Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, January 16, 1903, Page 7, Image 7

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    ORECON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, JANUAY 16, 1903
OREGON STATE FINANCES.
TOW
Kir.; &SiTg':af """""" j
Cash
The Kind You nave Always Bought, and which has been
iu use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
J? and has been made under his per-
(jr Cj('j'f, sonal supervision since its infancy. '
iar7 , UcA(K Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children Experience against Experiment.
iat is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
pud allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
CiENUSffiE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The semi-annual report of State Treas
urer Moore has heen made public. The
statement shows a cash balance in the
tate treasury on January 1st of $1,122-
796.11, as against $1,200,254.39 at the
close of the six monthe immediately
preceding. This reported balance is
ound in the several lunas. as ioiiows:
General fund $ 234,687 76
Common school fund.princi-
pal -lb
Common school fund, inter
est, 83.233 94
Agricultural College fund,
principal v,ilo n
Agricultural College fund, ,
interest 0,344 at)
University fund, principal. 2,310 50
University fund, interest... 1,565 53
Thurston Monument fund,
prin ipal 120 36
Ti.urston Monument, inter
est 4U "a
Swamp land fund 4,765 74
Tide land fund 19,673 63
Salmon industry fund 1,240 08
Oregon Soldiers' Home, na-.
tional fund 6,743 U8
State board of examiners'
fund 271 55
Oregon stove foundry fund ' 2528 57 r
Hatcherv fund 1414U tfl
Boupty fund 5,900 09
Pure food tund 149 65
State Agricultural College,
tax fund B,a ao
Sewer fund 92 64
J
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THC OCNTAUH COMPANY, TT MURRAY (TMET, NIW YORK CITY.
Family
WINES
California Wine House
MAIN STREET Bet. 4th and 5th
WILLAMETTE
GROCERY
MILES & McGLAS'HAN, PROPS
OREGON CITY, OREGON
I 25
Per Gallon
California Port..., $i oo
ExtraTawny
Extra Old Port
Delicate and Mellow
Superior Old Port and Sherry I 50
Selected For Medicinal Purposes
Extra Old California Sherry I .05
Medium, Pale, Delicate aud Dry '
California Tokay.......... I 00
Excellent Table W'iue
Sweet Muscatel 1 2?
Fine Wine ' v
Sweet Catawba 1 25
Klch
Angelica 1 05
Sott, Full and Fine.
Extra old Calif rnia Angelica 1 25
Superb old dessert wine.
Extra Dry California famous Wints.
... 85c
75c
75c
65c
00
Sparkling Burgundy
A dear, BparKtiug wine.
Sonoma Claret 65c
Tll,Vi. fruit wlnfl.
Extra Sonoma Zinfandel. . .
Kone better; a well matured wine
Extra Sonoma Riesling. . . ,
A white wine tnat Will please you.
Sonoma Hock
Quality unsurpassed ,
Sonoma Sauterne .1 1
A fine old white wine.
Fine Calif. Grape Brandy ..275
The genuine; good as imported.
Only Wine Vaults in the City
City Orders Delivered Tree.
Order, through Vowr Grocer.
6. 31. Brady.
DR. KINO'S
try NEW DISCOVERY
FOR THAT COLD.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Cures Consumtiou,Coughs,
Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma,
LaGrippe, Hoarseness,
Sore Throat, Croup and
Whooping Cough.
NO CURE. NO PAY.
Pric 50c. and $1 . T"l BOTTLES FREE
65 Cents
Gallon Pure Mo. Sarghum
20 Cents
Package Fairbank's Gold Dust
25 Cents
7 Boxes 1776 Washing Powders
75 Cents
20 Bars Perfection Soap
45 Cents
10-lb Sack New York Buck Wheat
25 Certs
2 Lion or Arbuckle Coffee
25 Cents
, 2-lbs Costa'Richa Coffee
10 Cents
S-lb Package Perfection Salt
We handle Toilet Soaps and Sta
tionary Goods.
Balance.
$1,122,796
January
mm its;
Good Things Gathered by an
Observing Statesman.
Total $1,122,796 11
"Some time go my daughter caught a
severe cold. She complained of pains in
her chest and had a bad cough. I gave
her Chamberlain's Cough Remedy ac
cording to directions and in two days
as well and able to go to school. I
have used this remedy in ray family for
the past seven years and have never
known it to fail," says James Prender-
gast, merchant, Annato Bay, Jamaica,
West India Islands. The pains in the
chest indicated n approaching attack
of pneumonia, which was undoubtedly
warded off by Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy. It counteracts any tendency
of a cold toward pneumonia. Sold by
G. A. Harding. .
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISMENTS.
WANTED To increase my list of farms
and lands for sale, in all parts of the
county. Lands owned by non-residents
represented and sold. H. E. Cross, At'
torney1 at Law .
the Dentist: Beatie and Beatie are
the dentists in the Weinhard building
Their rooms are numbers 16, 17, 18.
Send i'Oc to Aleert 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 j others 2 cents., tf
PSTIUY NOTICE Found on my furm
14 miles west of Clackamas station in
Clackamas county one-and-a-half year
old heifer, red with red and white face.
Took the calf up about the 10th of No
vember. Owner can have same by
proving "property and paying cost of pub
lication and keep. Joseph Webber,
Clackamas, Or.
New Century Comfort.
Millions are daily findings world of
comfort in Bucklin's Arnica Salve. It
kills pain from burns, scalds, cuts,
bruises; conquers ulcers and fever sores;
cures eruptions, salt rheum, boils aud
felons j removes corns and warts. Best
pile cure on earth. Only 25c at Geo. A.
Harding's drug store.
T HAVE received from Eastern Oregon
45 head of horses and want pasture
for same. Will pay $1 per month cash
in advance. A. D. Guylup, Oregon
City.
Removal of Office.
G. B. Dimick and George L. Story
have moved their law office from the
Stevens block to rooms 2 and 3 in the
new Garde building, up stairs.
ITCHINESS 4F T1IE SKIN.
The only remedy in the world that
will at once stop Itchiness of the Skin an
any part of the body that is absolutely
safe and never failing, is Itoan's Oint
ment. Free Samples at C. G.Huntley's.
New Plumbing
and Tin Shop
A. MIHLSTIN
JOBBING AND REPAIRING
a Specialty
Opposite Caufleld.Block OREGON CITY
Remarkable Cure of Croup.
A Little .Boy'S Lire Saved.
I have a few words to say regarding
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It
saved my boy's life and feel that I can
not praise it enough. I bought a bottle
of it from A. E. Kteere, of Goodwin, S.
D.,and when I got home with it the
poor baby could hardly breathe. I gave
the medicine as directed every ten min
utes until he "threw up" and then I
thought sure he was going to choke to
death. We tad to pull the phlegm out
of his mouth in great long stringers. I am
positive that if I had not got that bottle
of cough medicine, my boy would not v-e
on earth today.-Joel Demont, Inwood,
owa. For sale by G. A. Harding.
HOUSEWORK
Too much housework wrecks wo
men's, nerves. And the constant
care of children, day and night, is
often too trying for even a strong
woman. A haggard face tells the
story of the overworked housewife
and methei, Cmnged meases,
leucorrhaea Jd falling of the
womb result from overwork.
Every housewife needs a remedy
to regulate her menses and to
keep her sensitive female organs
' In perfect condition.
iWlrlE" CARDUI
is doing this for thousands of
American women to-day. It cured
Mrs. Jones and that is why she
writes this frank letter :
Glendeeae, By., Feb. 10, 1901.
I am o glad that your Wine of Cardul
U helping me. I am feeling better than
I hate felt for year. I am doing my
own work without any help, and I
waahed laat week and wee noi one bit
tired. - That ahowa that the Wine la
doing me good. 1 am getting nesuier
I ever waa oeiore, ana Bleep gooa
th.nl
and eat hearty. Before I began taking
Wine of Osardul, I uaod to hare to lay
down five 01 sir. time every day, but
pow I do not uuajroi lying aown m rouga
Mi mm, uiOBUs 4 una.
I
the day
1
For adle and lltmtnra, aAiba
mm. ' Tb. Lsdiw avuorv up
1.00 AT DKCOG1STS.
i, prim
rtn
if fjnnp.
it". The
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic
has stood the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One end a Half MUlIoa
bottles. Does this record of merit appeal to you? No Cure, No Pay, 50c.
Enclosed with every some u a Ten cent, package or Grove's Black Root Uver Pills.
Chautauqua Assemblies a Great Edu
cational Force Professional and
Amateur .Lecturers How a Ken
tuckian Beat a Circus Man Turtle
Too Much' For a Lion Paddy ana
the Judge Colonel Bain as an Or
ator The Farmer Boy on Dudes.
Copyright, 1S0S, by Champ Clark.
Comparatively few persons have any
adequate conception Of what a great
tducational force Intellectual, moral,
religious and material the Chautau
qua assemblies have come to be. There
are nearly 400 of them. A Chautauqua
assembly is a sort of literary, sck-iitilic,
oratorical and musical camp meeting,
a college or university In a tout or
tabernacle. They are carrying the best
thought of this generation to the re
motest nooks and corners of the repub
lic. All sorts of public speakers appear
on their platforms grave eeclesiastlcs,
profound university dons, solemn
statesmen, famous soldiers, distin
guished editors, celebrated authors,
poets and travelers aud specialists in
every branch of learning.
Most assuredly the Chautauquas give
a variety of mental pabulum. Some
times a redhot debate is added as a
novel feature and a drawing card.
Lecturers fall iiUo two natural divi
sions professionals aud eainteurs.
With the former it is their sole voca
tion. General Gordon, Colonel George
W. Ilain, Governor Bob Taylor, George
R. Wendling and a few others do noth
ing else from year's end to year's end.
The amateurs lecture sporadically, as
the doctors would say, each having
some other regular profession or call
ing. "Marse" Henry Watterson edits
a great newspaper, the Rev. Sam
Jones and Dr. MacArthur preach, and
so on to the end of the chapter. Some
men stay on the platform a lifetime,
making towering reputations and piles
of money. For instance, Wendell Phil
lips and Colonel Bob Ingersoll were
ratefcTaffiofig' America's great orators,
iris said that "Phillips raked in $150,000
on his lecture on "The Lost Arts." Oth
ers lecture a short time while In the
public eye. For Instance, while Henry
M. Stanley wore a sort of halo by rea
Bon of his African explorations he re
ceived as high as $1,000 per night
rather comfortable wages. For the last
six years William J. Bryan has per
haps made more money than any other
lecturer. He had a very amusing and
profitable experience in 1897. The
Chautauqua assembly at Carthage, Mo.,
wanted him for one lecture. Like Bar
kis, he .was "wlllln',M but demanded
$300 for his services. The Chautau
qua, thinking that too much, declined,
but offered him half the gate receipts,
lie accepted their proposition and bad
for his share something over $2;300, a
pretty fah- day's work. 3
Oratory Not a Lost Art
The question is frequently asked, "Is
oratory a lost art?", . Pessimists who
see nothing good In the present and
only eternal night In the future and
who are forever looking back to a
golden age assert that It Is; that all the
orators are dead; that only Jawsmlths
now vex the ears of men and saw the
circumambient atmosphere with their
arms. I take the negative. I'll make
my affidavit that there Is at least one
orator still moving the mind and heart
by the power of spoken words. Ills
name is George W. Bain, and his habi
tat Is the ancient home of orators, Lex
ington, Ky.
I had the exquisite pleasure of hear
ing him deliver a temperance lecture
in 1901 at the Fort Smith Chautauqua,
in Arkansas. The audience was splen
did, the theme hackneyed. For over
an hour he swayed his hearers as the
storm king sways the forest At one
moment he excited them to such up
roarious laughter that It must have
startled the turtles sleeping on the
banks of the Arkansas. The next they
were dissolved in tears. I am not
ashamed to confess that he set my
lachrymal glands to working freely
and copiously, and I have heard all
our great orators from John C. Beck
inridge to Joseph W. Bailey. The way
that Colonel Bain played upon that
weird harp of a thousand strings, the
human heart, waa a revelation to me.
Concerning the Warmburfler.
In a lecture on "Boys and Girls, Nice
and Naughty; or, The Pendulum of Hu
man Life," at the Sprlngdale Cbautau-,
qua, in Arkansas, In 1901 he edged In
a section en temperance and told this
amazing story: "Girls, I have a new
word for you warmburger. It hasn't
appeared in any dictionary yet, but it
may. It came about In this way: At
the first circus that ever appeared In
Allen county, Ky, an African lion was
advertised as one of the attractions. It
was stated In the bills that It was the
first ever brought to America. When
the show opened, among other things
the ringmaster said: 'Ladles and gen
tlemen, in this cage is a magnificent
African lion. Behold him la all bis
maiestv and ferocious glory. He is the
king of beasts and can easily whip any
of the animal kingdom.' When he got
that far In his oration," said Colonel
Bain, "a great, tall, muscular Kentuck
lan arose and roared, 'Hey, mister, do
you say that that lion can whip any
sort of animal? 'Yes,' replied the Hon
keeper with great pomposity. 'Well,'
drawled the Kentucklan, 'I'll bet you
$5 that I have an animal that can lick
himr 'I won't let the lion fight for $5.
Make it $25 and I'll go you, provided
you tell me what sort of animal it
Is. 'All right.' replied the Kentucklan
as he put up the money, 'it's a warm-
burger V So" the match was made. 'iar.
Kentucklan left the tent, but soon re
turned with a sack upon his shoulder.'
concealed In which was his 'warmbur
ger.' He opened the sack aud out of it
emptied Into the lion's cage a huge
snapping turtle. The lion walked up to
it, stuck his nose down and deliberate
ly proceeded to smell the 'warmbur
ger,' alias the turtle. The latter grab
bed the king of beasts by the nose and
held on like grim death. The lion tried
to tear It off with his claws, but could
not and finally began whining piteous
ly. 'Take It off!' yelled the lion's keep
er. 'The money is yours!' 'You take
him off!' nonchalantly replied the tri
umphant Kentucklan. You smell a
warmburger' to tost his genuineness.
Try the same method on any young
man you suspect of drinking."
A Darky In Court. '
Sitting under the shade 'of the trees
between two sessions of the Chautau
qua, some one read from a paper how
Mrs. Kennedy, on trial for murder at
Kansas City, threw herself upon the
mercy of the court. Colonel Bain said:
"That reminds me of an old colored
brother down In Kentucky who was
harnessed up before a justice of the
peace for soiiie misdemeanor. The jus
tice, who knew him well, said, 'Fom
pey, have you any lawyer?' 'No, sab,'
replied Pompey. 'I'll jist throw my
self on de lg(iance ob dis heah cote.' "
Pat and the Judge. ,
In his lecture he said: "An Irishman
rushed into the odice of a justice of the
peace and exclaimed in great excite
ment: 'Yer honor, there's a man out
there says he's going to kill me! He
showed me the pistol with which be
intends to do It ! Please have him ar
rested!' 'No use to do that, Pat. If
he kills you, we will have him hanged.'
'Oh, judge,' responded Pat, 'and If It
pl'ases yer honor, couldn't you have
him hanged before he kills me, so I
can attend the hangiug?' "
How an Orator Was Made.
"Poeta nnwltur, non fit" ("The poet
i Is born, not made"), is the old saying.
! The same reinnrk is largely true of or
ators, but a man may possess the or
atorical gift and not know 1L For
mauv rears that was the case with
Colonel Bain. The chiiuces are that. If
the meeting had never been held In
Boston to denounce the slayers of Love
joy, Wendell Phillips might never have
discovered his great power as an or
ator. Likewise If a great temperance
wave had not swept over the blue
grass region of Keutucky about a quar
ter of a century ago Colonel Bain
might and probably would have gone
on to his dying day unconscious of the
fact that he belongs to the tribe of
silver tougued orators.
Colonel William C P. Breckinridge,
himself a renowned practitioner of the
art of Demosthenes and Cicero, once
told me In the house of representatives'
fit 1 Washington how Bain got to lec
turing. "George W. Bala, was a brave
young Confederate soldier," said the
colonel. "WheU the war closed, he set
tled at Lexington and was engaged Iu
the mercantile business. ' A . temper
ance agitation, wiMJ started. One nUrlit
Bain was called on for some remarks
and did so well that he surprised him
self and all. wbe heard hliu. The pa
pers complimented him". He began to
receive invitations to speak at school
bouses in Fayette county. His speeches
constantly and rapidly grew better. " At
first he received no compensation not
even expenses. ' Then he received ex
pense money; then $6 and expenses.
The temperance agitation spread,
Bain's fame grew, and bis compensa
tion increased until he is one of the
best paid and most famous platform
orators In America."
An Honest Man.
Is moral character a factor In elo
quence? Is honesty a valuable asset
for an orator? Let Colonel Bain's his
tory answer. Ho was a merchant, a
partner in a mercantile house. It fail
ed for thousands of dollars, through no
fault of his. He did not sit down and
repine. He did not dodge. He took
the platform and for 18 long, weari
some years he went up and down the
laud delighting multitudes with his wit,
humor, pathos, eloquence and homely
philosophy, earning the wherewithal to
j pay those old partnership debts. When
, that was done, he called the ex-creditors
together and gave them a banquet.
Only think of that unequaled perform
ance! "All's well that ends well."
Half and Half.
The dyspeptic may well be represented'
pictorially as being half masculine andt
half feminine, and combimng the least;.-,
desirable characteristics of either sex
He has all the stubbornness of the man'i
with the peevish ir
ritability of a sick
woman. He's not
pleasant company at
home or abroad.
- Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery
cures dyspepsia and
other diseases of the
stomach and associ
ated organs of diges
tion and nutrition.
It renews physical
health which carries
with it cheerfulness
of temper, aud makes
life a pleasure instead
of a penance.
The " Discovery "
purifies the blood by
eliminating, the cor
rupt and poisonous
accumulations from
which dis-3P.se is bred.
It increases the ac- I l I
tivity of the blood- I fj I
making glands, so Ivi
increasing the supply
of pure rich blood, which gives life to'
every organ of the body. It fives new
life and new strength.
' "Your 'Golden Medical Discovery' has per
formed a wonderful cure," writes Mr. M. H .
House, of Charleston, Franklin Co., Ark. 1 h4 ?
i. the worst case of dvspepsia, the doctors say, that
they ever saw. After trying seven doctors an .
everything I could hear of with no benefit, I
tnet) ik. vierce's (joluen Medical Discovery and
now I am cured." i
Accept no substitute fot "Golden Med-
ical Discovery." There is nothing "just .
as 'good" for diseases of the stomach,,
blood and lungs. f
The Common Sense Medical Adviser,.
1008 large pages iu paper covers, is sent
free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps fa
pay expense of mailing only. Addrea..
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
LEGAL NOTICES.
1 It
1
Notice of Final Settlement.
Notice Is hereby given that the undnrsUnod ex ecutor
of the will of Leonard Hi-lna, deceaaeii,
has Hind his final account with the eomity oonr
of Clackamas oountyan'l state of Ore-con,
that the Hon. T. F. Ryan, in&g of said court ha -set
Monday, the 2d dav of February. 1903, at th
hour of ten o'clock a. m., of said day, aa th
time fur hearing- said report and olit.-cUolu there
to, If any there be.
Executor of the will of Leonard Ueluz, deooased
. CONTEST NOTICE.
Department of the In'erlor, United State Tju&
Ofllce, Oregon Chy. 1 m kuii November 14th lSoa.
A sufficient con--i snldnVit having been fiWd
In this office b) Aukum K. SciI1uk, contestant .
against homslead hiiiv No. i:t oO made Oct 16, .
HKM) for w of Section 17, Township 1 a. ..
Range 7 e, by William H. Usher contostee, to.
which it Is alleged that Contestant ' knows the -present
oondition of the same; also that amid
entryman has wholly abandoned sahl claim and
that he has never resided upon or cultivated
or Improved the same in auy mattnev
whatever- since making ' entry thereof or
at all nor hai anyone acting for him and that Ud
alleged absence from the said land was not da -
to his employment In the armj, havy or Marina
Corps of the United States as a private soldier,
officer seaman, or marine, during tho was with -Spain
or during any other war n which the
TJnlted States may he engaged-," said parties are
hereby noticed to appear, respond and "
evidence touching said allegations at 10 o'clock .
a. m. orl Huron 2U, 19i3. before the Register Aad,
Receiver at the United Stales Land Office In Ore
gon Cl-y Oregon.
The said contestant having, In a proporamdart
died November ,18, 1!KW, set forth facts whirls
show that after dllllgence personal service of thta
notice can not-he made. It waa ordered and
directed that such notice be given by due oa
proper publication.
Seo. W. Bibm,
Receive.
NOTICE TO OREDITORS,
Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned has
been appointed by the County Court of Clack
amas County, Oregon, ecjmtnislrator of tile estate
of Nancy Jane Beatie, deceased. All person
having olalms against said estate or the decease?.
are required to present them.with proper voucher st
and duly verified, wl hin six monthi from the
publication 01 tins nonce, tome aruernuj cut 1
his oftleQln the V.'e nl Td hell '.big Oitgos. y
CJ431 '
JOnl-ffl I. HBDGE8,
Admhilslistor of the estate of
Nancy Jam- Beatie, deccaeed.
Dated January ilth, liKB.
Hedges & Oriill Hi,
Attorneys.
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE TO CREDI
TORS. '
Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned -has
been dnly ap oinled bj the County Court
of Clackamas County, Oregon, exeoutrls of the
last will of William R. Bagby, late of said County, .
All persons having claims -ig.ilnsl the estate ot
said deceased, are notified to file such claim
with the proper vouchers ana uuiy veimou -cording
to law with my attorney, C. II. Dye .
Corner nth & Main St., Oiegnn City, Oregon ,.
within six months from ilate ol tills notice.
Dated at Oregon City, Uregou, ueuemuer ata .
mi.
HAK1UKT W. BAUIIY,
Executrix as afore said.
A Terse Eploram.
In a lecture at the Bprtngdale Chau
tauqua Dr. Lowe of Chicago university
delivered himself of this epigram.
which the audience received with up
roarious delight: "A billion dollar steel
trust or any other trust that may be
trusted to steal."
The finest epigram uttered In Ameri
ca recently was by Walter Williams,
editor of the Columbia (Mo.) Herald.
In addressing his Suuday school class,
the largest iu the state, he said, "Fame
hag taken men from the forge, the plow
and the carpenter's) bench, but she was
never known to reach over a picket
fence and snatch a dude out of a ham
mock!" That's worthy of Pope, Roche
foucauld or Thomas Bruckett Reed.
It take me back to Colonel Bain
again. In bis lecture on boys and glrli
ho tackled Um dude and spoke of him
as "lifting bis hat to show his Henry
Clay head minus the Henry!" He
continued: "An old farmer from the
Genesee valley concluded to give big
rustic 18-year-old son a chance to see
the world by taking him on a trip to
New York' city. They stopped on uu
1 eligible comer to watch the flood of hu
manity sweep, by. A great many dutle
went up and down. The youth had
never seen any of that species of ani
mal before aud gazed at them In open
mouthed and silent wonder. 11 iw fa
ther, noting his abstracted air. said
'My son, what are you thinking nlnnit?
The lad replied, 'I was Just gtu-lyitii
about what grH darned varmints yo
lee when you go out without a ku'i!' "
CHAMP CLARK.
CONTEST NOTICE.
Department ottheIkterioi;
United Slates Land Ollloe,
Oregon City, Or., Decent Im lth, IK.
A BnffloU-nt contest affidavit having been llled
In this office by l'eter tlranatzkl, contestant,
against Homestead Kntry No. 12II1S, made Decm
tier 2nd, 1H1I6, for sw;4 of swj section 5, towo-
ship 4 south, range 4 east by James Mylcs, cue
testes, iu which It Is alleged that eontestan
knows the present Condition of the same-, also the
said James Myles has wholly abandoned aaid
claim for the past two yearBj that he lias But Im
proved the same as required by law, nor had any
one make any Improvements thereon for Win: tha
to my best knowledge and belief said JameeMyle
never resided or settled upon said claim at all
(and that said alleged absenoe from the said land,
was not due te his employment In th Ann,
Navy or Marine Corps of the United State
private soldier, officer, seaman or marine deilng
the war with Spain, or during any other war iu
which the United States may be engaged).
Said parties are hereby notified to appear, re
spond and offer evidence touelilugaaldallegeHaej -I
111 Vlor.k m on March With. V):i. before Ike '
Register and Receiver at tho gultea Busies Umuo.
Office iu Oregon City, Oregon,,
The said contestant hating, In a proper am.
davit, filed December l&lb, l!W2, set forth fe
which show that afterdue alllgonee personal ser
vice of this notice can not be made, was ordered
and directed that such notice be given by due aa
proper publication. '
(iao. W. Bibm, Recetesr.
5 We aell the greateat of blood pnrlraesre
cker'a Blood Kllxlr, under a positive gtssr
antee. It will cute all chronlo and other blood -.
poisons. If you have eruptions or sores on your 1
body, or are pale, wens or run uowu, uhju.
what you need, we refund money if you are no.
salislledi hoc aud II. Ihwell 1 Jones, drugtrlsU.
t
If yon desire ft good coinplexloe ne
Mnsl Teat, a pure herb drink, fleets ei tlx).
liver and makes the skin smooth and clear. Cures
sick headaches; liic and 'jOC. Money r;fiiadl If
It does not satisfy you. Write to W. II. Hook"
Co., lluftalo, N. lor Irte ample. 01 How M A...
Juues, druKglsts.
e