OREGON CITY'ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1906. 7 r. . . in - - - - u maTrlXrf-' J LI LJ LULIL:: MR. and MRS. WILBERT THOMPSON. 801 Main St., Peoria, 111. MULL'S GRAPE TONIC CtJRED HIM. Gilbert Thompson never knew a well day until last June he had been constipated all his life many doctors treated him, but all tailed to even neip mm nis neaua uutu rapituy ana uu j auu.tr y , J 903, Mrs. Thompson asked us to suggest a. treatment far 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 WELL. , Mull's Grape Tonic Cured Him us as follows: "Mr husband, seed 23, suffers from sharp pains In his stomach and Let me know by return mail what oauses tbe pain. If you can. Mr. Thompson We want to sell Mull's Grape woon a Human lite is at staKe, Mrs. Thompson first wrote us as follows: snmatimas thtnka It hiR tlfiart- T.fit me knoV has been treated by several doctors, but they have given liim up." . We promptly advised that a first-class specialist be consulted. We quo: TVnln KAAO.ioa biuin It will miM MTittlnfittnii. lint FWV' ft. iwittlfl Is DO ODlOCt fcO US and if'vnnr hiwhnii' r.n&vi is as serious as vou state, we suegest you consult a reliable specialist, not the advertising kind, promptly." At the same time, knowing that Mull's Grape Tonic could do no harm, we advised its use-until a physician could be consulted. January 25 Mrs. Thompson wrote that a physician had been consulted. He diag nosed the case as beta)? chronic constipation and dyspepsia. His treatment was followed faithfully, but there was no perceptible improvement in Mr. Thompson's health. Then he began taking Mulls Grape Tonic and on Sept. s, 1903, we received the following letter from Mrs. Thompson: "You will remember that wrote to you last Januarw In regard to my husband's health. It Is four months since he quit taking Mull's Grape Tonio .for constipation, which he suffered from since birth. He took fust 24 bottles of It and Is perfectly cured. He Is much stronger and has gained considerably in flesh. I cannot thank you enough for Mull's Grape Tonic. It Is worth Its weight in gold.' Just $ 1 2 cured him and he has spent hundreds of dollars with doctors who did him no good. Now I want to state my case 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 cure me if you say It will, as it did all you claimed it would in my husband's case, await an early reply. Very respectfully yours, MRS. W, H.THOMPSON, 801 Main SL, Peora,IL LET IIS BIWE A 50)c. BOTTLE. This Coupon is good for a 50c. Bottle off Mull's Grape Tonic. Fill out this coupon and send to the Lightning Medicine Co., 157 Third" Ave., Bock Island, 111., and you will receive a full size, 50c. bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic. I have never taken Mull'a Grape Tonic, bat If you will supply me -with. & 50c bottle free, I will take it as directed. Name -Street No.. r If you are afflicted with constipatiot 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 Dggists. CONGRESS OF MOTHERS. ill The Congress of Mothers at Chau tauqua. The Oregon Society of the Con gress of Mothers will establish head quarters at Gladstone Park for Chau tauqua. . At 3 p. m. each day there will be a public meeting at which addresses will be given by prominent speakers, among whom are: Rev. Stephen Wise. D. D. ; Rev. Robert Marsh; Mr. M. R. Johnson, and others of note whose names will appear later. On July 18th will be held the an nual convention. In the morning there will be a business session. At 3:30 p. m., there will be the usual public meeting, when Mrs. C. M. Wood of Portland, president of the State So ciety, will deliver the annual address. All members of Child-study Clubs, Mothers' Clubs, Juvenile Court Work ers, teachers and all who are interest I ed in the training of the young are i cordially invited to visit headquarters and attend meetings. JULIA C. LA BARRE, Chairman of State Press Com. CATHERINE THE GREAT. SUNDAY EXCURSIONS ON THE CORVALLIS & EASTERN RAILROAD TO NEWPORT AND RETURN. Sunday excursions to Newport and return on the Corvallis & Eastern Railroad will leave Albany ..EVERY SUNDAY AT 7:30 A. M... Arriving in Newport at noon, return ing leave Newport at '5:30 p. m., giv ing 5 hours at the finest resort on the Coast. Health, rest and pleasure for the weary worker. Three day and season tickets from all S. P. points good going or return ing on Sunday excursion trains. Fare from Albany, Corvallis or Philomath $1.50 for the round trip. Connection at Albany with Eugene Local going and South bound over land on return. 1 r" Ui'irHi'Hsliifl BhiTi im.ii.iim H IU-. II) .IIHII! .!. JJIlljl O. R, & N., THE TIME SAVER. Chicago . 17 Hours Nearer via This Popular Columbia River Route. Franklin was right when he said "Lost time is never found again." The O. R. & N., in addition to giv ing you 200 miles along the matchless Columbia River, saves you 17 hours to Chicago. It is the Short Line tq Lewistoo. Short Line to the Palouse country. Short Line to Spokane. Short Line to the Coeur d' Alene country. Short Line to Salt Lake City. Short Line to Denver. Short Line to Kansas City. Short Line to Omaha. ,. - Short Line to Chicago. Short Line 10 all points East. Three trains East daily, 9:15 a. m., 8:15 p. m., and 6:15 p. m. The "Chicago-Portland Special," is an fine as the finest. Every comfort of home. For particulars ask any agent of the Southern Pacific Companv, or write A. L. CRAIG, ' General Passenger Agent, Portland, Ore. Sec Nature's Wondrous Handiwork Through Utah and Colorado Castle Gate, Canon of the Grand, Black Canon, Mar shall and Tennessee Pas ses, and the World-Famous Royal Gorge For Descripitive and Illustrated Phamplets, write to W. C. McBRIDE, Gen'l Ag't, 124 Third St., PORTLAND, Or. Let Us Send You the COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE Three Months FREE Three months' free trial for merely sending your naran. Iso money no letter, nothing but your address on the attached coupon. If, after three months' trial, you wish to have the magazine stopped, merely tell us, and the copies received will cost you nothing. You are to be the exclusive judge. And there'll be no questions, no quibbling, nothing. We'll leave the decision to you. If, after three months' test, you find you need the Cosmopolitan, let us send you the magazine for the fall year. That's all there is to it. PROCURED AND DEFENDED. Send model, arawuu? or photo, for expert search and free report. Frwe advice, how to obtain patents, trade coprngnu. etc, N ALL COUNTRIES. Business direct with Washington saves time, money ana ojten tne patent. Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively. Write or come to us at 633 Ninth Street, opp. United Statei Patent Office, WASHINGTON, D. C. INSURANCE. Plate Glass, burglar-proof, and al kinds of casualty insurance written by O. A. Cheney of Oregon City. Of fice with Justice of the Peace. Remember, though, that in reading ! the Cosmopolitan, you are reading one of the oldest high-elass magazines j published today in America. j Such eminent and great men have ' in the past contributed to the reputa tion of the Cosmopolitan as: Presi ! dent Roosevelt, Mark Twain, Presi dent Eliot, John Wanamaker, Count Tolstoi. Henry Waterson, Jas. Whit comb Riley, etc., etc. The following list of eminent con tributors taken from among a hun dred others will indicate the remark ably high standard that will be main tained by the Cosmopolitan during 190G FICTION: Sir Gilbert Parker, Alfred Henry Lewis, Booth Tarklng ton. ART: Frederic Remington, Henri Elbert Hubbard. Henry Waterson, Edwin Markham, Lanos, Frank Verbeck. SPECIAL: No finer array of talent could pos sibly be offered than the list of world specialists named above. "Home" magazine is the key-note to the Cosmopolitan. In no sense is the Cosmopolitan a 1 small, cheap 16-page mail-order monthly- It is to the contrary, a great 240 pags illustrated home magazine. 1 Its editorial policy aims at every , phase of clean, wholesome home life. An abundance of bright stories, full j of fun, life and action, will interest : every member of the family. ' Topics of the day are treated sanely, by experts of international repute political reform, international affairs, economics, social problems, and a hundred other timely topics of which every intelligent man or woman must be informed. Fogarty, Verbeck, are only a few of i The Cosmopolitan affords unusual : advantages for the refining and edu cative value of art Remington, Lanos, ' The Cosmopolitan, furthermore, has just begun one of the most remark able exposes ever attempted by a corf temnorary magazine, "The Treason of the Senate," by David Graham Phillips. It will be strictly impossible during this series, for us to insure news-stand purchasers a copy of the magazine, but We do guarantee that all readers who have, under this special offer, ap plied direct to the office for copies, will receive regularly the magazine dur ing this brilliant series of articles. Be sure to read this most scathing of all political exposures. We thoroughly believe that every intelligent reader will not only take but actually want the Cosmopolitan, should he once see the magazine it self. And that's why we offer a three months' free trial at our expense. We leave the decision entirely upon the merit of the monthly. If you don't like the three months received, you may stop the paper, and the copies received won't ' cost you a cent. Weare going to leave, it all to your decision. Could anything be more fair? Fill out today the coupon below place in an envelope remail to us and receive three months' test free. But mail the coupon today to-morrow will never come. Cosmopolitan Magazine, 1789 Broadway, New York. OREGON CITY MARKET REPORT. COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, 1789 Broadway, New York. I accept your liberal offer of three months' free trial subscrip tion to the Cosmopolitan, as adver tised in the Oregon City Enter prise. If at the end of the three months I do not like the magazine, I will let you know and have the paper discontinued, under which conditions, it is understood that the copies received shall cost me nothing. Otherwise you may send me the Cosmopolitan for a full year and bill be atthe regular subscription price of only one dol lar. Write Plainly. (Corrected Weekly.) Wheat No. 1, 6773c per bu. Flours-Valley, $4.25 per bbl. Hard wheat $4.90, Portland, $1.10 per sack. Howard's Best, $1.25 per sack. Oats In sacks, $1.15 per cental. Hay Timothy, baled $lij$12 per ton; clover $9; oat, $9; mixta hay $9. cheat, $8.50. Millstuffs Bran $19.50 per ton; shorts, $20.50 per ton; chop $18.00 per ton; barley rolled $25.50 per ton. Potatoes 4050c per sack. Eggs Oregon 18 to 20c per doz. Butter Ranch 2535; separator. 35c; creamery, 3540c. Rutabegas, Carrots, Turnips, Par snips and Beets 75c per sack. Good Apples Choice $3.00. Honey ll12c per lb. Prunes (.dried) Petite 4 1-zc per lb ; Italian, large 7c per lb ; medium 5 l-2c per lb; Silver 7c per lb. Dried Apples Sun Dried, quartered, 4c lb; sliced, 6c; fancy bleached. 7c. Dressed Chickens 12&c lb. Live Stock and Dressed Meats Beef, lire $2.50$3.00 per hundred. Hogs, live, 6; dressed 8; sheep, $2.50$3.00 head; veal, dressed 6c; lambs, live, $2$2.50 per head. $3.50 per head. OLD CHRONIC SORES. As a dressing for old chronic sores there is nothing so good as Chamber lain's Salve. While it is not advisable to heal old sores entirely, they should be kept in good condition for which this salve is especially valuable. For sale by Howell & Jones. DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR BOWELS. Many serious diseases arise from ne glect ofthe bowels. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are a pleasant and agreeable laxative. They invigorate the liver and regulate the bowels. For sale by Howell & Jones. GORGEOUS ATTIRE. An Odd Woman AVas Thia Empress of the Russian. A recent writer says of Catherine the Great, empress of Russia from the year 1762 to 1706: "She rose at 6 and lit her own fire. Her table - was ideally simple. From the reproach of overeating and over. drinking she was free. Though she could not sing a note, she and Prince DashkoCf, who could sing no better, oc casionally performed In a concert. A sudden burst of the most exalted and ridiculous discordant tones was the consequence, one seconding the other, with scientific shrugs and all the sol emn, self complacent airs and grimaces of musicians. From this perhaps she passed to a cat concert and imitated the purring of a cat In the most droll and ludicrous manner, always taking care to add appropriate, half comic, half"sentlmental words, which she In vented for the occasion, or else, spitting like a cat in a passion, with her back up, she suddenly boxed the first person in her way, making ujyier hand Into a paw and mewing outrageously ." When playing whist one night Cather ine could not get her page to answer the bell. "After she had rung twice, again without effect, she left the room, looking daggers, and did not reappear for a considerable time. The company supposed that the unfortunate page was destined to Siberia or at least the knout. As a matter of fact, Catherine on entering the antechamber found the page, like his betters, busy at whist "When the bell rang he happened to have so Interesting a hand that he could not make up his mind to quit it Now, what did the empress do? She dispatched the page on her errand and then quietly sat down, to hold his cards until he should return." THE AGRA DIAMOND. Fna Smns;- Portland Evening Telegram, daily, and the Weekly Enterprise, .both one year, for $5.50. . " cJua. as r o hia. Bean th vTllB K'n(l YoU Ha U THE CHARM OF A CLEAR PLEXION. COM Oresa of a Liverpool Merchant the Eighteenth Centnry. The Liverpool merchant in the lattei half of the eighteenth century musl fcave presented a by no means unpleas Ing appearance. He dressed, as a rule, we are informed, in a suit of one' color, usually light or of a snuffy shade. The cut of his ordinary coat resembled that of a court dress coatr- with standup collar and gilt, silvered, twist or basket buttons. His waistcoat was very long, with large "flaps," containing flapped pockets, these often decorated with buttons. . His breeches, being short, were ornamented at the knees with buckles of gold, silver or stone, -kept In countenance by large gold, silver or gilt buckles on his shoes, his legs being hosed, as a rule, in silk, plain, striped or ribbed. Ruffles at his wrist and a white stock about his throat were an almost invariable accompaniment, and on his head a cocked hat, pointed In front and higher at the back than the sides, over hair dressed Into large "cannon" curls on each side of his face, with a cue hanging behind, or it might be over a "tie," "cauliflower" or "brown bob" wig. Thus, with stick or umbrella, rendered remarkable by rea son of its head of gold, silver, amber or ebony, would he wend his way to "town." In "full dress" he must have even more attractively looked the .mer chant "prince" in his waistcoat of silk, satin or velvet rich In color and design. with long flaps elaborately embroid ered, silk breeches and silk hose, with conspicuous knee and shoe buckles. If he on occasion dined with the mayor he might receive an engraved Invita tion card similar to the following, di rected to Mr. Leece In 1776: "Mr. May or presents his compliments to Mr. Leece, begs the favor of his company on Sunday next to dinner, at 1 o'clock, at . the Exchange. An answer is de sired. 12th July. '7G." Odd Manner In Which It Wa a-led Ont of India. Like many other diamonds, the Agra diamond has had adventures. It gets its name from the fact that it was tak en at the battle of Agra In 1526 by the Emperor Baber, who was the founder of the Mogul empire In India. The Marquis of Donegall was in Agra In 1857, when the diamond was taken from the ktng of Delhi. Donegall was at the time engaged as secretary and belonged to the same regiment as the young officer who obtained possession of the diamond. It was resolved among them to smuggle it home to England rather than give it up and to share In the loot money. The question arose how were they to get it home. No one seemed able to hit upon a method that would be likely to meet with success until the last evening pre vious to the departure of the regiment. During the ctrarse of dinner the youn gest subaltern suddenly Jumped up and said: "I have it. We will conceal the diamond in a horse ball and make the horse swallow it." This met with gen eral approbation, a ball was secured! the Inside scooped out, the diamond In serted, the end stopped up and the horse made to swallow it. When the regiment reached the port of embarkation the horse was taken 111 and had to be shot- The diamond was taken from his stomach and brought over to-England. It was sub sequently sold to the Duke of Bruns wick, and since then It has been recut from a forty-six carat stone to thirty one and a half carats Id order to get rid of the black spots in it, and It Is the most perfect and brilliant diamond of a rose.pink color. BUNDLE BEARERS. Name. Street City State Bean the The Kind Vou Have Always Bacgfa Signature of Subscribe for the Oregon City Enterprise -Jammed nrbmic "WrmnitifiLKife gives rosy cheeks and active health to pale, sickly children. And it is good for their elders, too. Ask your druggist for it Nothing lends more to personal at tractiveness than the clear skin and fresh complexion that comes to those who use Laxikola tablets, trial size cents, a guaranteed cure for sallow- ness and constipation. Huntley Bros. GUNS. The Germans were the inventors of the first gun. About 1378, Schwartz, a German machinist, manufactured numerous crude guns which were brought Into use by the Venetians in 1392. It is a strange fact that cannon were made before small firearms. At Am berg there is still a piece of ordinance marked with the date , 1303. Cannon were first used in war at the Battle of Crecy in 1346. It was not until 1544, however, that they were made in Eng land. - Soothes itching skin. Heals cuts or burns without a scar. Cures piles, eczema, salt rheum, any itching. Doan's Ointment. Your druggist sells it. TWENTY YEAR BATTLE. "I was loser in a twenty-year battle with chronic piles and malignant sores, until I tried Bucklen's Arnica Salve; which turned the tide, by curing both, till not a trace remains," writes A. M. Bruce, of Farmville, Va. Best for old Ulcers, Cuts, Burns and Wounds. 25c at Howell & Jones' drug store. - DEN At Molalla, every Monday: on Appointments. STRY Saturday JHNO V. THOMAS, Dentist a Role That "City Men Are Not Not Inclined to Play. There was a. 'time, remembered easily by many, when the tender husband did not shrink from carrying home mate-rlals-for his dinner. Men of learning In those simpler days grasped the eel of commerce, as the eel of science, by the tail. The' statesman with Jovian brow and blue coat with brass buttons was very human with a dried codfish wrapped carelessly in brown paper un der his eloquent arm. To see a highly respectable citizen with 'a demijohn was a cheering sight. Nor was it be neath the dignity of a painful preacher of th6 word of God to carry a pair of trousers to the tailor when the rent was beyond the skill of domestic in genuity. The present civilization may be real or chromo; this at least is certain the age of carrying bundles Is gone so far as city men are concerned, although no Burke has celebrated in sonorous prose its passing. The man protests against the burden of a can of peas, a jar of marmalade, his wife's bank book. The youth insists that the two or three col lars bought to bridge him over the weekly coming of the laundryman shall be sent home. The schoolboy, however his mother may coax or threaten, sulks at the thought of a bundle, for he fears the ridicule of snobbishly trained com panions. The bundle Is avoided,- h"t respected, as It was by the great Napoleon. Dem ocratic simplicity is found only In tra dition and in De Tocqueville's book. It Is not surprising that the bundle should be spurned: that a fashionable mother may uot be able to support the weight Andrew Johnson's Writ In a:. The letters of President Taylor are rare, but perhaps those of Andrew Johnson are the rarest, as he did but little of his own writing. His son conducted most of his correspondence and signed his father's name to the -letters. It is related that one reason why President Johnson wrote so little was owing to an accident which hap pened to him when he was working at his trade as tailor. One day a tailor's heavy iron goose fell on his arm, so Injuring that member that he found it extremely diSicult to indulge In pen manship thereafter. Andrew Johnson was the poorest writer among the presidents as well as the rarest. His handwriting was very much of a -scrawl and can scarcely be deciphered by the average reader. Natural Cross of Pearls. Some curious things have been found In the briny deep, but one of the odd est Is an ecclesiastical emblem made of pearls which was washed ashore on the" coast of West Australia. There are nine good sized gems in this natural curiosity. These have been joined to gether to form a perfect Latin cross. Seven pearls of equal size comprise the upright and two more form the trans verse piece. The joining has been the work of nature. The odd prize, dis covered In a pearl oyster, Is said to be worth at least $50,000. It Is called the Great Southern Cross pearl. Both. Bass-r-And of which variety Is your wife, the clinging vine or the self as sertive? Cass A little of both. When she wants a new dress or a new hat she generally begins in the clinging vine role. If that doesn't bring the money, then she changes to the self as sertive, and well, she Invariably gets the dress or the hat. Opposltea. "Why does he wish to marry her 7 "He says people should marry their pposltes." "Why, they are both dark." "Yes, but he hasn't a cent, and she has a million dollars." Pittsburg Post If you get angry with aman or wo man, make? lin vonr mind whnr vnn or of her owu baby in the street. Boston f ,olM to sav and then don't sav ir Herald. . I .