MORNING ENTERPRISE. TUESDAY, JUNE 3. 1913. e&cl the Announcement Below and seethe mil FREE $75.00 for yof club or church no canvassing ot solicting neccessary FREE 00 II K c ave Y ON ALL PURCHASES CCMS MADE at OUR STORE present them to the Enterprise office and re ceive your votes for CASH PRIZE CONTEST Co MASONIC TEMPLE ELDG. t SECTIONAL POST BINDERS CANVAS AND CORDUROY Made in all sizes to fit any sheet OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Bell Theatre TODAY 101 Bison Feature IN THREE PARTS ENTITLED i A House Divi A Mammoth Civil War Spectacle. Coco Cultivation Tester Tested Comedy VAUDVILLE The Bernardos in their Musical Comedy Singing and Dancing Complete Change Each Day JUST RECEIVED a Shipment of Fresh Roasted Coffee j a blend of Fancy High Grade Mild Flavor Coffee OOl and excellent in the seep, only LLji JY POUIKI Grocer1 ................. t . , . i , .............. HANSEN'S!! Nomination Good for 1000 Votes HOME MADE BREAD MAIN 33. B-39 7 Tickets 25c TWO BAKERIES BRANCH 7th and Jefferson Oregon City Enterprise's Bargain' Contest Coupon $75.00 in Gold for Saving Cash Checks "or . MAIN 24 Wedding & Birthday Cakes a specialty I 4 Add ress (Only one nomination coupon is allowed each contestant, must be used within five days of date below.) JUNE 3; 1913. It For the benefit of the large number of shoppers using The Morning Enter prise as a medium in which to find exceptional purchasing opportunities, t&is paper offers the following induce ment to Its readers and friends to carefully read the advertisements of the progressive stores on this page. A grand prize of $50.00 in cash will be given to the individual or any form of organization or institution turning in the greatest amount of money shown on the cash checks or receipts and monthly bills secured at any of the stores on this pace. To the candidate securing the next largest amount, $15.00 in cash. To the third, $10.00 in cash. EXPLANATION. To secure votes in The Morning En terprise's Refund Bargain Contest make your purchases at the stores ad vertising on this page, and call for a sales check for every purchase made. Turn these checks into The Enter prise's office, where votes will be giv en for the amount shown on each check. Five votes will be given for each five cents shown on the cash check, receipt of monthly bill. This vote is to be deposited in the voting box at this office. Sales checks must represent cash purchases. All cash checks and monthly bills' must be turned into this office within ten days of the purchase date. Every contestant entering the con test is entitled to one nominating cou pon good for 1009 votes. The only ex ception to contestants entering the Bargain Contest are employees of this office or the stores advertising on this page. Watch for the standing of contest ants, wnich will be published else where in this paper daily. The Re fund Bargain page appears Tuesday and Friday for a period of ten weeks. t i GARAGE We have the best equipped Garage in Clackamas Comity Our mechanics are acknowledged to be the very best in their lines and we are prepared to give the service and to do any kind of work on all kinds of cars in a mechanical manner. GIVE US A TRIAL. YOU WILL BE SATISFIED MILLER-PARKER CO. 6TH AND MAIN STS. M G&tS Quantity and Qualy f r Cash Mggf c KLOOSTRA'S Iv&LP Home Sugar Cured Hams and Bacons, Kettle Rendered Lard Gives satisfaction. ft rt j. i ?ii -fi xriai win convince you. 7TH STREET MARKET . 7th and Center Sts. . Our Aim ! Is to Please We are always striving to give our patrons the j best merchandise pracitc able for the least money. See our new arrivals in L System and Stein-Block Suits at $12.50 to $30.00 j Mothers don't fail to visit our boys department. Price Bros. For Proper Clothes 6TH AND MAIN STS. We give S & H Green Stamps. Commencement Day Gifts Nothinsr so atroroDriate for Graduation o-ifts KnnL-e -They will be kept and treasured for years, while other j gifts of more cost are soon laid aside and forgotten, Cloth Books - ! w . 1 . i i-eatner cooks Books in Sets - Bibles, Testaments. Prayer Books - - . 50c to $5.00 Fountain Pens - - - $1.00 to $5.00 Stationery, Pennants, Kodaks, Candy, Pictures. j Huntley BrOS. Co., The Rexall Store I 25c to $2.00 35c to $3.00 $3.50 to $20.00 Furniture Hardware English Breakfast Table very substantial j)2.75 Come here for anything you need in clean and fresh Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables WE MAKE A SPECIALTY of PREFERRED STOCK and DIAMOND W CANNED GOODS, BLUE RIBBON BREAD, HUB SPECIAL COFFEE CLEAR CREEK BUTTER and DEMENTS BEST FLOUR We have a Square Deal for You Every Day in the week THE HUB GROCERY CO SEVENTH AND CENTER STS. M. E. B U N N C. H. OIOKEY t Bass-Hueter Pure Paints Hueters Varnishes VONDERAHE & SOOTH Paints, Oils, Varnishes Wall Paper v 207 Seventh St., Oregon City Phone Main 4082 I Geo. A. Harding WILLAMETTE BUILDING Drugs and Medicines and Toilet Articles NOTHING BUT THE BEST Courteous treatment extended to all. Trade Building AT THE Workingman's Store Special prices on all lines daring this sale Here are a few items Bloe Chambry Shirts, best 50c goods, at 37c Good strong working pants, the regular $t .50 values, at . . . 98c A broken lot of Dress Shirts that sold from 75c to $J. 00, at' . . 29c Spe. ial Prices on Hats and Shoes. Don't forget the place NEXT TO THE BELL THEATRE 25 per cent. Discount ON STALL & DEAN Gloves and Mitts In order to cot out stock of Gloves and Mitts down we will sell at a great sacrifice. In this manner we keep out Stock always op to date MILLER-PARKER CO. SIXTH AND MAIN STREETS i I I $ . wr World famous amnion 4 i meats new styles just received. Every one a masterpiece and guaranteed in every part and particular. Every one we sell makes us another friend. Burmeister & Andresen Oregon City Jewelers CHOENBOR HAS GOOD GROCERIES CORNERED Both Phones AT SEVENTH AND CENTER STREETS Both Phones WOMEN'S FASHIONS . TO FAVOR JAPANESE ..NEW YORK, June 2. It was to be expected that the abandoning of strict rules governing the details of style of cut, ornamentation, etc., in women's fashions would first lead to displays of originality and eventual ly to absurd and sensational ex tremes. Ever since the coming into fashion of the hobbile skirt things have gone from bad to worse and now the point has been reached when an evhibition of the latest models by the noted fashion designers of Paris and other fashion centres reminds 'one of nothing so much as of an ex hibition of Cubist "art." Ons of the latest freak notions is the adoption of the Japanese sii housette as interpreted by the west ern originators of fashions. Only a short time ago one of the best known Importers displayed a model which was so completely Japanese that it caused those who saw it gasp with astonishment. The costume was in the new taffeta, which is quite unlike the old material. One occasionally sees on the street a woman wearing a dress of changeable taffeta of the kind that was popular a few seasons ago. It is excessively brilliant of surface, while the new weaves of the fabric have a curious filmy sheen, al most like the soft bloom on a plum. The Japanese model referred to was in light green taffeta. It had a set-on hem of the same material and theregular "obi" or broad sash which the Japanese woman wears around her waist, and ties in an immense butterfly bow in the back. The ma terial stood away from the back of the neck quite stiffly. The only trimming was embroidery of green and silvery gray floss silk in a Jap anese arrangement of squares. New girdles and sashes appear as by magic -every few days, and some of them are fearful and wonderful in deed. Others will be unobjection able if they are discreetly reserved for wear with white and cream sum mer frocks. Of these are the new pongee sashes in Cubist designs and colors. They come from ten to eigh teen inches in width and look more like crepe than pongee. The ends are gathered" in tassels made of the colors shown in the printed patterns. Shoes and hosiery become more and more striking; and such variety and novelty were never born to blush 1 unseen, either. French fashion creat ! ors may issue edicts against slashed skirts until they are tired; with these tempting ' specimens of foot wear spread out before them, many American women will snap their fin gers at the edicts from Paris and will demand a chance to display the new finery. Fop a Now Set. "Does Alice like ber new dentist?" -"Well, he certainly made an impres sion ou her." -Boston Transcript WHITE SOX TRIM STATE By pounding Baker, the ex-Louisville mound artist, at the opportune moment, the fast Commercial club White Sox of Oregon City defeated the Salem Senators on Salem base ball grounds Sunday by the score of 8 to 7. It was a game replete with brilliant fielding and heavy stick work, mixed with a few errors to even up matters. Salem started the scoring in the 3rd inning by taking advantage of two errors of the Sox. Of the three scores, Salem earned one. The lo cals retaliated in the 5th by slam ming Baker's spitter to the fence. At the close of the inning the Sox had forced six runs across. Salem scored four more in the 6th With two down in the eighth and a man on second Freeman poled the ball over the fence for a home run. Salem's only chance to score was in the 9th, with one man on 3rd and two down. MfcRae drove out towards deep left, Bruce, after a sensational run, gathered in their last chance. Winterbotham pitched splendid ball and backed by a superior hitting team brought home the bacon. Bak er fanned 5, walked 4, allowed 9 hits. Winterbotham struck out 8 Issued 3 passes and presented Salem with 7 hits. The line-up: White Sox " Salem Lavier f-b . McRae Carothers s-b Humshurs G. Miller t-b Bell Winterbotham ...p Baker Frost c Birchet A. Miller ss Keene A. Long cf., Creech Freeman rf Mlaxon Bruce If Meiring Umpires Shay and Nichols. Don't feel lively as you "uset" Bones getting stiff losing juice, Brace up tackle it again. Kocky Mountain Tea will help you win. Have you pains in the back, rheu matism fainting spells, indigestion, constipation, dull, sick headaches, poor appetite yourstomach's out of kilter take Hollister's Rocky Moun tain Tea (or tablets) at least once-a-week for a month or two and see how different you'll feel. 35c Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Co. DEATH CALLS PIONEER James Marrs, a pioneer of Clack amas county, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Aldredge, . Sun day, following an attack of "pneumon ia. Mr. Marrs was born in Arkansas in January, 1840. In his early life he crossed the plains three times, final ly settling in Oregon City. The fun eral will be held Tuesday afternoon at two o'clock in the United Brethren church, the Rev. Milliken officiating. He is survived by a son and five daughters. x SUM FRUITS MAKE APPEARANCE With the' sudden onrush of summer weather strawberries have been com ing into the local and Portland mar kets with much greater freedom, and as a result the price has dropped in some grades as far as one dollar a crate. Prime Oregon " and Washing ton berries are still topping the mar ket, but the bottom has dropped out of California prices. State berries are the best of the offerings, and are finding ready sales. Summer fruits are also being ship ped in from outside states. Florida watermelons have appeared at five cents per pound, and many were sold at that figue. Early cantaloupes are also being offered at top prices, but the fruit does not seem greatly in demand, doubt being expressed as to its flavor. Apricots are coming in from California in increasing quan tities, and the price has dropped to $2.25 a crate. Advices have been re ceived that early Yakima peaches will be on the market by the end of the week. Asparagus is still a prime markst favorite, and is ranging from 65 cents to a dollar per dozen bunches. Local market prices are somewhat under this, growers being able to sell direct for less than the commission men are charging. Other vegetables are remaining un changed, save that supplies are be ing offered more plentifully. Livestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) steers 7a'ha 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 lb; PORK 9 "1-2 and 10c. POULTRY (buying) Hens 12 to 13c. Stags slow at 10c; old roos ters 8c;; broilers 22c. Fruits APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prune on basis 4 for 35 to 40c. VEGETABLES ONIONS $100 sack. POTATOES About 25 to 30c f. o. b. shiping points per hundred; again stageant and not moving at any price. Butter, Eggs. BUTTER (I lying), Ordinary coun try butter 20 to 25c; fancy eream- EGGS Oregon ranch case count 16c; Oregon ranch candled 18c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are aa follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 9c to 10c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.60 each! Mohair 31c. , WOOL 15 to 16c. ' FEED (Selling) Shorts $29; bran $27; process barley, $30.50 to $31.59. 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. The classified aG columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. FOr Suppressed tf.enstruaiisn PAINFUL Menstrualisn And a PREVENTIVE for FEMALE 11 -J IRREGULARITIES. . Are Safe and Reliable. Hg Perfectly Harmless Purely Vege table! Nevei Fail! Red ' Cross Tansy Pills The Ladles' PRICE $1.00 Sent postpaid on receipt of price. Money refunded it not as we -av. Booklet seat tree. yia de Cinchona 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.