3 MOKNING ENTERPRISE SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1913. Sunday Services At the 4 Congregational Church This Morning at 10:30 o'clock Topic "THE INHABITANTS OF , HEAVEN" ' Thia. Evening at" 7 : 30 ' o'clock Illustrated Lecture "THE PEOPLE AND MISSIONS OF WEST AFRICA" GEO. NELSON. EDWARDS, Pastor. A Reason. Hammond Why do you take your wife so often to see the moving pic tures? Wayburn 1 want to Impress on her mind that actions speak louder than words. Chicago News. LOCAL BRIEPS Now is the time to set out Rose trees, 3-year old trees 20c ench, de livered and set out free of charge. These are guaranteed to bloom by the middle of June. H. J. Bigger, 9th and Center Streets. Fred Schafer, the prominent Molal la lumberman, was in this city the latter part of the week attending to business. Grant Mumpower, of Stone, was an Oregon City visitor Friday and Sat urday. A. F. Benson, of Estacada, was in this city Saturday attending to bus iness matters. Mrs. L. Paul, of Clackamas, was in this city Friday and Saturday. Miiss Ethelwyn Thompson, of Port land, but formerly of Oregon City, is visiting friends here and at Meldrum. J. C. Fellows, of Mlolalla, was in this city the last part of the week at tneding to business. Rev. Spiess, of Clackamas, was a visitor to this city Saturday. Miss Evelyn Rider, of Lents, is a guest at the Electric Hotel. "Fine Line of Pianos at Electric Ho tel Building. A. L. Steiner, of Molalla, is spend ing a few days in this city and is a guest at the Electric Hotel. Miss Mary Brown is spending a few days in this city visiting friends. Call and see our hats. Miss C. Gold smith. Dr. van Brakle, Usieopath, Mason ic Building, Phone Main 399. AT AURORA MEETING At a meeting of the residents of Aurora and persons living in the neighborhood Saturday afternoon the raising of stock was discussed exten sively. The meeting was held under the auspices of the Aurora Commer cial Club. It was the unanimous opinion that the farmers should raise more stock than they are rais ing at present. It was added that the dairy business and the raising of of swine would be more profitable than other lines. Dr. James "Withy combe, of the Oregon Agricultural College, delivered an interesting ad dress, and State Dairy and Food Com missioner Mickel told of what could be accomplished in the dairy indus try in this state. Grant G. Dimick, manager of the Western Stock Jour nal, spoke upon the swine industry explaining what he had accomplish ed at his farm in this county. Man ager Brown, of the Brownville Stock Farm, delivered an instructive ad dress upon poultry and swine. Didn't Need Them. Neighbor If your stntement is true your clothesline was robbed by tramps. Judson How do you make that out? Neighbor Didn't you say they took ev erything but the towels? Illustrated Bits. For all eye troubles such as Granulated Lids, Sore Eyes, Weak Vs.ts, Dimness of Vision, Tired Eyes, etc. 25 cents a tube. Money back plan. "Good or nothing but the eyes." For Sale by JONES Automobiles for Hire PHONES: MAIN 77; A 193 Miller-IPar leer Co. POTATO PRICES ARE STILL AT LOW EBB The weakness in the potato trade and the slowness of the demand, coupled with - the fact that country interests are overloading the trade is worrying the commission men. In the Portland trade there has been a fair movement of potatoes recently, but for every sack sold there have been three more receiv ed recently. Naturally, this has not had a good effect upon the trade. Receivers are unable to 'flni room for the increased offerings. Their own storerooms are full, the docks are full and the price is so low that they do not want to take the chance of putting them in poblic storehouses with the additional cost. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows: . HIDES (Buying) Green salted, 7c to 8c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. FEED (Selling) Shorts $25; bran $24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to S5. HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and $9; oat hay best $11 and $12; mix ed $10 to $11; selling ' alfalfa $13.50 to $17.00; Idaho and Eastern Oregon timothy selling $19.50 to $23.00. OATS $24.00 to $26.50; wheat 90; oil meal selling $40.00; Shay Brook dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. Whole corn $28. Livestock, Meats. BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and 8c; cows 6 and 7 c, bulls 4 to 6c. MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; 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 ID. POULTRY (buying) Hens 11 to 13c; stags slow at 10c; old -roos-7c; broilers 17c. Fruits APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Buying), Prunes on basis 6 to 8 cents. VEGETABLES ONIONS $1.00 sack. 'POTATOES About 35c to 40c f. o. b. shipping points, per hundred, with no sales at going quotations. Butter, Eggs. BUTTER (I ytng), Ordinary conn try butter 25c and 30c; fancy cream ery 75c to 85c roll. : EGGS Oregon ranch case count 14c; Oegon ranch candled 15c. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Ellen M. Rockwood to F. H. Gil bert lot 5, block 1, Ardenwald; $400. Ellen M. Rockwood to F. A. Knapp and S. P. Miackey, 9 lot, block 1; lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, block 3; lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, block 4; lots 12, 13, 14 and 18, block 7; lots 25, 26 and 27, block 8; lots 17, 19, 20 and 21, block 9; lots 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 14 and 15, block 10; lot 10, block 11; lots 2, 5, 11, 15 and 16, block 12 Ardenwald; $1. Town of Milwaukie to J. F. Wetz erland in Milwaukie; $1. Minnie M. and M. E. Lee to J. W. Chadsey and wife, tract 92 and part tract 77 Peach Cove; $10. Aage Anderson and wife to John Olson, tracts 16 and 17, Foster Acres; $10. Charles B. Moores and wife to F. L. Roberts, lot 36, Sellwood Gardens; $10. George M. Kirk to Myrtle M. Kirk, land section 34, township 2 South, range 2 East; $10. - Willamette Pulp & Paper Company to School District Thirty-four, land section 25, township 2 south, range 1 east; $1. Charlette Samundson to Charles N. Wait, lots 1 and 2, block 1 Roth's Addition to Canby; $1. Frank Busch to Annie Busch lot 2, block 10 Oregon City; $1. 1 ADVERTISING TALKS NO. 16 (By Ralph Kaye) Women are always on the lookout for goods that not only please them and fill a personal need but goods that will save her household duties. Bakery advertising should appeal directly to women. Now in buying pies, cakes, cookies, bead, etc., what does a woman want to know? Is it not the purity of ingredients cleanliness in the surroundings where the goods are baked? She not only considers her own likes and dislikes but those of her family. After you have told her the goods are pure and made under sanitary conditions you must arouse a desire to purchase by appealing to her taste, her appetite, her imagination. In advertising pumpkin pies, if you tell her they are made of real pumpkins, fresh from the field, that the crust is flakey and crisp, Hot sticky and doughy, that the tops have an even brown through the powder ed sugar, you set her imagination to working. Once you do that, it's a case of making good what you tell her, that's all. t Next talk on Grocery Advertising. DRUG COMPANY. At the Portland Theatres LAST CAR LEAVES FOR OREGON CITY AT MIDNIiHI So T -fuf SCENE FROM "BUNTY PULLS THE STRINGS," Af HEILIG MARCH "lO The comedy success "Bunty Pull3 the Strings" which will be the attraction at The Heilig Theatre, 11th anc! iMorrison streets, for six nights, beginning ..Monday, March JO.. . Popular price matinee Wednesday and special price ..matinee Saturday. "BUNTY PULLS THE STRINGS" An announcement of more than us ual interest to Portland theatre-goers is that made by Manager Pangla ot the Heilig Theatre of the coming of Graham Moffat's universally popular Scotch play, "Bunty Pulls The Strings." The play will be here for one week beginning Monday, March 10 "Bunty Pulls The Strings' is un animously conceded to be the most sucesslul of all plays of recent years. It will be presented here by the all Scotch company of players which Wil liam A. Brady, the American producer of "Bunty," recruited- from the lead ing theatres of Londn, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. Mr. Graham Moffat, the author, helped Mir. Brady make the selection, for Mr. Moffat's acquaint ance with the player folk of tho Unit ed Kingdom is extensive. Mr. Mof fat was himself an actor for several years and as such visited all the larg er cities of Great Britain and Ireland. Miss Molly. Mclntyre, a charming little lassie who came over here with the Scotch company a little over a SOCIETY'S CR1TICESM ANSWERED BY JUDGE Members of the Farmers' Society . of Equity having criticized County Judge Beatie and Circuit Judge ' Campbell for denying the society the ' courtrooms for its meetings, Judge ; Eeatie said Saturday if the other members of the county court favored the courtrooms being turned over to the organization, - he would offer no further objection. He, however, re iterated a former statement that the Courthouse was primarily intended for court business, but when possible the courtrooms had been turned over to granges and other societies work ing for a betterment of conditions. A suggestion that other towns in the county might take- advantage of the court's refusal to allow the so ciety the use of the courtrooms and provide halls for it to meet in, thus taking business from Oregon City, was answered by Judge Beatie as follows: "The county court represents the whole county. I live in Oregon City. Mr. Blair lives beyond Canby. Mr. Mattoon lives in Estacada. So far as this court is concerned it repre sents the entire county Canbyl Estacada and all other towns in the county have the same rights. The court is just as much interested in seeing other towns grow and aiding them as it is in seeing Oregon City grow. Personally, because I live in this city, I would like to' see it be come one of the largest cities in the West, but in my capacity as county judge I cannot discriminate against other towns in the county, and, I am sure if I tried, Messrs. Mattoon and Blair would soon call a halt on me. But if I was wrong in denying this society the use of our rooms, when really they were needed for the bus iness of the court, and if the other members of the court so decide, I shall withdraw "all objections and welcome the members of the organ ization. My opinion was, and is, that this society is organized on entirely differnt lines from the granges, that its work and purposes are entirely different; it is a business oganiza tion and therefore should engage a hall in which to hold its meetings and not hold them in the courthouse which belongs to everybody." The Bagpipes. A bagpipe has three long tubes, oi "drones." which possess no fixed notes; 8 wind chest, sac or lungs inflated by a blowpipe; a chanter, with finger holes for playing the melody. It is an Instrument with a small compass of about nine notes, whirt form no dia tonic scale, ; nor are they accurately tuned to one another. Each note origi nally possessed a Gaelic name, such as hodroho. hananum, huchan, hirchin, etc.. and all the airs, reels, flings, slo gans, war inarches, nulachans, strath-, speys, laments, piobaireachd pibrochs etc., were self taught by ear. Now there are two or three book tutors In the market. London Family Herald. If It nappened It Is Jn tne Enter prise. ;;. year ago, plays the part of Bunty Biggar. Her debut in America, at Collier's comedy theatre, New York City, was such a triumph that she be came famous almost . overnight and since then has firmly established her self in the affections of th? theatre going public of the larger "cenier s of population of the country wherever "Bunty"' has been presented since it began its road tour. What the en thusiastic New York critics said of her has been repeated, in substance, by those of Chicago, St. Louis, Cincin nati, Detroit and elsewhere. Little need be said of "Bunty Pulls the Strings" as a play. Every read er follower of things theatrical knows of its charm and quaintness, Its com pelling delineation of human nature in a picturesque Scotch setting cf the period of 1860. Plays like "Bunty' are not written every day. In fact, they are are so rare that they are wel comed with open arms when one is written. If ever a play was welcomed with open arms that play was "Bunty Pulls the Strings." MRS. DURKEE GIVEN PARTY ON RETUR A surprise party was tendered Mrs. C. E. Burns Friday evening by Mrs. C. E. Burns at her home in Preen point. The party was given in hon or of Mrs. Durkee's return to this city, where she and her husband will make their future home. Mrs. Dur kee nas lived . in Spokane several years. She was formerly Miss Mable Covert and lived for a number of years with Mrs. Burns. The evening was pleasantly spent with music and games, after which delicious refreshments were served. Among those present were: Ma, and Mrs. C. E. Burns, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Burns, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Reddick, Mr .and Mrs. C. W. Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. L. Nobel, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Monnell, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Bar ry, Mrs. J. Murray, Mrs. T. Burns, Mrs. J. Surber, Mrs. C. Bernier, Miss May Straight, Walter Kelly, Miss Gen nevieve Kelly, Miss Helen Surbei Lloyd Bernier, Doris Reddick, Ryle Reddick, Leslie and Edward Burns, Dorothy Noble, Katherine Barry, Genevieve Burns, and Cleve Durkee. Mr. and Mrs. Durkee will make their home in this city at Seventeenth and Main Streets. In Doubt About the Brand. ! A frt'sluiuiii csi in home from high soliooi the oilier day and told her moth er she was discouraged. The mother asked her' the cause. "Well," she re plied. '! will have to go three more years hefore ! will be in the senior class, and it really doesn't seem worth j the trouble'. This morning iu a spell ' i'.'. contest i'ie teacher asked a senior j boy to spell -pneumonia.' and he stood ' up and lool.i l about the room a bit uncertainly :! t 1'ien said: 'Ho yon i.i .'!! Hie liquid or the dis ease?' " I'i:i:s.is Ciiy Star. j Like a St. Bernard. Ore of the happiest compliments ! ever paid to Gladstone w-as lxird i HoushtonV. i i "I haven't seen you for ages. I live ! the life of a dog." said the hard work j ed statesman. "Yes."' said Lord Houghton, "of a St Bernard, the savior of meu." Ixmdon Chronicle. Talk Dollars. The economical housewife was en- , aeavonng to dispose or a, much worn j dress. j "Hannah." she said to the negress. j "I will take 4 for the dress." j "Ain't you got nothiu' uot so sus- j pensive?" asked the darkey. "No. But I'll take off a dollar. Ton j can save that." said the lady.. "Land sakes. niissie!" exclaimed Hannah. "That dou't save me nothln'. That's jest" a talk dollar." National Monthly. Leather Aprons. The leather apron worn by black smiths is meutioned by the elder Pliny, who flourished A. D. ,23-7S. OGLE MINE STOCK FINE INVESTMENT THIS IS A REAL GOLD MINE, NOT A STOCK JOBBING PROPOSITION We are going to install a 100 ton cyanide plant on our property. We have proven beyond all question of doubt thatthe ore is there in pay ing quantities to keep said plant in operation for years to come. This mine is located in our own county and own ed by your own people and under these conditions it is bound to be of great benefit to our county as all the mon ey extracted will be distributed right here at home. We have a mine and not a hole in the ground called a mine that so many have bought stock in. When we say a Mine, we mean that the ore bodies are located to the extent that it shows that it will take " Coupon STOCK FULLY PAID AND N ON ASSESSABLE. CAPITAL 1,000,000 SHARES, PAR VALUE $1. ' ." I hereby subscribe for and purchase shares of Treasury Stock of the Ogle Moun tain Mining Company at the agreed price of 70 cents a share, total $ . .1 hereby agree to pay for same on the following terms: 25 per cent when the machinery is or-dered and work starts, and 25 per cent on the first of each month there-after until full amount is paid, said stock to be issued on final payment.' Signed - Address Date, March , 1913. FOR YOUR PLUMBING Go to MARTIN SEILER At Elliott Garage Fifth and Main Streets WORK GUARANTEED. REASON ABLE PRICES Telephone A 18 or Main 1361 GRIPPE REMEDY MAKES FRIENDS Every time we sell a package of Rexall Grippe Pills to a new customer we make a new friend. Every time we sell one to an old customer we increase that customer's confidence in us. We invariably recommend Rexall Grippe Pills to every sufferer who asks our advice, because we sin cerely believe them to be the best remedy ever devised for grippe best in the promptness with-which the dis ease is relieved best to allay the In flammation and -congestion in head and bronchial tubes best to reduce the fever and restore general com fort and normal health. If you knew what we know about Rexall Grippe Pills, if you could have the opportunity we have to hear the grateful testimonials from pleased customers concerning them, your faith in them would be as great as ours. We back our confidence In Rexall Grippe Pills in the most substantial way, in each and every case we offer them- with our absolute guarantee to refund the money paid for them if they do not give utmost satisfaction. This leaves you no excuse for hesita tion to use them. You get the money you paid for them in case they do not do all for you that you expect them to. Price 25 cents. Sold in this com munity only at our store The Rex all Store Huntley Bros Co. Brain Weights. The average weight of man's brain is 3 pounds 8 ounces and of woman's brain 2 pounds 11 ounces. COMING IKeviEne Great Russian Pianist Bungalow' Theatre Sun. Mar. 16 3. P.M. PRICES: 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 Mail Orders Receive1 Seat Sale Mar. 14 Direction Lors Steers-Wynn Coman years to work them out. If you have old stock stored away ask yourself whether it was a hole in the ground or a' mine you invested in, and if you will look it up and find your stock is worthless you can't help but see that you invested in a hole in the ground and not a Mine, bo don't con demn a mine or place it in the same ranks. Be broader minded. Statistics show that there was produced in the year 1910 over $127,000,000 in gold and silver in the United States and as this is a fact you cannot say that mining does not pay. If we get our plant jn operation this fall it is rea OGLE MOUNTAIN MINING CO. PLAN YOUR The Land of Sunshine and via the (a SUNSET lUbUtNSbrwblAl ROUTES A THOROUGHLY YOU CAN SEE IN CALIFORNIA: Pf ' Attractive seaside resorts, famous hotels, hot springs and out door sports. At Pasadena the world famed ostrich farms and magnificient homes. At San Bernadina and Riverside the Or ange Groves. At Catalina, the wonderful submarine gardens, and at various other points attractions that delight the eye and inform the mind. LOW ONE WAY OR ROUND TRIP FARES: Round trip tickets to Los Angeles on sale daily with long re turn limit and stop-overs at will. If you wish to go still fur ther south or east, tickets via all rail, or rail and steamer through New Orleans can be secured at reasonable rates. Further particulars on application" to any Agent. Ask for descrip tive literature on California, or "Wayside Notes," describing trip San Francisco to New Orleans. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. Hereeverywhere in the frozen north ---in the fever ridden swamps of the tropics they look to me for aid. To the invalid, the convales cent, the old, the infirm, I give real helpful service. A little of me goes a long way. - . , Cyrus NoH r'-ire and old. W. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents, Portland, Oregon. Her Kind of Dates. "See that girl?" The barber pointed at a handsome blond who passed the window. "Well, she makes more dates than any other girl in town." "The idea!" "Yes; she works in a calendar fac tory." : And the barber went on shaving. Youngstown Telegram. sonable to believe that we will be handling 500 tons daily in five years from now, and that means an output of about $1,000,000 a year. It has tak en years of labor to make the mine what it is today and as we are only short $10,000 to carry on our work to completion we think this a very small amount to ask our friends who have not already helped, to raise. Think it over! Cut out the following contract, sign up for a block of stock and you will congratulate yourself by saying you helped put - the finishing touch on the plant that made Ogle Mountain famous. By TRIP THROUGH 49 ENJOYABLE ROUTE CHEAP AS DIRT Four Willamette Lots. On car line. Level. 50 x 100 feet, $100 each, Terms. All Phones JOHN W. LODER, Owner. Stevens Bldg., Oregon City.