OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1913. eacl the Announcement below and secure $75.00 fot yaot clb or church no canvassing or soiicting neccessary FREE Save Y Checks out oaies. ON ALL PURCHASES MADE at OUR STORE present them to the Enterprise office and re ceive your votes for CASH PRIZE CONTEST B anaon ac MASONIC TEMPLE ELDG. r Co SECTIONAL POST BINDERS CANVAS AND CORDUROY Made in all sizes to fit any sheet OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE When You are in a Rush for Printing Remember The Enterprise i ................ a Special This Week: GUNPOWDER MEYUNE 45c BASKET FIRED JAPAN 45c CELYON, the great favorite among all black teas LIPTON'S TETLEY'S HORNIMAN'S ......65c Phone 74 H. IP. BRIGHTBILL 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 Coupon Good for 1000 Votes Oregon City Enterprise's Bargain Contest For the benefit of the large number of shoppers using TheMorning 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 cf 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 votS 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 i i- 4..;.. ctAinn i 1. uui at Liixo uiuuc. oaies cuena must i represent cash purchases. All cash checks and monthly bills must be $ turned into this office within ten days of the purchase date. You get a STEIN-BLOCH Suit for i At Price Bros. Where Clothes Fit 6TH AND MAIN STS. We give S & H Green Stamps. the Size for Your Camp VICTROLA is always ready to entertain you and - your C friends A VICTROLA adds one-half to your vaca tion pleasures TWO DOLLARS TODAY and two dimes a day buys you this genuine $ 1 5 V1CTOR-VICTROLA. Latest sound boxplays any disk record. Light in weight, but strong and dura ble. Come in today and select your machine. HUNTLEY BROS. CO. , . .... ........ - .-.. j OREGON CITY, OREGON dons ..rrf'.l. S-SsV J'H'if- ma ;n Good, Substantial Ones f?m$l.G0 Up FLY TRAPSv "SURE CATCH" 15c and Up Adjustable Window Screens and Fly Screen by the Yard I Each month our businesss increases, and THERE IS A REASON j Come here for your Groceries and you will learn the REA- j SON. If you can't come, send the children. They are welcome and will be treated with the same courtesy as yourselr. THE HUB GROCERY CO. SEVENTH AND CENTER STS. M. E. BUND C. H. DICKEY' $75.00 in Gold for Saving Cash Checks For. Add ress (Only one nomination coupon is allowed each contestant. Good Any Time During Contest. 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. 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 & mechanical manner. GIVE US A TRIAL. YOU WILL BE SATISFIED. 6TH AND MAIN STS. MeatS Q"antity and Quality for Cash Mfwrfo Home Sugar Cured Hams and Bacons, Kettle Rendered Lard Gives satisfaction. - A trial will convince you. 7TH STREET MARKET 7th and Center Sts. You Wear Good Clothes Bass-Hueter Pure Paints Hueters Varnishes VONDERAHE & BOOTH Paints, Oils, Varnishes Wall Paper 207 Seventh St., Oregon City Phone Main 4082 BECAUSE you know that you owe it to yourself to make a good appear ance. It increases your self-respect and the respect of your neigh bors. For That Reason You should buy your clothes of us; we sell better clothes for " the same money as others or the sajne clothes for less money. In Fact We sell at workingmen's prices. Workingman's Store NEXT TO THE BELL THEATRE Geo. A. Harding WILLAMETTE BUILDING Drugs and Medicines and Toilet Articles NOTHING BUT THE BEST Courteous treatment extended to all. THE ONE PERFECT GIFT -3 4r IT - WILL - PAY - YOU To Get Our Prices on Summer and Sporting Goods We have a complete line of hammocks, porch settees, lunch outfits and sporting goods MILLER-PARKER CO. We Fix It 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 sell 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 CH O IB MO O R HAS GOOD GROCERIES CORNERED BothPhonesAT SEVENTH AND CENTER STREETS $ NEWS FROM THE COUNTRY INTERESTING ITEMS FROM ALL PARTS OF CLACKAMAS COUNTY WILLAMETTE. Mrs. A. S. Helden and young son, of Montana, have been visiting with Mrs. R. A. Junkin -who was an old school mate. Deputy Sheriff' Edmunds shot one dog, whose sanity was in doubt Mbn day evening. If there was only a hyd rophobia scare amon,? horses may be Willamette would get rid of the bands of horses that are running wild de stroying sidewalks and annoying ev every one night and day. Mr. and Mrs. Manthey have left for South Dakota after a pleasant visit at Tours. - Dr. Fred Hunt, wife and two daught ers came up from Roseburg in their car and have been visiting their rela tives here, the Hunt, Bacon and Court ney families. Neal Whitney of Roseburg, a nephew of Fred Bacon, is trying mill . work- for a change. Mayor Turner had the misfortune to be hurt by a flying chip, in the eye at the "Red Mill." Rev. Mr. Putnam from Madras, Oregon, filled the Methodist pulpit Sunday. One of the surveying crew In our midst, a Mr. Williams, cut his right foot very badly Wednesday in the woods. He was taken to Oregon City and had his foot dressed and is now going about on crutches. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hoult have re turned from a visit with friends in Madras. Dan Coulsin, our wood-sawer, is back from a short prospecting tour among the mines of Southern Ore gon. The friends of Rev. E. A, Smith ex tend congratulations on the arrival of the brand new baby boy at his home Monday evening. Mrs. Clem Dollar spent Monday with her mother Mrs. B. F. Baker. . ., The Girl Cadets returned Monday from their camping trip to Chautau qua. . They report a splendid trip. The only accident was to Miss Mabel Larson ,the last day who sprained her right arm badly. . Mrs. Manning and children . and Miss Mildred Ream, also camped at chautauqua the two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Will Critzer and child are camping out on the banks of the Willametbe. It is a mistake about the marriage of Everett Downey. That event is yet to happen. Mrs. Standifor gave a party Thurs day afternoon in honor of, her daught er, Christine who was six. STAFFORD. We are having beautiful weather yet. For ten days now, beginning on Monday, the 7th, we have had no rain and while four days of the time it has been rather hot'for men working in the field, a gentle breeza made life bearable and hay is being rushed under cover in all the fields. The Delkar Bros, cut there oats on the Gage place that had been blown down and hauled off nearly four loads from the little strip. Oats are very heavy this year. Mfrs. Ida Delkar and children went to Seaside last Sunday for a week's outing. She was accompanied by her sister. Mr. and Mrs. August Delkar visited John Sager in East Portland return ing home last Sunday. Mr. Sager formerly lived on Shafer's hill, but ill health compelled him to sell out and he is still a great sufferer. Mrs. Nemec is doing as well as one could expect with her broken leg and bruised in so many places. Mrs. Moser does not seem to im prove very fast About a dozen of the Mr. Powell's friends and neighbors followed his remains to the crematorium last Thursday, where it was his express ed wish to be taken. He was a man of . sterling character, liked and re spected by neighbors and friends. He was born near Dallas, Oregon on Nov. 5, 1854. His father died while he was still a boy. He proved himself a de voted son and brother, and a great help to his mother, in the care and education of her younger children. He married Miss Anna Parker Dec. 14, 1890, and was a kind and loving husband and very much attached to their little adopted son, now five years old, too youg to realize his great loss. He leaves besides his widow and little son, three sisters, all of Port land, and a host' of other relatives to mourn his loss. He died of organ ic heart disease, from which he had been a patient sufferer for a number of years. . Some of the girls and boys of the neighborhood went to Succor. Lake last . Sunday for a picnic, which al most had a tragic ending, as Ernest Aerni got into water over his head and not being able to swin went down but Joe Nemec promptly went for him when the boy clutched him as a drowning person will, and both would have been drowned had not others of the party got a boat around in time to haul them both aboard. It was a somewhat narrow call. Mrs. Weisenborn, a former resident of Stafford, but) now of Glencoe, is visiting for a week among her old neighbors. Mrs. Waehlte .whose husband was pastor of the Baptist church here for seven years but who,went to California seeking health, has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Geo. Aden, the past month but finds the climate does not agree with her and will return to her home in California soon. John A. Gage came to his old home Tuesday afternoon as Roy his young er boy, had not been very well and he decided to take bim home with him so as to be near, medical aid if needed. , Mr. Gage's hand, which he cut severely, has healed up but he says it feels weak and tires easily. MACKSBURG. . Heat, necessary to ripen the grain and fruit, has prevailed in this reg ion the past week, but it has not been hot enough to wither vegetation or to lower the streams. The Molalla and its tributaries are flowing at their accustomed pace, while, the pasture retains its freshness and cattle ara as sleek and content as in early spring. Grain will, very soon, be beyond danger' of injury from weather of any kind, and by its present appearance promises an abundant yield. The annual Verein picnic took place on Sunday, the twentieth and brought us many visitors from the surround ing country. The usual dance fol lowed the day's entertainment ' and notwithstanding the heat, seemed to be greatly enjoyed. The base ball game between Hub bard and Macksburg appeared, owing to the weather, to lack vigor. Hub bard carried off the honors, 16 to 17. Ralph Gribble and wife, from Ore gon City and Albert Gribble with his wife, from Portland . spent Sunday with their people at Macksburg. Fred Mertz, of Portland, was also a Sunday visitor here. Gordon Scramlin has lately pur chased a fine new Ford motor car. Jake Fenske has added another ve hicle of the same kind to. the num ber owned by Macksburg people. Ainslse Gribble's livery stable at Canby is still recommending itself to the public through the promptness and efficiency of the proprietor. The families of Geo. Walsh and A. A. Baldwin enjoyed a woodland pic nic on the grounds of latter last Thursday. The occasion being the tenth birthday of Mr. and Mrs. Walsh's daughter, Sarah. Blackberry ing parties continue to go out in the morning carrying their lunches and : to return bringing stores of this highly prized fruit. The blackberries are in their prime now and seem inexhaustible in abund ance. . " The Messrs. Frank Hilton and son, -Will Roth and A. A. Baldwin left home on . the morning of the twen tieth for a few day's camping and fishing in the mountains. MJrs. Boesche . is enjoying a visit from her sister, Mrs. Vorne, of As toria, who, with her son is spending some time here, leaving her home in charge of Bertha Boesche. The -weather, on Tuesday night, changed from a stats of oppressive heat to one of spring-like coolness, having in the mean time brought for ward the corn and potatoes to an incredible degree. Falling Hair Many People Have a Simple Way of Stopping It It was Dr. Sangerbond, of Paris, who first discovered that dandruff and falling hair were caused by a microbe. And now that Parisian Sage, the ramedy that kills the dandruff germ is sold in every town in America, the clean people of this country have awakened to the fact that dandruff is unnecessary; that falling hair and itching scalp can be quickly stopped, and that people who usa Parisian Sage will never grow bald. To every reader of the Morning En terprise who wishes to eradicate dis gusting dandruff, stop falling hair, and have an immaculately clean scalp, free frcin itchiness, we make this of fer: ' Parisian Sage is soid by druggists everywhere, for 50 cents a large bot tla. It is an ideal, daintily perfumed hair dressing, free from, grease and stickiness, and wil cause hair to groV lustrous and - luxuriant. Sold and guaranteed by Huntley Bros. For Sale By HUNTLEY BROS. CO., DRUGGIST