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About Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1901)
OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. JUNE 7, 1901 .Oregon Shout line aim Union Pacific TIME SCHEDULES FROM " depart Portland, Ore. aubivh ClilraRo- Salt Lake, Denver, Ft Portland Worth, Omaha, Kan- Spicial ens City, St. Louie, Chi- 4:30 p.m. 6a.m. cago and East. Atlnntio Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Express Worth, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago 8:10 a. m. 9 p. m. and East. St. Paul Walla Walla, Lewiston, " Fast Mail Spokane, Wallace, Pull man, Minneapolis, St. 7:00 ft. m. p. m. ' Paul, Duluth, Milwan- . kee, Chicago and. East. Ocean Steamships p.m. All Sailing Dates subjeot 4 p.m. to change. For San Francisco Sail J, . -. every 6 days. Daily Columbia River Kx.8unday steamers. p- 8 p m. Ex. Sunday Saturday To Ajtoria mA w 10 Vm- Landings. Willamette River. 6.46 a.m. 4.80 p.m. Ex.Sunday Oregon Cily, Newbe;g, Ex. Sunday Salem, Independence and way-landings. . Willamette and Yam- 7 a. m. h Rjyers. - S:30 P-ra- Tnes.Thur. niversj. Mo.iWe(1. and Sat. Oregon City, Dayton nd Fri and way-landings, - . , c.4o a. m. Willamette River 430 p. m. Tues. Thur. Mon., Wed end Sat, Portland to Corvallia andFri, and way-landings. Leave Snake River Leave Blparia Lewiston :40a. m. Rlparia to Lewiston. 8:30 a.m. Daily. . Daily 72 Hours - ' POBTLAND to CHICAGO - . ' No change of ears For rates, berth reservations, etc, call at ticket omoe, Third ana Vt osliirmton Streets. A. L. CRAIO. 6. T. A.. , Portland, Oregon The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co's Strs. Regulator & Dalles City Dally (exoept Sunday) between The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks, Vancouver and Portland Touching at way points on both sides of the Columbia river. Both of tbe above steamers have been rebnll and art In excellent shape for the season of 1900 Tbe Regulator Line will endeavor to give its patrons uie nest service possinie. For Comfort, Economy and Pleasure travel by the steamers of The . Regulator The above steamers leave Portland 7 a m.and Dalles at 8 a, m.,and arriveat destinations ample mse ior outgoing trains. . Portland Office, The Dalles Office oak St. Dock. . . CourtStreet. A. C. AUAWAT " General Agent SOUTH AND EAST VIA "v ' Southern Pacific Co. Shasta Ronte Trains leave Oregon City for Portland at 7 0 and 9:22 A. M., and 6;80 P.M. Lt Portland - 8:80 a.k. 8:30 . If. Lv Oregon City 8:22A.M. 9:14 P.M. At Ashland 12:55 a.V. 12:85 p.h, " Sacramento 6:10 P. M 5:00 a.k. " San Francisco . 7:4b P.H. 8:46 p.m. " Ogden 4:46 A. M. 7:00 A. K. " Denver . 9:30 A.M. 9:15 A. X. " Kansas City 7:25 A M, 7:5 A.M. ' " Chicago 7:42 a.m. 8:80 A. u. " Los Angeles ' 2:00 p.m. 8:05 a.m. " El Paso 0:00 p.m. 6:00 P.M. " Fort Worth 6:30 a.m. 6:80 a.m. " City of Uexico 11:30 A. M. 11:30 A. St. " Houston 7:00 B. M. 7:00 a.m. ' New Orleans 6:30 P.M. 6:30 P. M, " Washington 6:42 a.m. 6:42 a.m. " New lork 12:10 P.M. 12:10 P.M. Pullman and Tourist Cars on both trains Chair cars. Sacramento to Oeden and El Paso: and tourist cars to Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans and Washington. Connecting at Pan Francisco with several Steamship Lines for Honolulu, Japan, China, Philippines, Central and Eouih America. See E. L. HoorENGABNia, agent at Oregon City station, or address C. H. MARKHAM, G. P. A., Portland, Or Guaranteed JM5(JD Salary yearly. Men and women of good address to represent ns, some to travel appointing agents, others for local woik locking after our Interests. 81100 salary guaranteed vearly; extra commissions and expenses, rapid advancement, old established hou.o. Grand chance for earnest man or woman to secure pleasant, permanent position, liberal Income and future. New brilliant lines. Write at once. STAFFORD PRESS, ' 23 Church Sta., Mew llaven, Conn WANTED TBTJSTWORTAY MEN AND WO men to travel and advertise for old established house of solid financial standing. Salary $7! a year and expenses, all payable in cash. Ko can vassing required. Give references and enclose lelf-aadretsed stamped envelope. Addreaa Man ager, I06 Canon Bldg., Chicago. "Best of Everything ' In a word this tells of the p?s senger service via, THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE 8 Trains Daily between St, Paul and Chicago comprising: : The Latest Pullman Sleepers . Peerless Dining Cars Library and Observation Cars ' Free Reclining Chair Cars The 20th Century Train "THE NORTH-WESTERN LIMITED" runs every day of the year. The Finest Train in the World Electric Lighted Steam Heated To Chicago by Daylight. The Badger State Express, the finest day train running between C hicago via. the Short Line. Connections from the west made via The Northern Pacific, . Great Northern, ' and Canadian Pacific Rys. This ia also one of the best lines between Omaha, St. Paul and Minneapolis ill agents sell tickets via "The North western Line." W. H. MEAD, H. S. SISLER. G. A. . T. A. 348 Alder St., Portland, Oregon. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas. W. W. Smith, plaintiff, V vs. -, Anile K. Smith, defendant. To Annie E. Smith, said defendant. In the name of the State of Oregon, vou are hereby required to appear and answer the com plaint niea a;ainst you in tne above entitled suit on or before the 28th day of June, 1901, that being the last day prescribed in the order of publication of this summons and if you fail to appear and answer said complaint, the plaintiff will apply to the Conrt for the relief prayed for therein, to-wit: A dissolution of the bonds of matrimony between you and tne pi al nil it. This summons is published by order of the Hon. Thomas A. HcBride, Judge of the 6th Ju dicial district of the state of Oregon, for the county of Clackamas, made and entered on the 8th day of May, 1901, and the first publication bo ing the 10th day of Hay, 1901. U BBN S SCMJUEbBL, Attorneys fox plaintiff. . NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Pursuant to an order of the Countv Court of Jackson County, Oregon, made and entered on tne atitn nay 01 April, lsoi, in tne matter 01 the es tale and guardiaushlp of Bessie Randall, Jr., mi nor child: of O. P. Randall, deceased, licensing me so to do, I will, from and after June 80th 1901, offer at private sale, and sell thereat to the highes': bidder, or cash In hand, the following desoribed real properly belonging to said estate and situated in the County of Clackamas, Slate of Oregon, to-witi Beginning 2.72 chains north of the southeast oorner of section 7, township 5 south of range t east Willamette Meridian; thence running north 18.62 chains; tlfence west 41.Q8 chains; thence south 1802 ohains; thenoe east 41.50 chains, to the place of beginning; the same be ing a part of the S of the D. L. C. of I. D. Murray and Maria T. Hurray, containing 89 aorea, more or less, save ana except a rlght-or-way deeded to Israel oiler February 10th, 1890, and recorded In Book 37 at page 89 of tbe deed of records of wid Claikamas County. That bids for said property will be received by me at Woodville. Jackson Connlv. Oreeon. and after s ld June 20th, 1901, 1 will sell and convey tne same to tne highest cash uitiuer therefor. MKS. BKSSIE HAM ALL, Sr., Guardian of Ihe Person and I- state of Bessie Randall, Jr.. Minor. Dated, May 11th, 1901. . CITATION TO HEIRS. In the Countv Court of the Stato of Oregon, for the Cbunty of Clackamas. In the matter of the guardianship of Stephen A. Lane, an Insane person, To the next of kin and all persons Interested in the estate of Stephen A, Lane, an insane person. In tbe name of the state of Oregon, you are hereby required and cited to appear In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas, at the court room thereof, at the court bouse In tbe said county of Clackamas, on Monday, the 10th day of June A. D, 1901, at 10 o'clock, a. m., of that day, then and thereto show cause, if any there be and you have, why a license for the sale of the real property 01 sal a btepnen A. Lane, towit. The north half of southeast quarter (nUof Bfl1.') and southeast auarterof southeast quarter (se of so4) of section 82, township 4 south of range 3 east of the Willamette Meridian, Clackamas County, Oregon, should not be ;ranted as as prayed for In the petition on file ereln . Witness, the Hon. Thomas F. Ryan, Judge of the Countv Court of the Slate of Ores: in. for the County of Clackamas, this 9th day of May A. D iwu. Attest, IT. H. COOPKK, Clerk. CITATION. County the County of Clackamas. In the matter of the estate of 1 Fredrick Bullard, deceased.) B, F. Bullard, the duly appointed, acting and qualified administrator of Ihe estate of Fredrick Bullard, deceased, having filed bis petition in the above entitled court praying for an order of snle of the following descriled real properly belong ing to said estate, to-wit: Lots numbered 3 and 4, of section 28, In town ship 3 south of range 4 east, Willamette Meridian, In Oregon, and eoulainiag 68.16 acres. Also be ginning at the most northerly comer of a 236 acre tract of land deeded by Vesty K. Ralney and 8. H. Ratney on the 6th day of May, 7i, by James Crawford in sections 17, 20 and to, township three south, range fonr east, Willamette Meridian, said deed being recorded on rages 41 and KL of book "K" ,of the records of deeds of Clackamas county, Oregon; thence south 6 degrees east 10 chains; thence south 69 degrees 30 minutes west 10 chains: thence north 6 degrees west 10 chains; thence north 69 degrees 30 minutes east 10 chains to the plaoe of Winning containing, 10 acres more or less. Also an undivided one half Inter est in the following described property situated in the county of Clac kamas, Oiegon. Andb'ing a part of the W m . M Wade D. L. (J., known as Claim Ho 39, and being a part of sections 10, 17, 20 and 21, In township three south, range four east of the Willamette Meridian, Uuuudtd and, de scribed as follows: Beginning at a point 10.13 chains sonlh of the northeast corner of Bald claim No. 39; running thence south 69 degrees 30 minutes weat 44 chains; thence south 6 dot rees east 20.09 chains; thence north 69 degrees 80 mluutes east 42.22 chains to tbe cast boundary line of the above mentioned D. L. C. ; thence along said line 20 chains to the place of beginning, containing eO acres, more or leas; The said petition ahove mentioned sets forth that It is necessary to sell said land to satisfy certain claims tiled against the above entitled es tate. It is therefore ordored by this court this 29th dayol Mav, lWI,that John Bullard, Fannie Akins, William liullard, B. V. Bullard. 8. E. Selliuau.W. M. Wade, Amy Ely, Rose Moehnke, and all others unknown, if any such there tie, and all per sons interested In said estate are hereby cited to appear befo re the above entitled court on the 21th day of June, 1H, at the hour of 10 o'clork a. ni of said day, at the court house in Oregon City, Clackamas County, Oregon, to show cause why an order should not be granted to the said administrator to sell the above described real es tate at private sale and that a copy of this order be published at least foursuocesiTe weeks in tbe Courier Herald, a aewspaper printed and pub lbbed In said county and tle. THOMAS F. RYAN, County Judge. Attest, K. H.Coopeb, Clerk, Dated, May 29th, 1901. Job Printing at the Courier-Herald LW NEWS OF Fiiday, May 31. At Philadelphia, a rowboat containing eight young people was swept over the Hat Kork dam in the schuilkyi river and seven of them drowned. Three fishermen were dtovned in Roekv River near Cleveland, O,, by the Upsetting of their boat. - The Hall of Fame of New York uni versity was dedicated yesterday. The American immortals who each have a tablet in it number 29. The London Times says that coalition of the European nations against the United States ia impracticable. From the Singapore branch of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank 50,000 have been stolen. French officers visiting Berlin are de- lighted with the consideration shown them. The old hostility has died out. Senator John L. McLanrin, of South Carolina, who calls himself a democrat though he professes the political princi ples of a very black republican, has is sued an address to the people of his state in which he calls his political ene my, Ben Tillman, Beveral kinds of a liar. Gov. McSweeney has refused to accept their resignations as U. S. senator and advised them to think it over. Tillman has replied te the governor in an open letter that he will refuse not to resign unless McLaurin backs out. There are nine aspirants in South Carolina to a teat in the U. S. senate. At Dayton, Wash., 40,000 pounds of wool were Bold at 13 cents . At Pierre, S. D., the Un;ted Copper Co., of Montana, anti-ttust, has organ ized with a capital of $30,000,000. In Malheur county an Eastern firm is buying about 11,01)0 head of youag stock at $20 for yearlings and $27 for two-year-olds. In the Bakeoven country 2500 horses have been gathered for the Eas tern market. - . . . The Am. Chemical & Spirit 03. of Evansville, In J., will be eloed, having joined a New York trust, and 400 men will be thrown out of work. The sheepmen of three Idaho counties have 1 ,000,000 pounds of wool, some of it of last season. . Fred Walcott, of Pocatello, Idaho, a braketnan, has sued the O. S. Line Co. for $40,000 for the loss of his leg in the Pocatello yard.,. J. Lindqulst, a watchman of the Alas ka Com. Co., aged 45, hanged himself to a sapling near Anchor Harbor. At North Yakima, Wash., Wm. Long, an old man, died from the effects of in juries received from being knocked over in the street by a runaway horse hitched to a light bugzy. ; .The department of agriculture esti mates that by June last year the green pea louse had done a damage in the At lantic coast states of $4,000,000. Thirty four Oklahoma cowboys passed through Portland on the way to their placer mine on Mission Creek near Cir cle City, Alaska. They have a hydraulic outfit. Japan has a surfeit of politics and as a consequence there Is a deadlock in ber cabinet. - Possible A merican heirs of the James Wood estate in England, worth $80,000, 000, are hunting up their pedigrees. At Vladfonte n within 40 miles of Jo hannesburg, on the railroad thence to Durham, Commander Delarey's forces attacked tbe garrison, inflicting a loss on the English in killed and wounded of 174. The Boers left 51 dead . The latter seem to be making progress in the south. In Cape Colony, near Colesburg, they are reported to have captured 500 horses. By the running away of three heavily loaded trolley cars at Wilmington, Del., two men werejtilled and 25 injured. Near Glenwood Springs, Colo., two men were killed and eight injured by a mine explosion. In Umatilla county, 2,250,000 pounds of wool have been clipped from 225,000 sheep. The county has 350,000 sheep. Wool at Pendleton is 6 1-2 to 10 1-2 cents. A seven-masted steel schooner will be built on the Atlantic coast to cost $254, 000 and of 11,500 tons displacement, Saturday, Jane 1. At Lookout. Modoc county, Cat., Cal vin Hall, aged 72 years, his three sons and a young man named B. D. Yantis were lynched by being hung from a bridge. They were professional thieves. Before the Chamber of Mines at Bulu wayo, South Africa, Cecil Rhodes advo cated the importation of Chinese coolies, and announced also that contracts had been let for 160 miles of new railroad to the Waukie coal fields.' A thrifty husband and wife of Che shire, England, bought in an obscure second-hand sbqp for 5 a blackened "Dei Pom pa" painting, for which, now it is cleaned, they ask 25,000. At the Obuchoff Iron Works, near St. Petersburg, the military killed 40 strik ers and wounded 150. In Covington, Ky., Mrs. Kate Hester shot and killed her husband, of whom fh was very jealous, her three-year-old daughter, and lastly put the revolver to ber head and blew out tier own brains. One of the resolutions passed at the annual convention of the Western Fede ration of Miners and the Western Labor Union, in sepsion at Denver, declares that steps should be taken politically to completely separate organized labor as a political body from all parties con trolled by tbe capitalist class, Idaho has 3,000,000 sheep. Sunday, June 2. Twenty-one American business men, representing many hundreds of millions of dollars and the New York Chamber of Commerce, were the guests of the king of England yesterdr.y. As a starter In that direction, John D, Rockefeller has given $200,000 toward promoting original research in problems of medicine and hygiene. When A.W. Grilling was about to be arrested on a street of Chicago on the charge of horsestealing, he turned his pistol against his temple and blew out his brems. The British war office disclaims offici al information of the reported severe Britiih defeat near Pretoria May 2, In which they lost 46 killed, 80 wounded, 600 prisoners and six guns. THE WEEK A company with a capital of $3,000,009 will build another shipbuilding plant on the Delaware river. From 200 to 500 Chinamen steal across our border from British Columbia every month. The Chinese exclusion act will be extended to Cuba. The President will not withdraw the American troops from Cuba until the Cuban constitutional convention has accepted the Piatt act in toto.- It must submit. The Cubans resent this. The ancient city of London has 26,000 population; London county has about the same as Scotland, a liltfe over 4, 600,000; Greater London, $6,500,000: Chicago, 2,074,000. - Monday, June 3. In a fire on the Isthmus of Tehaunte pec, 70 people were burned to death. Philips, the Chicago corn plunger on the bull side, unloaded 3,600,000 bushels and made $500,000. He is a bear now. For several days intense heat has pre vailed in Europe and many people have been killed by lightning. . Mrs. Annie L.Diggs, tha Kansas pop ulist prophetess, says Mayor Tom John son of Cleveland will be the next presi dent. An 18-mile pipeline has been con structed from the Beaumont, Texas, oil field to the Atlant'c ocean. Near Baker City, by means of a ditch from Powder Riyrr, 50,000 acres of land will be irrigated and put under cultiva tion. The Methodist church of America has already raised three-fifths of its stint of $20,000,000 for church work at the be ginning o the century . ' Tuesday, June 4. There is uneasiness in England over the recent military operations in South Africa. Miliiary hospitals in the United Kingdom are crowded with patients, a large numbor of whom are enteric fever cases from South Africa. The net earnings for the fiscal year of the $50,000,000 United States Rubber Company are but $62,605 J per cent. At McKeesport, Pa., Ben Setty, aged 38 years, barely escaped lynching for assaulting a four-year-old girl. : In the parlor of tbe Vernon Hotel, Chicago, Edward Forshay, an actor.shot and Killed Edna Stokes, an actress.wlth whom he was madly in love. On account of the strike, every paper mill but one at Holyoake, Mass., has shut down. . At Hartford, Conn , to 1800 striking machinists 10 hours' pay has been con ceded for a nine-hour day, and they have returned to work. In New York city, siiloin and round Bteak retail at 16 to 18 cents a pound ; porterhouse, 20 to 25 cents. At the Evangelical Lutheran General Svnod, In session at DesMoines, Iowa, Prof. E J. Wolfe said in his report on the general condition of the denomina tion that there was a woeful lack of god- minus in 11, me scram Die ior dollars leaving little time for care of bouIs. On the 18th, the Presbyterian creed revision committte will hold its first meeting at Pittsburg. . Hudson Maxim has sold to our gov ernment me secret ot the making of maximtie, tne most, powerlul explosive known, a shell filled with which will burst asunder any warship afloat. British iusileers acting as police in Tien Tsin ran afoul of French soldiers breaking into houses, and tried to stop them. A fight ensued ; a swarm of Ger mans came to the aid of the French. One dead frenchman and 15 men wounded. Russia has evidently determined to act in unison with tbe government of the United States in tbe settlement of the Chinese question. Near Dordrecht. Caua Oolonv. 32 nf vvoaenouse s yeomanry surrendered to 700 Boers. The English fear that the late movements of their wilv enemv have been a cover to an advance to tbe Oape, and that the British armies may V. 1 I l. iL. m . . nave w lursHKe tne iransvaai to pursue the Boer guerrillas devesting Cape Col ony. Jamestown, in the colony, was carj- iureu on uie za Dy uenerai Kritzinger, who looteu tne stores ana tne military magazines, thus securing needed sup plies for the Boers. Wednesday, June 5. In F.nfftnnrl. mini filin.lraila nf ft ma in all lines of business, have combined in "associations 'trusts. At Singapore a Malay doctor ran amuck and killed six people, besides wounding nine others, when some one cracked bis cocoanut with a club. The American Telephone and Tele. graph Company of New York has in creased its capital from $100,060,000 to IOU,UW,UUU. At Johannesburg, many miners who refuse to accept the low wages fixed bv military order, five shillings a day, have- gone on a strixe. At Metropolis. Illinois. Marshal W. E Oakes was mortally wounded by a shot in ttte Hack trom a revolver In the hands of A. M. Covington, but 'before he fell he wheeled about and killed the other, 1 A Y . I I . , At iron mount tin, rtiicn., eigtit men were killed by a powder explosion In a mine. Six miles from Spencer, Gunniton county, Colo., 20 masked men attacked a band of 5000 sheep and killed one-half of them. Two girls at play in Georgetown.Colo., were killed by being caught under a falling lumber pile. The Berlin Tageblatt denounces the plnn harbored by France of seizing the valuable Chinese island of ilai-Nau. Editor Gaylord Wilshire, of the Los Angeles Challenge, a radical socialist weekly paper, has challenged Wm. J. Bryan to a joint public discussion of the socialist question and stands ready to put up $10,000 which are to fall in Billy Bryan's pocket if he bests Wilshire, who claims to be a millionaire, A French mission has passed hun dreds of miles in flat-bottomed boats tip the great river Niger, In Northwest Af rica, to the town of Gaya, conveying six tons of provisions for troops in the in terior of this vast French possession . Thursday, June 6. On the Tonkin frontier, 8000 to 12,000 Ch ioese rebels had a fight with the im perial troopB aseistedlby Ihe French. In Southern Mongolia 15 pih sts were mur der.d. At Colman, Mich., William Anell, a taloonkeeper, ran amuck, and before be ing overpowered shot and killed his littje daughter, his wife and his mother, and also shot his brother and sister. . The deaths from wounds and sickness among the British troops in South Africa ( during May numbered 734. ! Under the new ruling of the superin tendent of immigration, all immigrants arriving at New York with tuberculosis of the lungs wi 1 be deporte ;l. Nothing has been heard of five fishing boats which left St. Brieux, France,over ; twomonthsagj and it is feared ihdrj crews, numbering 117, have perished, j At Macon, Mo., James Stacey, an en gineer in charge of a stationary engine, in a fit of insanity shot and killed his wife and daughter and then killed him self. His mind had become unbalanced by overwork. Bernard Stoy, a lanchman of Free man, Wash., hanged himself in his granary. At Yokohama every one scouts the idea that the Chinese government will ever teturn to Pekin exce-jt as a pretense to satisfy the allies, all of whose military pteparations will be made fruitless by a change of capital. The universal impres sion there is that in this matter the al lies have not only overreached them selves, but have played directly into the hands of Russia. According to the London Statist, the people of the United States buv back ennually from Europe $200,000,000 of their own securities. AtTruckee, Cal last night, the "001," masked, tarred and feathered Harry Trott up to his mouth and ears and or dered him to trot. The upper Yukon river is open and the thousands of tons of freight piled up at White Horse have begun to move to ward Dawson. Ths burning of 25 tonscf smokeless powder at the Mare Island (Cal.) Navy Yard caused a loss of about $500,000. ., At Youngstown, Pa., the steel trust has raised the wages of 2009 men work ing in the mills of the American Steel Hoop Company, 10 to 20 per cent. Seven Years In Bed. 'Will wonders ever cease?" inouire the friends of Mrs. L. Pease.of Law rence Kan, They knew she had been unable to leave ber bed in seven years on account of kidney and liver trouble, nervous prostrations and general- dabil ty ; but. "three bottles of Electric Bitttrs enabled me to walk, " Bhe writai',, and in three months I felt like a new par son. " Women suffering from Headache, BRCKaciie, jNervousness, sieepiessneso, Melancholy, Fainting, aud Dizzy Spells will dnd It a pnnceless blessing. Try it. Satisfaction is guaranteed by George, A. Harding. Only 50c. Edward Huss, a well known buisnes man of Sailsbtry, Mo writes: " I wish to say for the benefit of others, that I was a stfferer from lumbago and kidnev trouoie, ana an tne remenies nook gave tne no reliei. 1 was induced te try Fo leys' Kidney Cure, and after the use of three bottles, I tm cured." Cbarman & Go., . How's Thlsl We offer One Hundred D- lars Re ward for any case of Catarrh tuat can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., lr ps., To ledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wist & Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, G. Waldino, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly upon the blook and mu cuous surfaces cf the system. Price, 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. TliA Inp.lr nf Atinr-ffv vnn foftl, r.riit fiQilr. " rw j " , ache and a run down condition generally 1, , ! . 1 ! , f I I If I .1 an mean kiuuby uisuruer. roiey a mo ney Cure will restore your strength and vigor by making the kidneys well. Take no substitute. Charman & Co. VEGETABLES. Why Are Soma Volga r and Other Artatcicratlc T Why do we respect some vegetables ind despise others? The bean Is a graceful, confiding, engaging vine, but rou never can put beans Into poetry or Into the highest kind of prose. There Is no dignity In the bean. Corn which In my garden grows alongside the bean, and, so far as I can lee, with no affectation of superiority Is, however, the child of song. It waves In all literature. But mix lt with beans, and Its high tone Is gone. Sue to tush Is vulgar; It Is the bean In It. The bean Is a vulgar vegetable, with tut culture or any flavor of high socie ty among vegetables. Then there Is the cucumber, like so many people, good for nothing when It is ripe, and the wlldness has gone ont of lt. How Inferior to the melon, which grows upon a similar vine! The cu cumber Is a sort of low comedian In a company where the melon Is a minor gentleman. The lettuce Is to tne a most Interest ing study. Lettuce Is like conversation; It must be fresh and crisp, so sparkling that you scarcely notice the bitter In It. Lettuce, like moRt talkers, though, Is apt to run rapidly to seed. Blessed Is that sort which comes to a head, and so remains like a few peo ple I know growing more solid snd satisfactory and tender and whiter at the center. Lettuce like conversation, requires a good deal of oil, to avoid friction and keep the company smooth; a pinch of Attic salt, a daRh of pepper, mustard and vinegar, but so mixed that yon will notice no sharp contrasts, and a trifle of sugar. I feel that I am In the best society when I am with lettuce. It Is In the most select vegetable circle. Charles Dudley Warner In "My Bummer In fl Garden.'' COLORADO PRODUCTS. -s i Bow Some Vegetable and Fruits Da I have at HisU Altitudes. I Some of your readers will be interest ed to know the behavior of some of the newer vegotablos and fruits iu the Rocky mountains at an altitude of nearly 0,000 feet above sea level, j - In the cabbage lluo Danish Ballhead is one of the best all around sorts ever tried here. It will displace Early Win- ningstadt, which has beeu almost ex clusively grown hero for market! The i flat varieties have not been In favor for several years. The 1900 tomato did well here. So did the Quarter Century, both Introduc ed by Philadelphia seedsmen. Admiral Dewey potato Is the best yielding early potato we ever saw In our 13 years' experience as market gar deners. In melons the New Triumph surpris ed the natives last year, although it was a complete failure the year before because of the variety not being accli mated. The seed had been obtained direct from the originator In Florida. Last year a single vine matured over 200 pounds of melons. The New Har ris melon Is also a good one, growing to a large size, but Is not as early as claimed by the introducer. It ripened about with Dixie here. Extra Early Dlrigo beet is as early as the Egyptian and of better shape, with finer flavor. ' The Schumacher celery Is strictly first class, a strong, robust grower and a splendid keeper. A bunch of 12 stalks exhibited ot the fair here weighed 34 pounds. The New Mexican pepper la truly a monster. I think it Is too large for mangoes. It Is as early and proline here as Kuby King. In fruits there are the Triumph and Greensboro peaches. Both have fruit ed here this year, and people were as tonished at their early ripening and fine size. There is about a week's differ ence in ripening between Alexander and Triumph. The Willard and Red June plums fruited for the first time. The former was the largest and earliest by eight days. Willard Is the strongest and thriftiest grower, has the best foliage and holds Its fruit better thnn Red June. Judging both from their first fruiting we would select the former as the best plum. Wilder Early, Koonce and , Kleffer pears favored us with a few specimens each last year. The first named was the largest of tbe three and the best flavored. We were again disappointed in the size cf the Kleffer; think lt re quires very Btrong soil aud high cul ture. None of them was as large even as Wilder Early. In apples we fruited for the first time Gano, Delaware Red Winter (also call ed Lawyer), Arkansas Black and Mam moth Black Twig. The first two and the last are very fine. Lawyer espe cially Is of very best quality and no' apple looks nicer. Arkansas Black, while of good quality, Is too small for fancy market By the way, Champion peach has fruited here for three seasons and Is pronounced by all to be the best flavor ed peach ever tasted. Elberta does splendidly. Thus writes a Colorado correspond ent to American Gardening. rinnilr Device For Scalding; Hoara. With this device one man can handlo the heaviest hog with case. I have scalded some 40 bogs with It, and know what I am Baying. Place the hog on 8CALD1NO DEV1CK. the rack (Fig. 1), then close It, then proceed as shown In Fig. 2. Lift the hog over ths trough by taking hold of the long lever. Lower It lulu the trough, so that the rack springs clcnr of tho bottom of trough, then take hold of the cross lever and work It up aud down, throwing the carcass from outt side to the other, back and forth, until perfectly scalded. Keep trying the hair, so as to know when the proper scald ing point Is reached. Then swing out on tbe cleaning rack and take another hog. Tbe figures explain themselves, says an Ohio Farmer writer. Med I am WelaM Beef Cattle to tha Fore. A point In the cattle Industry of 1000 considered worth noting by tho Iowa Homestead Is that during most cf tho year heavy cattle were more or less at a discount, and animals weighing from 1,200 to 1,400 were preferred by buy ers. During the latter part of 180f heavy cattle sold very well, and many were Induced by this fact to make heavyweights during last year, only to be met by the remark, "Too heavy," when they reached the market, and when the time for Christmas cattlo ar rived In 1000, while steers weighing from 1.3.VI to 1,500 were selling from $0 to $"..r)0. the r?ry finest 1,700 to 1,000 pound rattle had to go from $5 to $5.40 FlU. Flo