.-4 MORNING ENTERPRISE, SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1913. Suggestive in Questions Sunday School Lessons f (41) A pastor in a leading Pres byterian Church in writing to the author of the Suggestive Questions on the Sunday Se-iool lesson says: "You are a stranger to me but 1 have to say I admire your Suggestive Questions, as published in the Morn ing ' Enterprise very much. They. will greatly Bible study. servant to seek him a wife. Would you say that every man should marry and if so, at what age? ,(5) If a sen is not interested to get a wife, ought his parents put a pressure on him to do so? (6) What importance should be attached to nationality, family and re- increase interest in ligion, as compared .with personality Calling the atteneion j in choosing a wife or accepting a of the first, teacher I met to them I ' husband? found she had used them and intended . (7) How much does God do in the calling the attention of her class to them a class of high school girls." This is the way all students of these Questions feel concerning them. Your Questions Answered If you would like to have answered any " particular question each or any week from "The Suggestive Questions on the Sunday School Lesson" .by Rev. Dr. Linscott, send in your request to this office giving the date of the les son and the number of the question you wish answered. You may select any question except the one indicated that it may be answered in writing by members of the club. Dr. Linscott will answer the questions either In these -columns or by mail through this office. Don't forget to state what ben efit these "Suggestive Questions" are to you. Give your full name and ad dress. Send your letters to the Ques tion Editor of the Morning Enterprise. Questions for March 23 (Copyright, 1911, by Rev. scott, D. D.) T. S. Lin- Isaac and Rebekah. Gen. xxiv. Golden Text In all thy ways ac knowledge him and he will direct thy paths. Pro v. iii:6. (1) Verse 1 Should a good old man be s bright in his mind and as glad in his heart as when he was younger? Why? (2) Verses 2-9 What would you say in value of a faithful workman or foreman or an absolutely trustworthy confidential secretary to an employer? (3) WThat, if any, value is an oath over a straight promise to bind the conscience of an intelligent man? (4) Isaac was thirty-six years old when Abraham, his father, sent his selection of tie wife of a truly good man? - (8) Would you say or not, and wny, that all true marriages are made ia heaven? (9) Verses 10-20 If an industrious man in an honorable calling constant ly seeks help from God, may he with safety quiet his heart from all anx iety and be assured of success? Why? (10; "How much consideration ought a woman, when her hand is sought in marriage, give to her suit or's wordly 'possessions? (11) If two salesmen, both Chris tian men of equal ability, start out to sell goods, and one prays for success with every prospect, while the ether does not, what would be the difference if any, in their degree of success? (12) Whether a man is rich or poor, which woman would make him the better wife, other things being equal, one who knows how to work, or one who has been raised in luxury without work? Why? (13) Verses 21-28 What is the difference in the restful assurance produced by faith and that which comes from faith being actually real ized through fact? (14) Verses 29-42 Who was La ban and what part does he play ir Bible history? (15) Why is it that presents form such an important part in courtship and marriage? (16) Why is it unwise in these days for cousins to marry? Verses 43-49 Of two young ' wo men, the one frank, cheerful, commun icative and obliging; the other timid, reserved and self contained, which Is the one more likely to get a good hus band? (This is one of the question" which may be answered in writing by members of the club.) (18) Verses 50-53 Why would you say or not that all the goods things which we get come from the Lord? (19) What effect does a devout re cognition of God's benefits have upon our generosity? (20) Verses 54-61 What can you say in favor of the man who is in a hurry to get home as soon he has finished his business. (21) Verses 62-67 When you know a man meditates in the 'fields at nights how would you estimate his general character? (22) What great historic signiff- You Gah Pay More for- A Motor Car But What More Do Yoe Get? ' Car for Hire night and day Let Us Show You This Car JHIugln.es 4th and Main Street 9r3.ug.hnes Phone Main 119 Expert Repair work all kinds of Cars TRADE MARK We want you to try one of these preparations on our recomen-dation--upon our positive and absolute guarantee. MERITOL HAIR TONIC, MERITOL PILE REMEDY, MERITOL TONIC DIGESTIVE, MERITOL ECZEMA REMEDY, MERITOL BLOOD PURIFER, MERITOL WHITE LINIMENT, MERITOL RHEUMATISM REMEDY They are made for us; we know what each contains and we know they have no superior. They are made by the AMERICAN DRUG AND PRESS ASSOCIATION , of which we are part owners, and we place the reputation of our store .behind them. If they were not right the very best to be had we would not want you to try them! SEE THE MERITOL TOILET LINE JONES DRUG COMPANY Exclusive Agents In Oregon City cance is there in the marriage of Isaac and Rebekah? Lesson for Sunday, March 30, 1913. Review The God of Our Fathers. USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, The antiseptic pvut;rio be shaKen iut- meshes. If yon wiitit ret a:id comfort for tiy&t. aHoi.p, bwo!1 n, s writing feet, use AilenV root's It re lieves corns und hunibni of all paiu and proven Eg blisters, sore and Cftioue spots. Just tiie thii g for Dancing I'arties, 1'atent Leather shoes, a?tl for Breaking in New Shoes. It is the greate-t comfort ai8Coveryor me acre i ryir jo-aay O'-tueveryvnere, i 25cts. Don't accept any svbamvre. F or r KM', trm) package, address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Koy, N. Y. POTATO MARKET HAS WORSE SLUMP VESSELS CRUSHED BY ICE; CREWS ESCAPE Potato markets along the coast are showing further declines in price and the outlook ia worse than before,, if such a condition is possible. , At Saa Francisco, Oregon Bur banks have dropped down to 6j c per cental for best offerings, and little of the business is available even at this figure. River stock is selling there down to 35c per cental, the lowest price ever known, for similar quality. At Puget Sound points The market has become so clogged with offerings that it is impossible to sell more than a small per cent of the arriv als even at 55 and 56c per cental. Locally the situation is even worse than at other points along the coast owing to the entire absence of an outlet. California does not Want Ore gon supplies because there are more holdings there than the trade can take care of. Arizona and Texas rae able to buy potatoes closer at home at lower prices than Pacific northwest stock can be landed there, therefore, is offering. This is the first year known that no business has been possible with the southwest. NOME, Alaska, March 21. Sam Gattschalk, a sailor from the whaling schooner Moras, reached here last night after a four months' trip over the broken ice of Bering strait, bring ing word of the loss of his ship and the schooner Kittiwack, both of which were crushed by the ice floes north of the Diomede Islands. In SDite of the t.prrililf storms nnrl the lack of food, all hands rMPrt ! none of this business Alaska safely, except Captain Whit ing or the Si'bras, who refused to risk the trip across the straits, say ing that it was sure death. Hr start ed south for Plover Bay, Siberia, and whether he reached it or not is not known. After the schooners were wrecked the crews, including Captain Koren of the Kittiwack, making researches in the Artie, set out for the Seward Peninsula in the only remaining wiaie boat. Heavy seas smashed the boat as they were hearing big Diomete Island. For three months the party subsisted on walrus, living in huts built of stones and ice, before they were able to attempt the passage of the 100 miles of broken ice to the mainland. Gottschalk reports tha" the other men are safe in an Esqui mo settlement. The Kittiwack was formerly jthe gasoline schooner Alva and is one of the smallest boat3 which ever ventur ed into the Artie seas. Same Cost The Same Light at Less Cost The ramous Mazda satisfaction in every way. Light will give you lasting It throws a clear, strong, - . - t AC . - - . . I - I ' "V -r:t rlf i f 'Z-j --tU ,Srf v V - s-'f Yy-i v, fey :-, -i -rrj - I-? i r ' r t rf ;i I 1 11 ' THE WILLAMETTE GLEE CLUB WHICH IS JUST RETURNING FROM A TOUR OF OREGON, WASHING TON AND IDAHO, WILL APPEAR AT THE OREGON CITY HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE OREGON CITY HIGH SCHOOL A. A. MARCH 25, '13. THE PROGRAM WILL CONSIST OF QUARTETTES, SOLOS, READINGS, CHORUSES ANDA COMIC OPERA SKETCH 44 TPHE'-.M INTRODUCING WELL KNOWN PERRY PRESCOT REIGELM AN FOR HIS HUMOROUS READINGS. - 'ni fnilowine excerpts attest the enthusiasm with which the Club was received at every performance: T ..The i house was crowded and their presentation was considered one of the best musical attractions ever put- on in Nampa." Nampa Leader, Nampa, Idaho. . " ' The program was spicy throughout and the Glee Club responded to frequent encores.' Rogue River Courier, Grants Pass, Oregon. EGGS ARE UP. - Eggs have had a shadp rise in the local market within the last few days. This is due, according to local author ities, to the fact that one of the large Portland commission houses contracted to ship six carloads of them. They did not have this . im mense quantity and have been forced to buy all over the Northwest, with the result that the price has risen accordingly. It is thought' that they will fall in a week or two. Prevailing Oregon City prleet are as follows: HIDESi-'(Buying) Green salted, 7c to 8c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. MOHAIR 32c; wool 18 to 20c. FEED (Selling) Shorts $25; bran ! $24; process barley $27 to $29 per ton. I FLOUR $4.50 to ?5. . . - i HAY (Buying) Clover at $8 and $9 ; oat hay best $11 and $12 ; mix-, ed $9 to $11: valley timothy $11 to; $13; selling alfalfa $13.50 to $17; Ida-, ho and Eastern Oregon timothy sell-1 ing $19.50 to $23. . OATS $22.00 to $26.50; wheat 93 ;j oil meal selling $38.00; Shay Brook! dairy feed $1.30 per hundred pounds. I Whole corn $29.00. j Livestock, Meat. . i BEEF (Live weight) steers 7 and j 8c; cows 6 and 7 c, bulls 4 to 6c. i MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6 1-2; lambs j '6 to 6 l-2c. . PORK 9 1-2 and 10c. ! VEAI. Calves 12c to 13c dressed, j according to grade. WEINIES 15c lb: sausage, 15c lb. I POULTRY (buying) Hens' 12 1-2 j to 14c. Stags skw at 10c; old roos- ters 7c; broilers 19c. FrulU APPLES 50c and $1. DRIED FRUITS (Baying), 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 ylng), Ordinary coun-1 try butter zoc nd 30c; fancy cream ery 75c to 85c roll. EGGS Oregon ranch case count 16c; Oregon ranch candled 18c. white light, the nearest imitation to sunlight it has been possible to get. As superior to the old carbon light as they were to the candle of our grandfathers. Note to exceptional prices below. Watt Candle Power Price, Clear Price' Baeted 15 12 35c - 40c 20 16 35c 40c 25 20 35c 40c 40 32 40c 45c 60 50 - 55c 60c 100 80 80c 85c 150 120 $1.25 - $1.35 250 200 $1.90 $1.60 Special We carry in stock at Portland prices everything in the electrical line to lighten labor in the household Portland Railway, Light & Power Company Beaver Building, Main Street CORRESPONDENCE SANDY REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. A. W. Morey and wife to Frank V. Little, land section 26, township 1 4 south, range 4 east; $10. A. ,E. Borthwick and wife to A. A. Guenther, land section 27, township 2 south, range 7 east; $10. W. P. Dibble to Portland, Eugene & Eastern Railway. Company, right of way Hugh Gordon D. L. C; $10. Estacada Realty Company to Miss J. L. Lemon, lots 32 and 33, block 5 Terrace Addition, section 20, township .3 south, range 4; $1. C. J. Van Duyn and wife to Irene Adams, Mary E. Adams and Pauline Adams, land section 25, township 2 south, range 5 east; $1. An Easter program is being pre pared by the Methodist Sunday school to be given following the 10 o'clock Sunday school Easter morning and Im mediately after the preaching ser vices will be given by the pastor, Rev. E. M. Smith of Salem. There will also be special Easter singing and sermon In the evening. The Foresters of America Lodge met in regular session in the I. O. O. F. hall Monday evening.. A good at tendance was present. The Women's club of Sandy will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of the secretary, Mrs. D. Ingles. The dance given Saturday night by the Sandy Band in Shelley's hall was well attended and a good time was enjoyed by all. Mr. and Mrs. J. Scales are this week entertaining their sister, Mrs. Maude Read of Corbet Mrs. R. E. Esson and two children, Dorothy and Ruth and Miss Dora Horgan are at Gladstone visiting Mrs. If you sw It In the Knterprlse lt't Esson'a mother, go. Miss Mildred Faubion of Welches was the guest of Mrs. H. H. Thomas the first part of the wek. Mrs. W. H. Barendrick and two children, Ruth and Grace, have re turned from Dallas, where they have been spending a couple of weeks visiting with Mrs. Barendrick's sister. Miss Hazel Mills has gone to Ore gon City to visit with her sister, MUss Alice Mills, and after spending sever al days with her she will go to Van couver where she will visit with friends. COLTON. John ; Arquette, one of the Colton pioneers died recently at the hospital in Portland, where he had gone for treatment. - , The Young People's Lutheran League met in the church Sunday eve ning. A good program was render ed, including a very interesting de bate. The matter of erecting a hall was also mentioned. The League elected a committee of three to look into the feasibility of erecting one. Charlie Swas drove to Colton Mon day. Dolph and Charlie Freeman, of El wood, were business callers in the Colton vicinity last week. V.' S. Dix hauled some. oats from Clarkes last week. Frank Hendricks and Wm. Scheif fer cal'.ed on Oscar Muller a week ago last Sunday. The Farmers' Equity Society mat. in Danielson's store Saturday evening; Charlie Swan bought Delbert Bon? ney's shingle mill and will move it up on his place soon. Hinie Lohndorf called on Oscar Mul ler !tst Tuesday. , Walter Gorbett did some team work for A. Erickson last week. J Engstrom bought a team last week. A. N. Swanson did some plowing for Chas BranJland last week. The Colton school went down to Jame? for an Arithmetic match with the school at that place last Friday. We ars proud to say our school was victorious. P E. Berglund had the misfortune o lose one ol his hcrses last we-sK. Phillip and Robert Putz were In Oregon City last Tuesday. There were some land buyers look ing over Bill Romey's place last .Week. Gust Gottberg was a business caller at Colton last Tuesday. , H. C. Hayner, of Clarkes, was in the Colton vicinity last week posting sale bills. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stromgren made a business trip to Colton last Tuesday.