OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, AUGUST 23, 1907, STATE NEWS. O - ............ ......Q There are several cases of smallpox near Lebanon. Many wells at Aurora have run dry this summer. Woodburn Is sprinkling its streets with crude petroleum. Hopplckers are offered $1.10 per hundred at W'oodburn. Hamilton K. Brooke, a well-known Portland man. died at 3 o'clock Wed nesday morning at his home, 50 Twentieth street, north. The steamer "Wiuema" which turned turtle recently In a gale on Klamath Lake, and sank near shore, has been raised and pumped out and put Into commission again. State Inspector Hutchinson says that sheep growers in Llnn and Lane counties are in many Instances evad. Astoria Is to hold her annual re-ln th !aw whlch Prides tor the dipping of sheep. It may be necea sary to quarantine those counties. gatta and country fair September 2-4. Lebanon is to have a new depot, 36x60 feet, for passenger and freight. Cottage Grove will have a poultry ahow sometime along about the holi days. The St. Johns Pioneer association will hold Its first annual picnic Au gust 28. Professors Strange and Harvey, principals of the Cottage Grove pub lic schools, have tendered their resignations. Governor Chamberlain has accepted an invitation to deliver an address on October 4 before the Inland Water ways Convention at Memphis, Tenn. His subject will be "The Importance of River and Harbor Improvement." The conditions required by the new State Board of normal schools will be met by the Monmouth school and it will continue to run. President Res sler says that the canvass for funds The Eugene cannery is said to have ( base proceeded far enough to justify handled about 200 tons of cherries this year, or about twice as much as last year. The well drillers at the Aurora waterworks plant took out a piece of wood from the well when down about 250 feet. The total wool clip of Oregon this year is estimated at 20,000,000 pounds. Last year the sheep produced about 18,000,000 pounds. Dan Kelley, the Oregon sprinter, has gone to Jamestown to take a hand In the races there. He promises to do some fast work. Eugene Is to have a new Federal building to cost J 50,000. They hope to lay the foundation this fall and complete the building next year. The paped mills at Lebanon have set 35 Japs at work cutting wood to him in making this definite announce ment. Altina Howard, 13 years old, was shot Wednesday afternoon by a stray bullet, tne missie striking her on the hip and glancing off. The girl Is a grand-daughter of Captain Howard, of Walla Walla, and has been stop plug with her aunt, Mrs. Desmond, at Seaside. She was walking along the road when the accident happened. FEAR OF GHOSTS. Harmless Visitors From Whom Wo All ( Shrink In Terror. Deep down iu the heart of man there abides a firm belief in the power of the dead to walk upon the earth and af fright, if such be their pleasure, the souls of the living. Wise folks, versed l in th ttrlmwfk snit fnrtia.wt In tnln.l keep the boilers going until there ta(aRaiMt faitb , augllt that Mvors of water enough to float down the usual the supernatural, laugh Ideas of the fuel. . kind to scorn, yet hardly one of The State Normal school at Drain opens Sept 17. Eight thousand dol lars have been raised locally to sup ply the deficiency In the withdrawal of the state appropriation. Martin Ophus; of Eugene, who killed his friend Ed Olson, mistaking him for a deer, while the two were hunting on the McKenzie, was exon erated by the coroner's jury at the inquest on the body of Olson. Two gangs of surveyors are running liBes across the Cascades, with what seems a purpose to extend the C. & E. road. One gang is encamped at Sand Mountain and is working along the line of the old survey of 1890. The Secretary of the Interior has approved the proposal for the relin quishment of 2990 acres of land In The Dalles land district, now held by the railroad company. Here's the latest In this year's bathing suits: WIfey "Oh, George, I've lost ay bathing suit. What shall I do?" Hubby "Don't say anything about it, and it won't be missed." Charles H. Pierce, the Ashland fruit canner, advises the people of Jackson county to raise more cherries, straw berries and raspberries. Not enough of these fruits are yet raised to meet the demands upon Ashland at prices remunerative to the grower. At the fair to be held at Sclo Octo ber 2, 3 and 4, a cash prize of $2 will be awarded on best Angora buck and $1 on best doe. A diploma will be awarded on best exhibit of four or more kids, and a premium of $2 for the best exhibit of not les than six Angora goats. The annual meeting of the Oregon Irrigation Association will be held in Grants Pass September 10, 11, and 12. The National Irrigation Congress closes at Sacramento, Cal., September 7, and all the Government experts who .will be at Sacramento will go direct to Grants Pass and take part in the Oregon Irrigation Convention. The steel bridge spanning the Wil lamette river near Harrisburg, speaks well for the enterprise of the South ern Pacific Company. It Is an up-to-date structure, equipped with a draw through which steamboats may pass. This draw Is operated by machinery that does the work automatically and one man can handle it. It is proposed to build a road through the picturesque mountain regioa lying In Columbia and Clatsop counties between St. Helens and As toria, over which automobiles may be driven and farmers' wagons drawn. The region is wild and beautiful In the extreme, and, covered by a good mountain road, no more enjoyable summer drive could be imagined. Rumors are again In circulation to the effect that the Wlilamette Valley Company, which owns the electric light and power and waterworks plants In many points In the Wlllam mette Valley besides Salem, and Is backed by the Rhoades, Sinkler & Butcher syndicate, of Philadelphia, has designs upon Salem and has un der consideration the scheme of en tering the Salem field with a gravity waterworks system in competition with the Salem Water Company. them win aare to walk alone through a graveyard in the night, or if one be found so lH)ld he will surely hasten his footsteps, unable wholly to subdue the fear of sheeted specters which may rise from the grass grown graves or emerge from moonlit tombs and follow on, for, strangely enough, the dead, if not actually hostile to the living, are esteemed dangerous and dreadful to encounter. It used to be the fashion, snys a writ er in Lippineott's Magazine, to sweep away all such uotlons by saying that they had their origin in the childhood of the race and that they sprang from fear of the unknown. This unques tionably was the easiest way to dis pose of them, but was It fuir? The subject pjssessef intense Interest for a great majority of mankind, and, though the existence of ghost Is nnproved. there is undeniably a vast deal of tes timony iu their U-half that deserves 6eriom and res;ect.'ul consideration. Fortunately, within the last fetf years the attitude of science toward the problem has altogether changed, and, actuated by a new spirit of Inquiry, the, wise men hive been engaged, thought fully and without prejudice. In study ing it out. While it cuu:: t be said that any final and definite conclusions have as yet been reaclnd. nu Immense amount of evidence has been sifted, enough to show pretty conclusively for one point that the traditional specter of the Cock Lane school, with clanking chain and attributes disagreeably suggestive of the grave. Ins no basis in fact. Ou the other hand, there are certain phantoms, altogether different in their character istics, in whose behalf a mass of testi mony !( ' adduced far greater than would bo required to establish com plete proof in any ordinary case In a court of law. Nothing fcbort of abso lute demonstration In such a matter can be satisfactory, but the evidence in question cerinluly staggers Incre dulity. Our fear of phR atoms appears to spring from o :rcad of the unknown, the mysterious and the Intangible. That It is a groundless terror is proved by the fact that in many thousands of cases of alleged spectral appearances subjected during the last few" years to painstaking Investigation not a single Instance has been found In which an injury was inflicted by the ghost upon the person or jwrsons to whom It pre sented itself. So that, even if we are to accept apparitions as veritable, we ought to regard them with curiosity rather than with apprehension, and In stead of trying to avoid such supernat ural visitors we should eagerly seek an opportunity to be haunted for the sake of observing for ourselves phenomena so Intensely interesting. Exchange In Necktie. A South Peun square business man has evolved a plan of bow to dodge wlfey, but there is merit attaching to it in this case. Ills wife insists on buying bis neckties and dotes on laven der and red or green spots or a pale shimmering nlle green shot with pur ple. Rather than cause her anguish by seeming to decry her taste in cravats, her husband most deceitfully starts for the office every morning wearing a tie of her selection. Once In the office, however, the traitor quickly exchanges tho offending necktie for something quieter which he keeps under careful lock and key in his own private desk. It would bo interesting to find out his wife's sensations should she pay him a visit some day in office hours or should he forget to make the exchange again before his trip home. Philadel phia Record. All Fence Wires, Nails, Stoves, Carpets, Chairs, and Farm Tools SOLD at REDUCED PRICES. ARTFf TOT TfPlHT OREGON CITY 1 nJT OWOii ilo ORFcnivr FR FACTS FROM FRANCE. Taris derives a huge revenue from the sale of dolls' dresses. ! Three hundred and fifty Hebrews ! are officers In the French army. From Puy de Dome, an extinct vol cano In France, carbonic acid li pro cured for commercial purposes. Sixty persons in France annually die of snake bite. Six cents Is paid for the head of a riier, and there are men who make their living by killing snakes. In a single department 300,000 vipers were killed in twenty-seven years. Captain Humbert, a French deputy, complains of the excessive number of officers attached to colonial troops. He says that the artillery of the colouial corps could on mobilization turn out eight four-gun batteries, which would be commanded by eight generals, eight een colonels, twenty-six lieutenant col onels and eighty-five commandants, to say nothing of mere captains and lieutenants. THE COURTS MODES OF THE MOMENT. There Is apparent a decided tendency toward the semltailored rather than the strictly tailored costume. Lingerie waists are showing a great deal of butter colored lace In their con struction, and very often it Is used In connection with pure white. The fancy for wash gowns, strong as It Is, does not seem to have diminished the vogue of the separate blouse, which has taken unto itself new scope and new beauty. For morning wear there Is nothing prettier or more generally satisfactory than percale. It has all of the wear ing and laundering qualities of linen and is much less expensive. Indications of the return of the tunic grow dally more significant, and, al though as yet It Is only suggested by the decoration, the suggestions are strong enough to Insure a more pro nounced effect In the fall, when heavier fabrics come Into use. New York Tost MANDAMUS THE SCHOOL DIRECTORS School districts Nob. 18. 20 and 38 have been merged Into a regular dis trict to be known as No. 110. Cer tain directors In the old districts have refused to mako an accounting of property to be turned over to tho new district and a mandamus suit Is tho result. It seems that part of district 2 Is also taken Into the new district and 110 Is entitled tw a share of tho assets of No. 2, whoso officers refuse to turn It over. It is said that the value of the property In controversy Is $250. The usual procedure Is for each district to appoint an arbiter, but No. 2 refused, and will not turn over the assets. The directors have been ordered to apear In court Mon day, August 2(1, and give cause for their refusal. SELLING TIMBER THE CHARGE MADE was covered with a growth of small trees, wholly unfit and unsuitable for saw or merchantable timber. Ho re moved from time to time some of tho timber for tho purpose of clearing the land and putting up the necessary fences and building, and had only sold the surplus timber from these Im provements. Nlckell filed a copy of a letter from the Commissioner of the General Ind Office, In which the defendant Is granted permission to clear the land and sell the surplus timber. Judge Dlmlck decided the conten tion over ownership was legitimate, and allowed a temporary injunction against removing the timber. COURT NOTES. Henry Fleshensteln & Co. have taken judgment $154.78 agulnst F. K. Ring. J. A. Wells has been appo'ntcd guardian of Cecil, Roy, Ethel arj Earl Wells. vorco had been granted only last April, and less than six mouths had elapsed. It has been decided to continue th case against Harry Halumnn of M II waukle, complaint having ben made that he Is of feeble mind and an ef fort having been mado to commit him. Mrs. Foster wants a divorce from James Foster, charging cruH and In human treatment. The parties lv at Damascus and were marrM at Roaring llianch. Pa . In 1874. They have six children, five grown. Mrs Foster asks for I20 to defray exixms of suit and 13') a month alimony. Fos ter Is said to he worth 1 1,000. The case of George W. Yergen vs. Garrison P. Nickell was heard Tues day. Yergen claims ownership of Hot 4, section 27, township 3 south. rango 1 west, which was bomeateaded by the defendant, and tho plaintiff has a contest pending against the land In the United States Land Office In Portland. He alleges that Nlckell Is attempting to denude the land of the timber, having Installed a sawmill out fit. The defendant filed an answer, stating that he had filed on the prop erty when It was vacant and that It Will of Margaret J. Sawtell admit ted to probate and record. Ralph Saw tell administrator, Elmer Albright. George Adams and Charles Dougherty appointed appralsors. Value estate 17.300. The J. A. llarnes Machinery Com pany, of OshkoMh, Wis., has filed a suit In the Circuit Court against thi Oregon City Mill It Lumber Company ;to recover $915, with Interest at tho rate of C per cent, from April 1, l!o7. and for the costs and disbursement of the suit. The plaintiff corporatlo'i alleges that the local company pur chased a doublet-nded tenoner for S75, and a special sash Kh'ttlng at- jtachmi'nt for 175, and has failed jpay for tho machinery or any part of It. SHORT STORIES. Chalk contains 500 different kinds of tiny shells. Taken the world over, the annual average rainfall is sixty Inches. The utilization of herring for fertili zer has been stopped by the Canadian government. The highest flag pole In Connecticut Is said to be In Hurlington Center. The pole Is 100 feet long and stands 08 feet out of the ground. From it floats a 28 by 14 flag. i . Mechanics in the Klondike get $10 a day and common laborers M to $5, with lionrd. Everything consumed in the way of living costs from two to three times as much as it does In the States. ' When the chimney on the old Tris tram Goldthwalte bouse In Fort III II, Me., was torn down recently 10,000 bricks were tnken out, or enough to build four ordinary chimneys. This one was built 1!). years ago. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. According to the London reviewers, a waltz In "The Merry Widow" has "created a perfect furore." Dorothy Tennant, whose original suc cess was scored In "The College Wid ow," Is announced us one of the new stars to twinkle next season. One of the scenes In "The Merrjf Widow," the new Viennese opera, s located In Maxim's, where the people are said to be the most frolicsome found in any resort in Paris. A host of American opera lovers will be Interested t5 know thnt the well re membered contralto, Marlon Ivell, lids j been engaged to appear at the opera in ftantes for the Coming seuson. Ada Lewis, whose eccentric charac terizations are making her name fore most In that line of work, has made Winnie Wiggles la "Fascinating Flora" one of the roost talked of roles In New York. ... ' n May West has Instituted suit In Circuit Court asking for a divorce from George West, to whom she was married In Portland In May. M1. She charges West with desertion ami vants to return to her maiden name, May .Woodman. Mrs. Mary Kramein and Peter Jo seph Irrnen appeared at tho court hnse Monday afternoon and asked for a marriage license. None was granted as the woman's decree of dl- LOST. Thursday night, August 15, In font of Melllen's second hand stire, dresn ;sult case, containing letters odriresseit to Mrs. Ammerman. Reward, Ad dress. Mrs. Mark Ammerman, It, F. I). 3, Oregon City. HORSE WANTED. Would like to hire a saddle horse for two or three days a week. Will be given good care and not overridden. Address, IX L, care Enterprise. You'll Find Two Kinds of Men's Clothes 2 KINDS OF HATS 2 KINDS OF 2 KINDS OF Men's and Women's TOGGERY SHOES Eczema. V For the good of those suffering with eczema or otnor such trouble, I wlsi to say, my wife had something jf that kind and after using the doc tors' remedies for some time conclud ed to try Chamberlain's Salve, and It proved to be better t'lan anything she had tried. For sale by Howell & Jones... . , . ... The IBest That's Made The Best for the Kloivey This store swears by QUALITY at any and all seasons of the year.. Do you believe In QUALITY? Of course you do.. Sometimes you're tempted to economize but you always learn that QUALITY pays best. We've found, after years of study, that "GOOD GOODS" make steady patrons that QUALITY Is the strongest force In building up a business.. But HERE, "Qualitty" does not mean high price. CLOTHES BUYING HERE IS POSTIVE ECONOMY! Wer'e "House-cleaning this month getting shelves and counters ready to receive Fall Stocks. WILL YOU BUY A SUIT NOW? Seel How you'll save! ' ' A Handsome, Stylish Man's Suit Worth $12.00 for Newest styles, well made, handsome, up-to-date Suits. Nothing the matter with 'em,- only we'd rather have a little money now and the room than have the Suits. IS THE HAT GETTING A BIT SHABBY? Better get a new one we'll furnish It at less than the factory cost. Special Sale Men's and Women's Shoes Next Ten Days Footwear for Men, Women and Children at prices that will keep us humping to fit the feet that will come trooping to us.. All leathers and newest style lasts., Sizes to fit any normal foot., For the next 10 days. , ' We'll Sell Yoa Shoes at the Factory Cost many special lots for less, SAVE MONEY BY BUYING AT OUR AUGUST "HOUSE CLEANING SALE" J. LEVITT'S "Man Shop" Two doors from Postofflce, opposite Bank. OREGON CITY