Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, January 05, 1912, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
4- WH V DOC WHITE HAD TO PUT
ONE OVR ON CUBS.
Doc White, for ten years a
pitcher with the Chicago Amer
icans, litis one of the longest
heads In base
ball. He also
is somewh&i of
a humorist. A .
few days aft
er the White
Sox. broke all
records by
winning three
straight series
from the Cubs
last fall Doe
was asked how
be managed to
hurl so fine a
game against
the National
leaguers in the
T
DOC WHITE.
Sunday battle. It will be re
membered that White not only
beat them 4 to 2, but got two
hits and a pass himself.
"Well, it was just like this,"
T dryly answered the lanky twirl-
er. "I saw visions ot Minneapo
lis ahead of me and had to do
it"
All of which is good stuff, es
pecially as his fellow pitchers,
Altrock, Patterson. Olmstead.
Fiene, etc., have gone to that ex
cellent city. But Doc intends fo 7
remain a major leaguer as long J,
as possible. There is some , T
-chance that he may become a 4
X regular manager some day. but T
T that's telling secrets. 4
M-l-l-I-I-I-I-l-I-I-I-l-I-l-I-l-I-I-I'M'IM-l
WOULD ALTER POLO RULES.
Water Sport Is Thought to Be Too
- Rough at Present.
The revival of interest experienced
this fall In the game of American wa
ter polo has once more started a move
ment in the west in favor of revising
the rules. Dr. J. H. White, formerly
of the Chicago A. A., is at the head of
those advocating the adoption by the
Amateur Athletic union of the "thrown
goal."
Shorn of their trimming details, they
may be condensed into:
First Allowing goals to be scored
by throwing the ball at the board as
well as by touching it and counting
two points for the thrown and five for
the touched goal.
Second. Inflating the ball fully in
stead of having it only seven-eighths
inflated.
The object of these rules is, of course,
to open the play and eliminate as
much as possible unnecessary rough
work, making the game clear and
more spectacular.
SOCCER TEAM COMING.
Australian Eleven Will Tour United
States Next Year.
A prominent Australian capitalist
and an enthusiastic supporter of soc
cer football in that country is now in
New York city making arrangements
for the visit of an all star amateur
Australian team that he proposes to
tour this country with next year. If
successful in his efforts the team will
land on the Pacific coast and give ex
hibitions in the principal cities on the
way east
The Australian aggregation will be
rhosen from the amateur cracks of the
country, college, school and the regu
lar amateurs. After leaving America
they will tour England before return
ing to Australia. It is the promoter's
plan to have a yearly series if possible
between the star teams of America,
England and Australia, making It a
tri-continental affair, which, he fig
ured, would create intense interest.
JONES FORCED TO REST.
Champion Mile Runner Sprains Tendon
and Will Not Compete This Winter.
John Paul Jones, Cornell's great
runner nnd mile champion of the Unit
ed States, will not be able to enter any
indoor meets in the Immediate future,
and it is possible that be will do no
indoor training this winter at all.
Jones has developed a strained tendon
Achilles, which is badly swollen, and
Coach Jack Moakley of the track team
has ordered him not to train.
Moakley says Jones sustained the in
Jury in cross country running, but it
did not develop a serious character un
til lately. Jones has been showered
with Invitations to run at various
meets this winter, but has been forced
to decline them on account of this in
Jury. AUTO RACING DETERIORATING.
Fast Motor Driving Losing Much of Its
Popularity,
Waning public interest the useless
ness of demonstrating how fast cars
can travel and the needless waste of
human life are fast putting automo
bile racing In the discard. For three
years attendance at the big races has
steadily decreased.
The recent running of the Vanderbilt
cup race at Savannah, Ga., despite the
fact that phenomenal speed was attain
ed by the cars, was not an unqualified
luccess, and recently Alfred Reeves,
former member of the Vanderbilt cup
commission and the racing board of
the American Automobile association,
predicted that about one more running
will end that classic.
England's 1912 Golf Tourney.
Great Britain's amateur golf cham
pionship for 1912 will take place in the
week beginning June 3. For the first
time in the history of the event It will
be played on the links of the Royal
North Devon club at Westward hotel.
Our Lighthouse Service.
Although the United States has the
smallest foreign going merchant ma
rine In the world. It possesses the
most perfectly equipped and elaborate
lighthouse service o be found on any
coast line. During the last half cen
tury this service has cost $lfO,(Hi).0OO.
and Its maintenance calls for the ap
propriation of about $7,000,000 annual
ly. Oak Tree Bark.
The bark of very lage oak trees
weighs In somt cases a? much as
three tons.
ft
THE EMPEROR
ANDJFATE
By THEODORE BORLAND
Copyright by American Press Asso
ciation. 1911.
, There was once a young man who
lived In a country that had long been
ruled by a line of profligate kings. At
last the people, maddened by their
wrongs and by hunger, rose up in
their might, beheaded the king and his
queen and secretly made away with
the heir apparent so that no successor
might inherit the throne. Then they
killed all the nobles on whom the king
ly power rested and established a re
public. This young man, who was a soldier
by profession, stood by the palace and
witnessed the fury of the mob: He
had not suffered himself from the roy
al tyranny, but could understand the
vengeance these people coveted. Nev
ertheless the scene impressed him with
the undesirability of anarchy. The
kings of other countries turned out
their armies to force the revolutionists
to put back the monarchy, and the
young soldier fought with the armies
of his country against these sover
eigns. From the first it was apparent that
he had In him the elements of a great
general. He soon obtained the com
mand of an independent army and
fought battle after battle, wianing ev
ery one till his enemies retreated with
in their own borders and left him mas
ter ot the situation.
The young man, naturally ambitious,
was fired by this success to greater
deeds. Obtaining other armies he
went on foreign conquests, always re
turning successful. This won for him
the plaudils of the people, and when
they placed the government in the
bands of three associate governors
they made the general' the first of the
three. But he did not remain long at
home. Fresh wars called him to other
fields, but he always conquered, and
whenever he did so he attached some
additional territory to bis own country.
And so absorbing one territory. after
another from what had been a king
dom he established an empire.
And now. since he was appointing
his brothers to govern these countries
he had conquered, making them kings,
It was necessary that he should have
for himself a title even higher than
that of king. So the legislative body
conferred on him the title of emperor,
putting it to the vote of the people
whether or no this should be so. The
people confirmed the. appointment, and
he was seated on an imperial throne
At this time, when ! was at the
height of his glory and power, one
night he had a dream. He dreamed
that he was sitting on his throne, the
imperial crown on his head, the scep
ter in his band, and a throng of cour
tiers passing before him. bowing to him
as they passed. Among them the em
peror noticed a figure clad in unseem
ly apparel to wear at court, having
nothing about his or her figure for
there seemed to be no sex only a flow
ing robe of poor material. This per
son passed the emperor without a bow.
keeping his strange eyes on the sover
eign all the while.
"Who are you?" asked the emperor.
"Fate."
"Ah. you are Fate, are you? What
are you doing here?"
"I came to implant within your brain
that which will accomplish my inten
tions for you."
"What are those intentions?"
"It is not meet that mortals should
know what I have in store for them."
"At least tell me-what will be mv
end."
The figure turned and looked up
ward. The emperor's gaze followed In
the same direction, and be saw a pic
ture, toward which he seemed to be
moving. It was a rock surrounded by
water, the waves incessantly beating
upon it. Presently he stood on the
rock himself. It was a desolate place,
and with him were only a few of those
whom he had ennobled. Soldiers of a
foreign nation loitering about Indi
cated that he was a prisoner. He en
tered an unpretentious bouse, from
which he would never emerge:
The scene changed, and he lay dying
in this house. The few friends who
had accompanied him stood about him,
but no wife, no child. Then the pic
ture rolled away, and the emperor sat
alone on his throne. He awoke with a
dreadful sensation and slept no more
till morning, when he fell into a trou
bled slumber. When he awoke all
memory of his dream had left him.
Not long after this he started on an
other campaign. Thus far he had
never failed and did not think ! possi
ble for him to fail. He marched an
army into a northern country in the
dead of winter. The people of that
country retreated before him. destroy
ed their granaries and burned their
cities. His army, cold and starving,
made a horrible retreat, a verv few
of his soldiers again regaining their
own country.
From this point the emperor's star
steadily went down, down. He made
desperate efforts to retrieve bis failing
fortunes, but achieved no permanent
success. All those kingdoms he had
subdued, seeing that his tide had turn
ed, joined together to crush him. He
staked ail on one decisive battle and
lost.
He gave himself up to one of the
kings who defeated him and was sent
to a rock in the midst of a great ocean.
There he died surrounded by a few ad
herents; but neither his wife nor his
son were with him.
His name was Napoleon Bonaparte.
There was a saying among the an
cients that those whom the gods wish j
to destroy they first make mad.
Chamois Skins.
'Chamois skins? No, madam, we
have none.V said the truthful druggist
But what are those in the window?"..
demanded the woman.
"Kid skins." replied the druggist.
They are sold as chamois, but thev
are not I doubt if you can find a
chamois skin in New York outside a
museum. There are not enough cham
ois left in all Europe to supply New
York for one day. They are being
exterminated as the' American buffalo
was. -They are now rigidly protected
by game laws and are 6nly shot dur
ing the open season by the sportsmen.
Will you take a kid skin? Yes. madam,
you will find it just as good, but it
Isn't chamois." New York Sun.
The Snail's Horns.
A snail's manner of withdrawing his
horns is very interesting. He does not
pull them back bodily into their re
ceptacles, but turns them inside out,
just as one sometimes turns the fin
gers of a tight glove.
The Plow.
Emperor Shun Nung of China iiiYent
ed the plow and introduced agriculture
and medical science in 1200 B. C.
Slander.
He who slanders wields a sword
Which he holds at the point. His own
hands receive the wounds.
jwaaoys
JVKrror
To Improve the Neck and Shoulders.
Every - girl cannot have beautiful
shoulders, but every girl can do much
toward improving the appearance of
a scrawny neck and weak, undevelop
ed shoulders. The carriage of the
head has much to do with the appear
ance of both.
What sentimental poet has not sung
the praises of a graceful neck and
pretty, well rounded shoulders? And
what girl of the day does not covet
them? If she is the lucky possessor
of both can any one blame her for be
ing the least bit proud? But if she
possesses neither and goes much into
society no one can censure her if she
Uses every effort to improve herself
In these respects since the garb of so
ciety requires a liberal display of these
portions of the body.
A pair of shoulders curving out from
a graceful neck and sloping down to
shapely arms will always call forth
admiration. And if they are white,
with just enough of the rose tint" un
derneath to create the impression of
health, so much the more will they be
admired. Then, too, their poise must
be perfect and their lines graceful.
Exercise, massage and proper carriage
assist greatly In developing shapely
outlines, while by applications of un
guents and lotions the whiteness of
the skin may be brought out or in
creased. Balancing the shoulders properly is
necessary at all times. If they are
well formed it is necessary to walk or
sit correctly in order to keep them so.
Young women who are engaged for
several hours daily at clerical work,
sitting at a desk, are apt to lean more
to one side than to the other, and this
very position has made many uneven
shoulders. Of course the position one
takes in leaning toward the desk and.
often the kind of light thrown upon
the work are responsible for the un
even positions. Even if you cannot
leave the desk for any length of time
it is a wise plan to get up and walk
up and down the floor otice or twice,
raise the head high and throw back the
shoulders. If you can get to an open
window to inhale ami exh:i!e a few
times properly so much Hip better.
Lunch hour gives scarcely ei-migh
exercise for those whose orcui;i.ion
compels them to lesirt a sedentary life.
Don't call a messenger - for every
trifling errand. Get un occasionally,
stretch the limbs, throw b;i' k the shoul
ders and walk about a few times be
tween morning anil noon and between
noon and going home in the even'ng. It
will do you a great deal of good, and
no doubt you cau snake up for the few
moments taken each time for recrea
tion. If you do not do this you cannot
expect to have well formed and nicely
rounded shoulders. In taking up work
which will necessitate the raising and
Use of one arm or the other the indi
vidual should attempt in some way to
equalize the position so that lopsided
results may be avoided.
When the shoulders are thin and hol
low correct carriage, with daily appli
cations of a good skin food, which
should be massaged with a firm, round
ing movement of the palm of the band
and rubbed well into the skin, will
prove beneficial.
Wash For the Hair.
The washing of the hair is especially
Important now that the hair is worn
flat, and hair not properly washed
might just as well not be washed at
all. Parisian beauty doctors are using
a hair washing paste the foundation of
which is powdered soap. You cover
the powder with boiling water., add
some borax and orris root with a little
sachet powder of your favorite scent,
and you are ready to begin. When it is
all of a bubble you take it off the fire
and stir In some whole oatmeal. When
it cools it Is ready for use. If a very
high perfume is desired some oil of
rose geranium Is added. You will then
have a jelly, not very clear because of
the oatmeal and orris, but smelling de
lightful. After the paste is thoroughly worked
in the rinsing must begin. Many per
sons do not understand how difficult It
is to rinse the hair properly. The trou
ble is that the individual hairs ate
coated with soap, and the water must
be hot and used with force to get the
soap out. That is the theory and se
cret of it.
Ten Rules For Beauty.
Lillian Russell In one of ber beauty
essays gives the following rules:
Keep in the open as much" as possi
ble. Breathe deeply and regularly
while walking.
Live on a diet of eggs, fruit, vege
tables and milk as much as possible.
Take a warm bath daily and a sweat
bath once a week.
Dress loosely and not too warmly.
Wear no heavy clothes or heavy hats.
Go to bed early and get up early.
Sleep in a dark room with windows
pen and take from seven to eight
hours' sleep.
- Take one absolutely quiet day every
two weeks without reading, writing or
visiting. , "
Avoid worrying. Talk or hear np
scandal. :
Marry and be the" best friend it Is
possible for you to be to your hus
band. . ;
Be temperate In. all pleasures.
Remember, when these things be
;oTie habits you are far t. vhe road
V beauty, health and happiness.
IN THE KITCHEN. j- hi
- - - -. 1 A
Many Brushes For H fa
Modern Dishwashing. H IB '
jferx&Tups -CpftPot5 iSjaits..,.tJar &tesp5 I
v'LLl!'' f "s fj
THE LATEST OLBAKINO BRUSHES. ! H
Modern housekeeping requires doz
ens of brushes and a towel for every
sort of dishwashing. This photograph,
taken in a model kitchen, depicts the
various brushes necessary to clean
properly coffee cups, coffeepot, tum
blers, pans, sieves and even coffee and
tea pot spouts. The towel rack also
has accommodation for hand and glass
towels and separate towels for 4rying
crockery and table silver.
At the Glove Counter.
"No woman." said the woman shop
per, "ever tries on bargain counter
gloves or any gloves that are sold for
a dollar or less a pair. Why? Because
It is the unwritten rule that they shall
not be tried on, as every woman knows.
Sold at these special low prices with
little or no profit or perhaps at a loss,
as bargains, they must uot be made
less desirable by trying on. as every
woman understands. But the. men?
They don't understand, which is natu
ral, for they have less occasion to. At
any rate, they try on gloves freely and
regardless.
"Here was a bargain sale of men's
gloves at a price under a dollar, and
there were twenty men around the
counter .buying them. And' were they
trying them on? Why. certainly, very
openly, frankly, naively, standing fac
ing the counter and trying them a no
standing on the outskirts of tbe crowd
and facing away from the counter and
trying them, this not to make them
selves invisible, but simply turning that
way to get more room.,
"And did anybody try to stop them?
Not at all. There were two sales
women at the counter, but they viewed
this trying on apparently quite uudis
turbed. They let the men keep right
on, while they continued steadily to
sell gloves, which was of course quite
the correct thing to do, for the men
have not yet learned the law of the
bargain glove counter."
This Is Fashion's New Tam-o'-shanter.
The tarn crown reappears ever so
often, and this Is fashion's last ver
sion of this ever popular hat crown.
A cap of marten fur. mounted on -a
narrow brim of velvet, fits the head
SMART FtTB HAT.
closely, and at the top of this fur cap
Is the huge crown of velvet which has
the effect of a great bird, just alighted
on the small hat. At the side of the
fur cap is an ornament of chenille
and gold cord.
Tube Skirt a Menace to Health.
The hobble and tube skirts and other
tight fitting garments are given as
causes for tuberculosis by Dr. Herman
Spalding, chief of the bureau of medi
cal Inspection of Chicago. Loose fit
ting clothes, he declares, are proper
for maintaining health and happiness.
Dr. Spalding recommends that sizes in
coats and underclothing be purchased
about four sizes larger than those you
have been accustomed to, if they have
been tight fitting.
If you have been wearing a tight fit
ting hobble or tube skirt he recom
mends that you forget tbe styles and
order a hoopskirt. Another recom
mendation is that when you walk
along" tbe streets shrug your shoulders
and allow the cold air to circulate be
neath your clothing. If you would
have health you must give the skin
air just as you would the lungs.
Beef and Temper.
Some doctors say a regular diet of
beef makes people ill tempered and
cross.
Conspicuous.
Probably nothing else of the same
area is as conspicuous as a dent in a
derby hat Atchisou Globe.
Cottages.
Th term "cottage" was first applied
to ajsmali house without land In the
year 1275. :
- t Eye of a Ky.
It hs been estimated that the eye of
a fly t-n discern an object one five-millionth
;f an inch in diameter.
fx - g
For the Readers of the
MORNING ENTERPRISE
By special arrangement with the publishers we . are able to
offer our readers and patrons a most unusual opportunity to
secure two of the leading magazines on subscription in con
nection with this paper at a most remarkably low price.
This means a big saving to MORNING ENTERPRISE
mail subscribers.
This Is The Off zt
El R YBODYS MAGAZINE . . . regular price $1.50
THE DELINEATOR-..... ... . regular price 1 .50
d the
an
MORNING
Our
ORDER OF US ctthis BianK out ORDER TO-DAY
THE MORNING ENTERPRISE
OREGON CITY, OREGON
GENTLEMEN: Enclosed find $4.25 for which -enter my subscription with the pub
lisher for one year each for THE DELINEATOR and EVERYBODY'S MAGAZINE, to
gether with the MORNING ENTERPRISE.
Name....
Address. .
If you want the MORNING ENTERPRISE delivered by our carrier in Oregon City, Glad
stone or Willamette, combination price will be $5.25
SPICY SPORT CHATS
By TOMMY CLARK.
Ordinarily the announcement that
one of the major leagues had thrown
down the gauntlet to the other would
cause quite a stir, but the resolution
passed by the American league recent
ly at the meeting in New York failed
to create this impression. Baseball as
now conducted is too prosperous to
take any chances of ruining it with
another war, especially if that conflict
would be brought about as a result of
3ome unimpoi-tant misunderstanding.
Men who make hundreds of thou
sands of dollars out of baseball every
year are going to think a few times
before entering into another baseball
war.
The American league's resolution was
cleverly worded, because it was pos
sible to put any one of ten different
constructions on it without really pin
ning the league to any one proposition.
The ball players are the only ones
disappointed because of the rather
slim chaives of a conflict, for it is the
players who always are benefited by
such conditions, and if it was up to
them there never would be peace.
One object of the resolution, so it is
hinted, is to rebuke Charles Webb
Murphy's statement that Ban Johnson
controls the National league as well
as the American and might as well be
selected as chief of tie parent organ
ization In public as to continue as its
chief In private. Then, too, it is hint
ed that Ban Johnson is anything but
pleased with the manner in which the
national commission carried on the
ticket scalping investigation.
The Causo of the Trouble.
"What is the matter with that ba
by?" growled an irascible husband as
the little one persisted in howling and
kicking to the extent of his little might.
"The matter is, sir," calmly replied
the wife as she strode np and down
the room "the matter is that this baby
inherits your temper."
And the husband returned to his pa
per with a gloomier look than before.
NOT EXPENSIVE
Treatment at Hot Lake, Including medical attention, hoard and
bsths, costs no more than yon would pay to live at any first class
hotel. Rooms can be had rrom 75 cents to $2.50 per day. Meats
In the cafeteria are served from 20 cents up and in the grill at the
usual grill prices. Baths range from 50 cents to $1.00.
We Do Ctfte Rheumatism
HOT LAKE SANATORIUM
HOT LAKE, OREGON.
WALTER Ii. PIERCE. Pres.-Mgr.
PEC1AL BARGAIN
ENTERPRISE (bymail) regularprice 3.00
Price Only $4.25
Quite Natural.
"I wish to see the lady of the house,"
said the tramp at the back door.
"I am she." auswered the lady.
"Go on send me the missus," said
the holio.
. "Look here, you impudent "creature!
I am the lady of this house and its
mistress. You can't stand here insult
ing tne by pretending you think I'm a
hired girl either. You get right out of
this"
"Softly, madam," inierrupted the
bum. "You mistake my mistake. You
looked so independent, so happy, so
autocratic, madam, that I thought yon
were the cook. 1 hope you will pardon
me. The error was natural, as you must
confess." Cleveland Tlam Dealer.
A Place of Lost Hopes.
. Newmarket, the English racing town,
has often sent its patrons gi'umblin
away. There was Coke o' Norfolk, for
instance, who in his younger, days vis
ited the "horsey" town and came away
a poorer man and remembered the fuel
all his life. He never raced again.
And more, he even refused to look at
the place of his lost hopes. Whenever
necessity drove his liaise across the
heath be pulled down the' blinds and
coached his" son to take like precau
tions.
"Tom. my boy." he would say. "re
member when you pass over Newmar
ket never look at the place."
Nevertheless Newmarket still sur
vives. Telling the Bumps.
The antiquity of palmistry is in
striking contrast to. the modernity of
"telling the bumps," with which it is
.often associated in popular estimation.
Wrongly associated, since the phre
nologist merely reads character with
out attempting any predictions of the
future. Phrenology was invented by
Gall the German physician,' who, as a
boy, had studied the beads of his
schoolfellows. Gall gave his first lec
ture In 1796, but six years later his
teaching was prohibited by the Austri
an government. Phrenological societies
were soon formed in London, and the
science, after leing "refuted" by Lord
Jeffrey and others; gradually made
headway. London Chronicle.
Hot Lake Mineral Baths
and inud given under scien
tific direction have cured
thousands. Write for Illus
trated booklet descriptive of
Hot Lake Sanatorium and
' the methods employed. Hot
Lake Sanatorium is acces
sible as it is located direct
ly on the main line of the
O.-W. R. & N. railway, and
special excursion rates are
to be had at all times. Ask
agents.
$6.00
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Henry A. Dedman to Horace Patch,
lots 4, 5, block 2, Dedman's Addi
tion to Canby; $250.
William F. and Pearl Mackey to
Isaac Williams, 15 acres of section
1, township 5 south, range 1 east;
$765.
Charles Dye, trustee to W. W.
Myers, lot 5 of block 4, South Oregon
City; $1.
Robert E. Oatfield and Grace M.
Oatfield to Northwestern Trust Com
pany, 66.10 acres of section 12, town
ship 2 south, range 1 east; $10.
Orrin Kellogg and Margaret Kel
logg to John R. Oatfield 645 acres of
land in D. L. C. of Orrin and Mar
garet Kellogg, township 2 south,
ranges 1 and 2 east; $1.
! Helen M. Failing- and flenrtra R
Hathaway to John R. Oatfield, 645
acres of Orrin and Margaret Kellogg,
D. L. C. township 2 south ranges
1 and 2 east; $1.
Elisha D. and Ethel Kellogg et al
to John R. Oatfield, 645 acres of D.
L. C. of Orrin and Margaret Kellogg,
township 2 south, ranges 1 and 2 east;
$1.00. .
Amanda A. Kellogg et al to John
R. Oatfield, 645 acres of D. L. C. of
Orrin and Margaret Kellogg, town
ship 2 south, ranges 1 and 2 east; $1.
J. H. Graham et al to John R. Oat
field, 645 acres of D. L. C. of Orrin
and Margaret Kellogg,, township fi
south ranges 1 and 2 east; $1.
Warren D. Hathaway et al to John
R. Oatfield, 645 acres of D. L. C. of
Orrin Kellogg and Margaret -Kellogg,
township 2 south, ranges 1 and 2
east; $1.
Heirs of Edward Kellogg to John
R. Oatfield, 645 acres of D. L. C.
of Orrin and Margaret Kellogg, town
ship 2 south, ranges 1 and 2 east; $1.
John W. and Grace Loder to Maude
Lightbody, land in Clackamas coun
ty; $1.
Bernard P. and Hattie L. Reilly
to R. E. and Allie Jenks, land In
sections 9 and 10, township 2 south,
range 2 east; $10.
Grace M. Balcolm to Gabriel Bal
colm, lot 7 of block 97, second sub
division, portion of Oak Grove; $1.
Gabriel Balcolm to William J. Alex
ander and Jennie Alexander, lot 7 of
block 97, Second Subdivision of por
tion of Oak Grove; $10.
John E. Wetzler, Jr., and Matilda
Wetzler to Julia and Samuel Hoesly,
lots 9 and 11, block 9, Robertson; $1. .
John Wetzler, Jr., and Matilda
Wetzler to Julia ond Samuel Hoesly,
lots 10, 12, block 9, Robertson; $1.
Gilbert L. Hedges administrator, to
William LaSalle, undivided one-sixth
interest in lot 7 of block 52, Glad
stone; $1.
Albert G. Hedges et al to William
LaSalle, lot 7 of block 52, Gladstone;
$1.00.
Charles W. Risley and Alice Ris
ley to Erantes and Tillie Hokanson, -land
in Concord; $1,200.
SOCIAL HYGIENE
TO BE DISCUSSED
The Brotherhood of Gladstone will
hold a banquet at the Gault Hall,
Gladstone, this evening at 6:45
o'clock. There will be several good
speakers among them Dr . House, of
Portland, who will have for his sub
ject "Social Hygiene," and Judge
Gatens, of the Juvenile Court who will
talk on the same line. There will be
a speaker from the faculty of the
Reed Institute, and his subject will
be "Psychology of the Sexes." Boys
more than fourteen years of age, an1
men are invited.
Read the Morning Eitsrprtse.
J