i i j . ft' . i i . COUR 21st YEAR OREGON CIT, OKEGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 1903 NO. 18 OREGON PROFESSIONAL. Db. John Welch. Dr. Loots A. Morris Y"ELCH & MORRIS DENTIST8 Dr. Welch in personal attendance at the office on Weduesd iv of every week. Office next door to Courier building OREGON CITY, OREGON J)R. GEO. HO EYE DENTIST All work warranted end satisfaction guaranteed S ' Crown and Bridga work a specialty I Canfield Building OREGON CITY ORKOON Jt 0. STRICKLAND, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Does an Up-To-Date General Praotice Special attention given to surgery and diseases of women. OlBce in Garde Building, 7th and Main flt OREGON C1TT, OREGON J. W. Norms, M. D. J. W. Powbll. M. JfORRIS & POWELL, Physicians and Surgeon. Calls in city nr country promptly attended Garde Building, Oregon City. QSTEOPATHY DR. C. D. LOVE OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Graduate of American School of Osteopathy, Kirltsville, Mo. Successfully treats both acute and chronic dis eases. ' Call for literature. Consultation and Examination Free. Office Hours: (Or by appointment at any time. Booms No. 4 and 5, Stevens Building, Main St OREGON CITY, ON0OH. 0. Schuebei, W. S. U'REN JJKEN & SCHUEBEL ATTORNEYS AT LAW Ur-' " ' "-frDpfat Will praotioe In all courts, make collections and settlements of estates, furnish abstracts of title, lend yon mon.iv aud lend your money on flrst mortgage. OSlce in Enterprise building. OREGON CITY OREGON c. D, & D. C. LATCURETTE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Oommeroial, Beat Estate and Probate our Specialties Office in Commercial Bank Building . OREGON CITY , OREGON JJOBERT A. MILLER ATTORNEY AT LAW 0. D,EBY, NOTARY PUBLIC. iReal Estate bought and sold, money loaned Hies examined n ml abstracts made oash paid for (utility warrants, rrouate aaa commissioners 'Court business and Insurance. BOOH 8, WEINHABD BUU.DIMO ' 'OREGON CITY, ... OREGON QRANT B. DIM ICR Attorney and Counselor at Law Will pracllee in all Courts in the State, Circuit and District Courts of the United States. Insolvent debtors taken through bankruptcy, ffloe in Garde Building, Oregon City, Or. (COMMERCIAL BANK oif OREGON CITY, CAPITAL $100,000 Transacts a general banking business Makes losne and oi 'lections, dlkconnts bills buyi and sellt. domestic and foreign ezchauge and receires deposits subject to check. Open from Km. to 4 p. m. liATOTJBETTB, ident . J. MKT KB ' shl GREENMAi THE PIONEER EXPRESSMAN (Established 1865) Prompt delivery to all parts of the city OREGON CITY REGON THE COBWEB Oregon City's Leading Wine House All the teading brands jf Cal fornia Wines kept in stock. Come and see us. ! E.A.BRADY g Fall term opens September 22 For catalogue or information addre's, - quickest way to Mate certificate. i E. D. RESSLER, President or J. B. BUTLER, Secretary, DO YOU WANT A RIG Or ,a horse or anything: pertaining to a first class livery stable. If you do Gross & Moody the liverymen, will furnish it to you at a rea sonable figure from their, barn near the depot. First-class service. Driver furnished if required. GROSS & MOODY, In the Hop Fields. This Week Will End the Pick ing Season. A riedium Crop of Fair Quality Has Been Harvested. What tobacco is to Kentucky, what corn is to Iowa, wheat lo Kansas and cotton to Texas and the South, the hop crop is to Oregon and Washington. Ore gon has the distinctioq to growing more pounds of hopa and of better Quality than any other f tate in the Union. Ore gon bopn are known tho world over and in fact the big end of the Oregon hop crop is bought by nilish buyers and shipped by them to "Old England" and there they become the important feature in the brewing of beer. There are hundred' ot acres of hop yards in Clackamas county, not as many it is true as there are in Marion, Yam bill and tome of the counties South of us. Yet the quality of the crop grown in Clackamas is as tine and is just as re munerative as those grown in any part of the coast country. Ou account of the extraordinary price of hops for the last two or three years many new hop yards have been planted out this year and they will be in full beaiing next seimon. Just how many acres are planted to hope in Clackamas county it would be more than difficult to say, but there must he in excess of 1,000 acres and possible two thousand acres Hops last year were sold in the open market lor from twenty to thirty cents per pound and those of our citizens who were lucky enough to have a good yard "feathered their nests" in royal floe style. Thp year the price is almost as good and many crops are being sold for twenty three to twenty five cents and the lucky owners of hop fields will have large bank accounts this winter. Hop picking has been in full bl -st dur ing the past two weeks and this week will see the end of this branch of the work. The pickiug season is the jolliest season of the year. Men, women and children go to the yards for an onting as well b to make a little pin money to buy fall clothes with and the many "Jim cra:ke'' of life thai add to the pleasure and the enjoyment of lite on this hu mane sphere. , If you should pass through any of the pretty villages in the Willamette Valley, or any other of the ' hoD regions of the Pacific Northwest, aboutSeptember first, you will wonder what has become of the inhabitants of all the beautiful homes, where fine gardens and fruit laden or chards are everywhere maturing in the sunshine, left to the mercy of the passer by, or eared for only by some lonesoai"- Joking dog who watches you piteously s you pass.or howls mournfully behind the picket fence. But by and by the mystery is solved . Along the roadside you notice rows and rows af hops, climb ing up tall poles or gracefully festoon-1 ing long, heavy wires that stretch from post to post across the field. Ana the rows are alive with a busy jubilant crowd of pickers, with great baskets, each of which holds four and one-half bushels of the yejlow-green hops. Everybody is picking, from the tiny toddler who sometimes fills a small market basket in a day, to Gnndpa, who feels uneasy if he fails to nil his large basket ten times between his 1 asty breakfast and the supper eaten more, leisurely, by the light of a campfire that send6 its fluttering red fingers up among the fir branches. Jokes fly Wiiok find last, and the pretty, rosy girls, disguised in the ugliebt of togs, yet find time enough for flirting to render life endur able. If they are picking irom piles, joii hear the shout: "Hod pole! Hop pole! Hop pole I" in all tones and keyed to all pitches avn that of paiicmce Then, if uU follow the "'pole-pullet " to the vo ciferous picker, you will find some one holding a ' mule" two long, l'ght sticks fastened together to form a prop for the heavy pole which the pole.puller wr. nches loose at thebo'f.om and low ers into the prop. The pole once settled in position, nimble fingers soon strip the pretty hopi from the yines. Thi basket filled, the picker calk lustily, "M-e-a-s-u-r-el" and from somewhere alonti the rank growth of vines auother man appears, carrying a huiie burlap sack, and into this he empties tne basket, gives tn nicker a ticket, "good for one-half box of hops," and the picker goes on filling and empty- State Normal School MAMMOUTH, OREGON Training school for teachers. Courses arrang ed especially for training teachers for all branches of the profession. Most approved methods for graded and ungraded work taught in actual district school. The demand for graduates of this school as teachers far exceeds the supply. The training department which consists of a nine grade public school of about 250 pupils Is well equipped in all its branches Including Sloyd Music, drawing and Physical Training. The Normal course the best and mV2&tt(Sfi h Bei.ij Uredjlto 4 HON. GRANT Hon. G,.)!it B. Dimick, who mayor of Oregon City, and who recently announced that in no event would he be a candidate for re-electloh, is being urged by the business men -or uregon uty to make the race again. On Wednesday he was called upon by a committe of the best ' business interests of the city and urged to reconsider his determination to retire from the mavoralitv office. He has as yet given no expression of opinion as to what he may ao in tne matter. Mr. Uimick's administration of the office of mayor nas Deen eminently satisfactory to lotne to loose tus services. ing the basket. These tickets are worth from 20 cents to 25 r-erits e-ich, and the star pickers who cairy off from ten to fourteen of them each day reap a small fortune in the uo or three weeks of hop picking. Whenagio'.ly number of boxes has bt'en gathered, a man comes with a horse and sled, loads on the socks, burs' ing with fullnea, and drives to the hoo house. The great sacks are lifted by means of pulleys to the sewnd story, where the hops ar emptied inio a floor made from boards an lucu or more in width, with up ices about, a hill inch wide bet ween iheoi Over this coarse, heavy cloth is stretched tightly, and a fire is built in the room below. Pans of sulpt ur and live coals ar placed in this lower room, the funic bleaching the hoi.sand biingingtoan untimely end the multitude of in-eots residing in them, and whose pulverized bodies ooubtless a Id a "toothsome flavor to the beer later on. i When thoroughly tried as to hops, and thoroughly defunct ad to bugs, lice and oth r creeping things, the mass is scooped 1, ft" into a huge bin, where it res s until u h s accumulated sufficient dampness to aumit of the baling pro cess. When baled it is sold to the wholese.e bop dealers. The pickers' tents are pitched in cool, shady oiaces, and the owners of the hop fields in mont cuees make their employes welcome to vegetables and fruit in abundance, thereby reducing the ex pense ot living to a minimum, When the long-looked-for season iB over, the pickers return home in boat loads, wagon loads and carloads, each one with the nriceof some long-coveted article uicneci ttwnv tu ing or her purse, and happy a t,e'y are dirtv .vhich is saying cotibiderable. It has bsen the pleasure of the Cour ier scribe during the last two weeks to Bpend nioch of his time at Aurora just over the line in IVfarion county in the hop yard of Mr. Geoige Vallei the rail road agent at that place and to Mr, Miller and his son and family we are in' debted for kindnesses extended. STREET FAIR ENDS. 'or Dty Celebration a Success Despite Bad Weather. 1; The Btrertt fair cama to a .lna Tnu. AV tlltrhl. . I ha Fair na nn a a. success as might have been . Several mings serveu 10 ceep down the attend ance The flrst day opened with in clement weatjier, but still there was a lair sued crowd in town, especially at night, and rfr crowd seemed to enjoy it self immensely, throwing confetti and engaging In other innocent amusements. The fair was not opeued Sunday, nor was any of the shows. There were two reasons for this. One was that the ministers of the varions churches of Oregon City had nnearthed a statute whereby any one running a place of amu eroent on Sunday couM, be arrest ed and fined Another wu. that there was no crowd in town. There were few er people in town Sunday than any pre vious fSundAV fnr mnnlk. T 1 1 l I . one or both reasons the managers of the I at rout fun. 1 1.1 . . 0 ... , uuui.ieo mat it would be a good plan to keep the doors closed . At I Bny rate they kept closed. I Arnold's shows, which were the lead ing attractions at the fair, were very good show ind, ed. The Japanese troupe 01-.ar.ubR!e anu iudS'ers, Alice, the girl I with the long hair on her .. face, and UWfctt. twins, ihe kinetojeope il the glasshlowers and even the old plantation were all well patronised and were ap- Run for Mayor. A 't ' ' J'. It f l - ' - ' H, IV A 1 "If B. DIMICK. for the past thee years has been the business element, and they are ... predated, the free stunts were up to the standard. Labor Day, which fell on Monday, orougnt out tne biggest crowd of anv day of the ehow snd it was also the most inclement day . While the showers were internment and sporadic, they were drenching. At times the rain came down in torrents, driving the festive sight-seers tq shelter. At night, how ever the rains ceased and the crowds on ttie streets" b came larger. Confetti battles became frequent and old and young engaged in the sport. The Labor Day celebrations Monday were quite successful. The uniou labor picnic, at Gladstone Park, given under the auspices of the carpenters' and painters' unions, was a successful affair. Carpenters and painters and friends of carpenters and painters, both from Oregon City and from Portland, vthererl at. that place to thn number of several bundled and proceeded to cele brate in a manner betitii g the occasion. The address of the day was made by O. H. Morgan. It was an excellent address and well soiled to the occasion. In the the afternoon a game of ball was played between the carpenters and painters which resulted m a victory for the paint ere. The score was 24 to 6. Besides the ball game there were all kinds of races and other sports. The Park place nana aiecoursed music for tye occasion, wnue tne rain hindered the attendance Sirr.ewhat. it did not damnen the ardor of th crowd in attendance. ARTISANS AT CANEMAH PARK. Up at Canemah park a large crowd of Artisans held forth There was dancing in the pavillion, and divers kinds of races. Iu ho afternoon a game of ball between the Oregon City team and Van couver was played. Oregon City won the game by a score of S to 2. The grue was called in the fifth inning. In the evenh g Governor Chamberlain deliver ed a brief address The Governor came down on the 6:30 train and returned on the W:20 train, tie stated tl at he was one of the oldest Artisans in Oregon, And congratulated the order upon its ex cellent showing and continued prosper. ity. The Governor's Speech was well received and occasionod applause. HOP KILNS BURNED. Chinese Meet With Loss on a Farm Near Aurora. Aurora, Or., Sepl. 7 This afternoon three nop-dryiDg kilns, together with about 500 boxes tf hops, burned to the ground on the A. W. uiesy farm, three miles west of Aurora. The bopyard is leased by Look Hop, of Portland. Look Hop and his two sons are running the farm. They started a fire in the driers and while this wai burning its best there was an ezplosiop, caused, it is believed by either-saltpeter er sulphur explod ing, and fn a few minutes everything was aname. The three kilns were bunt closely together and on this account neither could be saved. One of the Chinamen, Charley, was badly hurt by timbers falling on htm. Raised From the Dead. C. W. Lanrtli. "Porter" for the OrleiiUl Hotel Channtc, Kan., nyr. "I knew what it wm to lutr.-r with neura'gia iudtwd I did, and I gut a bot tla of Bullaid'a SiK.w I lu I incut and I wtu'raisod Irom the dead." I tried to (tet some more, oni bclore I had "dipowd' of mr bottlo, I wa cured tntirdf. I am loll In' de truth too," 25c,.6oo and II tt Cliarujn & Co a. Mysterious Disappearance of a Clackamas County Citizen. A. C. Ryan Comes to Town and Mys teriously Disappears. A. C. Ryan, a yonfg faimerof Mar quatn, is missing and his friends are seeking to learn his whereabouts and ex press considerable anxiety as to his safety.) . f". W Ryan came to trwn Saturday on busi ness. JHe put his horse he had ridden ill Dimick's livery stuble. He told his people'at Marquam that he would re turn Sunday Sunday passed and Rvan did not come home.j Tuesday mori ing no word had been received from him and his father-in-law, George Slauenter, decided to come to town and se if something bad not haimend to him. UM'hen he arrived here he found Ryan's tiQter iu the stable A thorough search failed to reveal the whoreabouis of the missing man. Ryan drew $110 from the oank Satur day and from that time his whereabouts are unknown. His father-in-law took the horse home with him Tuesday and expressed the gravest feats as to the safety ot Rvan. He said that he did not drink nor gamble and was unable to account for his mysterious disappear' ance. He thiuks that Kyan may have met with foul play and that he may have displayed the money which he drew from the bank to some oi the numerous mountebanks with whfch the town was filled during tin street fair. Kyan is described as a man of about 40 years of age, medium height, and weight with a sandy complexion. M hen he disappeared he was roughly dress( d. wearing a light coat and vest and dark trousers. He had on a gray hat with a leather band. Local authorities have been notified anda th rough search will be made for the missing man, UNKNOWN B0DV FOUND IN PORTLAND , Wedneslay morning an unknown body was found propped against the bank of Sullivan's gulch slough, in Portland, which is believed by many to be the body of the unfortunate Ryan. While the description tallies in many nointsthe body ha not been identified as Rvan's. Ivan Dimick. son nf D R Dimick, the liveryman, left for Portland Thursday morning to see if he could not identify the remains, but no report had been received from him up to the time this article was written. Coroner Fin ley held a post mortem examination over the remains Wednesday afternoon, hut no decision could be reached as to how the man came to his death. When foun the mat's hands were tightly clutched to tufts of grass at his side, while the man lay against the bank with his feet up to his knees in water. There were no marks of vioJen e upon the body. It is said that no cme of the same des cription as the man found in Sullivan's Gulch has been reported missing from Portland. The body had evidently been on the bank but a few hdurs and death had not preceded finding the body by many hours Nothing was found upon the bo9v hut a hankerchief and three lead pencil stumps. It is generally be lieved here that the body will rrove to ue tnat ot Kyan. it such is the case there is very little question but that he nas Deen robbed and murdered. 0 . Croup. ' Usually begins with the symptoms of a common cold ; there in chilliness, sneez ing, sore throat, hot skin, quick pulse, noareness and impeded respiration. Give frequent small doBes of- Ballard's uorehound oyrup, (the child will cry for it) and at the first sign of a croupy cough apply frequently Ballard's Snow Liniment externally to the throat 50 cents atOha'nnan & Go's. No flore Excursions on theO & E. The popular Sunday excursions to Newport have been discontinued and no more will be run to that point this sea son. Trains will run, however, every day except Sunday. Oregon CitqMacbineSbo) PHILIP BUCKLEIN. PROP. Having First-class Machinery Doing First-class Work Kfeps la Stock a Line Shafting and Pulleys, New ancl Second Hand. Also Engine and Saw Mill Machinery -,Vf' ' V V tfm-rM. . ,XlKd W(4 i Your Banking? 1U llltttLCl Ul'W DUiail, No matter how large, ZfcBank of Oregon City Will give it careiui attention. This mes sage applies to the men and the vomen alike. For Over Sixty Years'. An old and well-tried remedy. Mri. Wlnslaw'i Sooihlng Syrup han been used for over sixty years bymillloneof muthrs for their children while teething, with perfect uccem. It sootbea the child, solt'ns the gums, allays all pain, cures wind collo, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It pleasant to taste. Sold by druguiats In every part of the worlu. Twenty five cenu a bottle. Its valtje Is incalculable. He sure and aak for Mrs. Winslow's SoothlnR Syrup, and takeo other kind. WILLAMETTE GROCERY MILES & McGLASHYN, Props 35(5 Pound for the M&M blend coffee. 25c Pound Equity blend finest thing in town' for money 15c 1 ' Pound for our extra blend, something new. Remember those are pure goods guaran teed. 50c i 1 Gal bast table syrup." 25c 3 cans oysters. 25c . 3 cans Rex lye. eo00twieet0et I A Positive Statement,? Huntley Bros., Druggists, are I , agents for Oregon L.'4.' for . I KcllettS Oil of Eden Sweet Sfrlrlts of Eden Remedies that will positively cure any case of Rheumatism, no matter how Severe or how long standing. In case anyone is not cured, the California Co-Operative Medial Company, of Oakland, will refund the purchase price. Call at Huntley Broi. for frea booklet. innnwvuwwmn w ? mm. , T T j VA4 PliOHRlWOBS OF TlUt meat 111! JSL Market ,. : A,. O.'.U. W. Builclin?. ORKGOM CITY, (;H yn:)';