OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1905.. 7 cn) dd p si"&cb aD ADD Mm LSil r MR. and MRS. WILBERT THOMPSON, 801 Main St., Peoria, III. MULL'S GRAPE TONIC CURED HIM. Gilbert Thompson never knew a well day until last June he had been constipated all his life many doctors treated him, bat ail failed to even help him his health failed rapidly and on January 21 1903, Mrs. Thompson asked us to suggest a treatment for her husband We thought the case too serious and recommended that a specialist be consulted but he also failed to help the patient NOW HE IS WELL. Mull's Grape Tonic Cured Him Mrs. Thompson first wrote us as follows: "My husband, aged 28, suffers from sharp pains In his stomach and times thinks It is his heart. Let me know by return mall what causes me pain, a ; cnmnti has been treated by several doctors, but they have given him up." We promptly advised tnat a nrst-ciass specialist oe cousmieu you can. Mr. Thompson We quote: "We want to sell Mull's Grape Tonic, because we know it will cure constipation, but 60c. a bottle Is no object to us when a human life Is at stake. and If your husband's case Is as serious as you state, we suggest you consult a rename specialise, not me advertising kind, promptly." At the same time, knowing that Mull's Grape Tonic could do no harm, we advised Its use until a physician oould be consulted. January 26 Mrs. Thompson wrote that a physician had been consulted. He diag nosed the case as being chronic constipation and dyspepsia. His treatment was followed faithfully, but there was no perceptible improvement In Mr. Thompson's health. Then he began taking Mull's Grape Tonic and on Sept. 3, 1903, we received the following letter from Mrs. Thompson: "You will remember that I wrote to you last Januar in regard to my husband's health. It is four months sinoe he quit taking Mull's Grape Tonlo for eonstipatlon, which he suffered from since birth. He took Just 24 bottles of It and is perfectly cured. He is much stranger and has gained considerably in flesh. I cannot thank you enough for Mull's Grape Tonlo. It is worth Its weight In gold.' Just $12 cured him and he has spent hundreds of dollars, with doctors who did him no good. Now I want to state my oase to you and expect your early reply. I also have consti pation, have had for three years. Kindly let me know as I am sure it will oure me If you say it will, as it did all you claimed it would in my husband's oase. I await an early reply Very respectfully yours, MRS. W.H. THOMPSON, 801 Main St., Peor-a, IIU LET IIS G3IVE A 5c. F9 This Coupon is good for a 50c. Bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic. Fill out this coupon and send to the Lightning Medicine Co., 157 Tliird'A ve.. Rock Island, 111., and you will receive a full size, 50c. bottle of -Mull's .Grape Tonic. I have never taken Mall's Grape Tonic, but If you will supply me with a SOc. bottle free, I will take it as directed. . . Name Street No- City State. FULL ADDRESS AND WRITS PLAINLY. If you are afflicted with constipation or any of its kindred diseases we will buy a 50-cent bottle for you of your druggist and give it to you to try. If you are constipated we know it will cure you. Surely if we have such confidence in our remedy as to pay for a bottle of it that you may test for yourself, its won derful curative qualities, you should not refuse to accept our offer. Mull's Grape Tonic is the only cure for constipation known. We do not recom mend it for anything "but Constipation and its allied diseases. It is our free gift to you. In accepting this free bottle you do not obligate yourself further than to take its contents. Mull's Grape Tonic is pleasant to take and one bottle will benefit you. We want you to try it and, therefore, if you will fill out the attached coupon and mail it to us to-day we will instruct your druggist to give you a 50-cent bottle and charge same to us. HOWELL & JONES, Reliable Druggists. be heated again when saved until an other milking. 9. A rich cream testing 35 per cent fat or more is the most satisfactory to both farmer and factory. The best separators will skim a rich cream as efficiently as a thin cream and more skim milk is left on the farm when a rich cream is sold. -10. . Cream should be perfectly sweet, containing no lumps or clots when sampled and delivered to the haulers or parties buying it. There is a good demand for sweet cream and it can easily be supplied by keeping the separator, tinware, strainer cloth and water tank clean ' on1 tlia roo m rri 1 The preceeding , recommendations when followed will pay well for what some may think is "a lot of extra both er." E. H. Farrington in Jersey Bul letin. Feed the ensilage after milking, so the cows may be quiet while being milked. Wis. Agriculturist. BEST LINIMENT ON EARTH. Henry D. Baldwin, Supt. City Water Works, Shullsburg, Wis., writes, "I have tried many kinds of lini ment, but I have never received much benefit until I used Ballard's Snow Liniment for rheumatism and pains, I think it the best liniment on earth 25c, 50c and $1.00. - Sold by Huntley Bros. Co. HOW MUCH ENSILAGE TO FEED. J -3&ro sSarQ 4A 10 i P. M., arrives and Oregon Shot line and Union Pacific THREE TRA TO HE EAST DAILY M.; leaves The Dalles 2 Cascade Locks 6- P. M. ! Meals served on all steamers. : Fine accommodations lor teams ; wagons. Landing at Portland at Alder Street Dock. MARCUS TALBOT,, V. P. & G. M. Gen. OfHce. Portland. Oregon. Astoria & Columbia River Railroad Co. Through Pullman standard and Tour ist sleeping cars daily to Omaha, Chicago, Spokane; tourist sleeping cars daily to Kansas City; through Pullman tourist sleeping cars (personally conducted) weekly to Chicago, Kansas City, reclin ing chairs (seats free to the east daily. 7 HOURS Portland to Chicago No Change of Cars. 70; Depart. Chicago Portland Special 9:15 a. rr Atlantic Express 8:15 p. m. . via. Huntington. St. Paul Fast Mail 6:15 p ll via Spo kane. Time Schedules. Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Worth, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and Kast. A i E1VB 5:25 p m Salt Lake. Denver, Ft. Worth, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and Bast. . 8:00 Walla Walla, Lew- j iston, Spokane, Min- 7-15 a m neapolis, St. Paul, I )i 1 1 :it h. Milwaukee. I Chicago and East. ! ' Leaves. UNION DEPOT Arrives. 8:00 A.M. For May gers. Rainier, Dailv. Daily. Clatskanie, Westport Clifton, Astoria, War renton, Flavel, Ham- 11:10A.M mond. Fort Stevens, Gearhart Park, Sea side. Astoria and Seashore. Express Daily. Astoria Express. 7:00 P.M. I 19:40 P.M. C. A. STEWART. Comm'l Agt., ii Alder street. Phone Main 906. -T. C. MAYO. O. F. & P. A.. Astoria. Or Ocean and River Schedule For San Francisco Every five days at 8 p. m. For Astoria, way points and Portland. Oregon. 8 p. m. ; Saturday at 10 p. m. Dall) service (water permitting) on Willam ette and Yamhill rivers. For detailed information of rates, The Oregon Railroad A Navigation Co. your nearest ticket agent, or Gerwra! Passenger Agent. A. I CRAIQ. COLUMBIA . RIVER SCENERY Portland and The Dalies ROUTE You Will Be Satisfied WITH YOUR JOURNEY If your tickets read over the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, the Seenic Line of the World" BECAUSE There are so many scenic attractions and points of interest along the line between Ogden and Denver that the trip never becomes tiresome. WEATHER FOR DECEMBER. U. S. Department of Agriculture Sup plies Interesting Data. If you are oingKast, write or informa tion -and get a pretty book that will tell you all fbout It. W. C. McBRIDE, General Agent PORTLAND, OREGON Regulator Line Steamers "BAILEY GATZERF "DALLES CITY"! "REGULATOR" "M ETLAKO". j "SADIE-B." I 1 Str. "Bailey Gatzert" leaves Portland 1 7 -X. M. Mondays. Wednesdays and Frl ' days; leaves The Dalles 7 A. M. Tuea , days. Thusrsdays and Saturdays. j Str. "Regulator" leaves Portland 7 A M Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays j leaves The Dalles 7 A. M. Mondays j Wednesdays and Fr" Jays. I Steamers leaving Portland make dail ; connection at Lyle with C. R. & N. train for Goldendale and Klickitat Valley points. O R. & N. tram leaves Goldendale on Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays at 6:30 A. M.. malting connection with I steaaier "Regulator" for . Portland and way points. C. R. & N. train leaves Goldendale on Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays af 8:30 A. M.. connecting at Tyle wltr steamer "Sadie B." for The Dalles, con nectlng there with O. R. & N. train East and Weat. Str. "Sadie B." leaves Cascade Lock dally (except Sunday) at 7 A. M. for Th Da Ilea and way points; arrives at 11 A. Famous at home for Generations past; Famous now all over the World. Sole For Saie ny - E. MATTHIAS -Agency for Oregon City. The following data, covering a peri od of 34 years, have been compiled from the Weather Bureau records at Portland, Oregon. They are issued to show the conditions that have pre vailed, during -the month in question, for the above period of years, but must not be construed as a. forecast of the weather conditions for the coming month. TEMPERATURE. Mean or normal temperature, 42 degrees. The warmest month was that of 1875, with an average of 48 degrees. The coldest month was that of 1884, with an average of 32 degrees. The highest temperature was 65 degrees on the 13th, 1886. The lowest temperature was 3 de grees on the 23d, 1879. The earliest date on which first kill ing frost occurred in autumn, October 13. Average date on which first killing frost occurred in autumn, November 15. Average date on which last killing frost occurred in spring. March 17. The latest date on which last kill ing frost occurred in Spring, May 9. PRECIPITATION Average for the month, 7.36 inches. Average number of days with .1 of an inch or more, 20. The 'greatest monthly precipitation was 20.14 inches in 1882. The least monthly precipitation was 0.88 inches in 1876. The greatest amount of precipita- I tion recorded in any 24 consecutive hours was 7.66 inches on the 12th-13the 1882. The greatest amount of snow fall recorded in any 24 consecutive hours (record extending to winter of 1885 only) was,' 14.0 inches on 22d, 1892. CLOUDS AND WEATHER. Average number of clear days, 4. Partly cloudy days, 8. Cloudy days, 19." WIND. The prevailing winds have been from the south. The average hourly velocity of the wind is 8 miles. - The highest velocity of the wind was 54 miles from the southwest. A dairyman writes that he has built a new silo and filled it with corn. I-fo has never fed ensilage or paid much attention to the subject and wants to know about how much to feed to new milch cows and what should be fed with it. Silage affords the best and cheap est roughage, succulent food and car bohydrates, and should be fed as lib erally as is possible without injury to the milk producing ability of the cows. The safe amount will depend large ly upon each cow and the kind of other feed available. Highly bred dairy cows can use more ensilage profitably than cows more disposed to lay on fat under liberal feeding. There can be no profit from a cow that puts the en silage into beef and loads herself down with fat. Such a cow must be fed less ensilage and more protein food, making her ration somewhat more expensive, it is true, but main taining her ability to turn feed into ; milk. : The cow's ration should be nearly CARE OF CREAM AT THE FARM, j balanced as to protein and carbohy drates, and every cow must be watch ed closely until her ability to utilize certain proportions of food is known. One cow may be able to consume forty- pounds of ensilage a day and pay for it, while the next in the row may increase rapidly in weight and de crease rapidly in milk flow under such heavy feeding. If one has good, bright, well-cured clover hay and wheat bran to feed with ensilage, more can be fed than it timothy and ground corn and oats were the only supplementary foods. This is true with cotton-seed meal, oat and pea meal, gluten meal, etc. This class of foods, are all rich in pro tein, and the more protein a cow gets the more carbohydrates she ought to get. Dairymen should feed all of the carbohydrates (ensilage) a cow can use, because it is the cheapest of all foods. For average feeding .thirty to thirty-five pounds per cow will suffice. This should be supplemented with clover hay, say five to eight pounds, corn fodder two to four pounds, five to six pounds of wheat bran, and one to two pounds of oil meal, cotton-seed meal ! or gluten meal: The individuality of the cow is the most important factor The problem of caring for the cream so that it may be delivered to the creamery in good condition is a ser ious one because it has an important bearing on the quality of the butter. In many cases, butter made from cream not properly cared for does not sell for the top market price, and since there is a growing tendency to sell butter on its merits, giving only the price its quality deserves, there will be difficulty in disposing of butter made from a poor quality of farm separator cream, at prices equal to those of butter made at whole milk creameries. Considering the question, however, from the mechanical side of the butter making process alone, there is no good reason why farm separator cream should not be equal to, if not better than that separated at a factory with power separators.- When milk is separated at the farm immediately after milking, the clean est and sweetest cream possible ought to be ohtained; it certainly should be better than that skimmed by a factory separator from milk which is two to twenty hours old. and on this account i , . " , , , , , , , tut: v. j w is Liie uiuat luiuui utui laviui a better butter should be made from ln determining the amount of ensilage CONSTIPATION. Health is absolutely impossible, if constipation be present. Many se rious cases of liver and kidney com plaint have sprung from neglected constipation. Such a deplorable con dition is unnecessary. There is a cure for it. Herbine will speedily remedy matters. C. A. Lindsay, P. M., Bronson, Fla., writes, Feb. 17, 1902: "Having used Herbine, I find it a fine medicine for constipation." 50c a bottle. For sale by Huntley Bros. Co. .TOO YOUNG TO KNOW. CHAPPED HANDS. Wash your hands .with warm water, dry with a towel and apply Chamber lain's Salve just before going to bed, and a speedy cure is certain. This salve is also unequalled for skin dis eases. For sale by Howell & Jones. "Say, ma, complained the insurance president's little boy, why don't you want me to play with the Bixley child ren?" "My dear child, this is something that you will understand when you grow older. Their father is nothing but a policy holder." UNREASONABLENESS as great as woman's. But MAN'S is often Thos. S. Austin, Mgr. of the "Repub lican, . of Leavenworth, Ind., was not unreasonable, when he refused to al low the doctors to operate on his wife, for female trouble, "Instead," he says, "we concluded to try Electric Bitters. My wife was then so sick, she could hardly leave her bed, and five (5) physicians had failed to re lieve her. After taking Electric Bit-te-s, she was perfectly cured, and 'can now perform all her household du ties" Guaranteed by Howell & Jones druggists, price 50c. the farm separator cream. The usual causes of defective butter from gathered cream are: First, un suitable place for keepingthe cream, and, second, holding the cream too long before it is collected by the cream gatherers. A perfectly clean, sweet and satisfactory cream is pro duced on many farms and delivered in good condition to either a retailer, an ice-cream maker or a creamery. There are, however, places where tainted and defective cream is found and in some cases it is being mixed with eream of better grade. This is hardly fair to the producer of first grade cream, and in order to raise the standard of the entire product to a grade equal to the best, the following suggestions are offered as a guide to persons not familiar with the proper methods of caring for cream. 1. Place" the separator on firm foundation in a clean, well ventilated room where it is free from all offen sive odors. 2. Thoroughly clean the separator after each skimming: the bowl should be taken apart and washed, together with all khe tinware," every time the separator is used; if allowed to stand for even one hour without cleaning there is danger of contaminating the next lot of cream from the sour bowl. This applies to all kinds of cream sep arators. 3. . Wash the separator bowl and all the tinware with cold water and then with . warm water, using a brush to polish the surface and clean out the seams and cracks: finally scald with boiling water leaving the parts of the j bowl and tinware to dry in some pro- i tected place where they will be pro-; tected from dust. Do not wipe the bowl ! or' tinware with a cloth or drying tow-' el ; heat them so hot with steam or boiling water that wiping is unneces- j sary. j 4. Rinse the milk receiving can ! and separator with a quart or two of hot water just before running the milk i into the separator. j 5. Cool the cream as it comes from the separator or immediately after, to a temperature near 50 degrees Fahren-1 heit and keep it cold until delivered. ; 6 Never mix warm and cold cream or sweet and slightly tainted cream, i 7. Provide a covered and clean wa-, ter tank for. holding the cream cans, and change the water frequently in the tank so that the temperature does not rise above 60 degrees Fahrenheit. A satisfactory arrangement may be made by allowing running water to flow through the cream tank to the stock watering tank. 8. Skim the milk immediately after each milking, as it is more work to save the milk and separate once a day and less satisfactory, than skimming while the milk is warm, since the milk to feed, and the feeder must determine the standard by her ability to utilize her feed profitably. Rake enough ensilage . from the top of the silo for the day's feeding, hav EIGHT ing it as fresh as possible while keep ing the contents of the pit from spoil ing. Always place ensilage before the cows with the mill feed directly on top of it and let the cow do the mixing. A DISASTROUS CALAMITY. It is a disastrous calamity, when you lose your health, because indi gestion and- constipation have sapped it away. Prompt relief can be had ia Dr. King's New Life Pills. They build up your digestive organs, and cure headache, dizziness, colic, consti pation, etc. Guaranteed at Howell & Jones drug store; 25c. OBITUARY. Mrs. Ida Dell Dodge, died at her home near Molalla, November 22, 1905. She was aged 25 years and 21 days. She leaves a husband, one son, Alfred, 3 I' i . n little Allie, aged 5 months. Also a father, mother, and one brother to mourn her loss. She was a kind and loving moth er and will Jbe sadly missed in her dear home. The remains were laid to rest in the Clackamas County Ceme tery at Molalla, Oregon. One moment the pale lips tremble, With the triumph she might not tell, As the sight of life immortal, On her spirit's vision fell, Then the look of rapture faded, And the beautiful smile was faint. As in some convent picture, On the face of the dying saint. And we felt in the lonesome mid-night as we sat by the silent dead, What a light on the path going down ward, The feet of the righteous, shed, When we thought with faith unshaken She came to the Jordan s tide, And taking the hand of the Saviour, went up on the other side. WHEN YOU HAVE A BAD COLD. You want a remedy that -will not only give quick relief but effect a per manent cure. . , . -' You want a remedy that will relieve the lungs and keep expectoration easy. You want a remedy that will coun teract the tendency toward pneumonia. You want a remedy that is pleas ant and safe to take. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy meets all of these requirements and for the speedy and permanent cure of bad colds stands without a peer. For sale by Geo. A. Harding. CJ-A. JSS T O IlIA. Bean the t m Mno T0U "avB ftlwa'5 BligII There is Money in it FOR YOU to get our quotations on a good en during Plumbing Job. Why not take the hint and get our estimate before handing out your contract ? A. 1Y1IHLSTIN, Main Street, near Eighth ran aHl F E fi o Flip YnntliQ' nnmiuiiiinii lllu 1UUL11U UUU1JJU111U1! rtin nn n rr, Mm I Inn rr mi Mtitt IhiTnunmnn r- U! GU UN I. I V RMimU M II o j X BOTH ONE YEAR This offer is open only to new subscribers to The Youths' Companion. Subscribers to that period ical desiring to renew their subscription, will be given the Knterprise and the Companion for $3.0Q Is is a Spi Oprtiitv to get your country weekly and one of the standard magazines for a little more than the price of one. - Remember, new subscribers to The Youths' Com panion will receive that publication and the Enterprise, both one year, for the reasonable price of only $2.50 Address ENTERPRISE Oregon City, Oregon