MORNING EXTERPBISE, THUKSDAY, APRIL 10, 1913 3 which has improved his place. Miss Lydfa Wolfer has just return ed home from Oregon City and we all hope she will stay. -. Mrs. H. Noftziger called on Mrs. Helvey Friday. THE DOCTOR IN CAMP By U QUAD Copyright. 1313. by Associated Lit erary Press. Choice Selection of Ladies Waists Now on Display at ADAMS DEPARTMENT STORE OREGON CITY'S BUSY STORE. Economy. He We must cut down household expenses some way. She Yes. I've been thinking of tak ing another dollar off the cook's wages. Chicago News. LOCAL BRIEFS Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Burk are in this city as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Burk. Mr. and Mrs. Ar chibald Burk live near Des Moines, Iowa. H. M. Gill, ex-mayor of Seattle, was in this city Wednesday attend ing to legal business. He was accom panied by C. C. Beatem. also of Seattle. Fred Wourms, of Clairmont, was in this city Wednesday attending to business affairs. He is a prominent farmer. J. E. Stitt, of Foster, Or is in this city for several days lookins over the country and looking over business. . Mrs. W. B. Stokes, of Oak Grove was in this city Wednesday visiting friends. J. B. Mason, of Molalla, was in this city Tuesday attending to bus iness. H. L. Swedl, of Eugene, is in this city for several days attending to business. George Simmons, of Portland, was in this city Tuesday attending to bus iness affairs. C. A. Rodgers, of Albany, is in t::ii city for several days attending to business interests. W. A. ' SI'avor, of Molalla, was la this city Tuesday attending to bus iness. He is a prominent farmer. . D. H. Moors, of Portland, v.a.3 an Oregon City visitor Wednesday. Mi?s Clara Fields was in this city Wednssday visiting friends. H. A. Lewis, of Portland, is in this city for several days visiting friends. Complete Loose Leaf Ledger Outfit $7.50 OjjR Jewel Ledger Outfit is just the thing for the il 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 : ST50 No. 63, the lame outfit in the 9 1-4 x 11 7-8 size $850 Oregon City Modern Office Oregon City ' Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason ic Building, Phone Main 399. " PLANS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL MEET MADE Plans have been completed for the Oregon State Sunday SchoorConven tion which will be held in this city April 24, 25 and 26. Speakers from all parts of the state will be in at tendance as well as delegates from virtually every Sunday school in the Western part of the state. Between 400 and 500 delegates are expected. Among the speakers at the conven tion will be State Sunday School President J. D. Springton, Rev. Miles B. Fisher, of San Francisco; Rev. H. N. Smith, of Portland, and William A. Brown, of Chicago. Plans have been made for the hous ing of delegates as well as for their entertainment. The Harvard plan will be followed with two delegates from every Sunday school in Oregon. There wil be a convention for the benefit of the Eastern delegates in Baker just before the one held in Oregon City. BAPTISTS TO GIVE BIG' CONCERT TOMORROW The following is a program of a concert to be given Friday evening at the First Baptist Church' in this city. Prayer by Rev. W. T. Milliken; Instrumental piece by Gertrude Jere miah; Selection by Girls' Quartet; Mandolin Solo by Echo Armstrong; Recitation, "Dad Beat in Politics", by Frank Milliken; Solo by Aletha Ogles by; Selection by the Girls' Quartet; Recitation by Ralf Barbur; Duet by Naomi and Eschol Armstrong; Reci tation by Eschol Armstrong; Solo by Naomi Armstrong; Recitation by Sammy McLarty. The one act drama "How She Was Trapped ' will be given, the following being tlie cast: Dick Roy, Floyd Etchi son; Janet Roy, Bernice Buckles; Nellie Taylor, Naomi Armstrong; Servant Girl, Gladys Cannon. In tfie Spring time you clean House, the stomach bowels need cleaning just as badly after the long indoor life of Winter, heavy foods, lack, of vegetables and fruits Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will clean and purify. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Company. Enterprise Systemitizers Oregon Tou may wonder how the miners got along without a doctor in camp, and there are indeed times enough when the services of a skillful physician were in demand. That winter we put in at Calico Flats there was somebody on the sick list all the time, and there were days when we had three or four patients in the hospital at once. As to medicines, our mainstay was a hot sweat. When a man began to dump around we didn't lose time by feeling his pulse or looking at his tongue. Three or four stoues were put iuto the fire to heat, blankets borrowed for the occasion, and when we got steam on the knots and twists and" kinks in that chap's case had to un ravel. He'd come out as long and flat and thin aud white as you please, and ; if any one pointed a finger at him for the next week he'd cry like a baby. Next to the sweat we had decoctions of herbs, barks and roots. But, as I said at the start, sickness became so prevalent and our plain remedies had so little effect that it was finally decided to send up to Sac ramento for a doctor. The idea was to have him come down and brace us all up and leave medicines and reme dies, and the expense was to be borne by a shake purse. "You see." said Judge Perdue as we talked the matter over, "we don't want a doctor that we may brag over the other camps. We want one because we are sick in the old fashioned way." "That's it!" chorused half a dozen voices. "We want the old fashioned sickness that we used to enjoy so much at home. We want a - doctor that will come in and say we are goin' to die for sure and then turn to and cure us. We are jest fairly cryin' for doses of them drugs that used to lift a feller outer bed and make him think he'd bit into moldy pumpkin! Lord, how I would like to come down with a case of old fashioned bilious fever!" A letter was sent to a dealer in the town asking him to forward a doctor, and in about five days along he came. He was a young man of twenty-four, just out of college in the east and just landed on the slope without a dollar in his pocket, and all he brought to camp with him was a lancet, some prescrip tion blanks and a stick of salve for making sticking plasters. There were four men in hospital that day, and after a bit the doctor entered to take a look at them. It happened that he came to big Jim Smith first. Smith was threatened with inflamma tory rheumatism and was in no mood to take nonsense. "Run out your tongue," said the doc tor as he bent over the man. Big Jim displayed it. but in such a begrudging way that it was plain to see that he thought it all bosh. "Your pulse." said the doctor, as he reached over for Jim's great paw. "Pulse? I ain't got any!" growled Jim. "Oh, yes. you have. Here it is in your wrist. Keep still for a moment." "Stranger," said Jim, after the doc tor "had dropped his hand, "d'ye mean to tell me that ye kin feel a man's wrist and tell what ails his insides?" - "Yes, in a measure." "Excuse my not callin' you a liar, but some of the boys will do it for me afore you are an hour older!" "What are your symptoms?" asked the 'doctor. "Never had any." ! "But how do you feel?" "Sick." "How were you taken?" "Stranger, what are you drivin' at?" demanded Jim as he sat up in bed. "Have you got pains?" "In course I have. D'ye s'pose I'd be lyin' flat on my back here if any thing less'n a ton was holdin' me down?" "Do you ache?" "Rayther." "Any fever?" "Waal, I git away with a quart ot cold water at a gulp." The doctor sat and studied the case for a few minutes, and then he came over to the shanty where the commit tee had assembled and said: "Gentlemen, the case of Big Jim is a serious one. He needs a change of diet scenery and air. My advice is that you brace him up as well as you can on chicken soup and beef tea and then send him off for a trip to Cuba." When .he was going out he' said he would drop in next morning and have a look at the other cases, but he never had the chance. When the boys found that he had come without even a dose of quinine and they heard him talk about chicken soup and trips to Cuba for a man who hadn't $5 to his name they waited upon him in a sort of hilarious body, and at midnight he went up the trail at the rate of twelve miles an hour, witba crowd behind him aching for his ears as relics. Next day we heated half a tin of rocks, took six or eight blankets and gave Big Jim such a sweat that all his toe nails shed off, and rather than be cured the same way the other men got well. "I did have some faith in the chap," exclaimed Jim. "Jest a lttle bit until he axed my symptoms. That floored me. The Idea of sendin' 200 miles for a doctor to walk in on ye and not be able to tell symptoms from the all firedest backache a man ever had, topped off with chills gallopin' up and down the spine wall! . I'm only sorry that you moved the procession on him afore I was able to head it" Snakes. ' One hundred and eleven kinds of snakes inhabit the United States. There are also ninety-seven species of lizards, besides an array of turtles and tortoises and two big species of croco dilians in the low grounds of the southeast. Of the reptiles eighteen varieties are poisonous, every state having its share of them. More a Surplus. "You see that man? Well, when he goes hunting be always gets more game than he's after." "How's that?" "Because be hunts trouble." Balti more American. EVEK r AiliLY Needs a genuine Anti-Sep. ic in the dome. Therfe is hardly a day that some member of the family doesn'c suffer from Burns, Cuts, Scalds, Chapped Hands ana Lips, Tetter, Scald Head, Eczema, Sun Burn, Corns, etc. Dr. Beil's Antiseptic Salve is an old-time fully guar anteed remedy fo.r 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 hoy, 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 Antiseptic Sake. Verv truly, MRS. S. M. d. BYRD, Route 3, Box 2, Blackstone, S.C. FOR SALE BY THE JONES DRUG COMPANY REAL- ESTATE TRANSFERS. Mrs. A. W. Yates and A. W. Yates to E. S. McCrary, land tract 2, Wil lamette Tracts; $10. E. S. MlcCreary and wife to Joseph" Asped, land Tract 2 Willamette Tracts; $10. Theresa Schmid to T. llartt Gard ner, 80 acres in NE 1-4 of SW 1-4, Sec. 20, township 2 south, range 6 east; $10. Herbert R. Tayler and wife to Lolis C. Becker, land in Tyler Tract; $10. C. B. and Annie J. Ryckman to Florence Brown, 1 acre in W .T. Mat lock DoHfttion Claim, No. 37; $10. James F. Sanders and wife to Mal colm E. Nichols, 2 acres in William B. Campbell's lot 3; $10. Christ Neiderhauser to Behtra M. Thais, lot 14, Wichita; $10. Arthur C. Sprague and wife to George H. Deikinson and wife, 10 acres in SE 1-4 of SE 1-4 of Sec. 24, township 4 south, range 1 east; $1, F. F. Johnson to Nina V. Rupert, blocks 8 and 9, Fielding Tract; $1. Polly K. Miller to Lettie M. New combe, lot 55 by 100 in Hector Camp bell D. L. C; $1. Mary L. D. Penisten to H. H. Pred more, 82.84 acres in Daniel Heron D. L. C; $3,500. Josephine Carmire to Flora T. Carmire, NW 1-2 of tract 34, Willam ette & Tualatin Tracts; $1. Ivor C. Long to David E. Long, 30 acres in Edward A. Wilson Claim No. 7200; $750. Languid, yawning people, always tired, without vim or vigor, no appe tite, can't digest the food they do eat, tongue coated, constipated, but-of-sorts most of the time, with head aches, bad breath, sallow cheeks, Winter's germs, are in your system you need Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, a Spring tonic, purifier, clean ser. Jones Drug Co. It you saw it in the Knterprise it's so. CORRESPONDENCE M EADOWBROOK. Mr. Stewart, of Portland, who has bought some land, was out on busi ness Monday. A few of the young folks attended league at Colton Sunday evening. All reported' a good program. Mr. and Mrs. Zeek, of Canby, visit ed at Mrs. Zeek's ' brother's Mrs. Hutchinson's. M)rs. Ralph Holman, son, Charles, Miss May Yoder and Ruben Chind gren spent Sunday afternoon at O. L. Larkins. Miss Inez Snodgrass, the Colton school teacher spent Sunday with her sister, Mrs. Wm. Bohlender. Ralph Holman, manager of the Mo lalla base ball team had his men out practicing Sunday and expects to start playing soon. EAST CLACKAMAS. Mr. Liebig took a load of potatoes to Canby. Paul Smith and Gus Rothberg made a business trip to Oregon City Satur day. A crowd of young folk gathered at the home of J. Moshberger last Sun day night and spent the evening in playing cards. Mr. Stuts has purchased a fine span of horses. Mr. and Mrs. Moftziger were in Canby Saturday on business. Dudley Helvey, of iEldorado, is working in the sawmill here. Merle Jones, who has been a visit or of the Mashberger family has left for The Dalles. Pete Nortz called on John Noftziger Saturday. ,. Mr. Geortzin has built a new barn ave and the strong, Cyrus Noble the CLARKES. Miss Zela Johnson, the Timber Grove school teacher was in Portland last Saturday. Mrs. Macie Casto, of Carus, was visiting her sister, Mrs. W. Fawver, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wettlauf er were in town last week. Sam Elmer is grubbing out his old apple orchard. Miss Susie Smith has gone to town to work. L. Masson and Mrs. Mary Lee and daughter, Irene, were in town last week. - Miss Hazel Ringo spent Sunday with Miss Elizabeth Marshall. F. T. Webb, the Clarkes school teacher,' was in town last Saturday on business. . George Hoffstetter, Jr., came from Portland this week. Henry. Schiewe is on the sick list. EAST EAGLE CREEK. Mr. and Mlrs. Naylor entertained the Flinch Club at their home last Tues day evening. A fine supper was serv ed by the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Gibson made a return trip to Barton last Wednesday. . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Douglass were the week-end guests of relatives in Oregon City. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Cooke, of Da mascus, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Howlett Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mlrs. Ed Douglass were Es tacada visitors last Saturday. : Joe Cahill, while at work down at the mill on Deep Creek, near Barton, fell between two cars Saturday and was. very badly hurt. A special car was sent out and he was taken to the St. Vincent's hospital, where an examination was to be made on Mon day to determine the extent of his in juries. Mrs. Katie Douglass spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Howlette. Russell Jones went to Portland Sat urday to visit for a day or two with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Huntington entertain ed Mr. and Mrs. Clark at dinner Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Woodle spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Kitzmiller. James Gibson celebrated his 87th birthday Sunday. Nearly all of his Big Cyanide Plant Is To Be Installed Soon Work To Commence Immediately Construction work is to begin on the 100-ton cyanide plant on the property of the Ogle Mountain Min ing Company early in April. Mr. Charles F. Spaulding, Engineer and expert, will be here by April 1 to take charge of the construction work and the orders for machinery will be placed immediately. Stop and think what the above statement means to Clackamas Coun ty and the state at large. Have you helped finance the proposition? Are you going to let the chance go by? Or are you going to get in and help us along? Now is the time a little help will be appreciated, for when the plant is completed it will do the rest. If you don't want to help, just keep your eye on Ogle Mountain and watch the gold bricks come out, and console yourself by the old saying, "The chance has gone by." This is one of the many recom mends that we have of the Engineer, 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 fer same on the following terms: 25 per cent when the machinery is or-dered and work starts, and 26 per cent on the first of each month there-after until full amount is paid, said stock to be issued om final payment. Signed Address Date, March , 1913. thre drunkard, man who craves rough, high-proof Bottled at drinking strength W. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents, Portland, Oregon. The Ford product has been multiplied by two-and-a-half-' but the demand has been multi plied by four. If you want one for May delivery you must order it now. Don't delay. There are more than 220,000 Fords on the world's hiahwavs the best possible testimony to their unexcelled worth. Prices runabout $600 tour--ng car $675 f. o. b. Oregon City with complete eauioment. Catalogue from Pacific Highway Ga' rage, Twelfth End Main, Ford Agents for Clack amas County. Pacific Highway Garage 12th & Main Sts. Ford Agts. for Clackamas Co. sons and -daughters and some of his grandchildren gathered at his home in honor of the event, and a fine din ner was partaken of. Mr. Gibson is an old pioneer of Oregon, having lived here since 1868. Those present were, Mrs. H. F. Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. Har vey Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Gib-j son, Mr. and Mrs. John Reid, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Udell. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibson, H. S. Gibson, Susie Reid, The odore and Chester Reid, Earl, Hazel and Franklin Gibson, Iva, Agnes, Her bert and Alice Udell and Edward Chapman. ALSPAUGH. .." We are still having rain but are waiting patiently for good weather to come. Fred Ely traded his farm to Mr. Franks for a house and lot in Port land and intends to move there in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Tull will move Mr. Charles F. Spaulding, who is to take charge of the work at the mine. Copy Gilbert Wilks & Co., Inc., Electrical Tngineers and General Con tractors, Denver, Col. To whom it may concern The bearer, Mr. Charles F. Spaulding, has been known to me for a considerable time past and I consider him one of the best mining and concentration engineers of the West. He is pains taking, and being possessed of great natural ability, has brought several hard propositions to a successful ter mination, and I have no hesitation in strongly recommending him to any one needing high grade services in his line. Signed, WILLIAM H. GREY, M. & E. E. Under the management ' of Mr. Spaulding we feel sure we are going to get all there is coming to us, and the best of treatment for he has the name of doing things right. Coupon. OGLE MOUNTAIN MINING CO. By e sworn enemies heavy whiskey to Eagle Creek this. week. Miss Emma Dowty has returned home from Portland. Mrs. Henry Gitaens and Mrs. O. E Tull were the guests of Mrs. John Githens Saturday afternoon. Fred Bannister purchased a fine saddle horse from Mr. Simmons, of Estacada last week. Mrs. Edgar Hieple has been visit ing with her sister, Mlrs. George De-. Shields during the past few days. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.- Shields attend ed the masquerade ball at Estacada Friday. They received the honor of having the best costumes there. They were dressed as Indians. - Several people from here attended the dance at Eagle Creek Saturday night. A fine time was reported, al though there was a very small crowd on account of the rain. Miss Cooper, who has been work ing in Portland has returned home. Mamie Hieple has returned to Portland, where she has a position. Where can you place a few dollars with the chance of winning larger prof its? There is no easier money made than there is in mining. Why do we say we have a mine? Because we have our property developed, the veins are of true fissure origin, there are many in number and range in width from four to seventeen feet; are located from surface to thirteen hundred feet in depth and all carry values in payable quantities. What more can you ask, as these are facts and the property is located right here at home and owned by heme people. - . Gentlemen, what more can we do to prove to you that we have one of the best investments for big returns on the Pacific Coast? Our display f ore is credited among mining men as being the best on the coast. Call at our office, Tenth and Main Streets,' and learn all particulars or fill out the following contract:' drinker,