i I ri SUeiGESTIOrl "I m troubl.4 wtttt rto--toh tronbl. Thinlford', BlaoS Draught did in tnor foot In on week than all tba doc tor'! madicln. I took in a Jr,"-MRS. (ARAB B. 6HIRF1KUD, ElletUTUl. lad. Thwiford's Black Draught quickly invigorates the ao tioo o! the stomach and mrM pvrn rhrnnin nui nt indiireetinn. If vnn will IT take a small dose of Thed ford's Black Draught occa sionally you will keep your stomach and liver ia per fect condition. THEDMD'5 VETCH HAV PROCTABLE CROP. of clover or other ana. The average farmer hns ben taught to grow more Foro Plant That Will Grow On Dry; timothy than clover, by the commercial Land. man, or the man who buys and sells the ' B Porough, who has 160 acres of farmer's hoy, When the hay la compos ? adtoin nn Ros-us niver. two miles ! ed of cloar timothy, not too fine, It la of- ;'ftn(8 Pass, Is & man of progrea- i si-adca as A No. 1. and command the i BLM-DRAIM More sickness is caused by constipation than by any other disease. Thedford's Black-Draught not only re lieves constipation but euros diarrhoea and dysentery and keeps the bowels regular. All drotfrists sell Si-Mat package. "Thedford's Black Draught is the best medi cine to reeulate the bowels I have cv.r used." MRS. A. M. GRANT. Snasds Ferry, N. C. COnSTIPATIOiJ OFF TO GLADSTONE. Continued from Prtc l. I Ninth Day. Wene(sy. July 19. MORNtNO 8-1 J Classes. AFTERNOON. 1:00 Parson's Orchestra. One Hour. 2:00 Solo. Reading. Prof. Everett Kemp. Introductory Address, by Mrs. Sarah A. Evan?. Member of State Commission on Child Labor. Lecture, Mrs. Florence Kelly, of New York City, the greatest au thority on Child Labor In Amer ica. S:30 Baseball. 7:00 Parson s Orchestra. 45 minutes. 8:00 An Evening of Magic. Mystery, i Mirth, by Carter, the Magician, of Chicago. "The one magician original with himself, others merely imitate their peers." as sisted by his wife. Mrs. Corinne Carter. Tenth Day, Thursday, July 20. MORNING. 8-12 Classes. AFTERNOON. 1:00 Parson's Orchestra, One Hour. 2:00 Solo. Lecture, "Job's Wife Vindicated," by Rev. Roland Dwight Grant, D. D., of Boston. 3 :30 Baseball. 7:00 Parson's Orchestra, 45 Minutes. 8;00 Carter, the Magician, Second En- tertainment. Eleventh Day, Friday, July 1. 8:12 Classes. AFTERNOON. 1:00 Parson's Orchestra, One Hour. 2:00 Solo. Lecture, "Snakes In Paradise," by Rev. Roland Dwight Grant, D. D. 3:00 Baseball. 7:00 Parson's Orchestra. 45 Minutes. 8:00 Lecture, "Gladstone," by Dr. Frank Wakely Gunsaulus, President of Armour Institute of Technology, Chicago. Twelfth Day, Saturday, July 22. MORNING 8-12 Classes. AFTERNOON. 1:00 Parson's Orchestra, One Hour. 2:00 Lecture, "Modern Pulpit," by Dr. Frank "Wakely Gunsaulus. 3:30 Baseball. 7:00 Parson's Orchestra, 45 Minutes. 8:00 ColeridgeTaylor's Dramatic Can tata, "Hiawatha's , Wedding Feast." ' , . Soloist: Mr. J. IV. Belcher, tenor; and a miscellaneous selection In which Mr. Belcher, Miss Annie Ditchburn, mezzo-soprano, and Miss Ethel Shea, contralto, will take part. Chorus of over one hundred voices and orchestra. 9 :45 Fireworks. Thirteenth Day, Sunday, July 23. MORNING. 10:30 Sunday School, under the super vision of Rev. Howard N. Smith, of Portland. AFTERNOON. 2:00 Music by Chautauqua Chorus, as sisted by "Boy Choir" from St. David's Episcopal Church, Port land. Reading of the Scripture, Prof. Everett Kemp. Sermon, Dr. Frank W. Gunsaulus. 4:00 Sacred Concert for Two Hours by Parson's Orchestra. 8:00 Music by Chautauqua and "Boy Choir." Sermon, "Jewish Socialism versus Rockefellerism," by Dr. Roland Dwight Grant. ;! das and he proposes to take up (II :d farming Instead of depending on t ih kind of crop as Is the rule of so ,n faimrie. Mr. Borough has only . ut commenced to open up his land and ha only about 40 acres In cultlvattlon. t 1 e has to aifalfa, grain, fruit and pasture. In order to have a diversity or ops he will so soon as he can got ad " Uonal land cleared Increase his or ' aid and will put out a hop yard. Ho v':i plant ten acres of hops next spring n! later on Increase the acreage to 20 i: '.'5 acres. BoixMigh has Ave acres to fruit and t !a planning to largely Increase his or a d, now that he has seen the success .:' the Medford and Ashland fruitgrowers i on;' In ft curing to their members od pi otlt on their fruit, and there la a ,,od prospect of there being a fruit grow u n kn organised In this county. Mr. u ouKh, like the other small orchardista .UKt'phltte county, has found that lie .a.- too much fruit for his family use, n i the local market being so much of i time over-stocked that it Is not u.ltaule to sell In, and to ship small quantities of fruit to distant markets is . oiun a losing venture, the dealers ab o. uing all the profits, and frequently all ,.i pi Ice but the freight charges. With .is condition confronting them dosens 1. 1 small orchards In the vicinity of it.s city have been practically abandoned aid toe tieta neglected and gone to n. Mr. Botough has kept his orchard .i ,;ood condition, but he has found that any oi his trees are practically worth as they are of varieties of which is no demand for the fruit. The n.' apples that bring fancy prices, and ua. thippcrs will handle, are the Spits .ivtigs and Newtown Pippins. Mr. Bor . ..) will topgiaft all his other trees to a kinds. He has a few Spltsenberga si they are heavily loaded with fruit . aie also his Bellflowers, but his Red- k Pippins and Winesaps have but little fruit on them. M: . Boioughs gave a trial to the grow 13 of vetches for hay this year and so oftiable was the experiment that he will sow a large field this Fall. As the i d has to be Imported from the East he is desirous of securing a number of farmeis, who want to try vetches on their land, to join hint In buying seed, thereby making a saving on the price and on the freight. Mr. Borough sowed last I October 2V4 acres to vetches, using 105 pounds of seed, with an equal amount of wheat. From this 2 acres of land he .ut nine tons of hay and It cured as green and In as prime condition as the Ust alfalfa. This vetch is a kind of pea and makes both grain and hay and is considered by stockmen to be more val uable, pound for pound, than any other hay grown. The special point that makes vetches of value to Rogue River farmers best price In the market. If the hay should contain more or less clover, or any other grass, either tame or wild, It will be graded as No. 2, No. 3, and so on, depending entirely on the quality, The market price paid to the seller will be correspondingly smaller with the Increase of clover or other un desirable hay. It Is true that timothy Is good hay, particularly for the feeding of horses. It can be cured with less care than clover and generally Is not as dusty, nor does it give signs of mustlness as the clover Is apt to do. Both timothy and clover are particular foods of the cattle and other stock, and wherever stock raising Is the principal business these grasses should bo the principal crops ort the farm. But the raising of clover should not be neglected. Therefore It Is tho ob ject of the Intelligent farmer to combine cattle raising with field and meadow eul- ture. It is evident that large portions of land In this latitude are especially adapt ed to grass crops. Messrs. Jenkins and Wlnton found In their determination of the average com position of fodder that timothy and clov er to be as follows: 1 It will readily be seen that clover Is twice as rich as timothy In protein one of the most essential and high priced food Ingredients. Clover hay also con tains more fat and ash than timothy, Clover is, for this reason, one of the most valuable fodders that can be produced on our farms for the growing, fattening or dairying animals. When clover Is fed to stock, less grain and milled products are required than when timothy I fed. The manurlal value of a ton of each has been determined, and It has been found that clover hay contains more ni trogen and potash, but less phosphoric acid. Estimating nitrogen at alxteen cents per pound and potash at five cents per pound, it has been found that clover per ton, to be used as manure. Is worth from twenty to thirty per cent more than timothy to the farmer. When a furmer sells crops Which have been grown on the field he Is practically selling a por tion of these necessary chemical Ingred ients found In the soil. Each ton of clover hoy withdraws from the soil about 40 pounds of nitrogen, 38 pounds of potash, 13 pounds of mugnesla, 40 pounds of lime. 11 pounds of phos phoric acid and 15 pounds of sulphuric j acid, making an aggregate of ash and I ingredients alone of nearly 160 pounds, j In spite of the fact that the clover plant withdraws from the sill a con siderable amount of the essential plant food elements, clover as a fertiliser Is scarcely surpassed by any other plant. It is generally well-known that, like all other legumes, It has the power to appropriate atmospheric nitrogen for Its own use. It has been demonstrated, how- is that this plant will grow on land Jhat ever, that the plants of the clover family is too dry to be profitable for alfalfa, possess the unique ability to secure cost It Is a winter growing plant and matures ly nitrogen from the air. This explains Itself before the dry season sets In. Mr. Borough Is convinced that vetches should be sowed early in September, or as early as the fall rains will permit. As to seed- ing he thinks that not less than 60 pounds : each of wheat and vetch should be sown , to the acre on the average land, but the ' quality and dryness of the land should i govern the quantity of seed. William Crow, who has a fine farm on Rogue rlv. i er 15 miles below this city, has also given vetches a trial, having grown that i crop for the past two years, and he has found It very profitable. When the farm ers of Josephine county have learned the value of vetches as a dry land crop there Is little doubt but what it will become one of the leading forage crops of this sec- I tlon. Grants Pass Courier. i WHY YOU SHOULD GROW CLOVER. Many farmers of Oregon have asked us why they should grow clover when I they can grow timothy and other crops I which they can sell to better advantage in the markets, and that their land is the most productive they ever saw. It is true that when the land Is new and contains much humus, most of the 1 ordinary grains can be grown with a rea sonable amount of success. By continu ally growing grain on such fields the soil becomes depleted of its fertility, the crop becomes poorer and poorer and the yield less from year to year. The fertility of the soil Is then not a permanent one. It must ba replenished by some means. The plea of diversified farming Is be coming greater and greater among the Industrious farmers. The clover plant fills an excellent place as one of the crops 4n the system of rotation, not only as one furnishing valuable food for stock, but because of its ability to enrich the soil in the great plant food nitrogen. The Idea of raising hay for the market has grown very strong among our farm ers, says J. F. Wojta. Timothy is al most exclusively raised at the expense why plants belonging to this family thrive so much better In poor soil than do other plants. Should you dig up a clover plant with Its toois and carefully remove the soli, you will notice attached to these roots little rodules, the also' of bird hN.i ard smaller. These nodules appear uninter esting at first, but should you examine thcia under k high power microscope you would find countless numbers of li- iv4 otganlsms, the bacl-r.a, whobe purpose it Is to gather nitrogen from the soil and air. n The clover roots provide a support for nodules and a home for bacteria. The bacteria In change collect the nitrogen and give it over to the plant as food. There exists a mutual relation between the clover and the bacteria. One lives for the benefit of the other. Long before It wn known that such relation existed between the clover and the bacteria, farmers well knew from practice that on fields wherever clover, peas, or any of the legumes were grown, the soli In such field was enriched ,and that subsequent crops would grow and yield better than If no leguminous crops had been there grown. If large crops, of clover hay be taken from the field and soil without adequate returns being made, the ash Ingredients mentioned may In time be seriously di minished. To prevent this, the clover hay upon the farm should be consumed by domestic livestock maintained on the farm and the manure resulting there from returned to the land, and In this way the productivity of the soil Is al most Indefinitely preserved. Round Trip 35 Cents. During the Chautauqua Assembly, the Southern Pacific Company will operate a number of trains dally between Oregon City and Portland and tickets will be sold at the rate of 35 cents for round trip Buy It New, Now Is the time to buy Chamberlain's Collo, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It la certain to be needed sooner or later and when that time comes you will need It badly-you will need it qulukly. Buy now. It may save life. For sals by Geo. A. Harding. I Bright's Disease and Diabetes News. The New Fulton Compounds iivi Record of 87 per trot of Recoveries Among Chronic Case of Bright' Disease and Diabetes, Heretofore Considered Incurable. Druggists know that Brlfhtt tMnesa and Diabetes have been regarded by pbyslolaa tneurabls and that op to the sdrsot of the Fulton Compounds that nothing oo their shelves would touch it, It Is proven f o thai nesrlt nine tenttu ot alt ease are now curable, aud druggists ihemaalees are taking the new Coav pounds. One of the recoveries was Dr. 2tle alinself, the pioneer drugglut of Sffl Isolde street, San Franotsoo, and he gsve tt to over e doien others who recovered. Her Is another interesting recovery (W copy from the Saor. bmqio Ness of November It, 1903)1 "After serious Illness of ever t year Judge J. R. Allen of this eltr has recovered sod re gards himself most fortunate in successfully battling with what Is generally regarded as fatal malady, Brlgbfs Disease of the Kidneys, la speaking of bis ease Judge Allen said: 'I bellev that the trvstmsnt given ate by my physician was in ncoordeaee -with iba bi method Qaed In the regular praollc of niJ. cine, but II afforded toe no re-let. llfartug of the Fulton Compound. 1 went to Han KrancWo lolnvewtlgate and i soon convinced I should endnrgo the treatment. It l three bmimIi before 1 noticed a change for the better. I uwt the wedieine faithfully fur nearly year and eo cow Ond do evidence of the diwi and am satlKfled it la entirely eliminated. My ap petite in good, I have gained oTqiren ptinnos la weight and will be uleaned to doicrltie ni experience to anyone who may can or writ. acranmnta Nwa Nor. IS. 1W1 Ttie editor of the News hlnnelf was the friend bo told Judge A lion of the Fulton Compound. Thev are the only thing known that cure llrurhtl UlMiase aid Diabetes, Ftutoo'a ttertai fonipound for liright's jid Kidney Dive", i for Diabetes, tl.eo. John J. roiton to., , 'ashlngtoo atreet, Ban Fraoolnro, ani it for eui Wi eompoundera. Free analyse bend tor i'ampnlet. for patient. W are ih iolul , agent lor the Compounds la this elty, Charman & Co., City Drug Stort. 2,HKi milfa o lonjt .in tanct telephone win .i Oregon, Wftghingtoi .Cali fornia and Idaho now u operation by u, r'acifii Station Telrphuiif Cum pany, covering 1,'Zi towns Quick, accurate, rheti, All the Batiafactiuij ol uerBonal communication l)iotance no effect It. . . clear undemanding. Spo kane and Han Francisci aw eacily heard Portland. Oretfoi- Oity otiice ni Hiinliiiirs Urns' The Aristocrat amon the whiskies of the Ol School. Without a peer. for Sals oy E. MATTHIAS . Agenoy for Oregon Sole City. Cured Bright' Disease. Geo. A. Sherman, Lisbon Red Mills, Lawrence Co., N. T., writes: "I had kid ney disease for many years and had been treated by physicians for twelve years; had taken a well known kidney medicine and other remedies that were recom mended but got no relief until I began using Foley's Kidney Cure. The . first half bottle relieved me and four bottles have cured me of this terrible disease. ' Before I began taking Foley's Kidney j Cure I had to make water about every fifteen minutes day and night, and passed ', a brick-dust substance, and sometimes ' a slimy substance. I believe I would have 1 died if I had not taken Foley's Kidney! Cure." Huntley Bros. Co. Subscribe for the Enterprise. HAVE YOUR PfSint iaag j Eni DONE AT THE -- i Job Office! GOOD WORK. REASONABLE -PRICES OKEGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY It, I90o. j i i Mill Tho Kind You Have Alwayi Bought, ftntl width I104 boa in uno for over 30 yearn, ha born tho il(rnatur . and Iia bmn inrulo under hit pT jr "oiiaJ supervision lnr it WLaSyX UcA44: Allow no on to dcrrlve you In th Alt Counterfeit, Imitations And " Jut--jrool" arc , l!i pertinent that trill with ond endanger tho iieajta Infants nnd Chtltocn-Kpcrlenc again. KtperUaei). What is CASTORIA Contort 1 ft Intrude mibstltut for Coalor Oil, r. gorle, Drop and Hoothtnsr Syrup. It til I'lwwnnt, u contain neither Opium, Morphine nor other Marcou substance. It air 1 It guarantee. It dentroyn Worn And allays I'cverlshnes. It cures DIurrhwA and WI14 Colic. It relieves Teething Trouble, cure Ctitlpatks and Flatulency. It anslmllate the Food, regulate th Stomach and Ilowel, giving healthy and natural slots, Th Children's Paiuicea Tbo Mother's Friend, GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Beaxi tho Signature of S7 Tbo KM You Me Always Bon$ In Use For Over 30 Years. sw Twia ewma, t mhm rrwn, mm m if Molt- i 11 ELECTRIC LIGHT IN THE HOUSE IS REAL ECONOMY IT is not only HOW LITTLU IT end the ennsrqurnt taring in exp se, uut the stvintf in hraltii, the mvhik In time, the id (lltion to I he comfort, of lift It re iiovcs the reat fire dmir t ir tm uutchc In th hd of carrlrt p ron It dues noi smoke or viilste the atm pi r It does not make too to soil draprnrs and amain It will cot ton more lo ourn yw isrid . than 300 candle powrr la KtKCTKlC lixht rtwtrit Uy will iv unite and tMr li(ht for your money thn ou c n H hy iu ..thrr aitificlal illuminani. IN OTMKR OK 1S in addition I tt. 1 lanlinr, lis hrahhfulnrM, and its safety, nrtt.ie light ialot-i, ClIKAI'F.sr lit you ess hsve. NEW AND REDUCED RATES for Meter Service, puts Electric Light within the reach of Everyone. ESTIMATES on cost of wirine, and information rejrardine the use of ele triaty for LIGHT or POWER, in the HOME, the OFFICE, the STORE and the FACTORY, prom tly furnished upon appli cation to Mr. C G. Miller at he Company's branch office, next door to the Bank of Oregon City. PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY C. G. Miller, Contract Manager for Oregon City Oregon Gty Enterprise $1.50 per ye Semi-Weekly Oregon Journal $ 1.50 a y' Subscribe for both mw for only HJ5 per vear Oregon City Enterprise and Weekly Oregoniari, both 1 year for only $2.0C