MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, MAY 27,1913 LOGAN. BERRY CROP PAYS $400 AN ACRE SENIORS, POISONED, PLANNING REVENGE WARM TIME WAITS CALIFORNIA FOLKS MUSICAL COMEDY TROUPE COMING "From a strictly commercial point of view the loganberry seems to be one of the best business propositions that is Open to the small fruit grower of the northwest at the present time," says Prof. V. R. Gardner of the Ore gon Agricultural College. "If an average of five tons is ob tained, this means an income of ap proximately $400 an acre," he con tinies. "With an average yield of only four tons, a very moderate esti mate indeed, the income an acre would be $320. The cost of picking amounts to about $.25 a crate, or $20 a ton. This leaves a very good mar gin to cover the cost of production and for profit upon the amount of capital invested. "Heretofore the demand for logan berries has been more or less limit ed. The fruit) is comparatively soft and not suitable for long distance shipment. With the development of the canning trade and with the dis , covery that the fruit can be dried to advantage, a very large market is open to it. "Canneries are willing to pay about four cents a pound or $S0 a ton for th-e fresh fruit, the same price that they pay for raspberries and straw berries. They are able to pay this price because they can sell it to prac tically the same trade that takes these fruits, and it is no more cost ly to put on the market in cans. Furthermore, it seems very likely that they will continue to pay this prica for it, for the prices of straw berries and raspberries will tend to establish a level below which it can not well drop." $1.20 CAUSES ROW , AND FINE BATTLE Emulating more or less the heavy . weight champions, "Pat" Edwards and J. M. Murphy "mixed it ' Monday afternoon at Fifth and- Mlain streets, and were having a battle royal when Deputy Sheriff Henry Striebig and Arthur Williams butted into the mill and separated the contestants. Later Deputy Striebig turned the two recal citrant citizens over to the local por lice, who in turn arraigned them be fore Recorder Stipp, where they drew respectively $5 and $2.50 fines. The argument started, it is said, over $1.20, which was a matter of dif ference between the two men. Words grew to mors words, and gradually the conversation became harsh and explicit. Finalfy, it is said, Mr. Murphy intimated pretty directly that there was something the matter with the brand of veracity that Mr. Ed wards was using, and then blows - took the place of mere breath. Both men tip the scales in the neighbor hood of 200 pounds, and are stalwart and well built in proportion. Friends and onlookers who saw the mill say that both men ought to go in training for the honor of being "white hope," in the place of Luther McCarty, lately killed by a blow over the heart. BORING PASTOR RESIGNS Rev. W. L. Wilson has resigned from ((he joint pastorship of the Bor ing and Pleasant Home Methodist charges, which he has served since last October. His borne is at Laurel wood, Portland. Rev. Mir. Moore, district superintendent, will provide a supply until the meeting of the con ference. " H. Optedal, of North Plains, has made arrangements to stjart the erec tion of a building for a drug store and residence in Pleasant Home - at once. MARRIAGE LICENSES Marriage licenses have been issued by County Clerk Mulvey to the. fol lowing: Miss Hazel Monroe Warner and Y. V. Walker, of Lents; Stella Zak and John Gawlista, of Oregon City; Anna Hargrove and J. S. Imel ; Grace New burn and Burns Lenz, of Clackamas; Dora E. Weddle and Leonard Thomas Burley, of Canby; Edna May Hutch inson and Harry Garett, of Canby, and Rose Campbell and Max Buse, of Oregon City. Attorneys for the Portland, Eugene & Eastern railroad have been busy acquiring additional right-of-way grants in the neighborhood of West Oregon City the past week. Baldheaded Row Early Piety Not Always the Cause of Baldness Inasmuch as It is an accepted fact that baldness, falling hair and dand ruff are caused by a germ, doesn't it stands to reason that the only way to prevent such calamities is to kill the germs. And doesn't it stand to reason that the only way to kill these germs is to use Parsian Sage, which Huntley Bros. Co. has' so much faith in that they guarantee it to cure dandruff, falling hair and itching scalp in two weeks, or money back? Parisian Sage is a delightful hair tonic pleasant to use. It is not sticky or greasy, and contains only those ingredients that will surely benefit. . . - It is now sold by druggists all over America, and by Huntley Bros. Co. for 50 cents a largo bottle. It is used extensively by women who desire lux uriant hair with a radiant luster. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every package. Gti Stress -7 ross PAINFUL Menstruafisr; Tansy Pills AndaPREVENTlVEfor flMAI.E ' IRREC-IIXAEITIES. Are Safe and Reliable. t3T- Perfectly Harmless Tbe Lisas' Purely Vege table! Never FaiL 9 PRICE $1.00 Saat postpaid on receipt of ' nice. Money refunded il not as Booklet sent tree. Y'lU de CillChOIia CO.. Des Moines, Iowa Take adantage of our new Parcel Post and order a bottle of us today THE JONES DRUG CO. Beaver Bldg., Oregon City, Ore. J Professor Wagner, instructor in Pchemistiry, leader in athletics and keeper of the "first aid" Jcit at he high school, was a busy man Saturday and Mbnday. Not only did he have his usual duties to attend to, but he was kept on the jump applying sooth ing lotions to souvenirs of the senior picnic that members of that olass ac quired last week when they went on an interrupted hayrick ride. Shortly after the return from the picnic the seniors began to blossom forth with a beautiful rash, and with a persistent itching., At first rumors of scarlet fever and smallpox were rife, and then it developed that noth ing more serious was wrong than a generous sprinkling of the aftermath of frolicing in poison oak. Whether the youths acquired their decoration when the hayrick broke down, or whether they got it at the park, has not. yet been determined; but that they got there is no doubt. However, the seniors are not as vexed at the matter as they might be, for they see a dawning revenge ahead ahead of them. The freshmen are go ing to hold a similar picnic, and up per classmen who are already tired of being laughed at by the neophytes declare that they will get their re venge when the younger set goes out. Just how they are going to enforce an acquaintanceship between the freshmen and poison oak they have not revea'ed, but they are willing to wager that the freshmen get tangled up in ihe same stuff. FOOTBALL WORK TO. START Spring football practice for the high school team will begin Tuesday or Wednesday of this week. Practice wi'.l of necessity be light, but it is the aim of Athletic Instructor Wag ner to get the Jjoys out early, and so line up material for the fall team. There is much good timber in the school, and it is expected that a strong eleven will be developed. MAN GETS FISH, TICKET, FREEDOM Feeling the urgent need of a sal mon, one of the paper mill employees Friday morning wandered out to the falls and caught one of the regal fish with a gaff. The act was noted by one of the water baliffs, who was on patrol at the time, and the man's identity was also discovered. Shocked and pained at this breach of the fish ing, code, the baliff laid an informa tion before Justice Sievers, and a war rant for the defender was issued. In stead of going to the mill at once to get the man, however, Justice Sievers suggested that perhaps it would be better to wait until five o'clock, when the criminal would be through his work, and would have earned at least a full day to apply upon his fine. Constable Jack Frost took the war rant and went to the mill at the ap pointed hour, and waited for his quarry. At half past five he was still wainting, and at six the constable be came nervous and started inquiries. Then it developed that the fish. poach er had been warned of the fate await ing him, and early in the afternoon had obtained a transfer to the Cali fornia plant of the same company, had drawn his pay, bought his ticket south, and left for the land of (adver tised) sunshine and oranges. Constable Frost was much peeved. This is the first prisoner that he has gone after that he has failed to get, and he feels that in justice to his rep utation the court ought to appoint him a special officer and send him south after the fugitive and the sal mon. Justice Sievers does not see it in that light however, and Frost is doubly sad over the loss of both the prisoner and the California trip. LOCAL YACHTSMEN SEE SPEEDY RAGE Oregon City motorboat enthusiasts joined in the run to Wilsonville Sun day with members of the Portland Motorboat club, and reported a thor oughly good time. A number of the races 'were entered by local boats, and all acquitted themselves well. People who went from here saw the remarkable race between the Va moose and the Oregon Wolf II, in which the former title holder was beaten by over a hundred feet in the six-mile race. The two speed boats traveled at a rate in excess of 40 miles an hour for most of the course, but the Vamoose was never for a moment in danger. The H. W. Scott, of the Portland Harbor patrol, won the free-for-all and finished second in the race for boats averaging 15 miles an hour and under. The Martha King, owned by Ray King, finished second in the free-for-all, with the Laureate, owned by Charles Kranz, third. The Leslie S., owned by Leslie Seabrook, was first in tne 15-mile class race, with the H. W. Scott second and the Reo owned by Volger Bros., third. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS C. D. Long to H. A. and Karen H. Ramberg, tract of 5 acres in N. E. , Sec. 31, T. 5 S., R.1E.; $500. Thomazine Carstens to A. F. Fish er, part of block 3, Darling's add to Oregon City; $1. (To correct). John Diopel to John H. Broetje, lot 13, block 188, Milwaukia park; $125. Werner Kuppenbender to Wm. C. Wanke, 2 acres in Robert Caufield D. L. C; $10. " Susan O. and A. J. Joslyn to Port land, Eugene & Eastern, right-of-way across lots 34 and 35, Pruneland; $10. John Dennison and wife to Sophia M. Schooley, lots 15 and 16, block 6, Gladstone; $10. Mary E. and E.'A. Collins to James N. Collins, tracti in block 48, Min thorn Add. to Portland; $1,500. W. J. Alexander and wife to C E. Rich and wife, lot 7, block 97, second subdivision Oak Groves $2,500. W. R. Blackburn and wife to Frank W. Wood, lots 4, 5, 6 and 1, block 1, Parker's -Htfl addition to Oregon City; $850. - . H. C. Kanne and wife to Portland. Eugene & ... Eastern, right-of-way across W. , S. W. Sec. 2, T. 4 S., R, 1 E.; $10. ' Carl Christiansen and wifa to same, right-of-way across lots C aud D, tract 4, Willamette & Tualatin tracts; $10. - The Royal Oaks, the unique organ ization of live wires of Oakland, Cal., are coming north 209 strong by spe cial train to capture the Portland Rose Festival. Enroute, they will visit in many citjes of Western Ore gon, spreading the gospel of optim ism and good fellowship. The mem bers of the order are preparing spe cial stunts for the trip . and getting ready a number of surprises to spring at the various stops. Oregon City will be one of their calling points. Fully uniformed, they will march in the Rose Festival parades and will participate in all the features of Port land "s great floral frolic. While here they will have the Royal Rosarians,. "the organization of local boosters, for their playmates, and they will have at their command the whole city and everything in it. Nothing will be too good, it is announced, for Port land's guests. They will be taken on board the flagship of the Rose Festival fleet for the trip down the Willamette river to welcome Res Oregonus, king of the Festival, and his royal suite to Rosaria. The king and queen of the Pasa dena Rose Festival will be given an elaborato reception by Rex Oregonus and his court, in which the royalties of the different floral fetes of the coast will receive their subject and these monarches will owe allegiance to none save the rose, which all are gathered to honor.- A program has been arranged for the city's guests that appears to pre clude the possibility and possibility of more than 40 winks of sleep for tbe Royal Oaks during the week. MISS CRAWFORD TO SPEAK Miss Isabelle Crawford, who lived for many years a missionary among the Indians, will speak at the Baptist church at 7:45 o'clock Tuesday even ing. She will appear in Indian cos tume. . A PAYING BUSINESS. Authoress Who Does Not Neglect Home Duties For Literary Work. "I am aware," said Mrs. Rinehart, author of popular plays and novels, in a recent interview, "that folks imagine Mary Roberts Rinehart is an old maid, with a lean, wrinkled face, spectacles, a dress that doesn't fit and perhaps a parrot, or that she is mannish in her garb and yearns for a vote, or that she talks of art and the wonders of Bohe mia. I know they do, and it hurts me. "I'm a regular person, with a home and a husband and three children, with all the desire of my sex to wear the best gowns I can have and wear them as well as the next woman. I don't yearn for a vote. I don't talk about art, because I'm busy with my house hold and my writing. As for Bohemia, I have no part or parcel of it. "We have a Pomeranian and an Aire dale terrier and a Persian cat. We have a lot of chickens Orpingtons, Plymouth Rocks and Wyandottes, all white and a few turkeys. "I have a very pleasant library in our home at Sewickley. It is equipped with all the books, pictures and desks that any author's heart could desire, but I can't write in it , The only work I can do in our house is running the house. In a Pittsburgh office building I have a small office, -with a plain table and chair in it. There I do my writing. I consider five hours' work a good day, and then I go back to Sewickley and take up my house hold duties and pleasures again. "So you see literature Is more of a business than a passion with me. I like to write, but it doesn't take up all my thoughts. There is a demand for what I turn out, and I produce it as carefully and conscientiously as any manufacturer would produce collars oi candy.' "It has had its rewards like any oth er business. There were lean years and fat years. The leanest of the lean years brought $1,200, and in the fattest of the fat I earned $50,000. I once made $5,000 in three weeks." The Velvet Waistband. Black or colored velvet ribbon of ex cessive width forms sashes for new lingerie frocks. One of these new models is made of white batiste, all over hand embroid ered with a rather large and cold floral pattern, and inset between the gar lands with small squares of creamy lace. About the waist at its normal line is a girdle of flame colored velvet ribbon, which at the back Is tied in a butterfly bow. The loops of the bow are drawn up ward and caught against the shoulder blades, while the long ends fall over the demitrain of the skirt. New Cotton Fabrics. The semi-military Balkan styles lend themselves well to development in the new cotton stuffs. Belted jackets of ratine or eponge are mounted over skirts of cotton crape or harmonica, crape with a thickened thread in the weave which gives the effect of pin tucks or broken stripes. . Buttons are the first requisite of the Balkan cos tume, and the buttons must be gay enough to make themselves heard, so to speak, on the costume or their ef fect will Mb lost. With such frocks are worn huts of a smart semi-tailored character and buttoned boots of white buckskin. Victor Emmanuel ll.'s Long Mustache. Sir Frederick Carrmgtou is said to have possessed the fiuest mustache in the British army. It was not so long, however, as that worn by Victor Em manuel II.. whom the Duchess of Sutherland described as "tbe only knight of the Garter I have ever soon who looked as if he would certainly have tbe best of it with the dragon." The first ruler of United Italy allow ed his mustache to attain such a length that in his later years he would never eat anything at a public ban quet He was obliged to tie his mus tache behind his head when taking food, and this he thought looked un dignified in front of people not belong ing to his own circle. London Globe. The Pitch. . "They say life should be a grand, sweet song." "What is yours pitched tor "A flat." -Washington Herald. By way of a change from vaudeville Manager Murphy will offer the Frank Rich company at the Star theatre for an engagement of four days opening Thursday evening, May 29th. The announcement has been received with much favor by the patrons of this popular theatre. There are twenty people in the organization, and they come "here direct from a long run in Vancouver, and bring with them their entire equipment, which s the largest carried by any popular (priced organ ization in America. ' - ,. "" The stage settings and electrical ef fects are said to be finer than any ever seen outside of the big road shows.. Each bill will be given in the entirety, and will include many novel numbers by the chorus, which is well-known throughout the country as tjhe "Sunshine Girls." The production is brought out un der the personal management of Wal ter F. Smith, business manager of the Frank Rich company. Mr. Smith who is a theatrical man of wide ex perience, declares that he is willing to risk his reputation on the present company. "We deliver the goods," said Mr. Smith, "and we base the rep utation of our shows on delivering the goods. We don't advertise what we haven't got, and we produce ev thing that we advertise. That is our system, and has been the backbone of our popularity." MANY TEACHERS AO-ELECTED (Continued from Page J..) to a primary position. The following teachers were elected: High school H. F. Pfingsten, prin cipal; Pearl G. Cartlidge, English and oratory; August Wagner, science; Alena Folfe, languages; Maybelle Hunstock, commercial; Evelyn Todd, mathematics; Alice Larsen, history and science. Barclay building Anna T. Smith, first grade; Nieta Harding, third grade; Ola Mickey, fourth grade; Beatrice Weeks, fourth grade; Gus sie L. Hull, fifth grade; A. O. Freel, eighth grade and principal. Eastham building Meta Watsoi, first grade; Emma Wilke, second grade; Eleanor Brodie, third -grade; Lillian Anderson, fourth grade; Ada laide Beebe, sixth grade; Queene Adams, sixth grade; N. W. Bowland, eighth grade and principal. The board of education will . prob ably fill existing vacancies next Fri day night. Teachers are to be elect ed for the second, sixth and seventh grades in the Barclay building, and the first and second, (combinaion) fifth -and seventh grade in. the East ham building. THE LATEST FASH2QX KGTE Says : "It 1b a wise precaution against getting holes in delicate hosiery to powder the shoes before pntting them on. Many people sprinkle the famotiB antiseptic powder, Allen's Foot-Ease, into the shoes, and find that it saves its cost t,;n times over in keeping holes from hosiery as well as lessening friction and consequent smarting and aching of the feet. IVIerx's XVIer's All Shoes, Furnishings and Underwear Reduced WHEN Sale at 87-89 Third St. Only EASTERN STAR TO VISIT Mount Scott Chapter, U. D., Order of Eastern Star, of Lents, will come to Oregon City Tuesday night for a fraternal visit to Pioneer chapter, at its regular communication. All mem bers of the local chapter are request ed to. be present at the meeting. O. C. WHITE SOX 10, PIEDMONT MAROONS 1. Playing in mid-season form, the Commercial club White Sox of Ore gon City won their initial game from the Piedmont Maroons, of Portland, Unqualifiedly the Best LEDGER The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CURVED HINGE allows the covers to drop back on the desk without throwing the leaves into a curved position. Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches OREGON CJTY ENTERPRISE Headquarters for Loose Leaf Systems A SALE THAT AFFORDS THE BEST OPPORTUNITY TO BUY CLOTH ING AND FURNISHINGS AT PRICES MUCH BELOW NORMAL. THOUS ANDS WHO HAVE BOUGHT DURING THE LAST TWO WEEKS CAN TESTIFY TO THE REMARKABLE PRICES THAT MOYER HAS PLAC ED ON EVERYTHING IN THIS STORE. lO IS uits Only vaits Only Suits Only 25 Suits Only 1G.SO Boys' $2.50 Knicker Suits $1.50 Boys' $2.95 Knicker Suits $1.90 -Boys' $3.95 Knicker Suits $2.50 Boys' $5.00 Knicker Suits $3.50 YOU SEE IT IN OUR AD by the overwhelming score of 10 to 1 Sunday. The game was played on the Peninsula park grounds, and was witnessed by 700 fans. Several sen sational plays were pulled off by the locals, the most noticeable being the long backward run by Bruce into deep right field pulling down a hard fly; George Miller's brilliant stops at third base and Carotheis home run in the 9th. Arch Long, pitching for the White Sox, was there with air tight ball and fielded his position perfectly. Piedmont's lone run. was made in the fourth, a single by Lepold and a triple by Doty, pushed Liepold across the plate. Base stealing by the Sox was a common occurance. Riley of 6.50 lO.SO ITS SO Sale at 8789 Third St. Only Piedmont, allowed 8 hits, fanned 8 and struck 4 men by pitched balls. Long whiffed 5, allowed 5 hits, two being very scratchy, and issued no passes. The Sox play the Blue Bells of Portland, on the Canemah park field Decoration. Day, Friday, May 30th, at 2:00 p. m. The line-up Sunday was: O. C. White Sox ' Piedmont G. Miller .." 3-b Liepold Lavier 1-b , Wadsworth A. Long p Riley Frost c Bartholomen Smith ss Doty Bruce .' rf Crowe P. Long If Arnold