The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 10, 1922, Page 4

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i : PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class : Matter. i GEORGE D. MANN - - : - - Editor i Foreign Representatives : G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - -DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK 3 Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Ass ciated Press exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatéhes herein-are also erved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per oa dicistareths eB U20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . eee 020 mail, per year (in siate outside 5.00 1, outside of North Dakota ois tier Gu THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) HE UFTS A TON A phenomenally strong man is discovered working in a steel mill at Youngstown, Ohio. He is Gus Lessis, 22, a Greek. g Gus first att attention by absent-mindely picking up azone-ton steel beam, and carrying it up a flight of stairs. This, of course, nearly shuts down the mill. A ismarck).,.. - Crowds gather about Gus. He entertains them by bend- , an iron bar, three-quarters of an inch in diameter, around his neck like a corkscrew, then unwinding it. Barnum once said, “If you have anything worth showing, get it under canvas.” So Gus takes the road and charges admission. Without straining himself, Gus could pick up a ton. of coal, wagon'and all. You wonder what he looks like? Well, he.weighs only 18 z Compared with size, he is a weakling alongside an ant. Nevertheless, he is one of the strongest men:in the world. si ngth was nét acquired in gymnasiums.. He says he inherited it. That, however, is only partly correct. When a: human body weighing 185 pounds easily lifts 18 times its weight, a good part of that strength is in the'will power. - You have had this experience. You try to lift :a heavy stvain every muscle into action, but cannot budge it. That makes you mad. Anger arouses the ‘will power. Yuu litt again. ‘The weight rises clear of the ground. ° Muscles are like the wires that: carry electric current. wer is in the mind. ‘It is will power. A weak- suddenly gone insane, could literally’ tie Gus Lessis in In asylums, four or more powerful men frequently “Veak museles, strong will power. Whether lifting weights, accomplishing hard tasks or conquering obstacles, will power is your*greatest force. It lies dormant in most: brains, a sleeping giant. waiting to be roused. J Confidence alone cari rouse it. That’s why confidence in self is the skelton key that opens oors of success. Also why the man of apparently small often “bluffs his way through.” i ,2 move than a temporary setback until the xetrent> in ¢’smay and admits defeat. ing in Portage Lake, Ontario, catches erch, generally and incorrectly call. ‘lls pound fish with a club, throws it in : Holf hex. later. on,shore, he.cleans the dore, tears insides out. Two hours afterwards, he happens to notig 2 “cleanings’—and finds the heart beating normally and rously as if in the fish.- Life still was present. an explain it. But this much is probable: If he human ability to worry, its heart would 2d in tne canoe or when the insides were torn out. a sure killer. » FAILURES More than 17,000 business firms failed between the first of the year and Oct. 1.: It’s a big figure, but at least 1.800,000 companies went through the nine months without failing. The liabilities of the failures exceeded their assets by about $200,000,000. Spread evenly over the whole popula- tion, this is less than $2 for each American. Most of us look at hard times through a high-powered magnifying glass. the attention. No one notices the vast fleet that rides the gale safely. FORD ; Henry Ford orders his foremen to speed up production and install new machinery so that the output of Fords will be 6000 a day by April 1, 1923. Allowing for Sundays, Ford will be able to turn out nearly two million cars a year, the greatest industrial miracle of history. ) _ Ford is always expecting better and better business. And he gets it—for many reasons, chief of which is that he never hypnotizes himself into stagnation by “anttcipating” de- pression. . ji CHECKS ‘.. The biggest check ever drawn is exhibited in New York. it transferred $200,000,000 from the national treasury dur- ing the war, and was the beginning of the big debt owed to America by the allies. 4 Nearby, in the collection, is the check for $7,200,000, which paid for our purchase of Alaska from Russia. _ There certainly is no limit to variety, when it comes to Uncle Sam’s investments. DEBT: : The national debt now is nearly two and half billion dol- lars less than it was three years ago. ,~-¥t-was cut down $230,000,000 in September, lowering it to $22,812,407,791. : A this rate of reduction, the entire national debt would be wiped out by the year 1950. Don’t expect it. ‘Much of| the reduction to date came from salvaging surplus war ma- terals. The junkman has finished the best of the picking. SAVED ¢~Maxim Gorky says that food furnished by the American Relief Administration has saved the lives of 9,000,000 Prus- $iars? 5 . his cancels a considerable portion of the war’s’ death toll. "There has never been anything like it, in i o.vay of relieving-hman suffering. ‘And still, abrozd, we are called a selfish nation. yuired to‘subdue a frail woman in a maniacal frenzy. \ The lone ship that perishes at sea gets} peacetime, in EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this 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 issues which arey) ek discussed in the press of the day, | SCANDINAVIAN FINANCES Essential reorganization of the largest private bank in. Denmark, the Danish Landsmandsbank of , Copenhagen, with the Government jtaking a hand after Parliment ap- ‘pointed a special committee to in- quire into the status of the institu- tion, for the moment calls atten- ‘tion to Scandinavian financing on {the whole, and the possible effect of what beyond a doubt constituted a crisis in Danish banking circles. | Dhe cables from Copenhagen have jalready told of the closing of the Stock Exchange on the day when the, Landsmansbank found itself in | difficulties, and its reopening a few days after, since public confi- dence remained unimpaired be- cause of the Governments quick action, Even though the losses in- | curred by the bank proved ‘to be jnearly double what was at first {thought to be the case; depositors ‘are assured that their money is | safe, and that withdrawals can now be made at pleasure. The Danish Government is to have five mem- bers on the new board of direc- tors. | In the final analysis the troubles lof the Landsmandsbank may be charged to the account of fhe war’s ‘aftermath, for, as in many other lands, so in Denmark, pri took so sudden a tumble that industrial interests suffered greatly in the | transition from high levels to near | normal.: However, the labor situa- tion in Denmark is rapidly right- ing itself now, that the workers |are accepting the inevitable with | regard to wages more in accord'- | with the times. | The Scandinavian exchange rate} lis slowly returning to par, and here | ‘again is one of the best evidences | that the economic problems of | Denmark, Norway, and Sweden aré | ; on the way to be fully solved: sComs | mercial relations ,with the.‘United | | States are constantly improving. | |Three important steamships lines, | the Scandinavian-American Line of | Copenhagen, the Swedish-American | Line, and the Norwegian-American Line, respectively of Stockholm | and Christiania, have for years| constituted valuable links of trans-,| portation and freight between nor- | thern Europe and America. Scan-| | dinavian exports, which grew to| great proportions during the war;| }and which “experienced a slump | ‘ subsequetly, are once more looming /' {up. The effect of the new tariff | will, of. course, affect conditions in genera], but in time there is bound | to be an adjustment. | | In view, therefore, of the appar- jent stable conditions. in Denmark end elsewhere in Scandinavia, there ‘ig/no reason whatever. to feel dis-| ~ turbed because’.a jbank even of such size as, the’ Landsmansbank, | with .its More than’ fifty, branches | throughout, the;Danish ‘provinces, felt it netessaty of front.—hi mB ‘tor. WB A CODE NEW TO THE SEA | . There is going to:be'plenty of in-' | dignation® expressed: at: the state- | ment of the Liverpool-firm of ship- ‘owners which holds it is “not ne- jcessarily the duty, of a vessel to roceed to the aésistance of an-, other which has met. with disaster in a fog.” The indignation will nrobably nowhere be more’ pro- ; nounced than in the country under | whose flag the shipowners in ques- \tion ply their trade, for no one has contributed more gallantly to es- tablishing the best traditions of sejfaring than the men who sail the seven seas in her ships. One of the first traditions of the sea is to go tothe aid of the ship \in distress, and to go whether in } good weather or bad, in security or in danger; through calm seas or tempest-riven infernos. Only get ‘there! Look out for yourself after | you rave looked out for the vessel | that is worse off than you are. And | the worse she. is.off.the more.she. neetls your ‘help. / S That was the old.doctrine: Here jis the new: {It. is certainly diffi- |eult to conceive,of anything more | dangerous thang" for several ves- {sels proceeding . on..,.\converging courses in a fog with the sense that early arrival at ithe scene of, dis- aster is a matter of moment.; Such an operation is°far more ‘likely to j increase than diminish the loss of | life and property.” Of course’ it is dangerous. Masters of sailing ships do not need to be told that by | owners writing letters from a swiv- |el chair, They know it well enough, But there is the difference of view- point. The sailor would go, know- ing the danger; the owner would) have him stop ‘because of the dan- | ger. The new. creed is frankly a ship- | owners’ creed. But we imagine |there will be few other shipowners who will uphold it. -Most of them | ;are willing to make their own sac- | Tiflces when the inexorable sea de- {mands them.—Philadelphia Public | Ledger. ts | | { het | V1 1 ————_____—_____-——_9 | A THOUGHT 0 | They that know thy name will put | their trust in thee; for thou, Lord, | | has not forsaken them that seek ;thee—Psalm 9:10, Be strong: | We are not hereto play to dream, to! | drift. 1 | We have hard work to do and loads | | to lift, ‘ | | Shun not the struggle; face it. 'Tis | God's gift. | Be strong! j It mattens not how deep intrenched | the wrong, : \ | How hard the battle goes, the day) how long. ”° |Faint, not, fight on! Tomorrow comes the, song. Maltbie D, Babcock. Siam is holding a lottery to raise moneyg for the developement of her jair service, o i iden far away at the headwaters. stood still; then heart and blood ran i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE’ ©1022 GEORGE H.DORAN COMDANY ,tiot and she felt her knees tremble \-felt: weak ad she rested against the stole, pine’s, huge trunk and covered her It was : QUINTANA and his band of :inter- national thieves. who first the priceless gem, the Flaming! face with unsteady fi Jewel, from the mi E : ly fingers, COUNTESS OF ESTHONIA. Bove at! Until the moment, Eve had never ‘the now beggared countess forced’ (veamed what the memory ‘of this JAMES DARRAGH to. scek the gem ™an really; meant to her—never and trace it to the disreputable dreamed that she had capacity’ for “hotel” in the Adirondacks owned | emotion so utterly overwhelming. y. Even now confusion, shame, ' fear MIKE CLINCH, Under the name of were paramount. All she wanted HA pane Darragh works at the’) was $0 get away—gct away and still ine otel,” Where “he meets henageart’s ld beating—control, the Clinch’s beaytiful steg-daughter, ge EVE STRAYER, the one great, ag ganbe tremor that! possessed: her, fluence for: good in’ =the crime® ppecbver mifid:and sense and breath, stained carcer of Clinch. .When§ She drew her hand from her eyes Quintana and his gang arrive inv@nd_looked upon the man she had the vicinity, both Clinch and’Hal attémpted to kill—upon the young Smith know they’ will mag who had wrestled her off her nothing to regain the loot filchedjfeef and. handeuffed her—and\ whd ; the royal casket. Clinch | had bathed her blecding mouth with aha als are ah eld sheen and who had kissed her eR ees poate cache.” "She was trembling so that she be- 4 aoe came frightened. The racket of the y Sh ae straight as a young) PY. brook in his ears safeguarded her in 7 ‘ " @ measure, ve fey ave tiously began the detour. her eyes of gentian-blue always When at length the wide circle Ys ‘i through the woods had been safely The morning turned warm; she : nad pulled off her soft felt hat, shook out Sccomplished and Eve was moving har jelipped ‘cuslastatripped ‘open, the odeaenmonens the: thickening zanks; of shire Cather snowy aReoat iwhere. tamarack, her heart, which seemed sweat glinimered like melted frost, ¢® Auffocate her, quieted; gnd_ she The forest was lovely in the morn- Vted against, a shoulder, of rock, ing sunlight—lovely and ,still—save ONT a ea ilciaher aeke a for the blue-jays—for the,.summer et Mia ae be Aidier se birds had gone and only birds des- Pocket Bis ae orchict sand: loose f : ‘I at, it. The are of cambric bore} tined to a long Northern winter now his, initials, J. S. Blood from her lip remained. jean H cue Ee +, | rethained on it. She had not washed Eve's tread was light on the moist! Tot aoots, SUT trail; her quick eyes missed nothing bette —not the dainty imprint of deer,‘ fresh made, nor the sprawling insi nia of rambling. raccoons—nor, the big barred owl huddled on’ a pi limb overhead, nor, where the swift gravelly reaches of the brook caught | D sunlight, did she miss the swirl and To 3€@€ ou. furrowing and milling of — painted | “Ay SAXS HS trout on the spawning beds. ! : In her‘cartridge-pouch she carried NG sée “ou ON BUSINGSS Ej She bent over nearly | WANTS TO pA FASS ASG OO SON , ~ {stunted spruces stood out against | She put it to her lipw again, me- | chanically. A ‘falnt fodér of tobacco | still glung’to it. j By every law of loyalty, pride, self: man her enemy. Instead, she held | his. handkerchief against her lips— crushed it there suddenly, closing her eyes. while the color surged and surged through her skin from throat. to hair. Then, wearily, she lifted her head and logked out into the gray and dreary years seemed. to stretch like milestones away, away into an end- less waste. She put the handkerchief into her pocket, shouldered her rifle, moved of, without looking about her—a mistake which only the emotion of the’ moment ‘could account for a girl so habituated to caution—for she had gone only a few rods before a man’s strident ‘voice halted her: “Halte la! Crosse en air!” “Drop that rifle!” came another, yoies {rpm behind her. “You're; cay: fered! Throw your gun on the ground!” y G She’ stood as though paralyzed. To the right! and>»left she heard people trampling through the thicket to- ward her. i \ “Down with’ that gun, damn you!” repeated the. voice, breathless from running. All around her men came floundering and crashing toward her through the undergrowth. She could see some of them. jf As she stooped to place her rifle on the dead leaves, she drew the flat packet from her cartridge sack at the same time and slid it deftly under a rotting log. Then,. calm but very pale, she stood upright to face events. ‘The first’man wore a red and yel- low bandanna handkerchief over the lower half of his face, pulled tightly across a bony nose. He held a long pistol nearly parallel ‘to his own body; and when ‘he’ came up to where she was ‘standing he poked the -muzzle. .into--her~stomach. She did not flinch; he said noth- ing;...she looked. intently into the Pe AAS Hs A= had trusted to her. The sack swayed gently as she Strode on, slapping her left hip at every Step; and always her subconscious mind remained on guard and aware of it; and now and then she dropped her hand to feel of the pouch and strap. ‘ From Star Peak’s left flank an icy stream clatters down to the level floor of the woods, here; and it was here that Eve had meant to quench her thirst with a mouthful of sweet water. But, as she approached. the tiny ford, warily, she saw a saddled horse tied to a sapling and a man seated on a mossy log . N The trappings of horse, the gray- green uniform of the man, left no room for speculation; a trooper of the State Constabulary was seated there. His cap. was off; his head rested on his palrh.“Elbow on knee, he sat Xhere gazing at the water—watching | the slim fish, perhaps, darting up| stream toward their bridal-beds hid- the flat, sealed packet which Clinch MATXER. ots i No, & WON'T BE THINK OF You S A detour was imperative. The girl, from the shelter of a pine, looked out cautiously at the trooper. The sudden sight of him had merely checked her; now the recognition of his uniform startled her heart out of its tranquil rhythm and set the blood burning in her checks. | There was a memory of such a man seared into the girl’s very soul a—man whose head and shoulders resembled this man’s—who had the same bright hair, the same slim and powerful body—and who moved, too, as this young man moved. The trooper stirred, lifted his head to relight his nipe. The girl knew him: Aw tf Her heart 'T CAME IN HERE To TEcu YoU WHAT I You'RE A---- | Pe ee THEN You DIDN'T WANT TO. oe SEE ME ON BUSIwess AFTER \F TS TO SCA : : SocraBle Visiv = ivy SNAPPY SEATED MW Lt LETIS MAI ‘ , M age, wordless admonition to go more H State Trooper, Stormont, hearing it. g (ered rock, she. toiled, the heavy gasp- | respect, she should have held this | empty vista of her life, where the) j 7:30 tonight. TUESDA {the edge of his bandanna, Five other men were surrounding her, but they all wore white masks if vizard shape, revealing chin and mouth, i They were different otherwise, also, wearing various sérts ahd pat- terns of sport clothes, brand new, and giving them an odd, foreign ap- pearance, What troubled her most was the silence they maintained, The man wearing the bandanna was the only one who seemed at all a familiar figure—merely, perhaps, because he was American in build, clothing, and movement. He \took her by the shoulder, turned her around and gave her a shove forward. She staggered a step or two; he gave her another shove and she comprehended that she was to keep on going. Presently she found herself in a jsteep, wet deer-trail rising upward through a gully. She knew that runway. It led up Star Peak, Behind her as she climbed she heard the slopping, panting tread of men; her wind was better than theirs; she climbed lithely upward, setting a pace which finally. resulted in a violent jerk backward—a sav- slowly. As she climbed she wondered whether she should have fired an alarm shot on the chance of the But she had thought only of the packet at the moment of surprise. And now she wondered, whether, when freed,-she could ever again find that rotting log. ; Up, up, always up. along the wet gully, deep with silt,and frost-splint- ing of men behind her. Then she was jerked to a halt while her escort rested. Once, without turning, she said un- i steadily: ‘Who, are you? What have ]I done to you?” : ; There was no reply. | “What are you going to do to |me—-” she began again, and was) shaken -by the shoulder until silent. At last the vast arch of the east- ern sky sprang out ahead, where Ny the sunshine and the intense heut of midday fell upon a bare table-land of rock and moss and fern. As she came out upon the level, the man behind her. took both her ‘arms and: pulled them back » and somebody bandaged her. eyes. Then a hand closed on her left arm and, so guided, she stumbled and crept | forward” across the rocks for a few moments until her guide halted her. and forced her into a sitting position / on a smooth, flat boulder. c She heard the crunching of heavy | feet around her, whispering made \hoarse by breath exhausted, move- ment across rock and scrub, retreat- ing steps. For an interminable time she sat there alone in the’hot sun, drenched | to the skin in sweat, listening, think- ing, striving to find a reason for this lawless ‘outrage. After a long while she. heard some- body coming across the. rocks, stiffened as she listened with some vague presentiment. of evil. (Continued in Our Next Issue) 4 pe : . ——_—-® | THETWINS | | ee | By Olive Barton Roberts It all happened just’ as: the Sour Old Witch’ had said. You -know she! had. given Light Fingers, the bad little fairy, a magic; egg. “If you break this egg in the road in front of the Twins,” she said, “a stone wall instantly will appear in their path, so high and ‘so wide the magic automobile will never. get} past it. Then, you can shove the Twins opt and take the automobile | home to’ your. master.” ‘And it had all happened just asj the Sour Old Witch had said—that | is, this much had ~ happened, the | stone wall appeared and the magic | car had to stop or get wrecked. Light Fingers, up in his tree-top (where he had hidden in order to throw down the egg at the proper; time): laughed and laughed. He. was: so\tickled about everything that he! forgot about grabbing the car as the Sour Old Wich had said. But: somebody else was, watching. The Green Wizard had seen every-| thing. He had helped the’ Twins) right along and he wasn’t going to desert them now. So he thought | and thought and thought. Suddenly; he slapped his knee. “T have'.it,” he said, so loudly his voice echoed and re-echoed over hills and forests and valleys like |thunder. | Off he strode over his tree-tops land stooped. down. to the ground where a three-cornered door led into Brownieland. He knocked three); times and instantly a Brownie stuck up his head. |” j “May I see Mr. Pim Pim, the King; of the Brownies?” asked the Green Whizard. “Certainly, sir,”, said the Brownie. Pim Pim appeared at’ qrice and the Green Whizard whispered something into, his ear. oat “My- Goodness! ‘Is that: so?” ex-| claimed the Brownie. “Of course | | Pl help you. . Vl get.Mike Mole! at once and. all his :helpers. We'll get that wall dawn in a hurry.” And away he went. —_—_—__—__—__-__-® | AT THE MOVIES | —__—_________-0 THE ELTINGE “Beyond the Rocks” is the feature attraction at the Eltinge theatre for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday | of this week, The story was written by Elinor Glyn, famous for her no- | vel romances.’ Gloria Sjranson is the star of the picture ‘with Rudolph | Valentino as her leading man. A va-| riety of’ scenes changing from the} glittering world of English high so- ciety to dizzy adventure among Al- pine cliffs create spectacular back- grounds for an unusually interesting \and entertaining picture. Regular meeting Bismarck Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, ' two ratty eyes fastened on her over|- ‘ADVENTURE OF || | receiv Y, OCTOBER 10, 1922 te t ‘There. never will be enough hap- piness to supply the demand. ‘ Difference between kissing and be- ing kissed is there is’ no satisfaction in the former. So many men think woman’s place is to be out of place. Coal may go in the cellar, but coal prices will not. Mrs, A. Husband is running for a Michigan office. We can prove it. » Plasterers are making $26 a day in Chicago; but then, they have to live in Chicago. No more ham and eggs are served in the Franklin (Pa.) jail, Be good if you ever go there. In Hongkong, a bank was robbed of $200,000. Civilization spreads. Green What Miss Brown defeated Mrs. in Ardsley tennis matches. could you expect in the fall? 4 This is a fine country, but Norway’ has a-law making girls learn to cook before they marry. i Some thief stole’a famous Scotcit comedian’s golf clothes. Doctors say he will recover, Smyrna is said to be the birth: place of bridge whist, but that isn’t why the town was burned. Our money will be.printed on a better grade of paper soon, but it won't last us any fonger. Many a crooked landlord owns a square block. Professional fisherman met in At- lantie City. The ones with the long- est. arms won. A hunter tells us the way of the trespasser is pretty hard. A girl of 21 recently married a baghelor of 86, but any girl of 21 could have done that. ‘ Gas output breaks all records. So does output for gas. } In the New York street cleaners’ ‘jazz band the banjo player ought to be a good rag picker. Part of a wedding cake at Mont- clair, N. J., was 50 years old. These bakeries are terrible. To keep it bobbed or let it grow, that is the question. | A’magazine issue is a failure to lots of people if it has no bathing girl pictures. Mirrors take the conceit out of tensible people and put: the conceit into’ féolish people. 4 A man is’ on anyone’s level if he is on-the level. MANDAN NEWS Committee chairmen for the Par- ent-Teacher association have been named by Mrs. F. H. Waldo, presi- dent, as follows: Program, Miss Iva Scott, social, Mrs. H. H. Warres, health and recreation, Mrs. G. H. Spielman, counsel, H. S. Russell, civie improvement, Mrs. Fred Mc- Kendry, finance, Edwin Bonde. The. personnel of these committces wili be announced. later in the’ week. . It is felt that there are many morc parents’ and ‘school patrons ‘who should become, members of the as- sociation. Any. who are interested are requested to notify the secretary, Mrs, S. E. Arthur.’The next meeting will be held Oct. An automobile collision ‘which re- sulted in minor injuries to Miss Nel- lie Taylor, and the wrecking of two cars occurred Sunday afternoon neor the A. D. Taylor farm south of the city. Two cars, a Buick driven by. Miss Tavlor. and an Oakland driven by J. P. Zweber, proprietor of a hotel at New Leipzig, approached each other. at a considerable specd and met,on a bridge which was too narrow for the cars to pass. The inside front wheels crashed, break- ing those on either cars, stripping running boards, bendig chassis frames. dnd causing other damage. Four men riding in the Zweber car were unhurt, while Miss Nellie Tay- lor sustained a few scratches and cuts from flying windshield glass. s Miss Theresia Andore and. Ernest Rober, both of the city, were united in marriage at 7 o'clock’ yesterday morning at nuptial mass at the St- Joseph’s church by Father Herbert. Following the ceremony the wedding party attended a dinner. at the home of the groom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Rober. Sixth Ave., S. W. Mr. and Mrs. Rober will leave for cities on the west coast for their honeymoon and will return to Man- dan to make. their home. Mr. Rober is a brakeman for the Northern Pa- cific here. Se. CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH ! MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5¢ and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Shei- field Ave., Chicago, Ill., writing your name and address clearly. You will in retarn a trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and back; rheumatism, back- ache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a whole- some and thoroughly cleansing cath- ‘artic: for constipation, biliousness, | headaches, and sluggist bowels.

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