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About Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1903)
OREGON CITY COURIER, -FRIDAY, JULY 10, -1903. 7 1 J. F. O'DonnellA- Top buggies, 4 $ 5 5 and up Open buggies .........$25 and up Carriages and Hacks, Milburn Wagons, Corumbus Buggies. vir,. 4. "t a ' m; v aa w m w at TT v TT ttllv X UUi JLJLClU. at Harris Grocery And are going to make special induce- jj ments to close buyers. Cash and Small Profits is Our Motto. WiWiiWMBaiKaM J. W. COLE, T"" - ' All goods bought in bond. Purity and quality guaranteed Some famous Id brands James E. Old Sam Old Roxburv Rye Cor. Railroad Ave. and Main St igBS9WBI Cbe Planet Salon mFTTnK I PI liUllli rvit.A drink, drink Planet Whisky i the from Kentucky. We also carry all the other first-class brands. f . Old Crow ? j . Deivars' Scotch ,. , YtllowtUnt Kermltaat. ,i I , .ToAw Btaa's Scotch : Wonticelio Rve CvrusttobU ' ? mcKant's Pure Walt 1 Wilson Whisky tfunftr Ity ... . Canadian Club brtam nft and the Celebrated RED TOP WHISKY The finest Resort In the city rdarde Building, next to the Suspension Bridge: The Best Laundry is 'i The Troy Steam Laundry is tht Best Does riot wear out or destroy your linen ist .5 V I -i Our Wagon will call for your soiled linen each week and "deliver your laundried goods to your home. Perfect .satisfac tion assured, di. ? . v '--J? ' . :V' 'i tU K' e. l. johnson, The Barber, Agent- Elk Horn Livery Feed 2 Sale Stable HORSES BOUGHT AND SOLD Fine56RigstoLet D. R. DIMICK, Manager , ; OjRIEGrOIN- CITY, OREGON Oregon Citij Machine Shop PHILIP BUCKLEIN. PROP. Having First-class Machinery Doing First-class Work Keeps in Stock a Line Shafting and Pulleys, New and Second .Hand. Also Engine and Saw Mill Machinery. ( 2C6 flr&tLSIrect, Portland, Ore Binders, Mowers, Rakes, Hay Presses, Iron and Wood, Pumps Plows and Harrows, Cream Sepa rators. , ' nr. j w w mam mm WQ1SMS, and Cigars Pepper, Kentucky Bourbon Harris Kentucky Bourbon Kelly & Kuconkb when you tbe BEST beet in the world. It la distilled selected grain 'in the mountains of thef Cheapest L" ! at ReasonablePrices Bill! "im ii 1 11 11. urn nil t JegetablePreparationForAs slmilating theTood andReguIa ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes DIgestion,Checrful ness andltest.Contains neither Opium.Morpttine nor Mineral. NotNahcotic. Beope ofOldErSAMUIlPITCBEll i Fhmpktn Suil . 41k.Sc.vui JtoJulUSaltl stniM SeMt Jrppefmtnt -Si Caiiana&Scda fUmSted CtanJud Sugar . hntaywn f'tarm ADerfect Ilemedv for Constipa tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms ,Convulsions,Feverish ness andLoss OF SlEER Tac Simile Signature ot OTWYOBK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPEB. The Boss Worm' Medicine H. P. KumDeDrusgisMeiahtin, Ala., writes: "One of my cnrtomera had a child, which whs slok and ihrew up all food, oonld retain noth iK on Its Biomach. Ha bought one "ottle nf White's Oe.im .VermifiiRn, nd It 'brought up I'D worms from the child. It's the bes' worm medi cine in the world." Whiie'Cream Vermifuge is also the children's tonic. It improves their di. swstion ana assimiiatt n of food strengthens their nervous system and restores them to the health, vigor and elasticity of spirits natural to childhood. 25u at Charman & Co. s. Corvallls & Easttrn Railway. . TIM I CARD NO. 21. No. 2 For Yaqulnna: : ' ' ' ' Leaves Albany. 12:44 p.m. ' Corvallis 2:00 r. K. Arrives Yaquioa. 6:26 p. tf. No. 1 Returning: Leaves Yaquina..., ., 6:45a.m. Leases Corvallls 11:80 . M. Arriv Albany ..'. 12:15 P. M o.8 for Detroit: Leaves Albany 7:00 A.M. Yrrives Detroit. 12:05 p. M. No. 4 from Det'oit: ; , Leaves Detroit 12:48 p. If. Arrives Albany 5:35 p. M Train No. 1 arrives In Albany Jn timo to eo -nect with the 8. P. south bound train as well as giving two or three hours in Albany before cV parluro of 8. P. North bound train. Train No. 2 connects with the S. P, trains at Corvallls and Albany giving direct service to New port and adjaoeni beaches. Train 3 for Detroit, Breitehbush and other mountain resorts leaves Albany at 7.00 a. m., reaching Detroit at noon, giving ample time to reach the reach the Springs same day. For lurther information apply to KDWtN BTONE, Manager. ThomasCockrell, Agent, Albany. H H. Cronipe, Agent, Corvallis. . 1 . Ten thousand demons gnawing 4 away at one's vitals oouldn't be much wirse man the tortures of itching piles. Yet there's a cure. Doan'a Oint ment never falls; Foley's Honey and Tn!" fn rnitrf-4r SHfG.SUtt NOOOl!, NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Shandy decqaed, has filed his final report Cn the county oourt of Clackamas comity, Oregoa,,. and the said court has set Monday, July 2Mh, 1093, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., of said day at the court house in Oregon City, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing any and all objections to said final report, and to his final discharge as ad ministrator of said estate. , O. fl. BOYLJtB, Dated June 17 1903. ? ' ? . ... Administrator' of the Estate of ;. Elizabeth Shandy, Deoeased, R0BF.BT A. MlLLKR & O. B KBI, , , Attorneys for Administrator. i First Publication, June 19. , Last Publicatloa,jly )7. f' v Tmmtdiate t : and there is not a Case of piles . in existence that cannot be qnickly and permanently cared ,, bv Ptrrin't Pit Spteifk. f You take it that's all. New price One Dollar a bottle at Tonr drngitiat. If he hasn't it write to V 1 , Dr. Perrin Medical Co., ' . .-J , . i i Helena, Mont!" 1 Dizzy? Then your liver isn't acting well. You suffer from bilious ness, constipation. Ayer's Pills act directly on the liver. Want votir ip.iut.H tie r berU beautltui hrwit ltr l.rll 1 ' .v ? Tiien use ... EUCKiNQHAM'SDVEer. ft: For 60 yesrs they have been the Standard Family ?tl. Small deses cure. AiidrfJgits. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears For Over Thirty Years THE CCNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. 3 SPECIAL ROUND TBIP RATI: 8. Botwen June 4th nd Angus' 26th. Th ( Illi nois Central will sell round triptck0ts from Or (run and W,t hmglon iminis "to (;ni ago, airo, Memphis and New Orleans ut ORBATI.Y reduced rates. lii kots good for three monlhs. GoIub limit ten days. Returning limit ten dajs after "turting west, stop over privileges eith r way, west of the Missouri river. Bale dates are arranged to be convenient foi delegatf s to oonvenlion nf National .'durational Association at Boston; Klks at Baltimore; Wood men at Iiidianapi lis: Eagles at New York: 8h Thi ers at Saratoga; K-ights of Pythias at Louisville ana commercial travelers at Indianapolis. You can take your choice of Sixteen differen routs Write us. We will cheerfully give you any detailed information you want. Yours truly, B. H. Tkumboh,, Commercial Agent Third St., Portland. Oregon. ' No man or woman ln the state will hesitate to speak well of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Table's after once trying them. They always produce a pleasant movement of the bowels, Im j ove the appetite and strengthen ths digest ion For sale by 4. A. Harding. Reduced Summer Excursion Hates . The Denver & Rio Grande, popularly known ae the "Scenic Line of the World, has 'anuonnced greatly reduced round-trip rates from Pacific Coast points for the beneflt of teachers who will spend their vacation in the East, and delegates to all prominent Oonvenlions N. H. B., Boston; A. O. U,V..at8t Paul; B. P. O. K., at Baltimore; Woodmen of America at Indianapolis: Eagles at New Kork, Mystic Slirine, at Saratoga Springs: K of P.. at Louisville, and T. P- A., at Indianapolis Tickets at the reduced rates will be based upon one fare for the round trip, but will be sold only eenain days. These tickets will carry stopover privileges on the going trip, giving passengers an opportunity to vl-it Salt Lake Ctty, Glenwood Springs, Colorado Springs and Denvert iind will be good to return any time within nlnty 90 days Passengers going via the Denver Si Rio Grande are given the privilege of returning via a differ ent route. For the rate to the point you wish to go, and lor Jatea of sale and other particulars, as well as tor illustrated pamphlets, write1, -, W. C. McBride, General Agent, ' VU Third St., Portland Or. Night Was Her Terror.!;, "I would oongh nearly all night 'long," writes Mrs. Charles Applegate, of Alexandria, Irrd.,"and oould hardly get any sleep. I had consumption so bad that if I walked a block I wonld cough frightfully and spit blood, but,' when all other meaielnes failed, three II bottles of Dr, King's New Discovery wholly t ured me and I gained Sg pounds." It's Absolutely guaranteed to cure Coughs, Colds LaQrippe, Bronchitis and all Throat Troubles. Price 60e and II. Trial botlkt free at Charman 's drug store. MD1; CECELIA ST0WE, Oratot, Entr Modi Club, ' j 176 Warren Avenue,- Chicago, III.', Oct. 22, 1902. Hat nearly tour yean 1 i tillered from ovarian troubles. The doc tor Insisted ori an operation as the only way to get weft. I, however,; strongly objected to Bn operation My husband felt disheartened ai well-ai tforhome with' a sick woman ia a disconsolate place at best. A friendly druggist advised him, to get?a bottle of Wise of Cardni for me to try, and he' did so; I began to improve m a few days and my recovery was very rapid. , vVith-j in eighteen weeks I was another being... ... .,... .. Mrs. Stowe's letter shows evpry woman how a home is saddened by female weaknes and how completely Wine of Cardni cures that sick ness and brines health and hanni- nens apain. ' Lo not po on suffer ing. (io to your drnfrut today and secure a 1.00 bottle of Wine of C'ardui. the f t ft Use STICKS TO OLD CUSTOMS. Supreme Court of United States It Wedded to lt Tradition. The supreme court of the United States does business on an antiquated plan. While it Is undoubtedly the most dignified body of men in this country, if not in the world, it has its peculiar-, ities, and they are striking ones. One of the traditions of the court preyents newspaper correspondents from at tending the session of the court in their professional capacity. Provision is made for a representative of each of the great press associations, but the correspondents have to push and crowd lh behind the rear railing with the hundreds of other spectators. Usually they have to stand up, and if they are peen taking notes an attendant escorts them to the door. Tne result is that the 200 or more correspondents have to de pend on their memory for their reports of proceedings in the supreme court room. . . ' ' There is another court custom which prevents correspondents from seeing the opinions handed down until they have secured authority from the judges who severally .deliver them from the bench, This authority is not always given, the Judge exercising his own discretion about it. Not infre quently the correspondent has to go to the home of the Judge to get the written authority, and perhaps by the time he gets back to the capitol the office of the clerk o' the court is closed. Indianapolis Sentinel. Georgetown' Unique Pence. - Georgetown has nothing which' bet ter proves her age than the curious old fence rails In front of three houses on the north side of P street, between Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth streets. They are rarely pointed out to the vis lotr, but there is a certain amount of interest attached to them.-- When the English troops looted the city in 1812 they burned, in addition to the capitol, a great quantity of arms and ammunition at the navy yard. The stocks of the rifles were destroyed by the fire, but the thrifty citizens of Georgetown made use Of the barrels. They were sunk Into cement, joined to gether, and a small spike was placed in each muzzle. An ornamental fence was the result. ' ' , ' Indentations on the barrels showing where the sights were removed and where the stocks were fastened may be seen today. The bid rifles are defend ing the property from the footsteps of marauding children, even as they belched flame at the advancing British nine decades ago. Washington Times. Giant Mica Crystal. The peninsula of India is famous fot the eseellence of its mica deposits. On account of Its delicacy , mica quickly Suffers from the crushing . effects of earth movements, and thd superiority of the Indian deposits is ascribed to the geologically long and perfect quies cence that the great peninsula has en Joyed. In the Nellore district crystals, or "books," of muscovito mica have been1 obtained measuring ten feet across the basal planes. Usually they are much smaller, and even in India the stability of the earth has not been sufficiently continuous ,to preveut tho destruction of large quantities of this delicate and valuable mineral. Bryn Mawr'a New Librarian. ' Announcement ft made of the ap pointment to the librarlanship of Bryn Mawr college of Miss Isadore Gilbert Mudge of Brooklyn Miss Mudge took the degree of Ph. B. at Cornell univer sity in 1807 and that of B. L. S. from the New York State Library school ln 1000. She lias since been reference li brarian and assistant professor Of li brary economy at the University of Illinois. Miss Mudge " succeeds Miss Isabel Ely Lord, for six years librarian of the college, who resigns the post to enter public library work. s "- "Bismarck' Right Hand." Eobert von Keudell, who recently died, aged nearly eighty, used to be called "Bismarck's right hand," and he was wont to iy that he and Bucher were the busiest men in" the depart ment of the exterior. He was noted for his musical talent and often played for Bismarck. His memory was so good that he could play the piano for hours without notes. While he was ambas sador at Rome his house was the ren dezvous of the artistic world. ' i Goat. ....... The United States is almost a gont lesa country compared wltlj otoeiw, and the importations of ; goutuklns;, young and old, aggregate $35,000,000 a year, Which represents the slaughter of 17, OOO.fJOo: gonta- aud klds.i; Ctennaay Jw 8,000,000 head, Spain tS.OOO.OOO, Austria 2,000,000 and France, Bulgaria and Ita ly about 1,500,000 each. In Turkey there are six goats for each person, the goat being the most" Important Bdurce "of income.- .... ,. . d' tinn tn SMhnlfrflMV t V It Is stated that iron1s'irrndual?T dig- placing steel for shipbuilding purposes la England. The prices of iron plates are quoted as $1.22 a ton dearer tlihn steel. Experience has shown that iron is less subject to corrosion from trie Ac tion of salt water and tht atmosphere than steeli audi consequently tlie Ufe of an Iron ship is longer than that of a steel ship. Manufacturers are trying to produce lighter iron, of greater tensile strength.'. j ; j .. Millionaire at New York It Is estimated that there are In New fork city today 1,320 millionaires as against 204 lit 1880 and 2j in 485a. Thor were no millionaires in New York 100 years ago.- The first person to reach that distinction was John Ja cob' Astor, who bocamo a millionaire bont JS20. , Six years before that the richest man In the city was Isaac Cliis- ion(- who swore -that -ha. was .. worth $750,000. ..... SHAM MENDICANTS. Clueer Title by Which They Know Bach Other In Big; Cltlea. Mendicants are criminals, nine-tenths of them with criminal records, is the report of those who have Investigated these wretches who are allowed to parade their simulated miseries upon our! streets. Those who are in fuct leg less or armless have lost those unde sired and useless organs as tramps in stealing rides on railroad trains, etc., and even the few really blind of the many that pretend to be so were made so purposely or are glad they are so. New York city is ridding itself of these Impostors by the simple expedient of showing up their frauds. In the slang of these worthies, "New York is jim mied." By taking the good arms Out of splints or the sound legs out of casts, exposing the sham blind and the malingering paralytic, punishing the frauds, etc., the streets are cleared of them. Other cities are yet to learn a lesson. "Chi Slim" made a large in come, some $50 a week for years, in ,an hour or two a day In New York play ing the prmtlytlc. "British" was al most as successful. "P. P." is the name given by the fraternity to the plaster of paris bandage men. The "sap' men are the crutch and cripple frauds. The "cane men" are those who go ho far ther than canes. The "human crab,'' the "human dog," the "human alliga tor," are other types. The "crust thrower" is the fellow w;ho slyly drops a moldy crust of bread before the pass er by and then seizes it as if with hint' ger. ,The "duckets" or "dockets" . are those who parade signs, verses, etc., on placards. When "Florida Shine," "Bos-" ton Charlie," "Toronto Peg," "The Crane," "Dutch Harris," "St. Louis Joe" or "Chi Slim" gets arrested his companions of "the trust" contribute and hire a lawyer for him or secure means for his escape. American Med icine. Lakes Always Frozen. "There are in the state of Oregon two lakes that are frozen still from one year's end to the other," said P. G. Harper of Portland. "They were dis covered in Baker county not very long ago by a party on a hunting and fish ing trip in the mountains of the Pan handle district. - After passing through a particularly wild stretch of country the party discovered the lakes on the north summit of one of the mountains in the neighborhood. The lakes are ;j both small, one of them barely 150 feet i across, while the other Is less i than j 1,000 feet in diameter. Both are cov I; ered with a heavy coating of Ice as I clear as crystal and as smooth as glass and of such Btrength that it held sev? ileral members of the patty who roJe across on horseback. It is believed the I; ice never melts, because the lakes are j so situated behind two peaks that the ! rays of the sun never strike them for sufficient length of time to make any Impression." Washington Star. . The Snondilla. i "People who have been much In the south are very fond of the sapadilla,1; said the fashionable fruiterer. "As for looks, it's a toss up between a russet apple and a sweet potato. The pulp !s very soft and deliclously sweet. It is tropical and Is eatable when It begins to be spotted. The tree in its native haunts Is a tall evergreen, and the fruit Is called by some the sapntlfUu plum. As for the spelling of It, there's no limit sapodilln, sappndillo, sappo dilla, zapotllla, sapotillo, zapotlla and zapoto are a few of the ways. ' It Is the cochitzapotl of Mexico. , An Amer ican nickname Is naseberry. Some who consider it too sweet by Itself find' it delicious In desserts." Philadelphia Record1.'1 ; ' , ' " .i Wooden Shoe In Chicago.' A Chicago drummer recently under took to "Josh" a man who Was. wear- , lng a pair of wooden shoes about the streets ln Chicago. The Hollander of- fered to bet tbe Cblcagoan that he could "shinny" up a tree faster than the commercial man, both men to go at it with shoes on, and tbe Hollander Won the bet. ' i ... ; H: .,;;.. i , One firm ln Holland sells no less than 2,000 pairs--of wooden shoes a year here. Some are- sold as souvenirs, but the bulk go to the people who leaf tied to. wear them, ln Holland- and hitve taught tbeic children born In this coun try to wear them.,..,. i The Chateau d'If. . ' Th .Chateau vd'If, upon, the, little rock Island' of the same name, has tb'ree titles to fame It was built, or at least fortified, by Francis 1.; It was used ln 1774 for,, the Imprisonment of Mtra beau, but Is, much more ' renowned for its place ln Action than for its place in history since Alexandre , pu mas gave It such, eminence in the scen ery of, his ''Count of ; Monte-Chrtsto," This castle pas Just bfen sold by pub lic auction' dnd was knocked down for the price oil 5,500 francs to a modest re tired sea captain of Marseilles. Phila delphia Record. She Knew Aaron Bnrr. Mra, Henry Chndwlck of Brooklyn, Who is eighty-four years old, tells of seeing Aaron Burr. She is the grand daughter of Benjamin Botts, who de fended Burr in his trial for treason at U.tohmonU in 1807. Her father owned a farm near Jamaica, on Long Island, adjoining one owned by Burr. When she saw Colonel Burr he was seventy, seven years old, withered and bent, but bis famous eyes were still black ami piercing. Burr died ln 1830, Mrs. Chad wlek also knew Chief Justice -Mnwhull Well.