1 MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1913. Will You I! fi That is About What it Will Coat You if You Go to the SAN FRAN TBnrVTVT AND TAKE YOUR THAlSirR; nM r.FTTlNr. ACCOMMODATIONS AFTER YOU ARRIVE Reservations fof Hotels and Transportation can Be made now at prices that will sur prise you. Make a small payment to tne Local Bank and be assured of a good time. in si) FOR FULL INFORMATION See CHESTER ELLIOTT L TED AT SALEM To interest school children and school teachers in a state-wide ex hibit at the state fair in Salem of school work done in Oregon, L. P. Harrington, of Cresswell, field work er of tl'-o state department of educa tion, was in Oregon City Tuesday, and will spend the next two or three days in other parts of the country. Mir. Harrington came here primarily to make arrangements for an exhibit by the county schools at Salem, but in the course of his visit was shown the city school exhibit in the Barclay school, and at once become an en thusiastic booster fro that, as well. "I told your Mr. Tooze that we wanted that exhibit in its entirely at Salem," he said, shortly after haviig viewed the display. "I am not exag gerating: a bit when T sav that H is one of the finest exhibits of co-ordinated school work that I have seen, and that it demonstrates exactly what we believe the aim of modern educa tion should be to teach the child use ful, practical, developing work, which will be of service to him or her in lat er years. "I am a great believer in practical work. I think our schools should aim to give the children not only the reg ular studies, but something more be sides, something that will develop the natural talent of the youngsters and enable them to amount to something not only in later life, but - while they are in school as well. I think there ought to be a closer relation be tween the school and the home, I be lieve in 'home credits' in fact, and I believe that by doing such work as you are doing here you are taking great strides towards that end. , You are interesting the children, you are making them regard their studies as something necessary in their lives, and because of this you are making a direct appeal to the parents and the home through the school children. "This is why .we want your exhibit is planning this school fair at Salem to carry on this work of bringing the home and the school into closer touch. This is why we want your exhibit, we want people to see it, we want oth er children to see it, so that they will want the same things in their locality. here, and those who are responsible for the work are doing the state and UB uuiiureu a great service. Mr. Harrington goes from here to Oak Grove, Milwaukie, West Oregon City and Canby. On his way he is distributing literature descriptive of the school division of the state fair, the prizes offered and the work being done elsewhere. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Almon Ml Shibley to James A. Shib ley and wife, 50 acres more or less in Sees. 5 and 6, T. 4 S., R. 4 B.; $10. Edith Maud and S. A. Thomas to L. A. Purdy, 100 acres off north end of lot 5, Sec. 25, and the west half of the west half of lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, Sec. 36, and lots 1 and 2, Sec. 35, T. 2 S., R. 3 E.; $10. (To correct). C. L. and H. V. Adix to K. E. and J. C. Herring, lot 1, Sec. 31, T. 3 S., R. 4 E.; $10. K. E. and J. C. Hering to C. L. Adix 10 acres in Sec. 20, T. 3 S., R. 4 E.; $10. Almon M. Shibley to James A. Shib'ey and wife, 19 acres more or less in Sec. 6, T. 4 S., R. 4 E.; $10. Homer A. Kruse and wife to P. A. Roes, 20 acs more 'or less in Sees. 7 and 18, T. 3 S., R. 1 E.; $10. Nels L. Allen to Julia M. Rider, lot 89, Canby Gardens; $1,250. Addie B. Osborn to Lawyers Title & Trust company, north half or N. W. Sec. 5, T. 2 S.. R. 3 E., and 25 acres in east half of west half of S. W. M and west half of the west half of the east half of S. W. Sec. 32, T. 1 S., R. 3 E.; $10. Annette and F. E. Albright to Chas. N. Lewis, part of lots 2 and 7, block 132, Oregon City; $352.50. ONE DOSE WILL HAKE YOU FORGET That You Ever Had Stomach Trouble or Gall Stones. MAYR'S WONDERFUL STOMACH ".EMEDYforallStomach, Liver and Intestinal Trouble, basirms, indigestion, uyspepaia, treasure of Gas around the Heart, Sour Stomach, Distress After Ealln ar. Nervousness, Dizzi ness, Fainting Spells, Sick Headaches, Censtl patlon, Conseated end Torped Uvar, Valiowlaun dlc. Appeedicltla and Sell The above ailments ana mainly caused by the clogging of the intes tinal tract with mu coid and catarrhal accretions, backing up poisonous fluids in to the stomach, and otherwise deransrina? yf,. the digestive system. Mayrs Wonderful Stomach Remedy is the Best and most widely known Remedy for these ailments and should quickly relieve and cure the mostchronie cases. Put it to a test. One dose will prove its great curative powers. It acts like magic in the most chronic case of Stomach, Liver and In testinal ailments. Appendicitis and symptoms of (sil Stones. Thousands of sufferers are highly praising the remedy and are recommending i to outers 1 or restoring tnem to penect Health. Do not permit a dangerous operation tat these ailments until you have at least tried one nose 01 una great Kemedy. Bend lor FEES valuable booklet on Stomach Ailments to Geo. H. rjik A MARVELOUS -X EMr Ml raiaijSf: gu stokes 1 i geq. a. turn iifi News of Mikado's Illness Kept From Public Until It Had Become Serious C I' . . At-- I tx... ' The cablegram announcing that the mikado of Japan was critically 111 of inflammation of the lungs and that eight court physicians were In attendance on him was no more of a surprise to the western world than was the physi cians' bulletin announcing that fact n shock to the people of Tokyo. News of the emperor's illness wits kept from the public of Japan until It had reached 11 point where the physicians besan to fear the worst. The emperor while a child showed s.vnipn iis of lung trouble, and It was feared many times while he was cmivu pv!n n he .vmikl not live to take the throne. This illustra t'on shows . ! h;s robes of state. .! NAVAL CADETS CELEBRATE ANNAPOIJS, Md., June 2. Mary land's old capital city appeared in a gay and festive mood today at the opening of the week of gala exercises incident to graduation at the United States Naval Academy. The programme of the week was ushered in at 10 o'clock thlifcmorning with the official reception to the board of various apetaoinEL. ,do ne board of visitors appointed by the president and congress to conduct the annual inspection of he naval school. The reception was followed by an in fantry drill by the midshipmen, and this afternoon the members of the board witnessed a dress parade. Other drills, exhibitions and social functions will carry the programme along until Friday, when the gradua tion exercises proper will be held any the members of the first class will be addressed by Secretary Daniels of the Navy Department. . Conference of Students MOHONK LAKE, N. Y., June 2. The conference of the World Stu dents' Christian Federation, which met here today for an eight-day ses sion, is the largest and most represen tative gathering of its kind ever held. The attendance far exceeds that at the meetings hid in previous years in London, Versailles, Tokio and Con stantinople. England, Germany, Rus sia, Hungary, Sweden, Norway, Fin land, China and Japan are among the countries represented by delegates. Racing Law Up for Argument ALBANY, N. Y., June 2. The ques tion of the constitutionality of the anti-gambling law prohibiting oral betting at race tracks and holding di rectors of racing associations liable for such betting, came up for argu ment before the court of appeals to day. If the constitutionality of the law is upheld the plans now making for a revival of racing in this state probably will be left in abeyance. Enginemen and Firemen. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 2. A proposal to remove the national head quarters of the- organization from Peoria, 111., to Washington, D. C, is one of the important matters to be considered and acted upon at ths twenty-sixth annual convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engine men and Firemen, which met here to day with an attendance of several hundred delegates. Enterprise advertising pays. - 1 PATH OF THE SUN. It Relation to the Equinoxes and the Solstices. The sun's path is called the ecliptic. It is a great circle of the celestial sphere, cutting the celestial equator at two points 180 degrees apart and mak ing with it an angle of 23 degrees known as the obliquity of the ecliptic. The crossing points are called the equi noxes, because the days and nights are then equal, and the points midway be tween the equinoxes are the solstices, because the sun then seems to stand still for a few days. The ecliptic is so .called because eclipses occur only when the moon Is crossing it or is near it, for the moon's orbit cuts the ecliptic in two points, called nodes or knots, and at other times is above or below It If the moon, when in either node, is in line with the sun and the earth we have an eclipse, either total or annular. If she is near her node we have a partial eclipse. The moon's nodes are not stationary. but move backward on the moon's orbit completing a revolution' in about nineteen years, when the. eclipses of the period recur in the same order and at about the same Intervals as before. This period of eighteen years and elev en days is called the saros. It was knwn to the Chaldeans and the Greeks and gave them their data for computing eclipses. . ' Any intelligent person can trace the sun's path In the heavens. If the son rises exactly in the east and sets In the west it is the time of the equi noxes. If the sunrise and sunset points are farthest north and the sun at noonday is highest in the heavens It Is the time of the summer solstice. If the sunrise and sunset points are farthest south and the sun is very low In the heavens at noonday It Is the time of the winter solstice. Harper's Weekly. . When He Feela It Another one of these ways In which the pestered can shut up the pestering: r "Do you suffer from a cold In the head?" asked the kindly butter-In of the snuffler on the street car. "Invariably, when 1 have one," growled the victim, and thereby es caped another remedy. Cleveland Plain Dealer. Enterprise advertising pays. BIG CELEBRATIONS SET FOR "FOURTH" Fourth of July plans are being formulated in both Oregon City and Gladstone these days at a rate that bids fair to become feverish in the immediate future. A committee of local business men will go out Wed nesday and solicit funds for the cel ebration here, and expect to get a substantial amount together which wi'.l be utilized in providing features well worth seeing, and which are ex pected to attract many people from outside points. Another committee is working up a program, and when the two groups get together, things will really begin to move. In Gladstone Monday night a meet ing of the Fourth '"get-together" com mittee was held, and it was - found that there would be plenty of funds provided for one of the greatest "city picnics" ever held. The Gladstone affair is mainly for Gladstone, and willnot interfere with the Oregon City doings. There will be sports, in which about $125 worth of prizes will be put up, and there will be other things as interesting. The Gladstone gath ering will be held in the park, and admission will only be by ticket, which will tend to make the affair particularly for Gladstone people. Tickets will be free. Plan Appropriation Reform WASHINGTON, D. C, June 2. A special committee of the house met today and took up for discussion a variety of propositions for changing the form of preparing governmental estimates and appropriations. The necessity of co-ordinating the esti mates in some way is generally ad mitted, but a variety of opinion ex ists as to the best plan to be adopted. Some representatives favor a modifi cation of the English budget scheme, while ethers are opnly opposed to the adoption "of any such. plan. Enterprise advertising pays. RUSSIA'S POLICE SYSTEM. It'Ha an Assistant In Every House In ... St. Petersburg. The. Russian police system is ex tremely complicated, for it practically gives Russia an assistant policeman in every house in St Petersburg. The landlord has a private porter or acts as porter himself. A porter has authority to rn:ike an arrest, and he is obliged to rush from the house to the street at the sound of a polic'e whistle. As there is a policeman statloned'at every block, which is the limit of his beat, and as every policeman within a certain radius may respond with the porters to the signal, it takes but a few Mocouds to get a platoon of uni formed men. with almost a regiment of porter policemen together. Russia has also a most elaborate system of training its policemen, and some time ago there was opened at St Petersburg a fully equipped police man's college, designed to train men In all the various duties of an officer of the law. At this college policemen are made familiar with the tools used by criminals, their teachers holding that they cannot become proficient police men in any other way. The Russian policeman attends lec tures at which burglars' methods and instruments are explained, so that he can checkmate them, while he has the advantage of the criminal museum, which is attached to the college. There every appurtenance known to the breaker of the law must be experi mented with until its every use is thor oughly understood. London Tit-Bits. Foxy. "Did the doctor diagnose your case easily?" "Yes." "How long did it take?" "Not long. I wore my shabbiest suit" Birmingham Age-Herald. Boost your home town by reading your home paper. Unqualifiedly the Best : LEDGER : The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CURVED HINGE allows the covers to drop back' on the desk without throwing the leaves into a curved position. Sizes 8 1-4 to 20 inches OREGOrfXITY ENTERPRISE Headquarters for Loose Leaf Systems SEVENTH and MAIN STREETS A DEED AND A WORD. A little stream had lost its way .'" Amid the grass and fern. -A passing stranger scooped a well. Where wi-nry men might turn He walled it in and hung with care A ladle at the brink. He thought not of the deed he did. But judged that all might drink He passed ugain, and, lo. the well. By summer never dried, Had cooled ten thousand parch ing tongues And saved a life beside. A nameless man amid a crowd That thronged the daily mart Let fall a word of hope and love. Unstudied, from the heart A whisper on the tumult thrown, A transitory breath It raised a brother from the dust. It saved a soul from death. O germ. O fount. O word of love, O thought at random cast, . Ye were but little at the first. But mighty at the last Charles Mackay. Notable Wedding in Vancouver. VANCOUVER, B. C, June 2. Christ Church in this city was the scene of a notable wedding today, the bride being Miss Geraldine Pipon, daughter of Major General Pipon, C. B., resident governor of the Tower of London, and the bridgegroom Mr. George Herbert Head( formerly of London, and now a resident of Van couver. REV. SMITH TO SPEAK The Rev. E. A. Smith will inaugaur ate regular Wednesday night services on the west. side this week, when ha speaks at Willamette on "The Athlete Who Never Came Back." Next Sunday he will preach at Highland, Alverta and Henrici. REBEKAHS ENTERTAIN . A most successful musical enter tainment was given by the Rebekahs at Gladstone Tnesriav evsnin? anA n large attendance helped increase the enjoyment of the affair. An excellent program was renaerea, readings, vo cal and instrumental selections being the features. Among those whose ef forts assisted in making the evening enjoyable were Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Burke, Miss Kathleen Harrison, Mlrs. A. Matheson, A. M. Proppe, . H. A. Swafford, Marison Money, Anna Mc Millian, Mildred Hall, Stanley Wil liams and Mrs. Ada Jolly. THIS COUPLE HOPEFUL Monday while Justice Sievers was hearing a case in which a woman ac cused her husband of beating her a young couple appeared at his court and asked to be married. The jus tice suggested that they listen to the evidence in the trail for a time. This the young people did, and later repeated their request to get married. After his honor had made them one. the bride blushed and said: ."We are going to love each other, judge, and not fight like this." Red Cross Tansy Pills FOR Suppressed Menstruation PAINFUL Menstruation And a PREVENTIVE for FIMALE IRREGULARITIES. Are Safe and Reliable. Eg Perfectly Harmless The Ladies' Eurely Vege table! Mevet Fail PRICE $1.00 Sent postpaid on receipt of price. Money refunded if not as we ZBj. Booklet sent tree, Vill de Cinchona CO.. Ies Moines, Iowa Take adantage of our new Parcel Post and order a bottle of us today the inMcc nnur rn I 1IL. JU11LJ lHUU lU. Beaver Bldg., Oregon City, Ore.