Closing Out Entire stock of drygoods ladies scits and coats, farnishings and shoes. See Our Closing Out Prices Before Buying J. LEVITT Impartial. "Whose clears does Smeller smoke?" "Anybody's." LOCAL BRIEFS Dr. J. A. van Brakle, licensed oste opathic physician, 806 Washington Mrs. Anna Kruse is very ill at her home on Twelfth and Main streets. The Order of the Eastern Star will give a hot dinner at Mason's banquet hall on Friday from 11:30 A. M. to 1:30 P. M-. 25 cents. Mr. and Mrs. William Guenther, of Shubel, were in this city Wednesday. Fred Lindau, of Clarkes, was in Ore gon City Wednesday. Rev. and Mrs. Wettlaufer, of Clarkes were la this city Wednesday. P. Thomas, of Beaver Creek, was in this city on business Wednesday. Ely Stark, of Clarkes, was in this city Wednesday. Mr. Carl and Nathan CassidaV, of Carus, were in this city Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Laegan, of Beav er Creek, were in Oregon City Tues day. Mrs. Fred Steiner, of Beaver Creek, accompanied by his son, were in Ore gon City Tuesday. Mr. Peterson, of Maple Lane, was in this city Tuesday, having come here on business. Fred LLndsley, of Carus, one of the well known farmers of that section, was in this city Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Elliott, of Clairmont, were among the Oregon City visitors Wednesday. Philip Steiner, one of the well known farmers of Beaver Creek transacted business in Oregon City Wednesay. Miss Grace Duvall and brother, Dean of Carus, were Oregon City visitors Wednesday. Messrs. Pierce representing the Chaf fin & Harlow Company, of Portland were in this city on business Wednes day. Don Andrus, of Lebanon, Kansas, and I. Kimsey, of Lebanon, , are ia Oregon City. Otis Engle one of the well known residents of Molalla, was in this city Wednesday. Charlie Williams is in this city, and is arranging for the production of the "Chinese Revolution" to be put on at the Electric thi evening. N. P. Hult of Colton, and Oscar Hult, of Mulino, well known farmers of Clackamas county, were in this city on business Wednesday. Earl Latourette, who is the champion quarter back of the University of Ore gon, is in this city and is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chares D. Lat ourette. - Miss Myrtle Buchanan, Miss Cis Pratt, Miss Dolly Pratt, of this city, mm O O W r to and what a disappointment it u Ui..ad taut though you are youn. yo-r hair h ' tginning to turn gray that you are .urely going to "look old before your tii.e. Don't wait for any more g.-ny iiairj to come get a bottle of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH today. Start in now and use it reular!y. Those gray hairs will soon disappear be restored to their natural color and stay so. HAY'S HAIR HEALTH will keep you looking young. $1.0C and 50c at Drui ,Store or direct upon receipt of price and dealers name. Send 10c for trial bottle. Philo Hay Spec Co., Newark, N. J. . Huntley Bros. Co. Oregon City N were among those attending from this city the McKinnoa-Harding wedding solemnized Wednesday evening at the Presbyteria church, Portland. Mrs. Frank L. Whlddea and Mrs. Roy Walker, of Jamestown, North Da kota, have arrived in this city, and are guests of Mr. and Mrs. McClaae, of Mount Pleasant Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Berkman after visiting Mrs. Berkman's mother and sister, Mrs. C. O. T. Williams and Mrs. C. G. Miller, of this city, return ed to their home at McMinnville on Tuesday evening. Miss Gladys Robey, of Des Moines, Iowa, who has been in this city visit ing at the home of Mrs. Cecil Robey, left Wednesday for Hillsboro, where she will visit relatives before proceed ing to her home in Iowa. Martin Seiler, who has been at the St. Martin's Hot Springs, where he went -for the benefit of his health, as he has been a sufferer for several months from Inflammatory rheuma tism has returned. Edwin Richards, who was stricken with a paralytic stroke several months ago, and who was improving from the effects was agin stricken at his home on Twelfth and Main street the first of the week.. Jacob Schaft, one of the prominent residents of Carus, was in Oregon City Wednesday, having come here for the purpose of meeting his parents, broth ers and sisters, who have gone to Medfont, Wisconsin, and are to make their home in Clackamas County. David E. Lofgren, of Portland, who is a candidate for joint representative on the Republican ticket, was in this city on business Wednesday. While in this city Mr. Lofgren closed the land deal of the James estate, consist ing of 250 acres located at Colton, the purchaser being N. P. Hult, of Colton. The land is among the finest pieces in Clackamas County, and is exceptionally good for apple growing. Miss Elsie Schoenborn and Harry Schoenborn, of Carus, were in this city Wednesday, Mr. Schoenborn and his sister had an experiece Saturday night when they were attending the debate at Shubel which they do not care to again experience. They had driven their horse and buggy to Shu bel and leaving their large dog ia the buggy, which acted as a protection and at the close of the meeting start ed for place where their horse had been hitched, but to their dismay found the animal gone and also the dog and buggy. Their home was five miles away and this was made on foot. The horse had taken another route home, and it was thought that some one had driven it in that direction in tending to "get away'' with it. The dog seemed to act as though stunned but is now apparently all right. Preparations Made Against A General Coal Mine Strike if 'i s & ' A V" " . 1 s ' j I GOWN FOR SPRING BRIDE. For the spring bride a design is given today which lends itself, to an expensive development in, 'Say silk or crepe de chine or a plainer render ing ia a less expensive albatross or cashmere. The body of the gown has the appearance of being one with the tunic and opens over a vest and und erskirt of chiffon or mousseline de soie. Bands of heavier silk fold back from the front and with the sleeves are daintily embroidered in a color contrasting with the gown. The sleeves and bottom of the tunic whose lower edge slopes gradually backward and downward into a slight train are finished with a self-tone silk fringe. DIFFICULTIES. To conquer difficulties is to in crease our pleasures. When ad vancing toward any proposed object or when we see with satisfaction the completion of some favorite scheme the mind feels tranquil and con tented and looks forward with pleasure to the coming day. There's the R'u'o. "Why is it that you are so strongly opposed to extending to women the right to vote?" "My wife has become a suffragette.' "Well, what of It? Do you find that she neglects the children or that sbeJ isn't paying,' enough attention to the business of running the house?" "No; it's not that. She's become so blamed well informed ou public mat ters that I have to keep busy reading all the time in order to prevent her from finding out my 'ignorance concern ing such things." Judge. Fungus Slippers. Before the discovery of lucifer matches a large hoof shaped fungus growing on the trunks of trees was used throughout northern Europe for makiug amadou or tinder. The thick, brown, wood flesh of the same fun gus, cut into slices and beaten until It assumes the appearance of felt. Is used at the present day in some parts of Germany for- the manufacture of chest protectors, caps, purses, bed room slippers and various other articles. The Cause of Earthquakes. When there is an earthquake the Tibetans know just how it happened. There are evil spirits. "Some of them are gigantic brutes a' mile in height, with tiny mouths which prevent them swallowing even the smallest crumb of any kind of food. Naturally they suffer from hunger, and in their agon ized writhings they are the immediate cause of earthquakes." - f 'Tt J'j$t&iO? icM SCORED I '- ' ? tT , 4- t1 4 W Photos by American Press Association. ITIJ coal miners in Great Britain. France. Belgium and Germany leaving their work and in the first named country causing a gen eral suspension . of industry and those of the anthracite and bituminous regions of the United States threatening a strike the dealers and consumers of the eastern cities have naturally been concerned over the prospects of a coal famine in this country Id preparation for such an eventuality great stocks of coal have been accumulated in the storage yards near New York, and the Pennsylvania operators have been rushing the coal already mined and screened to the great distributing depots Prices have risen both for anthracite and bituminous coal, for, although the demands of the anthracite miners are more insistent than those of the bituminous workers, the latter have been considering the possibility of a walkout The member ship of the anthracite unions is estimated at 30,000, the total number of an thracite miners at about 170,000. The term "breaker" used in the caption ot the illustration above is applied to the machinery by which the coal is broken into sizes for its various uses and to the building containing the machinery ET IS sin Much more interest is showing in the mohair trade at this time, and var ious prices are ruling. The competi tion between buyers at southern Ore gon points is causing a stronger feel ing to prevail among holders in other' sections of the Willamette valley and dealers say that it is impossible to do business at this time. While as high as 36c a pound is being offered for "hair" ia southern Oregon, where there is a fight between a banking interest and a local mill, buyers from the east are now offering over 34c a pound, and say that this is all the market can stand at present. As the outside mills consume the bulk of the supplies, it is aparent that the price will be of their making after the competition and fight among local dear ers has subsided. The sales date for the Lebanon-So-daville pool has been set for April 25. It is not knowa how many fleeces will be offered there, as the list in the pool has not yet been completed. The only other pool that has thus far named its sales date is that at Eddy PARDEE IS NAMED CITY TREASURER (Continued from page 1) Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows-: DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis of 6 to 8 cents. Fruits, Vegetables. HIDES ( Buying) Green hides, 6 to 7c; salters 7 to 8c; dry hides 12c to 14c; sheep pelts, 25c to 75c each. . Hay, Grain,. Feed. EGGS Oregon ranch eggs, 18c to 20c. SACK VEGETABLES Carrots, HAY (Buying) Timothy, $12 to $15; clover, $9 to $16; oat hay, best, $9 to $10; mixed, $9 to $12; alfalfa, $15 to $16.50. OATS (Buying) Grany $33 to $34.50 wheat $20; oil meal, selling $35; Shady Brook dairy feed, 88c to 90c bushel. FEED ( Sellng) Shorts, $25; bran. $24; rolling barley, $39: process bar ley, $40. FLOUR $4.56 to $5.25. Butter, Poultry, Eags. POULTRY (Selling) Hens 13c to 14c spring, 12c to 13c, and roosters 8c. Butter (Buji,i Ordinary coun try butter, 20c to 30c; fancy dairy, $1.25 to $1.60 per sack; parsnips, $1.25 to $1.50; turnips, $1.25 to $1.50; beets, $1.50. , POTATOES Best buying $1.25 to $1.50 according to quality per hund red. ONIONS Oregon, $3 to' $3.50 per hundred; Australian, $2 per hundred. Livestock, Meats BEEF (Live Weight) Steers, 5 and 640; cows, 4c; bulls ZV2C. VEAL Calves 10c to 12c dressed, according to grade. MOHAIR 31c to 32c. MUTTTON Sheep 3c to 3V&C. lambs, 4c an t 5c. Baseball AT PORTLAND RECREATION PARK Cor. Vaughrv and Twenty-fourth Sts. SAN FRANCISCO VS. PORTLAND April 16, 17, 18, 19, 29, 21. Games Begin Weekdays at 3:30 p. m. Sunday at 2:30 p. m. LADIES DAY FRIDAY . " ' Boys Mnder 12 Free to Bleachers' Wednesday. be opened next week. It will cost be tween $3,000 and $4,000. The city has issued $20,000 bonds to defray the cost of building the water plant. Hoehler & Company, of Toledo, O., made the highest bid for the bonds, which was several hundreds dollars above par, and probably will be the purchasers. The First Thimble. There is a tradition that a Dutch ?!1 versmilh pondered over a certain no tion which he had cherished long :ihJ silently in the slow working senses which he deemed his brain n notion for a trinket, a fallal, for a d'.gnitit'd lady of Holland. It must lie a useful trinket, albeit a costly one. meet for so good 0 sempstress as Daute Alixe Van P.ensselae-r. When the notion took definite shape, the thing was quickly wrought in precious metal by fingers as def as the brain was slow, and the industrious housewife proudly wore not only her first thimble, but the first thimble possessed by any Dutch frau. Century. A Hindu Proverb. Help thy brother's l;-.ial across, rind, lu, thine own has re;t U.-) tiif shore!. RilKlll Proverb Wm. Hammond Lawyer f 1 i - r; v-r ' I 1 - J it. V- -f y - , To the voters of Justice District No.4 and especially the members of the Republican party, as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Justice of the Peace in your district I will allow no influence except Law and Justice to govern my decisions if I am nominated- and elected to serve the people in the said office. No man or body of men have any political strings tied to me and If I am elected I will have no political debts to pay. I will give my best efforts and use all my ability to give every one a square deal and to deal out justice without fear or favor. I will not en ter into any combination with either plaintiffs or defendants, but will give every person, regardless of their sta tion in life, their wealth or social in fluence a fair - and impartial trial. Justice District No. 4 Includes Ore gon City No's. 1, 2, 3 and 4; West Oregon City, (Willamette,. Canemah, Maple Lane, Abernethy aad Glad stone. ' - WM. HAMMOND. (Paid Adv.) lakes Sewing a Pleasure 'F you could eliminate the tiresome drudgery of pedaling-wouldn't sewing be a pleasure instead of a task? An electric sewing machine motor attached' to your machine does all the WORK, giving any speed de sired by the mere pressure of the foot on the treadle. Current can be drawn from any one of your electric light sockets-at any time-in any room-at a cost of but a half-cent an hour. Let us explain how simply the motor, is attached how easy the control-how safe the operation. Ask us today. Portland Railway, Light and Power Company MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH & ALDER STS. PHONES MAIN 6688 AND A. 6131. V To The Legal Voters of Clack amas Co. Ore. Gentlemen: ' A man must be judged by his own words and deeds, not by the words of his enemies or false friends. ' ' For weeks Christ Schuebel has been attacking me most shamefully. Some person or persons must be supplying him with large sums of money and his vocation surely does not keep him very busy since he finds so much time to roam over the whole county telling others how very, very good he himself is, and how despicable his opponents are. This I could not do. I have neither time nor money nor "brass" enough to attack and slander those who have always been friendly and - kind to me. Neither can I understand how a person can afford to ' spend hundreds of dollars for the small recompensation he can-honestly get if elected to the legislature. Mr. Schuebel tries to make his audience believe that the "interests" or certain parties have "bought" me. Be not deceived ! Not. I but he has been bought, if signs fail not, and because he is used to being bought and being sold, as everybody knows, he made an effort to buy me in my own house. This happened March 31, 1912. If I am elected, I shall be pleased, and I shall always remember my friends in thankfulness. If I am not elected, I shall harbor no bitter thoughts against anyone in my heart. !. I never was a politician, desire to be none, and never shall be one. If elected, I shall seek to promote the general welfare, as I have prom ised, in a business way and without aspect of person. The legal voters must decide whether they want honorable, ex perienced and successful men, chosen from their ranks, as their rep resentatives, or whether they want politicians and demagogues, who ' seek only their own honor and welfare, who trample on the rights and honor of their fellowmen, and who are the cause that our political life is as corrupt as it is. I declare and prove by my daily life that all attacks, which Mr. Schuebel is making on me, are malevolent lies, manufactured by him self and sown broadcast, contrary to his own better knowledge. His whole life long Gust Schnoeer was", and is, a laboring man. Every laboring man must know that Gust Schnoerr will always plead the cause and fight valiantly for the just rights and interests of the laborer. Look up his past record, and if elected watch his work and look for results in the legislature. ' GUST SCHNOERR. (Paid Adv.) Bigness of Texas. The state of Texas is bigger than France, bigger than the whole German empire, bigger than Austria-Hungary,' bigger' twice over than the United Kingdom. It Ui rich in uatural re sources, and it settled as thickly as lit tle Belgium It would have a popula tion' of 265.000.000. or nearly three times the present population of the en tire United States. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Philip and Karoline Streib to W. F. Lehman, lots 11, 12, block 5, Streib's First Addition to Milwaukie; fllOO. James K. "W. Willson to J. R. and Mary Pearl, lots 12, 13, block 2, Mor ris' subdivision to lots 6, 9, 29, 22, 23, First Addition to Jennings Lodg2; $1. C. G. and Eethel North to J. D. and C. E. Livesay, land in section 6, town ship 4 south, rang 1 east; $10. - William Kellendonk to Coyd A. Looney, 3 acres of Clackamas Coun ty; $105(C Bstacada State Bank to Asa R. Haw- i kins, .46 acre of Fraley's Subdivision;" $200. Emmoads L. and E. Maude Basford io Ella Gilbert, 80 acres of section8, 9, 16, 17, township 3 south, range 3 east; $10. . - How Rtrone are von mine in fho support of. your candidate in the En terprise automobile contest?