5 99 HEAR THE NEW EDISON DISK PHONOGRAPH MORNING ENTERPRISE, "WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1913 This is the only Disk Machine made that requiies no changing of needles. It uses a Diamond Point Reproducer and plays flat double faced Disk Records. i , It has a concealed torn, an automatic stopping device and a cabinet for holding records. " . HEAR THIS MACHINE BOOSTER DAY Our store will be open all day and we will be glad to play this wonderful machine for you. We are exclusive dealers for EDISON DISK and CYL INDER PHONOGRAPH and RECORDS IN TWO PARTS From Dickens' story of Mr. Pickwick's Adventures. Booster Day, Friday, April 25th Burmeister Andresen "Km SUSPENSION BRIDGE CORNER Oregon City Jewelers 10 ACRES For exchange, 3 acres In cul tivation, balance all open; land easily cleared; 4-room house, barn, some fruit, with some personal property; 3 miles from Oregon City. Will take $850.00 in Oregon City prop erty, balance 3 years, price of place, $2000. E. P. ELLIOTT & SON 7th and Main A True Gentleman. mm Kindly Suburban Resident (to itiner ant plant meivhanti - Y-es: I'll take one, as you say your wife and children are starving. Just put it on uiy hut. You will find a sovereigu in my left hand waistcoat pocket. I'll wait here till ycu bring rhe change. Punch. k A ft ft ftl LOCAL BRIEPS Louis A. Colton and H. W. McLean, both of Portland, were in town Tues-1 day visiting friends and attending the luncheon of the Live Wires. Mr. Col ton has been the manager of the Pa cific Paper company, in Potland, but is leaving for San Francisco, where he will become the assistant manager of the Zellerback company, which is the main house of the Pacific Paper company Zellerback interests. Mr. Colton will be succeeded in Portland by Mr. McLean, who comes from Oak land. There will b3 a hearing for credit ors in the bankruptcy proceedings in the case of Mr. Barde and J. Levitt, both individually and as a firm, at the courthouse at 1 p. m., May 7. Referee B. N. Hicks will preside at the creditors will be given meeting, n, mi! Dro. a chance to hear the compiv. posed by the bankrupts. I The frame work of the first floor of the house being erected by J. E. Jack on Ninth and Washington strets has ! been completed and work on the sec ond floor has been started. This will be one of the most attractive resi dences in the city. Misses Ruby and Pearl Francis were in the city Monday visiting &eir par ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Francis. They are studying nursing in the Good Sam aritan hospital in Portland. Now is the time to disinfect your poultry house and yard with Con key s Nox-i-eid?. It prevents disease and insures a healthy hatch. Come in and get a can now. Guaranteed by Oregon Commission Co. Born, to the wife of William Kin sey, of Portland, a girl. Both Mr and Mrs. Kinsey were formerly resi dents cf this city. Mrs. Kinsey was formerly Miss Minnie Schatz. Richard Miller, of Highland, was in town Tuesday attending to legal busi ness. A. T. Donald, of Portland, was an Oregon City visitor the first part of the week. j A. L. Thomson, of Portland, was a j business visitor in the county seat qp ! Wednesday. Mat Raber, formerly chief engineer : at the Willamette Pulp & Paper mills, has gone to .Eugene. i Ward B. Lewis was in this city Mon-1 day and Tuesday transacting business, i His home is in Seattle.- j J. E. Hedges is having the basement ' excavated for his new home on Sixth and John Adams streets. Tualitin Tent, Knights of the Maca bees, gave a successful dance and en tertainment Tuesday night. S. C. White, of the Seeley-Dresser company, of Portland, was in the city Tuesday on a business trip. G. A. Schubel, of Schubel, was in ; the county seat Tuesday visiting rela-; tives and attending to business affairs, j Katherine Ward Pope was in this j city Tuesday visiting friends. j E. Russ, a Portland salesman, was ' here Tuesday transacting business. Alice Porter, of Portland, is in this city for several days visting friends. Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason ic Building, Phone Main 399. A SOCIAL LEADERSHIP It Failed, but Something Better Came. By FRED L. YOUNG rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT BOOSTER DISPLAY THE VARIED ' (Continued from Page 1.) auto, fine plush robe, valued at $15, put up by Mitchell, Staver & Lewis, of Portland; best community car from outside the city proper, $10; most uni quely decorated car or float, fc7.50; R. handsomest After the parade Saturday afternoon there will be a ball game at Canemah park, between teams from Canby and Oregon City. This game will be de layed in starting so that spectators may view the parade first and reach the ball park in plenty of time for the opening innings. Mrs. Kenworthy of the ultra fashion able and very rich Mrs. Kenworthy had her name engraved on a silver plate on the door of a box in the "dia mond horseshoe." which means the first tier of the Metropolitan Opera House, New York drove up in her carriage to the restaurant on - Fifth avenue patronized by her set and went inside for a bit of luncheon. While she was at table, suddenly looking up, facing her at another table very near, sat a gentleman regarding her with an embarrassed stare. Mrs. Kenworthy was somewhat embarrassed herself, but was secretly pleased to. notice ad miration in the gazer's eyes. 4few years before these two sailors on the sea of wealth had been divorc ed, and the lady had married again. Mr. Goldwin. ber first husband, who now sat near her. bad gone abroad and had remained there till recently, hav ing returned to America a few days prior to this contretemps. Wow. both Mr. Goldwin and his former wife. Mrs. Kenworthy. each Baw the other cast a glance about the room to see if there was any one pres ent they knew or who knew them. The hour was quite late for luncheon, n nd but few persons were left in the room. Among those remaining there was not a familiar face. Time, the great eradicator, rubs out all things, and among them was the bitterness these two had felt for each other, Mr. Goldwin got up from his table and. another man's wife, advanced to where the lady was sitting and said: "You're looking remarkably well. Kit The only change I see in you is for the better." "Sit down."' said Mrs. Kenworthy, casting another furtive glance about the room. "This is dangerous," he remarked, taking a chair, "but I can't help it Bell Theatre 101 BISON FEATURE IN TWO REELS "The Song of the Telegraph" . A THRILLING "WESTERN DRAMA THIRD REEL The Wheel of Fate Pile COMEDY FILM Our Black Horse SPECIAL PICTURES FOR BOOSTER DAY ' APRIL 25 "THE CALIFORNIA ROUND-UP" IN THREE REELS APRIL 26 "SHERIDAN'S RIDE" IN THREE REELS "YOU LOST HUSBAND AND CHILDREN AS WELL AS THE LEADERSHIP. " you're looking so charming. If we were seen here together what a lot of talk It would make!" B "You've been away long enough to be partly forgotten. Only your old friends would know you. and they wouldn't tell." " Wouldn't they? It would be the talkjaf the clubs before dinner hour." "I'm more afraid of some woman getting hold of It" "Well, never mind what people say. In our position we can do anything." "So we can." "It's a long while since we met. Suppose we have a bottle together." -' The lady agreed, and a champagne cooler was brought in. with the cork peeping temptingly from the cracked ice. and some terrapin added to what had been already served. Meanwhile the conversation proceeded. "I was trying to think the othet day." remarked the lady, "what it was that first set ns going apart." "Nothing except your dancing three times In one evening with Kenwor thy." "1 don't believe," the went on pen sively, "that if you hadn't I wouldn't" "Maybe not , You bad to have a new fancy now and then, and if I had let yoq alone it might have died of itself. By opposing you I fanned the flame." . "I think it was rather for the sake of appearnm-HH . Vi.u know that among persons ot ur rank ioo much domestic ii..its is a drawback to social distinc tion. Oirr -TraaitiK ,Z2Z ve, ne"-" all changed husbands. It's an incum bency as well as a privilege." "It was hard on the children." "Not so hard ns you would suppose. You know that from the time they were born my social duties required my attention" elsewhere. They saw very little of me or I of them. But do you know. Tom" -a slight quiver In her roice "that there are really times when I hardly think the game has been worth the candle?! "That's admitting a great deal for a woman who 'has been trying for the leadership of society." "I have failed. When the G.'s went abroad to live, leaving the leadership vacant. I saw my chance...but my rival got in ahead of me." "And you lost husband and children as well as the leadership." "Wasn't It disappointing?" "Is it gone forever?" "I don't know. Mrs. Mortimer, they say, has an Incurable disease. There may be hope." "Hope for Mrs. Mortimer?" "Don't be silly; that the leadership may become vacant " ' Mr. Goldwin sipped his wine, medi tatively. He had a great brain in his bead and was contemplating a master stroke for his former wife. "I presume. -Kit," he said presently, "that if you saw another chance for the prize Kenworthy would not stand in your way any more than I did." "1 should tb'ink not." "Well. I have a scheme for you." "What is it?" "You are aware that the gilded set likes to be shocked. Nevertheless its members are great sticklers for the law. You couldn't leave me and live with Kenworthy without being di vorced from roe and married to him Now. I've been thlukjng that it would be a coup for you to divorce Ken worthy and remarry me." "I should think that would be very commonplace To take a third husband would be better." "Yes. but I have a plan to suggest that would lend spice to your return ing to me. Instead of not being seen together, suppose we are seen together a great deal. Everybody would be talking about the singular feature of my rivalry with Kenworthy for my own I mean his wife. Secret proceed ings for your divorce could be institut ed, and after keeping society agog for a considerable time, the divorce being granted, we can remarry." The lady took in this plan-dubiously. "That would be a good scheme." she said at last, "if I were n social climber who had just expected an entrance and needed something to carry rae on, nut iln " move. in the matter of leader- - t won- woTt T!BTa' ship . .... really nothing bad anonr t. "There would be something good about It for the children." "The children of divorced persons in high life are pitied outside our circle by persons who don't know how well off the little ones are. but that's noth ing to us. We couldn't be where we are if we had hearts like other peo ple." "You're wrong. Kit We have hearts, but we or rather you women for whom society exists suppress them. You are hungry for our children now." For the first time during the dialogue the woman suffered her heart to be tray itself It was now between 3 and 4 o'clock, too late for luncheon, too early for dinner. There was scarcely a person In the cafe except Mr. Gold win and Mrs. Kenworthy. Each lost a hand in the folds of the tablecloth, and the-two hands were Joined there. "Are you going to Mrs. V.'s tonight?" asked Mrs. Kenworthy. "No: she doesn't know of my ar rival." "I will see that she sends you an Invitation. It's a dinner and a cotil lion." "Never mind the invitation. We who are in the ring are not obliged to have invitations. I'll go in after the dinner." "Don't be too attentive at first." "Certainly hot. That woufd seem unretini'd. No one we know has seen us here. We will appear to have met for (he first time since we parted at (he cotillion." "Now I think you had better go." He bowed himself a way from her "ceremoniously; and a few minutes later, giving a ten dollar tip to James, the waiter who always served her. to make sure there should be no leakage through him. she passed to the robing room and thence to her carriage. That evening at Mrs. V.'s 'cotillion Mr Goldwin surprised the hostess and was made welcome. Mrs. Kenworthy looked agitated when she saw him, and be seemed much depressed. About an hour after bis entrance a sensation occurred. Mrs. Kenworthy "favored" Mr. Goldwin, and the two sailed away together. The next day society was talking about the unique scene of a husband dancing with his divorced wife. What would Kenworthy say or do about It? Mr. Kenworthy -didn't do anything aliout-it. His wife had married . bim A T . T H E G R A N v I&vTz!.'" W v -v Jt A T T H E G R A N D PART ONE records the Adventures of "The Honorable Event," introducing Mr. Pickwick. Mr. Jingle, Mr. Winkle, Mr. Tupman, Dr. Slammer and all the well-known members of the Pickwick Club". These gentlemen are involved In the Honorable Event, which is brought about by the rascally Jingle, pr. Slammer and Mr. Winkle are about to fight a duel, which is prevented by the timely discovery that Jingle and not Winkle is the man who insulted the Doctor. A most extraordinary and humorous affair. PART TWO embodies "The Adventure of Westgate Seminary,'" in which Pickwick, through Job Trotter, Jingle's chum, makes a wild goose chase to the young ladies' seminary to prevent Jingle from eloping with one of the girls. This scheme of Jingle's gives Jingle and Job Trotter a chance to get away and escape the discovery of their rascality. Sam Weller, Pickwick's faithful servent, is much in evidence in this laughable adventure. EXTRA A pair of Ladies' of Gent's Shoes will be gien away in Afternoon and evening. for a purpose, and. that purpose hav ing failed, he was not in especially good standing with her. He was not sorry to hand her back to her former husband. Mr. Gold win's scheme so Tar as gain ing a social leadership for the woman he remarried did not succeed, and so bitter was bis after disappointment that she determined to drop out of the race for leadership. From this moment she sought another occupation and fell a peg lower in the social standard by beginning anew that devotion to her husband and children which had first stood in her way of social preferment. Once her ambition was broken through she every day pained in her interest in her home till at last she merely kept her position as a member of society. "What a pity." every one in the cir cle said, "that the beautiful Mrs. Gold win should have given up a leadership that might eventually be hers for a domestic lift! They say that she 'real ly loves her husband and is ofteu seen driving in the park with her children instead of sending a governess with them." "Great has been my wife's social failure." says .Mr. Goldwin, "and every day I thank heaven for it. Singular that to get her started, in a new, or, rather, turn her back to the old inter est I must needs foist that ridiculous plan upon her. She understood its ab surdity as well as 1 Her heart had got the upper hand " "Boost" Your own interest by trading here. Boys' Overalls, 25c, 30c, 50c, etc. Boys' Pants, 50c and 75c. Girls' Dresses, 25c to $3.00: Shirtwaists, 65c to $3.00. Our Banner Line of ladies and childrens' dresses are guar anteed, fast color and good fabrics. Call and inspect our Ine of Millinery and furnishings. They are money savers and will give you satisfaction. C. F. STAFFORD Corner Main and 6th Sts Union IVieat Co. DIGESTER TANNAGE BEEF SCRAP MEAT MEAL GREEN BONE ""I Garden and Field Seed, Groceries, Mill Feed Fertilisers, Squirrel Poison, Arsenate of Lead in the balk OREGON COMMON CO. 1 1 th and Main Streets BOX SOCIAL PLANNED BY WILLAMETTE'S AID The Ladies' Aid society of the Will amette church will give a box social j Thursday night, April 24, at the church, to which the public are cord ially invited. There will be cake, sandwiches, coffee, . candy for sale and a fine quilt the ladies made will be sold at auction. This is to be fol lowed by other monthly socials under a live social committee of which Mlrs. J. B. Boland is chairman. MARRIAGE LICENSES Marriage licenses have been issued by the county clek to Eva, Newkirk and Frank Rtebhoff, of Oregon City, and to Margaret I. French and Ev jrt Liisanatti, of Portland. n In the Spring time you clean Housa. The stomach bowels need cleaning just as badly after the long indoor life of Winter, heavy foods, lack of vegeta bles and fruitsi Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will clean and purify. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Co. Complete Loose Leaf Ledger Outfit $7.50 OpR Jewel Ledger Outfit is just the thing for the Lsmall 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 bidder 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 S7-50 No. 53, the same outfit in the 9 1-4 x 11 7-8 size $8 50 ' Oregon City Enterprise Modern Office Systematizers Oregon City ' Oregon I