X OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD. FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1901. 1 SOUTH AND EAST VIA Southern Pacific Co. Shasta Route Trains leave Oregon City for Portland at 70 and 9;22 a. 51., and C;30 p. M. Ar Ashland 12:31 A. v. 11:30 a.m. " Sacramento 6:00 P. M 4:35 A.M. " San Francisco 7:4,s p. ar. 8:15 r.M. " Ogden 5:45 A. M. 11:45 A.M. Denver 9:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. " Kansas City 7:52 A M, '7:25 a.m. " Chicago . 7:45a.M. 9:30a,m. " Los, Angeles 1:50 p.m. 7:00 a.m. " El Paso 6:00 P.M. 6:00 p.m. " Fort Worth 6:30 A.M. 6:30 a.m., ' Uity of Mexico 9:65 a.m. 9:55 a.m. " Houston 4:00 B. m. 4:00 a.m. ' Kow Orleans 5:26 P.M. 6:25 P. V, . " Washington 6:42 a.m. 6:42 a.m. " New York 12:43 P.M. 12:43 P.M. Pullman and Tourist Cars on both trains, ChaL- oars, bacramcnto to Ogden and El Paso; ,nd tourist cars to Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans nud Washington. Connecting at San Francisco with several Steamship Lines for Honolulu, Japan, China, Philippines, Oeutrai and South America, , See E. L. Hoofenoarner, agent at Oregon City station, or address C. H. MARKHAM, 6. P. A., Portland, Or. (HJ) SHOipUNS 'wp Union Pacific The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co.'s Strs. Regulator & Dalles City Dally (except Suuduy) between The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks, Vancouver- and Portland Touching at way points on both sides of the UOlunium river. un, nr nhnvn stnnmprs have been rebuil and are in 'ixoellent shiipe for the season of 1900 The Koirulatur Line willendeavor to give its patrous ttio best service possible. Fnr ilLinfort. Economy and. Pleasure travel by the steamers of The Regulator Line. m,nni.nv..t..umDTiil,.nvA Pm-tlnnd 7a. m.and Dalles at 8 a. iu.,aud arrive at destination in ample time for oniuoing truins. Portland Oilice. The Dalles Office Oak St. Dock. Courtstreet. A. O. A1XAWAV General Agent , Ocean Steamships 8 p. ra. All Sailing Dates subject 4 p. m. to change. For San Kram.isco Sail every 5 days. Daiiv Columbia River Ex. Sunday steamers. p- 8 p. m. Ex . Sunda Saturday To Astoria and Vay- ' 10 p.m. Landiugs. N Willam.tte River. 6 a.m. 4.30 p.m. Ex. Sunday Oregon City, Newbe;g, Ex. Sunday Salem, Independence and way-landings, Willamette and Yam- 7 a. m. hill Rivers., ':3P;m- Tnes. Thur. Mo., Vi ed. and Sat. Oregon City, Dayton and Frl' and way-landings. e a. m. Willamette River 4:30 p m Tues. Thur. Moll.. Wed and Sat. Portland to Corvallis and Fri. and way-landings. Leave Snake River Leave Eiparia i Lewiston J:40a. m. tlparla to Lewiston. 8:30 a.m. Daily. Daily u V, V 4 v JL E i" v H (5-1 I mm n A. L. CRAIG, G, P. A., Portland, Oregon Best of Everything" In a word this tells of the pass enger service via, TEE NORTH-WESTERN LINE 8 Trains Daily between St, Paul and Chicago comprising: The Latest Pullman Sleepers Peerless Dining Cars . Library and Observation Cars Free Reclining Chair Cars The 20th Century Train "THE NORTH-WESTERN LIMITED" runs every day of the year. The Finest Train in the World Electric Lighted Steam Heated To Chicago by Daylight. The Badger State Express, the finest day train running between Chicago via. the Short Line. Connections from the west made via The Northern Pacific, Great Northern, and Canadian Pacific Rys. This is also one of the best lines between Omaha, St. Paul and Minneapolis All agents sell tickets via "The North western Line." W. H. MEAD, H. S. SISLER. Ci. A. t8 Alder St., Portland, Oregon. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given tuat the undersigned ku been duly appointed by the county court, ol the state of Oregon, for Clackamas county, ex ecutor ior the estate of Leonora Elisabeth Laoey, deceased. AU persons haying olalmg against laid estate are hereby required to present the tame to me properly verified, as required by law, at Springwater, Oregon, or to my attorney, Rob ert A. Miller, at Oregon City, Oregon, within six months from date hereof. Albert Lacbv, Executor of the estate of Leonora Elizabeth Lacey, deceased. Dated this 31st day of January, 1901 SUMMONS. In he Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas. Mable Sollnsky, PlalntifT, vs. William H. Sollnsky, Defendant. To William H. Sollnsky, Defendant. In the name ot the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer tlie com plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit, in the above entitled court, on or betore the 1st day of March, A. D , 1901, the said last men tioned date being the last day of the limo pro scribed by the court In the, order for service of this summons upon you. by publication thereof, and If you so fail to appear and answer, in this suit, on or before the said 1st dy of March, A, D., ll'Ol, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court forthe rslijf de.n tnloii In the said complaint, to wit: That the bonds of matrimony heretofore and now existing between you and tliu said plaintiff, bo' disolvedi That the plain tiff have the care, custody and control ot child; that the plaintiff have the decree of the Court against you for the costs and disbursements of this suit, and for such other aad further relief as to equity muy seem jus'.i The defendant Is here by further notified that this summons Is served upon him by publication thereof, by virtue of an order made In this suit by the Hon. Thomas F. Byan, Judge of the Couuty Court of the State of Oregon for Clackamas County, on the 14th day of Jan., A. D. 1901, ordering and directing that this Summons be served upon you, the above named defendant by publication thereof lu the Courier- Herald, a newspaper published in Oregon City, County of Clackamas, State of Oregon, and of general circulation In said City, County and State for a period of six successive weeks from the first publication of this Summons, the date of the first publication of this summons, being the 18th day of January, A. D 1901. T.O.THORNrON. Attorney for Plaintiff. The White Man's Burden i'can be named in the 'single word dys pepsia. It is the one disease, wnicn more than any other, affects m th Atnprirati neotile. f-j It is common to all U V classes and all condi tions. It makes life miserable. It mars k fnnnlv hanrnness. It interferes with busi-1 ness and pleasure alike, and it discounts a man's usefulness just as much as it discounts his happi ness. . There's a remedy for dyspepsia. Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery has lifted this burden from the bodies of hundreds of thou sands. Tt cures ninety-eight out of L every nunurea wuo give it a fair and faithful trial. I used ten bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery and several vials of his 'Pleasant Pellets' a year ago this spring, and have had no trouble with indigestion since," writes Mr. W. T. Thompson, "of Town send. Broadwater Co.. Montana. Words fail to tell how thankful I am for the relief, as I had Buffered so much and it seemed that the doctors could do me no good. 1 got down iu weight to 125 pounds, and was not able to work at all. Now I weigh nearly 160 and can do a day's work on the farm. I have recommended your medicine to several, and shall always have a good word to say for Dr. Pierce and his medicines." Free. Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. It con tains 1008 pages and over 700 illustra tions. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth binding to Dr. R. V. Fierce, Huttalo, N. Y. K Ct NEWS OF THE WEEK , r-n a HI a A AA R' Hording Block, Oregon City NOTIOK OP FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, ex ecutor of the lust Will and Testament of Seba Norton, deceased, 1 as tiled iu the County Court of C'ncksnias Coin ty, State of Oregon, his final ac count ns such Kxicutor of said Kstnte, and that Monday (lie In day of April, 1001, at the hour of 10 o'clock, a. m.'. lias been fixed bv the Judge of said Court, nn the time for hearing of said ob jections to said report and the settlement Uiereot. ltlCHAItD DUNDA9, Executor of the lust Will aud Testament of ScbaNonon, Deceased. 1 v In tbo County Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County. In the Matter of the Estate of 1 Lenora Boss, Duces sed. ) Notice is hereby given that the unlerslgned has been duly appointed administratrix of the above entitled estate by the above entl'led Oourt, and liai on the 27th day ol February, 1901, duly qualified as such. Creditors of the said estate are hereby notlfkd to piesent tneir claims uuiy verified to the undersigned by leaving the same with J.J. Cooke, sheriffs office, oourt house, Ore gon City, Oregon, within six months from tne date hereof. LUCINDA ROSS, Administratrix of the Estate of Lenora Bobs, Deceased. Dated February 27th, ldOl. SUMMONS. SUMMONS. In the circuit court of the state of Oregon for the county of Clackamas. Ada L. Osburn, Plaintiff, In the Circuit Court of the Slate of Oregon, for the County of Clackamas. Ellen A. Farnharnv 1 v's. Willis J. Farnham, I Defendant,!- J To Willis J. Farnham, Detent ant- T . In the name of the State of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer to the con plaint filed against you In the above entitled suit on or before theOth day of March, JpOl, that be ing the time prescribed In the order- for publica tion of this summons-the date of the first publi cation of this summons being on the 15th day of February, 1901: and if you fall to s appear an answer, the plaintiff herein will apply to the sail court for the relief prayed for iu the complaint; to-wlt, a judgment against you aiid a decree dis solving the marriage contract now existing be tween you and the plaintiff, and for the custody and control of the two children, and for such other relief prayed for In the complaint herein. This summons is published by order of the Hon., I. V. Kyan, Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas County, dated and entered on the 14th day of February 1901. T. F. COWING, . Attorney fcr I'lalutiff NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR Notice is hereby given that I have been, by order o' ihjjCounty Oourt of Clackamas Co., Ore., duly appointed administrator of the Estate 01 William D. Bedford, deceased. All persons na in; claims against said estate are notified to present them daly verified torn at the office of my attorney, H. E. Cross, at Oregon City, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. ASA R HAWKINS, . Administrator of the Estate of William D, Bedford, deceased H. E. Cross, Attorney for Estate. Thomas J. Osburn, Defendant. To Thomas J. Osburn, D fendant: In the name of the state of Oregon, you arc hereby requ Ired to appear and answer the com plaint filed again-it you In the above entitled auit on or before the 1st day of March, 1901, l.ulmT th& limit nrifUrilM.. Ill order of P 'jh Hint vw, - 1 cation of this summons; and If yon fail to appear aud answer said complaint, the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief theiein prayed for, to-wit: A deci-e of divorce from the bonds of matrimony now existing between you and the plaintiff nd for other, relief prayed for iu the complaint herein. This fmnmoi is publWied by order of Hon. Thomas K. Iiyan, County J11.U j of siid county, made and entered the Uth day of January, I'M, and the dale of the first publication is Friday, January is, ll'Ol . at: a the said publication Is to run fix consecutive week from O13 said date. M. J. MAt'MAHON,' Attorney for Plaintiff. Dated at Oregon City, Jan. 11, l'.tll. In the Circuit Court of the Btate of Oregon, for the County ol Clackamas. W. F. Hubbard, plaintiff, vs. Mary M, Hubbard, defendant. To Mary M.Hubbard, said defendant. In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer tne com plain t filed against you in tne auove entitled mi on or before the 16th day of April, 1901, and if you fail 80 to answer for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the above entitled Court foradeoree forever dissolving the bonds of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant, and for such other relief as shall seem meet ana proper This summons is ordered published in 'he Ore gon City Courier-Herald for the period of six weefe from date of first publication thereof, such order being made by the Hon. inos. c. ityai' Judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas, on the 27th day of February, 1901. II. E. CMOS'. Attorney for Plaintiff. First publication March L-X, Will. . SUMMONS. Farm f ar Sale. 19 miles south of Oregon City, 3mil;s south-of Molalla. Known as tin Teasel t'arm. Contain ing 810 acres. 140 acre; clear plow land; 40 acres mcrerk boliom: luO acres, upland; 7 acres, or chard. All well watered and fenced with stake and ire lence. and drained with atone and tile , pches: rood buildings. 90 rods from achoel house; 115 rods Irom church; good location fuf Ukiug slock to mountains Price S'WX), I1O0O down, balance to suit at 6 per cent Interest. For further particulars apply on farm to A. ; Sawtwj, In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Clackamas. Matt Olson. ) Plaintiff, 1 vs. Bertha oiwin, 1 Dfffendait; J To Bertha Olson, Defendant: IS the name of the state of Oregon, you are liouKu rur,t,lr..,l tr. n,,no.r and n ,i iwor tllP complaint filed against you In the above en titled suit on,or before the'-'Oth day olJMarch.l'JOl, and if you fail to appear and atiwer said coin plaint, ;t:ie plaintiff, will apply to the court for the r lief therein prayed for, tO'Ait: a decree f divorce from the bonds of matrimony now existing between yi u aud tbo plaintiff. This summons Is published by order of Hon. Thomis F. Ryan, County Judge of said connly, made and entered the l'Jth day of January, 1901, and the dr,te of the first publication Is Friday, January 20Ui, 1901, and the said publication is to run iix consecutive weeks from the said date. WALDEMIR SETON. Attorney for Plaintiff. Dated at Oregon City, January 25th, l'JOi EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Friday, Feb. 22. A shortage of $31,030 has been found in tbo state land ofl'uie. Prist. Steyn and Gen. DeWet have issued an address in which they call the attention of the woild to the brutality and Bavaoery of the British mode of war fare. Canitnttndant Botha has counseled his men never to surrender. The, Boers ap pear to be hard uressed by the British and some of them are in distress. Von Waldersee is obliged to abandon his looting expedition into China Rus sia is in a conflict with Chinese forces in the territory Bhe has seized; The powers have agreed that there shall be no more land-grabbing in China. i Near Klip River, just south of Johan nesburg, the Boers captured a trainload of foodstuffs. At Hartebeestfontein the cjlumn of Gen. Methuen had a fight with 1400 Boers. A railroad collision near Trenton, N. J., killed 10 persons and wounded 25. For assaulting a 13-year-old girl, Tom Vital, a negro, was lynched at Lake Charles, La. For trying to defend Vital, Samuelftfaddox was shot dead. Fire caused $75,000 damage to the Clatsop Mill Co.'s plant at Astoria. Saturday. Feb. 23. While entering the harbor of San Francisco, the Bteamer Rio de Janeiro ran on a rock and sank." The number lost, mostly Asiatics, was 122. The ship was in charge of a pilot, who was saved. The California prune trust is anchored to miserable failure of its effort to con trol the market by 50,000,000 pounds of prunes. The president has issued a proclama tion calling for a special session of the seiiiite March 4. Sir Robert Hart protests against the seizure of his properly in Pekin, for li gation purposes, by Austria, France, Germany and Italy. Sunday, Feb. 24. The London Weekly Dispatch says Gen. Botha has offered to surrender. Many squatters are mining for gold and other metals in the province oi Ben gnet, Philippine islands, Gen. Cailles offers 10 Mexican dollars for each Amer ican head, as scalp bounty. John Daly, lcrd mayor of Limerick, now in Chicago, says he believes the war in South Africa will continue until the English are driven out of the country The Maryland Steel Co. of Baitimqre is building two 10,000-ton tramp steamers. To revitalize the democratic paity, 200 prominent democrats met at a dinner in the Bullitt tfftilding, Philadelphia. Congress has Toted $5,000,000 for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis In 1903. Monday, Feb. 25. The president intends to ask for an increase of the regular army to 150,000, at the nest regular session of congress In Ireland, 500 agricultural organiza tions have a membership of 50,000, all heads of families. Lord Kitchener reports that on Feb. 18 General French inflicted a severe blow on the Boers, who lost all told 581 men, 22,230 cattle, 6570 horses and mules, 1070 wagons, 155,440 sheep, 160,000 rounds ammunition, rifles and cannon. Gene ra's DeWet and Steyn got away with 400 Boers. They told the burghers to get back to Orange Colony as best they could. The Boer invasion of Cape Colony thus seems to have been a disastrous failure. J. P. Morgan's steel trust will have a capitalization of $1,100,000,000. The Austrian reichstag got into a tierce quarrel over the Catholic confessional. Mrs. Carrie Nation has wiitten a letter from the Topeka jail lo Judge llazen asking that he release her before he is swept into hell. Mrs, Roea Wurzer, a widow, at Un iontown, Wash., threw her six children into a 30 foot well, and jumped in after them. She was rescued but the children drowned. When the captain of the fchip Kenne bec, at Port Townsend, V'asli, refused the request of W. V. Wilmot, who had thipped when drunk, to release him, Estate of Geo. W. Leo, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the nnderalgncd, R. I . II I n go, executor of the estate or said George W Deo, decked, to the creditors of and ajl persons WillUot tXlk cyanide C'f polaSSIum and having claims against the estate ol faia Uucnre fJl JBH( W. Lee, deceased, and against the said Oorge W ! Le, to exhibit them with the mcevsary vouchers, within tix month! after the nm publication of this notice, lo mo, the said executor, at tlie of fice of my attorneys, t'lleu & cbuebe!,In the Enteprii-e building, at Oregon City, in Clacka mas county, Oregon. First publication of Ibis nor tiee, Friduy, February 22, VM. , It. L. KINCO, iM 't'Utor. U'bes it 6ontui)RI Attorneys. Zpif3? J& Printing at the Thia signature is on every box of the genuint Laxative Brorao-Quinine Table the remedy that cures cold In oe day mease Settle. All persons knowing themselves in debted to the undersigned, will please call and settle at once, a I do not de sire to make any trouble in the matter , fAUL UussotK. The can fac:ory at Fairhaven, Wash, will turn out this year S0,000,000 cam?. Spokane parties hunting oil have so curtd leases oft 1300 acres near Fanning- ton in tlie "jjas belt." Iu ih-j Dcllin'ham Buy country, VVa hi a glasit factory will he established. Near Cohille, Wash., oil has been ounl. During a raid on a Xorth Topeka, K.m.', galoiii, J. W. Adam was danger Oisly hurl. 8. Tearson, formerly a commissary in the Boer army, has returned from Eu rope, Ilejfiaye that all telegrr.ph lines are controlled by the British and it is impossible to get reliable news, and be lieves the Boers have captured both the i forces of Smith-Dorrien and French. wanning dynamite in a hot stove. He is stone - leal now and has hut one arm. Tuesday, Feb. 20. A lire in the Diamond ville coul nit e Nu. 1 at Kemtner, W y , entombed 0 men and 15 horses. A $llo,()00 lire cccuried on Wooilwmd avenue, Detroit. General DeWet, who is attempting to escape by crossing the swollen Orange River, is pursued by several BritUh col umns. Gen. Botha, with 2000 Boers, has broken away from Gen. French's pursuit. The Boers are attacking tlie i lty ol Richmond in the center of Cape olony. The Boer envoys in Holland Hi.tly de ny that peace proposals have been made to King Edward. RnBsia is bird up and wants tn bor row money. At a flie in Birmingham, England, Bix people were burned to death. The population of Saxony is 4,199.780, an increase of 11 per cent since 18H6: Neiir Piiikeisburg, Oocs county, a 100 pound meteor Ml wl ieh whs of pumice s one for.tnu.ihjn. In Monte Carlo Gulch, Yukon, a mus to Ion skull has been found that meas ures three feet between the eyes. The revenue cutter Bear will take a herd of reindeer from Siberia to Alaska. Mrs. Al. Taylor, of Pool Slough, fell out of a boat and was drowned in Ya quina hay. From Tamoioca the British steamer Chatton brought to the Guggenheim smelter at Perth Atnboy, N. J., lead bullion worth half a million dollars. It is an open secret in Washington that Boai Ilanna and his ship-subsidy steal are the prime movers of the extra cession of c ingress called by the prest dent, In a sermon, Rev Di. J. P. Peters, (f New York, charged that every street railway in the city hud secured valuable privileges by fraud or corruption In the British South African army 1000 Americans are serving, who shipped un der false promised on Biitish horse-ships from New Orleans and were left helpless and penniless in distant Africa The Cubans regard their 'constitution as already in effect and w ill deman that the United States get out of the is land after the election is held. The steamer Rio de Janeiro, wrecked in the harbor of San Francisco, lies in 13 fathoms of water AtTerre Haute, Ind., George Ward a half-crazy negro, was lynched for ihe murder of Miss Ida Frankenstein Seven English columns have bo;r con' verging their energies on Gen. DeWet force, which has been shattered, he him self escaping across the Orange Eiver in an open boat. Kitchener has so thor oughly "concentrated" humanity and food in the two republics that in London military circles it is beliovod by July the Boers will be licked for good and all. It will take 10 years to build the Jap anese emperor's new palace at Tokio.the steel frame work of which, 200 by 400 feet, has been put up by a Chicago man. In the Diamondville mine fire, Wyo ming, 32 lives were lost. Wediesday, Feb. 27. General Gomez says that the Cubans are not fit to govein and if the Ameri cans were to withdraw he would go with them. " The population of Germany is 56,345, 014, an increase of 4,000,000 since 1895. The now dead Consul-General Wild- man, of Hong Kong, predicted that Chi na will be divided into five pieces, as it used to be. Adelbert Hay, lute U. S. consul at Pretoria, will he given a dinner in Lon don by Joe Chamberlain forgiving offi cial aid and comfort to the English. In Idaho, 410,000 acres of agricultural land will be opened for settlement, lo cated in Fort Hall Indian reservation. Thursday, Feb. 28. The U. 8. senate has passed the ar my appropriation bill, which gives the president imperial power in, the Philip pine islands. February 25, 300 Boers surrendered to Gen. French, and C334cattle,f)800 sheep, 2H7 wagons, 388 horses, 20,000 rounds of ammunition and several cannon were captured. British columns are attempting to cor ner I'eWetand Steyn's forcos at Peter mvillc, south of the swollen Orange. The British captured 41 Boer and a quantity of supplies at Seheiper'sLaaer. A crowd of 10,000 in the eily of Pekin witnessed the chopping off of the heads f C'h'u Su and llsiu Cheng Yu. According to the Husso-Chinese con vention, Russia will he practically abso lute master in Manchuria, Mongolia and Chinese Turkestan. The hog which John McAlisler ol Grande Ronde Valley, butchered, weigh ed, dressed, 735 pounds. President McKinley denies he said "the thirst of Christendom for blood must now be considered sullicienilv J, A. McGLASHAN, Manager Stores Oregon City and Portland TELEPHONE 513 IO Cents Pound Dried l'eac'ies IO Cents Poun 1 Apricols 7 Cents Poui'd Italian Prune? , 2$ Cents j Cans Tomatoes or Corn 15 Cents Can Red Salmon 25 Cents Pounds Japan Rice ' 25 Cents 1 6 Pounds Black Figs We handle a full line of Garden Seeds. MARKET REPORTS. PORTLAND. (Corrected on Thursday.) Flour Best $2 903.40; graham J2.60. Wheat Walla Walla 5355c; valley 58c59;' bluestem 67c. OAts White 44345c; gray 42 43o. Barley Feed $15; brewing $10 per t. Millstuffs Bran $15, ; middlings 21 ; shorts $18 ; chop $10. Hay Timothy $3213 ; clover, w9; Oregon wild $7. B itter Fancy ere vn iry 5) at 1 55o ; store, 25 and 30. Eggs 13 to 14 cents per doz. Poultry Mixed thickens $3.003.50; hens $:i.504; springs $23 50; geese, $(!7; docks' $o0; live turkeys 11 12c; dressed, 1214o. Mutton Gross, best sheep, weatheis , nd ewes, sheared, $4 50; dressed, 0 and 7 cents per pound. Hogs choice heavy, $5 00 and $5 25; light, $5; dressert, 6 1-2 and 0 cants per pound. Veal Large,'Gl-2 and 7 cents per pound. Beef Gross, top steers, $4 50 and $ dressed beef, 7 and 8 cents per pound. Che so Full cream 12aC per pound Young America :c. Potatoes 45 and 50 cents per sack. Vegetables Beets '$1 ; turnips 75o per sack; garlic 7c per lb; cabbage $1.05 1.80 per 100 pounds; cauliflower 75o per dozen ; parsnips 85c per sack ; celery 8090c per dozen; asparagus 78c; peas 34c per pound. Dried fruit Apples evaporated 506; sun-dried sacks or boxes 34c; pears sun and evaporated 8gc ; pitless plums 78c; Italian prunes o7c; extra silver choice 57. - OREGON CITY. Corrected on Thursday, Wheat, wagon, 53. Oats, 45. Potatoes, 50 and 60 cents per sack. Eggs 15 per dozen. Butter, dairy, 35 to 45o per, roll; creamery, 50c. . . . Dried apples, 5 to 6o per pound. Dried prunes Italians, 4c; petite and German, 3c. Clackamas County Cerium. Including the suburbs and Caneman, Weitt Oregon City and Abemethy pre cincts, the latter including Gladstone and Parkplace, Oregon City has 9,371 inhabitants. Keaer Creek , Borings Canby precinct,incl tiding Canemah Hiuhlund. Milk Creek.. Needy Now Era Oragon'City, precini z and J, coextensive -ith Oregon City 3-194 Oregon City. 3494 Ward 1 1222 Ward 2 1205 Ward 3 IOCS Oswego l'leasiint Hill..,. Seivers . ., Soda Spring. pmigwiiter Tual.iH I 'nioii Viola Went Oregon City (tint . 1900 1891) 1,111 329 609 "'oo4 202 755 787 372 ...... 617 m 100 150 499 009 120 103 723 008 074 070 392 421 247 245 , 141 143 480 404 4:17 402 477 454 824 432 275 1002 907 533 582 042 .473 384 1 slaked, after taking at least 100 lives for Levi L. Yoder, living near Salem, was every Christian slaughtered." 098 68.4 280 233 243 mi 158 200 prv- 755 Total 19,018 3107 3002 920 401 107 274 291 411 12U , 224 15,233 TIik I)ew ;ij Wanker. 1'Iim I)evy washt-r linen away entirely ftilti tlie w trlib ard and can he easily operue t whilesnting down. Iu three iniini eM tlie in.n liiiw will wash a tu' fuil of e itlie I guarantee the Dewey anir will d al I cliiin Uiders by mail will reeeive pro mpt,, .uiiiton. Ad dress me at Oreg m Ci y. W. II. Stonkiiackbb, Ag-iiit for Clackamas county.