8 OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1908 .-if teflSMi Goods of . n-. ff New An Furniture Stoves Ranges Kitchen Utensils Etc. Oar $ Chairs that we marked down to 65c for the Sale ate all gone-1 25 went in a week. We r nave a i e w $J.20 Chairs left that go at 85c. We still have too many Ranges and heaters on hand We do not ex pect to get the original cost oat of them They must be sold for what they will bring. $2.00 will do for oar small heaters. Oar Iron Beds are about clean ed oat bat $2.25 will bay one while they last. Plenty of the bed springs that go at $f. 75 still on hand. Don't pay $2.50 or $2.75 for this spring later bat lay in a supply daring oar Sale Yoa can bay KITCHEN UTENSILS for a song. Al so any PICTURE we have In stock for fust about what yoa care to offer. We have plenty of medium priced ROCKERS that we mast sell for oar ORIGINAL COST. DON'T DELAY too long! Every day leaves less for yoa to select from. E. W. Mellien (Ob Company Continues! Opposite the Court House TW THEODQEE ITopyrlglit, 1898, by O. P. Putnam's Iom. Published under arrangement with Q. P. Putnam'i Bona, New York and London. NCB lu September I was camped ou the shores of Kooteual Lake, having with me as companions, John Willis and an im passive - looking I ndlan named Annual. Coming across through the dense coniferous forests of northern Idaho we had struck the Kootenai Elver. Then we went down with the current as It wound In half circles through a long alluvial valley of mixed marsh and woodland, hemmed In by lofty moun tains. The lake itself, when we reach ed It, stretched straight away like a great fiord, a hundred miles long and about three in breadth. The frowning and rugged Selklrks came down sheer t the water's edge. So straight were the rock walls that it was difficult fw us to land with our batteau, save at the places where the rapid mountain torrents entered the lake. We had come down from a week's fruitless hunting in the mountains; a week of excessive toll, in a country where we saw no game for in our ig norance wo had wasted time, not go ing straight back to the high ranges, from which the game had not yet de scended. After three or four days of rest, and of feasting on trout a wel come fellef to the monotony of frying pan bread and coarsey salt pork we were ready for another trial; and early one morning we made the start. Hav ing to pack everything for a fortnight's use on our backs, through an excess ively rough country we of course traveled as light as possible, leaving almost all we had with the tent and boat. -We walked In single file, as. is nec essary in thick woods. The white hunter led, and I followed, each with rifle on shoulder and pack on back. Ammal, the Indian, pigeon toed along behind, carrying his pack, not as we did ours, but by help of a forehead band, which he sometimes shifted across his breast The traveling through the tangled, brush choked for est, and along the bowlder strewn and precipitous mountain sides, was incon ceivably rough and difficult. An hour or two before sunset we were traveling, as usual, in Indian file, beside the stneam, through an open wood of great hemlock trees. There was no breeze, and we made no sound as we marched, for our feet sunk noiselessly luto the deep moss. Suddenly the hunter, who was lead ing, dropped down In his tracks, point ing upward; and some fifty feet be yond 1 saw the head and shoulders of a bear as he rose to make a sweep at some berries. lie was In a hollow where a tall, rank, prickly plant, with broad leaves, grew luxuriantly; and he was gathering Its red berries, rising on his hind legs and sweeping them down into his mouth with his paw, and was much too Intent on his work to notice us, for his bead was pointed the other way. The moment he rose agulu I fired, meaning to shoot through the shoulders, but Instead, in the hur ry, taking him lu the neck. Down he wont, but whether hurt or not we could 'not sec, for the second he was on all fours he was no longer visible. Itnther to my surprise he uttered no sound for bear when hit or when charging often make a great noise so I raced toward the edge of the hollow, tho hunter close behind me, while Am uuil danced about lu the rear, very much excited, as Indians always are lu the presence of big game. The In stant we reached tho hollow and look ed down Into It from the low bank on which we stood we saw by the sway ing of the tall plants that tho bear was coming our way. The hunter waB standing some ten feet distant, a hem lock trunk being between us; aud the next moment the bear sprang clean up Hie bmik the other side of the hem lock, and almost wlthlu arm's length of my companion. I do not think he hud Intended to charge; he was prob ably confused by tho bullet through his neck, and had by chance blundered out of the hollow lu our direction; but when he saw the hunter so closo he turned for him, his hair bristling and his teeth showing. The niuti had no cartridge In his weapou, and with his puck ou could not have used it any how; aud for a moment it looked as if he stood a fair chance of being hurt. As tho beast sprang out of the hollow he poised for a second ou tho edge of the bank to recover his balance, giving luo a beautiful shot, as he stood side ways to me; the bullet struck between the eye and ear, and lie fell as If hit with a polo axe. Our prize was a largo black bear, with two curious brown streaks down his back, one on each side the spine. We skinned htm and camped by the carcass, as It was growing late. To take the chill off the evening air we built a huge fire, the logs roaring aud crackling. To one side of It we made our beds of balsam and hemlock boughs; we did not build a brush lean to, because the night seemed likely to be clear. Then we supped on sugar less tea, frylng-pun bread, and quanti ties of bear meat, filed or roasted and how very good It tasted only those know who have gone through much hardship aud some Utile hunger, and have worked violently for several days without flesh food. The morning after killing llruln, we again took up our inarch, heading up stream, that we might go to Its sources amidst the mountains, where the snow Holds fed Its springs. It was two full days' Journey thither, but we took much luuger to make It, as we kept hulling to hunt the adjoining moun tains. On such occasions Ammal was left as camp guard, while the white hunter and I would start by daybreak and return at dark utterly worn out by the excessive fatigue. We knew uotlilun of caribou, nor where to hunt y3 ROOSEVELT- for them; and we bad been tola tnat thus early In the season they were above tree limit on the mountain sides. TJntll within a couple of days of turning our faces back towards the lake we did not come across any cari bou, and saw but a few old signs; and we began to be fearful lest we should have to return without getting any, for our shoes had been cut to ribbons by the sharp rocks, we were almost out of flour, and therefore had but little to eat However, our perseverance was destined to be rewarded. The first day after reaching our final camp, we hunted across a set of spurs and hollows, but saw nothing living. The next day we started early, deter mined to take a long walk and follow the main stream up to its head, or at least above timber line. The hunter struck so brisk a pace, plunging through thickets and leaping from log to log In the slashes of fallen tim ber, and from boulder to boulder in crossing the rock-slides, that I could hardly keep up to him, struggle as I would, an4 we each of us got several ugly tumbles, saving our rifles at the expense of scraped hands and bruised bodies. We went up one side of the stream, Intending to come down the other; for the forest belt was narrow enough to hunt thoroughly. For two or three hours we tolled through dense growth. Then we came to a spur of open hemlock forest; and no sooner had we entered It than the hunter stopped and pointed exultlngly to a well-marked game trail. In which It was easy at n glance to discern the great round foot prints of our quarry We hunted care fully over the spur imd found several trails, generally leading down along the ridge; we also found a number of beds, some old and some recent, usual ly placed where the animal could keep a lookout for any foe coming up from the valley. They were merely slight hollows or ldeutatliuis In the pine needles; and. jlke the game tralU, were placed In localities similar to those that would be chosen by black tall deer. The caribou droppings were also very plentiful; and there were signs of where they had browsed on the blueberry bushes, cropping off the Giving me a beautiful ihot, as he stood sideways to me. berries, and also apparently of where they had here and there plucked a mouthful of a peculiar kind of moss, or cropped off some little mushrooms. But the beasts themselves had evident ly left the ridge, and we went ou. After a little while the valley be came so high that the large timber ceased, aud there were only occasional groves of spindling evergreens. Be yond the edge of the big timber was a largo boggy tract, studded with little pools; and here again we found plenty of caribou tracks. A caribou has an enormous foot, bigger than a cow's, und admirably adapted for traveling over snow or bogs; hence they can pass through places where the loyg slender hoofs of moose or deer, or the round hoofs of elk, would let their owners sink at once; and they are very difficult to kill by following ou snow shoes a method much In vogue among the brutal game butcben for slaughter ing the more helpless animals. Spread ing out his great hoofs, and bending his legs till lie walks almost on the Joints, a caribou will travel swiftly over a crust through which a moose KILL the COUCH AND CURE the LUNGS Dr. King's WITH New Discovery FflR Iouchs PRICK IAa A tl OA OLDS Trial Bottl. fnt AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY OB HONEY REFUNDED. Cures all Kidney and Bladder Diseases Guaranteed JONES. DRUG COMPANY The 1908 Line of Fine Dress Goods is now ready for your inspection. We are making a special bid this season for your trade, and if superior qualities, quantities and prices count for anything we'll have your business. II the New Fables Are Here in Abundance and more beautiful than ever before. Now is the time to buy them, when the assortments are, the best, and while you have time to make them up. In New Goods and the finest assortment to select from in the city. All THIS SEA SONS Patterns L. ADAMS OREGON CITY'S BUSIEST STORE breaks at every stride, or through deep snow In which a deer cannot flounder fifty yards. Usually he trots; but when pressed he will spring awkward ly along, leaving tracks In the snow almost exactly like magnified Imprints of those of a great rabbit, the long marks of the two hlntl legs forming an angle with each other, while the forefeet make a large point almost be tween. The caribou had wandered all over the bogs and through the shallow pools, but evideutly only nt night or In the dusk, when feeding or In coming to drink; and we again went on. Soon the timber disappeared almost en tirely, and thick brushwood took Its place; we were In a high, bare alpine valley, the snow lying In drifts along the sides. In places there had been enormous rock-slides, entirely filling up the bottom, ro that for a quarter of a mile at a stretch the stream ran un derground, lu the rock masses of this alpine valley we, as usual, saw many conies aud hoary woodchucks. The caribou trails bad ceased, and It was evident that the beasts were uot ahead of us In the barren, treeless recesses between the mountains of rock and snow; and we turned back down the valley, crossing over to the opposite or south side of the stream. We, had already eaten our scanty lunch, for It was afternoon. For sev eral miles of hard walking, through thicket, marsh, and rock-slide, we saw no traces of the game. Then we reached the forest, which soon widen ed out, and crept up the mountain sides; and we came to where apotber stream entered the one we were follow ing. A high, steep shoulder between the two vallyes was covered with an open growth of great hemlock timber, and In this we again found the trails and beds plentiful. There was no breeze, and after beating through the forest nearly to its upper edge, we be gan to go down the ridge, or point of the shoulder. The comparative free dom from brushwood made It easy to walk without noise, and we descended the steep Incline with the utmost care, scanning every object, and using every caution not to slip on the hemlock needles, nor to strike a stone or break a stick with our feet The sign was very fresh, and when still half a mile or so from the bottom we at last came on three bull caribou. 0 Convalescents need a large amount of nourish O ment in easily digested form. Sj Scoffs Emulsion is powerful nourish- 0 ment highly concentrated. Q It makes bone, blood and muscle without V putting any tax on the digestion. 0 ALL DRUCCIST3: 50c. AND $1.00. 00000000000000000000000 Gianct Instantly the hunter croucnea down, while I ran noiselessly forward be hind the shelter of a big hemlock trunk until within fifty yards of the grazing and unconscious quarry.. They were feeding with their heads up-hill, but so greedily that they had not seen us; and they were rather difficult to see themselves, for their bodies har monized well in color with the brown tree-trunks and lichen-covered boul ders. The largest, a big bull with a good but by no means extraordinary bead, was nearest As he stood fronting me with his head down I fired into hla neck, breaking the bone, and he turn ed a tremendous back somersault The other two halted a second in stun ned terror; then one, a yearling, rush ed past us up the valley down which we had come, while the other, a large bull with small antlers, crossed right In front of me, at a canter, his neck thrust out and his head so coarse looking compared to the delicate out lines of an elk's turned towards me. His movements seemed clumsy and awkward, utterly unlike those of deer; but be handled his great hoofs cleverly enough, and broke Into headlong, rattling gallop as he went down the hillside, crashing through the saplings and leaping over the fallen logs. There was a spur a little beyond, aud up this he went at swinging trot halting when he reached the top, and turning to look at me once nore. He was only a hundred yards away; and though I had not In' tended to shoot him (for his Dead was not good), the temptation was sore; and I was glad when, in another sec ond, the stupid beast 'urned again and went off up the valley at a slashing run. Best Treatment tor a Burn. If for no other reason, Chamber' Iain's Salve should be kept in every household on aooonnt of it great valne in the treatment of burns. It allays the pain almost instant It, and unless the injury is a severe one, heali the parts without leaving a soar, This salve is also nneqnalled for chap ped hands, sore nipples and diseases of the skin. Price 25 cents. For sale by Huntley Bros, Oregon City and Molalla. Values HAVE YOU DRIVEN THE MEN folks into the practice of Econ i'llil omyf not gnow the good example by beginning to economize yourself? Buy whatever you need in the way of Coffee and Tea at thii up-to-date store. Finest MA J Coffee... 33c Bast Teas 60c Harris Grocery OREGON CITY Astoria Budget: Eight timber cruisers arrived In this city last ev ening and this morning left for the Nehalem valley and will make their headquarters at Medley's place. Lit tle is known about them or In whose employ they are except that they are to cruise 20,000 acres of timber. SWIFTS PRIDE SOAP 7 Bars for 25c Makes wash day easier by cutting the rubbing in half. Less rubbing means less hard work and longer life for your clothing and linens. Swift's Pride Soap makes the white pieces clear and snowy, even if you do not have an opportunity to tnubleach them on the lawn. A. ROBERTSON Tnc Sercnth OUR SUCCESS is due to the uniform high grade dentistry that Is always done at this office. PLATE WORK We are doing more plate work than any three dental offices In Oregon City. We do it for less money and guarantee a lit. At Crown and Bridge Work and Fine Gold Fillings we set the pace. Before you have your dental work done, come and talk it over with us. Free ex amination. No Cm, No Cocaine EXTRACTING FREE AND PAINLESS when teeth are ordered. Oregon Dental Parlors Over Harding's Drug Store. A written guarantee with all work. Wool Soap housewife is looking for We have it in 5c and I Oc cakes ! Be sure to ask For WOOL SOAP Street Grocer f which I wulm an- I denveu I cubuxl . -ut-runk. B LWWool I Softptlio I lafUca I and one S jj