MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1913. Willing. Mr. Gaysport How much does that reckless son of mine owe you for all embroidering you've done for him? Miss Sweetly Only his love. Mr. Gaysport Well, I've never com plained about paying his debts. Chi cago News. LOCAL BRIEFS The classified ad columns of The" Enterprise satisfy your wants. W. E. Baker was in Oregon City the latter part of the week. John Franzer, of Portland, was an Oregon City visitor Monday. Robert Knauf, of Portland, was an Oregon City visitor Monday. Paul Wessinger and party, of Port land, motored to Oregon City Sunday. Paul J. Fennester, of Centralia, was in town on legal business Satur day. C. E. Hartness, a well-known ranch er of the county, was in town Mon day. Miss Ruth L. Dwyer, of Portland, was visiting Oregon City friends Sun day. Mrs. J. W. Thornberry, of Astoria, is visiting John Reams, of Willam ette. H. M. Williams, of Oswego, was a county seat caller the latter part of the week. W. W. Everhart, of Molalla, was a county seat visitor the latter part of the week. Earl Whitman, of Astoria, was in the county seat on legal business Mbnday. Richard B. Demment, of Tacoma, was a business visitor in the county seat Monday. Mrs. J. C. Clyde, of Bridal Veil, was a Sunday visitor with Oregon City friends. Mr. and Mors. James Osborn, of Cor vallis, were in the city the latter part of the week. Misses Nora and Mary O'Conner, of Portland, were week-end guests of local friends. Mrs. C. A. Trexal, of Corvallis, was a visitor Saturday at the home of Wil liam Anderson. Donald M. Ferguson, of Portland, was a county seat visitor on legal business Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank DeVoe were Oregon City callers Monday, motor ing out from Portland. Martin Slotenborg, of Clackamas, was a county seat visitor the latter part Qf the weak end. . George Grant, one of the veteran engineers on the Northern Pacific, was visiting friends in Oregon City Sunday. - There will be a meeting of Cataract Hose company Tuesday evening to arrangs for decorating the apparatus for participation in the Rose show parade. C. E. Spence, of this city, master of the state grange, has been appoint ed a member of the special commit tee to boost Astoria and the lower Co lumbia valley. Box Social; given at the Baptist Church Tuesday evening, June 3rd, at 8 o'clock.- Pleasant program pre pared by B. Y. P. U. and a good time anticipated. Boxes sold at 50c per box. Everybody come! Ladies please bring boxes. THIS LADY'S G00D APPETITE Mrs. Hansen, In a Letter From Mobile, Tells How She Gained It Mobile, Ala. "I suffered for seven years, with womanly trouble," writei Mrs. Sigurd Hansen in a letter from this city. "I felt weak and always had a headache and was always going to the doctor. At last I was operated on, and felt better, but soon I had the same trouble. My husband asked me to try Cardul. I felt better after the first bottle, and now, I have a good appetite and sleep well. I feel fine, and the doctor tells me I am looking better than he ever saw me." If you are sick and miserable, and Buffer from any of the pains due to Womanly trouble try Cardul. Cardui is successful because it Is composed of Ingredients that have been found to act curatively on the woman ly constitution. For more than fifty years, It has been used by women of all ages, with great uccess. Try it Tour druggist sells it. N. B. Write to: Ladles" Advisory Dept.. Chatta nooea Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special Inftmctiwis, and 64-pas:e book. " Home Treatises sr Women," sent In olain wrapper, on request. War Declared! Catarrh Germs Must Be Conquered or Health Will be Destroyed If you have catarrh you must van quish aa army of persistent, destruc tiv i microbes before you can be hea'tby. - You might as well choose your weapons, declare war and destroy this army of catarrh germs right noT-. Booth's HYOMEI, a pleasant germ destroying air breather over the en tire membrane will kill Catarrh germs. . Booth's HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-me) Is guaranteed by Huntley Bros, to end catarrh or money back. It surely is fine for coughs and croup If you own a little HYOMEI hard rubber pocket inhaler get a separ ate bottle of HYOMEI for only 50 cents. If you haven't an inhaler se cure a complete outfit for only ?L00. Just breathe it no stomach dosing. The Almighty Dollar With a Hole In It We all like to think that our own dollar is sound and worth 100 cents. .If some one tries to pass us. a dollar with a hole in it, or one plugged with lead, we make an emphatic protest. And yet some of us go along, day by day, letting each of our dollars buy us an average of about 70c. apiece. All of which comes from the unthriftty American habit of careless spending, or, in other words, buying things in a hurry without thought and considera tion. -In a new and bountiful coun try like ours it is a natural re sult of too much prosperity. There is, however, a growing class of people who realize that it pays well to think as they buy. To all such we recommend the advertising pages of THE ENTERPRISE which offer re liable information and sugges tion to intending purchasers. MARVELS OF PHOTOGRAPHY. How Creatures Invisible to the Eye Are Shown as Monsters. Photographing the invisible sounds like a misnomer, but correct to say in visible by the unaided eye. This com plex and valuable science is revealing wouders in the excessively minute, and myriad objects, animate and inan imate, are brought to view whose ex istence has all along been unknown. Two methods of illuminating the ob jects are in use strong light is pass ed through very thin layers of the sub stance or reflected from the outside surface of thick masses and also from the external portions of exceedingly small opaque bodies. These solid particles can be placed on glass slides or floated in transpar ent liquids, as a drop of water be tween two very thin glasses. Pinch the glasses close together: there is no danger of killing the smaller kinds of animals, such as bacteria and microbes. They have plenty of room in a film of water so thin as to be beyond imagi nation. The magnifying lenses for expan sion of images of these minute objects require the most consummate skill in manufacture, the microcamera like wise, and the two combined are tri umphs of human genius. The finished products, the perfected pictures, are highly educational. Many different kinds of greatly Improved glass are now made in Jena, Germany, and these have almost revolutionized mi croscopy. And the wonders accom plished by using the most sensitive plates ever made, and these with many different kinds of waves of light, are almost beyond comprehension. The "Arabian Nights" people are eclipsed. Thus put a drop of stagnant water on glass, lay a thin plate upon It, press down, and the layer of water will be thiu indeed. Put it under the microscope, turn bright light through the layer, pass this light into the very small camera and let it fall on a pre pared moving film; then the amazing effect of animals In motion is to be fixed on a film that is itself in motion. This film, a long strip, is then placed on rollers and unwound, so that it will pass powerful projecting lenses in a moving picture outfit. This is, indeed, photographing the unknown. Since man appeared on earth no such aid to refined research into nuture's labyrinths has been dis covered. Then a large audience can see all that there is in a minute drop of water on a screen from ten to six teen feet in diameter. Totally Invisi ble creatures become monsters and move with great rapidity before the eyes of the people. Thousands of new species of minute living organisms are rescued from realms of the unknown. Edgar Lucien Larkln in New York American. Bamboos as Water Pitchers. In the Hawaiian Islands the natives carry their supply of water about with them in long bamboo tubes, the joints of which have been knocked out Girls may be seen making their way to near by springs with the family "water jug." They patiently fill the long hol low in the bamboo with water,- block ing up the end with a wooden plug. This is then carried to the hut and lasts the family for several days, keep ing cool and sweet in this novel re ceptacle. The larger bamboo trunks are used in the same way as receptacles for storing various household commod ities. World Wide Magazine. Changed With Time., The word "affectionate" is an in stance of how meanings change, for an affectionate person was originally the reverse of agreeable, the word meaning passionate or willful. John Knox in 1554 writes of "the govern ment of an affectionate woman" being "a rage without reason." aud a century later another writer deplores the evils of affectionate soldiers. And now, as any nursemaid knows, affectionate soldiers have no evils. London Stand ard. Silenced. "Do you know, Clara, we ought not to subscribe to the opera any more. We bind ourselves, and afterward we have to hear the same things over and over again." "As if that were any reason! I have also bound myself and have to hear the same things over and over again from you." Meggendorfer Blatter. . MANY VISIT WILHOIT Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Latourette, Mrs. E. J. Daulton, Misses Helen and Bess Daulton, Miss Kathleen Sealy, Ben and Lee Harding, C. J. Miller, Frank Jaggar and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brodie were among the Oregon City people who visited Wilhoit Springs Sunday. :- A GOOD INVESTMENT There is no better investment than a fifty-cent piece in a bottle of Meri tol White Liniment. Muscular an I rheumatic pains, swellings, lameness and soreness of the muscles are promptly relieved. Meritol White Liniment is especially recommended as a general pain killer of unusual merit. Jones Drug Co. A TIMID GIRL By JOHN B. OVERAKER Nellie was her name, though if she bad been born in New England when they were naming children for the hu man virtues they would have called her Modesty. Timidity would have also described her, for she appeared to be afraid of her shadow. She was a typewriter in my private bank out in the western town of B. My institu tion was a Bmall one, and I required but a small force. There was one teller, who paid and received; also a bookkeeper, a boy and my typewriter. One day a party of robbers rode into an adjoining town, pulled up at the bank, shot the cashier dead, emptied the loose currency into bags and gal loped away, all within seven minutes. Their leader was known to be a des perate youngster called Kid Malone, scarcely twenty-two years old. When Kid Malone a few days later rode into another tovrn and robbed an other baDk with only one man to as sist him and in less time than before, it occurred to me that I had better be taking measures to prepare for an at tack on my own Institution I called my little force together for consulta tion. The cashier proposed that a re volver be so fixed in the door of my private office that I could fire It imme diately on the appearance of a robber and another be similarly fixed to his window. The bookkeeper should also be armed. Bob, the boy, said he in tended to arm himself with hand grenades. When it came Nellie's turn to make suggestions she said she couldn't think of anything. In case a robber came she would duck under her typewriter table. But after a number of propositions, none of which seemed to be practical, she gathered her wits and surprised us all by a very sensible proposition. "These preparations to fight desperate men frighten me. It seems to me that they should rather be met by artifice. Until this scare is over how would it do to conceal the cash in something that could be easily removed? I know you'll think it ridiculous, but I have an idea that I think I could work my self if 1 could only keep enough cour age How would it do to have a baby carriage standing near the back door with a lot of little pillows and blan kets and quilts in it, just as though there was a baby asleep, and under the covering to keep the cash during banking hours? Then if this Kid Ma lone comes to rob the bank I can shriek, run to the-baby carriage and wheel it away." "That's an idea- worth considering," said I. The more I thought about Nellie's plan the more I approved of it A baby carriage was procured, and as soon as the bank opened in the morn ing the bulk of the funds was put In it and kept there till after 3 o'clock, when we closed the doors. The car riage stood in a hallway, the opening to which was screened so as to conceal the bank officials when they went to it to put in or take out cash. Nellie's machine was within a few feet of the passage, and in case of trouble it would be the most natural thing in the world for her to take to flight through the exit All I feared was that if we were attacked the girl Would be so frightened that she wouldn't stop in her fljght to wheel away the treas ure. We kept up our precaution -for three days, and sincg it was quite incon venient in doing business I was about to abandon it but Nellie said she had dreamed tbat Kid Malone had appear ed and somehow had got away with a lot of money. I am ashamed to con fess that I was Influenced by this dream, which decided me to keep up our precaution for another day. About 11 o'clock the next morning a clatter of horses' hoofs was heard coming down the street Nellie heard it and turned pale. She didn't wait for robbers to reach the bank. She ran for the baby carriage, and both she and it disappeared. I heard the riding party stop before the bank and sat still, in tending to submit to a robbery of what few bills there were on the counters. The teller crouched down below his window, the bookkeeper ducked under his desk, and, as for Bob, he followed Nellie out through the back door. I waited every minute expecting to see armed men come in through the front door, but nobody came. Then I heard the horses without trot away. 1 was wondering what it all meant when Bob came in and cried: "Stung!" He had been running and was out of breath. When he recovered he said that Nellie had gone from the back around to the front door, where one of the party of riders had helped her on to a horse, while another had taken the contents of the baby carriage under his arm, and, mounting, the party bad ridden out of town. I could not believe the story and hur ried out to the street where I saw the baby carriage standing on the side walk ' A crowd was gathering, several of whom assured me that they had seen my typewriter riding away beside a man whom they recognized for Kid Malone. I went back into the bank and told my force to keep their mouths shut I was not entirt-ly broken up by the loss, though I was badly crippled. For tunately we kept only enough cash in the bank to get on with, the rest being bidden in my home. Nellie was Kid Malone's girl, and she had secured a place In my bank on purpose to assist him to rob me. Humor of a Genius. Elizabeth" Barrett Browning com bined with an exalted spirituality an inimitable sense of humor which per vaded all her days. As illustrating this humor Lilian Whiting tells in "The Brownings Their Life and Art," the story of the time Poe sent Mrs. Brown ing a. volume of his poems with an in scription on the flyleaf that declared her to be "the noblest of her sex." "And what could I say in reply," Mrs. Browning laughingly remarked, "but 'Sir. you are the most discerning of yours?'." , A Mighty Cliff. Myling Head, at Stromoe. one of the Faroe islands, has a sheer drop ot 2,200 feet from the crest to the sea. SHIPS JUST LIKE A VILLAGE. Strange Little Worlds Are the South Pacific Ocean Steamers. In the morning (how strange at sea) I was awakened by the bleating of a lamb and by a lusty cockcrow. The Royal Mail steamers of the west coast are a strange little world. Built fof an ocean where storms are unknown.' they combine certain comforts not to be found on .much more pretentious boats. Their saloons and cabins are excep tionally large and open directly upon the promenade decks tbat stretch the entire length of the ship, there being, properly speaking, no steerage and no second class. The natives and others who cannot afford the first class ticket travel in the "cublerta," as it is called, a deck at the stern roofed with canvas, but otherwise open, where in pictur esque confusion, surrounded by bags and bundles, they loll in hammocks or lie wrapped In shawls. " Toward this deck the hencoop faces a big two story affair, partly filled with ripening fruits, bananas, oranges and the like and partly with chickens, ducks and other forlorn looking fowl, fattening for the table. Between decks stand your beef and mutton on the hoof, gazing mournfully up at you as you look down the hatchways. - Upon this homelike boat, quiet and contented, with no unseemly hurry, you meander down the coast at ten knots. The air is soft as a caress, and for at least eight months of the year the sea is as placid as a mountain lake, a glassy mirror reflecting an azure sky. Ernest Piexotto in Scrib ner's Magazine. POCKETS VERSUS HAND BAGS. Real Reason of the Subjection of Wo - man to Man. Civilized man finds it difficult to make his way .through life without a dozen pockets. The ordinary walking suit has fifteen. Civilized woman makes her way through life without pockets, depending on a single bag carried in the hand. The professional humorists have never tired of com menting on woman's pocketless condi tion, but it is really no laughing mat ter. Here is a sex difference which is something more- than fashion, which goes to the very heart of the subjec tion of woman to man. If we accept Spencer's definition of the evolution ary process as consisting in progress from an indefinite homegeneity to a definite heterogeneity the superior po sition of man is at once established. His fifteen diversified pockets, each al located to a separate UBe watch, cigar case, pocketknife. purse, newspaper and package of garden seeds need only be contrasted with the" single reticule in which the female, of the spe cies stores " away an unco-ordinated mass of. handkerchiefs, toilet articles, car fare, press clippings, telephone ad dresses, dress goods samples, confec tionery, memoranda and tradesmen's bills that have long been settled by check. Strong in his pockets, man walks the earth free In the play of his upper limbs, whereas woman sacrifices the use of her right arm before venturing out in a world of street cars, motor cars, moving staircases, elevators and ticket booths. New York Post No Wonder She Behaved. "I believe," said the minister, with a twinkle in his eye, "that the saying that children and fools tell the truth" Is true. The other day my wife and I were invited out to dinner. The chil 3ren of the family were so remarka bly well behaved that my wife re marked: " 'What lovely, well behaved children yours are, Mrs. Brown r "Both Mr. and Mrs. Brown beamed at this approval of their offspring, when up piped little Mary. 'Well, pa said that if we didn't behave he'd knock our blocks off. didn't you, pa?' "Moth ers' Magazine. Royal Informality. At Cadinen, Emperor William's mod el farm in West Prussia, where he loves to tramp about in rough clothes and high top boots, there is a certain blacksmith whose hand is never too grimy for his kaiser to shake. The Princess Victoria Luise from earliest years has shared her father's liking for the man's sterling qualities. One day the emperor and princess, in com pany with a high official, called at the smithy. As its owner turned from work to welcwne them the kaiser in troduced him as "a special friend of my daughter's." Pictorial Review. Toasted Bugs. An insect much resembling the Jnne bug and found in great quantities in the high plains about Quito, capital of Ecuador, is toasted and eaten as a delicacy by the natives of that coun try. It is sold in the streets in the same manner as are chestnuts in the cities of this country. - The roasted bugs taste very much like toasted bread. Not Well Pleased. "I had to kill my dog this morning." said the boob. "Was he mad?" asked the cheerful idiot. "Well, he didn't seem any too well pleased." replied the boob. Cincinnati Enquirer. Most Interesting. Woman is the most interesting thing ever invented. One half the world spends its time writing about her, and the other half spends its time reading about her. Cincinnati Enquirer. 'Never spend your money before you have it Thomas Jefferson. Queer Job. "Here's a man who has a queer Job," said the cheerful idiot as he looked up from his paper. "What does he do?" asked the boob "He is bookkeeper for a bookseller," replied the cheerful idiot Exchange. To the People of Oregon City We wish to again call your atten tion to the fact that we are sole agents in this city for Meritol Pile Remedy. Our success with tMs rem edy has far exceeded our most san guine ..expectations. Therefore, we are pleased to recommend and guar antee evry package of Meritol Pile Remedy. Jones Drug Co. AUTO INVADES STORE ' NEW YORK, June 2: Sometimes it is quite difficult to escape from be ing run down by an automobiles Automobiles seem to be bound to run somebody down and if they cannot find any victims upon the public streets, they pursue them into houses and stores. There were a number of persons, among them two women with small children, in a grocery store on First avenue, near 74th St., the other evening, never dreaming that they were in immient danger of being run down, when a wicked and bloodthirst automobie became unman ageable and crashed through the big plate glass window right into the store. The people in the store were wholly unprepared for the sudden on slaught and wre bowled over like ninepins in a bowling alley. All re ceived more or less serious injuries. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS W. W. Everhart and wife to P. C. Miller and wife, lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, block 3, Everhart's add. to Molala; $1. Ambrose Pleuard and wife to Wil liam E. Baker and wife, tract adjac ent to Clackamas Heights; $200. William N. Chilcote and wife to Ernest Lehman and wife, 35 acres in Sec. 32, T. 1 S., R. 3 E.; $10. Ernest Lehman and wife to W. N. Chilcote east half of N. E. of N. E. and north half of S. E. of Sec. 26, T. 6 S., R. 2 E., also sawmill buildings, etc.; $10." M. H. Taylor and wife to Neil Tay lor, undivided third interest in 133.32 acres in T. 3 S., R. 4 E.; $1. William P. Schmidt and wife to Henry M. Williams, lot 6, block 46, Oregon Iron & Steel addition to Os wego; $350. Portland RaHway, Llgfel & Power Company Beaver Building, Main Street E. T. Mass, sheriff, to Candace M. Hartness, part of Lot Whitcombe and wife D. L. C; $3,880.59. BANS ARE ANNOUNCED Bans for ' Miss Bertha MUrgaret Barry and Arthur McAnulty were an nounced for the first time in St. John's Roman Catholic church Sun day by the Rev. Father Hillebrand. Miss Barry is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Barry, of this city, and is regarded as one of the bright est and most accomplished members of the younger set. She has lived here the greater part of her life, and has a host of friends who wish her much happiness in her forthcoming marriage. Mr. McAnulty is well and favorably known throughout Clackamas county. The wedding will take place Thurs day, June 12, at St. John's church. FRESHMEN HOLD PICNIC The freshmen class of the high school gave a picnic at Schnorer's park Saturday afternoon. A party of 150 left Oregon City for Willamette at 11:00 a. m. The afternoon was spent in playing games and outdoor sports, a very enjoyable time being reported by those who were present The refreshmnts committee served a delicious feed. After a delightful af ternoon everybody adjourned to -Shively's opera house to attend the senior play. Nothing is more disagreeable than eczema, or other skin diseases. It is also dangerous unless speedily check ed. Meritol Eczema Remedy will af ford instant relief and permanent re sults. We have never seen a remedy that compares with it. Jones Drug Co. Friend of the Housewife T is the most useful thing in the house," said a lady of her Bell " Telephone." It takes mv message to the market to the merchant, to the doctor, to the fire station, to anybody at any place.' a " Bell Telephone Service is the standard service of the world, and every Bell Tele phone is a Long Distance Station. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY The Superiority of Electric Toast to the charred, or , brittle, or soggy kind made in the tedious old-fashioned way, is relatively the same as the superiority of grilled steak to fried steak. For one-tenth of a cent a slice the General Electric Radiant Toaster makes Perfect Toast faster than you can ed: it. It is Perfect Toast because the radiant heat forces the necessary chemical change in the bread. This insures delicious golden Toast that fairly melts in your mouth. You can cperate the General Electric Radiant Toaster on the finest damask table cloth. Its neat porcelain base and cheerful r glowing coils add grace and charm to any table. - Thk little toaster is n display at our store in the Bea ver Building on Main Street. SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-E. the antiseptic powder. It re lieves painful, smarting, tender, nervous feet, sad instantly takes toe sting ont of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the see. Aliens Foot-Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain relief lor sweating, callous, swollen, tired, achingf set. Always nse ltto Break in New shoes. Try ft to-day. Sold everywhere, 6 Cts. Don't accept anf tubtiiiuie. 'or FREE trial package address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. X. Hen'hatched chicks are early vic tims of head-lice. Conkey's Head Lice Ointment is sure death to these pests and doesn't injure the chicks. Enough in one tube to save 100 chicks. 10c, 25c. For sale Jn Oregon City by the Oregon Commis sion Co. ootsur An A r,U179 iYOURA Xlf-lXS4-VVA AJ-ii It WIII NOT Utovl taiKo HEADACHE CAPSULES They will care any kind of Headache, no mauer watt me cause, renecuy nariinss. Price 25 Cants l WeRBlAH IICHTT MFC. CO Bes Moines, la. J THE JONES DRUG CO. We have a large stock of these remedies, just fresh from the labor atory.