(scoop r want- A 3 SME MiOHTUoK, " wrf I I .-U" youtobwtover ;;;:rJi-SlM& sport out Ms scr ntRCE.BoTNDuv. R&,7 ljjT Vl4wS6N rJA VQVVaUUPSTICfi V-OOX FIERCE OzVv PAINT THE(?t IS NO TK C liT? TH H! 15 ANT-PAirT V AV, 'J V-m0UT PAlNTV,' UpSTICKT0 A Kt! fji( T WjLM a CRAoe-wHerxA Kr77T 0 ICQ OH te$SS oVL f fflfefift lt-J! JENNINGS D 1 - I III munch to the other vessel foruiv men li ,i thatdurlng I ho the doctor m I During the week past the Q. V. Card family have entertained Mr. and Mr. R. H. Judd of rortland, and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. rura of Battle Ground. Wash. The annual campmeeting and Young Peoples Alliance and Sunday School Conventions of the Evangeli cal Association will be held at the River View campgrove at this place, from June 30Ui to Aug. 8th. The German Baptists of Portland had a picnic at the RlTer View camp grounds at this place on July 4. Mr. and Mra. Earnest Bniechert and family of Omaha, Neb., spent Thursday with Mrs. Bess Bruechert and family. During the Elks Convention, Mr. Geo. Morse and Miss Mable will have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Dan Salt, of Seattle and the Misses Ger trude and Harriet Merritt of Du buque, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. MseFarlane will entertain their brother, Mr. ,Chuob and son Raymond, Mr. Chubb being a prominent Elk from Oakland. CaL Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Redmond will have the pleasure of entertaining Dr. Goble and wife of Medford and Mr. and Mrs. Lock Brown of Eugene, who are prominent Elks In their respec tive home towns. Thirty-two pupils of the Grace Chap el attended the Clackamas County Sunday School picnic at Gladstone Park an Friday, last The picnic table was presided over by Mesdames A. C MacFarlane, J. P. Strain, H. C. Painton and the Misses Carrie Scrip ture and Mabel Morse. On Sunday. July 7th, the first quar terly meeting of the year will be held at Grace Chapel. . The presiding elder. H. E. Hornschuh, will preach. Rev. Ford, of Oregon City, will also be present Mrs A. P. Donahue has returned to Portland after a weeks stay at her cottage here. Mr .and Mrs. Berry, of the east side, have had as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Rainer and daughter of Col orado. Mrs. Rainer being a daughter of Mrs. Berry. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kinney and daughter of Portland will spend the summer with Mrs. Kinney's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Robertson. Mr. Downing has commenced work on his little home on the east side. At the school meeting on Monday night Prof. Thompson was re-elected" to teach the higher grades and Miss Campbell, a student of Eugene, the primary grade, to fill the vacancy of Miss Bronte Jennings. Miss Helen Seeley entertained a number of her little friends from Oregon City, Gladstone, Meldrum and this place, at her home on Thursday, last the occasion being her tenth birthday anniversary. Games were in dulged In and dainty refrebhments were served by Mrs. Seeley. An item which was overlooked by the correspondent was a pretty little party given Mrs. Jess Strain for her little daughter on June 5th. The occasion was the sixth birthday of Miss Etta Strain. An invitation was extended to all the little folks of this place and a jolly time was had by the little ones. Mrs. Strain assisted by some of the older guests served re freshments before 5, the hour for the little folks to wish Etta many returns of the day. " Hugh Mcuovern and Miss Lenora Miller were married In Portland dur ing the week. Mr. McGo-.'ern is in terested in real estate at this place, and his bride at one time conducted the store here, and both have hosts of friends who wish them much hap piness In the years to come. E. T. Webb has sold all his property interests at this place and bought at Newberg, .where he expects to reside. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Robinson and mother, Mrs. W. Robinson, Of Win nepeg, Canada, Joined a party of Port land friends, who took a trip up the Columbia, to The Dalles, on Friday, last. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wear returned on Thursday from a weeks camp on th banks of the Willamette, near New Era. Mrs. S. P. Downs was a Portland visitor on Tuesday, and little Miss Margaret Downs will spend the rest of the week, the guest of Norma Con way, in Portland. Nine boys of the Sunnyside Con gregational Church are camping on Hull Ave. Their Sunday School teacher, Mrs. Pilklngton, chaperoning them. On Saturday evening The Circle, with a number of tbelr friends, ten dered a farewell party to Mrs. Edith Truscott, at tbe H. C. Painton home. The living room was very prettily decorated with vine maple and Ore- gon lilies, while the tables, cake and Ice cream were where served, i were centered wnn clusters or pins rosea. Keventv-nve were rireaent. ' During the evening Mrs. Robinson and tbe M kites Mabel Plad.-n and Helen Painton furnished a number of mus ical selections. Several tables of cards were played. It Is with regret that we are called upon to part with Mrs. Truscott and family, who will move to tbelr home in Gresbam about July 15th. Mrs. O. H. Card was called to the bedside of her sister. Miss Hannah Pura, in Portland on Sunday. Miss Pura will be removed to the Card home on Wednesday, and the change 13 hoped will bo beneficial to her. Heart toHeart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. PEG LEGGED OPTIMISM. A friend sends us tbe story of John Goodwin, cripple. In 11)10 Goodwin moved on to a farm near West Point, Ga. It was s small brush farm and required much clear in ft to prepare It for crops. One day his brother, who was begins him, ac cidentally shot Goodwin In tbe leg. Amputation became necessary, the Rmb being cut off just below the knee. Goodwin was without nionej.-nd bad a family to support hot' be did not give up Jiope: In a'fevr weeks he was hobbling about on crutches directing things. The neighbors kindly helped blra ont and, crippled as he was, be succeeded In raising fourteen bales of cotton and some corn. Then be got a peg leg. He moved the next winter to a larger place, which was also a brush farm. He went vigorously to work clearing tbe land. In speaking of his work this Indomitable cripple says: "I did as much plowing ss ever I did In one season on my peg leg." There's a picture for you plowing on a peg leg! Moreover, be says: "I made sixteen bales of cotton and some corn, besides raising some- fine shotes for my meat and lard. 1 may come out . in debt some, but I am not lonesome." Now One might suppose Goodwin would be satisfied with having cleared two farms In as many years, but in a re cent letter he says: "I have got new ground this year and am preparing It while It is too wet for anything else. 1 am going to raise more corn this year. I forgot to tell you about my bay. I cut and housed twenty big loads." How is that for a cripple? One cannot but wonder what Good win might be able to do with two good legs. And the optimism of the man is good to think about Some there are who besides being maimed In limb are lamed In mind, but not John Goodwin. When he was shot in the leg he wan not wounded In spirit. Ton can cripple a man's body, but you can't make bis mind go uu crutches. , John Goodwin's leg Hon molderlmr In the tomb, but bis soul goes march Ing on. Could Knt cl vim do If ynu had "What wi mllllouT "XollltnC " SHANTUNG COAT SUIT A distinctive little coat suit of nat ural color shantung is sketched above. The cutaway coat closes with a single button and the ed;res of the deep point thus acquired are finished with narrow pleated ruffles of tobacco brown eatln. This satin Is also ap plied in the form of odd shaped revers which are trimmed with cyratal but tons. Tbe skirt closes sliehtlv to the jr - f t of the front the over lapping edge finished by an applied piece of the gatin a,mnar to that which simultes revers. The satin Is also used for the wide turn-back cuffs. With this Is worn a hat whore crown is of silk in the shade of the shantung and rolling brim is covered with tobacco brown satin. A feather ornament of brown and tan trims tbe sides. Dysentery is always serious snd of ten a dangerous disease, but it can be cured. Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy has cured It even when mallt'nant snd epidemic. For sale by Huntley Bros. Co, Ore gon City, Hubbard, Molalla and Can-by. to OREGON CITY" ENTEIllMilSK. FIJI DAY, JULY 5, The Frozen Ship By RALPH HUNTER When 1 was commanding tbe Mary Blake, a brignnttue, on one of my voy ages I started from Tokyo, Japatv-for Boston. Tbe crew I bad shlped lu America at setting out were very good men, but had been thinned out by the hardships of tbe voyage. Several bad been swept overboard by sens coming over her during storms on tbs Pacific ocean, others bad died of fever con traded on tiro coast of Africa, and sov era I men who went sshore ou tbe Mar shall islands never cams back. 1 sup pose tbey were murdered by tbs na tives. Unfortunately the men I lost wert my best sailors, snd tbe few of tbe original crew remaining were tbe worst To get borne 1 was obliged to pick up a crew lu Japan, get more at Hongkong and finish the complement at Naples, Italy. Tbe cousequeuee was that I sailed through tbe Mediter ranean and out on to tbe Atlantic with tbe worst lot of seamen ever got to gether except on a pirate ship. It was sll I could do to handle them, especially as my first and second mate were afraid of them. The crew, sow found this out anil were proportionate ly ugly-.- -The weather turned bad soon after we left Gibraltar, and It was necessary to send men sloft to tuk In salL A mist had frozen on the rigging, snd the men wouldn't go. When I told them that if tbey didn't we were liable to go to tbe bottom tbey said they might as well perish that way as to slip overboard from icy rigging. I and my two mates were obliged to go aloft and get In tbe sail. This, of course, was mutiny, snd the men st least all except the copperskln among them knew It When tbe whites told the latter we were only some ten days' sail from tbe American coast and when I got there I could have them banged they were all in favor of taking the ship, mardering me and tbe two mutes and turning ber Into a pirate. In fact some of tbem I bad shipped in the east bad been pirates In tbe Malay ar chipelago. I kept a stiff upper lip, being heavily armed all tbe while, aud by my man ner endeavored if I could not cow them to at least convince them that some of tbem would get killed before tbey killed me Besides, there Is al ways government which, though It cannot protect otlicers far out on the ocean by force, has even there a great moral effect In this way I. tbe only one on the ship who did not sbow fear of tbe rascals, endeavored to stave off disaster till we neared tbe American coast and fell In with other vessels. Tbere is a point In tbe Atlantic about where the Titanic was sunk by an Ice berg where the arctic stream, having brought tbe lee down from tbe north, swinsn It off to the southeastward. We ran Into tbis neighborhood at a season when a number of these ses mountains were coming along amid fields of lee On the day we struck the ice the men. Incited by one of tbe worst of them, wbo took the lead, determined that they would go no nearer the coast where they were liable to meet with the punishment they deserved 1 was standing on tbe xx'p deck looking at several bergs that were In sigbt und inwardly cursing the fields of le that were imiieding our progress toward tbe land when 1 saw the crew or most of them comiDg nft Neither of the other officers was on deck, and It occurred to me that they bud ellher been secured or made away with and the men were corning to finish ine. Glancing ntout over the waters In the hope of seeing a vessel. I did see one poke her nose from behind one of the bergs Some of the mutineers, seeing me looking over the starboard bow. pans ed to see what 1 was looking at. The vessel was moving very slowly with only ber Jib sails set while tbe rem nnnts of other sails that bad been blown away wpre fluttering In the wind. My enemies had calculated on removing me without any one seeing them. As soon as they dlioovered this vessel most of them hesitated. Their leader endeavored to Induce them to go on. but we and the other ship were bound to meet s few miles farther on. snd this was too much for the white sailors, especially those who realized what their punishment would be In case tbey were caujiht murdering their captain Encouraged. 1 drew a revolver with each band snd ordered the men back to tbe forecastle Every man obeyed me. I took up s glass snd leveled it oo the sblp. What I saw convinced me that there was not a living person on her. A msn was Is shed to the wheel, bat he was dead. Another was lean ing np sgalnst tbe side of tbe poop fleck, but I wss sure be was frozeo stiff. Several other bodies were lying on the deck motionless, snd all were covered with a costing of ice. My protectors were dead men. But they were ss good ss five men as long N my crew believed them to he living , I resolved to set before we got near enough to the other vessel for my men to see Calling tin-in aft. I pointed to the ship snd. reminding them that I could signal for help. nlTervd to refrain from rcportlnij their action when ws reached port If ther would return to duty. My offer wss accepted, and. tearing the ftircm ship to go her wsy. I steered for Boston harbor The ship that bad saved me must hare got wedgi'd between the bergs and sunk, for I oner heard ot ber. COLONEL'S T IN RING TO THE LAST ROOSEVELT AND FRIENDS HAVE LONG CONFERENCE AT OYSTER BAY EX PRESIDENT CERTAIN Of SUCCESS T. R. Denies That Nomination Of Wil son Has Given Third-Party Movement 8erlous Setback OYSTER BAY. N. Y.. July 3. With the Democratic National ticket in the field. Colonel Roosevelt aud a group of his lieutenants took up today the work of laying the foundation upon which they hope to build a new party. Since the birth of the party In Chi cago little has been done, as Colonel Roosevelt said he felt It necessary to await the outcome at Baltimore. Tbe situation In the lluht of tbe nomina tion -of Wood row Wilson wss discuss ed at a conference at Sagamors Hill which wss attended by Senator Dix on, of Montana; William Fllnn ,of Pittsburg; George W. Perkins and Frauk A. Munscy, of New York, and E. A. Van Valkenburg of Philadelphia. The presence of these men at Saga more Hill gave rise to reorta that the third-party movement had suffer ed a serious setback as a result of the selection of candidates by the Democratic convention and that somo of Colonel Roosevelt's leaders were In favor of abandoning tbe fight. Col onel Roosevelt denied this emphatic ally. "There was no thought of abandon ing the fight," ssid he. "These men simply came to talk over the situa tion with me and to discuss details of the call for the National convention." The statement of Governor Osborn, of Michigan, ona of the seven Govern ors who asked Colonel Roosevelt to became a candidate for the Republi can nomination that In his opinion no third party was now necessary was cited to the Colonel as one reason for the reports that all was going well with the movement. Guns Heard Ninatyssvsn Miles. My house Is on a high hill near (jimIiiI mlng. and a I sat rtudli.g one nfier noon 1 beard, or rather felt, a long vi bratlng boom several times reienti'd I Thought It must be a motor vnu maneuvering tiehlnd the house, but found nothing there Then I guessed what it miclit be and forthwith wrote to the chief gunnery olllcer of II. M. 8 Orion to make sure. Through the very kind courtesy of this gentleman I am able to state for certain that tbe dls charge of the Orion's guns was dis tinctly audible ninety seven statute tulles from the ship, the sound tnkinc somewhere about eleven minutes to travel the distiince. Letter lu Loudou Spectator. - Whiitlsr's' id of Hands. " Whistler, tlit artist, said: "I alwsys ose Irish models for hands, with tbelr long, slender tinkers and delightful ar ticulations, the most In-aiitlrul bands In the world. I think Irish eyes arc also tbe most beautiful. American girls' bands come next. English girls have red. coarse hands; the German girl has broad, flat bunds, snd tbe Spanish band Is full of big veins." What He Thought ot Hsportsrs. When l-'rcd Kellv hist liroke into Cleveland Journalism he was put on police One nlnlit he was sent to H big lire down on the flats A reporter named Brown was sent with him The lire was a whale, and presently Brown disappeared A wall had fallen., and Kelly was sure Brown was under It. He rushed to the telephone and called up bis city editor. "Say." be shouted Into the telephone, 'Brown is gone: He's burned up!" "What's t hut 7" asked the city editor. "Brown Is burned up, I tell you! He fell Into the lire!". ?AII right." said the city editor, hang ing up the telephone. "I'll send anoth er man." Saturday Evening Post An Accident st Sss. So you say you're sn old time sailor. Did you ever have sny accidents while at sea?" Once. mum. I dropped I bowl of hot soup In sn old Isdy's lap."-Defrolt Fres Press. 1912 The Bashful M an By M QUAD Copyright, UU. by Assodletad Lit rsrjr IVmi If Moses Taylor, sou of a farmer nd twsuty-tbrvs years old wbsu tbs liicldeuts about to lw related occurred, bsd Immu tbs sou of a reel u living lu tbs woods otis would not bavs bseu surprised to Dud blui a bit bashful As It was, bis baahfulueas was kuown and talked about by balf ths couutry t Cp to tbs agt of fourteen Motva was cbevky Instead of biuhfuL lis was In lovs with t tires dlffvreut girls Us wss lu for aixillltig schools, husking bees, apple parings, circuses snd camp meetings, sud hs was alwsys seut to tbs vlllags to do tbs trading. Us was In his element when bs could chin wltb a tin peddler or lightning rod msn. Then sll of a sudden thscbsugs rauie. U went to bed bis old self aud woks up somebody slss. Hs wss so bashful that hs could hardly lis got to tbs breakfast table to rat with tbs family. Us wss flurried and tmhsr raswd) snd blushing, snd whoa be had escaped from ths table after eating balf a meal bis mother said to tbs fa ther: "Jacob, you hitch up and drivs to the village after Dr. Williams" "But why. maT he asked. "Because he's needed here. Pro afraid Moses Is In for It" Tbe doctor arrived. Ills pulss wss counted, his tongue examined aud bis eyes rolled up Tuir said the medical man. "Going to bs fever, doctor?" , "Don't think so" "Is It csneerT "No." "tiolug craxyf "The boy Is all right only bs has turned bashful nil at ones." Within three months ths family was coaxing their best for Muses to become Impudent again, but all their efforts were failures Tbs horsewhip would have checked his Impudence somewhat but wbnt are you going to do with a boy that rushes iipsmlrs and crawls under a bed every time a neighbor calls to borrow s drawing of tesl It got to be more than a nuisance, and after It had lasted a year without prospect of a change Dr. Wllllnms ras sent for agnln. Moses started fur the woods, but was headed off and tied to a rhnlr. Tbs conclusion thnt Dr. Williams ar rival st after an hour of poking around was that some sudden shock might scatter the boy's Imshfuluess snd re store his youthful cheek. Several sorts of shocks were suggested, but the rnln barrel shock was the one tried. The month wss November, snd the barrel under the kitchen eaves was full of cold water. Without knowing what was coming young Moses was tnken out and dumed In. It was hoped that he would kick snd yell and -fight, but he did nothing hut sink bashfully tn the bottom of the barrel and let them haul him out hr the hair hefnr he was niille drowned The disgusted doctor said there wss nothing more to lie dons but wait aud see If the boy would out grow his ailment Moses got no worse and no better ne Just continued to lie the champion bashful young msn of the United Rtntes. A room wss made for him In the barn, snd tlilntrs were so mnmiced that be seldom enme In contact with anv one outside the family Mows had mi'-lied the age of twenty-two and was still as had ns a fool and ns bur densoine ns a lunatic, when nn old wo man who had heard of bis case Jour nered (Kl miles to ee him. She didn't get to see hi nt pcrsonnllv, but tlie moth er told her nil nhonl It . If Moses Inil Ix-cii iahful about wo men or nlKiiit ru.v other one thing It would have la-en easy to diagnose his case, but he would dodge a cow ns quick ns a woman. After the old wo man had Ihhmi at the house three days, gathering nil the particulars she could, she wir ready wltb a suggestion. It was summer then. It was known that every night Is-fore going to lied Moses went down to a creek be had dammed np and took a swim and was an hour about It This Incident was the basis ! of tbe suggestion. On a particular night ns tbe watchers saw blra leave tbe barn others slipped In and spread a layer of bnllthlstles over the sheets and s layer of nettles over that. Then t generous supply of both products wcrs scattered over the floor of the barn, and the people cleared out and left a free road. Tbe doctor was right sbont giving him s shock." snld the old woman, "but It wasn't the right sort and didn't la it long enough. Nettles snd bull thistles will do the trick." ' Mores uttered a yell and gave a jump almost ss soon ss be entered the barn, then more yells snd more Jumps ss bs mads bis way to' his bed. then yells and whoops and shouts snd cuss words as he bounced down on the net tles snd thistles as be rolled around. It bus workedT whispered tbe old woman, wltb a sigh of relief. So It had. When Moses cried Ont for belp bis bsshfnlness wss gone, nev er tn return. Tbey estimated that he bsd 1.0(10.0110 stings snd that 2.000.000 thistles bad entered bis anatomy and there picking out the thistles and anointing ths stings the young innii used luO.Put) rusa words ami worked up ton of ImpudencT). When hs could movs around again bs wors his hat on his ear. spat over his shoulder and was sngam'd tn a widow within Sll weeks I Ms-tors sometimes uinks mistakes, but old women never do There Is something about nettles and bull thistles that touches the spot. oats ream ieiuaina. "When I was lu tbs railroad bast Oes," salt! Chsuncey M. Dspew oocsv "ths president of a small Una wslt sd on ms tn request an exchange of courtesies. I Interrogated him. and lis said proudly: "'Ou our litis, air, not only has a collision never occurred,, but on our lino a collision would ls Impossible.' " Impossible?' said I. 'Oh. come; I know that ths latest automatic safety devices ar excellent things But tin f osslble Is a large word.' "'It's literally 'rue wltb us, sir,' hs replied. "'How csn It her said I. " 'Why,' scld hs, 'we own euly ons trsln.' " A Winning Pries Mar. A New York merchant, In speaking about his early experiences In tbs re tall business, said: "I made four ven tures In a amr! II way, three of which were, If not failures, unsuccessful. It was the custom In those days to mark , all goods wltb A cost and a selflng mark, and the former wna essential ln ctiuse the laltrr was not always lived up to It wss elastic, tbe tuia prb-s system being lmHissll because of competition My first rst mark was tiod luy bulpr.' each letter represent ing s numeral. Then I had 'Mark honest.' The third mark employed was FultiiNiaurr.' but I bad no luck until I changed my cost mark to 'Mukeproflt' "-New York Tribune Whan O'Connall Ratuaad ts fight There were all sorts of ways of get ting out of a duel formerly, us well ss of gutting Into one N. P. Willis re cords a jroiiviTsiitlon with Moors at Lady Blesslngtou'a In which Moors defended dueling as "tbe great pre server of tbs decencies of society." He was condemning O'Connell for not Oiceithg Peel. O'Coiniell pleaded Ills wife's Illness and delnyed until tbs luw Interfered. Some other Irish patriot shout the same tlms refused a challcugo oo account of ths Illness of his duugtiter. and a Dublin wit mads a good epigram on the two: Bom men with a horror of alaushtar Improv on Ilia Scripture eominsnil And honor their wlfa snd Ihalr dsustilar, That their dux nmr Imp Ions In Iht land. WILLAMETTE Mr. and Mrs. John Ranch have re turned from their wedding trip through Southern Oregon, and are spending the 4th with Mrs. Itauch's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Roddy. Willamette Railway Company's new car cam bandy for the 4th, as they were obliged to run trailers In con nection with tbe three regular passen ger cars. Leonard Runynn spent the Fourth blnckherrylng and was lucky enough to get about six gallons. Mr. and Mrs. Bcmay ate picnic din ner with Mrs. Bemay's mother, Mrs. Ella Stevenson, on July 4th. Miss Kdltb. Arthur and Esther Ro gers left on the up-rlvcr boat for Wheutland, where they spent Fourth with their undo, John Rogers of Am ity. The surveyors are crowding work on tbe new railroad line. Tbey work ed all day July fourth. Willamette Is enthusiastic over the prospects of an other line. 8PIRITUALI8T CAMP MEETING AT NEW ERA Tbe New Era Spiritualist Camp meeting will bold Its fortieth annual session from July 6th to August 4th Inclusive. Mr. and Mrs. A. Scott Bled soe of Kansas City, Mo., will be tha principal speakers and message bear ers, other good mediums will bs pres ent. Coma and bring your tents and enjoy a season of recreation, social enjoyment and spiritual uplifttnent. To those who cannot camp, come and spend a day wltb us, we have tents to rent or room and board at tne no- tel. For further information address L. U Irvln, secretary, Barlow, Oregon L BUT TRADE IS LIGHT The wool market continues strong In tone, but trade In this stats now Is on a small scale as compared wltb that of a few weeks ago. In both Eastern and Western Oregon the bulk of the 1912 clip has passed out of first bands, and with buyers offering good prices and sellers disposed to let go, ths chances ars that tbs un sold holdings will be cleaned up wlth- n a short time, for tne time East ern Oregon wool Is quoted at sn ex treme range of 14 to It cents, snd Valley products at 20 to 22. I.ltllo If any mors than g.uUO.OUO pounds of the atnte'l clip now remains unsold, according tn local dealers, and tlto most of this wool la east of ths mountains. Tbs buyers ars still In the field, picking up offering wherev er they nro to bs found, hut the sea son of at-tlvs buying Is virtually end ed. t)u the wholo ths prices paid to date art ssid to bavs been satisfact ory to the sheepmen. I Prevailing Oregon City prices ars as follows: DIllKD rilUITH (lluyllig)-rruns o:i basis of 0 to 8 cants. Fruits, Vsgstahlss. IlinKS (Buying) (Ireen hides, 7o to 8c; sailers 7c; dry hides 1 cents to Hp; sheep pelta. 2So to 7 So sscu. Hsy, drain, Fssd. EOiflH Oregon ranch eggs, lTocass count: 19o randeled. HAY (Buying) Tlmotky, 111 to fIS! clover, IS to I'J; oat bay, beat, 110 to 111; mixed, S3 tu Sll: alfalfa. to fit .60. OATS (Buying) $35.00 to 118 50 wheat Pc bu.; oil meal, selling 13160 Shady Brook dslry fed, $1.30 per 100 pounds. FEKI (Selling) Bhorts, 30; bran $.'; process barley, 141.60 per ton, r'UH K-HS0 (o 15.00. I-OTVTOES Best buying l&o to 95c accordlug to quality per hund red. POCI,TRY-(Buylng)-Hens llo to 13c; spring, 17a to 50c, sud roosters Ho. Sisrs He. Buttsr, Poultry, tags. Buttar (lkiywg ordiasry coun try butter, too to I5rj fancy dairy, oc roll. Llvsstock, Masts BERK (Uvs Welghn Steers, 5H snd ts'c; cows. 4Hc; bulls Se. MUTTTON Sheep So to Jo. VBAly Culves 10c to 12a drsased, according to grado. MOIIAIK 33o to 36c. Notlos of Final 8ttlmtnt Notice Is hereby given that tbs un dersigned admluhilriitrtx with the will annexed of the estate of J. Philip Shannon, doreaaed, has filed ber final account and report In said estate, snd tbs County Court ot Clackamas Coun ty, Oregon, bus fixed Monday, ths btb duy of August, 1V1J, at tan o'clock A. M. at tbe County Courtroom In ths County Courthouse In Oregon t'lty, Oregon, ss ths time and plrn-o for hearing objections to tbs said so count aud tho settlement (hereof. BEUTIIA H. UlESY. Administratrix with tbe will annex ed of the eatute of J. Philip Hhun lion, deceased. JOS. K. IIKIMiKH, Attorney. Sheriff's Sale. In the Circuit Court of lbs Stats ot Oregou, for the County of Clucks maa. P. M. Hoist, Plaintiff, vs. J. M. Anderson, C. M. Anderson, Junies N. Davis, Trustee In Bank ruptcy of the eatute of J. M. Ander sou, Bankrupt, Defendants. State of Oregon, County of Clacks maa ss. By virtue of a judgment order, de cree snd an execution, duly Issued out of snd under tho seal of the ghovo en titled court, In tho shove eutllled cause, to mo duly directed snd dated the 28th duy of June, 1912, upon a Judgment rendered and entered In said rourt on the 2Bth day of Juno, 1912, In fnvor of P. M. Hoist, Plulu tiff, snd against J. M. Anderson, De fendsnt, for the sum of l,9u.(i(), with Interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from the 2.1rd day ot November, 1908, to the present date; and the further sum of :ioo.oo, as at torney's foe, and Interest on snld Judgment at 6 per cent per annum un yi paid, commanding ice to make sals of the following doscrfbod personal property slluato In the county of Clackamas, ststo of Oregon, to-wlt: A sawmill formerly owned by Hoist ' snd Anderson, located on the North fork of Deep Creek on the Wj of the N.E.J of Section IS, Twp. 2 8. R. 4 E. of the Willamette Meridian, contain Ing two boilers, one engine, edger and plainer, together with all of the tools and fixtures now at or Dear said mill. Also all fir timber down snd standing uu me w. or ma n.e. of said sec. tlon 18 snd wbst Is lying North of the field on the N.W.J of the S.E.J of Section 18. Excepting and reserving nil cedar large and small, all maple trees, and all fir trees that measure six feet In diameter one foot above the ground, or as much thereof as may be necessary and sufficient to raise the amount due on the Judg ment as above set forth and expense of the sale. Now, Therefore, by virtus of said execution. Judgment order and decree, nnd In rompllnnc.e with the commands' of said writ, I will on Saturday, the 3rd day of August, 1912; st the hour of 10 o'clock A. M., at tbs front door of the County Court House In the City of Oregon City, In said County and Slate, sell at public auction, suB Ject to redemption, to the highest bid der, for If. S. gold coin cash In hand. all the right, title snd Interest Which the within Yarned defendanta or eltn- er of them, had on the date of tbe mortgage herein or since hsd In or to the above described resl property or sny part thereof, to satisfy said exe cution. Judgment order, decree, Inter est costs snd all accruing costs.. E. T. MASS, Sheriff of Clackamas County, Oregon., By B. J. 8TAAT9. Deputy. Dated, Oregon C'ty., Ore., June 29th. 1912.