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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - Publishers "Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPA CHICAGO - - - DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. "MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRES: 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 also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE __ Daily by carrier, per year.. Se Sets oa Veo DUeeU) Daily by mail,-per year (in Bismarck)... . Go 3 7.20 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) NEED FOR WEST SIDE A convincing presentation of the need of the west side for a grade school building was made to the board of educa- tion. This section of the city has grown rapidly and new houses are building every season; there is no school serving a large section of the city, and it is too much. to require little children to tramp a mile to school. All but one of the school buildings now are crowded, because of the rapid growth of the city. The need of the West side existed, how- ever, before this growth affected all schools. The Will was unfortunately located, being almost in the business s tion, and may have to be abandoned in a few years. Cost of the school system is high, the taxes levied have not met running expenses, and theré is a real demand for economy. to spend several hundred thousand dollars paving her streets, planning a park system and generally building up the city, | and at the same time deny the right of good schools. The tichholt school was built during a period of high costs, yet forward-locking citizens will find pride in the fact that al- though it was believed this school would meet the need of future years the growth of the city has been so rapid that it is now hardly adequate to serve the needs of the east side Bismarck is rightly proud of her school system, and can- not afford to have it anything but the best in the state. There may be debate upon the wisdom of expenditure of | money upon some‘phases of the present school curriculum, but there can be none upon the proposition that the city ought to provide that every child may be well grounded in the fundamentals of education. “DON’T TOUCH!” Iron used to be made illicitly and sold “on the quiet,” same as moonshine liquor is bootlegged today. Before our country won its independence, England made it a crime to manufacture iron in her colonies. The idea. of course, was to protect the iron-makers in England. This didn’t stop the Americans of that period who had the bootlegging germ in their blood. They found a sheltered place in the forest, difficult -to approach, and set up their blast furnaces. Tne remains of one of the furnaces still exist near Youngstown, O., says Prof. Herbert M. Boylston of Case School of Applied Science, in Cleveland. Human nature seems to hate prohibition of any kind. Maybe you experience a craving to touch a painted surface which a sign warns you is fresh and wet. Or you may feel a hot metal wave of resentment at the sign: “Private — Keep Out. This Means You.” Many a grown man can recall how as a boy he got his tongue stuck fast to the cold iron pump handle, during win- ter—all because he had been indelibly cautioned not to do it. Tell the nation that instantaneous death would result from pulling the lobe of the left ear four times in rapid suc- cession, and the undertakers would do a big business. Thou- sands could not resist. All this explains why it is so difficult to enforce prohibi- tion. As soon as a thing is prohibited, a crop of law-breakers springs up, ready to take a chance at violating the law for profit. This was true of the “iron bootlegger” prior to 1776. It is true of the liquor bootlegger today. The greatest law-breaker, ethically, is the customer who provides the profit—the incentive. On top of.all this is the peculiar psychological fact that, as soon as a thing is prohibited, people who never thought of committing the prohibited act suddenly develop a mis- chievous craving to try it at least once. = RADIUM Radium, most mysterious substance in the universe, drops to the lowest price ever. Seventy thousand dollars buys as much radium as $120,000 bought six months ago. Important news for the hundreds of thousands with cancer. ’ ‘It is disheartening that even radium, the marvel healer, is subject to the same law of supply and demand as every- day necessities. The price is down because supply exceeds buying—though the total supply of pure radium in the worl is not much more than five ounces. CLUTTER =Wederal courts in the New York district are swamped with untried cases. Piled up behind the three district judges are about 23,000 cases waiting to be heard. Many of thesc willbe two or three years “coming to bat.’” But the situation merely reflects on a large scale the condition of most American courts most of the time. We need a referee system to examine all cases before putting thep to judge and jury, and throw out foolish disputes, also ones. that could be settled by compromsie. Too’ many laws. , - APPETIZING jucky ones who have eaten strawberry shortcake as pre- ed by Mrs. Harriet Carter of Tulsa, Okla., vow it’s the estzever. The recipe, donated for raising funds to educate ie Ag women, brings in $1500. This will be used for ing a memorial cookhouse ‘in Vellore, India. ined a r See AEOE, oF fothing quite as indispensible as a. g cook, : eve: ‘do rote more stoteachs than had cooks, .. ‘ ee en ; No one eee” i / VILLA former Mexican bandit, is reported to have of $50,000 for his memoirs. He ef he, _ the past and have his hear of him, It would be poor economy, however, for Bismar¢k | id | é the ‘collection of reparitions in up, only as a ranchman and benefactor of and material without. the Bilt ie, A -/>* Jecopomie ruin-of Germany.’ In‘the 3 Y by i" nas lere it of either falure of success. | 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 are belng discussed in the press of the day, UNIFICATION OF SSIA Stalin, commissar of minori- in a report to the All-Russian Soviet Congress, urges the unifica- ; tion of Rus and the resoration j of the old boundaries, ‘To back up | | his recommendations M, Stalin de- ‘clares that small autonomous re- pudlics cannot exist without Rus- M 2 proper, while Russia cannot 4 stactorily re-establish her na- KS tional life without their cordial support. Needless to the con- heartily commended — the Fa stand taken by the commissar, It is true that a multiplicity of nall states, each with its govern- nt to support and an army to maintain, involves a considerable tax upon the people and that union would be not only more economical but more effective, provided alwa that there was a homogeneous! pepulation in the group, each al- lied with the others by a common | language, a common race and| common interest.—Tacoma Ledger. | FAILURE | “Big 1” Haywood may soon be back in America, whence he jump- ed his bond to flee to Russia, Be- fore he went, if America held his had his soul. But an experience in the country | EVERY DAY IN EVERY WAY Te COOK * _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CoO coo | COUE-ED EVERY DAY IN EVERY. WAY THE WEATHER GETS PUNKER AND PUNKER EVERY DAY IN EVERY WAY TheY GET NUTTIER AN’ NUTTIER EVERY Day IN EVERY WAY MY CAR RUNS SMOOTHER AND SmoolHer Sia, EVERY DAY IN EVERY WAY You GET MORE j CHARMING AN’ MORE CHARMING ul, Big Bill even contem plates serving out his sentence in! the Unied States as perhaps pre- ferable to more of Moscow. | For Ha cored an economic failire in Russia, and the Moscow Soviet, which never was sentimental, only bloody, gets more | and more intolerant of failure. He is disappointed, nay embittered, to | discover that in the Russian Utopia | | the economic law works as immiti- | as here, that to eat one must | at tears of sentiment butter | EVERY DAY IN EVERY WAY HE GETS CRAZIER AND CRAZIER no bread. Haywood headed a co-operative ufacturing colony, expecting to | faith, will be the withdra e of it an coanonite euceer=) (Otc pati ‘ y, to have it pay its! Garms fthwcaeize tore ence, feed and clothe its members. | paul Pioneer Pr Brits cyt After trial he is back in Moscow, | a faliure, and a Dutch engineer, | *. — — — 7 aie, coum | Patients Tell of ure by Coue wal of the and the restoration to | Bill’s I. W. W. tenets, has been put jin his place. Nor in Moscow. is Bill finding sympathizers. Lenin {and Trotzky are neither wiping his | eyes calling him comrade. | | Bin sits alone draining samovars} Nancy, France, jof tea. He sees himself a failure, | camaraderie that ex among ali his dream dissolved, the world a/who attend the auto-suggestion clin- | hard reality. ‘ jic of Emile Coue I heard many first | America looks good to Bill, the; hand stories of what Coue had done BY MILTON BRONNER NEA Staff Corre: | Ameri with too much common’ for his patients. | sense to lstento his diatribes, but| To these people I was a fellow the America that is kind and in-|ufferer. They wanted to banish j;dulgent and sentimental to crim: s So they frankly dis- | inals, H with me. Here is a pretty American womi married to a titled foreigner. For e told me, she suffered from in her right shoulder and arm. She had been here for three months. Her pains went away over two months ygo and have never re- turned. Bill was strong for romance in \his rough I, W. W. way. He must | sidestep reality—to do so was the law of his nature. So this ‘bi | competent , vehement, negligent, |sertimental, rhetorical, worthless jagitator, violating the law of so ciety and the faith of his bonds-; case N. v0: didn’t exist, to the earthly para-\has suffered from drooping eyelids. j gape that hasn’t materialized— they would drop and completely | Minneapolis Journal. jcover her eyes. Her husband, who | lis here with her, is a wealthy New York business n He had called | ‘The first detachments of French. j Poe loae THE FRENCH ACT | 1 rated specialists of our bis engineers have already moved into . No results. She and her jthe Ruhr, but the exact nature of /husband both told me Coue had 1M. Poincare’s program of seizures | {is still an official secret. The most important point about the | program yet to be established is jthe part which the military is to your eyelids.” i play. This is obviously a vital} CASE NUMBER THREE: jpoint. A certain military escort Canadian civil engineer. must of course be provided for the suffered some kind of lesion in th? engineers and civil administrators brain from overwork. He had diffi- who are to take over the mines,|culty in walking. And, sometimes, |forests ,industries and other pro-|when he started walking, he had | ductive agencies, but the fact that ‘difficulty in stopping. jevery soldier and cured her. One day when I was there, he turned to her and said: “Ma ways remember you are mistress of A |will be able to give of her good | i BISMARCK AND THE FUTURE ne, when you I@aye here al- | cars. He told me|its former a} i | (By Evelyn Nelson) k, the capital city of North situated “by a bend in the souri,” where ‘t seems to command the terrtory far to the East and West of the river. While Bismarck is a very up-to-date city, there are many things yet lacking, or which may be improved upon let Bismar Dakota, ws, then, devote some time to these. | Firstly: Our people are ‘nereas- ing, und increas’ng rapidly. We need ore schools to accomodate the younger generation. One or two grade schools should be built and dition to the high school should also be: built. . Secondly: A clean, neat, beautiful tity, appeals to those who are look- ing for a new home. Our populat on Will grow tremendously if we beau- tty our city, A general clean up of the city is commendable, Vacant lots should not be left to nature's care Citizerfs must do their part by keep- ing a clean yard. The capitol grounds should be preserved. Park boards j should be orgamzed to create parks and beautify the city. Remember that we will grow and prosper if we are known to the world. Thirdly: S’gns should be placed on all street corners to inform pedes- or avenue they are on and to help them find different locations. This is very important. Fourthly: Police and fire protec- ter ane] 1 ght should be great- ‘oved and used to the best cal advantage. | Fifthly: There should be increas- ed cooperation of the schools wth the home and business corporations. Here’s a chance to do something ur community. Help make Bis- marek a happier, healthier, b gger, bear in mind that what Bismarck will be .n the and your actions now. So here is to Bismarck, To her we will bow; Let’s help her in future, By helping her now. ‘| eee eee eee street ‘car and board it without any roubl CASE NUMBER FOUR: A ranca mine owner from Sogth Africa tho came here for relief trom the horrors of insomnia, He is no sleeping like a normal person should. But he told me something more won derful than that. His spectacles had irritated the skin back of one of his The sore grew bigger and big- ger_and ever more painful. Doctors in South Africa told him it was some strang fibrous growth and advised going to, hecause he tells me that since he has been here in Nancy using autosuggestion, the swelling has gone down to one-third ze and is still decreasing. it will go away entirely. MBER FIVE: An Eng- ‘BY CONDO He believes CASE NU every expense he was well.on the way to recovery. adds to the total German bill indi- And I myself saw him run for jcates the possibility of a vicious | circle which might have most dan-| Berous consequences. One of the I R heaviest burdens which the cn | EVERETT UE lent German budget carries is the| 7 cost of the existing limited occu-! \ ‘pation—a former German Minister | Shuai STRUNee. H of State has testified that the item} ; ! is even now four-fifths of the whole ;erdinary budget. Any unnecessary ;exXPense to which France puts her- | ) Self in the new occupation, there-| |fore, will plunge Germany deeper | jinto debt, prolong the occupation, ‘and so set in motion an endless | ‘process with only one possible | | culmination. The economical con- jduct of the occupation is accord- | ingly one of the tests of French | good faith. | The wisdom of the French policy | ; Will be judged by its efficacy in| |producing the reparations money | = ;without smashing Germany. The| \S MA |penalities tof be imposed. cannot |fail to disturb German industry |and to retard the recovery of world ;commerce, but M. Poincare will {have justified his policy if he can |eollect his claims without having worked permanent injury to the German capital _ establishment. | This way of going about the collec- tion is reminiscent of the boy who | drank alcohol acid to see if his| jsystem could stand it, but since| France refuses to entertain more jconstructive programs, such as | that proposed by Secretary Hughes, {She must be permitted to make the ‘experiment. If the program fails to produce the reparations, or if in the precess of collection Germany | ig ruthlessly destroyed, the stron™ suspicion, perhaps unjustified, will e that France went in with puni- tive or aggressive, rather than fiscal, ideas. ee Though it is our conviction that the French program involves un- necessary rigks, both to present world stability and future peace, we sincerely hope for its success. By “success” we of course mean ou DIRECT MS ‘To THS Post Orrics F =" BLoeK TO THS “CAH. CouPLs o' BLOCKS AND FOucD fH} THEN ee NS A STRANGER HERS SUN'S NOT SHINING AND IF HE DOSSN'T A COMPASS YOUR DIRECTIONS ARE AS USGFUL STRAISHT AHGAD wo Blocks, THs THRES BLOCKS, THGN A HALE Nou Go EAST A SOUTH THREE SlLoeks AND THe! OU TURN THE CARRY ON THIS STREET TO THS RIGHT Leer. 3 THantc } Yoo, SIR.) lish woman, are on her face. circles under her eyes. she had been confined to her bed for eight ye with various ailments. Now she liv: ttends the Coue clinics. jfor long walks, At night she visits the theater and enjoys ite | CASE NUMBER SIX: An Ameri- can woman from Connecticut. For years a sufferer from asthma. Now she breathes in comfort. She had not been able to enjoy theaters be- Pain has cut deep He had|him to consult surgeons in England.}cause she couldn’t be shut up that ine isn't way with other people. The other night I saw her at the opera in Nancy. I could go on and on citing other instances. ‘These people are Coue fans, They have all the enthusiasm of religious converts. Some are in- sisting on making gifts of money to Monsieur Coue. And when people voluntarily part with money it means something. ADVENTURE OF |; THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts Dusty Coat, the fairy sandman, and Nancy and Nick had spr.nkied magic powder on all the sleeping creatures in Whispering Forest and Bright Meadow, and sent them all to Dreamland, A\'ter that the three little travel- ers went to Dreamland themselves. . As they ent.red thé little marsh gateway with climbing roses all over it, a curious sight met their eyes. There was Philip Frog in satin and lace parading around arm in arm wth Mke Mole in velvet and lace, the two of them grown to such a ‘size that they eould have swal- lowed the Twins, if they had so wished, in one gobble. Philip was laughing. I've turned “poet,” said been wr ting verses. ‘ “You dont say so,” repl’éq M ke with admiration. “Would you ‘mind letting me hear a jingle or two?” “Not in the least,” said Philip ob- ligingly, “How’s this?” i “Dd you ever hear 8 hoot-owl hoot? He’s got a voice like a rubber-boot. He sings no better’ than old gum- shoe, - And he’s always yelling out, ‘who| who, who?’ ” (“Tee hee!’ sniggered Mike Mole. “That's. fine! When did you think of it?” . “I've always thought of it,” de- clared Philip with a wave of hs hand. “Only I couldn’t say it be- cause-I was afraid he'd hear me.‘ There are no owls in Dreamland T can say what I please., Here’: other about one of my enemies: “ ‘Ola Cobby Cob Coon Is'a pérfeet loon, I hope he'll very pon othe mogni’.”” ts i" declared Mibe Mole. “Say Mike, he.’ “I've | | ‘|o— trians and strangers of what street | better and more prosperous c.ty, But ! uture, depends on you, The marks of suffering | She told me} s like other people. She | She goes; -|in’ such. schools. The emergency | ache, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1923 {IN LEGISLATIVE HALLS | The capitol was deserted yester-| Gilbert Semingson, state examiner, |day afternoon when, after brief ses-|said the guaranty fund commission sions, the solons went to Mandan|would welcome the opportunity to to the irrigation association meet-|lay all the facts of that body before ing. Bismarck business men, mem-|the senate as asked in the resolu- bers of the Association of Commerce,|tion of Senator Rusch. — came in for praise for the way they — Z rushed cars to the capitol to take] Any lingering doubt that the anti- the legilators to Mandan, The Man-|cigarette or any other “blue law” dan men agreed to provide cars for|might be repealed at this session the return. has passed with the continued in- troduction of prohibitory measurcs Difficulty in finding suitable com-|of one. kind or another. mittee rooms, and the long trips nedded to find various state offices] Clerks of the senate committees scattered about the city, has called/are: J. A. Buttree, Barnes, state af- attention to the need of a new capi-| fairs committee; R. E. Hamilton, tol. The coal bill for heating the| Nelson, county appropriations; M. cld building is another good argu-|D. Avery, Burleigh, judiciary; E. A ment. Watt, Stutsman, banks and banking a and taxes and taxat' Many legislators got an oppor: : tunity yesterday afternoon to ride] Former Governor Joseph Devine ‘over the Missouri rive bridge, for}is taking much interest in the se which they appropriated money, for|sion and is giving legislators the ben- the first time. They all seemed’ sat-|efit of his experience. isfied, and the Bismarck and Mandan —- men did not hesitate to tell them} “Dad” Walker, Nonpartisan league what a fine thing the bridge is for|warhorse, has served before in a this part of the state. regular and special session, and has = a record of not having introduc Every day in every way, I'm get-!a bill except on request. “Dad” is ting more harmonious in every way.” |watching the other fellow. the Dr. Coue version of the present session. The Nonpartisans plan study on Walter Maddock, of the house, who as called home on business, was expected back in his seat today or tomorrow. eee “You are a real genius, Philip. I spose you wouldn't dare to say that out loud anywhere Ise but here, either.” Ml, hardly!” said Philp cau- “Knowing that Cob: Coon frog’s legs as well as I I'ke various measures through meetings frequently at night, which are not necessarily in the form of a caucus, but at which non-political bills are discussed and dissected. ‘ patrons are opposed to their children Ndancing for moral and cons reasons; that public dancing induces, tempts and brings pressure upon such children to dance to the chagrin of parents; and is an effort to se- ientious (To be Continued) cure the dance at public expense, ight, 1923 NEA Servire) ete.” Referred to Committee on Temperance. | Senate Calendar | (Bills Introduced.) |S. B. 18. Stevens, Ramsey (Ind.)--- | Amends the registered nurse law to | include the requirement of two years work in scme accredited high school | of the state. The bill is sponsored by the N. D. Nurses association. S. B. 14, McCoy. Richland and ‘Sperry, Burleigh (Inds.)—Prohibits the wearing of masks or other d guises in public, Makes guilty o misdemeanor any You have got to make the best of things to get them. The older a man gets the younger he wishes he was. a persons over 15 years old who wears a mask, regalia or head covering “outside of any building” and provides a penalty of $25 to $100 or 10 to 30 days in jail, er both. Aimed especially at Ku Klux Klan operations in North Da- Most of the free things you enter are pay as ‘you leave. Lots of girls th’nk the dishes wash themselves. j kota, Regferred to Judiciary com- | mittee. Why worry? Six months from Joint Re-olution, Rusch, Casi now the furnace wll be working (Ind.) Cites apparent lack of un-| fine and coal will be cheaper.* derstanding of the funct’oning, stat- us and funds on hand of the Guar- anty Fund commission, and that the commission stands ready to furnish a complete report. Resolves that the senate and thé house request the Guaranty Fund Commission “to fur- nish to either body a complete r¢- port showing the condition of the fund, the manner of its administra- tion, the condition of the closed banks, the relative amount of the available fund and the liabilities of the closed banks and such other, de- tails and information as may be of interest.” Tomorrow is always one day late. Two -can live longer than one, It is easy for a wrestler to get these new dance steps. Spring hats and customers are be- ing trimmed. Mother misses father when he is out hunting because she is afraid the other hunters will not, A good mixer has lots of fr'ends— especially a good drink mixer. The money a man saves by not helping others never does him so very much good. ——_—_______-—_—@ | House Calendar | Mein ivaindnsacce anal H. B, 23, Heaton, Burleigh (Ind. | and Burkhart, Ward (N.)—Is one of a group of measures fost¢red by F. L. Watkins and the temperance or- ganizations, It re-enacts with amend- | ments the present statute relating | to the power of state’s attorneys, Un- | der the present statutes a state’s at- | torney has the power to issue sub- { poenaes and question witnesses rel- | ative to the violation of liquor laws, |and also grants that official the right to hold witnesses who refusw to testify in contempt. This law, | however, was held unconstitutional in district court although never tak- en to the supreme court. The ques- | tion of the assumption of judicial] Many a’ man looks run down be- power on the part of the state's at-| cause of the bills his wife runs up. | torney is eliminated in H. B, 23, the pay | state's attorney being instructed to] It looks like a hard winter for the ‘certify to the district court for con-| ice man, |tempt such witnesses as refuse to ‘appear in answer to summons, or| Some people don’t care what they who refuse to testify. Where the| do and neither does anyone else, |old law on state’s attorney's sub- poenas applied only to prohibition! |The man who says noth’ng doesn’t | eases, the amended law proposed ex-| #!ways mean it, |tends the power of summons for in-! | vestigation of “violation of any law: | or laws.” Referred to judiciary eom- mittee. : H. B, 24; Carr, Stutsman (Ind.) Re- jpeals Chapter 38, Session Laws ot /1921—the conciliation court measure. According to the author the law cre- ating conciliators was theoretically j excellent, but has fallen far short of being feasible or anything but ex- pensive in practice.’ Instead of sav- ing litigation costs it has worked directly opposite. Other points cited by Mr..Carr for the repeal of the | statute include: it delays proceed- ings in court doesn’t. apply to gar- nishments and créditors -by filing garnishment actions thus evade the |law; makes it almost impossible to | follow where creditor and:debtor live in different counties or sections of the state because of question of which coneiliators have jurisdiction, and makes difficult. of settlement cases where’ debtor or creditor re- sides outside of the state because of the preclusion of attorneys ap- pearing before the conciliator. Com- mittee on state affairs. H. B, 25, Malerow,, Pembina (Ind.) Hempel, ‘Sheridan .(N,). " Prohibits dancing in any public, graded, con- solidated or high school building of the state, and makes guilty of a mis- demeanor any director, board of edu- cation or person permitting dancing Some people seem to think they are doing wrong by living. A hustler has no time for bad luck. Human nature never changes, but it often short-changes. Aviation. has ‘ts ups and downs. If cussing the weather made us fat there would be no skinny men. There may be safety in numbers, but not in auto numbers. The early bird catches cgid. A man is known by the money he keeps, They don’t have sleeping cars on the road to success. One thing that won't do in a pinch is a shoe. If ig gnptance were bliss would more happy people. Get @ new auto tag or you're it. there Nobody can make loosé ends meet, HOUGHT ‘ ._ Fear God, and keep his command- ments, for this is the whole duty of man.—Ecclesiastes 12:18,’ The first cond tion of goodness is somethingsto love; the second coettng to reverence—George El- jot. e y * Cut This Out—It Is Worth Cut out this slip, enclose ne % cents and mail it to Foley & Co., 2885 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Il, writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in “return a trial pacl age containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds’ and croup; Foley Kidney. Pills for pains in sides and back;’ rhbumatism, back- Kidney and bladder ailment: clause sets forth “Whereas. ' an! and -Féley'Cathattic Tablets; a ohn emergency exists in that dancing is)some and thoroughly cleansing ‘ca- g part of the public schogl cur-[thartic for constipation, billousness, ‘iculum; that many tax payers ana{headaches and sluggish bowels, Ay 4 —_________ ss, | T i —_—_ |