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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1899)
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 0, 1899 -4 j y fcoUKESl'ONDEiNOE TIIK OOVtfKM.K.NT BATIOX. ,ht miMem- llir If In the (?oTrlinient low lnl I try tin concorllon to chf ! ,,;U1 H-iii"li bill used ll to armour j llirlr Ttrli .The ltW from mi I'ver would liv ! gone through.' Tin ilamani lirdtik, lbfe bollcr r plat patolir. i Turn drutlt-drllK'literi we're trying to chew. Thf n. Ilia strfreth of the sinew there li In the alt horw, Aa tough m liarJ rubber, aa dursbls, too. Had our "Uncle" but made onr Ann slios from It, A pair would bar tated tb whole catu 1 , palgn IhroiiKh. Tliia foTemnirnt tail hon, digestion j k del In. ni)rrUiia to bulleta, and gastric Juice, too. lie oilier smtet woraeli I long aball renieintwr, arc ilia celluloid biscuits, tb alumgullion te; Tb rancid aow-belly, lb bean, cold and arresy. That remarkable "cofref our cooky would brew. And lliat crowning atrocity, bab of canned salmon, From benrefortli Hrar n.e awear It all fish I eschew. At i.igbt aben kind alumber ber robe throws uion me, And shut my djselic lurroundirgs to Uj fancy take flight to an )icur' heaven. And I dream ol roast duck and of terrapin stew, Of turkey and cranberries, cold chicken aalad. And enraptured 1 follow the bill of far through. But tb revaili bugle dispel lb Illusion tl.it w cfl nj blat.lfts, grab my plate and than rac "gel in tb line op close to lb cook bou Unlnrky lb soldier wbo get lb leal place. For h II get bal isleflby twohundred befor him, The renult can b judged by tha look - oa hii face. HamiT Bates, Comjany D.,ltth Ii fantry. Celtta. There was quite a crowd in Colton last week at the r hooting match. Quite a nun. ber of Coltoo-ite attend ed the Marquerade at the F. A. hall on Cbiiatniaf eve, and bad fine time. Hire Delia and Medie Hubbard are at home on a virit. W. II. Dix baa returned to Kelw, after few days ybit with bia parents of thia place. Mr. Gottberj had the misfortune1 to et ouit hard fall but week on the matelf no tones were . ur mo . nn v nrn Mi. 0 HubbaiJ M the guwt of ff-eSMMdirgtbe holiday. T1.V baket g.yeo bv tLeCC ' Mis Ed',lh ,ntl Isellie BockDer ere plaiting their KrandparenUJ, Wr. and Mrs. Gorbett last week. CoBRISPONDIXT. A fine par' organ for sale on easy terms at Xjt Oregon City Auction House. gufford. The snow that fell last week has nearly disappeared. Hemy Schstx is up near Sheridan making fence. John Schiewe, who passed away last Monday night very suddenly, not having 'XSeea known to be ill, leaves a wife and lour children in yery close cucumstan- An A.O.U. W. organizer met a few of the young men at the hall Saturday evening ana lamru at euuie icnjjiu uu tha benefits, etc., of the order. It was his intention to organize a lodge here mn fpw turned out he seemed to U w ' I think another trial necessary. Rome powder was used to celebrate the victory of the hew iear over the Old. Geo. Cline is hauling wood near Wil lamette. Phil. Tinier has had some culverts and biidges repaired. Plenty of money to loan at 8 per cent i loiitr-or short lime, apdiv to u. u. ' Hayefl. i Byringwattr. j A public installation of officers was V . 1 held in Lewellen's hall by Tent No. 89, V. O. T. M s, baturday evening. 1 lie following Sir Knights were installed by Fast Commander, W, W. Wallens: . Cora. W. L. B. Cornett ; Lient. Com r E. Lewellen; H. K. A F. K., W. L TffHllRO sergeant, F. W. Liyermore; Chip-f F. W. Walker; MaHter at Arms, ji. It. Dubois; lBt Master Guard, E. T. Tiunrmore: 2u Master Guard, Wm. I - ' unihtr : Sentinel. Biilnev Smith : Picket. h), N. Bridensline. f After installation, a program consist ' . s ami Anf fumlimi vau! r .i I !nno a rtrt music followed, which was highly ap preciated by the audience. f The Tent extends thanks to the Viola quartette and all ctiiers who asHiuted he program. MdIImo. A petition to make 'Tappy" Neil kimhner our nejtl Koad Huju-rviiHir is being circulated and largely aignod in this locality. Frank Mulveyand (ioo. Kough visi ted the old folks on Christmaa. Geo. M. Cord's saw mil, Is runninii on full time snd (ieorge, as well as the crew, looks pleasant caiw a new female took. Geo. Ilarger, from ft. Helen visited at hia sister's, Mrs. F. M. Maiinliiu'a on Xaias. I'rof. Oale and Mica Mary Mani.lntf attendsl the Masque ball at Canyon Creek on Christmaa eve, and report a large crowd and a pleasant time. The eovial and dance given by the Muhno Literary ISociety at the Grange Hall on Friday eve, IVc. 30lh. w as a decided success, and netted Pro ceeds go to Mulino si hool. Miss Mary Manning has formed a new musical class and is teaching organ and violin. Geo. Force is about to build a large new barn on his place at Mulino. Miss Fatty, our school teacher, is giving general satislaction and will probably be re-employed for the spring term. Grandma Farnsworth, well known to old resident here, who is now 86 years old, will move here with her daughter Mra. Emma Lyons.'iua few weeks. Mrs. C.T. How ard has been busy for some time making wedding dresses and we expect to hear the bells tap soon. The snow baa come and is still coming, but the fellow that calls it beautiful had better not show his bead in this section. Kn. Uighlaad- Mr. Krohn met with an accident Sat urday while coming home from town. The bone he was riding fell with hitn and fractured his leg just above the ankle. Frank Welsh and family are home from a week'i visit in Oregon City with ber mother. Our school teacher, . Elliot, spent the holidays at home. George Stephensand wife visited with her mother, Mis. Card, during the holidays. A number of our young folks attended the masqurade at Harmony, New Years eve, and report having an enjoyable time. Mrs. Miller was visiting relatives here last week. George Kirk and wife spent Xmas here with her parents. George Harrington was up from Port land and spent Xmas with his folks. We hear the pleasant whistle of Ding's mill once and a while. Willis May field is making shingles for a new barn. Chester Gard is home again, after a two months absence. Scxflowib. School Report D;stNo2; term commenced Nov. 13th, 1893, and ended Dec. 9th, 1898. Number of pupils enrolled 2fl; days taught, 19; total attendance, 451 days. Those not tardy: Misses Lena, Edith, Birdie and Wilma Blair; Zella Coldren; Misses Lizzie, Anna and Susie Erb; Lena Morris; Sada King; Daisie Loog; Ira and Milo Blair; Orrie Irvin and Willie Kanagy: Bent Klllen; Bert Kent; Gilbert, Bert, Enoch and LenardLong; Lester Dimick, Myrtle Dimick; 8ilas nd Oliver Yoder: Elmer and Oliver King. George dtbicklasd, Teacher, DO YOU KNOW." Consjmc-tion is preventable? Science has proven that, and also that neglect is suicidal. The worst cold or cough can be cured with hhilob's Cough and Con sumption Cure. Sold on positive guar antee for over fifty years. C. u Huntley, Duuggist. To-Mght and To-Morrow Sight. And each day and night during this week you can get at any druggist s Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, acknowledged to be the most successful remedy ever sold for coughs, Crouo. Bronchitis, Aethma and Con sumption. Got a bottle to-day and keep it always in the house, so you can check your cold at once. Price 25c and 50c, Sample bottle free. la Grippe Successfully Treated. "I have jnst recovered from the second attack of la grippe this year," says Mr. Jas. A. Jones, publisher of the Leader, Mexia. Texas. "In the latter case 1 used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and I think with considerable success, only being in bed a little over two days against ten days for the formor attack. The second attack I am satiuSed would have been equally as bad as the first but for the 'use of this remedy as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being 'struck' with it, while in the first case I was able to attend to business about two before getting 'down.'" For sale by Geo. A. Harding. OASTOItXA. Bsars tbs jf IrW Kind Yoil Haw always Bougnt " Signature Tiie or the Dropper ? There are cough medicines that are taken as freely as a drink of water from a dipper. They are cheap medicines. Quantity does not make up for quality. It's the qual ity that cures. There's one medi cine that's dropped, not dipped Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. There s more power in drops of this remedy than in dippersful of cheap cough syrups and elixirs. It cures Bron chitis, Asthma, Croup, Whooping Cough, and all Colds, Coughs, and affections of the Throat and Lungs. MP'S Cherry Pectoral is now half price for the half-size bottles 50 cents. COKCEKXINO MILK FKVF.K IN COWS. From Denmark comes the newa of a recently propounded theory concerning this ill-understood and terribly fatal disease of dairy cows and of a new treatment based on the discovery. The subject is of widespread interest, eo that no apology is necessary for introducing it to the notice of our readeri. It has been said that "milk fever" is so-called because it is not fever and has little or nothing to do with the milk. In this it is hardly singular, for many popu lar names for animal diseases appear to be constructed on the principle of con cealing any reference to cause and symp toms: but if there is anything in this latest theory as to the primary cause of milk fever" it would seem that tne employment of the term "milk" in con nection with it ia about to receive tardy justification. Still, it is not a "fever" because in fever a prominent symptom indeed, the most diagnostic ymptom is elevation of the internal temperature, and in milk fever there is no fever, the temperature being normal, or even sub-normal. In spite of all the attention which the disease has received from veterinary ear geons, agriculturists; in some countries from medical doctors, the cause still re mained an unsolved riddle. We all know the kind of cow generally attacked, the conditions under which it occurs, and the common result. There ia no need to go into them, or to enumerate the theories as to cause and pathology, but we may ssy that some special agent in the blood has always been a favorite theory. Milk fever was at one time supposed to be contagious, that is to say, it could be communicated by a diseased cow to healthly newly-calved one, and many eases were quoted where three or four cows in the same shed went down with milk fever shortly after they had calved. This supposition of a contagious form of milk fever was completely opeet a anon lime aiterwarua wumi iv nw plained that the cause of so many cattle hnrt timn afterwards when it was ex tuwrnninir affected almost at the one me was due to uniformity of surround ingsand mismanagement of the in-calf cows Uamgee ana oiner veterinary buijcuub considered that there is present in th. Gamgee and other veterinary surgeons blood a specific element, and some years ago a medical man wrote to the journals long account of several cases, in which ha demonstrated to his own satisfaction tl ,t milk fnver is a contagious blood disease. Others have considered it due . . ..... t to poisoning through decomposition of uterine secretions, and this ptomame theory, with the ntterus as the point of origin of the poison, has secured a good many adhearents. AH these, however, fail to explain by the disease never occurs after abortion, rarely after diffiuclt birth and never in heifers. Some have attributed the disease to an accumulation ol rniiic producing elements in the blood, giving rise to fever and practically blood poisoning, and there is a certain resemblance be tween this idea and this latest theory of .Schmidt's. By a process of elimination or weeding out of all the other theories as untenable he appears to have arrived at the con clusion that the udder is the point of origin, and the cause the absorpsion by the blood of a poison formed in the mammary elands, which, entering the circulation, affects the central nervous system and muscular tissue. Our know ledge of this new theory is principally derived from a translation and summary of a paper on the "cause and treatment of milk fever," by J. Schmidt, -Veterinary surgeon, of Denmark. In his paper it is stated that "the cause has iU origin in some abnormality which Btanda In a certain relation to the secretion o milk during tho "boastings" period. Tills milk fever, as we know, appears alter irreat functional activity of the udder, especially In good milch cows. The suggestion, therefore presents lUolfthat an excessive quantity of a poisonous metabolic produrt is iloyol oMd in the ud.ler, becomes aWrhed by the capillary vessels of that organ, and passing into the general blood stream produces a form of intoxication. tt would be a dithVult matter (or us to follow the author here thioiuh his In teresting and ingeuioua singulations a to the manner in which the peculiar toxic material to which he attributes the paralysis is developed in the udJer from the "beastlng," but we may say that he accounts for the Immunity ol heifers by their milk yield being less, and the fact that they have scarcely any useless cells to be cast otT at tne commence- uient of milk secretion. Of course the concept ion of such an entirely new line of treatment-new theories always do and hence the great iiuiuler ol cures and varieties of treat ineut. Hchiuidt concluded that the most certain way of atlVi'ting the function of the diseased udder would he !y direct injection, anj he selected a drug called ioUiiitii Iodide as the a go nt. The results re corded exceed anything that could l claimed for any other system of treat- ment yet Introduced, the percentage of recoveries being very high. The new treatment is on its trial in England, and the veterinary instilment makers are busy making special ayrlnges for forcing the solution of potaiuin iodide into the udder through the teats. It is still a little too soon for us to form an opinion on the subject, (or al though the theory seems reasonable, and the resulta of the treatment very good, we have seen too many cures In troduced with a flourish of trumpets (mite aa loud not to have learned cautiou concerning them. Irish Independent, Dublin. The regular b'ennial session of the state legislature convenes at Salem next Monday. Y. M. C. A. NOTES. The management of the Young Men's Chrintian Association has In operation a movement intended to materially benefit every man and boy in Oregon City, and likewise to add directly to the public im provement of the ciiy. Mewing the one thousand five nun.lreij men and boys in Oregon City to be personally favored in diyera ways, spirtually, intel lectually, morally, socially, physically, the Y. M. C. A. finds it absolutely nec essary to enlarge its quarters This fact and positive demands backed by ma terial and yoluntary assielam-e from scores of boys yet under their majority. have forced the Y. M. C. A. manage ment to attempt the construction of a building. A plan is derided upon with a view to provide separate and distinct compartments tor the various branches of work of the organization. The school of gymnasia to be of large and commo dious dimensions, no less thsn W or CO by 70 or 80 feet with the best apparatus and fixtures ; underground bowling allies, tub, shower, and Turkish baths; free reading rooms and library with maga nes and periodicals, leading dailies etc,, school rooms and amusement rooms, all up-to-date ; also a ladies' de partment and other improvements and idditions as the needs of tho association suggest. The chiel object always being the spiritual, intellectual, social and physical welfare of the men and boys of Oreuon City. Such a building so equip ped will cost no less than $2000 and with the push and means of 500 boys In Ore- iron City in co-operation, with the Kood . and means of the additional thona- nd men in our city, we believe the meritorious building ia an assured sue Rev. P. K. Hammond, of bt. Paul s . . EW.lch.nth will speak to men at :00 o'clock u. m. meeting Sunday next. All men will be ediiied to hear thia pleasing and gifted speaker. Tli a " MowpvV nf 1'ortland will meet onr homa team Saturday, this week. A I . . ... 1,1 L close game is expected and will be in teresting. The proceeds of the game ill be applied toward the new build ing fund. Admission 10 cents Tgeatrical And Masquerade Cos tumes for Rent and Sale. Country orders promptly attended to. Baruth & Febvet. Room aoS, Marquam Bldg. - - Portland, Or from O.HJontwUaf JMfrfea Prof. W. H. Peeks, who if. W. H. Feexe, wno kes a specialty o( llnpay, has without ibt treated and cur- makes KdII ed more rased than any living P!,viclni hie ticcAKA it aalrnlh(n(T Ua how, hnrr1 nf paw of to years' standing curia vj him. He publishes valuable work on thia dla eafte.wlUt-h h sands with a tie of hit absoluta cure, free to any sufferers who may send their V. O. and Express adclress. ProLW. B. mU. ... Cedar St., Bo w Tor 1113 Ijllf 10 7 3r Tho Kind You Hitv Alwnyaj Nought, ami tslilch lins) been lu use for over 00 jenrs, lint born tho Itfimtiir of p - oiul lum lccii mml under hi per- sZJJ-t-t1- poiml auporvlHlon slnco Its Infancy CWVWtiV, Allow no on to deceive you In this. All Counterfeit. Imitations mid Nuhatltutes) ro but Ki perlmeuts flint trill with mid endjinirer th health of Infauts and Chlldtcn-Hsperlenco nrnlnt Ki.wrlineiit What is CASTORIA Caatorln Is A suhstltuto for Cnstor Oil, IMresrnrle, Drop nd Boothlng Hyriipn. It U IIiirmlcM nnd Pleuwint. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlo nubNtanec. It niro I It iriinruiitee. It destroy Wornisj nnd allays FevcrUhiu. It cure IXarrhirn nnd Wind Colic. It relieves Tcctlilnir Trouble, cure Constipation nnd Flatulency. It nlmlliite tho lWI, regulate tho Moninch and llowcl. fflvliijr healthy and natural sleep Tho Children's ttimicMMV-Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Boors tb) The Kind You Have Always Bought; , In Use For Over 30 Years. A Patent: plourGE Manufactured in Oregon City from the best selected wheat on the market. All Our Flour Manufactured From Old Wheat IT IS FOR SALE Krclt',.,,,.!, Guaranteed the best. Patronize Home Industry. 1)0 YOU NEED ANY Doors, Ita, Ota, OU 0TIER IIUILDIKH MATERIAL? :G0 TO : C. H. BESTOW A CO- Low Prices. First-class Goods. Corner tlth and Main Streets. Oregon City, Oregon. THE r4il Weekly Inter Ocean ia V. Pi m LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ALL , POLITICAL PAPERS IN THE WEST A O ft ft Always American THE WEEKLY INTER THE NEWS AND BEST Lvery Column is Wight, The Literature of its columns la MjUdl to that of the bail muna zincs It is interesting to the children as well as the parents. 'HITS INTER OCEAN b a WESTERN MEVSPAPITP, und-wMle It J King- to th fraily THE NEWS OF TIIE WORLD anJ eiw I s n:.drn the best and aHert diKuuSont of all qui-itionj of the Any, !t h in f ill nympath with the Ideaa and aspirationi of Western people anJ ditcuss-a 1 U":iure M.d politics from the Western standpoint. .S; Jjjt, Z $ 1 ,00-PRICE ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR $' .00 i e . ) inc unit? rniu oununi tur nmu iua iiiunm tffjk a ARE THE BEST EVER fH M ;THE INTER OCEAN'S '. r 71 Price ol ItHlly by mall ' 'J' f Vi VrtM ' .undv by mall i. f ally unit Sunilay by mll The Inter-Ocean will be given as The Slgnaturo of i: :$ Voilfl iGrcxcror lb Always Republican OCEAN SUPPLIES ALL CURRENT LITERATURE Clean unci Pecked wiila N'cwa rntriAiit nr Jut iutcd r-cjki. tuinurw ur ini iniun SEEN IN THE WEST, NEWS IS E M 2 ill -i3 I on per yr (Mi prr yt ir (10 rr ) cr a Premium to each new Subscriberof Enterpriae. ioiiiw . r . ! i ) I IS