Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, November 17, 1905, Page 10, Image 10

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    UKEGOtf .CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1905.
10
VETOES FRANCHISE
MAYOR SOMMER RETURNS ORDI
NANCE WITHOUT APPROVAL.
Oregon Water Power & Railway Com
pany May Not Get 35-Year
Freight Privilege.
j Tuesday afternoon Mayor E. A. Som-
mer vetoed the Oregon Water Power
i & Railway Company's 35-year freight
! franchise ordinance that he had under
i consideration for ten days. The ordi
! nance together with the Mayor's veto
I message, was filed with Recorder Dim
! ick late Tuesday afternoon,
i In vetoing the ordinance. Mayor
1 Sommer returned to the Council the
following message:
; To the Honorable Council of Oregon
! City:
; Gentlemen: In the early portion of
J my administration as Mayor of Oregon
! City, a request was made by the Ore-
gon Water Power and Railway Com
i pany for a new franchise upon Main
' street which would include the right
to operate passenger, freight and ex
j press cars upon said Main street with
1 out restriction as to time or manner of
I operation. This request was made in
; view of the proposed extension 'of the
i lines oi tne Oregon w aier rower aim ,
: Railway Company through Oregon
i City and into the southeastern portion !
of Clackamas County. At the time i
; said request was presented, tne senii -
ment of your body was opposed to
granting a franchise conferring unre
stricted traffic privileges to the said
company upon Main street, and in ac
cordance with the will of the people
of Oregon City assembled in mass, a
committee of citizens was appointed
to endeavor to frame a franchise ordi
nance that would at once satisfy the
requirements of the company and also
protect the interests of Oregon City.
I am advised that this committee met
several times but failed to effect any
agreement with the railroad company
and nade a report to the Council ol
Oregon .City to that effect. Subse
quently a resolution was introduced in
the council directing the Mayor to ap
point a committee of three members
of the council together with the Mayor
and City Attorney to meet with the
officials of the Railroad Company and
enaeavor to rrame a rrancmse tnat
would protect the interests of Oregon ,
City and at the same time grant to the
railroad company such rights and
privileges as would permit the exten
sion of its lines and thereby promote
the development of Oregon City and
also the portion of Clackamas County
lying south and east of Oregon City.
Pursuant to this resolution I appoint
ed as members of the said committee
Councilmen R. Koerner, Wm. Sheahan
and H. E. Straight to act with the City
Attorney, Franklin T. Griffith and my
self as the representatives of the coun
cil. The committee organized and care
fully and conscientiously discharged
the duty imposed upon it. The com
mittee first considered the several ex
isting franchises in favor of the rail
road company which are as follows:
Ordinance No. 139, which was ap
proved July 11, 1892, a grant to the
East Side Railway Company, its suc
cessors and assigns, the right to lay
down, maintain and operate upon
Main street from Third street to the
northerly limits of the city, either a
single or double track railway with
the necessary turnouts and turn-tables.
This ordinance provided that
the railroad should be operated by
animal, cable or electric power and
should continue in force for a term
of fifty years and that after the first
ten years there should be paid to Ore
gon City an annual license of $100.00
for each of the remaining forty years.
Such license to be paid on the first of
January of each year,
t rdlsftaCe No. 201, approved June
"54, 1897. which granted to the East
Side Railway Company the right and
privilege to operate an express car on
Main street for the term of ten years
from June 1, 1897.
Ordinance No. 241, passed August
17, 1899, whereby there was granted
to G. C. Fields, his heirs and assigns,
the right to layNlown, maintain and
operate a railway upon Main street
from Third street southerly along and
upon Main street and over and upon
the road on the easterly side of the
basin to the southern boundary of the
city, together with necessary turnouts,
turn-tables and switches. This fran
chise provides for an annual license
fee of $50.00 per annum and- expires
August 17, 1929.
Ordinance No. 274, approved Novem
ber 10. 1902, granting to the Oregon
Water Power and Railway Company,
its successors and assigns, the right to
lay down, maintain and operate rail
way tracks on Third street and also
the right to operate express and
freight cars upon Main street and
Third street and allowing one round
trip of not exceeding three attached
cars between 7 A. M. and noon of each
day and one round trip of three at
tached cars between 12 o'clock noon
and 7 :00 o'clock P. M. of said day and
also granting the right to operate ex
press and freight cars as often as the
company may desire between 9:00
o'clock P. M. and seven o'clock A. M.
This franchise expires November 10
1912," and provides for an annual li
cense fee of $400 during the first five
years and $500 per annum during the
last are years.
At the outset of the committee's ne
gotiations it was confronted with the
fact that the railroad company now
holds a passenger franchise which has
yet 37 years to run and for which the
company is required to pay an annual
license fee of only $100.00 during the
entire term. Under this long term
franchise the company has the right
to lay an additional track on Main
street together with necessary turn
outs, turn-tables and switches and it
seemed desirable to the committee
that the right to lay a second track
should be surrendered and that it
would be to the advantage of the city
to have only a single track placed in
the center of the street and also that
the location of switches and turnouts
should be definitely fixed so as not to
interfere with the use of the street.
.. Under the freight car franchise now
held by the company. It has the rignt
to oDerate two trains of freight cars
daily and an unlimited number of
NATURE'S ESSENCE
Extracted from the Roots of Native, Forest Plants.
Go Straight Back to Nature for Your Health.
There is Your Strength.
Consider your body as an engine
which supplies you with all activity of
mind and body. Keep the machinery
well oiled and it runs smoothly. It
does not groan in doing ita work.. But
let the stomach, which is the fire-box
fcr the human eneine. eet "out of kil-
' ter" and. we soon meet with disaster.
The products of undigested ana ae
eomposing food is poison to the system.
Wo rtr r.r.t liv on what we eat but
on what wo digest, assnnMate, and take
np in the blood. The Diooa in turn
feeds the nerves, the heart, and the
whole ss'stisrr., and all goes woll with us
if the. blood b'- kept purt- nnd rich. If
not, then the liei', wi-L-li is tlie human
filter within us, gets clogged up and
poisons accumulate in the body from
over-eating, over-drinking, or hurriedly
doing both. The smash -up occurs
when the blood is poisoned by the
stomach and liver being unable to take
care of the over-load I The red flag of
danger is thrown out in the shape of
eruptions on the skin, or in nervous
ness and sleeplessness, the sufferer be
coming blue, despondent and irritable,
because the nerves lack nourishment
and are starved.
Nature's laws are perfect if only we
obey them, but disease follows dis
obedience. Go straight to Nature for
the cure, to the forest ; there are mys
teries there, some of which we can
thmfor yOU. Take the bark of the
"S"" . "L Mojroi,0
n LZ Rirnnt
Stone root, Queen's root, Bloodroot
and Golden Seal root, make a scien
tific. Glvceric extract of them, with
just the right proportions, and you have
Jr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
It took Dr. Pierce, with the assist
ance of two learned chemists and phar
macists, many months of hard work
experimenting to perfect this vegetable
alterative and tonic extract of the great
est efficiency. To make rich, red
blood, to properly nourish the nerves
and the whole body, and cure that
lassitude and feeling of weakness and
nerve exhaustion, take Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. It bears
the badge of honesty upon every
bottle in the full list of its ingredients,
printed in plain English, and it has sold
more largely in the pa.t forty years than
any othtr blood purifier and stomach
tome. The refreshing influence of this
freight cars nightly. But this freight
car franchise has but seven years to
run and therefore will be an insuper
able obstacle to further extensions of
the company's lines into the south
eastern portion of Clackamas County,
as it is a well known fact that rail
roads are built mainly upon money
obtained from the sale of bonds and it
is unreasonable to assume that a bond
issue of sufficient size to construct an
extension into the southeastern por
tion of the county, could be floated on
a short term franchise of seven years.
In determining the merits of the
question submitted to it, the commit
tee considered the enormous benefits
that have accrued to the people of the
northeastern portion of Clackamas
County by reason of the extension, of
the company's lines to Estacada and
believing that the southeastern por
tion of the county is a much richer ag
ricultural section, it reached the con
clusion that an extension of the com
pany's lines into that portion of the
county would be of great and lasting
benefit to the county at large and to
Oregon City in particular, in that it
would provide transportation facilities
to Oregon City and enable the farmers
to bring in and market their products
here; that it would promote the pros
perity of the territory served by it
and would necessarily increase the
busines transacted at Oregon City by
reason of the . influx of people that
would inevitably follow the establish
ment of the road and that in doing so,
no injury would be caused to Oregon
City either to its busines men or the
property owners upon Mam street,
provided, that reasonable restrictions
should be placed upon the operation
of the freight cars of the company
through the city. Having reached the
conclusion, therefore, that an exten
sion of the company's lines would be
of great and lasting benefit to the
county as well as to the city, the com
mittee pursued its negotiations with
the railroad company with such effect
that an ordinance was finally pre
pared, which had for its purpose the
surrender of existing franchises held
by the company conferring upon it the
same rights as to night freight traffic
as the company now holds, and chang
ing the two train freight privileges
daily to four trains of freight cars of
not to exceed four cars each, between
the hours of seven o'clock in the morn
ing and seven o'clock in the evening.
This change from two trains of freight
cars to four trains of freight cars daily
and the lengthening of the freight car
privilege from seven years to 35 years
constituted the new rights granted to
the railroad company and in exchange
therefor the city would receive the
surender of all existing franchises, in
cluding the surrender of the right to
lay an additional track on Main street,
the changing of the present track from
the side to the center of the street,
the new track to be all grooved rails
laid in concrete foundation and the
street between the rails and one foot
on each side thereof, to be paved with
Belgium blocks and thereafter to be
mamtainea in repair oy mo wuiyaujr
during the life-time of the franchise, tion of the said petition I have sub
which improvement would cost not mitted to the leading petitioners a
extract is like Nature's infevrc- tha
blood is bathed in the invi-rct ng
tonic which gives life to it and rhe v.tal
Area of the body burn bivhtei-x ard
their increased activity consumes the
tissue rubbith which has accumulated
in the system.
The " Discovery " cures all skin affec
tions, blotches, pimples, eruptions and
boils; heals old sores, or ulcers, "white
swellings," scrofulous affectionf rnd
kindred ailments.
The "Golden Medical Discovery" is
just the tisue builder and tonic yoa
require when recovering from a hard
cold, grip, pneumonia or a long siege
of fever or other prostrating disease.
No matter bow strong the constitution,
onr stomach and liver are apt to be
"out of kilter" occasionally. In con
sequence our blood is disordered, for
the stomach is the laboratory for the
constant manufacture of blood.
It is a trite saying that no man is
stronger than his stomach. Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical '-ZZ-ztx strengthens
the stomach puts it in shape to make
pure, rich blood helps the liver and
kidneys to expel, the poisons from the
body and thus cures both liver and
kidney troubles. If yon take this
natural blood purifer and tonic, yoa
will assist vour system in manufactur
ing each day a pint of rich, red blood,
that is invigorating to the brain and
nerves. The weak, nervous, run-down,
debilitated condition which so many
people suffer from, is usually the effect
of poisons in the blood ; it is often in
dicated by pimples or boils appearing
on the skin, the face becomes thin and
the feelings "blue." Dr. Pierce's "Dis
covery " cures all blood humors as 'well
as being a tonic that makes one vigor
ous, strong and forceful. It is the only
medicine put up for sale through drug
gists for like purposes that contains
neither alcohol nor harmful drugs, and
the only one, every ingredient of which
has the professional endorsement of
the leading medical writers of this
country. Some of these endorsements
are published in a little book of ex
tracts from standard medical works
and will be sent to any address free,
on receipt of request therefor by letter
or postal card, addressed to Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. It tells just what
Dr. Pierce's medicines are made of.
The " Words of Praise " for the sev
eral ingredients of which Dr. Pierce's
medicines are composed, by leaders in
all the several schools of medical prac
tice, and recommending them for the
cure of the diseases for which the
" Golden Medical Discovery" is advised,
should have far more weight with the
sick and afflicted than any amount oi
the so-called "testimonials" so con
spicuously flaunted before the public
by those who are afraid to let the in
gredients of which their medicines are
composed be known. Bear in mind
that the "Golden Medical Discovery
has the badge of honesty on every
bottle wrapper, in a full list of its in
gredients. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure
constipation, invigorate the tire' nnd
regulate stomach and bowels.
less than $25,000.00; the continuation
of such Belgium block pavement upon
the permanent improvement of all
those portions of the street not now
paved .with vitrified brick, and the
payment of an increased compensation
to Oregon City from $550.00 per an
num now paid by the company to
$800.00 per ' annum for the first five
years of the new term and increasing
$300.00 per annum at intervals of five
years so that during the last five years
of the term, the company would be re
quired to pay an annual license fee of
$2,C00.00 and the license fees of the
entire term would aggregate $59,500.
All of these advantages would be de
rived by the city from the new fran
chise aside from, the benefits that
would naturally flow from the devel
opment of the Southern portion of
Clackamas county and the increased
business that would come to Oregon
City. i
The committee having the matter in
charge held a number of meetings and
every phase of the new ordinance was
carefully discussed and considered and
when finally prepared had the unani
mous support of the committee, anc
so far as I am advised every member j
of that committee still believes the
ordinance, as prepared and as passed
by the council to be the best contract
that could be made by the city, and
one that fully safe-guarded the inter
ests of the city, its people and its
property owners. No argument has
been adduced by the opponents of this
measure that has in any wise or to
the slightest extent changed my opin
ion as to the merits of this measure.
I joined in its recommendation to the
careful consideration of the council
and I believe now as I did then that
the best interests of Oregon City
would be subserved by permitting the
ordinance to become a law.
The opposition to this measure first
found expression in a suit instituted
by Wm. Andresen in which a restrain
ing order was issued preventing three
members of the council from voting
upon the passage of the ordinance
upon the ground that the three defend
ants were in the employ of the rail
road company and charges of fraud
were made against the three defend
ants, which the plaintiff in the case
wholly failed to substantiate and after
a hearing upon demurrer to the com
plaint, the court dissolved the injunc
tion. Afterwards, and as the members of
the council were about to vote upon
the measure, a second restraining order-was
served upon them in a suit
brought to restrain all of the mem
bers of the council from passing the
ordinance. This suit, like the first,
failed and the injunction was dis
solved. The council then took up the
matter and by vote of six to two
passed the ordinance.
I have been presented with a peti
tion bearing the names of 533' electors
of Oregon City out of a total of 830
electors, and said petitioners pray that
I exercise the power vested in me, as
Mayor, to veto the -ordinance passed
by the council. Since the presenta-
proposition to submit the question of
the approval or veto of the ordinance
to three unbiased and impartial
judges, non-residents of Oregon City,
who should determine whether or not,
as a business proposition, the ordi
nance is for the best interests of Ore
gon City. My proposal has been re
jected upon the. ground that the people
of Oregon City are themselves best
fitted to determine issues bearing
upon their own welfare and that where
a majority of the inhabitants, tax
payers and business men of the city
are opposed to a measure, they should
not be called upon to submit to non
residents a matter, the determination
of which, should rest with them. I
am forced to admit that there is merit
in the contention of the petitioners
that in the making of a contract, such
as this ordinance, where the people
are the parties of the first part, that
their agents should not force them
into a contract against their express
will. Were this a question of morals
it would make no difference to me if
four-fifths of the people of my city
were opposed to me if I had the ap
proval of my own conscience but no
moral principle is involved in this or
dinance; it is in the nature of a con
tract to be approved by me as the
executive of the city, acting for its
people and as their agent. And con
sidering the matter thus, the Question
that presents itself to my mind is,
would I be right in nermittinz the
ordinance to become a law because I
believed it a good measure, when a
great majority of my princinals. the
people, for and on r.-hose behalf the
contract is made, have expressed me
their emphatic and unqualified disap
proval? There has been much bitter
ness shown in this controversy, the
motives of the supporters of the meas
ure have been impugned, and so ex
treme has the feeling grown that the
grand jury of Clackamas County have
been requested to investigate the
passage of this franchise in an effort
to discover fraud. I have purposely
delayed the communication of this
message until after the Grand Jury
had had an opportunity to thoroughly
investigate the charges of fraud
brought before it and which has re
sulted in failure of that body to itake
action because of the absolute want
and non-existence of any evidence of
the slightest degree of fraud. .
The supporters of this ordinance in
the council have, I believe, been abso
lutely honest in their convictions and
in their opinion of the merits of this
ordinance, I heartily concur.
However, gentlemen, believing as I
do, that I hold my office as the servant
and not as the master of the people, I
feel it my duty to set aside my own
judgment as to the merits of this or
dinance, and solely for the reason that
the measure is opposed By a great ma
jority of the electors, tax-payers and
business men of Oregon City, I return
without my approval the ordinance
passed by you November 4, 1905, and
entitled :
. "An ordinance authorizing the Ore-'
gon Water Power and Railway Com
pany, its successors and assigns, to
construct, maintain and operate a rail
way on Main street from the Northern
limits of the City to the Southern
point of the termination of said Main
street; thence over and upon the road
on the Easterly side of the basin to
the Southern boundary of said city;
and upon Third street from Main
street to the Willamette river; and
to operate the same by any means
Pv. lit8" T erf? the DeCeS
!a5Z:?ieland strJQSthe necessary
wiica lkji LutrupeiitLiuu uiweui uy elec
tricity, and to carry passengers.
freight and express matter on and '
Jln"??7' t0 C2UeCt
charges and tolls therefor, and re-:
pealing Ordinances Nos. 139, 201, 241,
256 and 274.
E. A. SOMMER,
Mayor,
uaiea uregon uity, Oregon, November
14, 1905.
IN TflWE OF PEACE.
In the first months of the Russia
Japan war we had a striking example
of the necessity for preparation and i
the early advantage of those, who, so I
to speak, "have shingled their roofs
in dry weather." The virtue of prep-
aration has made history and given
to us our greatest men. The individ-'.
ual as well as the nation should be
prepared for any emergency. Are you
prepared to successfully combat the
first cold you take? A cold can be
cured much more quickly when treat
ed as soon as it has been contracted
and before it has become settled in
the system. Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy is famous for its cures of
colds and it should be kept at hand
ready for instant use. For sale by .
Howell & Jones. j
Almost Exasperating. '
"Do you object to telling the court
your age?" asked the attorney.
"Do I look as if I had reason to he
afraid to tell how old I am?" she in
dignantly answered.
. "Oh, no, no. I didn't mean that at
all. ; I assure you that it is common
even for women whp are young to de
cline to give their ages." j
"Am I to understand from your re
marks you consider me old? Your
use of the word 'even' indicates that
you do."
"I had no such intention, madam, I
assure you."
"It seems to me that you have a
poor way of saying what you mean."
"That must be a mere matter of
opinion. I will try to speak plainly,
so that there may be no misunder
standing. Will you please tell the
court how old you are?"
"Do you wish to have me tell the
day of the month on which I was
born?"
"You may if you wish to do so, but
that is not- esential."
"Well it was the 27th of October."
"Yes?" .
" "My mother's maiden name was
Mary Williams and I live at 967 Grand
ison avenue. There! My goodness!
It's almost as annoying to get a di
vorce as to start a bank account."
CHAPPED HANDS.
Wash your hands with warm water,
dry with a towel and apply Chamber
lain's Salve just before going to bed,
and a speedy cure is certain. This
salve is also unequalled for skin dis
eases. For sale by Howell & Jones.
FALL CARE OF TURKEYS.
After the 1st of August the care of
turkeys is very little on a farm where
they have good range until cold weath
er. They must never be allowed to
stay away from home a single night
for in time they will get to be regular
tramps, stopping just where night
overtakes them. If they are brought
home for a 'short time after they are
turned on the range and watched a
little to see that they always come
home at the usual hour; the habit
gets to be fixed as all animals have a
strong iove of home. It is amusing
uomeitmes to see how even a chicken
will choose a particular corner .of a
coop to sleep in. If never prevented
would sleep there as long as they
lived. They think, be it ever so hum
ble, there is no place like home.
The most frequent ailments of tur
keys are liver trouble, indigestion and
roup. Liver trouble, I think, caused
by overeating. That is also the cause
of indigestion. Through the corn belt
turkeys get too much corn and com is
certainly not a good turkey food. It
is too hearty and it is entirely against
the nature of turkeys to bolt as they
do large quantities of heating food like
corn. Their natural way of eating is
to pick up a bug, or worm, or seeds,
one at a time, taking a half day nearly
for their breakfast and at 2 or 3
o'clock they start out for home, and
helr supper is what they pick up on
the road to tne house. Now this is
tneir natural way of living two meals
a day but when corn was fed in
large quantities it makes more work
than the digestive organs can take
care of, and the liver, the great blood
strainer, cannot properly do its work,
and it becomes enlarged and diseased
and the indigestion and all its ill set
in and the turkey dies. They should
at this time of the year always have
coarser and very sharp grit. I keep
a box of grit where they travel every
j night and morning, and they cannot
: miss it if they want or need it, and
I have tried different remedies for
liver trouble and find the same treat
ment that is good for the human fami
ly under like circumstances is good
for turkeys. I give a pill of one-tenth
grain of calomel for three- nights,
then give a teaspoonful of castor oil
and when that has worked off I give
quinine twice a day, a capsule con
taining one to two grains. If this
treatment is carefully followed up it
will cure most cases.
There are several kinds of roup
remedies on the market that are good.
Roup is caused by taking cold and
since I discontinued feeding warm
feed I have very little trouble with
roup. Feeding warm food warms
them up and they stand around and
get chilled and take cold and the first
thing you know you have a lot of
roupy turkeys on hand.
Turkeys are not subject to such a
long list of diseases as are chickens.
If one lives in a wheat growing coun
try they win have very little trouble
on the feeding question as wheat
makes the most natural fool for tur
keys. Corn is too loosening for the
i i i x : l . i . l.
j uoweis' auu wireai iigui 111 Liit?
contrary direction, wnicn is just wnat
a turkey needs.
The other danger to turkeys is the
two legged animal that is the lowest
of all animals below the hog family,
the turkey thief. -
By the time Thanksgiving arrives
I think a large drove of turkeys will
meet tne, Madman's axe to celebrate
our great national prosperity. They
and the Indians are the only inhabi-
est nation in the world developed from
um nandful of igrims to lts pres.
x
p......... .......... .
A GREAT COMBINATION OFFER
J We Witt Furuish the "TW1CE-A-WEEK" Issue
of the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat
-WITH
Oregon City Enterprise
For
$2.00 Both Papers, one year, only $2.00
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat should not be
classed with the many cheap weekly papers. It is a
high-grade Semi-Weekly, eight or more pages, every
Tuesday and Friday. Jt is beyond all comparison the
biggest, best and cheapest National News and Home
Journal .published in the United States. Jt is strictly
Republican in politics but is above all
A Great Modern Newspaper.
It is not made up indiscriminately from the Daily
issue. It is carefully edited with especial reference to
the needs of the Farmer, the Merchant and the Pro
fessional man who desires to keep throughly posted
without sparing the time to read a large Daily Paper.
It also contains a great variety of well selected reading
matter, making it invaluable to every member of the
family.
This Liberal Clubbing Offer
is open to old oi new subscribers, but may be with
drawn at anytime, and we must receive the cash with
order.
Send us your Subscription with $2.00
DO THIS TO-DAY!
Blight's Disease and
Diabetes News.
The New Fulton Compounds Have
Record of 87 per cent ol Recoveries
Among Chronic Cases of Brlght's
Disease and Diabetes, Heretoforf
Considered Incurable.
Druggists know that Brlgtita Disease snd
Diabetes have been regarded by physiolans aa
Incurable and that up to the adrent of tne
Fulton Compounds tnat nothing on their sherrea
would touch It. It Is a proves fact that nearly
nine-tenths of all cases are now curable, and
druggists themselves are talcing the pew Com
pounds. One of the recoveries was Dr. Zeile
himself, the pioneer druggist of 622 Paclflo
street, San Francisco, and he gave it to over a
dozen others who reoovered. Here is another
interesting recovery (We copy from the Sacra,
mento News of November 16, 1902):
"After a serious illness of over a year Judge
J. R. Allen of this city has reoovered and re
gards himself most fortunate in successfully
battling with what is generally regarded as
fatal malady, Bright's Disease ot the Kidneys.
In speaking of his case Judge Allen said: 1
believe that the treatment given me by my
physician was in accordance with the best
methods used in the regular praotioe of medi
cine, but it afforded me no relief. Hearing of
the Fulton Compounds I went to San Francisco
to investigate and was soon convinced I should
undergo the treatment. It was three months
before I noticed a change for the better. I used
the medicine faithfully for nearly a year and
can now find no evidence of the disease and
am satisfied It is entirely eliminated. My ap
petite is good, I have gained seventeen pounds
in weight and will be pleased to describe my
experience to anyone who may call or write.''"
Sacramento News. Nov. 16, 1904.
The editor of the News himself was the friend
who told Judge Allen of the Fulton Compounds.
They are the only things known that ours
Bright's Disease and Diabetes. Fulton's Renal
Compound for Bright's and Kidney Diseases,
1; for Diabetes, (1.50. John J. Fulton Co.,
409 Washington street, San Francisco, sole
compounders. Free analyses for patients.
Send for Pamphlet. We are the exclusive
ganta for these Compounds in this oity.
Charman & Co., City Drug Store.
ent eminence. All the earth takes off
its hats and makes its most obedient
bow to America, the home of the free
and the land of the brave. Farmer
and Breeder.
Bean the
(Signature
of
The Kind Yoa Haw Always Boogfi
' Customer Waiter, this steak is like
leather. Take it away.
"Waiter Can't change it now, sir;
you've bent it. Ex.
CROUP.
A reliable medicine and one that
should always be kept in the home
for immediate use is Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. It will prevent the
attack if given as soon as the child
becomes hoarse, or even after the
croupy cough appears For sale by
Howell & Jones.
Knew His Business.
"Dr. Goodleigh seems to have had
wonderful success in raising funds for
the new church."
"Yes. Yon know he appointed Mr.
Hammersleigh, the reformed get-rich-quick
man, as chairman of the finance
committee.
CJ J "Jt- Jt'. J j5k. ,
Bear the si Kind You Have Always Bount"
Signature
of
THE-