Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, November 08, 1900, Image 1

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    OFFICIAL
PAPER
WEEKLY GAZETTE
Leads In Preatlge
Leads In Circulation...
Subscription Price, f 1.50 '
uu9 in news.,
WgEKLYgAZETTE
Subscription price. $1.50
I IIU niSTAUlAIKlVi mi iTtM h: i V J 1 VM
J
U Tt TTT1 17 ITmr r "
The Paper Is Published Strictly In the
Interests of Morrow Countv ami it.
The Heppner Gazette
Is published every Thursday by '
J. W. RE DING-TON.
Entered at the Postoffice at Heppner, Oregon,
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY. OREGON. THURSDAY NuvT
Taxpayers.
ranwam i . .1.111.11.1 i.piri
8, 1900,
ornciAL SISSCTOBT.
Sixth Judicial District.
inrouit Judge. Stephen A. Lowell
.vmniuui attorney n, j, Hean
Morrow Connty Officials.
J nnt (Senator... J, W.Morrow
..v''uiuv. js. u. Freeland
C aniyJadge ... A. Q. Bartholomew
t-ommiMioneri J. L. Howard
J. W. Beokett.
.., J,iwi,- Tawter Crawford
1 Sheriff... A.Andrews
f Treasurer t M. Liohtenthal
Assessor J. f. Willis
. jjarveyor... JnUus Keithly
ohool Sap't Jay W. Bhipley
C ironer Dr. E. R. HnnJook
Stock Inspector Henry Scherzinger
HUPNBB TOWN OVFIOKRS.
faTJti; Frank Gilliam
IJouoyilmen.... 8- P- Garrigups,
. oimons. J. J. Koberts, J5. W Rhea, G(
. No Me and Thoe. Quaid.
Kooorder J, P. Williams
.rascirer ..u W. Briggs
Marshal....... George Thornton
HBRPNJtR SCHOOL DISTRICT,
Directors Frank Gillirm. 0. E. Farusworth.
IimiiiIiiiii !
AVegefable PreparationforAs- 1
similatinglheroodandRcgula- 1
ling the Stomachs andBowels of jj
J.M
Precinct Offloerf .
Jnrtioeof the Peace W. A. Richardson
i onstable g. 8. Gray
United States Land Offioer.
, , THB DALLIS, OB.
Jay P. Lucas Register
Otie Patterson Receiver
. LA OBAKDB, OB.
K. W. Bartlett R6Klstn.
t O. Bwackhamer Receiver
It is a fact that farms can be bought
in Morrow county at such low prices
ttiat their first coming crop will pay for
wit? lanu.
C E. Redfield
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Ofllce in First National Bank building.
Heppner, Oregon.
. G. W. Phelps
, ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office in Natter's Building. Heppner, Oregon.
Hl, .liHAHllBR I
Promotes Digcstion.CheerfuF-
ness and Kestxontains neither
OWum,Morphine norMineraL
NOTXAilCOTIC.
fimpki Seal"
JbcSmna
Mums
AfesoMfefcfe
Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa
jion , Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss of Sleep.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW VOHK.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears
Signi
NO. 807
BrAKXLiJNti SOLDIER STORY.
Gwendolen Ovkrton in Aeoonaut.
ature jF
fyfi ;illse
For Ovfir
EXACT CO0V OF WRAPRER.
J. W. Morrow
, ATTORNEY AT LAW
and
U. S. COMMISSIONER.
Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or.
. , , : r - .
A. Mallory,
U. S. COMMISSIONER
NOTARY PUBLIC
DDrnoli,e,,1. sl "s?.6. aU kind of land i
Collections made on reasonable terms.
Office at residence on Chase street.
Government land script for sale.
D. E Gilman
GENERAL COLLECTOR.
' Put your old books and notes in his
hands and get your money out of them
Makes a specialty of hard collections.
omce in J. N, Brown's building, Heppner, Or
Dr. M. B. Metzler
DENTIST
Palace
J. W. MORROW. Proprietor.
Strictly First-Class
A Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel
tvery Modern Cpnvenience.
Drummers' Resort.
There was no skeleton the in armor
wnen uartpole found it; only Borne
bauu anu a mm Die-weed, a rattle.
snake, and a tarantula. The taran
tula scuttled off, he killed the
rattlesnake, and the tumble-wend
and sand he emptied out. Then
he had the armor done up 'in a
shelter-tent aud put upon a pack
mule. After which the column
moved on. It should not, ' hava
halted at all, for it was in pursuit
of a band of Indians. But there
were bands of Indians everv !nB
and the finding of a full suit of
armor lying under a mesquite bush
oeeiae ine trail was rare.
venaiuiy nanpoie naa never
heard of such a thine. And. so far
as he kijew, it was the only Bait of
armor ever discovered on the New
Mexico plains, but his lorn nn fho
BUDject was not profound.
When be got back to his two-
company post on the banks of the
Gila, he found the interest irt Iif
which had been lacking for him up
iw meu, ia eniarcina tnat know .
edge. He sent East ior boobs and
nistories and treatises concernino
coats ot mail and the , men I who
nave worn them, and he even want
so far as to write to the Smithson
ian Institution, at the risk of hav
ing a government commission sent
out at once to seize his treasure
And in the interval of two months
which elapsed before he received a
reply for the railroad was onlv t,n
Kansas in those davs he set ahnnt
cleaning the armor himself, and
w-ith his own hands joining it tn.
gether. t ; ;
He was so occupied, what with
mai ana tne histories and othAr
boobs, that he forgot to havn ftiU.
bottom malaria and had no time to
worry about the flies. Then, when
the steel was once more brie-ht nn
the azure shield of Achilles, and he
naa proved to nis owu and everv
one's satisfaction that it must once
nave protected the bodv .of one of
uoronaao's men, and must date
from the middle of the sixteenth
century, or thereabout, he hung it
up in his one-room adobe quarters,
along Wtn -ne Indian trophies
iute were as notniug now and the
bottled reptiles of umny sorts; and
the fame of it spread through the
land. An English lord in a pith
helmet and gray linen, who was
going about the country, traveled
miles out of hia way to look upon
it; and a scientific Dartv from TW
ton did the same. HMrtmiln won
beginning to be very nroud. when.
one day, he had a visitor of an-
sleep in his quarters and keep
guard over his things. So it was
into the luckless soldier's h
mat tne knile was driven, and the
next aay a telegram apprised Hart-
piue mat nis striber was murdered
"Where did you find it?" hA rsIta
The lieutenant explained at some
length.
, "Is it very old?"
Hartpole said it was at least
three hundred and thirtv odd r A fir a
old. and went intn a littio fj i..- ; D."WI";'
u.j- j . au" U18 8U ot man was cone.
know '' he said E.7th f 1 The d&y, after tbat a11 the
HUOW, ne Said. iiUt that WB! HI) nurtnunt a.t a.
manifestly absurd that Hartpole were on he -ar-pTtb and TavS
i?7'?01- "Ifc cutthe eryatiC wee'bS
is very fine." said Cieco. "Fnr ;if i if m' WC1C,1 "m8
how much will you sell it to m mtdicITan 3 TffJMJ
iaturaiiy, Martpole only laughed,
medicine-man called "Cieeo.
11 7S7
tne scouts reDorted that ha
but the ApachS.was in earne dto.gSS of whSi
Srihe!!- f : -he whioh no WhSllutfco
StockmensHeadquarters. other kind,
it was a man he had seen somA-
and
was
iron
l it i
lnolrino- hi'm Bl,oK, ; L r v utio-xiiyB 8 OUliet COUld
ft vA?na t P n thS faC?- pierce- Thev also sported that
JNo, ae veras. I wish tn hnv it itha. ni,i:u.:. i .r
fromvon" J ouuwBuuab anu tne ran-utes
will T rlnn't i. ii th& Sierrft B1ancas were join-
sweSthfaStt r M; iHghim- Poised to be an in-
mere Sd2 ' the"exed teresting time for the Territories,
at tne mere idea. Hartpole began to have a dim
eaid theTndtn dllar8'" idea y the medicine man SaS
"If von S f i, a WaDted his SPani8h mail nw. He
it you had a thousand von wna m-AA . .
. H T ,, ot tne department was. Trouble
Br"l, . 1:.JefB-t tbat this promised tobe
: -' R w "Btlu' "tuu uaa 10 be checked at once, if at all.
It was serious nlmnHv hnk iV.Q.
111 J
me lOOk WftH nna fliir. ; f. j ii
Ciego drew a buckskin bag troops, which was that the hostiles
5 IOldS Of his SftSh. Tt maa I J .
full of gold. "There are fiva hnnl t7J. w awaI"
dred dollars here. In three days cillnZ T Td th m to sSk KSte
I can bringyou five hundred more." rather than to shun It And tw e
"Hartpole guessed hew he harl i, a , nu 1,W1. '
i-omA hv it a uSa , -"""is bu, mey oeat on tne
-Tn.:.?- "t..rr '" ,.vr e- lroP8, because there was. as usual
j-unuiB Bioien monev. na ssiri f... fa, n n.. iL- j i- '
antn-ilv: nnk ir. Vt,' Z"' " rut. luw llJ1,u rlm ey
-o---rf7 r - vmi if liuVCI W ere cauff it in a rhd f v,
run orinn. rTi.i u i . . .. " - k"- u i"c
'Vnn w u u , "b". "u luero were no less
f!iAr,. t -ot. ' .i" , r" " uouPH against them
I.'iTZ " 5 uun- J- tlartpole's was of the number.
wx . uo many tmngs tor yon." The Indian fou!?ht . m . wn
narrnniQ innm h,o . i ... . o - - " "
tulo menu or the ilrst ilnv until t,iliKt ,
No ." he said. vnn hh "a TJ . "n"luZ u
i tu J -i oouuuu, iu mo open at nrst
AJ bLf bun UHVll I r Plan t,.m K : -1 I. n
ffPt nnf! -- .Uvu Hum uomuu Bueiier, tnen at
e. --v. I Inst thotr W.utl
K nan tknn.1, A1 a BUailOW
dirtwT;u"u, rr '," U12a P on a Hillside, and
h PiLVir"? mere was no get"ng tm out. A
ho fllr , I- u , fuutluiy mountain-howitzer might hav
had TAAlinors rohinK -nl k i ""b"1 ua v
Tt is mail K wu.UOI1uu aoneit, but there was none with
It is well however, for those who the command. All day the troona
have the direction of nhilriron ar,A 1"JOUU; ue troops
.., in voneys into so much
Kl. fC .u": T w- mouth of the cave
uo1 iuubo Himpie ioik nave
sometimes reasana for the things
Spanish oattis.
can t have it.
the
be.
of
as showed
tween the 'pine trunks and the
walls of rock. Thev knew that the
slaughter within must have been
prstty severe, but there were no
One of the finest equipped Bars and Clubrooms
in the state in connection
"st-ass sample Rooms.
For Business Heppner is one of the Leadina
Towns of the West
Teeth Extracted and Filled.
Bridging a specialty
Painless Extraction. . . .
Heppner - - Oregon.
For Fall and Winter Wear
M. LICHTENTHAL..
Gentry & Sharp
Tonsorial Artists
Your patronage solicited.
Satisfaction guaranteed.. .
Hot and Cold Baths-
Main Street, near Palace Hotel, Heppner.
J. R. Simons Si Son
General Blacksmiths
Horseshoeing a Specialty FLOUR
. The Pioneer Boot and Shoe Dealer of Heppner, has
- The Latest Styles of Footwear if or
Men, Women and Children.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. 7
....,.,m.mairni. o 1.1 . ..
: 'pa.ring a specialty.
HOME INDUSTRY.
FLOUR
Wagon Making
and Repairing.
All work done with neatness
and dispatch. ...
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Upper Main Street,
Heppner, Ore,
Nothing so
6ood
as a pare malt bererage to refresh one
after a hard day's work has ever been
discovered. And there is one malt
beverage that is better than other I
that is
J. B. Natter's beer
It goes right to the spot, and is served np at
Natter's Brewery, on upper Main St., Heppner,
where an ice-cold cellar In the solid rock keeps
(always cool.
Heppner Flouring Mill Co.
Has secured the services of a first class miller
and keep on hand a full supply of
FLOUR, : GRAHAM, : GERM : MEAL
WHOLE WHEAT, BRAN and SHORTS
Of the Tery best quality Md guaranteed to gi Bali.faoti,,,,.
The mill exchanges
their patronage.
- w
with the farm
ers, and solicits
L. HOUSTON, Manager.
Gom(
e to Morrow Lountv for lnw.nr.,.
lands. Values are sure to double up. Nev
er again will land sell so low as it does now.
times hanging around 'the slocm-v
and the poet a small, lithe fellow.
part uoyotero Apache, , part Mexi
can, possibly . a very , Bmall Dart
white, who had some reputation as
a medicine-man with the tribes, but
not much as anything else.
nartpole was sitting under his
ramada on a late summer after
noon, reading a book whosa covers
curled up with the teat, ! when
something came between him and
his light, and, Jookiue ud. he saw
the medicine-man peering in ? the
opening. He said, "Hullo. Cieeo."
and added; "What do VOU WB.il f.
eh?"
Ciego was so called because ha
was blind in one eye. ; He came in
under the, ramada.-and stood so
close to him that Hartpole moved a
nttie. i ne Voyotero'g cast-off uni
iorm ana red nead-band were : not
clean. . , ,
Ciego spoke excellent Soanish.
and, as Hartpole did, too, he had
no trouble about making himself
understood. He explained that ha
would like to see the suit of iron
clothes which he had been told
that the lieutenant possessed. The
lieutenant was so pleased to think
that he bad been spoken of even in
the fastness of the Sierra Blanca
aud of the Tonto Basin that he
forgot how dirty Cieco was. and
straightway rose and invited him
into the one room.
The medicine-man stood looking?
at the armor with an interest and
evident appreciation that touched
Hartpole very much. After the
manner of his kind, he said no
word, but presently be went near
er and felt of the plates and chains
with his nnger-tips. and nut his
good eye cloce and looked inside.
Then be turned to Hartnole.
am muni
glisteneng
they do and say, good and suffici
lent unto themselves. But it never
7r. ... wuo,' lula S12Q8 Of surrender nAvarthalQDa
nau-mina Indian s reasons might The hostiles might hold out unti
some weeks latTr traD8P,re one deaS thSy ce
Y iSSL. , Mainly would until ,heir medicine.
u a.Jtuj a LlJUrj L1II1I H W H.H H I rvi i- v- f 1 1 nil -. .
leeendofa t. ,hita ZlZl BUU"m. Ia- Aue medicine
hZi r ; ::::: man cmi seen Yrom time to
anl rule Tver t ' 3
hnA w,,.n .,.-4. . v'uujdhj, hiuuuk me trees and un
' " a Bum ui. uiJiDinir lrnn u a-j i, ,. ...
A nrf thair t,Qitj iCZ. UCJ uf UBU- AUU ior an tnat it went
. v.v,.. ""'iiuuu iaU Lllau WnO- I Of. Qlrvniln r. J L-
soever should find anH Mth. r,,T"'J ""u ungnr, no
t ,j r . 1 ,""v ouuet seemed ever to hit it. Even
to Consider U
if, 7a u , , "UD with awe.
"I'ftajd sounds fromCtne caTe
" ' w- UWUIO. UUb UVHr HI I I inr n 1 I 1 1 , 1 t i.
the A nnr-ha tric 'a a uu" ' ana tne Indians
.ini" 7." " '"It. U1 lue withm it were without
wio uul iu. Aim tne very tion and
jron "v w tt"u yeuing, calling the'remnant of
tL n..i i i; i M1'8 followers on. It stood so. for a
tafJ5.1U.r World; odd andstrange
adding these to the gold he had Sdr L on
w1c. u uum many raids, ne took But Hartnolfl. knAlinr, .1, l.
camp of the bind a bowlder. rmmhi i
1 I - -j wja wv vui (
bVUkrrinl .1 ,
ot pureh.,e had failed. r7h.P,.T j .. . M? 8 .
Ciego looked the White-Eye a sharpshooter's medal in his time,
officer over from his scalp to his and he put his skill to use now!
toes, and up again, and then with There was a puff of smoke from
no sound, save just one grunt, went above his bowlder, and the shining
out from the quarters and from figure threw up its arms aud stag!
TwLin t m t u . ered' TLen U fel1 forward, down
Hartpole told of it at the mas fmm tha i t . i.. ....
SZ te ! ." -dcra8 the logs
v. uw BB uuu Biones,
nartpole ought to have forseen.
himself down to the
soldiers to obtain fairlv
hesitated with
the triggers of
Tbev found, when th av rl rn (mod
One night an Indian, his bodv him out. tbat IlartnoWa hnllt, l.n.l
, - . , -
uMeaasiiwafl Dorn. a poisoned Kone Btraicht thronoh tliA ovwi
SWEETHEARTS AND WIVES.
Dak O'Connell.
If sweethearts were sweethearts always,
Whether as maid or wife,
No drop would be half so pleasant
In the mingled draught of life.'
But the sweetheart has smiles and blushes
When the wife has frowns and sighs,
And the wile's have a wrathful glitter
For the glow of the Bweetheart's eyes.
If lovers were lovers always,
The same to sweetheart and wife,
Who would change for a future of Eden
The joys of this checkered life?
But husbands grow grave and silent,
And cares on the anxious brow
Oft replace the sunshine that perished .
ai tne words of the marriage vow.
Happy Is he whose sweetheart
Is wife and sweetheart still
Whose voice, as of old, can charm;
Whose kiss, as of old, can thrill;
CHILD'S PUNISHMENT.
The punishment should be pro.
portioned out of the offense and
grow out of it as a natural consfl.
quence. A child who is lazy in
the morning and persistently late
for breakfast should be deprived,
not of a proper amount of food, but
of something he partiaularly likes
and might have had if he had been
in time, as sugar on the oatmeal,
ot syrup on the griddle cakes.
If he has been promised that he
should go for a drive, or a walk,-or
some expedition, and is not ready
at the time for starting he should
ua ieiu TOuind. ine bitter disap
pointment will teach him, as noth
ing else can do as effectually, the
value of punctuality. If he is sent
on an errand and does not return
promptly he should not be al
lowed to taste the nice things made
with the sugar or eggs he was so
long in bringing. If his errand
were of some other nature he
should be made to stay alone in
his own room for as long a time as
he has kept his mother, or nmr nna
else, waiting. November Ladies'
Home Journal.
THINK OF IT!
Prince Chigi. who WAR Cnnnd
guilty at Eonie of having violated
tue iaw against the selling of val
ued works of art. in disnosino f
Botticelli's famous paintintr. "Th
Virgin and Child," was arraigned
in court Tuesday and sentenced tn
pay a fine of one hundred th lIllHIIIlil
dollars, which is the price he is
said to have received from Ten
don dealer. The mastArnipno nnt
past the Italian custom ant.hnri.
ties by painting 'over the picture of
"The Virgin and Child" another
picture that could be
off. , '
region
ROMANCE AND REALITY.
John Millrace Murphy, the veteran
editor of the Washington Standard,
keeps close track of the world, wbiln
ivini; in the sleepy old capital citv of
Olyrapia. He ia a pioneer of Pmmt.
Cl .1 1 n
ouiiiiu, anu jieb seen that rich
grow from nothing to soraethine.
llela a wrighter of Kreat strength.
andean knock the moonshine out of
anything if he half tries. One of hi.
latest poems is as follows:
Seattle publishes to the world in a
half column editorial that she has a
population of OO.Onn- inium -i,..i
i - I ,,n , i 4WV DV11UUI
children, M) churches. 45 nswsiuiwrs.
harbors, a salt a.nl f rutin unt ix m
X() fllnriluLlo 0;...:.. mU . . . '
. oUt,irun, u.wu uicycies, a
domestic trade of 4.()00.0on i.r m.,m
etc., etc., but she failed to mntin '
presumably from mer nv.i-Mi,t
she had 500 saloons and beer hall g, 5000
toughs, 350 "drunk" arrests per month,
entailing a greater cost to tlm nit f...
ourt proceedings than nil the.
Hons received bv her biyIu .i,n...i.n-
combined. ' "
BRITON AND BOER.
General Dewet is reported to have
miide his appearance near Frankfort, in
urange River Colony, and small
A Village Blacksmith Saved His Little Boa's
Life.
Mr. fl. H. Black, the well-knjwo vil
lug blacksmith at Qrahnmeville, Sulll
md Co.,N. Y.gayg; "Oar little goo, 5
yearg old, has always been subject to
coop, and go bad bava tbe attacks beeo
tbat w bsve feared many times that be
wonld die. We bave bad the doctor and
nsed many rjuedinioM, botfJbamberlain'g
Oi.ngb Remedy ig sow our sole reliance.
It gme to dissolve the tongb mnoug
sod by giving frequent doseg wben tbe
oroapy symptoms appear we have found
that be dreaded croup ia eared before
it eets eettled " There ie do danger in
giving this remedy for it oontaing no
opinm or other lojanoug drng and may
be given as confidently to a babe ag to
an adult. For tale by Corner A Warren.
knife in his hand, stole across thA
sandy parade-ground when the
moon was under th clouds of a
coming atorm, and slipped, as
silently as none but a savage can,
under the ramada of Hartoole's
quarters, and thence through the
open door. The Indian had missed
nothing when be had been in that
one small room a month hc.far
He knew where everything in it
was, from the chromo in the blue
frame on the wall to the cot in the
corner, across from the fire-nia
He hid himself behind tha
of calico that curtained off the
nook where HartrjolA'a r.Wha
hung, and waited until tho moon
showed for a moment through a
break in the clouds, and he could
see the figure on the cot beneath
tbe mosquito-net. When the room
was dark again, he slid out; and
the blade of the knife in his hand
went straight through the heart of
the man asleep. Then he took the
rattling armor from its nails and
wrapped it in the calico curtain,
and fled through the night, as
silently and swiftly as only an
Apache can.
Now it happened that Hartpole
had gone to another post a good
mf.ny miles to the eaat that
day, and he had left his striker to!
J xi . n.
oyo, miu i u a i viego was ciego m
very truth now and quite dead,
The God of the World In 1914.
a famous aoientisl prediota that tbe
world will come to an end in 1914, basing
hia osculations on tbe revelations of the
' i,jJi It this is go, it It well for us to
get wbat pleasure we own ont of the few
year that remain for ns to live. One of
the aareet ways to enjoy life Is the po
ssesion of itood beailb, and a well ref
lated stomaob. Hostetter'g Htomaoh
Bitters will enable anyone to obtain this.
It ie tbe greatest medioloe for tbe on re
of ilia that arise from a bad stomach,
It cures dyspeisia, constipation, fever
and agne, malaria, rheumatism and in
somnia. No other medicine oan show a
record equal to Qostetter'g Hlomaoh
Bittere, toe giandard mediolne of the
American people for over fifty years.
LADIES' DOME JOURNAL.
"The Lovliest Woman in All
America," "The Future of the
White House," "The Man Who
Wrote Narcissus," "Waiting for
the Mail" a page drawing by A.
B. Frost and "How Aunt Bally
Brought Down the House." a short
story, are some of the excellent
features of the November Ladies'
Home Journal. Thpre are numer
ous articles on the fashions, and
woman's work. By the Curtis
Publishing Company, Philadelphia.
One dollar a year; 10 cents a copy.
tl
uomes ol Doers continue harassing tac
tics. It is asserted that. T.nr.i wtti.
w jiiviirjurjr
to stop pursuit of commandos and trv
to settle the colonics by garrisoning and
organizing the towns for rapid raids
with mounted troops.
"Prince Christian Victor's end," saya
a Pretoria dispatch, dated Nov. 1, "was
sudden and unexpected, although he
had been unconscious for three days.
The body was embalmed and prepara
tions were heing made to take it to Eng
land, when the telegram arrived an
nouncing that it was the Queen's de
sire that the remain hn Vkll fill A n n
soldier's grave. The ceremony was per
formed today with military pomp.
Millions Given Away.
It is certainly gratifying to tbe public
lo know of one oonoern iu tbe land who
are not afraid to be generous to the
needy and suffering. The proprietors ef
Dr. King's New Dipoovery for Cod
sumptmn, Coughs and Colds, have eiven
rway over ten million trial bottles of
tbis great medioine, and have the satis
faction of knowing it ha i10i..,i.
cured thousands of hnnulu ......
Anthma, Bronchitis. HnsriMn... .i ..n'
disease of tbe Tbrnut -j
Langs are surely cured hv it p.n
(longer Warren Drug Co.. and get a
freetrml bottle HaUt ,IM fW.and
... oouio guaranteed, or
I'MIIHUfll,
priee
WANTKD-
ACT1VK M ne (umn .,,..
!! .11..... .7. .7 " "'"' 1.11AK-
. ,7, riiuect 11 ormton for nlil
Sal-";""1 """"""""' wl...u4le ho. ie
!H ayar.siire.n. Hoii,.ty more than ex
I''T T'"1"''"1- "rr..fr,...P, any hs" k i,
Hty. Ji,;i.. nt-if-Mt.ln-Hea slain ped enveloi a
t