Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, October 26, 1906, Page 6, Image 6

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    J.
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1906.
Saw and Hammer Altering
Dr. McLoughliiVs Old Home
The old home of Dr. McLoughlin
at the head of Main street, opposite the
woolen mills, is -being remodeled into
a more convenient and modern house.
Parts of the house that were brought
from England are being taken out and
replaced with new parts. How this
Is regarded by strangers was shown,
Thursday, when Dr. and Mrs. Wm. S.
"Wallace of Los Angeles visited the
old house during a tour to points of
historic interest about our city. "Noth
ing less than sacrilege," said Mrs.
Wallace, "and I am surprised that the
citizens here do not take steps to pre
serve their historic places both as a
matter of duty and pride, and for fi
nancial reasons as well, for-1 am sure
such places attract many visitors to
your city."
Dr. and Mrs. Wallace themselves
came to OregonCity because of its
historic interest. Thed had read Mrs.
Eva Emery Dye's book, McLoughlin
and Did Oregon; being at Portland
came to this city to meet the author
of the book that had given them so
MOLALLA GRANGE FAIR
(Premiums Awarded (Continued
from last week).
Best Quinces, Albert Moshberger 2
Best Grapes, B. Fredrich 1.
. Best Burg. Grapes, do 1
Best Spitz. Apples, do 1
Best King Apples, do 1
Beit Rhode Isd. Apples, do 1
Best Belle Flower Apples, do 1
Best Baldwin Apples, do 2
Best Lady Apples, do 1
" Best Red Cheek Apples, do 1
Best Gravenstein Apples, do 1
Beat Pears, Bertha Adams 1
Best Sorghum, Albert Moshberger 1.
Best Wolf River Apples, Louise Sail
er 1.
Best- Blue Pearmains Apples, W. W.
Everhart 1.
Best Pop Corn. do 1
Best Pop Corn C. W. Herman 2.
Best White Dent Corn, J. W. Thom
as 1. .
Best White Dent Corn, P. C. Miller 2
Best Yellow Corn.H. A. Kayler 1.
Best Yellow Corn, P. C. Miller 2.
Best Cabbage, T. B. Donaldson 1.
Best Cabbage, Gottlieb Feyrer 2.1
Best House Flowers. Mrs. L. C. Dun
ton 1.
Best tobacco, Jacob Harless 1.
Best Plug Tobacco, Jas. Rastall 1.
Best Cookies, Mrs. E. T. B. Thomas
Best Tobacco Stalks, James Rastall 1
Best Watermelons, May Herman 1-2
Cookery and Preserved Fruits.
Best Cookies, Mrs. E. B. B. Thomas
1 and2.
Best Hop Yeast Bread, Mrs. Annette
Albright 1.
Best Hop Yeast Bread, Miss Vesta
. Harless 2. -
Best Light Biscuit, Mrs. Annettie Al
bright 1.
Best Roll Butter, Mrs. Eliza Daugh
erty 1.
Best Roll Butter Mrs. E. T. B. Thom
as 2.
Best Baking Powder Biscuit, Mabel
Dungan 1.
Best Baking Powder Biscuit, Ipha
Robbins 2.
Best Soda Biscuits, Mrs. Orla Bux
ton 1.
Best Cake, Mrs. Annie Everhart 1.
Best Cake, Mrs. E. T. B. Thomas 2.
Best Apple Pie, Mrs. Mary Robbins, 1.
Best Pumpkin Pie, do 2.
Best Butter Prints, Mrs. E. T. B.
Thomas 1.
Best Display Jellies, " do 1.
Best Display Can Fruit do 1.
Fancy Work.
Best Rug, Mrs. W. D. Adams 1.
Best Rug, Mrs. R. Boswell 2.
Best Crazy Quilt, Mrs. Ellen Sawtell, 1
do ' do Elsie Daugherty,2
Best Tidy, Mrs. Mary Stewart 1.
Best Tidy, Mrs. Jennie Perry 2'.
Best Stand Cover, Mrs. Gottlieb Fey-
rer 1.
Best Stand Cover, Mrs. Mary Stew
art 2.
Best Cushion, Mrs. Anna Perry 1.
, Best Cushion, Mrs. Annettie Albright
. 2. ' '
Best Collar, Miss Edith Sawtell 1.
Best Apron, Mrs. Margaret Sawtell 1.
Best Pillow Top, Mrs. Mackrell 1.
Tea Satisfaction
Golden
Golden
Golden
Golden
Golden
Golden
Golden
JAJolssrRG?
TEA ft
much pleasure, and to see the places
where the great McLoughlin lived and
worked.
Under Mrs. Dye's guidance they saw
the graves of Dr. McLoughlin and his
wife. The great pioneer of this Pa
cific northwest, founder of our city,
was buried in St. John's churchyard in
.1857, and three years later his Indian
wife was laid beside him." His stone
bears this inscription: "A friend of
Oregon and founder of Oregon City."
In the church a stained glass win
dow dedicated to his memory gives a
speaking likeness of Dr. McLoughlin.!
The old home is fully described in
Mrs. Dye's book. The front room on
the left of the large hall is where the
old man died. It still contains the
old-fashioned fire-place. Across the
hall was his wife's sitting room. The
narrow "colonial" windows on 'each
side of the front door came from Eng
land when the house was built. It is
a two story frame building with broad
steps from the street to the door.
Best Pillow Top, Miss Bertha Adams
2.
Best Pin Cushion, Miss "Vesta Har
less 1.
Best Chimese, Miss Edith Sawtell 1.
Best Shawl, Mrs. Ellen Sawtell 1.
Best Doily, Mrs. Gottlieb Feyrer 1.
Best Handkerchief, Mrs. Margaret
Sawtell 1.
Best Home-Made Blanket, Mrs. R.
Boswell 1.
Best Quilt, Mrs. Kate Adams 1.
Best Cushion, Rhoda Mackrell 1.
Best Pechose, do do 1
Best pair Stockings, do do - 1
Best Bed Spread, Mrs.-Emily Case 1
Best Bouquet Dahlias, Miss Bertha
Adams 1 and' 2.
J. W. THOMAS,
Secretary
A Most Worthy Article.
When an article has been on the
market for years and gains friends
every year, it is .safe to call this med
icine a worthy one. Such is Ballard's
Horehound Syrup. It positively, cures
coughs and all Pulmonary diseases..
One of the best known merchants in
Mobile, Ala., says: "For five years
my family has not been troubled with
the winter coughs. We owe this to
Ballard's Horehound Syrup. I know
it has saved my children from many
sick spells." For sale by Huntley
Bros.' Drug Co.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
John P. Freeman to Viola Freeman,
10 acres John Tuttle DLC, NE, NE,
sec. 5, 3 s-4 E; $500.
John P. Freeman to Beulah F. Row
ley, 10 acres John Tuttle DLC, SE,
NE NE sec. 5, 3 s-4 E; $500.
John P. Freeman to W. D. Freeman
100 acres S half E half John Tuttle
DLC in sec 32, 2 s-4 E and sec 5, 3
s-4 E; $2000.
Wm. Anderson to L. W. Stryker and
E. E. Sharon, 25 acres in sec. 26, 1
s-2 E; $1200.
W. A. Laidlow to L. K. Moore, lots
2, 3, 4, and 5, blk. 3, Maywood; $6500.
Hugh T. Evans to Peter Taylor, lots
7 and 8, bl. 16 O. I. & S. Co., First
Add, Oswego; $1100.
Henry W. Dudley to John C. Hankin
20 acres, S half SW, NE, Sec. 33, 1
9-2 E; part of Wm. Phillips D.L.C;
$2000.
Pacific Title & Trust Co., to Mount
Hood & Barlow Road 62 miles road,
$1.00. (reconveyance).
O. E. F. Lee to A. D. Hall, 90 acres,
part of DLC No. 42, sees. 4 and 9, 6
s-1 E; $2951. .
Sellwood Land and Title Co., to Geo.
Bigham, lot 4, tract 60, first subdiv. of
Oak Grove; $200.
Pleasance P. Hedges, Edwin Hedg
es, Albert G. Hedges, Geo. Hedges,
Etta T. Chapman, Mabel Hollenbeck
Dingman, to C T. Tooze, lots 3 and 14,
blk 28, Gladstone; $200.
Mary Lawe to Marshall C. Soule,
lots 1, 2, 3, 4, sec. 26, 2 s-2 E, 44.8
acres; $500.
Leslie L. Shank to Eliz R. GInzer,
lots 5 and 6, blk. 2, Lee's Add to Can
by; (Q.C.D.) $1.00.
Eliza J. Darling to H. R. Chase and
A. D .Chase, 351.48 acres, S half SW
SEVEN FLAVORS
Gate Japan
Gate English Breakfast
Gate Ceylon
Gate Oolong
Gate Fancy Blend -Gate
Gunpowder
Gate Black and Green
' 'Pacltd m Flavor-Tight Cartons
J. A. Folger & Co., San F)
ran Cisco
Tor your Protection
we place this label on every
package of Scott's Emulsion.
The man'Yvitha fishon his back
is our trade-mark, and It Is. a
guarantee that Scott's Emul
sion will do all that Is claimed
for It. Nothing better for lung,
throat or bronchial troubles in
infant or adult. Scott's Emul
sion is one of the greatest flesh
builders known to the medical
world.
' W'll mead yoa mmmple tree, ,
SCOn & BOWKE,
40t Pearl Street
Hew York
and lots 3 and' 4, sec. 13 and S half
SE, and lots 5 and 6, sec. 14, lots 1
and 2, sec. 23, lots 1 and 2, sec. 24, all
in town 5 s-J W; $13,500.
Bank of Oregon City to A. K. Ford,
2.60 acres in Julia A. Lewis DLC;
$130.
Willamette Land Co. to J. T. Ap
person, blk. 11, Apperson's Subd. blk.
5, & and 7, Parkplace; $125.
C H. Willoughby to Gottfried
Grossenbacher, lots 1 to 8, blk. 13,
Canemah; $1050.
M. F. Donahue to Portland & Sandy
River Electric Co. E half SE, sec. 8,
N half NE, sec. 17, 2 s-5 E, 160 acres ;
$1.00. '
Joseph Resch to W- F. Stangel, part
of DLC, J.-W. Boon No. 42, and part
of CI 45, 3 s-1 w, $2000.
Edw. Danielson to A. C Mowrey,
timber and right of way deed to half
NW and SW, NE, sec. 20, 2 s-4 E; $1.
Sarah J. Buckman to W. F. Harris,
part of A. Hood DLCr in sec. 9, 10, 15,
16, 5 s-2 E; 1 acres: $1500.
Wilhelm tiueperlet to Frank Gue
perlet part of and Vicker's DLC, 105
acres, 3 s-1 E; $500.
C. M. Wilson to F. T. Bradford and
M. Calavan 49.52 acres in sec. 21, 3
s-1 E; $2000.
Charles Hun? to Portland & Sandy
River Electric Co. S half NW & N half
SW, NW SE and SW NW, sec. 16,
2 s-5 E; 240 acres : $1.
Anna Kaufman to Emma G. Robin
son, lot 4, blk. 58, Oak Grove, w.d.,
$950.
Emma G. Robinson to Emma M.
Larson, lot 4, blk. 58, Oak Grove, w.d.,
$1250.
Herman Retlig to Wilber Ray Bunn,
lot 2 and N half SW, SE sec. 5, 2 s-3,
E; 40 plus acres, w. d., $3700.
W. L. Smith to Emma L. Cox, S
half blk 4, (lots 5, 6, 7 and 8) So.
Oswego, w. d., $800. ' '
Robert Glen, Rdbt. A. Glen and
Hugh Glen to F. R. Bussard, part of
DLC, Jos Kellogg, 13 acres, w.d.,
$1500.
Gustav Will to Hugo Geschwendt,
NE, SE, sec. 5, 3 s-1, E; 40 acres, w.d.
$2600.
Vevia Lansch to Arthur W. Brown,
12.53 acres in DLC, Henry Rowlie, 3
s-3 and 4 E, w. d.; $240.
Fritz Timmermann to Julius Tim
mermann W half NW, NE sec. 5,
2 s-4 E; w. d.; $1.
Ira Erb to Annie Matthews, lots 8
to 13, lots 32 to 36, blk. 70 Minthorn
Add., City Portland, w.d; $250.
Ira Erb to Annie Mathews, lots 42
to 46, blk. 42, Minthorn Add city of
Portland, w.d.; $100.
E. F. Riley to Annie Mathews, lots
6 to 24, blk. 65, lot 1, blk. 66, Min
thorn add city of Portland, w. d.;
$200.
Annie Mathews to Jas. P. McGHn
chey, lots 6 to 24, blk. 65, lot 1 blk.
66, lots 8 to 13, and 32 to 36, blk. 70,
lots 42 to 46, blk. 42, Minthorn add.,
Portland, (w.d.; $10.00.
Maggie A. Johhson to Ira Erb, lots
8 to 13, 32 to 36, blk. 70, Minthorn add.
Portland, q.c.d., $500.
Laurie J. Moody to B..S. Payne lots
5 and 18, blk. 93, 1st subd. part of
Oak Grove, deed of confirmation;
$170.
Ralph W. Hoyt, Trustee to Thos.
Crowley part of Ezra Fisher DLC, No.
44, 2, s-2 E; w. d.; $125.
J. G. Miller to E. B. Miller, part of
I. Whealdon DLC, T 4, SR. 1 E; 151.20
acres; $5500.
Thos. H. Smith to Lydie Kary, lot
59, blk 1, P. L. H. No. 1, w. d.; $30.
O. W. P. Townsite Co. to City of '
Estacada, lot 8, blk. 7; $200. !
O. W. P. Townsite Co. tc T, A. Mil
ler, lot 12, blk. 19; $75.
T. A. Miller to R. G. Marchbantt, lot :
12, blk. 19 $300. '
G. B. Dimick to W. T. Henderson, 1
SE, NE and part SE. sec. 19, 4 s-4 E: ,
$1000.
Jno, B. Mathews to Kate M. Col
burn, part lot 4, blk. 30, First Subd.
Oag Grove; $2375. J
D. F. LeFevre to W. L. Mitchell, '
part of R. N. Workham DLC, sec. 22, :
3 s-2 E; 30 acres; $500. I
Victor Erickson to Jas. C. Russell,
part of J. D. Garrett DLC, sec. 31, 1
s-2 E; 5 acres; $600.
Alice Russell to Jas. M. Tracy, H.
A. Straight DLC, 2 s-2 E; 13 acres
(q.c.d.) fl50. ,
Frank E. Mellim to Grace Loder,
part of bl. "A" Derlings' Add to Ore
gon City; $110.
Napoleon Bonaparte
showed at the battle of Austerlitz,
he was the greatest Leader in the
.world. Ballard's Snow Liniment has
shown the public it is the best Lini
ment in the world. A quick cure
for Rheumatism, Sprains, Burns, Cuts,
etc. A. C. Pitts, Rodessa, La., says:
"I use- Ballard's Snow Liniment in my
family and find it unexcelled for sore
chest, headache, corns, in fact for
anything that can be reached by a I
liniment." For sale by Huntley Bros.
Drug Co.
R. A. Wilkinson Funeral.
The funeral of Robert A. Wilkinson
was held from the family residence,
, Fourteenth and Madison streets, Fri
day afternoon at 2 o'clock, Rev. H. B.
The deceased was the third son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilkinson, and
was born at Albany, N. Y., in 1.874,
coming two years later to Oregon
City. He was taken ill last April and
was Just recovering when attacked
by typhoid fever, with complications,
which left him enfeebled. He battled
bravely for life but, death conquered.
He returned Wednesday from a sev
eral weeks stay at Seaside. The be
reaved relatives have the sympathy of
many friends.
Julius Caesar
was a man of nerve, but sickness left
its mark and he became aged before
his time Sickness Is often caused by
a torpid liver. Herbine will regulate
your liver and give you health.. Mrs.
Carrie Austin, Hollon, Kas.. writes:
"I consider Herbine the best medi
cine I ever heard of. I am never with
out it. Sold by Huntley Bros.' Drug
Co. -
Measuring the Power.
The TT. S. Geological Survey is
maintaining stations on streams in
Western Oregon, . gauging' their flow
and supply of power. The nine sta
tions where daily readings are made
are as follows: Barton, Dickey Prai
rie Mehama, Surver, " Hendricks' Fer
ry, Jasper, Goshen Waterloo and Albany.
Tib. E2useirirklslber.
From a modest beginning to our present commercial position as leading furni
ture and carpet dealer, our infallible method has carried as through to this
great success, and that method - just keeping faith with the public, honest and
reliable dealings, lower' prices and better, grade of furniture and carpets than
our competitors.
Folding Cots at
RANK
2
V
The Kind You Have Always
in use lor over 30 years,
All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children Experience against Experiments
What is CASTOR I A
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare'
goric, Drops and Soothing' Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and 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.
GENUINE
CASTORIA
S7
Bears the
Tie Kind You Haye Always Bought
In Use For , Over 3 O Years.
. TMC OINTAUH COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY.
D. C. LATOUSETTE, President. F. J. MEYER, Cashier.
THE COMMERCIAL BANK
OF OREGON CITY, OREGON
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL 3100,000
Transacts a General Banking Business. Open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Our Competitors
squeal because our
prices on carpets
,ari to low,, never
mind Mr. Buyer
you know , that 85c
a yard will buy the
best . wool carpet
and 35c the cheap
est. ;T This chair was
no bought at 1 our
store'and you can
see the consequen
ces. We sell only
well ruece, jelia
ble Rocking chairs
fullsizeland;high
armsj. or -
B 1 75
3 Irons and
handle stand
85c
$2-50-
Mi-
ULTUf
- )
Bought and which has been
has borne the signature or
and has been made Kinder his per
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
ALWAYS
Signature of
Our couches are
made for com
fort, let us show
you at $ 1 O one
and be astonish
ed at the value.
.S525
will buy V. this
Parlor Lamp, ac
tually one of the
best lamps in the
market.
Ik
$18 will buy a regular $25 Sew
ing Machine, 10 years guarantee.