a mile down stream.; Charges were made agalnBt the station aeitt for carelessness, but he had had help to block the wheels. The bly cedar tie was at hatid with the ma.ks of tie wheels as tbey bad ground tver It It was easy to trace tfie car frOn the frog to where she bad gradually, olrobed up on the main track. There bM been no carelessness, but there wai myBtety. There was nothlr g wrong with the rails where the car had left the main track, and when the car Itself was found and overhauled she ladn't been damaged to the amount of I cents. ' I Railroad men like a mysvry retard ing car or locomotive, but tailroad offi cials detest one. When No. 1414 was hauled back on the track, tie men were for branding her with tjie title ' of "Ghost." but an order wrnt up and down the line to keep ham's oil. Give f car or an engine a bad name, iud you pave the way to som-body being killed. While no one Oared chulk mark this car, her eccentricities became known over every mile of the road, and employees were gosslplug'as to what she would do next The next thing after jumping the culvert was a trage dy. She had been loaded with shilled com In bulk at RomersvIRe for Chica go, aud before the doors were tipsed four hoboes enscouceit themselves among the corn. It was a 2 1 hours' Vide, sud they had a soft bed of It. NoJl414 was attached to a freight train ajbout 7 o'clock lu the evening and wn: the last car, or next to the caboose. No cue was really afraid of tier, but here was a bit of uneasiness as site was picked up, and special care was aken to see If her brakes were In good rder and her Journal boxes W'll parked. Away she went with the others, aud nothing happened until the train leach ed Iron Hill. It Lmi to side track there for a passengci train aixl tn pick up three or four ours, in backing down the long siding No. 14 14 suddenly left the track, DreaKiug loose trout tie ear ahead and the cal .e behind anil run ning off at right ntirhs, IVriuijately, she did not ruu over the main (track, but took j the otw " lo and brought up ajra'i.?'- C0 .,hp aud reared up on eJ 5- , rtort b there like a ladder piut'ti tcltiM a house and had toie reported ' is a J-ib for the wrecking ew. Next day. when she was haulfl back on tti track and In spected $e dead bodies of tbc hoboes were dlsfovered. Tbey find been smotb- ; ered unfer tne corn, l The faster inechriuU set to work to dIscoTr why No, 144 was a track juinpr. This was Ler third Jump, and It wa: suspected that ouietti,u must , 1 with her wneU. ShtlwM taken to the shop and tiffed off the trucks, and axles and wheels were In spected down to a fine hair. ' The wheels were absolutely true, and so were the axles and the bang of the trucks. No better box car was ever built, but No. 1414 was not sent back on the road for a few weeks. The offi cials waited until the gossip had died out. There was talk of giving her a new number, but that would have been admitting that she was a "queer" car. fter a vacation of eight weeks the sir w.as loaded with flour for Wells rllle and made the trip without Inci dent. She was reloaded with shooks for a Chicago cooper, but not wtthout an adventure. There was a rich old widower at Wellsvllle 'named Carney, and he had a lovable daughter named Mary. While the girl was In love with a young fellow named Phillips, the fa ther wanted her to marry a man of his own choice. The result was an elope; ment and perhaps the only one of the kind ever heard of. With the conniv ance of the station agent Phillips and the girl were locked up In No. 1414, provided with food and water, and while the wrathy old father was rldiug over the highways with a shotgun in his hands and , blood In his eye the happy lovers were on their way to Chi cago to be married. , Two weeks later the car cut up rusty again. ' She was loaded with agricul tural Implements aud bound west and was In the middle of a train. After running along as smoothly as you please for 30 miles she suddenly balk edthat Is, her wheels gripped the rails as If both brakes had been twist ed by a giant's band, fire flew from the rails, and, as the coupling on the next car ahead gave way, the train broke In two, and there Was cussing to beat the band. There was no earthly excuse for such conduct on the part of 1414. Her journals' were well packed, the brakes off and the track all right When the train was coupled up. she moved off with the other cars like a snake going over the grass, but after a ten mile run she gripped again and again broke the train. She was tried again, and for the third time she cut up rusty. This happened near a sid ing, and she was cut out of the train and pulled in and left there. In the cutting out not one of ber wheels would turn. They simply slid along the rails. When the conductor report ed the adventure he was given to un derstand that such stories didn't go. It was held that his train crew ought to have sense enough to discover what i.was wroug, and the five of them barely Ceseaned a ten dnv lav off. Thev es caped It because a mechanic was sent down from the shops who reported that, while be could find nothing wrong with the car, she had certainly gripped and balked and broken, the -train,- as reported. When hauled off the siding, she rolled to her destination without causing the slightest -trcuble. It had become cerraki that car No. 1414 was" a "queer critter." and every body along the line was buy guessing What would happen next Two weeks after her fit of sulks she was billed for Chicago with a load of potatoes. She had rolled along for 100 miles without the slightest hitch when the freight train going east passed the express going west both under full speed on the double tracks. Of a sudden No. 1414 cast one of her fore wheels. It was on the Inner side, and that wheel went smashing Into the drawing room car and killed three passengers. It Is not once in ten years on any railroad that a car wheel files off; It was one chance in a million that this wheel should fly off at that particular spot and that particular angle, but that was what happened. Strangely ., enough, the freight train was not "wrecked. Even with a wheel gone the car held to the rails and mads a run of ten miles. There was a cry of "hoodoo" all along tne line, nut the car was repaired aud run out again. She was an object of curiosity from end to end of the road, ana mere were engineers who said they would rather have a ghost In the cab than that car lu the train behind.. It was a month before No. 1414 made another kick. Then she grinned the rails and broke a train, and that on a down grade. She was heavily loaded with grludstones. and. as a siding Imp. pened to be bandy, she was shoved off by herself. This siding was half a mile long and ended at a mort:ss. A buffer had been placed at that end, of course, but four hours after the ear bad been left and. as another train was ready to pick her up. she could not be found. There was the siding, but where was the car? There had been no wind of account, but when they came to closely investigate they found that car No. 1414 had run down on the buffer with force enough to uproot it and had then taken a bender into the quagmire. A comer of It was still visible, but before the wreckers got there the entire body of the ear was ten feel below the sur face and still going down, it might , have .perhaps been recovered and Its freight saved, but when the superin tendent was told how things were he telegraphed to the wreckers: "If she doesn't eotii? easv, let her go io !" I don t know whether she went as far down as that or not. but the last soundings placed her at 33 feet, and she was given up as a total loss, and everybody felt relieved. Damping Miiatera a Tbonaand Teara Clilnesp ucwsjinpors are a Cbinese puzzle. But. as In tbe press of more civilized rt'Kious. tbe advertisement columns are singularly Ulustrntlve of tbe life of fbe people. The way In which the heathen Chinee adheres to tbe calling of his forefathers Is shown In an announcement In a weekly of large circulation In the Celestial land. A celebrated dancing master, Hung-Foo-Cboo, announces that he la to hold a religious service, to which he Invltea all and sundry, In honor of the one thousandth anniversary of the death of bis ancestor, who was, tbe first of tht family to take no tbe iroftsslon. 0. W. EA8TH1M Q. B. DlHICK DIMICK & EASTHAM . ATTORNEYS AT LAW Commercial, Bui Estate and Probate Law Special ties, Abstract of Title made, Honey Loaned. , Reference, Bank of Oregon City OREGON CITY, OREGON J. C. BRADLEY'S Livery, Feed and Sale Stables Nearly opposite Suspension bridge First-Class , Rigs of All Kinds ' OREGON CITY, OREGON : OR. FRANCIS FREEMAN DENTIST. Graduate of the Northwestern Univer sity Dental School, also of American Col lege of Dental Surgery, of Chicago. Willamette Block - Oppoiite Poitcffiot Oregon Citt, Obeooh. G. N. GREENMAN (Eatabllabed 186ft , rBB PIONEER EXPRESSMAN AND . DRAYMAN ' - Pamela Delivered: to All Farts of tba Cltj ORKUON CITY ... . ORKOOS "'"; COMMERCIAL ilANK OFOREGON CITY CAPITAL $100,000 Tranaae.ta a General Banking Bualneaa Loam Bi&6n: Hlilt dlaeuunted. Makea ool lootlone. Bii)nioid hellr exchange on all polnU id the United State and Kurope and on Hon "ing. PepoatM aaiMiveU uld to cheek. Bask open torn v a u.ioi P. M. t. 0. UMMN t, FRED J. HEY KB. xt Uaahlaa C. S. SEAMAN N, M. D. Calls promptly attended at allhoura EYES fated and. penperly fitted with GLASSES Offloe Hotire 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. ' Willamette Building - Opposite Postoffloe OKEGON CITY, OREGON E. I. SIAS Watchmaker and Jeweler Postofflce Building CANBY . - OREGON James Murrow Painting and-Papering If you want first-class work The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co.'s Strs. Regulator & Dalles City Dally (except Sunday) between The Dalles, 1 Hood River, Cascade Locks, Vancouver and Portland Touching at way points on both sides Ot the Columbia river. - Both of tbe above steamers have been rebnll and are tn excellent ahape for the season of 1900 The Regulator Line will endeavor to give its patrons the best service possible. Fnf rnrafnrf Runnnm a 11 .1 Pl.a.nM travel by the steamers of The) tlegnlator iine. The above iteamera leave Portland Ta. m.and Dalles at 8 a. m.,and arrive at destination in amule time for outgoing trains. ruriiana umce, ine vanes umce Oak St. Dock. Court Street. A. C. A IX A WAT Oeneral Age nt . SOUTH AND EAST SOUTHERN PACIFIC U). Shasta Route Trains teave Oregon City for Portland and way stations at 8:24 l.u. and 6;03 r.jf , Lv Portland 8:30 a.m. 7:00 r.M. " Oregon City 9-.22A.I'. 7:62 r.al. , Ar Ashland 12:3t A.. 11:30 a.m, " Sacramento 5:00 P. H. 4:S5 A.at. " 8an Francisco 7:4b p.m. 8:1 p.m. " Ogden 5:48 a. m. 11:45 a.m. " Denver 9:00 A.M. 9:00 a.m. " Kansas City 7:52 am, 7:85 A.M. " Chicago ' 7:45 A. M. 9:S0 A, u. " Loa Angeles 1:20 f.st. 7:00 a.m. ' El Paso 0p.m. e.OO p.m. " Fort Worth 0:80 a.m. :80 a.m. " City of Mexico 0:58 a.m. 9:55 a.m. " Houston :00.M. ,4:00 A. M. " New Orleans 5:21 p.m. 6:25 p.m. " Washlugton 6:42 a.m. 6:42 a.m.' " New lork 12:43 p.m. 12:48 p.m. Pi, 11 . . . "'" na jourisi tars on both tralna. uir ears, bacramento to OciUn ...J n p.. nd tourist cars to Chicago, St. Louis, New "mu ana nasmngton. Connecting at San Francisco with aeveral Steamship lines for Honolulu, Japan. China Philippines, Ceatral and Sonih America. See K. Li HoopssoAtuiua, agent at Oregon C ty station, or address C. H.XARKHAM, G. P.A Portland, O Loet, on Main atreet, a flO-greenback, leet eaiaraay. finder please leave at rier-Herald offices reward Co1 BANK OF OREGON CITy Jam BAHKIM8 HOUSI II THB CITf tAIB CP CAPITA! ttofinM BVMPIVB pOJUOM rtetldeal, flM-prealdenl Chab. H. CaWa Quo. A. Hti 1. O. CiOr.'lH A Oeneral Banking Boaineea tranaaotsd uepoaiti BeoelTea Subject to Check. Approved Bllla and Notes Discounted. County and City Warrant! Bought. Leant Made on Available Beourltv Exchange Bought and 4old. Collection! Made Promptly. rirtS"". S0l,f AvlUbl In Any Part the TelegraphtoBj.ob.ange Sold on Pottlani Itl nwiKD . nicaao anl New York. Interest Paid on Time Depoaite. New Plumbing and Tin Shop v A. MlHLSTIN I i JOBBING AND REPAIR! N a Specialty i Opposite Oaufleld Block OREGON CI T Y ' VV. II. YOUNG'S I Livery & Feed Stalta Finest FuneratfTurnouts in city OREGON CITY. OREGON ssential t-fe-ot co.ufcrf. mid health. I flstimatea n patting iu Pluinlting Wurkand fittings for 'arse und anu!! hrnct ulll te foicad surrtfaastng'y low when quality ot work ami material ued ia .!ODiiiurd WewDulil be pUinaeii to bave'aa epporiauitji toaubraitflKure. . F. C. GADKE r C. D. & D. C. LATOURETTE ' A1T0RHET8 AT LAW Commercial, Beat Estate and Probate Lav BpeoiaUlea Ofle la Comsiarelal Bank Building mims cot . une M.C STRICKLAND, : ft, D ( Hospital and Private Experience.) Us Brofeaalonal service to tbe people on cur and vieinny. special aueniu Jsl io Catarrh and Chronlo diseases. lest of references given. Offlee ta Willamette BuUdlnf. . OBoa) hourst 10 tOtfe, wp.i tllOOIf CITY OUOOt 0, SCHUEBEL ATTORVFV AT LAW OREGON CITY - OREQOT DK, GEO. HOEYE, , . DENTIST. Office In CauSeld Building, Main Street. ; Oregon OitT. Baia and Orowh Work a 8pcialtt, All work warranted and latlsfactiom ; guaranteed. DR. L. L. PICKENS , " V, DENTIST Barclay Building, Prlcas Moderate. All Operations Guaranteed. SHANK & BI83EU Embalmers and t Funeral Directors Telephones, Night or Day j Seventh Street ' 'Near Depot K You Want High Grade Stamp Photos 1 OREQON CITy, OREGON G. E. HAYES ATTORNEY AT LAW c.u. uaiiaiof. opp. Bank of Oregon CIW OREGON CITY OREGOX C ci-i 4 ' -' ' - !-