1 MORNING ENTERPRISE, SATURDAY,APRIL 19, 1913 AURORA TELEPHONE ome Uueen Mange Brighten Up The City-Get Ready For Booster Day WORK IS STARTED We Give Votes V. Harris, Quality Grocerer The Star Theatre, Moving Pictures, Vaudeville Help Os Clean Up The Brighten Up campaign starts today, and we want to help any movement to make Oregon City, a city beautiful. Clean up the back yards, tear down the old shacksand use some paint here and there. We Give Votes Huntley Bros. Co., The Rexall Store The Morning Enterprise, All the News, All the Time Today righten Up Week Starts "Brighten up" is the cry of the hour. -Brighten up the house, the floors, the walls, the whole house. Start the good work in your own house, Brighten Up inside and outside, make your home cheery and comfortable. 1000 Bonus Votes With Every 50c. Purchase in Our Paint Store All Brighten Up week we'll have a big special on every article 'in our paint store. Bonus votes with every purchase. This sale includes every gallon of House, Barn and Buggy Paint, Shingle Stain, Varnish, Enamel, Alabas tine, Dekorato, Castor Machine, Separator, Red Engine and Capital Cylin der Oils. No bonus votes on -bulk Linseed or White Lead. HUNTLEY BROS! CO. The R.eall Store ' ' A Snap-5 Acres All in high state of cultivation, lays level, 60 bearing fruit trees, all lays high and sightly; 3 miles from Oregon City near Clackamas Southern. This must be sold in one week; price $875 biggest snap in the country worth $1500. See M. A. ELLIOTT at 7th and -Main intention Good. "Can be play poker?" "No." "Then what is be doing in that crowd so much of the time?" "Just trying to." LOCAL BRIEFS Tualatin Tent, Knights of the Mac cabees, has made speedy payment of the death claim of the late William "Wheeler, who died last month. E. S. Follansbee, record keeper of Tualatin Tent, received yesterday a ehck for $1009 in favor of Mrs. Alice Wheeler, mother of the deceased. Th? time that had elapsed since the papers were prepared was less than three weeks. Mrs. Viola Godfrey and Mrs. R. C. Ganong walked to New Era Thursday. They said that although the weather was just a little bit warm, neverthe less the trip was enjoyable. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fischer, of Sioux City, Iowa, were Oregon City visitors during the past week. They are making an extended trip over the West and may decide to make there home here. Now is the time . to disinfect your poultry house and yard with Conkey's Nox-i-cide. It prevents and insures a healthy hatch. Come in and get a can now. Guaranteed by Oregon Com mission Co. . M. Trullinger, of Molalla, was a vis itor to the county seat Friday. He is a prominent Clackamas county farmer. Henry Witt, of Portland, Ore., was an Oregon City visitor on Wednesday. . C. D. Patch was in Oregon City the first part of the week attending to legal business. His home is in Port land. , The Estacada Progress says "At torney Devore has been making" reg ular business trips to Oregon City the past week." . Mir. and Mrs. S. D. Porter, of Salem, were in this city for several days the first part of the week attending to legal business. R. W. Hart is in Oregon City for several days, while he is on a trip throughout the Northwest. His home is in Santa Ana, California. Fred P. Osborne, of Scranton, Pa., is a visitor at the Electric Hotel for a few days. ... MJClien, of Portland, was . busi ness visitor to the Fall City Thursday and Friday. Clair Cross, of Roseburg, has been in Oregon City for several days on a business trip. T. B. McDevitt, Jr., a Portland at torney, was in Oregon City Friday on legal business. Mrs. E. Lamkins, of Hubbard, was in this city the first part of the week visiting friends." Mrs. Charles Kent, of Elliott Prairie, is in the falls city for a few days' vis iting' friends. H. E. Day, of Portland, has been in this city for several days and has now returned to his home. H. O. Carlson, of Molalla, was in this city Thursday and Friday trans acting busines affairs. J. P. Belmont, of Seattle, is in Clackamas county metropolis for a few days attending to business. Ben Brooks, a Portland business man, was in this city during the past week attending to business affairs. W. F. Kirk, 0f Portland, was in Ore gon City Friday. F. B. Peacock, of Portland, was an Oregon City visitor Friday. Charles D. Haynes, of Clarks, was in the county seat Thursday. A. Ml Hicks, of Wasco, has been in town Thursday visiting friends. Mrs. R. W. Brown, of Portland, was in this city Thursday visiting friends. Dr. van Brakle, Osteopath, Mason ic Building, phone Main 399. . AWARDS ARE SET FOR BOOSTER DAY AWARDS Prizes to be awarded at the annual stock show and for the features of the Booster Day parades have been deter mined, and are as follows: DIVISION A. Best driving team with carriage First $10.00 Second 5.00 Best single driving horse First $ 5.00 Second 3.00 Best draft team of any kind First $10.00 Second 5.00 Best farm team driven to wagon . First $10.00 Second 5,00 Best saddle horse with rider First $5.00 riding bridle, given by Stone's harness shop, Oregon City. Second 2.30 Best Shetland Pony driven to rig First .....$ 2.50 DIVISION B. Best Draft Stallion First $.7.j0 Second 5.00 Best Draft Mare First $ o.OO Second 2.50 Fillies First $ 5.00 Second 2.50 Best Coach Stallion First '. :.$ 5.C0 Second . : ... 2.50 j Standard bred Stallion, 2 years old or over First $ 5.00 Second 2.50 Standard bred (Mare First $ 5.00 Second 2.50 Standard bred Fillies First $ 5.00 Second 2.50 Grand Champion Stallion Any age Ribbon Grand Champion Mare or Filly Any age Ribbon Get of one Sire and 4 Colts, either Sex 1 year old or over, shown with Sire $ 7.50 DIVISION C. Best bull, 2 years old or over.$ 5.00 Best bull, 1 year and under 2 2.59 Best bull, under one year... 2.50 Best cow, 2 years old or over..l Eureka Butter print by Vermont Farm Machine Co.7 Portland, Ore. Best heifer under 21 set of Silver Steel Hand Saws, given by E. C. Atkins Co., Portland, Oregon. Best herd of cattle, registered Jer sey bull, worth $150, given by W. A. Shewman, Oregon City, Ore Best herd of cattle not registered Jersey bull, worth $100, given by W. H. Turner by H. Schneider, Manager. Guernsey, Class B Best bull, 2 years old or over.$ 5.00 Best bull, under 2 years 2.50 Best cow or heifer any age.. 2.50 Holstein, Class C Best bull, 2 years old or over.$ 5.0 D Best bull, under 2 years 2.50 Best cow," 2 years old or over 5.00 Best heifer under 2 years... 2.50 Grand display of cows and one bull any breed, must be registered in the above classes and at least one must be winner in said classes 1 Hurst potato and garden truck Sprayer with orchard attach ments given by the Farmers Im plement Co., Portland, Oregon. Registered cows any breed, not men tioned in the above classes may be shown and shall receive a prize or "honorable mention. SATURDAY, APRIL 26th. DIVISION D. Parade of school children Highest percentage of enrollment and best drilled -City ,Schoos First $10.00 Second 5.00 Suburban Schools First $10.00 Second 5.00 Country Schools First $10.00 Second 5.00 Best Fraternal Organization . . First . $10.00 Second 5.00 Most unique and comical Fraternal or ganization First ; ...$30.09 Second 10.00 Best Decorated Float First $10.09 Second 5.00 The most unique and comical wagon or rig of any kind Prize ....$5.00 be The Best Float, representing Trades man or' Mercantile House Prize $5.00 Dairy cows Milk Test, one-day test First prize 6 Louden cow" Stanch ions, given by the Rpyer Imple ment Co.; 208 Front St., Portland, Oregon, and one 30 pound milk scale, given by Monroe & Criseil, 145 Front St., Portland, Oregon. Second Prize 240 pound union scale, given by Fairbanks Morse & Co., 1st & Stark' Sts., Portland, Oregon, and a 4-bottle Fascil . Milk and Cream Tester, by Co lumbia Dairy Supply Co., 68 Front St., Portland, Oregon. Third Prize No. 7 Freeman feed cutter, given by Parlin & Oren- dortf Co., E. Water & Belmont Sts., Portland, Oregon. Fourth Prize One 4-bottle Milk and Cream Tester by Monroe & Cris eil, 145 Front St., Portland, Ore. The usual conditions and rules used by County or State Fairs shall used in the Dairy cow milk test. All cows must on the grounds and milked in the presence of the Super intendent at 6 o'clock P. Mi, on the day before the opening of the test The test is for one day. All entries must be made to the manager on before April the 20th. HOGS. Poland Chinas Boar, 2 years old or over $3.00 Boar, 1 year and under two.. 3.00 Boar, under one year 3.00 Sow, under two years 3.00 Sow, under 1 year , ." 3.00 Boar and 3 sows, under one. year, bred by exhibitor One boar (Po land China) from the Dimick Stock Farm, given by the Western Stock Journal. Berkshire . . -. Boar, 2 years old or over $3.00 Boar, 1 year and under two.. 3.00 Boar, under one year 3.00 Sow, under two years 3.00 Sow, under 1 year 8.00 Boar and 3 sows, under one year, bred by exhibitor 5.00 Sheep Best Lincoln Ram... $3.00 Best Lincoln Ewe 3.00 Best Cotswold Ram 3.03 Best Cotswold Ewe 3.00 Best 3 goats, any breed $10.00 plush robe given by Studebaker Bros. Co., Portland. List of contributors to the Clacka mas County Stock Show and Boost t day. or Stockholders of the Aurora Miutual Telephone company met Thursday and adopted by-laws for their organ ization. Officers were also elected to serve until the next annual meeting. The following directors were chosen: F. E. Yergen, L. P. Swan, G. A. Ehlen, A. J..Mishler, Charles Becks Jr., George X. Gooding and J. P. Feller. The board immediately organized and elected the following officers: Pres ident, G. A. Ehlen; vice-president, G. X. Gooding; secretary, A. J. MishlerjJ treasurer, Cnarlas Becke Jr. Both stockholders and directors were a unit in favor of immediate ac tion in starting the work of construc tion. The company is capitalized at $5000 in shares of $25 each. It will probably have free switching priv ileges with the connecting mutual and other lines, and long distance connec tions to Portland and other cities over the northwest. In the Spring time you clean House, U19 stomach bowels need cleaning just as badly after the long indoor life of Winter, heavy foods, lack of vegetables and fruits Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will clean and purify. 35c, Tea or Tablets. Jones Drug Company. NEW YORK Rhinelander building home of the Hearst newspapers in New York, was destroyed by a fire that threatened the downtown news paper district Friday morning. No employees were jpjured, but the loss to the plan will run into the hundreds of thousands. BASEBALL GAMES HELD UP--RAIN Rain Friday afternoon put a quietus on baseball playing in the Northwest to a considerable extent. There was no Coast League game in Portland, but to make up for that the Portland Colts won a game from Spokane in the Inland Empire city. The score in this game was 4 to 3, in favor of Portland, but the deciding run was not made until the 12th inning. N Coast League games' in the south resulted as follows: At Venice, Sac ramento 0, Venice 7; at San Fran cisco, Oakland 6, San Francisco o. The result of today's games does not alter the standing of the clubs as far as relative postions goes. ODD FELLOWS CELERATE The ninety-fourth anniversary of the founding of the Odd Fellows will be celebrated at Aurora on April 26 by the Aurora lodge. The chief speaker will be Judge Grant B. Dimick, of Oregon City. For the Rebeckahs Mrs. Ora B. Casper or Mrs. Galloway will deliver the aoddress. Both the lodges in Aurora are in a particularly flourishing condition. BIBLE CLASS POPULAR Rev. T. B. Ford, pastor of the First Methodist church, has been conduct ing a series of Bible meetings in the church at Elyville, which have proved popular .and successful. The meetings have been conducted every evening of the past week, and have been well at tended. There wil be no meeting Sat urday evening, but there will be one at 2:30 Sunday afternoon. Let Us Show You. Tf vnn aw a sufferer of Diles or hemmoroids in any form, come to nnr stnre nnd let us show you Meri- tol Pile Remedy. It is one of the best preparations we have ever handled and. is sold on a positive guarantee. Jones Drug do. "First Aid to the Perplexed." The "first aid to be perplex ed" in the administration of the household should be the ad vertising columns of THE EN TERPRISE. You were looking at the tablecloth today and " that brought up the question of table linens. This ought to be a good time to buy tablecloths and napkins. Watch the announcements of the reliable stores that adver tise in THE ENTERPRISE. And, speaking about table linens, weren't you thinking of a new rug for the dining room, new curtains, another couch cover? Perhaps something was paid about replenishing the cut glass supply or a new china cabinet or a buffet. And what about a new refrig erator this season? A fine up-to-date sanitary refrigerator is not in the luxury class any more; it is a necessity. Take your housekeeping prob lems to the advertising columns of THE ENTERPRISE. It is the business of the stores repre sented there to help you. FAIR WORK FOR CHILDREN Last year, as nearly as can be esti mated, about 60,000 children engaged in making or raising something to ex hibit and for competition in the prizes offered by the various garden, indus trial, school, county and state fairs. It is hoped and believed that this j ear the number of children who will interest themselves in preparing for the fairs to be held in the fall, will reach at least 125,000. One of the main objects of these contests, is to get the boys and girls interested in something, and it is easier to interest them in something practical, something in which their work will show than it is to keep them interested by merely furnishing amusements for them. "The busy man is the happy man" is no less true of the child, and the benefit in char acter building will be untold. The wide reaching influence of this work among the children has already been felt in one community, where six families as a direct result of the Low priced and dependable. Fully reinforced and strongly erect ed nothing on the market to cpmpare with it at the price. Best cold rolled polished sheet steel; riveted with cone head rivets, reinforced at every part; main top covers and centers of selected pig iron; covers have Boston rim rings, preventing cracking; fire box is sectional and heavy to withstand all rea sonable uses, duplex grates burn wood or coal; high closet with balance door, nickel plate drop stand, nickel brackets, edges, panel, ' draft check, etc.; reser "oir of heavy cast i ron, tank en ameled white, oven door nickel trimmed and provided with bal ance spring; asbestos lined throughout, oven braced with heavy guage angle irons: heavy cast iron base; firebox has punch feed. Above prices are cash only; but we will take your old stove as part payment. Oven 16x186 lids... $26-50 Oven 14x18 6 lids cast reservoir, price $27'50 MAIN STREET Oregon City - Oregon work of the children in these families getting up agricultural exhibits for the school fars, have moved to coun try places. That wonder worker, na ture, has from the little than can be raised on city lots, manifested her self to these city dwellers, in all her charm, and has lured these families back to the soil. The children have learned a lesson In industry, and the rewards for mer itorious exhibits were sufficiently val uable to make their effort worth while. The rules for entering these con tests are few and simple, but the most important from every standpoint, is that the children must do the work themselves. The ground may be plowed and harrowed for the children but after that preliminary work the children must do it ali themselves. Planting, cultivating, harvesting must all be done by the chiluren. In raising poultry ther- child does not have to own the parent flock, but must set the eggs and feed and care for the chickens they exhibit. Fine eggs from blooded stock have been distributed among the children, and at the fairs this year some fine poultry will be exhibited by the chil dren. The children should do all the work themselves, for they will have a pride in their exhibits if they are honestly mad, tat they could not know if the parents did the work, and allowed the children to exhibit the products as their on. To instil into a child's mind the lesson of honesty and fair dealing is as necessary as to teach him industry. "To thy self be true, and it follows as the day follows night that to no other man canst thou be' false." Character building is the most important part of a child's life, and much good to his whole career ma result from these industrial contests, for the habits of industry, economy, system, honesty and self-reliance which all go to the making of a good citizen, may be learned through work in these lines. There will be many valuable prizes for the children at the State Fair again this year, and the school con tests will be of high educational value to the exhibitors. Parents should en courage the children to begin early to get ready for thees fairs, it will keep the children busy and happy. OPPORTUNITIES. . Oregon, by the United States census of 1910, had a population of 672,705, this has been augmented in the two years by at least an incoming settle ment of 100,000 people. Of this num ber. Portland in 1910, 'by census fig ures, claimed 207,214 souls, increased to 257,490 in 1912 by a conservative directory estimate. Don't you want to come to Clackamas County, next door neighbor to the city of Portland, and help feed this big city. Figures show how disproportionate has been the in flux to the city. Does it mean any thing to you? More than 1-4 of the population of one of the biggest states in the Union settled in one city of the state. The people of Portland want your poultry, your dairy products, your small fruits, your vegetables and fruits, and there is no place where they can be grown more cheaply than in- Clackamas County. No place where transportation can be affected more cheaply and efficiently than from Clackamas County, for you can sup-' ply your market direct. ' Don't you see your opportunity? Produce the best, and get the best returns, and there is no place in the country where you can do this any better than right here in Clackamas County. UNLIKE OREGON. The Eastern states have been swept by floods and winds for many years, but it has remained for 1913 to bring to the East a calamity which has broken all previous records for sever- The horrors of floods have been in tensified by blizzards, and snow and ice have added untold suffering to un told suffering. Tornadoes of unusual violence have ravaged the Southern and Middle West states, and lives have been sacrificed, and nronertv has been devastated to an extent which has horrified the whole world. Th wholesale destruction of lives I and of property during Easter week I is unprecedented, and the rise of the j Ohio and Mississippi rivers to record j breaking stages will probably add to the loss of life, will undoubtedly add j to loss of. property. i Torrential rams of 1-2 inch an hour i which lasted for a week are held to j account for the destroying floods i which wrought disaster to two whole ' states, leaving hardly one city un ! scathed,' and making havoc in parts j of many other states. The annual rain jfall of the Willamette Valley of 44 j inches was exceeded- in less than a i week, and the rivers swollen with the ! usual winter rains could not carry off the excess of water, and sad his tory has been made. - During the same week in one day an unprecsdentedly heavy rain occur red in this county, when in 24 hours .9 of an inch fell. The jesting saying that Oregon rains are not wet rains has its origin in the fact that the rains never come in heavy and drenching down pours. One can be out for hours in Valley rain and not get wet. Hence "Oregon rains are not wet rains." Extreme high winds do not prevail inthe Valley. The clouds never as sume the frightful black and heavy blue of the wind and storm clouds which strike such terror to the heart, and the frightful disasters of our sis ter states are not feared here. The sense OI security iruui meac teniujc visitors, and from lightning, which ie enjoyed here, can only be appreciated by those who have known the horrid fear whoch possesses one who has lived through even a moderate East ern storm. We extend a deep sympathy to those who have suffered in the storms and floods and to. those also who live in fear that they may be the next to receive a visition; We also extend an invitation to come to Clack amas County where torrential rains are never known, where the dread tor nado and cyclone have never blown their terrible breath, and where light nings do not make summer a time to be dreaded. Our winter rains come gently and the average rainfall is sufficient to obviate the necessity of irrigation. Our winters are not extremely cold, nor our summers intensely hot. tn fact the elements are moderate in all ways, and in this valley years ago called the garden spot of the world one may find surcease from the buffet tings of storms, and feel safe to go about one's business without the hid eous fear of wind and rain and light ning and tempest , ciackamas County offers a place of refuge, a place where life may be be gun again with a certain knowledge that nature has a kindlier manner than she ' shows to other sections. Boost your city by Dootlns tout daily paper. The Enterprise should be in every home. ROME The condition of Pope Pius X. seems to be steadily improving, and early Saturday moring his physi-" cians were quite sanguine of his ulti mate recovery. His fever has gone, and unless pneumonia sets in he is said to be out of danger. "The faith of the West in its own future derives its inspiration from that which has been achieved and is now being accomplished.''