MORNING ENTERPRISE. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1913. Wha They Thrive On. src. "What is good for potato bugs?" "Good for potato bugs?" That is what I said." "Potato plants. 1 guess." Local Briefs . D. T. Larkin, of Boise, was in Ore gon City Monday. J. W. Grace visited Mrs. G. W. Grace of this city Sunday. J. N. Morrie, ol Lebanon, was in Oregon City Sunday. F. W. McLeran, manager of the Wil ioit hotel is in the city. Samuel J. Randall,' of Spokane, was in Oregon, City Sunday. E. Laesch, of Portland, stayed at a local hotel over Sunday' night. E. Olsen, of Portland, was a local visitor the fore part of the week. F. E. Dodge has come down from Canby. to work- in the county seat. John Dundan, of Robbin's store at Molalla, was in the county seat Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Wilson, of Toit land, were in this city the first jf the week. Claude Howard, of Mulino, -was in the county seat the latter part of last wee"k. Frank Kellogg is very ill of typhoid pneumonia at his home on Twelfth street. Miss Minnie Vonderahe, formerly of this city but now of Hood River, was here Monday. You should eat Roman Meal Bread. It's fine, and you can get it at The Hub Grocery, on the hill. Mrs. E. W. Scott is visting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Betzel. Mrs. Scott is f ormerly of this city. Louis Keen, of Athena, was in this part of the county the fore pari of the week to look over land. E. C. Boardman, of Canby, passed through this city Saturday on his '.vay to Vancouver, Washington. Roman Meal Bread is healthful. You can't help but like it. Fresh ev ery morning at The Hub Grocery. A. J. Lewthwaite, of Portland, man ager of the Crown-Columbia Paper mills was in Oregon City Monday. Mrs. L. W. Oswald, who has been ill at the local hospital for over a week, returned to her home in Glad stone Monday. A. W. Kirchem and H. H. Kirchem, who have been hunting in Tillamook county, have returned, loaded down with their trophies of their trip. Mrs. W. Warner, of Damascus, un derwent an operation at the Oregon City hospital Monday morning. She is reported as rapidly recovering. Everyone likes our Hub Special Cof fee. It's a blend that is hard to equal at any price. Hub Grocery, on the hill. Miss Lena Spatz and Gottlieb A Schneide who were married on Octo ber 15, are expected to return in a few days. They will make their home in Redland. Among those registered at the Elec tric hotel are: S. E. Williams, B. Woodward, Charles Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Runsey, W .W. Haskins, H. C. Ross, L. G. Criteser, E. E. William, W. P. Gerwolf, Charles Sturges and D. Hogan. The two brothers, William and Philip L. Hammond, have formed a partnership to be known as Hammond & Hammond which will have offices in Oregon City and Canby. Philip Hammond is a recent graduate and will take charge of the Canby office. Mrs. W. R. "Kraxberger and her two baby daughters, Ruth and Ester, have returned to their home at 720 Jeffer son street in this city after being ill for some time in a Portland hosp'tal with typhoid fever. This is the sec ond time that little Ester has had this disease in four years. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Sageson and Ir.eir children, Samuel, Gilbert and Ray mond, have returned from Nyssa, Oregon, and are staying at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Sage sori, of this city. They have been proving up on ahomestead and havi been away from Oregon City for t vo years. The chestnut trees of this country ' may soon be extinct, but unfortunate ly the jokesmiths are not dependent upon them for their supplies. The classified ad columns of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. DRUGS EXCITE YOUR KIDNEYS, USE SALTS If your Back is aching or Bladder bothers, drink lots of water and eat less meat When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their nor mal activity. The function of the kid neys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 600 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand .the vital importance of keeping the kid neys active. Drink lots of water you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for genera tions to clean and stimulate clogged kid neys; also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of drri tation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kid- : neys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache. -n mmam -n ,f ,gi p MORNING ENTERPRISE'S " CLACK AH AS COUNTY SPECIAL NEWS SERVICE WILLAMETTE Merritt Willson, Agent Theodore Jenkins, of Portland, is visiting relatives near Willamette. He will return to his home in a few days. John U. Thomas has been in the southern part of the state on business. He. will return to his home to the west of town in a few days. Mr. Thomas is a ne warrival in this setcion, having is a new arrival in this section, having of Iowa. Mrs. William Lawrence and her daughter Louise are visiting in Will amette. Clarence Upton and . family passed through this town in their automobile on their way to Salem. Miss Maude Booker, of Walla Walla, Wash., visited Miss Myrtle Cross and Miss Gertrude Wilson, of Willamette, Sunday. Miss Booker is a former Ore gon City girl. She will spend the win ter in Vancouver, Washington. GANEMAH CARNOTT SPENCER, Agent W. Kellog, who has been ill for a short time has recovered. "" 'Mrs. T .Bradley, of Willamette, vis ited friends in Canemah Monday. B. Helsby, of Oregon City, visited in Canemah Sunday. E. Long has. returned from a short hunting trip up the Willamette valley. B. Hawkins, of Hillsboro, was vis iting in Canemah Sunday. John L. Phillips, of Vancouver, Wn,. visited friends near Canemah the lat ter part of last week. He returned to his home town early Monday morning. WHY AMERICAN CITIES SHOULD PURCHASE PARKS. No Longer Considered a Luxury, but, Like Streets, a Necessity. One of the latest cities to secure gen eral plan reports, joining in with the leading American cities in securing such general schemes of development, is New London, Conn. The report con tains the following reasons why every city should ucquire parks: "There are at least four reasons why cities should now act in a large way in acquiring and improving land for use as parks and playgrounds: First. Property is steadily increasing in value. It is not likely to be cheaper than it is now. Second. Once bought, park lands increase in value. All oth er public works depreciate; parks ap preciate. Third. Parks pay for them selves or more than pay for themselves by making new real estate values. Some examples in support of this state ment are given in the appendix. Fourth. A sound park policy vigorous ly pushed by public authority soon brings rich gifts from private individu als. The history of American city parks furnishes much evidence in sup port of this tendency. Cities that own few parks seldom receive gifts of parks. On the other hand, some cities that have a long and honorable record in public park making have an equally long and honorable record of private gifts for parks. "Parks are no longer considered a luxury by growing American cities. They are classed with streets, and sew ers and schools as a necessity. They contribute directly to health and effi ciency, to pleasure and economic wealth. Moreover, they stir and nour ish civic pride." WORRY. Ungovernable worry is Gable to lead a person to insanity and even to death. There must be a way of taking worry so that it shall do us good and not harm. Worry, right ly taken, should train to quietness, humility, patience, gentleness, sym pathy. PUMPELLY. Crack Punter of Yale Varsity Football Team. Photo by American Press Association. A FAIR PROPOSITION The manufacturers of Meritol Rheu matism Powders have so much confi dence in this preparation that they authorize us to sell them to you on a positive guarantee to give you relief in all cases of Rheumatism or refund your money. This is certainly a fair proposition. Let us show them to you. Jones Drug Co., exclusive agents. WEST LINN James McLarty, Agent Edward C-Kellogg, of Seattle, was in West Linn for a short time Satur day visiting friends and relatives. Herbert Carleton, who has been vis iting his mother in West Linn for sev eral days, left Monday. William Bowiner has returned to his home in West Linn after several months spent in the mountains. Harold J. Moore, who has been vis iting for several days near West Linn will returnto his home in Astoria Tuesday. Mr. Tanzer is improving his house at West Linn. HUERTA IS AFTER PRESIDENTIAL BEE VERA VRUZ, Mexico, Oct. 20. De spite" all his promises to the contrary, it was considered practically certain today that Provisional President Huer ta will be a candidate to succeed him self at the 'election next Sunday, Oc tober 26. The constitution prohibits the same president from serving two terms in succession, but Huerta" presumably will resign in a day or two, to make a break between his two periods of of fice holding. That he will announce his candi dacy immediately following Ger.eral Felix Diaz' arrival here, was the gen eral expetctation. It was said General Blanquet will run with him for vicf president. Blanquet was born in Spain, and consequently is ineligible to the presidency, but it was doubted if a mere technicality like this would interfere with the program. Ex-Minister of Foreign Affairs Gam boa, the Catholic party's candidate, was counted on to retire from the race with the announcement of Huor ta's candidacy. He has been consider ed completely under the latttr's con trol. Manuel Calerc, the liberal candidutu has smail support, and, is not a seri ous rival of any other prospective can didate. Felix Diaz, however, it was believed, may prove embarrassment to Huerta, if he decides to make the. campaign, and it was for this reason that his friends expressed much anxiety con cerning his safety. They annoanced that he would not run if Huerta as pires to the office, but this statement was deemed purely perfunctory. DEMOTED HERE WASHINGTON, Oct. 20. The New York immigration authorities' order excluding Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst from admission to the United States was overruled today. She was ordered admitted immediately. It was stated at the White House that Mrs. Pankhurst will be given freedom on her own recognizance. Secretary of Labor William B. Wil son said he entertained serious doubt as to whether Mrs.- Pankhurst's acts in England consitituted moral turpi tude, adding that if she broke the laws of the United States she could easily be arresl'jd Commissioner General Caminetti then ordered Mrs. Pankhurst's release. President Wilson conferred at the White House today with Commission er General of Immigration Caminetti concerning Mrs, Pankhurst's case. Rotundity of Earth. . We are assured by competent author ity that Thales of Miletus taught that the earth was of globular form so early as 640 B. C. Pythagoras demon strated from the varying altitudes of the stars that the earth must be round. Aristarchus of Sambs maintained that the earth turned on its own axis and revolved about the sun. which doctrine was held by his contemporaries as so absurd and revolting that the philos opher nearly lost his life B. C. 280. The wisdom of the ancients "was. of course, lost sight of in the darkness of the "middle ages," and it took Galilei and Copernicus to' restore the old knowledge to the world. New York American. " . That's Different. "A man may adore every hair on his wife's bead " "Well?" "But he regards, those on her dresser with mixed emotions' Pittsburgh Post. Opportunity. - Sometimes one succeeds -by embrac ing the other fellow's opportunity. New York American. JUST MIX SAGE It's Grandmother's Rec ipe for Dandruff and Restoring Color to Hair. Almost - everyone knowi that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brines back the nat ural color and luster to the hair when faded, streaked or gray? also cures dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which la mussy and troublesome. Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. D asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product called "Wyeta's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy- you will get a large HI mil GRAY Funny Questions arc Flung at Secretary of Commercial Club "Hojw many pounds of clover seed make a bushel?" "How many acres does, it take", to make the Ideal farm?" "At what season of the year do you plant clover and. how deep ought the seeds be planted in order to get the best crop?" Thousands of other questions just like these pour into the office of Sec retary Freytag of the Commercial clubevery day in the year and hun dreds of homeseekers ask similar questions that have to be answered by letter. From that little office on - Main street, the Oregon City Commercial club sends out answers to queries of that kind every day to people thous ands of miles away in other states and even in other lands. The adver tising that has been given to this state in various ways has bjought in the queries that the secretary now has to answer. In addition, questions that the children get in their regular work at school are flung at the secretary and the child is just as interested in his answers as are the people who are planning to make this state their home. The questions with which this yarn begins were fired at the secreary Mon day by a' little girl in school. In some of the mysterious ways by which children of the schools are given ques tions like this to answer, she has found a puzzle. The only way out of the difficulty that she could see was to ask that center of information known as the secretary of the com mercial club. He answered them for her and gave her several other ideas that she wilL be able to use in her school "work. Every day questions like this are coming into the office, not only from the people of the city but from those across the continent, from people who want to learn .more of the land to which they are looking and where they plan to some day build their homes. Land and Water. It cannot, of course, be said for cer tain that we yet know the greatest depth of the sea. But Sir James Ross once took soundings 900 miles to the westward of St. Helena and found the depth to be just under six miles! And the pressure of the water at only 1,100 yards is equal to 15,000 pounds to the square inch. Altogether there are about 147.000, 000 square miles of water on the earth to 49,500,000 square miles of land. London Globe. Bad Judgment. "There is one discordant note in your garden, my dear madam.", remarked the aesthetic landscape architect. "What is that?" asked the lady, much alarmed. . - " "I notice." he replied, with'a shud der, "that you have a dogwood planted near some pussy willows." Philadel phia Ledger. Woman. Without woman, her foibles and ec centricities the novelist would have been out of business long ago. KETCHAM. Captain of '1913 Yale Varsity Football Team. Photo by Anieriuan Press Association. Constipation, indigestion, drive away appetite ana make you weak and sick. Holister's Rock Moun tain Tea restores the appetHe, drivas awajr disease, builds up the system. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Jones Drug TEA A! SULPHUR bottle for about SO cents. Some druggists make their own, but it's usually too -sticky,? so Insist upon getting "Wyeth's," which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair, and Is the best remedy for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and to stop falling hair. Folks like "Wyeth's' Sage and Sulphur" because no one can pos sibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does It so naturally and evenly, says a well-known down town druggist. You dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This re quires but a few moments, by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two i restored to lt natural oolor and looks even - more beautiful and gloesy than ever. ! For Sale by Huntley Bros. x4 ikv ' fVi i 1 ,( III? BRICKLEY. Right Halfback of 1913 Yale Varsity Football Team. vi, t. Photo by American Press Association. Platonic love, like perpetual mo tion, is all right as a meory but it won't work. Some men will pay a- $50 cigar hill without a murmur and then get-real fussy over a $2 bill for gas. CATARRHAL TROUBLES ENDED-USE HYOMEI You Breathe It No Stomach Dosings Clears the Head Use nature's remedy for catarrh, or cold in the head, one that is harmless yet quick and effective. It is the healing oils and balsams of Hyomei which you breathe through a small pocket inhaler.This curative and antiseptic air reaches the most re mote air cells in the nose, throat and lungs, killing the catarrhl germs, stop ping the offensive breath, raising of mucus, droppings in the throat, crusts in the nose and all other catarrhal symptoms. . The complete outfit costs only $1.00 and Huntley Bros. Co. will return your money if not satisfied. Do not con tinue to suffer catarrhl ills try Hy omei now today. For Sale By HUNTLEY BROS. Co. fins Judge Its Merits fori Yourself As the size ' of your thumb com pares with your hand, so this il lustration comp arts with the .size of tb book. v Hi rt Take No novel could be more interesting; no text book is more instructive. It is indeed the acknowledged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone in which every man, woman and chiid must be interested. Mail Orders Filled See Certificate Printed on Page 4 By the OREGON CITY EGGS ARE FIRMER; VEAL TRADE BETTER Firmer quotations are noted in egga and a dearth of offerings has been noted for the past few days. The commission men have reported a steadily increasing firmness in the market and a shortage of the offerings that have been received. The market for veal is better than it has been for several days and the prices are generally lower. The sup plies of Deaches are still the tone has been weak and the strade sluggish. Sales are hard to make and the prices have suffered a break. Livestock, Meats BEEF fLive "weiehti stwra 7nnH 8c; cows 6 and 7c: bui".s 4 to 6c. MUTTON SheeD 3 to 4c: lamha 5 to 5Hc. POULTRY (Buvinel Hens- nlrt roosters, 9c; broilers 12c. WEINIES 15c lb; sausage 15c lb j$26.70 ROUND TRIP TO THE Pontola Festival AT SAN FRANCISCO VIA lOGDENftSHASTAI "The Exposition Line 1915" A four day carnival and fete with unlimited attractions and enter tainment. Spectacular Parades. Naval and Military Tournaments Fleets of American and Foreign War Vessels. RELAY RUNNING AND SWIMMING RACES Sacramento to San Francisco INCLUDING Swimming San Francisco Bay By Rival College Students TICKETS ON SALE OCT. 19-20-21-22 Final Return Limit, November 10 Call on any Southern Pacific Agent for further particulars. JOHN M. SCOTT General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon aodl wisL 7 mm tropical colorings, interwoven with word pic tures none the less artistic . YOU MUST HAVE A COPY OF IT f Home Will Al mo s As explained in the Certificate printed daily in these columns, that handsome volume is distrib uted at $ 1 . 1 8 for the $4 style see illustration and 48 cents for the $2 book. , PORK 10 and 11c. VEAL Calves 12c to 15c dressei according to grade. . Fruits "APPLES 50c and Jl. , DRIED FRUITS (Buying) Prunes on basis 4 for 35 to 40c. . . ONIONS $1 per sack. . ' POTATOES 65 and 80c. -BUTTER (Buying) Ordinary country butter 23c to 25c- - 38c; Oregon ranch candled 40c. " Prevailing Oregon City prices are as follows,: HIDES (Buying)-Green salted, 9c. CORN Whole corn $36; cracked $37. ' SHEEP PELTS 75c to each. FLOUR $4.30 to $5. HAY (Buying) Clover at 8 and $9.00; timothy $12.00 cd ?13.00; oat hay best $10 and $11; mixed $9 to $13;, Idaho and eastern Oregon tim othy selling $20; valley timothy $12 to. $14. OATS (Buying) $23.00 and $24; wheat 77c and 78c;. oil meal selling $38; Shady Brook feed $1.25 per cent. FEED (Selling) Shorts $26; bran $24; feed barley $30 to $31. - The claRfiifipri arl rrtlnmno rxf Tk. Enterprise satisfy your wants. THE See Mere words can not describe it; an illustration such as is herein presented cannot portray its -beauties. The French would call it an "Edition de Luxe." We have no phrase so fitting It is indeed a su perfine edition, a book of surpassing elegance, the grand triumph of art in magnificent t F r e e ENTER 1 You