MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1912, MORNING ENTERPRISE OREGON CITY, OREGON L E. BRODIE, Editor and Publisher. "Xaiterad as second-daaa matter Ju aarr 9. ltll. at the post offloe at Oraeoa City Oregon, under the Act of March TEBMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year, by mall . ...I.M Biz Months, by mail 1M Pour Month, by mall l.M Per week, by carrier 1 CITY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER. ?e'S'8JSj?"8Ji THE MORNING ENTERPRISE Is on sale at the following stores every day: Huntley Bros. Drug Main Street. J. W. McAnulty Cigars Seventh and Main. f E. B. Auderson, 4 Main near Sixth. 0 M. E. Dunn Confectionery Next door to P. O. City Drug Store Electric Hotel. fjcmoenborn Confectionery Seventh and .T. Q. Adams. .3.$.3SSfc Feb. 1 In American History. 1893 United States flag raised over the town hall at Ilouolulu. 1909 President Elect W. H. Taft for mally opened the Pacific end of the Panama canal. 1911 Rear Admiral Charles S. Sperry. U. S. N.. retired, who commanded the battleship fleet on its world crui?" iu 1908-9. died In Washing ton; born 1S4S. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. (From noon today to dooii tomorrow. I Sun sets 5:18. rises 7:0!): moon sets 7:31 a. m.: S:18 p. in., moon at perigee, nearest earth, distant about '230.000 miles; twice at perigee this short month; higliest and farthest north to day and full tomorrow. Constellation visible 8:30 p. m.. in February: Over head. Auriga. Gemini. Taurus: north. Ursa Minor: northeast. Ursa Major. Canes Venatici: eost. Leo. Leo Minor, Cancel; southeast. Hydra. Argo Navis; soufh; Cauis Major. C'anis Minor. Mo noceros. Lepus. Columba. Orion: south west, r'luvius Kridunus. Cetus: west, Aries. Pisces: northwest. Perseus. An dromeda. Cassiopeia. Cepheus. First magnitude stars visible same hour, fig ures indicating distance in "light years" -that is. years required for tbeir light to reach earth, when sun's light comes In 8 minutes: Overhead, Ca pella. 50: Pollux. 50: Aldeliaran, 45: east. Kegulus, 100; south. Procyoii. 10; Sirius, 8.6 (brightest stan: P.ctelgens. 110; Rigel, over 200. Planets in Feb ruary, 1912: Mercury, iie;u the son and invisible; Venus. rise. :! nt 5:30 a. m.; Mars, sets about '.'... a. m.; Jupiter, in east before sunrise; Saturn, sets about midnight; Uranns and Nep tune always invisible; sun In constella tion Capricornus till 14th. then in Aquarius; zodiacal light iu west. DEATHS FROM PREVENTABLE DISEASES. Forty per cent of the persons who died in Chicago, during the month of December last died of preventable diseases. That is to say, they died needless deaths. Pneumonia and tu berculosis claimed more than half of this 40 per cent, and science cata logues both as "dirty air" diseases. "The urgent need of the times," says a hicago board of health bulle tin, in discussing the subject, "is the proper airing of homes. If you will not keep your windows open at night, you at least should give your sleeping room a thorough airing before you retire. The other rooms should be ventilated at least twice a day." ! People generally do not seem to ap preciate that death lurks in badly ventilated apartments. Attempts to maintain comfort and avoid colds by keeping rooms warm at the expense of fresh air defeat their very purpose. There is greater need for fresh air in the winter than in the summer Everybody Seems to lie Iu Favor of Peace ANDREW CARNEGIE URGES TREATIES CHE warlike proceedings in Europe at present are a flash from the past, a passing recurrence of practices of savage times. I do not believe they are the prelude to a period of general warfare. The world is now moving backward. It is NOT GOING BACK TO THE HABIT OF WAR. . . . Everywhere I hear most encouraging news about the attitude of the people toward the arbitration treaties with Great Britain and France. In practically 200,000 churches the ministers are urging the ratification of the treaties. The public sentiment in favor of these treaties ha grown stronger day by day. IF GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE AND GERMANY WERE TO MAKE THESE ARBITRATION TREATIES WITH THE UNITED STATES IT WOULD HAVE A HIGHLY SOBERING EFFECT UPON OTHER NA TIONS. These troubles that we, are hearing of now in Europe. and in Asia do not disturb my faith in the ultimate success of the peace movement. Today the man who enlists in the army or navy enters about the safest of all vocations. There is only the "REMOTEST CHANCE THAT A UNITED STATES SOLDIER Q.R SAILOR WELL EVER SEE A BATTLE. months, when doors and windows are open as a matter of course. NEW PREMIER OF FRANCE. His second attempt, in an interval of twelve years, finds M. Raymond Poincare successful in forming a new cabinet in France. The first effort was made soon after the death of President Faure and the election of President Loubet to succeed him. The Dreyfus affair had the republic in a turmoil and the fear that the entire army might es pouse the royalist cause and restore the monarchy was general. A com bination of Socialists and Radicals, with anti-Semites, Boulangists and Royalists in the chamber of deputies, overthrew the Deputy Minister, and M. Poincare was called upon to form a new cabinet. Poincare had made a number of no table speeches espousing the cause of Dreyfus, though he attempted to separate the prosecutors, of the Jew ish officer from the army as an or ganization. He was alsccpunsel for Colonel Picquart, who had exposed the Dreyfus conspiracy and for whom life had been made miserable. The task of forming a new minis try proved too much for Poincare at that time, and it was passed on to Waldeck-Rousseau, who successfully guided France through one of the most critical crises fn her recent his tory. The new premier has served in the chamber of deputies and the Senate, has acted as minister of p.ublic in struction and minister of finance, is a lawyer, artist and writer, a stead fast Republican and a member of the forty Immortals. His premiership augurs well for France. Chicago has a painter named Zero Marx. He should feel at home now. "Even if a man changes his mind, it ought not to embarrass him," says Dr. Woodrow Wilson. How the Bal timore June gathering will feel upon the subject will continue to give the good doctor considerable anxiety. After reading his testimony before the Stanley committee one cannot es cape the conviction that Mr. Carnegie is more familiar with statues than statutes. The first exhibition of local pro ducts ever held in the Philippines will open at Manila in February. No anti imperialists will be displayed. They are essentially a Nebraska product. Saying the time is not ripe for the election of a woman to the highest deliberate body in the world, Mrs. Sarah Piatt Decker has declined to become a candidate for United States Senator from Colorado. Mrs. Decker is wise in her day and generation. FORUM OF THE PEOPLE BRIDGE CLEANING URGED. Morning Enterprise. To the Editor: At this time of the year when the falls are most beautiful, nearly every visitor who comes to our town walks out on the bridge for a view of the river and the mills that is, if they possess the courage and hardihood to wade through the slush that covers the east approach. There seems to be a legend to the effect that it was once customary to have this bridge hosed off occasion ally, but it certainly has not been done in modern times. The larger percentage of Oregon City's citizens are obliged to cross the bridge every day to their work, and find it something of a hardship to wade through slush so thick that even on sunny days it does not dry. City officials say this is a matter belonging to the County Court", and the County Court has said that it be longs to the city, so in the meantime, visitors to the poultry show should be warned to bring their galoshes if they wish to view the falls. ' Yours very truly, MRS. ERNESTINE SINGER. Ultimate Success of Peace Movement " Is Certain FALLS HURL AGED LOGGER TO DEATH (Continued from page 1) Louis Smith, son of Mrs. Peter Smith, of Canemah, recovered the launch a3 it floated under the suspen sion bridge. It was overturned and virtually a wreck. Several men in skiffs searched for the body but it is probable that it will never be found. It is generally believed that Bernart was thrown from the boat before it went over the big falls. He had a wife and eight children, five of the latter having been by a former mar riage. Bernart logged for George Brough ton for many years, and had for some time had been employed by Portland companies. The Broughton mill was washed away in j.890. He also had worked for Frederick Schafer, of Mo lalla. Peter Nehrent, who knew Bernart for forty years, said Wednesday night he was one of the most conscientious workers that had ever done service on the river here: "He was always busy," said Nehrent, "and had accu mulated considerable property. He had rigged up a little cabin on his launch and frequently when he came to this city he would sleep in the craft. He also cooked his meals on it." Many fatal accidents have occurred" at the falls and only one man has ever gone over them and escaped with his life. The fortunate man was Harry Freeman, who with his father, George Freeman, his brothers James, George, Jr., and Mr. Shannon were in a boat that was carried over the falls in the spring of 1903. The bodies of one or two of the others were not found Edward Boyles was carried over the falls and drowned in 1898 A com panion, Edward Brown, jumped out the boat and saved himself by cling to the breakwater. Frank ' Perkins and homas Scollard were drowned there in 1892, and Charles Stewart was a victim in 1891. It is also said that many Indians have lost their Jives by being swept over the falls in canoes. Animal Doctors In China. Because of the fondness of the Chi nese for animals the veterinary sur geon forms a class by himself. He treats horses, mules, donkeys, camels, cattle, dogs. cats, birds and goldfish. He has four principal prescriptions, each consisting of about a dozen dif ferent drugs and each efficacious ac cording to the season of the year. Ab scesses are punctured with steel nee dles, of which he has various forma Dried lizards are good for horses suf fering from pulmonary troubles. In giving medicines to a horse a special bit is used, by meaus of which the animal is tied up and the concoction is poured into the mouth with an ox horn fashioned into a ladle.-Exchange. A Fish That Looks Like Seaweed. It is a well known fact that many in sects, birds and animals have a way of simulating leaves, twigs, foliage and tall grasses among which they seek shelter, but who ever heard of a fish imitating seaweedV The Aus tralian sea dragon is a kind of sea horse, but one strangely transformed by extravagant trappings. It is so richly ornamented with loose and flap ping ribbons of skin that it looks like a bunch of seaweed when traveling through the water, and the ravenous wolves of the sea searching for food may pass it a dozen times a day with out suspecting that the innocent look ing bit of seaweed is really a fish. Now York World. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. MOTHER S WAGES. What about mother's wages? Father gets his wages, the boys get theirs, and the girls get theirs. No body pays mother's wages. Father does not pay mother's wages because he says it takes all of his to pay the bills and make both ends meet. The boys say they must have good clothes and some spending money and they cannot pay mother. And the girls complain that their small earnings must go for gowns and hats and ribbons. Mother merely does the family work without pay. Mother gets up early to get break fast for' father and the boys and hur ries them off to their work. She gets the girls a dainty bite and then warms up the scraps for the little ones who go to school. Mother eats between times. It ts mother who all day long sweeps and scrubs and dusts and sews and cooks and hustles in the meantime to get two more meals. After supper father sits down to his pipe and evening paper or goes down town to talk politics. The boys dress and go out. , The girls have company. But mother washes the dishes and gets things ready for breakfast, and then sits down to mend and darn socks until bedtime. Eight hours? Mother works eighteen. And the next day and the next and the next, so long as she is able to be out of bed. mother keeps up this exacting routine, while the others get all the playtime. Suppose the family were to employ a housekeeper for this work. She would demand mighty good pay for these two shifts in one. And perhaps she would throw out the back kitchen door as much as her wages. But mother pinches and scrapes and saves. Is it fair? Mother should have her wages. Let father give her most of his. She will make a dollar go farther than he. Let the boys save a little and pay mother something for their keep, and let (he girls buy less chocolates and pay their mother something. Try giving her a regular allowance, aven if ir be small, and watch her face brighteu until she looks almost s young as her girls. She will not spend it on herself. Trust mother foi that. - Pay mother ber wages. Two Kinds of People. Some people are always grumbling. If they had been born in the garden of Eden the? would have found much to' complain of. Others are happy any where. They see beauties and bless ings all around them. Might Be, but Not Wisely. "Do you consider him a man who can be trusted?" "Well," replied the purist, "I suppose be can be trusted, but there would be considerable risk attached to the proceeding." Patronize our advertisers. H-l-I-H"l"I"I"I-r'I"I"I-I"I"I"M--M-H- A Serum Of Youth t A German Professor Gives His ? Reasons For Disapproving ' I . of Its Use By F. A. MITCHEL 'I"1"1"I"1-I"I"I-I"1"1-I"I"1"I"I"I"I"I-1"I"1"I-I"I"I' "These American scientists," said Dr. Holwig-Sheinberg, original investi gator at the University of Bonn, "make me tired. I have Just read an article copied from an American jour nal stating that one of them has dis covered a method of preventing decay in living organisms, or rather of re newing the primary condition, which is the same thing. He has been ex perimenting on bacteria and from bacteria hopes to lead up to more complex organisms. Thirty years ago I began where be is beginning today and In ten years had reached a point where I was able indefinitely to per petuate youth in human beings." "Ton did that!" exclaimed Professor Shroeder. taking his pipe out of his "WHEN I SAW HEB AGAIN I WAS SHOCKED." mouth and looking through his spec tacles at Dr. Holwig-Sheinberg in as tonishment "I did," replied the other. "Why, then, did you not announce your discovery?" "Because the only case 1 ever per fected demonstrated that it is not best to interfere too radically with nat ural processes." "You had an experience?" "I had; one that admonished me to permit persons to grow old in the nat ural way." "Do tell me about it: I am dying of curiosity." "Well, I began just where this Amer ican began. I made cultures of bac teria, observed the cause of decay and hunted for a serum to prevent it. I failed in this, but discovered one that would kill th'e decaying bacteria for a certain period and capable of contin uing the process ad infinitum. I will not attempt to give you in a nutshell investigations extending over a period of ten years whereby I at last succeed ed in applying my discovery to human beings. All I shall attempt to do now ts to give you the principal reason why I did not announce my discovery to the world. "When I had succeeded in keeping monkeys young and frisky my next step was to try my serum on the next and. highest type of animal life man. I had received pecuniary support in my investigations from Baron Wobel and, after trying two or three experi ments on subjects, announced to him that I could keep a man at the same apparent age from the moment I began to treat him for an indefinite period. The baron was much interested and asked me many questions concerning my process what danger there might be to the patient, my ability to contin ue it and what would be the result for him after my death. I satisfied him on most of these points, whereupon he told me that a commoner. Herr Schof fenholer, enormously rich, was desir ous of uniting his wealth to the bar-' on's title. Herr Schoffenholer had a daughter aged twenty, and the baron had a son aged two. These were the only children born to either family. The only way to unite the wealth and the title was to marry these two. But the difference of age was an insur mountable difficulty. " 'Now. said the baron to me. 'if yoti tan keep Franlein Schoffenholer at her present age till my son Is old enough to marry the two interests may be united.' "Here was a chance to try an exper iment under favorable conditions. Aft er numerous family councils at which a great deal of opposition was raised Herr Schoffenholer decided the matter by compelling his daughter to submit to my treatment. I was not informed of this compulsion or that the fraulein was In love with a young guardsman, a few years her senior. Had I been I would not have consented to act in the matter. "I began my treatment on the frau lein's twentieth birthday. She re sponded admirably, and I saw at once that the serum which I injected under the skin of her arm was taking effect. 1 found th these injections needed to be made once every twenty-two days, for or the twenty-third day a new birth of cell destroying bacteria came up to recommence the process Of decay. . - "It was not long before I learned of the love affair betwen the guardsman and the fraulein and that clandestine meetings were taking place at long in tervals to be sure between them. Since the fraulein remained youthful and the guardsman was growing older his love for her grew in proportion as the difference in their ages lengthened. What effect this increasing difference had on the fraulein I did not learn, for she kept her feelings to herself. I offered to decline to continue my treat ment If she wished it. but she told me that, having acceded to her father's order, she would carry it out to the end. "Seventeen years passed. The baby boy Wobel was nineteen, the fraulein thirty-seven and the guardsman forty. The latter had never married, and his love for the fraulein had grown to be a dominant passion with him. He was getting gray and bald and showed oth er signs of coming old age. On the contrary the girl he worshiped had all the freshness of youth. Her beauty had not been in the least impaired. It was quite natural that a man who was now too old for other girls of the frau lein's age should cling to her. especial ly as she had kept pace with him in that experience which matures the in tellectual powers. "Baron Wobel would not consent to the marriage between his son and Fraulein Schoffenholer till the former came of age. The young man was within a few weeks of twenty-one, and preparations were being made for the wedding when I received a hurry call to the Schoffenholer residence. I found the fraulein very ill. This was unfor tunate, for within a few days it would be necessary for me to give her an in jection of the serum, and in her weak ened condition I did not know what the effect would be. Indeed. I dare not administer it "For a time the fraulein's life hung in the balance. Then she began to mend. I left her under the care of the family physician and did not see her for a month. When I saw her again I was shocked. From a girl of twenty she had become a woman of over forty, and her illness had made her look ten or fifteen years older than that. Her hair was- almost -white,, her skin yellow and wrinkled, her teeth badly decayed and ber figure bony and angular. Indeed every feature which would have decayed gradually without my treatment had broken down with in a brief period. "Here was en embarrassing situation. Young Wobel had shown every willing ness to marry the girl his father had provided for him. not only on account of her fortune, but because of her beauty, which was that cf a girl, and her intellect, which was that of a ma ture, woman. But now what would he say when he should see her? Her fa ther begged me to resto.e her youth and when I told him that I' had no power to do so stormed at me for a fool and an idiot ''Young Wobel was not permitted to see his fiancee till a few days before the proposed wedding. When he met a woman who looked to be over fifty, and much broken at that, he collapsed. There was no use in trying to induce him to marry her. Indeed, at her age a marriage would be fruitless and its object defeated. . "I, was placed in a very unfortunate position. Every one seemed iti consid er me to blame for the affair, though I had done only what I had been re-' quested to do. I felt very sorry for Fraulein Schoffenholer. for I was obliged to admit to myself that had I permitted her to grow old as nature intended she would not now have been suddenly plunged into her present dis tress. In order to make amends I wrote a note to her guardsman lover, informing him that the lady he had so long loved was now free to marry him However, I thought it best to permit him to observe her changed condition for himself. He replied, thanking me for the information, which he declared had 'thrilled him with an ecstatic hap piness.' "He called upon her. When the poor woman saw his shocked expression at her altered appearance she held out her arms to him, putting on just such an appealing smile as would be seductive in a girl of twenty, but was horrible in a broken down old woman. He tried to respond, but failed. After a brief Interview he excused himself and has never seen her from that day to this. Recently I received his wedding cards and have learned that he is to marry a girl of sixteen. "As for the fraulein, who had It not been for my interference with nature's laws would now have been the wife of the guardsman and the mother doubt less of grown sons and daughters, she is a withered spinster., I can never for give myself for being the cause of her misfortune. "This Is the reason why 1 have never either prosecuted my discovery or" given it to the world. It remains for these Americans who are upsetting the tra ditions of centuries to proceed in their reckless course to defy nature's laws and to make themselves generally dis agreeable to the rest of the world. 1 would like to get this fellow who has made this so called discovery, keep him young for a matter of thirty or forty years, then let old age come upon him at once, to see how be would like the transition. So long as they confine themselves to colonies of bacteria or to guinea pigs or monkeys there is no harm done, but when it comes to jump ing a young girl Into an old woman please excuse ma. I've bad enough of it" ' Chinese Chorus Girls. In some Chinese theaters the stage manager has an economical custom of employing dummy figures cut out of cardboard and the like to swell the ranks of the chorus without at the same time swelling the salary list The Round World. "1 hear you have a brother abroad?" "Ihave." " "Is he a long way off?" "Yes; he could hardly get any fur ther away without coming nearer." Boston Transcript Subscribe for the Daily enterprise- DEMAND TOR SPUDS SHOWS IMPROVEMENT Though trade in the potato market has not yet reached the proportions expected at this time of the year, there is a fair outward movement now under way, and in the event this con tinues and improves, as in all probab ility it will, the chances are that dur ing the next two months a very con siderable portion of the Oregon crop will be marketed. Whether a clean-up of the marketa ble surplus in this state can be offect ed between now and the end of the season, however, is yet to be deter mined, but on the whole the outlook would seem to be rather favorable. In California and the states on the Mexi can border the demand appears to be stiffening and broadening, and the prospect is for heavier rather than lighter shipments in that direction as the season advances. The' size of the available supply in this state is wholly a matter of guess work. Dealers do not pretend to have anything like an accurate line on the total of farmers' holdings, but that the supply is materially greater tha that of this time a year ago is gen erally conceded. At the same time the market is in much better shape than a year ago, for crop failures last season in many of the Eastern states have worked to the advantage of the Oregon growers, so the outlook can hardly be regarded as unfavorable. On the other hand, a matter to which buyers for shipment out of the state are constantly calling attention is the poor quality of much of the stock now offered in this state. The proportion of fancy stock in the last crop harvested in Oregon is said to have been a good deal smaller than usual, and this naturally is a factor of importance in the marketing of the output For the most part fair to good grade Burbanks are being sent to the South ern border states, and for these at shipping points buyers are paying 95 cents to 1.10 a hundred. The San Francisco trade almost wholly calls for strictly fancy stock, which is none too plentiful in this state. For such potatoes buyers are paying $1.10 to $1.20, with occasional lots of extra quality stock going at $1.25. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis of 6 1-4 pounds for 45-50's. Fruits, Vegetables. HIDES (Buying) Green hides, 5c to 6c; salters, 5 to 6c; dry hides, 12c to 14c; sheep pelts, 25c to 75c each. Hay, Grain, Feed. HAY (Buying) Timothy, $12 to $15; clover, $8 to $9; oat hay, best, $9 to $10; mixed, $9 to $12; alfalfa, $15 to $16.50. OATS (Buying) Gray, $27 to $28; wheat, $28 to $29; oil meal, $53; Shady Brook dairy feed, $1.25 per 100 pounds. FEED (Selling) Shorts, $26; roll ed barley, $39; process barley, $40; whole corn, $39; cracked corn. $40; bran $25. FLOUR $4.50 to $5.25. Butter, Poultry, Eggs. POULTRY (Buying) Heus, 10c to 11c; spring, 10 to 11c, and roosters, 8c. Butter (Buying) Ordinary coun try butter, 25c to 30c; fancy dairy, 40c. EGGS Oregon ranch eggs, 30c to 35c. SACK VEGETABLES Carrots, $1.25 to $1.50 per sack; parsnips, $1.25 to $1.50; turnips, $1.25 to $1.50; beets, $1.50. POTATOES Best buying 85c to $1 per hundred. hundred; Australian, $2 per hundred. ONIONS Oregon, $1.25 to $1.50 per Lvestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) Steers, 5c and 5 1-2; cows, 4 l-2c; bulls, 3 l-2c VEAL Calves bring from 8c to 13c, according to grade. MUTTON Sheep, 3c and 3 l-2c; lambs, 4c and 5c. Railways and Steel. Railways use over 2.000.000 tons of steel a year, which is almost half the world's Dnwiuct LOVE ONE ANOTHER. How beautifully is it ordered that, as many thousands work for one, so must every individual bring his labor to make the whole. The highest is not to despise the lowest nor the lowest to envy the highest. Each must live in all and by all. Who will not .work neither shall he eat. So God has ordered that men, be ing in need of each other, should learn to love each other and bear each other's burdens. G. A. Sala. British Convicts. Convicts in British prisons are not allowed to see a mirror during the pe riod of their incarceration. CASH in the hands of the wage-earner the temptation to spend it coming from every side. To secure your cash and avoid temptation to spend, place it with The Bank of Oregon City OLDEST BANK IN THE COUNTY D. C LATOUltBTTB PraoMaot THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of OREGON CITY , OREGON ' CAPITAL, $50,000.00. Traaaaeta a aawral fcanking Bualneaa. Stafford's Bargain Store SUCCESSORS TO EDDY & SON. More for the money. Best for the price. ' Remember the little store on the corner, opposite Bank of Oregon City when in need of Dry Goods Ladies', Gents' and Children's Fur nishings, Notions, etc. McCall's Patterns in stock. C. L STAFFORD, 608 Main St Wants, For Sale, Etc Matioca uader Uiaa claaalfieel miiaaage will b laaarted at ana eeat a ward. ftMt inearttoa. half a cant additional Immtr tiaaa. one tnca eua, St aar moat, ball taa ear. (4 imasj si war moata. Caah must aaoompaajr eraer anlnaa ana has an open aoconnt with the taper. Mo ftavaaoial raspaaalbtUty for errr; vhare arrora occur free ourreotea noUea will fe prtstea for patron. Miain-xa efcarce UN WANTED. WANTED Everybody to know that I carry the largest stock of second hand furniture in town. Tourists or local people looking for curios In dian arrow heads, old stamps or Indian trinkets should see me. Will buy anything of value. George Young, Main street, near Fifth. WANTED Plain sewing to do at home. Phone Farmers 54. FOR SALE. FOR SALE Two lots in Gladstone, under market value. Call at 612 Fourth street, regon City. Main 2463. WOOD AND COAL. OREGON CITY WOOD AND FUEL CO., F. M. Bluhm. Wood and coal delivered to all parts of the city. SAWING A SPECIALTY. Phone your orders. Pacific 3502, Home B 110. FARM LOANS. FARM LOANS Dimick & Dimick, Lawyers, Oregon City, Or. ATTORNEYS, O. D. EBY, Attorney-at-Law, Money ioaned, abstracts furnished, land titles examined, estates settled, gen eral law business. Over Bank of Oregon City. U'REN & SCHUEBEL, Attorneys-at-Law, Deutscher Advokat, will prac tice in all courts, make collections and settlements. Offiee in Enter prise Bldg., Oregon City, Oregon. INSURANCE. B. H. COOPER, For Fire Insurance and Real Estate. Let us handle your properties we buy, sell and exchange. Office in Enterprise Bldg., Oregon City, Oregon. CLEANING AND PRESSING. CHICAGO TAILORS suits made to order from $10 and up. We also do cleaning, pressing and repairing. Three doors south of postoffce. PIANO TUNING. PIANO TUNING If you want your piano thoroughly and accurately tuned, at moderate cost, notify Piano-Tuner it Electric Hotel. Strongly endorsed by the director of the Philharmonic, who will per sonally vouch for his work. . L L J ENTERTAINS CLUB The Tuesday Night Bridge Club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Jones, who proved most delightful host and hostess. The rooms of the Jones home were beautified by large quantities of red carnations and as paragus ferns, and festoons of ivy in termingled with Oregon grape. De licious refreshments were served after many games of bridge had been in dulged in, the prizes being won by Mrs. Eber A. Chapman and Dr. H. S. Mount. Present were Mr. and Mrs. John Adams, Dr. and Mrs. A. L. Beatie, Mr. and Mrs. Eber A. Chapman, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Shewman, Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Mount, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mulvey, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Straight, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Rands, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Eastham, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. McBaln and Mrs. Nieta B. Lawrence. If BEST COAL LOWEST PRICES $7.50 UP PER TON. Free Delivery In City, Cane mah, Gladstone and West Side. Oregon Commission Co ELEVENTH AND MAIN STw Oregon City, Ore. ROCK SPRING COAL MENDOTA COAL SHELBY COAL is a very slippery . article 9 J. METER. Cashla. Open front 9 A. M. t J . I