OHEGOX CITY ENTKhTJflHK, FJU DAY, JULY 28, 3903 INDIGESTION'S RECORD Sho rt Sidehead Stories TRkl!LV-TOI.D TALKS OK TMB W1!!K'A UOINflS. A ' 4 4 4 4 Salvation Army Meeting fur children nt Hulvatlon Army ball on Hlxth street Hundity nt 2 p, rn. for ehllilren only, 1 'ui-ti n lt.Hnn send children In Hundiiy Hi'hool, Alsofure wi'll mxr'llnir of Uetitenunt Ward at nbove hull In th" fvi'tilNK at H o'clock. All weloomo, Mn. Alice Wood Diss Mi a. A Mr Wood, stint CI ycara, died lust Thursday at hr homii In thin lty. Tlio dri'ciiHxd, who la survived by it husbund, wus tlic inotliir of Mia. I.imiiidiu II, Jom-a, who whn mordirtd luat Hii tmbrr In tlila city by OcorKo W. l.uih. llurlul rvls wrt onndMctt-il Hundiiy. Dr. ttuart Damura In l tin ault fur diuniiK" rcint1y In slltut'd ty lli exuootor of I tin atnt of MhkkI" ()otJn HKiilnat lir. W. K. Carll nd lir. (', A. Btusrt,, ntlomeys tJ'llen A Hi'liUf-bKl for Dr. Htni.il, hsvs nifd imurr-r to Din 'oinilulnt inking; that Hi ault bs dismissed on lbs ground that tlin comiditlnt does not stnts fart suf ficient to const I tin a. rauan for action, PcuMar Attack of Inianlty J. M. Ioty. sci1 !0 years of itgs, of Hmuly, waa comiritt !! to thai atatn In mum ssyloin Moiiduy, Duty's malady la of an iinuauul nature lln Imagines tliat while visiting at I'oiilaiid during the fourth hi wua drugged and although Oil la disbelieved by the, Ind'a parents, I hi- tiiilliirliiHtlini la considered responsl tlx for tlit? young mun'a demented condition. Forty-thrao Yaara Bstwttn Visits Cdliuif I Joseph I'lnkhnm, assayrr In rtiKrge. of thi government aaany onVs at Itolse', ldoho, wna a. visitor to thla city Monday. Thla waa lhi (lint lints Colonel I'lnkham hna visited Oregon City since. IHi.2 when he drove down the Willamette river to thla city with an ox team and camped here over night. Colonel I'luk ham waa accompanied )y a party of sight-seers for whom lie acted na guide and conducted the pMiiy to many placea of historic Inlereat In llila vicinity. Ttachara Art Battar Paid Tim annual report of County ftchmd Hiiperlntrndcnt J. C, Zluser aliowa an In crease In the salaries paid teachera In llila county. Kor the yrar joat eniled the average monthly salary fur male teach era waa S4B.72 and for female teachera 140X0. Thla la a gain over laat year for both men and women of 13.72, while at (he aame time an entire month has been added to the averuge taught In Clacks ma county. A general average of 7 4 moil i tin hna been maintained all over the county. Twtntyons Pound Cabbago Mr. McOlnaliun, of the dim of Miles t McOlushan, waa recnted a few diiya ago with a tine large apeclmen of the cnbhugo family. The vegetable la very large, weighing I weiily-nne pounds. It ha g aolld cenier. and the leavea branch out finm the center. The cabbage wna presented to ha new owner by Cbaa. I.lvaay, a farmer, living on Abemethy creek. MiiliixliHtl ha had the cabbage forwarded to I'oitliiuil, where tin expect to place It on exhibition at the Kalr. along with the Chu kninaa county exhibit Took tha Wrong Tabid Mlsliiklng mi iintUccptlc titlilet for lim.lai'lii' medicine, I. J. Kay, of thla city narrowly em-aped death from corroalve aulillmate poloonliig Monday night. Vhi4h lie returned home In the evening, Mr. Cure For The Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS MEYER FAILED Health Fully Restored tnd thi Joy ( Lift Rolnd Whtn acheerful, bra e, Hght-hearUd woman ia suddenly plunged Into that perfection of mitusry, the IiLUES, it ia a iad picture. It ia usually this way : fcibe haa been feeling "out of aorta" Kay compltilned of n liendiiclm and r iiealrd hla dmighter to give, him a head ache, tablet. Having taken the medi cine, (lie patient remarked that the pre partition hud a peculiar taatn when thn daughter on InveMtlgatlon dlacovered the nilatiiko and promptly atimmoned a phy alclan who iidmlnlatered timely antidote and aaved the nmn'a life, Largait Mortgaga Pacordad A mortgage for $10,000,1)00, and cover ing all of the property of the Portland (leneral Kleclrlo Company In Clnckamaa county, waa laat week Hied In thn county recorder1 office In favor of an Kaatern mortgage iind truat company. The, pro ceeda of the mortgage, which conalala of 82 type written pagea and la tha largest ever recorded In Clackamaa county, will ha used lit llquldMlng the company'a In debtedneaa and In Improving and enlarg ing It light plant In thla city. Among the Improvement" planned ia thn building of a 40,000 home-power plant In thla city, Cavalryman Bscomo III Kred Vale and Harvey Itfiwllng. pri vates In Troop A, Oregon Cavalry, were forwarded to their homea at Icbnnnn by the overland train Monday night. While at Oregon City both men were aleied with aevern attacks of Illness, making It Impossible for them to continue, the trip with the other members of thn troop. Vale la aeiliMisly -III of a fever while Itiiwllnga la the victim of a bullous at tack, The other members of thn troop departed thn same night for Ilnmnn, The troop waa en rout home from the Iwla and Clark Kxpoaitlnn where It had been encamped for a few daya. A Boating Party Eighteen Oregon City young people held a moonlight picnic on thn waters of the Willamette Friday night. They went' down the river toward Oswego, landed, made coffee, which waa served with crabs, re-embarked, circled around the river again and at a lute hour came home, Thn young people were chaper oned by Mr. and Mrs. I,. Floyd Duly, of Portland. In the party were Misses Ijiura l'om, Cla Hin clay J'ratt. Margar et rioodfeiiow. Murjorln Caufleld. May Mcllrlde, Antoinette Waldon. Martha Krancea Draper and Vevs Tull. I.lvy Htlpp, Tt.l Osmund, Jot (Inodfellow. Dr. Parker, Fred Nelson, Ernest Hand, Frank Newton and Dr. Mount. A Clackamas County Plontor Newa reached Oregon City Saturday morning of thn death nt McMlnnvllle the day before, of John O. Toner, an octo genarian and a Clnckamaa county pio neer. Mr. Toner, who waa 2 years old. was one of the best known ateamboat men on thn Willamette a quarter of a century ago. lln lived In Oregon City for many years prior to 1875, when he moved to McMimivllle. lie leavea two aona, Will Toner, who la a Wells-Fargo messenger on the Corvallia & Kuatem road, and Kred Toner, who la employed In the; Corvallia post oftlce. lln also leaves one daughter, Mr. Wright of Cnrvallls. His body arrived In Oregon City Hundiiy morning and was given burial st MotiMiiln View cemetery. Wrong Man Slgntd Will Kmll Keck, one of the four sons of Joseph Johnnnuiis Heck, deceased, has had hlmaelf appointed adminlatrator of the esttite of his deceased futher ns a means of disentangling a complicated situation regarding the disposition of the estate which consists of property of the value of $12n0. IMorn his decease. Heck dictated a will that wna written In Cer mau by a neighbor, named Strauaser, who afllxnd his, Htrausser's signature to the document which whs thereby Invali dated, lly the provisions of the will, which cannot he admitted to probute, the estate, with the exception of tl each to the other three sons, Is bequeathed to Kmll Heck, who Is now named na admin istrator iind with whom the elder Heck lived for ninny years preceding his death. for some time; hcud hna ached and back also; has slept poorly, been quite nervous, and nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and heart-beats very faxt; then that bearing-down feeling, and during her menstrual period she is exceedingly denpondent. Nothing; pleaeu her. Her doctor saya : " Cheer up: you have dyspcpHia ;you will be all right soon." But she doesn't get " all right," and hope vanishes; then coino the brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUES. Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage gone, but take Lydia L. Pinkhatn's Vege table .Compound. See what it did for Mrs. RoNa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late Gen eral Uoger Uanson, C.8. A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I cannot toll you with pen and ink what Lydia K. Plukbaiiilt Vegetable Compound has done for me. I ntitiored with female troubles, extreme liuwitudo, ' the blues,' nervouHtioH and that all koiki feeling. I waa adviaed to try Lydia K. l'inUliam's Veftetabla Comjiound, and it not only cured my female ilerBngBnient, but It lias restored me to perfect health and strength. The buoyancy of my younger days has returned, and I do not suf fer any longer with despondency, as I did be fore. I consider Lydia K. Pinknam's Vege table Compound a boon to sick and suffering women." If you 'have aorne derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Plikham, Lynn, Mm., for advice. Mllwsukle Pool Ordinance Is Repealed At a meeting of the Milwnukle Coun cil last evening pool ordinance No. 10. of the Mllwaukle Country Club House, run by M. i. Nease and Imiac (irntton, of Portland, was repealed. However. Its liquor llccitHc Ht 111 stands. What the re sult of the repeal of the pool ordinance will lie remains yet to be seen. Mr. Oration purchased t he church property. on which the club house stands, paying, so It Is understood, tsnoo. 'Hie building put up Is not an expensive one, but some recent Improvements have been mode In the way of a restaurant and sleeping apartments. Htlnce the clubhouse was opened She Hellwnod cars Instead of stopping at the gulf links, run up to Mll waukle, and the city treasurer has been greatly enriched by the license fee. Thursday's Oregonlan. Damage Suit Transferred The case of 11. P. Hidings vs. Marlon county, which whs recently tiled hi de partment No. 1 of the state circuit for Marlon county, lias been transferred to Clackamas county. The suit whs brought by the plaintiff to recover $:l(io0 diimaKcs for Injuries alcged to have been sustain ed by him on account of a broken plank In the bridge spanning Pudding river, a few miles ciiHt of Wooillmrn. Mr, Itid Inus claims his horse stepped through the hole in the bridge and threw him heavily upon the Hoof of the structure and that he was permanently Injured by the fall. He 1ms engaged Attorney K. P. Morcoin of Woodhurn to conduct his rase, upon whose motion the change of venue whs granted by Judge Hurnett. Attorneys J. Jl. and C. U McNnry will look after the Interests of Marlon county. -Hiilcm Statesman. "Thebes! remedy I enn prescribe for your hv (llgrstlon. nisdnm, In Green's Angus! Flower, I know of several other pliynician who pre scribe It reguluxly." Indigestion is milking an awful record as a cause of sudden deaths. It is beat ing heart-failure in its ghastly harvest. You read in the papers daily of appar ently healthy and even robust men being suddenly attacked with acute indigestion after enjoying a hearly meal, and of thett dying in tunny citsts before a physician could be culled in. This should be a warning to you whe suffer with regular or js riodical attack! of indigestion. If these unfortunate vic tims of acute iinliocstion hud taken a small dose of (Veen's August Flower be fore or after their meals they would not have fnllen a prey to such sudden seizures. August Flo'Afer prevents indigestion by creating good digestion. It also regulates the liver, purifies the blood and tones tip the entire system in a iintur.il wav. t . Two sizes, 25c and 75c. All druggists, Charman & Co., City Drug Store Thn rock materli.! for the road Is being; obtained and placed on the street by Olds & Harris, contractors, who have their own private rock crusher, which Is located at thn present crushing the rock taken from thn large quarry at thn foot of the bluff at Fulls View. The rill Will be Made An agreement between the city author ities and thn Southern Pacific company has been reached by which the earth that Is being excavated Ht thn Third street crossing In thn making of the Im provements by thn railroad people will tie tranaported and used for making a flill on Main street near Eleventh atreet. This Is done by the railroad company at an agreed price of , cents per cubic yard. This Is an Improvement the city has long had under consideration, but thn expense seemed too heavy until the present very reasonable deal was made with thn railroad company. Estimates for doing this very work that were form erly secured reached as high as 50 cents per cubic yard. Hy making this nil the building of a new bridge over thn can yon at Main and Kltventh streets, which would necessarily have to bn done within a few months will be avoldtd, and thn city will havn a much morn durable and satisfactory thoroughfare In the end. Seventh Street to be Improved KxteilHlvo Improvements are being made m Seventh street, from which the city Is clearing away the covering of the street and replacing it with . new crushed rock. The work has progressed rapidly mid the work of repairing the roadway will soon be completed. Seventh street is ntio of the main streets of the city and over which nearly all of the produce of Iho enstern and southern por tions of the county Is hauled. H has become necessary for the city each year to do considerable repair work on this driveway, owing to the heavy traffic,, General Summary The past week was the hottest of the season, and no rain of consequence oc curred In any part of the state. Fortu nately, the wind was generally light and the wheat crop suffered but little dumug. In the Crand Ilonde valley and In some of the Columbia Hlver counties east of the Cascade mountains late sown spring wheat was damaged by the hot weather and will probubly be cut for hay. The bulk of the crop, however, is safe, and both spring and fall wheat are now being cut as rapidly as possible. Threshing will begin In the Willamette valley this week. All indications point to an extra good crop of wheat, both as to quantity I and quality. Pasturage Is getting short, I hut stock continues In good condition. I The How of milk Is decreasing In the I dairy districts, but not more than usual ' at this season of the year. The second 1 crop of alfalfa Is being cut, and the crop ' promises to be about an average one. Hop burs urn forming and the vines are growing nicely. Hop lice are still to be found, but they are less numerous than j formerly. Corn, potatoes and guldens . huve made good advancement, but these crops would be Improved by more rain. Early apples are ripe. Prunes, pears and peaches are doing well. Something of a Romance What promised to bt somewhat of a romance was nipped in the bud here last Saturday evening when Chief of Police Mattocks arrested a young couple. Henry Pope, aged about 17, and Tillle Wrifcht, aged HI, both' residing with their par ents near Scott's Mills. It seems tlint the couple had been rather intimate for some time, and in the hopes that separ ation would have B cooling effect upon the youthful mliids, the girl was sent by her parents to live with relatives at Newberg. Hut they probably never heard that "Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder," for lust Saturday morning the hoy showed up nt Newberg and got the girl to go with him. They took the boat to New Era and from there they started to walk the track and went as far as Harlow where they took the train to this city. The attracted considerable at tention here and when, after some ques tioning, the mimes of their parents were learned they were prompfly notified, and the couple was ordered detained, The girl was tuken to the Pioneer Hotel, while the boy was taken to Jail. The front door was left open and during tht night the prisoner succeeded In opening the cell door and whs found next morning sitting In front of the hotel. whs taken back to Jail where he remained until his brother accompanied by the girl's parents came with a hack and took them both along home. Aurora Horeulls. CHOLERA INFANTUM. Child Not Expected to Live from one Hour to Another, but Cured by Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, Huth, the little daughter of E. N. Dew ey, of Agnewvllle, Va., was seriously 111 of cholera Infantum last Summer. "We gave hr up and did not expect her to live from one hour to another," he says. "I happened to think of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dlarrhoer Remedy and got a bottle of it from the store. I five hours I saw a change for the better. We kept on living It and before she had tak en the half of one small bottle she was well." This remedy 'Is for sale by Geo. A. Harding'. Subscribe to the Enterprise, best local paper In Willamette Valley. We are Closing Out Our Stock of High Grade Sewing Machines We are not offering a make that is not known. We have only the very best, the White and the Standard Machines. These ma chines are not shop worn or second hand; they are the latest styles manufactured by the White Co. and Standard Co. Every machine is warranted to give satisfaction. Our own guarantee as well as the factory's guarantee goes with each machine WE ARE OFFERING THE $60.00 Machines for $30.00 AND THE $65.00 Machines for $32.50 If you are looking for a bargain come in before they are all gone, as we will positively refuse orders after our present stock is sold. Btttmeiste & Andresen THE OREGON CITY JEWELERS Suspension Bridge Corner Having secured the agency for the Studebaker Company iot Oregon City and vicinity, W L. Blocb.the Furniture man, is now prepared to supply your wants in another way. THE REPUTATION of the Studebaker Company's pro ducts is too well known to require any introduction to the people of this vicinity The trademark of STUD stands for the best in the way of Wagons, Buggies and Carriages Delay making any purchases until you have consulted Mr Block who will carry a complete line of Stude baker vehicles o J.I THE FURNITURE MAN Main and Seventh Streets 4 Oregon Gty, Oregon