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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY _. CHICAGO - - - - a Marquette Bldg. i PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH “NEW YORK - - - : Fifth Ave. Bldg. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC. Daily by carrier, per year............ Bre ‘Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . 5 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) WELCOME GRAIN DEALERS! With red and white streamers, part of Bismarck at- tempts to welcome the grain dealers of the state. But to voice the welcome of the great inaudible majority we add our pleasure at having the fourteenth Annual Convention ‘of the North Dakota Farmers Grain Dealers Association meet here in our city. Especially gratifying it is that the ‘outlook which confronts them today is so materially im- proved over the black horizon of last year when the chaos in Europe and agricultural depression here in this state loomed so threatening to farmers and dealers. 4 President Gunkelman surveying past accomplishments and future prospects in his annual address sounds a sane keynote of progressive conservatism. Pointing out the increasing evidence that the American farmer is becoming slow to follow the leadership of a radical minority, he em- phasized quite justly the benefit the farmers of the state are now reaping by the defeat of the threatened legislation which complicated the economic situation last year, imprac- tical theorists and selfseeking politicians proposing meas- ures with specious arguments of widespread relief which would have effectually destroyed the open market. The efforts of the grain trade and the cooperation of leaders in agriculture, he points out, were responsible for killing such | DETROIT Kresge Bldg. Editorial Review " reproduced in this ment column may SEMPER PARATUS (New York Times) One of the greatest achievements of modern times is an organization always ready to respond instantly in case of any great disaster from fire, flood, plague, earthquake or hurricane — the American Red Cross. It provides human sym- pathy and intelligence in the wake of what are called “acts of Goa.” The, office of the Red Cross ig ex- pressed in the motto: Where flood or fire or tam- ine goes There, too, go I, to carry relief where prevention was not possible. Save earth- quake, there is no “act of God” so nearly impossible to foresee as such a great wind as swept across the borders of several States in the (Mississippi Valley on Wednesday. It was not a mere figure of speech that made the voice of God speak to Job “out of a whirlwind.” In no phenomenon of nature {s “force majeure” so impressive and over- whelming. Man is utterly power- less in the face of it. If he es-| capes, it is not of his own resource, as is witnessed by the one left sit- ting in what was a room when the roof and four siwes of the house were blown away, or of the men swept from an automobile and left unhurt at the roadside. When Thor asked in the Edda: “What call they the wind?” the All-Know- ing gave it several names: “The Waverer,” “The Wailer,” but in hell it was “The Blusfering Blast.” It was in this character that it made its devastating way out of the Ozarks across Southern Illi: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Now It’s The Calf’s Turn a You Can’t Kill Goose Rhymes WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1925 Those Mother i tho opinion of ‘The fribune. Thay : :GEORGED.MANN - - = - Publisher |] ir Qresented here in order tha By Cynthia Grey Foreign Representatives Orr tenportant estes whlch - are _ N PAY ede” Se vere ee Perhaps you are one of those benighted women who still teach their children the rhymes of Mother Goose. It may even be that you are foolish enough to read them Robert Louis Stevenson’s di elightful verses about The Friendly Cow, and the Birdie With the Yellow Bill! F At least, Winifred Sackville Stoner thinks you are foolish if you do! e She feels that a child should be taught physiology and other “ologies” with its nonsense rhymes . . . instead of having its little head filled with tales of the cow that jumped over the moon, and the pobble-that-has-no-toes. You probably remember Winifred Sackville Stoner as a child prodigy, not so many years ago. Newspapers and magazines printed stories ga- lore about her. At the age of 4 she was making public speeches, At 12 her mother proudly declared she knew as much as a college graduate. Now she’s grown and has adopted three little children. She. is teach- ing them Esperanto, the universal language, among other high-brow things, And instead of nursery rhymes, these babies are learning some of Winifred’s own poems, called “Jin- “Two active kidneys, a liver for bile, Folks with good livers always smile; Let's work our livers—make life worth while, Smiling and smiling a big smile.” Now, it’s all very well to know that we have kidneys and a liver, but why should we be worried with the fact at the tender age of four or five? Sooner or later we find out all about them, anyway—just as we learn that it’s our tonsils that give us sore throat, or our appendix that has to be operated upon! And such sober knowledge can never take the place of nursery rhymes in a child’s life. For the first years of its life a child should be nothing but a ourselves into thinking that the world isn’t as drab as it seems . ~ and that the things we get from life are the things we wanted. We all need the rose-colored specs of “Let's pretend” once in a while. Goose stories and its nonsense rhymes has taught us how to “pre- tend” successfully, we're much bet- ter off than people who have been reared in the grim schdol of stark reality. News of Our Neighbors a j | | | > a MOFFIT The Moffit Methodist church and Sunday School is planning a festival and bazaar for March 28, 1925, Many good things are promised for the oc- casion. Come all who can and have a nice time, Mr, Ira Peckins returned home froma brief stay in Mandan, N. D., where he was under the cure of phy- sicjans, on March 20. About 75 guests were present at the Ninth wedding anniversary party of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Moffit, at their farm home, on March 20, Danc- uneconomic and socialistic legislation. nois and Kentucky, sweeping down healthy little animal. Play is as|ing, card playing and a midnight We agree that in a purely agricultural state it should Po ee necessary to it as food and sleep|lunch was the program. Everybody not be necessary for the grain dealers to maintain a legis- scend again and again in fury until Play is part of its part of the happi- and sunshine. growth... had a pleasant evening. And if babyhood with its Mother ¢ lative committee to protest against measures detrimental | its force was spent. ps yourself,” said Chubby to Cutie. “I ness habit that grownups need to| Mrs. Fred Pilsbury was a_ very> alike to farmers and dealers, nor should their efforts to se-|, Yet the “still, small voice” Of} hate sassafras tea and sulphur and help them bear the hard knocks of| pleasant caller at the different e , human sympathy after the strong| molasses, so I do.” life, homes in Moffit Monday A. M. as a cure passage of a warehouse act to control and supervise the | win! gives alleviation to the story| And now my story is done. Bo Peep and Peter, Peter the| representative of the church bazuar handling of grain have proved fruitless. Myr. Gunkelman is | of this tragic occurrence. It is or-| (To Be Continued) aera ne almest sere to be given March 28, at Moffit, N. D. no doubt right in attributing the failure partly to the grain| ganized sympathy, with means at | (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) | theme <. ', SandARIMOEE Gs. teal aS} Mrs. Fred W. Moffit w ee dealers themselv: : their la i hand with which to express it, that rae a TSC TELEGRAM FROM JOHN ALDEN] “Oh, Mrs. Prescott is out with Claus! TRICheGADIELIAGiLe Ton” Monday, lealers themselves for their lack of an educational program # Teas Mat 6 | by a rc B ‘ Santa Claus! ger to the Capitol City on Monday i i q F gives one more proof of the prog: PRESCOTT TO SALLY the nurse and children for a ride!| It seems to me a cruel and un-| of thi Kk. ° which would explain to farmers the workings of the market-|ress_ that mankind has made. ATHERTON {Will You. pleases ‘ell Her ‘when shel wits: (ing. robe chiulot these|e ing machinery which affords an open market for the pro-| What is done so promptly to give Ra cree ba returns that Mr. Prescott is at the| people from the Never-Never Land-| yo Moffit Inn Garage has been ; ducer where buyer and seller may meet. rolief to the living, especially Bovmuch) for) your pMess abe | ran pn ci motel) y tere |e ws) be | Andutodcire tht versesi spout) tMell/ sopenedawithinjthalpastiweekiandilis : es See .,.|through the Red Cross, should ature for the check is not/all day, being detained until he/liver and kidneys instead! andeetniwsaanagedient Last year the Grain Dealers Association proved its | make more of our citizens ready |" I am sending you another| hears from some very important foe te peamege worth by assisting the Northwest Regional Advisory Board | to sign at the next roll-call. Only ‘SAYS AISI Gils iss Gieciad off ula business) Ask Mrs, Prescott to call 4 ook Back ab your own childhood.| rhe township election which took in preventing one of the worst threatened tieups of trans-| general enrollment enables the ° would fill in any amount up to'my|{ am most anxious to hear from| tucked awey of sitting st. mother's | Place Pod CES Ea ib Sats portation in the grain industry of the state, by relieving | Red Cross to be Gran Teno Orde | Wethfect ara}scidito beloneycause]| Mie) Uainrca At Receokery end AS eR ie Hema ee Anenunreceoititn| Ric omeouiew the needy ody alllabout Fe Lai nHeieGuNLRETOR tliotbaltels the terminal situation when there was danger that loading | deny from villages that seemed |, spring colds, so we have about] jricoiats you can get at Maltby's. I| Leslie Prescott ree ene eae gan Tamm desperately | showed the following: | Mr. August could not keep pace with the influx. As it is, the record of | three days ago to tbe as free from | : is HEMPGR: t two ot diamonds: a one ee Dearest jWite: I have wait-| sorry for you... . just as I am Peiees Boe as sr, October a F f danger as tens of thousanc’s of i suing Nbc ,| sapphire. You know the kind I}ed for you to call me up for hours.) sorry for the three adopted children | 57 ne : September, October and November of last year shows one | (yiger oe tetas in this countey. |q Russian mews, today, | You can buy] mean. ‘The kind that all the women|T can not wait ang longer and now| of Winifred Sackville ‘Stoner, who |0f Ne, Dece; tr eu otina wag of the largest grain shipments in the state’s history. First help in such emergencies| couldn't bring it home. youl are wearing now. Send them to me|I am going to write to you. — are reading their Mother Goose in|constable, A township meeting wae management and elevator accounting, grain grading and the| provised. It must be prepared in In Lely) the pire: out ie pope Arey next Wi Dol thistandiliewilll leaveomtanavaieerahivate you so-otten eed poise languare eae study of the propagation of varieties of grain at the State| vance. Fortunately, the Red citing, for sustitiss whieh 1s one} be ver ul. vcanmn, before, and just as often I have| It's not fair to starve a child’s ima-|, Mrs. Ella Porter and grand daugh- Agricultural Colle; vhich the President point: hould | CToss was ready and the American | Way iz JOHN PRESCOTT. | done something else for which I gination by never giving it any of |tet Curstie Marie called at the F. W. pen College, which the President points out, should | peopie should keep it ever so. : Neary ‘Telegram: From Nurse: Anderson to|have been sorrier. eae ttairy stories and the. magic | Moff:t home Sunday afternoon March be given consideration as a progressive step toward the ae eee And in Manila, the horse races are John Alden Prescott I am just going to ask you, wife;things that belong to childhood, | 22. : reg: 19 held early in the morning, I i i \ i cheb ie e, ecuring of iniproved keti diti |held early in the morning, leaving a Arrived safely with your mother.| of mine, to put me out of this sus-| For we all need to say “Let’s pre- F ‘ secu: g of imp! ed marketing con itions. fr is us frshea ‘ A : {day for cussing. We are at the Traymore, as you|pense and tell me what you want|tend” once in a while, even after| Mr. Swift from Glencoe is deliver- If the Convention’s sessions continue in the sane tenor|/| ADVENTURE OF Aaveee ct suggested. Mrs. Prescott is as de-|me to do. I am at your service. If] we're grown up. i ing fence posts to V. Benz at Moffit outlined in the annual presidential address, the grain dealers INS Bice eaters a net corel lighted ‘as a child with a new toy,) you want me to blow out what few) Often and often we have to “kid” this week. will have reaped the profit from their meeting that they and THE TW juiceless grapefruit. POUR hee. Wlllibe.clesRedmindeedl |RUMREILERteaRe nT te cee disinterested onlookers of Bismarck wish them. BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON —— 4 to stay here some weeks. “ I hate to put up an_ extraneous FABLES ON HEALTH : Dog team broke all records in the ANDERSON. | plea of any kind, but I must just EXAMINE THE MOTIVES Raa SEN arctic, a ran 50 Ape = maybe a Picionbeney lceass-nrony aay Alden| remind you ate cet Barinase BEGIN AT HOME jow, this story is abou -|dog catcher was driving it. rescott From Albany Hotel to must go on, an now that at the There is but one issue in the present city campaign: tontail brothers who lived across == His Apartment present time no other man can carry ae : UN? | Ripple Creek. i an is bei as- scott. | i i j rane _ ; That of lower taxation. It overshadows all minor consider-| it isnt about the Twins and thel ured again, ‘If they find the middle : Hiroe cott | Wes onion voor Zathens ished! (rer <Taleingiol house flieg and foods." |of his customers, he should be run ations and embraces of necessity efficiency and economy March Hare at all. that. they had| it 8 # fine place for a singing school. “It is Mr. Prescott speaking. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) remaried | WE: aS Dlg ne car sieht 5 Hose IPA Contes in the general management of city affairs. If the voters—| dug a lot of sassafras root, and a3] They have dug up another _an- RE ‘ down on Main street last full?” aged Mrs. Jones. 1 ‘and they are all taxpayers—are alert they will upset the | sassafras has something to do with! cient King, another King Tut, with 8) the Hudten Guid, a eeteioment Neuse House, the White Door Settlements| “Well, if that fellow starts, cut] oBut I think, if 1 were you, f Abe maa 2 is story, they are in it after all. i H he 1 , as Y i 3 0 e last, fh .combination in the saddle at the city hall. Three members| At east « litte bit. name like'a dozen radio stations. | [0° she“ftinge of Hell's ‘Kitchen. |tloment, Harlem House and many,|lenvine hie fruit’ uncovered to caten |r uit thecold-tin cane, Ruin water “of the present city commission hold absolute sway. They| Cutie and Chubby Cottontail] A congressman wants to protect i ribeke, Cee have ee oe many others, ie all the dust and all the filth and/in tin cans is a good place for have ignored the protests of H. A. Thompson, minority mem-| *t#¥¢¢, with, thelr aunt, Mrs. Bunny.) oysters, which are a little backward {92 “huey are satisfied. that they | A song writer named Pease made |pourd of health sad ces it something | "SAiscéenst sid stable, heaped ful ~ber. It has been a tight little ring in all matters affecting | School and get an education. AD QUbAB ROS TBE Macaca tue et are creating something of beauty for|a mistake the other night when he| can not be done. of rubbish, is a good place for flies Pa _expenditures of public funds. This trio has settled in ad.|. They wete really needed at home,| A man can be pretty smart, but! themselves, something in life beyond | broadcast from a local radio station.|""q’ rman who doesn’t know any. | to, breed.” " : > 3 A papas but there wasn’t any school near . ‘bread and butter. His wife heard him. They had been | 4); ft} “ ight,” replied Mr, Jones. “I'll | vance of the ope: aoerall alth , , never both pretty and smart. Bee thing about caring for the health of| “All right,” rep! : pen meetings ail Issues ani e minority mem-| their house and it was most neces- gaaaan separated for several years and she rrange to have that done before an- F A H ; , his customers, should be taught. And | arrang: ber has been ignored in every attempt he has made to re-|sary that they learn their X, Y, Z's] A family may come in handy. You| Settlement workers always remind | wanted buck alimony. She located) if he cares nothing about the health | other week, at the most.” duce tax d enfi les Of busi ; *{and so forth. 3 pan ack the judge to let you off juct| me of gardeners tending plants. They |him through his radio talk. xes and enforce common rules of business in the|""But they didn’t like school and this once for their sake take young plants of humanity, prune scene War transaction of city affairs. every chance they got they played i them and shape them up for hardy] One of the most popular crossword | FIA) BRON SCHOOL cough and I rested well all night.’ His proposal to reduce the city budget was given scant | h°okie. Moving all the seasons up about| growth. ‘They turn children of ig-|jokes along Broadway is “What is » One of the largest selling cough 3 y was g Hookie means that you go some] three months would satisty all of us.|Norant immigrants into cultured cit-| three-letter word for something that ATERS WINS | medicines in the World. | Contains pecention. The budget was put through without adequate place else instead of going to school po izens. ; Walle through the commested comes frqm a tree and “buys dl othes DEB no opiates, Safe for children. In- earings or consideration. material saving could have |#nd never let on. And it usually! The man who tells a girl he would! districts and you'll find dozens of /for a chorus girl?” The answer, FINAL] sist upon Foley’s. Refuse substi- z sj turns out so awfully that you wish o, tetle vould these greenhouses for humans, the | course, is “Sap. eitpion IN SEMI-FI = =sbeen made as was pointed out by Mr. Thompson and a group|you'd gone to school and behaved | fi? for her wouldnt be so rash ifi Henry Street Settlement, Madison P._JaMES W. DBAN. tuteas Ady: 3a of taxpayers who made some study of city finances. yourself. Qa es The Hebron High school debatin; — —?* =. Efforts to fi Well, one day along late in March, 7 A ater el eevron: Hig hiecnog ating. orts to force more equal assessment of real estate Ae Wacom ans dines, It won't really be spring until we team, composed of Paul Schweigert, Thought | and personal property met the same fate at the hands of |nesrly, like summer. The ‘sun was| Set the street car windows open. Cart Breer Pe an ene (REE ctr aasay:.) ne | =the city hall trio. Some of those most active in A. P. Len-| out and the wind lew sort of sotly| Now and then you see fellow in a debate here last Friday. The| cs 1) a that asketh of hart’s campaign come under the classification of the “tax|see things growing, The last few| Who expects to become a | howling debate marked the culmination of | snee; and of him that taketh away By jation | ee ee Oe eee He" Beaty Sebatera had’ preiguly | (hy mgedy ask them not aren Is there any justice in a system of assessments H ‘ttle With 18 hours a day to worr: defeated the representatives of Dick-| Luke 6:30. = | 1 ly th j y Biers [cabbage inatheulitsle svalleys nove aa miy thing some) pecple. srend inson High school and of Belfield. Aa i il i ever 0 t . : Bed Heath ieee Ra Ate apeeien tious home | ike twists, of green paper, and the | tet) worrying about how they look. Te had downed the former by a unan- yeibat alone, Belongs, to you. which 3 d at $4, home of a man near |}; ra anlage sibita and —— imous decision on Jan. 23: The Heb- .—Vemuna, the city ring, a member of the campaign committee, which Pe tiinee: ardoltar, bills, and, chy) crore skirts don't give the March’ ron. team defeated, Stacie: in the see: 3 | 7 oy i on i. 5 he could not he rebuilt today for $15,000. nee en ae ee ee See eaten stacy beer Boned Be Some of the laborers and salaried men struggling to pay | young scamps of rabbits to be crazy One eertela thing About spring is} polis RC eC a i J i ‘i A b i, 1 everything seems so uncertain. remaining, hose, a 5 e near to the city | nibble green” stuff and sigh, “ho-| We have given up quitting smok- state semi-finals, ; -xing get off lightly. bum,/ and say that the veather was |iBE- he i mejabers, pe the “Beach pele) _ These are notorious facts, but the city ring has either |'"%,,c24s whiskers” and’ eo on. ; man rooli Gore and Carlyle Mathison. ‘The = sae re A ‘They kept poki id nibbli An Arkansas man sent Coolidge derle and Carlyle Mathison. ‘The =feared to cross members of their political organization and nibbling and’ poking—accldentiy, Th en oml: (He. hess lot of spate. | question for, debate was, “Resolved, ( A A su , of rse, and th ‘ongress isn’t part o: em. at the federal government ‘shou! peorce an honest assessment or they believe in low taxes for eer icten Serikbin Seceek take —— ; ‘own and operate the railroads.” Heb- “4 je man who has property and high taxes for the little, | the school-be ; Bad news fron Bpele High hesls| ron. upheld the negative of this ques- p Bpinivential taxpayer who is never noticed except when his} ,, The first thing they knew it was/tOr OT ‘heir shoes, BY GosH, “THAT/S A WOMAN | Prof: Ge) Soolt ond Prof, Edward ae os ats “Jimineezers!” ‘cried Cutie. “We're| (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)| | FOR WOU 4s 3% SEE ONT TH Purtee of the Dickinson State Nor- We =, This is not a personal fight; it is not a newspaper fight; | late!” ? ae { OTHER D pw Get IN BRONT OF - shea mal School, and County Judge B. W- it is not an Association of Commerce fight h we are!” | gasped Chubbie.| ® f D ; Shay of Manin, (Abent snree Oye r rie 0 e fight however, some |«whavil we do?” | In New York | dred people turned out to hear the . of its officials may: seek to-white-wash conditions at the city| “Huh!” said Cutie. “I dunno. Stay two teams fight it out on the foren- “hall; it is essentially and vitally a fight of and for the com- | *7ound jhere, 1 guess, until school's | @————————_— . se TEER ARE (BOnORR: NES A : out and t - ag be mon people of Bismarck. : : wage siesta sical eae Ou Nem York. March 2 all Peay) Phe debate was held in the Heb- Mr. Thompson has no committee to solicit funds, he is|,,We'll get # lickin” said Chubbie!ment life. It buds and, flourishes pany Clty Mall andar, ae auspieoy ae paying his.own way as his modest means permit. There |’““Wwell’ we won't say anything |Sn@,seems the brighter because of G. H. Leick, president of the a “are no headquarters with paid secretaries. There is no about 3 : isc. ing in black loan ¢ ij eantion, promiced.. Tee, sebron M = ici j ‘ asn’t wise one though—and orug, favore: e audience with a elaborate scheme of publicity, just a few vital facts from | yagi ee ney ee | sae OE theo dark Byways of the few songs after the debate. Mr. Leo the city recoftls and the indisputable evidence reflected from "Yer, sir, that sis,hat he said. And| greatest artists. But those left be- Gr Eater ot Des moines pened (ihe ipts. what's more that’s what he did— “i i program with a vocal solo, while ethe ies eats ey __|what they both did, Bled “are nt withose analy beauty: | Margaret " Neidhardt, daughter of Study His careful i ‘i uv Mee As ihe campaign ; 4 four. o'clock they hopped home thal’ Bult drabeoecepadinze but 2ith Tony Neidhardt, closed the prograni warms up and you are solicited, ask the man who importunes |Jocking as though butter wouldn't |their heads in the, clouds—potential: { ' LA or i i = i A melt in their mouths. heres be Great interest has been developed ‘ou for a vote whether he is on the public payroll? Do you | But the first thing their aunt said | (are uy ns, truckt:, Bartymores| [DON'T TAC \< in high school debating at Hebron. long to the tax protected clique? Are you interested in| was, “Where have you two been?” | painters digging ditches. Le Ge) OCR Ee farmers living: 26 miles: from town. . ry “Why we had sort of a headache. i Hi tly have come in to hear 'the debates _city or public school contracts? gol el FER ee | aces Rene accuraies\ 1 hacome)| | fe RMA WN see which have been held this winter. ’t let. those “~ teed st fhe public trough throw dust would do us’ good." serernied with, Witla Goats Batis * Aa The threatening weather of Friday ir eyes or obscure the high cost of city government ing fever at's what you/he hes been an amateur actor, play- pBee Praven’.®; bis. MaRBOHE, A have,” cried Mrs. Bunny. “I’ve just | j if Spee pm peaapopaet “< B rage 3 by branding this Fea eg asa peices ane - made sassafras tes and mined ust |ing some of the greatest roles of ll NIGHT COUGH QUICKLY RE- is not. concerns every voter in Bismarck who does not | some ur and m I ve and clubrooms. . Just'now he has a ED * orl each of you a-big dose of both, and ing role in Bret Harte’s “Sal ppen to be within the scope of the public crib and of tax e larte’s “Salomy then you mustn’t eat any supper and it ye the»Cellar This is the substance of a letter. ” bel je! ng preenated by ae ma to bed at five o'clock. If you do| Players. avival- ‘ Vote your taxes downward not upward April 7 Eat ovary “day for five. days you'll thie classte im New York for’ many iif coughed. fost Seals apse Remember this, you pay the freight—its your fight. This| “I wich we hadn't played hookie,” **The Cellar .Players have been or- ally “at. might" Tried almost avery: | Zhewspaper can only give you the facts. It is not seeking |{usrered Cutie to Chubby, when ganized about sight years. The mem- thing and have found nothing to “tp dictate cap Sd al 2 Bag Ha tucked nee ship of 40 includes truck drivers, equal FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR you! ihe een ¢ je you can play it by piano movers, clerks, and stenograph- COMPOUND, One dose relieved my. |