Morning enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1911-1933, December 02, 1913, Image 4

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    MORNING ENTERPRISE. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2. 1913.
SPORT
All STARS CHOOSEN
DOPE
TEN COACHES AND WRITERS
PICK BEST PLAYERS
Five conference college football
players were unanimous selections for
the All Northwestern football team by
a composite vote of 10 coaches and
writers. They were Fenton and Par
sons of Oregon, Sutton and Miller of
Washington and Chrisman of the Ore
gon Agricultural college. The critics
voted solidly for four of them in the
position they played all season, while
balloting on Miller was split, he be
ing given six for fullback and four for
halfback. This shifting was solely
for the purpose of giving some outsid
er a chance at halfback. Miller would
play equally as well at fullback as
halfback.
The composite eleven follows:
George - Harter, Washington State
college, center; Joe Harter, Washing
ton State college, and Fenton, Univer
sity of Oregon .guards; Chrisman Ore
gon Agricultural cqjlege, and Ander
son, University of Washington, and
Johnson, University of Idaho, ends;
Cornell, University of Oregon, quar
terback; Parsons, University of Ore
gon, and Lockhart, University of
Idaho, halfbacks, and Miller, Univer
sity of Washington, fullback.
RITCHIE IS IMPROVED
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 1. Fight
fans who jonurney to Willie Ritchie's
were convinced today that the cham
pion is a greatly improved fighter.
Harlem Tommy Murphy, who clashes
with Ritchie here on the evening of
Dectmber 10, also entertained several
hundred fans at his camp at San Ra
fael. - The champion's work consisted of
six rounds of boxing, two each with
Joe Getz, Guy Lee, of Portland, and
Jimmy McVeigh. It looked to the
fans as if Ritchie put more steam into
his punches than heretofore and he
balanced himself better when set for
a blow.
PETROSKEY TO MEET BENZ
BUTTE, Mont., Dec. 1. Sailor Ed
Petroskey of San Francisco and Leo
Benz have signed articles for a 12
--nnd contest here, under the auspices
of the Copper City Athletic club, about
December 15. The men will fight at
158 pounds. Benz has fought 15 bat
tles here, winning all except one
dra.v. Of the others, he won 12 by
the 'knockout route within four
rounds.
JOSEPH E. O'TOOLE.
Former Newsboy Defeated Presi
dent's Nephew For Class Honors.
V Ijf JFK
A '
V "'Wni'-ffiilli1rrF-':
SEASON WASECCENTRIC
U. OF O. GAMES FULL OF FREAKS
AND SURPRISES .
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EU
GENE, Dec. 1. It is hard to describe
the football season of the University
of Oregon which closed with the
Thanksgiving game in Portland, but
if one word can do it is is "eccentric."'
Oregon lost where she should have
won, as witness the freak game at Sa
lem with Willamette, and played a
closer game with Washington than the
football fraternity believed she would
Oregon was completely routed the
first half against O. A. C. at Albany
and turned over all the dope sheets by
not winning this game.
Football has not been the winner
this year that it should have been be
cause of the "on again, and off again"
variety, the state university eleven
has played. The report of the gradu
ate manager is not yet in but it will
be shy nearly $1500 of what it was
supposed to total.
Dean Walker, graduate manager,
explains this by saying that the dope
upsetting game against O. A. C. caus
ed many people to believe the annual
Oregon-Washington game would be a
farce and it lowered the attendance.
Due to "the inclement weather the
turkey day attraction at Portland
brought out a smaller crowd than at
any previous game for a number .of
years past. Walker had expected to
clear $1500 on this game, whereas
Oregon's share of the gate amounted
to $1450. Out of this expenses wil)
have to be met.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Cary visit rela
tives in Portland Sunday and Monday.
A large quantity of. prunes were
shipped from Estacada to the Willam
ette Valley Prune Association at Sa
lem last week, from the Estacada Fruit
Growers,' Association of this locality.
The car contained 25 tons, the indi
vidual shippers being P. F. Standish,
Clark Denny, P. M. Wagner and Thom
as & Butler.
It was quite a disappointment to
Many Saturday, when Mr. Ford of the
Estacada schools, called off the lec
ture course. Not enough season tick
ets were sold to warrant . his continu
ing engagement of the course.
Mrs. E. P. Prescott, left for her
home in Portland today, after quite an
extended visit here at the home of her
sister, Mrs. Henry Dubois.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Stokes are guests
of their daughter, Mrs. Roger Cary, for
Thanksgiving.
The marriage of Miss Anna Allen
and Mr. G. F. Surfus took place yester
day at 1:30 at the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Allen, of
Estacada, Rev. Givens performing the
ceremony.
J. A. Tucker had a turkey and goose
shooting match yesterday, using rifles
and there were a large number of contestants.
The Contest Contestants
are ..not getting all the votes
which are issued from day to
day with every cash sale. It
is evident .that some people are
not saving their votes for any
one and this conclusively shows
that there is room for a dozen
more active candidates.
Every Woman
is the name of a great play and
also tells who may enter this
contest to win one of seven
grand prizes which combined,
represent a value of $2200.
ESTACADA.
Cheer up, all you hard working, plain
people! Another blow at the high cost
of living is about to be struck. The
government has started in to bust the
jewelry trust
Homer Harriman, a former Estacada
boy, was here over the Sabbath from
The Dalles.
Earl Schultze came over from Port
land to see the football game.
The "500" club was very nicely en
tertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Sparks last Friday evening. The
usual good time is reported.
C. and G. Krigbaum, extensive fruit
growers in the Garfield neighborhood,
shipped their yield of prunes last
week.
A. F. Benson was a business visitor
in Portland Tuesday.
The special meetings at the Chris
tion church, conducted by Rev. Roy
Dunn, of Gladstone, are being well at
tended and considerable interest is
shown.
Mrs. Ida Holder and little daughter
arrived the latter part of last week
from Minnesota, to make their home
with Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Holder. Mr.
Holder and wife went to Portland to
meet their daughter-in-law.
L. D. Walker made his weekly visit
to Estacada this week from Canby.
B. O. Sarver and family have moved
from Estacada to Springwater.
J. A. Looney has taken up his resi
dence at Springwater, moving with his
family last week.
Mrs. J. W. Moore, of Cazadero, who
has been very ill, is improving under
the care of Dr. Haviland of Estacada.
A large number of people stood in
the rain and mud last Saturday after
noon to witness the football game be
tween Oregon City and Estacada and
when the score resulted in 12 to 0 in
favor of Estacada, there was great re
joicing. The same evening the boys
attended the moving picture show all
together, and a still greater demon
stration over the victory was made.
Our boys played six games during the
season and lost but two. They are
now champions of Clackamas County.
Mr. and Mrs. Shields, of Minneap
olis, Minn., who have been visiting at
the home of Mrs. Shields' sister, Mrs.
C. Wisner, left on Monday for The
Dalles for a short visit and later will
go to California. .
Gay lord Kieth, of Portland, was here
Saturday to witness the football game.
E. E. Saling has been having exten
sive repairs made on their residence
northwest of town. A. L .Lindsay is
doing the work.
Will Cary and wire went to Portland
yesterday to see the play, "Within the
Law" at the Heilig.
J. A. Somers, until last week book
keeper in the Estacada State Bank,
has decided to remain in Estacada
and will find employment which will
give him more out door exercise, as
his health has not been very good for
the past few months. Estacada peo
ple in general are pleased that Mr.
Somer and his estimable family are to
remain in Estacada.
Mrs. F. E. Guthrie went to Portland
last Thursday, returning the same day.
You
are invited to enter your name
and participate in the distribu
tion of these prizes on May 1st,
next. You do not need experi
ence, any great amount of time
and the fact of the contest hav
ing run four weeks makes little
difference.
Do You Want
a new piano in your home, or
a good watch? There awaits
an exceptional opportunity for
any wide awake woman or
young girl to get one of these
prizes. Come to the Rexall
Store today and ask for the
manager of
Huntley's Popularity
Contest
DRINK IRE WATER
IF
Eat less meat and take Salts for Back
ache or Bladder trouble
Neutralizes acids.
Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys,
they become overworked; get sluggish,
ache, and feel like lumps of lead. The
urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irri
tated, and you may be obliged to seek re
lief two or three times during the night.
When the kidneys clog you must help
them flush off the body's urinous waste
or you'll be a Teal Bick person shortly.
At first you feel a dull misery in the kid
ney region, you suffer from backache,
sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets
sour, tongue coated and you feel rheu
matic twinges when the weather is bad.
Eat less meat, drink lots of water;
also get from any pharmacist four ounces
of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful
in a glass 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 clogged kidneys'
and stimulate them to normal activity,
also to neutralize the acids, in urine, so
it no longer is a source of irritation,
thus ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in
jure; makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water drink which everyone should
take now and then to keep the kidneys
clean and active. Druggists here say
they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who
believe in overcoming kidney trouble
while it is only trouble.
For Sale bv Huntley Bros.
(Adv.)
Loneliness --Dispelled
YOU need never be lonely if you have a
Bell Telephone. If yoti live in the city
or in the country, yqut friends arc easily acces"
sible if yoti tis the Bell. Yoa can have a
neighborly chat at any time. The telephone
is a protection for the home. If something un
usual happens, yoti will find the Bell Telephone
an ever ready friend. All parts of the country
are united by universal Bell service.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph
Company
At the Portland Theatres
LAST CAR LEAVES FOR OREGON CITY AT MIDNIGHT
MRS. FISKE IN "THE HIGH ROAD," AT HEILIG, DECEMBER 1-2-3, MAT
INEE WE DNESDAY
f I 1 i s -
yw K 4 sax
I pi
Ulfclsj v' $4
In j I if I ; V -
MRS. FISKE AT HEILIG
Mrs. Fiske and the Manhattan com
pany under the direcion of Harrison
Grey Fiske, are to come to the Heilig
Theatre, Eleventh and Morrison, in
"The High Road," on Monday, Tues
day and Wednesday and Wednesday
"matinee, December 1, 2, and 3.
In "The High Road," his most im
portant work, Edward Sheldon, auth
or of Mrs. Fiske's former graphic suc
cess, "Salvation Nell," is said to
have felt the pulse of the moment and'
to have written a play with a purpose
but without a preachment. It is a
story, so to speak, of soul progression
From the ignorance and sordidness of
her early surroundings, Mary Page
starts upon an uphill journey and edu
cates, broadens and develops a natu
rally great mind and heart. After a
material experience of the beauties
and luxuries - of the world, there
comes, not a moral awakening exact
ly, but a stage in her moral develop
ment when these things can no longer
satisfy, and when her broadened vis
ion and augmented understanding
show her a great field of usefulness
to humanity. This she enters and in
it rapidly attains, through her ability,
her zeal and her self-sacrifice, the de
votion of hundreds of thousands of
the overworked, underfed and down
trodden for whom she has fought for
better material conditions and a hap
pier outlook on life. In the course of
her work for others, there comes into
her life a great love which finally
leads her to her woman's crown of
happiness, but she attains it only af
ter it seems to have been placed for
ever beyond her reach.
Meritol White Liniment is a splen
did .application for Sore Throat, Cold
on tne L,ungs, Croup and Pains in the
Chest. Saturate a piece of flannel
cloth with the Liniment anil use as a
plaster. It is very penetrating and ef-
iecuve. jones Urug Co., exclusive
agents. Adr.-
The famous and favorite actress, Mrs. Fiske and her splendid support
ing company will present Edward Sheldon's wonderful play success, "The
High Road," at The Heilig theatre, lUh and Morrison street, for "three
nights, beginning Monday, December 1. Matinee Wednesday. Mail or
ders are now being received.
HYOMEI RELIEVES
IN FIVE MINUTES
Help Comes Quickly When Hyomei
is Used for Catarrh, Bronchitis
or Cold in the Head
li you suffer from raising of muc
ous, husky voice, discharge from the
nose, droppings in the throat, sniffles,
or any other symptoms of catarrh, or
have bronchitis or cold in the hear
surely use Hyomei. It will banish the
diseast germs in the nose ,throt and
lungs and give quick and permanent
relief or money refunded by Huntley
Bros. Co.
The Hyomei treatment gives a tonic
healing effect to the air you breathe,
destyors the catarrhal germs, strops
the poisonous secretions, soothes the
irrigated mucous membrane and
makes a marked improvement in the
general health.
The complete" outfit, including in
haler and bottle of liquid, costs fl.00;
extra bottle of liquid, if later needed,
50 cents.
Low Round Trip Fares
to the
Oregon Development League
at
Roseburg, Thursday, December 4 th
via the
SUNSET
OGDENSSHASTAl
ROUTES
"THE Exposition Line 1915"
Sale Dates and Limits
Tickets will be sold from all main line and branch points between
Portland and Ashland to Roseburg, December 3rd and 4th. Final
return limit December 5th
Everyone Should Be There
Further partiilars, fares, train schedules, etc., from any S. P. Agent
JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Ore.
BAD STOMACH?
ONE DOSE off
Mayrs Wonderful Stomach Remedy
Should Convince You That Your
Suffering Is Unnecessary
commanded for Chronic Indigestion
and Stomach, Liver and lntes
tlnal Ailment.
Thousands of people, some right In your own lo
cality, have taken Mayr's Wonderful Stomach
Remedy for Stomach, Liver and Intestinal
Aliments, Dyspepsia, Pressure ol Gas Around
the Heart, Sour Stomach, Distress After Eat
ing, Nervousness, Dizziness, Fainting Spells,
Sick Headaches, Constipation, Torpid Liver,
etc., and are praising and recommending it
highly to others so that they may also know the
joys of living. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach
Remedy is the best and most widely known
Remedy for the above ailments. Ask your drug-a
gist for a bottle today. Put it to a test one dose I
should convince. It ia marvelous in its healing
properties and its effects are quite natural as it
acts on the source and foundation of stomach
ailments and in most cases brings quick relief
and permanent results. This highly successful
Remedy has been taken by the most prominent
people, and those in all walks of life, among
them Members of Congress, Justice of the
Supreme Court, Educators, Lawyers, Merchants,
Bankers, Doctors, Druggists, Nurses, Manufac
turers, Priests, Ministers, Fanners, with lasting
benefit and it should be equally successful in your
case. Send for free valuable booklet on Stomach
Ailments to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, 154-156
Whiting Street, Chicago, 111.
(For Sale in Oregon City by Huntley
Bros. Co.) Adv.
AT ONCE! CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN.
HEAD
GOLDS AND
CATARRH
VANISH
Breathe Freely ! Clears Stuffed-up,
Inflamed Nose 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. 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 is distress
ing but truly needless.
Put your faith just once in
"Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold
or catarrh will surely disappear.
f ThisNew Illustrated Book For Every Header I
i LaiMMMMMfMMMPPPIrla
UmAMA and THE CMimI
1
PRESENTED BY THE
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE
AS EXPLAINED RFI ow
See the Great Canal in Picture and Prose
SllfMMJMMfLlIllJMLlMlLlJLi;
EI
TEJ
Read How You May Have It Almost Free
w Cut oat the above coapon, and present It at this office with the ex-
T pense amount herein set opposite the style selected (which covers the
S items of the cost of packing, express from the factory, cheekine, clerk
hire and other necessary EXPENSE items), and receive your choice of
these honks;
PANAM A.
AND THE
CANAL
Is Picture and Frost
ILLUSTRATED
EDITION
TL!. 1 ili.-l t; ... ,ITI, -r ...
.mis ueaurum Dig volume is written oy wniis J. ADbot, m
a writer of international renown, and is the acknowl-
edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone. 9
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 ; T
title stamped in gold, with inlaid color panel ; contains A
more than 600 magnificent illustrations, including beau-
tiful pages reoroduced from water colnr studies in ml- T
onngs that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call I rilprNr G
and see this beautiful book that would sell for $4 under usual I AaSn( iol
I conditions, but which is presented to our readers for SIX of to Z
the above Certificates of consecutive dates, and only the P11
I $4
Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.59 and 6 Certificates
Panama an rl Regular octavo size; text matter practically the same as the $4 vol- m
a aucuua auu nme; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photo- fZ X
A 1 , l, : . 1 . i iL. i . . I PTPFMCV X
Amount ol
ft, a Pnn.' graphic reproductions, and the color plates ara I EXPENSE"
" ""s vmai fitted. This book would sell at $2 unJer usual condi-
J OCTAVO ms. Dut 13 presented to our readers lor SIX of the Dn
Er. riON ifcove Certificates of consecutive dates and only the MZ
j Sent by Mail, Postage Paul, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates X
TCTvrgTjeyywgTwvvgvgTio)f 988Wwt. J
i
Which proves that readers are all
eager to get the complete story of
anama lit Ca
IN PICTURE AND PROSE
It's a big $4 book.filled from cover to cover with rare pictures, inter
woven with a story which at once grasps you and holds your entire
interest to the very end. ,
The Oregon City Enterprise
recognizes the educational ad
vantages offered by this timely
work, and for( the benefit of Its
readers presents it for
6
Panama
Certificates
and
Only
$1.18
a
m&st
xmmm
There's also a
smaller volume with
only 100 illustra--tions
and no color
plates, for six cer
tificates and only. . .
48c
The $4 book Is 9x12
Inches more than 20
times as large as this
greatly reduced Illustration.
More than 600 Illustrations
AND 16 WATER COLORS
These pictures alone are worth more than the small expense amount
named above. They portray scene far removed from the path of the
tourist the jungle, the strange natives, the wilda of the Isthmus
and the gorgeous colorings of that flowery garden of the tropics.
- Mail Orders Filled, as Shown In the Certificate
Printed Dally.
GET YOUR BOOK TODAY
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED
For Sal By
HUNTLEY BROS.
Udr.) .
CO.