CM 3 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1913. ELECTRIC RAILWAY SANDY, Or., Aug. 25. Hope that Sandy finally will get street railway connection with Portland was revived this week by the presence here of F. D. Hunt, traffic manager of the Port land Railway, Light & Power Co. Mr. Hunt urged that a delegation of busi ness men ba sent to a meeting with the officials of the company in Port land with a view to showing President Griffith that it would pay the company to build to Sandy. About 15 men of : Sandy agreed to confer with Mr. Frif fith on tha subject of railway connec tion and elactric lights and power. Sandy had hopes of getting railway connection by means of the Multno mah &. Eastern railway, and subscrib ed $5000 in notes and cash, which are held in escrow in the Sandy Bank. The railway never was built,' but the sub scribers so far have failed to get the ' money,and notes returned. No Answer to Demand At the meeting of the Sandjt Com mercial club Wednesday the secretary . announced that there had been no answer made to the demand for the return of the bonus, A committes was appointed by the club to secure an attorney to start proceedings for the return of the bonus held in es crow. It is expected that the Pacific States Telegraph & Telephone company will make connection with the Sandy Cen tra! and the mountain trunk line to Rhododendron. Walter Creighton is assisting Super visor Douglas in erecting bridges on the Barlow road beyond the Summit House in preparation for the automo bile run to Pendleton from Portland. Roy Garwood, formerly of Camp Zig .. Zag, forest rangers, has been promot ed to supervisor of Plaza district. Thomas Brown, formerly of Lost Lake, has been stationed at Zig-Zag. PARTY REACHES TOP OF XPERTS TO TALK ON SCHOOL HYGIENE BTJFFALA, N. Y Aug. 25. The fourth International Congress on School Hygiene, for which prepara tions have been making for many months, was opened in this city to day with an attendance remarkable for its size and representative character. While the majority of the delegates, s was to fce expected, come from the I United States and Canada, there are many and eminent representatives here from the nations of Europe. Noted educators, scientists, physicians health officers and civic welfare work- rs to a total running into the hun dreds have registered. For an entire week they will exchange views and listen to papers and addresses on ev ery important phase of work having to do with improving the health and effi ciency of school children. Is Fourth Session The present meeting is the fourth triennial session of the International Congress of School Hygiene. The con gress was organized in Nuremberg in 1904. The second meeting was held in London in 1907 and the third in Paris in 1903. Twenty-five nations have membership on the permnaent international committee of the con gress. Among the topics that will be con sidered by the congress during the week are the following: The relation etween school hygiene and home con ditions; rural school hygiene, school children as carriers of disease, the re lation of athletics to health, eye dis eases among school children, the hy- lene of lay, the hygiene of the de fective child, and the relation of spinal curvature and flat feet to the health of the child. Numerous papers to be presented by experts will treat of open air schools, iunch rooms, drinking facilities, vill- ge school, summer camps, rest rooms, chool architecture, the prevention of epidemics, school nurses, and school decorations. Making the ascent of Mount Hood for the tenth time, Raymond Caufield. with a party, returned to Oregon City at 1 o'clock Monday morning. Caufield, who is a clerk in the Bank of Oregon City and a former Univer sity of Oregon student, said that .this would be his last trip up the mountain. He is badly burned about the face from the fierce rays of the sun. Cau field acted as guide for his party and was accompanied up the mountain by Mortimer Park and Tod Binford, both of Oregon City. The start was made from Govern ment Camp just after Midnight Sat urday and the summit was reached, atfer an eight-mile hike, at 2:15 p. m. on Sunday. Mr. Caufield saw Mount Shasta, 460 miles distant, from the summit of Mlount Hood. In addtiion to the three who climed the mountain, Percy Caufield, Fred W. Humphrys and Harry Black, the latter a deputy sheriff of Multnomah county, went from this city by automobile, arriving at Government Camp at 11:30 o'clock Saturday night, but only three mem bers of the party of six made the . abcent- IT CAN BE RELIED UPON The American Drug and Press Asso ciation authorizes its members to guar antee absolutely Mieritol Hair Tonic. It has no equal. It is a wonderful rem edy. A trial will convince you. MOTHER HELD EOR EFFORT TO KIDNAP IONE, Or., Aug. 25. Bound over to appear before the grand jury on the charge of kidnaping, C. K. Slater and Mrs. Slater, of Portland, were taken to the county jail at Heppner today by Deputy Sheriff Frank Nash and turned over to Sheriff Evans under $500 bonds each. Mr. and Mrs Slater reached lone this morning and about 1 o'clock went to the home of D. H. Grabill, where they demanded the custody of Mrs. Slater's two children by a former mar riage. Mrs. Grabill refused to surren der the children, but was brushed aside by Mrs. Slater, who carried the little ones to the waiting automobile and started for Arlington. John Bryson, an lone liveryman, who was driving the automobile, was not satisfied that all was well and when he reached Main street he called the city marshall and explained his suspicions of the Slaters. Grandfather Recovers Children Mr. Grabill. grandfather of the chil dren, then appeared and the marshal turned the children over to mm. Mr. . Grabill then swore out a warrant for the arrest of Mr. and Mrs. S.ater, charging them with kidnaping. They ' pleaded not guilty to the charge, but could not furnish bail and were taken to Heppner and turned over to the county officials to await the action of the errand jury. . About two years ago Mrs. Slater left her husband, Jim Grabill, ana went from California to Portland where she is alleged to have obtained a divorce in Judge McGmnn s court ' charging cruelty and white slavery, ',. She alleges that after obtaining the divorce, she later married C. K. biat- ' er, who claims to be a member of the Portland police rorce. MARRIAGE LICENSE ISSUED tv riprk Mulvev issued a mar riage license Monday to Miss Alma Harms ard Russell C. Scramnn, Dotn of Macksburg. L ' Democrats Hope to Win in Maine AUGUSTA, Me., Aug. 25. The Dem ocratic campaign in the third con gressional district, where an election is to be held September 8 to choose successor to the late Congressman Goodwin, was begun today in earnest. The national committee has sent Rep resentatives Cullop, of Indiana; Mur ray, of Massachusetts, and Reilly, of Connecticut to fire the opening guns. Later it is expected Secretary of Commerce Redfield and possibly Speaker Clark will be heard in sev eral speeches. The Democrats have decided to stand squarely by the tariff measure now pending in congress. Th-a Democratic speakers also Will give considerable attention to the Mulhall charges regarding election aid given to former Representative Littlefield, of Maine, for many years a Republi FATE AND A COW By M. QUAD Copyright, 1913, by Associated Lit erary Press. I WILL BE DEDICATED KOEKUK, la., Aug. 25. The great Mississippi river power dam, one of the engineer wonders of the world, is to be dedicated here next week, and Koekuk is preparing for the occasion on a scale in proportion to its importance. It will be a red-letter event not only for Keokuk and its immediate vicin ity, but for all the cities and towns within a radius of several hundred miles, for the wonderful new zone which is to be formally opened is ex pected to minister to the millions of inhabitants of Iowa, Illinois and Missouri. The governors of the three states will be here and with other guests of note will deliver addresses appropriate to the occasion. From Chicago, St. ouls, Hannibal, Quincy, Burlington. Fort Madison and numerous other cit ies will come delegations of citizens to join in the celebration. Is Important Project The importance of the great engi neering project that has now become an accomplished fact cannot be over estimated. It is expected to work an industrial revolution in three of the great states of the Middle West and will be to this entire section of the country what the mammoth hvdro- electnc plants of Niagara Falls are to Ontario and western New York. The dam reresents the labor of three years and an expenditure esti mated at $27,000,000. With the single exception of the irrigation struc ture across the Nile at Assouan it is the longest bank-to-bank river dam in the world. It spans the Mississippi river for a distance of 4568 feet, be tween this city on the Iowa side and the town of Hamilton on the Illinois side. The structure is built of solid con crete. The width is 19 feet at the top and 42 feet at the base. Its total height is 53 feet, with 119 arched spans and piers 6 feet thick. Each spillway is 30 feet long and 32 feet high, and the steel gates above the spillways measure 11 by 32 feet. A SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENT Modern science has nrodnoed tin such effective agency for the relief of maiestion dyspepsia, constipation, biliousness or impure blood as Meri tol Tonic Digestive, the result of the nest minds of the American Driii nnrt Jones Drug Co., association msmbers. tress Association, composed of drug gists and newspaper men all over the country. Try this great remedy. Fifty-Second Annual Oregon State FAIR SALEM, OREGON Sept. 29 to Oct. 4, 1913 A whole week of pleasure and profit $20,000 offered in premiums on Agricultural, Livestock, Poultry, Textile and other ex hibits. Horse races, Shooting tourna ment, Fireworks, Band Con certs, Eugenics exposition, Chil dren's playground and other free attractions, including Boyd and Ogle's One Ring Circus. Free Camp Grounds. You are invited. Send for Premium List and En try Blanks Reduced rates on all railroads. For particulars address Frank Meredith. Sec. Salern, Oregon Steel Cars and Safety Signal Devices Wonders of Railroading Professor Slocum of the college at Madison was fifty years old at a cer tain date. He was tall and stoop shouldered and ungainly. He was ret icent and undemonstrative, and socie ty knew him not at all. Miss Deborah Day of the same town had reached the age of forty-five. She was plain of face' and frigid of attitude, and her charms were missing. It was one -Sunday in church that fate brought the old bach and the old maid together in the same pew, and they sang from the same hymn book. Fate, through a mutual acquaintance, introduced them after the sermon. A few evenings later the professor call ed. The talk was of philosophy. He called again, and they talked of theoso phy. He made a third call, and the age of the world was under discussion for an hour. After that it was for the cow to do her part. One evening, just at sundown. Miss D:iy walked forth in a . meadow to gather a few daisies. At the same hour it singularly happened that Pro fessor Slocum sought the same mead ow in search of geological specimens. The lady discovered her daisies, the professor discovered his pebbles, the two people discovered each other, and together they discovered a cow. A cow may be simply an animated object on the landscape or she may be a dis covery because she is enraged over the loss of a horn knocked off in some way and because she has her head down and her tail up and is charging the pebbles and daisy gatherers. Then the fifth discovery showed up. It was a cow shed twenty rods away. a rough affair that had seen bet ter days. The meadow was retired, and the shed was more so. They reached it just in time for the pro fessor to find a board and bar the en trance against the cow and later on to further strengthen it There was no doubt about the bovine being in ear nest. She made frantic efforts to tear down the shed with her remaining horn, and when she could not effect an entrance she stood on guard to keep her victims from coming out. Dark ness suddenly fell, and then the per turbed couple suddenly realized their situation. "Professor Slocum, I must leave here this instant!" exclaimed the horrified Miss Day. "And so must I!" was the reply. "It is not proper!" "Certainly hot!" "I shall be a laughingstock!" "And I the same!" ' "I can't go, but you must!" said'Miss Day as the cow quieted down. "Pro fessor, you must see that you must go you must see it!" "I do see it." he replied, "and, while I cannot depart from the shed, I can climb on the top of it" . This he accomplished by making his way through' a gap in the roof. He was now in a position of propriety, but there was the cow again. When she saw him perched lip there, so near and yet so far, she tried to climb up after him. and at the end of two min utes Miss Day was shrieking for pro tection. Down scrambled the pro fessor, and the cow took to running around the shed to find where he had disappeared. The interior of the shed had now become so dark that nothing could be seen. In trying to strengthen the door some more the pro fessor fell down and rolled over. ' In trying to go to his assistance Miss Day suddenly found herself sprawling. Can a person maintain frigidness when surrounded by a cow shed, with a mad cow battering away at the door? Can a person be stilted after rolling in the straw and dirt? Can he or she be severely ceremonious when it is im possible to see each other? The pro fessor wisely decided that they could not. and he reached out and clasped Miss Day's hand. ' She returned the clasp. Then he put his arm around her in a protecting way, and she did not shrink. Then the old cow. made up her mind to melt the frost and bring out the turtledoves if she had. to break her neck to do it. She gave a bellow of warning and retreated eight or ten rods and then came for the side of the shed like a runaway locomotive. She hit it fair and square, and two thirds of it caved in like a house of sand. In the caving she was mixed up with beams and boards, and the pro fessor took advantage of the occasion to tear the door aside and then pull his companion out into the open. Then they ran for the nearest fence. It wasn't dignified to fall down three or four times, but they fell. It wasn't eminently proper, when the fence, was reached and the cow was hard on their trail, for the professor to throw Miss Day pver and then take a scramble himself, but that's the way it was worked. Then as soon as the man in the case could get his breath he re alized the inevitable. They were both tattered and frizzled. Tbey had togeth er passed through peril by flood and fire (and cow), and romance had come to their hearts at last. "Miss Day. I have loved you from the first!" announced the professor as he took her hand. "And I I" she replied after gasp ing for breath. Of course she had, too, and of course that settled it then and there. The old cow kwked through the rails' at them, heard the cooing of the doves and with a snort of disgust turned tail and walked away. And yet she had made over two human beings to be like the average. 5 -SrSJ vSi'"- SP - J-r- AILROAD traffic of the present day is a far cry from tile inconveniences and the danger of a decade ago. Today every big railroad system adopts sooner or later not only all that makes for the comfort of tne travelers, but the newest and best ways of minimizing accidents. These interesting pictures 6how what the Pennsylvania railroad has done In two par ticulars for the greater safety of the public. A fire test of a steel passenger coach showed that the flames merely scorched the paint and. burned the cush ions. It is claimed that in case of a wreck there is little danger, of fire. TUe evolution of the steel car from the old wooden tinderbox is not more wonder ful, however, than is the strides made in signal safety devices. For instance, one of these pictures shows the signals in front of the drawbridge over a river near New York. If the draw should be open and the engineer not stop these automatic signals would derail the train a safe distance from the river. Liszt a Dry Smoker. Liszt was a dry smoker of a peculiar type. Massenet, who knew him well in his later years, tells us that Liszt could not play unless he had a cigar in his mouth, which be never troubled to light. He would sit down to the piano with a cigar between his teeth and keep munching it all the time he played. When the cigar was quite eaten up the abbe would rise. from the Instrument exhausted. Making Sure. Understand me. sir. I cannot live without your daughter" "But don't you misunderstand me. young man. What I want to know now Is where yon and Mary intend to live after you have been married." St- Louis Republic. LAWS OF THE MIND. I am firmly convinced that all the phenomena of the child -world, those which delight us as well as those that grieve us. depend upon fixed laws, as defi nite as those of the cosmos, the planetary system and the opera tions of nature, and it is there fore possible to discover them and examine them. When once we know and have assimilated these laws we shall be able pow erfully to counteract any retro grade and faulty tendencies in the children, and to encourage at the same time all that is good and virtuous. Friedrlch Froebel. A Captured Royal Standard. - The British royal standard which fills the center of the ceiling of Trhy hall, Annapolis, is a splendid example of flag restoration. Professor Wash burn said that this flag was "in about as fine pieces as chopped hay." yet to day it looks as if it had just left the hands of the weaver. A great deal of historic value is attached to this flag, as it is the only British royal standard in the possession of a foreign nation. In 1813 Commodore Isaac Chauncey and General Montgomery Pike cap tured the city of York, now Toronto, and took from the parliament house there this royal standard. Christian Herald. Governors at Keokuk. Menai Strait Bridge Echoes. Among the most noted echoes is that heard from the suspension bridge across the Menai straiL. The sound of a blow from a hammer on one of the main piers of the structure is returned in succession from each of the cross beams that support the roadway and from the opposite pier at the distance of 576 feet, in addition to which the sound is many times repeated between the water and the roadway at the rate of twenty-eight times in five seconds. . ' Too Efficient. Editor We are sorry to lose your subscription. Mr. Jackson. What's the matter? Don't you like our new poli tics? Mister Jackson It ain't dat sah: "tnin't dat. Mah wife jes' been an' dun landed a job o' work foh me hv advertisin' in vouh durned old Da- KEOKUK, Aug. 25. A week of cere monies and festivities in connection with the dedication of the great Miss issippi, river power dam was ushered in today with a reception of the gov ernors of Illinois, Missouri and Iowa. The governors of a number of the Eastern states, en route to the gover nor's conference at Colorado Springs, stopped off to inspect the big dam and plant. The formal dedication will take place tomorrow. UNIQUE NAME Con You Pronounce Name of World's Most Famous CATARRH Remedy? High-o-me that's the proper way to pronounce HYOMIEI, the sure breathing remedy that has rid tens of thousands of people of vile and dis gusting Catarrh. Booth's HYOMEI is made of Aus tralian eucalyptus combined with thy mol and some Hsterian antiseptics and is free from cocaine or any harm ful drug. Booth's HYOMEI is guaranteed to end the misery of Catarrh or monSy back. It is simply splendid for Croup Coughs or bronchitis. Complete outfit, including hard rub ber inhaler, $1.00. 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