MORNING ENTERPRISE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1912.. 3 Extra Special Just for a few days we will sell our Gaberdeens and Slipon Coats at great ly reduced prices. Come in and try one on. We carry the , Celebrated Mende burg Slipons Known the world over $15 coats $11.50 $20 coats $16.50 $25 coats $21.50 Come in and see them at J. Levitt Where you always get the best for less. On the corner of 7th and Main Streets OREGON CITY His Errand. I i I M i "'Ullo. Billy: Where you goin'?" "I aiD't goin". I'm jest seein' orf my college chum 'ere." Purrt?b. LOCAL BRIEFS Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason ic Building, Phone Main 399. For that graceful figure, wear the Spirella Corset, Room 4, Willamette Bldg. Phone Main 3552. Mrs. J. A. Elliott of Eugene, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Louis Heckman, of this city, return ed to her home Wednesday. Mrs. El liott had not paid Oregon City a visit for five years, and expressed her sur prise at the wonderful growth of the city in that time. Mrs. W. F. Schooley, of Gladstone, left Wednesday for Philomath, Ore gon, where she will visit her sister, Mrs. H. C. Taylor. She will return the first of December. If you cannot .sleep, eat or work, feel mean, cross and ugly, take Hol Jister's Rocky Mountain Tea this month; a tonic for the sick, there is no remedy equal to it. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Company. J. H. Foster of Forest Grove, who is general collector for the Durham Sewing Machine Company, was in Oregon City Wednesday on business. Miss Helen Daulton of this . city, expects to leave next month for New York where she will visit relatives for several months. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. 'Hennen, of Mo lalla, have moved to Oregon City, where they will take up their resi dence. ' J. H. Walker will return to this city today after an extended trip in the interest of the Willamette, Pulp & Paper Company. E. A. Chapman, of the Hawley Pulp & Paper Company, who has been on the sick list for several days is im proving. Miss Barbara Eakin, prominent in the younger society circles of Astoria, is visiting with the Misses Jardye and Ivy Ford. Theodore Osmund, who is with the Hawley Pulp & Paper Company, left Wednesday for a ten day's outing in Washington County. Mrs. H. L. Young, of this city, is visiting with Mrs. R. J. Moore, of Mil waukie, for a few days. The W. H. M. S. of the Methodist Church will give a bazaar December ' 10th. Mrs. M. L. Driggs has returned to her home after a week's visit with friends in Portland. Mrs. M. D. Latourette visited her sister, Mrs. H. F. Latourette of Port land, Wednesday. J. G. DeShazer, of Dover, was a bnslness visitor in Oregon City Wed nesday. Fred Suren, of the Portland Journal, was in Oregon City Wednesday on business. E. Hinkle of Redland, was a busi ness visitor 'in Oregon City Wednes day. B. Kuppenbender, of Molalla, was in the city Wednesday on business. The Misses Wourms of Clairmont, were in Oregon City Wednesday. FOR YOUR PLUMBING Go to MARTIN SEILER At Elliott Garage Fifth and Main Streets WORK GUARANTEED. REASON ABLE PRICES 1 1 M6ksw Mrs. M. L. Coovert, of Vancouver, Washington, who has been visiting with her niece, Mrs. William Logus, returned to her home Wednesday. J. R. Kelso, Justice of the Peace at Milwaukie, A. L. Reed and James Kelly, also of Milwaukie, were in Ore gon City Wednesday on business. Charles Risley of Risley Station, was in Oregon City Wednesday on business. - E. F. McFarland, who has been seriously ill, will be able to leave the Oregon City Hospital in a few days. SHERIFFS SURETY LOSES DAMAGE SUIT A jury in Circuit Judge Campbell's court returned a verdict of $582.50 in favor of C. Shrucken against Sheriff E. T. Mass, $282.50 being for mer chandise sold by the sheriff and $250 damages. Mr. Strucken owned mer chandise sold by the sheriff, which had changed hands several times be fore' he bought it. The Merchant's Protective Association was in reality the defendant in the case as it had provided a bond of $3,000 for the pro tection of the sheriff. It sued out a writ of attachment against George Ketch, a former owner, under a law which provides when the owner of a store sells out he must give all cred itors five days' notice and make an affidavit to that effect. The jury went out Tuesday evening and deliberated the entire night, returning a sealed verdict Wednesday morning. Struck en was represnted by Dimick & Dim ick and the defendant by Angell & Fisher of Portland. EFFECTIVE USE OF LACE A gown which otherwise would be noticeably plain has been raised to distinction by the judicious use of bands of heavy cream lace. A band sufficiently broad to extend quite a ways upon the sleeve trime the right side of the surplice blouse and ap pearing again on the left side of the crossed tunic produces the effect of a blouse and tunic in one. . The back of the bodice and the tunic are dupli cates of the front. The sleeves reach slightly below the elbow where they are finished with a turn back cuff of the heavy lace. Plain white silk forms the novel shield. F. NEW DANCING CLUB Prof. Ringler, Portland's leading dancing master, will start a new term in dancing at Busch's Hall tonight. A beginners' class will meet from 7:30 to 8:30, and advan ced class 8:30 to 9:30. Social dancing from 9 to 11 : 30 with orchestra music will be a feature every Thurs day evening. The latest society dances will be taught together with ball room etiquette and deportment. All pupils are requested to be on hand at the opening lesson. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. W. A. Raines and E. G. Raines to Fred B. Madison, lots 4, 5, block 32, Bolton; $10.00 Clackamas County to Wilbert Chil- cote and wife, 40 acres in section 30, township 1 south, range 3 east; $1. Wilbert Chilcote to Martin Winch, 40 acres in section 30, township 1 south range 3 east; $1. John S. Sleret and wife to Alphon so W. Shipley and R. S. Shipley, tract in section 9, township 2 south, range 5 east, tract in section 16, township 2 south, range 5 east; $1. TenBroack Whipple and W. Whip ple to R. E. Jarl, lot 5 in Hood View Acres; $10.00. Gladstone Real Estate Association to Ole Olson, 10 acres J. C. Carson Donation Land Claim, township 2 south, range 2 east; $1750. E. M. Miller to Myrtle M. Miller, lot 4 Fraley's Add., lot 5 and 6, block 37, First Add. Estacada; $10.00. John Johnson and O. Johnson to John Olson and O. Olson, 9 1-2 acres section 36, township 1 south, range 3 east; 15,000.00. John Wheeler and wife to Linn E. Jones, lot 7, block 81, Oregon City; $150.00. John W. Loder and wife to Olof Larson, lot "A", tract 22, Willamette and Tualatin Tracts; $1.00. UreeKs worsnip or kigmmiijj. The Greeks were so much afraid of lightning that they worshiped it. They endeavored to avert its malignant in fiuence by Hissing and whistling at it In places which had suffered by it at tars were erected and oblations made to avert the anger of the gods, after which no one dared to touch or ap proach them. J eart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.. NYE. RICH AND UNHAPPY To the wotiiiin of the lions": Are you tired f your daily drudgery Does the monotony of your wor-. which is never done, wear you to the edge of revolt? Does the utter uselessness of doing things over mid over again loom large? Are you wishing for riches and rai ment and leisure and luxury and travel? Then consider this woman. Sophie Irene Loch tells about her. She has ahnridant wealth and leisure, and yet she is discontented and dis satisfied. This woman lias everything life can give save one thing happiness. She is never at peace. Her breakfast !a brought to her bed. A maid dresses her Servants cater to her slightest wish. She travels much" and has the most expensive' staterooms in the steamers and on the train. She lives at the best hotels Rut She has nothing to do. In consequence she is always discon tented and wishing for something, she knows not what. She gets lonesome and feverish and fretful and is con stantly asking, "What's the use of it all?" This woman says: "I envy the woman who works. Ev ery hour of the day has a value, a rea son. She fills a need. I wander about for a new interest, a new thrill." , Why doesn't she go to work? "That's just it." she says. "Where would be the incentive, the need? Be sides. I don't know how to begin. I would have to make myself need to work, and I can't make believe." Do you see? This woman has more wealth and more leisure than she knows what to do with. She does not know the joy of the worker, the compensation that comes with a task well done. Which is the happier? You with your commonplace task or she with her leisure? You answer, of course, there is such a thing as a happy medium between extreme wealth and" poverty And so there is. And you. probably, are nei ther poverty stricken nor rich. Can you not subtract from the sting of your discontent which, after all. is but occasional- by this glimpse Into the life of one extreme? The Rajah Diamond. The largest known diamond before the discovery of the famous Cullinan diamond near Pretoria, afterward pre sented Jo King Edward VII. of Eng land, was the Rajah, which once be longed to the rajah of Mattan. It is an egg shaped stone, weighing 3G7 carats. At one time the goftrnor of Borneo offered for it 100,000, two war vessls fully equipped, a number of can non and a quantity of powder and shot, but this offer was refused, the rajnh believing that the fortunes of his family were connected with this gem. SHIPMENT OF HOGS Country killed hogs are showing a weak tone in the Portland markets for the day and the prices are lower. As a rule the better class offerings are being quoted at 10c a pound, al though an occasional transaction for something extra select may perhaps be a fraction better than this. Receipts for dressed hogs in the Portland markets during the last 48 hours were very heavy Wednes day" s express brought a more liberal supply than has been received here for many a day. Retailer's wants are now quite well taken care of and much difficulty is shown at the moment in unloading witn promptness. The recent neavy runs of live hogs have added to the weakness in the dressed hog trade, the former having a direct effect on the latter. While dressed hogs are weaker and lower a steady tone is ruling for coun try killed veals. Prices in this line are showing no change for the day, offerings moving off quite well at the previous range. Prevailing Oregon City price are as folio wb: HIDES (Buying), Green hides 6c to 7c; salters 7c; dry hides 12 c to 14c; sheep pelts 30c to 86c each.. EGGS Oregon ranch eggs 35 and 38 cents case count FEED (Selling), ShortB $27: bran $25; process barley $38 per ton. FLOUR $4.60 to 5.60. HAY (Buying) .Clover at $9 and $10; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix ed $10 to $12; alfalfa $15 to $16.50; Idaho timothy $20; whole corn $40; OATS $26; wheat $1.05 bushel; oil meal selling about $55; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Livestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) Steers 6 and 6 l-2c; cows 5 and 5 l-2c; bulls 4 12c. 3 l-2c. MUTTON Sheep 3c to 5c. CHICKENS 11 l-2c. PORK 9 1-2 and 10c. t VEAL Calves 12c to 13c dressed, according to grade. WEINIES 15c lb; sausage, 15c lb. POULTRY (Buying) Hens 11c; spring 13c, an droosters 8c. MOHAIR 33c to 35c. Fruits APPLES 70c arid $1; peaches 50c and 65c; crab apples 2c lb. DRIED FRUITS (Baying), Prunes on basis 6 to 8 cents. VEGETABLES ONIONS lc lb; peppers 7c lb; toma toes, 50c; corn 8c and 10c a doz. cracked $41. ' POTATOES New, about 50c to 60c per hundred. Butter, Poultry, Eggs. BUTTER (Buying), Ordinary coun try butter 30c and 35c; fancy dairy 80c roll. THE WIDOWS GOAT By M QUAD Copyright, 1912. by Associated Lit erary Press. Deacon Carter of the village of Romeo was a good man and a good neighbor. He never refused to lend his hoe or his wheelbarrow, and his wife Just ddted on lending her flatirons or washboard. The deacon would have no more hurt a person's feelings than he would have jumped off the bridge into Thornapple creek, and that he was ever to be threatened with a lawsuit was the last thing te be thought of. One day the deacon got a message to the effect that his widowed daughter over at Glen Dale was dying, and he borrowed a horse and buggy and drove over. The daughter had no children to mourn her. The father got there in time to receive her last instructions and to close her eyes. The widow had neither dog nor cat but in place of either or both had a goat It had been sent to her when young from a distance, and they had learned to love each other. The goat had made no trouble at all. and the daughter charged her father to take Billy home with him and watch and guard him and treat him with loving kindness. The goat was brought home and made to understand that it's future lines were to be cast in pleasant places. It was given the run of the yard, and for three days its attitude elicited sym pathy 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 found him just coming to himself again. "W-what is it, Jeptha?" she gasped. "The the goat!" "What about him?" "Came ot 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. Two days passed quietly, but on the evening of the second the goat quietly slipped his collar and slipped out to see the sights of Romeo. While rang ing around he encountered six different persons on their way to prayer meet ing. He took them in as fast as he came to them. Some went rolling into the ditch and some against the fence, but all underwent 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, he 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 i 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 ob ject flashed before his eyes, and he knew no more for half an hour. The sexton of the Baptist church had spent two hours sweeping and dusting and had started for his fireside with his bands clasped under his coattails. He went down like ripe barley before the sickle. His last impression was that a meteorite had fallen from the night sky and plunked him between the shoulders. There were half a dozen others that were treated to various surprises and sensations, and this time it cost Dea con Carter $no to settle. . "We'll have to sell him." he said to his" wife, with a sigh. "And Hanuer's ghost will haunt us!" The goat was chained up. and for two days be 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 I that chain and was once more at lib erty. The front doors of the church stood wide open, as if Inviting all the goats to- enter with the sheep, and this goat entered. He entered on the run. and within three minutes he had driven out the congregation. Could such a thing as that be over looked and the offender forgiven? 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. Thev finally hemmed him in on the bridge, closing In to take his life, when he went over-the rail into the creek and 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 eaw it all?" "Yes." "What do you think she thunk?" "Probably that she had a fool for a father." All the Vowels In One Word. There are but six words in the Eng lish language which contain all the vowels in regular order viz, abstemi ous, arsenious. anenious. facetious, ma terious and tragedious. There is but one word which contains them in tegu lar reverse order, and that word is duo literal. Besides the above there are 149 English words which contain all the vowels in irregular order. Twelve of these begin with the letter a. seven with b. twenty-three with c, sixteen with d. fourteen, with e, four with f. seven with g. one with h, six with i. two with j. two with m. two with n. two with o. thirteen with p. one with q, five with r. nine with s. two with t. fifteen with and six with v. Boost your city by boosting yqur daily paper. The Enterprise should be in every home. WHY PAY Jtt have a few sets of those 3 1 piece, gold trimmed Dinner Sets left. They, can be had $2.25 per set with a subscription. If you are already a subscriber, we will sell yoo a set at cost. Come in and look them over; yoo will be surprised at the quality. The Morning Enterprise CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Write Ideas For Moving Picture Plays! YOU WeWill Show You How! If you have ideas if you can THINK we will show you the secrets of this fascinating new profession. Positively no experience or literary excellence necessary. No "flowery language" is want ed. The demand for photoplays is practically unlimited. The big film manufacturers are "m oving heaven and earth" in their at tempts to get enough good plots to supply the ever increasing demand They are offering $100 and more, for single scenarios, or written ideas We have received many letters from the film manufacturers, such as VITAGRAPH, EDISON, ESSANAY, LUBIN, SOLAX, IMP, REX, RELIANCE, CHAMPION, GOMET, MELIES, ETC., urging us to send photoplays to them. We want more writers and we'll gladly teach you the secrets of success. We are selling photoplays written by people who "never be fore wrote a line for publication." Perhaps we can do the same for you. If you can think of only ony good idea every week, and will write it as directed by us, and it sells for only $25, a low figure, YOU WILL EARN $100 MONTHLY FOR SPARE TIME WORK. , a SEND YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS AT ONCE HfppT FOR FREE COPY OF OUR ILLUSTRATED BOOK, M. 1 "MOVING PICTURE PLAYWRITING." Don't hesitate. Don't argue. Write now and learn just what this new profession may mean for you and your future. NATIONAL AUTHORS' INSTITUTE 1543 Broadway Truly Considerate. A considerate patient had an artery opened by mistake for a vein by a French surgeon in the operation of bloodletting. The woman succumbed not long after to the effect of the blun der, but in her will left the surgeon a small yearly pension, "not only to com fort him, but so that he could live the rest of his life without doing vivisec tion any more." A similar historic oc currence is related in the Medical Times of a Polish princess who had had the same experience. She added a clause to her will expressing her for giveness and leaving the surgeon a small pension to indemnify him for the "loss of reputation that may follow my sad catastrophe." Cleopatra's Mummy. Where does Cleopatra's body rest? Scarcely a layman who would not an swer, "Why, in Egypt!" After her ca joleries, her wiles, her life of intense if not very exalted loves, Cleopatra was laid in one of the loveliest tombs that has ever been fashioned by the hand of man. But what a change 2,000 years has brought about! Today an ugly mummy, with an emblematic bunch of decayed wheat and a coarse comb tied to its head a mere roll of tightly swathed dust lies crumbled in a hide ous glass case at the British museum. It is Cleopatra, the once great queen, a Venus in charm, beauty and love. London Spectator. Kept His Word. "Be mine!" he cried in a wice sur charged with anguish. "If you refuse me I shall die!" . But the heartless girl refused him. That was sixty years ago. Yesterday he died. DOUBLE? CAN WRITE PHOTO PLAYS AND EARN $25.00 OR MORE WEEKLY NEW YORK CITY Lodge to Give Dance. A dance will be given Friday even ing, November 15, by the Pocohontas Lodge. The dance will be held at Busch's Hall. Excellent music is to be furnished and a large turnout is expected. MRS. LARAMQRE TELLS TROUBLES Lady In Goodwatcr Describes tier Distressing Experience and Tells Mow She Was Finally Relieved. Goodwater, Mo. ''Ever since I was a little girl," says Mrs. Riley Laramore, "I was a great sufferer from dyspepsia. I suffered misery after eating, and had terrible heartburn. I thought I had to suffer this way as long as I lived, but when I began to take Thedford's Black-Draught, in small doses, every night, the heartburn was all gone in a few days, and I could eat without distress. I took two small packages in all, and although that was some time ago, the dyspepsia has not returned. I speak a good word for Thedford's Black-Draught whenever I have the op portunity." If eating causes distress, we urge you to try Thedford's Black-Draught. It cleanses the system, helps the stomach to digest its food, regulates the bowels, and stimulates the liver. It acts gently and is without bad after effects. Try it Price 25c. For sale by Jones Drug Co.