Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, November 26, 1912, Page 3, Image 3

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1912.
Are You
Ready For
Diniier?
Perhaps some of our
suits will help you
Better come in and
let us show them -to
you
Priced from $10 to $35
J. Levitt
On the corner of 7th
and Main Streets
OREGON CITY
Earl Lutz.who has been ill ..at the
home of his mother in Portland for
several weeks, is now improving rap
idly and will visit Oregon ity today.
He expects to be able to return to his
work at J. Levitt's store in a few days.
Adolph Hugel of Wilhoit was in the
county seat Monday op business.
Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Meissner of this
city, made a trip to Portland Monday.
T. S. Stipp of Molalla was in Oregon
City on business Monday.
D. C. Fouts of Re'dland, was in Ore
gon City'Monday on business.
v Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason
ic Building, Phone Main 399.
C. O. Perry and family have moved
from Maple. Lane to Seattle.
Miss Maud Park is in Oregon City
attending the Teachers' Institute.
Miss Clara Mitchell is ill at her
home.
Frank White, of Portland, was in
Oregon. City on business Monday.
Paul Garrison, of Portland, visited
friends in Oregon City Sunday.
Mrs. S. F. ScipJture is seriuosly ill
A Dead One.
..ii:il!.:llJ I $S:t 10 ,. 1 a 4 Avree Oun
a -
Laggard Waiter Did you ring the
bell, sir?
Impatient Diner No; I was merely
tolling it 1 thought you must be dead.
Penny Pictorial.
LOCAL BRIEPS
. Woman s World
Mrs. Grover Cleveland
J to Marry Again.
,f
GROVER -CLKVEIiAND
PRESTON.
PBOFESSOB
YOUR GRAY HAIRS
QUICKLY VANISH
HARMLESS REMEDY, " MADE
FROM GARDEN SAGE, RESTORES.-'
COLOR TO
GRAY HAIR
Unreasonable.
penny saved is
1
a penny
"Bnre,
earned."
"Why don't you practice, that?"
"Say, you don't expect a man to live
fup to every quotation tie makes, do
you?" Cleveluud 1'liiiu Dealer.
, A-giever wiTe.
Friend Didn't your husband rajpe
when you showed him the dressmak
er's trill? Wife-Rather. Friend And
how did you quiet him?V Wife I show
ed him the milliner's account, and then
he became simply speechless. 1
The Cure,
Anxious Parent Doctor, my daugh
ter appears to be going blind, and she
is about to be married.- Doctor Let .
tfer go right on with the wedding. . II
anything can "open her eyes marriage
ill.
SERVICEABLE VELVETEEN FROCK
The accompanying drawing shows
a smartly simple frock of velveteen
This is of black with a pin-stripe of
white. The bodice is made with pleat
on the shoulder and broad box. pleat,
down the center front. The sleeves
are made on the style of those for
with a number of pleats at the cuff
running into a narrow-band. "ffcis
band and collar are of plain black
velvet. The narrow skirit is finished
on the bottom with a broad band of
the plain velvet, trimmed with but
tons. The center pleat of the blouse
is also trimmed with these buttons.
D. O. Anderson, who is connected
with the Western Stock Journal of
this city, returned Sunday from a trip
in which he covered the valley to Sa
lem, and after reaching Salem, hewent
to Portland and attended the Dairy
Show. Mr. Anderson 'ffisited Wood
burn, Mt. Angel, Silverton, Canby and
Salem, and at Mt Angel he was shown
through the college. The stock inter
ested him more than any other thing
and he reports that they have some
fine Poland China hogs. He said that
business was better than usual
throughout the entire trip.
Jesse Hazel and Louis Heckman,
who are connected with the Northwes
tern Association, returned to Oregon
City Sanday after attending the Land
Show in Portland last week Mr.
Heckman lauded the committee who
had charge of the Clackamas County
" exhibit. He said that, while it might
"'not have been as artistically arranged
as others, in quality of the produce it
was not excelled by any other exhibit
in the show.
The Saturday Club of the Congre-j
gational Church will hold its annual
market in the basement of the Church
Tuesday, Nov. 26. Cakes, mincgneat,
plum puddings, brown and white
bread, chickens, etc., for sale Mar
ket opens at 1:00 P. M. No orders
taken before sale opens.
, Carl Glouber, who was formerly con
nected with the Meier and Frank store
" in Portland in the capacity of window
' trimmer and card writer, has been en
gaged by L. Levitt, and will move to
this city and take up the work in the
Levitt store.
Beautiful eyes and handsome face
are eloquent commendations; eyes are3
the windows of a woman's heart. Hol
lister'e Rocky Mountain Tea makes
bright eyes, red lips; clears the com-
' plexion. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones
Drug Co.
R. L. Shepherd, freight agent for
the Portland Railway, Light & Power
tompany in Oregon City, and who is
also agent for the American Express
Company is confined to his home in
Sellwood.
F; M. Gill, of Estacada, representa
tive elect in the Legislature, is at
tending the Teachers' Institute. Mr.
Gill is a guest of Gustav Schnoerr,
who. also 'has been elected a member
of the Legislature.
Mrs. Don Meldrum is severely ill
at St. Vincent's Hospital in Portland.
Mrs.. Meldrum was recently operated
upon and was thought to be recoyer-
- ing when, she was stricken with pneu
monia. Misses Norma and Alice Holman
went to McMinnville Saturday to vis
it their grandmother, Mrs. Martha E,
Holman. They will be gone one week.
Lest you forget Nobel, 714 Main
Street has another new consignment
' of Eastern Fall Cheese. Cream, brick,
Swiss and Limburger:
Mrs. Arthur Mallatt was a visitor
in Oregon City Sunday. She spent a
week in Portland with heiister, Mrs.
Guy Osvurn.
H. L. Young, local manager for the
Portland Ralway, Light & Power Com
pany, made a business trip to Portland
Monday. .
Miss Bessie Hubbard, a trained
nurse of Portland, spent Sunday with
Mrs. Jack Cameron.
For that graceful figure, wear the
Spirella Corset, Room 4, Willamette
.Bldg. Phone Main 3552.
Mrs. S. F. Scripture, who is in a
Portland hospital is in a very critical
condition.
Fine chrsyanthemums for sale by
Mrs. Gilbert, 10th and Van Buren, 50
cents ' dozen.
SUPPLY OF LIVE
STOCK iS LARGE
The run of cattle Monday was heavy
at the North Portland yards and a
large number of steers changed hands.
The Baker district sent in five car
loads of cattle and several came from
Western Idaho. Central Oregon, too,
was well represented. At South Om
aha the cattle market was 10c higher.
North Portland cattle range:
Heavy fed steers ".. 7.00
.675
6.90
6.25
6.00
8.50
5.00 6.50 I
4.0U . . 4.7 b
4.00 . . 4.25
Common steers
Choice steers .
Fancy cows
Ordinary light cows
Fancy light cows . .
Heavy calves . . .
Best bulls
Ordinary bulls
The run of hogs too, was heavy, and
a couple of hundred head were bought
it the morning sales. The market re
mained steady. At South Omaha the
hog market opened strong, but clos
ed from 5c to 10c lower.
North Portland hog market range:
Best light $7.90
Medium light , 7.85
net neavy v.u.
Medium -heavy '. 7.75
Heavy 7.70
The run of sheep was about normal.
and included ,two carloads from Mon
tana and three carloads from Idaho.
At South Omaha the sheep market
was strong and active.
The engagement of Mrs. Frances Fol
som Cleveland, widow of Grover Cleve
land, twenty-second president of the
United States, was recently announced
by John Grier Hibben, president of
Princeton university. "
Mrs. Cleveland is forty-eight years
old, but looks far younger. It is twenty
seven years since she went to Wash
ington to become "the White House
bride," the only wife of a president to
be married at the official mansion and
the youngest woman who ever stepped
into the post as first lady of the land.
Five children came to the Clevelands.
They were Ruth, Marion, Frances,
Richard artd Esther. Ruth is dead.
Esther was the only one born in the
White House and has ever since been
referred to as the "White House baby."
The years have so flown by that this
winter will see the debut of the "White
House baby." and only recently rumor
was busy with the report of her en
gagement to the son of Dean West of
Princeton. This rumor had hardly been
repudiated by Mrs. Cleveland as "ut
terly false'' when there came the offi
cial announcement of the engagement
of the mother.
Professor Thomas Jes Preston, Mrs.
Cleveland's fiance, is fifty years of age
and is a graduate of Princeton... As a
young man his university studies were
interrupted bj illness, Hjid'te gave up
completing his education and went into
business, in which he made a rapid
and notable success, establishing -himself
at the head of a very prosperous
manufacturing company.
After acquiring a substantial fortune
and feeling that continued business
could not compensoA for his abandon
ed college ' career he closed his busi
ness connections and, although almost
forty years of age. went abroad to
study two years at the Sorbonne, Paris.
Returning to America, he entered
Princeton and took his degree of doctor
of philosophy. He was then called to
his present professorship at Wells col
lege, Aurora, N. Y. Although it was as
a student at Princeton that Mrs. Cleve
land first met Professor Preston, the
college where he now serves as a pro
fessor is her college. It was ntt Wells
college that Frances Folsom was a stu
dent when the rumors began to spread
that she' would one day be the bride of
Grover Cleveland.
A feeling of sadnessvaccompanies
the discovery of the first gray Jiairs
which unfortunately are looked upon
as heralds of advanced age. Gray hair,
however handsome it may be, makes
a person look old. We all know the
advantages of being young. Aside
troin the good impression a youthful
appearance makes on others, simply
knowing that you are "looking fit"
gives one courage to undertake and
accomplisn things. So w,hy suffer the
handicap of looking 'old on ac
count of gray hairs, when a sim
ple remedy will give your hair youth-..
ful color and beauty in a few day S".
time?
Most pecjle Know tnat common !
garden sage acts as a cojpr restorer
and scalp tonic as welL Our grand-1
mothers used a "Sage Tea" for keep
ing their.hair dark, soft and luxuriant.
In Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair
Remedy we have an ideal preparation ;
of Sage, combined with Sulphur and
other valuable remedies for dandruff,
itching scalp and thin, weak hair that ;
is split at the ends or constantly com-!
ing out A few applications of this
valuable remedy 'will bring back the
color, and in a short time it will re-'
move every trace of dandruff and
greatly improve othe growth and ap-:
pearance of the. hair.
Get a fifty cent bottle from your '
druggist today, and notice the differ
ence in your hair after a few days' ,
treatment. All druggists sell it, un
der guarantee that the money will be .
refunded if the remedy is not exactly
as represented.
MISS 111 IS
A miscellaneous shower was given
Saturday evening at the home of Mrs.
Lena Zingerling, Parkplace, in honor
of her daughter, Matilda, whose mar
riage to Julius IdehofE, of Stafford,
has been-'announced. The bride elect
received many useful and beautiful
gifts. Games and music were played
and light refreshments were served. ,
The following were present: !
-Mrs. Praeger, Mrs.' Frank Lucas, i
Mrs. Jones, Mrs. A. Hayhurst, Mrs. C.
Boener, Mrs. Jennie Butts, Mrs. Ru-'
ark, Mrs. Paul Praeger, Mrs. George
Mann, Mrs. John Munger, Mrs. P. C. 1
Burns, "Mrs. Shield DeFord, Mrs. Kent :
and Mrs. E. Dunn and Misses New
kirk, Ethel and Isabel Marvin, Fran- i
ces PrenschofC and Rena Jones. j
rric
Lowest Cost
1
LECTRIC LIGHT is the most suitable for homes,
offices, shops and other places needing light.
Electricity can beoised in any quantity, larse 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.
v 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 &
Prevailing Oregon City prices are aa
follows:
HIDES (Buying), Green vhldes 6c
to 7c; salters 7c; tlry hides 12 c to
14c; sheep pelts 30c to 85c each.
EGGS Oregon ranch eggs 35 and
38 cents case count.
FEED(Selling), Shorts $27; bran
$25; process barley $38 per ton.
FLOUR f4.60 , to 5.50.
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. i
CHICKENS 11 l-2c.
PORK 9 1-2 and 10c.
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 and $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, Egg.
BUTTER (Buying), Ordinary coun
try butter 30c and 35c; fancy dairy
80c roll.
Handy Telephone Tables.
The new telephone tables With wood
en stools will appeal to many house
keepers, as often it is difficult to find
a table the correct height for the tele
phone to rest upon.
These new tables, which come in
mahogany, oak and mission, are small
and good looking and would not at all
mar the appearance of any room, pro
vided, of course, that one was selected
in the same wood as the rest of the
furniture. They are square or .three
cornered in design and have swinging
wooden arms, with a found stand cov
ered with green baize on which to rest
the telephone. Under the table is a
shelf to hold the necessary but very
unsightly telephone directory, while
the wooden stool can be slid under the
table when not in use. The three cor
nered shaped table will be found very
convenient for fitting into a corner of
any room or hall.
On the top of the table can be placed
the necessary tablet and pencil, which
every telephone tablesjftould be sup
plied withr as it is often diflicult to
remember a number given over the
wire if there is not such a card or
tablet at hand.
The Most Curious Known Animal.
' The most peculiar and remarkable
animal in the world is the Ornlthoryn
chus paradoxus, the famed egg laying
mammal of Australia. It is shaped like
an otter, has fur like a beaver, is web
footed like a swan, has a bill like a
duck and a tail like that of a fox. it
is the only known fur covered creature
that lays eggs.
Power Co.
MAIN STREET m the BEAVER BLDG.
6
5V
Your Fortune In Teacup.
The following rime, which is the
translation of an old Chinese tea ynK
will prove useful in reading teacup
fortunes:
One leaf alone, alone you'll be;
Two together, the priest you'll see;
Three in groups, your wish you'll gala;
Four, a letter from a loving swain;
Five, good news the letter will bring;
Six in a row, a song you'll sing;
' Seven together, great fortune waits
For you. So say the teacup fates.
Tea leaves short and tea leaves tall
Bring you company great and small;
Tea leaves many and dotted fine
Are of bad luck the surest sign;
Tealeaves and clean the rim.
Your cup of joy o'erfiows the brim. -
A p iff ere nee.
- He Don't you think that some ot
her sayings are smart? She They
aren't, but I hey. do. -.Brooklyn' Life.
- GOOD FOR EVIL
There are some people who turn
gray, but do not grow hoary; whose
faces are furrowed, but not wrin
kled; whose hearts ate sore wound
ed in many places, but are not dead.
There is a youth that bids defiance
to old age, and there is a kindness
which laughs at the "world's usage.
These are they who have returned
good for evil.
Unqualifiedly the Best
GER;
The J)e Luxe Steel B&ck
allows the covers to drop back on the desk
without throwing the leaves into a curved
position. '
Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
Headquarters for
t Loose Leaf Systems