MORNING- ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, J AN. 23, 1913 Great Bargains For Men, Young Men and Boys Dur ; ing Our Big Clearance Sale J.Levitt Suspension Bridge Corner The Underdog. Benny Bull Bill Feathers Is a sol emn looking dog. Harry Hound Yes; he"s a melancol lie. New York Globe. LOCALJBRIEPS A cow belonging to Fred Mow of Gladstone created no little amuse ment on Main Street Wednesday. Mr. Mow who was attempting to lead the unruly animal, was about an hour getting it four blocks on the town's principle thoroughfare, to the amuse ment of a thrcng of interested spec tators.' An engagement of much interest to to their many friends in this city is that of Mary Pearl McKenna, of Port land to James Shanard Johns, of Pendleton, the well known athlete. Both were members of the 1912 Uni versity of Oregon class. Busch's Hall received a bad wetting as a result of the recent snow storm. When the snow began to melt, the drain pipes became stopped up and as a result the water leaked down along the walls of the building. Lit tle damage was caused other than to the plaster, which fas badly wetted. Kim, the Chinaman who for many years sold vegetables in this city has returned after three years spent in China. Kim states that he is glad to return to this country even though great changes are taking place in his native land. Work has been resumed on the paving of lower Main Street. The work was stopped during the heavy snow storm and it is now hoped that it may be completed without any further delays. J. Levitt has returned to this city after a trip of inspection of the var ious Barde, Levitt stores. They have stores in Portland, Salem, Ore gon City, Corvallis and Hood River. A fall tonic that makes rich, red blood, brings strength, health and happiness to the whole family. Pre vents dangerous Winter diseases. Nothing equal to Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35c, .Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Company. E. B. Brodie accompanied his wife and Mrs. Nieta Barlow Lawrence to Salem where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Eldridge. Mr. and Mrs. Brodie will return in sever al days. Doors will be open at 7 P. M. sharp at Bannon's after sumer sale this ev ening, some sensational values will . be giveu. Arthur Miller, of Puyallup," Wash., Is in the city as the guest of his brother, J. R. Miller. Mr. Miller was formerly a resident of Oregon City, but for the past 40 years he has liv ed elsewhere. Earl Latourette has bought a home at Tenth and Hancock Streets in Portland. After Mr. Latourette's marriage he intends to make this his home. Miss Anna Dean, of Portland, is spending a few days in Oregon City. Miss Dean is employed in .the County Clerks office. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Fortune have re turned to this city from Lewiston, Idaho. The Fortunes will make their home at Twelfth and Munroe Streets. Miss Helen Smith, who callapsed while at work in the L Adams store last week, has recovered and is now at her work again. - Doors will be open at 7 P. M. sharp at Bannon's after supper sale this ev ening, some sensational values will be given. " . E. T. Fields is in a very critical condition at his home on Twelfth Street. Mr. Fields has been ill for a 1 about two years. - - Mr. and Mrs. M.'D. Latourette at tended the play "Peter Grimm" pre sented in Portland Tuesday evening by David Warfield and company. Mr. Latourette says the play was one of the most pathetic he has ever seen and admits that-his lachrymal organs were worked overtime. H. A. Montgomery is in Spokane visiting friends. Mr. Montgomery ex pects to return to Oregon City in a few days. , - , Mrs. Katherine Ward Pope, of Portland, was the guest of Mrs. Charles D. Latourette therst of the week. Lillian Harris, daughter of V. Har ris, is now convalescing from her recent attack of typhoid fever. j Joe Harless, of Molalla, who has been spending a few days in this city has returned to his home. ' H. W. Petterson, of the firm of Ditt mar, Petterson Company, of Portland, is an Oregon City visitor. W. E.Pratt has recovered from his recent attack of typhoid and is now able to be about again. D. L. Trullinger, of Union Mills, was in town Tuesday transacting business. Marion White is at her work after a severe attack of typhoid fever. Harry Fiergusere, of Astoria, was in Oregon City the first of the week on a business, trip. Nellie Riebhoff, of Gladstone, is confined to her bed with pneumonia. Matilda Beck, of Albany, is spend ing a few days in Oregon City. A. E. Murron, of Hillsboro, has been a recent guest in Oregon City. C. G. James, of Denver, is register ed at the Electric Hotel. Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason- Ic Building, Phone Main 399. 1 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Emanuel Krigbaum to Philip Stan dish, land in sections 23, 24, 25 and 26, township 3 south, range 4 east; $11,284. CharlesH. Whitney to Henry Mey er, land section 2, township 5 south, range 1-east; $1,500. Estacada Realty Company to Hayme Kuhrasch, lots 37 and 38 Terrace Addition, section 20, toknship 3 south, range 4 east; $1. Martha A. Niedt to Eastern Invest ment Company, lots 1 and 2, block 3 and lots 31 and 32, blocck 2 Pleas ant Little Homes; $1. Carrie C. Thompson and wife to Daniel W. Storer and wife land in block 547, in original town plat Oak Grove; $1. James M, Hollinshead to Ewald Q,wade part lot 1, block 1, Greenpoint; $1,G00. SPUD DEMAND IS SOMEWHAT BETTER There is a slightly better demand for potatoes, but no improvement is showing in the price. There are fewer arrivals, owing to the bad con ditions of the roads, making it almost impossible for many growers to mar ket their stock at this time. There is no shortage in offerings, but the demand is better because nearby growers are no longer supply ing the bulk of the retail trade di rect. A small movement in the potato trade is still showing with Califor nia, but the call is not pronounced enough to force any change in the price. In fact, as soon as the roads are good enough for growers to of fer their stock generally, the market will again be overfed: This is the reason why buyers are not forced to offer above the former price. Grow ers are very glad to let go, and the only thing that kept the movement down previously was the lack of de mand even at prevailing low prices. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7c to 8c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. FEED (Selling) Shorts, $26; bran $24 ; process barley $27 to $28 per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to $5. 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 $21 and $22. OATS $24.50 to $25.50; wheat 85; oil meal selliing $42.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Whole corn $30. Livestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and 8c; caws 6 and 7c bulls 4 to 12c. MUTTON Sheep 4c to 5c; lambs 6 to 6 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 12c; spring 13c and old roosters 8c. Fruits APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prunes on basis 6 to 8 cents. VEGETABLES ONIONS $1.50 sack; tomatoes 50c; corn 8c and 10c a -doz.; cracked 40. POTATOES About 35c to 45c f. o. b. shipping points, per hundred. Butter, Poultry, Eggs. BUTTER (Frying), Ordinary coun try butter 25c and 30c; fancy cream ery 75c to 85c roll. EGGS Oregon Ranch eggs 30c to 32c case count. If It happened It Is In tne Enter prise. - White Ribbon Remedy is an . honest attempt to aid ' friends of drinking men to rem edy what is really a dreadful evil. ' " This remedy is ODORLESS, COLORLESS, TASTELESS And may be given secretly. JONES DRUG CO. " Oregon City SAVE THE FODDER Although it is too late In the season to consider doing anything with the corn for ensilage purposes we should not overlook the fact that to save the fodder which we. have already cut is not only our duty but is very impor tant from the standpoint of having sufficient feed for our livestock dur ing the winter months. Of the many ways to save the .corn crop the use of the silo Is perhaps the best, and yet only a few of the farmers in the corn belt have taken advantage of this means of saving the corn crop this season and we should begin right now to investigate the silo problem so that we can erect one next year. The silo not only saves 30 to 40 per cent of the corn's nutrition that would otherwise be lost, but it affords a green and suffi cient feed during the winter months. Crop reports sent out by the govern ment show that the farm value of hay as quoted October 1st, is some what less than it was October 1st, 1911, but yet it is higher by a con siderable amount than usual. In other words this indicates1 that the amount of rough feed available throughout the country is. less than normal and for this reason we should put forth extra efforts to save all the fodder and other rough feed we have as it will come in mighty handy before spring. When we consider the increased farm value of hay and the fact that if fodder is left standing in the field from 25 to 40 per cent of its feeding value is lost we will realize how im portant It is to form our plans now to save this fodder in the best possible shape. Perhaps you have not done so, but you have seen ypur neighbors leave the corn fodder in the fields during the winter months and haul it in day after day as it was required. This is bad practice, to say the least, and we hope that no reader of the Service Bureau will be found guilty of this practice this season. Late fall rains coupled with occasional sleet or snow storms not only waste a considerable amount of the fodder but make it extremely difficult to handle if left in the field. Fodder left exposed in this manner loses its feeding value through the loss of protein caused by the action of the elements and by the wasting of leaves due to handling. The next best practice is to stack the fodder as soon as the corn is picked. It is a good idea to locate tho stack somewhere convenient to the feeding rack or on the south side of a grove where the fodder can be led during the cold winter mornings by scattering it on the ground where the animals will be protected from the cold northwest winds. This brings us to the subject of shredding fodder, which is the most important and by far the best way of saving a fodder crop. The husker and shredder new in common use cuts the stalks in longitudinal sections, into small bits -hich puts it in a much more palatable form. It has been found that live stock . will eat much more of the stalk when shredded than when fed whole. The machine used for this purpose will deliver the corn in a husked condition. The cost of shredding varies, of course, in differ ent localities, but figuring the aver age cost of husking corn and storing it, the expense of shredding Is prac ELECTRIC! The Portland Railway Light and Power Company Beaver Building Main Street tically the came. Then. you will not only get the corn husked and stored but you will have your fodder In a ronvienient form for storing and feed ing. It is a good plan to store the shredded fodder in the hay mow or in some place where it can be. covered. If it is impossible for you to do this, stack the shredded fodder close to where you intend to feed it. This will not only .save labor, but will re duce losses in handling and hauling the shredded fodder. Another advan tage of shredding the fodder which is often overlooked is the convenience in handling the stable manure. It is perhaps unnecessary to call the Corn Belt farmers' attention to this fact. Let us 'plan right now to at least stack our fodder and If possible use a shredder. TURKEY SUBMITS TO WILL OF POWERS CONSTANTINOPLE, Jan. 22. Tur key submitted today to the will of the powers. The grand council of the Ottoman Empire, decided in favor of accepting the proposals of Europe for a peace settlement between Turkey and the Balkan allies. As officially announced, the grand council approved the governments point of view, declaring its confidence in the sentiments of equity voiced by the great powers and expressed the wish to see the promises and propos ed assistance effectually realized. It also asked the government "to exert all its efforts to insure in the future the safety of the country "and the development of its economic in terests. " The question submitted today by the Turkish government to the grand council was: "Should the recommen dations contained in the note of the European powers be accepted or re jected?" The government frankly confessed itself in favor of agreeing to the suggestion made by the powers. ' j Horse Drops Dead. - A horse, which J. Perry, of Molalla, was driving, dropped dead about three miles from this city Wednesday.- ' ' . Parsee Burial Customs. A Bombay correspondent, writing of the burial customs of the Parsees, says: "The approach of that transition we call death is a signal for the"rela tives to leave the presence of the dying one, the priest alone remaining to whisper Zend-Avesta precepts into his ear. He in turn passes out of the room and admits a dog. who is trained to gaze steadily into tbe face of the dying one. A dog is accounted the only liv ing creature that can terrorize the evil spirits, so the "sas-did. or "dog stare. is the last sight tbe Parsee has on earth. No human shadow must intervene; oth erwise the guardian virtue of tbe dog's gaze is annulled." Probability of Life. A man of twenty in good health may expect Ik. live forty years longer; a mau oi forty, twenty-seven. It answers the puzzling question, of "What Willi get her We have a display of Electric conveniences that will gladden the heart of any woman Only those who have some labor saving elec tric utensils can appreciate their work; below we give jusra suggestive list: Electric Chafing Dish, Electric Discs, Electric Toasters, Electric Irons, Electric Percolator, Electric Table Lamps.' ELECTRIC TABLE STOVES We give the same low prices as our Main Store in Portland, and the same courteous service." - Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A.. NYE. IMPROVING THE TIME." Hundreds of thousands of dollars are being spent in the effort to find one sixteenth of a second that is missing in tbe calculations of the world's as tronomers. A special building fitted with appa ratus was erected- because in tbe hour glass of time one small grain of sand was missing; Tile fracfion must be found. Because tbe world's longitude Is cat ciliated ou the sun's time as recorded nt Greenwich and Paris and Washing ton, so that every calculation must ac count for every atom of time. If not? If not every meridian line on earth would need to be shifted, every bound nry line between countries and states changed atid every map of the world made over. And the movements of the. planets would be variant! Do you see the tremendous Import of an instant of time? Time Is now! All tbere is of time or ever will be is comprehended in that now. The past Is nothing; the, future is not born and never willfie. So far as humans are concerned there vis absolutely nothing save now. Therefore: Let ns utilize the only thing we have We cannot turn back the dial, neither make tbe sun stand still. We cannot measure the value of the time we have lost nor compute the value of that which has not yet come to us. The present is potential. He who best improves what he has best appreciates its value. Therefore you will find upon the desk of the busy man this motto: "Do It Now." He is too busy for regrets over tbe last chance and does not put off until tomorrow the only thing he has In hand. - N-O-W spells opiwrtunity. Today is the day of salvation. To day you have the desire to do Today you have the strength to perform. To day you have the hope of accomplish fnent. Today you have tbe time to succeed. Do it today. Sufficient unto the day is the evil and the good thereof. Yesterday holds nothing but a memory; tomorrow noth ing but a promise. Today is the onlv day. Do it now! - She Was Really Sorry. "You say your wife threw a plate at you?" . "Yes; it was a fine china plate. It broke agaiust my bead." "Didn't she appear : sorry after she threw it?" ' "Yes, she appeared very sorry." "Ah. indeeoV. And what did she say?" "She said she was a fool not to con trol her temper." "Good. And what else did she say?" "She said she didn't believe she could match that plate again if she hunted the town through." Photo Bits. Palmist and Clairvoyant And Card Reader The f Germans Now JLocated at ' 524 Main St. Electric Annex Hotel Where they may be consulted upon all affairs of life. Such as business, love, marriages, changes, buying or selling prop erty, investments, where and in what you will best succeed. - s They will tell you who and when you will marry, what your lucky days and months are. Their Extraordinary Clairvoyant Power Combined with a su perior knowledge of occult, forces enables them to read your life with unerring accuracy from infancy to old age. - All this and much more is told without asking a single question. They have helped others, why not you? ' Partake of these advantages freely and you will b(j spar ed the saddest of alL sad words, "It might have been." Come -all you sick people. - Tells name, names of friends or enemies and exactly what you called to know. V SPECIAL for one month onlyreadings $1.00. Hrs. 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. daily. . f . - .- HOTEL ELECTRIC ANNEX Complete Loose Leaf Ledger Outfit $7.50 OJR Jewel Ledger Outfit is just the thing for the small merchant, the professional man, or the pri vate ledger accounts or records of an individual or corporation. The binder has a formed steel case with . a durable mechanism; the binding is a high grade Rus sia leather with corduroy sides. The No. 52 Outfit consists of binder as shown in cut, 250 flat opening ledger leaves, and a leather tab bed index. Sheet size 7 1-2 x 10 38 inches, price com plete : $7.50 No. 53, the same outfit in the 9 1-4 x 11 7-8 size 88 50 , Oregon City' Enterprise Modern Office Systematizes Oregon City . - Oregon For all eye troubles such as Granulated Lids, Sore Eyes, Weak Eyes, Dimness of Vision, Tired Eyes, e c. 25 cents a tube. Money back plan. "Good for nothing but the eyes." FOR SALE BY THE IS GIVEN FOR WATER PROBE (Continued from page 1) It was decided that the city bonds be placed on sale at 5 per cent. The matter of purchasing instruments for the city engineer's office was referred to the street committee, the finance committee and the city engineer. The matter of the acceptance of the Main Street sewer north of Four teenth Street was referred to the street committee .and the city engin eer. Are You Afficted With Piles? This disease,' whether acute or, chronic, is easily and rapidly over come by using Meritol Pile Remedy. Gives positive and permanent relief when all others fail, and we heartily recommend it to any sufferer. Jones Drug Co. - JOHN J. EDGREN DEAD. John J Edgren, a real estate dealer of -Portland, and formerly a resident of this city, died Wednesday. The arrangements for the funeral have not been made. JONES DRUG COMPANY IT GROWS HAIR Stops Dandruff and Scalp Diseases, Restores Gray or Faded Hair to Its Natural Color. Swissco Will Do. This For You. Swissco produces astounding rei suits so quickly it has amazed those who have used it. We will prove it to you if you will send 10c in silver or stamps to pay postage and we will send you a trial bottle and our won derful testimonials- There is no excuse for baldness. Write today to Swissco Hair Remedy Coj, 5311 P. O. Square, Cincinnati Ohio. . . Swissco is on sale' at all druggists and drug departments at 50c and $1.00 a bottle. ' ' - JONES DRUG COMPANY