OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1906. OREGON CITY and VICINITY BRIEF MENTION OC LOCAL HAPPENINGS GARNERED FOR THE BUSY READER. Imtrgit ijultin of Cmioiiiuti U him'I' mihI- III of htuirt Iroiibln, lli'ttiT lnuli nrtfr your rliliniiey (1ihh, A lixik In tlnitt inuy nave your Ihiiimk. MImh C'lnrn Miller In Mlnwly r"'vir lug from mi nit ark of ninlarliil fi-ver. J. A. TufU luu rccnlvoil word of the ilmith of IiIh utirltt, John Tuftii, til Hi-ntll'i. Wunli'il: dlrl fur liiMiMnwork In Httnill family lniilrn tit KntirprlH offlio. , All mllltwy kimii blow cost nl MIhm (ioltnmllh'N 34 1( Opi-ti itlr foiici-rt Hi Pit y park next Saturday I'vcnlim, AiiKut 2.1, ty tint Mllwnnl.ln liiiml. way ('oiiiiiiny, ami H. K. Woodward, npi-tit Mnvrrul ilny Hulling tuul limning on Milk crm-k. during the lant wi-nk. Ladder companies worn noon there rnady If tin y lui'l been nm-diid, also Homo Ni, 3. A lira of old paper In tlio a torn Mtovo Ignited moHM around tlio chimney, Immitgo (tuiall. Old nownpaporn fur null ut th Ih office- 250 pur hundred. I'luiiii'M (ionlUliii;, wlni linn licn NittMiiiiin in tli" Nlo io of lien milling In Portland for Hi'vnral iuoiiiIih piiHt, lum ii-hIkikmI IiIh position and 'will 1)0 wlllt tlni Kail Clly clothier when llmlr now Ht'iiu U opuneil III thu Ma annlc building. Hiiumrl Houki1, tho Ilnrlnt, I en Ini'Kl'iK ti Hit oUiitwIhk Improving hi KrrllllllllMil, Kor Hull) -H riMilii limine; I IhIh, A gnat bargain. Addr- Mm K V. Ki'iuii'dy, Oii'koii City, DrfK'Mi. STll MortliiH'r J, Ciirkri.dl Ih In charge of Huntley Unit:, urn' brunch ntnm ut Mo lalla thlt wi'i 't, wlillo J. II Vernon U taking a vacation. I'll ill Miller ha liiiiiKlit Hi" I'.m'in plat. Twelfth ntnl Adam jtreet, for fNDO. it will liuve the yal lill'-d In Ulld the hmimt reiuiideleil! All trlniined and untrlniineil hat below (himI at Ml (ofdttilth' '.lit Uev. J, It. Laiidnboroiigli, iiiHtor of thu First rnmliyterlun church, wrlttut lut Ih I'liJuyltiK IiIh vacation among old Im in friend In North Dakota. Ho tut left liowbell uihI Ih now ut Park Hiver. lli will return to Oregon I'lty eurly In Hepletiiber, .luck It. Ciiiifleld, former city treas urer, who recently went to Homo Val ley, Wnu., to accept a clerical ponl tlon with th L. V. Potior Lumber coin I 1 1 1 y . hut already liecn promoted, lie Ih now nltunt bookkeeper In tint company' officii. F, II mid Ani'l Oldenburg went to the Itugue Illver region Iat week, wlieru they will tako Hnlinuii ckrh for t!ie I'. H lilireutl of llnlierleH hUlloll. Ilert llolciimh ami fumlly of ('lnckaiiiua lirive uUo Knlie to i-HKUKO III tin! HUIIIU work and will ho uhio'iit until net HprlnK. Pr. T. R. Ilourd Imn Mold IiIh prnc tlco to Dr. liiivo, and will turn over IiIn offlco on Heptcniher Int. Ho aluo dlnpoiwd of IiIh renldenco to l)r. lw, who will tuko pOHHCHHloll HllOIlt tiilddlo of Heptiimher. Dr. Ih-iird will retlro from tho profoHHlon of tnedlclno, which ho IliidH too hlndliiK, and contemplutoM jolnliiK IiIh brother who ban a farm on tlio oiitHklrtH of Oregon City In tlio Krow lnx of fruit. TMh will tnako a va cancy In tlio office of county coroner. (Iratiti I'uhh DbMorver. DEATHS OF THE WEEK p Mr: Dan Herron, a woll ronpectod pioneer of Orogon, illid at her home In Pb aHiint Hill, AiiK'Mt 7, l')W, agod 70 yftirH and six rnonthH. Hhe Iobvoh henlilfrM her hiiMbund, ono daughter, four Hotin, ono hImUt and two hrothorn, Funcrul waH held at tho I'loiiHant Hill cemetery, Sunday mornltig at 11 o'clock, conduct)! by Kov. Coleman of Sherwood. f Waiitod Jontloman or lady with good reforonco to travol by ralf or with rig, for a firm of $250,000.00 capital. Salary $1,072 per year and pxpoimoH. Balary paid weekly and oxpeiiHoH advanced. AddroHH with utatup, Joh. A. Alexander, Oregon City, Ore. Doc. 21 Herman Hofatetter, 11 rnontha old Hon of Mr. and Mrit. Oeorgo HofHtottor, of darken, died KiVurday, after a brief HlniHH, Funeral from tho home Sunday. Full lino of Duck Hati at reduced prlceii at MIhm Coldnnilth'a. 31 tf NlKbl Officer K. I.. SIihw Ih acting chb f of police during the abHOtice of Chb-f HuriiH, wlni Ih ipendlng IiIh vaca tion ut 8enlili tuul ClutHkanlo. Mrn Win. Cordon and family have rented the Chano property on Water Htreet near tho aiiMpetiHlon bridge, and will conduct It bm a bonrdlng Iiouho. Hop picking HUppllen I'ttther Cauutli-t kIovom 25c. C'anvan glovoa 10c and ISr, at Thomhoti'a llarguln Store. 37tl Captain !aac I.. Hmlth of Fort Can by. keeper of the Capo IMHappolnt meni IlKht Mtutlon. Ih upending a mouth on hi .12aor farm near Clackamas HtAtion. Half of tlio large double Jiouho, 1H09 North Main htreet, for rent. Flvo riMiniH, city water, beautiful yard, beat location In town. !w rent, and poH HcHMlon given alMiut September 10. In quire at lite limine. The report of tho atate board of health Haying the Willamette and Columbia rlvern are Infected with, ty phoid fever ger.iiH, doon not caune any alarm Imri'. an the clty'a wat'r huj ply Ih thoroughly filtered and tho water from the maliiH U pure an ahown by repealed iimilyMU by export. MONEY TO IX5AN AT 6 AND 7 pr cont. Farm security. U'Hon & Schuobol. O. A. Ilelnx and family have return il from. Klamath FalU, where for bov crnl inoutliH Mr. Ili lnz wan itiKiiKod In biiHlneHH. Ho linn dlHpiwed of IiIh bun-tnt-na InteroKtH there ami expectn to again locate In Oregon City. ProfoMHor Henry L. Hatea. of Pacific unlveralty, apent Sunilay In thin city, preaching at tho First Congrega tional church In the morning. He wah the gucHt of hlH old Obeillu col lege frlemlH. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dy. Charlea Myera, who recently gold Mh farm at Viola to O. W. KuHtham, went to Corvallla Tuesday night for n Hhort vIhU. Mr. Myern cxpectn to leave In a few daya fur Conullle City, whore he will locate. Agent K. T. Fleldn of the Southern I'uelllc company, Conductor Charters nf tho Oregon Water Power & Hall- A Waxhington dlHpatch aayn rural freo delivery la ordered to atari Oc tober 10 on Oregon City route No. II. PoHtmaMtor Ha tula 1 1 linn receive no notification to the effect though tho tiewa Ih probably authentic. Number G Ih the rotito that will mipply Canemnh and then double back and mipply the mihurba on the north. Kll Ilrannon, of McMlnnville, who operated a aaw mill In the early 50'a on the alto now occupied by the pa per mills, Ih going to return hero with hlH family and end IiIh daya at tho plac he nettled when he flmt came to Oregon In 1851. Ho vlalted here recently In tho home of F. Colwell, and atarted negotlatlonH toward tho pur chase of a home. Wanted. Farm team, harneag and wagon cheap for canh. Inquire of C. T. Tooze, tiladHtono, Ore. 3Ct3 The ladleH of St. John's Catholic church gave another of their succchh fill Ice cream aoclaln on the lawn at the church Frldny evening. MuhIc wan Htipplied by tho German band of Portland, and gelectlona were rendered by a male chimin. DoIIcIouh refresh ments were nerved by charmingly gowned young women, and tho affair wan n very profitable one. There wan no admission charged to the grounds The net proceeds will go towards pay lug for tho improvement on tho church property. A defective Hue wan the cause of a alight hla,o Wednesday morning about 9 o'clock on the roof of the building occupied by J. K. Seeley'a grocery, cor tier Seventli and Center streets. Tho tire w as put out by the use of the hand extinguishers. An alarm was turned In and Fountain I low and Hook & Captain J. II. Ktnery, an old Califor nia forty-niner, and an Oregon pioneer, Hpofit .Monday In tl.o city, tho guoHt of telatlviH, C. II. Dye and Mr. Eva Emery Dye. Mr. Emery ban been con nected with tho postal aervleo on tho Columbia river for more than a quar ter of a century. Ho waa an Intimate friend of many of tho old pioneer, In cluding Coventor Joo !ane, Judge Deady, Jesse Applegato and other. While In tho city he visited Rose Farm and called on Mr. O'Neill, as for many year ho wa asaoclated with her deceased husband In tho steam boat business on the Columbia river. 1 no Ktiapp Ktore room, corner Tenth and Main utreet, ha been leased for three year by Carter & Conlln of Vancouver, W'anh., who are having It made ready for tho reception of a large stock of dry goods, shoes and men' furnishing early In Septem b"r. They own a largo atoro at Van couver and another at Washougal, Wash., their atore being known far and near by the trademark C C. J. H Curler, who, by the way, Ih no rela tion to tho senior member of the firm, I superintending tho arrangement of the More, and the junior partner, Mrs Conlln, will probably have charge of the aloro here. INSURANCE. Plato Clang, burglar-proof, and atl kinds of casualty Insurance written by 0. A. Cheney of Oregon City. Of fice with Justice of the Peace. Any kln Itching Is a temper-tester Tho more you acralch tho worne It Itches. Doan'g Ointment cures pile, eczema any akin itching. At all drug atores. RATES. Newport, Yaquina Bay, Breltenbuah Hot Spring From All S. P. and C. & E. Points. THE HORSESHOE is an emblem of good luck. The saving pass-book is another emblem of good luck; ' and not only that, but of business shrewd ness. Have you one of our books The BANK OF OREGON CITY Bank open frcm 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. Julia Winifred Grim, daughter of Hev. and Mr. W. 8. Crlm. who died In Denver. Colo., Tuesday, August 14, wa burled front tho home of Mr. ICdhh, at. Willamette, at ft: 15 o'clock TuoHday morning; Interment In River- view cemetery. Funeral wa delayed from Kunday on account of non-com- pletlott of burial vault. r u i i t i it ti P0LKAOOTCANS a MA Nl)YfoA"'l Pure, raw linseed oil costs less than "ready mixed" paint, but when mixed with thick Unlock pigment, gallon for gallon, it makes tne best paint for the least money. FOR SALE BY GEORGE A. HARDING OREGON CITY, OREGON. KIHUAjNr company uiirnnn Reliable and Seasonable Recipes Delicious Ice Cream. .ed applea, two cupfula of sugar. When Make a custard of one quart of milk I cold beat five eggs light, aUr alter- "1 have been aomewhat costive, but Donn'B Rcgulet gave Just the results desired. They act mildly and reeulate tho bowel perfectly." George B. Krausc, 300 Walnut Ave., Altoona. Pa. SUNDAY EXCURSIONS ON THE CORVALLIS & EASTERN RAILROAD TO NEWPORT AND RETURN. Sunday excursion to Newport and return on tho Corvallls & Eastern Railroad will leave Albany ..EVKRY SUNDAY AT 7:30 A. M... Arriving in Newport at noon, return ing leave Newport at 5:30 p. m., glr Ing 5'i hour at the finest resort on the Coast. Health, rest and pleasure for the weary worker. Throe day and season tickets from all S. P. points good going or return ing on Sunday excursion train. Faro from Albany, Corrallis or Philomath $1.50 for the round trip. Connection at Albany with Eugene Uical going and South bound over land on return. A Feat Indeed. Susie had tried the teacher's pa tience sorely, and when the latter looked up and saw the Utile girl chew ing gum, with her feet sprawling Into the aisle, she said: 'Susie Jones, take that gum out of yofir mouth and put your feet In!" and the yolks of two eggs. Add quar ter of a box of good geletlne, sweeten to taste and season with vanilla. Let It cool, then take one quart of rich cream, make It very sweet and froth It with a cream churn. Then take off the froth and beat It In the cu.iLard. Put all together and freeze. A Rich Apple Charlotte. Cut some not too thin strips of stale bread, take off the crusts and dip them in clarified butter and line a but tered mold or cake tin with them, making them fit very neatly. Peel am! core six or eight large apples; stew them till quite soft with four ounces of butter, sugar to taste and add the Juice of a lemon. When cool, lay a few spoonfuls In the mold, with a spoonful of apricot jam; then have j a layer of the strips of bread dipped In butter, another of the fruit, and so on till the mold Is filled, of course finishing oft with the strips of bread laid quite closely. Bake In a brisk oven, turn It out of the mold very care fully, sprinkle It with sugar and gar nish with little heaps of apricot Jam and red currant jelly. Apple Custard. Three cupfuls of stewed and strain- On and after June 1, 1906, the South ern Pacific In connection with the Corvallls & Eastern railroad will have on aale round trip tickets from point on their lines to Newport, Yaquina and Detroit at very low rate, good for re turn until October 10, 1906. Three day tickets to Newport and Yaquina, Rood going Saturdays and returning Mondays, are also on sale from all East Side points, Portland to Eugene. Inclusive, and from all West Side points, enabling people to visit their families and spend Sunday at the seaalde. Season tickets from all East Side and from all West Side points, are also on sale to Detroit at very low rates with stop-over privileges at Mill City or any point east, enabling tour Uts to visit the Santlam and Brelton bush Hot Spring In the Cascade mountnlns, which can be reached In one day. Sonson tickets will be good for re turn from all points until October 10, Throe-day ticket will be good going Saturdays and returning Mondays only. Ttcket from Portland and vici nity will be good for return via the East or West side at option of pas senKer. Tickets from Eugene and vi cinity will be good going via the Le banon Sprjngfleld branch If desired. Baggage on Newport tickets checked through to Newport, on Yaquina tick ets to Yaquina only. Sunday excur sions to Newport on tho C. & E. will hegln June 10th or 17th and run every Sunday thereafter, leaving Albany at 7:30 a. m.; leave Corvallls 8 a. m. S. P. trains connect with the C. & E. at Albany and Corvallls for Ya quina and Newport.. Trains on the C. & E. for Detroit leave Albany at 7:30 a. ru., enabling tourists to the Hot Springs to reach there the same dnv. Trains from and to Corvallls I connect with all East Side trains on i the S. P. I Full Information as to rates, time table, etc., can be obtained on appll- cation to J. C. Mayo, Gen. Pass. Agt ;C. & E. R. R. Albany: A. L. Craig, G. I P. A., S. P. Co., Portland, or to any S. P. or C. & E. agent. Rates from Oregon City to Newport $6.00. To Yaquina JG.00. Three day Rate from Oregon City to Newport, $3.00. There's No "Gas" About Thia. Municipal gas in Nottingham, Eng land, U about CO cents per thousand cubic feet, while Widnes, a town of 30,000 in Lancashire, sells It to Its people at 35 cents per 1000 cubic feet. The Oregonlan's Washington corres pondent remarks, "here is something for Portlanders to ponder over." If it Is, then there are thousands of other similar examples In municipal water systems, street car Bystems, electric IlKht systems, coal and fuel systems, that Portlanders and all others should ponder over, says the Mt. Scott News. But what good does It do to ponder? It does not In the least serve to elicit less abuse of the "brainless crank" who advocates municipal ownership from prosperous and all-wise "men of In fluence" In Portland and every other city. The success of municipal own ership of municipal necessities de pends only upon proper administra tion. With honest men In control the principle Is, In very many successful examples both at home and abroad, a thorough success and a vast lessen ing of expense. It is not something to ponder over. It U merely something for smart alecks to sneer over until the people get backbone enough to act for their mutual welfare. nately into a quart of milk with the apples, pour Into a pudding dish and bake. To be eaten when cold. Dora Leonard's Lemon Pie. Crate one lemon, mixing Juice with grated rind; add one cup of water, one cup sugar, yolks of two eggs, lump of butter size of an egg, one slice of bread grated very fine. After baking, beat the whites of the eggs with four table spoons of sugar, spread over the top of the pie and return to the oven till slightly browned. Peach Pudding. Chop the peaches Into a bowl and add a generous quantity of sugar; then set away until a thick syrup has been drawn. To this add beaten eggs In the proportion of two eggs to a pint of fruit, reserving the whites of two eggs for meringue. Add half the quan tity of milk there Is of fruit and two rolled crackers for each pint of the mixture. Mix, pour Into an earthen dish and slip into a quIcW oven. Rap Idly beat the whites with a heaping teaspoonful of soft white sugar to each, put at once on pudding and re turn to oven until the meringue Is a delicate brown. . Serve cold. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN Olive Oil Is Good Tonic Girls who are inclined to be thin should eat plenty of olive oil. Eaten with green vegetables, such as lettuce, cucumbers, cold asparagus and other "greens," it Is very good, as the veg etables themselves clear the skin and thus help In the beautifying process. Thin girls make a mistake when they play golf or tennis or anything that requires violent exercise. How She Cured Freckles. An old French grandmother used to make a bleach for her face when she was a girl that other girls may like. Thickened milk was Strained and into the liquid a slice of large green cu cumber was dropped and the whole boiled until pulpy. After standing aa hour it was placed In a bottle, the settlings thrown away. A tablespoon ful of alcohol, twenty drops tincture of benzoin and any perfume desired ad ded, and it was applied at night, dry ing on the surface, the face then being anointed with cream. Lemon Ice. One gallon of water, ono dozen fresh juicy lemons, 2ty pounds of sugar and the whites of half a dozen eggs beaten to a stiff froth. Put the pulp and the Juice of tho lemons In the water, let It stand some time, putting the peel In an hour or two before freezing, and the eggs just aa It Is ready to freeze. Poison Are Healthful. - In a new work on food preservatives Dr. R. C. Eccles, one of the highest au thorities on ferments, as reviewed In Current Literature, says that too much, rather than too little, restric tive law Is what ails us these days. Dr. Eccles points oitj that canned goods and bottled edibles are protect ed from dangerous deterioration only by the use of such preservatives as public opinion has been led to con demnsulphur, he said, salycllic acid, benzoic acid, formaldyhyde, naphthols, hydrogen peroxide, and the like. As to the common presumption that home-made goods survive without preservatives, ho asserts that these seldom equal in quality and flavor those put up by the manufacturers. The cases of ptomaine poisoning so often reported are traced by him to the absence of these much-abused preservatives. Dr. Eccles says there Is no evidence to support the frequent assertion that kidney troubles results from the elimination of the preserv' ing acids taken with canned meats. Ho says that during the period the use of canned meats have greatly Increas ed the publiq health has been at Its best. DENTISTRY At Molalla, every Monday: Saturday on Appointments. JOHN W. THOM AS, Dentist PROCURED NO DEFENDED. '"a I dmwuur uruhoto. furiurl Mn-6 And f rM roport I yrtw mtki. kow to oU)a luteal ua aiiirfc&l tVrtl" N ALL COUNTRIES. Suiintu tHrrci viti Washington tavti thu, I wtpnry ana njirm smr pa ml, PitMt ind Inf rinrMmnt Pnctlct Ltclmlnly. WiiM or com to tu fcl II atatt Strat, rn Valtrf IMm rmtat 0S.M.I WASHINGTON, D. C. O. R. & N., THE TIME SAVER. Chicago 17 Hours Nearer via This Popular Columbia River Route. Franklin was right when he said "Lost time la never found again." The O. R. & N., In addition to giv ing you 200 miles along the matchless Columbia River, saves you 17 hours to Chicago. It Is the Short Line to Lewlston. Short Line to the Palouse country. Short Line to Spokane. Short Line to the Coeur d' Alene country. , Short Line to Salt Lake City. Short Line to Denver. Short Line to Kansas City. Short Line to Omaha. Short Line to Chicago. Short Line to all points East. Three trains East dally, 9:15 a. m.. 8:15 p. m., and 6:15 p. m. The "Chicago-Portland Special," is an fine as the finest. Every comfort of home. For particulars ask any agent of the Southern Pacific Company, or write A. L. CRAIG, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Ore. land, commencing February 15 and continuing dally to and including April 7 and from September 15 until October 31. The rates from some of the princi pal points are: Chicago, $25; Bloom ington. 111.. $31.80; St Louis, $30; Omaha, $25; Kansas City, $25; Coun cil Bluffs, $25; St. Joseph, $25; Sioux City, $25; Denver, $25; corresponding rates will be made from other points and will appear to all points on Ore gon lines. Persons desiring to pay for tick ets to bring anyone from the East or middle West to Oregon may deposit the amount required with the local agent of the S. P. The company will do the rest. For further Information Inquire at any Southern Pacific ticket office. Colonist's tickets will be sold from the East to points on the Oregon lines of the Southern Pacific Co. via Port- See Nature's Wondrous Handiwork fi3 Through Utah and Colorado Castle Gate, Canon of the Grand, Black Canon, Mar shall and Tennessee Pas ses, and the World-Famous Royal Gorge For Descripitlve and Illustrated Phamplets, write to W. C. McBRIDE, Cen'l Ag"'t, 124 Third St., PORTLAND, Or. THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITY OREGON CITY, OREGON AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000 D. C. LATOURETTE F. J. MEYER President Cashier Transacts a general banking business. Open from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m.