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About Clackamas County record. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 1903-190? | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1903)
READY FOR FRAY SOCIALISTS WILL HOLD MASS INQ MARCH 14. MEET. Third Party to Prepare For a Thorough Or f aobatioa ol the County and the Open lot of the Congressional Campaign. The perfect organization of the Rep ublican party daring the last cam paign, which resulted in a complete sweep for, the Republicans, has evi dently been a lesson to the other par ties . First the Democrats, who with the citizens mismanaged their cam paign in several ways, met and ar ranged preliminary plans' for the next campaign, and now comes the Socal ista. They follow the policy of con ducting a campaign of education and will circulate literature throughout the country. In the absence of Chair man Grout, of the central committee, W.W . Myers, one of the prominent Socialist leaders of the county, has issued the following bulletin : ATTENTION SOCIALISTS 1 'COMRADES TO THE FRONT. By request of many comrades, in the -absence of our county chairman, I hereby call a mass meeting of all Socialists of Clackamas County to meet in Oregon City, Saturday, March 14, 1903 at 10 o'clock A. M. at Judge Stipp's Court room, to transact im portant business and to prepare for a thorough organization of the county and the opening of the congressional campaign. Dhath of Mrs. Sctaram.' Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Schram died Tuesday night after a lingering illness of over a year, of cancer of stomach, aged 60 years, 9 months and 2 days. .'She was" well known in this city where .she had resided since 1859, in which year she came to the United States from Germany, where she was born June 1, 1842. Several years after her arrival here she was married to John Schram, who survives her. She leaves one sister, Mrs. Fred Vonderahe, of 'Carus, and the following children: Alexander H. Schram, of Portland; Mrs. Joseph Lynch, Charles Schram, of Oregon City. The funeral was held this afternoon from the family resi dence and the interment took place in vthe Masonic cemetery. The foundation for the new ware house of Ely and Carter is about com pleted and work on the structure will commence at once. The warehouse will be 62 x 70, adjoining the store and farming machinery and imple ments will be stored there. LOST IN HOTELS. A WEAK HEART. Four deputy assessors started Mon day to make the annual assessment and they will be occupied at least three months. J. E. Judd will cover Tange 2 east, John K. Morris range 1 west and 1 east, John O.Bradley range 8, 4, 6, 6, and 7 east and J. W. Mc Anulty will assess town property. A gigantio production by home taL nt will be given in the Opera House next Friday and Saturday nights, March 13th and 14th. Mr. E. Collins who has charge of this entertainment under the auspices of the Ladies' Aid Society of the Congregational Church is proving himself a master in his art at the rehearsals. He controls 100 boys and girls in a most surprising manner, as they perform their parts as fairies, gnomes, representatives of all nations, midgets , grasshoppers, frogs, beetlos, etc The choruses of 100 boys and girls will Jsing will be the finest ever hoard by juvenile voices in Oregon City. The leading parts will be taken by some of the Oregon City's most popular young people Popular prices 25 and 50 cents. All 50 cent tickets an be exchanged for reserved seats at Huntley's. Tickets can be secur from the older childreu'takiug part in the entertainment, from members of the Aid Society, cr at Huntley's. taer Tfclaca That Abacatmlade Oaeats Forget to Takt iwr. Every hotel In New York baa a store room for article left behind by guests. It is one of the Important departments of the establishment and often earns the gratitude of traveler whose un fortunate habit of forgStlng leads them to look for things that are miss ing. In hotels a book Is kept In which are jotted down descriptions of arti cles forgotten. When a hotel does a Urge transient business, It Is frequent ly with difficulty that lost articles are arranged for Identification. The Integrity of servants must be relied upon to a large extent The chambermaid takes Immediate posses sion of a room upon the guest's de parture. She picks up anything that appears to have been left unintention ally. A note describing the article and giving the name of the guest, the room number and the time of departure Is taken to the clerk. The property Is turned over to the housekeeper and by her to the "lost" department. Said the clerk of one fashionable ho tel: "I remember a singular case of a man who didn't respond at once to the ball boy's call for an early train. The result was that when be did get up he had to run. From the station we got a call on the telephone: " 'Hurry to my room,' he shouted, and on the table you'll find a very val uable package. It's my eyes. Send them to the station.' "Sure enough, we found two gloss eyes on the dressing table In a plush case. One was for dally use and the other for an emergency. Guests often forget their false teeth, but that was the only case I ever knew of a man leaving his eyes." Rings and pins are often found on the washstand. Valuable pins are found everywhere, the window cur tains being va favorite depository. Watches and revolvers bob out from under pillows. Of course when the owner's address Is known and any thing valuable Is left ha is notified and the article sent to him. If not mIIaiI In n jam mntitha tia fftrtrnt- ten article usually Decomes me per quisite , of employees. New York Times. PRIMITIVE PUMPS. The Mechanism Uaed In Ancient Esypt and In China. A representative piece of mechanism occurs frequently on the sculptures of early Egypt. It has the appearance of and Is generally believed to be that of portable pump. The hydraulic screw is also attributed to this people, but their main reliance seems always to have been the shadoof, seen every' where along the banks of the Nile, an Invention so simple and so well adapt ed to their needs that it remains today substantially the same at It has been through all the centuries since history began. The same may be said regarding the chain pump In China, an. Invention the origin of which antedates the Christian era. This simple machine, which seems never to have been Improved upon, Is In such common use that every agricul tural laborer Is In possession of one. Where Irrigation Is conducted on a lar ger scale the chain pump Is made pro- rtortionatelv lareer and moved .by a very simple tread wheel, and still lar ger ones are operated by yoking a buf falo or other animal to a suitable driv ing machine. i The application of steam to raising water Is of uncertain origin. Long be fore the Christian era certain applica tions of fire to vessels containing wa ter, by which effects were produced calculated to astonish Ignorant wor snipers, were practiced by the priests of Egypt, Greece and Rome, but their knowledge seems never to have been turned into any channel of secular use fulness. Repnlaed by Beea. A strlkine Incident of the relief of Cawnpore was the rout of the Ninth lancers by a swarm of bees. A village In the line of march was found to be defended by a hastily Improvised stockade, on the top of which a num ber of hives were stuck. Into one of these a young officer jabbed his sword, with a result that in far less time than it takes to tell It the whole advance trunrd was racing for denr life to the rear, and Sir Hope Grant hastily formed line of battle, believing it re pulsed by the mutineers In force. Bill Cllaablnar or. Stair Konntlac Will Streaariuea fa Org-aa.' It Is not many years ago that the be lief prevailed that a sufferer from heart disease was In constant peril whenever be moved and that the nearer be approached absolute rest the better It was for his heart This Is still true In respect to certain forms of heart dis easethose due to actual disease or de generation of the heart muscles but when the disease is in the valves, as it Is in the majority of cases, the modern teaching Is that properly regulated ex ercise la beneficial This is founded upon the common sense view that the heart Is like other muscles in that It can be strengthened by exercise to meet increased calls upon it When the valves of a pump get out of order, it requires greater force to move a given quantity of water. If this force can be applied. It will make up for the defect in the valves. The same principle holds good in the case of the diseased heart; the valvular de fect must be made good "compensa tion" Is the medical term for this proc essby Increased strength In the heart muscle. The heart must be able not only to meet the ordinary, everyday extra strain this It does automatically, as It were, by the unaided efforts of nature but It must be stronger than neces sary, just as It is in health, to meet some extra strain caused by illness, a sudden nervous shock or some abso lutely necessary exertion. It is evident, therefore, that a diseased heart must to assure the safety of the patient be Strengthened beyond the requirements of a quiet life. This Is accomplished in various ways, but none is better for the purpose than hill climbing or stair climbing, the for mer for pleasant days, the latter for bad weather. The exercise should, of course, be taken under the direction of a physician, for It can easily be over done, In which case one of the bad con ditions against which it is the object of the exercise to provide will be arti ficially produced and the heart will be overtaxed before it is strong enough to withstand the extra strain. Youth's Companion. Wanted immediately ten woodchop pers. Price f 1.00 per cord. Crown Paper Co. ' Mar 12 SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas. R. P. Nelson, Plaintiff, vs. Jemima Nelson, Defendant. To Jemima Nelson, the above named defendant : In the name of the state of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit, on or before the 18th day April, A. D. 1903, that being the last day prescribed in the order of publication of this sum mons, and if yon fail to so appear and answer said complaint, the plaintiff will apply to the -Court for relief therein prayed, to-wit : a decree dis solving the bonds of matrimony exist ing between plaintiff and defendant, and such other relief as may seem meet and equitable. This . summons is published for six consecutive weeks by order of Hon. Thos. F. Ryan, County Judge for Clackamas county, Oregon, made Feb ruary 27th 1908. First publication of this summons being the 2nd day of March, 1903, and the last publication of this summons on April 13th, 1903. vi. B. DIMICK, Apr 13 Attorney for plaintiff. f What Washington Larks. There Is no avenue in Washington "Which measures mlequatoly up to the full deninnds of civic beauty. Wood ward avenue In Detroit, Euclid avenue in Cleveland. Peachtree avenue in At lanta, Independence avenue In Kansas City and Summit avenue in St Paul are all examples of handsome thor oughfares, where magnificent private residences are set In miniature parks. On a larger scale Brookline, near Bos ton, presents a charming picture of suburban development along pictur esque and artistic lines. There Is noth ing of the kind in Washington. Wash ington Post An Artlat'a Trlala. Brownly Dauber certainly has his own troubles. Pinder Why, 1 thought he was do ing splendidly. Brownly He was until he painted that last landscape. He painted the sun In' too natural Pinder- How could that be? BrownJy Well It dries up the wa ter In the pond so fast that be has to paint In new water every two or three aiays. New York Times. NATURAL HISTORY. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed ad ministrator of ttie estate of James An derson, deceased, and all persons hav ing claims against the said estato must present them to the undersigned, duly verified, within six months from the date of tins notice. - G. B. DimCK, Administrator of said estate. Dated this January 13, 1903. Geo. L. Story, Atty. for Adm. Feb. 27. All animals ruminate which -have horns and cloven feet The offspring of two rabbits might in ten years number 70,000,000. Flying fish have been known to Jump ten feet above the surface of the sea. The puffin is the most punctual of birds in the matter of its annual migration. The moose deer has the largest horns of any animal. They often weigh from fifty to sixty pounds. The boa and python have the largest number of ribs of any animals, the number being 320 pairs. Some few birds, notably the blue- throat, accomplish the whole of their migratory journey in one stupendous effort The reindeer can endure more than any other draft animal except the camel A reindeer has been known to pull 200 pounds at ten miles an hour for twelve hours. Timber Land, Aot June 8, 1878, Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Oregon City, Oregon. February. 24. 1903. Notice is hereby given that in com pliance with the provisions of the act of Congress of June 3rd 1878. entitled "An act for the sale of timber lands in the States of California, Oregon, nevaaa, ana wasnington Territory," as extended to all the Publio Land btates by act of August, 4, 1892, rienrv lieitkenmer. of Milwaukie, county of Clackamas, State of Oregon has this day filed in this office his sworn statement No. 6081, for the purchase of the S NE i ana uors i ana a or section JNo. 2 in Township No. 5 S, Range No. 4 E, and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural bur- poses, and to establish his claim to said land before the Register and Re ceiver oi tins otnee at Oregon City, Oregon, on Monday, the 11th day of May, 1903. He names as witnessess: Frank Busch,' of Oregon City : Anton Heit kemper, of Elwood, Oregon : Leo Heit kemper, of Elwood, Oregon; Dr. Geo. WaUens, of Springwater, Oregon. - Any and all persons claiming ad versely the above-described lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said 11th day of r rnn may, iu. CHAS. B. MOORES, Register, Apr. 80. Secondhand Book Habit. One of the novel habits of the pres ent day Is one that takes one to second- band bookstores, says the Philadelphia North American. Dealers In dissipated libraries call it aptly enough the "sec ondhand book habit" A clerk whose duty It is to stand at the front of the secondhand bookstore and watch out for possible purchasers Is the one who first made note of this queer habit He noticed that the same men and women were wont to stop and cursorily inspect the same dusty vol umes day after day, year in and year out They come every day the same old faces and they look over the same old books, and they never say any thing, and they never buy anything, and after awhile, when their time la up, they go away as silently as they came. Rice Stalling. s Rice stuffing for roast chicken or tur key is considered preferable to the usu al breadcrumbs. To prepare It brown one chopped onion In a tablespoonful of butter and mix with it four cupfuls of cold boiled rice and one cupful of breadcrumbs that have been moistened In one cupful of milk. Season with sage, parsley or other sweet herbs, as desired. Add half a pound of sausage meat or finely chopped salt pork and talt and pepper to taste. An Embnrraulng Anavrer. A man sent a note to a rich neighbor with whom he was on friendly terms to know If he could borrow an ass for a few hours. The worthy old man was no scholarand happened to have a fue'st sitting with him at the time, to whom he did not wish to expose his Ignorance. Opening the note and pre tending to read It, he reflected a mo ment and turned to the servant "Very sood," said he. "Tell your master I'll come myself presently." Timber Land Act June 8, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Oregon City, Oregon, March 2nd. 1908. Notice is hereby given that in com pliance witli the provisions of the act or uongress or June 8, 1878. entitled "An act for the sale of timber lands in the States of California, Oregon .Nevada, and Washington Territory,' as extended to all the Publio Laud States by act of August 4, 1892, Frank Bnsch. of Oregon City, county of Clackamas, state or uregon, lias tins day liled in tins omce Ins sworn statement No. 0037, for the purchase of the SWJi of boction No. 2, m Township No. S Range No. 4 E, and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes, and to estab iisn his claim to said land before the Register and Receiver of this office at Oregon City, Oregon, on Monday, the 11th flay of May, 1903. Ho names as witnesses : Frank Ha ielt,of Springwater, Ore. , Setli Austin, of Viola, Ore. , Gustave Frindrich, of Parkplace, Ore., Annie Bunch, of Oregon City, Oro. Any and all persons claiming ad versely the above-describod lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said 11th day of May, 1908. CHAS. B. MOORES, Register. The lnventor'a Triumph. 'You say that Arbeiter's inventions have made Beveral men millionaires, but did he ever make anything out of them?" "Oh, yes. lie was singularly success ful with his devices In that respect He made enough to perfect all of them." Indianapolis News. M THE-MARVELOUS-POWR . , , Oui'r-K' intp pf r mon has many surpris ing things. But none greater than the subiuca- .tion of eledtricity' to benefit the human ( hot Jj jPt I race. Powerful itself it may as the ele&ric current is be controlled by a child. m Portland General Electric Co. Golden Rule Bazaar Spring Goods Arriving Daily. Big Reduction in Boots and Shoes and Men's and Boys' Clothing. Special Sale of Stationery and Toilet Articles. Adams Bros.9 Golden Rule Bazaar Ore&on City's Big Gash Store Clackamas County Record , i .75 a Year Oregon City Planing Mill P. S. B7IKBR. Proprietor all kinds of Building Material, Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Turning and Scroll-Sawing. ( Orders for all kinds of Mill Work . solicited. Promptness and quality of work guaranteed. Before placing your orders write and inquire for prices. Shop Job-work ot all kinds. 3QC . U rrobably True. Wabash I wonder what makes old Gotrox dress so shabbily ? Monroe Ills pride, my boy. Wabash Why, how's that? Monroe He's afraid his customers will mistake him for one of his clerks. Chicago News. All In Vain. Clara I suppose I shall have to give Mr. Fidaleback the next dance. Maud Why don't yon sit it out with him? "Well, I've tried that" New Yorker. A Tlreaome Feraon. "No," said Mr. BUgglns; "I haven't any use for philosophers." "Why not?" "My Idea of a philosopher Is a man who pretends he enjoys hard luck," Washington Star. The Whole Thine. She None of your "love In a cottage" for me. I want a brownstone house in a fashionable neignDornooa. Be And I suppose you want it in your own name too. Brooklyn Life. For some reason or other we often read thPt some man or other has "dis appeared suddenly." It would be re markable to read of one who disap peared gradually. Washington Times. Clreumatancea Alter Facta. "But she used to be considered quit a beauty." "That was before her father failed." Detroit Free Press. The world is full of people who would break their necks any time rather than wait for the next car. Atchison Globe. Timber Land, Act June 8, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Oregon City, Oregon, March 2nd, 1903. Notice is hereby given that in com pliance with the provisions of the act of Congress of June 8, 1878, entitled "An act for the sale of timber lands in the states of California, Oregon, Nevada, and Washington Territory," as extended to all tne fnDiic iana States by act of August 4, 185)2, Annie tsuscn, of Oregon Citv. county of Clackamas, State or Oregon, lias tnis oay niea in this office her sworn statement No. 0088, for the purchase of the (NW) S N Wi. Lots 8 and 4 or section jno, 2. in Township No. 5, Range No. 4 E, and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable Tor its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes, and to establish her claim to said land before the Register and Receiver of this office at Oregon City, Oregon, on Monday, the 11th day of May, 1903. She names as witnesses: Frank Habelt, of Springwater, Ore., Seth Austin, of Viola, Ore. , Gustave Fried rich, of Parkplace, Ore. , Frank Busch, of Oregon City, Oro. Any and all persons claiming ad versely the above-described lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said 11th day of May, l'.03. CHAS. B. MOORES. Register. ThisIsYourChance To Buy Goods at Prices To SttU Your Ptirse We have just finished stock-taking and must reduce stock to make room for spring and summer goods. r I Will Sell Everything i I At a Big Reduction I J Shirt Waists and Skirts, Latest Styles; Dry Goods, Underwear, Hosiery, Shoes, Etc., of the best make and quality. Men's and Boys' Clothing, Hats, Gloves, Mackin toshes, Etc., at prices that no prudent buyer ever overlooks. Come and See for Yourself. THE RED FRONT GEO. T. HOWARD, Prop. nCottft House Block, Oregon City, Oregon n u