sifmnir, aprii . nt,
GHivrn
102.1.
—
. ......................
mediately Imagined I was
I
smelling
burning kulphur match»».
old.
burning sulphur tustches.
HIM
"Get down here, Imddy, and smell
this dog!" I whispered. “Is It
h»
fashioned mat <•!>»«, or what?"
I
One sniff was all that the Ud
st opped up them
needed.
couldn't get any
FRANCIS LYNDE-^
1*;
__
•COPYRIGHT BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
SYNOPSIS.
CHARTER t —Under hle grnndfather'S
wlil, Stanford Hniughtun, society liller,
nude ala
I.r ilio «Stato, vai md al
Somethlng llke Hv .uuu. Uva In a "sale re-
posttory.*T latltud» and loiigltu»!« *)•■
a. rlbed, and tirai la all
II m»y t.e Idehtl-
fled by ilio prvaance nearby uf a Munti-
l.alred, blua-eyerl girl, a pianalo borav.
end a dog alili a split fave, hall block
end hall whlte. Stanford al tirai reao'ia
thè bv.|ueat aa a Ione, bui after ronaaJ* re-
Uun seta uni tu fina hla lagasy.
CHARTER II <>n hla way lo Denver,
thè city malvai thè merldian Uva* rlbed
In hla grnndfaiher'a wlll, Stanford boaro
frum a follile trnvalor a aioli liavlug lu
du aliti a flouded mine.
CHAPTER III Thinking thins» over,
he begin« lu imagine theie may be e«»me-
thing in HU gi
Jfathvr'e bequest wui lb
while, big Id»« fl null/ centering un I be
iMjaelblltty of a mine, a« a
rcpoel“
turv.** lteA3»illng the narrative on th«
train, he ax-erialna thut hi« fellow trav-
•ler wag a mining •ng'nevr, ChaTlvg liul-
lertun
Huliertun rafuM> birn Infortna-
tlun, but from olhor auur«
Hiuughlon
leaina enough to iiiako him piuxeed lu
FIa<erviHe, In th«
daaeit
I’KAITEK IV -On th« etatIon platform
at Aliopia, Ju«t as ths Hain pulls uut,
Ftarifurd sees what appuar to be the Idsh-
that hots« and <)ua d«S<Flb«d In hie
grandfather'a will. Imprvesrd, lie lea* «-a
m« Ira n at the nest atop, Angsle
Flier«
he rK -« tl al Atropia waa ortg
l'la<-«t % ill«, |.is destination.
Unable lu
secure a conveyance al one« tu lake him
to Placerville, Broughton seires a cun*
etru< tlun car and • st apes, having th« Im*
ptr.*B»..n on the U>WR nu»tahu|. Hoaalw),
that h« Is slightly d«meni«d.
<"T!AI*rdl V. Pursued, h« abandons
the car. whu h Is wr«u k«d, ami ««capes on
foot
In the darkness, he is overtaken
by a girl un hurst-hat k. and THE d<»g.
After he explains hla preaen»'o. she in*
\ lies him tu her home, at the Old Clnna*
Lar mine, tu meet her father.
CHAlTril VI.—Broughton's boats see
Hlrnct Twornbly, c<*r»tuM»r of the mina,
and hla daughter Jranla. Seeing the girl.
Stanford Is natlan<-<1 he has liH-nted Ids
properly, but does nut reveal hie Identity.
CHAPTER VII—Next morning, with
tllrum. he visile th* mine. Hiram neks
hltn Io louk uver the machinery. and he
faM eo, glad of an excuse to be near
Jeanie, In whom he lute become Inter-
ewied, nnd ho rngiigna In Hie that real
w i rk he has ever done.
CMyPTRTl VITI Tlroughton and Hiram
get the pumps started, but are unable to
make an Impresemn on the water. Hut-
lerton. apparently nn old friend of the
Twomhlya, visile the mine.
lie offers
to drain It In consideration of Brough
ton's giving lia nrty-i-ne per rent uf the
prop»rtv Stanford tert see Then Inlier
ton offri« to buy the mine outright f -r
It had cost Brought..n • grund-
father more than half a million. Stan
ford again refum-a.
CHARTER IX
Jeanie caution» I'rough
ton against sailing the mine, under at.y
elrrumstancea, and. apparently In a spirit
of nils. h'ef. allows him to kiss her. Attar
a
i onvsreatinn
with
I t.tdtly
Hiram.
Htoiigl ton decides he will stick to the
property.
ly tuippom-d would be mude Under
cover of the dlatrnctlng racket. But
tfii-rv was no ussuult, though the meun-
liigli-MX clamor kept up without nbule-
mriit.
By the time we were beginning to
grow a trifle hardened to II the i-lamor
■.topped ns abruptly us It hud lu-gun
and the silence which succeeded was
even mure deafening than the noise
hud been. While 1 funclrd 1 could see
dint figures stealing down the roud
Hint led to the befleh below, 1 heard
Daddy say: "Now, w hat In ths mime
o' Jeholuehlm—"
lie had turned away from tils peep
hole and I could sense, rather than see.
that lie was rubbing his eyes. Then I
realised that u|iun me. also, a sudden
blindness bail fallen; the Interior of
the aim ft house bad become us dark
ns tin* Inside of n pocket. The effect
WM hu stupefying thut It took troth
of us u minute or so to understand
fbut route change us yet umleflnubls
had been wrought either In us or In
our mirrouiidlug« during the noisy In
terlmle.
"tlreut Jehu I” exclaimed I itie old
man— though he was within I n mis
reach 1 could make him out only ns a
dim shadow- "(¡rent Joint! J—1 b'lleva
liti g<dn* blind, Sluunle! 1—I canT
o-e nothin' s tall!"
"Don't worry," I hastened to say;
“I'm In the rume bout. We’ve been
looking tiro long anil steadily through
those auger-holes. It'U puss In n mln-
Ute."
But It didn't pass and presently the
voice of my ulti alili* partner cam«
again out of the durktiesH.
“P'raps It's cloudin' up some,*' lie
stt/gesied In h lialf-whls|ter. "I can't
see no stars through them windows.”
At this I looked towurd the window
openings, hut the Interior blackness
had blotted litem out completely. Al
most Instinctively I turned back to the
door mid put an eye to u loophole.
Hue glance was enough. The trouble,
whatever It might be, was with us nnd
not with the stay. The stats were
shining as brightly as ever.
"Don't move. Daddy." I cautioned.
i rrp
c ■*
fei
CHAPTER X.—Nest day. during Htan
ford's temporary absence from the mine,
an
enemy.
without
doubt
Bullerion.
wreck» the pumping machinery. Brough
ton decides io l.avu It out with him twat
day.
C1IAPTKR XI- In the morning hs fln.ls
Bullrrtnn anil Jennie have duuit>pnarr<1,
apparently eloped He also discovers that
hla deed lu the mlns has been Stolen, and
as II his nut bean recorded he has no
priait ut ownership
Mysterious actions
of the <li‘K causo lllrarn and Broughton
to take the trail In search ut Jeanie.
CHAPTER XII.—They
find
Jrardr's
pony, abandoned, nut no trac» of lite girl
V, ban they gat back to iba cabin. Bollar
lo n la llivrv. apparently awaiting their
return.
CHAPTER XIII -Relieving Jeanie to
have gone with IltillrrtOn, the sight of
th * man la too much (or Broughton, and
he uses hhti roughly. Bullerton demes
knowing
the
whereabouts ut Jeanie.
Broughton aiders him off hla property,
and hr departs vowing vengeance. Satis-
fled Bullerton means mischief, Broughton
an<1 Hiram fortify themaelves In the
mine shafthouse and prepare for a siege.
Bullerton cornea wth a crowd of deeper*
adorn am! on their refusal to xacate, be
gins an attack.
CHAPTER XIV.—During the day and
night the two successfully defend the
ehnfthousr itgidnst atlacka, including an
attempt to drown them out
(Continued from last week)
CHAPTER XVI
Burnt Matches.
Following the dog to the door, we
Could neither see nor hear anything
going on outside, though Burney's
snlfllngs under the door mid Ids low
growl warned us Hint something tv ns
afoot, either on Hie dump bend or In
the partly wrecked cabin beyond.
While we were still peeping and peer
ing, each lit bls auger-hole anil each
reatly io take an offhand shot at any
thing tluil seemed susplclotis, the si
lence of the mountain night was ripped
ami torn by the most hideous clamor
imaginable, arising, apparently, In the
cabin or perhaps from the gloving of
trees Just behind It. The rm'kbt was
deafening; comparable tn nothing that
I'd ever heard; a magnified orchestra
tion, so to apeak, of the pandemonium
made by a crowd of country hoys
serenading a newly married pair with
tin pans and .sucli-llke noise milking
implements.
"What In the name o' Joab!" stut
tered Dndtly Hiram. "Reckon them
gosh-dnniined plrateera *ve gone pluiu*
loony J"
"Walt," I qualified, anil I had to
shout to make myself heard. “There'll
bo more to follow. Tills Is only the
curtain-raiser."
But my guess appeared to be no
good. For quite some little time we
crouched, guiiN nt the ready, prepared
to repel the aasault which we uutural-
Daddy Took His Cue Instantly.
and then groped my way along the
wall nnd climbed to the top of our
earth-suck breastwork ut a point which
I guessed to lie under the nearest of
the two windows.
When 1 drew myself up nnd tried to
thrust a hand through the opening
the mysterious darkness was ex
plained. The window embrasures were
stopped up, both of them, on the out
side by something that felt like a
heavy ennvus curtain, though how the
curtain was held In place I could not
determine. But It was firmly braced
In some way. With all the purchase
I could get—which wasn’t much—I
couldn’t dislodge It or push It aside.
Making my way back to the door
I told Daddy what I had found.
”Huh!’’ lie said; "that old tarpaulin
that was out yonder In the ore shed,
llow d'ye reckou they got It there,
Stnnnle?”
"It's hoisted on a framework of
some kind, and they did It while wo
wore rubbering and trying to find out
what sll that noise was nbout.”
We were not kept very long In doubt
as to what the next enemy move was
to b* With the cessation of the tom
tom clatter the collie had grown curl-
ously restless. We couldn't see him,
but we could hear hint running from
post to pillar, snllllng at the cracks
and occasionally giving a whining
growl. Presently he begnn to cough
and sneeze; then he came racing back
to us, flattening himself to hold his
nose to the crack under the door and
taking long breaths us If lie were half
stifled. 1 stooped to pat him and Im-
nm,r rornrrn
r vrtr -hrnrr
■— ............. ...
1 Hutt» Wff lilt you. It'll I* fur a St>lsh "
"Yea,” sultl I. "You brought the
nru club up In a wugon, didn't you?"
Hr Ignored tl Is,
"IVt* could »larva you out If wr
chu««- to tak» the time. I know pretty
• uell uhut yuu've got to rut or ru ttvrr
wbut you haven't gut. It's your privi-
leg* tu take your life In your own
hands. Broniditon; that's up to you
Hut buw uliuut the old man?"
"The old man'» u itimt/ good and
able to speak for blsself!” yupped
Duddy. “You du your durndest.
> Charley Bullerton!”
"All right, once more. You'll hear
from us directly, how ; and as I »aid
before, we've quit gentling you. That'»
! mv lust word."
For a time after this the silence,
and the darknesa, since It xu> the hour
before dawn, were thick enough tn be
cut «lilt an ax. But the dog was
more restless than ever, and we knew
that aomcthlng we could neither see
nor hear must be going on. After a
while 1 asked the question that had
been worrying me ever since I had
beard the wagon wheels.
"What did they bring up In that
wagon. Daddy—a Gatling?"
"’llie Lord only know». Stannle—and
he won't tall," was the old prospector's
reply, made with no touch of Irrever
ence ; and the words were scarcely out
of his mouth before a thunderbolt
struck the shafthouse.
he little I"
enough
"tlosh-to-gee whiz—brimstone
TTe as-
Choked; "them devil» are amokln*
us
out I That's why they
window holes; so we
air I”
There appeared to
(line for any defensive move,
pliyxlatlng gaa was coming stronger
every moment, am! any search fur Its
source seemed utterly hupvk-aa. Yet
we" went kt it, coughing and choking,
and stumbling over everything tn the
darktie»«, us u matter of course.
After all it was Burney who (I honor
Idtn with the human pronoun because
he certainly deserved It) It was Bar
ney who showed us the devil'» door
way. The red glow was now sending
enough light hruugti cracks and crev
ices and the bullet rlpplugs overhead
to make our Inner darkness a degree
or so less than Stygian. Missing that
the
dug fur a moment at our com foot
mo □
breathing hole, we saw him circling the
a
the
particular spot In the floor and snarl
(Continued next Saturday)
ing at It na If It were something alive.
At that we both remembered
the slmfthomte floor wan raised a
or so from the rocky ledge on
GEORGE LEIGH MALLORY
down-mountain aide, and that
■pace underneath was partly open.
Daddy polote<l to the circling dog.
"Barney’s got It!" he panted.
"Tliey've run their chimney up under
the floor!" Then: "Where tn Sam
HUI did you leuve that ax?"
The ax was n*-ar at hand and I ran
for It. Holding my breath I began to
chop madly at the floor plunking. By
thin time (lie ntr was so bad that tt
.„.^u»»iuie to breathe it, ana arter
a few blows I had to drop the ax and
run to the breathing gap. Daddy took
Ida cue Instantly, snatching up the ux
at 1 flung It down and hacking away
as long ns be could hold hla breath.
When lie was forced to make a bolt
for the life saving hole In the door, I
run In again; thus got a couple of (he
fluor planks loose and pried them out.
In the space beneath the open-
cracked floor we found Bullerton's
chimney end; un old discarded boiler
flue. It seemed to be, leading up from
ths bench below. From unearthing
the hole we
had
the deadly thing to muzzling
It with
floor serving
as
one of our wet blankets
was the
which
the cool,
breathless work of only
a minute
or
rushing thus
In a shut
re-
two; and with the gun-main
off. the air Io the shafthouse soon b»
came bearable ugnlu,
chopped through the
a ventilator through
crisp night air came
vivifying blast.
George Leigh Mallory, ana of th
Our first care, after a prolonged
silence led us to believe that the raid leader, in the recent attempt to »cal*
ers bad withdrawn to study up some Mount Everett, hae announceo hi» tn
fresh scheme for getting rid of us. was tention to try it again.
to get a bar end pry our two doors
open so thnt the breeze mlcht blow ODD WEAPONS C" C'JZLiOTS
through and air the place out a bit.
Closing and barring the doors after Controversy That Hsd Fatal Ending
Settled With Billiard Dall—
the sulphur steueb had been reduced
Cagliostro'» Peculiar Idea.
to a mere match-box odor, we estab
lished our night-watch, Daddy Hiram
r.llllartl pin vers will lie Interested
taking the first trick under a solemn
promise to cull mo at the end of a to know that 80 years nso a duel with
couple of hours. This time he behaved a billiard ball took place iu wltii-h a
better, rousing me u little before mid man was l lllnl. The quarrel was be
night. He reported everything quiet, tween two men named I.enfant and
and pointed to the sleeping dog as evi Mellant in the commuue of Malaunfort
dence that there were no Intruders (Selne-et-Olsei. France.
One September day they quarreled
wltliin smelling distance.
"Been that-away ever since you over a gntne of billiards. (Ttallengrw
turned In,'* he said, meaning, as I took were exchanged, the red billiard ball
It, that the dog had been resting easy. was selected as the weapon, and lots
"You can Just keep an eye on Barney. were drawn to see who should throw
If anything goes to stirriu', he'll know It first.
It afore you wlll.”
Mellant was favored, and threw
Nothing did stir; and after Daddy with such speed and alm that Len-
bad gone to wrap himself In Ills damp fant, struck on the temple, fell dead.
blankets, I hud my work cut out for
The duel of the pill Is credited to
me keeping awake; In fact, I shouldn't Cagliostro. He had called a physician
want to swear that I was fully awHke a quack.
Possibly the physician
during all of the one hundred and thought this was too like the pot call
twenty minutes that my sentry-go last ing the kettle black.
Anyway, he
ed. No matter about that. Bullerton challenged. Cagliostro proposed that
didn't spring any more surprises on us two pills, one poisonous, the other
during my watch; and when I turned harmless, be put In a box and shaken
the fortress over to Daddy at two up. Each was to draw a pill and
o’clock I was able to more
pass than
the two
"all swallow It.
came
quiet" report back to Hiram
him and
go to
to I
“A medical controversy should be
the blankets with an easy conscience. settled in a medical fashion,” the
announced
I had just dropped he asleep,
as It ! magician explained. It Is not on rec
seemed to me—though In reality I had ord that the duel was carried out.
•lept like a log for
hours—when Daddy
shake me awake.
THEIR THIRD WIFE A TREE
"Somethin' doin',"
quietly, and when I sat up I saw that Hindus Have Evolved Really Unique
the collie was moving uneasily from
Way of Evading a Religious
one door to the other, stopping now
Technicality.
and then to stand moffwnlesa with hla
ears cocked and his head on one side;
Probably the most curious form of
"Barney hears something," I ven- marriage in existence prevails In India,
tured; and a moment later Daddy where men and women are married to
broke in:
trees. A Hindu In the Punjab cannot be
"Huh I It’s plain enough for my old legally married a third time, and when,
ears, now; It’s a wagon cornin' across I therefore, he wants a third wife, he Is
the bench.”
married to a certain tree, so that when
Now the presence of a wagon on our I he does actually take another wife site
bench at this early hour in the mom- ! counts as his fourth.
Ing might mean either one of two |
In another district of India there are
diametrically opposite things: Our communities where a tree marriage Is
deliverance: or the upcoming of re solemnized In the case of a man who
inforcements for the raiders. We were has lost two wives and Is desirous of
not left long In doubt. Shortly after taking a third, or a man who Is too
the rack-rack of the wagon wheels poor to marry tn the usual way.
stopped we heard footsteps, and the j
In the latter case, the man Is after
lialr stiffened on Barney’s back. Next wards married to a widow. As, how
we heard Bullerton’s voice, just out ever, the remarriage of a widow Is held
side ami apparently under our window by orthodox Hindus to be fraught with
openings.
every calamity, the wedding Is per
"Broughton I" the voice called; "can formed at dead of night under un old
you hear met'
mango tree. It Is not easy to under
"So well that you'd better keep ont stand the reason for such an extraor
of range!” I snapped back.
dinary custom as tree marriages, but
“All right—listen. You’ve got to get one authority points out that it seems
out, Broughton—that’s flat. I haven't to be Intended to avert the curse of
wanted to go to extremes. For per
widowhood, the "husband" being al
fectly obvious and commonplace rea ways alive.
sons I don’t want to have to kill you
to get rid of you. But we are not go- ■
Ing to gentle you any more. You’ve
already hurt four of my men. aud two
of the four are crippled. The next
Price Advances
on May 1
— 2,900 shares now remaining,
offered to customers and friends at
$95 per share
YOUR PARTNERS
IN PROGRESS
T he C alifornia O regon P ower C ompany
7% Preferred Capital Stock
Yielding *737 c / q
In a few week« — May 1 — th« opportunity
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attractive rat« of |95 p*r «her« will hav«
pa«a«d. Th« stock« a( comparable public uuli-
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par value price of $i(M» per share. II you want
7.37%—-and ea/efy —a«t rd once, while you
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figure. Even now our erratum-
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taking up the few »hares dill
available.
The California Oregon
Power Company hae shown a
substantial growth in mid .
inga resulting from the devel
opment of the territory in
which it operates.
THE STOCK >
Par value |IOO per share.
Dividends paid since issuance,
per share
per annum. Checks mailed every three months,
$1.75 pet share.
Proceeds of all securities sold devoted ex-
Hnaively to development of
Company’s properties.
Not assessable by the Com-
pen y for any purpose what
soever.
Exempt from Federal Nor
mal Individual Income Tax.
Between 1912 and 1922. the
Company's fonsumrn grew
from 6.561 io > <.»/<» an iiureeM of 1^0% —
and the development cd lh< trnhory is still »n
its infancy. In the s«me ».-n yrais the phyM« el
properties behind the Company's Capital Slo> k
have increased from $4. i89.425.76 to $ 10,291.•
S64 69. whu h includes seven hydroelectric;
plants in Southern Oregon an«l Nuiibern Cal
ifornia.
The accompanyir.g chai» sbow« the eteaJily
increased eerrnngs uf thia Company.
Tekes precedence as to as
sets and dividends over com
mon stock amounting to
>4,441,100 par value. Equity
tw* k uf the preferred stock
now outstanding amounts to
• total of S8.T85.l6l 5i, which equals $286.30
per share, m uvea three times the present coat
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Purchase may be made in any amount from
one share upwards; cash, or Mvrnge pXan;
$5 uO peg share as first payment, and $5.00 per
alia re per month. Interest un all partial pay
ments at 6% pea annum.
The aio<k is listed on the San Francisco
Stock end Bund Extliange.
The California Oregon Power Company
OfficM: Medford, Grants Pass, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Yreka, Dunsmuir, California
Price ddrancet May 1, 1923
On'
niiff
JM
«»—I ««-
I
The California Oregon Power Compiny
•/ lit txirfMngJf
I
Medford, Oregon
fUn '/fi
tn tn9n I9tw4i9tt
„ »««. it-
frin at wiui tiii
"g
f’
'•
7J7% f" •• •**—
wll ^9*999 ih fatta Irti af taatfarabla iygraalrttrtt aanta-
titi. Th f'itt wi! h tJnttftJ May t
Yaa atay fiait yaa' a'Jt* at ya fall tafat^aaiaa ai .»?«/
aar »fill, ar f'va any aitlr if m >
••g.vrwri.»,
|
P!ea»e have a member of your organization call
a* aail
'
Preferred Stock.
I
on nt» at«M you»
|
,\atat __________________________________________________ __
I Mdreii
|
I
ta tit taayaa.
Cultivating Friendship.
Agree with thy neighbor, but not
too swiftly; then he will be pleased to
think he lias won you by his wisdom.-»
Exchange.
Coming to
MEDFORD
COVNTY TREASI RER’S CALL
film ever made by Paramount.
It
FOR GENERAL WARRANTS also has more well-known small town
All Josephine County General war
rants issued up to, not including
April 1, 1914, and protested prior to
that date, are hereby called in and
are payable at the County Treasur
er^ office on or after April 23. 1923,
on which date interest will cease.
GEORGE S. CALHOUN,
Pounty Treasurer of Jose
phine County, Ore. 72
4 ♦ ♦ >♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦-♦
♦
♦
AMUSEMENTS
♦ ♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Breaks All Records
More than one record was broken
in the photoplay "Back Home and
Broke,” which George Ade wrote for
Thomas Meighan, and which comes
KPkXlAIJHT
to the Rivoli theatre April 25 and
26. The picture is said to have
In Internal .Medicine for the Past
more laughs to the reel than any
Twelve Years
Dr. Mellenthin
characters crammed into it in true
Ade style than most pictures of a
more or less rural type. Proceeds go
into the Memorial Home Fund.
79
BATTERY
WORK
done by an expert Battery Man
With the Very
LATEST
EQUIPMENT
Smith’s Garage
Service With a Smile
DOES NOT OPKR.VTE
HOLDERS OF VICTORY BONDS
Will Be At
HOLLAND HOTEL,
MONDAY,
.APRIL
:10th
Office Hours: It) ». u. to 4 p. m.
ONT*! IkAY ONLY
All Victory Bonds will be paid by the government
on
May 20th, 1923, and we otter our services in handling
them. We suggest that the bonds be deposited with us
in advance of the maturity date.
Registered Victory
Bonds must be forwarded to Washington for redemption,
and therefore should be sent in at once, in order that
payment may be made on May 20th.
No charges for ( owsuhatt-n
Dr. Mellinthln is a regular gradu
ate In medicine and surgery and Is
licensed by the state of Oregon.
He visits professionally the more
important towns and cities and crfiers
to all who call on this trip free con
sultation, except the expense of treat
ment when desired.
-Aocordfng to his method of treat
ment he does not operate for chronlo
appendicitis, gall stones, ulcers of
stomach, tonsils or adenoids.
He has to his credit wonderful re
sults in diseases of the stomach, liver,
bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart,
kidney, bladder, bed wetting, catarrh,
weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg
ulcers and rectal aliments.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF SOUTHERN OREGON
WHY PAY MORE ?
Onr Lumber Is Goixl
Our Price is Right
If yo*u have been afUng for any
length of time and do not get any
better, do not fall to call, as improper
measures rather than disease are very
often the cause of your long standing
trouble.
Remober above date, that consulta
tion on this trip will be free and that
his treatment is different.
Marled -women must be accompan
ied by their husbands.
Address: 336 Boston Block, Minne
apolis, Minn.
Come in and look it over
THE VALLEY LUMBER CO.
Wett F Street
Phone 47