Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, March 11, 1897, Image 4

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    HEADLIGHT X-RA YS i
Fresh garden seeds at Sturgeon’s.
Bay City Breeze*.
Trusses for »ale at Stuigeon’s drug
Kev. Potter has gone to Nehalem to
store.
hold protracted meetings.
Celluloid riiuivn,
Photos, Bmnpivo
samples
I The
xiic latest:
imxnsb . vvinnuiu
Our merchants
replenished
their
Look out for the spring opening of new 1110w on dfaplay at Hein’s Art Studio. 4t stocks of goods on last trip of str. Chilkat.
goods at La Mode Millinery store.
County warreuts taken at Cohn A Co
Mr. and Mrs. Sibley returned home on
WANTED - A goo«l iudnstiuus boy to
Dr Wise will be in Tillamook ready Str. Turckee
work for his board in hotel. Apply at for business about the 20th of the month.
Mrs. Parker haa become a resident of
Bay City again.
this office.
For lowest prices on picture frames of
Messrs. Cone and Cook returned from
Mrs. Sturgeon will soon be able to all kinds go to the Elite Foto Parlors, tf.
cruising timber on account of the snow.
show the early spring designs in millin­
Jewelry of all kinds at Stnrgeoii’s.
Leach A Jones will soon begin logging
ery.
New stove pipe at Carey’s hardwar near Bay City.
Bargains in fine watches at f^etcher’». «tore at 15 cis per joint.
Quite a number of our citizens are
The steamer Turckee came in Tuesday.
We Import Our Own r'y
*
SYRUPS
employe«! on the jetty work.
Subscribe for Hie weekly Examiner
Mr. Lem Parker has completed his
through B. C. Lamb, agt., and win a
J. E. Tuttle has put a telephone in '
contract t> get out poles for fish-traps.
$10,000 farm in California.
the post office for the use of the public.
The pole* will be shipped
on Str.
Fresh roll butter wanted at Cohn ACo. Truckee, but their final destination is
M iks Hunt, our obliging ¿.post-mistress,
New goods, new styles in hats, bon­ Alaska.
has charge of it.
nets and caps for children will be found
Mr. Higginbotham
returned from
Take all your furs and hides to Col.n A
in a few weeks at l^a Mode Millinery Astoria and will soon be ready to ship
Co.
store.
another cargo of cattle.
The carpenters are busily engagedin
The memorial services for the three
improving Mrs. Sturgeon’s millinery hoys a ho were drowned recently, and
Beaver Budget.
store.
which was to have been held on last
Sunday,
was
postponed
on
account
of
J. I). Edwards, county clerk, was laid
C Mills «nd W A. Baling went to
up tor a couple of days this week with the untinisked condition of the hall.
It will take place on next Sunday eve­ Wood« one tiny last week, returning with
la grippe.
ning. lion. T. B. Handley will deliver quite a wagon load of clams and steel­
The singing school under the direction the address.
Appropriate music has head fish, which are just Iha very finest
ot eaimg. There is no excuse for any
of Prof. Powell is booming.
been provided.
one going hungry in Tillamook county
Fred Za«hlach, Win. Oliver and B A
Prices of admission to band Iroys’ when two men can dig enough clams in
Todd of Nehalem were in town last entertainment on Wednesday evening
two hoiiiB to furnish meat and soup to
week in attendance on the District have been fixe«! as follows:
last six weeks for two large families.
Grange.
Children under 10 years, free.
There are two new houses, just fin­
Children from 10 to 15 years
15 cts
Mr. and Mrs. Sibley arrived home
General a<hiiissioii
25c ts ished, ready to he occupied, in Beaver,
from San Francisco on the steamer
Reserved seats
35c ts one belonging In Mr. J. R. Finley ami
a very rough
Truckee. They
___ z rej>ort
.
'Pickets will be on sale at Lamb’s on one to Mr Rump.
voyage, Mrs. Sibley being sick all the
Monday
The band will begin playing
way.
There was quite a turnout to church
on the street at 7:15 P. M
The over- nt Beaver but bird’s «lay from Coulson-
The age of Ernest Barnaul, deceased, ture will be played at 7:45,
ami the burg to hear Rev. Swab. Beaver wouhl
was wrongly given in last week’* iaaue. ' curtain will rise promptly al 8 o’clock.
!>♦• glad to have them come every Lord’s
Il was 10 years, 2 months, and 8 days.
Added to the severe stormy weather a day.
He was born in the territory of the
great scarcity of feed for cattle begins to
Chickasaw nation.
Wm. Brown, who committe«! suicide
(he felt all over the country. Hay is by tutting his throat, in Tillamook
W. Copeland’« Sermon on Thomas and the associate of a select body of ladies and
At the request of ninny subscribers, | scarcely obtainable at any figure and
; gentlemen.
There were many times during
Paine
we have published i 1 this issue a ser-1 severe suffering amongst the flocks ami recently, was a most excellent work (
j Paine’s residence in Paris when but for him
mon 011 the “Life and Work of the Rev- | beards is
now unavoidable. Eithet hand for C. Mills of this place only two
Rev. W. Copeland of Unity Church Salem, de- there would have been but short shift for both
olulioiiary Hero and Author, Thomas some of out farmers keep too much stock years ago; however, there weie times
Paine’’
I he sermon Appeared in J* I or
else they
they provi«le
too little
little feed.
feed. The then that he was very much unbalanced. lvered on a recent Sunday night an address on Americans and English, and more than once
or else
provi«le too
the American minister had to appeal to Paine
re« ent issue of the (hegonian
It 'V,H (j^.^fitps of cnmnion humanity as well as
Hay is getting quite scarce around Thomas Paine, the occasion being the presen­ ■ for help.
form inteieMting reading Io both belieV-1 H()U1|(| business policy would suggest Beaver—something
unusual,
partly tation by a member to the church of a fine copy
“Above all else, we should ever remember
eis and unbelievers.
t|ial ^¡g condition of things be remedied owing to the extra amount of cattle, and in India ink of the famous portrait of Paine,
i that grand spectacle, when Paine stood liefore
The weather during the past few days ' as soon as possible,
an unusually hard winter and backward taken by Jarvis when the author hero was 67.
The large congregation saw behind the read­ the French assembly, mad with fear, and
has been unusually severe.
Snow and
, ...........
.
. z-.
spring.
ing-desk, a portrait of Paine, wreathed with pressed to extreme by a mad mob, howling
hail have fallen in considerable quaiiti- 1
Our literary society will close on ivy. This will be placed in the library soou. . for blood, and pleading for mercy to Louis
ties, and though they Lave I in on the |
Wednesday P. M of this week, to re- and Unity Church is probably the only church XVI—‘Destroy monarchy but let the king go
ground but a very short time, the
free.’ He plead though few wouhl listen, and
epon
again next November
It has been in the United States so adorned
A short series of meetings will be held
atmosphere has been exceedingly cohl.
in the 8. D. A. Church.
Commencing | well attende«!, and no doubt many of
Mr. Copeland took for his text the words “My though he knew that the guillotine awaited
As a result many of our citizens aie
Sunday the
14th at 2 P. M. Text for 1 oltr boys and girls who have taken part, country is the world, to do good my religion,” him. This magnificent action of the compan­
suffering with severe colds.
they will become
ion of Washington and Jefferson should for­
the first Servicj. “As truly as I live, all | in after life, as
and said:
Arrangements have been made with the earth shall be filled with the glory i eminent as teachers, lawyers, preachers,
‘Many object to my setting apart a Sunday to ever silence those libelers, whose courage all
J and statesmen, will look hack to the honor Thomas Paine. I do this purposely. oozes away before any determined assault. A
the steamer Girlie to bring all persons of the Lord
from Bay Ci y, Gaaibaldi, and llobson-
Subject for Monday nt 7:30 I*. M. ! Beaver literary, and in their hearts be Paine has been made by the unchristian ! man who could for duty’s sake face—the
ville who may desire to attend tlie baml
The four universal Kingdoms,
thankful.
churches, called evangelical, to do duty as the guillotine would never whine on his death
hoys’ entertainment.
The charge fqr
We expect to have our new seats in I
Sheriff Jackson passed through Bea­ lay figure, which each clergyman and thenlogi I bed for mercy.
round trip, including show ticket, will the chmrh and the side walk completed
“The church has consecrated to the saints
ver a few «lavs ago, en route to Woods. cal student may decorate with such robes of
he 60 cents. Tickets will be on sale by that time. A cordial invitation is
day after day, and lest any shoald be omitted
He remarked that Beaver was improving falsehood and abuse as may suit his fancy.
Monday by the captain.
has established an “All-Saints’ Day.” Now
given to all
Services will he conduct­
more rapidly than any other part of With few exceptions ror over 100 years, ortho­
ed by Elder B. C. 'Labor and wife.
all lovers of free thought should set apart the
l'illaniook county.
One reason why is, dox clergymen have never ceased to sneer at
At a meeting of llie District Grange
Sundays nearest the birthdays of Thomas
On Monday, March first Judge Conder ' because so many of her citizens are a Tom Paine, to describe in glowing, fiery terms
held last week at the Allen House J. N. i
I the awful deathbed of the great infidel, a des- Paine, in honor of all heretics and non.
Gmy was ehc'vd represiuitalive to the in the casa of Dianlha Page vs Wm. 'I'. reading, thinking, praying, industrious
criptinn which has nothing whatever to ¿0 conformists, all so-called infidels, when we
people,
and
believe
in
working
for
God
Sax
ami
others
gave
judgement
for
plf.
State Grange to be held at Corvallis on
will call over the names of the heroes and
home
and
native
land, end with the reality,
the third Tuesday in May. F. M. «.mux
Lamb i : for a sum of money alleged to he due her and
• One would suppose that after the recent martyrs of free thought, hated by civil and
Sheets
: on account of money spent in caring for 1 especially patronizing||<>ur home papers,
was elected Alternate. John
f
lives of Paine, especially Moncure D. Conway’s religious tyrants, and to be honored every­
arled as Chairman and Myron Perkins, q 1 her father at the time of his final illness > of which the H eadlight seems to be
the bigots would ceaie their reiteration of ex- where by all lovers of progress. In this list
; and in proving up « hi a piece of land first choice.
Kecretary.
1 ploded romances; but they say the same things are many, it not the most, of the brightest in
I homesteaded by him and which lie fail-
1 over and over again, with no qualification, their several centuries, and Thomas Paine
A large number of persons have cd to prove up p oil before his death
Stephens Creek Suckers
sho ving an ignorance or perservity, which does not suffer in comparison with the others.
An
availed themselves of the seed offer in
* execution has been issued and the
j1 stamps them as no trustworthy guides for the About all of them lies have been told and
the llRADbKlHr. We actually give $1.60 land will l>e sold to satisfy the jmlge-
Chromo quinine and Sing-Sing for ' people. Especially when a revival is in pro­ evil spoken, but nothing worse can be said of
worth ot seeds free with every paid up I ment
gress, the audience is pointed to Tom Paine as Paine than has been said of Martin Luther.
sale at Tom Coil’s drug store.
aiibscriptioii to the H kadligiit
That is
If you contemplate a trip to Portland
an awful example of the terrible effect of infi­ He was called a drunkard and adulterei in
giving the paper for nothing and paying
The match
between Bill Wagon­ delity. Poor, drunken, dirty, frightened Tom his day, yet Protestants cannot find praise too
the Muhacrilier 10 cents to take I lie bar­ hour in mind the Str. Chilkat will ae tongue and Miss Eve Mainspring has
This will
Paine When the truth is. that Mr. Paine was exalted to be lavished on Luther.
gain. Those who want garden Beetle commodate you with a first class state­ been declared off
no more dirty than other «nufflakers of hl« be the case in the coming century with
should accept the offer at once.
The room and board through to Portland for
regard
to
Paiue.
Many
balances
will
then be
Mrs. 1 lately has moved her store to ( time, parsons as well as laymen; that he was
Meeds are worth the money asked for
$6.00.
corner 5th and 14th streets
She lias exceptionally temperate, when at an ordination adjusted; many wrongs righted, and many
Isitli.
For full particulars call on or phone opened up a tine line of vinegar, red dinner in Scotland it was not unusual for every sent to their own place.
The following immortal lines from n
“One word as to the circumstances under
thread, and smiles.
Call and see her. minister to go to bed helplessly drunk, drink-
Geo.
W. Kiger of Bay Citv, Or.
celebrated poet occurred to the editor of
1 iiig confusion to all heretics
His deathbed which the ‘Age of Reason” was written—cir­
For
Exchange
—
A
well-improve«l
farm
the 11KADL1GIIT last w eek as lie was
was calm and he had no fear for the future. cumstances, which when known, invest this
near city for tea-spoons at 25c per set. This is reserved for those who believe in endless much abused volume with a sanctity not even
Allen II oiinc Guest«.
engaged hi moving, mid driving nails:
Inquire of John William Henry Tudd.
"Liven there a man with soul so dead
misery. This perverse reiteration of falsehood possess 'd by the books of the Bible. It is the
IL (’. Todd, David Martini, Nehalem;
That never to himself hath said,
WANTED—A young man aged about proves the magnitude and dan ;er of that spirit­ ' dying bequest of a patriot to the lovers of free­
W. S Cone, M.
Leach, Earnest
F.
As on his thumb the hamiiier fell,
ual disease called orthodoxy.
Orthodoxy, dom; it is an attempt to save in France, from
•________________________________ i’ ” Ginger, Bay Citv ; J . A. Cook, I. F 60 wishes to meet a handsome young
lady with red hair, weighing about 250 whether in church or state, seems to paralyze the wreck of state and church, a reverence
for God, an exalted morality and a true religion
Don't fail to attend the entertainment Gould, Pittsburg P h . ; D. R. Hurlbut lbs., and not over 23. She must be able the moral sense, and its unfortunate victim can j
as he was finishing this book in his gloomy dun­
Leon Hurlbut Netarts; to pump cows and play the fiddle. no longer distinguish between truth and error.
to he given by the band hoys al the new Light House;
geon expecting each moment to be summoned
Opera llouaa on next Wednesday eve­ I. C. Quick, Nentocton ; .1. W. Maxwell, Object, matrimony, and don’t you foiget Repeating the old creedsand old commands. 1
orthodoxy makes so much noise that it cannot | to death, escapiug at last by what in the case of
it.
ning. The boys have spared no pains or Fairview; G, A
Bartoil. Trask; G A.
Ebler Abner Multitude, LB. hear the voice of God. which in every age ar- a church member, would have been called a
expense to make their entertainment
ouses the prophets to dare everything In the j miraele. No one who has any sense of the
Blaine;
August Anderson,
sliiclly lirst class in every particular. Mowers,
ShackmiHty Jim iacirculating a peti­
true relations of cause and effect but will ad­
The play selected is a good one, the cast Garibaldi ; James Erwin, Rosslaml BC tion at Schooner For«! to prohibit dog- interests of truth and religious freedom, and
which speaks as plainly now as in the olden mit that under sucn solemn circumstances in
of chaiavters has been carefully attend­
salmon and skunks from running at
the very sight ef death, no man would indulge
ed to, and rehearsing has lieen constant
large
Many Migmitiires have been time.
V«i«i of • bauks.
“A peculiarity of the war against Paine as an in ribaldry. No book in the Hebxew Bible was
for w>*eka
Good music has been pro­
obtained, ami we hope that the honor­
infidel is its utter groundlessness. There are , written amid such tragic surrounding. Paine's
To the fiiends who ho liberally con­ able council will pasH it
vided. and everything possible done to
piofessors in theological schools, orthodox ( “Age of Reason” is a solemn message from
make (lie <s*casion thoroughly enjoyable. tributed immev, material, and labor to
Aver’s Cherry Pectoral will remove schools and preachers in orthodox pulpit« who [ a lover of humanity and ot God, and is as much
Tin' band deserves encouragement ami Imi hi me a house, I lender my heait-
out Herod Paine. These professor« tell u« that entitled to be called prophecy as any other
freckles.
we (rust the hall will be crowded.
felt thanks.
much ot the Hebrew Bible is purely of human book. It is a word of God spoxeu in the iu ter-
J. Lowaist Jones, Schooner Ford
origin and written by men of low order of |
\ so ial «lance will be given at W. mm !-
Mr*.
A.
(J.
Ande
rain.
men Hall on Satuulay evening by Prof
development. Scholars whose Christianity no
Netarts Nuggets
Hughes, foi the pilip«»se of organising a
one dare shm II tell us that we must decide what
dancing c I hhh .
Excellent music has
parts of the Bible are from God. Under direc­
Nolle«.
been provided and evervl»o«!y is invited.
Mr. Er icst Heage, of Nestucea, is at tion of Christian scholars is soon to be published
persons
knowing
themselves
All
the
Polychrome Bible, which will sort out one j
An admission f««e of 25 cents per couple
Netarts
Ile is running the engine in
will be chaigeil at the «loot for the pur- indebted to me will please call mid set­ the saw mill at this place.
part from another, and by color« will show
p<e«e of meeting expenst>N. Prof. Hughe* tle their accounts within 30 days of the
how the books were written, which will be, as 1
The new srlmolhonse in school dis­
has bud an rxivii*ive experience a« a date ot (his notice
All accounts trict No. 43, the new district’at Netarts, compared with Paine’s Age of Reason”, like
teacher of dancing and comes well
using a gatling-gun instead of an old-fashioned
leniitiiiilig unsvttlvd by April lltli will in nearly completed
recommended as one of the brat tea« Il­
six-pounder.
ers on the coast.
\ large class is already Ire placed in the hands of a coLector for
‘ Not one iu a hundred of those who sneer at
Mr. (’lias. Worthington is logging for
mwmred, and to thia it is expe< ted Io add settlement.
Tom
Paine know what a noble patriot he was;
the Netarts saw mill
a niinilier of new names on Saturday
know
that his pamphlet “Common Sense” was
Geo W l*liel|«i.
Sheriff
.Jackson
in
spending
a
few
«lays
evening
the tocsin which confirmed the determination
Netnita, Ore.
nt hia much nt the head of the Bay.
While sairts at Mrs Sturgeon’s.
Red Cross Syrup
Superior Rock Candy Drips
Fuller’s Delicious Club House Syrup
Direct from the Manufacturers.
Nothing Equal to Them in Tilla­
mook County.
COHN & Co.
Mrs. V. C. Beatty is quite sick nt the
present writing.
Card of Thanks.
MARRIED.
I demie hereby to expies* niv sincere
Captain Geo. Hunt and E. B onks, of
and heaitfell thank* to all lliosc who
Cape Mears
Light-hoiue,
were Oil
made am h heroic effoits t" save the
Netarts
bench Monday.
life of my Ivar son, tarmi Ernest, and
FIN<
II
LOWERY
—
At
the
residence
In (li<w«e uh«» allei ward aaaiated ill reeOV-
of Rev. S. S. Dallas, in Tillamook. Mar
einig and buiying Ida laxly.
Nehalem Note«
O W. IG rn i rd . 10. 1897. by Rev. S. S. Dalla«, Henry L.
(From the Nehalem Timex.)
Finch mid Alice Low er v, Loth of Till««
R Krebs is cutting a bill of lnml»er for a
niook
«chao! house al F«dev.
"It is a startling lact that, almost
without exception, the adulterate I
teas are dangerous to health. Some
of them are actually poisonous."
—N. Y. Htrali.
Yes; some—not all But
that isn't the point. You
drink tea because you like
it — not because it is good
tor you.
The wholesome tea is
also the best-tasting; XX m Z-
ZwO
ut grocers' in
packages.
A J* ’» It < .1 * - npa«y
Sa« r-i«M« ia*sa
1 >1E1 ).
John Tuttle, the telephone man was
I in town this week locfcwig «iter busineaa
' in I rest« here
Chris Larsen ha« Iahen full control of
HARRIS— In Tillamook, Ore., Mar. Hotel Columbia, formerly conduct««! by
711», 1897, Fiances Maria Harris, a native John Israeli
We notice by the AMorisn that A. W.
of New Ymk, aged 70 year« V months
Gatea, ha« starte«! with hie family for
and 17 days
Chinook, where l«e will nt once com­
in IA52 mence preparations for trap fishing as
Mrs. Harris «Nime to
and to ^Tillamook ill 1S54. forly-tlirev goon as the «esson opens.
rears ago. When «became here there
Kdw G. E. Wist »hippe«! over 1100
a ere only a L-w whit« settleis in the
(«ainty.
Mrs. Hairia was the mother of caaes of salmon «nd clams to San
Francisco on the schooner Seven Sister*.
seven children, only three of whom
survive her, Albert Harris, at whose
Wm Zi merman is having a bill of
Í
Imine she died, Gldie Harris, the jew- lumber cut at Kreh’e mill for a IKW
rlor, and a daughter. Mrs. Hanis wm house on hie ranch on the Lay.
an excellent woman, a devoted mother,
Dr. Union recently preoented the
ami a life-long member of the M
K
church
The hmeral took place on “devil** with a fancy mallet. • very nse-
ful articule of furniture in a print shop
Wedneadav ami was conducted by the
He tnniel it out on a foot power tum-
lUv Mi Comer
The remains were
ing lathe of hie own construction.
interred iu Fairview ceuaetery.
of the colonists to be free. Few remember that
when the Colonial army, shoi t of provisions, ot
clothes, of ammunition, was in despair, that
l’aine s crisis aioused them to bear their depri­
vation« a littlo longer. AU seem to have forgot
ten that when the treasury wm « empty and men
were clamoring for peace on any term«. Mr.
Thomas Paine started a subscription, giving all
he had. which filled the treasury, and eiiabled
the armv to grant peace as Americans dictated.
••That Tom Paine was esteemed in his own
day is evident. Rarely, it ever, has the United
States government placed a man-of-war at the
service of a private cilisen . yet this was done
for Paine. Washington <*td not offer his hos­
pitality at Mount Vernon to a drunken profli­
gate. yet he invited Paine to become his guest
as long as convenient. Neither colonial legis­
latures uor congress were Profuse in gifts or
praise, yet both wert given Paine
When he
arrived at Paris. Lafayette gave to him to take
to Washington the key of the Bastille, which
meant »0 much le lovers of liberty the world
over, and Ijifavette gave this to Thomas Paiue,
a creature sunk so low. according to orthodoxy
as hardly lo be above the level of the brutes.
A man then, as before, deserving and receiv­
ing the respect of great men. and no one wa«
better able to judge of the quality of men than
the Mat quia de Lafayette, the beau ideal oi an
honorable French gentleman
When Monroe
hadal last secured a treaty on advantageous
letmata» both countries, he select«*! Thomas
Paine as the American bv«t fitted to carry the
important document to the United States, hot
the aalioaal aaaemblv would not give Paine
leave «f efcaence
After bis release from p. taon
Paine was long the iuuaic of Monroe • house
Leading Merchants.
est of truth tu^d righteousness.
Many will
j read essays onnigher criticism, will listen to
scholars as, in polished words, they say that,
what Paine said, and will still worship the
book, the day and the man; but a careful read­
ing of the “Age of Reasons” forever destroys
the old superstitutions.
“Listen friends to the ever-memorable words
of the modern prophet, certainly no more un­
savory in appeatance, if you believe the worst,
than some of the Jewish prophets:
“My country is the world; to do good my re­
ligion.” No one since the time of Tesus has
more completely summed .up the spirit of the
New Testament, and no one more thoroughly
practiced his religion than did Paine, on the
evidence of even his worst enemies. He ex-
posed himself to the charges of profligacy and
mid penuriousuess that he might render assis.
tauce to Madame lie Bonneville and her chil­
dren. Not only did Paine work for liberty in
Amerjca, but in England and France
s well.
To the eud of his life he was planning for uni­
versal peace and general freedom.
Judged by
what we know ot him and not by scandals
founded on lies, Thomas Paine jvas a better
Christian than those who revile his memory
and his words, “My country is the world; to
do good my religion,” might be inscribed as
a golden text in every Christian Church.”
Turning to Paine’s portrait, Mr. Copeland
concluded:
“Can any one look 011 that face and believe for
a moment the stories which have been told
about the immorality and his terrible deathbed.
Clean-cut, vigorous, vivacious and determined,
that man, who would not quail before the
French mob, would never weaken before the
accident of death. Such as the picture shows
him, such was he to the end. Honor, all honor
to the hero of the Revolution, the friend of hu­
manity and the prophet of God.”
There will !>• a calle«! Ma-
<•o,n,,HInicHtio,, of Tilla-
4^^S^nntDook Lodge No 57, A FA
M 111 tLe Masonic l all on
Saturday at 1 o’clock P M. All
I &BHCMS. Master Masonain good aland
ing ar« invited to attend By order of
W M
F R M B ealb , Sec’y
It is, or should be. the highest aim of
every merchant to please his customers;
and that Hie wi<l«-awnke drug firm o
Meyers A Esldeman, Sterling, III., is
doing so, is proven by the following,
from Mr. Eshleman: “In my sixteen
years’ experience in the drug business I
have never seen <»r sold or tried a medi­
cine that gave as good (satisfaction ns
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar­
rhoea Remedy.** Sok! !>y S. J. Sturgeon.
9¿’’. t7.
will return from Portland about
March 20th and will then be ready
to attend to all kinds of
Dont wait till the rush comes
but come at once.