CM MORNING ENTERPRISE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1913. TOOZE WANTS nru nrnnrniTinn OLA utuKtWUIUFI (Continued from page 1) vor of segregation that thera is a dif ference in the ability of boys . and girls to grasp different subjects; for instance, a boy is considered to be able to handle mathmatics better than a girl, while a girl excells in the cul ture subjects. Now this has been dis proved by actual investigations which show that girls rank higher in the mathmatical subjects and the boys highsr in culture. "Another point aften discussed in this interesting subject is in regard to the social demands of the young. There is no doubt but that the de velopment of the social life of the young is a function that the public schools must exercise. School Functions. "There has been much argument re sulting from discussion as to whether segregation woiild act as a protection for their moral safety. There is no question as to whether there is a so sial demand of the young or not. The question is whether the social and moral instincts can be intrusted to tha training and influence of the school. "Some authorities claim that neither sex can do best work when surrounded by those of the opposite sex, but this can be made the objsct of much debate, both pro and con. "In a large, school with - larger in come, the added expence of segrega tion can b3 me twith ease, but in the small school segregation means that more teachers must ba employed and additional classes must be organized." When asked if he was in favor of segregation in this city.Professor Toozereplied: "In a city of this sfee, I am in favor of segregation in a lim ited sense." - NEW PLANS TO KILL GROWTH OF DODDER OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, CORVALLIS, Ore., Sept. 16 "In small patches dodder may be erad icated by mowing with a scythe before it ripens its sesd and whan the mow ings are dry covering the infested spots with straw and burning them off," says Professor Scudder, agrono mist at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege. "The spots may then ba ho.ad and reseeded to alfalfa. In case the dod der has already started to seed' it may be singed off with a torch made by placing some rags saturated with kerosene in a can to which a handle is attached. "When the entire field has become so badly infested that it is not prac ticable to burn the infested spots, the best thing to do is to clip the alfalfa before the dodder seeds begin to ripen. The land should then be plowed and put into a cultivated crop such as corn, potatoas, or roots. This can be followed with grain. At the end of three years, if the ground- has been kept free of dodder, it may be put back into alfalfa. "Dodder is a leafless, slender vine, whitish yellow in color, bearing clus ters of white blossoms which ripen in to abundant seed, sometime as many as three or four crops in a season. Al though of parasitic habits the seed germinates in the soil sending up lit tle tendrils which attach themselves to the alfalfa or clover stalks, winding about the stem and living upon its sap until the alfalfa turns yellow and dies." PRESIDENT BLAMED FOR TROUBLE PORTLAND, Ore., Sept 15. All tie business misfortunes of the Home Telephone company, of Puget Sound, and the Northwestern Long Distance Telephone company, of California, were bund'-wd together and dumped upon the woulders of Samuel Hill, president vf the Home Telephone Company, of Portland, in the answer filed by those two companies in tha Circuit court of the United States yes terday, to the suit of the government against the American Telephone & Telegraph company and subsidiary companies. They are charged with conspiracy to monopolize the tele phone business in violation of the anti-trust law of July 2, 1890. Hill Is Approached. It was alleged in the answer of the Northwestern Long Distance Tele phone company that when, the busi ness affairs of their company were in a bad wy and failure seemed immin ent, William Mead, W. W. Hitchcock and W. H. Allen appealed to Mr. Hill for assistance in rehabilitating the fi nances of the Northwestern company and the Home Company, of Puget Sound. - - They allege that thay agreed to transfer to Mr. Hill controlling inter est in all three companies, including the Home, of Portland, and in return he agreed to invest new capital. This was in 1909. JAPANESE AT PEACE CONFERENCE REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS . Pratum leaped into prominence as a financial center when robbers dy namited the post office safe, and safe and money and everything thereabouts went aeroplanning. A score of per sons have been hunting and everyone has found at least one "simoleon." The citizens of Lents are consid ering building a modern library. Edgar P. Canfield to Genevieve Can field, south half block 12, Wichita; ?10 Sarah E. Parmele and husband to Polly A. Pierce, part of D. L .C. of ,G. C Thurman and wife in section 1 and 12, T. 2 S., R. 2 E.; $10. . Henry Schultz and wife to Paul A. Mignola and wife, five acres in Si E. Vi S. E. 14 section 4, township 3 south range 5 east; $1. Paul A. Mtignola and wife to Henry Schultz, five acres in section 4, T 3 S., R. 5 E.; $200. Paul A. Mignola to Fred H. Strong, Gl and 2-3 acres in S. E; , S. E. section four, T. 3 S., R 5 E.; $10. Ed S. Grindeland to H. G. Hart shorne and wife, 5.42 acres in sections 5, 6, 7 and 8, T. 4 S.,' R', 1 E.; $1200. B. P Mitchell and wife to Anna E. Kruger, lot four, block six, Edgawood addition to Oregon City; $1. Herbert M. Sternfels and wife to Hannah Sternfels, lots six, block 11, lots 5, 6 ,18, 17, block 8, lots 6, 7, 8, block six, Park addition to Albina: block 29, Patton's addition to Albina; N. W. N. W. Sec. 25, T. 1 S., R. 1 W., city of Portland, lots 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 7, block 19 in Clackamas county; section 26, T 3 N., R. 1 E.. Hood River; $1. FACTIONAL FIGHT TO BREAK AMONG I..W. W'S. RAGGED THOUSANDS SEE'TtM'S FUNERAL NEW YORK, Sept. 15. Fully 20,- 000 persons, a few in broadcloth, the vast majority in humbler garb and many actually in rags, lined the Bow ery today when the funeral car car rying "Big Tim" Sullivan's body roll ed slowly through the historic old thoroughfare to old St Patriot's on. thedral in Mott street. Twenty of honor, marched beside the car and hundreds of east Riders fnli Timothy D.' Sullivan, of the Tammany ciud, arove tie car himself. Nearly all the buildings on the Bow ery. Mott street and other strests in the vicinity, were draped in mourning. moving pictures Hashed Big Tim's Picture On a Screen at one nnint nnssa. d by the funeral car Two thousand roses and as many more chrysanthemums covered the casket as it rested in front of the altar. Monsignor John Kearney celebrated ma requiem nigh mass. .7508 ' 3 g rsaasasrasSK a.- J ... . - ' Copyright by International News Service). ; The part played by Japan during the praeent peaca conference at The Hague has attracted the attention of the Western World. The representa lives of tha Mikado, two of whom are shown hera on their way to the Peace Palace, entered fully into the spirit of the congress, to the gratification of all present. Tieir most conspicuous action was the overtures made to c':a delegates from the United States, the object of which looks towards a peace pact batwean the two nations whose relationship racently was sr sensi.iva a3 to cause alarm throughout. the civilized world. JEAN .VAL JEAN IS WIPES OUT FAMILY - FOUND IN PRIEOT . OF WIFE; ESCAPES NEW YORK, Sep!) 15. Police and alienists alike confessed themselves baffled today by the character of the Rev. Hans Schmidt, the assistant priast of St. Joseph's church hera, who confessed yesterday to . having killed and dismembered the body of Miss Anna Aumuller, parts of whose body were found last week in the Hudson river, and ara now in the Ho boken morgue. Coroner Feinberg declared that he never saw so marked a casa of dual personality. "One side of his face. wears a sane tified expression, just as one would expect on the face of a priest," said the coroner. "The other side is mark ed by a devilish brutality. From one side the eyes have a beatific gaze; from the other, a diabolical leer." "It was by command of St. Eliza beth of ...Hungary, my patron saint, that I killed Anna Aumuler," Schmidt told Father Luke Evers, . tha Tombs chaplain, today. "St Elizabeth commanded me to of fer up a sacrifice," he continued, "and like the sacrifice of Abraham, it must be one of blood. "So I killed Anna Aumuller and drank soma of her blood to consum mate the sacrifice" MEMPHIS, Tenn., SepH 15. Be cause they disapproved of him, Ed Ward Baxter of this place, tod" wiped out his wife's entire familj, Mr. and Sl'rs. Henry Smith, her fathex' and mother, and her brother, Oscar Smith. He shot them to death as they slapt. Baxter, who . had been separated from his wife, had tried to see her at her parent's home, but was invari ably refused admittance. She was in the house just before the murder, but escaped when she saw her hus band coming and hid in an outbuild ing. Young Smith, who wlas awaken ed by tha shooting, also tried to flea, but was shot down as he ran. After the triple tragedy, Baxter re loaded his gun and escaped. . The po lice are saeking him. Whether or not President Strahorn of the P E. & E .violated the stata law which prohibits a railroad giving free transportation in carrying a party of newspaper men through tha valley, has been brought before the state commission. Construction work of the Portland, Eugene & Eastern has been going on steadily all summer. CHICAGO, Sept.15. The eighth an nual convention of the industrial Workers of the World opened here today, with prospects for a warm factional fight for control ot this .mil itant, revolutionary body. Delegates from some of the western ates hinted broadly that the pres ent secretary, Vincent . St. John, who called the convention to oraer, had been too long in office, and that tha organization would benefit by a red.s tribution of memberships on the gov erning committee The insurgsnts planned to make their attack whan the convention balloted on the choice of a temporary chairman at the open ing session today. The fight, for control, the insurgents declared, was causad by no funda mental differences of opinion regard ing the policies of the I. W. W., but was based solely on the belief that the offices should ba rotated. Such, a method, they said, would be more sat isfactory to the rank and ma of the membership and would remove all suspicion that the organization was boss controlled. George Spaed, general organizer for the I. W. WI, arrivad today to read his report on the work of the organ ization during the last year, bpeed s report will show that the I. Wi W. now has a membership of 65,000, the largest since it .was formed nine years ago. At the first convention a membership of 40,000 was reported, but in the intervening years the num ber has fluctuated, dropping as low as 25,000. The convention will be in session for at least ten days. There is no set program and each session will be a round table affair, where any speak er who gains the floor may discuss any subject he sees fit. The strike and free speech agitation in cities of the Pacific coast, the Paterson silk strike, the recent disorders in Minot, N. D., and Seattle, are among the live" topics to be debated. "Bill" Haywood, Joe Ettor and oth er I. W. W. leaders engaged in strike agitation and propaganda work, are here to address the delegates. GETS MEDAL FOR HIS HEROIC RESCUE PORTLAND, Ora., Sept. 16. For de scending 60 f:.jt into a well filled with gas from an exploded charga of dyna mite and rescuing Abraham Hilde brand in 1904, Wiliam J. Raidy. a car penter living near Lents, received on Saturday a Carnegie hero medal. Reidy had almost forgotten the in cident whan last fall he was visited by a representative of the-Carnegia hero endowment fund. Afcer subjecting Reidy to a searching-examination- as to the circum stances surrc 'ding the saving of HildebranJ life, the investigator confirmed Rcirly's statements and a few weeks later Reidy received infor mation that ne had been awarded a bronze medal for his act. If you have stomach or bowel trouble, heart, liver or kidney disease. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea wi'.l do you more good, in less time, than any other remedy because . it re stores natural conditions. At all druggists, 35c. Jones Drug Co. la 7s 1V1 The Telephone and the Doctor ANY lives are saved each year because the doctor is reached promptly by the Bell Telephone. From the information he re ceives by telephone he can give directions for emergency measures, and provide himself with the necessary medicines and instruments. Consultations with Specialists are easily ar ranged by means of the Bell Long Distance Service, THE PACIFC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY SPECIAL TRAINS TO THE Oregon State Fair FROM PORTLAND - Monday, September 29 Thursday, October 2 Tuesday September 30 Friday, Octobar 3 Wednesday, October 1 Saturday, October i Leave Union Depot 8:10 a. m. " Leave East Morrison 820 a m Leave Oregon City ;. ....... 8:56 a! m; Arrive Fair Grounds 10:15 a m Arrive Salem io:20 a. m! RETURNING Leave Salem 5:20 p. m. Leave Fair Grounds 5; 40 p- m! Arrive Oregon City r. ........ v 7:12 p. mj Arrive Portland 7:5o p. m, Portland Day, Thursday. Oct. 2 $1.50 Round Trip Other Sale Dates September 25-26-27-28-29-30; October 1-2-3-4 $1.40 Round Trip from Oregon City Return Limit Oct. 8 All Trains Direct to Fair Grounds SUNSET 1 I (OtDEN & SHASTA) I 1 V ROUTES I JOHN M. SCOTT General Passenger Agent 6 DRAIN LAKES TO IRRIGATE LAND ONTARIO, Ore., Sept. 15. Judge Will R. King, chief counsel to the sec retary of the interior, is here, looking over irrigation matters pertaining to Malheur land Harnsy counties. It is his opinion that the two counties should unite on the irrigation question. He thinks that the Malheur lake lake country could be profitably drain ed and tha water used on the lands lower down. Dams could be placed in the rivers impounding the water. he says, so that the Malheur river could be regulated to the benefit o: the irrigation projects that depend on this sour- for their water. He says that the government could handle this matter and charge a small amount. for the work Judge King also thinks that a sys tern could be placed in operation whereby the highlands of this sec tion might be irrigated at a cost not to exceed $25 per acre, and says that if the people would make the proper effort the government would assist them. He emphasizes strongly the formation of drainage districts, and contends that many acres of now worthless land could ba made valu able. Judge King has also been attending to some legal matters at "Vale, and will leave in a few days for Washington HIP BELTS AND BLOUSED COATS FAVORITES FOR CHILDREN ' Fashions and fabrics for children's clothing are as alluring this autumn as for their elders, and happily for the mother who is to make the new gar ments they are not too intricate. She may be puzzled to know what tt select from the variety of wool mixtures, serges, ottaman cloths, checks, plaid plushes and . corduroy; but, having made a choice, she will find these two patterns just the right ones for an au tumn coat and a smart street dress. Both have the long waist effect and the belt which adds such a stylish appear ance to most children when worn be low the hips as now. The little coat (7S08) is made of Hague blue ottaman cloth, a little heavier than poplin, but having a simi lar cross weave. It has one section for the backhand closes at the side front with ornamental frogs of silk cord. The belt, thedeep round collar and the cuffs are trimmed with soutache braid to match. The pattern is cut in three sizes. Size 4 requires 34 yards of 39 inch material. Fifteen cents. Little French coats have a plaited section on the bottom like that pic tured on the blouse, which is a part of a cunning suit model. There is a two piece skirt attached to an underwaist. The material is one of the -new brown and white fancy checks, and the-trtm-ming is cream color cloth for collar and cuftsv The pattern (7871) is cut in five sizes. Size 12 requires 4 yards of 36 Inch material, one-half yard of lin ing and one-quarter yard of 36 inch contrasting material. - Fifteen cents. - The cannery at Grants Pass is now running at full capacity, turning out from 165. to 180 cases per day. SHORT SERMONS. He needs no other rosary whose thread of life is strung with beads of love and thought' From the Persian. The most beautiful of altars is the soul of an unhappy creature, consoled, thanking God. Victor Hugo. Let the only motive to read be the love of truth. Thomas a Kempis. Life, like a dome of many colored glass, stains the white radiance of eternity. Shelley. All that thou givest thou wilt carry away with thee. Turkish Proverb. . . Life is only bright when it pro ceedetb Toward a truer, deeper life above. Unqual if iedly the Best LEDGERS The De Luxe Steel Back New improved CU RVED 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 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE Headquarters for ' . . Loose Leaf Systems -