MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1913. SPORT DOPE 1MB n ME TEAMS WORK HARD AND SPIRIT AT HIGH PITCH ' , (By Thomas Burke) Graduate Manager Dean Walker, of the University of Oregon, passed "through Oregon City Wednesday after noon enroute to Albany from Port land, where he has been adding the infal touches in preparation for the game Saturday, when the two state institutions, U. of O. and the O. A. C, , will clash for the gridiron supremacy of Oregon. Mr. Walker says that mon- ster excursions will . be run from Portland on all -lines, and he has ar ranged a fare of 1 1-3 for the round trip for any Oregon people who wish ..-,tO maKe tne irip 10 AiDany saiuraay. J The train will leave here at 9:22 and will leave Albany in the evening about 6:30. A large number of Oregon City i people who belond to the alumni of j the two schools are planning on the trip. j According to Mr. Walker enthusi i asm is at the highest pitch in Oregon " football history over the game, not only in Corvallis and Eugene, where the two state schools are located, but practically all over the western part - of the state. He predicts that 10,000 -.people win see tne game, as iar as -'. Albany is concerned, all is in readi ' ncss for the big clash, for Mr. Walker 11,000 people is completed. The field is in such shape that the rain will do but slight damage as an excellent - drainage system has been provided. V-Wide sidewalks have been built from ' leading to all the reserved sections in thebleachers, that the big crowd will be protected from the dampness. The f i. ...;n 1. side of the field and the O. A. C. con- , tin gent will occupy tne soutn Dieacn " ers. Both colleges will be represent- hxr thpip rwn hnrtrin nnn paph wl I : attempt to outdo the other between quarters with "serpentines" and other RTIITITH. The cramp will he the hardest foueht " battle ever waged between the two old rival colleges, uregon wouiu seem iu have a shade the better of the argu ment, judging from the work of the . two elevents during thepast season, but Corvallis men are ready to put up -me uatLlc UJ. men uvea aim a " lieavy field will have a decided ad vantage, as the hope of the Oregon eleven lies largely in the speed of its - whose, work last vear was lareelv re- sponsible for O. A. C's. defeat, and INDIANS WILL TAKE THE COAST TRIP .:. PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 5 The much-talked of trip of the Carlisle In- ; dians to the northwest during the , Christmas holidays became a certain ty yesterday afternoon, when A. S. Goldsmith of the Seattle Athletic club , informed Manager Plowden Stott of the Multnomah club eleven that the Seattle- club would play the Indians. The proposed trip of the Indians has been up in the air for the past two weeks, but it is expected that all pre liminary details will be arranged at a meeting of Manager Stott of Multno mah, A. S. Goldsmith of Seattle and John R. Bender of the Washington . State college in Seattle, Sunday. CLUB OWNERS ELECT DIRECTOR CHICAGO, Nov. 5. Club owners gathered here today to attend the an nual business meeting , of the Ameri can League, which has been set for tomorrow. The board of directors, composed of C. A. Comiskey, Chicago; Charles W. Somers, Cleveland; Frank J. Farrel, New York; and James R. McAleer, Boston, expected to clear up routine business today in advance of the main session. Auditing the treas urer's report and inspecting the lea gue's financial condition, in addition to awarding the American League pennant to Philapelphia are the chief duties of the board of directors. WASHINGTON PREPARES FOR UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SEATTLE,, Wash., Nov. 5. Nine days of light practice will be gone through by the University of Washing ton football team, then, on November 15, the state university gridiron war riors will battle with all their pent-up vigor and enthusiasm to triumph over the University of Oregon eleven, for victory in that struggle means a sixth consecutive northwest intercollegiate championship for the purple and gold. The fourthcoming clash on the grid iron in Portland promises to be one of the hardest fought of the season, and in view of the keen rivalry be tween the Oregon and Washington, ag gregations, the game is expected to draw a record-breaking crowd. High government department offi cials won't jump and run in a great hurry even "when asked to do some thing by a pretty talented and tactful private secretary to a governor. CLUB MEETS IN ARMORY COMPANY L ATHLETIC CLUB GETS TOGETHER WEDNESDAY One of the first regular meetings of the Company L Athletic club was held Wednesday evening at the local arm ory. There was a large turnout and the boys showed lota of the kind of enthusiasm that will help make the new club a power in local athletics. Captain Blanchard is the head o the new organization, and, if his plans are carried out, Company L Athletic club will fill a long felt want in ath letic circles in this part of the county. All the members of company L, the local national guard, are members and it is planned to take in outside men into the body until the total enroll ment is close lo a hundred. There are, at the present time, about 63 in the company and it is thought that forty Oregon City men can be found who would appreciate membership in the club. An instructor will be imported from Portland and regular weekly meetings will be held. Besides these there will be smokers and other social gather ings several times a month. BUD WILL MEET BURNS SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5 Frankie Burns, Oakland scrapper, signed a.r tides quickly with Bud Anderson, when Dick Donald, Bud's manager told him he (Burns)) wanted to fight only in a round ring so he could run away from Anderson without hitting the corners. PELKY WILL FIGHT SMITH SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 5. Arthur Pelky, the white heavyweight champion of the world, has accepted terms, through his manager, Tommy PATTERSON. Captain of 1913 Michigan University Football Team. KiMJiVT'- -V'- .S&jjV- V-iV. "3." Photo by American Press Association. Burns, from Promoter James Cof froth,' to fight- Gunboat Smith 20 rounds here on New Year's day. All that remains to be done is for Coffroth to conclude arrangements with Smith, and he de clared this would be easy. 3 SPORTING BREVITIES S s s " Harry Vardon, the British golfer, is worth upwards of $200,000, according to Portland friends. He told Harry Davis that he intended to retire when he got back to England. Almost the entire sceond team of the University of Cihcago will play against Northwestern Saturday. Coach Stagg said he would not take no chance of injuring his varsity play ers, saving them for the crucial con test of his schedule the Minnesota game. Another big change was made in the makeup of the Yale varsity eleven at prictice today, when Captain Ket cham was shifted to right end. Way taking his place at guard. There was jubilation in the Har vard football camp today when Eddie Mahan, the fast halfback, was dis charged from the hospital and ap peared on the field in playing togs. It is expected he will be able to play against Princeton Saturday. It is said that Danny Hoffman, the old Philadelphia player, will purchase the Bridgeport Eastern association club in the near future. Bill Phillips, manager of the Indian apolis Federal league champions, has been reengaged as pilot for next sea son. Buddy Ryan is sticking around San Francisco and is playing ball with some of the southern barnstorming teams. The National league piled up 800 more base hits during 1913 than the American, but not in the world's series. 6H SAGE DAK GRAY HAIR SO NATURALLY NOBODY CAN TELL Bestores Its Luster, Pre rents Scalp Itching; Dandruff and Fall ing Hair. That beautiful eren (hide of dark, glossy hair can only be had fcy brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. While it la a mussy, tedloua taak It well repays those whose hair Is turning gray, faded mad streaked. Tour hair la your charm. It makes or mars the face. When It lades, turns gray and looks dry, vlspy and soraggly Just an appli cation or two of Sage and Sul phur enhance its appearance a lundred fold. .Don't bother to prepare the tonic; yon can get from any drug ptare aIO-ent fcrtttf of "Wyeth'a Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," ready to use. This can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color and luster of your hair, and Is the best thing known to remove dandruff, stop scalp Itching and falling hair. "Everybody chooses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because It dark ens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been ap plied. Tou simply dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time, which re-' quires but a few momenta. Do this at night and by mofning the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it be comes beautifully dark and ap pears glossy, lustrous and abun dant. It certainly helps folks look years younger and twice aa attractive, says a . well-know downtown drnggist. I If , For Sale By Huntley Bros. Co. earl to Heart Talks By CHARLES N. LDRIE MIGHT MOVE THE WORLD. If "it belongs to humari nnture to hate those whom one has injured," as Tacitus says, do we love those whom we have benefited? Undoubtedly, but how about those who" have benefited and are benefit ing us? ' If you have a debt of gratitude to pay meet the obligation squarely and manfully. Do not cancel the obliga tion in a grudging, niggardly, mean spirited manner that leaves your ben efactor with a sense of injury. Possibly the rarest of all the graces is the ability to express gratitude easi ly. How haltingly the words of thanks come from the tongue! How we hate to tell our fellow man who has done something for us that we feel our selves under an obligation to him! It was always thus. A century and a half ago Xjf. Johnson wrote; "There are minds so impatient of in feriority that their gratitude is n spe cies of revenge, and they return bene fits not because recompense is a pleas ure, but because obligation is a pain." Let not obligation be a thorn in your side. If you ARE obliged to a fellow man and all of us are at one time or another when it comes to saying so Say so without affectation, without hesitation, without "impatience of in feriority." Did it ever occur to you that save for the labor and patience of others we should all perish of want? We are dependent and interdependent, not In dependent For you and for me the cooly labors in the rice fields of China, the fisher man faces the storms and hardships of the icy north seas, the sponge gatherer plunges into the deep. Are they not, in virtue of our de pendence on them and our gratitude to them, our brothers? " Were the world fully aroused to the sense of the interdependence of man wars would cease. Man to man, the world over, would feel that all are members of one big family. And the gratitude that we should pay freely for all that is done for us granted even that it is done in each case with a selfish motive would be the force that should lift mankind to a higher, better plana. THAT-IS NO GOOD AT ALL" What It Meant When Used by the' Italian Postal Official. "A postoffice order was awaiting me In the postoffice of a small Italian vil lage." writes a correspondent of the Cologne Gazette. "I could see the pleasant little document lying on the counter, so I gave my name and asked for the money. "The official, however, remarked that that wouldn't do. Ah," thought I. "he wants some proof of' identity.' so I rummaged among my papers and fetch ed out my military service paper. " 'That is no good at all,' said the official, 'because' But after the 'be cause' he stuck. The words refused to Dome out, and he merely assumed an Icy official demeanor. Ah,' thought I, 'he can't read the German of my serv ice paper,' so I went away and dragged in my innkeeper, and he swore with a mighty oath that I was so and so. " 'That is no good at all,' was all the man behind the counter vouchsafed, though he said it with a smile. So I hurried back to the inn and fetched further proofs of my identity a pass port, an authenticated copy of a certifi cate of nationality and finally even a letter from an Italian relative. Surely the postoffice man would be able to read them. . "'That Is no good at all, he said, with another of his pleasant smiles, aftitr he had read them, adding that he was very, very sorry. Naturally I got angry at this and abused him as well as a limited acquaintance with foreign terms of abuse would permit " 'That is no good at all,' he saidt with another of his smiles, as he rat tled the shutter across the pigeon hole. Next morning I returned to the charge only to see the shutter fly across again. The day after the same thing hap pened. But on the third day I brought the burgomaster with me. I came pre pared to have it out with the Italian postoffice. What was my astonishment when I saw the clerk waiting for me behind the open shutter, with a hand ful of small coins, which he counted out to me, winding up with a fascinat ing smile as he said, 'Don't you see, yesterday and the day before I hadn't enough money.' " MYSTERY OF LEPROSY. And the Treatment Its Victims Re ceived In the Middle Ages. Why leprosy occurs in certain places and not in others is one of the mys teries of medicine. In the early centu ries of the Christian era it spread all over Europe. Every city had its leper house. For no cause that any one can assign it began to disappear early In the sixteenth century, and Europe soon numbered Its empty lazarettos by thou sands. Climate has no , influence on the disease, for when it left the most of Europe it persisted in Norway,- Ice land, Spain and the islands of the Med iterranean. In Asia it Is to be found from India to Siberia, and no part of Africa is free from it That leprosy can be planted In new territory is shown most pointedly in the terrible experience of Hawaii, which was free from the disease until about 1850, when the Chinese brought it there. Now Molokai is a name to make men shudder. In the middle ages it was the cus tom to consider a man dead whenever he was found to have leprosy. His heire divided his property, a funeral service was said for him and a shovel ful of earth thrown after him as he walked to his living grave In the leper house. The world Is kinder now, but knows no treatment for this scourge which is much more effective. St Lou Is Republic. Love will push a man into matri mony, but it takes a lawyer to pull him out. Captain inch, Hero of Volturno Disaster, and Faithful Dog Current Comment. A new Idea in ship furnishing is to make every mattress a life preserver If we cannot have unsinkable ships we can have unsinkable beds. Phila delphia Ledger. Germans are planning another boat line for use of the Panama canal. The world seems to have taken us at our word when we said we were building the ditch for all nations. Cleveland Plain Dealer. It has just been found that, the grave of Eugene Field." who delighted the hearts and minds .of thousands, is without a monument So soon the world forgets the men who in various ways have lightened its burdens. Bal timore American. I wasn't huPt a bit, says Huerta. The commission's pruning shears held out well. DROPS-INTO OPEN ELEVATOR SHAFT George McCarver, steward of the Commercial club, fell through the elevator shaft of the Masonic building Wednesday. Three cuts on his head and severe bruises on his body testi fied to the fact that he had dropped about 15 feet Mown the shaft to the bumpers below. - He was waiting for the elevator to descend to the first floor and, appar ently, looked up the shaft to see where the platform had stopped. He lost his balance and dropped down to the machinery . of the shaft. Em ployes around the building came to his rescue nd got him out. Had the elevator descended while he was in his position, it is more than possible that his injuries would have been ser ious. . ffSfSfSWfffSfiFff 'fifStlfilSfSIWSfVf tu:. V Til.. -41 1 Ti E p n 1 i ma-new tuuauaicu uuua rur svcry ueauen Photo .copyrigh t, 1913, by American Press Association. CAPTAIN FRANCIS INCH, who was the principal hero of the steamer Volturno, which burned at sea, was the last to leave the burning ship He was taken off by the Kroqnland. with his pet fox terrier Jack. The faithful dog had stuck to the captain's heels through much of the bat tle waged against the fire. This picture of the captain and his dog was taken on the Kroonland, which landed Inch and seventy-seven other rescued passen gers and oflicers at New York. In recognition of Captain Inch's bravery dur ing that dire time of peril the Uranium line announced that it would provide the commander with another ship, contrary to the rule of the sea that when a captain loses his vessel he is never given another. . . PANAMA ffi ANDTHE PRESENTED - BY THE OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE - - AS EXPLAINED BELOW See the Great Canal in Picture and" Prose CANAL 1 1! ra X mi Mil Read How You May Have It Almost Free Cat out the above coupon, and d resent It at this office with the ex pense 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 la Picturs and frost ILLUSTRATED EDITION This beautiful big volume is written by Willis J. Abbot, a writer of international renown, and is the acknowl edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zohc It is a splendid large book of almost 500 pages, 9x12 inches in size; printed from new type, large and clear, on special paper; bound in tropical red vellum cloth; . :.i .. . i - i j . I. i . - ,i , i . . A ILLUSTRATED siampeu in guiu, wun miaiu color panci ; contains miTinu more than 600 magnificent illustrations, including beau tiful pages reproduced from water color studies in col orings that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call I ExPENSE' and see this beautiful book that would sell for $4 under usual I Amount o! conditions, but which is presented to our readers for SIX of ' in the above Certificates of consecutive dates, and only the Sent by Mail, Pottage Paid, for $1.59 and 6 Certificates Panama and Regular octavo size; text matter practically the same as the $4 vol- A dliCUlia ailU nme: bound in blue vellum cloth; contains onlv 100 nhntA. I Srraphic reproductions, and the color plates are fitted. This book would sell at $2 nnjer UBual condi tons, but is presented to our readers tar SIX of the ;Jbove Certificates of consecutive dates and only the f the CanaT OCTAVO A ECIT10N Z Sent by Mail. Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates EXPENSE j Amount o I i 48c EVERY BAY TEEY Every day will be PANAMA DAY from now until further notice. - Clip the Panama Certificate printed elsewhere in the columns and present it TODAY. GO THE Greatly Reduced Illustration of the $4 Vot. (size 9x12 in.) UN THIS VOLUME THERE ARE EXACTLY (84 4 MAGNIFICENT ILLUSTRATIONS OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE wants ail 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 IX 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 (f J Illustrated p4 Edition 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.for $1.59 and 6 Certificates Regular octavo size ; text natter prac tically the same as the $4 volume; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photographic reproductions and the color plates are omitted-. 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 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 gold, with inlaid color panel; contains more than 600 mag nificent illustrations, including beauti- EXPENSE Amount of $1.18 Panama and The Canal $2 OCTAVO EDITION 3SN3dX3 Amount of 48c including many full page plates from, original water color studies in all their natural colorings. MAIL ORDERS, ADDRESS THE ENTERPRISE, Oregon Gy, Or. PANAMA tSe 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. He tells you of the people and the country, of the past as well as the present, -"and even dips into the promises for the future. The great story is inspiring filled to the full with local color and human interest a story that 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