4 MORNING ENTERPRISE TUESDAY; OCTOBER 1, 1912 : m i : r " - I ' GANDERBONE'S FORECAST OCTOBER. A scene at Armageddon, A warrior in tin, And every now and then a shout Emerging from the din. Some folks fancy Woodrow, And others fancy Bill, And others still for Theodore Are very hopeful still, A table and a pitcher, A speaker on his perch, "And here there someone asleep, The same as in church. ."The miracle of party, And the perfidy of .doubt, . With the usual statistics Till the watchman puts him o--t. A woman with a banner, Another with a drum, And another with a curtain pole Revolving on her thumb. Some folks say it's nothing, jiut others thinks it is, And like as not it won't be long Till man is getting his. The bull moose and the donkey, The elephant, the zoo, The trusts against the people, And the false against the true; But do not get excited, Or take it very hard. For thy'll all lie down together In the sweet barnyard. October was originally the eighth " month of the Romans, but it brought watermelons and pumpkins in at the T:"s4 same time and Numa Pompilius who :- -liked both, pushed it along to tenth lace-to keep from foundering himself ' V;,-- 'A .Bull, Moose party formed to dethrone lm,-but he held on, and was able in p-s:,;t6 lend ' to; pull the skulls of his en v. emiies around on a string on Hallow " J?; Vny; with a' candle inside, from ''''v .-'yrnjcn. we have our present-day Jack r ;r,r; . " ' o'-Lan'tern. . The zodiacal sign for October is Scorpio, meaning the Scorpion. It ;tjfpifies the manner in which candi dates sting one another in the last Ifejv- weeks of the campaign. Octo ber has always been; the favorite month of the year. That more peo ple have always married in June has only been explained upon the theory that inasmuch as they are undertak ing the battle of life together they COLTS EASY PREY FOR BEAVER MEN PORTLAND, Sept. 30. (Special) The Beavers easiiy disposed of the Colts today in a game to determine which team was stronger. The score was 6 to 1. The Coast leaguers used two pitchers Harkness and Higgin botham, the former retiring voluntar ily after letting the Colts down with three scattered hits in five innings. The Colts called in three, Easterly, Doty and then Southpaw Callahan. When Eastley departed after the first two men up in the sixth inning had hit safely, the score stood 3 to 1. Doty might have unloaded his heri tage without further humiliation had not Coltrin, Cruikshank and McDow ell mussed up succeeding chances. Higgingbotham, who finished for the Beavers, proved invincible ' and Callahan, the side-winder, who reliev ed Doty in the eighth also closed strong, although touched up for anoth er tally on a walk, a stolen base and Doan's single. 6 Couples Get Licenses. Licenses to marry have been issued to the following couples: Anna Jos ephine Hartley and Paul M. French; Mamie Dundas and Alexander McFar land; Rose Schatz and Chester Van Houten; Elizabeth Perault and Amos Dolors; Lena E. Braun and John Wat kins and Marie A. Kanak and George G.. Brown. PLAITS THE THING. This Picked Up Drapery Extremely Coquettish. - T"oi..J FEOCK OP -BLUE CHIFFON. Simple enough in general design Is ' this little frork of machine plaited blue chiffon over a buttoned cassock gown of white cbarmeuse. Particular ly chic, too. Is the hat woru with It or ' black velvet and the smart little pat ent leather boots with buttoned dotii tops, which complete the gay costume" wf .k if probably consider that it would be just as well to begin at once upon the mosquitoes. " - The gentle spirit of the-Fall Will come to glorify the air, And the football player will appall The . population with his hair. The referee will clinmb the poles And sound his shrill official toot, -And the moth will drill a few more holes - In everybody's Winter suit There is no glory to compare with tha( awaiting just ahead, when the gossamer gets in the air, arid the sas safras is flaming -red. A million harps have duly twanged upon the glories of the time, but a poet still were rather hanged than not; intone his little rhyme. . You may destroy his throbbing lyre and pitch! him headlong in the sea, but death alone can quench the fire that underlies a melody. He'll string a horse hair on a pole, and even stronger than, before uplift the passion of his soul with getting back upon the shore. At such a time, though you may laugh It would as probably avail To catch the acrobatic calf And tie a brick upon his tail. One whift of Autumn in his nose, And lowering his playful head, His rear appendage still uprose, Though weighted with a keg of lead You can't restrain the joy of Fall that palpitates in living things, nor hope to dissipate the thrall in which a poetaster ' sings. The calf will kick and buck around, the colt will cut a few high jinks, and the poet's zither will resound, despite wha)f anybody thinks. The better quality of air Will speed; the presidental race, And a cockleburr placed here and there Will help accelerate the pace. The trouble earth will gently sway Beneath the violent attack, And the trusts will hustle corn and hay Along the fence inside the track. Deacon Carter's Goat By M. QUAD " Copyright. 1912, by Associated Lit erary Press. ' When Deacon Carter's widowed daughter died she bequeathed him a goat. It was brought home and made to understand that its future lines were to be cast in pleasant places. It was given the run of the yard, and for three days its attitude elicited sympa thy and commendation. It really shed tears over the mistress and the home It had lost, and then it braced up and became playful. The deacon had a tomato patch, and he went out one morning to pick two or three tomatoes to go with his break fast. As he gathered them there was a concussion, and it was ten minutes later when ' his wife came out and fc'hnd him just coming to himself again. , "W-what is it, Jeptha?" she gasped. "The the goat!" "What about him?" "Came on the run and struck me with his head!" "But I don't see how he" But she did see. The goat came bounding on like a cyclone and bowled her over and over until she struck the row of sunflowers. The deacon got hold of a bean pole and kept the goat off, and they got into the house, lamed in every Joint This was the outbreak. It was the end of the goat's serenity. Men had to be called to help tie him tip, and those who hadn't looked upon him before now came to gaze. Nobody wished the animal ill. On the contrary, it was generally held that -grief had driven him to desperation. The deacon was advised to sit up all night and watch to see that Billy didn't commit suicide by hanging. Two days passed quietly, but on the evening of the second the goat quietly slipped, his collar and set out to see the sights of Romeo. While ranging around he encountered six different persons on their way to prayer meeting. He took them in as fast as he came to them. Some went rolling into the ditch and some against- the fence, but all under went the same sensation. They thought a tree had fallen on them. Even a good man can't escape conse quences if he Is the owner of a butting goat. Next day six limping people wanted to know what Deacon Carter was going to do about it. Like the square man that he was, be offered them $3 apiece and made settlements. ' "If it wasn't that ' I had promised Hanner on her dying bed" he said to his wife as the last victim limped away. "I know I know, deacon," was the reply. "We'll have to keep him." "We will." "Durn his hide!" "S-s-s-h! : There he stands in the" door!" That night the goat was shut up in the barn, but there was a window through which he jumped, taking the sash and glass with him. Mr. Griggs, the grocer, had locked up and was on his way home when some white object flashed before his eyes and he knew no more for half an hour. The sexton of the Baptist church has spent two hours sweeping and dusting, and had started for his fireside with his hands clasped under coatfails. He went down like ripe barley before the sickle. Abraham Davis, the undertaker, was taking a little walk before going to bed, or had stepped outside the gate to take one, when he went down with a crash and was out of range of the wireless for ten minnrps. Thpn hp prpnt tntn tha I house on hands and knees to ask his wife bow the earthquake had affected her. "' ' There were half a dozen others that were treated to various surprises and sensations, and this time ltcost Dea . The eager riders, all inclined at least resistance to the air, will lash their quadrupeds behind, and feel them fagging in despair. The hunjgry brutes wifl .smell the hay, and catch the fragrance of the corn, and in their first reformer bon. Ill rues the torture curse the day -that saw the time when) .plenty shows a helping hand on every Bide, and still nobody ever throws a bite for being villified. It -never was that way before in any other race they ran, and many a good and lusty roar will sound the perfidy of man. But that's the kind of race it is, say any creature what he will, and each' man's chance is only his with some how keeping at it still. A strictly uncorrupted trot, with empty stom achs all around, Is what they, enter ed, and they've got to make ther chargers cover ground. If Rockefel ler and his set desire a little sporting bout, why let them wait a bit to get their trust-fed steeplechasers out. We're having one perhaps the first we ever had, and while it toils, we'll take a care to hold a gun upon the pirate and his spoils. The Hunter's Moon will sail the sky To ecstacize the human race, And men will trail the pumpkin pie Through many a city eating place, The cider sign will grace the store, To offer men its ancient boon, And customers will bulge the door With getting out of the saloon. The twelfth of the month will be the 420th anniversary of the discovery of America, and Messrs. Rockerfeller Morgan and Carnegie will give a din ner on that date to Christopher Col umbus, who found it for them. The 27th will be the anniversary; of the landing in this country of the man for he month will be applebutter. who put thef Penn in Pennsylvania, and it will be; celebrated in an ap propriate manner by everybody who has put the important syllable in full on the 25th, and the password for the month will be applebutter. And then November will renew, with somewhat cooler weather, and the ,poor consumer sewing two thin union suits together. con Carter $50 to settle. He was a good man, and he had the interests of Romeo and the United States at heart, but his fellow townsmen didn't pro pose to be butted into Insensiblity for nothing. ' "We'll have to sell him," he said to his wife with a sigh. "But think of Hanner looking down from heaven!" "Then we'll give him away to some good family." "And Hanner's ghost will haunt us!" - The goat was chained up, and for two days he was a quiet, reflective ani mal. He stood most of the time with half closed eyes, as if seeing his past and hoping to see his future. Then Sunday came, and the people gathered at the church. The goat worked some sort of hocus pocus on that chain and was once more at lib erty. The doors of the churches stood wide open, as if inviting goats to en ter withjthe sheep, and this goat enter ed. He entered on the run, and within three minutes he had driven out the congregation. Those that were n Little slow were given aid. Could such a thing as that be over looked and the offender forgiven 7 You know it could not With pickets pulled from the fence, with clubs and rocks and umbrellas, they swarmed for the goat, and though he fought back they were too many for him. They finally hemmed him in on the. bridge, closing in to take his life, when he went over the rail into the creek jind was drowned. ." "I s'pose Hanner is an angel," ob served the deacon's wife as they sat together that evening. "Yes, I s'pose so." "And she saw it all?" "Yes." , . "What do you think she tiiunk?" . "Probably that she had a fool for a father."- . - Portugal's Colonies. From Lisbon in the fifteenth and six teenth centuries went out mariners through the unknown and uncharted oceans to Africa, India and the new world to the west and planted the flag of Portugal ' In every corner of the globe. But in Africa alone has Portu gal maintained its bold of colonies of any magnitude. In India are little bits, of Portuguese territory. Nova (ioa, southeast of Bombay, being the capital of all Portugal's colonies east of Cape of Good Hope, while as far east as China the island of Macao, in the Can ton river, first colonized nearly 400 years ago, still owns the sovereignty of the government at Lisbon. Argonaut Every Syllable. " There are many stories told of the pronunciation of certain English names, that of Cholmondeley, pronounced Chumley, generally finding a place in the list. A story, told of Lord Chol mondeley, gives a possible reason for in egnlarity in pronunciations.' Lord Cliolmonrioley was one day leaving. his own house, when he en countered an American, who. ' not knowing his lordship by sight, asked him if Lord Chol-mon-de-ley, pronounc ing each syllable distinctly, was at home. ' "No," replied the peer, without any hesitation, "nor any of his pe-o-ple." Youth's Companion. " - Kind Hearted. Hewltt-Wliy dIdxyou tuurry? Jew ett Just to give a friend of mine, a Clergyman, a Job.-New York Press. , A TVst For Eyesight An interesting test for eyesight may be had by observing Ursa Major the Great Bear on a clear starlit night. Not every one is aware that Mizar, the second star in the constellation, is a aouoie star. To observe this doublet demands good vision. Some starry night look up to the sky and see if you can rest content in the knowledge that your eyesight is not defective. ' Hearttofieaft Talks By EDWIN A.. NYE. WE AR.E BEING MADE. In one of George Macdonald's books there is this fragment of conversation: "I wonder why God made me," said Mrs. Fabur bitterly. "I'm sure I don't know where is the use of making me." "Perhaps not much yet" replied Dor othy, "but then he isn't done with you yet He is making you now, "and you don't like it" . ' -'-'.' Dorothy's philosophy, could we get it deep into our "hearts, would greatly help us. ,- We must learn the lesson that . the problem of this life is Dot In escaping hard and painful things, but rather in getting out of such experiences a res ignation which should make the heart gentle and the life sweet We must learn that we are not made, but only in the process of making. Therefore we ought not to complain at the strokes of the chisel that is fash ioning us. A recent writer tells the legend of "The Complaining Diamond." The rough stone cries out under the blows of the lapidary: '"I cannot understand Why should I suffer in this way?" The lapidary replies, "Wait:' what thou knowest not now thou shalt know here after" And outTbf all this came the famous Kobinoor to sparkle in the 'monarch's crown. ' , " The Master .of Life holds the mallet and he clips away what is necessary to grave his own features on the stubborn stone. We feel only the sharp edge of the chisel. - Even God (let us say It reverently) cannot make character in a day. We complain of his slow making of ns because we forget it takes time and much fashioning for the finished work. The young man makes a failure. He cannot see that it may be the making of him. One may succeed too easily and quickly. One may fail to learn his limitations, or to know the world as it is, or his work. Ail who have succeeded Dermanentlv have suffered the blows, the grindings, the polishing which the Kohinoor had to undergo. We are being made. And to all of us there is the teachine of Dorothy's philosophy and the com plaining diamond. We who are older bear upon our cheeks and brows the marks of the chisel. Sometimes the strokes were delicate and sometimes sharp. They were needed to make us what we are.' It is God's slow process. What we may be doth not yet ap pear, but we know that the hand of the Artist and the pattern are Divine. YOUNG MEN For Gonorrhoea and Gleet get Pabst's Okay Specific It is. the ONLY medicine which will cure each and every case. NO CASE known it has ever failed to cure, no matter how serious or of how long standing. Kesults trom its use will astonish you. It is absolutely safe, prevents stricture and can betaken without inconvenience1 and detention trom business. PRICE Fo br JONES CRUG COMPANY ....; . : yhe Home. The home is the cornerstone and .bul wark of the state, 'and " everything which tends to' keep alive and renew its influence and associations 'should be cherished and encouraged. Cincin nati Enquirer. hie t lie Lowest Ulectncity can be used in any quantity, large or small, thereby furnishing any required amount of light. Furthermore, electric lamps can be. located in any place thus affording any. desired distribution of light. No other lamps possess these qualifications, there fore it is not surprising that electric lamps are rapidly replacing all others in modern establishments. The Portland Railway Light & PowerCo. MAIN STREET in the BEAVER BLDG. WHY PAY jTE fr'ave a few can be had $2.25 per set with a subscription. If you are already a subscriber, we will sell yoti a set at cost. Come in and look them over; you will be surprised at the quality. The Morning Enterprise V CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Unfair. Another unfair thing In life the bride, with a wealth of hair, wears a veil, but the groom, who has a bald spot and really needs a veil to cover it Is denied the privilege. Atchison Globe. ' Best light LECTRIC LIGHT is thq most suitable for homes, offices, shops and other places needing light. DOUBLE? sets of those 3 1 piece, A Good Wife. "Thank you. doctor, for prescribing a trip to the Spa for me. Now, will you please ask my husband to give . up smoking and drinking beer, and then my trip will be easily paid for?" Meg gensdorfer Blatter. Co if (