OREGON ,-CITY .COURIER, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1903 . . k' ! I:. .u. ,,.,, , II illll'M.fT"! iisi AWfietablcPreparationror As similating thfiToodandRegula ting ihe S tamacbs aiuLBawels of PromoteslSgcstion,Checrlil ness andBostContalns neither Opium;Morpbine uorljinefal. Not Narcotic. AmJta Smi- Anitt Sm: iippcrrwfit v r w run Anerfecl Remedy for Consti&a- tioh, Sour Stotnach.Diarrhoea, Worms ,convuLsioris,revensiv aess and LOSS OF SLB facsimile Signature of NEW VOHIC. EXACT COPy OF YRAPPEB. -mini. New Plumbing and Tin Shop A. MIHLSTIN JOBBING AND REPAIRING a Specialty Opposite OauflelcLBlock OREGON CITY E. E. G. SEOL Will give you a Bargain in Wall Paper Wall Tinting and In General House Painting Paint Shop near Depot Hotel ' 0. A. Perrin, Helena, Mont. I wish to thank you for my re ff. I was mfferirg agonies Iron ilea and was taking morphine t eiieve me, when, on the advice o i friend, I rirceurrcd a bottle o ur Perrin Pile Specific and tool i tableipoohful at night and an otherin the morning. Athalfpa welve, r.ocn, my wife gave m r.olher (ablest oonful, when m ain all etopprck. In two dayB ss able to attend my regulu utli es eulluly lelleved. It w simp' ''"lul. Jinus JliTiK'Firn 11 . R. DIMICEi, LIVERYMAN Successor to W. II. Young. Will furnish rigs and prices. Finest turnouts in If you want a rig or a horse, South Main Street, Brunswick House NEWLY FURNISHED ROOMS Heals at All Honrs Open Day and Night Prices Reasonable Only First Class Restaurant in the City CHAS. CATTA, Prop. Opposite Suspension Bridge OliEGOW CITY, ORE. For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature; of For Over Thirty Years THC OKNTAUM COMPANY, NEW YORK CfTV. Few Requirements Necessary It doesn't require much knowledge to tench a country school," , says the Hutchinson News. "All the require ments necessary for a country school teacher is to be a primary, intermediate and high school teacher combined. She must be able to rustle her own kindling wood, build her own fires, adjust the fallen stove pipes, put in window panes that the boyB break, mend the broken desk, love the dull, unruly pupils as well as she does the bright, obedient scholar, or at least give no evidence of a a different condition of affairs. She must be able to drive a horse, spank un ruly kids, keep the big boys from mak ing love to ber, keep on the good side of all the people in the district. She must understand the school laws and be able to interpret them to the school board. She must raise money for the school library, keep all kinds of records plant trees on arbor day, be of an irre proachable moral character and pass an examination in all the branches of mod era education in which half the college graduates ten years from examination would flunk and in which an applicant for $2,500 a year government position would fail. For all these varied ac' complishmhnts and for all this labor the school teacher receives the magnificent salary of $25 to $00 per month and finds herself until eomeone takes pity on ber Out of this Bum she is expected to blow in a part of it each year in attending the county normal to fit herself more thor oughly for the earning of this magnifi cent salary." MMM A ML H of A W ftf a Use IVjr saddle-horses at reasonable the city. Best saddle horses. call on him. opposite Electric Hotel Brown & Welch Proprietors of thb Seventh Street Meat Market A. O. U. W. Building OREGON" CITY, OREGON and Restaurant WILLIAM BARLOW. PIONEUR CITIZEN OF CLACKAMAS COUNTY. Well Knomn, Better Liked, a Splendid Man. William Barlow, of - Barlow, this county, is one of the oldest citizens of the Willamette valley. He was born in Indiana on the 22d day of October, 1822, and at his last anniversary in Octo ber he was 80 years of age. Notwith standing his extreme age he is yet hale and hearty and as actiye as many men of much fewer years. , Mr. Barlow's father and family, migrated to the Willamette valley in 1845, leaving Illinois on the 30th day of March of that year and ar riving in Oregon City on the 25th day of December of that year. They crossed the plains with the old-fashioned ox team and carayan and braved the dan gers of the Indians and the privations by the way. From that day until now Mr. Barlow has been a resident of Clack amas county. Mr. Barlow says that the pleasantest summer he remembers to have spent in his entire life was the summer that he crossed the plains with the old ox team The summer was long and beautiful game was abundant and near at band They had plenty of good things to eat by the way. It was a long, delightful picnic from the time they left the prairies of Illinois until they reached the timbered country ol the Willamette. Mr. Barlow was united in marriage to Mrs. Martha Ann Allen on the 25th day of March, 1852. To this union three children were born, two of whom are now living, Cassius U. Barlow, a farmer living in this county, and Mary S. Bar- ow, who lives at home with her father All of the years of his life Mr. Barlow has been a very active and energetic citisen. When he set up for himself in Clackamas county be had no property He has .been a farmer, storekeeper trader, and has been remarkably sue cessful in all of his undertakings and pursuits. A few years ago Mr. Barlow was one of the largest land owners in the county and was reckoned one of the county's wealthiest and moat substan tial citizens. In more recent years he has distributed his property among his children, so at his death the property will become theirs absolutely, and there will be nothing left behind for the law yers to fight over. Mr. Barlow in days gone by has taken an active interest in politics. One time years ago he was elected assessor of the county, and it took him just thirty day to make for the county one of the best assessments it has ever had. Later he was a county commissioner. It goes without saying that he made a good one In the olden days he was a Whig, Henry Clay Whig in politics. During and after the war of the rebellion Mr, Barlow was a Lincoln Republican and supported that party. Later be became and is now a staunch Democrat of the Bryan school. He is highly regarded by all who know him, loved by his chil dren, appreciated by his friends, and is a hale "fellow well met" everywhere. Mr. Barlow is in love with the Wil lamttce vaney. He nas seen many countries, and says that this the best of all. Th3 best country in which to make an easy, honest living. He has seen the valley peopled from the first ; says there is no better people on earth than the people of Clackamas county.aud no better spot on earth for a man to live and die. The Grim Reaper, Miss Oda Randall, niece of Tom P. Raudall and well-known in this city, died Saturday morning at the Si. Vincent hospital in Portland after hav ing undergone a serious suraical operation. Miss Randall was born aud rmsed m this city but had recently resided in Toledo, Oregon. She had been visiting friends in Oregon City just prior to going to the hospital in Portland. She had a wide circle of friends here. She was an accomplished musician and only 13 years old. The funeral was held Sunday at Toledo and the remains laid to rest in the cemetery at that place. Straiedor Stolen. About December 1st, 1902, two heifers going to two years; one ligtit red, ear mark cut tip and crop underneath right ear; one dark red, white under belly. Suitable reward for recovery. Louis Fcsk, Redland, Or. , " - . f V . ' . '7 Iii n.un ir mi mKmmmmmmmmmmtlum MANY THOUSANDS CURED - . . - - Remarkable Cures Hade by Pe-runa Miss Blanche Myers, 8120 Penn street, elty writes : r " Daring each of the past cold when suddenly chilled after an evening party, and a most un pleasant catarrh lasting for several weeks would be the result. "Last winter my brother advised me to try Peruna, as one of his club friends bad been cured of a bad case of catarrh by using it. He procured me a bottle and I was much pleased to find that one bottle cured me. I shall not dread colds any more so long as I can procure Peruna," MISS BLANCHE MYERS. Peruna cures catarrh wherever located, with the same surety and promptness. There are no substitutes for Peruna. Miss Hattle Becker, secretary of the Goethe Club, of Racine, Wis., writes : "A short time ago I got my feet wet, and a. cold settled on my lungs which nothing seemed to remove. Our family physician tried extracts, powders and pills, but I kept getting worse until my brother advised me to try Peruna and purchased a bottle for me. "It acted like a charm andn a week I was like my old self once more ; in fact I felt stronger and had a better appetite than I have ever had before. Peruna will have a welcome place In our medi cine chest, as the whole family believes In it." Hattie Becker. Peruna is an internal remedy a Modern Instances. When the Summertime is over and the leaves have quit the trees. Then a melancholy hits you as you listen to the breeze, For the goose-flesh then is present and you find its no joke When the frost is on the windows and your overcoat's in Boak. And 'tis then your Summer wages you regretfully recall. And the fun you had in blowing them is not comforting at all When you Bhiver, blue and chilly, and you know you're dead, flat broke. And the frost is on the windows and your overcoat's in soak. Where are now the days of swelter and the nights so full of heat? Where the underwear all gauay and the Panama bo neat? Where are now the socks of openwork?- alas, it is no jokel When the frost is on the windows and your overcoat's in soak. You remember now with sorrow how you squandered all your dough, When you have to dig up money for more coal each day or so, And your heart is filled with sadness and your woe is hard to cloak When the frost is on the windows and your overcoat's in soak. Ob, there's nothing half so mournful as the wintry Wintertime, When the ice gets on your whiskers and your hair is white rime, When your pockets thoy are empty and your breath pours out like smoke, And the frost is on the windows and your overcoat's in soak. Ah, 'tis then you wish you wandered on a far-off Southern isle, Where the costume most in fashion is a palm le.if and a smile, Where they have no pesky pockets, so they never can go broke, Where no frost is on the windows and no overcoat's in soak. Removal of Office. G. B. Dimick and George L. Story have moved their law office from the Stevens block to rooniB 2 and 3 in the new Garde building, up stairs. ITCHINESS OF THE SKIN. The only remedy in the world that will at once stop Itchiness of the Skin on anv part of the body that is absolutely safe and never failing, is Doan's Oint ment. Free Samples at C. G. Huntley's. MISS BLANCHE MYERS Kansas City, Mo., a society belle of that four seasons I have caught a severe scientific remedy for catarrh. It cures catarrh wherever located. Its oures last. Peruna gives strength -by stopping waste. By saving the mucus it enriches the blood. By cleansing ttte mucous membranes it preserves Hie vital forces. A constant drain of mucus from the system is known as systemio catarrh. This may ooour from any organ of the body.. Peruna stops this waste by curing the catarrhal condition of the mucous membrane, no matter which organ may be affeted. Peruna cures catarrh wher ever located. Shoes, 1 Hats a Tin rants ; For the next sixty days my entire stock of the above men- gss S- tionnd goods will be sold absolutely at cost. Also a few Boys' 1 If You Want a Bargain I Now is the H General Merchandise, Oregon City iiiaiiiiiaiiiiii;mMl'Biinlfll,iiilill.A,,.d;iiu,iilili.,,.A,l,iiill!iil, SHANK & BISSELL, Undertakers Phones 411 and 304. T"""1!!! "'""'""'"'"'."".ipHiiimj.pjiiijjNiiBjiuniiBi,,,,, ROWAN and Lunch Counter W. I. ROWAN, Proprietor Opposite Electric Hotel, is the very best place in Oregon City to get a Dainty Lunch or SQUARE Open at All Hours, day or night Newly Furnished Rooms and Clean Beds OF CATARRH. a 1.- . I North and South. Mrs, Mary Cook, Pittsford, N. T., also sayst ; " I was not very weU for six years, paid many doctor bills, but never im proved very much. Two years ago I was attacked with , la grippe, which left me with! a severe liver trouble, I gar up ; hope of ever re covering. ' Peruna oured me. I feel young again, and am gaining in flesh, as t was very emaciated. My own children are surprised In the great change In ma when they come to visit me. We have made your Peruna our household rem edy." Mrs. Mary Cook. j Congressman H. Henry Powers ot Vermont, writes from Morrlsvllte, Vti "Peruna 1 have used In my family with success. I can recommend M as an excellent family remedy, and very good for coughs, colds and catarrhal affections." 'H. Henry Powers. i Hon. John H. Gear, United State Senator from Iowa, writes: " Peruna I oan recommend to all as a very good tonic, and particularly good as aremedy for catarrh." John H. Gear. Senator Gear's home address is Bur lington, Iowa. Mr. O. Fisher, 1801 Lexington avenue, New Tork City, writes : " I had catarrh and was troubled with a constont dropping from the back part of the nose into the throat, and a hor rible breath. Also severe hoarseness and yellow discharge from the nose j but I haven't the slightest trouble now of those complaints, and I honestly and conscientiously state that I am cured of catarrh of the nose and throat. " If there is anyway I can state it more positively I am only too glad to do so, and I am willing, very willing, to lend any aid in my power In helping you to Induce sufferers to give Peruna a trial, "My wife Is also taking Peruna, and It Is helping her wonderfully. She has improved considerably since taking Peruna. She feels fifty per cent better than she has In years, for all of which I am very thankful, as she was extremely nervous, had systemic catarrh, and thin blood."0. Fisher. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Boots, time to get it 1 "in""" fl fl"''"l't"ii'ilfciiiiil'IiiiiiiiifliMlthii We carry the only complete line of Caskets, Coffins, Robes and Linings in Clackamas County. We have the only First-Class Hearse in the County, which we will furnish for less than can be had elsewhere. Embalming a Specialty. Our prices always reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. Main St., Opp. Huntley' MUE MEAL Mrs. Mary Cook.