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About Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1903)
! OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1903, J J fl'TWII T(p buggies, .J 5 5 and up Cben buggies $25 and up Orriages and Hacks, Mil burp Vagons, Corumbus Buggies. ITT. -W-T a -XT n m w m aT m- "w & -v-aj-ai ft C YVLIIL 1 I III ij xxiiw ait guuig LU UlcUSX JspctliU muuee- IJ ments to close buyers. L 3 a J. W.COLE, w All goods bought in bond. Purity and quality guaranteed Some famous Old brands t James E. ' ; , ' ' Old Sam Old Roxbury Rye Cor. Railroad Ave. and Main St Etai ITMm II K I R I U EUmrafcA laaLav tiff Um I OlAnO"!" IVKIclll istne IrMullCl 11 1 113 IV II from Kentucky. W Old Crtiv Tjtrmitaqt Cyrus titbit Jjumtr Hft also carry all the other first-class brands. Dtivars' Scotch Xtlhwsttnt Jobn Begg's Scttcb Wontlctlh Hvt mcKant'9 Purt Walt Wilson Whisky ., Canadian Club Crtam frf and the Celebrated RED TOP WHISKY The finest Resort In the city rQarde Building, next to the Suspension Bridge: The Best Laundry is The Troy Steam Laundry is tht Best Does not wear out r destroy your linen. Our Wagon wUl'calt T6r your soiled linen each week and deliver your laundried goods to your home. Perfect satisfac tion assured. ' ' ' ( , E. L. JOHNSON, The Barber, Agent. Elk Horn; Livery Feed ; Sale Stable HORSES BOUGHT AND SOLD VFineiygsitoLct at ReasonablcPrices ZJXJSL DIMKX Maimer, TfTl, . Oregon City NatbineSbo ' PHILIP BUCKLEIN. PROP. Having-First-class Machinei7 Doing First-class Work Keeps io Stock a Line Shafting and Pulleys, New and Second Hand.1 ; Also Engine and Saw Mill Machinery Street, Binders, Mowers, Rakes, Hay Presses, Iron and Wood, Pumps Plows and Harrows, Cream Sepa rators. 1 nrr, -a I I 1 -Hie T at Harris Grocery s Motto. j GJ5FJ woiskns, and Cigars Pepper, Kentucky Bourbon Harris Kentucky Bourbon Kelly & Ruconicb and when you drink, drink Ik 1 the BEST De8t "n tlle world. It is distilled selected grain in the mountaiua of J the Cheapest f'4ntr -- b. ,-.vi-: . ..a ., - :. , - :r:s, 'j.c-vr' r . a The Kind You Have Always Bought, and -which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signatnre of - and has been made under his per LtfLjC&tffrrfAs. sonal supervision since its infancy. ar?, MtiCAWZ Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are bufc Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoriiv is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nd 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. CENUSME CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Haye Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. The Boss Worm Medicine H. P. Kumpe, Druggist I.eiehtnn, Ala., writes: "One of my customers had a child, which was sick, and threw up all food, could retain nothr iiK on its slomitch. Ho bought one holtle ol White's Cieam Vermifuge, and it brought up 119 worms from the child. It's the best worm inedl cine in the world." White's Crenm Vermifuge is also the children's tonic. It improves their di: gestion and assimilation of food, strengthens their nervous system and restores them to the health, vigor and elasticity of spirits natural to childhood. 25c at Charman & Co. 'a. CorvailU & Easttrn Railway. , tub card no. 21. No. 2 For Yaquluna: Leaves Albany. 12:44 P.M. CorvalliB 2:00 P. H. Arrls Yaquiea 6:26 p. M. No. 1 Returning: leaves Yaquina 6:45 a. h. Leares Corvallis 11:30 a. m. Arriv s Albnny 12:15 P. M 0 3 lor Detroit: Leaves Albany 7:00 a.m. Yrrivea Detroit 12:05 p. M. No. 4 from Detroit: - LeSves Detroit 12:45 P. U Arrives Albany 5:35 P. M. Trnin No. 1 arrive in Albany In time to co -neot witb the S. P. south bound train as well as giving two or three hours in Albany before de parture of S. P. North bound train. Train No. 2 connects with the S. P, trains at Corvallis and Albany givlngdirect service to New port and adjacent beaches. Train 3 for Detroit, Breltehbush and other mountain resorts leaves Albmiy at 7.00 a. in., reaching Detroit at noon, giving amplo time to reach the reach the Springs same day. For iurther information appl? to JSDWtN BTONE, Manager. THOMASCOCKRELt, Agent, Albany.' H H. Cbonisk, Agent, Corvallis. Ten thousand (emons gnawing away at one's vitals couldn't be much worse than the tortures of Itching piles. Yet there's a cure. Doan's Oint ment never lam; Folev's Honey and Tar NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the ujndenlgned admin istretor of the estate of ElUnb.th Shandy deceasid, has filed his final report in the county court of Clackamas county, Oregon, and th. said court hag sot Monday, July 26th, 1903, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. in., of said day at the court house in Oregon City, Oregon, as tbe time and place for hearing any and all objections to said final report, and to bis final discbarge as ad minist rator of said estate. O. 8. BOYLES, Dated June 17.1908. ' . Administrator of the Estate of . . Elizabeth Shandy, Deceased. Robert A. Miu.br 4-0. B Eby, Attorneys for Administrator. ; First Publication, June.la.' Last Publication, July, 17. - Immediate and there is not a eaw of piles in 'existence thai cannot.be ouickly and permanantly cured by Ptrrln'$ Flit Spttttic. You take it that' all. New price One Dollar a bottle at yonr druggist. II he hasn't it itain. Dr. Perrin Medic! Co., Helena, Mont. Sick iieadache? Food ' doesn't digest1 well? Appetlt poor? , Bowels jstfpated? Tongue coated?- 4 your liver ! Ayer's Pills" 5 liver pills; they cure dys cpsla, biliousness. 25c. All draggl.U. Want year uinuiuu'be or beard a baaaUfal brown or rteb black? Tben ue , BUCXlflGKAM'SDYElv0 - HI . aa .nt , . mm Signature of t ameer New vohk city. Sp cial Train Service to Gladstone Park for Chautauqua. Southern Pacific Co., will run fpeoial trains during (he session, July 14th to 26t,h, inchiBiVH, leaving Oreuon Cuv 8:25,9:22, 10:30, A. M.. 12:30, 1 :30", 2 :30, 3 :30, 4 :30, 5 :30, 6 :10, 7 :20 7 :45, 8:10, 8:30, 9:15-T. M. LaHt train leaves the Purk fur Oreson City 10:00 P. Al. No man or Wt im an la the state will nesitate to speak well of ChaiuberlHiu's Stomach and liver TabltiK after unce trintr them. Tliev always prouuee a pieasaut movement oi tne uuwelB, m M i ove vue mpt'ine auu siren gtiien ine uigcBiiou for sale by U. A. HardiBR. TROUBLES if? "IflndTbfdford'lBlaflk-DrauRht 'rw good medicine for liver dlaoaM. 11 cured my on after aa had ap.Bl 110 with doctors. It i all aiej- icine I tako."-MR8. CAROLIMB MABTIN, Parkarsburg, W. '. II your liver doei not act reg ularly go to your drufff irt ana secure a package of Tuedford'a Black-Draught and take a dose tonight. This great family medicine frees the constipated bowels, stirs up the torpid liter and causes a healthy secretion of bile. Thedford's Black - Draught , will cleanse the bowels of im purities and strengthen the kid neys. A torpid liver invites colds, biliousness, chills and fever and all manner of sick ness and contagion. Weak kid neva result in Bright'i ditaasa whieh claims as many vistims as consumption. A 25-cent pacamue of Tliedford's Black Droaflit should always b kspt ia ta4 house. "I taed Thedford's Black- Draaaht for llv.r and t'tatf com 1 plaiaM and found nothiag to ial '-WlXjLUM OOJFMAll, Mar- THSDFORDV SPECIAL ROUND TBIP BATES. Bfltwero Jna. 4th and A.plst 26th. Th Illi nois Central will nil ronn'd tripttcawtai from Ore con and Wavblnicton iwinta to Cbioaao. Cairo, ' Memphis aud New Orleans at , beatlt aiuuciD BAT1S. w . Tickets good for three months. tiotnir limit ten days. Returning limit teu days after Martlng west. Stop oyer privileges eitb.r way,, west of the Missouri river. Sale date st rranfred ta'a.'woBTenlent foi delegate, to Convention of National Educational Association at Boston; Elks at Baltimore; Wood Ban at lndiaaapDllsrKafc'l Maw. Vorsv; Shrln re at Saratoga;-Krlghtsaf Fythieiwa Loulevflle and Commercial travelers al Indlaoapoll. lou can take your choice of Sixteen differ en routs.. Write as. W will.' cheerfully fir. you any detailed hiforinatioa you want. . . loanurely, ' ' ' . H. TanuatTLL, Oommnrelal Agent Third 8C, Portland, Oregoa. : ' - ' '''', y i IV : Best Place onEarth For wagon3, buggies, har ness and all lines of farm implements. . F. HOLMES. ; L. CANBY, OREGON! IDEOGRAPHIC FIGURES. A Lesion In Engllah That Wm Taught by a Ckinnnina. ! That wo have partially adopted the Chinese method In our written lan guage was a new thought to me and one that I got from the proprietor of a Park avenue laundry when, In the nut- i ural Caucasian fashion, I referred to his written language as being very In ferior. "John," I sold, "why do your peopla use those chicken tracks Instead of bavlng an alphabet, as we havef " 'A B C too much trouble," he an swered quickly. "Why, you use chick en tracks, too, sometimes." "We don't use them," I replied. . "Yes; you use them very goodj I show you." Then he dipped his con venient brush In the Ink and made the number "80" on a sheet of brown pa per. "That name of street over there," he continued, pointing. "You say 'eighty-nine;' you don't write It with 'A B C That Chinee. One mark is one thing you say Idea;' yes, Idea. You don't put down 'n-l-n-e' "and here his brush came Into use again "you put down '0.' That's very good Chinee. We do that all the time." "That is ideographic,'? I suggested. "Yes, English have much Ideograph ic. All figures ideographic. Beet" And again he used his brush. "You make ' ' and ',' and you say 'minus,' 'plus.' You don't spell with 'A B C That is a mark for idea Ideographic. You make M' and say 'thousand.' That Chinese way. , Very good. I say, 'How hot?' and you write '-87V All Chinese. No 'A. B C,' no many letters, only marks and ideas. "Fine way. English know some fine Chinese ways. See! '$,' '.' You know them. Ideas! You say ideographic. You make many Chinese marksmarks for stars, for plants, for measures, for weights and signs for hundred and hundred many things; same as Chi nese. Good!" I actually left that laundry wiser than I entered it. New York Herald. A DRAMATIC LAWYER. Effective Climax That Reanlted In Setting a Murderer Free. : Lachaud, the great French advocate, was renowned for deliberate but telling dramatic improvisations, as it were, upon the original theme. At one time, for Instance, ho was de fending a murderer on Dec. 24. All day long he harassed witnesses, re calling them, causing delay after de lay before getting his final address to the jury. It was well on in the even ing before he commenced. Then sud denly, at the height of his passionate appeals for the prisoner, the slow, sol emn bells of the cathedral next door pealed for the midnight mass the first mass of Christmas morning. Lachaud stopped as if overwhelmed by a sud den warning. "Do you hear?" he said solemnly after a moment's silence, and bis man ner conveyed that all his own glib eloquence had been shattered hf the divine interruption of Christ himself. "The Redeemer comes to amend our pitiable endeavors. Which of us would dare now, on this great day of mercy and forgiveness, to condemn another human being and, above all, to con demn one whose culpability ia more than doubtful?" The prisoner Was acquitted without the least difficulty, though his death sentence ten minutes before had been regarded as certain. The actual sound of the pealing bells had been too much for nerves already strained to snap ping point by the fatigue of a long day's sitting. But nobody guessed, except tho few who knew Lachaud intimately, that he had been maneuvering from ' the time the court opened in the morning to get that one stirring effect. The prisoner was a dead man witaout It and saved as certainly if it could be brought off successfully. Kansas City Independent. ' Simple HeateUclie Core. . Hera la a headache cure that is Bait to be a marvelous remedy and to re lieve the sufferer when all else falls. It is easy to make and easy to apply, and it consists Simply ot black pepper and camphor. Take a quantity of black pepper and pot it in a handkerchief. Then fold the handkerchief orer so that the grains cannot fall out and saturate the whole thing' with cnn phor. Bind this "plaster"! on the head and lie down. In a very few, nioinomta the headache will be relieved and. the patient will be asleep, .wnen me nana kerchiof becomes dry saturate again with the camphor; that's all. People who have tried everything else say that thl home remedy relieves them sruicket At any rate, It la worth try fa. .,,",. td Ferrr'a Eaeapa Frona sis ftoh. 1 iyjules Ferry had a narrow, escape fkom rioleuca at tbe binds of the Paris commune, to whom h was Mpecially odious.1 Da eladed their pursuit through a , cbureh, letting hlmaelll down In a Vasket our of a rear window whllo the mob was forcing the outer door. The basket foil to the ground -with a thud and gave Its occupant a severe ahaklag Wk iBTaatloa ta Xeeaaaavtr, "Have you made any Improvements in your Invention V .1, . ,i haT," aJMTw-ered the tuterp rifling adeodet "One of my assistants! has fast discovered a new way to put stock oa the market -Washington Star. , Ufa'a lararl.a. "life," said the tobacconist to the wooden Indian, "la for most people a continuous proeeaa of getting oead things that they haven't been expect Ingt." Syracnue Herald. " Paper wu Invented by tbe Chinese ITS yean before the Christian era. the crrr or color NEW YORK A PICTURE OF PLEASING CONTRASTS IN HUES. The American .Metropolis In Thla Re.pect Snrpa.se. All the Great Monotone Tinted Capital of the Occidental World. New York has been written about from almost every possible point of view architectural, commercial, polit ical and social. Yet so far as we know It has never been properly appreciated for tbe one thing In which It surpasses all the other great capitals of the occi dental world, and that is for Its color. Those of us who live here all our lives or who absent ourselves for only brief and inconsiderable periods of time never know how extraordinary is the environment In which' we have been placed, it is only the stranger with an artistic sense or the native who has been long away who gets the full ef fect of this city of ours in Its unique prismatic floridity of hue such as vivi fies no other city of Its kind. If you will think for a moment and visualize from memory the great cities of Europe as a colorist would see them you will be struck by the fact that each one is a, monotone. London has the dull, dingy, smoky hue of its own No vember fogs, and as yon pass along Its miles and miles of streets, a welter of unvariegated facades and homely chim ney pots, your impression will be more and more that London is one great smudge, hideous and unrelieved beneath a sky of watery paleness which merely accentuates a little more the dingy hue of everything beneath It. Paris equally represents a monotone, a delicate gray that is neat and clean and that adds to the symmetry and har moniousness of the whole effect, but that is seldom diversified by warmer tones. Berlin is a monotone in buff, and Rome, like Paris, for the most part, a monotone in gray. One thinks at first of Naples as a city brilliant with the hues of the south, but a little reflection will show that it is not the city itself which can be rightly so regarded, but rather the setting of the city as one perceives it from the ship on which he enters the glorious bay or from the Capo dl Posi llpo. The Intense blue of the sky, the emerald of the surrounding hills, the sparkle on the waters that lap its crescent shore, the huge dun slope of Vesuvius, with its golden smoke, and Capri in the distance swimming in a golden mist these things afford an un forgettable dream of perfect coloring. But Naples, itself! The place Is aa commonplace and dirty and depress ing as Constantinople which also from a distance cheats you into thinking It a colorist's paradise. It is New York alone which, after delighting the eye with the beauty of its harbor, embraced by the long slopes of billowy green, fascinates the , eye by the brilliancy and diversity of its color scheme. The sky is as blut as that which is arched above thei Mediterranean. Its sunshine is as bright, and It is sifted down upon tbe city like gold dust scattered by a lav ish hand. But the sky and the sun light merely intensify the vividness of the color contrasts which are visible at every turn. Here is no convention, no conformity, no desire for harmo nious effect The snowy whiteness of marble and the clean gray of granite are everywhere intermingled with the cheerful buff or the warm, rich reda of brick. Patches of green appear at tbe end of every Tlsta. The enormous display windows of tho shops are a riot of blues and yel lows and pale rose and heliotrope and scarlet Gliding catches ami reflect? the sunlight at every turn. Flugs and streamers and multicolored awnings add to the effect, so that every street Is a veritable spectmm. Throughout the whole length and breadth of the Island city color abounds in flecks and splashes. It is Just a- bit , barbaric, possibly, but It Is also wonderful and striking. To the sober dullness of Mudnu or Konio or London it is what the Pom pellan wall paintings are to the quiet canvases of Ilarplgnles not art, but instinct nevertheless with a sensuous- neHH and a glow that stir one strange ly. If you are a h'atlve of New York perhaps, you never noticed this. -Yet all the same it is set before you every day, and if you wMl only think of it the next Onie you go out or uoors you will perceive it as a revelation and will know tiiat whatever else New York may be it is, at any" rate, a color city, and as such it Is one that has no rlvaL-New York Commercial Adver tiser. ,. j - , ' . - larea.tie. ' A young author, . evidently desirous of benefiting by the experience of an older brother craftsman, once asked Richard Henry Stoddard how he had acquired such a mastery of Anglo Saxon. - ' 1 don't know how I ever did it," re plied the' poet, who, after a momenfi inflection,' a'ddedj ;i think, however, I must attribute t to tne ract tnat i new er had any education!" . j ,", , Icentln'sf 'at Beheqie. Mr. Tucker What la It, Tommy ? Toothache? Well, we'll go to the den tist tomorrow. Even at your age a boy ought to begin to save his teeth. Tommy-Oeel If I aave up enough do I git soraethln' for 'em, pawl-Chicago Tribune. , The Proper War In. ' "You say Grace married Into the mart sett" "Gracious, no; she wu divorced Into it"-Baltlmore Herald. ( - ; There la a maxim of unfailing truth (that nobody ever prlea into snotbef iman'a concerns bat! with a detia to to jkjtB mlschlef.-Sotatlk, ..