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i Marquette Bldg. PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Matter. Editor -DETROIT Kresge Bldg. CHICAGO PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or spublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- od in this paper and also the local news published wise credite herein. All rights of republi also reserved. M 3ER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE iv (in Bismarck Nesey fe!) mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 by mail, outside of North Dakota seeeees 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER il (Established 1873) HOW TO FLY The Germans seem to have started something with their ion of special dispatches herein are by mail, per y air-gliding contests, in which one flier remained in the air | three hours in an airplane without a motor. A gliding craze now is sweeping England, progressive Lendon papers offering big prizes. f And it’s a safe bet that the gliding craze will invade | America and furnish thrills for the cautious who prefer to stay on the ground and “let George do it” in the air. A glider is a machine that travels on “air waves” about the same as a sailboat travels on water. It has a rudder for steering, also “control surfaces” which the pilot tilts to make’ the craft rise or descend and t6 balance the glider if it gets ‘lopsided and starts to tilt. First you have to master “aerial balance,” same as you | learn to balance on a bicycle. All depends on the pilot’s skill: He has to learn to use his artificial wings as a young bird learns to fly. ‘ You sit in the car, preferably on a hillside. Helpers grasp a long rope, attached to the glider, and run with it until] the wind catches under the wings and you “take off” like a kite. Then you fall. A motorless glider, of the type used by Herr Hentzen, German gliding champion, moves forward 16 feet for each foot it descends after taking off from a hillside, provided there are no up-gusts of wind to help move the craft upward and forward. x The Germans started their gliding by long and patient watching of hawks, gulls and swallows in flight. Air experts and mathematicians thus figured out the curves and tricks used by soaring birds. x i ‘Chief obstacle to gliding by man is that the pilot is apt at | econd foistrike a new air current or hole. German ob- 3 discovered that birds “instinctly scent” new air cur- with their heads. So the Germans are trying to develop skin-coating which: makes their faces sensitive to the. least touch of wind. As you probably suspect, the German general staff began quietly to investigate gliding as far back as 1915. This was; The peace treaty forbids power airplanes. So she turns to learned recently by French spies. Germanf making high pl without mot - YOU'D LIKE HIM New ideas are nearly as scarce as hen’s teeth. Once i aiwhile you meet an individual with & magnetic tempera ment, fairly bubbling with strikingly new ideas. Good company, mighty good: ‘You “can sit and talk to him by the hour and never get tired.” Such a man is Prof. A. M. Low, England’s great wireless expert. Like all Simon-pure radio fans, his interest'is more inthe future than the-present. That is, he inclines toward clairvoyant personality yWe present his most striking ideas. Don’t rely on your senses, says Low, for they are liars. He irls his cigaret in a circle,’ “That looks to your eyes like cle of fire, dcesn’t it? But you know it is not.” The eyes lie. THey see incorrectly. beni Speech will become unnecessary in the future. And peo- ple, will converse with each other by some form of sugges- tion, ‘electrical or otherwise. So predicts Low. He com- ments: ‘After all, if I want to convey a thought to you, it seems| rather crude that before I can convey the idea that is in my: mind I have to waggle my mouth about and puff irregular} gusts of wind through my lips to produce sounds!” ‘Senses are so unreliable, says Low, that there are hun- dreds of colors that no human eye can see. And a dog can! hear'a whistle of a pitch inaudible to man. ___ We “know” a lot of things that aren’t so, says Low. For instance, hit an electric light bulb with a hammer and you} think the steel comes in contact with the glass and breaks it.! Not so. Before the steel reaches the bulb, the glass is shat- tered by the cushion of air compressed and driven in front) of the hammer. This is proved by the ultra-rapid movie) camera, invented by Low. Low is convinced that there will be many big wars in the future. But the armies, he predicts, will be invisible to one| another, never meeting in open contact. Killing will be ‘done, by artificial lightning, blasts of terrific heat and wireless- | controlled bombs. | Then he switches to music, basis of which is rhythm, and| says: “Our sense of rhythm comes from the time when we" were some form of primitive life on the seashore waiting for | the returning tide to give us our food.” | Gosh! Pleased to have met you, Mr. Low. Come again!} __NEW AMSTERDAM ‘New York City in 1926 will celebrate the three hundredth * - anniversary of its founding. Peter Minult in 1626 bought Manhattan Island from the Indians for $26. The same land, for taxation purposes, now has an assessed valuation of, $6,000,000,000. ; Many other changes. Crime, for instance. Shortly after | its founding, New York City (then known as New Amster- dam) had a population of 252, yet in one morning 38 women appeared in police court, also a small mob’of men. Ona population basis, that would be equivalent now to about a million showing up before the judge daily. ‘Typewriters run down more people than autos. A hard winter is predicted by the coal profits. ‘Not so long ago every man in a checked suit was a gambler. ‘|Canada’s war debt milar “air sense.” ‘They are helped by a secret chemical | | EDITORIAL REVIEW | Comments reproduced in -thi column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir order that our-readers may have both sides of important issties which are being discussed in the press of the day, | { | THE WISKEY SEIZURE | The first of a series of whiskey seizures, probably the: largest in! ; the history of. the country, was’ | started by federal agents at Portal, |N. D, in an effort to head off the exportation of a million and a quarter dollars worth of intoxi- cants which distillers sought to | export to Canada, ty | From a business standpoint it is rather difficult to figure out the reasoning that prompts a govern- ment to officially permit the ex- portation of whiskey and then hire ja small army: in various states along the border, as well as far- ther south, to chase, catch and prosecute whiskey runners, There ig no argument why whiskey is j taken to Canada. No one ever sus- | pected Canadians of drinking bour- bon whiskey made in Kentucky. | | They have no use for it, except in| |the hands of the crookedest class | | of individuals who ever endeavor- led to classify themselves as busi- | ness men. Taking American liquor | | these men have doped it in order} to double the quantity until today a ; man is taking his life in his hands to taste the stuff. While American: liq: jed’ into Canada ‘to’ be dopéd, Americans -havebeen paying | | uptil today |. Canada money is ag soWhi as that; circulated by’ Uncle ‘Bam. The | whole process during the past ‘few | | years has been to give the United | States the vilest liquor ever smug- gled into a country,,with a hand-! some royalty. paid.to(the’ Canadian | government {ni’-4l action, If it is the ‘policy of the Wash- ington government’ to permit dis-| tillers in this country to realize on their stocks, why not allow it to be| sold, in an undiluted manner, at a j reasonable price direct to Amer-| icans, in place of carting it across the Canadian line which igs nothing |, less than a subterfuge. Without entering into an argu-| ment on the merits of the Volstead| ‘act, it is only fair to look at the) handling of the present liquor stocks in the country in the same manner as would be utilized in any similay matter. | There will be tremendous stakes involved in the present contro- | versy and a battle royal is assured, y EPISODE ONE CHAPTER 1 Eve DURING the last to two years Fate, Chance, and Destiny ihad been too busy to attend to Mike) Clinch. But now his turn was comin| the Eternal’ Sequence of things: The stars in their courses: indicat- ed the beginning of the undoing of Mike Clinch : t From Esthonia‘a refugee Coun-! in} | Whether Canadian bootleggers get | the’ 12,000 cases, mix .it with poi-| son and peddle it at exhorbitant; prices to thirsty United States, is the question that must be settled. —Minot Daily News. pe “TO MUCH,” IS RIGHT At Marketing Conference at Chairman! tess wrote to James. Darragh | Fargo last week, after 0 Burdick had made his report that. New York: | statistics showed a shortage of | “After two years we have | | wheat in the world, and attributed, discovered that it was Jose | low prices to a manipulation of the. Quintana’s band of interna- narket, the committee on agricul-- tional thieves that _ robbed ure made the report that: | -Ricea . Quintana has. disap- “Diversified farming ‘was the — poared. nly solution of the agricultural | problem in the state. The wheat acreage must be reduced, and the! | farmers raise crops that produce: lyrevenue the year around was | the recommendation of this com-| mittee. It claimed' that too much < “Valentine.” wheat was being raised.” The day Darragh received the: This is what The Ozone has been 'Jettey he started to look up Sard. trying to show for the past year, But that) very morning Sard had ; so far as North Dakota is con-| received a curious letter from Rot-| ‘cerned. Even a casual view of the terdam. ‘This, was the letter: situation must convince thoughtful “Sardius —.'Tourmaline —, | men that at present prices for grain, | Avagonite — Rhodonite * Por ; the main farm reliance for revenue,/ phyry — Obsidian — Nugget | Prices, that must be, paid for what, @ojiq’— Diaspore * Novaculite ‘he buys, including*fabor, the North) 3 yy, * Nugget Silver — Am- Dakota farmer 4# never “pay out”) ‘bey — Matrix Turquoise — by growing wheat. He cannot lilt, Blaeolite * Ivory — Sardonyx a mortgage, Jet alone keeping ip! “* Moonstone — Iceland Spar with hig rapidly «mounting taxeb| __ Kalpa Zircon — Eye Agate in addition with his farm product) * Celonite — Lapis — Iolite “ “4 Levantine diamond brok- er in New York, named Eman- uel Sard, may be in communi- cation with him, “Ricca and I are going to America as soon as possible. JEW ROBERT W. CHAMBERS 1” ©1922 GEORGE H DORAN COMPANY | | poked his pistol against Mr. Sard’s | Darragh lighted’ his pipe and sat HOOKING A RIDE ON THE LUMBER WAGON | ~- and walked into a forest entirely familiar to him. 1 He emerged in half an hour on a wood road,two miles farther on. Here he felled a tree across the road and,sat down:in the bushes to, await events. N '? ToWdrd sunset, hearing a car tom) he tied ‘his. handkerchie! over this. face ‘below. the. eyes, and took an automatic from his pocket s Sard’s car stopped and Sard got out‘td'inspect the obstruction. Dar- ragh. sauntered. out of, the bushes, fat abdomen, and leisurely and thoroughly robbed him. In.an agreeable spot near a brook him ‘down to examine the booty. in detail. Two pistols, a stiletto, and a-blackjeck composed the arsenal of Mr. Sard. A large wallet dis- élosed more than four thousand dollars in Treasury notes—some- thing to reimburse Ricca when she arrived, he thought. Among Sard’s papers he discov- ered a cipher letter from. Rotter- dam—probably from Quintana. Cipher was rather in Darragh’s ine. - But Quintana’s cipher proved to be only an easy acrostic—the very simplest of secret messages. With- in an hour Darragh had it penciled ‘| ragh had little trouble with Quin- out: | “Take notice: ~=“Star Pond, N. Y. is Mike Clinch. wR Cipher oy «_. Name Has Flam- ing Jewel. Erosite I sail at once. “Quintana.” Having served in Russia as an officer in the Military Intelligence Department attached to the Amer- ican Expeditionary Forces, Dar- tana’s letter. Even the signature was not difficult,’the fraction 1-5 was easily translated Quint; andj the familiar prescription symbol a spelled ana; which gave Quintana’s name in full. . ~ He had!heard of Erosite as the rarest and most magnificent of all gems. Only three were known. ‘the young Duchess Theodorica 07} Esthonia has possesed one. Darragh was immensely amused to find that the chase after Eman- uel Sard should have led him to the very borders of the great Har- rod estate in the Adirondacks, | which now was the property of Tiarrod’s nephew, James Darragh. When he came to the first tres- pass notice he stood a moment to read it. Then, slowly, he turned: and looked toward. Clinch’s, i Fate, Chance, and Destiny were becoming very busy with Mike Clinch. They. had started Quin- tana, Sard; and. Darragh on his trail. Now’ they stirred up the so- vereign State of New York. \ CHAPTER II TWO State Troopers drew! bridles in the yellowing October ; forest. Trooper nnis said to| Trooper Stormont: ‘“That’s Mike Clinch’s clearing. Our man may be there. Now we'll see if anybody tips him off this time.” Stormont nodded. “All the scum of. the wilderness | gathers here.” went on Lannis.| “Here’s where half the trouble in} the North Woods hatches, We'll eat dinner at Clinch’s. His step-)| daughter isa peach.” The sturdy, sun-browned troon- er, , glanced at his... wrist watch, tretched his legs ‘in his stirrups. | “Jack,” he said, “I’ want you to) get Clinch right, and I’m going to | lady of her. gun on me.” as at present turned out and sell- ing. Continuance of a grain reli- ance source with existing condi- tions spells, futility of his labors. This may not sound or read good ‘to some real ‘estate . investors, boomers: of the “bread,~basket of the world” doctrine, but it:is-truth. —Steele (N. D.) Ozone. ~ A WOMAN AUDITS In the city of Long Beach, Walter Barber, Assistant City Manager, skips three days from his office in the merry month of June, Comes the ‘thirtieth of the month and he | presents himself for the little old pay envelope. Myrtle L, Gunsul, City Auditor, looks up with a sur- prised and painted expression. Asks if Mr. Barber was not absent from his office three days in June. Mm Barber allows that. he sure was. ‘Then, says the fair auditor, Mr. Barber ig entitled to-no pay fer the month of June. And to the present writing .all officialdom of Long Beach has been unable to ‘make her change her mind, and the City Attorney says she is respons- ible only to the people. the lady is misplaced. President Harding could do no greater serv- \ice to his country than to call her Clearly | —- Nephrite — Chalcedony —’, Hydrolite * Hegolite — Ame- thyst — Selenite * Fre Opal — Labradorte — Aquamarne — Malachite — Iris Stone— Natrolite — Garnet * Jade — Emerald — Wood Opal — Es- sonite'— Lazull * Epidote — Ruby — Onyx — Saphire — Indicolite — Topaz) — Euclase * Indian Diamond % Star Sap: phire — African Diamond — Iceland Spar — Lapis Crucifer Abalone — Turkish Turquois¢ * Old Mine Stone: — Natrolite — Cats Eye — Electrum * * * 1-5a a.” i That afternoon young Darragh located Sard’s office and presented hmself as a customer. The weasel- | faced clerk behind the wicket had a | pistol handy and informed Darragh that Sard was away on a busines? rip. Darragh looked around the small office: “IT have important news concern- ing Jose Quintana” whispered Darragh;’ “Where is Sard?” “Why, he had a letter from Quin- tana this very morning,” replied the clerk’ in a low, uneasy voice. “Mr. Sard left for Albany on the! . cautiously | EVERETT TRUE |. BY CONDO | THAT You GVERETT = OT QUITS READY, Bvt IMWAITING YOU, CAN SHAVS. To TAG JONGS PARTY TONIGHT. 7 = aS WECKL, SUPPER'S WHILS You'Re | | We'RE INVITED]. | | \ i ao ae ° | Oncs&, MRS. TeUG, WL BE CLAD Oo GO. L UNDGESTAND THEY'RS UNG | HANG SOMG Good, OLD: FASHIONGD - KISSING GAMES. A S| , \ one o’clock train. Is there any trouble?” Darragh bored him through his dark stare: “Mind your business,” he said. That night in Albany Darragh 0 | It led toa ( nhanee mer nay roll. —Uos Angeles | i oaler in automobiles. Sard had ‘bought a Comet Six, paying cash, ——__________ and had started\ north. | ATHOUGHT | eae Through Schenectady, day, { \and Mayfield, ‘the following o——________... { fc i ———® | Darragh traced a brand new Comet | Wash you; make you clean; put | Six containing one short, dark Le- jaway the evil of your doings from |vantinc with a parrot nose. In Northville Darragh hired a Ford. | before my eyes; cease to do evi At Lake Pleasant Sard’s car ‘to Washington to take charge of! | the national budget as @ successor ‘to ‘Gen, Charles G, Dawes, who} never in his cussiest moments ‘shaved efficiency so’ well beneath | the t | i ie tender skin of those on the | sicked up Sard’s trail. with | 4 Jearn to do well.—Isaiah 1:16.17. ; Will ali great Neptune’s ocean wash ' went wrong. Darragh missed him this blood by ten minutes; but he learned that iva | ; Clean from my hand? No, this hand | Sard had inquired the way to Ghost |_will rather | Lake Inn. The multitudinous seas incarnadine,| That was sufficient. Darragh Making the green one red. | bought an axe, drove as far as Har- —Lady Macbeth. | | LS WEclo!- Hee! IDENCS F AWEULLY SoRRy ! rod’s Corners, dismissed the Ford, | MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1922 tell'you about his outfit while we | watch this road. It’s like a movie. \Clinch plays the lead. I'll out the scenario for you—". | “Way back around 1900 Mike \Clinch was a guide—a decent | young fellow they say. } | “About that’ time there came to 'Clinch’s ‘hotel’ a Mr. and Mrs. Strayer. They were ‘lungers.’ | Strayer seemed to be a gentleman; ‘his. wife was, good looking and rather common. Both were very | young.~ He had the consump bad— the galloping variety. He didn’t last long. A month after he died his voung wife had a baby. Clinch married her. She also died the same year. The baby’s name was Eve, Clinch became quite crazy about her and started to make a That was his mania.” “Clinch had plenty of money in | those days,” he went on, “He could! afford to educate the child. The kid had a governess. Then he sent her to a fanc boarding school. She had everything a young girl could want. “She developed into a _ pretty young thing at 15 . She’s 18 now—and I don’t know what ta call her. She pulled a gun on me in July.” ti “What!” “Sure. -There was a row at Clinch’s dump. A rum-runner call jed Jake Kloon got shot up. I came} up to get Clinch. He was sick- ‘unk in his bunk. Wh2n I broke the door, Eve Strayer pulled a “What inquired Stormont. “Nothing. I took Clinch, . .. happened?” | But he got off as usual.” “Acquitted ?”” Lannis. nodded, rol'ing another cigaret:. . “Now, I'll tell you how Clinch happened to go wrong,” he said. “You see he'd always made his liv- ing by guiding. Well, some years ago.Henry Harrod of Boston came here: and bought thoudands and thousands of ecres of forest all around Clinch’s, That meant ruin to Clinch, He walled in. No hunt- ers care to be restricted. Business stopped. His! stepdaughter’s educa- ion became expenive. He was in a bad way. Harrod offered him a big price. But Clinch turned ugly and wouldn’t budge. And. that’s how Clinch began to go wrong.” Stormont nodded. . “Well, Clinch found money in many ways. The Conservation Commissioner in Albany began to hear about game law violations. The Revenus people heard of rum- running. (Clinch lost his guide’s license. But nobody could get the goods on him. “Thon the war came and the girl volunteered, She got to France, somehow. Clinch wanted to be on the same side of the world she was on, and he went with a Forestry Regiment and cut trees for railroad ties in southern France until the war ended and they sent him home. “Eve Strayer came back too. She’s there now. You'll see her at dinner* time.” ‘Lannis finished his second cig- aret, got back into his stirrups, gathering bridle; began “leisurely to divide curb and snaffle. .“That’s the layout, Jack,” he said. “Yonder lies the Red Light district of the North Woods. Mike Clinch is the brains of all the dirty work that goes on. .& floating po- pulation of crooks and bums— game violators, bodtleggers. ae And there’s the girl Eve Strayer.” » (Continued in Our Next Issue) _ MANDAN NEWS Blame I. W. W. For Firing Farm Crops Members of the I, W. W. are blam- ed for damage occur:ng, in various parts of the Missouri Slope in the | last few weeks in which grain stacks have been burned and threshing ma- chinery damaged. At risbane, rand county, some un- known person fired Ave stacks of hay on the Robert Franzen farm, and members of the st=te fire marshal’s department who investigated declar- ed they found evidence that cinched the incendiary theory. ‘ ear aMnnhaven in Mercer coun- ty. six sacks of grain o. nthe Adolt Oster farm were “da:troyed by fire believed to have been incendiary as the fire burned only the stacks and; | Nob the intervening stubble. A week ago unknown partiés stole: magneto and other equipment from the treshing tractor of N. B. Lewis near Oakdale in Dunn gounty. other magneto and repairs were se cured and the outfit moved to anoth-; ler location. On vane second day of threshing horseshoes, rocks and oth- er articles placed in grain bundles nearly ruined the threshing machin- ery. McDonald N amed Railroad Foreman Francis L, McDonald has received the appointment of road foreman of engineers on the Yellowstone divi- sion of the Northern Pacific to suc-; ceed the late John Wynn who was advanced to the position in the St. Paul offices. | Mr. McDonald will make, his headquarters in Mandan. Mr. McDonald has been in the em- An-| On, HELLO, Mes. JONES. THIS IS MRS. TRVE, But JUST AT THE LAST MOMGNT AING HAS INTGREERGD AND W ssiarcy GET TO HS PARTY. | ploy of. the Northern Pacific since \he was 17 years old and for many | Years as an engineer. He has been jaccounted one of the most faithful land reliable of the man on the Yellowstone division and his pro- | motion is in recignition of his long and faithful service. MRS. JONES’ REGS VM AWEULLY SRR some = SG CAN'T AWFEULLY, @ ‘ers association Friday night Mrs. F. H. Waldo was elected president, Miss Hattie Gaines, vice president, and Mrs. S. E, Arthur, secretary- \treasurer. - Following the meeting a dance party in honor of the teach- ers of the city was held with over 100 in attendance. Music was furnished by the high school orches- tra composed of Grace Allen, Earl -Hendrickson and William Stutsman. The ladies served . refreshments during the evening. © At a meeting of the parent teach-| Gunma Sims Says May we call the Dardenetles des- perate straits? Thanks. Wonder how Congress can tell |when it is, not in session? | The older a man gets the more young people there are, “Loot Safe—headline. Too safe, All wild birds don’t fly south for the winter. Human ones go in autos {and Pullmans, In Chicago, Albert Bartel found 97 diamond rings in his cellar; but that is nothing, one man found some coal. A relief party for the relief. party ‘for the, relief party for Stefansson may start soon. | John’ Reyder, New York police- man, shot a robber. John is a new cop, so knows no better. This may.be an awful country, but foreigners are’ pay:ag $1,000 each tc get smuggled in. The young lady who spent all sum- mer tanning her hide spends all fali hiding her tan. William Hammond caught an‘ ant- eater in New Jersey. An anteater 1s not a man on a picnic. socolow has two states arguing which shall try to hand him. Chicago barber attacked a man with a spade. Wash your head be- | fore getting a haircut. \ Dorothy Lebas, waitress, yawned and dislocated her jaw. Never tell a waitress bum jokes. You hear about tne courage of convictions, but bootieggen; have the courage of ‘their, acquittals, Man in Connersville, Ind. has a Chinese cow 34 inches high. She does not give condensed milk. Dad had to mind the baby when she was young. Now that she is 18 dad still minds her. “Harvard Student): Homeless”— headline. In a few weeks they will be home less than ever. the corner where you are.” ———Keqgc—rp? ADVENTURE OF | THETWINS | By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy and Nick were having a {fine ride. / The Fairy Queen’s magic auto- mobile was taking them to Fairy- land as-fast as it could go. They traveled along the Milky Way, then just beyond the Dream- land Tree, they turned down Moon- beam Hill and before long they ‘found themselves on the earth. Just between Bright Meadowland and Whispering Forest the magic ‘automobile turned into a nice road that led to the Fairy Queen’s pal- ace. “Won't the Fairy Queen be glad ; when she sees us,” said Nancy hap- pily. ‘‘Won’t she be glad we got ‘her automobile back for her from Light Fingers, the bad little fairy who stole it.” “I should say so!” declared Nick, “I hope nothing more happens,” sighed Nancy. arond carefully. He didn’t see anything, so he said, “it’s all right now. Light |Fingers .is discouraged, I guess, land he’s going to let us alone this time. “We'll be there soon now.” | But Nick hadn't looked up at the sky., He didn’t see a shooting star with two riders go streaking across it. The riders were Comet-Legs and Light Fingers. The two fairies landed in Bluster Gust Land. They peeped into the Weatherman’s house’ and found |him away, which was just what jthey wanted. The next thing they did wags to turn the spigot of his “pourdown” barrel, and before you could blink jan eye it was. teeming down rain {on the earth on the very road where the Twins were, “Oh! Oh!” cried Nancy, “We're skidding.” And |so they were—right into a ditch beside the road! ) (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) Dr. Scholl’s foot expert at our store Saturday, October 7th. Examination and advice free. A. W. Lucas Co. BREAK A COLD IN FEW HOURS “Pape’s Cold Compound” Acts | Quick, Costs Little, and Never Sickens! | Every druggist here guarantees ;each packege of “Pape’s Cold Com- pound” to break up any cold and end igrippe misery in’ s few hours or ‘money returned. Stuffiness, pain, j headache, feverishness, inflamed ~or lcongested nose and head relieved | with first dose. These safe, pleasant j tablets cost only a sew cents and mil- ‘lions now take them instead of sick- [ening quinine. Your luck may be bad, but Walter Note to the traffic cop, “Brighten “So do I,” agreed. Nick, looking * ye Ad t ww ; ov 4 a iy “