OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1906. L.Short Sklehead Stories'... ! J TI!Vl!l,V-TOI.I TALUS 0 Tllli WI!I!K'.1 DOINUS. v 4 1 Ex-Commliiiloner Balr Cunicllim Iliilr, former County Com inlHMliiimi' of Cliu'ldiiiniM county, ami n pioneer ri'Mlilmit. of thin n:tIoii, tiled Hiimliiy til IiIh homo n( Cuiliy al'icr n tollK HllH'MN. . TIlO doei'lCOnl WIIH HKi'll nliniit OR your iiml hi mii'Vlvod 1y three mum unit linn ihiuyhter. Grocery and Saloon Attached Tim ''.I'licety atom miiiI kiiIohii IiiimI tu'MH of A, It. McWIIIlitnm at Omwcko, wiim at Inched l''rli)iiy by CoiiNUiblo Ticinbutli on nn net Ion biouuht by It. I,. Hitbln, i'i'ii'i'Hi'iit!iiK Poi'tlnnd erodl titi H, wlu n''k to recover Judgment fur I'lllllllM imHIOKllllMK Mii7. - Oreuon City Won A IhinKii. (mil ti'iun from thin U y Hittmiliiy nli'ht itt Woodhiini iIi'IViiIikI I ho HiihIiu'Hm Mnn'H (imiiii of Hint, city by ii Hcuro of HI to 17. Tlui iliiyi'M from thin city wore: I'M WIIIIiiiiim, itiitur; A. WtlllutiiM and lilnnchiu'd, lorwiinlti; O, Kiibri'l uml Telford, Htmi'ils, number of about 100 miMemblod (it, tho church, the ocriiHlon bcliiK thn mi nimi roll cull of tho church. During tho cvoiiIiik viu'Ioiih report h wore read nbowliitc tho conilltbiii of (ho church uml t tint, of It m auxiliary nocotlen to ho In Kiiod Mhiiio. Kov, (!, V. Clupp, of Korea! lirovc, wn pn-Hont nnd inndu mi inblri'iiH reviewing rim proKrotiH of the church ni. tho noncltmlim of which rcfn'Hhiiii'iilH were nerved, Custom Star Entertain l.iiHt Kildny night nt tho A, O. II. V. bull on Hcvi'iiili hlroi'i, tho nicinbcrst of I'loniTi' Chapter, Order of llm ICumI in Klur i'iilt'1'iiilin d tlui MiiHotm mid their wIvcm with n clever prunuu of n i in h luii'i'i'Mt, n fiircn being liicludi'd umotig tho n ti in 1 inning tlm even ing whliit wiiH played, tlm prl,ci being Wiin by Mm. II. Mnhlruiii mid Ted Oxiuuud. KefriiHhnii'iitii woro nerved. Fond of Satchel J. A, Nile, who claim to bo of Marlon counly, whh nrreHied hero Hat I ii rd ay night by Chief of Pollen Hums for Din lai'i'i'iiy of a witi'liel from Chart. K. Archiird, n couiiiiercliil traveller of I'orilnnd. Tlm theft wiih commuted on tlm northbound California overland JiiMi before tlm train reached thin clly. the Ktuleii prnpi-rt was recovered but Nlb'M had InniMferred prnelleiilly nil of Hot coiiletiiti of tho litulen grip Into of tho coiiieniM of the Klob'n i;rlp to iitored, Arcbftnl declined to ap" r HKiiliiht Nile, who wiih releioied. THE SECRET OF SUCCESS "No, Kir V.m ciiiitinl pi)m n(T nnr nuWKiiln o lie1. 1 vr liprii ihiik Aii.'iHt I lwr tm e 1 wu it li-.y, mut J II bit vii iwj other." paper work an reporter on tlm Green Buy Dully (liietto. In 1KH8, ho cmo to OreKon, and wan for two yearn Identified with ttio Went Bhoro !nBa zlno, then for nevtira) yijam In ne,wn pitlier work In Oregon City and Balern, and for more than flvo year on the i Hlaff of tlm I'ortland Oreonliin, In j tlm Kprlng of 19015 ho went to Itend n j I!, H. CornniliiHloner, and after wcath-' erlnK tlm trying condltloim there and ' W'cIiik the advent of a new era, ho la laniiferred to the HoHeburg Land I (Jllice, In lH!:i he, nmrrbid MIhh Graco WllllaniH, daughter of tho latf C. O. T. W'llllaiiiM, of OreKon City, and they bavo a ten year-old daughter. t.'mp iiia Valley Newa. (flonebiirg.) WH 0 SHE WA S SKETCH OP THE LIFE OP LYDIA E. PINKHAM Tho January Number of tlm Pacific Monthly created a new in In uniKU'.lim ptihlhditiiK on tlm IV lillC CoilMt. N'oltiliot of the kind him -ver been attempted before. The half lolleH were the tllleht ponHlbl". Btlil were reproduced on the fluent paper. The articlM wero by b'adlnK men, hiich an William Winter, dramatic dltor of the New York Tribune; Doctor David Btarr Jordan, iriHldeiit of l.idainl Stanford, Jr., I'lilverhlty, and Julian Hawthorne, Apploi Any Old Time II. It. ThouipHon exhllilleil mmi V,r en fruit In bin offlce a few daya hko that wan certainly out of the ordi nary i ven for Orejpni - land of won iern, that flm Ih. An apple troo xtaudliiK In Mr. Thoinpoii'n dooryard l4iMiiiiii bott fall and Mr. Thompxon bun watched patiently to nee what tlm 1 1 null would be. I, Hl" HppleN WIIH lb" remilt and oonio wern hbowed to iim. They have attained the Mzn of iiiai'bb'M, If Mr. TboiiipHoii or any- body Iho can iiMKiire tm frcah appl Panorama of Finance and the Marketf Ah oiifi would expect of a f;reat met ropolitan newspaper having the fac.lll tb'M of The Chlciuto H"conl Herald, that puper alwayo covem the market and flntiticliil and commercial lutclH (cotico Kciierully on a ncalo of excep tional f uim-HM, eoverlna two entire pnicea of each iiisiie. Tho iiuotht.iorm on live utocit, j?raln and provlHiorm, Htoekn uml b'.iidH, and In fact every commercial and financial market in which the peoplo. of tho Northwent aro Interented, aro throiixlily completo and xatDfactory. Special cnblen tell tho afory of fl iianco abroad. The "Hpeculallve Com- And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of '73M Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale In Drug Stores. I'orty million bottled of Anmst J;lowrr old in tin) I'nile 1 SI. ill nlonu. diiicc ill lutroiliictio'i I Ami the d'-miitid for it is Mill growing. Jm't licit a fine dhowinx id ' Mtii'ci-hs? Don't it jirove that AiiUHt l'lowi-r h:ei had unfailing micii-m in the cure of indi;;e- iioit mid d ynpi pia tho worit cm iiiii i of health iiml liaiipiiicM? Dimh it led ulford the la-t cviilcm v. that A......u, l.'l... : u ..ll ..i.i.i. , .mil iv ,i nine n n i nil. ! "II', , I, , .lit-,.! m,,., T..11. I .. ,t i.e. 11. MoMia,!. and int. ,'iual div,,,cr?-that it ' ' t v " l the bet .r a!! liver r i.la.or? I r' N re t Hec- A..K..-t l'b.Acr ,. a mati bh sH record ! ,,nH 'r'"1'1 niarki-t jihkw tba InlereHt of over vra-, in miiif; the ailing mil-1 ,,,f:',!a,',ra fr, t)l" A'lantlo to the l:..n of 'tla'-sc .liarrviinx i:omi.lait.t. M'"56 amHt U1' t,;!1 "f 1,10 lin,1,'r- Two mi , j',,: ami 751:. All diii'nit!t. !r,irr""M ln Kral "", Purity mar- ivipi. 1 -y i.-iuitj jit'i r.uiuii iin-ii 1,1 the pit, In It? way a Important an tlm 1. 11 mil rn m ftliil i,,lifin, t.?ipl r.f tha lilay'K utory of upeculatlon. The Wall Monday evening, rebrtiary 5 with !t,lr""t ivU,'r "f J,,lin ChaniberH (turn-bamiu-t. The iK-caalon u 'in 1 1, I ,'U1PS ,h" ''""y hlMU.ry of Gotham's Tliln remarkable woman, whone maiden name wan Eaten, was born In Lynn, Man., February 9th, Wj, com ing from a good old Quaker family. For ome years the taught bchool, and became known as a woman of an alert Char man & Co., City Drug Store I In March IIiik for Gazette. the probb Hprluit Is in of apple dump. Holved. -(,'orvallla with a In tho V 1 1 r 1 1 . n v ti u I 4 11 a 1 year the Heilmen kov a banquet for nature of a return money market In a moat entertaining and InHtructlve fanhlon. Kxauilne tho market pane of uny iHaue and seo for yotirmdf. Divore In 8hort Order Hut a very few mluuteit elnpNed In I tot Hlattt circuit court here hint ThurN ilay from the time if the tlliiiK of tin' coinplalllt tilllll JiidKC Mcllrlde reil bred a decree Krantlio; Katherlno I litinlltoii, of Cortland, a divorce from Knii'Ht Hamilton, other divorce, do creen wtrn ri turned the Name day by .hnliii MclirhU as followM: lHr..ii Hmlth aualnitt GoorKe y, Hnilth; Vic tor I'lrnrd aKaliiHt Heni l'lrard. The divorce suit of K. I.. Vntt tiKaliiht HeMiile Wyntt was illHiiiliuied, tie; KiiKb'M, nbortly after the on?anl.a- Don of the latter order. Tho ban(iiet In u)hu In coiiimeijioralion of tho llr.Ht nmilveraary of tlm oruauizatlim of tho Died of Heart Failure KuKleH' lidt'o In this city. A. M. Sin William llohliiMon, need 7H yours, C 1 it. 1. I'lnucaiu', Frank Newton. H. 11, .....1 : ,i..v ,11. ..1 u ,.u ..,..... 1 U' ll.il it 1111,1 T t iili'il'ii'i uilll n oiiin 110 'I nuil'llll limi If : " ' f-""" ' t miiu; i'ininpu mq 1 ir 1 luK of b. art failure at the home of his j KkW commltl ,n arrauK-ments ! ''f ',ri'Kham' .w'.Te "U Bon, William Itobltroiii. in WchI 0ro-'f"r tlm bati(iiet. Dr. W. K. Carll will K011 City. The di'ci'ii,ed w an horn In ; (dllclato as toantuiaKU'r. Vocal hoIos northern In land but iaiied the nn-at-1 will be rendered. G. H. Dinilck will i-r part or his llfi In C anada, m ar Deliver tho address of welcome, and The GiltnerForresler Nuptials Kdtnund (iiltner, the popular secretary of tho I'ortland Chamber of Commerce, and Miss iora Mae For- fT -T - - S-r I Toronto, lie lived In Oregon City for about the years. I'.ciddes a wife, i he Ih survived by three sous ami five ilitilUhtilM, I Will the exception of Frauds C. KobliiMon, of Salt Ijikn City, and Win. KobliiNoii, of this city, tho ) children reside near Toronto. Canada, llurlal services were held at tho homo iof Win. ltobliiHoii on tlm West Sldo Monday inornlm-. Hev. . K. Ham ;inond, otlli iatliiK. Interment followed iat Mountain View (Vim-icry. Charles W. Kelly will respond for tho Hed Miti. Henry I'usey will act as accompanist, and Informal speeches w ill be made by several of tho mem bers of tho two lodges. Church Hold Annual Meeting Thursday evening the members of the First CoiiKreattoual church to tlm Eagle Will Banquet i Oregon Clly Aerie No. ti!U Fraternal Onbr of Maidus, will entertain the .members of Wacheno Tribe. Improved .Order of Itedmen. In Knapp's hall. Receiver Lawrence Wa Confirmed 1 J. M. Lawrence, whoso nomination I to tm receiver of public moneys ot lioKcburK was confirmed by the sen ate Inst Monday, was born at Flint villi, near Green Day, Wisconsin, 42 years iiko this month. Ills early llfo was spent on a farm, and his school Iiik wns obtained In tho "llttlo red schiailhouse" and tlm Stalo Normal sclnsd at Oshkosh. He tauKht scIukjI twii winters, and at 13 begun news HIS MASTERS VOICE terdny afternoon, at the homo of tho hrlde'H parents, says Saturday's Ore Rotilan. Tlm ciTi'moiiy was performed by Hov. llrnce Wolverton, pastor of the Christian Church In I'ortland, who went down for the occasion. Thir teen persons made up tho bridal party. Mlsa Georgia Glltner, sister of the Kroom. and Miss Forrester, sister of the bride, served as bridesmaids, and 1'lnkerton C. I'atterson, of I'ortland, the fiance, of Miss Giltner, was best man. 'Tlm others In tho party were: It. F. Giltner, of Portland; Mr. and Mrs. ForriHtcr, their two young sons and two aunts of the bride. Tho cere mony wa.i performed under a hupe hell of flowers, and the house was sim ply and tastefully decorated with Krecns and cut (lowers. Promptly at 5 o'clock the marriage service was read. Mr and Mrs. Giltner camo Into Portland and here tisik the train for the South, heading for tho honeymoon trail" to California. They planned to go to San Francisco and Is Angeles, but the lihies of ex-Senator George Mc Ilrlde. who Is an uncle of Mr. Giltner, forms an occasion for their Rtopping off at Sacramento. Mr. and Mrs. Gilt ner will be at home after February 4 at r.sc, Everett street, poudlng the com pletion of their new home on Johnson street. DANGER IN DELAY. ' Prompt Action Must Be Taken Ij Preserve Health. To VlTOE, 0 Is no longer a mere novelty like the old style talking machine. It is seriously recognised by music lovers as a musical instrument of great merit, reproducing all the beautiful quality of the original. Prices of Machines, $17.50, $20, $25, $35, $45 and $65. Reduced prices on Records, 7 -in. 35c, 10-in. 60c, 12-in. $1.00. I Kidney troubles are dangerous be cause they creep on so stealthily that they Ki t a firm grip on the victim be fore ho is aware of It. They manifest l themselves in such vailed forms that l they are easily mistaken for other i diseases. I Make no mistake. ; IK) not delay. , Treat the kidney now. The kidneys are sick and will not get i well unless you use a kidney medicine. I Doan's Kidney Pills is the certain, I safe and prompt remedy for the kid- : neys only. It cures. , G. S. Cooper, farmer, living three ; miles northeast of Salem, Ore., on the j Garden road, says: "I very often lifted heavy weights, hut have since j regret toil having done so, as the result was that I strained my back and ever ( after had more or less trouble from j dull, aching pains across my loins and I other symptoms of kidney complaint. hi some way Bonn's Kidney Pills were j brought to my notice and the first I time 1 went to town I dropped into i a drug store and Inquired about them. ; I was told they were highly recom j mended and advised to give them a trial. I did so. And while I did not I follow the treatment as regularly as I ! should have done, being a poor hand to take any kind of medicine, the bene fit I derived from their use stamps them as a remedy which acts fully up to the representations made for it." Flonty more proof like this from Oregon City people. Call at Huntley Pros' drug store and ask what their ! customers report. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. 4le member the name Doan's and take no other. and Investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa thetic nature. In lS43he married Isaac Plnkbam, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three, sons and a daughter. In thoRe (rooil old Yasbioned days It was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and ex perience many of them gained a won derful knowledge of the curative prop erties of the various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkham took a great Interest In the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease She maintained that just as nature so tMMintifully provides in the .harvest fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies ex pressly designed to cure the various Ills and weaknesses of the body, and It was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medi cines for her own family and mends, Chief of these was a rare combina tion of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu liar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pink- ham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this so far was done freely, with out money and without price, as labor of love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centen nial year dawned it found their prop erty swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter, with their mother, combined forces to restore the family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for the women of the whole world. The I'inkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling" it, for always before they had given It away freely. They hired a Job printer to run oft some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medi cine, now called Lydia E. I'inkham'a Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful enrative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the de- . mand gradually increased. In 1877, by combined efforts the fam ily had saved enough money to com mence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, tintil to day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vege table Compound have become house hold words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are nsed anna- ally in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have done it herself. During her long and eventful expe rience she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to pre serve arecordof every case thatcame to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice and there were thousands received careful study, and the details, includ ing symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future relerence, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collabora tion of Information regarding the. treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in the worltC With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. She wascarefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence. To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its origina tor passed away. For nearly twenty five years she has continued it, and nothing in the vror sh0ws when the first Lydia; . Pinkham dropped her pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large family, took it up. With women assistants, some as capable as herself, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work. and probably from the oftice of no other person have so many women been ad vised how to regain health. Sick wo men, this advice is "Yours for Health" freely given if you only write to ask for it. Such Is the history of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound ; made from simple roots and herbs ; the one great medicine for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the noble woman whose name it bears. 14. at nine o'clock. A. M., and continu ing tintil Friday, February 16, at four o'clock P. M. First, Second and Third Grade Certi ficates. Wednesday: Penmanship, history, orthography, reading. Thursday: Written arithmetic, theo ry of teaching, grammar, physiology. Friday: Geography, mental arith metic, school law, civil government. Primary Certificates. Wednesday: Penmanship, orthogra phy, arithmetic, reading. Thursday: Art of questioning, theo ry of teaching, physiology., . Yours truly. J. C. ZINSER, County Supt. of Schools. How's This. We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions, and financially able to car ry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDIXG, KINXAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system. Testimon ials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. TEACHERS' EXAMINATIONS. &t?melstei & Aiicbesen Suspension Bridge Corner The Otegon City Jewelers Notice Is hereby given that the County Supmintendent of Clackamas county, will hold the regular examina tion of applicants for state and county papers at Oregon City, as follows: For State Papers. Commencing Wednesday .February 14, at nine o'clock A. M., and continu ing until Saturday, February 17, at four o'clock P, M. Wednesday: Penmanship, history, spolltns, algebra, reading, school law. 1 Thursday: Written arithmetic, theory of teaching, grammar book keeping, physics, civil government. ' Friday: Physiology, geography, men- i tal arithemetlc, composition, physical geography. ,v Saturday: Botany, plane geometry, general history, English literature, psychology. i For County Papers. j Commencing Wednesday, February THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF OREGON CITY Oregon City, Oregon AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000 D. F. LATOURETTE MEYER President Cashier Transacts a general banking business. Open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. , Prices Reasonable LET US DO YOUr Work Work Guaranteed We do a General Baggagei and Transfer Business. Safes, Pianos and Furniture Moved Office Opposite Masonio Building TS2!Zim Williams Bros. Transfer Co.