Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, August 20, 1913, Image 3

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OUKOON CITY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1913.
Information.
p , . - - .
Martba Dat's my fiance. He's In
HA minin huainpaa
Mrs. Jones What kind of minin'.
Martha Why, calclminln'. Washing
ton Star.
. LOCALJBRIEPS
Miss Edith Alldredge is ill at her
home with typhoid lever.
Misses Daisey and Desmond Cole, of
Grants Pass, who have bsen spending
their vacation in th,e Nehalem, River
Valley, are in Oregon City as the
guests of their sister, Mrs. George V.
Ely, Miss Daisy will return home next
weak to take up her school work.
Mirs. S. M. Ramsby, who was'' taken
to the Oregon City hospital Monday,
Is-ill with typhoid fever.
Mrs. John A. DeMaui, of Stafford,
has gone to Warrenton, Oregon,
where she will spend two weeks vis
iting with relatives.
L. F. Parker, a prominent resident
of Butte, Mont., was in this city for
a short time on business Tuesday.
Dr. Lacian O. Graves, of Denver,
passed through this city Tuesday on
his way to San Francisco. He is mak
ing a tour of the Pacific coast.
A. Sail, a stock raiser of Salem,
was a visitor on business Tuesday.
Miss Rena May of this city left
Monday morning for Springfield, Ore
gon, where she will spend two weeks
visiting with her brother, Lawrence.
Clarence L. Eaton, an attorney, of
this city, left Tuesday on a business
trip to Southern Oregon, and will re
turn the lpst of the week.
John Ward, a well known resident
of Camas, Wn., was a business visit
or Tuesday.
Dave Williams has gone to Bay
Ocean, where he will join his family
and spend a few weeks of his vaca
tion there.
Fred Barber, a business man of
Camas, was a county seat visitor
Tuesday.
W. C. Marquam, of Canby, was a
visitor on business in town Tuesday.
W. S. Bain, an attorney of Camas,
was in the county seat one legal busi
ness Tuesday.
H. C. O'Neil, a business man of Sa
lem, was a visitor h,ere Tuesday.
H. Walton, a business man of Spo
kane, was a visitor in this city Tues
day. Kenneth Forrest, of Falls City, was
in the county seat visiting with
friends over Sunday and Monday.
- C. I. Stafford, a merchant of this
city left Sunday evening on a busi
ness trip to New York. He will spend
about a month visiting with relatives
in New York state.
. J. F. Wilmarth of LaMonta, Oregon,
made a business trip here Tuesday.
Virion, Hopkins, a resident of Fal's
City, made a business trip to this city
Tuesday.
THE AUTUMN GIRL
Brocaded Suits Never
Better Liked Than Now.
IN HUNTER S GREEN BROCADS.
At the end of the season one's tailor
ed suit is apt to look a bit the worse
for weir. and the woman who is up
.to the minute iu smartness is buying a
new costume for the ea.ly autumn
days.
She could not make a more modish
selection than to purchase a suit like
the one pictured of hunter's green
brocaded cloth.
The deep cuffs and collar are fash
ionable features of this desirable cos
tume. A Wall street tinancler was taimng
about music. "1 like nil music," he
said, "except such native and special
sorts as the tomtom, the bagpipes or
the India bufaa give off. Did you ever
notice how a piper prances up and
down as he pipes? He never sits, be
never stands still, but np and down,
round and round, to and fro, be struts
continually. A little boy, listening to
the weird Bkirrof tbe bagpipes of a
street performer, once said to bis fa
ther, 'Father, why does the piper keep
on the move all tbe time he plays?'
'1 can't say, my boy.' the father an
swered, 'unless it is to prevent any
one getting the range with a cobble
stone.' " -. -
l , ' l V, -;4
ft-
if ,
KEEP YOUR EYE
ON THE PITCHER
Knfielders Know Where to Play
as Ball Is Hurled.
LIGHT ON' "INSIDE WORK."
It Takes Time to Master Plays That
Often Mean Winning of Ball Games.
Watch For Catcher's Signals Evers
Is an Expert:
"Why don't those men on the infield
move around more?" is a question
often asked at a baseball game, mostly
by people who are not regular patrons
at the parks, when they happen to
take their eyes off the pitcher, catcher
or batter to look at the meu protecting
the inner defense. What they see iu
this glance is a quartet of athletes,
hands on their knees and eyes stead
fastly leveled at the man at tbe plate.
This iTttitude causes the fans to ask
that question. It is the attitude the in
fielders generally are in when tbe
pitcher takes his position to pitch.
What the four men do when the twirl
er is in the act of delivering the ball
the enthusiasts seldom notice, for they
take their eyes off tbe fielders and
focus them on the hurler or hitter.
The infielders move around, probably
not as much as the men occupying
the outer garden, which may be tbe
reason why the fans sitting in the
stands do not observe it. When the
catcher squats to give his signal to
the hurler for a fast ball or curve each
man on the infield watches and knows
what is to be thrown. If tbe back
stop has to hide his signal in such a
way that the third baseman or short
stop cannot see they are informed
through a code by the second baseman
or first baseman. ' It is necessary that
each man know so be can play accord
ingly. The way they shift also depends
upon the batter. They may take a
step or two to tbe right or left as 'soon
as he sets himself for the dinger's of
ferings. They may even move farther
than that. Often an infielder will
shift from five to ten feet just because
a certain player swats the ball through
a certain section of the infield.- Then
when the ball is thrown the players
will start to the right or left, accord
ing to whether the ball is thrown is a
fast one or a curve.
Failure to observe this system close
ly has lost many a game and has cost
clubs many runs. Manager Evers of
the Chicago Cubs follows this method
probably closer than any other man in
the game today.
If the Cubs' leader 1s watched closely
it will be found that he starts toward
first base when a ball is thrown to the
outside of the plate by a right handed
pitcher and toward second when the
bail is over the center or on the inside.
This enables him to make a quick start
and also enables him to field batted
balls that he probably would not come
near getting if he did not obtain this
one or two step advantage.
WHEAT CRACK OUTFIELDER:
Bill Dahlen Says He Wouldn't Trade
Him For Any Other Man.
Manager Bill Dahlen of the Brooklyn
team declares that Zach Wheat is the
most valuable outfielder in the Na
tional league. "There isn't anything
Photo by American Press Association.
ZACH WHEAT. BROOKLYN'S STAR OUT,
K1ELDEK.
be cannot do. and do it well, too," said
Dahlen recently. " wouldn't trade
him for any other outfielder in the
parent organization Wheat can al
most tell just what direction to go to
get under tbe ball as soon as it is bit.
He covers as much if not more ground
than any otfcer outer gardener in the
league, and be possesses a wonderful
throwing arm. "
"As a base runner he is one of the
best in the game. Although he is not
hitting as hard as he did last year or
the one before, be is hitting when bits
mean runs. No. sir. I would not part
with him for any other outfielder, and
that's saying some." .
in Eigypi a targe proportion or tne
barbers are state functionaries. Ac
cording to ifti edict issued by Ibrahim
Pasha in 1848. every village barber
was ordered when death occurred in
his district to make a careful examina
tion of the corpse and report to the au
thorities any death occurring through
epidemic, disease or foul play. Severe
penalties were imposed for any neg
lect of this duty, and a fee of 5 cents
was paid for each death registered.
Some years ago the system of payment
by fees was abolislied, and each village
barber now draws from the govern
ment a fixed salary for bis services.
Exchange. ,
mS
Joseph E. Willard
Minister to
JOSEPH E. WILLARD is the new minister to Spain. He'll very likely be
made an ambassador shortly, for a bill was introduced in congress to
raise the Madrid station to an embassy. Mr "Willard, like so many
others of President Wilson's appointees,' is a southerner. His hbme is
in Richmond, Va., where he is a lawyer of note He has served his state in
official capacity and was a stanch supporter of the president Mr. Willard
planned to take up his duties abroad at once.
SNARES i'N ENGLISH.
Puzzles For Foreigners Who Arc
Learning the Language.
It is hard for the person to whom
English is his native tongue to realize
what a struggle the foreigner has to
understand some of the peculiarities
of our spelling and pronunciation. "One
foreigner gives the following descrip
tion of his first lesson in an English
class. . -
We have been given a book to learn
the letters. I arrive at the class, hav
ing learned them perfectly.
. Soon, in the course of the lesson, we
have the word 1-o-w. "Love," I pro
nounce it, thinking the w has tbe
sound of v.
"No; it is pronounced 'lo.' " says the
teacher.
"Then why is the w there?" I in
quire, mystified.
"It is there because that is the way
the word is spelled," responds the
teacher, "but it is silent. Never mind
why: it is sufficient to know that it is
there."
Befoce long we corap to n-o-w.
"Pronounce It" says the teacher.
"No." I reply.
"Why will you not?" she asks me.
It is some time before she under
stands that I am trying to pronounce
the word when I say "No." Then she
declares that, although 1-o-w is lo, n-o-w
is now.
"If you want to make it no," she ex
plains kindly, "you put k before it" .
Yon may believe I am bewildered.
However, I memorize that n-o-v is
now. The next word is s-n-o-w. I
pronounce it like now with an s be-,
fore it The teacher laughs. The w is
again become silent, apparently for no
reason, and the word is called sno.
But that is not all. Later ! find that
if yon drop the n from snow you can
pronounce it whichever way you like.
Youth's Companion.
50,000 Large Bottles
Swissco Hair Remedy
Given Tway Free
We Want Every Man and Woman in Oregon City to Have
a Large Trial FREE Bottle of Swissco
Hair Remedy , 7
Swissco Grows New Hair, Removes Dandruff, Brings Back Natural Col
or to the Hair and Stops all Hair and Scalp Troubles
It will not cost you anything to
prove it and be absolutely satisfied
and for all that Swissco is the most
wonderful treatment that you hava
ever used or heard of.
If you suffer from falling hair, thin
hair, bald spots, brittls hair, faded
hair, hair ruined by bleaching, coarse
-"" and unruly hair, dandruff, itchings,
sore scalp, pimples, on scalp, simply
fill out free coupon herewith and gel
a free bottle at once by taking it to
any drug store named in tha coupon."
No questions will be asked, simply
hand the coupon to the clerk and you
will get a bottle absolutely free.
Full sized bottles of Swissco are for
sale at all drug and department stores
- at 50 cents and $1.00 per bottle. Jones
Drug Co.
Is New
Alfonso's Realm
LONDON'S QUEER MARKET.
All Its Wares Are Strewn Upon the
Cobbled Pavements.
There are many queer markets scat
tered over the face of the globe, but
London, among its many other unique
features, is the proud possessor of
what is perhaps the strangest and most
extraordinary of them all.
At the Caledonia market, Islington,
whence the great metropolis draws a
large proportion of its meat supply, the
cobbled pavements, with their count
less rows of white fenced pens, are
usually given up to the display of fat
sto 3k but Kvidays "a change comes
o'er tbe spirit of the dream." The
colibii'd pavements are there, the white
pens still break up tbe wide expanse,
but uo cattle or sheep are to be seen.
On that day the great market is giv
en over to a throng of miscellaneous
traders, whose wares provide the most
amazing contrasts imaginable. There
is nothing in the whole gamut of hu
man devices and needs which one may
not come across displayed in some odd
collection set forth on the cobblestones.
The traders use few counters or stalls.
Each of them, whether he has a stock
worth three or four hundred pounds or
a few rusty old bolts and spindles
which one might reasonably expect to
purchase for a shilling or two, dumps
his wares on the pavement of the mar
ket Moreover, at this remarkable
place there are markets within mar
kets, each taking its regular turn and
place during the day and then packing
up and vanishing. The market was
opened by Prince Albert, Queen Victo
ria's consort, about sixty years ago,
Wide World Magazine.
Wager of Battle.
In 1817 one Richard Thornton, called
to the bar of tbe king's bench charged
with the murder of Mary Askford, in
nlieu court threw down his &nva otirt
was a pretty to oo. wager or Darxie,
it was supposed, bad died a natural
death In the dark ages, but Lord El
len Iwroiigb after much consultation of
precedent beld that It was still the
lawof England and ordered a field to
le prepared. Thornton's accuser there-
uku declining combat tbe prisoner
was discharged. Next year parliament
passed au act abolishing this privilege
of appeal to tbe strong right arm.
Conceited.
"So you broke your engagement with
him."
"Yes." . .
"What for?"
"He's a couceited thing. I simply
couldn't stand him."
"I never beard him brag. : What
makes youthink bira conceited?"
"All the time we were engaged he
never once told me tbat be was on
worthy of my love "Detroit Free
Press
Provisional Government.
"Katber." said the small boy. "what
Is a provisional government?"
"Well, my sou. my impression in a
general way is tbat a provisional gov
ernment is one tbat has to keep bus
tling from day to day for provisions."
Washington Star.
, Too Much Busy-ness.
Falstaff's saying. "It were better to
be eaten to death with rust than
scoured to nothing with perpetual mo
tion." comes to mind when one notes
the many busy-nesses of the modern'
woman.
"Rushed to death!" she cries. "So
much to do. so little time." and away
she patters to attend a committee meet
ing or address convention or "see
somebody" about something. And it
never occurs to her that this old world
would wag along just the same if she
did none of these things in fact, she
would be highly indignant were such
an insinuation made.
Well, as a matter of fact women
do accomplish many good, works. But
they haven't as yet acquired the art
of doing things without bustle and fuss
as men do. They spend too much en
ergy -in getting ready to do things;
they flutter too much. The empty
wagon makes a lot of noise; the load
ed wagon goes quietly.
The woman of real executive ability
goes about her duties quietly; she has
mentally organized her work. Whether
she moves about in her own house or
engages in outside endeavors, she is
calm and composed and effective. She
has, moreover, a sense of proportion
which enables her to recognize how
much of her energy and time can pro
fitably be given to any one thing.
You will find that the really effi
cient woman is not busy with her
busy-nesses all the time. She knows
the value of leisure and that hurry
and haste never produce the best re
sults. And quite often she is called upon
to repair the results -of overhaste or
ill judged action" on the part of those
who act first and think afterward.
Kitchen Kinks.
To clean strainers and sieves rub
with coarse salt and then pour boil
ing water through them.
When a dish is to be set directly on
ice place a rubber fruit jar ring under
it to prevent it from slipping off.
To prevent a ladder from slipping
paste pieces of old rubber over each
support This will protect the floors
and avert many a fall.
Homemade sanitary duster: Dip a
piece of soft Wack cotton cloth in thin
melted paraffin and let dry. This will
hold the dust so it will not scatter
again.
For absorbing odors when cooking
cabbage,- ham, onions or anything
whjch has a strong odor put a small
pan of vinegar on the stove and there
will be no scent of cooking.
To remove scorch spots wet the
scorched portion with clear water and
sprinkle with borax. It will remove
the scorch find leave no stain and may
be used on the most delicate fabrics.
WHAT WE REALLY NEED
Each of us in our small organism
possesses a germ, or whatever you
like to call it, which, properly devel
oped, should eventually lead us to
the realization of all our ambitions.
All that is wanted are energy and
concentration.
BOTTLE COUPON
Good for one large Trial Bottle
of Swissco Hair . Remedy when
'. name and address is properly fill
ed in on dotted lines balow. Taose
. outisde of Oregon City will get a
free bottle by sending 10 cents in
stmps or silver direct to Swissco
Hair Remedy Co., 000 P. O.
Square, Cincinnati, Ohio, to h-slp
cover expenses of packing, etc.
Name
Street
City State.....
Give full address, write plainly.
Above coupon good at any of the fol- '
lowing drug stores.
THE THINKERS.
The meu whose- minds move
faster tban their age
; And faster than society's dull .
flight
Must bear tbe ribald railings
and the rage
Of those who tag behind it
As the light .
Plays on the horizon's verge be
. fore- its night
Can penetrate life's dark and
murky stage;
As tbe tired badgi, on his pil
grimage. .
Hears, ere he sees, the foun
tain bubbling bright;
As tbe sweet smiles of infants
promise youth
And martyr sufferings herald
sacred truth.
So thought flung forward Is
the prophecy
Of truth's majestic march and
shows the way
Where future time shall lead the
proud array
Of, peace, of power and love
if liberty.
", Sir John Bowring.
When Bride and Groom Were Thin.
In the year 1795 Dr. Douglas was
made master of Corpus Cbristi college
and then married Miss Mainwaring, a
daughter of the Lady Margaret pro
fessor of theology. As both were very
thin. Mansel wrote as follows:
St. Paul has declared that persons, though
twain.
In marriage united one flesh shall re
main. But had he been by when. like Pharaoh's
kine,- pairing.
Dr. Douglas of Benet espoused Miss
Mainwaring.
The apostle no doubt would have altered
his tone
And cried. "These two splinters Bhall
make but one bone!"
-Pall Mall Gazette.
One of the Queer Things.
"There are many queer things in con
nection with human existence." says
the professor in the Fliegeude Blatter
"Thus. U have discovered that by mul
tiplying the numerals which Indicate
the date of my birth by my telephone
number and subtracting the age of my
mother-in-law the final result will be
IJ1V holw niimhpr "
PEAR BLIGHT IS
"BUG" DISEASE
WASHINGTON, D. C, Aug. 19.
The department of Agriculture has re
ceived notice by telegraph from citi
zens in the state of Washington that
certain people are spreading the idea
that the pear blight is not a bacterial
disease, and that the department's
recommendation that pear blight can
The Best Food-Drink Lunch at Fountains
vim m mw pv m w, - - mi s w m nai at ,gi . jta, 'kii
S"..r... ... tv M r
ORIGINAL
GENUINE
Avoid imitations
Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form.
For infants, invalids and growing children.
Pure nutrition.upbuOding the whole body,
l-.'-'- cr-fes nursing mothers and the aged.
ifllLijVIMt)
I. C. S. An Ethical Power
Now, gentlement, just for a moment, I wuld speak to you, not as
an educationalist, but as a preacher of manhood and a lover of his
kind. The question of the use of alchohol by the student when study
ing, has carried me back to the thought. The International Correspond
ence Schools are not simply educational, they are ethical; they not
only make foremen and "craftsmen and draftsmen, but they mak
MEN in capital letters. For you can never awaken any ons to bis
commerciail possibilities without stirring up all other possibilities so
cial, patriotic, philanthropic, intellectual, moral. The moment you suc
ceed breaking up one area of inertia you. set vibration moving through
every part of the being and all kinds of dormant and stagnant powers
are set into healthy motion. When a man's mind gets engrossed with
an intellectual occupation and. he finds that he has a grip upon the
laws and forces oi the universe, the saloon, the vulgar and degrading
buow, tha curb-stone loafing, and the hours of inane and ribald waste
all seam to be unworthy of him and his self-respect clothes him in a
protective armor which helps to keep his entire manhood inviolate. A
"great American preacher. used to speak much about "the expulsive pow
er of a new affection," and, having as your life work the duty of both
supplying and developing this "new affection" the love cf the best, by
which the unworthy and base will be expelled, perhaps unconsciously
but surely, from many and many a man. Success to you in your work!
The Trained Man Never Worries
When the chiefs put their heads together to hire or "fire," the
trained man doesn't worry. He knows that there is always a place for
him. . .
' '. You can look your job and every man. in the face if you possess the
training so much in demand everywhere today. The - International
Correspondence Scnools will go to you in your spare tioie, whereever
you live, and will train you to become an expert in your chosen line
of work. Such 'a training will forever take you off the "anxious" seat.
It costs you nothing to find how the I. C. S. can help you. Mark
the coupon opposite the occupation for which you have a natural lik
ing, mail the coupon today, and the I. C. S. will send you facts showing
how you can earn mora money in the occupation of your own choice.
INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS
'' .' " H. H. HARRIS, Local Mgr.
505 McKay Building, Portland, Oregon.
Explain without, further obligations on my part, how I can qual
ify for the position before which I mark X.
Salesmanship
Electrical Engineer
Electric. Lighting Supt. -Telephone
Expert
Architect
Building Contractor
Architectural Draftsman .
Structural Engineer
Concrete Construction.
Mechanical Engineer , .
Mechanical Draftsman
Civil Engineer
Mine Superintendent
Stationary Engineer
Plumbing and Sueam Fitting
Gas Engines ... "
Name ... :
Present Occupation ................... ' ......... .
Street and No. . . . ." . .
City: .; v.. State
be dealt with' by cutting out the dis
eased portions of trees is not an ef
fective measure.
In the fear that these unscientific
opinions may stop orchardists from
following the highly successful practi
cal measures recommended by tha
federal specialists, and thus lose their
own orchards and spread the disease
among neighboring orchards, the de
partment has issued the following spe
cial statement:
, "That pear blight is a bacterial dis
east of the pear tree is not open to
question. The scientists have clearly
established the existence of these bac
tsria by means of microscopis exam
ination, and have reproduced th.9 dis
ease by inoculating fruit and trees
with t'aem. The germ is the bacillus
amylovorus. It is an oval-shaped
body, and is 1-18000 of an inch long
and 1-25000 of an inch across, and can
be clearly seen with a high power mi
croscope. "Moreover, th3 scientists have raised
these bacteria in their laboratories
and havj usad them a large number of
times in experiments to infect healthy
trees and fruit. Wherever this bacil
lus has been introduced into a healthy
traa or fruit the pear blight has fol
lowed. The scientists also have prov
ed that the pear blight can be com
municated from the blossoms of an
affected tree to healthy trees by bees
and othpr insects, and that the blight
that is held over through the winter
can be communicated to healthy por
tions of the sama tree or to other trees
by flies or other insects."
Livestock, Meats.
BEEF ii.'p weisrhtl steers 7 and
8c: cows fi snd 7c. bn'ls 4 to "5c.
MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6; lambs
6 to 6Hc.
VE A Tj r'?.!veB 12c't0 13c dressed,
flocordisr to srfle.
WETNTES 15c lb: sanage. 15c lb,
-.PORK 9H and 1C.
Poultry r buying) Hens 11 to 12c:
strs?s slow at "0c: old roosters 8c;
broilers 20 to 21c.
Fruits
A PPTyES SOo and t1.
DRIED FRTTTTS f buying) Prunes
on basis 4 for 35 to 40c.
. ONIONS $1.00 per sac.
POTATOES Nothing doing.
BUTTER (buyir?) Ordinarv
country butter 23 to 25c.
EGOS Oregon ranch, case count
26c; Oregon ranch candled 27c.
Prevailing Oregcn City prices are
as follows:
HIDES (buying) Green saled, 9c
MOHAIR 28c.
CORN Whole c0rn, $32.
to 10c: sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each.
WOOL 15 to lfic.
FEED (Selling) Shortu $28; barn
$26; process barley, $30.50 o $31.o0
per ton.
FLOUR $4.50 to $5.
HAY (buying) Clover at $8 and
$9; nat kay best $11 and $12; mixed
$9 to $11: Idaho and Eastern Oregnn
timothy selling $20.50 to $23; valley
timothy, $12 to $15.
Drain Athletic Fields
Tile-draining the athletic fields and
play grounds of the Oregon Agricultur
al Cor.ege has been 75 percent com
pleted, according to statements given
out by Prof essor Dolan, who is super
intending the work.
I m;w ,.rt. yh.i.i If .-a a m a m .w-;. T,
SI. IP. 'if. .irll J B
n i ni 4'" "'"iiu
Insist Up&n
ye
Tako No Substitute
More healthful than tea or coffee.
Agrees with the weakest digestion.
Keep it on your sideboard at home.
A quick lunch prepared in a minute.
Civil Service
- Bookkeeping
Stenography and Typewriting
Window Trimming
" Show Card Writing
Letter and Sign Painting
Advertising
' Commercial Illustrating
Industrial Designing
Commercial Law .- -
- Automobile Running v
English Branches
Poultry Farming'
Teacher Spanish
Agriculture French
, Chemist . - German