Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, March 05, 1913, Image 3

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1913.
Got Off Easy.
VETERANS NARC
Wife: No .2
SPRING NECKWEAR.
Caller How much for a marriage li
cense? Town Clerk One dollar.
Culler I've only got 50 cents.
Town Clerk You're lucky. Phila
delphia Bulletin.
LOCAL BRIEFS
John Jennings has returned to this
city after a month spent in San Diego
and Los Angeles. While in San Diego
he was the guest of his brother
Charles, who formerly lived in this I
the damage done by the recent freeze
in California is fully as bad as report
ed and that millions of dollars worth
or oranges and lemons were destroy
ed. He gays that San Diego is grow
ing rapidly and making great prepa
rations for . their fair. Los Angeles,
he now believes is a larger city than
San Francisco. Mr. Jennings admir
ed the Southern California roads, but
says- that he would not give Oregon
. for California and would not like to
live in that state.
Charles Legler, of the Oregon Man
ufacturing Company, will leave this
cTty Thursday for an extended trip
through California, Arizona, New Mex
ico and Texas, wliere he will go in
the interest of his company. He
expects to be absent from this city
about two months.
J. M. Taylor, of Portland, was in
this city Tuesday attending the meet
ing of the Grand Army. Mr. Taylor,
who is the father of Mrs. George I
Broughton, was for many years a res
ident of this city.
Mr. Ponltryman: When you see
your chickens moping, wheezing, gwol
lenheaded and sneezing, we recom
mend Conkey's Roup Remedy. Guar
anteed by Oregon Commission Co.
Henry Gilbert has returned to this
city from San Francisco, after at
tending the funeral of his brother,
who died in that city some time ago.
Peter Smith, of Canemah, is very
ill at his home of stenosous heart.
He was low all day Tuesday and was
little improved in the evening.
Ml, and Mrs. Jack Reddaway and
Mr. C. Derr, of Portland, were the
guests of Mrs. Eva Adams of this
city.
iss Sue Vaushan. of Hood River.
has been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
T MitRS will rprnrn fn nor Iinmo
today.
M. J. Lee, of Canby, was an Ore
gon City visitor Tuesday. He attend
ed the weekly luncheon of the Live
Wires.
George Gregory and daughter, Le-
ona, of Molalla, are in this city attend
ing to business and visiting friends.
Mr. and Mrs. James Pfeffer, of San
Francisco, who visited James McNeil,
have returned to their home.
Henry Price, of Portland, was in
this city Tuesday visiting his broth
er, Albert Price.
H. Eabler, of Logan, was in Oreeon
City Monday 'and Tuesday attendine
to business.
Arnold Thomas, of Portland, was
a business visitor in this city Tues-
flay.
A. Bakke, of Portland, was in this
city Monday attending to business.
16-inch dry wood for sale. O. .T.
Hood, 14th and Main Sts.
Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason
ic Building, phone Main 399.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Wallace Ball and wife to Charles
L. Hunter, land section 34. tnwnshin
1 south, range 4 east; $10.
Serah A. Muratta and husband to
Savage & Pennell Furniture Company
lots 7 and 8, block 34, Gladstone;
$750.
Otis W. Townsend to Otto Rnrc
and Irving Lund, sections 32 and 33,
townsiiip 4 south, range 1 east $2,500.
iarcissa v. Hampton and husband
to G. B. Trotter, lnnrl section a
township 3 south, range 3 east; $1,500.
uiacitamas ADstract Company to
Fred Schoonert. land sertinn 1 town
ship 2 south, range 2 east; $3,500.
j. o. ivicivenney ana wite to Mary
A. Sayler and husband, section 12,
township 3 south, range 1 east; $2,500.
A. E. Latourette and D. Clinton
Latourette, trustees, to A. J. -Anderson
tracts 12 and 13, Winston Tracts;
$10.
James P. Kellv nnH wife lots 1 91
22, 23 and 24, block 4, Nob Hill; $l!
THORPE HAS AN ORIGMAL
IDEA OF FUN.
Jim Thorpe, the Indian, now
u member t tile (Jiants, is a
grat bid. but lias original and
aboriginal ideas, says Expert W.
A. Phi'lan. A correspondent
who went to the Olympic games
says that Thorpe once invited
him out rrauj evening, but nev
er got jh: chance again. "We
were in": 'aria." says he. "and a
lot of athletes and scribes were
lolling in the hotel when Thorpe
came in and asked us to go with
hiin. Said he had found a place
where we could have more fun
than any otber place he ever
saw. So we trotted along, and
Thorpe led us to n joint under
the shadow of Montmartre. a
regular bat cave, full of hard
! looking Apaches. 'Where's the
j fun here. Jim?' I queried. Thorpe
4 grinned a foot wide. "Big lots
fun.' said he. 'Here last night
Had to lick seven Frenchmen.
Maybe so we get fine fight to
night All we need do just go
in, act noisy, have elegant fight
: Come along!' " . ,
By M. QUAD
Copyright. 1012, by Associated, Lit
erary Press:
"No; 1 baiiu't heard about Joe Tav
lor's cow getting mired in the huckle- i
berry swamp," replied Cncle Abnei
Shorts as some one in the crowd at
the postoflice put the question, "but
I've beard sadder news that that today-yes,
a good deal sadder. Js it
Hint any. -one we all know is dead?
.No, but perhaps it was better for him
if lie was dead. I don't want to keep
you in suspense, and 1 will therefore
say that George Green got married to
day for the .swond time.
"I hain't looking for anybody to be
shocked dead at the news. It has jest
set me to thinking and aroused a heap
of recollections. You all know that 1
lost my wife three years ago,. and aft
er a year 1 married again and am now
living with No. 2. I reckon it's also
purty well known that No. 2 bosses
the roost. '
"There was folks in this village, gen
tlemen, who said that I'd grieve my
self to death over my loss, anu there
were others who said I'd be snooping
around after No. 2 within a year. As I
for me, I felt that I was wasting
away and was powerfully surprised
one day to find myself eating heartily
ot a boiled dinner. From that time I
began to pick up, but for months after
ward 1 hud no more thoughts of mar
rying ag'in than Lemuel Goodheart has
of puttiug his foot ag'in a hot stove.
It seemed to me that the man who lost
such an augel of a wife as 1 had de
served to be shot for thinking of mar
rying ag'in.
"Jest when the idea hit me that I'd
better look arounS a little for another
woman I can't say. I think it was after
I'd cooked my own meals, made my
own bed, sewed on my own buttons
and washed my own shirts for seven
or eight months. Then the feeling
stole over uie that there was room in
the house for another. It sorter skeer
ed me at first, but I'm saying that it's
a feeling you can get used to in a day
or two. . As soon as 1 began to won
der if I really ought to marry ag'in I
found myself advancing a dozen rea
sons why 1 should.
"Well, it hain't no secret that 1 look
ed around and found the Widder Glenn.
She might have been looking around
at the same time, but I'm not going to
say that siich is the case. At first it
was a question with me whether a
widower could love for the second
time. Within a week after I had hit
the widder's trail that question was
settled in the atlirmative. 1 found my
self a heap more in love than on the
first occasion. All of you was kind
enough to say that 1-made a durned
tool of myself, and, though 1 couldn't
see it then. I'm admitting most of it
now.
"Gentlemen, 1 was two long months
hesitating over asking the widder to
lie mine, and yet the rest of you was
saying that sl-ed jump at the chance.
Mebbe you V'is right. 1 know that
when 1 finally -Jiauaged to get up the
courage I hiul"v t hardly got my mouth
open before su; says yes.
"And. now cvines the real p'int. I'd
been boss of the house, same as all of
you are boss of yours. Wasn't it nat
eral for me to seep right on bossing?
Had the thought of surrendering the
reins of gove1 iwieut occurred to me?
Is a man and a husband to be treated
like a child o a slave? At the first
go-off ber bossing was a novelty, and
1 rather liked it and encouraged it. 1
was still in lo'"e, you see. After about
a month the novelty wore off, and 1
began to assirt myself. I took the
bossing businiss into my own hands.
What follere"? Why, that wife got
right up on Tier hind legs and made
the air blue 1-tr forty rods around. She
got out ten words to my one. When
1 took her by the ear to sit her down
and hush her up she lit into my hair
and pulled it 70t by handfuls.
"Gentlemen, who bosses the roost?
Mrs. Shorts:
"Who handles the cash? Mrs. Shorts!
"Who tells me when I can go and
when I shall come? Mrs. Shorts!
"Who gives me liberty to draw my
breath? Mrs. Shorts!
"I'm only telling you what you all
know and what is the gossip of the
town. She made up her mind "when
she became No. 2 that she'd be the
boss, and she's carried it out. That's
the way with all No. 2's. No. 1 knuck
les down and lets you do the bossing
and thinks it's all right, but No. 2 is
no such chicken. She intended to get
the whip hand when she married you.
and she's going to keep it or raise such
a row that you'll wish you was in
your grave.
"Understand, gentlemen," that I'm
saving nothins agin Mrs. Shorts.
! Vtm'c filior'ii oUlr Ci T f'A lint ciifll
pickled peaches as she does put up!
And apple sass--it makes yon grin
from your neck to your heels! Just
one of the nicest women in the eoun
iry. and I hope that she'll outlive me
by twenty years, but I have had to use
! her as an illustration. She married
nie to be boss, and she is boss, same
as all the other No. 2's. I hain't ex
actly saying that the man who loses
No. 1 shouldn't look for a No. 2, but
I'm saying that if he does he ought
to know what's coming to him and
what he'll be sure to get. I've fit agin
it and fit and fit but it's no go. To
night she sends me down here after a
gallon of ile and snys I can stay just
forty minutes. Them forty is so
mighty nigh up that I've got to get a
hump on me and run all the way
home, and even then Mn. Shorts may
be standing there Tith a club to hit
me when I jump through the gate."
Julius Caesar,
The almost unanimous verdict of an
cient and modern times is to the effect
that Julius Caesar was what Shake
speare calls him, "The foremost man of
all this world." Never before or since
has any one exhibited in so high a de
gree all the qualities of a born ruler oi
men. And never had any man a grand
er role to play. To preside over the
most important crisis in the history of
the most important branch of the hu
roan race was a task that none but the
greatest of men could successfully per
form. Caesar, swept one obstacle after
another aside and stood at last where
h; meant to stand. New York American.
TO OLD WARMS
QUARTERLY PENSION DAY IS
OBSERVED BY GRIZZLED
WARRIORS
RELIEF CORPS SERVES FINE DINNER
Past Commander Hu1! Calls Assem
blage to Order and Addresses
are Made, by Veter
ans Tuesday being the regular quarter
ly pension day, a large gathering of
the veterans of the civil war from all
parts of the county met at Willamette
Hall, where they were entertained by
the Women's Relief Corps. . Shortly
before noon Post Commander Hull
called the assemblage to order
and old war songs were sung,
old war music was renderei
by the flfers and drummers, and ad
dresses were made by visiting vet
erans. Among the veterans present were:
C. A. Williams, Ninti Vermont Infan
try, Adjutant General; H. L. Hull,
Commander, 57 Pennsylvania Infan
try; H. S. Clyde, Thirteenth U. S.
Infantry; Junior Department Com
mander G. A. R.; John Kelly, Fourth
United States Infantry; J. G. Butler,
Forty-Ninth Wisconsin Infantry; Dan
Casey, Sixth Massachusetts Infantry;
J. Dorsums, Twenty-Seventh New
Jersey Infantry; J. F. Nelson, Third
Wisconsin Cavalry; Patrick Fallon,
First Nek York Engineers; C. A.
Stockwell, Eighty-Third Illinois In
fantry; T Crowley, First Oregon In
fantry; J. C. Paddock, Twenty-First
Missouri Infanrtry; G. H. Webster,
Sixty-Fourth Illinois Infantry; J. J.
Mallatt, Twelfth Missouri Cavalry;'
Edwin Scruton, Thirty-Fifth Iowa In
fantry; David Sullivan, Eighteenth
Ohio Infantry; J. R. Flowers, Twenty
Sixth Kentucky Infantry; T. M. Kel
logg, First Wisconsin Cavalry; John
Baldwin. Twenty-Third Missouri In
fantry; G. W. Doty, U. S. N.; Richard
Murphy, First Indiana Cavalry; J. C.
Sawyer, Sixteenth Vermont Infantry;
Joe Sewell, Ninety-Fifth Illinois In
fantry; L. R. Andrew, Second Illionis
Artillery; Dan Mallory, Sixth United
States Cavalry; Phil Burke, Sixty
Third Pennsylvania Infantry; D. A.
James, First Wisconsin Cavalry; J.
A. Roman, First Pennsvlvania Rifles;
F. T. Webber, U. S. N. ; D. J. , Hors
man, Fourth Iowa Infantry; Frank
Moore, Eighth . Minnesota Infantry;
Chris Lessor, Eleventh Ohio Infan
try; M. J, Shea, Second California
Cavalry: J. Gorbett. Fifty-Fourth In
diana Infantry; W. W. Freeman,
Eleventh Illinois Infantry; R. F. Ed
dy, Third Iowa Infantry; G. A. Hard
ing, First Oregon Infantry; Faxon
Hawford, First Minnesota Infantry;
Dan McSweeney, Fifth U. S. Infan
try; J. Dobbins, Fifteenth Illinois In
fantry; C. E. Enos Cahill, Eightieth
Ohio Infantry; A. C. Getz, Seventy
Ninth Pennsvlvania Infantry; Patrick
Morris, 144th N. Y. Infantry; J. S.
Vaughn.. Fourteenth Indiana Infantry;
J." F. O'Donnell, Wilson's Zouaves;
H. Pendergast, Thirty-Seventh Indi
ana Infantry; A. J. Hobble. Eleventh
Illinois Cavalry; G. Wells, Thir
teenth "Wisconsin Infantry; John
Crawford, First Indiana Cavalry; O.
W. O'Neill, U. S.-M. C; J. A. Tufts,
Fourteenth Wisconsin Infantry; Jar
rett, First Nevada Cavalry; Theodore
Huerth, Ninth Wisconsin Infantry;
S. Gray, 123rd Indiana Infantry; Abe
Axtell, 101st New York Infantry; J.
T. McHolland, Twenty-Seventh Indi
ana Infantry; Edward Johnson Eighty
Eighth New York Infantry; Tim
Duffy, U. S. M. C.
Among the women entertaining
the veterans were Mesdames Amelia
Haddocks, Pauline Schwartz, Emma
Roman, G. W. Doty, Frank Moore,
Clara Moore, Julia Tingle, G. W. Ran
dall, Axtell, Clyde, Scruton, Kellogg,
E. D. James, E. B. Grant, A. L. Hick
man, A. L. Farr, A. J. Hobble, William
Paetz, Sewell, S. C. Linn, J. Doremus,
and Miss Nellie M. Alldredge.
John Kelly, E. B. Grant; T. M. Kel
logg, Abe Axtell, J. S. Vaughan, W.
H. Brooks, John Baldwin, J. T. Hors
man, C. A. Ctockwell, W. H. McLel
lan, J. T. Butler and J. J. McHolland,
drummers and fifers, made the air
resound with old war tunes which
they played on the battlefields, some
of the instruments being the ones to
the tunes of which the boys marched
when they were young and each
handled his musical instrument as
lively as he did in his boyhood days.
P. G. Wells was the efficient drum
major.
HR. AND MRS. BiCKLE
HAVE FAREWELL PARTY
At the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Warnoek of Mount Pleasant, a
farewell party in honor of Mr. and
Mrs. George Bickle,, who are leaving
the county was held Friday. The
evening was enjoyably spent singing
songs and playing games. Musical
selections were rendered with, great
success by Miss Leona Kellogg, Miss
Hester Dannanman and Miss Lucille
Kellogg. Delicious refreshments
were served and the party broke up
with wishes for future success and
happiness to Mr. and Mrs. Bickle.
Among those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Bickle, Ml:, and Mrs. Frank
Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Riopele, Mr.
and Mrs. T. C. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. E. T.
Portouw, Mir. and Mrs. Edward Mc
Lean, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. McLean,
Mrs. A. E. King, Misses Hester Dan
nanman, Lucille Kellogg, Leona Kel
logg, Isabel Partouw, Messrs. David
Thomas, James Dananman, "Wither
Portouw, Arthur King and Ralph W
Niles.
Waiting.
A Junior officer on a warship was
dressing to go ashore and sent for his
attendant, u newly recruited negro boy
"Sain,-' said the officer, "give my
compliments to the executive office!
and tell him I desire permission to gc
ashore" which is the' formality. '
"Yes, suh." said the boy. who stood
at attention and did not leave.
"Well." said the officer sharply, "why
don't you go?"
.'Why, suh," replied the boy, "I ain't
neerd no compliments yit!" Saturdaj
Evening Post
Medici" Collar of
Black Chiffon.
"" "5
WHAT THE MODISH GIEL WUiL WEAB.
Medici collars are going to be very
modish this spring, and the collar il
lustrated is a chic example of this
style. The airy effect of the black
chiffon collar gives it a dainty effect
against the bared white throat "
The collar Is cleverly wired and, at
tached to a turned down sailor collai
of the chiffon edged with plaited net
Wed at Thirty, Says Mrs. Belmont.
When Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont was
asked recently whether she really had
said that girls would be better off if
they did not marry before they were
twenty-five she answered without a
moment's hesitation:
"If they took my advice they would
wait until they were even older than
that. And I do not mean that counsel
for working girls only. I believe that
if women did not marry under thirty
there would be fewer divorces' than
there are now.
"Men are not at all-the fairy princes
that young girls think them. And girls
are by no means the angels men imag
ine them to be until they learn better.
If both men and women married later
they would know themselves and each
other far better than they do as mere
girls and boys, and there "would be
fewer tragic disenchantments." :
Rubber Tips For Hatpins.
Under a new law which went Into
effect recently street car conductors
throughout Sweden are provided with
rubber tips by the government which
they shall furnish to women passen
gers not complying with the new law
against unprotected hatpins.
To wear hatpins with exposed points
is now a misdemeanor in Sweden, and
women without the tips will be com
pelled to obtain them from the street
car men at a cost of 1 cent each.
This Veil Cannot Hurt Eyes.
In the exact center of this thickly
covered lace veil is a medallion of
s& f
A- : ' f I
I
Ipl
tm
THE NEW SCROLL PATTEKK.
plain, sheer net, in which the face is
framed as In a window. This veil is in
a new scroll pattern very fashionable
just now.
KITCHENETTES.
Paste an envelope in your cookbook
for recipes that you cut from papers
and magazines.
When making desserts allow one
heaping tablespoonful of granulated
sugar to each egg and a half pint of
milk.
Always in cooking vegetables start
them in boiling water. A teaspoouful
of salt to each two quarts of water is
the allowance.
For an appetizing salad mince a cou
ple of green peppers, mix them with
three tablespoonfuls of chopped chives
and serve on white lettuce leaves with
French dressing.
Shredded retT cabbage and white cel
ery cut fine mnke a very popular salad.
Sprinkle the top of the salad with a
tablespoonful of minced onion and
dress with oil and vinegar.
When cooking ketchup, jelly, etc., try
putting a few marbles in the kettle to
prevent burning. The heat will keep
the marbles rolling and thus prevent
the ketchup, etc., from sticking to the
kettle.
When roasting a fowl in a gas stove
put three tablespoonfuls of water into
the meat tin at the bottom of the stove.
You will find the steam wiii make the
bird teuder and obviate the necessity
for continually basting it.
Sufficient Unto Herself.
This is from a reader who knows the
little girl.
The litiie girl's mother was down
stairs frying doughnuts, and the littlt
girl, aged five, was playing near. The
grandmother, who was upstairs, called
down. "Do you need any help?"
The mother, busy with the fork in
hand over the sizzling receptacle, fear
ing the grandmother could not hear hei
reply, said to the little girl, "Go to the
stairs and say. 'I'm sufficient unto my
self.'" ....
So the little girl ran to the stairs and
called up, "Gran'ma, mother says she's
fishin' .. 'em out herself!" Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
fl
More -light 3t Same Cost
The
The famous Mazda Light will give you lasting
satisfaction in every way. It throws a clear, strong,
white light, the nearest imitation to sunlight it has
been possible to get. - As superior to the old carbon
light as they were to the candle of our - grandfathers.
Note to exceptional prices below.
Watt Candle Power ' Price, Clear Price' frosted
Base
15 12 35c 40c
20. - 16 . 35c 40c
25 20 35c 40c
40 " . 32 40c 4lc
60 50 55c 60c
100 5 80 80c 85c
150 120- $1.25 $1.35
250 . 200 $1.90 $1.60 Special
We carry
in the electrical
Portland Railway, Light & Power Company
Beaver Building, Main Street
IMPROVEMENT SHOWN
Liberal contracting movement is
shown in the hop trade at Willam
ette Valley points. Fifteen cents a
pound is being freely offered for con
tracts on the coming Oregon crop.
The sales of the contracts during the
last 10 days have been unusually fav
orable. At the present time there is prac
tically nothing pressing in the spot
hop trade. This is expected and the
belief of the trade is that little bus
iness will cloL3 until around the mid
dle of the month, similar to that
shown last month. Then buying was
principally between dealers with only
a sprinkling of sales by growers.
Dealers' holdings -at this time are
nominal, therefore, if there is any
movement in spots in the immediate
future, they must be secured from the
producers. The latter are generally
firm in their views and are holding
for firmer prices, which dealers are
at present unable to offer.
Conditions in the hop market
throughout the world are rather quiet
at this time owing to the sr-allness
of holdings and the tight prices that
holders are asking. This has been
the cheapest hop market in the world
and for that reason alone the bulk of
the business- has passed in this ter
ritory recently. Now with the ideas
of Oregon holders uniform with tfiose
of other sections it is quite possible
that the business will be split up
somewhat and make it appear as if
there was only a nominal amount of
trade passing.
Prevailing Oregon City prices are as
follows:
HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7e,
to 8c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each!
FEED (Selling) Shorts $25; bran
$24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton.
FLOUR $4.50 to $5.
HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and
$9; oai hay best $11 and $12; mix
ed $10 to $11; selling alfalfa $13.50
to $17.00; Idaho and Eastern Oregon
timothy selling $19.50 to $23.00.
OATS $24.00 to $26.50; wheat 85;
oil meal selling $40.00; Shay Brook
dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds.
Whole corn $28.
Livestock, Meats.
BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and
8c; cows 6 and 7 c, bulls 4 to 6c.
MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; lambs
6 to 6 l-2c.
PORK 9 1-2 and 10c.
VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed,
according to grade.
WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 15c lb.
POULTRY (Buying) Hens 12 1-2
to 13 l-2c; stags slow at 10; old roos
7c; broilers 17c-
Frults
APPLES 50c and $1.
DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prunes
on basis 6 to 8 cents.
VEGETABLES
ONIONS $1.00 sack.
POTATOES About 35c to 40c f.
o. b. shipping points, per hundred,
with no Eales at going quotations.
Butter, Eggs.
BUTTER (I lying), Ordinary coun
try butter 25c and 30c; fancy cream
ery 75c to 85c roll. .
EGGS Oregon ranch , case count
15c; Oregon ranch candled 16.
Boost your -city by boosting yonr
daily . paper. The Enterprise should
be in every home.
Same Light at Less
in stock at Portland prices everything
-line to lighten labor in the household
,'PLAN YOUR
The
Sunshine
via
A THOROUGHLY
fc)SUN S ET I
I I06DEN&3HASTA j I
I V ROUTES f
YOU CAN SEE IN CALIFORNIA: JTJ '
Attractive seaside resorts, famous hotels, hot springs and out
door sports. At Pasadena the world famed ostrich farms and
magnificient homes. At San Bernadina and Riverside the Or
ange Groves. At Catalina, the wonderful submarine gardens,
and at various oth'er points attraction's that delight the eye and
inform the mind.
LOW ONE WAY OR ROUND TRIP FARES:
Round trip tickets to Los Angeles on sale daily with long re
turn limit and stop-overs at will. If you wish to go still fur
ther south or east, tickets via all rail, or rail and steamer
through New Orleans can be secured at reasonable rates.
Further particulars on application to any Agent. Ask for descrip
tive literature on California, or "Wayside Notes," describing trip San
Francisco to New Orleans.
JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon.
For all eye troubles such as Granulated Lids, Sore Eyes, Weal;
Eyes, Dimness of Vision, Tired Eyes, e.d- 25 "cents a tube. Money
back plan. "Good or nothing but "the eyes." .
FOR SALE BY THE
The rougher whiskey tastcsthe stronger it is.
The stronger it is the 'more harm it will do.
But then you don't have to drink it rough, strong
or high-proof.
There's Cyrus Noljle, pure, old palatable
bottled at drinking strength.
Costs no more than any other whiskey.
W. J. Van Schuyer & Co., Genera 1 Agents, Portland, Oregon
Cost
TRIP THROUGH
Land of
2;
the
ENJOYABLE ROUTE
JONES DRUG COMPANY