Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, April 29, 1913, Image 4

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1913
If Moyer's $15 Suits Were
Made Merely to Sell
there would not be so many men eager to buy them.
Moyer's success in producing fine suits at $15 is because
of the fact that they are made to wear-the selling of
them follow naturally.
The first question asked when a fabric is examined is
this: "Will it give the sqrvice required of the cloths that
go into Moyer $15 suits?" Nothing but the best is ae
cepted nothing but all-wool fabrics thoroughly tested.
Moyer $15 suits stand without an
equal at the price-easily the peer
of those sold by ordinary stores .
at $20.00 and $25.00.
When You See It In Our Ad, It's So
87-89 Third
First and Yamhill
Third and Oak
Second and Morrison
GOLDEN WEDDING CALLS
MANY FRIENDS TOGETHER
Mr. and Mrs. T, G. Jonsrud cele-.
brated their golden wedding anniver
sary at Kelso, Sunday, surounded by
relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs.
Jonsrud were born in Norway and
were married 50 years ago near Al
bert Lea, Minnesota, April 13, 1863.
They came to Oregon in 1S77, settling
in Clackamas county. Mr. Jonsrud)
is 78 years of age and is well preserv
ed. He vas state senator of Minne
sota and served as justice of the
peace in Clackamas county. Mrs.
Jonsrud is 72 years of age. Three
years ago she was crippled by a fall.
DEALER IS FINED
J. C. Kaupisch, who was indicted by
the grand jury for selling lightweight
butter, was Monday fined $25 in
Judge Campbell's court.
NORTHEWESTERN LEAGUE
Vancouver 727
Seattle 571
Spokane 571
Portand 455
Victoria 357
Tacoma .357
Monday's Results
At Spokane Spokane 7, Seattle 1.
At Victoria Vancouver 6, Victoria
At Tacoma Tacoma 4, Portland 2.
f if
ITS' I .5"
A 7
The Superiority of ElectricToast
to the charred, or brittle, or soggy kind made in trie
tedious old-fashioned way, is relatively the same as the
superiority cf grilled steak to fried steak.
For one-tenth of a cent a slice the General
hiectnc Radiant 1 'caster makes Perfect Toast faster
Lhar; you can cct it. It is Perfect Toast because the
radiant heat forces the necessary chemical change
n the bread. This insures delicious golden Toast that
fairly melts in your mouth.
You can operate the General Electric Radiant Toaster on the
finest damask table cloth. Its neat porcelain base and cheerful
glowing ceils add grace and charm to' any table.
This little toaster is on display at our store in the Bea
ver Building on Main Street.
Portland Railway, Light & Power Company
Beaver Building, Main Street
A Centennial Story
of 1813 .
By ARTHUR TROWBRIDGE
such an exhorbitant figure as bis
price that the councilmen gave up
all idea of adopting the site.
ESTACADA OFFERS
It was during the early part of the
nineteenth century that a young man
and a girl were walking op one of the
beaches of the New Jersey coast nut
far south of New York city. That
region Is now taken up with summer
residences and hotels, but it was then
a desolate ocean shore, inhabited only
by country people who dwelt there all
the year round. That the pair strolling
on the beach were lovers was evident,
for at times they walked hand in baud
and at times the man's arm encircled
the girl's waist. They were soon to
be married and were talking over their
plans.
The young man. Edgar Hart, was
to go the next day to New York to
take a business position: tbe girl.
Dorothy Ten Eyck, was to begin prep
arations for her marriage, which was
to take place in u few weeks. It was
dusk wheu they finished their walk.
Edgar Hart starting to walk north
ward to his home, a mile away; Doro
thy Ten Eyck to go to her father's
bouse up on the bluff, a short distance
back of the beach. On the way she
passed the bouse of Mother Van Uaas
back, who stood in tbe door.
"It's bad luck for you, Dorothy," said
the old woman, "that you've taken up
with Edgar Hart, who is going to the
city, where he'll meet finer birds than
you. You'll not see bin) again in these
parts."
"You will prove a false, prophet.
Mother Gaasback. Edgar is true as
steel."
"Just wait and see." replied the other,
and, turning her back on the girl, who
was struggling to repress tears at the
malicious thrust she went into tbe
house.
Edgar had agreed to post a letter to
his sweetheart as soon as It would be
convenient for him to do so after reach
ing the city. He was to start at day
light the next morning and hoped to
reach New York by evening. If he
wrote the next day Dorothy might get
a letter from him by the post on the
fourth day after he left ber.
The morning after their parting Dor
othy stole away from home to go to
the place where Edgar had given her
his last kiss. She reached the edge of
the bluff and stood looking down on
the ocean. The crew of a British ves
sel anchored not far from the shore
was . making preparations for sailing.
She was a man-of-war. and had the
couple not been absorbed in each other
the evening before they would have
noticed her standing down the coast
from the direction of New York. Dor
othy saw a man on the deck waving
something white, but only for a mo
ment, since an officer ordered him 'to
join those engaged in hoisting the sails.
Dorothy surmised that a sailor seeing
a woman on the shore was inclined to
salute her. The ship sailed away.
When the fourth day after Edgar's
departure came round the post rider
left no letter for Dorothy. She was
sure one would come for her the next
day, but she was again disappointed.
When a week had passed and no let
ter came Dorothy was much troubled.
Passing the house of Mother Ten Eyck.
the old woman called to ber, asking
what word she had heard from Edgar,
and Dorothy was obliged to say that
she had not beard at all.
"I didn'j: think he'd go back on you
so soon," said Mother Ten Eyck.-f
"Well, you'd better choose some young
man who is content to stick to the plow
and not waste your time waiting for
one who is ambitious to become citi
fied." Dorothy, stung to the quick, was
about to hurl the words back at the
old woman, but repressed tile impulse
and, turning ber back, went ber way.
Weeks, months passed and no word
came from Edgar. Dorothy was too
proud to seek him, but at last one of
the neighbors,, who bad business in New
York, when there went to the place
where Edgar was to have been em
ployed and learned that the young man
had not appeared according to appoint
ment When Dorothy heard this she
was filled with forebodings worse than
her distress at being neglected. She
feared that her lover had been mur
dered. "He went away to get rid of her,"
said Mother Ten Eyck. "He never in
tended to stop in New York. He's
gone back to his folks in England."
Every one except Dorothy accepted
this explanation. ' But Dorothy had
.faith in her lover. She told of having
seen a man on a ship wave to ber the
day after Edgar's departure, and this
was interpreted by her neighbors to
mean a farewell from her lover to her.
Eighteen months passed, when one
day the missing man walked into Dor
othy's home alive and well and caught
ber up in bis arms.
This was his story. The night he
left Dorothy, while walking on the
beach, he saw a boat approaching.
When it touched the shore half a doz
en men sprang out. took him forcibly
into the boat and out to a ship that had
just dropped ber anchor. He had been
captured by a press gang for the Brit
ish navy,.
The next morning be saw Dorothy
on the beach and tried to attract het
attention, but was ordered to duty in
hoisting sails. He had been compelled
to serve the interval since his capture
in the British navy and had received
quite a sum of prize money, with
which be had at last succeeded in mak
ing bis escape. He married Dorothy,
and with bis capital he opened s small
store in New York.
PROBE WATER QUESTION
Councilman Tooze, chairman of the
special committee on water supply,
and other members of the committee.
have been busy the past week inves
tigating several possible .sources of
supply in the neighborhood of Oregon
gon City. No decision has as yet
been reached by the gentlemen, btr
it is believed that a report to the
council wil be made shortly.
One location investiated was round
to be admirably suited in several re
spects, but the owner hearing tha
the city might want springs on Ms
land for water supply, became im
pressed with an exaggerated idea of
the value of the place, and quoted
"KICK" ON AWARDS
Considerable dissatisfaction ? has.
been expressed by Estacada citizens
over the awarding of priz3 in the
county school oratorical contest, in
which winners were from ; Oregon
City schools. It is claimed by the
Estacada people that the contest was
never held, and that their own con
testants never had a chance to com
pete. -
In explaining the matter, T. J.
Gary, county school superintendent,
places'the blame for the tangle, as it
exists, upon Samuel Adler, of Oak
Grove, the secretary of the county
oratorical league. To Mr. Adler was
entrusted the duty of notifyinng the
different competitors of the test, and
it is alleged by tha Estacada con
tingent that they never received no
tification of the contest. ...
Mr. Adler says that he wrote -and
mailed a notice of the contest to
schools, including those at Estacada.
The Estacada people say that no such
notice was ever received. When the
time came for submitting orations,
but tw0 were presented, and these
two (previously printed in The En
terprise) received the awards. It
now appears that while the oratori
cal committee was passing judgment
on these two, that Estacada contest
ants were waiting at Gladstone- to
deliver their orations; though at the
tim this was unknowp.
An effort will be made to adjust
matters in the tangle. It is general
ly believed that Mr. Adler sent the
notices, as he alleges, but that they
became lost in the mail.
"RISES FROM DEATH"
fOWUCTITRIAL
Retrial of the case of Mary Conkl
ing versus the Hawley Pulp & Paper
company consumed the entire day in
Judge Campbell's department of the
circuit court Monday. The case was
tried once last year, but the jury dis
agreed. The suit is for damages,
based upon the death of the plaintiff's
husband in the p'ant of the defend
ant at Milwaukie.
Interest attached to the trial here
owinng to thefact that Harry J.
Parkinson, one of the attorneys for
the plaintiff, while trying the case,
enjoyed a pseudo ressurection from
the dead. -Saturday night Parkinson
wa-3 hanged in effigy by the co-eds
at the University of Oregon, as a
mark of disfavor for his activity in
the move to unite the state univer
sity with the State Agricultural col
lege. A figure representing Parkinson
was hanged at the annual April Frol
ic of co-eds in the gymnasium Sat
urday night. Parkinson was repre
sented as a pseudo person who was
attempting to marry the University
of Oregon, a beautiful maiden, to O.
A. C, a husky farmer. Protests arose
from all sides, and, just as the cere
mony was about to be completed, a
noose fell from the gallery onto Park
inson's neck, and drawn up as tight
ly as safety to the co-ed who imper
sonated the Port" and petition circu
later would permit, amid the cheers
of 300 university women. The Ore
gon club staged the act.
The 3'nry hearing the case of Conkl-
ing versus the Hawley company is
composed of the following: S. A. D.
Hungate. A. N. Cooke, H. S. Gibson,
J. A. Miley, Fred Jasie, George Koek
iler, R. B. Holcomb, Henry Swales, H.
L-. Vaughn, C. C. Bosland, Ed Gross
and A. J. Hodge.
LAFRANCE ADMITS FRAUD
CO.IUILLE, Or., April 28: "A. J.
Ferger," arested here Saturday night
on the charge of swindling insurance
companies and fraternal bodies by
substituting a body found in the
Clackamas river for himself, and
then collecting $15,000 insurance
through his wife, has confessed that
he is James C. LaFrance, and that
he perpetrated the fraud charged
With the money he received he es
tablished a tie mill here, and has
been quite successful. The woman
arrested with him is Mrs. LaFrance,
he says. Detection of his crime was
brought about by the man's rash re
turn to the west, after detectives in
the employ of insurance companies
had traced him to Texas.
SWISSCO GROWS
NEW
Stops Dandruff and Restores Gray or
Faded Hair to its Natural Color
LARGE TRIAL BOTTLE FREE
ASLEEP AT THE SWITori
jVhy Wear Yourself Out Fixing Ur
Old Switches, When You Can Have
A Beautiful Head of Hair All
Your Own.
Swissco grows all the hair yoi
.vant. Changes gray or faded hair
'.o a youthful color without dyeini
ir staining. Stops dandruff and al
lair and scalp troubles.
Send 10c in silver or stamps tc
ia.y for postage, etc., to Swissco Hai'
Remedy Co., 5311 P. O. Square, Cin
linnati, O. and get a large free tria
ottle. vv
Swissco is on sale everywhere b.
druggists and drug departments at
0c and $1.00 a bottle.
JONES DRUG COMPANY
When you ask for .Cyrus Noble the
dealer knows that you know good
whiskey.
It costs yon the same as any other good whiskey.
W. J. Van Schuyver & Co., General Agents, Portland, Oregon.
Your Stomach Is Your
Best friend or Your
Worst Enemy
A bad stomach will cause you to have sick headaches,
indigestion, beliousness, irregular appetite, insomnia, con
stipation, feel tired and all run down and depressed and
nervous in spirit.
Cooper's New Discovery will tone up a rundown, over
iworked stomach, help digest your food, strengthen the ner
vous system and restore the stomach to a healthy condition
so that you may eat what you please without fear of in.
digestion or stomach trouble.'
, COOPER'S NEW DISCOVERY
will rid your body of all poisons, excessive acids and
stomach gas, which sour your entire meal, and enable
your stomach to perform its duty so perfectly that every
particle of food will aid in nourishing the body and giving
tone and strength to the entire system. It will also reg
ulate your bowels and relieve you of constipation, help the
liver and kidneys and restore your energy, ambition and
appetite. That nauseous feeling (will leave you, and in
fact, you will feel fine generally.
Don't delay, but go to your druggist anw get a bottle
of Cooper's New Discovery, take three dosesone before
each meal and if you don't think its the best medicine
you ever used, your money will be refunded. After tak
ing a full bottle you will feel like a new person.
Jones Dung Company
"Orchestra" and "Noise."
In Shakespeare's time no musical
dictionary could have distinguished be
tween "orchestra" and "band." for the
simple reason that neither word was
then English in a musical sense. "Or
chestra" did not arrive before the
eighteenth century and even "band"
not until the latter half of the seven
teenth, when Charles II. had a. "band
of violins." in imitation probably of
Louis XIV.'s "bande." The old Eng
lish word for a band of music was
"noise." "See if thou canst find out
Sneak's noise. Mistress Tearsheet
would fain hear some music." says one
drawer to the other at the Boar's Head
tavern. And Ren .Tonson has "a noise
of fiddlers" and "a noise of trumpets."
House' of Commons Prison.
The house of commons has its own
prison for those that treat it with con
tempt tbe clock tower of the bouse.
It was here that Mr. Bradlaugh was
committed in 1SS0 for refusing to obey
the speaker's order to withdraw. He
was liberated nest day. A more real
punishment was the imprisonment
there of a Mr. Ward, a" solicitor, in
1S79 for a breach of the privileges of
the house in connection with a bill.
He remained there several days until
a medical certificate was produced to
the effect that his health was in danger
through the perpetual striking of Big
Ben. The commons debated whethei
to stop the clock or release the prisoner,
and Big Ben won. London Spectator.
September 5, 1911. She will be
buried in Mountain View cemetery.
SWISSCO STOPS IT
LARGE TRIAL BOTTLE FREE
An Extraordinary Biography.
Tlit" most extraordinary biography in
existence is Neither written nor print
ed. It is pi'inh"!. It contains the life
T'ti-rcs of diaries Magnes. a
ii'::'i- Having been calum
niate:!, Ir.' ileteiiJined to set hiiusell
right in the eyes of liis contemporaries
iiiid employed Paul Veronese to paint
his biography. T'ie volume has eight
een pages of vellum. Each has a large
central pi-tare, surrounded by ten
smaller, each Having its appropriate
inscr';-ti'.':i. i'i whole recounting the
most not; He scenes in his life.
BROOKLYN, N. Y., April 28. Dud
ley Jardine, a millionaire, and noted
builder of church organs, died here
a hermit under an alias, and had it
not been for accidental indentifica
tion would have been buried in Pot
ter's field.
Dandruff Is Maddening.
Swissco stops dandruff quickly,
grows new hair and restores gray or
faded hair to its . natural youthful
color.
Swissco stops baldness, bald spots,
falling hair, scabby scalp, sore scalp,
brittle hair or any hair or scalp
trouble.
To prove that our claims are true
we will send you a large trial bottle
free if you will send 10c in silver or
stamps to help pay cost of postage
and packing to Swissco Hair Remedy
Co., 5311 P. O. Square, Cincinnati, O.
Swissco will be found on sale at all
druggists and drug departments ev
erywhere at 50c and $1.00 a bottle.
JONES DRUG COMPANY
DEATH TAKES BABE
Mary Bangy, the 20-month-old baby
of Mr. and Mrs. August Bangy, died
in this city died in the city Sunday
after an illness of several days. Tbe
little child was born in this county
CORRESPONDENCE
LOGAN
The lecture by Dr. E. A. Pierce of
the state health board, was very in
teresting and was appreciated by
those present. Tiie closing exercises
of the Lower Logan school preceded
the lecture.
More cattle buyers are around this
week.
Miss Julia Busch is ill with ty
phoid fever in Oregon City.
Kirchem Bros, have dumped 300
sacks of potatoes over the bluff,
there being no sale for them.
The C. C. creamery has placed an
order for another Wizzard cream vat
of 309 gallon capacity. The have
two but the increasing amout of
cream makes another necessary.
A. A. Crissell of Portland was out
this way Sunday.
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is
nature's own tonic, purely vegetable.
Its use is not followed by devitaliz
ing effects. Safe and sure try it for
debility, anaemia, poor appetite,
spring tiredness. Tea or Tablets
1
MM GREY HAIR TO ITS
YOUTHFUL AND NATURAL COLOR
Easily, Quickly., Surely, Safe
ly, by Hay's Hair
Health
Don't neglect your hair or allow it
to become grey, thin, dry or lifeless.
A beautiful head of natural colored,
luxuriant radiant hair is priceless to
every woman. Why not have it and
keep it so? Why be prematurely grey
and grow old-looking before your time?
By all means don't let your hair be
come grey or faded and full of irri
tating and annoying Dandruff when
Hay's Hair Health will bring back its
youthful color and remove the Dand
ruff almost immediately.
It is simple, safe, easy to use and
FOR SALE AND RECOMMEND
harmless. Its use cannot be detected.
Don't waste time thinking or worry
ing about your grey hair, or take
chances with new and untried prepara
tions get a bottle of Hay's Hair
Health today. It's so nice and clean
to use and has been used and given
absolute satisfaction for twenty-five
years. Give it a fair trial, the grey
hairs will disappear in no time and
you'll be delighted with it.
Druggists guarantee to refund your
money if you are not satisfied with.
Hay's Hair Health.
Free: Sign this adv. and take it to the
following druggists and get a 50c. bot
tle of Hay's Hair Health and a 25c.
cake of Harfina Soap for 50c; or fl.00
bottle of Hay's Hair Health and two
25c. cakes of Harfina Soap Free, for ?L
ED BY HUNTLEY BROS. CO.