C33 MOKNING ENTERPRISE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1913. What Ha Had Dona. ' The S:ilt'sm:iu Have you lfked over ttie samples 1 left with you? The Merchant No; I overlooked tlieui. Chicago News. LOCAL BRIEPS The little daughter of Mrs. H. A. Hasbrook, who was seriously burned in this city abou.t two weeks ago, is now afl'icted with scarletina and is in a bad condition. Her burns are heal ing to some extent. Word has been received from Mr and Mrs. Charles Cduf.olJ, that thev arrived safely in New Ci leans Wed nesday after a delightful Mp to Pa nama. They were not sick t sea, but report that the weat!i3r was verv warm. The new addition to the Baptist parsonage is about completed and will soon be occupied. This will add several rooms to the house which is occupied by Rev. W. T. Miilliken. You can't lose by buying Conkey's Laying Tonic. If your hens don't lay you get your money back. 25c, 50c, and $1.00 packages. For sale by Oregon Commission Co. The Derthick Club will meet at the home of Mrs. C. G. Miller on Seventh and Center Streets Friday afternoon. Mrs. Miller will be assisted by Mrs. Thomas A. Burke. Mrs. Josie Fields and daughter, Miss Clara, are moving to Portland, where they will make, their future home. They have bought a place in L.aureiturst. j Miss E. B. Kinkie, of thi-j city, Sas i returned home after bpn-iding a tew ' days with her sister, Mrs. Fred Field- j house, of Gresiiam. I Mr. and Mrs. Victor Coneroe bave taken tiic house on Twelfth and Wash-! in&ton Streets recently vacated by j the Wisemandle family. j F. A. Burdon, who has been contir- j ed to hii home for several days Yvitli pneumonia, is now recovering and -.viii soon be at his work again. Robert Dieck, the engineer employ ed by the city to iivesniga'.e a future ! water supply for th-.; city, was in the tity Wednesday. V. H. Wang, of Canby, was in Ore gon Cicy Thursday attending to bus iness. He is a prominent business man of that place. Miss Maude Curtis, music teacher in the Oregon City schools, is conlin- I ed to her home on account of illness. Representative Gustav Schnoerr has returned from Salem, the Legislature having been adjourned until March 4. Miss Mary Ellen L5ug iws returned to this city from Salvia, where the was a clerk in the Legisl.tvre. H. C. Trullinger, a progressive farm er of Molalla, was in this city Thurs day attending to business. O. H. Finke, of Dayton, North Da koa, is in this city for a few days looking over the town. J. A. Bakke, of Portland, was in this city Wednesday and Thursday on a business trip. A. M. Widdson, of Portland, was a business visitor in this city Wednes day and Thursday. Mrs. Mary McCarver, who has been ill a number of weeks of heart trouble, is much improved. John Busch has gone to Eugene for JnLl "Hit iFfllM WHAT IS A TRAMP AUTOMOBILE you ask. Not a dilapidated car of ancient manufacture not at all. In our sense, it usually is a new car, painted, trimmed, and shiny on the outside, like many other cars. And yet this one is a tramp automobile a car without a home. Don't you buy that kind! BECAUSE IT IS SOLD TO YOU WITHOUT SERVICE, that valuable adjunct without which any car may become an expensive bargain to its owner. "HOW IS THE DEALER GOING TO TAKE CARE OFMEf ' That's one of the questions you should ask yourself. "How well or how poorly is he equipped to give me proper service?" OVERLAND DEALERS CARRY A STOCK OF PARTS and replacements depending on the number of Overland cars running in the particular dealer's territory. That's a part of the dealer's con tract with the Willis-Overland Company on which the company lays great stress. PARTS ORDERS COME FIRST, ALL OTH ER BUSINESS NEXT, That is the rule of the big Overland plants in Toledo, which stands behind the dealer every time. Such is the SERVICE you buy in addition to the big unrivalled value you get in the great Overland itself. STEP IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF, one of these days, how well the Overland owner is taken care of. No particular credit is claimed for this con dition, because it is a business maxim as old as busi ness itself, that the satisfied customer is the mer chant's best advertisement. It's just -ordinary mer cantile sagacity. But you ought to look into it for your own benefit. DO YOU WISH TO KNOW MORE ABOUT IT? Will you call? A postal wil bring the infor mation,. even a telephone reqiiest. iller-Parker, Dealers Oregon City, Oregon. M C -A.. Elliott For San Francisco tou: a few days where he wi?'. visit friends the remainder of the weel J. Ferguson, of New Era, was in this city Thursday attending to bus iness. The work of cleaning lower Main Street has been stopped for a few days. C. A. Williams was in Oregon City J rnursuay attending .o fu.sraess M. McDanields, of Portland, was a visitor in Oregon Cicy Thursday. Or. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason ic Building, Phone Main 399. rs CLUB TO HELP CLEAN CITY The Woman's Club, at a meeting Thursday afternoon, in response to an invitation from the Live Wires and Street Committee of the City Council to cooperate with them regarding the cleaniag of streets, decided unani mously to do so. The club affirmed resolutions adopted by the Federation of Womans' Clubs regarding the dis posal of garbage, and the resolutions will be presented to the city council. M?s. M. M. Charman read an interest ing par?r on, "The Constitution of Oregon" and Mrs. W. R. Money read an interesting paper on, "Property Rights of Women in Oregon." Mrs. David Caufield, president, and chair man of the scholarship fund, reported that ?32.35 had been collected by the club, which sets a new record. FATHER OF C. B. HARDING'S WIFE DIES IN PORTLAND J. D. McKinnon, father-in-law of Carleton B. Harding, son of George A. Harding, died at his home in Port land Thursday evening. Mr. McKin non had been ill several weeks. He was 73 years of age and had been a railroad contractor in Portland for a number rf years. The funeral will be held tomorrow. SUFFRAGETTES HAY GET LIFE SENTENCES LONDON, Feb. 27. "Militant suf fragettes connected with the burning of buiidings in public parks are liable to penal servitude for life." This was the announcement today of Travers Humphreys, public prose cutor, in asking the Magistrate at the Kew Police Court to commit for trial Miss Lillian Lenton and Miss Joyce Locke. The two were arrested Feb ruary 20 for setting fire to a pavilion in the Kew Botanical Gardens. ' I make my charge," said Mr. Hum phreys, "under the malicious damage act, which makes it a felony punish able by penal servitude for life for any person to fire a building belong ing to the King, or devoted to pub lic use." At the hearing today only Miss Locke appeared, Miss Lenton having been released owing to ill health, af ter carrying out a hunger strike. Humphreys said the prison physicians reported that she would have died unless released. i The Magistrate protested that the procedure was extraordinary. Pris oners, he continued, sometimes are released from prison but not from custody. He immediately issued a warrant for her arrest. Miss Locke, who also started a hunger strike while detained, was forcibly fed. She pleaded that she was tco ill to conduct her defense but the case proceeded and she was committed for trial at the Assizes. Bail was fixed at $5000 on the prom ise of the accused that she would re frain from any agitation pending her appearance before the jury. A young woman who was arrested on the AU-Elglish tennis grounds at Wimbledon last night with bags con taining inflammable materials in her possession, refused to give any infor mation about herself in the police court today. She was remanded, for further investigation. The police testified that they found five cans of paraffin and other combustibles near tne grandstand. "She Is Prematurely Grey?" Is This Said About You? SHERIFF'S SON THREATENS GIRL (Continued from Page 1.) : : j'iif- name of the writer of tv.' letter I ltd them to ask the assistance i' e authorities, and the girl who delivers milk at several downtown homes in the evenings was taken from her route while the investigation proceeded. IT IS UNNECESSARY TO BECOME GREY Any one who is grey before the age of fifty, is prematurely so. HAY'S HAIR HEALTH will restore the grey hairs to their natural color and do it so quickly so naturally, that no one will know that you are us ing it will cleanse the scalp of all dandruff and keep it so. When you see a man or woman with tplendid hair, unstreaked by grey or faded hairs, you may be sure it is in good condition kept so by HAY'S HAIR HEALTH. -Grey and faded hair makes you look at least 10 years older. Get rid of it right away. Don't FOR SALE AND RECOMMEND waste any time on other worthless re storers and revivers. Get the only genuine and really satisfactory one. HAY S HAIR HEALTH, long and favorably known as the very best preparation of its kind Used NOW, it prevents grey hair-used when you HAVE grey hair, puts back the old time vigor and color. FREE: Sign this adv. and take to any of the following drug gists, and get a 50c size bottle of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH and one cake of HARFINA SOAP FREE, for 50c, or $1.00 size bottle of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH and 2 cakes of HARFINA SOAP FREE, for $1.00. ED BY HUNTLEY BROS. CO. TodLkir ' Is Tln.e Dsiv THERE'S NO MONEY TRUST, SAYS MORGAN WASHINGTON, Feb. 27. A gen eral denial of the existence or possi bility of a "money trust" was present ed to the House money trust commit tee today in a long letter sent by J. P. Morgan & Co., at the invitation of the committee. Simultaneously, Chairman Pujo gave out a reply, in which the committee informed Morgan & Co. that its re quest had been made January 27, since when the committee had been at work on its report for a month. "Your memorandum," the reply concluded, "manifestly comes too late to be of value." The Morgan letter laid at the door of the present banking and currency laws the responsibility for any "con centration of money and credit that may exist. ' In its conclusion as to the commit tee's activities, the letter said: "We venture to submit that in a strong public opinion there lies the greatest safeguard of the community. The public are the ones who entrust bankers with such influence and pow er as they today have in every civil ized land and the public is unlikely to entrust that power to weak or evil hands. Your counsel asked witnesses whether the present power held by bankers in the country would not be a menace if it lay in evil hands. If Congress were to fall in evil hands the results might be deplorable. But to us it seems as little likely that the citizens of this country will fill Con gress with rascals, as it is that they will entrust the leadership of their business and financial affairs to a set of clever rogues." The letter says that such concen tration of money in New York as has occurred is due to the "antiquated banking system" and the natural law which "in every country creates some one 3ity as the great financial center." That part of the money trust reso lution declaring that it is "generally believed that groups of financiers cre ate, avert and compose panics," was particularly attacked by the letter. Morgan & Co., set for that any with holding of money or credit by one man in any market would be "prompt ly relieved by the automatic flow of credit trom some altogether foreign source." "We regret," said the letter, "that a belief so incredible, so abhorrent and so harmful to the country should for a moment have found lodgment anywhere. And we welcome your in vitation as an opportunity for us to state, to the extent of our observa tions and experience, there is not ev en a vestige of truth in the idea that in whole or in part, the financial con vulsion of 1907 was brought through the design of any man or men." SANDY DYNAMITED '" in i a js s in 2 w& i owacr The bridge built by the Mount Hood Improvement League, across the Sandy River above the mouth of the Zigzag River, in the Mount Hood dis trict, was partly wrecked last week by a charge of dynamite. Recently it was noticed that the upper side had dropped into the river. At first it was supposed the weight was re sponsible, but a closer examination showed that a charge of dynamite had been placed on one side of the upper stringers. The entire bridge was badly wreck ed and must be reconstructed. It was built last summer by people liv ing in the district and was consider ed first class. This, bridge is the only span across the Sandy in that district. It cost be tween $700 and $800 and in addition many of the residents donated labor in its erection. THE PAMPERED ONES. If the fondness of vanity of fa ther or mother has kept a man from hard work, if another has al ways helped him out at the end of his trouble, if what was light al ways fell to him and what was heavy to some one else, if he has been permitted to shirk until shirk ing has become a habit, his life will be a disheartening failure. Uannei coai. Kentinky and Pennsylvania produce nearly all the cnnnel coal mined in the United States. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR GIVES SOCIAL TONIGHT The Christian Endeavor of the Con gregational Church will give a social at the church this evening. Guests are urged to dress in colonial cos tumes. There will be games and songs. Boys are Let Go. James McLarty, 14 years of age, and James McLarty, 15 years of age, pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing chickens in the juvenile court Thurs day, and Judge Beatie suspended sen tence. He told the boys that they must go to school and if they were ever brought before him again he would tlve them jail sentences. UNION LABOR MAN TO BE IN CABINET (Continued from Page 1.) ported to be still under consideration, the most reliable information obtain able today is that James C. McRey nolds, of New York, will be the new Attorney-General. Confirmation comes from every side that the President-elect has- se lected William J. Bryan for Secretary of the Treasury; William G. McAdoo for Secretary of the Navy; Josephus Daniels for secretary of the Navy, and Representative Albert Burleson, of Texas, for Postmaster-General. The name of Louis D. Brandels still is known to be uppermost in Wilson's Today only we will give '500 bonus votes with each 25c purchase of Talcum Powder For this month's end special we have included five famous brands noted for their delightful frag rance and soothing qualities. VIOLET DULOE SQUIBBS RICKSECKERS YOUR CHOICE 25c CAN WE HAVE YOUR FAVORITE ODOR WILLIAMS SOUL KISS 3f. 500 bonus votes with each 25c purchase. HUNTLEY BROS CO. THE REXALL STORE WE GIVE VOTES Huntley Bros. Co. V. Harris Star Theatre Morning Enterprise Ft tiit Ttee -Spraying According to Law by Jack Gleason Under the direction of O. E. Freytag, County Fruit Inspector. Phone Main I6JJ mind for Secretary of Commerce, as the post now held by Nagel probably will be called hereafter. "It is said Mr. Wilson from the first was anxious to place a Progressive Republican in his Cabinet, and the selection of Brandels is believed to be a result of that desire. The - information as yet with re spect to diplomatic posts is meager. It became known here today that Frederick C. Penfield, of Philadel phia, and Henry N. Morgenthau, of New York, very likely would be chos en for Ambassadors, the former to Rome and the latter to Berlin. Lively discussion was precipitated in Congregressional circles by a pub lished statement credited to President-elect Wilson that he intended to spend part of each working day in the President's room at the Capitol, to keep in closer touch with the leg islative officers. Such action on the part of the President would overturn a precedent which has restructed tae President's visit to the Capitol to the last hours of a session of Congress. S J; BatStimelhd J M Fnend JE3 y bA Father's and Hll 'j! Sister's too gf JF iTf because IT WJi I iSSC SOFTENS THE tVfH II R freshing, cooling, in- tS . j 'HI vigorating effect that aZjp 1 i everyone wants. rij f Keeps the "little L T I 1 one" sweet and fresh "7 I'm j B Most everyone else has. and 1 1 3 HEBE 1 3 BATH POWDHL D ML Sen J 5c far trial size raJtl ' - I Vy? 25c and 50c at your J ' fC2 Druggists or Philo V jgg S-t. rij -Aj Hay Specialties Co. ?JBa My Jk K lJ Newark. N. J.. V. kf jfL H TOD AND CAKE WITH0UTni5TAKE"r WfIB?' Tke Day sMMi Our MiU Started wm Flour 1 TKe Day Our Mill Started we began making a Perfect All-Purpose It is universally known as Fisher's Blend Flour ( Hade from Eastern Ears Wheat and Western Soft Wheat ) and we are still producing it, every working day of the year, to the full capacity of an un equalled plant. It is the Perfect All-Purpose Flour. It sets the standard for real economy. - Manufactured br Fisher Flouring Mills Co. America's Finest Flouring Mills " For Sale by AIT Dealers What T?ain Can I Take? FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED BY HUNTLEY BROTHERS CO. I WHAT'S the next train I can -take to connect with the Northern express at the Junction-? Can I get a through ticket? What's the fare, please?" "When there is no time-table handy, the de sired information is readily otained by a Bell Telephone call to the local railroad station. Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. Every Bell Telephone is a Long DJstance Station