MORNING- ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, JUKE 10, 1913. 00 R eacl tfis A.iliiotiiicciieiit Below &tkd s&ctjtf FREE $75.00 fo yoti club ot chach---no canvassing ot sotictmg neccessafy FREE Check Y ottf oaies ON ALL PURCHASES MADE at OUR STORE present them to the Enterprise office and re ceive your votes for CASH PRIZE CONTEST annon o MASONIC TEMPLE BLDG. SECTIONAL POST BINDERS CANVAS AND CORDUROY Made in all sizes to fit any sheet OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Bell Theatre Ask for your votes id. the $75.00 Voting Contest. You may get this money for the asking. Tickets given at the box office of the Bell Theatre Special This W A! Occident Flour - $1.80 Fisher Blend - - $1.50 H. JP. BRIGHTBELL, Grocer HANSEN'S HOME MADE OREAD MAIN 33. B-39 7 Tickets 25c TWO BAKERIES BRANCH 7th and Jefferson MAIN 24 ' Wedding & Birthday Cakes a specialty Nomination Good for 1000 Votes Oregon City Enterprise's Bargain Contest Coupon $75.00 in Gold for Saving Cash Checks For . 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, this 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 page. 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 V 1. C 1 ,. U il, - cavu live cema suuwu uu tuts i;ttsji 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 1000 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, which will be published else where in this paper daily. The Re fund Bargain page appears Tuesday and Friday for a period of ten weeks. - Onr Aim Is to Please GARAGE We have the best equipped Garage in Clackamas Couuty 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. . ' " --- I fi8tS Quantity and Quality for Cash IWaof C Home Sugar Cured Hams and Bacons, Kettle Rendered Lard Gives satisfaction. A trial will convince you. 7TH STREET MARKET 7th and Center Sts Trade Building LE AT, THE Workingman's Store Special prices on all lines daring this sale Here are a few items Blue Chamfery Shirts, best 50c goods, at 37c Good strong working pants, the regular $1.50 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 BELLTHEATRE We are always -giving to give our patrons the 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 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 Nothing so appropriate for graduation gifts as books. They will be kept and treasured for years, while other gifts of more cost are soon laid aside and forgotten, Cloth Books -Leather Books Books in Sets ... Bibles, Testaments, Prayer Books Fountain Pens - 25c to $2.00 35c to $3.00 $3.50 to $20.00 50c to $1.00 to $5.00 $5.00 Stationery, Pennants, Kodaks, Candy, Pictures. Hutltley BrOS. Co., The Rexall Store Furniture Hardware English Breakfast Table P very substantial 2.75 H 11 U I Here is your last chance of the season to buy Good Apples at a. Lo-w Good sized Apples, all packed and soud, at 65cents per Box THE HUB GROCERY CO SEVENTH AND CENTER STS. rice M. E. BUNN C. H. DIOKEY It Bass-Hueter Pure Paints Hueter's Varnishes VONDERAHE & BOOTH Paints, Oils, Varnishes Wall Paper 207 Seventh St., Oregon City Phone Main 4082 Geo. A. Harding WILLAMETTE BUILDING Drugs and Medicines and Toilet Articles NOTHING BUT THE BEST Courteous treatment extended to all. 25 per cent. Discount ON STALL 6V DEAN Gloves and Mitts In order to cot oar stock of Gloves and Mitts down we will sell at a great sacrifice. In this manner we keep oar Stock always op to date MILLER-PARKER CO. SIXTH AND MAIN STREETS THE ONE PERFECT GIFT K .HI- II I II.LIJ ULIUIL. I. A jeweled ring means love be tween parent and child, brother and sister, lover and sweetheart, husband and wife. No other gift conveys such af fection or gives such life long pleasure. We sell W. W. W. Guaranteed Rings, because they give satis faction. We ell them because they are better than other rings and cost no more. W. W. W. Guaranteed Rings are solid gold, set with the var ious birthstones. THEY COST FROM $2.00 UP BURMEISTER & ANDRESEN -Oregon City Jewelers ' CHOENBOR HAS GOOD GROCERIES CORNERED BotiiPhonesAT SEVENTH AND CENTER STREETS B.th phone. E TO SECIl CHATAUQUA TICKET Red-hot from the presses of The En terprise, the Chatautauqua- annual booklet and program makes its ap pearance Tuesday. The 1913 booklet i3 printed in brown, with a two-color ' cover, and consists of 32 pages. The booklet is a mighty pretty piece of work. The Enterprise's battery of fast presses began the run of 30,000 impressions Saturday morning, and the force established a record in printing, folding, stitching and trim ming the boqklets. The monster task of mailing the booklets to all corners of the sur rounding country will begin in earn est today at the office of the secre tary, H. E. Cross.. As this is vacation time, the management of the as sembly will give a limited number of high school or other young ladies who wish to earn their season tickets, an opportunity to secure one by assist ing In the work of mailing the pro grams. Those who call earliest at the office of the secretary, Mr. Cross, will be given the chance to earn their season, ticket during the next two days. W. T. Milliken, John Loder and family and Ova Renner will be among the visitors at McMinnville Wednes day to attend graduation exercises. PENNSYLVANIA COAL FINDS STRONG RIVAL NEW ORLEANS, La.,- June 9 With the arrival here today of the first barge of coal from the Alabama fields by the all-water route a mighty rival is ready to grapple with Penn slyvania for the fuel market on the lower Mississippi. Giant dredges have at last opened a great fluvial highway into New Orleans, which, in a large measure, overcomes the ad vantages which nature gave the coal companies along the Monongahela. The shipment that arrived today is small, but it is believed to be the fore runner of millions of tons and to mark the accomplishment of one of the most important commercial achievements in this section since Eads cut his channel through the shifting bar at the mouth of the Miss issippi. It is not alone the New Orleans market that is now concentrating the attention of "the great coal concerns on this port. Within a few months the Panama canal will be a reality. With the converging of many steamship lines' coal will be trimmed into pects to get the lion's share of this business. "Ad" Men Flock to Baltimore. BALTIMORE, Md., June 9. With the downstown section gorgeously decorated for the occasion, Baltimore today extended a hearty welcome to the ninth annual convention of the Associated Advertising club of Am- CASE IS CALLED; PLAINTIFF GONE J. Elliott Clark, last week the de fendant in an assault and battery case in Justice Sievers' court, and later, reported as having mysteriously dis appeared from his rooms in Portland, following what is said to have been an attempt at suicide, failed to appear as plaintiff in the local justice court Monday when his case to recover 190 from his wife was called. Whether the man is dead, or has left the coun try following his martial troubles, his attorneys, Cross & Hammond, do not know. Clark brougth suit last week to re cover $190, which he claimed was t'J9 balance of $235 he had given his wife to keep for him. He says that she re fused to give him the money when he asked for it, but did dole him out $49 of it in small contributions. His wife denies .that he ever gave her the money. A GOOD INVESTMENT There is no better investment than a fifty cent piece in a bottle of Meri tol White Liniment. Muscular and rheumatic pains, swellings, lameness and soreness of the muscles are promptly relieved. Meritol White Liniment is especially recommended as a general pain killer of unusual merit. NOTORIOUS CASE AGAIN IN MISSOURI'S COURTS ST. LOUIS, Mo., June 9. After hav ing been postponed -through nine terms of court because of the alleged illness of the defendant, the case of Mrs. Dora Doxey-Whitney was taken up in the St. Louis county court at Clayton for trial. Mrs. Whitney has been a defendant in the .courts of this viciinity for four years, first on a charge of murder, and then on a charge of bigamy. She first was in dicted after William J. Erder, a SU Louis postal clerk she married at Clayton, died, leaving her an insur ance policy on his life. A trial In this city on the murdef charge result ed in an acquittal. Mrs. Doxey, as Bhe then was, and her husband, Dr. Loren B. Doxey, then went to Tenn essee. Dr. Doxey's body later was found in the Tennessee river at Clif ton, Tenn. It was reported a case of suicide. In the meantime Mr. Doxey had been indicted for bigamy, on the ground that she had married Er-Ier while still the wife of Dr.. Doxey. Soon after the death of Dr. Doxey the widow went to Greer, Idaho, where she married a man named Whitney. Whitney is her sixth husband. Taft Visits Washington. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 9. Former President Taft came to Wash ington today for the first time since he retired from the presidency last March. The purpose of his visit is to attend a meeting. ' of the Lincoln Memorial commission, of which he is a member. . FLOODS INFLUENCE CATTLE QUOTATIONS Receipts for the week have been: Cattle 1575, calves 49, hogs 5189, sheep 5827. The cattle market is very slow. A combination of- circumstances has beared prices and there is. not as strong demand for beef as the pre vious week. Extreme high water has caused many cattle in the vicinity of Portland to be liquidated before the usual time. Heavy shipments from California and Utah have filled the yards. Best steers are selling at $7.25 to $7.50; cows $6.25 to $6.50; bulls $5.50 and calves $8.00 to $9.00. The hog trade held strong until Fri day. Receipts have been very liberal and the market is from 5c to 10c low er. Best light swine steady at $8.40 An uneven sheep market ruled for the six-day period ending Saturday. There is a fair demand for fat mut ton, which is very scarce. The bulk of receipts contained nothing but poor sheep and lambs, which are slow to move. Yearlings are quoted at $5.50 to $5.75; two year-olds $5.50 Ewes $4.50 to $4.75 and best spring lambs are steady at $6.50 to $6.75. Texas University Celebrates. AUSTIN, Texas, June 9. Com mencement week at the University of Texas, which opened today, marks the thirtieth anniversary of the uni versity and it is being made the oc casion for an appropriate celebration. Corliss Andrews has returned from the Oregon Agricultural college to spenA his vacation here. HAY'S HI HEALTH TOME Refined Women Give This the Preference . EDMONTON, Alta., June 9. The annual convention of the Canadian women s tress emu met. uere iuuu.j with delegates present from Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Hamilton, Winni peg. Fort William. -"Calgary, Victoria fi-d many other cities of the Domin ion.' The business sessions will con tinue two days and will be inter spersed with numerous features of entertainment. The easiest way to keep your hair youthful-looking, to prevent it from turning grey, is to use Hay's Hair Health. It gives absolute satisfaction and a few applications will restore nat ural color, give vitality to grey and faded hair and remove all traces of Dandruff. Beautiful natural colored, youthful-looking hair, more than any thing else, contributes to a woman's good looks. Hay's Hair Health is keeping thou sands of women's hair glossy, natural colored and beautiful. You'll never regret buying it when yotf see the dif ference it makes In your appearance. Free: Sign this adv. and take it to the following druggists and get a 50c. bot tle of Hay's Hair Health and a 25c. cake of Harfina Soap, for 50c; or $1.00 bottle of Hay's Hair Health and two 25c. cakes of Harfina Soap Free, for 1 Canadian Women's Press Club Re Cross Tansy Pills FOR ' Suppressed Menstruation PAINFUL Menstruation And PREVENTIVE tor FJMALE '"-J IRREGULARITIES. A r. c.f. anri Reliable. Perfectly Harmless PureVv Vege table! never PRICE Sl.OO Qpnt nostrjaid on receipt ot - - nrifp. Monev refunded if not as we Booklet scat tree. Vin de Cinchona Co.. Moines, iowa Take adantage of our new Parcel Post and order a bottle of us today tup imicf nnup rn 1 l!L JU11LJ UKUU IV. Beaver Bldg., Oregon City, Ore. X