Drives away Plies, Mosquitoes and Gnats.
It protects horses and cattle from attacks
of insects, enabling tbem to feed and
aleep in peace. It prevents loss of weight
and etrenpth from worry caused by
attacks of insects, and from the irritation
of their bites and stings. There is a
satisfaction in the relief it affords
domestic animals from the scourge of
maddening parasites and flies, besides the
profit in returns. Horses do more work
on less feed and cows yield more and
better milk when relieved from the frenzy
incited by constantly fighting a swarm of
voracious, insatiable insects.
Four sizes, 35c, 50c, 75c and $1.35.
Ask your merchant for it.
HOYT Chbmicai, Co. Portland, Oregon
!
ENTERPRISE
OPERA HOUSE
Watch for
NText
Announcement
(PAID ADVERTISING.)
Settle It Now
Settle It Right
For constitutional amendment
giving to cities and towns
exclusive power to license,
regulate, control, suppress,
or prohibit the sale of intox
icating liquors within the
municipality. -
328 X Ves
ENDORSED BY
40,000 OREGON CITIZENS
GREATER OREGON HOME RULI
ASSOCIATION..
618 Electric Building, Portland, Ore.
The White
If you want a high grade sewing
machine wMch Is a
WORLD'S STANDARD
OF EXCELLENCE
BUY A WHITE
The machine Is unsurpassed for
simplicity, durability and the char
actor ot the work It will .do. It la
made In two styles, the Vibrator
Shut-Mo and the Improved Rotary
Shuttle The tauter machine sew
either a lock or a chain stitch
There are a number ot styles to
choose from and the wood work Is
the handsomest possible,
Fred S. Ashley
handles the WHITE
Wallowa county.
MACHINE In
00
ooO--
LIFE OF am BE OF REFORM
Battled With Bosses From Earli
est Period In Which He
Interested Himself
In Politics.
000
T
llE attack on Mayor William
Jay Gaynor of New York is
the sixth of the kind made on
prominent Americans while oc
cupying public office.
Presidents Lincoln. Garfield and Mc
Klnley were victims of assassins, as
were the elder Carter H. Harrison
while mayor of Chicago and Governor
New York Mayor Sixth Prcm'.
nent American Whose Life
Was Sought While
In Office. . -
POQ !
doubt tnnke mistakes, but judge me
Justly and help me."
To a magistrate be appointed be
wrote and let It be published that the
town meeting might know of it:
-Make a resolution when you are
sworn In never to allow younielf to
be moved by poUrienl inQuences or by
any improper Interference."
And to nnofber he said: "I hope and
William E. Gocbel of Kentucky. An , trust that the morning of the day you
assume this powerful office you . will
feel more like bowing your head for
assistance and strength than strutting
about Be a good man and you will
be a great ran frustrate," "Be humble."
was nnotluej- bit of his advice to mag
istrates. Recently he-went to'the night court,
and on going to the city hall in the
Buyers
Succeed when everything else falls.
In nervous prostration end female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
J FOR KIDNEY. LIVER AND
it is the beat medicine ever sold
Over a druggist's counter.
unsuccessful plot was laid to slay
James II. Peabody while governor of
Colorado, and Frank Steuneuberg was
killed, though after be had left Idaho's
gubernatorial chuir.
Gaynor Born on Farm.
Mayor Gaynor's career was that of
a farmer boy who rose by sheer force
nnrl nmlitHnfl ti nil ont'l.iltln rmclf-1.ii. I
at the bur, on the bench and in poli
tics. His success as an executive was
marked In the comparatively short
time he ruled New York' before James
J. Gallagher threw the nation into ex
citement by . shooting the Gotham
mayor on the deck of the German
liner.
Mayor Gaynor started his political
career early on the basis of the old
fashioned town meeting, and on the
efficiency of that factor in the system
of popular government he based his
confidepce all through his career, right
up to his. election as. mayor of New
Vork, during bis campaign for which;
be repeatedly said to his audiences tt
Brooklyn:
. "Why should I answer the lies they
tell nbout me tell about me to yon,,
my neighbors, who know tue-V
First Purifies FlittmsK
lie found himself as a youoyr man, a
countryman from up, states hi the old
towu of Flatbush, where corruption
ruled and forty satoous did business
with only, one license. He went to his
neighbors and so fnr "worked upou
their feelings- for righteousness' sake-
generation before Mr. Itoosevelt had.
made the phrase from the Bible popu
lar with voters that they supported:
him in a successful effort to down the
old Klntbush political ring aud force
the saloons all to. take out licenses. .
He moved to Brooklyn and found
there the oM Hugh 'McLaughlin nia-
hlne mulcting the city by the ancient
and present method of .selling to the
municipality private property at an
exorbitant price $1,200,000 for a wa
ter supply plant which the ring mem
bers had purchased for $1S3.0G0 and
appealing to the people, his neighbors,
against n ring which had) been regard
ed as all powerful he beat the ring
through the popilutr suffrage.
He found John X. McKaue dolnc at
Coney Island what he had Been done
In Flntbus, and lm Brooklyn, and, de
nouncing him in appeals to the public,
he bent hlw; at the polls and sent him
and sixteen of his followers to Jalll
At the time- of the Colurabiau cele
bration he found more bands charged
for than could be got together taTSew
York and Brooklyn. He published' the
knowledge of the graft and challenged
he bills that were presented"., but tho
ring, etill powerful, got a kllt.througli
the legislature authorizing the payment,
ot tho exorbitant claim. . Gaynor went
to the governor and got the bill vetoed.
Serves on Bench.
He declined otllce on several! occa
sions after some of these successes,
hut ran for Justice of the supfieme
court after the McLaughlin, uiacbin
had been started on the ran, and hfa
triumphant election with the- Brooklyn
city ticket led to the final overthrow of
that machine.
While on the bench he-continued his
political activities both as citizen aud
magistrate, not hesitating to appeal to.
the popular attention even against th
practices of his fellow Justices, ail-
though not attacking them personally-
He set forth that it was on the groujad
of popular rights that he luterveued to
protect George Duffy from the police
In the Imbroglio whin h resulted In
Mayor McClelland dismissal of Police
Commissioner Kiugbatu. and within a
few months be was nominated for
mayor of New York.
Upon reslgulns as supreme court lus-
tlce to qualify himself to run be Bald:
"J hod thought to pass my life In my
present exalted office, but man pro
poses aud God disposes, and I am con
tent. I must now resign In order to be
eligible under the constitution to re
celve votes for mayor. 1 hope 1 shall
never regret It. for I am acting solely
froni a sense of duty." ,
Appeals to People.
' Since his election as mayor, address
ing the larger community either di
rectly or through letters- to subordi
nate or by hU owu physical arts, k
has appealed to the people at large ex
actly as he had done earlier, albeit he
Could scarcely command the- direct
medium of his old fashioned town
meeting.
"Nagging at tne does no good; come
and help me. My job la not easy." he
said once, and It was quoted abroad.
And again, addressing 800 lawyers and
Judges at the Waldorf-Astoria, he aald
morning he-told to the public through
tlie newspapers his 'observations of
what he. considered wrong In the ad
ministrations of the police department
and the court as they bad come before
him. and he took hieusures as the chief
magistrate of the city to reform both
the procedure In the court aud the con
duct and practices of the police, whose
head he has made himself actually
since ho entered upon the-tin ties of the
mayoralty. . . . , - .
Persistence In this method and in
acts of this sort' gave him a hold on
the community's attention which was
never relaxed and it made him also
a figure of natiouaa interest and one
who was watched even abroad.
To Mayor Gaynor's crusades against
police abuses was due the present en
forcement In New York of the rule
that arrested prisoners are not pic
tured in the rogues' gallry until after
they have been properly convicted. -
In his campaign for the mayoralty
Mayor Gayuor based his plea for votes
on his pledge to give the city a busi
nesslike administration., enforcing all
the laws evenly and alike and making
the police proper servants of the peo
ple and' not self assuming masters.
After his election he kept his list of
Intended commissioners very closely
to himself until It was almost time fot
them to be sworn in. Very few ol
MAYOR GAYNOR &XD HIS SON RUFCS.
, ' ft I v': V
i
t '
Copyright, 1910, by American) Press Association. .- ...
ONE MINUTE S DIFFERENCE IN MAYOR GAYNOR'S' LIFE PHOTO
GRAPHS TAKEN JUST BEFORE AND IMMEDIATELY AFTfitt
THE SHOOTING. . ' '
tlm were active Tammany men, al
though neurly all of theni were In
good standing with the Democratic or
gauisatlon. Probers Put. at "Work. t
.- The commissioners of accounts- were
set to work probing eivery branch of
L the city government, and especially he
had tbem look Into stories of police
abuse of prisoners and terrorizing of
witnesses in cases where charge's were
bout to be brought against policemen.
Th mayor took personal command
ences since he became mayor of "early
days at the couutry schooIlMiuseJ where
he warmed his eara'at a wcmhI burning
stove in the winter and of, pitching
bay and splitting rails In the-summer'.'
After his attendance at the district
school he went for a Mine to the
Whltestown seminary, gwiug tbeuce to
St. Lout, where he taught school and
studied Uiw aud hitee- went to Boston
to coutlane bis studiesv "
The
; Kan ot Family. ,
Gnvnors have -seven children.
of the police, balancing Commissioner r
Baker aud Deputy Commissioner Btr- 1'Thls summer those of them- who are
ghor, who are on veuly bad terms. ' nnmnrrled baTe b-n living at. hi
against one another thus keeping Idm- j country ; place at 81. James. N. Y
self Informed on tendencies of tho old .where Mayor Gaynor went almost
fashioned pnllce inacidue and Its most every Friday and remained until Moo-
day, working with his hired men; on
the farm. He always was fond of anl
nmls and liked to W followed about;
his country place by one or moc dogs.
It -was while on his way ta his coun
try home that the mayor -rescued Edi
tor i Cheney, a Long- Islawf. uelghnor.
with .whom be was t-angh on a-snow
bound train near Iluutiagtoii. They
tried to walk Into lluininto;i through
the Htorm together. Mr. Cheney felt
thmngh a rrvsile and wi badly hart.
Sate
pecial.
EHiEiiied.
.'.''' : . ..
7 We can offer" you Bargains in every
thing in Fall and Winter wear "
Suits, Sweaters,
Furs, Underwear,
Hosiery, Shoes,
Blankets Comforts
Extra Bargains in Men's
High Grade
Worsted Suits
$9.75
$12.50
..Men's $12.50 to $15.00
Worsted Suits, at
Men's $15.00 to $18.00
Worsted Suits, at
Econom' prices on Men's, Boys', La
dies', Misses and Juniors' Shoes for
hard wear also street and dress shoes
Don't fail to see our stock of Fur
Neckwear, Muffs and Caps
WW
LYRIC THEATER
. ' Thomas Bruce, Manager
- Latest Motion Pictures and Illustrated Songs
Program Changes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday ,
- Matinee Wednesday and Saturday, 2:30
PRICES
lO CEINTS
bitter t-rltUv.
Trcntcndmis savings In the business
administration of the city wore effect
ed, by the mnyurfe simple ideas uX
atvounting and of holding public em
ployees responsible for definite subdi
visions of the work ol their-departments.
, . ;
. Llttlo la known of Mayor Gaynor's
youthful pfe. He was lrn nftv-nlne
yeara ago on a furtu in Oneida eoimtv.
"lu the grvat task that I uow enter j In New "York, which had been cleared.
uion I nioat earnestly ask for your by bis grundbtther and -u-hfc-li ins bt
gooi will and support Without tha ther cultivated. Thw TlDaae of Orte
upfiort ot Intelligent and unselfish kany was a tender uhvuiott of hi
wen I can do little Indeed. I shall no childhood. It iiai told jiublk audi- J C( U0'lL
The mayor covered blai with hla wer,
r-iuit unit then foncht IiIm wn thrancrli
i the storm, the worst of tho winter, anX
CONCRETE WORK r -
10f all kinds.Hf you believe in beautifying Enterprise, you
i must believe in making that beauty enduring. U Concrete is '
enduring it will render city beauty a "Concrete Reality."
ISee us for any and all kinds of Concrete Work.
MARKS BROTHERS, General Contractors.
New Lino of
Superior" Stoves'and Ranges
; See me and get my price's before buyint else
- where. I carry also a full and complete line of
. . bath tubs, basins and bowls, and a full list of
plumbing supplies. First-class plumbing at the ;
' lowest figure for which such plumbing can be
done. -:- ALL WORK GUARANTEED. -
S. K. CLARK
Ei"terprle, Oresorr
Wiien you are in need of . good printing
jctjme to this office and have it done right
I - HigH Grade Job Woik a Specialty