- MORNING ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1912. 3 Special in BOYS' WASH , SUITS and BLOUSES - Of the Celebrated Mothers' Friend Make . Friday and Saturday We will sell the boys' wash suits and blouses at great reductions. Better stock up while the size and assortment is not broken. 125 Boys' Wash Suit 95c. 150 Boys' Wash Suits $1.15 200 Boys' Wash Suits $1.35 250 Boys' Wash Suits $1.85 300 Boys' Wash Suits $2.35 50 Boys' Blouses 40 cents. 75 Boys' Blouses 55 cents. 100 Boys' Blouses 85 cents. Extraordinary bargains in Boys' Wool Shirts. Going at proportionate reductions. On the Cor. of 7th and Main. U Happy Suggestion. fcP "K " ' T" "Ma, do folks live happy ever after when they get married?" "They ought to, my child." "Ma, why don't you and pa get mar ried?" "Why, we are, of course!" "Maybe it didn't take." ence Moore, will return to her home today. - R. M. Andrews of Albany, was an Oregon City visitor Saturday. Mr. Andrew has been attending the Elks' Convention in Portland during the ! week. " j Mr. and Mrs. C. Hazzard, of Maple Falls, Wash., were in this city Friday ' ad Saturday. They have been at tending the Elks' convention in Port land. ' .. Miss Bernice Paisley, of Portland, is in this city the guest of Miss Racii el Hunter. During her visit in this city Miss Paisley is attending the chautauqua. Joe Flora, of Newberg, who has been in Oregon City visiting relatives left Saturday for Eastern ' Oregon, where he will engage in work in the harvest fields during the summer. Mrs. Anna R. Williams left Satur day evening for Portland and from that city will leave for Seaside, Ore gon, where she will spend a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Boylan. Joe Justin will leave this morning on his motorcycle for Government Camp, where he will spend the day. Mr. Justin attempted to make the trip last Sunday but owing to the condi tion of the roads was unable to make the trip. Mr. and Mrs. George Swafford and three little children, of Eugene, who have been visiting in this city .with Mr. Swafford's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L .Swafford, will leave for their home this evening. Mr. Swafford is a member of the LaGrande order of Elks, and attended the convention in Portland while visiting here. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence May and two children, of Wendling, Oregon, left Saturday after visiting in Ore gon City with Mrs. May's .parents, Mr .and Mrs. Mosier, of Greenpoint, and Mr. May's mother, Mrs. N. A. Bowers, of Canemah, and with his brother, Lake May, also of Canemah. Mr. May and his family have been in Oregon' City since July 4. They also attended the Elks' convention. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wilkin and Mr. and Mrs. Eli Maddock, of Heppner, Oregon, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Woodbury, were in this city Friday being guests of Mrs. John Gleason and ' daughters, Misses Helen and Mame Gleason. They came to this city on the Woodbury automobile, Mrs. Wilkin returned to Oregon City Saturday to spend a few days at the Chautauqua, being a guest at the Gleason home. Mr. Wilkin' and Mr, Maddock, the latter a former resident of Oregon City, are the owners and proprietors of the Palace Hotel in Heppner. They are members of the order of Elks at Heppner, and took part in the parade Thursday. LOCAL BRIEFS Dr. van Brakle, osteopath, Masonic Building, Phone Main 399. J. Holman, of Beaver Creek, was in this city Friday. I John B. Jackson, of Clairmont, was ! in this city Frjday on business. Mrs. Baker, of Bellingnam, Wash, was in this city Friday and Saturday, David Jones, of Carus, was among the Oregon City visitors Fri day. Richard Mueller of Highland, was among the Oregon City visitors Fri day. Miss Alice Scherzinger has gone to Wilsonville .where she will spend her vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner and daughter of Carus, were among the Oregon City visitors Saturday. Albert Hurst, owner of. a flouring mill at Union Mills, was in Oregon City on business Friday. Otis Engle ,one of the well known residents of Aurora, was in Oregon City Friday and Saturday. George Lammers, a prominent saw mill man of Beaver Creek, was in Ore gon City on business Saturday. Mr. Spence, father of C E. Spence, of Beaver Creek, was transacting bus iness in Oregon City Saturday. James Dickey, one of the well known residents of Molalla, was tran sacting business in Oregon City Sat urday. Mrs. Anna Johnson, of Bolton, who a few days ago was operated upon at 1 the Oregon City hospital for appendi citis is improving. Mrs. L .E. Clark ,of Rainier, accom panied by Mrs. C. Hood, were in this at the Electric Hotel. Harold Swafford will leave Monday morning for Seattle, Wash., and al so, Victoria, B. C, where he will spend two weeks 'vacation. Miss Claire Minton, of St. Paul, Minn., who has been in Oregon City the guest of Misses Alma and Flor- I'M A fj c a . 7 i 'LI "' FOULARD GOWN. A modish design for a foulard gown which should prove of excellent service for various occasions is given today. The foulard Is the ever popu lar navy blue coin-dotted in black and white. Self-tone satin ribbon is used for the bretels and to outline the bib portion of the bodice. There is also a wide square yoke of lace. The underskirt is of the foulard, the slashed tunic and bib of black mous seline de soi with border of blue sat in ribbon. There is a narrow crushed girdle of ribbon without ends. With this is worn a hat of navy blue chip trimmed with one black and one white wing. A Perfect Gentleman. Little Elmer Papa, what is a perfect gentleman? Mr. Broadbead A perfect gentleman, my son. is a man who when you start to tell him your troubles does not break in and try to tell you his. Exchange. Down the highway" or up the by-way at a maximunvfcost of a cent or two a mile asagainst thirty or forty for the . heavy, "Dreadnaught" type of car the light, strong, Ford will carry you in perfect comfort and if need be, in record time. More than 75,000 new Fords into service this season proof that they must be right. Three passenger Roadster $685 five passenger touring car $785. C A. ELLIOTT Main 119 A72 Main, Near 4th St. - - Woman'sWorld Tablets of Mark Twain Made by Miss Church. t f I mm rnjtn 4 l tAt rc x A t 1 MISS ANGELINA SCHUYLER CHURCH. " Mr. and Mrs. George A. Mahan of Hannibal, Mo., recently presented to their home city the house built in 1844 by Mark Twain's father, in which the famous author first saw the light of day. . Miss Angelina '.Schuyler Church of New York city is the talented young artist who was commissioned to make the bronze tablets which have been placed on the outside of the house in commemoration of the occasion. Peo ple who are interested in the educa tion that does not forget character building are enthusiastic over the legend that the inscription tablet pre sents. It reads: "Mark Twain's life teaches that poverty is an incentive rather than a bar and that any boy, however humble his birth and sur roundings, may by honesty and indus try accomplish great things." Pedagogues who have seen the tab lets are suggesting that they deserve a place in the public schools of the na tion, not only because of their artistry, but .because of the lesson conveyed, the comfort and stimulus in the sug-' gestion, which could hardly fail to be advantageous, linked with the fascina tion that Mark Twain exerts over vast numbers of young people. Miss Church's portrait of the au thor in the tablet has been called the best yet made. Concerning it the Rev. Joseph H. Twitchell of Hartford, a lifelong friend of Twain, says: "1 could riot have supposed there could have been made so living a likeness of the man in. that form. Really it brings my dear old friend to life again as no picture of him does." MissChureh until recently has confined her art work to depicting animal life, and her study of "The .Runaway An Episode of Central Park, New York City," has won particular favor from critics. The artistic education of Miss Church has been radically different from the conventional methods that crystallize the ideals of the schools. The only use she has made of teachers has been for the purpose of acquiring technique. The New York School of Applied De sign, Mucha of Paris, an authority on composition, and Beard, the animal painter, have been her instructors. Technique having been acquired. Miss Church turned to the teachers to whom she professes her greatest debt horses and dogs. These she studied from life until she knew their every bone and muscle and their co-ordination. Miss Church was recently invited by Uruguay to enter a competition for an equestrian statue of a South American hero especially dear to that nation. Has Nursed For Forty-five Years. In connection with the death of Lord Lister it is interesting to know that the nurse who assisted the famous sur geon with his first antiseptic prepara tions is still in the Glasgow Royal in firmary. Nurse Bell has many inter esting stories of the old days when Professor Lister was in the Infirmary and the crowd of students and dress ers, many of them now chiefs, who attended the classes from 1861 to 1869. Nurse Bell has been in 'the Royal in firmary for forty-five years. She is now sixty-nine years of age. and she enjoys good health, though not able to do much. When Lord Lister was pre sented with the freedom of the city of Glasgow four years ago it was his spe cial desire that Nurse Bell should be present at the function in St Andrew's ball. When the .memorial service was held In the university chapel she had a special invitation to be present. Of Course He Didn't. Husband What a peculiar dish. Wife I did the cooking myself, and in turning the leaves of the cookbook I turned two at a time, and 1 cooked the herrings In apple Jelly, but you don't mind, do you ? Satire. MEASURE OF SUCCESS. It is one of the appointed condi tions of the labor of men that in proportion to the time between the seed sowing and the harvest is the fullness of the fruit and that gener ally, therefore, the farther off we place our aim and the less we de sire to be ourselves the witnesses of what we have labored for the more wide and rich will be the measure of our success.- John Ruskin. The Old London Watch. - London's police force owes its,origin to the London watch. Instituted in the year 1253. TEXAS CATTLE-IS SHIPPED TO PORTLAND PORTLAND, July , 13. Two cars of cattle arrived " in the yards in North Portland this morning from Sweetwater, Texas, shipped by A. B. Vreenmaier. They are feeders. The run was light, however, the other shippers for the daybeing G. E. Luckey, Cond on, one car hogs and sheep, and W. E. Eddon, Garabana, Or., two cars cattle. The markets were reported steady but sales was con fined to a few bunches of cows. Some weakness has been shown in the lamb and sheep markets during the week and some predict a slump in the near future, but there is nothing to indicate this with much of a certainty. The demand for feeder steers is good. South Omaha reported hogs lower this morning. . Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis of 6 to 8 cents. Fruits, Vegetables. HIDES (Buying) Green hides 6c to 7c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 cents to 14c; sheep pelts, 30c to 85c each. Hay, Grain, Feed. EGGS Oregon ranch eggs, 22c case count; 23c candeled. HAY (Buyin) Timothy out of mar ket clover, at $8; oat hay, best, $10.00; mixed, $9 to $11; alfalfa $15 to $16.50. OATS (Buying) $30.00 to $36.50, wheat 90c bu.; oil meal, selling about $48.00; Shay Brook dairy feed, $1. 30 per 100 pounds. ' FEED (Selling) Shorts, $25 bran $28; process barley, $40 per ton. FLOUR $4.60 to $5.50. POTATOES New about lc lb. POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c to 13c; spring, 17c to 20c, and roosters 8c. Stags 11c. . Butter, Poultry, Eggs. Buttei" (Buying) Ordinary coun try butter, 20c to 25c; fancy dairy, 0c roll. Livestock, Meats BEEF (five Weight) Steers, 5 and 6c; cows, 4c; bulls 3c. MITTTTON Sheep 3c to 3c. VEAL Calves 10c " to 12c dressed, according to grade. MOHAIR 33c to 35c. Some Brief Epitaphs. The following are among the brief and curious epitaphs seen in European cemeteries: At Worcester, England, the slab erected over a departed auc tioneer is inscribed with a single word. "Gone." . In Sussex the initials and date of the" death of the deceased are fol lowed by two words, "He was." On the monument of Charles the Great of Germany the brief inscription is "Ca ralo Magno." The most remarkable is at Cane Hill cemetery, Belfast, where the inscription says, "Left till called for." Lucky Man. He (a former suitor So you are married after ail. You told me once that you never intended to belong to any man. She Well, that remark still holds good. "But your husband?" "Oh, he belongs to me." Change of Location Portland Railway Light & Power Company s 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. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS, - Edward T. Webb, to Frank Smith, 1 acre of Jennings Lodge; $1500. O. Y. and Grethe Trallerud to Ma thias Erland, 35 acres of section 16, township 5 south, range 1 east; $2000. J. G. Mumpower to L .D., Julia A. Mumpower and Mary J. Dicken, land in section 13, township 2 south, range 2 east; $1. W. A. and" Ida Alcorn to Blanche Ashbaugh, land in section 33, town ship 2 south, range "7 east; $10. Shirley and Elizabethe S. Buck to W. R. Douglas, lots 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 14, block 22, lots 11, 12, block 23, and lots 7, 8, block 24, Milwaukie Park; $2250. . Ida M. and M. G. Thurston toA. M. Gilbert, lots 37, 38, block 87, Min thorn addition to Portland ; $150. John A. Davis and Emma Davis to Charles G. Herrman and C. A. Oman, land in section 32, township 1 south, range 2 east; $10. W. H. and Fern Banes to O. W. Messelhiser, 8 Oacres of section 12, township 3 south, range 4 east; $10. Hallie and W. H. Buoy to Nels and Lorena Lundgren, 10 acres of D. L. C. of George Crow, township 2 south, range " least; $10. D With Yovt 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.