Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, July 10, 1912, Page 3, Image 3

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

    MORNING ENTERPRISE WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1912.
3
i Why Not
DRESS UP
Look Right for our
visting Elks. Our Fam
ous Society Brand and
Schloss Bros. Clothes
for
Young Men and Men
Who Stay Young
Will help you do it.
Latest Models, Box
Back, and lots of oth
ers to choose from and
cost no more than the
ordinary kind. Come
in and try one on.
PRICES
1
. $15 to $30
Exceptional values in
men's and boy's Furnish
ings, also complete line
of Florscheim Shoes.
For Men Who Care.
For Future Use.
Mother I see you have written me a
letter to say how sorry you are you
took the jam. Well, I'll forgive you.
Johnny Yes, ma, but please don't
destroy the letter. It will do for next
time. New York Mail.
LOCAL BRIEFS
Dr. van Brakle, osteopath, Masonic
Building, Phone Main 399.
Jacob Jossi, of Carus, was in this
city on business Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Buckner, of Shu-
bel, wore in this city Tuesday.
Mrs. Owens, of Beaver Creek, was
in this city on business Tuesday.
- Theodore Roesser, of Maple Laus,
was En this city on business Tuesday.
H. F. Elbertson, of Roseburg, was
in Oregon City Monday and Tuesday.
Theodore Piatt has gone to Yacolt,
Wash., where he will remain for some
time.
Carl Schmeiser and son, - Max, of
Central Point, were in this city Tues
day. L. E. Barrett, a student of Stanford
University, is registered at the Elec
tric Hotel.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McCarthy, of
Carus, were among the Oregon City
visitors Tuesday.
C. E. Spence, who is master of the
state grange, is very ill at his home
at Beaver Creek.
Norman F. Hall, of San Francisco, a
dealer in book-binders' supplies, was
in Oregon City Tuesday.
Jacob Grossmueller and wife and
their daughter, of Shubel, were among
the Oregon City visitors Tuesday.
Mrs. Hugh Roberts, of Jennings
Lodge one of the well known residents
of that place, was in Oregon City on
business Tuesday.
Miss Mable Yocum, of Hoquiam,
Wash., is in this city visiting with
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Martin. Miss Yo--cum
is a niece of Mrs. Martin.
Richard Frederick, Mr .and Mrs. Ir
vin Ray, of this city, leave today for
Rockaway Beach, Oregon, where they
will spend two weeks by the sea.
Mrs. Kosina Fouts and Mrs. Eliza
beth Fox left Tuesday evening for
Portland, where they will visit the for-
'-v.ia rt -i 11 orli f Tlno I nil n T nmnn-
-Mr. and Mrs. Harries, of Eugene,
were in this city the first of the week
visiting the latter's sister, Mrs. J. J.
Cooke. Mr. and Mrs. Harris are at
tending the Elks' convention. -
P. G. Spence, who has been spending
the past three months in Oregon vis
iting his brother, C. E. Spence, and
family at Beaver Creek, left Tuesday
for his home in Fairbury, Nebraska.
Mr. and Mrs. Derby, of Salem, will
arrive here today and will visit their
daughter, Miss Nell Derby, and also
attend the Elks' convention. Mr. Der
by is a member of the Salem order of
Elks.
John F .Clark and H. E. Cross went
to Portland Tuesday afternoon, where
they attended the funeral of the late
W. C. Johnson, and acted as pallbear
ers. Mr. Johnson was formerly an at
torney of this city.
Mrs. Viola Meyer, who has been con
nected with the millinery establish
ment on Main street between Ninth
and Eight street, left Tuesday for
Ohio, where she will make her future
home. Mrs. Meyer has sold her in
terest in the millinery business to
Miss Leila Hyatt.
Mrs. L. Stevens, of Powell River, B.
C, has arrived in Oregon City and
will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Douthit, and Mr. Stevens' parents,
Mr .and Mrs A. R. Stevens, of Maple
Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens formerly
resided in this city before making
tneir come in Powell River.
Edwin F. Driggs, of New York, is in
Portland visiting his mother, Mrs. E.
F. Driggs, who recently moved from
this city to Portland. Mr .Driggs and
family will remain in. Portland" for
three months. Mr. Driggs is a form
er uregon city boy, and is now a lead
ing attorney of New York.
Mrs. Joseph Goodfellow and little
daughter, of Bend, Oregon, have re
turned to Oregon City from Eugene,
where they have been visiting rela
tives. Mr. Goodfellow will arrive bora
within a few weeks and will visit his
mother, Mrs. Robert J. Goodfellow,
and will accompany his family home.
Just received a nice lot of new
cream brick Swiss and Limburger
cheese. L. A. Noble, 714 Main street
C. G. Huntley, who with his wife
and daughter, are sojourning at Can
non Beach, Oregon, returned to Ore-
Ugon City Tuesday to remain dur
ing the week and to attend the Mk.s
convention in Portland. Mrs. Huntley
and daughter are still at Cannon
Beach, and Mr. Huntley will return to
that resort next week. At the present
time many campers are coming in at
that place.
BLACK AND WHITE CREATION
A charming effect both in color and
line has been achieved in this pictur
esque hat of black chip. It has a low
flat crown and wide brim with a fas
cinating tilt just at the spot to make
it most becomoing. Around the crown
and near the outer edge of the brim
is a wreath of white marguerites
dotted with an ocasional one which
shades to the yellow. A box pleated
ruche of frayed black taffeta also en
circles the crown and continuing has
been wired to form an aigrette to the
left of the front.
I
(Continued from page 1)
duct daily Bible Classes and Professor
Lee Emerson Bassett, who will con
duct the Shakespeare department out
lined their work, and Miss Gage whet
ted up the appetites of the patrons by
telling of the good things in store for
those interested in domestic scienee.
The platform manager, S. Piatt
Jones, though exhausted from a fifteen-hour
ride from Eastern Oregon,
stepped onto the main auditorium at
the conclusion of Rev. Spurgeon's ad
dress and made a most favorable im
pression with the audience. Mr. Jones
has a most striking personality and is
an entertainer of large ability. He
has just completed a most successful
session as manager of the platform at
La Grande.
The tent city jumped in numbers
from two hundred to almost three
hundred and fifty during the day and
camping outfits are still pouring into
the park. It is expected that fully
two thousand will be in the auditor
ium for the two features today. Mc
Cormick and "Bronte" and Judge Sad
ler for the evening.
Miss Leah Slusser was the soloist
for Professor Chapman's orchestra
concert at 1:15 in the afternoon, and
hearty encores greeted her appearance
Professor Chapman's orchestra is one
of this year's features and is on the
program for two concerts daily.
Mount Angel and the Portland Colts
officially opened the Chautauqua base
ball series, and almost the whole at
tendance watched the first game. The
score was: Mount Angel, 8; Colts, 11.
Batteries, Mt. Angel, White, Sharback
and White; Colts, Tucker and Scott
Umpire, William Burnside of Portland.
The game was a good exhibition
featuring the circuseatches of B. Mas
cot for the Colts.
The following will' be the program
today:
8:11. Summer School.
11:00. Chautauqua Forum.
"A Chautauqua Morning,"
led by S .Piatt Jones.
1 : 1,5. Concert, Chapman's orches
tra. Soloist, Perry Barton Arrant, pi
anist. 2:00. An afternoon with McCor
mock and Bronte, the dog with the log
ical understanding.-
3:30. Baseball, Gladstone vs. Clack
amas. .
7:15. Concert, Chapman's orchestra
Soloist Edson Dwinell Clapp, violin
ist. 8:00. Reading, Professor Lee Em
erson Bassett.
Judge Frank P .Sadler,' of Chicago.
"The Criminal in the Making."
WHY HESITATE?
We Will Relieve You of Kidney Di
sease or Furnish You Medicine
Free.
We know we can furnish medicine
that will almost always effect easy
and positive relief for kidney ailments.
We are so certain of this that we sell
every package with our printed guar
antee that the medicine shall cost the
purchaser nothing should it fail to do
as we claim.
We have been recommending and
selling this medicine to a considerable
extent, and are feceiving the best kind
of evidence that it is doing exactly as
we said it would. That's why we can
safely and truthfully ask all our neigh
bors to try it at our risk.
Our treatment consists of Rexall
Kidney Pills, which are one of the fin
est pharmaceutical preparations we
know of for overcoming kidney, blad
der and urinary derangements, and as
sociate ailments.
We want everyone who suffers from
any kidney or urinary disease to come
to our store and get a package of Rex
all Kidney Pills. They can try as
many as three packages with the dis
tinct understanding that we will re
turn every penny paid us for the med
icine at the mere hint of dissatisfac
tion. Certainly we know of no strong
er reason as to why you should at
least give Rexall Kidney Pills a trial.
We would not dare to make this offer
were we not positive that the result
will be as we proclaim. Price- 50c.
Sold in this community only at our
store, The Rexall Store. Huntley
Bros. Co. .
CHAUTAUQUA
COURSE IN NATURE
STUDY SUGGESTED
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu
gene, July 9. Special.) A nature
study course for town and country
schools that will work, was suggested
in the opening of a course of lectures
by Professor Frederick Smith of Chi
cago Teachers' college, speaking at
the University of Oregon. "Nature
study," he said, "must begin some
where and get somewhere and be
something. It must contribute to the
spiritual well being of the community
and aid in the development of charac
ter.
"The principle things, however, that
should be demanded of a nature study
course in the schools, is in providing
an experience for children that will en
able them to understand the things
they learn in books. A young woman
in a Chicago high school told me she
had always pictured radishes as grow
ing in bunches five cents worth in a
place.
"At another time I asked a class In
the teachers' college to give the com
mon name of two insects that were in
jurious to the flowers, trees or shrubs
of Chicago, and one student wrote,
'Coons and possums are insects that
injure the trees. The only way to get
rid of them is to shoot them.'
"Another demand that must be made
of a nature study course is that it aid
in the movement for civic betterment,
that it encourage the planning of pub
lic parks and other places of recrea
tion for the children; that it work for
the beautification of back yards.
LOWLY BEAVERS LOSE
PORTLAND, July 9, (Special.)
Portland lost a pitcher's battle today.
1 to 0. Miller allowed only 2 hits.
Seven bingles were made off Klawit-
ter's delivery. It was an exciting
game and if San Francisco had not
scored in the first it would have gone
into extra innings.
The results Tuesday follow:
- At Portland San Francisco 1, Port
land 0.
At San Francisco Oakland 4, Sac
ramento 2.
At Los Angeles Los Angeles 4, Ver
non 0. k
OREGON CITY MEN
HONOR DEAD LAWYER
Rev. S. P .Davis, of this city, offici
ated Tuesday afternoon at the funeral
of W. Carey Johnson, one of the most
prominent lawyers of Oregon, at the
White Temple in Portland. Mr. John
son practiced law in Oregon City for
many years, after which he moved to
Portland. Among the active pall-bear
ers were Mayor Dimick, Hon. H. E.
Cross, John W. Loder and D. C. Lat-
ourette, of this city. The honorary
pall-bearers were W. D. Fenton, L. R.
Webster, Henry E. McGinn, C. A.
Dolph, C. R. Idleman and C. W. Fulton
He Might Know One.
A man, apparently from the country,
stepped up to the ticket seller In the
Forty -second street subway station, ac
cording to the New York Telegraph,
and asked:
"Been Id town long?"
"Quite awhile," replied the ticket
seller.
"Know a man named O'Connell?"
"No."
"Sure yon don't know O'ConnellT
"Say," said the ticket seller Impa
tiently, "there are 5.000.000 people in
New York. " Do yon expect me to know
every man In the city?"
"No." replied the other, "but 1
thought yon might have sense enough
to know one."
' A Strange Recipe For Acting.
Perhaps the most striking instance
of voluntary hallucination is that re
corded by an Intimate friend of the
actor Talma. Langlois states that the
great tragedian told him that when
ever he entered on the stage he was
accustomed by force of will to make
his brilliant audience disappear and to
substitute for them a house full of
skeletons. The emotion which these
ghastly creatures of his own imagina
tion excited served, he declared, to
give additional force to his own imper
sonations. The Most Accurate Frontier.
As an instance of the jealousy exist
ing in the relations between Norway
and Sweden it may be noted that the
boundary line between the two coun
tries is the most minutely exact in Eu
rope. In every parish' touched by the
line there Is deposited an elaborate plan
which Is renewed every ten years, the
whole of the work of surveying, etc..
being carefully repeated each time.
Commencing Thursday, July 11,
1912, the Oregon City Transporta
tion Co. -
Str. Pomona
Will make two round trips between
Portland and Oregon City and
three round trips Sunday.
WEEK DAYS
Leave Portland. Leave Oregon City
8:00 a. m. 11:00 a. m.
2:00 p. m. 5:00 p. m.
SUNDAY - .
Leave Portland. Leave Oregon City
9:00 a. m. 10:30 a. m.
12:00, noon 1:30 p. m.
3:00 p. m. " 5:00 p. m.
Boat and car tickets are inter
changeable. -
Take a cool and pleasant trip by
water. Freight handled twice a
day each way with care and dis
patch. .
Oregon City Transportation Co. "
M1NNVILLE HAS
BIG 1911 HOP SALE
The sale of more 1911 hops is re
ported from the McMinnville district,
namely the Dave Stout crop of 120
bales, which reducea unsold 11911s to
exactly '298 bales.' The Stout crop was
purchased by Hal V. Bolam and at a
price reported to be in around 28c.
The demand for the remainder of last
year's crop is keen but holders are
firm and refuse to sell at prices
around 26 and 28cy, which is the low
est that has been paid during the re
cent buying.
In the contract market there is a
good demand at 20-21c with few sel
lers. As the weather east is unusual
ly warm, it follows that brewers' trade
is better and so they are more Inclin
ed to consider buying some hop sup
plies. While the majority of buyers
would much prefer to spend the week
witnessing the program of the Elks'
convention, yet they are- unable to do
so on account of orders to be attend
ed to as it is now getting into the
mosti mportant part of the 1912 crop
the world over and so every phase of
the situation demands close attention.
Cables from England report weather
more favorable, vermin decreasing.
Telegrams from New York report
weather extremely hot and dry. Crop
conditions in Oregon are better as
weather has cleared oft and growers
are busy spraying.
Prevailing Oregon City prices are as
follows: -
DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes
on basis of 6 to 8 cents.
Fruits, Vegetable.
HIDES (Buying) Green hides. 7c
to 8c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 cents
to 14c; sheep pelts, 25c to 75c each.
Hay, Grain, Feed.
EGGS Oregon ranch eggs, 17c case
count; 19c candeled.
HAY (Buying) Timothy, $12 to
$15! clover, $8 to $9; oat hay, best,
$10 to $11; mixed, $9 to $11; arfalfa,
$1S to $16.50.
OATS (Buying) $35.00 to $36.50
wheat 90c bn.; oil meal, selling $36.50
Shady Erook dairy feed, $1.30 per 100
pounds.
FEED (Selling) Shorts, $30; bran
$26; process barley, $41.50 per ton.
FLOUR $4.60 to $5.50.
potatoes Best buying 85c to
95c according to quality per hund
red:.
POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c to
13c; spring, 17c to 20c, and roosters
sc. stags lie.
Butter, Poultry, Eog.
Butter (Buyi Ordinary coun
try butter, 20c to 25c; fancy dairy,
0c roll.
Livestock, Meats
BEEF (Live Weight) Steers, 5
and 640; cows, 4c; bulls 3c.
MUTTTON Sheep 3c to Zc.
VEAL Calves 10c to 12c dressed,
according to grade.
MOHAIR 33c to 35c.
Taking a Chance.
" "Is that picture one of the old mas
ters you were telling me about?" asked
Mr. Cumrox.
"Yes," replied the art dealer. "It Is
a genuine treasure absolutely authen
tic." "I'll buy It I already have three just
like it, and somewhere in the bunch
I'm liable to hit the original." Wash
ington Star. - - -
Portland Railway
Light and power department will
be located at 617 Main Street, in the
Beaver Building, after July 4th.
Lamp . renewals, collections, con
tracts and supplies at this office.
All consumers who have not signed
the new contracts will obtain the ad
vantage of lower rates by signing same
and returning to the Oregon City office,
617 Main Street.
Gold Acts That Way Sometimes.
Parvenu My son wants a magnet
Have you a handsome one in gold?
Pele Mele.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Lenora C. Atwater and Henry At
water to George W. Green, land in
section 4, township 2 south, range 1
"Dfei$it Sets
t
With Yotif Subscriptions
THE ENTERPRISE
Has a limited number of
fine, 31-piece, gold trimmed
dinner sets that are just
what you want. Call or
'phone our office and let
us explain our offer.
Change of Location
Power Company's
east; $600.
B. F. and E. R. Hart to Emma John
son, land in section 22, township 3
south, range 5 east; $10.
Edwin T. and Josie Fields to George
and Stella Rakel, lots 7 and 8 of block
8, Canemah; $1.
E. C. and Mary E. Hackett to Melis
so A. Bestow, land in Oregon City
near 14th and Main streets; $10.
Melissa A. and H. P. Bestow to E. C.
Light &
Howell, land in D .L. C. of George Ab
ernethy, township 2 south, range 2
eats; $10.
Mary and Thomas McCarthy to
Charles Weismandel, 52 acres of sec
tions 20, 21, 28, 29, township 3 south
range 2 east; $1500.
Isadore and Katherihe Schiel to Em
ma C Miller, land in D. L. C. of J. S.
Risley No. 51, township 2 south, range
1 east; $3000.