Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, September 29, 1911, Image 1

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    CITY COURI
29th YAR.
OREGON- CITY, OREGON. FRIDAY, SEPT. 29, 1911.
No.
OREGON
GIVING US THE
TH1RDDEGREE.
Squeezing Until we Swear
we Like the Pressure.
MAKING LEMONADE OUT OF US
A Little Sermon and a Big Pre
diction on Today's Big Game.
It seems go strange that the trusts
and Red Kovers can't see that they
ore lighting the dynamite fus, wheo
they continually advance prices of
necessities.
If these big combinations would
only be satisfied with the hog's share,
and give the people a little show at
the feed, there wouldn't be this un
rest in the oountry.
y It isn't the faotthat the trusts con
trol necessities that the ooinmon herd
is kicking, bnt the faot that they are
using t1 e control to pinch to force
tribute. And if conditions don't
'change to relieve the people before
- ' long, yon will see some hot times in
this bunch of states
; CJl This isn't a case of oroaks or die-,
torted vision, bnt it is a prrfdiction
that" any eaun man will make" after
looking today's conditions in the face.
Go into vour meat market and bny
a pound of boiled ham aud you will
' pay 85 cents for it.
. Two cents an ounce, and yon look
' at this wad of meat yon conld hide in
one paw and wonder if you haven't
made a mistake and gotten into a
drag store. '
, ' Dried beef sets you baotc 40 cents
for 16 ounces and "sugar cared"
bacon 25 oents a pound.
He tries the grooery store for a
substitute for meat and duds that 13
hen's eggs oost him HO cents 3
cents apiece.
So he outs oat both eggs nnd meat
and hat nerve enough to ask the
prioes of potatoes aud bread. The
former is selling at $1 60, going up
each day, and flour at $1.40, racing
with potatoes to see which can go the
higher.
Lard to mix with the bread costs 16
oents per pound.
If he wants a bite of cheese he lays
. down 20 oents per pound.
. If he has sand enough to ask the
price of sugar it is eight cents per
pound. (Tliis was written Tuesday,
it may be at 10 oents now. )
Almost every necessity, almost
every article that the workingman
HAS to have, either to eat or wear,
has just about doubled in prioe in
three years.
All woolens have taken' a jump of
about 60 pr oeut.
Shoes were never so high and every
pair costs yon more.
' Clothing, cotton goods,, and ail
wearing material are going up.
And the common folk, those whose
roads through life lay between the
WE GIVE SERVICE
Tea and Toast
There's something quaint about the mere sug
gestion; there are traditions behind it that hark
back to a less strenuous age; to an age when the "
dear old ladies meet at the weekly sewing circle to
coin nice ripe gossip, and sip tea and eat Toast.
As a universal insitution the sewing circle is
now a memory, but "Tea and Toast" is more pop-"
ular than ever. '
This popularity is largely due to the invention
. of the Electric Radiant Toaster. This attractive ' '
little device makes Toast scientifically, for its radi
s . ant heat forces the absolutely necessary chemical
change in the bread. This means Perfect Toast in
any degree that suits your individual taste. And
it will surprise you to know that the net cost is
, the merest fraction of a centper slice. Also that
' . it makes Toast faster than the average family can
. eat it.
. Entirely aside from these vital features-utility,
speed and economy-there is a genuine charm in
. operating the Electric Radiant "Toaster. The
soothing glow of the coils, on a neat porcelain
base creates a snug and cheerful atmosphere.
The Electric Radiant Toaster is a unique orna
ment wherever it is used-on the finest polished
table, or on the finest damask table cloth.
Portland Railway, Ligfit &
Powet Company
MAIN OFFICE SEVENTH ALDER.
WE GIVE SERVICE WE GIVE SERVICE
factory and the home, and whose ex
istence is moulded into and becomes a
part of the weekly pay check, are re
belling at a oondition which clips at
one end and makes no restitution at
the other. ,
The man with a family can't see a
war to break even, when steadily in
creasing prices out the pay check in
two.
Years of prosperity., yeais of pretty
good, wages aud fairly cheap products
have educated the laboring classes up
to a standard of living that lias in
oluded comforts and some luxuries.
He is a white man, has the white
man's Bpirit and wants, and it is
pretty hard for him to knuckle.
He can't see any reason in the
world why the cold storage, meat,
shoe, sugar and other trusts should
rob him.
When you tell him the oountrr does
not produce enough beef for meat and
enough hides for shoes, he asks you
why you dou't take the tariff off and
let them in. --
When you tell him the pri.e of flour
is caused by wheat shortage and
Chicago gambling, he tells you to let
in Canadian wheat.
He wants the tariff lowered to re
lieve the oonsumer, not raised to pro
tect trusts.
He knows that every time ttie sugar
trust boosts its prioe one cent a pound
it means seventy million dollars a
year more profit to the sugar -trust,
and he knows they have no right to
make him pay this.
Aud I want to till you that if these
combinations continue to boost prices
that before long you will see strikes
and labor troubles that will make the
lata Debs rebellion look like a peace
conference in comparison. '
The whole trouble is here that
consumers know there is no necessity,
riglit or justioe in the raise of prices
oiwhe most of the hundreds of arti
cles. . .
, Demand regulates the prices when
pioducts are not cornered.
Did yon ever before know of a - con
dition of hard times when prices
didn't go DOWN ?.J
Aud now, in the face of short time,
little work aud men being laid off in
all the big railroad- shops prices ol
everything go UP.
Tin people know it is the squeeze
play and they are pretty indignant
that the combinations will take ad
vantage of their helplessness to tight.
And they are ominously defiant ofj
the government which flagrantly dis-!
regards their condition and their ap
peals for aid.
And men in this mood are hard to
handle. They are open for any pos
sible change that gives promise of re
lief, aud their, uncertainty, and their
olamor keeps a country and its busi
ness in a state of uncertainty that is
dangerous.
And the big thieves, the trusts who
are so hoggish they don't know when
the Bwill is exhausted, these fools
ooutinue to put the screws on. . '
., Mrs. Rev. Stoever aud children will
arrive in Oregou City this evening,
and Rev. Stoever will be here a week
later.
Get your butter wrappers -at tne
Courier office and put your goods out
in shape. ,
WE
A
RAILROAD
IDE
6
No Eastern Capital Nec
essary This Time.
MADE OF SAND AND WORK,
Stock Jumps to Par and Bonds
are Selling Fast.
A few months ago, whon Oregon
City people started out to build a
standard railroad to Molalla, the
mourners shook their heads and said
it couldn't be done.
It IIaS been dou, and not one of
those mourners can buy a share of
stock unlvss he lays down one hundred
dollars for it.
Anything o. n be done that business
warrants, when the right men get
alter it and who will stay with it un
til it IS done. v
- On Monday ereuing, all stock of
the Clackamas Southern Kail way
Company was raised from f50 to 'fl00
per share. This aotion was tuken by
the board ot directors for the reason
that they had received subsoriptions
to the capital stock in a sum approxi
mately 80,OOO. The compauy now
has at its oouiniand a sufficient
amount of money to build the entire
grade from Oregou Oity to Moalla,
together with all of the bridges, aud
as a result the stock is far more valu
able than it was when the work first?
started in the mouth of March of this
year.
There are about 140 men working
on the grade. and getting out timbers
and ties preparatory to the building
of the necessary trestles aud laying
the tracks The direotors will now
center their energies toward the sell
ing of their hrst mortgage six per
cent bonds for the purchase of ties,
steel aud equipment, and they do not
expect that to be a very difficult task
for the reason that some of the most
conservative men in the county have
expressed their desire to get some of
the DondB, for the reason that they
know their money will be absolutely
safe aud that the interest will be
paid promptly -semi-annually.
The directors of the Olackaums
Southern Railway Company were
greatly handicapped in the beginning
of their work for the reason' that most
people were educated up to the idea
that it required eastern money to
build a railroad, and but very few
ever stopped to think that the men
engaged in the largest railway enter
prises oouid not build a mile of rail
way themselves but have to depend
solely upon employees skilled in that
particular line of work, and on bor
rowed capital, and the heads of all
railroad corporations simply look to
the flunnoial end of the enterprise and
depend solely upon skilled employees
for the actual work. The officers of
the Clackamas Southern Railway
Company are pursuing that identical
GIVE SERVICE
course aud it will be conceded by all
that the officers of the company are
shrewd business men and look princi
pally toward the financial end of the
work and depend upon their chief . en
gineer for the actual ' construction
woik.
The Clackamas Southern made a
wise seleotion . in procuring the ser
vices of J. L. Stacer as its chief en
gineer on account of his long experi
ence in railroad work for the Hill sys
tem, and it is conoeaea that the Hill
people always execute their work in a
most scientific and substantial man
ner.
The bonds issued by the Clackamas
Southern Railway Company have
better security back of them than any
railroad bonds ever issued in the
state, for the reason that tiie issue is
confined to such a low sum per mile.
and the country traversed by the line
is thickly populated and has a won
derful tonnage awaiting the. comple
tiou of the road, together with rich
productive agricultural districts trib
utary which guarantee perpetual feed
era for the line.
The day of uneasiness and worry for
the success of the undertaking is over.
The work is all done but finishing.
and the finishing is dead easy when
there is plenty of money in Bight.
IS THIS WORTH WHILE
Isn't it Greater than Susan B,
Anthony or Carrie Nation?
An out-of-tte-state subscriber sends
a postal card to the Courier with this.
"Enjoyed much of 'What's Your
Bone Box For,' but would like an ar
ticle on how a woman can get out of
the box stall to the pasture, while
cooking three meals a day and taking
care of the children."
All men can't be Roosevelts or Mor
gans, nor all women Susan B. An
thonys or Harriet Beecher StoweB.
But all men CAN use their brains
to raise themselves and their boys
above hod-carriers, and aU mothers
can use .their brains to make them
sulves and their girls more than petty,
narrot-like, small-talk, society noth
inns. I watched four little girls playing
"society" one day aping thir
mothers' ways and it made one feel
sorry for the little misses and ashamed
of their mothers.
Gathering up her dress as she had
seen her mother do, one little girl
shook hands with h"r hostess and
aid "Have had suoh a SPLENDID
time, Mrs. , and your refresh
ments were SO nice. "
This mite of a girl was posing as
she had seen her mother pose, and
using the conventional smart talk .of
her mother's set.
And what , a start for this litlfe
lady, what a "pitifully narrow road for
her to start life in. .
There was a chance for the mother.'
Not a ohanoe to become a Joan of
Arc, perhaps1; but a chance to make
that little girl realize that there was
something more in life than being a
parrot, a chance to start her on higher
ambitions, aud the satisfaction in af
ter life of having made and moulded a
tfue woman, a woman who could
think, who could talk, and whom all
would respect. '.
And the mother who does this is
greater than any Belva Look wood or
Carrie Nation.
The mother wiio does this doesn't
have the later remorse over the girl
who has gone wrong.
Today the mother eduoates the girl
to be "cute," to store op society shop
talk, to rraotioe faoial expressions and
be a sillv, light-hearted, cackling non
entity. - ,
And here's where the mother can
get out of the box stall. She can de
velop brains, Bhe can make that hand
some girl's head expand, bring her up
to higher standard than compliments
and society talk and do more for
womanhood than Queen Elizabeth
ever did,
PLACES WE DONT KNOW.
Series of Letters of the Odd
Spots of our Country.!
For several weeks there has been In
the display windows of the Courier
office relics from the Puye oliff
dwellers' ruiim of New Mexico, and
the hundreds of people who have
stopped to look at them proves the
interest we have In a life and civiliza
tion that has disappeared off the face
of the earth.
Next week the Courier will start a
series of letters of the out-of-the-way
spots of our country, of the places aud
people way back from the markets of
men, of the cliff dwellers, the self
scourgers, the stone river of Zuni, the
Texas rangers, the pueblos ot Zumi,
Aoouio and Laguwa, cowboy life,
stories of OH Mex'co, etc
These articles were written bv the
Courier editor a year ago for a syndi
cate of eastern newspapers. They are
not highly scientific, but written as
the writer saw them, as they are, and
we believe they will be interesting to
the people of this country who know
so much of foreign countries, and so
little of home.
Big Sale of Stock.
On Tuesday, Oct., 3, at the farm of
O. E. Spence, 1 miles south of Ore
gon City and 6 miles east of Oanby,
on Molalla road, beginning at 10 a.
m., the following described live stock
will be soli:
Three registered bulls A. J. O. 0,
Two " heifers '
Seven high grade caws.
Seven " " heifers.
(Ten fresh this fall)
One 6-year-old sorrel driving horse
One 4-year-old sorrel driving mare
(single or double. )
One 1-year -old black driving mare.
ALFRED A. 8PANGLER,
Owner.
M. H. I10STETLER,
Auctioneer. .
If yon have a cow, horse, wagon or
bunch of hay, or In fact any old thins
you don't want, that you believe some
one else would like, it will pay you
to say so in a few words in the Cour
ier's want columns They bring r-alts.
MAKING
GOOD
15 JOT LUCK.
It is Taking a Chance and
Getting Away With It.
ONLY THE. FAILURES USE IT,
God Helps the Man who Helps
.Himself not the Piker.
It was his luck, they glibly said
When things began to come his way;
And stubbornly he pushed ahead
While they stood 'round from day
to day
And said that - with his luck they
knew
That they could be successful, too.
What's luck, anyhow?
Opportunity, one fellojw wljl tell
you a chance coming to you that
missed the other fellow.
If it had hit the other fellow,he
would have gotten away with it and
made good, but it was his luck to miss
it, and your luck to catch Jjt.
I want to tip you off that this luck
business Is pretty much a hoodoo
bunk, and that the Individual frames
up the most of what comes to him.
You can wait for good luck to camp
on your trail until you are a petri
fied stiff, or you can throw out your
feet, hunt up opportunity and make
it.
The man who gets along up around
45 years and has nothing to show for
it but the fact that he's living, won't
find much "hard luck" sympathy
around the Courier office, unless he
has had a lot of sickness or pretty
straight misfortune story to balance
his failure.
To be sure all men cannot be suc
cesses, in nfe way this age defines
success. Every fellow 'can't get his
picture In the Sunday Oregonlan, and
hadev people look at him as some
onion. But this story Is only hitting
the man :who is bemoaning the fel-'
low who thinks the world Is not giv
ing him an even break, and who is
protesting the race.
Many a man is satisfied ,wlth him
self and this little old world who
never came anywhere near making
a success . of anything in the way ,
we measure success but to himself
and to his family he is all he ever
hotfed to be and is as happy and con
tented as a hog in an alfalfa patch.
But there is no . one along the line
who has any right to tell him to
change his compass or which page to
study. This man lives as best satis
fies his own particular self and he's
his own meter. He has little ambi
tion, is easily satisfied and Is prob
ably the most contented man on
earth.
But the man this article Is prod
ding is he .who has passed middle life,
has had good health, little misfortune
has never got away with anything,
and who goes around looking as if he
had a mortgage coming due. When
this fellow points out the men who
have "hit it lucky," and sets up the
long moan because he never caught
on well, he's in Dutch with me, and
I have no ear fpr his sad talk.
The fellow who plays In "good
luck" is invariably the wrestler who
clinches with opportunity and works
around for a toe hold or strangle
lock. Outsiders know little of the in
side work that gives him this hold
they call It a "lucky strike." They
see the result only and they ell
"luck." All they can see Is a string
of horseshoes,
But this man may have played long
and carefully for . the holds that
brought this luck. He may have been
tripped, side-rolled, pinned to the mat
and yet come up and stayed with it
time and again before he maae nis
luck.
I have an acquaintance who sold his
oil Interests in Oklahoma for two
million dollars last winter, and I have
heard enough horseshoe "luck" stor
ies told about him to bury bim as
deep as his oil gusher.
Why they had it that a hunch told
him to go down there and drill and
he simply had to he had to hit oil In
self defense. They say "luck" would
fall on this man and kill him li ne
didn't' dodge it.
But there was no luck to It. He
used his head and took a chance
that's all there is of it. He figured
that the operators who were only get
ting dry holes- down there weren't
Koine deen enough, or making test
enough. He went after it with a cir
cle test, punched down a lot of dry
holes, and finally hit it.
Outside people never Knew tne
long chances this man took or how
near he came to going prone neiore
he Droved his theory. They only
knew that he sold out for two million
dollars, out half of it In his own pock
et and the stockholders got the other
half. It was simply a case of "bull
head luck."
To be sure there Is the man who
has fortune fall on him and who nev
er has to make an extra wiggle to
satisfy every want. If you are de
termined to have luck Bhape ends,
give this man credit enough to bal
ance the ledger. His father made
success for him.
I always admire a man who has
sand enough to kick in and play the
game when Mr. Opportunity gives
hlm,the tjp that is if he has brains
to mix witn nis sana. iiuc oneu sauu
is played for Judgment, and sand los
es. And even then I will play the
loser to get a piece of the money in
the second go.
I want to see the successful man
who never made a string of mlsj
takes. It is through these that he
gets wise and finds 'Ihjck." The man
who takes some chances and doesn't
shy at something that looks hard Is
the fellow who comes up and the fel
low that the failure is telling "lucky"
stories about
Incorporation is Loose
There la trouble ahead In Willamette
ovr (be recent incorporation election,
busi
eleo
James Downey has brought snit
through Dimiok & Dimiok to have
the election set aside, on the grounds
mat cue incorporators of the town did
not have the votes canvassed by the
county court; that the court has never
deolared the town incorporated; that
the electors never filed the names of
any persons receiving the highest
numoer or votes, nor the court ever
having deolared any persons elected.
It these charges, or half of them.
are sustained, it would be well for the
people of Willamette to dig up Lord's
uregon law ana get a little bit famil
iar with it before they start another
incorporation campaign. .
AREN'T. WE DUMMIES?
Why do we Let More Than One
Telephone Co. Assess Us?
When you get down to common
sense, please explain why Oregon
City needs two telephone systems,
any more than it needs two postof-
fices or two systems of mail delivery.
Nearly every business place in this
city has both phones, not because
they want them both or need them
both, but because they have to have
them both.
The city doesn't need both these
systems any more than it needs two
mayors, and they are simply an extra
source of expense and an hourly
source of annoyance.
What the business men should do
is to get together and agree on one
'phone and cut out the other one.
They have the key to the situation.
What 'phone they would agree to use
the private residences would use.
Ther is no doubt about this, for they
would be compelled to, and it is sim
ply monkeydoodle nonsense to have
to use two 'phones or what one can
easily cover and take care of.
It's a matter of business, and one
we should play business methods
with. We don't owe any obligations
to any telephone company on earth.
We have the business and If it
looks good to the telephone concerns
let them bid on it, and the company
that offers the best for the business
should get If.
We are a lot of wooden men to let
two telephone companies string us,
while for just half the expense and
half the annoyance we could have the
same service.
What's the use of two systems? If
there IS use, three would be better,
and a half dozen' better yet.
All you business men have got to
do Is to simply agree to use one
phone only, and you solve the prob
lem and cut out a big useless expense.
Why don't you?
OSWEGOJROUBIES.
Village and Cement Company
Scrapping Over Streets.
A man Moore, president of the Port
land Cement Co. , of Oswego, has
Governor West beaten for keeping his
name before the people and in the
newspapers, and the latest broke out
Sunday.
The oement company is building a
million dollar plant at Oswego, and
there has been considerable trouble
over the matter ot property ana
street titles, one of which resulted in
fight between Moore and John and
Henry Beohner some weeks ago.
Sunday last the oeniuut oompany
commenced the erection of fences
across several of the town's streets,
when a protest was started a protest
that nearly ended in a riot, and in
which about 200 citizens took a part.
Moore had 100 men on the job, dig
ging pest holea and stringing fence
across the streets. The citizens at
hrst attempted to stop the work by
force, but cooler heads prevailed, and
a petition of protest was brought to
Judge Beatie here, asking the ocurt s
protection and that tlie fences be re
moved. ' It is stated that Mr. Moore holds
that the streets were never legally
dedicated as publio streets, aud that
he ie within his rights in fenoing,
while the petitioners olaim they have
been in publio use for fifty years and
are therefore publio thoroughfares.
Judge Beatie gave a hearing before
the oounty court Tuesday morning, in
which lie sustained the petitioners
and issued an order for the removal
of tin fences, aud ordered Koad Sup
ervisor Davidson to remove them
There was ourreut talk that the
oenient oompany would oppose the
oonrt order, and Sheriff Macs and
deputies Miles, Eddy and Long went
to Oswego to see that the order was
carried out without interference, but
no opposition was ottered, exoupting
protests by the company.
The outcome will no doubt be an
appeal to the courts and long-drawn-out
litigation over the disputed prop
erty. Splendid Nerve.
Three is hardly week someone does
Aran lila irrluDDnAaa tlitft t.llA
UU. U.OH, 111. - -" - -"
Courier office, ask us to give them
tne aevii, noi no menuuu n vuiu ,
and then when the paper is out he
borrows a Courier to Bee if we roasted
'em.
Bat it takos all kinds of nerve and
all kinds of people lo make no vari
ety.
with the ohanoes of the whole
ness being thrown out and the
tion declared void.
We want you to know us as
The Nyal Store
Because we are sole agent3 for the famous Nyal's
Family Remedies
We have found every Nyal Remedy absolutely re-
liable and efficient. That's why we can afford to
sell these remedies on the Money Back Plan
We wUl cheerfully refund the price of any NYAL Remedy
with which you are not entirely satisfied
JONES DRUG CO.
llNCORPORATJtD
We're in business for your Health
E OU
111 THE OPEN.
Open River Men Want to
Know who to Fight.
FARMER SAYS SMOKE 'EM OUT
That an Open River to State is
Greater than Personal Ends.
So far as this paper oan loam the
government officials are .working ou
cue matter or rigntn or way for the
locks oanal, and while the opposition
is aotive to atop the project, if possi
ble, yet the work is beiug done under
cover.
From direct government authority
we learn that aB soon as nrices for the
rights of way are seoured, the matter
will be referred to the government.
and if the prices asked are reasonable.
the government will deoide which of
the several surveys will be used, and
work will then speedily follow. In
the event of exiiorbitant valuations
being plaoed on the property, the
matter will have to oome to apprais
nient courts, delaying the work for
weeks, and possibly postponing it in
definitely. As the matter stands now there is
no other proposition to be considered
than the east side routes, ' and so far
as the action of oongress is oonoerned
and the authority of the secretary of
war, it is a matter of east tide locks
or no locks. There can be no other
routes considered or propositions en
tertained nutil the present authoriza
tion has been annulled and the matter
again taken up with the government.
And suoii a course would mean a
lose out on the whole proposition.
This the opposerB to the locks well
know.
From business man in Oregon Oity,
from commercial club members and
citizens generally there is outspoken
protest against the people and the
moans that are working to stop this
project. '
From a business man at Wilsonville
we quote a part of a letter reoeived
this week, which we believe repre
sents the sentiment of the farmers of
the Willauie te valley, and a letter
which should be considered from a
broader view than that the looks will
be a good proposition for the business
interests of Oregon Oity :
"As a farmer, a shipper and a tax
payer I, would Bay that no private in- ,
terests, no group of men, or any oity
has a right to think the Willamette
falls belongs to them and that its
waters are theirs to dispose of,
'JThe Willamette fa':i belong to Or
egon and every taxpayer in the state
has an equal interest in fieni and the
river.
" As one of the taxpayers who will
pay his part of the state's big appro
priation for a free passageway around
the falls, I indignantly protest
against a few men holding np this
work which would take 60 oents a ton
from freight rates to the Willamette
farmers, and I for one propose that
the farmers above the falls, and the
members of the open 'river oongres
join in a movement to uncover the
men and interests who are trying to
prevent the oanal, show up to the
people of Oregon why they are trying
to stop the woik, and hold them up to
the soorn of Oregon, as nieasruing a
personal dollar against a state's wel
fare." This suggestion is a movement that
would oount more than all the pro
tests the clubs or oouKresses of Oreuon
could make. '
It would not be a difficult matter to
find out who writcj and who has
published the articles tending to stop
the oanal work, and the citizens of
Oregon Oity, tho Commercial Olnb
and the farmers of the Willamette
valley should hunt out these (tickers,
know who they have to fight and
make them stand in the open.
And What have we Gained?
At a meeting of the oity oonnoil
Monday night it was deoided to drop
the matter of further litigation over
the removal of a shade tree in front
of the Walker home on the heights,
pay the coats and have the contractor
go ahead with the work.
This aotion should never have been
commenced. It was worse than fool
ish, has been expensive to the oitv,
has delayed the work and has brought
no end of oritioisrn against the village
officials for trying to out down a
shade tree that any man's common
sense tells him should not be cat
down.
The action was too small, too petty,
too much like spite work for a city's
council to get down to, aud it seems
strange that the oflioials oonld not
have taken this action before two
courts should have deoided against
them.
After weeks of oost, hard feelings,
aud oritioism we are baok to the start
And what has been gained?
Vox any pain, from top to toe, from
any cause, apply Dr. Thomas' Eleo -tio
Oil. Pain can't stay whore it is
nsed.
COM
IT