V! J MORNING ENTERPRISE. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 18, 1913. SPORT DOPE HIGH SCHOOL LOOKS FORWARD TO BEST YEAR The Oregon City High school bas ketball team has been hard at work with almost daily practice for close to two weeks and by Saturday the final team will have been picked. Coach Wagner is enthuiastic about the pros pects for the coming season and pre dicts that the local school will make a record In Clackamas county this season." Several games are scheduled with other schools in the county but none will played until after Christmas. la all the. season there will probably be 12 or 14 games. The team will be composed of the Green, J. Beatie, Clarence Orem, John Roak, Arthur Farr, Albert Vorhies and Lyle Kellogg, according to a state ment by Wagner Wednesday. The po sition of the men has not yet been an nounced and this list includes those who will be subs as well as the play ers of the regular team. PARTY TO WELCOME RETURN CHICAGO, Dec. 17. President Ban B. Johnson, of the American League, and a party of Chicago baseball enthu siasts will travel to New York or. a special train next March to welcome back to this country the world-touring Chicago White Sox and New York Giants, according to plaas announced today. The party will leave here on March 5, arriving iin New York the next, day in time to meet the tourists on their arrival. McLOUGHLIN ELECTS - To a close vote Wednesday after noon McLoughlin Institute football team elected Mitchel Storey captain for the 1914 season and Joseph Mil ler for manager. These boys were the stars for the 1913 season and will probably be the backbone of next year's team. S . SPORTING BREVITIES 8 $SSSSsSSSS-iSS!8: Matty Mclntyre, former White Sox outfielder, who played with Provi dence last summer, is seeking to man age a minor league team next year. Eill Sweeney says he doesn't want to manage the Cincinnati Ri.ds, w hich shows that Johnny Evers is not ;he only brainy second baseman. Ty Cobb says there is no such th.ng as a batting eye. Ty always did like to kid the pitchers. Dick Kinsella, former scout of the St. Louis Cardinals, will ,o south in the spring with the New York Giants to fill the place formerly occupied by Wilbert Robinson. President Baum denies the report that he has signed an uniphe !v the name of Hayes, or anyone else for next season. He says that Held, Mc Carthy, Finney, Pfyle and Guthrie will be on the job next year and that he will not send contracts to the umpires until after the holidays. Spiegel, the Washington and Jeffer son halfback, scored 21 touchdowns for a total of 126 points during lue last season. GOTCH HAS CHALLENGE MAMUTOFF WANTS TO MEET FRANK GOTCH Ivan Mamutoff Is the latest Importa tion of foreign wrestling material. He Is a muscular, big Russian, employed as a member of the czar's bodyguard. Mamutoff Is best at the Graeeo-Ro-man style, but will meet Frank Gotch. w Photo by American Press Association. Ivan mamutoff. the American champion, in any style of mat work that Gotch favors. Gotch will, it is said, come out of his retirement to meet Mamutoff. The Russian is over six feet tall and weighs almost 300 pounds. CUB STAR OUT OF FRATERNITY QUEER GREETINGS. Tribes That Spit Upon or Weep Over Their Visitors. Among the Masai and Dkerewe it Is a mark of respect to greet an acquaint ance or a stranger by spitting at him. Almost as strange is the custom ascrib ed to the Tibetans of sticking out the tongue by way of salutation. Rubbing noses is quite common; the Burmese and many tribes of Eskimos, Lapland ers and Malays do so. Stranger than any of these customs is the weeping salutation that has been observed a worn; central South Ameri can Indians. This form of greeting oc curs, too, in the Andaman islands. New Zealand and Polynesia. A Portuguese explorer describes the custom as he saw it used among a tribe of South American Indians: "Whenever a guest enters a hut he is immediately honored and made wel come by being wept over. Without a word being spoken he is led to the hammock. As soon as he is seated the hostess and her daughters and any of their girl friends who happen to be In the house (it the time come and sit about the guest, touch him lightly with their fingers and commence to weep loudly and to shed many tears. During this eeretnony.Mn a sort of connected discourse, they recite everything that has happened to them recently and talk of the hardships of the road that the visitor has suffered and of anything and everything that can arouse com passiou and tears. The guest, bis hand before his face, pretends to weep and does not speak until the crying has gone on for some time. Then they all Wipe away their tears and become as lively and merry as if they had never cried In all t)wir live." Exchance. Zimmerman Fails to Pay Dues to Players' Organization. Heiuie Zimmerman, the hard hitting third baseman of the Chicago National league club, Is no longer a member of the Baseball Players' fraternity. David L. Fultz. president of the Players" or ganization, confirmed a report to this effect, explaining that Zimmerman had been dropped in July after failure to pay his dues, Zimmerman owed for six weeks, snid Fultz. Others also financially delinquent were notified that their names had been removed from the membership list. Fultz said, but they were rein stated after their applications were ap proved by the advisory board. Zimmer man can join again by applying form ally for reinstatement, but. according to Fultz, the Chicago i l i ver has not evidenced any desire i i!n so. Fultz attrilmtfd Zimiuerunin's uttitude to ward tlie fraternity as iinl fference and not as meaning that he vas hostile to ward it. Be Careful, Mac. President McAleer's plans to travel around the world with an all star base ball Hub are likely to- be upset owing to the fact that his Boston Red Sox are balking over their contracts for 1914. THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL. Still one thing remains to furnish the house beautiful, without which guests and books and flowers only emphasize the fact that the house is not a home. 1 mean the warm light in the rooms that comes from kind eyes, from quick, unconscious smiles, from gentleness in tones, from habits of forethoughtfulness for one another all that happy illumi nation which in the 'inside of a house corresponds to morning sun light outside falling on quiet dewy fields. William Channing GanneL Lights Were Out, .The stranger was driving his auto through the crowded thoroughfare of Boston. It was night At the corner of Tremont and Boylston a large traf fic cop halted the stranger. Walking over to the car, the cop said: "1 should like to call your attention to the fact that one of your forward irradiators Is shrouded In gloom and the effulgence of the Illuminator has evanesced and that the transversal ether oscillations in your rparmost In candeseencer have been discontinued." Cincinnati Enquirer. OPENS UP NOSTRILS, CLEARS HEAD, ENDS COLDS OR CATARRH AT ONCE Instantly Relieves Swollen, Inflamed Nose, Head, Throat You Breathe Freely Dull Headache Goes Nasty Discharge Stops. 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 cattarhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the Email bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, fra- For Sal By HUNTLEY BROS. (Adv.) grant 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 blow ing. Catarrh or a cold, with its run ning nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is dis tressing but truly needless. Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. GRAVEL VERSUS CONCRETE ROAD Each One Best In Its Proper Place, Says Expert. - BUILDING METHODS BETTER. For All Kinds of Country Traffic the Gravel Highway Is Excellent, but It Is Impracticable In Suburban Towns. Lasts Five Years. By FRANK F. ROGERS, State Highway Commissioner of Mich igan. Farmers who have been building the old fashioned gravel roads In counties where the traffic is not great need not lose any sleep for fear that they have been doing the wrong thing. A gravel road is plenty good enough for all ordi nary country traffic. Wayne county, Mich., has the most elaborate and extensive system of con crete roads in the world. The tests of the state highway commission were made just outside the city limits of De troit on several roads and also on the county line, from a dozen to a score of miles farther out. The result was very good news for the ordinary road build ers, who haven't a fortune to- spend on the work, but bad news for the manu facturers of concrete making machines. A three months' daily count of the vehicles on a road just outside Detroit gave an average of 2.1G0 daily. At the county line the average was only slightly in excess of 300. At the coun ty line the road was gravel and with stood that much traffic with practically no damage. As Wayne county has al most three-quarters of a million people and a correspondingly large traffic, the deduction is that in the vast majority of counties 1?i the United States gravel roads will serve all necessities for many years to come. But a gravel road near Detroit would be worse than useless. Wayne county is not making a mistake in building concrete roads. Neither will any other iiiiliiiiiiiBPiilliii CO. READY TO LAY. THE CONCRETE. county in any state where the traffic Is heavy make a mistake in building them. A gravel road near any large city wouldn't last three months. Gravel roads under ordinary traffic will last five years. Methods of making concrete roads seem to have improved largely within a few years. The concrete is laid in sections about twenty-five feet in width. A road made four years ago was found by inspection to be 76 per cent defective after a year's use. A road made in 1912 suffered only 27 per cent in a year. The defects found in the roads were not ascribed to traffic. Near Detroit 89 per cent of the traffic is in automo biles and only 11 per cent 'horse drawn. Automobiles do not injure concrete. The defects are cracks and holes, due to careless construction. The com mission found that in places where the road had for its foundation the origi nal highway the concrete had remain ed perfect. Where it had been built upon filled in foundation the filling in had not been made solid enough. The result was longitudinal cracks extend ing practically the entire length of the filled In stretches. Transverse cracks were found singly and infrequently. They were ascribed to lack of sufficient space between the section to allow for contraction and expansion caused by heat and cold. Diagonal cracks, also Infrequent, are due to a combination of both the faults which cause the longitudinal and trans verse cracks. Holes are due to foun dation substances such as clay, wood or uncrushed rock having been Imbed ded in the concrete when it was soft. It is thus shown that no one kind of road is good for all conditions. The concrete road and the gravel road are the extremes of roads good enough to be called good. There are other kinds of intermediate quality of resistance to- traffic. The kind that ought to be built in any locality depends upon the amount of traffic they will have to sustain and the cost of getting the material there. The latter item might be so great as to fail to justify the kind of road which other circum stances would call for. The soil and the drainage must be considered. Concrete roads are easily and inex pensively repaired. The method is to pour tar In the cracks and. holes and sift sand over It This patching seems to be permanent and costs from $30 to $100 Der mile. Hard Workers. Only one in 10,000 ean be a genius, bat any one can be a hard worker, which' pays better. The biggest busi ness men are nothing more than the best workmen who have been promot ed. The world Is full of three-quarters men. They are three-quarters Indus trious ant cannot get all the way. A man should know his job thoroughly and Oil It with enthusiasm. His work Is his backer, his source of credit, bis hope of prosperity and distinction. Be as careful of your job as you are of year note In a bank. Howe's Monthly. urnrisc CONTAINS Two Paring Knives with steel blades and waterproof handles One high grade Can Opener, tempered cutter "KITCHEN SET (3 Pieces) Iha Set as tuirs If you send in a year's subscription to the OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE. It makes no dif ference whether it is yours or your neighbor's, or whether it is new or old. Send in the sub scription and we will send you the set by return mail. We have only a limited number of these and the offer will close December 31 unless we run short before that time. DETAILS OF ROAD MAKING. Construction, Maintenance and Water ways Are Difficult Problems. "Of all the factors which go to make np the perfect macadam road," says Logan Waller Page, "there Is un doubtedly none more potent than that of the suitability of the material which enters its construction. There are two ways In which the engineer may avail himself of the information necessary to a proper selection of road ma terial. The first and only certain onej is to make an actual service test on the material under observation and under the same conditions of traffic and climate to which the proposed road will be subjected. The second method is by means of short time la boratory tests to approximate as near ly asjjossible the destructive agencies to which the material will be subject ed on the road." A properly designed waterway struc ture should fulfill the following re quirements: Waterway sufficient to carry off promptly the water coming to it: prop er foundations to bear the loads, resist undermining and give long service; su perstructure designed to bear for' a long period of years any load which may legally be imposed upon it and so constructed as, to serve the comfort nnd convenience of travel and economy of maintenance. CLARKES. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wettlau'fer were in town on business last Friday. - Mrs. Henry Kl'einsmith went to Eu gene Thanksgiving to visit her moth er, Mrs. Washburn. Mr. Eugene Cumins and family moved to Portland the other day. Clarkes band gave" a fine social on last Thursday night and they are do ing fine. Clarkes school is going to have a fine program for Xmas and also a Xmas tree and the band will play too. Our supervisor J. Putz is working on the road in Timber Grove. Mr. Bottemiller Is plowing and is getting ready to sow wheat. Mrs. Hepp has gone to Portland on a visit. Mr. Kleinsmith purchased an auto mobile. Miss Lillian Bonfigt spent Thanks giving at home in Sherwood, Ore. Capt. A. M. Elmer, of the Salvation Army and the Lieutenant preached last Sunday evening in the M. E. church. Miss Elda Marquardt and Elda Zwahlen visited the Timber Grove school last Thursday. Mr. Stout is doing some carpenter work for Ed Buol. He is fixing his house up now. Miss Irene and Erma Lee went to town to stay. Mr. Sam Elmer is plowing and is get ting ready to sow grain. Mr. William Kleinsmith is sawing wood. Mr. Buol was on the sick list but (s some better now. A FAIR PROPOSITION The manufacturers of Meritol Kheu matism Powders have so much confi dence in this preparation that they authorize us to sell them to you on a positive guarantee to give you relief in all cases of rheumatism or refund your money. This is certainly a fair proposition. Let us show them to you. Jones Drug Co., exclusve agents. Adv. Undertakers are men who follow the medical profession. READ THE MORNING ENTERPRISE IT HAS THE NEWS. FLAGS FOR ROAD PATROL. European Plan Adopted to Keep High way Repairers at Work. Eisrht hundred white flags inscribed "S. H. D. Patrol" are flying on the highways of New York state, marking the places where the men engaged in repairing roads are at work, according to a plan of Commissioner, of High ways John N. Carlisle. Many com plaints have been made regarding the failure of patrolmen to care properly for the highways, and under the new plan Commissioner Carlisle hopes to make the patrol service more effective. The flag system has been adopted from the European countries, where the maintenance of highways has be come more of an exact science than it is in America. The display of the little white flsiss along the highways abroad has lind the effect. Commissioner Car lisle says, of making patrolmen more efficient, as the failure on the part of the citizens of those countries to see the flacrs usually is reported to head auarters. Poor Boy. "They say your son is permitting himself since his marriage to be ter ribly henpecked." "Yes, I'm afraid the poor boy has In herited all his father's weaknesses." Chicago Kecord-Herald. Knowing and Telling. "I don't object to a man tellln all he knows," said Uncle John, "if he honestly knows all he tells." Lady Baltimore Cake The Most Popular Cake This Season By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine This is considered by many cooking authorities the finest cake that can be made, though in reality it is not at all difficult. - K C Lady Baltimore Cake One cup butter; 2 cups granulated sugar; 1 cup.milki 1 teaspoonful rose water; 3 cups flour; 3 level teaspoon fuls K C Baking Powder; whites of 6 eggs, beaten dry. Cream the butter and beat in the sugar gradually. Sift together, three times, the flour and baking powder, and add to the butter and sugar, alternately with the milk and rose water. Lastly, add the egg whites. Bake in three-layer cake pans. Put the layers together with the following frosting. Not The cake is a large oge and sells at women's Exchanges for $1.50. 32 Frosting lor Lady Baltimore Cake Three cups granulated sugar; 2 cup boiling water; whites of 3 eggs; I cup chopped raisins; I cup chopped nut-meats; Sfigs cut in thin slues. Stir the sugar and water until the sugar is dissolved, then let boil without stirring until the syrup from a spoon will spin a long thread; pour upon the whites of the eggs, beaten dry, beating constantly meanwhile. Continue the beating until the frosting is cold; add the fruit and spread upon the cake. The K C Cook's Book contains ninety Just such delicious recipes. bread, muffins, cakes and pastry. Yon can secure a copy free by sending- the certificate packed in every 25-ceut can of KC Bkina- Powder to the jAQtrxa Mrs. Co., Chicago Small cans do sot contain Cook's Book emigrates. Christmas Wines and Liquors AT HALF PRICE All Wines 65c Per Gal. All Whiskies V $2.50 Per Gal. KENTUCKY LIQUOR CO. Cor. 5th and Main Streets BRING YOUR JUGS ". A vivid imagination is as dangerous as a little learning. 3 IRKS t?7S 6 IS You Wish To Obtain Complete and Permanent Results Try lilayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy One Dose Wi!! Convince You &yrs Voridt: f-i Stomach Remedy is well known throiijh." t.K cJ-'.t country. Many thousand people l'v2 tal-iu it z'sji Stomach, Liver and Intestinal AUrac-nls ond report marvelous results and are highly prni:n it to others. Astonishing benefits siui't:cra have received even from one mcnioua aa'e. It rarely ever fails and those afil-otci wit''. Stoirich, lAvet vvA Intestinal Aifirttr,, I id.tcaiion Gas .to the Storaaca stv Ii'tesrineSj Oir.Ji?cs, Fr.intin Spells, Colic Attacks. 'tVavHii Liver, Constipation, etc.. ehouid by all means try tins remedy. The , benefits stomach iiuA'crcia v-ho lvsve taken Ai.-yr's y.oniicrfvj! Sto cfch lemuJy have rr.c?vcd H in uo,-:t rcnes a iarjn? one. Alter youhive taken this Remedy you should be able to digest and as-iimiliile your food, enable the heart to pump pure red blood to every part of th body, giving firmness and strength to fibre and n:usc!e, lustre and sparlde to the eye, clear ness end color to the complexion and activity and bri'.iiuEcy to the brain. Do away with your pain and suilering and this is often possible with even or. dose cC Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy. Interesting literature and booklet describing Stomach Ailments sent free by Geo, H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, 154-156 Whiting St Chicago. UL . (For Sale in Oregon City by Huntley - Bros. Co.) Adv. Christmas Suggestions for Her "V An mectttc WARMER TOASTER FLAT IRON TABLE LAMP PERCOLATER CHAFING DISH CURLING IRON TABLE COOKER All these and many other Electrical Appliances are on display at our Main St Store Help lighten her work by giving her one of the many labor saving electrical devices that we carry Portland Railway Light 4 Power Company THE ELECTRIC STORE Beaver Building, Main Street TelHome, A228 Pacific Mak 1 15