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About Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1901)
OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1901 Moth CLACKAMAS COUNTY NEWS J i er To The Public. Correspondents. considerable labor pledged od condition Itema for publication should be he county contribute an eiual in as eariy as poesinie iu iuo 1 n... sure pumicauuii. auhjico y j Wednesday noon are sometimes crowded out by lack of space or time. Mountain View. The last of the hoppickers started away Thursday morning. P. D. Cur rin, S. Harrington and a number of other went to Lincoln Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson went on Thursday. 8ome of the pickers went to Monitor last week. Mrs. Bullard and Mrs. Schoth with a few others are picking hops at Mr. DickerBori's yard. Miss Ella Darling and her aunt re turned from their trip to the coast at Nye Creek last Saturday. Elmer Duvall is working on a boat running from Portland to Salem. Mrs. Prank Albright and daughter re turned from their vwit at Jefferson last Monday. MiHS Maud Moran is visiting out at Harmonv this week. Mrs. McKay, of West Oregon City, was the guest of Mrs. Beattie Tuesday. Mrs. 0. Schueoel and children are visiting in thin burg this week during the absence of Mr. Schuebel. Miss Ollie Harris is the guest of Mrs. Francis and attending the institute this week. Elmer Dixon is yery sick with blood poisoning, having been hurt at the fire of Josi's barn. Sauna. Great clearance sale. Miss Goldsmith. Great reduction on all trimmed hats at Miss Goldsmith. Mackaburg. HarveBt is over and soon hoppicking will be a tiling of the past. The whis tle of the Bteam thresher can only be beard at a distance. The grain did not turn Out as well as was anticipated some t'rne ago. Early potatoes are almost a failure, but late ones are promising a fair yield. Mrs. Siever Kamsby and family, of Molalla, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Smith and family Sunday. Mr. Koch, of this place, is erecting a handsome two-story residence for a Mr. Steers, of the upper section. News arrived here that Mr. Steers' little girl was shot in the foot by the ac cidental explosion of a gopher gun with which she was playing. Jack Frost paid us a visit last night. Noah. A beautiful line of baby bonnets and hats, ail reduced, at Miss Gsldtmith. Car ua. As hoppiaking is "all the go" now moat of the young , people have gone to the hop yards. Threshing is finished in this neigh borhood, and most everyone is satisfied with his crop. Air. (jibbs was baling hay for D. Thomas and Fred Lindsley last week. Cams school will begin September 23rd with Mr. Metzjjer, of Gresham, as teacher. Ed Jones, of Portland, was visiting friends here last week. 0. Casidy is home from Goldendale He intends to go back in the spring. Charles Stewart was burning slashing . yesterday. A crowd of Tayne's hoppickers were invited to the home of Mr. Payne Mon day evening, where they enjoyed sing ng and music of the phonograph. Flowers, ribbons, fancy ohlffrons at great sacrifice. Miss Goldsmith. Meadowbrook. Hoppiiikors are coming home from th yards and report a short harvest. George Williams had two fingers badly crushed in some machinery last week. Mrs. Charles Rice, of Beaver, Wyom ing is visiting the family of W. R. Gar rett.. Miss Edith Jackson, of Elv, will teach the fall term of pchool at West Canyon Creek Ac ademy beginning the last of September. Meadowbrook pnBtoffice should be placed upon wheels, as we never know where to find it. Lust week it was carted over to the foot of Denniion hill to the residence of Mr. llendershott. J. M. Ware, of Ely, was in Meadow brook Saturday and Sunday visiting friends. Mrs. Cook and Miss Francis Myers, of Portland, are rusticating out on Nath Creek under the vino and fig tree of our genial neighbor, L. Percy Williams. IH 11 Trnllinger is circulating a peti tion for volunteer work to cut down and gravel the Trnllinger lull and the road from thence to Union Mills. He has Mountain View. Grandpa Swafford, who has been at Salem during the summer, has returned to Ely again. MiBS Tillie Henrici bae returned from Long Beach, where she spent the sum mer. Mrs. George Stephens is visiting rel atives and friends at Highland this week. Mrs. HornBchuch's health is quite poorly lately. Mrs. Osborne gives Hazel and Mabel Francis music lessons on the organ every Tuesday. W G. Beattie started for Fort Wran gle, Alaska, this morning. Charles Ely started this morning for a trip in the mountains. , Hoppickers are coming home a few at a time. Elmer Dixon is thought to be on the road to recovery. i Mr, Freidrich and boys returned home from the coast last Thursday. The supplies for the Mountain View Sunday school have been sent for, and the Sunday school is to be re-organized the last Sunday in this month. Mrs. Ernest Harrington has returned to California after a two months' visit here. Mr. West has a new bicycle. Salina. A car load of milk crocks just received and will sell at 8 c per gal lon. W, L. Block, the Homefurnisher, Maple Lane. Harvest is over with here.and the hop pickers are expected home the la t of tnis weelc, so "tater digging" win oe an the go with everyone soon. Mr. Gerber is a returned hoppicker at this writing. He reports about 12 days as being the length of time required to pick any of the yards this season, as the crop is very light, yet the quality is good. Mr. Dickerson finished picking hops on Sunday after a run of six days with about half a crop. Misses Edith Jackson and Elsie Gibbs attended the teachers' institute in Ore gon City last week. Isaac Shortlidge was home for a few days (last week from Lincoln, but re turned to accept a position as fireman in a hop dryer. Ben Beard is also in that vicinity. John Gaffney, Jr., sited with his parents at Harmony r:-rday and Sun day. Mrs. Green and children were the guests of her sister, Mrs. Myers, last week. Miss Elsie Gibbs spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss Julia Spooner, of Payne, and also visited the Evening Star Grange at Mount Tabor Saturday eve ning. Mr. Richards drove bis fine black team to town today. Pansy Blossom. CHAMPION BINDERS We euaranen that Hi a FVronti Sprocket wheel on this machine will give a i ab clu.e gain of 16 per cent of poc at the time of tieing and dis charging bundle. J. he loree feed elevator will waste less grain than any other. There Is less shattering. The Relief Rake keeps inner end of platform clear. Everyone of those using Champion Binders eays it has no equal. Send for Catalogue. Mitchell, Lewis & Staver Co. First and Taylor Sts. PORTLAND, - OREGON 4 I Reduction Sale During the month of September in order to make room for Fall stock we will greatly reduce prices on all Stoves, Ranges, Graniteware and Tinware OREGON CITY, OREGON "My mother was troubled with consumption for many years. At last she was given up to die. Then she tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I-. . 1 1 1 ana was ipccauy curea. u D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y. Jj No matter how hard your cough or how long you have had it, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the best thing you can take. It's too risky to wait until you have consump tion. If you are cougmn today, get a bottle o Cherry Pectoral at once Tim slits : 25c., 5c, SI. All dragilstt. Consult your doctor. It he says take It, than do m he says. If ho tells 70a not to take it, thin don't toko It. Ho knows. LT It with Mm. Wo art willing. J. 0. AVER CO., Lowell, Mn. Barlow . Born, 10 Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. Free man, a son, Sunday, September 8th. Hoppicking wound up here yesterday with a very liht crop, but of good quality. Work on the new bridge is almost at a standstill for the want of steel rods on account of the steel strike. W. W. Jesse's Italian prune crop is immense. Can it be possible that the contract for building the new bridge at this place was let to the highest bidder? It they let the printing contract that way, why not other contracts the same? How many people know bv reading our great dailies that there were 13 men kidnaped at Tampa, Fla., and car ried away f a distant desert it-land and left there to starve, becau-e they were union cigar makers and demanding bet ter wages. Great is the plutocratic press wonderful free country . Otad Tidings Still we have fine weather. Honnickinc is tnft nrilpr nf ihn .lav The general average this year is about iwo-Mirus oi a crop. i Threshing is a thing of the past in this neck of the woods. Bird Lamm, of Meadowbrook, passed through this place Sunday. The Marks Prairie correspondent must have cut his whiskers off. We will get a glance at him this fall. CASTOR I A Por Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of The Finest Fabric made by human skill is coarse compaaed with tbe lining of the bowels. When . L !- . 1 . hub tenner niemorane is irritated we have griping pains, diarrhoea and chol era morbus. Whatever be the cause of the trouble, take Perry Davis Pain Killer according to the directions with each bottle. Travelers in all climates carry Pain Killer in iheir gripsacks Large bottles 25 and 50 cents. THE HOME GOLD CURE. An Ingenious Treatment bv which Drunkard! are Being Cnred Da'ly in Spite of Themselves. No Noxious Doses. No Weakening of the Nerves. A Pleasant and I'onllive Cure for the Liquor Habit. It is now generally known and nnHpr. stood that Drunkenness is a disease and not weakness. A body tilled with pui-. son, and nerves completely shattered by periodical or constant use of iiitnximirinu liquors, requires an antidote capable f iiiu.iniK.iiir nnu ciuuiCHIUlg IllIS poison. and drstroying (he craving for intoxi cants. Suffereis may now cure tin in selves at home without publicity or loHt of time from business by this wondertnl HUilUrnni numn.i t . . iiuiuii uulii uttiii wnict) lias hem pertected alter many years of clime study and treatment of inebriates. The fai h luluse according to directions of this wonderful discovery is positively guar anteed to cure the most obstinate cane, no matter how hard a drinker. Our records show the marvelous transforma tiou of thousands of Drunkards into so ber, industrious ami upright men WIVES CURE YOUR HUSBANDS I CHILDREN CURE YOUK FATH ERS I I This remedy is no sense a noa trtim but is a specific for this disease only, and is so skilllully devised and pre pared that it is thoroughly soluble and pleasant to the taste, so that it can be given in a cup of tea or coffee wituom the knowledge of tbe person taking it. Tuousands of Drunkards have cured themselves with this priceless remedy, and as many more have been cured and made temperate men bv having the "CURE" administered by loving friends and relatives without their knowledge in conee or tea, and Ue.ieve today that they discontinued drinking of their own freewill. DON0TWA1I. Do not he deluded by apparent and misleading "improvement." Drive out the disease at once and for all time. The "Home GOLD CURE" is sold at the extr. melv low price of One Dollar, thus placing in reach of everybody g treatment more ef fectual than othvrs costing $5 to f50. Full directions accompany eacli package. Special advice by skilled physiciMnc when requested without extra chame Seut prepaid to any part of ibe world on receipt of One Dollar. A.!dre8 Dent E f94, EDWIN B. UILES&COMPAN Y, 2XM and ?332 Market Street, Pli.btdel phia. All correspondence strictly oond ' ential headache" (ESDI . 2 Be, lie. GRAFTING STONE FRUITS. A Jersey Grower's New Method and the Instrument Used. At a meeting of the New Jersey State Horticultural society Mr. Martin Ernst, a very successful frul grower, Intro duced a method of grafting which vr&a new to most of those present. He said: When you cut a twig from a tree (holding up a cut portion Vfi Inches through), If it does not heal over in one season, it causes the root to rot. The damage done to a tree by cleft grafting' seldom heals perfectly the first season and results often in decay setting In. In my method I imo tills little Instru ment, which has its cutting portion of V shape attached to a shank with a wooden handle. I then take a twig; cut the top off, leaving the stock about an inch through, then on the side of the stock I cut out with my instrument a. place for the insertion of the scion, which Is shaped on the lower end with a very sharp knife to fit closely the GRAFTING WITH A HEW TOOL. place of Insertion. You will notice I place the lower end of the scion direct ly over the stock. Insert the scion, which will fit closely and requires some strength to remove. Now paint the cut end of stock and scion. with a liquid grafting preparation composed of one pound of rosin to one pint of al cohol. I prefer a liquid preparation, as It simply coats the cut surface over, keeping water and air from it and does not crack and fall off. When the sun shines, this liquid melts and runs al most all off, so I put on a rag which keeps it cool and prevents it running off. To keep the rag in place and also to assist in keeping the scion in place wind a string around It, which Is cut away when the bud of scion has made two or three inches of growth. (Bast would rot away and save the cutting of string.) This method of planting Is mostly used for stone fruits, cherries, plums and peaches. You must graft stone fruit very early, nnd the season to do so Is of short duration, say about the last of March, and with care In setting them about 75 per cent of grafts will live. Starting; Plants In Sprlnfr. Dahlias, tuberoses, gloxinias and tu berous begonias should be started Into growth this mouth. Unless the two first named plants get nu early start they almost nlwtiys fail til come Into bloom before frosty wml'ii ;- Is here. Put them Into pots or boxes cf earth and let them Ret well rooted liofoie warm weather comes. In this way one can lengthen the season at least n month or six weeks for them. It Is not so Important In the case of the two oth er plants, as they are summer bloomers and should be kept In pots, but the ear lier they are got to growing the better It will be for them, writes E. E. Itex ford In Ledger Monthly. Early Blooming; Shrnbs. The Japan Judas (Cercls Japonlca), bush compact, leaves dark green, flow ers very early In great abundance. The English laburnum (cytlsus), long stems of very handsome golden flow ers, with the green wood nnd pea vine foliage, look delicate and attractive. The Viburnum pllcatum, peculiar in Its leaf, when In flower Is an attractive bush, and, being of easy culture. Is desirable. The flowering thorn and Dowering crab have a peculiar fra grance all their own that Is charming. Early Spray For Peach Leaf Cnrl. In regions where peach leaf curl Is injurious, Professor Qulutnuce of Geor gia recommends that the bordeaux for the first application 1. e., before the bloom opens should be made up of six pounds of copper sulphate, six pounds of lime to 50 gallons of water. Floral Notes. Wistaria will not cling to a flat wall. It needs some other support It will clamber very high with the aid of a single wire. Goldenrods are now becoming favor ites for garden culture, and the sweet goldenrod Is one of the most desirable Xor the purpose. Ruga rugosa makes a fair hedge and will bear shearing. The leaves are glossy, but the flowers are single and worthless for cutting. An occasional vine of golden honey suckle may be tastefully disposed among the green leaved sorts upon a veranda with pleasing effect Trofessor Galloway estimates that not less than $1,000,000 worth of vio lets are sold every year and that were It not for the violet spot the produc tion would Increase 20 per cent j I wish to announce that I will be able to furnish you with your fall and winter Cloth ing, Underwear, Hats, Shoes, Etc., cheaper than you can buy in Portland, and we have a big stock of up-to-date goods to select from. J. M. PRICE The Up-To-Date Clothier. What you see in our ad is so." FAST WORKING -MONEY MAKING Southwick May Presses 40-inch Feed Opening Capacity 12 to 16 tons, Daily More of them in use in Oregon and Washington than of all other makes combined Send for Catalogue and Testimonial Circular Mitchell-Lewis & Staver Co., First and Taylor Sts., PORTLAND, OREGON DOOOOOO0OGQIMX8X83SX MRS. R. BECKER 220 FIRST STREET - - - PORTLAND, OREGON . Has a complete assortment of Pall lylilliijcry, Fufs, lylilliQery Novelties, Etc. Hats trimmsd to order, Feathers dyed and curled. PRICES MODERATE. Never Put a Boy I To Bed Hungry Always give him plenty of good, wholesome food, such as you find in a first-class store like ours. We carry all the best goods known to the trade. Clean liness is our hobby. If you are afraid of a foul cellar at your own home, you should be afraid to eat gro ceries that come from a foul store. Give us a call and look us over. Seventh and Center Sts. MUIR BROS, j KMHHHMMIHtlMft THE UNIVERSITY OF ' OREGON Highest standard In the state! . Two hundred courses In Literature, Science and the Arte, Science and Engineering and Music New buildings and flqulpment. Hevcn new instructor, Nearly 5000 volumes added to library In 1001. Summer school with University credit. Special courses for teachers, for Law and Med ical students. Department of Education for teachers, principals and superintendents. Tuition free, cost of living low. Three students granted scholarships in large eastern universities in 1901. Send name to President or Registrar for circu lars and catalogue, Eugene, Oregon. Ml CIVILIAN and UNIFORM 5 GARMENTS I Built TO ORDER, and Built RIGHT Come In and See Samples and let us quote you Prices ( P. O. SHARK, Oregon City, Ore MANHOOD RESTORED "CUPIDENE This treat Vcith. Vi t&itKer.th Drm - rt tlonol a larnoun t rench physician, will quickly cur you of all ner vous or diseases of the generative organs, auoh m Loat Manhood. Insomnia, I'ains in tneiiaca.bemlnal Emissions, Nerrous Debility, Pimplea, Unfitness to Marry, Exhausting Drains, Varicocele ana Constipation. It stops all losses by day or night PreTents qulca. Sfss of discharge, wkich It not checked leads to Boermatorrhma and ormpp rT7B " tf horrors of Impotency 'l'PIIK.F.clean8ea tUeliver, ih f ITPinKKV! ntwnflrthens and npatnrea small weak nriranik. The reason sufferers ara not cured by Doctors is because ninety pT cent are troubled with Proatattltla. CUl'IDKNE Is the only known remedy to cure vitbout an operation, soooteetlmnnk ats. A written, guarantee given and money returned if six boxen does not effect a, permanent ur U)0abox,aii furJs.U), by mail, bend for jraait circular and testimonials. Adoreaa paioi, jsKulci.iai m, r. u. iiox aJ.a, Ban Taiclaco,uu. jxir&oisbf GEO. A. HIRDING, Druggist Oregon City, Oregon