Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, October 15, 1914, Image 3

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1914.
THIS
no
BE
ME
OF
LEAVE ARMY OUT AND WRITE
OF CLIMATE AND THINGS
SOLDIER RESENTS CRITICISMS
Vigorously Objects to the Side Lights
of Army Life as Portrayed
Years ago when the great oil
wells were struck at Beaumont, Tex.,
I went to Spindle Top and wrote up
actual conditions, warning the peo-
pie not to invest in a pool of oil that
was bound to run dry, and incidental
ly showed up the big interests that
were handling the "blue sky" deal
and HOW they worked the bunco.
Th'e daily newspapers took it up
and said if Brown ever returned to
Beaumont he would get tar and feath
ers.
A few months' experience proved
the articles and predictions were
dead true for the big gushers
ceased to gush, and thousands of men
were beautifully swindled.
I wrote of conditions of the army
and navy from Honolulu. I knew I
would hear from it, and I have, from
far off China, from the Philippines
and from the Hawaiian Islands.
They are a mighty patriotic, bunch.
on the Sandwich Islands. They say
every resident of the Pacific coast be
longs to the Order of Boost, but the
Hawaiians have the 32 degree they
are Shriners.
Sitting on the balcony of a hotel
one night I remarked to a visitor
there were two big objections to the
islands, the foreigners and the sun.
A fellow sitting so far away he
would have needed an ear trumpet
at once broke in:
"Where do you live, young man?"
"Oregon," I replied.
"Oregon oh, yes; that is where
the dogs bark at the sun when it
shines."
And I let it go at that.
Following is a letter received from
Honolulu. It is reprinted exactly as
written, and following it are a few
comments:
Schofield Barracks, H. T.
Sept. 22, 1914.
A few days ago an extract from
the Courier came into my hands
which was such a gross injustice to
the City of Honolulu in general but
the enlisted men of the Army and
Navy, who are stationed on the Island
of Oahu in particular, that I would
like to try to put things before your
readers in a somewhat different
light.
I have been absent from Oregon
City since 1911 but before that time
I was in Oregon City for about five
years and if the present management
of the Courier is the same it ws
at that time, I can hardly understand
how it is that such a slanderous arti
cle appears in your paper, on a sub
ject which you certainly have been
greatly misinformed upon.
As for the beginning of the piece,
which deals with the actions of the
Oregon and Washington naval milit
ia, I will pass over, as I am very
poorly informed on that particular
part of the article and I intend to say
nothing in this letter which I cannot
personally uphold.
For my beginning, your article
states as follows:
"In the evening these sailors go
to the park, (they call it a park) and
there, mixed up with soldiers, they
pack over from nearby saloons great
quantities of beer in quart bottles, lie
on the grass and drink. They have
wrestling matches, fights and all
sorts of sailor and soldier sports and
no cop ever molests."
As for the park in question, I wjll
not attempt to deny that it has a
very unsavory reputation. Oahu
park is the park in question but
will ask you if nearly every city of
any size in the United States has not
some park in its domain of which it
is not proud?
Was Oregon City very proud of
Canemah park about three years ago,
and perhaps at present?
As for the soldiers and sailors, if
there is one solider there, they are
ten Chinese, Japs and Portugese.
As for fights, etc., among the men
of the service, it may be that it hap
pens once in a while but it is by no
means the rule as your article gives
us to understand.
Again you say:
'KThe soldiers are not as bad as
the sailors as the restraint is more.
It means guard house and loss of pay
to them if they get too bad; yet they
are a bad lot.
"They tell me there are about
8,000 on the Island of Oahu and about
90 per cent of them are soldiers be
cause they had been failures at some
thing else.
"I talked with one of the men
and he said that nearly every private
was there for some bad cause, getting
into trouble, drink, failure; that
they were the down-and-outs, young
fellows who enlisted as a last resort."
My personal opinion of a man who
would write such a statement for
publication is that he has about as
much respect for his country and for
-the army which Btands ready to de
fend it as an ordinary lap-dog and
that if the time should ever come
when the United States needs men to
defend it, that the most likely place
to look for men of his stamp would
be in a hollow tree somewhere out in
the thickest timber to be found, or
else down in the cellar covered op
in the potato bin.
I have been in the army for three
years and to my knowledge about 90
per cent of the men in the army to
day are clean, intelligent, and more
or less well educated young men,
many of them fully capable of hold
ing positions of skilled laborers, car
penters, firemen, tinners, etc.
I have known several men with
college educations, and men with
less than 6th or 7th grade schooling
are very rare. .
I do not try to say that there are
no "failures" and "down-and-outs" in
the army but I know that instead of
being in the large majority they are
far in the minority.
I am not in the least afraid to as
sert that if you should go into any
city in the United States and pick
8,000 men from all parts of the
city pick them indiscriminately
and compare them with 8,000 soldiers
from this island or any other post
and I am certain that you would be
forced to admit that the soldiers were
the best men mentally or physically,
or both.
Once again, your article quotes a
shooting scrap of which I happen to
have heard the particulars.
In the first place this shooting
took place right in the heart of the
red light district, and if this author
was looking for material for an ar
ticle on Honolulu as a city, what was
he doing, in that part of town ?
He states that he was an eye wit
ness, and I ask him here if he were
writing an article on San Francisco
would he go to the "Barbary Coast"
for his material, or would he go to
the Bowery and give his experiences
there as New York city ?
There are plenty of respectable
places of amusement in Honolulu
without going to that part of town at
all.
As for the soldiers he saw in that
district, they were some of the un
desirables who wander into the Army
and just because he saw twenty or
thirty uniformed men Who were mis
behaving, why should he say that 90
per cent of the entire 8,000 on the
Island were "a bad lot?"
He states that he talked with one
man and evidentally took his word
for the character of all the men on
the island.
I have often noticed, both in Hono
lulu and in San Francisco where I
was a soldier for some months, that
a bunch of six or eight men may
come down the , street in civilian
clothes and be staggering drunk and
making a show of themselves in gen
eral, and if any notice is taken of
them at all it will merely be a smile
or shrug with possibly the remark
that "That bunch is well lit up."
But let one soldier come down the
street showing the effects of liquor
at all and half of the people who see
him either say or think, "that's what
our army is composed of."
Perhaps the very man who says
this may have seen a dozen soldiers
who were perfectly sober and well
mannered, but a few minutes before
but do those soldiers get any credit?
Far from it. If any notice at all
is taken of them, it is merely "There
goes another bunch of those awful
soliders. Going to get tanked up I
guess."
As for this , man's remarks upon
the climate, the impression he gives
is a great exageration, and as for
his "hail storms," I am sure Ihave
never seen one since I have been
here. The storms he saw in the
mountains were nothing ' but light
rams.
Now there are a number of other
things in that article which I should
ike to speak of but I will take no
more of your time now. Ho'wever,
Mr. Editor, since you used consider
able of your valuable space to give
the City of Honolulu and the soldiers
in its vicinity a very black eye don't
you think you could use a little space
for this letter and give the soldiers
of the Hawaiian Department a chance
to have a word said in their defense
in response to a slanderous attack
made behind their back?
I am not, however, criticising the
Courier" nearly as much as I am'
the author of the letter and now be
fore I close I will speak a word of
myself in case you print this as I sin
cerely hope you will.
I only know of a few Oregon City
men of any prominence at all who
may remember me, but of those few, I
will name the following: Dr. Mies
sner (I am not sure of the spelling of
his name, but if I remember right
his offices were near the end of the
bridge), Mr. Fred Metzner of the
Oregon City Woolen Mills, Mr. Ar
thur Rehfield, of the Willamette P.
& P. Co., or Mr. Joseph Beaulieu of
the Hawley P. &P. Co.
It also happens that my enlistment
in the army expires soon and I expect
to come back to Portland about the
last of November.
I shall then be glad to give this
my attention in person if there is any
need. ..
Hoping to hear from you on this
matter and to hear that you have giv
en it your attention I am
Yours very truly,
Private Bert H. Blosser,
Troop "E," 4th Cavalry, Schofield
Barracks, Hawaiian Territory.
hands full of paper money which he
was waving. The bartender had re
fused him another drink.
These things I saw. They occur
red. Mr. Blosser asks what I was doing
in the red light district when a sol
dier was shot?
Did he think I would go to a
Christian Endeavor meeting for a
slum story?
The shooting occurred in a public
street. . That was where I was. And
by the way, what were the soldiers
(a mob of them who tried to kill the
policeman) doing there?
I wrote of Honolulu and conditions
as I found them. There are many
beautiful things to be seen there,
which I have written of, but on the
other hand there are conditions there
which would not be tolerated any
where else in the United States and
I wrote of them as they are and as
I saw them.
If Mr. Blosser (as he intimates)
will give this matter PERSONAL at
tention on his return to the States
in November, he won't have to hunt
to find the writer and if he thought
the threat would scare out a retrac
tion of things written well he has
one more great big think coming to
him.
i M. J. Brown.
GLEN ECHO
Why pass over the militia inci
dent? He was there in the city.
If the comments on the soldiers were
false, perhaps that was also.
As to whether other cities have
such parks as the one written of,, I
was not making comparisons. I
was writing of Honolulu, not Oregon"
City or Pittsburg.
As to the drunkeness and brawls in
the park being exceptions to the
rule, I did not have "the rule. I
wrote of what I saw there.
I did not confine my talk to ONE
soldier, but to dozens of them. I
met them in the small parks during
the days, at the beach, and I never
talked with one but who was count
ing the days to get out of the army.
They were dissatisfied, rebellious
and complaining, and Mr. Blosser has
but to look up the files of the "Ho
waiian" of July to find a strong ar
ticle along these lines. They were
complaining of their quarters, of the
arrogance of the officers and the os
tracism of the people of the city.
On the Main street of the city I
saw an officer stop two. privates in
the center of a crosswalk, command
them to "attention" and bawl them
out before the eyes of probably one
hundred people. '
What the cause was I did not
learn, .but the spectacle was most
humiliating, and when the West
Point snob had left the soldiers curs
ed him.
I saw an officer come out of a sa
loon, drunken and cursing, with his
More rain Oh well, let it come.
We said last summer that we would
never complain about rain again, and
now we have got to watch out or we
will forget. '
War and politics, politics and war
are about all we hear on our street
corners and homes. The politics
are alright, but when will that ter
rible war end?
News is scarce in the vicinity as
Mrs. Gossip has not been around
lately, but we are up in arms fight
ing booze. Mrs. Ed Andrews was
here registering last week, getting
ten names before breakfast. Wasn't
that pretty good?
Mrs. Moran entertained the W. C
T. U. union last Friday, fifteen la
dies being present, and five new
members came in. You see we are in
earnest and mean business and are
going to do our part in voting Ore
gon dry. Our dry posters are torn
down, but what of that, we have
more, and besides we can yell Ore
gon is going dry so loudly that those
wet fellows will turn pale, then we
will yell again. They say that we
won't yell so loudly after election.
Well, we are going to risk it anyway
and yell while we can. I for one
would like to give a yell for the
Courier and if I can't yell I can say
that we have a paper to be proud of.
It stands for right and principle, and
we wish all success to the Courier.
Oregon 1914
Dry! Dry! Dry!
Who'll make it so?
I! I! I!
EAGLE CREEK,
Mrs. J. P. Strahl was pleasantly
surprised last Tuesday afternoon
when about 14 ladies called to spend
the afternoon with her in honor of
her birthday. After a social two
hours or so together a luncheon of
coffee, sandwiches and pie was
served.
Walter Douglass, accompanied by
Mrs, Will Douglass, made a trip to
Portland last Friday.
Mrs. R. B. Gibson was the guest
of her sister, Mrs. S. J. Eddy of
Portland, last Friday.
Mrs. Viola Douglass was an Ore
gon City visitor last Saturday .
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Benson of Lo
gan, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Douglass Sunday.
Ed Douglass butchered some hogs
and took them to Portland the first
of the week.
H. H. Hoffmeister made a busi
ness trip to Portland the latter part
of last week.
TRADE
If you wish to trade your farm
near Woodburn. Mt Angel, Hubbard
or Aurora for a good 48 acres near
a good town, one mile from carline, 3
miles from high school, R. F. D.,
cream route, and phone in house, 4o
acres in cultivation, 4 acres in orchard
8 acres in timber. Pasture. 3 springs
in pasture. Good 7-room house, two
barns 30x50 and 38x50. IGranaiy,
prune dryer, wagon shed, chicken
house, hog house, 6 cows, two good
horses, 5 hogs, 60 hens, two wagons,
mower, rake, binder, plows, harrovv,
disc and seeder.
Want to get in German settlement
would prefer near Catholic church.
For particulars see Dillman & How
land, 8th and Main St.
Hot Lake Manager Would Like No
tice of Arrival in Advance
Persons contemplating a visit to
Hot Lake Springs, Oregon, who re
quire the service of a wheel chair or
other special convenience, are re
quested by the management to give
notice of arrival in advance, so that
proper care and attention may be as
sured.
(Paid advertisement.)
Citrolax
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ed, sweet and wholesome. Ask for
Citrolax. Jo.nes Drug Co.
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PenetrabonvJgW-
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Chicopee Falls, Mass:
READY NOW
Where the People Rale
OR
The Initiative and Refefendom.fDirect Pftmaty
Law and the Recall in use in the State of Oregon
BY
GILBERT L. HEDGES, A. B.f LL. D.
OF THE OREGON BAR
One Volume 224 Pages Price $2.50 Delivered
This' volume is intended to make clear to the pro
fessional and layman alike the principles of pro
gressive legislation, which have been enacted into law
in the State of Oregon during the past decade. y
The text is first given, followed by the interpre
tation of the same by the Supreme Court of the State
of Oregon and the Supreme Court of the United
States:,,
Where possible the exact language of the Courts
is given that the reader may see and understand rul
ings of first impression and compare them with sub-
sequent decisions on the same subject.
Instances of the Recall are given showing when,
where and against whom invoked; the charges pre
ferred; the answers made to the charges; a brief
description of the recall elections and the results.
The author lias pointed out some of the defects
of the 'Oregon System of Laws" and has suggested
remedies.
This volume contains the Constitution of the
State of Oregon, complete with all amendments to
date.
The work is well indexed.
SEND US YOUR ORDER NOW.
Bender-Moss Co., Publishers
11 City Hall Ave.,
San Francisco, Cal.
Send me prepaid, "Where the People Rule," Buckram
Binding, for which I agree to pay $2.50 delivered.
Signed
Address
. :.:.191
The Want Column
WANTED A horse. Kev. a.. a. a ,,. ,,, ,on,
Smith, Oregon City, would lute a, T'lr
FOR SALE House and four lots.
Price $950. Will take Oregon City
warrants or bonds to $700 . Bal.
terms. Macdonald & Van Auken.
rmvl HiMvino" hnrsA for his keeD
for the winter. The horse must
be safe and sound and will receive
good care.
FOR SALE Cheap, two private tel
ephones and wire. Address Alon
Shewman, Milwaukie, Rt. 1.
FOR SALE Two houses and three
lots in . Canemah. Will be sold
cheap. Address J. W. Plummer,
Canemah.
FOR SALE 3 head fresh Jersey
cows. K. C. Reitsma, Maple Lane.
FOR SALE Pony, 10 years old, 800
pounds, grey, gentle, broken . to
ride or drive, price $25. G. F.
Knowles, Oregon City.
$1500 mortiraE'e for sale: security.
real estate valued at $7,000. U. S.
Mortgage Co., 17 Beaver Bldg., Ore
gon City.
FOR SALE ..OR TRADE Popcorn
crispet machine, nearly new and
will be sold cheap. James Cono
ver, 709 Eleventh street, Oregon
City.
LOST OR STRAYED A large deep
red 2 year-old heifer from Viola
belonging to Rev. C. C. Coop. Any
information leading to wherea
bouts will be suitably rewarded.
Notify H. H. Coop, Estacada Rt. 3,
or A. B. Coop, Oregon City.
S
FOR SALE 25 head of good grade
Lincoln sheep. Address W. F.
Harris, Rt. 3, Bx. 72, Oregon City.
C. E. SPENCE, Master
ORCeON CITV, R,3
MRS. MINNIE E. BOND, LECTURER
EUGENE
MARY S. HOWARD, SECRETARY
MULINO
Ertiu,aammm OREGON STATE GRANGE
MASTER, EX-OFFICIO CHAIRMAN
OFFICE OF MASTER
C L. SHAW, ALBANY
B. O. LEEDY, CORVALLIS, R. 3
H. HIRSCHBERO, TREASURER
INDEPENDENCE
Krijtalutiur (Bummtttw
MASTER, EX-OFFICIO CHAIRMAN
E. A. BOND. IRVINQ
OREGON CITY, OREGON
Oct. 12, 1914.
TROrORTIONAL REPRESENTATION AMENDMENT
Ballot Number 348 X Yes
To the Voters of Orcyon:
On behalf of our several organizations, the undersigned ask you to vote for this measure, because
we believe it will result in electing better representatives in the legislature, who will make better and few
er laws, and it will increase the People's power over the legislature.
There are sixty representatives in the legislature of Oregon. This amendment assures the elec
tion of any and every candidate who is voted for by as many as 1-GOlh of all the voters of the state who
vote. It is absolutely certain under this measure that no county or district can fail to elect its local can
didate if the people of that county or district, where his name is printed on the ballot, will give him as
many as 1-G0th of all the votes cast in the State. Itis just as certain, under this amendment, that any
group of voters, no matter how widely they may be scattered over the State, can elect their representative
it they write in his name on l-0th of all the ballots cast in the State.
In Denmark Proportional representation has been in use more than fifty years. The laws of that
country are so good that the Danes have not had an "unemployed" problem for many years; 89 per cent
of the farmers own their farms and only 11 per cent are renters. The Danes export.! more than ninety
two million dollars' worth of butter, bacon and eggs in 1908. Denmark has only about one-sixth as
much land as Oregon, and her summers are so short that the cattle grazing season is only fourteen weeks.
For more information on Denmark see the Valley Farm of March and April, 1914, and the Youth's Com
panion of Kept. 24, 1914. ' t ' I : v&I'M
The condition of Denmark is proof that proportional representation gets better legislators than the
American plan of plurality elections; that such legislators make better laws, and thereby more general
prosperity for all the people; The wealth of Denmark is probably greater per capita than that of any
other country in the world, and it is very evenly distributed. The very poor and the very rich are few
and far between. - ! ' i 5 5
This amendment is bitterly opposed by the Daily Oregonian and other opponents of the People's
Power in the government of Oregon, and especially by the "Non Partisan League" of Portland, which is
advertising very extensively against its approval. All its opponents know as well as we do that adoption
of this amendment and abolition of the State Senate will give the voters almost as direct power over the
Legislature as the Initiative and Referendum gave the people over law making outside of the legislature.
It will allow equal power to all voters instead of the present injustice of allowing some electors to vote
for 13 representatives, while others can vote only for one. -tlYtfi'SJ.
Respectfully ; submitted,
O. E. SPENCE, Master of the State Grange.
J. D. DROWN, President of the Farmers' Union of Oregon.
W. W. GRISENT1IWAITE, President Farmers' Society of Equity.
Oregon State Federation of Labor by T. II. ISurchard, President, and E. J. Stack, Secretary
People's Power League, by C. E. R. Wood, President and W. S. JJ'Ken, Secretary,
HELP IKE FARMER
Common Carriers Will Co-operato In
Marketing Farm Products Middle .
Men Charge Higher Rates
for Handling Farm Than
Factory Products.
By Peter Radford.
Lecturer National Farmers' Union.
The leading railroad systems of the
nation will establish market bureaus
to assist the farmers along their
lines In marketing their products.
Many roads have acceded to the re
quest of the Farmera' Union and an
nounced their willingness to enter
Into active co-operation with the far
mers In marketing their products.
The express companies have sur
veyed the Held and the Federal Gov
ernment, through the parcel post,
has demonstrated the possibilities of
mo wuiuiuii tun mr us a ustjiui agency
In marketing farm commodities.
I consider the action of these giant
business concerns in determining to
co-operate with the farmers In mar
keting their crops, to be the greatest
product of human thought on the
Western hemisphere during the past
year, and it demonstrates that the
educational 'work of the Farmers'
Union has brought the nation to a
clearer understanding, of the real
problem of the farmer.
To give information on marketing
Is far more valuable than to give
advice on production. There is a mu
tual Interest between the railroadB
and the farmer which cannot exist
between any other lines of industry.
The railroads are tke teamsters of
agriculture, and they are employed
only when there is something to haul.
Good prices will do more to Increase
tnn n o a a th on onv rX at fn rtf rtt and
railroads want tonnage,
Agriculture has many inherent dis
advantages which require combined
effort to overcome In marketing.
There are millions of producing units -working
independently and Belling
without knowledge of market condi
tions. The harvest is once a year,
while consumption is pretty even
ly distributed throughout the entire
year, and most of the farmers,
through custom and necessity, dump
their entire crop on the market as
soon as It is gathered. The problem
of organizing and systematizing the
markets is one in which the fanners
invite assistance of all lines of in
dustry friendly to their Interests.
Farmers Bear the Burden.
The business of the manufacturer
lends Itself more readily to organiza
tion and the facilities for studying the
markets are more eaBily available. The
ICBUJl IB U1UI LUO UlCUUIItllllO ttlO WUl"
pelled to handle most staple manufac
tured articles at very little profit, and
as a consequence the merchant must
loolt to products which he buys di
rect from the farm for his profits,
The reports of the Federal Depart
ment of Agriculture show some very
Interesting information and enable .
comparison between the cost of
marketing products of the farm and
those of the factory. 1 A few items
will serve to illustrate the general
run. The cost of getting sugar from
the refinery to the consumer le 9
cents on the dollar; the coBt of get-
king UUOI.VU AftVJ.ll iuvwi; w .wu
sumer Is 14 cents on the dollar. In
Belling a dollar's worth of eggs the
middleman gets a profit of 60 cents
on the dollar. In selling a dollar's
worth of potatoes, the middleman
makes 70 cents on the dollar; in sell
ing a dollar's worth of fruit, the
middleman gets 84 cents on the dol
lar, and on cantaloupes 82 cents.
Farmers' Bulletin No. 670, published
by the United States Department of
Agriculture, In discussing this subject,
said :
'The high price paid by consumers
ranging from 6 to 500 per cent, In
Borne cases, more than the farmer re
ceives, indicates that there Is plenty
of room for lowering the cost of
farm products to consumers and at
the same time largely Increasing the
cash Income per farm, without In
creasing farm production. This condi
tion is undoubtedly a marketing prob
lem which will have to be solved by
better organization of farmers and
Improved methods of marketing."
Large Shipper! Influence Rates.
In railroad rates the Inequalities
are equally as glurlng. Rate making
In its primitive Btages was largely
influenced by demands and arguments
of large shippers, but the farmers
were unorganized and seldom ap
peared before rate-muklng bodies, and
the burden of expense In transporta
tion lies largely against the raw
products of the farm.
In banking, our securities are dis
criminated against, as compared with
the produuts of the factories and
mines. The farmer is entitled to a
square deal. The farmer Is more In
terested In good prices and efficient
service than he is In rates.
$100 Reward, $100
-The readers of tlila puper will bs
pleased to learn that there Is at leant one
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure In all ltd stages, and that la
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only
f osltlve cure now known to the medical
raternlty. Catarrh twins; a constitutional
disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In
ternally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system, there
by destroying the foundation of the dis
ease, and giving the patient strength by
building up the constitution and assisting
nature In doing Its work. The propric'.i.rs
have so much faith In its curative pow
ers that they offer One Hundred Poll irs
for any case that It falls to cure. Bona
for list of testimonials.
Addren: F. J. CHKNET 4 CO., Toledo. O.
Bold by nil DrusKlOs. TSo.
ASJKO nail imiy nils iur uuiiMiiijn'.uM.
Hopeless Lung Trouble Cured
Many recoveries from Lung Troub
le. . j... a. t tiii- r; rr..
lea niu uun lu ai. ajii -
1 1 . Tl . t V, t U T iinrvo
checks the Cough and gives relief at
it- ir a u;ii,:V,ci flatoo M
C. writes: "I used Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-IIoney
in a case given up a3
hopeless and it effected a complete
cure." Get a bottte of Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar-Honey if your cough is dry
and hacking let it trickle down the
.u i in .,.i ui vuiir
UUUUl, yuu win nuiuj
1 Only 25, at your Druggist.
I