r- , t J' OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1913. At the Portland Theaters Last Car Leaves For Oregon City at Midnight CHAfsLOTT E WALKER IN "THE TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE," AT HEILIG, NOVEMBER 6,7. 8. I p t 511 r F0RUH1 OF THE PEOPLE WILL OREGON CITY GO DRY? MOUNT PLEASANT, Ore., Nov. 3 (Editor of The Enterprise) Please allow me as an old taxpayer of Ore gon City of little over 30 years a mall space for few lines, as I am anxious to say few words to the mothers and wives of pur good little town before they will cast their , votes on the fourth. I hope you all consider it well before you will cast your votes. Remember when you will try to vote the town dry, you will also at "the same time cast your vote to drive your boys and husbands-to Portland to get what they call good time. 'We cannot keep them -home if we try to use the club. I am proud to say that I have no use for the saloons; but I don't see any use for us to vote the town "dry" when Portland is right at SALTS IF BACKACHY Drink lots of water and stop eating meat for a while if your Bladder troubles yon. The charming ao"" Charlotte W Vv.cr rn;l a splendid supporting conpany, will be seen in the wonderful play success, "The Trail 'of the Lon sor.ie Tine," fit. The Heilig Theatre, 11th and Morrison streets, Thursday, Friday, Saturday nights, November 6, 7. S. A special price matinee will be given Saturday. Mail orders now. Eoxoffice sale opens Tuesday, November 4. THE MUSICAL COMEDY, "THE GIRL FROM MUM MS," AT HEILIG SUN DAY MONDAY, TUE jAt, K0EV.3Ea 2, 3, .4. ' -k.1- --- -- r jit r - I- i ' LOCAL TEAMS TO HEET O. C. H. S. AND ALL-STARS ARE TO PLAY ON CANEMAH FIELD Oregon City high school and the Oregon City All-Stars will meet on the Canemah field this afternoon in ae of the warmest football games of the season. . The All-Stars team has' been organ ized largely for this game but contains several good players so the high school team will have to work If they lake the contest. The line-vin is as follows: 0.''C. H. S. Position Eleston C. . ' The brilliant musical comedy success, T'je O-rl from Mumms," will i a the a time' Ion s the Ht Uis? 'iheafr?. inh ivA Morrison -street, for three night3 begioning Sv.ti'ley, November 2. II GAME Miller...: R. G. L.. Luttmeier. . j. . .R. T. L.. . Mass R. E. L.. Green .-. L. G. R... J. Beatie... L. T. R... Armstrong L. E. R.. . C. Peatie Q. ...... Kellogg R. H Myers Tj. H , Moody Dtmgey R. B Verhuis O. C. A. S. . Halleston . . Bentley . . Milliken .... Cross CJuinn Stromeyer .... Miller Bob Beatie . Finucana his little shop the other day the story oi nis great recora which, however, failed to win the pennant for Detroit. Hamilton, Ont., took the pennant and the world's championship. S. A. C. CONSIDERS INDIANS When you -wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it gen erally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish ana clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; re moving all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physi cian at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonfui in a class of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes delightful, effer vescent lithia-water drink. or Sale bv Huntley Bros. (Adv.) our doors where our dear ones can go and will go. It would be just the same to try to stop the rivers to go to the seas, as-to try to stop any of our boys from getting all they want .as long as they will continue to makq it. I am with you any time to cost my vote to indorse a national prohibiton that would be the starting point. And I cannot see why some of our leading business men is doing their best to get the town dry if they will get their wish they will also loose lots of trade Our taxes are bound to go to the limit and then we will be Jar . from .getting the $10,000. ' I hope we all think of all this and it will be far better to keep our boys at home, when they go to Portland we don't know what will come of them. In 1880-1 did my best to get a little town dry and we got our wish, but I am sorry to say that a good many wives and children could see the beer and . whiskey every day at their homes and got to like it as well as the father. - Kindness and a happy home is the best remedy to keep folks at home. WTith the good council and officers they got our little town one of the best on the coast. $10,000 is a great help until we stop them from making of it. t. C. THOMAS. AT ONGE? CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN, THE MATTER OF ARRESTS IN DRY CITIES OREGON CITY, Ore.; Nov. 3. (Ed itor of the Enterprise) The following statistics of arrests in each instance mean for intoxication: In Washington Belljngham, wet in 1910, 918 arrests; dry in 1912, 169 ar rests. Everett, wet in 1909, 782 ar rests; dry in 1911, 306 arests. In Georgia Atlanta, last wet year, 6,508 arrests; dopped to 2,636 when the city went dry. Illlnois-Galesburg, wet in. 1907, 1, 113 arrests; when the city went dry arrestst fell to 247. Eight dry cities in Nebraska includ ing Beatrice, York, Wayne, etc., had an average last year of 21 arrests each. At the same time in the eight wet cities nearest them in population, such as Nebraska City, Kearney, etc., the number was an average of " 528 each. , Men point to the number of arrests for drunkenness in Eugene and Al bany. But they do not tell how many less this was per poulation than be fore those towns went dry, nor do they' say much about the number of arrests for intoxication in Oregon City nor about the drunks who retain enough sense to escape arrest. -In Indiana the wets got the local option law replaced by a home rule bill just as they have here. In conse quence they threw several dry towns into the wet column again. What was the result? Wabash, dry, in May, 1910 had 13 arrests; in May, 1911, (wet) it had 44; Elkhart, dry, had 84 and, wet, 161 in the year; Munice, dry. HEAD GOLDS AND CATARRH VANISH Breathe Freely! Clears Stuffed-up, Inflamed Note and Head and Stops Catarrhal Discharge. Cures Dull Headache. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just 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 or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. ,End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, fragrant balm dissolves by the heat of 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. f Don't lay awake ' to-night strug gling" for breath, with head stuffed; uostrila closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat,: and raw dryness is distress ing but truly needless. Put your f a ith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. For Sale By HUNTLEY BROS. CC. (Adv.) had 53, wet, had 85 in a month. . Yet they say. "See the number of dinka in a dry town!". In West Virginia, ilrv rnnntioa fh are an average of 3.3 criminals per 1000 population. In. wet counties the average is 10 per 1000. In Vireinia 66 drv counties anH s dry cities average 1 criminal in 491 population. 32 nartlv wet and- nartlv rt rv pnnn. ties average 1 in 264. 2 wet counties and 11 wet cities av erage 1 criminal in 31 inhabitants. Boulder, Colorado, had 22 arrests in its last wet year. Under the dry re gibe, they had decreased to 6 in 1909 and none in 1911. Under the data of August iqh the Daily News of Grand Junction' Colorado, contains the following editorial: "The T)ailv-'Mpw hna iaA a nnn,tia of inquiries lately as to the number of arrests in the last two and a half years under the 'dry' regime as com pared to the number of arrests rinr. ing the last 'wet' year. The figures are as follows : "In 1908 HTKlr I 'wet' nurimu Did year's arrests totalled 428. - "In 1909 wilh eyven months 'dry' and the balana ;et' the number of arrests was 22C. "In 1910 an entirely dry year the number of arrests was 162. "The mayor's report for the first six months of 1911 shows a total num ber of 61. "In 1908 (wet) arrests for drunken ness and disturbing the peace ran about 80 percent of the total. In 1911 they ran about 45 per cent" Does prohibtion increase crime? M. YODER. "THE GIRL FROM MUM MS" Sheehan & Beck's Parisian musi3 cocktail, "The Girl From Mumms," book by J. A. Lacy .score by Fred A. Bohnhorst, will be served in three courses at the Heilig theatre, 11th and Morrison streets, for three nights be ginning Sunday, November 2nd, by an excellent cast headed by Miss Olive Vail, America's leading comedienne, who has scored in more musical com edy successes than any comedienne of the day. In "The Girl From Mumms" Miss Vail has found a comedienne role that will give her an excellent opportunity of displaying her ability and peculiar style of work. Other members of the company are J. I. Oliver, Jackson Barry, John E. Frank, Frank Bert rand, Miss Nellie Watters, Miss Laura Crews, Miss Marjie Dow and Miss Hazel Regan. The production is beautifully mounted, while the " costuming is the most goregous seen on tour in recent years, and many of the foremost de signers of the country say that the creations produced by Madame McGregor-Hull for "The Girl From Mumms" are far in advance of those seen in the fashion center of New York. Enterprise advertising pays. Meritol White Liniment is a splen did application for Sore Throat, Cold on the Lungs, Croup and Pains in the Chest. Saturate a piece of flannel cloth with the Liniment and use as a plaster. It is very penetrating and ef fective. Jones Drug Co., exclusive agents. Adv. Every day will be PANAMA DAY from now until further notice. Clip the Panama Certificate printed elsewhere in the columns and present it TODAY. SEATTLE, Wn, Nov. 3 The di recors of the Seattle Athletic club, which has organized a football team, will at their weekly meeting tonight, decide whether it will be advisable for the Seattle club to have the Car lisle Indians play in Seattle - on the proposed western trip of the Indians. DOBIE WILL STAY WITH WASHINGTON LOCAL MEN OREGON CITY BOYS ARE IN THE O. U.-O. A. C. GAME (By Thom-rss Burke) That game of all football games "Oregon vs. O .A. C," scheduled to be played at Albany next Saturday will attract a large crowd of Oregon City people, if indications count for anything. Not alone because the event is the annual struggle between the two institutions for the cham pionship of Oregon, but also because there are at least two Oregon City boys who will participate in the game. These are Wallace Caufield, the sturdy center on the Oregon team, and son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Caufield of this place, and AIHe Grout, who form erly lived in Oregon City, but is now a resident of Tillamook; alumni and friends of both colleges are extreme ly interested in the battle tlm year, and probably fifty people will go from this place. Caufield, who is playing his fourth season in the pivot position on the .university team, bids fair to take all northwest honors this year. He is recognized among the conference col leges as one of the headiest players and one of the most reliable passers among the northwest centers. Grout is playing his .second year as a regu lar on the U. team, and holds down one of the tackle niches. Football rivalry between the two old time opponents is at a white head this year. The O. A. C. eleven, stung by . a humiliating defeat at the hand of Ifce University of Washington, is out after the Oregon scalp in earnest, and s'r-nds a fair show of beating the Eu gene men. Up until Saturday the "dope"-was all in Oregon's favor, but the surprising defeat administered by Willamette University, a non-confer-ence college, which won from the col legians by a 6-3 score, has lowered the Oregon's hopes of turning out a championship team and boosted O. A. C. stock as to the result of Saturday's grme. There will probably be about 12,000 people in Albany for the event, which is played on neutral grounds each year, that each team may have an equal advantage. BUD COMES HOME On account bf objections interposed by Frankie Burns, Bud Anderson will not meet him in the near future. Af ter granting weight concessions asked by the Oakland fighter, the latter backed out and Anderson boarded a steamer for Portland. He 'arrived in Portland this afternoon. Manager Dick Donald remained in San Francisco to look up another match for the Vancouver lightweight and Bud will be ready to go souh again whenever he secures a bout. FIRST WORLD'S GAME IN 1865. The interleague struggle for . su preme baseball honors, the world's series as-it is known today, began in 1884, but the first series for the coun try's baseball championship dates back to 1865, and James Conaty, now a cobbler in Kansas City, was the hero of the occasion, . pitching and winning seven straight games in one week. Conaty, now old and bent with his weight of 77 years, told In SEATTLE, Wri.; No. 3 President George E. Vincent, of the University of Minnesota, who was in Seattle last night, said there was no chance of Gil mour Dobie, football coach at the Uni versity of Washington, being called to Minnesota to take the place of Dr. H. Williams. . . - ?SJfcS.5S3(SS8, S SPORTING BREVITIES $ J Harvard is suffering from a slight attack of "quarterbackitis," with bad complications of fumbling setting' in. Cornell's play this season has been marked by inconsistency, but the Ithaca clan promises to be a factor to reckon with. Physical directors of the Young Men's Christian association frjm all parts of the Pacific northwest opened a conference at 9 o'clock' this morning that will continue throughout the week in Portland. The Chattanooga club, of the South ern league, has placed a draft in for Outfielder Wilhoit, but it is doubtful if it will be allowed. Venice purchas ed the player previous to the drafting season. McKenzie, Princeton's star miler. is forced to take things very easy this fall because of a sprained ankle. He is one of the best men at Princeton in the cross-country runs, too. Detroit holds the booby pri::e in at tendance figures for a world 3 series rames. Johnny Coulon, bantamweight champion of the world, states that he expects to be ready to box by the mid dle of next month. Johnny will probably meet either Kid Williams or Frankie Burns at Milwaukie when he makes his first fight. LIGHT TEAM WINS Despite the fact that it was out weighted ten pounds to the men," the West Linn school football team dub bed the Willamette eleven to the tune of 20 to 8 on the grounds of the lat ter Sunday afternoon. Warack, Win kle and Montgomery starred for the winners. " Enterprise classified ads pay. If r -Fa s) vcTM 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 afford to offer this $4 book for the mere expense of distribution and WITHOUT ONE CENT OF PROFIT. HOW TO GET 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 EXPENSE -Amount of $1.18 Greatly Reduced Illustration of the $4 Vol. (size 9x12 in.) IN THIS VOLUME THERE ARE EXACTLY 644 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 stamned in cold, with inlaid color OA "'"strated panel; contains more than 600 mag Pi Edition 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 $4 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.f or $ 1 .59 and 6 Certificates Regular octavo size; text matter prac tically the same as the $4 volume; bound in blue vellum cloth; contain 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 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 h 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. He-tells you of the people and the country, of the past as ..well as the present, and eve dips into the promises for the future. The great story is inspiring filled to the full with local color and human interest a story .hat 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 , Reproduced from original, sketches. Clip and Present Panama Certificates Printed daily In these columns and GET YOUR BOOK TODAY Money Refunded If Not Satisfied