M-3 MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1913 USCH O O .1 What W One Large P i I f e go ror uur customers Take yoti pencil and mark it down we will give you free of charge with every 50 cent purchase icf urc Free along all the babies and harvest the to decorate your rooms. Hand painted pictures in rich gilt frame, regular $10.00 will go for - - $4.95 Beautiful framed pictures regular $2.00 value will go tor - - - - - - 95c We will give Trading Stamps on all your purchases. But only one picture to one person. So bring beautiful pictures if you wish We willl sell our celebrated well known Adrian fence 40 inchs high for 33c per rod There will be on sale 50 beveled edge mir rors, fancy frames, size 22 x 32 inches in cluding frame, the regular price is $5.50 but during Booster Day they will go for $2.90 Low Priced and Dependable' '3Se Fully reinforced and strongly erected. Nothing on the market can compare with it at the price. j ! Best cold rolled polished sheet steel; riveted with cone head rivets, reinforced at every part; main top, covers and centers of selected pig iron; covers have Boston rim rings, preventing cracking; fire box is sectional and heavy to withstand all rea sonable uses, duplex grates burn wcod or coal; high 'closet with balance door, nickel plate drop stand, nickel brackets, edges, panel, draft check, etc.; reser-. oir of heavy cast i ron, tank en ameled white, oven door nickel trimmed and provided with bal ance spring; asbestos lined throughout, oven braced with heavy guage angle irons; Oven 16x18 6 lids. 82G50 Oven 14x186 lids cast reservoir, price 27-50 Above prices are cash only; but we will take your old stove as part GRANITE WARE Will pay for one good sized, handl ed Aetna Granite Sauce Pans. 'J EGGS ARE QUOTED AT PRICES TO SUIT 'Get all you can for 3rour eggs" seems to be the cry of poultrymen at present, and as a result the egg market is in general disorder. Best eggs are quoted from 19y2 to .25 cents a dozen, and are being bought at . all prices. The w holesale market is altogether upset, and the only prices that, are at all staple are on or ders for export shipment. There is a plentiful supply of egs, and a de sire to unload this while the selling is good is responsible for the situa tion. , Increased offerings of chicken are lowering the market, though local prices in Oregon City remain high. Local raiders are finding a better mar ket for their stock in Portland. Apples have developed a scarcity, and good prices are to be had either at retail or wholesale for .good var ieties. Large sizes are selling better than .small fruit. 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, ac ording to grade. WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 15c It). POULTRY (buying) Hens 12, 13 to 14c. Stags slow at 10c; old roos ters Sc; broilers 19c. Fruits 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 sales at going quotations. Butter, Eggs. BUTTER (I tying), Ordinary coun try but.tor 25c and 30c; iancy cream ery 75c t'o 85c roll. EGGS Oregon ranch case count 18c; Oregon ranch candled 18c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7c to Sc: sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. MOHAIR 32c. WOOL 18 to 20 c. FEED (Selling Shorts $26; bran $24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to S3. OATS $22.00 to $27.00; wheat 93; oil meal selling $38.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Whole corn $30.00. HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and $9; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix ed $9 to $11; valley timothy $12 to $13; selling alfalfa $13.50 to $17; Ida ho and Eastern Oregon timothy sell $14; selling alfalfa $13.50 to $17; Ida ing $19.50 to $23. A fine dinner will be served by the Women Relief Corp, in Willamette Hall, Friday and Saturday. Sweet Peas. The original ancestors of the sweet pea came from Sicily and Ceylon, and the first giiiilencr on record as sending the soed t" other growers whs ;in Ital ian monk. F.-itlu-r l'mmiscufc Cupani. v. bo sent seed to Cntrlniirt in HiftO The Ladies of the Eastern Star will serve a cafateria dinner in the ban quet room of the Masonic Hall, Fri day and Saturday from 11 A. M., an prices 10 cents and up. FORUM OFTHE PEOPLE CLACKAMAS COUNTY TO LOOSE MILLION DOLLARS MULINO, Ore., April 20, 1913. (To the Editor, ) Sir: A famous financier once said he regarded the state of Oregon as his private prop erty. That man was the lata E. H. Harriman, and well indeed, does the Old residents know how tru was his boast All the people who have had to Bhlp freight over the Southern Pacific railroad (a Harriman proper ty) know that the policy of the great corporation has literally crushed the development of the state of Oregon. Why has the state of Washington, with net as good resources, got twice the population that Orsrrr-n has? I say, that ev?ry well informed railroad shipper will tell . you that it is be cause Washington has Hill railroads, r.nd because Oregon (until quite re cently) has had Harriman railroads. I will say, in writing this series of arti cles to the press, I voice the senti ments of hundreds of citizens of Clackamas county in -regard to the railroad situation in this section. I and a number of others, believe the mass of the people do not realize the extreme seriousness of the railroad situation, or the tremendous loss that will accrue to the prosperity of Clack amas county if the Southern Pacific railroad suceeds in preventing the building of the C ackamas Southern railroad, which they are making the greatest possible effort to do. With no intentions of bui ding a road to Molalla from Canby, the Harriman people have for more than a ye"ar past, been making the flumsiest kind of a bluff at building a railroad be tween these two points. During the past winter the Clackamas Southern R. R. has spent two dollars on rail road construction t6 one that has been spent on the Canby-Molalla road. But about March first, last, a we!.l known Canby man who has been booming the road from Canby made a trip over the Clackamas Southern railroad and evidently concluded that the Clackamas Southern could not be killed, as they were laying about 800 feet of track daily. In less than one week's time a grade crew was put on. between Molalla and Liberal, and they are now getting right-of-way south to ward the Teazel Creek country. Let it be known to everybody that while the official name of this road is the Portland, Eugene & Eastern, it has vary propery been nicknamed "the spite road." I shall now go on to prove that P., E..& E. will not only not benefit Molalla country, but will be a serious hinderance to its prosper ity. I shall show that this railroad will injure not only all of the Molalla valley, but Mackasburg and Canfiy as well. The first great reason is be cause of the policy of the Southern Pacific to charge all the traffic will bear on freight rates. They have a department whose business it is to find out about every article that is shipped. What is the lowest price it can be produced for; what is the highest price it sells for; and set the freight rate to take a'l the difference, thus absorbing all the profit above the barest operating expenses. To help keep the freight rates down there never was a time that the peo ple of Molalla and Liberal needed the YES, SWISSCO WILL GROW YOUR HAIR Prevents Baldness and Dandruff, Re stores Gray or Faded Hair To Its Natural Color. IT Stops Dandruff and Scalp Diseases, Restores Gray or Faded Hair to Its Natural Color. r - s n His Hairs Are Numbered, Are Yours? Swissco stops dandruff quickly, grows new hair and restores gray and faded hair to its natural youthful color. Swissco stops baldness, bald spots, falling hair, scabby scalp, sore scalp, brittle hair or any hair or scalp trouble. To prove that ours claims are tsjje we will send you a large trial bottle free if you will send 10c in silver or stamps to help pay cost of postage and packing to Swissco Hair Remedy Co., 5311 P. O. Square, Cincinnati, O. Swissco will be found on sale at all druggists and drug departments everywhere at 50c and $1.00 a bottle. JONES DRUG COMPANY there is a quiet determination on the part of the property owners to sell out and get away to other parts as soon as it is definitely settled that the P., E. & E. is the only railroad to be built. There will be a fall, not a raise in land. Of course, I do not deny that there will be a short temporary boom of Molalla and Liberal, but it will not last. I spent a few weeks in the Rogue River Valley in Southern Oregon in 1908. A business man of Medford said to me, "We have quite a boom on here now, but it cannot last unless we can get another rail road. The Southern Pacific makes it impossible for us to do anything, we pay three or four times as much for a car'oad of freight from either Port land or San Francisco-as they pay be tween those two cities." Southern Pacific rates on wheat and flour from Portland t0 Roseburg, $180. from Port land to San Francisco, $60. The town of Medford is covered over at the present time with "for rent" signs, and as a last resort the people- have joined with Grants Pass to build a railroad to Crescent City, Cal., 75-miles over a range of moun tains. And work is now going on; this project is called the Pacific In terior railroad. The city of Salem, with all the advantages of the state institutions, made but small growth for many years until the Oregon E'ec trlc was built there. Since that time Salem has almost doubled her popula tion. Comnare' the prices of land along the Southern Pacific lines in Yamhill county, with that along the Oregon Electric (a Hill road) and note the difference in growth in the two sec tions. I am not jealous of Mtolalla, and hope they wiU make a good town there. I consider that the building of a large town at Molalla or Liberal either will help Mulino, rather than hinder its growth, and furnish us here with a better market for our produce. I do not hold to the nar row view that my town can be built up by pulling down my neighbor towns. But I know that a Southern Pacific railroad cannot be a benefit to the Molalla val'ey. Next week I propose to put down in cold facts and figures how the difference in value between the Port land, Eugene & Eastern and the Clack amas Southern railroads will amount to more than one million dollars di rectly and several mi'lion indirectly, which amount will be lost if the Clackamas Southern is not built. I will show that the Clackamas South ern railroad is so near success and needs such a small amount of money to complete it that it is the height of folly to set down and say that we cannot do it. This hold-up shall not be pulled off by that great corporation that has cursed both Oregon and Cal ifornia for these many years. Watch out for another expose next week. Yours for justice to the stockholders of the Clackamas Southern, who have put their hard earned money in to one of the most important enterprises ever attempted in the county. Shall they be robbed by a great cor poration? CLAUDE HOWARD. Swissco Will Do This For You. Swissco produces astounding re sults so quickly it has amazed those who have used it. We will prove it to you if you will send 10c in silver or stamps to pay postage and we will send you a trial bottle and our won derful testimonials. There is no excuse for baldness. Write today to Swissco Hair. Remedy Co., 5311 P. O. Square, Cincinnati, Ohio. Swissco is on sale at all druggists and drug departments at 50c and $1.00 a bottle. JONES DRUG COMPANY Clackamas Southern worse than to have it built right now. I do not know what kind of veng eance the Harriman people will take upon me for exposing their secret that they have kept from the people of Molalla and Liberal so carefully, but here goes any way: Heretofore, a most all the business, both freight and passenger, has gone to Oregon City, where it goes to Portland by the Portland Railway, Light & Power Go. The Southern Pacific has not had the business between Oregon City and Portland. Now this line commonly called the O. W. P. has been very accomodating to the people. You ride from Oregon City to Port land for 20 cents. I have shipped cu cumbers, lettuce and other produce to Portland for i40 ceptsi per hundred pounds, and they delivered it to the commission house without extra charge. Now that little difference of free delivery on a few boxes of prod uce would make all1 the difference of success and failure in my business. Now, the P., E. & E. are going to spend a large sum of money to build a railroad to Canby build a very ex pensive bridge across the Willamette river near New Era; build a town on the west side at Oregon City (to the great injury of Oregon City) ; carry the people many miles out of their way get once again the monopoly of the business of the Molalla valley. The people will pay 45 or 50 cents' to ride to Portland on the P., E. & E., instead of going by the Clackamas Southern to Oregon City proper and paying 20 cents. Passengers may, it Lis true, at loss of time, may leave the P., E. & E. and walk across the ; river at Oregon City, but freight can not, and on this the most important i item of all the people of the entire Molalla valley will be powerless to 1 protect themselves against the South-! ern Pacific monoply. Now, I submit the development of the entire county ' depends upon getting a freight rate to the city of Portland as low or low- i er than other parts of the Willamette ; va'ley. Otherwise we will not only not get new industries, but will loose i many we now have. A well known business man of the Molalla valley said to the writer, "If we do not get the Clackamas South ern, I will unload my land for any thing I can get for it, and move my business "over on the Oregon Electric. I will not locate on a Harriman rail road." This is exactly what the writer of these lines will do, for he will not stay where he. has to patronize the Portland, Eugene & Eastern. I, know We have decided to close out cut entire stock of Ladies' and Children's Shoes to move them quickly we have cat the price to 15 per cent, below actual cost. You most see the goods to appreciate their value. Ladies' $4.00 Tan or Black, lace or button, now Ladies' $3.50 Tan or Black, lace or button, now Ladies' $3.00 Tan or Black, lace or button, now Ladies' $2.50 Tan or Black, lace, now - - Girls' or Misses' $2.75 black button shoes, cloth uppers, pattent leather bottoms - - - $2.00 Shoes now selling - - -$ I .50 Children's Button Shoes now selling 135 1.89 1.35 .89 Special for Friday and Saturday, the two big Booster Days, Mens' Dress and Work Shoes and Gloves, Hats, Clothing and Furnishings at special prices. CHICAGO 4 DOORS SOUTH OF POSTOFFICE STORE OREGON CITY, OREGON