A MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1913. PRETTY WEDDING IS CELEBRATED Mr. E. A. Schulz, of Portland, and Miss Helen Engelbrecht, second eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August En glebrecht, this city, were united in marriage at 8 p. m. August 20, at the home of tiie bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Engelbrecht by Reversnd ' W. R. Kraxberger, pastor of the Luth eran church. The witnesses were Henry Boqus laskey and Frank A. Schuz, brother of the groom, both of Portland. The wedding march was played by Mrs. Henry Brandt. After the wedding ceremony dinner was served to the guests present, num bering forty. Mrs. Schulz was becomingly dressed in white crepe meteor, trimmed with point lace and wore a veil, held in ' place with a wreath of lillies of the valley, and carried a boquet of bride's roses. Immediately after the wedding cere money Mr. and MVs. Schulz left for a short trip to Mt. Hood, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Schiverin, return ing to this city Wednesday. They will make their home at 545 Maiden Avenue, Portland, where the groom has a nicely furnished house in rsadi ness. GROWERS ARE READY TO HARVEST CROP Hopgrowers of the Willamette Val ley are now wailing to see what will be the attitude of the I..W. W. when the gathering of the Oregon hop crop begins next week, but for the tim? there seems to be little or no fear of the agitators resorting here to the tactics employed in some of the Cali fornia yards a few weeks ago. In that state there was trouble at the out set, and for a few days it looked as if the trouble-makers might seriously in terfere with the gathering of the Cali fornia crop. But the disturbance, a3 a consequence of prompt action on the part of the peace officers, was brief, and since then the picking of the crop in that state has proceeded without interruption. Army of Pickers For the gathering of the Oregon hop crop an army of several thousand pick ers has already been engaged, and for the most part the force is made up of families who every year go from Port land and other cities and towns into the hopgrowing districts for an outing as well as for the money attraction offered in the hopfields. In California a very considerable portion of the crop every year is gathered by transient laborers, who naturally are more sus ceptible to the influence of agitators than men and women with families. BUSY DAYS IN STORE FOR COLLEGE BOYS O. A. C, CORVALLIS, Ore., Aug. 27. To teach the applied arts in the de partment of arts and architecture, Ore gon Agricultural College, Miss E. M. Flarida has been added to the faculty under Professor F. D. McLouth, head of the department . Following her graduation from the Michigan State Normal College, Miss Flarida for a few years engaged in teaching. She then entered Teachers' College, of New York City, where she specialized in the applied arts under the instruction of the celebrated Pro fessor, Dow, and received her art de gree. Since then she has been employe! as teacher of her specialties. More recently she was director of art in struction in the Summer School' of the Michigan State Normal College. Her work in the Oregon College will be instruction in the applied arts de sign, color harmony and some clay modeling as related most closely to the domestic arts. Squad at Work The training squad of the O. A. C. football players will being practice at the Newport beach the eighth of Sep tember. Dr. Stewart and his football stars, past, present and future, leave for Yak ima Bay on the seventh, and as ar rangements for housing and training have been completed, no time will be lost in beginning work. A corps of trainers and assistant coaches will accompany the players who are expected to round into form by the time school opens. Machine Tested The refrigerating mcahine and cold storage plant of the dairy department, Oregon Agricultural college, has been tested and found to be satisfactory. The capacity of the machine is two and one-half tons of ice per day. CENTENARY OF BATTLE MORRISBURG,' Ont., Aug. 27. One hundred years ago this autumn occur red the battle of Chrysler's Farm, one of the notable engagements of the last war between Great Britain and the United States. Today the centenary was celebrated, with a grand rally of ' school children of eastern Ontario and a military display furnished by troop3 drawn from the same section. Tomor row the celebration will conclude with a programe of addresses by men prominent in Canadian public life. The battle or Chrysler s Farm was fought Nov. 11, 1813, on the Canadian side of the St. Lawrence, below Og densburg. Sixteen hundred Americans under Gen. Boyd, and 1500 British troops under Col. Morrison, were en gaged in the conflict. The Americans were repulsed with a loss of 102 killed and 236 wounded. Ina Claire is to appear in London in "The Eleventh Muse." . Ellen Beach Yaw will appear vaudeville the coming season. Bessie Abbott and Jeff De Angeli3 will head the cast of "Rob Ro-." Minnie Palmer is to appear in a one act comedy, "The Seashore Widow. Valerie Bergere has a new comedy playlet, entitled "Boston Baked Beans." Signor Perugini has been re-engaged for the part of Chorus in "The Yellow Jacket." v Klaw & Erlanger have acquired the rights of production to "The Poor Lit tle Rich Girl." As rheumatism is due to an excess of uric acid in the system, the only sensible, rational treatment is one that removes this poison. That is whac Hollister's Rocky Mountain tea does. That's why it cures for good. Jones E TRAHP TO PORTLAND In two hours and 25 minutes, four Oregon City girls, armed with their lunch baskets nad kodaks, tramped the lu miles to Portland Wednesday and fell that they have broken the rec ord for the feat. They, left Oregon City at 7 o'clock Wednesday morning and started for Central Prak in Portland as their des tination. They spent the afternoon in the city and caught an evening car home. The girls were Misses Esther and Alice Downsr, Evelyn Williams and Mavel Ely. BEAVERS WIN AGAIN Portland 6, Sacramento 5. San Francisco 5, Los Angeles 2. Venice 3. Oakland 0. Coast League Standings Portland .563 Sacramento 507 Venice 500 Los Angeles 490 San Francisco ' : 476 Oakland 469 Dore Davidson, who was with "The Blue Bird" last season, has written a play on an unusual theme, called "A Tragedy of the Fog." PRAGTICAL MAN GETS NEW JOB AT COLLEGE OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, CORVALLIS, Ore., Aug. 27 The faculty of the department of com merce, Oregon Agricultural Colege, has been strengthened by the addition of Mr. Clyde I. Blanchard as assist ant professor of senography. Professor Blanchard, after gradua tion from the Kansas City high school, studied at Swathmore College for one year, and finished its undergraduate work at Baker University, Baldwin, Kansas, receiving a batchelor of arts degree. His commercial training was acquir ed in a year's work at Spaldings Busi ness, College, Kansas City, a year's work in shorthand at Baker Univer sity, and graduate work in tb College of Commerce at Chicago University, three years' work in commercial branches specializing in stenography. Instructor at Y. M. C. A. During part of this time he was in structor of commercial subjects in the Kansas City Y. M. C. A., from which institution he received high commend ation. Last year he was head of the commercial department of the Ottum wa, Iowa, high school, which position he resigns to come here. Considerable office experience has accompanied Professor Blanchard's training. For nine months he was secretary to the auditor of the Kansas City Street Railway company, and his resignation from this position called forth expressions of regret both by the auditor and the president of the company. In addition to his instructional du ties Prof essor Blanchard will be chair man of a stenographers' association for the improvement of stenography and office management throughout the institution. NEW CURE FOR RHEUMATISM Get the uric acid out of your system and your rheumatism will be curea. Meritol Rheumatism Powders are the most effective agency known for this purpose. You can buy them from any member of the American Drug mhi Press Association. Jones Drug. Co. THAW WINS TWICE T SHERBROOKE, Que., Aug, 27. Harry K. Thaw won three victories over the New York state authorities today and was locked tonight in the Sherbrooke jail, immune for the time being from the Dominion immigration authorities, after having received an ovation from the townspeople of Sher brooke that would have done honor to a prince of royal blood. So demonstrative was the scene in the Superior court when, at the mora ing session, Judge Arthur Globensky refused to allow counsel representing New York state to be party to the pro ceedings, that the court subsequently warned spectators that a repetition of the cheering, chair climing, handker chief waving and general hysteria would mean jail sentences for the de- monstrants. Fifty-Second Annual Oregon State FAIR SALEM, OREGON Sept. 29 to Oct. 4, 1913 A whole week of pleasure and profit $20,000 offered in premiums on Agricultural, Livestock, Poultry, Textile and other ex hibits. Horse races, Shooting tourna ment, Fireworks, Band Con certs, Eugenics exposition, Chil dren's playground and other free attractions, including Boyd and Ogle's One Ring Circus. Free Camp Grounds. You are invited. Send for Premium List and En try Blanks Reduced rates on all railroads. For particulars address Frank Meredith. Sec. Salem, Oregon Pabst's Okay Specific Does the worK. You all h ry A A know- it by reputation. X'i.UU Price Y "" FOR SALE BY . JONES DRUG COMPANY EXPERTS PROVE ONE MORE WELL IS PURE W. A. White,' an Oregon City archi tect and builder, has just received from the state board of uealth, a re port on a sample of water from thi well on his property on Madison street and while the analysis shows 66 organ isms per cubic cendmeter, there wap a total absence of colon bacilli This the second time within a week, that a favorable report has been re ceived from a sample of well water in Oregon City, the other being from the well on the residence property of Geo. . A. Harding. The neighbors of Mr. White, who use water from the well, as well s Mr. White's own family, are exceedingly pleased to learu that the water is not contaminated and that there is no dan ger of typhoid resulting from"its us AN EXPENSIVE ROAD. Highway Through Mountains of Nor way 3,715 Feet Above Sea Level. In some parts of the United States the geographical conditions make the building and maintenance of good roads almost an impossibility. To con struct a good highway through certain sections of the mountains is a stu pendous task. But in many sections even short stretches of roads have been built at an enormous outlay of money. One of the most difficult roads to build one that perhaps cost as much ! as any other in the world was con structed through the deep July snow ( by Underwood & Underwood. BOAD OK DYKESKAKD PASS, NORWAY. drifts upon Dyreskard pass, in Nor way. This road Is 3,715 feet above the level of the sea, and the workmen were compelled to dig through snow, soil and rock in order to make it passable. tn certain sections of the United States roads have been built through the mountains, but in most instances they are poor and impassable, espe cially in severe weather. The roads in the mountains of North Carolina are perhaps the poorest, but are, being improved. This section is sparsely populated, and the inhabitants are no longer willing to put up with the poor roads and live shut up in the great mountains, frequently having every approach to the nearest town cut off by absolutely impassable roads. INDIANA IN THE LEAD. Hoosier State Has More Miles of Im proved Roads Than Any Other. Rhode Island may have fewer square miles than any of her sister states; but, according to the Good Roads Year Book, she is the only state in the Un ion whose improved roads amount to half of her total roads. Delaware, her closest rival Tor smaliness, has only 6 per cent of her roads improved. Mas sachusetts presses her tiny neighbor in this respect' by mdkin a showing of 49 per cent of her roads improved. Naturally other states try to discount this primacy of Rhode Island. An In diana journal accounts for it on the ground that the state is in reality nothing but Providence, and Newport and their suburbs.. It then disposes of Massachusetts by the remark that, except for some hills through which only state roads run, that commonwealth is practically one big town. This process of elimination leaves Indiana at the top in the per centage of improved roads. But the Hoosier State already has honor enough in the fact that it possesses more miles of improved roads than any other state, although its 25,000 miles exceed Ohio's supply of improved highways by only a few hundred miles. These two states are far ahead of the rest. Next to them come New York, with 15,000 miles; Washington, with 12.000; Wis consin and Kentucky, with 10,000 each. New York Evening Post. Impertinence. "1 notice that you and Simmons don't seem to be as friendly as you were for merly." "No. Be' has no use for me any more." - "What s the matter?" "At the club a few nights ago he at tempted to tell a joke at my expense. and by a lucky inspiration I was able to slip in a remark which tamed the laugh on him." Chicago Record-Herald- Margaret Anglin Prepares to Star. In Shakespearean Plays ' fifiif felt tnvv J- 'fu MARGARET ANGLIN has won a foremost place on the American stage as a gifted and versatile artist. Among the more notable theatrical enterprises that will invite attention the coming season will be Miss Anglin's revivals of Shakespeare's "As You Like It " "The Taming or the Shrew." "Twelfth Night" and "Antony and Cleopatra." On Sept 5. pre paratory to the beginning of her regular touring season In SaD Francisco. Miss Anglin will play the "Electra" of Sophocles In the Greek theater at the Uni versity of California, where two years ago she presented the "Antigone" whlcn attracted country wide favorable critical comment and placed Miss Anglin in the very forefront of America's emotional actresses of classic ro.-. EIGHT-HOUR BILL TO BE VOTEDON IN 1914 SALEM, .Ore., Aug. 27. Petitions asking for the initiation of an eight hour law for women at the next gen eral election were filed with the sec retary of state yesterday afternoon by Mlrs. I. B. Garriott a member of! the executive, coniiiiittee of the Wo- j men's Eight-hour League, of Portland, i The petitions are the same as those wnich Dr. Marie Equi attempted to file for the special election to be held in November this year. The secreary of state refused to file them for this year's election; and when mandamus proceedings were instituted to compel him to file them he won in the oourts. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Hubert Brennan to Thomas Ostrow ski, part of D. L. C. of S. S. White, in Sees. 13 and 14 T. 3 S., R. 1 E.; $1200. Mliry M. Charman to T. Leonard Charman, lots in West Lynn; $10. H. P. Bush and wife to Sarah Sloan, one acre in section 27, T. 2 S., R. 7 E.: $10. v Samuel M. Jackson to L. A. Larfield, T. H. Forrester D. L. C. Sec. 25, T. 2 S., R. 3 E., 7.52 acres; $1600. R. H. Snodgrass and wife to E. P. Berdine, timber on W. N. E. ii Sec. 7, T. 5 S., R. 3 E.; $10. David E. Lofgren to Emit Lind and wife, S. W. N. E. Sec. 5, T. 5 S., R. 3 E.; $10. Wallace Davies and wife to Emma Davies, lots hree, four, 13, 14, 15, 16, in Sandy; ?1. The classiried ac columns of The Enterprise satisfy your' wants. Unqualifiedly the Best : LEDGER; The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CURVED HINGE allows the covers to drop back on the desk without throwing the leaves into a curved position. Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Headquarters for Loose Leaf Systems SOUTH TO ENTERTAIN OLD UNION SOLDIERS CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Aug. 27. When the Grand Army of the Republic meets here on September 15 for its forty-seventh national encampment, it Will hA thp fi-rst timo in hictnrv hat such an encampment is held in the real souia. it is true, one national encamp ment was held In Louisville, but that city was really too far north and too far removed from the actual seat of the war to be. considered as part of the real south. It is different with Chattanooga, the immediate vicinity of which was the scene of some of the bloodiest battles nf th ni vi? wot in eluding Chickamauga, Lookout Moun tain. Orchard Knob and Missionary Ridge. Old Feeling Dies Undoubtedly there was a time when the selection of Chattanooga as the plac3 of gathering would have been fatal to the success of a Grand Army encampment. During the first fifteen or more years after the close of the war there was still enough of the in tense popular feeling against the North left among the impoverished people of the South to make the se'ec tion of a real southern city as the place for holding a Grand Army en campment a matter of doubtful judg ment. There would probably have been no hostile demonstrations on the part of the Southerners southern hospitality would not have permitted that but there would have been embarrasment on both sides and unavoidable friction. But . time has worked marvelous changes. The old time antagonism has been wiped out; great national problems, common national dangers have brought the North and the South c'oser together; a clearer recognition 01 tne mutuar or their interests ce mented the fractures and comradeship in the camps and upon the battlefields of the Spanish-American war strength ened the bonds of friendship and loyal ty between the North and the South mors than anything else could have done. i Mary Pickford is to be seen in a : moving picture production of "In The ; Bishop's Carriage." Olga Nethersole may visit this coun try again: She has not been seen on this side for several seasons. William Hodge is to star this sea son under the management of the Shuberts in "The Road to Happiness." Mary Keener has just been engaged by Charles Froham for the leading feminine part in "The Conspiracy." Martha Hedman will be John Mia son's leading woman in the new p'ay by Augustus Thomas, entitled "Indian Summer. EGGS TAKE RISE IN PRICE; FIRM TONE Fresh eggs have taken an advance in price of one cent a dozen, according to quotations, because of the shortage in the receipts. The markets have not been over stocked with a supply for several days though there are a large number of shipments in cold storage Spring chickens are in little demand although the market for hens at ex treme prices is still good. Receipts of fancy potatoes have been reported, with the tone of the market firm. Grapes are coming into the commis- sion housese in rather liberal quaint ies. Livestock, Meats. BEEF iLve weight) steers 7 and 8c; cows 6 and 7c. bulls 4 to cc. MUTTON Sheep 5 to 6H., lambs G to 6M.c. Poultry (buying) Hens 11 to 12c.; stags slaw at 10c; old roosters 8c; broilers 20 to 21c. WEINIES 15c lb; sauage, 15c lb. PORK 9-4 and 10c. VEAL 'V.ves 12c t0 loc dressed, according to grade. Fruits. APPLES 50c and Jl. DRIED FRUITS (buying) -Prunes on basis 4 fr 35 to 40c ONIONS $1.00 per saoi. ' POTATOES Nothing d0ing. BUTTSR (buying) Ordinary country butter 23 to 2Cic. EGGS Oregon ranch, case count 26c; Oregon ranch candled 27c. Prevailing Oregon City prices are as folldvrs: HIDES (buying) Green saled, c MOHAIR 28c. CORN Whole c0rn. $32. to 10c; sheep pelts 75c to $1.50 each. WOOL 15 to 16c. FEED (Selling) Short $28; barn $26; process barley, $30.50 o ?31.o0 per ton. FLOUR $4.50 to $5. HAY (buying) Clover at $8 and $9; 0at kay best $11 aad $12; mixed $9 to $11; Idaho and Eastern Oregon timothy selling $20.50 to $23; vallev timothy, $12 to $15. "Swissco" Did It! Have You Tried It? Grows New Hair, Removes Dandruff, Brings Back Natural Color to the Hair, and Stops All . Hair and Scalp Troubles 25 CENT BOTTLE FREE TO ALL Every one who is bald has tried by every mfeans possible to restore his hair, but net until the discovery of the marvelous Swissco Hair and Scalp Remedy has there been anything of fered that would accomplish this re sult. Dandruff, Falling Hair, .Sore, .Itchy Scalp Quickly Cured This great remedy cures baldness, bald spots, falling hair, scabby scalp, sore scalp dandruff, brittle hair or any other hair or scalp disease, and changes gray hair to youthful jcolor and gloss. If you are suffering from baldness or any of the troubles named above or have gray hair that you want re stored to youthful color, Jet us send you a 25-cent bottle free for trial. Swissco Hair Remedy is for sale, by all druggists at 50 cents and $1.00 a bottle, bul; the free bottle can only be had by writing direct- to the Swissco Hair Remedy Co., 000 P. O. Square Cincinnati, Ohio, encloing 10 cents as an evidence of good faith. The 10 cents does not cover actual postage and packing on the 25-cent bottle we send you. For sale and recommended in Ore gon City by Jones Drug Co. Drug Co.