MORNING ENTERPRISE THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1912. 3 Clothes That Set the Pace If you are thinking of Clothes, come in and try on one of our famous Society Brand Clothes for young men, and men .who stay young. They cost no more than the or dinary ones. $15 to $30 Suspension Bridge Corner WITH PRICES ON THE SQUARE At the Army Maneuvers. "You understand these meneuvers are intended to imitate actual condi tions. Accordingly you ought to have withdrawn your force, instead of com pelling the prince to beat a retreat!" Le Rife. LOCAL BR! EPS Dr. van Brakle, osteopath, Masonic Building, Phone Main 399. The trail of the Lonesome Pine on sale at Huntley's for 50c. Mrs. Herman Fisher, of Cams, was in this city Wednesday. Mrs. W. A. Shewman, of Risley, was in this city visiting friends Wednesday. Miss Veta Edmiston, of Beav er Creek is in this city visiting her sister, Mrs. Oscar Minor. Miss Echo Spence, of Beaver Creek, is in this city, and is the guest of Miss Maybelle Mills. Girl of the Limberlost on sale at Huntley's for 50. Hundreds of other equally good books at same price. Herman Smith, of Carus, one of the well known farmers of that place, was. in this city on busi ness Wednesday. Mrs. John Roberston, of Seat tle Wash., who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Shewman, of Risley, has returned to her home. C. Spence, of Beaver Creek, one of the prominent farmers of Clackamas County, and who is on the committee for good roads, is in Portland on business; Miss Maria Pratt left Tuesday for Portland, where she will visit for a week, the guest of her brother, Forbes Pratt, and wife. Mrs. Ella Criteser, of Rock Isl and, Oregon, near New Era, who has been in this city visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs., W. S. Rid er, will return to her home to day. Mrs. E. E. Root, of Pennsylvan. ia, is visiting her granddaughter, Mrs. W. A. Shewman, of Risley, and also her daughter, Mrs. Geo. ge Watson, of Tionesta, Pa., who is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Shewman. Mrs. E. M. Waldron and young son, who have .been visiting at Po well's Butte, Eastern Oregon, have returned to Oregon City. They visited Mrs. T. B. Osburn and also Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Fost er. - - Mrs. Millie Trumbull, who will be in attendance at the 'Women's Club this afterroon, is chairman of the Child Labor Commisson, and also chaii-nan of the Legisla tive Committee Federation of Wo men's Clubs. It was the intention of the Art isans to have Dr. Olmstead, of Portland, to attend the meeting of the order Thursday evening when he was to deliver an address but owing to a previous engage ment Dr. Olmstead will not be ab le to attend. Miss Martha Rider, who has been visiting at Independence, has re turned to her home in this city, and was accompanied by Miss Lena Jones, Frank Ridgr and fam ily, and are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Rider. They came to this city hi an automo bile. Mrs. W. C. Green and sister, Mrs. Anna R. Williams returned from Seaside Monday evening aftpr snendinsr Sunday with their nnrAnts. Mr. and Mrs. George Boylan. Mrs. Williams' young son Allen, will remain at beasiae ior the summer with her grandpar ents. W. S. Rider, of this city, who accompanied his brother, 6. D. Rider of IndeDendence to Powell's Butte Eastern Oregon, where they have enjoyed hunting ana tisning Mr. Rider, of In dependence, proceeded on his way home. They had a most aeiignt. ful time. They visited relatives at Powell's Butte.' Mr nnrt Mrs. H. L. Young, of Portland, have moved to this city nnH will nccnnv the Hendry resi dence on Ninth and Washington streets during the summer, mr. Young has come to this city to tato tho mnanae-fiment of a depart ment of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company s nusi- nes s . Mrs. S. A. Chase, and daughter Mrs. Gilbert L. Hedges, and the latter's two small daughters, who at. Harvard. Idaho, where they have been spending the past two weeks visning wnu the former's son, Ivan Chase, who is the owner of a 200-acre ranch returned to their homes in Ore gon City Tuesday afternoon. While in Idaho they experienced a cyclone while attending a picnic and close to where they were pic nicking large trees were blown down and uprooted. Burr Johnson, one of the prom inent pioneers of Oregon, whose home has been for the past 40 years at Pendleton, Oregon, and who has been in this city visiting his son, G. F. Johnson, deputy county assessor, returned to .his home Tuesday. Mr. Johnson with his wife attended the Pioneer's reunion recently held in Portland Mr. Johnson came to Oregon across the plains with his parents in the year of 1844, and Mrs. Johnson in the year of 1847. The latter will remain in this city with her son and family for another week before returning to her home. i - a TTffY n a Mr me o A i3a f r. a' 3.' i'' mm WJ A SHI fit There are two dangerous kinds of stockings one that is patched and darned until it becomes a torture to walk on; the other that is made of yarn so tough and coarse that one might as well be walking on wire,. The public is no longer content to buy sox and stockings that will merely, wear well. Guaranteed hosiery must be comfort able and stylish, also. outwear their guarantee; they do not wear out the foot. Our customers tell us that fpe, are more comfortable than any hosiery they ever wore. The man who is on his feet a great, deal, as well as the man of fashion and leisure who prides himself onc always dressing as a gentleman, take equal pride in Vfigivfer&c&e, Treat your feet right. Buy them a box of ToFaideftfioae.. put on a pair of low shoes, and note before the day is over how many people compliment you on your hosiery. Adams' Big Department Store jg Get an Accident A rare chance offered by the Oregon City Hospital Co. In order to establish an Im provement Fund, a limited num ber of coupons will be on sale between now and July 1st. Holders of these coupons will beentitled, in case of accident, to all hospital services free of charge. ' . One dollar paid the first of each month will secure to cou pon holders all hospital care, doctor's fees . .dressings and medicines .without any addition al charge. Any person desiring to pur chase one of these Accident Coupons will place their name and address upon the list which will be at Huntley Bros." Drug Store and deposit - with them the payment for the first month. V. P. Tapp, of Wapinita, Ore gon, and formerly a resident of Cherryville spent several days here last week visiting friends. FOR THE MORNING SUIT A becoming tailored hat for morning wear is given as a mil linery suggestion today. This is of natural colored Milan straw with high conical crown and be comingly rolled brim and sets well down on the head. Around the crown is a strip of two inch ol ive green velvet ribbon, while on the right is a novelty aigrette . in green and white. These aigr ettes which are short and square and lie flat to the hat, have at tained a great popularity in the season's millinery. They are in tended for wear on the tailored hats, having a crisp, neat smart ness which is very fetching. Spiritualist Camp Meeting At New Era The New Era Spiritualist Camp meeting will hold its fortieth, ah naul session from July 6th to August 4th inclusive. Mr. and Mrs. A. Scott Bledsoe of Kansas City, Mo., will be the principal speakers and message bearers, other good mediums will be pres ent. Come and bring your tents and enjoy a season of recreation, social enjoyment and spiritual upliftment. To those who can not camp, come and spend a day with us, we have tents to rent or room and board at the hotel. For further information address L. L. Irvin, secretary, Barlow, Oregon. merely a conversation. - This is not a classic. On the other band, it is not a joke. It is one of those things about half way betweeo comic and pathetic that you don't know how- to classify. Let ns there fore call It an overheard conversation, which Indeed Is all It Is, anyhow. "She's a dandy little girl, all right, in spite o' her faults." "She is that Ain't she nice to ber parents?" "Sure why. she Jest dotes on her mother." "So they tell me. I hear that she even Interdoosed her mot her to some o' ber swell friends."- Cleveland Plain Dealer. " - The Island of Rhodes. Rhodes was the center of the culture and commerce of the Aegean in the days when the Aegean meant the heart of civilization and the island was the battleground of mighty armadas and formidable legions from the days of Alexander the Great to Mohammed. The Island is the most easterly of the Aegean group. It is about forty-five miles long by about twenty -two wide. The island has been famous for its beautiful climate from the earliest ages. Good Anyhow. Norman McLeod was once preaching In a district in Ayrshire, where the reading of a sermon Is regarded as the greatest fault of which the minister caD be guilty. When the congregation dispersed an old woman, overflowing with enthusiasm, addressed her neigh bor: "Did ye ever hear onythlng sae gran'? Wasna that a sermon?" All her expressions of admiration be ing met by a stolid glance, she shout ed: "Speak, woman! Wasna-that a sermon?" "He read it," Raid the other. To which she replied with indignant emphasis, "I wadna care if he had whustled It!" Chicago Record-Herald. London's' Water Mains. The water mains of LoDdon aggre gate 6,000 miles, twice the width of the Atlantic ocean. WEAKER FEELING SHOWN IN There is a weaker feeling all through the local potato market and prices are lower. Both old and new growth are showing the weakness, but in the old crop pressure is greatest. 'Sales of good old potatoes are now being made in limited lots generally around $1 1.10 per ceiital, but some poor to ordi nary offerings are going down to 85c. - Continued offering of old pota toes is show in trade and there is a noticeable decrease in the de mand daily. At the present lime the call is so limited that buyers are not inclined to purchase at any price from country interests. At this time there is more than a sufficient amount of stock to fill all the wants of the trade. Even the best California new stock is not being quoted above 2c a pound today. This is for south ern California stuff being made down to 1 -and one-half cents in many instances. Local new potatoes are coming forward in larger supply and there is quite a noticeable in crease in the quality. Sizes are better and in most instances are, equal, if not better, than that re ceived from the Sacramento sec tion. ' Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: . DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes oa basis of 6 to 8 cents. 1 Fruits, Vegetables. HIDES (Buying) Green hides, 7c to 8c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 cents to 14c; sheep pelts, 25c to 75c each. Hay, Grain, Feed. EGGS Oregon ranch eggs, 17c case count; 19c candeled. HAT (Buying) Timothy, $12 to $15! clover, $8 to $9; oat hay, best, $10 to $11; mixed, $9 to $11; alfalfa, $15 to $16.50. OATS (Buying) $35.00 to $36.50 wheat 80c bu.; oil meal, selling $36.50 Shady Brook dairy feed, $1.30 per 100 pounds. . FEED (Selling) Shorts, $30; bran $26; process barley, $41.50 per ton. FLOUR $4.60 to $5.50. POTATOES Best buying 85c to 95c according to quality per hund red. Butter, Poultry. Eags. POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c to 13c; spring, 17c to 20c, and roosters 8c. Stags 11c. . Butter (Buyfc3 Ordinary coun try butter, 20c to 25c; fancy dairy, 0c roll. Livestock, Meats BEEF (Live Weight) Steers, 5 and 6M.c; cows, 4c; bulls 3c. MTJTTTON Sheep 3c to 3Ve. VEAlr Calves 10c to 12c dressed, according to grade. MOHAIR 33c to 35c MILL HOME BUILDING PLAN IS GIVEN PRAISE (Oregon Journal) The announced plans of the Willamette Pulp & Paper, com pany at Oregon City for their workpeople near the mills at Ore gon City deserves study. On the purchased tract of fifty six acres when divided into quar ter acre lots, about 200 homes can be established. As the com- ft A COOL KITCHEN H m 2 o tn c en With -a rear live breeze blowing away the stif ling sultry air and cool ing the whole room that's YOUR kitchen, and all others, too, Qiat have an electric fah i Portland Railway, Light and Power Company Call ot Electric Store MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH & ALDER STS. PHONES MAIN 6688 AND A. 6131 pany intends erecting houses on these lots and selling them to the work people for cost prices, pay able by monthly payments grad uated on a rental basis, a very de sirable variation is seen from the more common plan of a corpora tion's renting to its employes houses it has built, retaining the ownership in its own hands. On either plan the physical ad vantages of space to live and breathe for the worker and his family can be attained, at probab ly not a widely different cost to him. But the Oregon City quar ter acre is to become the worker's own. It is his own house that he improves. When he cleans up and plants and cultivates his gar den, that which he grows will have the special savor of owner ship, which, once tasted, will not be forgotten. Then will come in, too, the spirit of healthy rivalry, in hsva ttin rTn4;nn i. il. neatest and best kept garden. The company 'is said to have 750 employes, or thereabouts. Those who establish homes- on the hillside west of the Willam ette river will have surroundings of beauty hard to be excelled. Sets With Yott Subscriptions THE ENTERPRISE Has a limited number of fine, 31-piece, gold trimmed dinner sets that are just what you want. Call or 'phone our office and let us explain our offer.