The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1922, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE| Es zs Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. ; | BISMARCK TRIBUNECO.. -.- - Publishers’ Foreign Representatives j G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - et )~S”CDETROIT | 2 Kresge Bldg. | D SMITH ' Fifth Ave. Bldg. ‘Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AN NEW YORK th vs - - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | The Associated Press is 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 dispatches herein are’ algo reserved. i MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | : SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | Daily by carrier, per year.... peace 120! Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck ancusts 120: Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00; Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00! “THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) i 1 REAL DEMON What is it, in your life, that you fear or dread most? | And how much effect is this fear or dread having. on your health, fortunes, state of mind and general happines Along this line, you will be interested in a peculiar case that has been perplexing the Workmen’s Compensation Com- mission of New York state. | In a hat factory some of the employes got mercurial | poisoning from handling dyes. One of the workers who be- | came ill and had to hunt another job asked the commission | for money to cover the loss of several weeks’ pay. A medical specialist, testifying at the hearing, says that | this particular employe’s illness was due to fear, not to poisoning. That is, seeing his fellow-workers become ill, he grew afaid that he also might get poisoned, and wor- ried himself into neurosis, a nervous condition in which the! patient often imagines that he has a physical illness — in | this case, poisoning. i : oe Ps if © Fear, under various terrifying scientific names, in thef last few years since the war ended,-has become a common,| disease. Wherever a group of physicians get together they | begin talking about this pandemic of nervous apprehension. “ Doctors’ offices are crowded with people—fearing titat their hearts are about to stop beating, that they are on the verge of a nervous breakdown, that an annoying acid condi tion of the stomach may be stealthily advancing cancer. | Probably three-fourths of these maladies are imaginary. They are, fortunately, making people realize the mind’s vast power over the body, for good or bad. s _ Basil King’s book, “The Conquest of Fear,”/suggests that most of the world’s troubles these days are due to the demon, FEAR. . 2 “There is not a government which is not'afraid of some gather ‘government. There is not a government which is not afraid of its own people. There is not a people which is not, afraid of its own government. There is not a country in Which one group is not afraid of some other group.. All is rivalry, enmity, suspicion, confusion ahd distrust, while men’s hearts are fainting for fear and for anxious expecta- tion ‘of what is coming on the world.” Fear (apprehension combined with distrust) leads to double-crossing. And double-crossing reacts in vengeance. ... There can be no happiness for individuals or nations until | we rise in our might and slay the demon, FEAR. 7 COMING BACK Doughboys, who remember the terrific devastation they saw. in France, will be especially ,interested to learn that | France is steadily getting the damages repaired. ..; It is important news to all of us, that France is more than | halfway back to normal. Why important? - Because our | prosperity depends to considerable ‘extent on Europe’s | come-back. And France is as much a key nation, as Ger- many, to the general European situation. ‘ For instance, 741,883 buildings in-France were destroyed or. suffered serious damage. The French government re- ports that nearly 500,000 of these buildings had been rebuilt by: September 1, the date of the last ceck-up. Later figures are not available, since it takes several months to round up y the information. And, of the 22,900 French factories destroyed in the war, 20;000 had been rebuilt September 1. = About 5,000,000 acres of French faming land was ren- dered unfit for cultivation by battles. Nearly 4,400,000 acres of these have been cleared of shells, leveled and again are bearing crops. / j ; The war trenches totaled 436,230,000 cubic yards of earth excavated, and about 365,000,000 cubic yards of have been filled in. : Barbed wire entanglements at the close of the war totaled 446,108,000 square yards. _Doughboys -wondered how the French would ever manage to coil the wire. Well, 341,000,- 000 square yards of wire entanglements have been coiled and removed. _. And over a million abandoned shells have been gathered up and destroyed or stored. = France loafing on the job? That’s ridiculous. The French have been as active as ants, at repairing the dam- ages of war. “=: Damages in the French devastated regions, according to: French officials estimates, totaled 102,000,000,000 francs. France has spent 40,000,000,000 francs repairing the dam- ages, and on this account Germany has paid 4,000,000,000 francs. These are the French government’s figures. The devastation of France, as revealed by these statistics, If we'd had similar destruction in America, no doubt we'd be foaming at the mouth and generally acting emotionally in’ a way that other countries would find hard to under- stand. . All this must be kept in mind, in judging the present French attitude. FISH A large-mouth bass weighing 18 pounds 8 ounces was caught by O. C. Donehey, in Lake Serpentine, Fla. Largest om record. This may riot seem important to you, but to at least, 2;000,000 Americans it is the most interesting happening for, months. A chronic angler would trade a few years of his ie - catch a bass of that size, particularly a small-mouth-} lack, | - Considering the different things that different people are| interested in, it’s easy to understand why it’s so difficult! to.get a general agreement on anything. lthat wheat is always low in the {Would have received about 4 cents | EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opirion of The Tribune. They are presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides of Important {ssues which are being discussed in the press of the day, CARRYING WHEAT OVER A. good many months ago The | Herald published a tabe compiled from government records of wheat prices on the Chicago market for a period of some 22 yéars. The statement had often been made | fall when the bulk of the market- ing ig done, and high the following spring. These alleged facts are plained on the ground that spac- | ulaters force down the price inj the fall, and load up with cheap | wheat, and then unload after they; have forced prices up in the | spring, } These statements did not accord | with The Herald’s observation of | the trend of prices, but there was! available no official compilation which could be accepted as author-} itative. Official figures weére ob- tained, compiled and compared, and it was found that the man who had held his wheat year after | year untli spring, and then sold it, | per bushel less it he had sold in the fall. Out of this 4 cents he would have had to provide for storage charges, interest charges and ghinkage. In some years he would have made a good profit, In| other years hé would have sus- tained. a loss. But one year with another it would have paid him} better to sell his wheat in the; fall, i The Minneapolis Chamber of! Commeyce has just issued a bulle- | tin dealing with the same subject. Two grades of wheat are discuss- ed, No. 1 Northern for the four fall months and the four. following spring months for the year 1885 .to 1914 inclusiev. The war years and the years following the war are not included because of the erratic behaviors of the market in those years because of war conditions. The Minneapolis tabulation shows substantially what The Her-| frequently did by offering higher prices, payable in trade, than was | quoted by line companves to their ald’s taublation showed months|agents and payable by check. Com- , ago. Foy the years cited the aver-jpetition between towns frequently age spring price exceeded the|arose, especially so in towns adja- cent to creame! where a deliver- | ed at the creamery price naturally | ranged h'gher than prevailed at ad- jacent points where cream was so!d to agents and required shipment as well as station costs.” average fall price for No. 1 North- ern 4.25 cents, and for Nofl 2 Nor- thern 4,32 cents. The correspondence between the two tabulations is striking inas- much as they cover different years and are made for different mar- kets: They. disprove completely —_——_______-» one of the pet theories of stump|| ADVENTURE OF || speakers of a certain class never- | THE TWINS | theless, the. theory ‘will. persist, and it will serve to do duty in ‘many a ‘campaign.—Grand Forks By Olive Barton Roberts ‘The next house the Tw:ns went to. Herald. was the Weston's, Ef | Naney and Nick, you know,, were, out collecting notes tor Santa Claus, They would light on a snowy roof like two little b.rds, and Nick woald hustle down the dark chimitey, waile') HORSE AND MOTOR. The annual plea for re-instatement of the horse was. xedently. made at the meeting in Chicago of the Horse Association of America. The an- nouncement’ that there are still Wy) thousands of horses in daily use o the streets of Chicago—and undoubt- ly the situation) ig similar’ in other cities—is offered as proof that Dob- bin is coming back rapidly since the war. The breeding of fine horses was urged; the present market is said to be far under-supplied. Somehow this all leaves the aver- age reader uninterested. Not many persons have the impulse to start a erusade in behalf of the return of the horse to city streets and coun- try by-ways. Nevertheless, it does no harm to recognize that this animal still has his uses and his friends. The auto- mobile and motor truck and even tho flying machine have been found to do Nancy watched overhcad for Tweek- anose, the naughty gnome who liked to steal the notes. “Here are two of them,” wispered up Nick when he had scrambled down, Nancy could just hear. She stopped watching and helped Nick to scramble out, looking as j grimmy as the Chimney Sweep him- self. : Now it isn’t nice to read other people's leiters, but it was different with Nancy and: Nick. Santa Claus told them ‘tc be sure to read each letter, as they found it, so that if anything happened and it got lost, they could remember some of the things, at least, and Tommy or Dicky or Harry, or Suzy or Jane wouldn't be left: altogether without much of the horse’s work more clean- ly, swiftly and economically. But jthere remain certain, jobs which man’s faithful beast of burden still! performs more satisfactorily than any modern bit of machinery. So long as there are such tasks tu e porformed, so long as there are pleasure and service to be derivea \from their existence,’ there will be |horses. Only, there isn’t any real |use in trying to pash the motor ve- jhicle into the: background in ordes |to Testore the horse.to its former po- | sition of prominence—Minot, Daily | News, things on Christmas morning. So Nick opened one of the letters and read: : “Dear Santy Klos: “T want a drum and a horn and a soljer sute and an engin and a baseball an an. air gun, and a tunnel and a nife and a tin bug. I hope you are well WINNY WESTON’” “Humph!” declared) Nancy. “They're funny things for a girl to want. She never said a word about a doll,” ; “Oh, listen!” cried Nick. “Here's the other note,” and he read: ‘ “Deer Santy, ; Lama anremagss “Please, sir, I want ‘a doll and a TRAFFIC IN OUR CITIES baby bugy and a kitchen cabinet and | The traffic situation in the citics)# new muff and a toy piano and a ,of America during the last few | bracelet. Lovingly, years is presenting the most serious | “ ‘WILLIE WESTON.’” : problem that city governments have “Goodness!” scoffed Nick ever been called upon to face. wanting things like that!” /~ Cities have attempted to meet the | nancy ook the notes andi looked problem in various ways. Traffic | them. —“Somebody’s rubbed the | policemen have been employed, park-|Mames out akd changed them,” she ,ing zones have been designated, new |S#d quickly. “IH bet you anything jtules have been laid down when itjit was Tweekanose—the little ras- appeared that necessity required. | °2!- : | But! with the ever increasing use; And so it was, my dears. | of the automobile congestion has| Nancy fixed the mistakes at once. j likewise, increased. And consequently | Tee ae | the problem is still. with us. An ticle inthe Anerkan city'|! PEOPLE'S FORUM | of recent issue, very pertinently asks: “Shall our city thoroughfares [be highways or garages?” After discussing the usual meth- ods of handling the traffic situation, methods which have been tried in every Americank city, the articie makes a plea for publie parking spa- ‘ces. It says that these sparking spaces | * should be acquired at \ strategie sincere thanks for’ the courte- points where the “half days” aid | extended: to..us) by, iyou and Nall days” could be parked withost {YU" Paper during our revival meet- ehteving acd’ conceiving. the ing. November 19th to December een 10th, and to especially express our This is a very wise suggestion of |#PPreciation for the valuable space the possible way the traffic situation |@74Ated us during this time and to inthe cities will eventually have to{thank you for the excellent location be handled. But whether it is in this/#iven and the very graceful pwording way or some other, it is'certain thie, 20d freedom from sensationalism ex- a solution will have to be found/ It | tended -by your headline writer. is the big problem in city manages! (DF. Bennard, the evangelist, said ment today.—Fargo Forum, j to us that better treatment at the | i * {hand of te press he had never THANKS TRIBUNE | Editor, Bismarck Tribune: As the meeting of the Official Board of The ,McCabe Methodist iscopal Chureh we were appointed committee to express to you MONG BUYERS jKnown. And while he is not here to “An unusually keen compet tior ;Join us in our thanks, we know that for cream preva‘led, especial'y b:- |he approves of them). tween merchant bu: says A. A. LOEHRKE, J. K. DORAN, report a the dairy commiss.oner i Members of Committee. the past year, “This because cream | is the equivalent of cash. It caused a number cf such merchants to ty out licenses to buy independant! This permitted them to adiust . +h prices to suit themselves which th: |. The sap in a vine circulates with five times the force of the blooa through the most important artery in a horse’s leg. boy | SIC’ \ ak AS LNG Ain Editor’s Note: This is the third prize winning essay in the contest conducted by The Tribune—It is by S. 0. Le Bhrron. Engineers can build a great bridge spanning a mighty stream, so strong} that lines of heavy truck may pass with scarcely a tremor, yet a hun- dred men trained to march in perfect step are asked to break step’ when passing overt for fear of rocking the bridge to destruction, and so it is with Bismarck, if we are to accom; plish big things we must have unity of action. We make much of the Red Trail and the number of tourists, we provide a camp with conveniences, and’ that is good, but what we need are’ trails ‘leading to, rather than through: Bismarck,: with. convenien- ‘ces. which will keep people here, or make them want to come again. must look to the roads for we have a very large territory, naturally tri- butary to Bismarck and we must ° ‘develop this if our city is to grow. We. have a fine physical townsite, natural drainage, good soil as shown by the trees and shrubs already grown, so it is an attractive city for homes. We need more dwellings, both private and apartment houses. Our schools, business college, churches, hospitals and hotels are among the best, but must keep a little ahead of the growth of the city if we are to get more people here to live. Honest advertising backed by all the residents of the city and surround- ing country will, bring . us more wholesale houses) will help our al- ready ‘good reputation as a distri buting potht of sced and nursery stock, and this means real profit to our farmers. We wint a starch fac- tory so our garmers need never sell potatoes at a loss. °* 2, We should investigate irrigation. the utilization of the vast water pow- er of the Missouri river, the getting of electric power und light from a 'VERETT TRUE RM —_o BISMARCK AND THE FUTURE 2 | ||_MANDAN NEWS | ‘Ketter to Head Commercial Club Edward A. Ketter of Grand, Forks jhas been engaged by the Mandan |Commercial club to fill the position | of paid secretary which has been left vacant by the resignation of j | Thomas H. Sullivan who resigned a |few months ago. Mr. Ketter will as- suine the duties of the office Jan. 2. The new Commercial Club secrc- itary is a native of East Grand Forks, | ‘Minn., having attended the public ‘schools there and in Grand Forks, He graduated from the department {of law and fine arts at the Univer- jaity of North Dakota in June, 1922. |For the past year he has been as-| sistant to the secretary of the Grand Forks Commercial club and comes; ‘to Mandan highly recommended as | jan active worker. | Mrs. W. N. Poor who has been a} |guest for several months of her |daughter, Mrs. J. E, Agnew returned ‘hursday from a visit of two weeks | in Dickinson. where she attended to! business matters. Mrs. Boor will |spend a month in Mandan dp a guest | tof her daughter ‘before leaving for Los Angeles, Calf. to spend the re- imainder of the winter with her son, | | Harold Poor. | The first team of the Mandan » ;high school wen from Carson basket ball team Ly a score of 30 to 9 Fri- day while the second team lost to Flasher by a score of 8-to 4. The ‘‘game at Carson was well played by |both sides but the Mandan seconds ‘were en the o%fensive side shortly ‘after the opening of the game. | 1 —. | Miss Cecile Peters, daughter of | Mr, and Mrs, L. C. Peters who has | been spending the past four months }in Livingston, Mont. as the guest of | Mr. and Mrs. Albert Peters returned ‘to her. home Sunday. Misg/Ruth Olson, ddughter of Mr. and Mts, Anton Olson, who has been teaching music in theh schools at Gowrie, Ia, will spend the holidays with friends at Fort Dodge, Ia. A marriage license was issued Thursday by County Judge Shaw to Anna Dettman and Emil Lennie, both of New Salem, plant located at the coal minés. V want to be on the air mail, passen- fer and freight lines which {soon cross the northern part of the, United States. We should be leaders in developing radio both for the city; and country around. The city water question may be easily settled if! we but. march together. . Unjust | freight rates may be corrected. We | Mrs, John C, Smith of the city underwent» an operation Friday morning at the Deaconess hospital. George Zander of St. Vincent has entered the Deaconess hospital. PICTURESQUE CHARACTER PASS- ED WITH DEATH OF MAJOR want parks and playgrounds, and| |. LACEY . should act while land is selling be-) Richmfnd, Ind., Dec. 18—Indiana low value: Winter sports in the hills |!08t one! of its most famous char- northwest of the city are passible, ;*¢ters with the passing on Novem- as is also a wonderful park with; ber 11 of Major M. M. Lacey of scenic drives, on the river bottom ; Fountain City. and along the bluffs. We need Fed-| Slave smuggler, veteran of the eral and State, experiment farms, we |Civil War, chief of police in Rich- should try.to get the proposed- model puoi, lawver and a leader in public children’s. city of the. Yeomen .Bro- | 4ffairs, Major Lacey led a most won- therhood. We have the machinery | derful and exciting life. for all of. this in our Association| His opposition to slavery develop- of Commerce, our Rotary, church {ed when he was a child living in DECEMBER 18, 1922. Tom Sims Says Turkey refuses to place a limit on her army which is the limit. Buy two, toy trains, One for the kids and one for father. Give her an imported hair brush if you think she has imported hair. Shop late and enjoy the rush. Don't forget and give an English- man Irish linen handkerchiefs. If the French, occupy the Ruhr“ ’ Valley it may mean a war. You can give some friend a wrist watch. After raising cain gbout turkey prices remember that a Christmas goose costs a week’s pay in Berlin. Manchuria want$ America’s worn- out strgct cars. Sorry, Manchuria, but we are using them. Chicago has a deaf and dumb bar- ber college. Long may they shave. A rug as a gift makes a room as snug as a bug in a rug. Towels are nice clean gifts. Some women want house dresses for Christmas, but movie ticke¥s are considered more useful, The boy will be disappointed if there is no sawdust in sister’s doll. Give daughter a razor so she will not sharpen pencils with yours. When marking up a price ,tag al- ways be sure the person who re- ceives the gift will not exchange it. The lighter electric irons do nov damage the wall or knock a husband out like the heavy ones. What we need is a coal wave. Presidential work is ruining Hard- ing’s golf, which is an alibi very few golfers can give. After calling a man a liar you often find you missed your calling. Basketball has the place of foot- ball, but like substitutes for high- balls, it hasn't the kick. Miss Grace Haskins is 22 and a film producer, but some movies indi- cate there are producers 10 years younger than Grace. College Folks, Coming Home ‘The next, week will see the holiday home-coming of many of the young people of the city who are attending many: of the colleges of the north- societies, boy and girl scout troops, ; and kindred organizations, if. we but march in unison. A scientist has told | us that by placing a bass violin in each room of the Woolworth build- ing of New York, all tuned to a cer- tain pitch, sit in a room acros\ the street and wreck the greatest , build- ing of steel_and concrete. So let us tune our voices to one pitch, time our actions to one perfect step, and iwithout a‘halt clear all obstacles |from:a/path leading straight to 4 population of twenty thousand in jnineteen hundred and thirty-two. | | ATHOUGHT |! Mountain City and at the age of eleven years he was one of the “coa- ductors” of the “underground rail- way system,” which smuggled, run- away slaves from the Ohio river tu Canada. ‘4 A brother of Major Lacey is said to have assisted Eliza Harris, the original from whom the famous character in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” was adapted, across the Ohio river to Ripley, and then to Fountain City. Major Lacey’s work in connection with the “underground - railway,” was to help conduct negroes who had been brought to Levi Coffin’s homestead in Fountain City, te tne next station of the system. The Grand Central Station of the s as Coffin’s home was called, tem, was used as a hiding place for ap- proximately three thousand slaves who pagsed through té the north- |ward, it has been estimated. Justice ‘and truth ‘are two points! The outbreak of the Civil War of such exquisite délicacy, that our!ended Major Lacey’s career as a coarse and blunted’ instrumerts wili|slave runner, for he immediately en- not touch them accurately—Pascal. | listed in the Union Army. In 1865 he ‘was commissioned a major in the 69th Indiana Infantry. Following the termination of the struggle, Major jLacey made his home in Richmond, jwhere he served as chief of police from 1869 to 1873, He then went’ to | Washington where he practiced law |for some time. | Major Lacey spent his last years at Fountain City. He was senior | viee-commander of the loyal Legion, A false halance is an abomination | to the Lord: but a just weight is hi: delight.—Proverbs 11:1. BY CONDO |and a member of the Vicksburg |Military Park commission under EVERY Tes , % GBT Cone HAiRs ! ROOM AND AND ON YouR Come Home I NEVER HEARD Rm ABOUT cu SS PLACE § GO AN THis HOUSE, THe les IN THE HACC D IN THS BATH ROOM AND IN THC Governor W. T. Durbin and Gover- nér J, F. Hanley. He was eighty-se- |ven years old when he died. DO WOM LIKE A GIFT OR NOT? | Somehow or other it has become ‘a joking matter that the member of the family who finances the giving usually draws the least desirable of the presents. - |Father gets so little consideration? Is it because he keeps mum about i what he wants? Or does no one show | interest in him? Any real man with a good car and ‘any good red blood in his veins ix lenthusiastic about that cer and its lequipment. He is going to like a | Good Accessory, such as are on | display at Corwin Motor Co., better than any: handkerkhief or cigars procurable. . The car dealer can furnish more |real tips on Dad's wants than any- ‘one else. Be sure to consult him be- |fore picking something you know he will not care for. MXxGD VP WIth in “Comt WHEN ‘You | PRETTY FUGITIVE IS TAKEN BY FROM THE OFRIC | eTVICIAL xXoU YAMMG Dickenson, Dec. 18.—Miss Eliza- THOSSG t beth Keefe, pretty New York girl toe who was taken into custody a week = ago by Stark county authorities at | the request of Washington off‘cials, was returned to Spokane to faze charge of larceny. It is alleged that she had stolen a quantity of cloth- ‘ing while visiting at the home of a friend in that city. | She was taken back to.the Wash- ington city by Miss Alma Lundin, | police woman, who came to Dickin- Ison from Bismarck, where she had CARE WHETHER MEN | | Is it because of the strain and | |worry over the rest of the list that’ pave west and elsewhere. Miss Marie Hagerman, daughter af Mreand Mrs. H. E, Hagerman, and Miss Margaret Gypson, daughter of Mrs, George H. Wilson, who are at- tending Washington univers'ty, w.!l reach Mandan dur-ng the week to spend the holiday vacation. Miss Ruth Renden, a student at St. Olaf’s | Northfield and Robert Renden, who is attending St. John’s College, Dela- field, Wis., will spend their vacation iwith thair parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A Renden. Ralph Williams, son of Mr, and Mrs. Joe Williams, and Robert Cohen, son of Sidney Cohen of the Arcade Variety store, stu- 'dents at the University of Minne- sota, are expected to arrive home iduring the week for a two weeks visit here with their parents. Miss Mac Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Taylor, who has been at- tending high school in San Pedro, California, making her home with ther brother and. sister-in-law, Lt. land Mrs. Duane Taylor, will return to Mandan for her Christmas vaca- | Mrs. Anton£ Olson, and Bernard Porter, son q° Mr. and Mr. J. K. Porter, student at the University of North Dakota, and Leslie Harrison, son of-Mrs. H. Jess, Frederick layis, son of Mr. and Mrs, L. A. Tavis and {Henry Opitz, students at Purdue jare expected home for the holidays. | Robert Sullivan, son of Mr. and M J. Sullivan, who is a student at the | University of Minnesota and James iHansen, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Hansen, a student at Purdue, will not come to Mandan during the holi- ,days, but will be guests of fr'en‘is lin the cities where they are attend- ing school. To touch apples, when cooking, with a steel fork or knife leaves a sharp, acrid taste. A silver knife or a wooden fork or spoon should he used. i A postoffice and police station ’ been established on Craig Island, 850 miles from the north pole and the most, northerly point | #0 provided. \ | The Bible is published by the | British and Foreign Bible Society in 1550 different languages. BREAK ACOLD ~ INFEW HOUR® :“Pape’s Cold Compound” Acts Quick, Costs Little, and Never Sickens! | Every druggist here guarantees pound” to break up any cold and end grippe misery in a few hours or money returned. Stuffiness, pain, j headache, feverishness, inflamed or 'congested nose and head ‘relieved with first dose. These safe, pleasant tablets cost only a rew cents and mil lions now take them instead of sick- | gone to secure extradition papers. jening quinine. @ j tion. Archie Olson, son of Mr. and + ¢ I\; jeach package of “Pape’s Cold Com-(4

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