Oregon City courier=herald. (Oregon City, Or.) 1898-1902, August 08, 1902, Image 1

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    Cit
COUPItztt ESTABLISHED MAY, 1883
HlrfALD ESTABLISHED JULY, 1893
tNDESEKDENT ESTABLISHED 1898
OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1902
20th YEAR, NO. '
Oregon
v
D. & D. C. LATOURETTE
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Commercial, Real Estate and h
Specialties
Office In Commercial Bank Building
OREGON CITY OREGON
COMMERCIAL BANK '
o OREGON CITY
CAPITAL $100,000
Transact" a general banking business
Makes loans and collections, discounts bills
bnjri and sells domestic and foreign exchange,
end! receives deposits subject to oheck.
Open from 9 a, m. to 4 p. m.
jj NEWS OF THE WEEK. ij
D. I!. liAXOCBETTR,
. rMdeut
K, J. Mkykr
Casbie
Qt N. GREENMAN
THE PIONEER EXPRESSMAN
(Established 1865)
Prompt delivery to all parts of the elty
OREGON CITY OREGON
J)R. GEO. HOEYE
DENTIST
All work warranted and satisfaction guaranteed
Crown and Bridge work a specialty
Caufteld Building
OREGON CITY OREGON
J)R. FRANCIS FREEMAN
DENTIST
Graduate' of Northwestern University Dental
School, also of American College
Dental Surgery, Chicago
Willamette Block
OREGON CITY
OREGON
0.
E. HAYES
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Stevens Building, opp. Bank t
OREGON CITY
Oregon City
OREGON
4TJEO. T. hOWARD
NOTARY PUBLIC
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
At Ri d Fro-t, Court.House Block
OREGON CITY
OREGON
JJ C. STRICKLAND, M. D.
(Hospital and Private Experience)
Special attention paid to Catarrh and Chronic
Diseases
Office hours: 10 to 12, a. m.; 4 to 6, p.m.
Willamette Building
OREGON CITY OREGON
J. W. Nokiub, M. D. J.W.Powell. M D.
JJORRIS & POWELL,
Physicians and Surgeons.
Calls in city or country promptly attend ed
Office: 1,2,17,
Charman BroB. Block, Oregon City.
0.
W. EASTHAM
ATTORNEY AT LAW
ard Titles Examined, Abstracts Made, Deeds,
' Moitf6s, Etc. diaw n, Money Loaned.
Office over Bank of Oregon City.
OREGON CITY, - OREGON
JJROBERT A. MILLER
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Will practice in all Courts of the State
Welnhard Building, Opposite Court House
OREGON CITY, OREGON
W. S. TJ'REN
0. BCHUEBXI,
JJREN & SCHUEBEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
fctutfftet 9Ibootai
Will practice In all courts, make collections
and settlements of estates, furnish abstracts of
title, lend you money ana lena your money on
umce in .nierpnge uuuuiug.
OREGON
first mortgage.
OREGON CITY
jj I. SIAS
DXALEB IN
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY
Silverware and Spectacles
CANBY OREGON
VV. II. YOUNG'S
Livery & Feed Stable
Finest.Turnouts nf City
OREGON CITY. OREGON
S. J. VAUGHAN'S
Livery, Feed and Sale Stables
Nearly oppositelSuspension bridge
First-Class Rigs of All Kinds
OREGON CITY, OREGON
Oregon City
Second-Hand & Junk Store
Highest Prices Paid for Second-Hand
Goods, Hides, Junks, Metals of all
Kinds, Etc.
Second-Hand Goods Bought and Sold
Ring Phone 416 for Junk.
Sugarman & Co.
Don't bass tis by call in and get oar
prices. Red Front Trading Company. '
Saturday, August 2.
Oregon's wool cliy is 19,500,000 pounds.
The state treaaurer has $550.n00 irre
ducible school funds on hand, unloaned.
The Oregon Short Line has ordered
$900,000 of Additional rolling stock.
At Los Alamos, Santa Barbara county,
Oal., earthquake shocks have produced
a panic among the inhabitants.
Two regiments of National guards
have been sent to quell the riot at Shen
andoah, Pa.
Mrs. Victoria Gibson, of Butler, Ind.,
has been arrested for swindling men
wanting wives by means of a fraudulent
matrimonial bureau.
At McKeespoort, Pa., the U.S. Steel
Co. has blackhsted 300 iron and steel
workers.
The railroads of the United States re
quire daily 500 new cars and 10 new lo
comotives. In July 500,000 buBhels of wheat were
shipped from Portland.
Harry Tracy, the outlaw, passed over
the Cascades and crossed the Columbia
in Eastern Washington in the early
morning of August 1, bound for the
"Hole in the Wall" in Idaho. He had
two horses, four guns and 200 rounds of
ammunition; He intends to rob a bank
or express car.
Japan intends to enact a lawexcluJing
Chinese immigrants.
The great dam on the upper Nile, one
and a quarter miles long, is con pleted.
According to a report fron. Wena'chee,
Wash., Tracy appeared at a ranch six
miles from there on Wednesday of last
week at 10 a. in., and demanded dinner.
An explosion in a colliery at Wollan
gotig, N. ts. W., killed a number of
miners.
Last month the Beaumont, Texas, oil
district 8' ipped out 1,250,000 barrels of
oil.
In Manila cholera is spreading and
7000 cigarmakers have struck.
On the night of July 31st, two men
held uo one of J. Lenden herder's fish-
rAPpivinir Bfriu.'B at Auti-tvia an1 ,rKl-.uil '
the man in charge cf $400.
Tillamook's output of cheese this vear
is placed at 1,500,000 pouhds, being 300,
000 more than iaat year.
Sunday, August 3.
M J Kinney has bought 97,000 acres
of land on Coos Bay. Ir. includes moat
of the defunct town of Empire City.
Price $000,000.
At "Concordia cemetery , Chicago, 25
gravediggers are on a sti ke.
Contract has been let o erade and
bridge 71 miles of railrnau from Kiparia
to Lewiston, for $S00,000.
Sheriff Cudahee, of Sen i tie, a-id two:
other sheriffs are hot a ter T.acy in
Eastern Washington.
J P. Morgan has bought a mansion
in London.
A London newspaper advocates an in
ternational banking and naval union
between England and the United Siates.
The Montana state board of eciualiza-
tion has raised assessment value of rail
roads ODerating in the state from $J5,
000,000, last year's basis, to $40,000,000.
The Morgan-Hill merger lines pay 7
per cent on tie fancy valuation of $50,
000 per mile.
A b"ard of army officers- pronounces
the coast defences of the country to be
practically of no value.
President John Mitchell is holding
mass meetings among the stiikers of the
Pennsylvania anthracite district .
Holbein swam 13 hours in attempting
to swim across the English channel, but
the tide prevented him.
Monday, August 4.
In Paris 3000 socialists paraded with
banners shouting, "Down with the
prieBte !"
King Victor Immanuel will visit the
emperors of Russia and Germany to pro
pose disarmament.
The republican national committee has
issued a campaign textbook.
The Hartford Courant, republican,
says it is the "hog element" in the party
that opposes revision of the tariff.
A desperate battle is in progress on
the Panama isthmus.
Sheriffs Cudahee and DeBolt are on
Tracy's trail iu Eastern Washington.
The Big Bend. Wash., farmers ask
the railroads to reduce freight rates, the
sum aggregating over a half million dol
lars. President Samuel Gompers, of the A.
F. of Labor, spoke in Salem Sunday
evening. Governor Geer presided.
The Catholic schools which the gov
ernment of France is attempting to
close, under the law Ugainet religious
associations, have 0000 teachers,
many of them SiBters, and 150,000 pu -pils.
A combine of Texas cattlemen expects
to graze 200,000 head of cattle in Canada
next year.
Cuba will borrow $35,000,000 on 30-year5-per-cent
bonds.
China want3 all foreign troops with
drawn from Shanghai.
An earthquake shock occurred in
Missoula county, Mont.
The Columbia Southern Railroad uses
oil fuel in its locomotives.
In a revolt of convicts at Jelissavento
poli, Russia, 34 convicts were slain and
73 wounded.
In Becker county, Minn., two broth
ers, who had taken care of horses af
fected with glanders, contracted gland
ers and died of it.
Near Savannah, Ga.. John Wise, a
negro rape fiend, was riddled with bul
lets and strung up.
The National Consumers' League,
which is actually a crusade against
sweatshop work, is rapidly gaining
strength throughout the country.
Tuesday, August 5.
Mr. Leyds, the Boer emissary at
Paris during the war, says
that the South African question j
has just begun and in ten years Eng-
land will have lost South Africa.
Emperor William, of Germany,! as no
sympathy with King Victor Immauuel's
suggestion to reduce armaments. He
says a large military establishment is
good for the people.
The president of the National Live
stock Aascciation warns the meat pack
ers against forming a combination.
From the Tennessee penitentiaiy 16
convicts escaped.
Three railway presidents confer with
the farmers of the Inland Empire and
agree to re luce rates. An 18-mile line
will be built in the Big Bend country
to connect the N. P. & G. Northern.
Two lakes always covered with ice
have ben found in( Baker county.
An Eastern packing house wants to
erect a plant in Portland.
In a note pinned to the well of C. V.
Drazon, a farmer located near O'esaa,
Wash., Outlaw- Tracy has warned Sher
iff Cudahee to take J tumble and let
him alone or he will fix him plenty.
At Pottswille, Pa., the coal operators
have abandoned the attempt to stait
the mines. The ranks of the strikers
remain unbroken.
In connection with his merger of the
Southern railways, J. P. Morgan will
run two lines of steamers.
The astronomer of the University of
Cali .ornia has found 100 double stars.
John Shandron and his wife, of South
Haven, Mich., have adopted 22 chil
dren, who formed the entire contents of
an orphin asylum it Minneapolis.
The novernment is building hydro
gen captive baloons.
(C ntinued on pane 7.)
I i-'i
-A,U rii
t'S. w."" i ,
This Trade Mark on the side
of a wagon box is a guarantee
of excellence and high grade
quality in the construction of
this wagon. If yours does
not have it on dispose of it
and get one that has as you
cannot afford to run any
chances on the material us
in a wagon, every time you break down it costs you mor
though the manufacturers replace the broken part.
Mil MIWI
BEY A FISH
The Getter ul Activity in, Build
ing in Oregon City.
It is a fact worthy of special mention
that Oregon City is steadily improving
and becoming more metropolitan all the
time. j
This movement in the improvement!
line is perhapb mo-it manifest in the i
way of the erection of new buildinus. I
TliiB 9 aor, mo e than ever n the rast,
has the building enterprise received uew
impetus The wav to realize this fact!
is to io k down upon the city fiom so e
high promontory on the little cottage
and larger structures which arecrod-i
ing to the front hand. i
One buildinz now iu the prccesB of ;
construction, and one which will be a
credit to 'lie city, is the handsome new '
store building to be Solomon
Garde. 'I his is to be a brick structure j
of two Btoiies with a well cemented base- j
ment. On the ground floor will be three
storerooms fit ted up with every modern
improvement with projecting w indows i
such as afford the goods an excellent,
opportunity for 'liaplay. The upper
floor will lie divided into well-finished
office ro, mi. I
Nor is this all that ran be said of this
building akening, for the Willamette
Pulp & Paper Co. are now engaged in
erectinganew pulp mill on the island
close to the milla on the West Side. !
For quite a while the company has been
usiim the old electric light plant at the
basin for the purpose of the manufacture
of ground pulp, but this structure has
long since served ont its period of UBe- ,
fulness. Time and hard ussge have got-
ten in their telling work on this old ;
remnant of former use and activity, and
it is to be supplanted by a larger s rue- i
ture more adapted to the demands of 1
the work.
O.her ei.tetprises of less magnitude
are everywhere to be seen. A. W.
Cheney is erecting two desirable cot
tages on Ninth street, just Buch houses
as small families will need. H. L.Pat
terson haB lately completed three cozy
little bouses on Adams street. Fred
McCaueland will soon have completed a
handsome residence on Seventh street,
which is to be occupied by himself and
family. Mack Howell is erecting a fine
large residence on the north side of
town, which he and his family will soon
occupy. A. D. Putrow, J. M. Taylor
and Bruce Curry have each finished re
pairing and painting their residences on
11th and 12th streets. Wallace Cole
has lately completed a fine little cottage
on Seventh street near Shively's hall,
which will always remain desirable to
the public. And these are only a few of
the many improvements which lack of
space render it impossible to ' mention.
You msy say what you- please derog
ratory to western enterprise, but in Ore
gon City it is certainly increasing with
every rising sun. Tnts is the kind ot pro
gress that our city needs. These are
the features which attract new comers
and leave them a lasting impression,
and these are what will be a lasting ad
vertisement of the fair City by the Falls.
May the good work continue.
As a climax let us add : Every carpen-
rer is employed, in fact, there are not
carpenters enough, and the demand for
laborers is greater, at present, than the
supply.
Typical of the Heathen Chinee.
The Chinaman is certainly capable of
getting the most out of the leaBt of any
class of men. This truth is aftly illus
trated in a little incident which came
under our observation a few days ago.
The Chinamen who work on the 8. P.
track have grubbed outalarge fir stump,
and dug a place out of the bank.thus ob
taining altogether about 20x20 feet, and
planted this plot full of China cabbage.
After doing this these industrious fellows
erected a trough from Singer's creek, a
distance of 70 yards, and by means of
the trough they conduct water in abund
ance to their plants. A white man
might have lived along the same
track 500 years and it would never have
occurred to him that he could dig a gar
den out of the embankment: neither!
would he have been apt to take the
trouble to attach a trough to the creek
and thereby get a valuable means of ir
rigation. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAI
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund the money If it fails
to curer E. W. Grove's signature is on
each box. 25c.
We also carry a full line of Buggies andSprinr Wagon:.
Write us for prices on everything you need, it cn.y takes' a
postal card and may save you dollars.
N
ORTHWEST
FONT STREET,
IMPLEMENT LOMPANY,
PORTLAND
ORE
FRANK BUSCH
Mouse Furnishing
..Woods...
Sideboards "ese are handsomely carved in ash, with fancy clock shelves and large bevel plate
mirrors, two cutlery drawers each, long linen drawer and two cupboard. Price $14.50
Picture Frame? ne rame doesn't make a fine picture, but a poor frame spoils many a
UlCa pjcture Taste in the selection of a moulding and mat should be fur-
We sell a niee 16x20 gilt frame with glass, for $f
nished by the picture framer.
tnv Pntah Some housekeepers think that stove polish is simply to make the stove look
JlOVe r U1LM1 jney are mistaken in this. Our " .'Silver Gloss Stove Polish" preserves
the stove and is a positive necessity if you want to keep your stove in prime condition. Per box 15c
IT'S REASONABLE. The price is not
much when you come to buy a refrigerator, and
one of these well ventilated zinc lined affairs will
prove itself a satisfaction every day through the
summer. Ycu ought fo have-one early so as to
get the full benefit. Price $10; size 22x39
. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 .
'mmy mi
Wp1
il r
' :
T?iM"ui T-Tnc Your garden and lawn will
ivuuucr jtiusc lnnk better if you hayc
plenty of hose and keep the lawn well sprinkled.
Our canvas lined high quality rubber hose, i
inch diameter, is the most convenient size and
the most economical hose you could have. Price
per 50 foot section, $$ Of course we have
cheaper hose excellent if there is no high
pressure.
Chinaware T.here is mu,ch here th!it ?nl
v give you pleasure, including
attractive necessities, which go so far to making
up the comfort and pleasure of a meal. Beau-
KWTIEPtS-
IP
m
I
tiful dishes add to the taste of the food, and these beautiful
sets will give a banquet effect to a simple meal. They are all
durab of ex ent artistic quality, and not expensive 100
piece set transparent china, $19.
VjUlldlllb niture. handsome carpets an6
rugs, but it js the draperies that give a fin
ishing touc hto a new or old house. Don't
put all of your money into the other things,
save a little lor your lace curtains. 11 oniy
takes a little money to get all you will want at the prices we are now making on
this line of goods. Lace Curtain Material,
I2c. per yard.
Hammocks
90c. up.
FRANK BUSCH,
House Furnisher, Oregon City
1