MORNING ENTERPRISE, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1913. ' I f H IA 71 A T TV 7 TTTF TT Oa TTTT I T TM TT rwrr i - 1 I Double S. & H. Green Trading Stamps on All These Articles ALL PARISIAN IVORY ONE QUARTER OFF Regular Price AT- GU PRICES T R A T E Look over this partial list of Gifts you surely will find the desired article here. Framed Pictures Fountain Pens Brass Ware Pocket Books Purses Card Cases Hand Bags Finger Purses . Manicuring Articles Manicuring Sets Necktie Boxes Glove Boxes Jewel Boxes Fancy Perfume Perfume Atomizers Xmas Postals Xmas Cards Xmas Booklets Xmas Letters Dennison's Xmas Goods Shaving Sets Believing that we are over stocked arid not finding the usual demand for this class of Christmas Gifts we have decided to sell all our - Toilet Sets, Manicuring Sets, Shaving Sets, Smoking Sets, Hand Bags, Mirrors, At one-fourth off the regular price. We have these in real ebony from $1.50 to $10.00, Parisian ivory $2.00 to $10.00, Sterling Silver $1.00 to $15.00, Fox Wood $1.00 to $7.00, Quadruple plate $2.00 to $20.00, Genuine Seal and Alligator Hand Bags $1.50 to $15.00. - As an extra inducement we will give you on all purchases of the above double S. & H. Green Trading Stamps. All Goods Marked in Plain Figures. See For Yourself. I I in J Look over this partial list of Gifts you surely will find the desired article here: Safety Razors, all kinds Old Style Razors Toilet Sets Individual Articles in Parisian Ivory Lowney's Candies, Boxes Xmas Stationery Box Cigars Watches Pipes Cigar Holders Tobacco Boxes Work Boxes Mirrors Military Brushes Thermos Bottles Knives Fancy Calendars Clothes Brushes Hair Brushes Hat Brushes COUPON 50c purchase 10 S. & H. Green Trading Stamps I : J Oregon City, Oregon COUPON 50c purchase 10 S. & H. Green Trading Stamps Choose Your Gift Now. We Will Lay It Aside for You. GARFIELD. W. P. Snuffin and wife were the motifs for a surprise party given by their friends and relatives to the num ber of twenty-three, in honor of their eighteenth wedding anniversary, not having the least hint of their coming tiil all were on the porch of their line home. It was a complete surprise to the couple, who were enjoying a con versation with H. D. Trapp and wife, who had come into spend the evening with them by appointment. The even ing was spent very enjoyably by all present in conversation, intersperseor with music by P. S. Palmateer, Jr., on his fine graphaphone, till 11 o'clock when refreshments were served. Those presented were: Mr. and Mrs. H. Is. Trapp, Mr. Frazier, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Palmateer, Mr. and Mrs. H. Epper son and daughters, Misses Callie and Cathrine, Mrs. Leatha Wills, Ira and Melvil Wills, Alfred Duncan, Kenneth and Avis Palmateer, Wilma and Mil lion Duncan, R. S. Palmateer, Jr., Pay Wills, Mr. and Mrs. R. Palmateer, par ents of Mrs. Snuffin. Lee Wills is still on his dairy farm on the Columbia slough. He is build ing a modern sanitary barn. He in tends to move his family down there in the latter part of February. ALSPAUGH The basket social at Currinsville, given by the Ladies' Aid Friday night was a grand success. John Githens and Edgar Hieple have been rounding up their herds of cattle. J. W. Dowty has a sick horse. Miss Hazel Githens visited with Mrs. O. E. Tull one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hieple and John Githens were the dinner guests of Mr. and. Mrs. Frank Boyer Thurs day. Mrs. Morton and Mrs. Pyle, of Esta cada, were the guests of Mrs. G. W. Dowty and Mrs. Chas. Sparks Friday Mrs. John Githens was an Estacada visitor Friday. EAGLE CREEK. TT S. OthRon made a hiisiness trin to Portland last week. Dick Gibson and wife were Esta cada visitors last Friday. Roy Douglass and wife made a busi ness visit to Estacada last Saturday. E. L. Palfrey made a brief business call on Roy Douglass on Saturday last. Mr. Naylor and wife and Ray. Woodle and wife were Estacada visit ors Tuesday... F. P. Allen, the Sunday school mis sionary, was in the neighborhood the nrBi 01 me wees caning on irienas. Mrs. Viola Douglass and son, Carl, were out this way Sunday calling on relatives.' Get the news-read the Enterprise. SINCERITY. Don't be an imitation of some body. Be genuine. Be yourself. ' Ape no greatness. Be willing to pass for what you are. A good dime is a good deal better than a bad . dollar. . Affect no oddness, but dare to be right, though you . have to be singular. Gstting Around It. The members of a party around a table in an exclusive club In a down town skyscraper were much amused the other evening by a controversy between their waiter and another em ployee of the club. One of the party had ordered sirup. What the sirup was for has nothing to do with this story. Going to the dumb waiter, the servitor shouted In his best ordering voice: "Sirup!" "I don't getchu." came the response down the shaft. "Sirup!!" this time with two excla mation points and rising inflection. "Come again," was the imperturbable response. "Sirup!" It went up the shaft like the blast of an explosion. "Aw, spell it." said the echo. "S-u-r" the waiter had his feet planted firmly "s-u-r" he had tight ened his vest and taken a deep breath "s-su-r. Say, bring some one to the shaft that can understand me, will yuh?" And he waited with some dignity the coming of a person with sharper ears. Pittsburgh Post Courtship by Flowers. In remote Alpine hamlets and vil lages, especially in the Bernese Ober laud. there still exist ancient and pret ty customs of proposing marriage by the language of flowers. If a maid accepts a bouquet of edelweiss from a man she at the same time accepts him as her fiance, the idea being that the man has risked his life to obtain the flowers for the woman be loves. An other method which exists in the can ton of Glarus is for the young man to place a flowerpot containing a single rose and a note on the window sill of the girl's room when she is absent from home and wait perhaps days for a reply. If the maid takes the rose the young man boldly enters the house to arrange matters with her parents, but If the rose-is allowed to fadeaway the. proposal is rejected without a sin gle word having been exchanged be tween the couple. Sometimes a fickle girl will keep a young man waiting a day or two for an answer, but what ever It may be it is final. When Buttons Were Big. Bachanmont writes in his "Secret Memoirs." Nov. 18, 178G: "The mania for buttons is today extremely ridicu lous. They are not only of enormous size, some of them as big as six pound crowns, but miniatures and pict ires are made upon them, and this orna mentation is extremely costly. Some of them represent the medals of the twelve Caesars, others antique stat ues and still others the Metamor phoses of Ovid." Isabey, In his bio graphical otes. says that when he came to Paris he worked for a living by making copies of Vanloos and Bouchers on the lids of snuffboxes and that for these medallions he was paid from 6 to 8 francs each. "As it was still the fashion," he said, "to wear buttons as big "as a five franc Diece uriQn which cunids. flowers and landscapes were cut In cameo, I -went Into that business. I got 12- sous for each." Philadelphia Ledger. Act of a Monster. Where is Carmania? Translate It into Kirman and a few who are up in the affairs of the middle east could identify the Persian province. Most of us know so little of that part of the world. But the chief town. Kirman. also known as Carmania. was the scene in 1795 of one of the most terrible events ever in the history of Asia. Agha Mohammed, founder of the Kajar dynasty, then besieged and took the place and. raging at the escape of his defeated rival, with three followers, ordered 70.000 eyes of the inhabitants to be brought to him. He counted them with his dagger point and said to his minister. "If one had been want ing I would have made up the number with your own eyes." London Standard. His Finish. A politician was describing at the club the death of a rival. "Yes. Jones is dead." he said, and. with a chuckle, he held his glass up to the light "Yes, Jones Is dead. He slipped on the parquetry floor of his library and killed himself." The politician gave a loud laugh. Then he added: "A bardwood finish, eh?" Exchange. Camels In Water. The camel is about the only animal that cannot swim. It is an extraordi nary fact that the moment the ungain ly creature loses Its footing in a stream it turns over and makes no effort to save itself from drowning. London Answers. Obeyed Orders. Wife Didn't you hear me ask you for $10? Husband-1 did. Wife Then why do you give me only $5? Husband Because you told me yester day to believe only half what I hear. COUNTY COURT. (Continued from Page Five) Harry Ameele 1.00 Leo Shindler 1.00 J. E. Mathews . : 1.00 James Snyder 1.00 Clarence Eaton 5.00 Geo. BighamV. ,; v. s . 6.10 C. A. Worthingtbn' . r. : . .1 J . . . - 9.80 Mrs. B. Russell . .. 1.90 Miss P. Newell ....... . . 1.90 P. Newell .... 1.90 T. R. Worthington 2.00 E. Emmons 2.00 L:A. Bullard , . 2.00 L. E. Armstrong ". 2.00 G. W. Derry . ... . . 2.00 E. C. Warren 2.00 . Sheriff. ' Fashion Livery Stable 8.50 Miller-Parker Co. . ; . . . 15.15 B. J. Staats - 1.75 Ivan Wood -. 1.50 W. J. Wilson 3.50 W. S. Eddy 5.10 F. A. Miles 112.45 Richey & Lunday .;, 6.50 John T. May 1.25 W. J. Wilson 5.00 E. T. Mass 42.30 Tax Department. Cis B. Pratt $ 60.00 Clerk. W. L. Mulvey '..$ 10.00 E. T. Quinn 1.40 1. M. Harrington 1.40 Ruth Smith 16.00 Recorder Louise Cochran .......$ 65.00 E. P. Dedman 5.00 Treasurer Alice Dwiggins ....$46.00 Coroner M. J. Lee 1.20 G. U. Kesselring 1.20 J. A. Graham '. 1.20 Wilson Evans 1.20 H. C. Gillmore 1.20 Andrew Kocher 1.20 Walter Krueger 1.70 Clifford Will 1.70 Clyde Dick 1.70 Dr .Stanley Wang ........ 10.00 C. T. 'Sievers 10.25 W. J. Wilson 38.25 Dr. Barendick 10.00 J. L. Swafford 1.20 Tom J. Myers 1.20 G. W. Boy lan 1.20 Philip Kohl 1.20 William Gardner 1.20 H. W. Trembath 1.20 H. J. Robinson 2.10 David H. Courtney 2.10 Robert A. Wilson 3.90 John H. Hartranft .. 3.90 R. C. James 3.90 Calvin P. Morse 2.10 Dr. Guy Mount 10.0C Gilbert L. Hedges 11.45 Supt. pf Schools. H. M. James .; . $133.55 J. E. Calavan 8.95 W. J. Wilson - 2.50 Brenton Vedder ..... 112.70 M. L. Pittman 8.40 D. E. Frost 12.11 Asessor J. E, Jack .T:$ 2.80 Clara Mitchell 50.00 Gertie Willson ,, 50.00 Extending1 Tax Roll J. O. Staats ".$ 67.50 Surveyor D. Thompson Meldrum . .$106.30 Harry Shelly ..... 27.50 Fashion Livery Stable- ........ 10.00 County Veterinarian W. S. Eddy ....$ 10.00 H. G. Mullenhoff 26.25 Board of Health '. J. A. VanBrakle .4....;......$ 6.50 Huntley Bros. Co. .......... . 2.90 W. J. Wilson 1.50 - Fruit , Inspector O.K. Freytag :.."..$ 13.89 Curreiit Expense Home Telephone Co. ..... . . . . $ 15.50 Huntley Bros. Co. 14.95 Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co. ....... 20.80 Huntley Bros. Co ; 24.55 Court House Pioneer Transfer Co. -. .$ ... .75 William Weismandel .75 R. L. Leach ..127.50 Jones Drug Co. 1.35 Crescent Chemical Co. 7.00 Jail E. T. Mass .......$145.30 L. Adams 6.25 Bannon & Co 7M County Poor Wm. Danforth . .$ 15.00 David E. Jones 8.00 W. T. Gardner , 10.00 Mrs.' Bradtl ' 10.00 J. W .S. Owens 20.00 Sam Booher 16.00 N. H. Smith .. 10.00 Dock Mosier .-rr 10.00 Mrs. Jessie Allen 20.00 Patton Home 16.00 Alice Carr ,.. 10.00 "A. J. Rosenthal . .- 20.00 Mary Buol 5.00 Peter Erickson 10.00 Sarah Gibbons 20.00 Ambrose Pluard 10.00 Ella Payne 10.00 Henry Spiess 10.00 W. W. Everhart .. ?5.00 V. Harris ... 10.00 Farr Bros. 11.75 J. P. Finley & Son 43.00 Huntley Bros. Co 5.05 Louis Nobel, Jr . ." 8.00 L. Adams . ." ...... .. 6.S5 J. W. S. Owens 10.00 Chas. Moshberger 18.00 Oregon City Hospital 47.50 Hogg Bros 1.50 Peter Erickson 5.00 Denis Donovan 12.50 Dr. J. W. Norris 3.8r, C. James Ivey 20.00 Wichita Mercantile Co. 13.60 Board of Water Comm 1.00 J. Bickner & Sons 5.00 J. H. Barnett -7-. 15.75 Meier & Frank Co. 5.03 Mrs. J. Prenevost 10.00 Farr Bros. ' 20.00 H. F. Padgham .. 35.00 Frank T. Barlow ....... ....... . . , 7.60 Fred Clack 7.00 Frank T. Barlow ............ 20.00 Chas. H. Hart 10.00 Wm. Hammond . .". ; ,-. 6.00 Frank T. Barlow ... 7.50 Miss M. E. Swales . . ... - 45.00 V.Harris ..: 5.00 Mrs. W. F. Schooley . . . . .:. 2Q.00 Mrs. G. E. Woodward . . .-. . . . ... 20.00 Mrs. Bartschi : . . . . ; 5.00 Mrs. Prenevost .. . 10.00 H. S. "Anderson .... 11.00 W. J. Moldenhauer 10.00 L. E. Mars ............. . " 4.65 Dr. Stanley M. Wang . 1' 76.30 Indigent. Soldier ' k Mead Post No. 2 G. A. R. . : . . $' 15.00 . Insane Dr. Guy Mount .......... $ 5.00 The Western Union Tel. Co .50 A. R. Stephens ; . 2.00 Dr. Hugh S. Mount "'. 6.00 Election Mrs. J. H. Mattley ......$ 3.50 G. F. Johnson 20.00 Huntley Bros. Co 14.30 Oregon City Wood & Fuel Co. . . 5.00 Alfred Danielson ' 1.65 Collins & Richey 12.00 John S. Owings 1.S0 John V. Green , 15.00 L. S. Aldrich M0 G. H. Young . . . . ............. 4.00 Beaver Creek Hall Ass'n , . . . . . S.60 Oregon City Courier . .... 8i.60 (Continued on page 7.) Oregon City Enterprise . 138.85 Wild Animal Bounty Robert Putz $ S.00 Juvenile Court 4. x-1 uat ........ ..........f t).x Minda E. Church 45.50 Tax Rebate Harry M. Courtright . .$ 88.34 Harry M. Courtright 14.73 Harrv M. Courtrieht 65.60 Harry M. Courtright 9.21 . CHRISTMAS1AND1NEW YEAR HOLIDAYS AT HOME LOW ROUND TRIP FARES Via The 0) SU N S ET 6 1 I (OGDEN&SHASTA) I I ROUTES 1 I The Exposition Line, 1915 BETWEEN ALL POINTS IN OREGON, ALSO FROM . POINTS IN OREGON TO CALIFORNIA, - WASHINGTON AND IDAHO Christmas Holidays: Between all points in Oregon ; also from s Southern Pacific points to points in Washington and Idaho Dec. 18 to 25 inclusive. Between Oregon and California points Dec. 20 to 25. Return limit all points Jan. 5, 1914. New Years Holidays: Dec. 27 to Jan.-1, with final return limit Jan. 5, 1914. The New Year Fares apply only between -points in Oregon and between Oregon and California. SUPERIOR TRAIN SERVICE ; - Observation Cars, Dining Cars and big, warm all-steel coaches. All trains solidly vestibuled Call on nearest Southern Pacific Agent for full particulars train schedules, specific fares, etc. JOHN M. SCOTT,' General Passengei- J gent, Portland, Oregon