OREOON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1907. Sealed Bid Auction Sale Nice residence for sale by sealed bids. Go over and see it then cast your bid in box for bids at the Electric Hotel. This is your chance to get a home at your figure. Reserve right to reject any and all bids. Bid just what it is worth to you and your chance is good and the highest bidder takes the property on payment of his bid if accepted. Lot 50 x 100 feet, six rooms, with three storerooms or pantry and cellar 8x10 underneath, good well of water. Photograph showing house can be seen at bid box in Electric Hotel. Sale by owner S. E; KENNEDY P. S. Bids will be opened on Sept. 15, 1907, at 11 o'clock a. m. Will give terms with proper bid. ,1. A, Tuft ha purchased 11 lots In Gladstone, th land lying between the O. W. T, and the Willamette Riv er, The price quoted In $900 and Mr. TufU I planning to build a borne for himself and family. Arthur Buter, aged 13 year, wa drowned la tho Willamette a few miles below thin city Wednesday af ternoon whllo buttling. Those with Mm were too scared to give the nec essary aid to nave hlit life, " i 1 " Selections A Wild Went show added to the La bor Day attraction at Oregon City. The tent were pitched across the Wil lamette on the Went Bide, and two fair sized crowd witnessed the af ternoon and evening performances. Sunday, September 1, wan the an nual rally day In the M. K. church the country over, but a no many young people are away hop and prune picking it wan decided to postpone the event until later; probably the first Sunday In October, o i i LOCAL BRIEFS Tho CoiiKri'Katlonul church pwplo littve ordrrml mw byntnaU, Hcr'tnry Taft speak at the Ar mory In Portland thl evening. The law rUtlng to denatured alco hol wi-nt Into effuct Sunday. Oregon City nt about five hundred iMxipbt, young and old, to tho hop yard itmi wm k. It look a If Oregon City would tiave a ball loam In the TrlClty league ni'Xt yiar. Lightning struck a burn belonging to (i.iW. Sera ni 1 1 n at Macksburg lust wwk and burmd It down. MrMlnnvllle U to have a great county school fair and slock show September 21 to 27. Inclusive. 8rhol begin September 23, allow ing thoK who wish time to spend their varatkm In the hopfleld. The orcaalonul rain In Oregon thU muniner have greatly decreased the, usual damage from foreHt ftr. Hoy of the Congregational church are planning for an entertainment next Monday night, at the church. water iiiaIii and that something must be done to save them. Hugh Ilrady, a Portland (liver, Is trying to find the body of George A. Talli-y. who was drowned In tho Wil lamette IshI Thursday. Mrs. Morland, who has operated a Isiardlng house on Seventh street, was compelled to close It last week on account of HI health. Council turned down the claim of Wm. A. Bpcnru for damage on ac Niunl of an accident at Fourteenth street. Garfield Grange voted a 50 cent as. wesniont on each of Ita members at a recent meeting to pny for painting the grange hall. The Court House was a deserted rdaco I.alMir Day and the echoes which "sound and resound" through Its cor ridors hud full sway. Portland citizens are now charging that electrolysis Is destroying the IS. T. Avlson had his hand caught In a napper at the woolen mill Wed nesday and as a result Is likely to lone one or more fingers. Uev. Hoar, the new Congregational 1st paittor at Parkplace and Clacka mas, has arrived with his family and taken charge of the work. Ilev. T. V. Ilowcn, the new rector at the Episcopal church I expected to arrive In Oregon City today and to preach Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. The union' picnic of the Iiaptlst Sun day Behind of Portland w as held Mon day at Willamette, and more, than looo children from tho metropolis were on the grounds. i ii The fourth quarterly confidence will be held In the M. E. church next Tuesday evening at the church on Main street. Presiding Elder II. F. Holand will he present. All the ministers of Seattle worked all day Labor Day on a tabernacle be ing erected for the purpose of holding revival meeting In that city next winter. The labor unions recognized the preacher as "fair and square" j workmen and praised them for their efforts. It look as If the building of the new public wharf at the foot of Elev enth street would give Oregon City a ! commission house. This Is an enter prise) that would prove a good thing for the city and the farming commun ity around, and Is a business well worth fostering. A delegation from tho Willamette Development I.cngue went to Portland Thursday night to hear Secretary Taft, on Invitation from the committee hav ing the matter In charge. The Sodnville Hotel at the mineral springs town of Sodavllle was burned last week Thursday, and for a time It looked as if tho little hamlet was doomed to go up in nmokc. rM. A. I Williams and Miss Ver netta Itatdorf were quietly married Wednesday evening at tho Presby terian unrsonngo In this city, Rev. J. H. Lundsborough officiating. The necessary signature to the petition for a vote on the proposition for an excise board have bin secured ami tho paper properly filed with the recorder. The minister' association Is back of the project and from thl on the campaign will be for votes December 2. Both Oregon City teams lost in the ball games Sunday. The Gray were defeajod by the Wabash club of Port land, on the Willamette grounds. In a score of 4 to 0. A patched-up Woolen Mill team was defeated at Caneraah Park by the Holllday Maroons In a score of 14 to 7. The repair to the bridge over the Clackamas at Parkplace have progres sed far enough so that the bridge will be opened to the public Saturday, and perhaps Friday afternoon. This will prove a great convenience to those who wish to come to Oregon City over that road. The Portland Pure Food Show and Industrial Exposition, for which the Retail Grocers' Association has been preparing several months, opened at the Exposition building Monday night and will be In full swing every after noon and evening, with the exception of Sunday, up to and Including Sep tember 14. Ralph Nash and George Dlllman were In an automobile accident Labor Day, on the bridge across the Willam ette. The boys were both astride one horse when It became frightened at an auto they met on the bridge. The horse threw both off In front of the machine and young Dlllman was se verely hurt by the fall and coming In contact with tho moving auto. No one really to blame. A HUNGRY GHOST. 8tory of a Rsctnt Prematura Burial In China. This Is the tale of a ghost that eat, and It bus thrown thy town of tho Hlaugfii district of China Into a com motion, The fact are related In the North China Herald. Ou March 27 the thirty-year-old son of Tzl Lung, a schoolteacher, was thought to have died of typhus fever. HI family be ing very poor, the body wa placed In a frail wood cofJln nnd burled only a few Inches under the soil outside the western gate of the town of Hlnng yang. On April 0 a man put his horse to graze on the spot. The tM-ast found good gruss near the grave and brought Its foot down upon the soil above the coffin, the lid of which wa broken. In a little while the owner of the horse aw a gaunt white arm thrust up through the hole made by the horse's hoof. Thinking the dead man's ghost wo about to rise to avenge the Insult of fered In the breaking of the coffin, the watcher hurried up and began shovel ing earth Into the bole to keep tho ghost down. A muffled voice expos tulated and twgged to lw freed, claim lug to be the living son of Tzl Lung. The watcher fled in terror to the town, where be told every one be met of what had happened. The ghost' fa ther urged that the ghost should be let alone and not further disturbed. A large crowd, however, went out of the city to view the wonder. The ghost kept lagging most plteously to be let out One man had courage enough to unearth the cover of the cofJln completely and open It, allowing the "resurrected" man to sit up. Uice oup and wine were brought and rav enously devoured by the ghost, still sitting upright In bis coffin Imbedded la the earth. Finally the unhappy spirit was re leased and confined In a temple until be could prove himself to be a living man. Chicago News. DELAY IS DANGEROUS Come and see about getting those broken down teeth repaired or extracted as it will save your health and see what we will do the work for. We can do any case of dentistry from extracting to most complicated piece of work Absolutely Painless. We have testimonials to prove our statement. Our Prices are Rfo-ht Our work right and that i the reason that in a short time in Oregon City we have built up our large practice and it is growing every day. We Use No Cas We Use No Cocaine We extract painless, we give a printed guarantee with every piece of work. Fine Cold Fillings, guaranteed for 10 years, $1 and tip. Gold Crowns, $4.00 to $5.00. Bridge Work Solid 22 Kt Cold, $4.00 to $5.00 per tooth. Plates, guaranteed to fit and last for 10 years, $5.00. Extracting by our painless methods 50c. And free when plates are ordered. OREGON DENTAL PARLORS Over Harding's Drag Store and Postoffke. ; I 0 -0 Book and Jot) Pointing All hinds Low Prices k Prompt Service Stat Press Job Room OREGON CITY, OREGON County School Superintendent Zln sor has 'resigned his position and T. J. Gary of Willamette has been chos en as his successor. Mr. Zlnser was led to this step by pressing private business; he expects to move to his farm In Polk county. Mr. Gary has taught rifteen years In this county and is well-known to the teachers and the school officials of the county. Mr. Zlnser leaves a host of friends who will regret his retirement at this time. Mrs. Willis Johnson, nee Cheney, who lived her younger years in Ore gon City, and Is well and favorably known to a large circle of friends In this country, died at her homo at Ho Ik. In the mountains near Tillamook on Monday of this week. The news cam ns a shock to her friends and relatives in this city as it was not known she was 111. She leaves a hus band nnd two small children to mourn her loss. , She was 31 years of age. Burial will be at Tillamook. Seward's Prophecy Realized. When, shortly before his death In 1S72. William II. He ward was asked what he believed to be the greatest achievement of hi public career, be an swered, "The annexation of Alaska." He added, however, "But the American people will not grasp the value of that acquisition for a third of a century yet" Thl how that Seward, tbe em pire builder, wa also a prophet Sew ard ha been dead for thirty-five year, and It Is only In recent time that hi countrymen have appreciated the Im portance of Alaska a a possession. Strong opposition was offered In the bouse of representatives in 18C7 to making the appropriation of $7,200,000, the price which Seward paid to Russia for tho province. Said one of annexa tion' opponents In that chamber, "All that Alaska will ever be able to pro duce are polar bears and Icebergs." For several years a nickname for the 1 region was "Seward's Folly." But time has fully vindicated Seward. Leslie's Weekly. The Oldest Text Book. Within the last few years a revolu tion has been accomplished at Oxford which ouKht really to affect the mind of the nation more than the difference between Lord Curzon and I.ord Itose bery. A text book has been discarded which was already venerable for Its antiquity at the beginning of the j Christian era. Needless to say, we are I referring to Euclid's Elements," for ! What other text book ever had such a run as that? It h:is been accepted ever since its publication, which was ! hi tho reign of the first Ptolemy (B. C. 323 -Sol. No writer has ever become so Identified with a science as Euclid with geometry. The nearest ap proaches are to be found lu the rela tion of Aristotle to logic and of Adam Smith to political economy. London Spectator. A Stairway of Concrete. One of the most novel, useful and pleasing uses to which cement has been put In Interior construction la the I hanging concrete stairway. In its j construction no structural Iron what , ever is used, only small channel bars ' oiie-qunrter Inch by three-quarter Inch ! Fpncetl about four Inches and covered j with expanded metal lathing. The j false work can lie removed In two weeks. The stairway supports not only its own weight, but, in addition, 7,r00 pounds of marble, nnd a load of 2,0(10 pounds has been carried up the stairs without Injury or deflection. ! Only the best quality cement should be used In Interior work. Phlladel ' phla Ledger. TABLECLOTHS. The "Doubl'er" and the "Bubble" of Olden Time. Id tbe twelfth century the table cloths were very large and were al ways laid on the table double. For a long time they were called "doublers" for that reason. The cloth wa first placed so as to touch the floor on the sldo of tbe table at which the guest sat. Then all the cloth that remained j was folded so that it Just covered tbe table. ( Charles V. bad sixty-seven table cloths which were from fifteen to j twenty yards long and two yard wide. I lie had one cloth which was thirty two yards long, and that had the arms of France embroidered on It In silk. All of thee were fringed. In the sixteenth century "doublers," or double cloths, were replaced by two tablecloths, one of which was small and was laid just as we lay ours to day. The other, which was put on over it, wa large and of leautifully figured linen. It was skillfully folded in such a way that, a.i a book of that time say, "it resembled a winding river, gently ruffled by a little breeze, for among very many little fold were here and there great bubbles." It must h.ive required much art and care to make dishes, plates, saltcellars, sauce dlsbe nnd glasses Ktand steadily In the rald.t of this undulating sea nnd among those "bubbles' and puffy folds. However, the fashion bad only a short existence, as Is apt to be the case with unpractical fashions, and toward the latter part of the century a single cloth, laid flat and touching tbe floor on all sides of the table, came Into gen eral use, , Often Enough. Rich A nnt-You only visit me when you want money. Spendthrift-Well, I couhfr't come much oftener. could It - Harper's Weekly. Punith the Big Criminals. Tbe average American business man, whether be deals In railroad or salt mackerel, will agree with tbe At torney General when he says: "Business men ought to wish to have the laws strictly and Impartially enforced. If this Is done everybody knows what he can do and what he cannot and everybody has a fair field and no favor." The Attorney General has an Idea that the surest way to Impress the public with the Impartiality of law is to punish the big criminals who have hitherto claimed Immunity and whose notorious example has acted as a sub tle poison In threatening every plane of business life. i FLAGMAN AT SINGER HILL. The proposition to put an overhead crossing over the Southern Pacific railway at Singer Hill, In this city, I has not reached final adjustment. But recognizing the danger to people driv ing over the tracks at that point the ! Southern Pacific has stationed a flag jman at the foot of the hill to warn people of the approach of trains. The farmers coming Into the city by that route can feel safe under the new ar rangement; the new overhead cros sing will likely come a little later. Dr. George Hoeye and family, of Oregon City, arrived in Salem this morning, and are making their annual outing by camping at the fair grounds. They will be at home to their friends there for several weeks. Salem Jour nal. George F. Field, State Fish Com missioner of Massachusetts, and Dr. Delmo State Superintendent of Hatch eries In Massachusetts, In company with Superintendent Henry O'Malley, of the United States Bureau of Fish eries, made an Inspection of the Government work at the Clackamas station, last week, where racks and traps have been installed, preparatory to commmenclng the Fall work. They also went to Cazadero and In jspected the state station. More than (1,000,000 eggs have been taken from I the early Spring Chinook run at that station. Jones A woman generally lowers her voice to ask a favor. j Black Yes; but I notice she raises jher voice If she doesn't get it. William Jennings' tf! jjenuings' Lodge, John Straight and Louis Him lor are home from a bunting nnd fish Ingvtrlp on the Upper Clackamas Riv er. They went as far as the old hatch ery and were absent ten days. Mr. Jennings says they would have remain ed longer, but they shot eight deer and rather than have the meat spoil brought it home and will return for another outing. Mr. Jennings also says that there is plenty of trout In the upper Clackamas! but no salmon, on account of the dam across the riv er at Cazadero. Town Without a Postoffiee. I While In Scotland last nutumu 1 nr ' rived at Maxwelltowu, Klrkeudbrlght- shire, and wanting a stamp for a pie j ture postcard I Inquired for the post j omoe, but to lily surprise I wns in i formed the town had neither post nor , telegraph otfice. Investigation revealed I that the town had n population of ! more than 3,000 inhabitants, being i also a burgh, with its provost, town ; council and bailies. This unique town ; has to depend on Dumfries, nearly l three miles distant, for everything of a postal nature.-Loudou Tit-Bits. The First Trousers. rockets were one of the great sar torial objections urged against trou sers, and a writer on male fashions eighty years ago declared: "No pockets can bo tolerated on any account what ever. They make a man Ick like a Yankee." London Chronicle, Faim Foi Sale I 02 Acf eS mikiom the villege of Marquam where there is two stores, postoffiee, blacksmith shop, $ 1 500 school house, church and parsonage. About 6 miles from railroad. 7 miles from silverton, 2 miles from Scott's Mills; good house and barn; about 45 acres in cultiva tion, besides pasture; place well watered; good soil, about 40 acres fine bottom land; 1 5 acres good tim ber; telephone line passes by place; j t f . t n 4 ! gooa nop iana; oottom iana wouio grown fine corn. Price $4,500, $2,500 cash, balance on time. For particulars write to A. B. MARQUAM, Tiller, Ore. or if yotf wish to see the farm call on PHILLIP MARQUAM, Marqaam, Oregon. i