Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, October 04, 1912, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE LAND OF THE
PEMTENTIES
A BIT OF AMERICAN LIFE WE
KNOW LITTLE OF.
Grewsome Sights of Torture and
Self Scourging.
(By M. J. Brown.
Every man to his own liking
Very ofton I see a newspaper
heading "See America First, and
I just can't help but read it. But
it will tell you to follow the tour
i.sts' footsteps and see some of
our well-known, or widely adl-r
Used natural wonders.
Great, if you like lliein, but
there are other wonders I like
heller. But each to his own liking
I have been all around Yellow,
stone park, hut too busy to call
I have been along almost the edge
of the grand canyon, but too bent
oil hunting something old to even
leave my card. I have been within
five miles of the Mammoth Cave
of Kentucky with no desire to ex
plore it.
But I HAVE seen the great riv
er of slono in America; I have
seen tho famous historic rocks
where the Spaniards carved their
history when there was no way to
write it; I have seen the cliff
dwellers' ruins, where men lived
died and their history was ohlil
crated before a while man's foot
ever touched America ;I have seen
ancient and wonderful Zenii, in
habited today by the same race
that lived Ihere dim ages before
Coronado ever crossed the Hio
Grande; I have seen the ancient
cave dwellers- homes, the many
inhabited and abandoned pueblos
tho forest of agate; the strange
and unknown Penilenlies, and
many other odd sights.
This is my idea of seeing Am
erica first.
Is there any of you who reads
these lines that can locate the
places above? Can you tell just
where any one is except pos
sibly tho petrified forest?
Try it without tho aid of an
alias.
There is a locality in New Mex
ieo. northeast of Santa Fe, far
hack from the railroads, and hid
den in the great mountains, that
few whites have ever seen, and it
will be many years yet before
many do see it, for it is a toil
soino journey and one must hit
tho rough places. But it was ever
my yearning to get into these un
known corners and I have pass
ed by tho many of tho big wonders
and their $5. a day hotels to hunt
some old Indian idol, nnd I have
almost waded in dangers to find
them.
Twice I have visited the Indian
hamlets of the l'enitenties once
in February, when wo were lost,
snow bound and poisoned, nnd the
second time in sunny November,
when the trip was one of con
tinued wonder and pleasure.
I found a man near F.spanola,
who wanted to take a team thru
to a mining camp south of Taos,
but ho would not go through
alone. He and I were not long in
signing articles of agreement
ho to drive, I to pay the freight.
The journey whs one conlin
nous un the mountain and down
again, mountains way up in the
air 8,000 feel, and the weirdest
and strangest of great hills;
mountains that, were cinders that
appeared to have been pushed up
out of a great furnace; mount
ains of almost solid rock; giant
hills of strange colors and fan
laslio shapes.
And in I he valleys between
these, hills, hidden away from Ihe
markets of men, are hamlets of
a strange people, people who live
in a world of weird fanaticism
and witchcraft,, sclf-seorgers
crusifiers, flagellants.
But or liese later. 1 want, to
tell you of a strange find first
The second day out we had gol
len well into the. mountain fasl
ness, and Unit jolting was gel
ling monotonous and tiresome.
My side partner pointed out a
peak ahead, not more than a half
mile distant, where our road
would pass, hut he said we must
go fully three miles in a zig-zag
to reach it. I quit the outfit and
climbed for Ihe peak, telling him
I would go ahead ami order din
ner. Half way up, on a little plat
eau, I chased a kangaroo squir
rel (two long and Iwo short legs)
and shot, at him. I thought I had
hi! him and followed him into a
dense growth of brush, when I
came info an opening, a cleared
space of perhaps an eiglh of an
acre, half of which was solid,
smooth rock, polished by Ihe
sands of time being blown over
it.
And Ihere on Ihe rock's face 1
saw something, what I don't, know
and what none of those connerl
ed with the historical museum in
Santa Fe knew of or could tell
inn about.
Carved in the solid rock was
.what resembled a great checker
hoard, with squares about ten
inches across, Ihe alternating
ones cut in fully two inches, Ihe
others level with the rock's face.
Around these squares was a bor
der, and outside the border on nn,
side, something like a wheel, with
spokes close together, and on Ihe
oilier side, paralell straight lines
on an angle. The whole cutting
covered about ten feel square.
't hat it was done ages ago, every
thing indicated. The corners ami
edges were worn smooth by the
fine sand which had blown over
them. Wind and erosion had
alone done the work.
What was it?
I don't know, but I would give
a year's subscription to the Cour
ier to find out.
This carving was remote.
There were no inhabitants in tU is
locality. There were no valleys,
no grass, no water. A llocky Ml.
goat could not live there. But one
day people did live there. Ani
mals did not carve it, and it must
have been done since the age of
sleel or that rock was soft tufa
one day..
I drew a crude diagram of it
and hustled on, and then tho
driver met me on tho peak; he
came out to see whether I was
lost or a lion had seen mo first.
Ho would not even go back to
look at it.
And I stood there and looked
off to the west to where tho cliff
dweller's ruins are crumbling, up
Ihere at the beginning of the
Santa Clara valley, and I wonder
ed if these prehistoric people,
who so mysteriously disappeared
from the face of the earth, had
not some connection with this
strange checker marked rock hid
den on this mountain top.
And long after I am dead and
long forgotten, others will find
these stone carvings and wonder
again.
After lunch we hit the trail
again and it was little more than
a trail. Tho driver added to anti
cipation by saying il was neces
sary to pound the ponies on the
back and get into one of the Mex
ican hamlets, for he said it was
not safe to sleep out in that loc
ality. He said there were many es
caped criminals from the prison
at Santa Fe, and other baa men
of the southwest who had never
been caught, who lived and hid in
that locality.
They were certainly safe hut
he said white men were not. They
think only sheriffs and deputies
have any business in there, and
they know what their business is.
Many a deputy has gone in there
lo earn a reward, and never come
out to claim it. The convicts trap
and pan gold along the streams,
and they have some trusty Mex
ican who acts a s the lence.
Just as it was getting dark we
found a Mexican dobie and stup
ed for the night. My partner
could speak a half breed Spanish,
and when ho ran short of words
ho would fill in wilh gestures.
l'hey understood what we wanted,
a place to sleep. We had food and
colfee. Profiling by our experien
ce, we uiu our own Kiicnen worn
and cooking. There was a father,
mother, two grown girls and a
11 tie kid. We gave him some sup.
per and a cup of colfee. He went
to the whito bread and bacon like
a tramp lo a back door hand out,
but he would not drink the cof-
s. He would taste it and look
at his sister. II was probably his
first taste of real coffee, and his
tongue was educated to roasted
mosquito beans and soap weed
concoction.
One of the girls was striking
ly hansome. Dark, an olive shade,
wilh fine features and red cheeks
and she had a smile that would
inako one almost want to for-
ako civilization and become a
sheep hording fanatic. But I Hint
of ihe wifo and baby back in York
state and faced tho other way.
Hulled in our blankets we slept
iiilside. The Mexicans offered us
... I, i... i
one room, inere were uiruej mo,
we figured it the family would
have to cord up or sleep outside
if we accepted, so wo declined.
Tho next morning wo took all
Iho eggs they had, g5ve them a
dollar for hotel accomodations,
and drove on.
I started to write you some
thing about Iheso strange people
and this wonderful fanaticism,
but, the pencil has chased oil' mi
other trails.
Next week 1 will get back lo
them.
Want to Vote on It.
petition has been filed with
lounly Clerk Mulvey to submit
(lie question of local option to
the voters of Eslacada at the gen.
ral election next month.
Kstacada is a dry town under a
ical option vide, but a later
lection carried it for saloons,
but Ihe election was declared il
legal by the courts. In tho inean-
ime a saloon had opened, and tne
proprietors wero convicted and
await sentence.
GUARANTEED TO
STOP ITCHING!
Just Apply ZKMO on That Mad
dening Itching That'll Prove II.
That itching thai drives you
nearly wild, Ihat eczema or skin
ilolch, will absolutely vanish as
you never lietore iieneved it pos-
lble, bv the use oi the new rem
dy, ZKMO.
ZKMO will be a supriso to you
just as it has been a supriso lo
thousands who have already tried
Your first use of ZKMO will
bring instant relief, pain and
lung, prickly heat, pimples,
blackheads, dandruff, skin irri-
alion or inflamation will stop.
Don't miss if for -rcents.
When you have proven with a 25
cut botllo how remarkable KMO
is lo your satisfaction, then you
an buy a $1. bed lie, which rem
ains six limes as nuicn as uie
5 cent bottle.
ZKMO is sold al drug stores in
direct on receipt of price, by K.
Hose Medicine Co,, St. Louis,
Mo. The $1 hoi lie contains six
imcs as much as the 25cent
bottle.
Sold and guaranteed in Oregon
"My by llnulley Bros. Drug Store.
SIMPLE MIXTURE HELPS
OREGON CITY PEOPLE.
That simple remedies are best
is again been proven. Huntley
Ilros. Co., report thai many of
Ihe Oregon City people tire re-
riving Ol'ICK benefit from sial
ic buck! horn bark, glycerine,
to., as mixed in Adler-i-ka, the
ierman appendicitis remedy, a
SINGLE DOSK helps sour stom
ach, gas on the stomach and con-
tipation INSTANTLY because
this simple mixture anliseptieiz-
s the digestive organs and draws
off Ihe impurities.
Sold at Huntley Bros. Co., Oregon
City, Ore.
MOVES ON THE
HOW THEY LOOK TO THE MAN
ON THE OUTSIDE.
Editorial Comment on the Matters
Before the People.
Have you read the editorials
in regard to the vvoolen mills
company being indicted for
"planting" the dynamite in order
to discredit the strikers. Did you
see where Ihe great dailies called
the company officials "a lot of
murderous fiends," etc. . Didn't
see it? Now that is strange Did
you look for Ihat kind of stuff and
the demand that those criminals
be made lo answer for their
crimes? Well, I have read a few
of both Democrat and Republican
papers, 'but nary an editorial wilh
the exception of the paper before
you, namely the Courier. That is
the only one outside of the Soc
ialist press that I have noted lo
comment on this' matter. And
another thing I have not heard
either of the old party papers de
nouncing the conditions at Law.
rence, Mass. Even that paragon
of Noise, Theodore, is silent on
that subject. Crime consists
only upon the sole condition of
who commits the act.
Tho soft, velvety paw 'of the
politician is abroad in the land. I
went up against il recently and it
gave mo a chill. Fearing pneu
monia I resorted to quinine. Take
no chances; heller go prepared.
Farmers
Look Up Your FALL
Requirements in Farm
Tools
N O W
If you need a new Plow
or Harrow, Feed Cut
ter, Waj?on, Buggy
ANYTHING in Imple
ments or Vehicles, you
will find it in the
mitcbell
Line
The Best for
The
West
See Us !
CANBY
HDWE.
& IMPLE
MENT CO.
Canby, Ore.
BIG FREE IMPLEMENT
Only reeenlly mini her forcible
example of the uncertainly of our
economic system was had in Ihe
suicide of Captain Merry in Port,
land. For many years he was
rated a success, but ape and the
changes of coinlil ions brought
Ihe fear of wnnl and suicide.
You may be nexl. "Oh," you say,
"Ihat is the last thing I would
think of. doing." Once litis man
thought likewise. Of course you
have never coininilted suicide and
you never will.
Did you observe thai congress
had given us a parcels post? So
we will catch up with other na
tions bye and bye, if the next con
gress could have a dozen Socialist
members, we would likely gel
some form of old age. pensions.
I wondered why Straus was
nominated for governor on the
Roosevelt ticket until 1 saw he
was controller of 11. II. Mary Co
Ihe big New York department
store. Then wondered no more.
No workinginan need apply, but
just give up your votes, pay your
taxes and look pleasant.
I have been asked by a man who
never read Frenzed Finance as to
what important information it
contains in regard lo McKinley's
assassination. I.awson says the
Ill's!, examination revealed that
Mckinley could not live, bul that
Standard Oil put a press censor
on all bulletins and misinformed
tho public into the belief of re-
oregon:city courier, fridav,
covery; that Standard Oil intend
ed to bring on a panic at the time
of his death, just to make a few
honest dollars. I say by all
means get a copy somehow and
read it. It's interesting, coining
from the inside of Big Business.
And then take another look at
your idol.
The tariff question may not be
settled this year, neither will all
reforms be adopted, but the ques
tion "Who's a Liar," ha9 been
definitely settled.
Taft may not want to take the
slump, but he might stand in the
market place and show his pre
convention scars.
I believe in the secret ballot as
the best means of feerless ex
pression, but somehow can't see
why a candidate for public office
nominated on a party ticket,
should hide his party colors. It
certainly canot be from cowardice
for after defying millions of
germs, kissing all the babies
what more is there to fear?
We prohibit tho shell game and
forbid three card inonle, but per
mit the speclular purifying the
moral atmosphere in the cities.
But perhaps it is just as well not
lo meddle in the show business.
A family of four were out hop
picking and took in a cool hun
dred dollars in three weeks, so
Ihey proudly announce. So I
took a pencil and figured that
this was equal to Taft's salary up
to 1 1 :23 a. m., while occupied get
ting his smile on straight. See
anything?
Do you little farmers think you
Implements
and Vehicles
of Quality
'DREW 9
CAHRK. esA.
at Right Prices
CATALOGUE SENT
are going to win out against the
farm syndicate? If so, you are
going up against a stone wall,
unless you do so collectively. Like
a bundle of slicks taken out sep.
nralejy, you will all be broken.
John F. Stark.
MOUTH COMFORT.
Best Insured by Using Rexall
Tooth Paste Guaranteed to
Please.
llexall Tooth Paste is meant lo
please you. Every care is exer
cised in selecting the purest in
gredients and blending them into
the dainty, antiseptic, delightful
finishedd product. That is why it
is the favorite among all our
tooth preparations, selling fast
er than ayn three of them. Our
people have learned that using
llexall Tooth Paste is a pleasing
experience, and that it is also
good for both their teeth and
gums. It destroys the germs of
decay, helps whiten and preserve
the teeth, makes the gums red
and rosy, and leaves the breath
fragrant and sweet. If it doesn't
do all this if it doesn't please
you your money hack. Price, 25
cents. Sold in this community
only at our store. Huntley Bros.
Co., Oregon City, Canby, Hubbard,
and Molalla.
For any pain,' Jrom lop to loe,
from any cause, apply lr, Thom
as' Eclectic Oil. Pain can't stay
where it is used.
J
X II tun.
NH
il
oct. 4, 1912
NEWS OF OREGON
LITTLE STORIES OF THE BIG
GEST OF STATES.
Interesting Little Bits of News of
the Coast Country.
A hop farmer in the Mission
Bottom Country, near Salem, has
grown $40,000 worth of hops on
$100 acres. Tho crop is already
soiu at mat figure.
A farmer in the Molalla dis
trict, has sold $800 worth of clov
er seed from eight acres and has
27 tons of clover hay, worth $270.
from the same land.
A man in the Table Rock dis
trict of Jackson county raised
6,000 sacks of potatoes on 30
acres. These potatoes are now
worth, at the Medford depot, $1.25
per sack, or $7,500 for the crop
from 30 acres.
Thomas Morgan, of Enterprise,
harvested $10,000 worth of grain
from one ranch in Union County
and he will grow enough on other
ranches near Enterprise to bring
his total crop up to 35,000 bush
els;, Mrs. J. W. Kochor of Portland
found a snake having two heads.
It is eight inches long and with
tho exception of the extra head, Is
like. any of the hundreds of others
that infest the neighborhood. The
heads grow out from the neck
side by side and each is as large
as the head of an ordinary snake
of the size, would be.
L. R. Alderman, State Superin-
That Never
Fall Down
Hoosier Drills
Positive Forced Feed
Bloom Manure
Spreaders
Double Steel Reach
J. I. CASE PLOWS
The Plow a Man Can Pull
Dick's Feed Cutters
A big line, and good
Drew Litter Carriers
A genuine labor saver
' HARROWS
Disc, spring, spike-tooth
Water Systems
The Mitchell Wagon
Monarch of the Road
See Us!
w. J.
WILSON
&
CO.
Oregon City
Ore.
YOU UPON REQUEST
tendent of Public Instruction, has
a project under way that ought
to prove helpful. He proposes to
make the school houses the soc
ial centres of the various com
munities of the state by giving
an extended lecture course dur
ing the winter months. These
talks will be by well informed
speakers, who will" discuss sub
jects of common interest.
The Albany Commercial Club
has adopted a resolution favor
ing the setting aside by the Gov
ernor of the second Saturday of
October as Fire Day, when ac
cumulated rubbish will be burn
ed and thereby danger of acci
dental fires greatly lessened.
. The Portland, Eugene and
Eastern, the Southern Pacific's
system of electric lines, has def
inite plans for bringing settlers
to the Willamette Yalley. When
the interurban roads are put into
operation, special efforts will be
made to bring thousands of east
ern people to settle on the land,
hoping in this way to divide up
the large farms and encourage
more intensive agriculture. The
company will pay much attention
to the establishment of canner
ies, fruit evaporators and other
plants to utilize farm products.
Josephine county isn't doing a
thing to bootleggers. Ninety days
in jail and a !00 fine was given
to Lee Yirk for selling one bottle
of booze, and St. Jines got 15 days
in jail and a $250 fine.
The planting of a 250 acre wal.
Fall Goods
nut farm will be begun in Yam
hill County. The culture, of wal
nuts has proven one of the most
profitable industries for the
farmers of Yamhill and a com
pany proposes to go into it on a
big scale.
The attendance at the Pendle
ton Round-Up was more than
50,000, and the gate receipts over
$37,000.
The supreme court in an op
inion handed down Tues. refused
to dismiss the suit brought by the
state against Wells, Fargo & Co.,
to collect a tax under the gross
income law for the three years
1900-7-8.
F
L
HICINBOTHAM CAN'T SEE IT
ANY OTHER WAY.
Still Contends the Alligators In
the Pool Will Get Them.
Editor Courier:
I cannot answer all the boys in
seperate letters but I will notice
some of the main points in eaoh
of their letters, in this one ar
ticle and also give some interest
ing points on single tax from an
Alberta paper, (The Calgary Her
ald, of September 12,) which has
been an advocate of single tax
right along, but after trying it
out to its satisfaction it reports
as follows: "The result has been
well-nigh disastrous to a number
of Alberta towns. Their finances
are well-nigh paralized. Single
tax as applied to their land, on
any reasonable basis of assess
ment whatever, does not come
near to supplying their actual
financial needs. Public works
have had to be stopped; public
service is demoralized; publio of
ficials cannot get their money,
and even school teachers have
been held up for their salaries,
because the municipalities have
been unable to, establish a new
basi" of revenue, "You see now
how misleading are the reports
sent out by our single tax breth
ren that live in Portland, who
have been reporting single tax
to be working perfectly satisfac
tory in Alberta and the different
towns through British Columbia,
AsT have printed before, the taxes
in Edmonton are 15 or 20 times
as high now as they were six or
seven years ago, when they first
started in with, single tax. Now
please don't give me any more
such dope as that for your fun
eral is set for Nov. 5, and I should
hate to have you called into the
presence of your Creator and
Judge after giving vent to such
stuff as that.
Bro. O. D. thinks it is possible
to harness the assessors up in
in such a way that we can make
them do as we want them to.
What kind of harness are you go
ing to put on them, Bro. Robbins,
so as to make them put the value
of raw land in the different sec
tions all over the county at the
figure you want them to put it
at?
How would you come out, if as
you say, owners of unimproved
land in your locality will not sell
it for $100 per acre and the
board of appraisers that would
have charge of placing a revalu
ation on the land, in case the
single tax bill should be adopted,
(which will have to be done,)
would fix the value of wild land
in your immediate neighborhood,
at just what you are holding it at,
$100 per acre?) Wouldn't you
have to go down in your jeans, a
little bit? Do you believe you can
fix the harness so as to control
that particular part of their
work? If you can't I am afraid
you will be crawling out of the
swimming hole, too, on account
of the alligators.
And there is Bro. Rogers, that
I didn't know but what he was
dead, I hadn't heard from him for
so long. He doesn't know what to
think of that man Hicinbotham.
He thinks I am certainly a stayer
on the single tax question. Now I
will tell you Bro. Rodgers, why I
am a stayer, because I can't see
the least inducement in the world
to let go. There is nothing in
sisrht. You and I have got the
kind of property that will have to
pay all the tax if this bill passes.
We are in the wrong class, and
I don't see any chance for us to
get out of this class; we have got
to have the land to make a living,
while tho other class can get
along without any land, if they
want to, therefore our class
would have all the taxes to pay
we would be the niggers and
slaves, and the other class
would be the aristocracy. Do you
want that? Why do you swallow
all that dope that is sent out by
Eggleston, and Cridge and the
rest of that Fels crowd that are
paid big money all the time to
agitate this single tax question?
Do you expect to get reliable
statements from them? Look at
the way they are misrepresenting
the conditions of things at Alber
ta and all through British Col
umbia. I don't know Bro. Lewis,
but I will say if he is going to be
in the class with the niggers and
slaves, he had better do a little
thinking before he votes. Best
wishes for the laboring men.
Ceo. Hicinbotham. .'.
We want to call Mr. Hicinboth.
am s attention to nis ramer m-
concistent position. He is loud
in his intimations that the papers
which FAYOR the graduated
single tax are not honest in their
expressions, are pain vy me
Fels fund to make them and tnai
he does not believe in their state
ments, but without question he
will take for gospel truth, and
concede as sentiment of all Brit
ish Columbia what one lone
newspaper up there is reported to
have said
mm will
CA TAX
HOW II IRKS
IN CANADA
VIEW THAT DOESN'T AGREE
WITH MR. H'S STORY.
Asks him to Take a Trip to B.
and Find the Alligators.
Editor Courier:
Friend Hicinbotham seems to
worry over the fact that where
improvements are not taxed land
values go up. They go up because
of inpreased population. If any
thing attracted 50,000 more
people to Hic's farm in the hills
his land values would go up.
Every additional thousand would
add to land values $.1,500,000.
This value would either go into
the public till or into some pri
vate tills, according to what the
law provided. In Alberta they take
more of it than we do in Oregon.
In Edmonton they take a twenty
mill tax on the value of the land
and run a modern, progressive,
enterprising city without robbing
anybody of parts of their house
or contents, or fining them for
carrying on any useful and hon
est business. So satisfactory is
this system that it has extendod
to every small rural township
(they have no counties,) and
every city is upon that basis, or
stepping into it within a few
months.
H. has the jim-jams over tho
single tax. Some people have 'oin
bad. They see alligators where
trout lay in the pools. There are
no alligators my friend. Calm
yourself. Here is a tax receipt
from tho rural district of Kent,
B. C. For 22 years they have been
made out that way. A man with
$5,000 assessed value of land
pays $50 in taxe ten mill tax.
He has improvements worth
$5,000 and pays nothing on them
in taxes. Along side of him is
a man with the same value of
land and but $250 in improve
ments. He pays a ten mill tax on
his land only the same amount.
That community has inoreasod
in population, greatly augmented
its land values, is a typical farm
ing and dairying township, and
has been doing this sort of thing
since 1889, when in order "to en
courage the people to improve
their farms" all taxes for local
purposes wero stricken off im
provements. The town clerk re
sides at Agassiz, B. C, and if
friend II. was to go up there and
tell them that it would lower
their taxes and restore prosper,
ity and establish more just con
ditions to tax improvements and
reduce taxes on idle land, they
would conolude. the poor fellow
was in need of a physician and
had been looking into a recept
icale where, if looked into too
often, alligators and snakes are
seen to emerge and spread them
selves over the landscape. The
rural sections find that to exempt
improvements from taxation
works exactly as it does in the
cities and larger towns it en
courages land use, and discour
ages land speculation. It reduces
taxes on land users and workers
and increases taxes on land spec
ulators and shirkers.
The municipal clerk of Peach
land, B. C, a fruit growing com
munity, writes that they have had
the exemption" of improvements
there for several years, and that
it gives to the land owners "en
couragement and incentive to go
ahead and both improve and
beautify their holdings without
being taxed for their labors in
that direction." He goes on to
suggest that a higher tax on
speculative holdings in propor
tion to value than on used lands
would be better than the pres
ent Oregon system. This sort of
tax is already in operation in
some British Columbia towns. A
special tax is levied on "wild
lands" all over the state, and
compels some improvements to
be made in order to evade it. It
would pay G. H. to take a trip up
there and show some of the B. C.
people the alligators they are
harboring in their pools. He
might come back sane.
Alfred D. Cridge.
Saved By His Wife.
She's a wise women who knows
just what to do when her hus
band's life is in danger, but Mrs.
R. J. Flint, Braintree, Yt., is on of
that kind. "She insisted on me
using Dr. King's New Discovery,"
writes Mr. F. "for a dreadful
cough, when I was so weak all my
friends thought I had only a short
time to live, and it completely
cured me." A quick cure for
coughs anr colds, it's the most
safe and reliable medicine for
many throat and lung troubles
grip, bronchitus, croup, whoop
ing cough, quinsy, tonsilitis,
hemorrhages. A trial will con
vince you. 50 cents and a $1.
Guaranteed by Huntley Bros. Co.,
Oregon City, Ore.
Carl C. Kratzenstein, Mgr. J. G.
Tanner Drug Store, Santa Cruz,
Calif., writes:. "We have sold
Foley and Company's medicines
have yet to hear our first com
plaint, or of a dissatisfied custo
mer. Their remedies are pure,
made as represented, and contain
no injurious substances. On the
contrary, our experience shows
us that the Company's aim has
always been to make health giv
ing and health maintaining rem
edies.
For sale by Huntley Bros. Co.,
Oregon City, Ore.
Doan'sRegulets cure constip
ation without griping, nausea,
nor any weakening effect. Ask
your druggist for them. 25 cents
per box.