i. 0 MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1913. 4 SPORT DOPE warren:' - Right Tackle of 1913 Yale Varsity Football Team. 0. A. C. IS TO HAVE FINEST GYMNASIUM 0. C. H. S. Every day will be PANAMA DAY from now until further notice. Clip the Panama Certificate printed elsewhere in the columns and present it TODAY. IS BADLY TWISTED I EYEfY. -DAY '-THEY. GO I O. A. C. is tohave one of the finest gymnasiums on the coast when the iew building is completed some time this winer. The new building will cost close to $100,000 when completed and will have the largest floor of any "gym." on the coast. The' building wiil consist of a sub basement, a basement, a mazzanine floor, and a second floor. In the base ment will be located the power and heating plants, part of the lockers, and the swimming pool and showers. This pool will be 50 by 100 feet and will range in depth from three to 12 feet and will have a spoon shaped bottom. Its width will permit two taen to race at the same time, allow ing each contestant a lane five feet - wiue. A spectator o gallery win sui round the pool and will hold 500 peo ple. On the main floor will be the lobby or reception hall. The corridor will be lined with trophy cases to display the honors won in the past. The main noor wnl be 90 by 150 feet which is large enough to accom modate 200 students. Six basketball teams can play on the floor at the same time by putting the baskets on the side of the "gym" instead of lenEbwiap. The. runnine- track which will run around the room as a bal cony may also be used to seat the spectators and will accommodate at least 1000 people. Other features of the new building are the bowling alleys, squash courts, padded wrestling and boxing room, and committee rooms. The locker rooms will have 2500 lockers and will accommodate easily 5000 persons. Besides these there will be private lockers for the faculty, the varsity teams, and the visiting teams. The Oregon City high school foot ball schedule for the next week or so has been so badly twisted and thrown out of joint that the manager that made would hardly recognize it. Mass and Myers, two of the stars of the local eleven, are out of the game and as a result, the mix-up planned for next Saturday with Van couver has been cancelled. This game would have been very close. The Oregon City boys have been working hard for some time so as to prepare themselves. However, the date will not be wasted as Manager Beatie thinks that a game can be arranged with Canby. This would be the first football game for any Camby high school team in the history of the school. The Canby squad have been out regularly for sev eral weeks so that the team probably has considerable team work. The Oregon City boys will play St. Johns high school a week from this coming Saturday on the home grounds. MCLOUGHLIN AND CANEMAH TO MIX SATURDAY McLoughlin second team will play Cauemah Saturday on the field of the latter team. Neither eleven has play ed before so it is hard to size up the strength of the two schools. The Mc Laughlin squad is very light, averag ing near 90 pounds. WEST LINN AND BARCLAY TO MEET SOON A game has been arranged between the West Linn and Barclay schools for November 7. This will be the first game this season for the west side team and about the fourth for the Ore gon City eleven. The West Linn boys average about 135 and have been working regularly for some time They are captained by Delbe Montgomery. WILLAMETTE NEVER WAS SLOW Willamette school has never been very far behind the times and often they are far in the lead. For instance a report has reached Oregon City that the boys of that school have already started to play baseball and in order to make some definite record of that fact have broken several windows of the school house. ' Some men are born deaf and some acquire deafness shortly after acquir ing talkative wives. Enterprise classified ads pay. $ ??$$$'$$?$'?' $ S S SPORTING BREVITIES e $? esssesss-S'- According to dope received from the East, the chances for Princeton walking away with college football honors this year are mighty good. Things seemed to be settled for a 20-round bout in San Francisco Thanksgiving day when Willie Ritchie will meet Harlem Tommy Murphy. Walter Camp has taken active charge of the Yale team and already has made several changes in the line. Johnny Kilbane, featherweight champion, will meet Eddie O'Keefe at Philadelphia "in a six-round bout November 10, if reports are true. Byron Houck, the former Washing ton high school pitcher who has been with the Philadelphia Athletics all season, has returned to Portland with a wife and a record of eight victories out of 13 games played. BEAUTIFUL HAIR, A JOY FOREVER If you have a beautiful head of hair, try to keep it. If you have not, try to get it. Meritol Hair Tonic keeps the scalp clean, promotes a healthy growth of beautiful hair, and keeps it soft and lustrous. Try it. Jones Drug Co., Exclusive Agency. Adv. 7979 iTHE TOUCH OF ER APERY ON OROWM.TIP GOWNS MARKS JUNIOR MODES AS WELL Aa long as materials are so supple and clinging, their very touch sugges tive of folds and drapings, draped gowns and wraps will continue modish. For the woman whose dress allow ance is somewhat limited it is wise to choose a dark, soft silk for the lunch . eon or afternoon tea frock. It may be worn much oftener than a light shade - and will be found generally more sat isfactory. Moire, silk poplin, one of the soft taffetas or charmeuse are all suitable, and many of the soft drapey wool Btuffs make up most attractively. A crow-blue taffetas with a self fig ure was used to develop 7979. The wide girdle of a lighter blue affords an . effective contrast, and the gathered . -iiroDe of ficrured tulle is practical, as it is a simple matter to replace it when soiled. There is just a touch of drapery on each side of the skirt, and the blouse is a peasant design closing in the-back. This model may be copied in size 36 with 6 yards of 36 inch taffetas and yard of tulle. The "dress-up" frock of the little miss has its bit of drapery, too, as may be seen in 7996. An albatross or bright silk with a touch of colored embroid ery at the belt and on the cuffs could be used with this design with excellent results. For size 10 it requires 2H yards of 36 inch material. No. 7979 sizes 34 to 42. No. 7996 sizes 6 to 12. Each pattern is 1R cents. Every number and style of Pat tern made by the Ladies' Home Journal Home Pattern Co. is carHecHn stock and sold only bjr Elliott Brothers Department Store 7th Street at Madison On the Hill "The Criterion" Magazine 5c at our pattern counter. I J If -wiZ: i X r ft. t .4! if . . llf 111 -' S ' f(V - j m 111 i THE OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE wants all of its many readers to enjoy the benefits of this great distribution. Every one of these volumes given out will make a new friend, and every new friend means in creased circulation. Only on this basis , can we-fford to offer this $4 book for the mere expensa of ..distribution and WITHOUT ONE CENT OF PROFIT. MOW TO CSET IT CLIP AND PRESENT SIX CERTIFICATES PRINTED DAILY IN THIS PAPER to this office, with the expense amount herein set opposite the style selected (which covers the items of the cost of packing, express from the factory, checking, clerk hire and other necessary EXPENSE items), and receive your choice of these books: PANAMA AND THE CANAL In Picture and Prose Illustrated . Edition EXPENSE Amount of $1.18 Photo by American Press Association , Greatly Reduced Illustration of the $4 Vol. (size Sx12 In.) IN THIS VOLUME THERE ARE EXACTLY RUINED THE PAINTING. Curious Fate of Bur.ne-Jones' Favorite Water Color. A very curious history is that of Burne-.Ionfs' favorite picture. "Love Anions the Ruins." The original pic ture was in wnter color andpavas sent to Paris by a firm of art puliMliers for reproduction and in that city forward ed to their photographic studios in the suburbs. The picture unhappily pre- . ceded the letter of instructions regard- mp: it warning the photographer of the ! medium in which it was painted, so i that immediately on Its arrival it was I brushed over with white of esrg to bring out the colors for photographing an excellent procedure in the case of oil pictures, harmless and very effica cious. But. as to the Burne-.Iones pictur-. Love was very soon among his own mins. for every swish of the brush brought off the final touches and left a mere smeared ground. Sir Edward Burne-.Iones was heartbroken at the loss of a work on which his reputation, he considered, would in great measure rest and on which he had spent many months of patient toil and the very perfection of his execution in the reali zation of one of the most poetic con ceptions that had sprung from his -fanciful Imagination. "Love Among the Ruins" was paint ed during the years 1S70-3. In October, 1S03. it was destroyed, and by the fol lowing year the oil version was fin ished, hut was scarcely a consolation to the artist for the loss of his first and more spontaneous work. ANIMALS-IN OPERA. MAGNIFICENT ILLUSTRATIONS ThiS beautiful big volume is the ac knowledged standard reference work of the greAt Canal Zone.- It is a splendid large book, printed from new type, large and clear, on special paper; bound in tropical red vellum cloth; title stamped in goId, with inlaid color panel; contains more than COO mag nificent illustrations, including beauti ful pages reproduced from water color stu dies in coloring that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call and see this beautiful book- that would sell for i under usual conditions, but which is 'presented to our readers for SIX Certificates of consecu tive dates, and only the Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $ 1 .59 and 6 Certificates Regular octavo size; text matter prac tically the same as the $4 volume; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photographic reproductions and the color plates are omit ted. This book would sell at $2 under usual conditions, but is pre-sented-to our readers for Six certificates of consecutive dates, and only the Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates Panama and The Canal $2 OCTAVO EDITION EXPENSE Amount of 48c i including many full page plates from original water color studies in all their natural colorings. MAIL ORDERS, ADDRESS THE ENTERPRISE, Oregon City, Or. PANAMA CANAL IN PICTURE AND PROSE EDUCATES AS WELL AS ENTERTAINS Willis J. Abbott' the author of this, book, takes you in at the front door of Panama, tells you the time when Columbus searched for a natural waterway to the Pacific Ocean, brings you up through the centuries of revolution and warfare, and on through to the realization of the greatest achievement of this day and age. lie tells you of the people and the country, of the past as well- as the .present, and eve,n dips into the promises for the future. The great story is inspiring filled to the full with local color and human interest a story thai "will live as long as the great canal itself. More Than 400 Large Pages , Special paper; clear new type More Than 600 Illustration Beautifully printed; black and white - And 16 Water Colors Clip and Present Panama Certificates, Printed daily in these columns and . , GET YOUR BOOK TODAY H B I I j. - Reproduced from orlginalskewies. J Money Refunded If Not Satisfied Jjjl Some of Them Raised Up Their Voices With Weird Effect. ; Few persons realize how many ni mnls appear in opera. Py this I do not mean such animals as the tenor who played the part of Lohengrin and was told by Von Bulow that he was the" knight of the swine rather than of the swan, but real bona fide animals They extend all the way from Monte verde to Wagner. About A. P. 1(00 it was not,unusual - rismtt or eipnrusfs Tioon tn op eratic stage. One can never ten wuai these animals may improvise In their parts. I know of a case where an ele phant caused a most hasty exit of the orchestra in London long ago. when the father of B. E. Woolf, the Boston crit 1c. was conducting The donkey in Leoncavallo's "Pas llacci" has not a speaking part, yei once that I know of he lifted up his voice and made Canio's great solo an unexpected duet. Balaam himself was not more astonished than was the tenor on that occasion. In spite of the saying. "Thou sh!t not yoke the ox and, the ass together." P1frnp f'flns:Fr1 than tirn fn ftint n Hiut in "The Children of Bethlehem." On ' h"i,rtv PPI of everybody, perhaps. this occasion the ass was a tenor, but This prediction of a restoration of hoopskirts to fashion may not be real ized A great many such threats never come true ago they were foretelling side whiskers for men A .New Kngland suffragette has tamed angle worms so that they come up out of the ground and eat sauer kraut from her hand Such a woman ol'iould Have mi trouble whatever with mere man ' . . That proposition to make baggage j-ars collapsible, so they may act as buffers iu train ollisions. will meet the I do not believe that Pierne meant anv reflection upon the high voiced f rater nity. Louis C. Elson in Musical Observer. This New Illustrated Book For Every Eesde- m Is i PRESENTED-BY THE OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE AS EXPLAINED RFinw See the Great Canal in Picture and Prose sMMMIMlllJlMJllMMMIMi Read How You May Have It Almost Free Cut out the above coupon, and present It at this office with the ex . pense amount herein set opposite the style selected (which covers the items ot the cost of packing, express from the factory, checking:, clerk hire and other necessary EXPENSE Items), and receive four choice of these books: 9 f A M AH A lms d63111'"31 D,g volume is written by Willis J. Abbot, 5 AND THE I CANAL a writer of international renown, and is the acknowl- edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone. J It is a splendid large book of almost 500 pages, 9x12 - i - . j . iiicues m size ; priniea irom new type, targe ana ciear, A 1 l.w. aw I 1MB .-" kiviui HIILI , UUUUU 111 LI UUILHI I CIA VC11U111 UUIU. ? 4 A -ILLUSTRATED t't'e statnPed m Bold, with inlaid colof panel ; contains a 4 EDITION I?ore 411311 600 magnificent illustrations, including beau- pagca icjjiuuulcu nun. water cuiur 5iuu.es m lui orings that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call X and see this beautiful book that would sell for $4 under usual conditions, but which is presented to our readers for SIX of 9 the above Certificate of consecutive dates, and only the EXPENSE Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.59 and 6 Certificates 9 Panama anrl Regular octavo site: text matter practically the same as the $4 vol- 1 oucuua auu ume; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photo- I r 136 V-anai fitted. This book would sell at 12 unJer usual condi- I Amoanlot ft a OCTAVO tons, but is presented to our readers for SIX of the 5 tr.'TlON Jcove Certificates of consecutive dates and only the J Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates 48! fall election of 1908 ,and has been dry ever since. There was not even ce ment sidewalks in Canby at that time and very little wooden sidewalks and For instance, about a vear 1 onlv 0,16 concrete Duiiamg, tne Dank Duuuing. since tnat time tney nave built a $20,000 concrete school build ing, a $10,000 concrete Methodist church, a $15,000 concrete Odd Fel lows hall, a $12,000 concrete. Masonic temple, a $3,000 addition to the bank building, a $30,000 concrete general merchandise ttuilding, built by Carlton Rosencrans & Company, 100x100 feet, two stories and full cement basement, one of the finest stores in Clackamas county, besides a $5,000 opera house of wood. The year following the dry election 26 new residences were built. Now after four years, in spite of the loss of revenue from four saloons, the town does not have $1 of indebtedness and has more money in the treasury than it ever had in the balmiest days when it was wet. In addition to build ing these buildings, we have serval blocks of concrete sidewalk and are building over fifteen blocks more and preparing to hard surface and cluster light the main street. The wets said that the grp.ss wouI3 except the person who has a trunk in the ImsxNKt ''nr. '1'lic New York linkups are over rww'wrt !ind various relief measures are i rrtered. The district attorney siiiri.";;- 'oiifier hours and fewer holi days i. -r Hie judges. Is the iiiiio mad that lie makes so revolutisnn ry a pro P'lSiilV . , FORUM OF THE P .0PLE CANBY, Ore., Oct. 29. (Mr. C. II. Dye,' Esq., chairman of committee of of One Hundred., Oregon City, Ore gon.) Dear Sir: In response zo your request for statement as to the con dition of Canby before and after go ing dry, I have to say that Canby was wet from its incorporation until the grow in the streets of Canby; that the business men would go broke; that the town would be ruined; that all the Germans from Macksburg to Molalla would go to Barlow and Aurora to do their trading. That they were false prophets is proved by tho building by Carlton & Rosencriins of the largest general merchandise store in the county. This firm was doing business in a rented building when the town went dry. ''At that time the deposits .'in the Canby bank did hot exceed $75,000; BREATHE FREELY! OPEN NOSTRILS STUFFED HEAD END CATARRH i Instant Relief When Nose and Head Are Clogged From a Cold. Stops Nasty Catarrhal Discharges. Dull Headache Vanishes. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, jnst to try it Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head cr catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Crenra Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, For S ale By HUNTLEY SR03. CO. (A dT.) . fragrant balm dissolves by -the heat o. the nostrils ; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen . membrane which lines the nose, head and throat ; clears the air passages ; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of, cleansing, soothing relief comes im mediately. Don't lay awake to-night strug gling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness s distress i:ig but truly needless, Tut your- faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. the last sworn report showed a total assets of, $314,000. There is not a half dozen arrests a year for drunkeness or disorderly con duct in Canby. Not. a single busi ness man interviewed was in faTor of returning to the wet column. Previous to the town's going dry a number of children were going to school with insufficient clothing and barefooted, whose fathers were spend ing their time and money in saloons. At the present time not a single fam ily in Canby but is in comfortable cir cumstances, children well clothed and going to school in the best school building in the county. Three years after the town went dry a blacksmith sold out his business, owning the only shop in the town, and when he closed up his accounts, he made an affidavit before me that he had never refused a man credit the three years of this diry administration and that he collected in thirty days af ter he sold his -shop, all his account but $7.50 and that he never had been in a community before where the peo ple seemed to have the prosperity and the ability to pay their accounts promptly. This affidavit is now on file in my office. The blacksmith's name is N. Digerness and he is now in the general merchandise business at Silverton, Oregon. The wets are making a talk of i empty store buildings in Canby; there I arc tirn cmiifv hiiilinjQ np.Pfl ftinn p.fl j by the Carlton Rosencrans company moving to their new and enlarges quarters, and they have occupied and paid the rent on the vacated building up to the present time, using it for storage purposes. The other store building that is vacant was a building used for selling out bankrupt stock collected here from various wet dis tricts, but on account of the prosper ous condition of the' farmers and resi dents ot.;Canby, they refused to buy bankrupt goods and the man had to go out of business. This building is ior rent for a legitimate business. . Iti place, of the two woocTen vacant buildings, we have seven concrete store buildings now occupied. Of the four saloon buildings, noe one of them is vacant at the present time. ' While the town went dry by the close margin of eight votes, the next time- it was voted on there was a majority of forty votes, and each succeeding election the wet force have endeavored to vote the town wet, the dry vote has in creased, until the last election it was nearly two to one votes against the wets. -. ' -. : , . ...... All this time Barlow, one and one half miles away, has had two saloons and they have not been able to detract to any extent from Canby's prosperity. The only blacksmith shop, in -Barlow has moved to Canby to get business. In -closing I wish to, aav that . I am no politician and have no ax to grind, but am stating facts just as conditions are here as will be verified by any leadine business man nf ranh - .1: v Yours very truly.