EN 8 THE WEATHER S Oregon CitjFair today; north S westerly winds. $ Oregon Fair today; northwest-3 S erly winds. $ SS33&SS3S8S3 The only daily newspaper be- 3 tween Portland and Salem; clr- S culates in every section of Clack- $ amas County, with a population 8 of 30,000. Are you an advertiser? $''4S WEEKLY ENTERPRISE ESTABLISHED 1560 VOL. IV No. 126. OREGON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1912. Per Week, 10 Cents N TO BE IN "SAP" LATOURETTE AND WAL LACE CAUFIELD WILL PLAY TOMORROW BOTH ARE HEROS OF MANY BATTLES Large Crowd From Oregon City Ex pected to Attend Struggle Be tween Varsity and Mult nomah Men With two Oregon City boys in the battle, and with two more who former ly lived in this city, it is expected that a large crowd from this city will attend the big football game at Port land tomorrow afternoon at Multno mah field, when the University of Ore gon eleven will meet the Multnomah Club for their annual struggle. "Sap" Latourette and Wallace Caufield, sons of Oregon City's pioneer bankers, will participate and Parsons, half back and Grout, tackle on the University eleven, both of whom formerly lived here, will be in the great conflict. "Sap", hero of a hundred hard fought gridiron battles, will play with the clubmen, against his former team mates, whose weaknesses, strong points, and characteristics, he knows like a book. Way down in his heart, the famous Oregon spirit has a great big cinch on "Sap", and while anxious to get in the game, as he has played but little since graduation, he would naturally prefer just a wee1 bit to display his remarkable football prow ess against others than his old friends. He played for four years with the Oregon eleven and won an enviable reputation as the greatest quarterback in the Northwest during his career. He was the directing gen eral in all of Oregon's big successes during the past four seasons. Young Caufield is playing his first year as a regular "center" for the university eleven, and his accurate passing has been a remarkable fea ture of the Eugene game this season. He participated in the game at Cor vallis Saturday, and his clever work while not of the spectacular order, was noticed by those who realize the responsibilities of the position. Johnny Parsons, who was the hero of the Eugene-O. A. C. duel last Sat urday, resided in Oregon City several years ago. His father, Rev. John Parsons, still has interests here, but is now an active minister at Fairfield, Alaska. Grout, Oregon's tackle, was also formerly an Oregon City boy, so all in all, the mill town will probably be well represented at the big game Thursday. The game promises to be one of the best ever played between the University and the Club men. Ore gon's remarkable strength displayed in the Albany game Saturday last, has boosted her chances of defeating Mult nomah's all-star eleven. Flushed with three victories in as- many years, the older players of the Portland aggrega tion believe they have the edge on the college lads, by about one or two touchdowns It is safe to say that if the Eugene team plays with the spirit that characterized their work last Sat urday, the clubmen will be given the surprise of the season At The Stat Special Today w 25 Yotes on auto contest with every ten cent admission. Entire change of pictures, also last chance to see Hee Haw Maud. Bring the little ones and let them see this won derful animal perform. NOTE We will have an entire change of vaudeville and pic tures for Thanksgiving Day OREGO CITY BOYS GAME --I ......... m mmmm mmmmmmmmm( Flechtrier's Orchestra t Formerly Star Orchestra Will be open for engagements after Saturday, Nov. 30th for CONCERTS, WEDDINGS, DANCES,. LODGE AND CLUB ENTERTAINMENTS, ETC. Any number of instru ments furnished. - For information, inquire of GUSTAV G. FLECHTNER or ROY BAXTER, Oregon City , Phone 271 i ...... i DR. HOMAN IS NEW CHAUTAUQUA HEAD DYE NAMED VICE-PRESIDENT AND CROSS ELECTED SECRETARY OF ASSOCIATION COLLEGES TO TAKE AN ACTIVE PART Representative Citizens From al Parts of Country are Elected Vice Presidents of As ssmbly Dr. Fletcher Homan, of Willamette University will head the Willamette Valley Chautauqua Association for the year 1913. At the annual election of officers held by the directors Tues day afternoon this choice was made known, and Hon. C. H. Dye, retiring president, was elected first vice-president. Hon H. E. Cross was unani mously chosen as secretary for the coming year. Besides the election of officers, the board of directors took the oath which the Association imposes upon them. It was voted to hold a session in 1913 but the exact dates and the selection of talent will be arranged later. H. E. Cross, C. H. Dye, and Sarah A. Ev ans were chosen as delegates from the assembly to attnd the Coast Chau taupua lEeeting to be held in Portland December 5. To extend the influence of the pio neer institution, She (following vice presidents were selected. All are rep resentative citizens from all sections of the community and have previously taken an active interest in the Chau tauqua: W. S. Hurst, Hubbard; A. M. Grilley, Portland; A. L. Clark, Ra nier; L. E. Carter, Portland; Mrs. Ida B. Barkley, Portland; Henry L. Bents, Aurora; Rev. J. Kratt, Portland; Mrs. S. Hovenden, Portland ; Dr. T. B. Ford, Oregon City; Dr. Milliken, Oregon City; Mrs. Robert H. Tate, Portland; I. A. Fanning, Newberg; Rev. Ed wards, city; Professor Gary, city; Mrs. Shirley Buck, Milwaukie; Mrs. H. Wyse Jones, McMinnville; Mrs. J. M. Poorman, VVoodburn; Professor R. R. Steele, Portland; J. F. Wilmarth, Bor ing; Rev. J. R. Landsborough, city; Mrs. E. S. Bollinger, Portland; Mrs. Emma Galloway, Salem; Rev. Henry Bates, forest Grove; Mrs. G. G. White, Mount Angel; W. H. Yoder, Hubbard; Percy T. Shelley, Sandy; Mrs. A. B. Manley, Portland ;H. Lr. Hussong, Astoria; Dr. J. E. Hall, Port land; E. S. Collins, Ostrander, Wash.; Mrs. A, King Wilson, Oswego; Rev. J. L. Jones, Parkplace; Mrs. Wayne Rob bins, Molalla; Professor Edward Sis sons, Mrs. M. J. Lee, Canby; Miss James, Sec. Y. W. C. A., Portland; Rev. Wievisick and Rev. Clack, both of Oregon City. . An effort will be made to interest more of the colleges of the Willamette Valley and the state in the great work of the Chautauqua for the com ing year. The meeting to be held in Portland December 5, is to be one of the great est of interest. Mr. Cross, who is man ager for all the Chautauquas on the coast, including the Idaho assemblies, says that representatives from the leading Lyceum Bureaus of the coun try will be at the meeting, in addition to the delegates from the fourteen Chautauquas on the coast. At this meeting the talent for the coming year will be selected, dates arranged as far as possible and other matters of importance will be discussed. A small classified ad will rent tnat vacant room. FOUR WEEKS TO CHRISTMAS vgf -f$A W Four little Santa Clauses busy as can be! One was knocked to next week and then there were three. That Is What Will Happen to Your Christmas Joy If You Don't Shop Early. I .-PERPETRATED BY WALT MeDOUGALLv ( (jnfll lflLHuUiL I NOBODY BEATS THE THEATRICAL MANAGER TO IT T0DAYJi j ! CAt.L upcentralV i I i 1 - , . : , - - V. U . f A. f " ' f ' 1-ADlES ANOGENTS, f (VOW PREStNT THE" -J ( f h 1JJ 1i 1 FIRST ESQUIMAUX BLONOES EVER SEEM 1 . r 1 r inrfyf lX l H I OM ANY STAGE. THIS QUARTETTE WIL1 Z Jl rSW. NK LjNOWSlW-ONWEBWKSOFTHE i 4 j S Wt-S f.i ft WABASH.THtlRWMESARE fe . . 2 . ' vilMt I WHl? frsi ?&4$ n r H ft Al7AKACMoo.coTTRP,e.KoosvK. $ i RAILS BEING LAID SHIPMENTS OF STEEL ARE MADE IN SEVEN MILE INSTALL MENTS DIRECTORS PUSHING WORK ON ROAD Clackamas Southern Will Provide Route for Farmers to Bring Pro uce to Market Road Built " by Independent Company The first shipment of steel rails for the Clackamas Southern Railroad ar rived in Oregon City Tuesday and the same will be laid down immediately, so as to place the first division of the road in operation between Oregon City and Beaver Creek. The rails have been provided for so that shipments will be made in seven mile installments, the total dis tance being thirty-two miles. The crossings for the Southern Pa- j cific and the two tracks of the Port-, land Railway, Light & Power Com: pany in the north end of the city, ! were made in Seattle, and will arrive m Oregon City today. The switch connecting the Clackamas Southern with the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company has been put in and is now being extended up through block Thirteen (13), so as to allow the Clackamas Southern switch room of its own for the storage of its rails as they arrive in the city. The company has enough money subscribed at Mt. Angel, Monitor and other points along the line to complete the grade and the bridges from Bea ver Creek to Mount Angel, and the only funds which the company is com pelled to raise in addition is for the laying of the steel and ballasting the track. It will require about $10,000 to lay and ballast the track between Oregon City and Beaver Creek and the com pany is asking the people of Oregon City to assist in that work. The com pany cannot use the money subscribed for grades and bridges for the laying down and . ballasting of that part of the road between Oregon City and Beaver Creek, as their subscription con tracts provide that the fundsheretofore subscribed shall be used for grades and bridges between Oregon City and Mount Angel. j The directors of the Clackamas Southern have devoted a great deal of time to this work without compen-j sation and they have accomplished a ' great deal more than the average cit- j izen ever expected. BY CLACKAMAS R.R. This is an independent road which is being built and financed by inde pendent capital, and it goes to show what can be accomplished in a com munity when an enterprise is support ed by those who will reap the greatest benefits. It is true that antagonistic compan ies have fought this road from incep tion, and in doing so they have dem onstrated that they did not want an independent company to enter any territory claimed by them. As a matter of fact the enhance ment of the value of real property (Continued on pag 2.) TEE WIL1S1? COMMERCIAL CLUB TO AID ROAD PLANS j With the object of arranging a def inite plan for road legislation, the j Oregon City Commercial Club, upon j the suggestion of B. T. McBain, pres j ident, has appointed the following j members of the club to confer with j W. A. Dimick. state senator, and F. : M Gill, Gustav Schnoerr and C. Schue bel, representatives-elect in the state , legislature: B. T. McBain, M. D. Lat j ourette and E. E. Brodie. A meeting ! will be held Wednesday evening, De j cember 2, at which all proposed road j laws will be considered. Mr. McBain said that various propositions for the improvement of roads were many and j differed widely and he thought the : Commercial Club should use its best I efforts to aid the representatives of j the county in the legislature and sen ! ate in adopting the best road meas ures. MAYOR DIMICK MARRIES COUPLE Anna J. Kennedy and Delbert Nel son of Albany were married Tuesday in Oregon City; Mayor Grant B. Dim ick officiating. NEW PICTURES AND More Tuirlceys Toniglnt at 8:15 and 9:30 P. M. The Grand TODAY TEACHERS GIVEN FINE INSTRUCTION MRS. HAYES, MISS BRENTON AND MR. CHAMBERLAIN SECOND DAY SPEAKERS GEOGRAPHY. IS INTERESTING THEME Miss Curran Declares that School Rooms Should Have More Light, Heat and Best Ventila tion The second day's meeting of the Teachers' Institute was even more in teresting than the first. Sessions were held morning, afternoon and ev ening. The morning session began with music, led by Mrs. Anna S. Hayes, who is instructor in singing in sever-: al schools in Clackamas County. Ala bama Brenton lectured upon "Draw ing of Objects", illustrating her ad dress with rapid crayon work at th3 blackboard. In the afternoon Miss Brenton lectured to the Primary Di vision of the Institute upon "Nature Study", again using the crayon. i Mamie Fulkerson of Salem and Miss Montgomery of the Eastham school, Oregon City, spoke upon "Writing" before the Primary and Intermediate Divisions respectively. Arthur H. Chamberlain introduced some progressive plans in his address upon "The Teacher of Geography", i He pointed out that formerly geogra-1 phy was the study of the earth as the home of man, but that now it is the study of man's environment. Consid ering it from this viewpoint, useful material can be gathered, not from text books alone, but from magazines, advertisements, railroad booklets, and the illustrated booklets of commercial clubs. Geography is called the "sick subject" of the curriculum, whereas it should be the most fascinating and vital and may be made so when prop erly presented. Children are likely to get distorted impressions of topo graphy, from, the ordinary text books. Excursions form one of the best means of making geography pleasant and luminous. Teachers ought fre quently to take the classes out upon these study excursions. Margaret Craig Curran, Deputy State Superintendent of Washington, spoke upon "Heat, Light and Ventila tion in- the School Room" A room that is not properly ventilated cannot be properly heated for the reason that if a good circulation is not going on dead air will accumulate in certain parts of the room. Good work can not be expected if pupils who are too warm, too cold or starved for fresh air. The real value of the school de pends largely upon these three items, heat, light and ventilation. Mamie Fulkerson spoke before the Intermediate Division upon "Lan guage". Her wide 'and successful ex perience enable her to present good material. Miss Lena Ulen of Clalrmont school sang a number of solos in a delightful -manner and with rare exvression. Mr. Chamberlain closed the day with an address upon "The Meaning (Continued on page 2) 1 GILL FOR GRANGE uimjumv urAPiinr REPRESENTATIVE-ELECT TELLS WIRES HE WANTS PEOPLETO HELP HIM ESTACADA MAN SHOWS SINCERITY Eby Proves Self Greatest Dip lomat in Oregon City's Com mercial Organiza tion F. M. Gill, of Estacada, made an address at the luncheon of the Live Wires Tuesday which had the right Oregon City and Clackamas County ring. Mr. Gill Is a schoolteacher first and a statesman next and the Live "X7lTftO Ol-fS Jl tllrt AV.fT.1nv. vV.nv I I cue yJL yjyiixiuil LUctL lie 1 a competent man no matter which vo cation he is following. i i intend to worn tor the interests of the cities as well as the country districts", was the first sentence ut tered by the speaker, who is a guest of Gustav Schnoerr, also a representative-elect in the Oregon Legislature. "I intend to do my best at Salem for M. Gill, Representative-Elect, who will work for interests of Oregon City. the betterment of all interests. I am especially interested in road legisla tion and have given it considerable study. I favor the so-called Grange bills which provide for roads leading ! from the farms to the market places. i If these roads are made, the trunk lines will be built as a matter of course. I know the people of the cit ies are willing to cooperate with the rural districts in providing a reason able system". Mr Gill explained that, he was a representative of Hood River and Wasco Counties at the last session of ; the legislature and that his eeatest j disadvantage was his constituents would not aid him by telling him the legislation desired, j "This hampered me considerably", I continued the speaker, "as you may f readily understand. I hope the peo ple of Clackamas County will make all the suggestions they may possibly have, . and I assure them that I will give them full consideration and do my best for them. I must know what the people of Clackamas County want before I ask for it. I have a bill in preparation amending the registration law. It provides that a registration in a precinct holds so long as the per-" son registering lives in that precinct. Under the present law a person has to register every two years even though he does no change his residence. I am also opposed to the law providing for the swearing in of voters at the polls." Mr. Gill said that he would try to have an amendment to the school law passeti regarding the qualifications of the state text book commissioners. He declared that under the present system the commissioners have no qualifications and are appointed be cause they chance to be good friends of the political party in power. He (Continued oa page 3) Will Be Closed Thanksgiving Day Open This Evening BANNON & CO. IIS. NEWTON IS MAYOR CANDIDATE OREGON CITY WOMAN WILL FILE PETITIONS WITH RECORDER . EARLY TODAY JONES IS ONLY MAN TO ENTER RACE M . D. Latourette Has Clear Field for City Treasurer Meyer, Horton ,and Metzner Council Can- ' dates Oregon City, historic capital of the greatest state, in the northwest, home of the famous "Father of Oregon" Dr. John McLoughlin has a new dis tinction thrust upon it. This beauti ful city by the Falls of the Willamette, famed in history and story, and mora famed in commercial records, is the first city in Oregon to have a woman candidate for mayor. She is Mrs. Kate L.. Newton, long a resident of Oregon City, and a fighter for the rights of all such as only women can be. Mrs. Newton has had her peti tions circulated. They have been sign ed by numerous citizens. She expects to be elected. And more than that, she says when she finds herself pre siding over the council, she will find herself acing in ESe interest of all the people. Mrs. Newton is perfectly sin cere in this political business and she has strong backing. ODnoseri to Mrs NTpwtnn ia T.i Jones, than whom there is no finer or no better male citizen anywhere. -He has served the city well in the bUls of the state legislature, and, if Mrs. Newton does not defeat him, will serve the city well as mayor. Mr. Jones is capable, affable, accommodat ing. The mayor of Oregon City is necessarily accommodating, for his daily, weekly, monthly, yearly sti-t pend, if placed anywhere on the led ger is placed on the left side. Mr. Jones also expects to be elected, but with all his political experience to say nothing of his political acumen, he realizes he has a race before him. The Oregon City suffragettes, while not militant, are mobolizing, contra dictory as the term may seem. The time for filing petitions closes at noon today, and after that no mat ter what political ambition an Oregon Cityite may have he will have, to wait about a year before offering himself as a victim to the electorate. There are other candidates besides Mr. Jones and Mrs Newton. Morti mer D. Latourette, scion of a histor ic banking family, of course is the onliy candidate for city treasurer. Mr. Latourette has served the city so well, ana been, so inadequately re warded for his most efficient service, that no other man or woman for purely selfish reasons would dare op pose him. George Randall, who owns a big slice of Oregon City real estate, and two or three ranches in the county near the city and Fred Metzner, who next to the owners, knows about all that is going on at the Oregon City Manufacturing Company, are candi dates for councilmen in the first ward. - W. A. Long, a firefighter of renown, and Joseph D. Renner are candidates for councilman in the . second ward for the long term, and Del Hart and L. P. Horton, present councilman, are candidates for the unexpired term of F. A. Burk. F. J. Meyer seeks reelection in Ward 3. Mr. Meyer is president of the present council and is regarded as one of the leaders. -.He is opposed by W. C. Greaves and Frank Betzold. MRS. WARNER WINS JELLY PRIZE AT SHOW Mrs. Robert Warner, of this city, won the first prize for fancy jellies at the Portland Land Show. Mrs. Wnrnpr whn livps flt K09 Pent.er Street, has made a study of jellies, and has won first prize at the county and state fairs for three years. The booth where Mrs. Warner had her exhibit was one of the most attractive at the Land Show. All Day Tomorrow