o,KOOX CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1913. A Fixture. "Where on earth did you get this air oil?" "That's not hair oil; It's liquid glue." "Great Jupiter! Then that's why I an't get my hat off!" New York kmerican. LOCAL BRIEPS W. S. Ralier, of Portland, a former lusiness partner of Mayor Albee, of ie metropolis, was a visicui m uicsuu ity Wednesday. L. A. McNary, a Portland attorney, as a county seat visitor on legal mat rs the middle of ths week. H. A. Kruse and sons Elmer and dolphus. of Froa; Pond, made fin uto trip to Oreeron City Wednesday, nd report that crops and ereneral de- elonment of fiat nart of the county rs boh prosrrnsssine; finely. Miss Enlslie .T. Oirresnn. of C)ii- 3eo. more or les Vnown to fame as comic onera singer, was an Oregon itv visitor tn? middie of te wV. iminr nn from Portland in hr pho. Tiss frnrretson is en ro"e to Califor- ia. njid is qnondjns; a fortnight wifh ortlmd friends. J. ". Kerrigan, of The Flqlles. was business visitor in twn Wednesdav. Mr. and Mrs. PatTi" T, TTanne of patlfi. wr? rnnnt.v s-eat vicinrs Wd- "srlav. Mr. Wannev is seeVins tim er investments. Dan Miiriooh. of fast'e TJooV. Wn.. aa a. hnqinpqs caller in the city the iridle of th weeV. George Piipov. mill manager of te Tawlev Puln f- P?nr rnmnanv. of tliis tv. was a visitor in Eneene to? first f the weeV. Miss T!oo T arVino. of Marn"aTn. is nendinsr hr vanption at Wilrioit nrins. MiQo T ,oViti3 oTjtprtaine'1 a limber of friends at het- ramn Inst iindav. Mias firah TUclrprooTi Tias returned f-nrn a short visit at Tremont. Charles Ttrnr. of Portland. was a ountv seat visitor on business Wed- sday. ,TaoV P"rt. of Npw VorV, waq p vis or In this citv TnosdaT. Mr. Pnrt k mpVin" a to"r of to TTnitrl States nd stonned off to see tbe paper mills nd scenerv. Mrs. TCd Phaw, and daughter Se- onia. nave lft. for Tone Peach. pore thay wil1 snend two weel-s en- vin" tie sea breee. T W. TOlliott. a rancher of Meheans- oro. Brecon, w-as in tfis ,citv Tn?s av calling on old friends. W. E. Panitf. a business man of Sa m, was in this city Wednesdav. Charles A. Seabnra:. of Portland, as an Oretron CitCy visitor on hus- less Wednesday. J. P. Prill, of Portland, was in O-rp- on City on business the middle of the eek. W. E. Bennatt. a Portland business man was in Oregon City on business uesday. M)-s. C. Kaiser, of Newburg. was in reson City Tuesday to sp'end a few ays visiting with friends and rela- ves. Mrs. Kaiser was formerly a sident of this city. R. Haz'ett. of Portland, was a coun- k seat visitor on business Wednes- ay. Mr. Hazlett, who is well 'known ere. snent some time calling on old Mends and acquaintances. nvthing which benefits mankind Is a treasure to you and me. NTiat. a wondrous blessing to us al! Is Hollister s Rocky Mountain Tr,a. e Jones Drug Co. W. A. Barr, of Corvallis, was a ounty seat visitor Tuesday. Mr. arr is a prominent businessman of orvallis. G. G. Bailey, of Portland, was an Oregon City visitor on business Tues- ay. Miss Virginia Shaw, daughter of Ed. haw, has left to make a month's isit with her uncle, C. A. Rands, of alouse, Wn. Mr. and Mrs. John Wise, of Port- knd, Maine, were visitors in this city uesday. This is Mr. and Mlrs. Wise's rst visit to the coast, and they were ud in praising Oregon secenery. Mrs. Wm. Cannon and son Everett, ho have been spending the last six reeks at Bay Ocean, have returned to his city. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Painter, of Cam- s, Wn., were in this city for a short me Monday. They have gone to the lountains where they will spend a lonth hunting big game. Mr. Turby, of Portland, was a busi- ess visitor in this city Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hope, of Port- ind, were Oregon City visitors Wed- esday. Herbert Bsrger, of Clear Creek, was business visitor in this city Wednes- ay. Miss' Myrtle Sharpe, of Estacada, ho has been visiting with friends In his city for the last three weks, re timed to her home Wednesday. yBS Ethel Woodle, of Portland, ho has been visiting with friends in lis city, has gone to Seaside where he will spend a few weeks before re- irning to her home. A. E. Heath, of Astoria, was a coun- W seat visitor on business Wednes- ay, "Hello Red!" The first "Red Eagle Council" in Oregon is now being organized in Oregon City. The charter fee is only 5. Ask for information it's free. Address Red Eagle Organ izer, care Electric Hotel. During fliy vacation from August lit to Sept ist, I will be in my office every Saturday from 9 to 4 Dr. L. A. Morris The Man Who Put the E E s In F E E T Look for This Trade-Mart Pio ture on tbe Label when buying ALLEN'S F00TEASE The Antiseptic Powder for Ten. Sratle-M&rk. der. Aching Feet. Sold every, where, 25c. Sample FREE. Address, AIXEN S. OLMSTED. Le Boy. N. Y. E. M. Smith, a business,, man of Springfield, was a visitor hera Wed nesday. Mr. Smith was accompanied by his daughter, Alice. M. E. Benedict," a rancher and stock raisar of Pendleton, was in Oregon City on business Wednesday. E. R. Glines, of Montesano, was a visitor on business in this city Wed nesday. P. P. Jackson and party, of St.. Paul, Minn., who are making an auto tour of the Pacific Northwest, were in Ore gon City taking in the sights Wed nesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. White left Thursday morning for a few weeks sojourn at Newport. Walter White has gone to Brooks, Ore., to" visit with the family of Geo. E. Finney. As rheumatism is due to an excess of uric acid in the system, the only sensible, rational treatment is one that removes this poison. That is what Hoi lister's Rocky Mountain tea does. That's why it cures for good. Jones Drug Co. Miss Hilda CiJopsr, of Parkdale, Hood River county, was brought So this city late Monday night suffering from an attack of appendicitis. She was operated upon at Sellwood hos pital Tuesday. Her many friends will be pleased to know she is gaining rapid'y. M(rs. Cooper is the daughter of Chas. F. Tooze, of this city. Everybody's Happy The prices at the big sale of the W. A. Holmes stock corner 14th and Main mean great savings. See their ad in this paper. Pretty Girl Appoint ed Game Warden. ; c-V- J HISS NOKMA FKEDERIO GIBBOKEX. 1 have already made two arrests for game violations. 1 had no trouble with the prisoners. I carried a re volver and a shotgun, and the pot hunters knew that I could use either of them." Which announcement goes to show that Miss Norma Frederic Gibboney didn't become game warden merely to wear a bright badge. Miss Gib boney was appointed warden recently by Governor Emmet O'Neal of Ala bama. She probably is the only wo man iu the United States with this sort of commission. When the news of her appointment was made public the pothunters in their huts along the Mobile bay marshes thought it a good joke. She's one of these society women," they laughed. "She never would come out ou a rainy day for fear of getting her feet wet. On with the killing." They were fully convinced of their mistake when the handsome warden came upon two of their number slaughtering ducks and marched them in with one hand resting significantly ou the black hutt of the revolver at her hip. Miss Gibboney's home is Aloha. It stands among acres of forest and foli age. .Mobile bay stretches away to the east, and at the back is the Dog river. She is a dendly shot 'with a rifle and can bring down the mallards from behind a blind with the best shots In Mobile. It was her love for animals and not the passion for hunt ing that led her to become one of the Alabama game police. "It is the birds that I particularly want to protect." said Miss Gibboney recently when speaking about her work "We seldom realize how much good they do If they didn't prey con . stautly ou the insects we would be without vegetation before very" long i am familiar with eery bird of Ala bama. Ten years ago you could see flocks of beautiful blue cranes in the edge of the water out there. Now they are curiosities. "I iliiVe recently fitted out a log cabin In the midst of ten acres of forest that Is just as nature made It. I intend to spend the rest of my life there." Miss Gibboney Is well known over the entire south. She is a frequent visitor lo New Orleans. Site is a de scendant of Zack Taylor. Patrick Hen ry and the Virginia Sheltons. She is prominent in society. From now on she won't see much of receptions and pink teas. Concerning Women. Mrs. Elsie Clews 1'arsons of New York has written a book which 'she calls "The Old Fashioned Woman." Mayor Gayuor. who generally is cred ited with saying what he thinks, de clared that it is a most interesting ' liook. but suirirests that the title might Woman's World i mimmmmmm 1 tll s&SZ 1 n --rr be cnangeu - to -Primitive anoiet. About the Sex." Mrs. Metcalfe resides at the station at Sackett Harlior. on Lake Ontario, and looks after the buildings, which are old and worn, for $1 a day. She Is therefore the only woman "com ma tidaut" in the United States and was present when the monument to commemorate the victory irj the war of 1S12 was dedicated recently. Miss Elizabeth C. Berdau in "Remi niscences of a Diplomat's Wife' toy Mrs Hugh Fraser. is described as a former friend of tbe grandchildren of Queen Victoria. Dpon oig occasion one of the princesses gave uer a ring and escused the fact that it was not n more expensive one by the remark. "But. you know. Granny Vic is so stingy M(s. Susie Root Rhodes, librarian of the League of American Penwomen. Is a member of the school board of Washington and has been chosen by the commissioners to represent the District of Columbia at the Interna tional congress of ' school hygiene to be held JnB;i(falo the last week in ""August. She Is one of the editors of a coklf)ok dow in the press. THE SANDS O' DEE. . "Oh. Mary, go and call the cattle home. And cnll the cattle home, Andcnll the cattle home. . Across the sands o' Dee!" Tbe western wind was wild and dank wi' foam. And all alone went she. The creeping tide came up along the sand. And o'er and o'er the sand. And round and round the sand As far as eye could see. The blinding mist came down " and hid the land. And never home came she. "Oh, is It weed or fish or floating . hair A tress o' golden hair, A drowned maiden's hair Above the nets at sea? Was never salmon yet that shone -so fair Among the stakes on Dee?" They rowed her In across -the rolling foam The cruel, crawling foam. The cruel, hungry foam To her grave beside the sea, But still the boatmen hear her call the cattle home Across the sands o' Dee. Charles Kingsley. One Way to Have Lace. Benjamin Franklin was a wit as well as a philosopher. His daughter once wrote him to send her from Paris some lace and feathers, which extrav agance on her part, he says, "disgust ed me as nnu ;i as if you had put salt into my strawberries." And be adds: "As you say you should 'have great pride in wearing anything I send and showing it as your father's taste,' I must avoid the opportunity of doing that with eithe" -lace or feathers. If you wear your cambric ruffles as I do and take care not to mend the holes, they will come in time to bejace: and feathers, my dear girl, may be had in America from every cock's tail." ' uooa Advice. Amateur Camerist Here's a photo graph 1 took of myself. What do you think of it? Miss Bright (examining it) The expression is very glum. You shouldn't take yourself so seriously. Boston Transcript. Bad promises lire better broken than kept. -Lincoln I. C. S. An Ethical Power Now, gentlement, just for a moment, I would speak to you, not as an educationalist, but as a preacher of manhood and a lover of his kind. The question of the use of alchohol by ths student when study ing, has carried me back to the thought. The International Correspond ence Schools are not simply educational, they are ethical; they not only make foremen and craftsmen and draftsmen, but they make MEN in capital letters. For you can never awaken any one to his commercial, possibilities without stirring up all other possibilities so cial, patriotic, philanthropic, intellectual, moral. The moment you suc ceed breaking up one area of inertia you set vibration moving through every part of the being and all kinds of dormant and stagnant powers are set into healthy motion. When a man's mind gets engrossed with an intellectual occupation and he finds that he has a grip upon the laws and forces of the universe, the saloon, the vulgar and degrading tow, the curb-stone loafing, and the hours of inane and ribald waste all seem to be unworthy of him and his self-respect clothes him in a protective armor which helps to keep his entire manhood inviolate. A great American preacher used to speak much about "the expulsive pow er of a new affection," and, having as your life work the duty of both supplying and developing tUis "new affection" the love cf the best, by which the unworthy and base will be expelled, perhaps unconsciously but surely, from many and many a man." Success to you iu-your work! The Trained Man Never Worries When the chiefs put their heads together to hire or "fire," the trained man doesn't worry. He knows that there is always a place for him. You can look your job and every man in the face if you possess the training so much in demand everywhere today. The International Correspondence Scnools will go to you in your spare tb-ne, whereeyer you live, and will train you to become an expert in your chosen line of work. Such a training will forever take you off the "anxious" seat. It costs you nothing to find how the I. C. S. can help yoH. Mark ths coupon opposite the occupation for which you have a natural lik ing, mail the coupon today, and the I. C. S. will send you facts showing how you can earn mors money in the occupation of your own choice. INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS H. H. HARR IS, Local Mgr. 505 McKay Building, Portland, Oregon. Explain without, further obligations on my part, how I can qual ify for the position hefore which I mark X. Salesmanship Electrical Engineer Electric Lighting Supt. Telephone Expert Architect Building Contractor Architectural Draftsman Structural Engineer Concrete Construction. Mechanical Engineer Mechanical Draftsman Civil Enginser Mine Superintendent Stationary Engineer -Plumbing and Steam Fitting Gas Engines Name Present Occupation . Street and No. .. .. ... .. City ', WORK OF THE TELEPHONE. Its Magic Has Enabled Us to Snap Our (ingers at Space. Just how modern is the essential and ubiquitous telephone now connecting over a half million houses and offices in New York city there is a casual line in "Pinafore" which serves to in dicate. When the kindly chorus is condoling with Ralph Rackstraw on his separation from his Josephine it chants these words to picture the ter ror of his lot: " "No telephone connects with his dun geon cell." . The line falls flat today. But "Pina fore" was produced for the first -time in 1878, and in 1870 the Bell patents for the first practical telephone were issued. Thus when the words were written they related to a new and startling invention that was the talk of the day, and the Gilbertian line was really a riy, topical jest. . . It is a safe guess, however, that very few of the people who laughed at "Pinafore" in the seventies foresaw what the telephone would really prove to be. The years of the telephone are few. But already it has transformed business method and social intercourse. The railroads, the fast trains, the tele graph, wireless, the automobile, all helped to make the nineteenth century a century of acceleration. - The telephone w7orked more real magic than all the rest together. The discovery of astral bodies would hard ly have done more to multiply human effectiveness and enable us to snap our 'fingers at space. New York Trib une. THREE WONDERFUL MJRRORS. Used In Place of a Telescope In Mount Wilson Observatory. From Los Angeles by trolley car and burro back up through the pine forests one reaches the Wilson observatory. No dome or gigantic telescope greets the visitor when he gains the summit. A huge Noah's ark of canvas destroys all preconceived ideas of what an ob servatory should look like, and within three wonderful mirrors take the place of the great tubular telescope of other observatories. The observatory building Is con structed of canvas, the sides being set in the form of tiers of steeply overlap ping vsaves. This arrangement is cal culated to allow for perfect ventilation and is re-enforced by a vertical wall of canvas, which can be raised or low sred at will to obtain an even tempera ture. The peculiar arrangement of mirrors that replaces the familiar telescope is the center around which all interest In the observatory revolves. These mir rors are constructed at the Yerkes ob servatory and are the finest products of the optician's manufacturing skill. The enlarging mirror, which is sup ported by a pier of stone at the farther nd of the building, is of concave ?lass four inches thick, and the scien tists tell us it is of twenty-four inch, aperture by sixty foot focus. The glass is polished ever so often with jewelers' rouge upon pads of chamois skin and is burnished every week or ten days, in order to remove all possible dust. . In addition a gal vanized cover is kept over it when it Is not In use. Christian Herald. Corrected. "He says he is always outspoken in his wife's presence." "He means out talked." -Houston Cost. THINK OF OTHERS. No. man can live happily who regards himself alone, who turns everything to his wn advantage. . Thou must live (or another if thou ' wishest to live for thyself. Seneca. Civil Service Bookkeeping ' Stenography and Typewriting Window Trimming Show Card Writing Letter and Sign Painting Advertising . Commercial Illustrating Industrial Designing Commercial Law Automobi'e Running English. Branches Poultry Farming Teacher " Spanish Agriculture French Chemist German State WQMEN llf f fe?ir in mm , v it. ; (Coynght by Incerna iona! News Serv Evidently the equal rights movement is gaining in prestige in Enelanl makers covering bets at one of the prominent race courses, which privilege sively to the male sex. The women bookmakers have proved very success hasitato tr mvor a V,or no mattor hnw loivro tUc 4- WAGNER AND THE CABBY. A Bit of Comedy That Won a Good Tip From the Composer. A story of Wagner known to very few is brought to the light by the Vos sische Zeituug." When the composer was in a really merry mood, the right mood for story telling, he used to say that, being in Berlin on a very hot summer's day and finding himself in the Donhoffsplatz, he summoned one of the first class droshkies that were still fairly numerous at that time and told the driver where to go. His des tination was at the very farthest point of a district within which only the lowest fare could be demanded. It struck Wagner immediately that his driver was taking a very affecting leave of one of his fellows, as though he were starting on a life or death journey. "Goodby, William,'' he said; "we shan't see each other again for a long time." After the carriage had rattled on for a good while it came suddenly to a standstill. The driver got down from his box on the right hand side, opened the carriage door and banged it to again; then he went round to the left side and repeated the performance, climbed up on to his box and resumed the journey. At the end of the drive Wagner asked him what this dumb crambo show meant. The driver, with a sly look, made answer: "I just want ed to bamboozle my old nag. He would never have believed that the whole drive was for a minimum fare and would have refused to go on. But by banging the doors I got him to imagine that one fare had got out and another got in." Wagner laughed heartily over this explanation, and the driver, in spite of his greed, over which the composer made very merry in his letters, real ized the handsome tip on 'which he had been speculating. London Standard. . I To 15-Watt Portland Railway, Light & Power Company THE ELECTRIC STORE Beaver Bmlding, Main Street , Tel. Home, A228 Pacific, Main 1 1 5 BOOKMAKERS PLACING ODDS IN srv v v -fry. Cold Water Was Condemned. In contrast with our present belief in cold water an English herbal pub lished in 1529 says that "many folke that hath bathed them in colde water have dyed or they came home." while the danger of drinking nature's bever age is pointed out in the assertion that "it Is unpossyble for them that drynk eth overmoche water in theyr youth to come to ye aege that God ordeyned tbem." Condemned alike s a bever age and a bath, cold water held a very meager place in mediaeval domestic economy. Rural New Yorker. What is just and right is the law of laws - Latin Proverb F. Says Sage Tea Mixed With Sulphur Restores Natural Color and Lustre Grd, faded hair turned beauti fully dark and luBtrous almost over night, Is a reality, if you'll take the trouble to mix sage tea and sulphur; but what's the use, you get a large bottle of the ready-to-use tonic, called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," at drug stores here for about 60 cents. Millions of bot tles of "Wyeth's" are sold annual ly, says a well-known druggist, because It darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one an tell It has been applied. . Ton lust dampen a sponge or SUED Hi DARK ATTRACTIVE NEW PKDCES 0 N MAZDA LAMPS Take Effect at Once Clear Glass 30c Frosted 20 " " " 30c ' " " 35c 25 " " " 30c " " 35c 40 " " 30c . ' ? " 35c 60 " " 40c " " 45c 110 " " " 70c " " 75c 150 " " $1.05 " "$1.15 250," " " 1.75 " " 1.60 ENGLAND . J ice). as in thf , had heretofore "been accord-d eX-clii" ful at, Mis enterprise and thev n-ver -ulci puse U1U me never fortv h ?ELPHIA' Pa" Au- 5The forty-third annual national convention ?Tnii fCAathoic Total Abstinence YZn , Amerlca began today, when 1.000. delegates, many of whom have been m the city several days, engaged m committee work in connection wW the convention, assembled in the Cath olic Boys High school for the formal opening exercises. The delegates ara headed by the Very Rev. Peter J O'Callaghan of Chicago as president while leading lights of the Roman Catholic church throughout the coun try are included in the list of those who are :o participate in the delibera tions.. The classified ad columns, of The Enterprise satisfy your wants. E, soft brush with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, and draw It through . your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Those whose hair is turning gray, becoming fadedj dry, scraggly and thin have a suis prise awaiting them because attest just one application the gray hatxt vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful all dandruff goes, scalp Itching and falling hair stops. This is the age of youth; gray haired, unattractive folks arent wanted around, so get busy with the sage and sulphur tonight, aad youll be amazed at your youthful appearance and the real beauty and healthy condition of your hair within a &w days. Inquiry at drug stores here shows that they all sell lots of "Wyeth'B Sage and Sulphur," and the (oiks ttsinjj it are enihufrtasyo, HUNTLEY BROS., Druggists Ball 35c BEAUTIFUL 11!