OREGON CITY COURIER FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1902. THE OLD COUNTRY Jf you wish to send money to the "Old Country" you can do so easily and cheaply through this bank We issue drafts payable in nearly all countries THE BANK OF OREGON CITY OREGON CIJY, OREGON CLASSIFIED ADVERTISMENTS. W ANTED To Increase my list of farms and lands for Bale, in all parta of the county! Lands owned by non-residents (represented and sold. H. . Cross, At torney at Law. JNDIVIDUAL8 MONEY to Loan to you at 6 per cent and 7 per cent on land or chattels ; also a good farms for sale worth $5000 each. $600 of city money on approved security. John W, Loder, Attorney-at-Law, Oregon Oity. Younger, the watchmaker, has moved next door to Harris' Grocery. J& youi trading at the Farkplace Cash "Store and get a chance on the two sew ing machines to be given away Christmas. Tke Parkpla:e Cash Store will give a Tfiy two sewing machines on Christmas. Bee Holmes, Parkplace, Oregon. When you visit Portland don't fail to get your meals at the Royal Restaurant, First and Madison. They serve an ex cellent meal at a moderate price ; a good square meal, 15c, The Dentist: Beatie and Beatie are the dentists in the VVeinhard building. Their room is number 6 to 8. Complete line of general merchandise t Parkplace Cash Store at prices equal and lower than Portland. Best and rin st line of shoes ever shown. Produce waken. A new Royal and a new Queen draw head sewing machines will be"giyen a way to customers of Parkplace Cash Store on ChriBtmas. Send EOc to Albert Tozier, Portland, Ore., for printed liBt and addresses of 5000 Clackamas county voters. Oregon City list 10 cents; Aurora, Canby, Bar low, Oswego, 5 cts ; others 2 cents, tf Hats, Hats, Hats. Buy now. Prices low and styles the best. Mies O. Gold; smith. COUGHS AND COLDS. Recommendation of a Well Known Chi cago Physician. I use and prescribe Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for almost all obstinate, constricted coughs, with direct results. I prescribe it to children of all ages. Am glad tc recommend it to all in need and seeking relief from colds and coughs and bronchial afflictions. It is non-narcotic and safe in the hands of the most unpro fessianal. A universal panacea for all mankind Mrs. Mary R. Melendy, M. D.,Ph.D., Chicago, 111. This remedy is for sale by G. A. Harding. PEKSONALS j Peter Wilson, of Logan, was in the city on Monday. W. A. Shaver, of Molalla, was in town Saturday on business. L. Rosenburg, of San Francisco, was registered at the Electric Saturday. H. M. Miller, of Dallas, was an Ore gon City vistor the first of the week. Mr. and Mra, J. W. Miller, of Salem, were in town Saturday visiting relatives. Mrs. Robert Wilkinson and Mrs. John Gleason visited friends in Clackamas Thursday. Mr. Trimble, the blacksmith, moved into the Bestow house in Green Point on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Blanchard, of New Era, were, were seen on our streets Friday of last week. James Fullam, of Redland, brought a load of turkeys and chickens to the Farr brothers on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kir.-hem, o Logan, were in the city on Saturday, patronizing our merchants. C. E. Ball.of Dickey's Prairie, stopped in Oregon City Sunday. Mr. Ball was on his way to Portland to visit friends. J. W. Allspaugh, E. L. Allspaugh and Miss W. E. Allspaugh, of Corvallis, were in town the first of the week visit ing with friends. ' Thursday evening January 1st, there will be given an entertainment and basket social at the. Brown school house, district No. 63. Drs. J. W. Norris and J. W. Powell will move their offices from their pres' ent quarters in the Electric botel ta rooms on the second floor of the Garde building. The Misses Veya and VeBta Knight, of Canby, passed through Oregon City Saturday evening on their way home from Portland, where they made a short visit with relatives. Fred Walker, of Viola, was in the city on Monday trading and getting ready for the Christmas holidays. Mr. Walker is one of the prominent farmers of the Viola neighborhood. . J. W. Scramlin, the Macksburg mer chant and postmaster, brought his wife to Oregon City to place her under the care of Dr. Sommer, and left her at the home of Mrs. Williamson, who is a profession al nurse, Sunday. Mr. Stonehacker writes from the Agency Plains in Eastern Oregon that there are 10 incl es of snow on the ground and cold in proportion. He no doubt wishes he was back in the Calay- air of 'Webfoot. . Floyd Kirk, of Beaver Creek, stales that after a couple of months he will move permanently to Eastern Oregon to take possession of his homestead on the north fork of John Day. His son occupied a claim adjoining his. Miss Minnie Walker, of Viola, who has been taking violin lessons for the past year, has been engaged to play the violin in the First Presbyterian church at Portland. She is quite a talented violionist and her success is very gratify ing to her many friends in Viola and other parts of the county. Chris Michels, of La Camas, Wash . , came home to Oregon City on Monday to spend the winter with the family of his mother. Mr. Michels haB been working at the paper mill at La Camas for the past two years and will likely go back to Washington in the spring. Busi ness is good in Washington and every thing is on the go says Mr. Michels. I Thankful t ... . , ., . T . (M We will remember tor many a day tins recora kj breaking Xmas business our friends and customers g 43) have given us Remember it because many people . (g questioned the policy of fitting up and stocking such a store said it was too big tor the town, etc. But we think every one of the doubters and ad visors will "go way back" now. They certainly would if they could have seen the satisfied throng of Xmas shoppers during the past week. Anyhow as we started out to say we are very thankful for the generous pastronage accorded us and wish you all a prosperous and happy New Year. Your Prescription The doctor puts years of experience into the pre scription he write" for you. We put years cf experi ence into the compound ing. You need both kinds of experience to insure proper results from the medicine you use. Our prices are always as low as they can be consistent with good service. Rubber Worth When you buy anything made of rubber especially soft rubber you want the kinds made by reliable houses. That is the kind we sell. . They are right when they come here, they are kept right and they go to you at right prices. Hot Water Bottles, Syringes and Sick Room Supplies. Remember we are the agents for all the Prussian Remedies Stock Food, Heave Cure, Poultry Food, Etc. A few of those handsome calendars left yet for" our lady customers. HUNTLEY BROS. POPULAR PRICE DRUGGISTS AND BOOKSELLERS , ' , nttasftesiiiaeatteiaDlMtgnSM 2 local news ntms 3 i On Saturday, January 3rd, Maple Lane Grange will install its new officers. The holiday displays in the various stores of Oregon City are wide and varied and very beautiful to look upon. A pie social in the Maple Lane neigh borhood added $11.60 to the building fund of Maple Lane Grange. Mrs. Lulu Rae and Samuel Boldorf were granted a license to marry on the 20th inst. Both are of this county. A marriage license was granted on the 20th to Miss Rosa Stauber and W. W. Cooper, both of Clackamas county. Miss Eugenia O. Lamont and John R. Jones were united in matrimony at the clerk's office last Friday, Judge T. F- Ryan officiating. Lost In front of the residence of H. E. Cross, in Gladstone, Inday, Decem ber 19, a set of dark brown furs. Finder Will please deliver to the Courier office. A crowd of Portland toughs were in Oregon City Sunday and made an at tempt to "do up"a crowd of Oregon Uity boys. Their bluff wns called and they made haste to get out of the city. On their property a little beyond the Bolton school bouse, along the main road, William Burner will build a house and his brother Charles a barn. Property tkere abbuts is held at $250 per acre. Work on the Methodist church was resumed Monday end a large force of men put to work. As a consequence the Courier office and the S. P. depot are hard to get to because the sidewalk, is blocked with building material. Sam Englehart, who has.beenkeep ing bar for John Cooke for some time past, left for his home in Bridgetown N. J., the first of the week. He is the son of a prominent woolen man back in New Jersey and goes back on the re vuest of his father to take a place in his mill. For the month ending December 1st, the patrons of the Stone creamery re ceived 31K cents per pound for butter fat. Next summer it is believed that the number of dairy farmers in the sec tian that can be conveniently reached by the creamery's wagon will largely increase. Mrs. C. Gibbons, who has rested in Oregon City for the past seven years, left on last Monday for Spokane, Wasli., where she will make her home in the future. Mrs. Gibbons goes to join her son who resides in that thriving Wasb To be Given Away : THIS IS HOW WE DO IT v With every Ten Men's Suits or Overcoats we sell, we will .Give Away a Ten Dollar Greenback "With every Ten Boy's Suits or Overcoats we will Give Away a Five Dollar Greenback Last year we gave away several hundred dollars, and hun-. dreds of our customers can testify to the facts. We not only Give this money away, but also give the Best Values in men's and boy's and children's clothing in the city. These have already received presents. See their receipts and the money in our windows: 1 E. E. STOESSEL, Salem, $10.00 ROY W. WHITNEY, 106 Mason Street, $10.00 E. W. JONES, Camas, Wash., $10.00 ELMER NYE, Woodlawn, $10.00 HENRY B. DAY, Dayton, Wash....... $10.00 ELMER SMITH, 346 Couch St., $ 5.00 W. E. MITCHELL, 63 Oak St., $5.00 MRS. O. M. CROUCH, Montavilla $ 5.00 ' SARAH GRIFFITH, 164 Grand Av. N., $ 5.00 MRS. CHAS. HAYES, 171 Stanton St., $ 5.00 y A. D. WOLFER, Hubbard, $5.00 WHEN YOU SEE IT IN OUR AD, IT'S SO Moijcr Clothing Company THIRD AND OAK STREETS PORTLAND, OREGON is what he wrote: "Your mouth is the front door to your face. It is the aper ature to the cold storage of our anatomy. Some mouths look like peaches and cream and some look like a hole in a brick wall to admit a new door or win dow. The mouth is a hotbed for tooth ache and the bunghole of oratory. It is the crimson isle . to your liver. It is pa triotism's fountain and the tool-cheBt for pie. Without a mouth the politician would be a wanderer on the face of the earth and go down to an unhonored grave. It is the grocer's friend, the ora tor's pride and the dentist's hope. It puts some men on the rostrum and some in jail. It is a temptation's lunch counter when attached to a man." RETURNED KLOXDIKER. Greatest Excitement Among the "Kids" in the South End. BURGLARIZED. HOME OF MRS. KOIIK ROB BED OF FIFTY DOLLARS. Following is the list of town officers for Canby,' elected on the first day ot De cember, and who will take their seats January 1,1903: Treasurer, Frank Zollner. Councilmen, C. N. Wait, Fred Hamp ton, H.C. Gilmore, E. I. Sias and R. Fanton. Sad Death. Mrs. Mary Hart, of Canby, died at her home in that city on the 15th day of ington city, and is engaged in the Feed rjecenlber of cancer of the stomach. She and livnrv stable business. Mrs, Gib bons leaves many friends In Oregon City. " W. L. Holcomb, who lives four miles east of Oregon City on the Holcomb road, was in town Friday on business. Mr. Holcomb is one of the oldest resi dents of this part of the Willamette val ley, having come to Oregon City with his parents in 1848, from the '-Sucker State." Mr. Hoclomb married and raised his family in this part of the county, and all of his matured manhood he hs been a resident of Clackamas county. He thinks well of this part of the earth, and thinks that one of these days Clackamas county will be to the forefront of any county of the Pacific coast in business, population and wealth. D. Kauffman, one of the "old timers' of Clackamas county was in Oregon City was ill for the last six months before her death and was a most excellent lady . Her remains were interred in the Zion cemetery. Shank & Bissell had charge of the funeral. Fine Farm Sold. s8 William Blount and wife, of near Canby, have sold their fine farm of sev eral hundred acres to Mr. Munson for M00 ner acre. Mr. Munson is from North Dakota. Mr. and Mrs. Blount in the spring will go to England, where they will make their home. School Report. Follwing is the report of school dis trict No. 6, Clackamas county, for the month ending December 5 : Number pupils enrolled 50 Number days taught 19 last Saturday attending to business and Number days attendance 8.15 ., . hat brami 0f whisky he uses to The people in the south end of the town, near the woolen mills, were treat ed to the exciting novelty of seeing a Klondiker scattering his wealth broad cast last Saturday afternoon. The name of the man who was so lav ish nith his means is Robert Kelland, of New Era. Kelland came down from Nome a few days ago and stopped at a hotel in Portland, and is reported to have "blown in" something like $2500 while there. Saturday he struck Oregon City. The return to his old home was too much for the Klondike miner. Ihe event must be celebrated in a fitting manner. Accordingly he hied himself to different places in town where King Al Kohol reigns supreme. He found plenty of his old friends, genial fellows, who were not loth to drink with a man who had money to burn. Kelland look ed on the wine was red. In fact, he looked on it several times, and each su& cesBive time he grew a little richer in his own estimation. When the Shades of evening began to fall, he concluded it was time to go home. By then be was a full-fledged millionaire. At the woolen mills he saw a crowd of children playing on the streets. Now was a good time to nrove that he was not only a million' aire but also something of a philanthro- olst. Dicainz down into his pocket he fished up handful after handful of coins and tossed them to the delighted "Kius. Many of them thought that Old Sarita Clause had really come to town. Among other change that Kelland threw away was a twenty dollar gold piece, which tie concluded was too-much for one of the children, and he took it back and got it changed and then distributed it. Kelland is reported to have struck it rich in the Klondike. He has the repu tation of being an all-around good fellow and has many friends in Oregon City. He has one fault, and that is that he and King Al Kohol are too good friends. No Clue to the Guilty Parties. Mrs. Mary Kohn lives on the Aberna- thy road, about four miles from town. She is a poor widow and lives all alone. On Friday of last week she left the house alone and went out for a call. When she returned she found that her house had been burglarized. A search reveal ed the fact that fifty dollars, which she kept concealed in a drawer, had been taken by the miscreants. Mrs. Kohn was in town tho first of the week and reported the loss. She hag absolutely no idea as to who the guilty parties are who took the money, but thinks some one must have been aware of where she kept it and watched her movements so as to be able to enter the house while she was gone. Hymeneal. On December 14, 1902, Miss Lillie Belle Rouse, of Brownsville, Oregon, was united In marriage to Mrs, W. B. May at the residence of Rev. and Mrs. W. L. Mollov, at Ely. A large assembly of guests were present to do honor to the occasion, and many valuable and useful presents were left with them as tokens of kind regards and warm friendship. Miss Rouse has ever since her earliest childhood been a resident of Browns ville. She has many admirors and friends who entertain for her high re gards and whose best wishes will al ways attend her. Mr. May is no less favored with a warm following of friends. He is a carpenter by trade, and is at present working for the Crown Taper Co. on their new pulp mill. Mr. and Mrs. May intend for the present to make their residence in this city, where they will be pleased to meet their friends. Christmas troods. Mr. Kauff- - D " man is one of the pioneers of the crea m ery business in this valley having put n oneof the first plants established in hiBtKitbu. Hj his bei vary suc cessful in the work, snd his butter has a fine reputation wherever known and brings the highest market price. He makes a part of his product in Oregon City and the remainder in Portland. He is of the opinion that there is a great future in Clackamas county for the creamery industry. A'Misiouri boy wai compelled by th teacher to write an essay on the "Mouth" for some Average daily attendance 43 Number times tardy 20 Those neither tardy nor absent were : Eva Sconce, Leland, Lela and Lily Har desty, Ella and May Shultz, Otis Ogle, Jeanie Catlett, Peter Kilo, Albert Kil mer, Harvey Ring, Lily, Norah, Elva and Earnest Conrad. Visitors present were: Mr. J. Ring, Mr. Shultz and Mr. Watson, Director O. D. Ritter, Superintendent J. C. Zinser. Visitors are always welcome. Alicb ii. Rittkr, Teacher. make him throw away his money we unable to leam. The "kldB" in the mith end are keeping a lookout for his return to town, ' Every hat trimmed or nntritnnio. infraction of discipline, and this J great reduction . M iss O. Goldi-m .it a it. Foils A Deadly Attack, "My wife was so ill that good physic ian were unable to help her," writes M. M. Austin, of Winchester, Ind., "but was completely cured by Dr, Kina's New Lile Pills." They work waders in stomach and liver troubles Cere constipation, sick headache. 25c t '.ieo. A. Harding'! drug store. ' A Startling Surprise. Very few could believe in looking at A. T. Hoadley. a healthy, robust black smith of Tililen, Ind., that for ten years he suffered such tortures from Rheu matism as few could endure and live. But a wonderful change followed his ' taking Electric Bitters, "and I have not felt a twinge in over a year." They regulate the Kidneys, purify the blood and cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Nervousness, improve digestion and give perfect health. Try them. Only 50cts. at Geo. A. Harding's drug store. Get a free sample of Chamberlain Stomach and Liver Tablets at Geo. A Harding's drug store They are ea to take and more pleasant In effuct the pills. Then their use Is not followed h conspipittion as is often the cas e wi pills. Regular size, 25 cents par out