PAGE 8. ORtOON CITY SNTSRPRISS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27, 10&. Eli L-bOc j n -mi J Tmm C1 r ma . . IP O ) 1 CVil CJ I I C" i With evety 25c purchase beginning January J Oth and ending February J 5th we will give a ticket in out Distribution Gift Sale to possess the following articles: I Elegant Velour Couch 1 Comfortable Willow Rocker J Kitchen Cabinet I Set 6 Dining Room Chairs, GolJen Oak, J Handsome Upholstered Morris Chair 1 Fancy Table Fancy Seat I Fancy Glass Cupboard 2 Chifioner' ive drawcrs j Rocker with Cobbler Seat J Ladies' Desk, Highly Polished OUR GREAT ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE Extraordinary Redactions, Unmatchable Bargains. We Mention Only a Few of the Many Bargains Which are Offered MEN'S SUITS pfs0KLADffiS'at coats Ind UNDERWEAR DRESS GOODS TKS"biSSScfe, f JACKETS and WOMEN'S SKIRTS Wen' 50c heavy ribbed underwear All wool I 38 inch dress goods on sale 7 85 greatly reduced. In pink, blue or tan, special at 39c. All wool walstlngs, clearance sale price saIe Pr,ce P?f Yar J For choice of men's fine all wool suits Children's Knee Pants Suits, prices to 3 5c 1 9c regular price 52.50; sale price clear them out quickly, marked at $9'85 $2.10, 2.45, 3.10, 3.75, 4.35. NOTIONS-San silk 3 spools for Zf' MEN'S PANTS Men's natural wool so, seamless toe f CJlsh "'Sf IfTT untroJlAC p , Men's all wool pants, heavy weight, and heel formerly sold at ISc.sale f" 5c' Fln " 2 for 5c. LADIES' UMDRELLAS-Regular Redded to $1,95 ' 9c jg gSS$1Sr uo 11 o. SEVENTH AND MAIN STREETS, OREGON CITY, OREGON SOME EI LLS PASS Continued. .ize teachers' institutes In various parts of counties; to require school clerks to announce vacancies in school hoards and boards to elect successors; to exempt teachers in music, languages and other special branches from general examina tion requirements; to reduce number of voters needed to sign petition of certain school districts from ten to five, and to provide for transportation of pupils from .one district to another. H. I!, GO. Cor nett of Linn. To allow 11000 each to Susan E. Jones, Edna Tiffany and Sylvia E. Fen-ell. wid ows of penitentiary guards killed in es cape of Tracy and Merrill II. E. 120, Graham of Marion. The Indian AVar veteran s' bill was re ported favorably today, with an amend ment which meets the objections whfch were made to the measure as originally introduced. The bill appropriates $15. 000 with which to pay the remainder of the claims of veterans of the Indian wars of 155 and 1S5C. The amendment adopted provides that in case any vet eran has died since his claim was al lowed, the money shall be paid to his -wife, children, father, or mother, In the order named. The amendment also pro vides that if there be no wife, children, father or mother, the money shall be paid to his estate. Senator Bowerman has Introduced a bill to amend section 547 of the code so as to permit litigants to appeal from an order granting a new trial. At present no such appeal lies, and the person In jured by the order hfis no redress. The Senate ways and means com mittee today reported favorably on the bill appropriating $r,000 for the purchase of apparatus for a timber and stone test ing station at the University of Oregon, the I'nited States to maintain an expert there to conduct the tests. To create a state library commission and to pay its secretary $1200 a year and traveling expenses Is the object of a bill passed by the House this morning by a vote of 33 to 23. I.inthlciim tRep.) of Multnomah, who Introduced the bill, led the fight for its passage against an op position headed by Smith (Dem.) Josephine. Uniform eighth-grade examinations in the public schools of the state is the pur pose of the bill introduced by McDeod of Union which passed the House this afternoon. The Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction is to prepare the examina tion questions which are to be sent to the directors of the various districts. Teachers of Union County started the movement and prominent educators of the state took It up with the result that the vote in the House was unanimous for the pasage of the bill. That no new bills shall be introduced In the House in the last ten days of the session and no Senate bills In the last five days except by consent of two-thirds of the members was resolved by the House this morning. To enable the House to take up Senate bills, the rules were amended bo as to require the Speaker to take up the next order of business fitter the one which was left over the day bcf ore. Judgment debtors are now exempted from execution to the extent of $75 a month of their earlngs, but a bill intro duced by Cornett makes liable to at tachment, eexcution or garnishment, 10 per cent of the $75 that has hitherto been exempt. To provide a more efficient method for collecting poll taxes Burns and Coos has reintroduced a bill to require employes to furnish Assessors with lists of per sons In ttVIr employ who are liable to the tax. "and upon being required to do so. shall deduct said poll tax out of any wages due said employ, and shull on demand forthwith pay the same to the Assessor or Sheriff." GOOD BYE TO INDIGESTION. Drugigsts Claim Pepslkola is Driving Dyspepsia Out. The above Is a pretty stronar statement but experience right here In Oregon City proves it to be really true. The evidence is positive. There Is no guess work about it. Huntley Eros Co. have been selling Pepslkola for some time now and many of their customers have Veen in to tell of the benefits received. One woman says It has increased her weight nearly ten pounds. Another had chronic dyspepsia for years and can now eat anything she wants without any dis tress afterwards. One man is grateful because Pepslkola has cured him of nerv ousness. Another says it has relieved the pain around his heart. Just think of It, here is a remedy that must cure you of sour stomach, wind belching, dizzy spells, nausea, biliousness, sick headache, and every other form of Indigestion or It will not cost you one penny. Every box of Pepslkola contains ten days treatment. It will make you feel better right away. It will clear up your complexion. It will put new color in your cheeks. It will most certainly in crease your weight. It will give you new nerve force, new energy, new strength, and if you feel run down or low spirited you will see an Improvement almost be yond belief. Just call on Huntley Bros Co. and ask for their honest opinion of this now fam ous dyspepsia cure. Try It on their rec ommend. If Pepslkola cures you you certainly will be glad to pay. If It docs not, all you need to do is to te Huntley Bros Co. and they win go right to the money drawer and pay your quarter back. vigorous a state as to prnml.se (he same for years to come. "After the trees begn to bear I cut the clover and leave It where It falls. I never remove any. nor do I allow live slock to enter, except when there In a lot of worth less wormy apples which I allow hogs to pick up, and when they have done no I turn them out again. "I have tried what is known us thorough cultivation; that Is. planting the young orchard in corn or some other crop and continuing this until the trees nre old enough to bear. To tne this method has proved a failure, because It exhausts the soil and Impoverishes it and rentiers the soil unfit to raise apples with profit. 'I have two apple orchards, In the one where the soil has been thoroughly cul tivated, the soli Is poor, the trees din- eased, and the fruit always small nnd I wormy. The other, where it is far cheap ler to keep It In clover than to cultivate, the trees are In vigorous condition with la dark green foliage, bright bark, and a large growth. Thes are signs that nature smiles on the one and condemns the I other." CARE OF FRUIT TREES. Deserves Your Patronage. The growth of a community and the success of Its local Institutions depends entirely on the loyalty of Its people. It Is well enough to preach "patronize home industry" but except the sen-Ice given at a home Institution equals that of out-of-town enterprises, this argument car ries no weight and Is entirely disregard ed, as It should be. But with Oregon City people It Is different. A few month. jago B. It. Johnson established the Cas icade Laundry, ft Is equipped with the I latest Improved machinery and Is dally ; turning out work that Is equal to any and sup. rlor to much of the laundry ! w''k that Ik being done In Portland, j Being a home Institution and furnishing j employment for many Oregon City people It Is enjoying an Immense patronage. ' The high standard of the work being done commends it to the general public. i.aunury lert at the O. K. barber shop will be promptly called for and delivered to any part of the city. Telephone 1204. E. Ii. Johnson, proprietor. forced him to go Into the smoking com partment with the other victims. Tire robbers did not molest the other passengers on I be c ar. probably because their liei-ve failed thcrri Instead of slopping the train they Jumped off. ami firing a few shots for the purpose of Intimidation disappeared Into the heavy undergrowth. The O. I:. & x. Co. has offered a re ward or J.eiii f,,r ,.,), halidlt. The stale has a standing reward of J i'io each, mak ing the aggregate JX'00. When these hud been robbed the ban dits slopped the train and Jumped off. disappearing into the heavy undergrowth along tin- sides of (he gulch under the East Twenty. eighth street bridge. Word was sent to tin- city and county authori ties, who went at once to the bridge and quickly organoid a posse, who started In Hearth of the thieves. Forced to Starve. B. F. Iek, of Concord, Ky. says; "For 20 years I suffered agonies with a sore on my tipper lip, so painful, sometimes, that icould not eat. After vainly trying everything else, I cured It wllh Ilucklen's Arnica Salve." Its great for burns, cuts and wounds. At Howell & Joins drug store; only I'Dc. A well known fruit grower gives the following advk-e in regard to planting and cultivating apple trees: "In choosing a site for an apple orchard I prefer a hillside facing the north. I set the trees two rods apart each way. It Is best to mix the varities, that is, one row of lien I'lavls. then one of Janet, then Jonathan, etc. I believe in summer, fall tmd winter varieties. "I plow a strip four feet wide and six inches deep the full length of the orchard. In this strip I plant the trees a little deeper than they grew in the nursery. i From two to three feet around eaeli tree I I cultivate with a hoe, and th's Is all the cultivation I ever do In an apple orchard. "I sow the orchard, If in stubble, in clover, and for the first seven years It is cut and placed around each tree, except the small space around the tree which I always keep cultivated. This cultivation Is necessary to destroy insects and niice, and 'allow the rain to enter the ground and not run off. Tire clover Is used for mulching and as an aid to this I use as much straw as possible to build up the bare and poor spots In the orchard. Such treatment will, by the time the orchard Is beginnnlng to bear, turn a worn out soil into a fertile one, and put your trees In a condition to bear fine fruit and In so BOLD TRAIN ROBBERY. Spokane Flyer Held Up at Portland Satur day Evening. POUT LAND, Jan. 21. What Is sup posed to have been a plan to hold up the O. It. & N. Co.'b eastbound train known as the Sp'oknne Flyer was partialis ne. eomplished Just after the train left the East Portland station tonight, shortly after six o'clock. Four masked men boarded the rear plat form of the last car-, known as the "Walla Walla sleeper" at the east Bide depot The track enters a dark ravine a few hundred feet south of the depot, and the train had no sooner turned into the gulch than four men entered the smoking compartment and commanded the occu pants to throw up their hands. Two of the robbers passed into the sleeper, while the other two relieved the occupants of the smoker of their jewelry, $150 in money and a draft for $750. The" occupants of the smoker were Ben Ii, Norden, Dan J. Coman, Edward Duffy, all of Portland; It. B. Slnnott, of the Dalles, and J. p. Nicholson, of Chicago. Two went Into the main part of the ear and met Pullman Conductor John Hayes whom they relieved of $75 In money and The New Naval Academy. Tin-re Is now approaching completion at Annapolis, Maryland, a school for naval officers, which will rank as the greatest training Institution of anv kind In the world. The United Mi.i..u v, Academy is main tailed by the National Covcrrum-nt In the same manner ns Is Went I'olni, nip) in Its reconstructed form, this- educational center fur Uncle S im's defenders on the sea will far- sur pass In inagnifieeiiec and equipment the famous military school on the Hudson. Coiign-HH iipproprlalcd the sum of $10, Ooo.oiKl for the work of reconstruction, which Is now In progress at Annapolis and while several years more will l- required for replacing tin- old, unsanitary ami un sightly buildings by the new architec tural masterpieces, I lie work has al ready progressed fin- enough to Indicate III some degree the ultimate surpassing beauty of tin. "new Naval Academy." The "New Annapolis" Is to be far more rnagnlllcent than the "new West Point," although the military academy was founded In nj, , tn,.,. Inim j, century ago, whereas the Naval Academy at Annapolis was not established until 1X15. Jiulced, rim- future l-'anagiits, Porters, Deweys and HchloyH will be ed ucated In buildings; costing fully twice as much us those whic h are being erect ed as school rooms for' the future army olIlcei-M. The project lo rebuild the naval academy was broached us long ago as 1XM, when Congress appointed a com mission to look into the needs of the in stitution. However, the project did not take definite shape until immediately after the Spanish-American war, when Congress, In the Hush of that popular en thusiasm which overspread the country, willingly voted $10,000,000 for th Juvenatlon of the famous bcIiooI. How ever, when the project of Imnrovlno- wut Point came up, the National t!,..,iUi. ture wan In a more economical frame of mind, and only $5,000,000 was v,,tf.,i t the work. From the Pacific Monthly for January. REAL ESTATfc TRANSFERS. Furnished Every Week by the Clackamas Abstract A Trust Company. S i: Hhlvely el al lo II. M I Mini' U. South half of itnrthwext quarter Seitlun 21. 5-1 V.. $ll. I. . C. Iliml.-i, to l-:. A lllmler lulu 1.1. K block 2. Pill kplacc; $125. T. J. (buy to J. and A. Wolfer, l..t bio. k 12, Hunwet Cliy; $710 S, IvrrciHool p. o Knurr, ft A In Claim 12. ?, 1, W; l'"i T. Fox to M. I', no. I K. 1. Weber, lot I. 2. block Oregon Iron Htt.-I Co. lut Add to Oswego; $2no. K. !. Il.icon to T. F. liyuii lots 3 4. block I; lot f block II, Palls Vb w; $5. (in. W. 1 1 Klewnrt to J l Slew.u t. 73.ii:-acii-H mid roadway In nnd near claim 2 'js, I-:. $i. J. W. Stone to p. K. Hlone. south half O flHU'thcitsl quar ter o fll.il thcuxl (pun ter o fH-M linn v,, atnl west half of southwest quarter of southwest quarter of north, west quarter of Section 5 21; $rot). C. M, Nash to J. I!, pl.-d.-rlks, tenth half of southeast quarter of section 2'.r, ;i-r.. K; ten. O. W. P. Townslte Co., to J. W. HtubhK, lot r, block 21, 1st add to F.Hlacnda; t"0. K M.itcbilt to M. J. Wisher, half In tcicMt In lots 7, H, block 3, Mountain View Add; $l.'i0. II. I-:, Fdwanls to J. Sims, lot 7. ,lk, 21, Cairby; $r;o. H- A. I fo S. II Shindy, lots 10, II. 12. block 2, Leo's Add to Canby; 175. II. A. l.co lo !;. H. fihlvcly, 1 ac re In Section 3-, .;; jnm, T. Oalrowskl to M. lUclz-nekl, Mi a. In Sees, IS and 4, f.;, $suo A. Hegltnan el al to M. J. Thomas, lot . 7. C-1, K; Jl. A. Walker lo J. Vc, 4X0 X 210 feet in 2 - 2 K; $:ili(l. A. !'. II. Chapman lo C. Iv Hayes, land hi section ,'!l, 2 1 10; nnd See, , 3 ... , j.; fir.nu. J II. Hayes lo A, Cebbardl 20, IS A In .Section c, ;t I, .;; il H. . 31, 2-1 tlailil. 0. A. Hleel to J. Clausen, II acres In M(-t ioll 10, 3 - 1, K; $,lj0. . A. Hteel to J. Clausen, i;0 acres ill Section 20, and 20, 3 - , K; $1. 1. H. Pale r to T, p. ity,,,,, 1L. ,.,.,. , J. A. Lewis ('I. 2 -1, K; $1250, O. W P. Tonwslte ('o, to A, Conlgaii lot 2:1, bill. 2:i, 1st Add to KHncada; $. I.. C. Kings to J, Adlilns 5 A. Heo, 12 4 - I K; $75. The Clackamas Abstract & Trust Co. are owners of the only complete abstract plant m Clackamas county. Prompt and reliable work on short notice. All work guaranteed. Abstracts made, money loaned, mortgages foreclosed, trusts exe cuted, estates settled and titles per routed. J. V. CLAItK, Atty-at-Law, President and Manager. Office over Bank or Oregon City. WILL MAKE MONEY. Treasury Department Will Show Actual Processes ot Minting and Engraving, Pol lllllld. Illr , J,,,,. 2; --. fentlll.1 (,f the Tl ciuon ilepartae iit Kltil.lt 111 th i;.nei(iniei iiiiihiitiR nt the 1-wU nnd 'lark i:poMt,,n will be 11 mint f opetnlloii where souvenir medal will bo tut to d out vi i d.ty Instead of gold ami sliver coins The mint Mill nhow nil the Uih.ru th- MUl.MI ptel., Ic.pdlCll ,, p,,J,,. lions of coin, cv.pi Ihe iisKiiylng nnd l-lliilng. The plant will rolislnt of 11 full net of miming machinery niantifac. lured 11I the Philadelphia mint, i,,,, hIkiic.I irlMimilelv for use at the New I'cin.r mini The in.. UN tinned out will be of an aillsllc d sign nnd the vis it. . I may . . every sli p ,,f manufactiiie from t tie time t ts- piece of itKtnl In placed In Din machine until It In thrown out "-11 the table and wnipped In tlsnnn paper f.-r I1I111 to ennv home ns n ouvi-. nlr. Alongside the mini i nhibit will be Ihe display of the llnr. au of Liugnn pig 1111, 1 I'r luting, which not only pi loin all the paper ciiri.ney of the. country, but p lints Its postiq:.- stamps ami revenue stamps as well. 'I'll Is loo will be an active- ex hlldt. for n printing p,. will be con tinually operated, lllimtritlrig (be meth od by which die llovcrninciil bus Its Hues! printing w.uk don., at Washing. Ion. Specimen pbiics of a special de sign Will be piloted ,i Vrw ,,f ,. V. Hens. This bur-ari will also show spec lllieliM of tin- bonds, Holes. c. tlllcntes ami other obligations Issued bv the Unit ed HtutcH, full s. Is of postage and reve nue Minium, Including stamps prepared for the Philippines, and .. . Ii, on of notes, I. mi. Is, etc., showing nil the pro-'c-sycM fioin blank piq.cr to llnlshed Hole. Vermont's building at the Lewis & Clark Centennial will be a reproduction of the old Constitution House of 1777. 6peedy Relief. A naive that heala without a scar Is DeWltfu Witch Hazel Salvo. No remedy effect such speedy relief. it draws out Inflamatlon, aoothes, cools and heals all cuts, burns and bruises. A sure cure for plies, and skin diseases. DoWItfe Witch Hazel Salve Is the only genuine. Beware of counterfeits, they aro dangerous. Sold by Geo, A Harding. Persia's exhibit ut the Lewis & Clark Centennial will be worth $200,000, Chamberlain' Couoh Remedy the Beit ' Made. "In my opinion Cluiinbcrlaln's Cuiigli Ilc-mcdy Is (ho best made, for rolds," snys Mrs. Cora Walker of Portervllle, Califor nia. There Is no doubt about Its being the best. No other will euro a cold so quickly. No other Is so sum a preventl tlve of pneumonia. No other Is so pleas ant find safe to lake. These are good reiisoriH why It should bo preferred to ny other. The fact Is that few people aid sut lulled with nny olhcr after having onco used this remedy. p0r snlo by Oeo, A. Ilurdlntf. NORTH'S ffl TCtffel ABOVE YCU WlfaW riN OllrtP CLOTHING ttlRYWMWt. TOWER 3 Jkkcn CodbeM Moti fomouj the world over Trvy art made in blacK or jccllow for all kinds of wrt work, wry Sweat bearme JIGN Of Trie rlJH 15 ouaranteedto dive jat Waction. All reliable dealers jelf thea AJ.TDWca.03T0l,HAJi,U.JiL Tom amtiAw co..tinutdTOBoiiTo. aw