The Columbia register. (Houlton, Columbia County, Or.) 1904-1906, August 05, 1904, Image 6

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MASTER OF
By Robert
IjHHIllllllin f-M-T r r r-'KH
CHAPTER XVII.
On reaehiriB; tandoa I twnwd a room
In a amall coffee house, and. having de
posited my liiKce, I started off at once
to the offices of tha mining company. 1
was astonUhed, on arriving at my domi
nation, to find that the 'Vinecs" con
sisted only of a couple of grimy rooms
la a side street. I waa received by a
dilapidated and somewhat dirty old clerk.
II Informed me that the head of the firm
waa' at that moment in hi room. 1 was
taken to him, and mad haste to state
my case.
I soon found that my presence titer
waa comparatively tuvless. Like mas
ter, like man. they aay. and certainly
George Redruth, in forming a company
to conduct the mine, had been careful
to select men whose view accorded with
hi own: besides, my character had pre
ceded me; they had Wen forewarned of
my visit, and to all my complaint they
had nothing to aay.
Sick at heart. I left the place. What
my uest move would be I did not know.
It was certain I could do nothing for
the CoruisU miner; and since they could
not starve, they must be left to trudge on
with that grim skeleton Death forever
by their side!
Pondering thus, I made my way slowly
alone the crowded streets, gaiiug ab
stractedly at the. sea of faces surround
Ing me. It was Saturday afternoon, and
the Strand was thronged. The hum of
the busv crowd distracted me. I turn
ed. intending to pass down one of the
aide streets, when suddenly 1 stepped
face to face with a woman who was
coming toward me, and uttered a cry,
It was my coumn Annie.
Rut so changed was she that I scarce
ly knew her. She was dressed as a lady.
and looked like one; but her face was
pale, her eyes looked troubled and sad.
Fhe must hav.e been walking quickly.
for as 1 turned to face her she almost
fell into my arms.
The cry I gave attracted her; she look
ed into my face, and knew me. She
paused, uncertain what to do. My sud
den appearance there, of all places on
the earth, was so unexpected that it com
rletely unnerved her. For a moment
she seemed about to fly; then, conquering
herself, she stood her ground.
"Hugh!" she exclaimed. "You here!'
"Yes!" I answered, sternly enough. "I
am here!"
I felt no joy in meeting her. Had she
come to me poor, despised, I should
have taken her in my arms, and said
"You poor, repentant child, come home;"
but when fie stood before me in her fine
raiment, my heart hardened; for I
thought of the heart-broken old people
whom she had left. My . appearance
must have been strange, for I began to
attract some attention, when Annie took
me by the arm and led me down the side
street I had intended to take.
"Hugh!" she said, "did you come to
London to look for me?"
"No. I came on other business, but I
promised to seek you and take you back."
She was still white as death and trem
bling violently. As I uttered these words
she shook her head, and'.her eyes filled
with tears.
"I cannot go home, Hugh; not yet,
she said, sadly.
"Not yet?" I repeated. "Will It ever
be better for you than it is now?"
"Yes, Hugh; and soon, I hope, I shall
be able to go and cause them no trouble,
Hugh, dear Hugh! you have never once
taken my hand; you have not looked at
me as you would have done some months
go. Yon think I have brought trouble
upon you all; but I am a lawful wife."
"A lawful wife? Whose wife?"
"Ah! do not ask me that. I cannot
tell you. But I am a wife; and some day,
very soon, I shall be acknowledged. Hugh,
will you not take my hand, and say that
you forgive me?"
"I have nothing to forgive," I replied.
"You did me no wrong; but you ruined
the happiness of your home, and you
have broken your father's heart"
"Hugh!"
"It is as well for you to hear it, An
nie," I continued. "When your flight
was discovered your father bore it brave
ly, we thought; but it seems he hid the
worst of his trouble from us, and pined
In secret It has been like a canker
worm gnawing at his heart; and now he
Is weak and feeble, like a weary, worn
old man!"
I ceased, for Annie had turned away
nd was crying piteously. I went to her
and took her hand.
"Annie," I said, "tell me the name of
the man who has been the author of all
this trouble, and I will ask no more."
- "I cannot tell you, Hugh. Why should
you wish to know? I tell you I am his
wife." .
"If you are his wife, where is the need
of all this secrecy?
"There are reasons why he cannot ao
knowledge me jifst now; therefore, I have
made a solemn vow never to tell his
Dame until he gives me permission. Is it
not enough for you to know that I have
not disgraced you, and that I am hap
py? Will you tell tbem at home that
you found nie well, and that they must
not grieve; because some day soon I shall
come back to them?
"Where are you living now?" I asked.
"Close by here," she replied, quickly.
"I was on my way home hen I met
you. Will you come with ine, Hugh? I
will show you the rooms."
I assented; and she led the way. She
walked quickly, and paused before
house. Entering with a latchkey, she
passed up a flight of stairs and entered
a room.
"This is where I live, Hugh," she
aid.
' It was a change indeed from the Corn
tsh kitchen in which she had lived all her
life. The room was one which I could
Imagine Madeline occupying, but which
was singularly out of place when coupled
with Annie!"
Having looked about me, I prepared to
leave.
' "Where are you going, Hugh?" she
asked. "Home? Shall I see you again?"
"That I don't know. Since you say
yon art well cared for and happy, where
Is the use of troubling your Home aay,
nerhaps. when your sun begins to set,
you'll find your way back to those who
loved you long before this villain crossed
your path!"
T
THE MINE
;
Buchanan.
f KtU
I opened tha door, stepped acre the
threshold, and faced two Strang men.
A hand wa laid upon my shoulder,
and a voice said:
Stop, young man! Wt want you for
murder!"
CHAPTER XVIII.
For "murder"? The very word para-
yted me; aud I looked at the man iu
uttej consternation.
Oh, Hush!" cried Annie, wildly.
"What is it? What have you done?'
Without answering her, 1 looked wild-
y tne men; then, acting on a man im
pulse and quite without reflection, I rush
ed to the dxr. In a moment the men
threw themselves pon me, aud there
was a brief but fierce struggle; but my
strength waa of no avail, and in a couple
of minutes I was overpowered and hand-
utTed. The man who had first address
ed me, looked at me with a grim smile.
"You're a Wld chap," he said; "but
it's no use. You'd have don much
better to have come along quietly. Now
lookee here. I've got to tell you that
whatever you say. from this moment for
ward, will be used in evidence against
you."
"For heavens sake, explain. I an
swered. "What does it all mean? who
is murdered?"
"How innocent we are! You'll be tell
ing us next that your name ain't Hugh
Trelawney, late overseer of the St. Uur-
lott mine."
"Trelawney is my name, but
"Of course it is; and Trelawney's the
name of the man we want the name on
this here warrant. My duty is to appre
hend you for the murder of Mr. Ephraim
S. Johnson, the new overseer, who took
your place."
"Johnson! murdered! I cried. "It is
impossible!"
"Oh. no. It aiu't." returned the imper
turbable official. "Deceased was found
at the foot of the cliffs, with his brains
knocked out, and bearing on his body
signs of violence; worse than that, he'd
been stabbed with a knife; and once
more, you're the party we. want for hav'
ing done the job."
Utterly amazed and horrified, I stag
gered and fell into a chair. As for An
nie, she seemed completely petrified. I
can see her white face now froien, tear
less and aghast!
"I will go with you." I said, "but I am
perfectly innocent. Until this moment, I
never even heard of this horrible affair,
I left St. Gurlott's two days ago."
"Exactly, was the dry retort; you
hooked it the very night of the murder,
The body was found early on the morn
ing of the 23d, and the warrant was is
sued yesterday."
As he spoke, I seemed to feel the net
closing round me. At first the very accu
sation had seemed preposterous; now, I
began to understand that my position
was one of extreme peril. If Johnson
had really been murdered, aud on that
night, as now seemed clear, I could not
escape suspicion by a mere alibi. I re
membered, with a thrill of horror, my
last meeting with the murdered man
just before my departure, and my heart
sank within me.
I knew my own innocence but who
was guilty? As I asked myself the ques
tion, I looked again at Annie, who was
still watching me intently; and in a mo
ment, as if by an inspiration, I thought
of her father! Had John Pendragon, in
a moment of madness, taken the life of
the man whom he suspected of causing
is daughter's flight? The thought was
almost too horrible for belief yet alas
it was not unreasonable,
Now, then, are you ready?" said the
officer, placing his hand upon my shoul
der.
"Hugh! dear Hugh! tell me yiu did not
do it! I cannot cannot believe that you
are guilty!" cried Annie.
"When the time comes," I said, sol
emnly, "may you be as well able to an
swer for your deeds as I shall answer
for mine. The trouble began with you.
If murder has Wen done, it is your do
ing also remember that!"
They were cruel words, and afterwards
I bitterly regretted them; but I was
thinking of her father, and remember
ing how bitter must be bet blame, if,
by any possibility, he had been driven
into crime and violence as a consequence
of her conduct Whether she understood
me or not, I cannot tell; but, hiding her
face in her hands, she sank on a couch,
hysterically sobbing.
What followed seemed more like an ex
traordinary dream than cruel waking re
ality! I was led from the house, placed
in a cab, and driven away. That very
afternoon I left London by train, an"d late
that night was handed over, handcuffed
and helpless, to the authorities of Fal
mouth jail.
My suspense did not last long. The
very next day I was taken from the pris
on, and placed in a dog-cart, with a po
liceman at my side and another on the
seat beside the driver. An inquest on the
body of the murdered man was to take
place that day at ftt. uurlott s, and, of
course, ray presence was necessary.
As we dashed through the village, I
saw several of the miners hanging about;
but I carefully averted my eyes from
theirs. A little further on, we passed the
door of the cottage where I had dwelt
so happily and so long; and I saw, with
a sigh of relief, that there was no sign
of any one about. We trotted on, till we
reached Redruth House. Here, to my
surprise, the horse was pulled up.
"Now, then, get down!" said my com
panion; and I alighted. As I did so,
some one pressed forward, and I met the
honest eyes of John Rudd. The poor
fellow thrust out his hand to seize mine;
then, finding that I was handcuffed, drew
the hand hastily back and placed it on
my shoulder. -
"Dawn't be dawnhearted, Master
Hugh!" he cried. "There be not a sawl
in St Gurlott's believes 'ee killed 'un.
So cheer up, lad; they'll soon set 'ee
free."
I thanked him, with tears standing in
my eyes, for his kindness touched me.
Then I was led into the house, and in a
little while was facing the coroner, in
the great old-fashioned dining hall, where
the Inquest was being held.
I forget many of the details of that
miserable day. Only one thing I vividly
remember the sight of the dead man's
W4y. stretched out for Inspection ra th
kitchen. Why I was taken to it 1
do not know; but 1 felt that I was close
ly watched as I bent over it Poor John
son! I freely forcavt hliu all the trou-
Me he had ever caused me, seeing th
lloodtatned aud disfigured mass which
had one been hi living self!
As the Inquest proceeded I realised the
ull extent of my peril. Several of th
men cam forward and testified to my
aring quarreled with the murdered man
nd knocked him down. Then the young
master, George Redruth, gave his testi
mony to the effect that 1 had been dis
missed from the oversccrshlp, and that I
ore a violent grudge agalnut the man
who had supplanted me. Finally, It wa
roved that 1 had left St. Uurlott . some
ime on the very night of the murder.
A uvea the witnesses examined was
my aunt. Sh looked utterly overcome
with grief, and, oti seeing me, would .have
prung to and embraced me hysterically
had she not beeu withheld. Her hu-
band, it waa shown, was too 111 to at-
end; but as hi evidence would have
imply corroborated hers, his abseuc
was deemed unimportant. All she had to
ay coucerned merely my movements on
the fatal night, and the coroner elicited
from her the fact that as lat as nine
iu the evening I had been lu Urn neigh
borhood of the mine.
Vague and circumstantial as all the
evidence was, it was sufficient to decide
he jury against me. laacd and horri
fied, I heard them bring in their verdict
a verdict of willful murder against
'Hugh Trelawney," who was straight
way committed tor trial at me next
ssiaes.
(To b continued.!
IT WORKfcD WELL,
An Experiment to Fhow How Easily
People Are Led,
Over in the corner of the club room
they were discussing that sheepish
tendency of most of us to "follow the
leader."
"Now, It la astonishing," said tho
young man with a bald spot
During one t)f those miserable foggy
nights throe young men In evening
dress were slowly niaklug their course
down Chestnut street. It was easy
to see that they were ncompnnled by
solemn, dignified "Jugs." Their clean
shaven, Gibson-like faces were entire
ly devoid of any expression of emo
tion, grave or gay. Straight ahead
they gnzed with stony stare. When
they reached one of the theaters they
paused In their solemn stroll and stood
on the curb, facing the entrance to tho
theater. And all this done without
a word from any of them. Despite tho
peuetratlng dampness, their overcoats
hung open, revealing snowy shirt bos
oms. Their trousers were turned up
at least four Inches at the bottoms.
Each chap carried a neatly folded um
brella.
It lacked but a few minutes of tho
close of the performance. The fog
was growing denser every moment
and the lights in the streets grew dim
mer and dimmer. The party ef four
stood motionless and silent until the
ushers came out of the theater and
opened the swinging doors. At this
instant each of the men opened and
hoisted his umbrella. The people com
ing out of the theater perceived -the
fog and then the party with raised
umbrellas.
"Oh, Jack!' cried a daintily dressed
little woman, "isn't this hard luck?
My gown will be ruined. How stupid
of us not to bring an umbrella!" And
she peered out of the door for a mo
ment, shivering and retreated to the
lobby. Jack turned up his coat collar
and dashed for a cab.
Then there was some dreadful
grumbling on the part of the unfor
tunates who had carriages, but could
not get to them because there was no
atwnlng from the theater to the curb.
Many men hoisted their umbrellas and
led women under their protection to
the carriage doors. One fellow es
corted a number of ladles, one at a
time, in order the better to protect
them from the rain. Lots of men In
dress suits, but lacking umbrellas,
muflied up completely, turned up their
trousers and galloped for, the street
cars at breakneck speed. ,
Through all this the chaps on the
curb maintained their solemn, dlgnl
fled demeanor.
It hadn't rained a drop.
Peeping Through Pin Holes.
The optical properties of the pin
holes are well known in these days of
amateur photography. Probably, hoW'
ever, the following device, based
thereupon, is not generally known,
though It Is easy to conceive of clr
cumstances in which it might serve
a very useful purpose. The Medical
Times tells us that by making a hole
through a piece of paper or postal
card, moving the pin a few times
around the hole to give it a smooth
edge, holding tho pin hole close to tho
eye and looking' at printed or other
matter held at the normal reading dis
tance, there Is a perfect definition, and
anyone who requires glasses to read
can, with this device, read anything.
When a pin hole is held to both eyes
at the same time there is a great Im
provement over one, with perfect bi
nocular effect The field is much
smaller than that seen when glasses
are used. There is less light and no
magnification. The Importance and
utility of this simple device In many
circumstances are obvious.
A Oood Substitute.
Customer (In bookstore) Have you a
book called The Fifteen Decisive Bat
tles? Proprietor No, but I hare some
thing similar, entitled Tha Autobiog
raphy of a Married Man.
Paradoxical.
Ostend Pa, do you run a bill over
in Mrs. rrune'a grocery?
Pa Yes, my son.
Ostend Then if you run. It why doea
she say It is of long standing.
SHOT AS
T sx.r '
Hi fov to -;
e?
x. T . .kV , . , -
iv - vN-V xf
EXECUTION OF TWO JAPANESE OFFICIOUS AT KIIAIUUN.
An eye-wltncss of the execution of the two Jnpajieso offleors, Colonel
ITcoko and Captain Ottl. at Khnrbln, has furnished an artlst-correpoiidcnt
of London Oranhlc with an Illustrated
were rnneht attemntlnir to blow un tho
In Manchuria, and wero brought before' a court-martial, which sentenced
them to be hanged as spies. General Kuropatkln, howover, ordered that they
should be shot. Throughout their trial
tion the two men displayed the utmost
both officers requested that their arms
behind them, and Captain Ottl asked
CVlonel Ukoko. who was a Christian,
Russian priest, nnd'made a will leaving
devoted to Red Cross work. "Both of
"died like heroes."
HOW (DISOM SUCCEEDED. X
Few true stories of merited commer
cial success Illustrate the value of
pluck and perseverance more clearly
than that of Thomas A. Edison and
the incandescent electric light It was
on October 1ft, 1879. says Casskr's
Magazine, that Mr. Edison deemed he I
had reached conditions under whicn
a carbon filament might be made Into
lamp. Accordingly a cotton thread
was laid in a halrpln-shaped groove
in a nickel plate, put in a nickel mold
and covered with charcoal and cooked
Hve' hours, it was then thoroughly
carbonired, but unhappily It broke to
pieces when the Inventor attempted
to take It from the mold.
Repeated experiments brought simi
lar failures, until late at night on the
18th one was rescued Intact; but It
broke while being fastened to the con
ducting wire. Neither Mr. Edison nor
his assistant, Charles Bachelor, naa
had any sleep since beginning work
two days before; but they determined
to keep at work and make a lamp be
fore they slept.
On the 19th they made several nia-
ments, but all broke in. the clamping
process. On the 20th one was success
fully clamped, and hope ran mgn mui
the lamp would soon e done; but
as it was being carried from the shop
where it was made to the glass blow-
lnir room to be sealed in a globe a
breath of wind caught It and blew it
away.
Mr. Bachelor was dismayed and dls
gnsted. Both men were exhausted and
almost discouraged, but they kept at
work. At last, on the morning of the
21st the fifth day since they bad
slept, they had the happiness of see
ing a lamp finally completed ana iignt
ed. The two men then went to bed
and slept several hours. When they
awoke the new lamp still burned. Mr,
Edison increased the current, and the
lamp burned more brightly far more
brightly than they had dared antici
pate. It was the first modern incan
descent lamp. Mr. Edison believed it
was a successful one, but it lusted
only two days, and then burned out
At once a host of employes went to
work carbonizing every available sub
sance in search of a better filament
In the midst of the work a passage
in one of Humboldt's books, describ-
lne a .certain kind of bamboo fiber,
suddenly occurred to Mr. Edison, and
suggested to him that the vegetable
strand would be Just the thing. At
once he hunted up the passage and
reread It Then he began a search for
the proper bamboo.
A corps or trainea investigators was
sent out all over the world on this
search, and scarcely a region of the
known surface of the globe was left
unvlslted. A hundred thousand dol
lars were spent In this way before
William Moore found the proper bam
boo In Northern Japan. To Insure
good supply, be bought a tract o( land
and put It In charge of two native
farmers.
Then , with the bamboo fiber began
new experiments, and In the spring
of 1881 the first really successiul in
candescent lamp was made. It burn
ed at slxteen-candle-power for nearly
sixteen hundred hours, and Its success
was thus assured.
I In tha following year a hundred
SPIES.
-T.I
. v. v1.-.
- i im
fc
account of the sceno. Tho two otllcert
railway bridge over the river None,
and the preliminaries to the execu
courage. On the execution ground
should not be tied to the boards
that his eyes should not be uamiagea.
received the holy communion from
a sum of a thousand roubles to be
the olBcers," writes the correspondent
thousand of those lamps were made,
ually modified a. improvements sug-
gested themselves, until the present
common style of lamp was tne result
Ten years rrom us nrst construction
four million lamps a year were being
made, and cloven years later, In 1903,
America alone required forty-five mil-
lfn 4 Mil Ira itaaautai
ne.tern America v.. r.aatern .
That great change, are taking
place In the currents of Pacific ocean
commerce, to no roiiowca rai oy sun
greater. Is rapidly becoming manifest
Cfic BUI., retire. Oriental market..
ml la niwl ni triatn IIAlfrtn nflfffi nn.
ment both in America and Alia, and
increasing use of steam on the ocean;
are effecting: great changes In the
courses of the trade of all countries
In touch with tha Pacific. More than
fifty steamships now sail regularly
from the ports of California, Oregon
nd Washington to ports In A.la or
In the great Pacific Island., and of
'tramp" steamers and sail vessels a
continually growing fleet Between
ports of British Columbia and ports
of Asia, Australia and New Zealand
there is similar movement It in
eludes not only the local commerce
between countries that border on the
greatest of oceans, but carries
j
heavy trade from the Orient
way across America to our
8tatcs, and even to Europe, from West
to East over the Atlantic.
Everything favors the growth of
this commerce to very large propor
tions. There Is promise of develop
ment or an international commerce
on the Pacific which, within the next
half century, may rival that on the
Atlantic. For the active theater of
the world', new effort is now eastern
Asia and western America. The two
hemispheres, heretofore scarcely af all
In communication except across the
Atlantic, are now rapidly developing
an Intercourse over the Pacific, which
Is to effect large transformation or at
least to become a great additional
factor In the commerce of the world.
Century.
A Hard Problem.
"Is this Mme. ronipon?" breathless
ly inquired a man who had climbed
several flights of stairs and been ad
mitted inlo a darkened parlor.
"It is," replied the stately person
age whom be addressed.
"The famous clairvoyant and for
tune teller?"
"The same." . '
"Do you read the mind?"
"With perfect ease."
"Con you foretell the future?"
"The future holds no mysteries that
I cannot unravel."
"Can you unfold the past?"
"The record of all things past is to
me an open book."
"Then," said the caller, feverishly
taking from his pocket a handful of
silver, "I wish you would tell me what
It Is that my wife wanted me to bring
home without fall this evening and
name 'your price. Money 1. no ob
ject" '
odd.;
"That's Brightley; ha raised quite a
fortune on a patent mud-scraper."
"He doesn't look very prosperous."
"No, be afterward sunk It all In a
sky-scraper." Philadelphia Ledse&
Avers
Falling hair mctns weak hair.
Then strengthen your hair;
feed It with the only hair rood,
Ayer'a Hair Vigor. It checks
falllnj hair, makes the hair
Hair Vigor
crow, completely cures dan
druff. And It always restores
color to gray hair, all the rich,
dark color of early life.
M ti.tr wu htltn "l 1
fmd I wuuM ! Il.ll.
Tli.n I irlvl Jr
lUlr Vlnr. Il oulcl .lnill ! ""'
111 i, ait. . - - - - . ,
tMttmtll.
A Tin rv
pit. Ma.
for
Falling Hair
He who rules must
hninor full at
-Oec-rg Eliot
much as he couimand.-
T Dreak In Mtw Shots.
Alwsrt ihi In Allen' fool-ra, t powder.
It cure hoi. tins, aehlna. woiin i.
Cure corn. Ing rtiwiu nalli ud tmnloiit. i
UitriiMlM " tna,e, leepi
nvmilHiiiiiit. Sml mailvil FKEK. AdlrM
Aiin a. uimiwa, i noy, r. i .
HyporrUy Is the necessary burdeo ol
villainy. Juhnaon.
Miss Agnes Miller, ol
CWCHgQ, Speaks tO young WOmeO
about dflOgCrS Ol theMcnStnial
Dgrjod4
w.-,T .nffered for
" r,,;uh' dysmenorrhea (painful
muX that I dreaded
J.W iwiK" w ... . : , . .
Jrery month, as I knew it meant three
Ar !! thla was due to an inflamed
nf th uterine appendage
"dand neglected colds.
ctXtoaS wallted how
dangerous Jt Is to take cold at thla
critical time, inucn sunermij wuum w
spared them. ThanK,uoa iw jyyut-
PjAffiMrSC K
I ' r . . . j
weeks after I started to take it, I
noticed a marked improvement In m
reneral health, and at ttie lime oiny
next monthly period the pain had
diminished considerably. I kept up
the treatment, and waa curea a moma
later. I am Ilka another person since.
I am In perfect health, any eyes ara
brighter, I have added 13 pound to my
weight, my color Is good, and I feel
light and happy." Miss Aonks Mru.cn,
85 Potomac Ave., Chicago, III. IMOi
farfttt If rittU ef ' wtf fvmtm
nut MUinot produttd.
Tho monthly sickness reflect
tho condition of n woman
health. Anything; unusual al
that tlmo should have prompt
ftmi proper attention
$5 For a Name $5
nl u tan or more name 01 youi.r jwom
with mean to waiir a llulnM Kriunation
and (or th nm on mi enruii puronuin.
M.r.u,AS.;
rum u irholariblu, w will reiuii you o id
Bctwell Business College, Tacoma, Wash.
BUY
FROM YOUR DI2A1-CR
Dr. C. Gee Wo
WONDERFUL
HOME
TREATMENT
Thl womUrful Chi
im doctor I cll4
rft b'KUM h. curr
Mopl without opera
tion that arc in up
to dla. Ha cura wlin
thoaa wonderful Chi.
neae harha, root, bud,
bark and vegetable
that are nttrely un
known to medical lot-
rnce In thla country.
Through th ne o
tho harmlea ramedlt thla famoa doctor
know th actio of over MO different n
edlea, which be (uccirully In different
dlaae. H guarantee to our cattarh, aatbr
ma, lung, throat, rh.umallim, nerroutneea.
lomach, liver, kldneya, etc. baa hundred af
leetlmonlal. Charge mod. rale. Call aad
a him. Patient out of tha oily writ fa
blanke and circular. Bend (tamp, CON BUI
TATION fUlCU. ADDHkltttt , .
The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co.
IS Aldar St.. Portland. brf
anr-Meoueu papw.
CURES ffHllll All tui 1111.
Beit Cough Syrup. Taato Good. Ul
In time. Bold by dnwulm.
Wehha
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