Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, June 01, 1913, Image 3

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MORNING EKTERliRISE, SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1913.
No Brainstorms There.
"I always say what 1 think."
"Aren't you afraid you'll forget bow
to talkr-Pittsburgh Post
LOCAL BKlCrS
D. C. Fouts, of Viola, was a county
seat visitor Saturday.
A. D. Mazingo. of Wilhoit, was in
Jregon City Saturday.
H. E. Poulterer, of Portland, was
in Oregon City Saturday.
J. J. Thornton, of Wilsonville, was
in the county seat Saturday.
Henry Hergert was a county seat
visitor the latter part of the week.
Makin Sartian is a patient at toe
hospital, suffering from appendicitis.
Mrs. Marian DeWitt, of Portland,
was calling upon local friends Satur
day. John W. Kraxberger, of Aurora,
was a county seat visitor Memorial
Day. ? -
G. B. Zander of Lents, was a coun
ty seat visitor the latter part of the
week.
S. A. D. Melvin, of Portland, was
in the county seat Saturday on legal
business.
C. E. Charleston, of Portland, was
transacting business in Oregon City
Saturday.
C. C. Robbins and. family, of Port
land, were visiting in Oregon City
Thursday.
Leslie E. Authers, of Oswego, was
a county seat visitor the latter part
of the week.
Miss " Nellie Franzen, of Portland,
was a week-end visitor with friends
in Oregon City.
Frank Talbert, a well-known ranch
er of Clackamas, was in the county
seat Saturday.
Misses Muriel and Rene Goodman,
of Portland, were visiting Oregon
City friends Saturday.
Mrs. J. W. Shea, of Tenth and J.
Q. Adams strets, is at the Oregon
City hospital, suffering from nneu
monia. Mlrs. E. J. . Frommeyer, of Milwau
kie, was operated upon for appendi
cities Friday, and is reported to be
doing well.
I. W. Noble, of Oakland, Ore., has
purcased six acres near Canby from
John W. Loder, and expects to make
his home there.
Miss Bertha Barry, who has been
with the Pacific Telephone & Tele
graph company for the past four
years, has resigned her position.
Mrs. J. E. Simpson,' who fell last
week in front of her home on the
West Side, and broke her leg, is re
ported to be getting along comfort
ably. Mrs. K. Turner, of Sherwood, who
has been at the Oregon City hospital
j for an operation for appendicitis, has
been taken to her home much im
proved. John Clark, arrested upon com
plaint of his wife, who charges him
with assault and battery, will be
tried Monday afternoon before Jus
tice Sievers.
Miss Gale Stewart Miss Helen Mc
intosh and Miss Irene J. Bennett, all
of Portland, were among those who
witnessed the high school play Sat
urday evening.
Box Social; given at the Baptist
Church Tuesday evening, June 3rd,
at 8 o'clock. Pleasant program pre
pared by B. Y. P. U. and a good time
anticipated. Boxes sold at 50c per
box. Everybody come! Ladies please
bring boxes.
Don't Fail to Hear
The
Maple Leaf
Colored
atThe Bell
TONIGHT
New Songs and Dances
Also a Very Long Bill of Pic
tures. Remeber Our Movies are the
Best No Exceptions
; COMING ,
Monday.' Tuesday and Wednes
day to the Bell, the Bernardos
In th-air funny sketch, entitled,
"The Automobile Sales Lady,"
"The Rube, Etc." 3 days.
Change of program every day.
Harmony
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Are You Ready
for Summer?
June first finds us right up
to summer:
Have you done everything for
the apartment, the house and
garden, the front yard, the
porch, the bungalow that the
warm months require.
Have you met all your person
al needs and those of your fam
ily. Look over THE ENTER
PRISE advertisements. If. you
feel that you are ready for sum
. mer you will see some things
you have missed.
If you have not made your
plans and purchases you will
find a splendid guide. ,.
THE ENTERPRISE adver
tisers are making some very-Interesting
offerings these days
apropos of the nearness of the ,
warm season. , .-
And in fact there are many
things of interest every day in
THE ENTERPRISE advertise
ments. Reading these ads' carefully
is a fine habit to acquire.
NEW WEEK'S EVENTS
MANY AND VARIED
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 31.
The Home Rule for Ireland bill will
be brought up in the house of com
mons for the second time next Tues
day. The bill is expected to go
through in the exact form in which it
was passed last year, and later re
jected by the House of Lords. After
a second rejection by the Lords,
which is regarded as inevitable as
was the first, the bill will come back
to the House of Commons and, in the
general belief, will be enacted into
law.
Arguments in the so-called tap line
case, which has attracted country
wide attention, will be presented to
the commerce court in Washington
Tuesday. The question at issue is
whether fifty-seven tap lines located
in various states are common carriers
and entitled to participate in joint
rates.
Two municipal elections of wide in
terest will take place early in the
week. Portland, Ore., will hold ifs
first election under the commission
plan of government. In Los Angles,
where a mayor and other city offici
als are to be chosen, a hard fight for
control is on between the Socialists
and anti-Socialists.
The trial matches between the Am
erican tennis players and the Aus
tralian team for theDwight F. Davis
international challenge cup are sched
uled to being Friday. The maches
are to be held at the West Side Ten
nis club in New York City.
Events of the week abroad will in
clude the customary observances of
the birthday anniversaries of Pope
Pius X. and King George V., the run
ning of the Epsom Derby, the British
woman's golf championships, the
opening of a Maritime Exposition at
Amsterdam, and the Franco-American
celebration commemorating the ori
gin of the name "America" at St. Die.
Conventions and conferences of the
week will include the General As
sembly of the Presbyterian church in
Canada, at Toronto; the annual meet
ing of the Canadian Press association,
also to be held in Toronto; the West
ern Governors' Congress, at Sal Lake
City; the General Synod of the Re
formed Church in. Ameria, at Asbury
Park, and the annual convention of
the Brotherhood of Locomotive En
ginemen and Firemen, at Washington,
D. C.
Exercises in honor of the birthday
of Jefferson Davis, only president of
the Confederate States of America,'
;will be held Tuesday throughout tlie
South.
GARBAGE COLLECTIONS
RESUMED FOR SUMMER
Collection of garbage by wagons of
the city sanitary department will be
resumed Monday, and calls will be
made for waste matter at all homes
on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
All citizens are urged to put their gar
bage cans out where the collectors
can obtain them, and to see that they
are covered. No charge is made for
this service by the city, and it will
be continued throughout the summer
months.
Royal Commission to Vi6it
SYDNEY, N. S. W., May 31 The
members of the Dominions royal com
mission of Great Britain, who have
been inquiring Into the commercial
resources and possibilities" of -Aus-tralia,
sailed on the steamship Ven
tura today for San Francisco, en
route to Canada and England. Sir
Edgar Vincent is the chairman of the
commission. Other men of note ii
the party are Sir Alfred Bateman, for
40 year3 a member of the British
Board of Trade; Sir Rider Haggarl,
the well-known author and authority
on agricultural questions, and Sir
Joseph Ward, former premier of New
Zealand.
Enterprise classified ads pay.
Passing of Famous Race Track
NEW YORK, May 31. An auction
sale of the Morris Park estate, em
bracing the historic old race track of
that name, was begun today. The
crowd that gathered for the opening
of the sale was the first that has been
seen in the great ' club-house since
the good old days when racing was
an established institution in New
York. The sale is expected to last a
week or longer, as there are upwards
of 3,000 lots to ge under the hammer.
The clubhouse and its furnishing, rep
resenting an investment of half a mil
lion dollars, will be disposed of to
the highest bidder and may be re
moved by the purchaser or retained
as a home.
PARKPLACE PLANS GAIETY
Commencement week is to be cele
brated by pupils of the Parkplace
school commencing June 1, and a var
iety of features have been arranged
for the occasion. The baccalaureate
sermon will be preached to the grad
uating class on Sunday, the Literary
society will hold its exercises Mbn
day evening, and the seniors will pre
sent "The College Bride," their class
play, Wednesday evening. The form
al graduation exercises and com
mencment will be Friday evening.
- The classified ad columns of The
Enterprise satisfy your wants.
A FLIGHTTOR LIFE
The Story of a Rescue Trip In the
Mountains of Alaska.
CRAVE MEM AND SPEEDY DOGS
Al Act of Heroism That Saved a Wo
man and Her Sick Husband From
Death When Stranded on a Winter
Night Amid the Snow Clad Peaks.
The hardships to which people are
exposed in the far north give frequent
occasion? for;the display of heroism.
In the pages of "Trailing and Camp
ing In Alaska'" Mr. Addison M. Powell
tells of tfie rescue of a woman and her
husband' who were stranded on the
mountains In an "Alaskan1. winter.
- A -dog team galloped np and stopped
fn front of "the only pretense of a hotel
in Valdez. The night was dark, as the
northern winter nights always are
when the moon is not shining. The
dogs immediately lay down, almost ex
hausted from their long trip, and the
two men were soon surrounded by In
quiring friends. One of the two said: .
"What do yon .think, fellows? - We
passed a woman just this side of Saw
mil Camp. She was pulling a sled, on
which- was her sick husband. We re
monstrated against her crossing the
glacier, but she replied that they
might as well die up there as any
where else, as It meant certain death
to stop. Our dogs could pull only our
outfit and there wasn't grub enough
for all, so we were compelled to leave
them. They will be at the last timber
tonight and If somebody doesn't go to
their rescue they will be dead by this
time tomorrow."
A man stepped out from the crowd
and said:
"I'll go for one. Now, who .else has
a good dog team to , splice in with
mine?"
"I'm your man!" answered another.
It was 3 o'clock in the morning be
fore they had made their selection of
dogs and were ready to start' on that
hazardous trip.
"We'll be on the first bench by day
light and have them here before mid
night" said one as he straightened out
the team for. the sixty mile run.
"Yea. boys! Stand in there, Leader!
Mush, mush on, mush!" And with a
yelp the dogs galloped away as if
awareof the urgency of their mission.
"Haw, Leader!" we heard as they
turned the corner, and then they were
gone. "There goes the best dog team
in Alaska and driven by two of the
best men on earth!" exclaimed a man
as he re-entered the house.
The trail was easily followed, and
soon the nine miles of level bench
were passed. The speed slackened
only when they were ascending the
ridge, which they crossed by 11 that
morning, and there it was seen that
the sharp peaks were curling fine snow
high in the air. ,
"They are beginning to smoke!" ex
claimed one of the men.
"Yes; we must get back before night
or it's all off." replied the other.
Down, down, the steep descent they
plunged, and by 1 o'clock they were
off the glacier and skipping over level
ground. In a short time they discov
erel the unfortunate couple whom they
had started out to rescue, and when
they came up to them it was a pitiable
scene that presented itself.
The poor woman had become com
pletely exhausted and had thrown her
self down beside her helpless husband.
She had evidently abandoned all hope
and was weeping bitterly when she
suddenly heurd the yell of a driver
and the barking of dogs. In a mo
ment she passed from despair to hope.
As the team galloped in a circle and
stopped beside her with the dogs'
heads pointed back toward the glacier
she clapped her hands with Joy.
The dogs lay down and with their
lolling tongues lapped the snow, while
the drivers ate some crackers and jok
ingly encouraged tho sick man and the
tired woman. They bade her seat her
self comfortably while they fastened
the two sleds together.. Soon they
were bounding away again at the dogs'
first speed.
When they recrossed the summit the
whole range was "smoking," and the
wind was sending the fine snow along
the crust It whipped their faces with
a warning of what was coming, but
the driver said:
"Twenty miles to town, and it can
never catch us!" -
In Valdez every one was anxiously
watching the trail. Many exclaimed,
"They can't possibly be here before
midnight!" but they were. As they
rushed up to the crowd with a yell
and a chorus of barks from the noble
dogs they were met by eager, helping
hands. The dogs acted as if they had
understood why they were being pet
ted, and again the woman wept for
Joy. .
. The Contingent Fee.
The following pointed note was writ
ten by Daniel Webster In answer to a
request that he take a certain case for
a contingent fee: "I do not desire em
ployment in professional matters, al
though I do sometimes engage in
thein. But I never engage on contin
gencies merely, for that would make
me a mere party to a lawsuit"
Resourceful,
Gibbs Your wife seems to be a re
sourceful woman. Dibbs Resourceful!
Why. the other day she put in a pane
of glass with chewing gum. Boston
Transcript.
Real coolness and self possession are
the indispensable accompaniments of a
jrreat mind. Dickens.
Her Specialty.
"I should think that lady astronomer
would be interested In her little' boy's
dirty face."
"Oh, she's too much absorbed In her
studies of the sky to keep her child's
face clean."
"But that's just why she shonld pay
attention. Isn't the dirt spots on the
son?" Baltimore American.
Congenial Employment.
The high prize of life, the crowning
fortune of man. is to be born to some
pursuit which finds him In employ
ment and happiness, whether it be to
make baskets or broadswords or canals
or statues or songs. Emerson.
How the
Story Ended
By F. A. M1TCHEL
I am a novelist I bad been work
ing very hard upon ; a story "Her
Choice" to finish it, since the.printers
were waiting for the copy for the last
chapters, the whole to be ready for
publication within a week. I was writ
ing "late, one night when for a time
how long 1 know not my faculties
came to a standstill. .
' My next remembrance is that I was
walking Jn a grove, strange to say,
with my heroine, Evelyn Hope not
only Evelyn Hope, the creature of my
Imagination, but Evelyn . Hope a real
being. And she was talking to me.
"You are trying to compel me to mar
ry that Scotchman, and I wish you to
understand that I won't do it"
"Angus McGregor "is a fine fellow,"
I replied. "You must marry him. I've
written the story with that end In
view, and if yon won't have him I shall
have to tear the whole thing to pieces.
Besides, there's no time for you to
change your mind at this late date.
The book is advertised for the 1st of
March."
"I change my mind! You might bet
ter state it you change my mind. You
novelists collect a lot of us together
and undertake to make us do just what
you intend we shall do. Then when
we"-
"Kick?"
"Yes, that expresses it exactly. When
we kick you say, 'You've got to do
as I wish you to do.' And we won't
that is, unless your will coincides with
our own."
"Well, then, if you will be so obstrep
orous, whom do you wish to marry?"
She didn't reply to this right off. We
were passing through some long grass,
and she bent down and picked a blade
growing higher than the rest and, put
ting one end of It in her mouth, said:
"You profess to be a novelist A nov
elist must understand the human heart
What do you know about the human
heart?"
"I thought I was well equipped In
that respect."
"And you can't make your heroine
marry the man of her choice. Fine in
stincts you have for divining how love
works."
"In woman. I admit my most suc
cessful novel was one in which I made
up my mind as to the man I would
love were I a woman and then made
her marry the biggest chump In the
lot"
"The woman knew better. At heart
he was a noble fellow."
"The fellow I was creating wasn't"
"You novelists tire me. The fellow
you were creating! Just as If you
could create a character!"
"Why not?"
"You set up a dummy and put this
into him and that into him, thinking
that this and that you have put in will
make him act so and so, but it doesn't
He goes off and does the other thing
while you stand gaping at him.' What's
the reason for your failure? Why, your
calculations are all wrong."
"I've violated what the playwrights
call the dramatic laws, you mean."
"Nonsense. There is no such thing
as dramatic laws. If there were there
would have to be a mammoth dramatic
prison, for the characters would be
breaking the laws every day. No; your
trouble has been in not foreseeing the
thousands of influences through which
your characters will pass. One of them
commits a horrid murder. Your reader
yearns to see him hanged. He escapes
from prison the night before the hang
ing. Straightway your reader's sym
pathy goes with him and he hopes the
murderer will not be caught"
"We are wasting time in generaliz
ing. You have told me that you Won't
marry Angus, and yet you will not tell
me who is your choice."
"Yes, I will. I'll have none of them."
:, "None of them! Great heavens!
What shall I do? The printers are
waiting, the publishers are hounding
me for the end, and now you, my hero
ine, on whom I have lavished so much
affection, tell me that you will neither
marry the man of my choice nor"
"Your choice!"
"Well, who's been writing the story?"
"You. By the time you have written
a few more you'll discover that instead
of writing a story - the story writes
you."
"You don't mean it! But time, is
pressing. Come, be good. . Fix it so
that I can finish the yarn and have
done with it"
"And you wish to know my' prefer
ence?" " a". ; . . . ; ' " . . .
I turned and Tlooked eagerly in her
eyes. To my surprise,. they fell to the
ground and a color rose to her cheeks.
With an infinitely sweet look on her
face she faded Into another real living
being, my betrothed, who was bending
over me.
"Have I been 111?" I asked.
"Very ill."
"How long?"
"A week."
"Bring me the last chapter of my
novel "
The story was written In the first
person. In a few hundred words I
made the heroine in love with this
imaginary person who was telling it.
all the while keeping himself in the
background. Then I hurried the manu
script on to my publisher.'
The book met with a great success,
which every one said was the sudden
turn given 'o the story by the author
making his heroine unexpectedly marry
the story teller. "That." said the
critics, "was a stroke of genius."
wny She AsKea.
Author (proudlyt- Sirs. Ramdall wjis
awfully anxious to learn my nom de
plume.
"Yes. she told me she didn't want to
read anything of yours by mistake."
Life.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Marriage licenses have been issued
by County Clerk Mulvey- to Alda M.
Scott and Leslie E. Authors, of Os
wego; Irene Lenore Moore and Hen
ry Ellie Poulterer, of Portland; Alice
Schuman and Gustave E. Zander, of
Lents; Anna Hoffman and John W.
Kraxberger, of Aurora, and to N. J.
Boyd and A. D. Mazingo, of Wilhoit
"SAFE AND SAKE"
FOURTH ORDERED
Oregon City is going to have a
"safe and sane Fourth'' this year,
and Chief Shaw, of the local police
force, is going to take particular
pains to see that it is such. Not
that the chief Has any grudge against
young America, he is simply obeying
the mandate of the city council,
which in Ordinance No. 590, passed
August 10, 1912, put the everlasting
kibosh on the noisy celebration, of In
dependence Day.
Under its provisions t'o.ere is to be
nothing stirring in the fireworks line
in the city proper. Outside the city
limits, and in West Oregon City, the
youngsters can blow their fingers off
if they so desire, and can shatter the
piece of the holidy with noise and ex
plosion. But within the corporate
limits the Fourth is to be safet quiet
and dignified. Firecrackers, no mat
ter how small, are strictly taboo; as
are go-devils, hi-cans, choke-cannons,
bombs and all other detonators.
People who feel that they must
make a noise and see smoke on the
national holiday are urged to hia
themselves elsewhere. The same is
true of those who want to see sky
rockets at night, for there is to be
nothing of that sort either. Dealers
who sell noise-makers will be just as
liable as those who may set them off.
CONGREGATIONAL SERVICES
Interesting services will be held in
the Congregational church today, the
pastor, Rev. George Nelson Edwards
speakiilg three times. Ahe morning
sermon topic will be "A Man and His
Garden." At 6:45 in the evening
Christian Endeavor meting will be
held, when the theme will be, "How
Should a Christian Choose his Voca
tion.' At the regular evening serv
ice Rev. Nelson wjll preach upon
"The Battles of Peace," touching up
on. Memorial Day observances.
UNCLAIMED MAIL"
The following is a list of unclaim
ed letters at the Oregon City postof
fice for the week ending May 30,
1913:
Woman's list: Alexander, Flor
ence; Cross, Myrtle; Wolford, Myr
tba. Men's list: Beimes, Enes R.; Bov
ris, Joes.; Chapin, Douglas; Crumb
ley, J. M.; Fisher, E. N.; Harvey, P.
W.; Jenkle, John; Perrine, F: S.; Rea
ver, Harry.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
J. J. Eisner and wife to Henry Her
gert, south half of N. E. of S. E.
Sec. 29, T. 1 S., R. 5 E.; $325.
Samuel B. Johnson and wife to Wil
liam N. Chileote, 35 acres in Sec. 32,
T. 1 S., R. 3 E.; $1. (To correct).
E. W. Dill and wife to Joe J. Thorn
ton, lot 7, block D, Wilsonville; $10.
Joe J. Thornton and wife to E. W.
Dill and wife, lot 7, block D. Wilso-i,
ville; $10.
BEAVERS WIN IN TENTH
Portland 2, San Francisco 1, i(10 in
nings). Los Angeles 3, Venice 2.
" Sacramento 6, Oakland 1.
Pacific Coast Standings
Los Angeles ', . . .603
Oakland 554
Venice 483
Portland . .463
San Francisco- .450
Sacramento 440
i
Portland Railway, Light & Power Company
Beaver Building, Main Street
SEES SHARP DROP
Receipts, for the week have been:
Catle 853, calves 59, hogs 2014, sheep
4570, horses 26.
Cattle values suffered a severe cut
during the week and the market is
generally 25 to 50 cents lower. Steers
received the brunt of the attack. Best
bullocks were selling steady $8.25 to
$8.50 toward the close with good
grass stuff around 8 cents, eutcher
stuff was slow to participate in the
slump as heifers brought $8.00 and
cows $7.80, although these prices are
not in existence today. Good bulls
and stags are steady to a shade weak
er, while calves remain unchanged.
Heavy liquidation from drouth afflict
ed section in California and Rockie
Mountain states, has hurried along
the annual advent of the grass cattle
run. Baef is not as plentiful as in
former years and the trade expects a
comparatively steady market all
spring and summer.
The hog market displayed strong
"come back" qualities from opening
to closing and gained approximately
25c. Best light swine sold steady
Wednesday $8.50 to $8.55. Demand
lias been brisk and big 'enough to ab
sorb receipts which have been better
than the average. Uncertainty as to
the market status the coming week
prevents much speculation.
Sheep house proved an Irregular
affair up to Thursday and thereafter
appeared to be steadier. Killers are
surfeited on poor mutton and lambs.
Are calling for prime suff which is
fairly firm. Wethers at $6.00 and
ewes at $5.25 and spring lambs $7.00
to $7.25 are price tops in the various
sheap classes. Liquidation large and
range of prices wide.
GROWERS GET $4
FOR FIRST BERRIES
Strawberry picking will start in
the "Willamette and Clackamas valley
Monday, and indications are that
there will be a good yield. The crop
will be in fine shape for early sales,
but indications also are that all fruit
not at once marketted will be value
less to the growers, as the late rains
and extra frosts seem to have effect-1
ed the keeping quality of the berries.
Those that have been picked so far,
and left for 24 hours, have shrivelled
up and lost all .their good points, not,
even being fit for canning. However,
as the demand for berries is excep
tionally heavy this year on account
of the lateness of the season, local
growers expect to get rid of their
crop at good figures. Some few
growers, who have been picking the
last two days of the past week, have
received $4 a crate for fruit.
Asparagus, which has been one of
the most varying of products this sea
son, is down again, after a recent
soaring into the class of luxuries.
Week end prices in Portland range 1
from 65 cents a dozen bunches up.
Prices in local markets have been
holding better.
Better eggs have been shipped to
wholesalers lately by poultry fanci
ers, and the market has assumed a
higher rate, and is firmer. Not much
over 22 cents is being paid for prime
stock, however, and much product is
still being sajd direct to consumers.
Other market staples are showing
little change. Green vegetables are
The Superiority of HectricToast
to the charred, or brittle, or soggy kind made in the
tedious old-fashioned way, is relatively ihe same as the
superiority of grilled steak to fried steak.
For one-tenth of a cent a slice the General
Electric Radiant Toaster makes Perfect Toast faster
than you can eat it. It is Perfect Toast because the
radiant heat forces the necessary chemical change
in the bread. This insures delicious golden Toast that
fairly melts in your mouth. 1
You can operate the Genera Electric Radiant Toaster on the
finest damask table cloth. Its neat porcelain base and cheerha
t glowing coils add grace and charm to any table.
This little toaster is on display at out store in the Bea
ver Building on Main Street.
a trifla lower, and are more plentiful.
Spuds are still at the bottom of the
list. - .
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. . .
VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed,
according to grade.
WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 15c ID.
PORK 9 1-2 and 10c.
POULTRY (buying) Hens 12
to 13c. Stags slow at 10c; old roos
ters 8c;; broilers 22c. "
Fruita 1
APPLES 60c and $1.
DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prue
on basis 4 for 35 to 40c.
VEGETABLES
ONIONS $1.00 sack.
.' POTATOES About 25 to 30c f.
o. b. sniping points per hundred;
again stageant and not moving at
any price.
Butter, Eggs.
BUTTER (E lying), Ordinary cou
try butter 20 to 25c; fancy cream-
EGGS Oregon ranch case count
16c; Oregon ranch candled 18c.
Prevailing Oregon City prloea are aa '
follows:
HIDES (Buying) Green salted. Sic
to 10c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each.
Mohair 31c.
WOOL 15 to 16c.
FEED (Selling) Shorts $29; bran
$27; process barley, $30.50 to $31.50.
per ton.
FLOUR $4.50 to $5.
OATS $28.50; wheat, 93 cents
oil meal selling $38.00; Shay Breok
dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds.
Whole corn $31.00.
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
ing $20.50 to $23.
s
Hen'hatched chicks are early vic
tims of head-lice. Conkey's Head
Lice Ointment is sure death to
these pests and doesn't injure the
chicks. Enough in one tube to save
100 chicks. 19c, 25c. For sale in
Oregon City by the Oregon Commis
sion Co.
f DOES1
(HEADACHE?
SYOURJ
It WILL, NOT if yoo talc
RRAUiE'5
HEADACHE I
CAPSULES
They will cure any kind of Headache, no
matter what the cause. Perfectly Harmless.
Price 25 Cental
LireSHAHlICETYUFG. CO.SesMobief,b-J
a-ywapw, FOR SALE BY tlWHl'UBM
THE JONES DRUG CO.
We have a large stock
of these remedies, just
fresh from the labor
atory. Pabst's OKay Specific
Does the worK. You all
.$3.00
know it by reputatio
Price .
FOR SALE BY
JONES DRUG COMPANY
1