MORNING ENTERPRISE, SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1913. One of the Most Sacred Things in Life IS THAT LITTLE BAND OF GOLD WHICH SIGNIFIES MARRRIAGE. TO THE BRIDE, I T IS THE KEY TO ALL HAPPINESS IN THE WORLD HER CONSTANT COMPANION THROUGH LIFE. WHAT A SENSE OF SATISFACTION TO Hiivi WHO SELfS A WEDDING RING, WELL KNOWING THAT YEARS HNCE, THE SAME HAND, WITHERED VVI1H AGE, WILL WEAR HIS RING EXHIBITING LITTLE SIGN OF WEAR. TO THE JEWELER WHO SELLS THIS RING COM EG THE RESPECT AND CONFIDENCE 0 ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESS IN THIS PARTICULAR FIELD OF ENDEA VOR. NO RING CONTAINS GOLD MORE THOROUGHLY WROUGHT, ORE THOROUGHLY WORKED ON THE GRAIN TO WITHS STAND WEAR THAN OUR RING. THOUSANDS OF WOrvH-N IN THE AUTUMN OF LIFE ARE THE PROUD OWNERS OF THE BURMEISTER & ANDRESEN RING. ' ' WE WOULD BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU OUR STOCK OF ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS. Surmeister OREGON CrTY JEWELERS 2 1-2 acres all in cultivati: 20 minutes from Main St., per cent down, balance $la. monthly. L'est of soil, see E. P. Elliott & Sci We have many other good bu Piling It Up. 7 A -v bkY-M' ' ,"1 The Householder Cnn't you do some thing to kill the echo In this garden? The Landscape Gardener I think it adds charm to the spot. The Householder But I spend a great denl of time here with my wife, and it doubles everything she says. Chicago News. i nrAi rdipps Miss Emma Webber, who has bee chief operator for , the Home Tele-J pnone Company lor two years, aas resigned. Her sister, TvUss Louise Webber, who has been assistant op erator, has beeu given the plaee. Miss Emma Webber was one of the most popular telephone operators in the eity, and her friends regret that I she has severed her connection with i the company. Phillip Sinnott, who for the past j year and a half has been in the ne ws- j paper business at Klamath Falls, re- j turned to this city Friday evening. He will visit his parents and friends in this 'city for several days before he returns. He states that he is, much impressed" with the climate and coun try about Klamath Falls and tfiinks it ,is a fine town. The Busch building now being erected on Main Street, between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets, has been leased to W. J. Wilson, of the Mitchell, Lewis and Staver Company. He will sub-lease a portion or the first floor and the basement to the Pacific Highway Garage. If you suffer from indigestion, con stipation, feel mean and cross, no strength or appetite, your stomach is j unhealthy. Hollister's Rocky Moun- j tain Tea strenghtens, purifies the j stomach, regulates the system. 35c, I Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Co. i Manv Oregon City people have ! availed themselves of the opportun- ity to see the Portland Automobile Show during the past week and the cars have carried large numbers down each evening. Miss Nieta Harding will leave this city Saturday for Eugene where she will attend the Beta Theta Pi dance which will be given Saturday even ing in the University City. Puts light in the eye, tints the cheek with Nature's bloom, loosens the tension of life, brushes the cob webs from the brain. It's Hollister's Rocky Mountain' Tea. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Co. Saturday Club Easter Market Sat urday, March 22, in lecture room of Congregational Church, 1 o'clock. Candy, cookies, Easter eggs, cakes, pies for sale. , Mr. and Mrs. Charles Caufleld will arrive in this city Sunday morning after an extended visit to Panama, Cuba, New York, New Orleans, Mon treal iitiH rhiMi,n H. P. Brightbill and family are preparing to move 'from their pres ent home on Twelfth Street to Four teenth Street. County Commissioner N, Blair, of njuijaia, naa ill tiiJB U1LJ 1UUSI Ul 1113 week attending to court business. Mrs. E. T. Fields, of Portland, was in this city Friday visiting friends and . attending to business. Earl Champion has returned to his v home in Seattle after spending sever al days in this city. William Wood, of Washougal, will 1; US'! i s ! : I ! i I i 1 ' f I I t i j g ! esen SUSPENSION BRIDGE CORNER be in this city Sunday visiting at the Cr.ulield heme. Miss leota Plair was in this city Friday visiting friends and attending . to business. i Lawrence Hornsehuch, of San Fran ' cisco. is visiting his sister, Mrs. C. A. Elliott. B. F Taker, cf Monmouth, brother of R. W. Baker, formerly of this city, ; : Is visiting friends uere. i Mrs. Goertler and son, Walter, ot i Barlow, were in this city Wednesday j : visiting friends and shopping. ' j I Miss Cornelius- Bliss, cf Spokane, : ; Wash., has been in this city several j days visiting friends. j ! A. L. Meyers, of Seattle, was in ! this city the lattpr part-of the week attending to business. M. T. Griswold, of Portland, was a visitor to Oregon City the latter part of the week. Miss Muriel Strong, of Portland, was in this city Thursday visiting friends. , " Angus Lee, of Sellwood, was in this city Friday attending to business. Dr. van Brakle, Usieopath, Masou ic Building, Phone Main 399. far as you can see scaling it at short j intervals I he French Present. ! .Dq peop,e gQ an(J down these One of the Hist nets of the French j evFry day..? you ask ;.resideiit after his election Is to sh j Yes, for most of the residences are iiefore the offic.-isil r:iM'er;i. reproduc- j on this first bluff, some are on the lions of the photograph being seut to ! second, and many are around that everv prefecture and town hall ii I bend and down on the flat- But the Prince i v'ew and ood air up there are worth I the climb, although an elevator is Hi M M Jzz I a fT dr tr 1 r 4- r Its t m s -a m -art. n rit I W jCtO. 4Bv flDOSiv M'f'JLS B I m g. o S F. O. B. FACTORY J SELF STARTER 30 HORSE-POWER 5-PASSENGER TOURING 110-INCH WHEEL BASE TIMKEN BEARINGS CENTER CONTROL CAR HIGH PRICED FEATURE No. 2 Be sure that your car is Thermo-Syphon cooled. Most popular pric ed cars depend upon the centrifugal pump but not the Overland. By the latter system, cooling is taking place with the first engine revolution when HEAT is required for the development of the en gine's best work. With the Thermo-Syphon system, cooling varies, NOT WITH SPEED, but directly with the temperature of the cylinder walls. Thus the Overland Motors do not heat climbing hills. In the Thermo-Syphon system, a circulation - is set up ONLY WHEN THE CYLINDER WALLS HAVE BECOME HEATED. Neither is there any pump to get out of order in this Overland system of cooling. A 1913 catalogue on request. Please address us. Mille-Farlcer Co. OREGON, mi Overland A l!Cl!SI!i SCIENCE ! PitLli LAUDS 203TO.N MONK OR" CALLS 113 ONE OF E-L'SV TOWNS IN WTST nf'TD'rC fiUPH CDflS! DM?C iifcluliuLO UllLll OlUflhL IlifliOL ! Eiauty and Eus-iness Pr grcSi"- ate Citd Beautiful Home Also are Given Attention io (Ji.nsuau bciance Monitor,, or Bo. ton, ill a recent issue, had the fol- j ioviug ankle .about Oregon City: For centdrks the Willamette .River poured its waters in freedom over lue falis unharnessed between the ma. nous biuii's ti.at mark the pre set, t tov.-nsite of Oregon City. Perhaps the Indians who lived at the 'falls appreciated their beauty, but tert..ii"i after the Lewis and- Clark expedition reached Oregon and wMie men explored the river there was no lack of prophecy as to tne city thi should be built by the falls. Dr. John MeLoughlin, the chief fac tor cf tie Hudson Pay Company, lo cated at tiie present ' site of Vancou ver, Wash., welcomed and fed the horde of those who, "in the early 40's, journeyed across the arid plains and lairly tumbled down the Rockies in to the large fur-bearing domain. Be- ! c: use of his kindness to tliese invad ' i ers be lost i;is position with the com pany, an d so decided to make his home at the falls, where he had lo cated a claim in 1S29, and to cast his lot with the Americans. About JJ546 he went to live there, built a saw mill and grist mill and the great falls began their career of usefulness. That was nearly 70 years ago and now Oregon City with its i population of 6500 is known as ths j mill town, a sort of suburb of Port i Innd, the metropolis, with which it is connected bv trolley. Eut after taking one "of the com fortable cars' that run half-hourly from Portland, along the Willamette River, vru discover that Oregon City has quite an independent life of its own, is proud of it, and has not re- linquished the old pioneer dream of making it a great commercial city. An escort tells you: "Yes, the mills are the backbone of the town, but let me first s':ow you other features." You go along well paved streets to the court house for this is the coun ty seat of Clackamas County and find it a large, two-story concrete building surrounded by beautiful trees. Next you find yourself at the bot tom of a flight of iron steps at the foot of an 80-foot bluff, and there are other skeleton flights of steps as REMY MAGNETO WARNER SPEEDOMETER MOHAIR TOP AND , fiOOT CLEAR VISION WIND SHIELD "PREST-O-LITE" TANK CITY, OR. Model 69T CiTY '-'1 unde way for the tenderfoot.' The stairs are easy and they wia'a ' up through beautiful greenery tiie ' massive rock-ribbed blml a wonder of moss, lichens, wild flowers and-?; i ier"? vaile graceful uazdaut ousaeo ti I seringas and tall maples iorui a bow- .i ; er through which one cateies giiiiu-: f i ses of the busy to An, tiio wiaiLn j J ! river and far away the blue iiLu, an-i ; p. grand mountains, lucre .-are beats ; j& i everywhere for rest along te way. :;. I At the top of the bluif , where it 1 I overlooks the heart of the to' n is j 3? i Met ouguiin Park, donated half a ceu- j 0 i tury ago to the city by it3 geuerouo ! 0 rounder a place ma.ie ana kept beau I; tiful by the Woman's Club. The old McLougiil.n house, whlsu ' originally stood downtown ac tue'taJ J of Main Street, was broanst up t jiQ the park. It was a ruin, but tlut clju ! ' had it papered, painted and (amis i ft ed as it was in the 40's. It is a suj- 1 1:? stantial square white buildicg set la j $ harmonious surrouudins& j r The oldest Charcots are in t-e lo.v i tr town and the newer ones on tie ; first bluff. Nearly Eli have beeu rt i ed lately ten in all, representing a- t-i many denominations. Xneie are five school build, ngs, three grade: sihcols, t:ie McLoughlin Iniititute, ana a ne.v high school, built where k commanJs a beautiful view of the rivei, a ree;' wooded island an.! the heights or Portland, 14 miles away! The city school system is considered stcoui to none in the West. v ' Among tne points of interest point ed out is the home of t ie author, iur i. s Eva Emery Dye, who has writt.ntue history of the Northwest ia romantii style. Edwin Markham lived co,vn in the fat when a boy, and net far. away Ella Higginson spent hfr girl hood and wrote short stories. Mrs. Dye's endeavors started a Chautauqua in ti.e town. The Chau tauqua grounds are a mile or so be low town in Gladstone pari , -where the town people, Portland people and hundreds from other places get pleasure, inspiration and new ideas every summer. A Carnegie library building cost ing $12,500, nearing completion, is seen in a fine setting of trees with ample grounds. For years a reading room fof the public which grew into a small library, also a rest room for country women "and others, jiave been maintained in the town. Besides the more stately residences on commanding heights, everywhere on the bluffs, down in the flat and business part of the place, are hun dreds of attractive small homes, bun galows with the r gay porch loxes, cottages with pretty lawns and abun dance of flowers, roses in the park ings, the fruit trees and kitchen gar dens. From the Boulevard along the bluff one can appreciate the big suspen sion bridge which links tiie town to the west side which terraces back giving ample room for the bjg city of the future. The large paper mills that supply the coast with paper stand like massive forts at the river's edge. Steamboats puff off for Port land or make their way- through then locks to the upper river. The falls, harnessed and subdued, pour decor ously over the big dam made to give the mills more power. In this "Pow er City of Oregon," beauty is sacrific ed to progress. The fine new Elks' home, the Ma sonic temple, which also houses the wide-awake Commercial Club and its auxiliary organization, "The Live Wires," are pointed out. Below, on the Southern Pacific track, extends a long train loaded with immense logs 2 1-2 feet to 6 feet in diameter, giant firs to be ground into pulp for paper. A power house supplies Port land, 15 miles away, with its light. West of the main fall is the fish ladder where, one month in the year, the Chinook salmon can find their vay to the upper river. . The Chinook run is from April to June 15. The av erage weight caught is 30 pounds, though the record runs as high as 65 pounds. Three great paper mills produce annually 75,000 tons of paper, or 235 tons daily. They employ more than 1000 people and distribute $800, 000 in wages annually. Tjieir combin ed investment is almost $6,000,000. The largest mill has started mai-V admirable reforms and the men are given a percentage of the profits. The Oregon City woolen mill, said to be the largest west of the Mississ ippi, employs 350 people. Then there xiire sawmills, an iron foundry, steam laundry and other enterprises. Everywhere in the town jme hears expressed the desire for newcomers. Jet. that MHbstiincp from which i!i-ti; U's !' iiniament are. made, losclv rcM-mbies onlinnrv coal. Jet. many verv !t is forriii'il. like mill, from wood and vejretabU" in tti-r. It differs from coal In that it contains a mucu smaller quantity of earthly impurities. There is soft jet .mihI hard jet. but only the latter is of much use in the making of ornamental articles. EVi.rt. . rt.rfiLY Needs a genuine Anti-Sep'io In the nome. ; There is hardly a day that some member of the family doesn' suffer from Burns, Cuts, Scalds, Chapped Hands ana Ltps. Tetter,-Scald Head, Eczema, Sun Burn, Corns, etc. Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salve is an old-time fully guar anteed remedy for these trou bles. 25 cents a box. Covered With Sores But Entire ly Cured Gentlemen After spending many dollars and trying many doctors in treating my lit le boy, I saw your Dr. Bell's Anti- Septic Salve advertised, pur chased a box, and though he was covered with sores from head to foot he was entirely cured after using only two boxes of Dr. Bell's AntiscpJc SaKe. Very truly, MRS. S. M. 6.. BYRD, Route 3, Box 2, Blackstone, S.C. FOR SALE BY THE JONES DRUG COMPANY wnos To With E DAY ornin OGLE THIS IS A REAL GOLD MINE, NOT A STOCK JOBBING PROPOSITION If you are looking for a sure thing here are a few things for you to think over. It is a sure thing that a plant Is going to be put on the property of the Ogle Mountain .Mining 'Company. It is a sure thing that our home peo- pie have furnished the money to put the ore in sight. It is a sure thing that the same people have signed for a good block of stock to install the plant. It is a sure . thing that some one is going to furnish" the bal ance. It is a sure , thing that if our home people don't furnish the balance some one will, and it is a sure thing that if outside capital furnishes it, just that much of the output will be sent away from home. It is a sure thing that the price of stock is going higher, and it is a STOCK FULLY PAID AND 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. Your 1 Here's Another j0 1 1. ii m. 1 1 y 1-Ieip Film Win every club of 5 subscrib- egs ot every subscription for five years to the Morning Enterprise we will give 60t000 votes. In addition we will give free of all charge, one of out famous leath er bound cook books to each sub scriber. Only clcbs of 5 or 5 years' subscription will be enti tied to bonus votes. ONLYREMEMBER riter MINE STOCK FINE INVESTMENT sure thing that the stock will be off the market as soon as we have the required amount to install the plant. Under these conditions don't you think it would be a wise idea to get in and help finance the proposition? We are not here to beg, but are here with a business proposition that will stand the test of any reputable mining engineer. This we know as the mine has stood the tests and been pronounced- all O. K. by repu table engineers. You don't need to be afraid to pay 70 cents a share, for it is going higher beyond all ques tion of doubt. The men that back their own judg ment with their own money are the men. to place your money with if you want to win and if you place your money with us that is what you will be doing. Look out for the men that Coupon NON ASSESSABLE. CAPITAL 1,000,000 SHARES, PAR VALUE $1. OGLE MOUNTAIN MINING CO. j r.avome.' Oig THE DATE do all the talking and never put up their own coin. The men at the head of this proposition are putting up what they can -and are going to put in their time installing the plant. Besides this we have men that are soing to furnish team's to help do the hauling and take their pay in stock, also men that are going to work on the construction work and get their pay the same way. These men see a future ahead or they would not - do this. They are not doing this for their own healthor for fun. Under these conditions don't you think it would be a good place to Invest a few dollars on the following terms? AUTO prise By