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About Condon globe. (Condon, Gilliam Co., Or.) 189?-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1908)
SUPPLEMENT TO THE CONDON GLOBE, AUGUST 28, i908N i A ' r X ) 0 3o r i : uvwuvuu innrumanJ uv inwvru uuv ITEMS OF INTEREST 1 Manager EJ. Cloutth, , of the1 Arlington Lumber Co., arrived in town Tuesday evening, leav ing tho name night for his rutich over in Ferry Canyon. John Knox, a prosperous wheat grower of Condon, is tho guest of George L. Neale and family this week. Mr. Knox has leased his big wheat farm for a term of years and ia taking life easy for a season. Central Point (Ore.) Herald, ; . Arthur Schilling returned the first of tho week from a visit; of several days at Gotdendale and ofier points. While in the K lick itat county seat he met several former Condonites, among whom was John Hess, formerly bookkeeper for the Gilliam Co. Milling Co., whom he reports is doing well and enjoying his new, home. ' ;'."'; .. If you have anything to trade exchange, rent or sell,1 see to it that you use The Globe Wants. George E. Swaf ford, New Manager Condon Interior View of . George E. SfTord, of Ore- v . . .M ...... qkuu V-ii-.v, arnvtru in una uuy ;JIMonday evening to take charge r 1 oi me maniiRi'miTii oi ine on i iyfrdon Drug Co. 's store. Mr. R. ,TL, Hunt expects to leave on JjMonday for Portland to com- ' plete arrangements with the Watch Clem Growl The lumber for the new school 1 was received this week. Francis "Wester left Monday ; for his home at Jefferson, Or. A W.W. McPherson and J. E. . ilehroeder drove to Rock Creek Wist Sunday, after fruit, so they fsay, after "peaches" no doubt. f J. C. McEaehern presen- tc . her husband with a bright TilQJy boy. This is the happy news that John received last ; K. Sunday morning. It partially Vqcounts for the pleasing smile i that John wears these days. Jost & Phillips Clem, Oregon Dealers in " " ' GENERAL MRRCIIANI?TSE Jilt-r(cr;y 5I70CS for Ter; are (Juarapteed ; to stand the hardest knocks. 1 1 SNOWDRIFT FLOUR Letter Heads, Envelopes, Statements Printed' at the Globe Office. vrvt vnru uxr, uvuvu uif uv uvn.ru mi invuuu iniruwuu ininnmru iru u w . FROM CONDON AND . Mrs. J. C. Sturtrill in exnected homo next week from an exten dod visit with her parents at Haines, Baker county. Mrs. Sturgill'a mother who haa been ill, is feeling much better and unless untoward circumstances arise, Professor Sturgill expects his family to return to Condon the coming week. '" Mrs. Ida Jackson, of Fossil, was in Forest Grove the past week in attendance at the re union given in honor of the 90th birthday of Samuel Markee, one of the honored pioneers of Ore gon. He was born near, Colum bus, Ohio, came west and lo cated in Washington county. The Oregonian published a pic ture of his relatives last Monday, but erroneously jjave the date line as Cottage Grove. ' Kiiniiiijiiablo outfit fur smart dreHrn. There is a touch of er li'i'iiuu in our gnutU lhat foil cri titrisni. The 8. B. Barker Co. He Stephenson's Slock of 8tylih Summer Shot. Drug Co. Assumes Management. the Condon Drug Co.'s Store, Main Street, Condon' Woodard Clarke Co, for which he will travel , throughout the Pacific Northwest Mr. Hunt will remove his family which has been visiting with relatives in Tennessee during the past year to Portland in time for the children to enter school. Dur , Mrs." Macirie' Bohannon who has , been visiting her mother, Mrs. McPherson of this place, re turned to her home in Ballston, last Wednesday morning. ; John Chandler and Henry Wil kins made a business trip to Ar lington Monday. Another car of wheat was shipped this week to Kerr, Ci fi ord & Co. at Albina. E. J. McPherson who has been on the sick list for some time, is able to be around again. Bachelors are thicker than fleas in this section, , and think of it, it's leap year too. GILLIAM COUNTY 1 3 Boat Service on Columbia. It has been announced that on September 1st the Open Itiver Transportation Company will place the steamer Relief in com mission on the upper Columbia to make daily trips between Ce liloand Arlington and Alderdale. At Celilo sho will connect with the steamer J. N. Teal from Portland by way of the portage road. This will assist in getting the wheat to Portland. , Subscribe for the Globe! newsy every week. It' Political Information. , Registration rcojiens Sept 20. Close for election October 20. Presidential election November S No one is immune from kidney trouble, no just remember thai Foley' Kidney Remedy will stoj the irregularities and cure an) case of kidney r bladder troubh that it not beyond the reach ol tuediuine. Bold by Condon Drug Company. for Ci V ''1 ing his stay in Condon Mr. Hunt has made a host of friends who will wish him abundant success in his new endeavors and much happiness in his new home. The Globe says, "au revoir." At Salem. , The Oregon State Fair for 1908 will be held at Salem during the week 1 beginning September 14, The Oregon fair is the leading agricultural exposition on the Pacific coast. Special efforts have been put forth to make the coming fair, the greatest in the history of the organization, Extended classification of live stock, increased premiums and additional conveniences for ex hibitors in all department will assure greater displays which should be seen by large crowds during fair week. Leading stockmen of Oregon and the Pacific Norhwest have expended time and money in the better ment of their herds and flocks, and many of , them have signi fied their intentions to show their best animals at the Salem fair next month. Your neighbor would probably enjoy this paper as well as you do. Lend him your copy. All kinds and all sizes of Over alls at Weigel & Rice. : i j Miss Penelope.) By TROY AlllSON. i ruprfhtJ. 1M7, ty C. C I'urMlli. lie erected Iht first and ouly board er wllb 8 uliy illKhliy. "I tliliik fun will II nil It 1411M enough bpre, Mr. Ilolnui. Yuu uUt In your li-Her that fun wu ili-J to get from home and Hi children while you flnlhlicd your iHHik," John ll'iliiwn put til milt tune down on tlif vernnilu oi.i tho uuge ord w-n-ttiit, Aunt Illm)'. "It Uiuk tile mill iiilit," h snld, UkliiK In thi) KfirccinH culnrtng of I he trit nd the old rtmhlotird flower gar, leu, now gujr with il.iliilnw mid ffi-rutil-am. "I think I will Im able to work aftor duy or m of rmt and wander ing through the wood. 'When I got your umther'a anawpr to my advertlw mcnl I liixtluc-llvefy knt-w that it was tho rltfht 0110 to accept." MIxh reneloit hlimliwl faintly. "Not my nioihi'r" I am yonr hont' ca. I keep hoase for my father." Bhe norer In the world would have thought of berwelf lila hindlady. "Aunt I'll aey will render you any necessary aerv loe. Take Mr. Ilolimn' ault tune, Aunt Dilitey. and aliow hlin hla room. Sup. Iter will be ready In balf an boar." il went uiwtulm tit the front bed room, rather pleaaed that be would bare for company at anpper a pleaalug woman of perbnpa thirty Inatead of the middle agd farmer' a wife whom hi ImaKlimtion bad'pii'tured. Mine I'encloiie, giving a final touch to ber aupper tahle, with Its centerple of brilliant fall bloasotni, talked to ber blind father. "If lt'a quiet he want, be certainly ought to be aatlKfled. But he In a much younger man than I el pectcil. I have read bla laat book, and It doenn't aeem that aurb jolly look ing man could havo written booka ao rlou. "He anld there were five children at iIm limiKc and that their mother be loved that a constant exercise of lunga ind munch wna god for their devel tpmeiit. We'll feel really Important, liiddy, buviug a rent book written In iur lioutte or on our venimTn or in our Imck yard, wherever genius bappena to nsplre blrn." And tihe rnn on merrily, 'Ivlng the little delnlla which for the en veil in of bla bllmlneoa bad been he pleasure of her father's life. Tho novel progTed finely In the text few weeks, and the hoarder dl- a nz. Jit "I KK1T TBI BOSH tOD OAVM UK." vlded bla days Into morntnga for work, afternoons for fishing and rambling through the woods and gay little chnta with Misa Penelope and her father after supper. Mlsa Penelope forgot the shyness for which she was noted and talked of the things she had read and dreamed about for yearn as if she had actually lived them. Returning from school ten years before, he bad not found the average youth of the community con genial. Iler natural timidity and ret icence bad been mistaken for hauteur, and not one of the country swains had possessed the courage to. ask her to 'go for the customary drives or to the yearly lee cream fostivnl. She had tended her Oower garden, di rected the management of her father's farm and for amusement bad lived In a world of books and magazines. The only love of her life was a worship of Rudolph Uassendyll after reading "The Prisoner of Zemlo." She uncousclous ly adapted her stylo of dress to the lines that Bhe thought would have suit ed the slenderness of Queen Flavla and never realized that she was dream ing her life away. , . To Holmes she talked freely-of her fancies, of his work, of anything that the moment prompted, and he had un consciously added a touch of ber to the quaiut heroine of his book. "Let me read you the last three chapters," be said one evening when the rain hud driven them Indoors trwa the flower gurden and the hammock under the trees. "It always sounds conceited for a writer to want to read his owu works, but I believe I have given the exact touch to this, and I want to see how it strikes you." v He brought the manuscript, and Miss Penelope lit the old fashioned lamp. As be read bet- eyes dilated and she listened eagerly. She saw her own dahlia garden Hinntlujr In the autumn sun, the woodland patl U-iat led from the back of the garden to the met i and was It Mr. Holme or ber own Itudolpb Iiasaendyil translated to quiet and homelike atmosphere that was given red roue lu the garden by the strangely familiar woman la the book? "You have made ber like me," she gas)ied Incredulously, "and idealized me, and where she tells blui about ber. life, lived lu the character from booka sba bad read. It exactly what 1 said to you the af ternooo we went riding on the creek." "I couldn't help It," be confessed. "It fitted the Esther la my story to perfectly that 1 wa almply obliged to let ber borrow the whole conversation. Tou don't wind, do you?" "t never was more flattered, to my life." she aald impulsively. "I never iuwiglMd . there was one trait or thought of mine of enough importance to be written about, but you have made me teem all that I always want ed to be." . "Are you?" He laid the manuscript on the table, "I kept the rose you gave me that day in the garden," be said abruptly. She tat still and white, the situation being one that ahe bad never met with or dreamed of meeting. ' "To me you are Esther. I could love you the aame way." be said quietly. Mix Penelope rote, frightened and childlike. quiver of pain trembling on her Hi). "Mr. Holmes, I have admired you. I have tried to entertain you at beat 1 could to keep you from finding the dull next of our life tedious. Perhaps 1 arn to blame," the said dazedly. ' "I found you to sympathetic and congen ial that I talked to you mora than I ever talked to any one in my life, but I never thought that you would misun derstand me would offer me tbla in tuit. You, t married man," the gasped. "A-a-wbatr be asked blankly, f "A married man," ahe aald brokenly, two tear trickling down ber cheeks. Holmes, finished product 'of clvlll tatlon, let bit mouth drop open in as tonishment , r ' "I've never been married in my life," be said in amazement . "Rut those five children that yon wanted to get away fromT aha said faintly. , Holmes struggled with bis merri ment and was finally able to anawer: "Those five kids belong fb my sis-, ter," be chuckled. "I live with her . aud her husband In any part of the house that is not pre-empted by those urchins. I never -dreamed that you,, thought I was married all this time." Mis Penelope still stood, nervous and dazed before blm. - - - He took her band and, stooping, pressed his lips to it "I kept the rose," he said insinuatingly. '' , I ,-4SUa4okd downepos -fcts- bkmrt ' bead, and per -own beloved Queen Flavla and Rudolph Rassendyll be came from that moment mere crea tures of fiction. She had -found ber own romance. ... s . ' , "I'm so-glad you kept It," she said timidly. ' -r . Foley's Kidney Reuidy : wii cure a.ny case of kidney: or liv'br trouble that is not beyaud tfie reach of medicine. ; No: medicine can do more. Sold by Coudoii Drug Co. To Prospective Investors.: You may invest from 4100 :to $25,000 in Portland Business Blocks with R. D. Inman,.(T. D.I Honey man, uov. Uea IS. Chamber lain, Dr. Andrew C. Smith and others. It paid others 12.98 per cent in 1907. It will pay you. No care, no taxes. For further par ticulars call at this office or write O. E. McClure, Superintendent ,of Properties, 812 Dekum Building, Portland, Oregon. CONDON AMUSEMENT HALL MYER3A WILLOUCHBY ; Props. ' ' ; TOBACCOS An'appropriate resort in BILLIARDS . CIGARS which you art inviled to . POOL' ' CANDIES : spend a pleasant hour CLUB ROOMS MAIN STR EI You Can't Afford Good Implements are the best investments on a farm, and ihey can't be .too good. You can't afford them, no matter how cheap the ; . price. Buy a good implement from W, L. BARKER & CO., and it will be the cheap est in the end. , - . U. C. Barker s Beautiful Dress j4at$ - MAKE US A CALL MISS OREINER'S MILLINERY PARLORS Agricultural College Corvallis, Oregon Offers collegiate courses in Agriculture, including Agronomy Horticulture, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, etc.; Forestry; Domestic Science and Art; Civil, Electrical, Mechanical, and Min ing Engineering; Commerce; Pharmacy. ' Offers elementary courses in Agriculture, Forestry, Domestic Science and Art, Commerce, and Mechanic Arts, including forge work, cabinet making, steam fitting,' plumbing, machine work, etc. - . Strong faculty, modern equip ment; free tuition; opens Sept ember 25. ' . Illustrated catalogue with full information on application to the Registrar, free. THE BEST in PRINTED STA-; TIONERY can be had - at the" ' GLOBE PRIIITEBY ,CALL UP or SEE US . about our Frices.; Prompt Service and J fi Work Guarantee'. f ULDG! SPECIAL OFFERS trikl will flMkka ma m MrBiaiuint eua moiisav refunded. Sotrvenlr Collect!m!!L,,rJ?y,.7S;. sls.tK Mnlnsi ffwuHaiM. law, 9lsaU Ms, tkllbts. sWf:kl. Uansinitasv Rnnrtrusv Ctsstas.CkleSMdMk. Ansm. IMnAlL n,UM Sm .kUi.& Duntt Txllk 1WM VkIhuuI roitse iius, uuih, wrwmt, hsbssbsi sssm sm tbls rf Bulbs VmyiA. tsftthr hk ms Mt mHsis4, Ik L, lKrtwci Mil, 1 "l IMsHnti SCSMIf SKS UHOIIMISl t B M US SsjSv. US JSBM as WWVS SjWSW, . . VsT W P.tf ".? - ET.' CONDON Poor Implements ?o., .?oi7dbp, or. 0 ess cr::ii . , ? oao ,0 0 1 " ' iU. ?sBBass'c'S' wisasssrS VL W p cp o cz:::.:":::";::,::1' C3 Q