The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 27, 1927, Page 4

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% See 4 PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Independent News; _, THE STATE'S OLDEST NA WSPAPER Pe (Established 1873) ee Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter, George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Ad Daily by carrier, per year ....... Daily by mail, per year, (in Bism Waily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck).... Daily by mail, outside of North Dako Member Audit Bureau of Circul Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches sredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontareous origin published herein. All rights of republication of ail other matter herein are also reserved. vance 7.20 ++ 5.00 6.00 Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGG DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH | NEW YORK - - : Fifth Ave, Bldg. (Official City, State and Ccanty Newspaper) Help the Flood Sufferers are steudily growing worse. With the Mississippi and tribut streams rising higher and higher, thousands of acres are being inundated, thousands have been made homeless. Conditions in south, and only the promptest of any of these flood refu- Itered and fed; they mus: rivers subside. Disease preadin: an save til th Red Cross is appealing to the people of Bismacrk and Burleigh county to help them succor these unfortunat That the need is reat is shown by the fact that this organization has asked for $5,000,000 from the people of the na- tion, the largest ever asked for an American relief cause. These are our neighbors who have been driven from their homes. As should re- spond, and respond generously. Aid is needed im- y, and the people of Burleigh county and ck must do their share to aid their fellow citizens. neighbors, we 5 The Slove’s Outlook With moisture deep in the ground and with con- siderable seeding done, Missouri Slope farmers have good reason for optimism. | While the downpours slowed up seeding in this territory, this work w not sufficiently retarded to be harmful and the benefits gained from ‘the rainfall far eclipse any loss of time. There enough moisture in the ground now to give a good start. With a normal amount of rainfall during | the rest of the growing season, there should be little cause for worry. | One thing is certain. Whatever kind of y this may turn out to be, that indomitable spirit) which has sustained the Slope farmer in past years | is sure to remain. In short crop years, he has gone doggedly on his way, working hard and showing! courage and grit which speak well for the future! of this country. If we all can retain that same ability to look the facts squarely in the face and keep up our spirit no matter how discouraging things may look, the Missouri Slope need not worry But this year, it is likely, we will not be required to fight against odds. Instead, nature seems t» be favoring us. We have a great chance for aj good crop—a great chance to show the rest of the state what the Missouri Slope can accomplish. Better Homes Week | The week of April 24 to May 1 is being observed | throughout the United States as Better Homes Week and Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, who is president of Better Homes in America, has made the following statement regarding this na tion-wide pregram: 20} Farest Week ha ‘of agriculture. . _— est Week committee, of which Hon, Frank O. Low. | den of [mois is general chairman, is compos | nearly 100 organizations representing almost ever) {conceivable form of interest—the federal govern Jment, state governments, outdour, wild life and {recreational interests, foresters and forestry asso- ;ciations, the lumber indystry, large consumers of !forest products, labor, groups interested in water resources, scientific and civic organizations and | many cthe dof for its purpose the giving of an | opportunity for every form of interest in trees and |forests to find expressicn, each in its ‘own way. | Waste and worthless land is worse than a dead loss, It is a drag on the community. Reforesta- | ‘tion can reclaim‘ these waste lands and convert! them to valuable natural ou! In calling our attention to this, Forest Week accomplishes an im-! t work. | Wanted—More News It is regrettable that the Chinese situation is such that clearer and more definite news dispatches cannot be from the troubled areas. | After reading diligently all of the dispatches on | iking affair, one finds oneself still pretty | much in the dark as to exactly what happened. | dust how many people were killed, why, and by! em, are things that no one in this country can | lefinitely. | the the N, In absence of more authoritative news would be well for ail of us to keep a few thing: mind: First, the fighting in China is above all a civil] ‘war, pure and simple, with the anti-foreign agi- tation playing a minor part. Civil wars are al- | ways bloody, and the Chinese non-combatants are suffering far more heavily than any group of white men. | Second, the British and American forces in China| jare not there to intervene between the two factions, | but to protect British and American subject Neither we nor England are at war with Chin or with any faction in China. | Third, the gathering of uncolored news in China| is so difficult that we in America can well take | most of the atrocity stories with the proverbial pinch of salt. in Fourth, the influence of Soviet Russia on the | Cantonese is probably people think. to far less powerful than some | iets would like, of course, | ration started in China, and | are doing all they can to take credit for the | pnt war; but the Chinese people are not, by | nature, the kind of people who take to communist | doctrin They are essentially industrious and frugal—two traits that don’t go with communism. The § ¢ a world con Abcve all, we must not make snap judgments. |“ Our representatives in China seem to be eompe- | tent and level-headed; let's trust them to play a/| watchful, waiting game, and reserve our own de-| cisions until we have more light. Editorial Comment The Agriculutral Problem Reviewed From the Other Side (Kansas City Star) The bus men's commission on agriculture | which was appointed last November has made a preliminary report. The committee was made upi of representative men who were primarily inter- ested in industry rather than agriculture. Their appointment was based upon the theory that pros- perity in industry could not be maintained indefi- nitely if those engaged in agriculture were unable to buy their products. Hearings were held in every section cf the country. An effort was made ty consult persons who were interested in every phase | SS Farmers who produced wheat, corn or cotton to| the exclusion of all other crops, as well as those who fcllowed a diversified system of farming, tes- tified. Marketing agencies, both competitive and cooperative, were consulted. The evidence pre- Practically unanimous that there is a rF | question, was loud and triumphant: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ZA F:Saint » Sinner & NEA SERVICE, INC. toe7 Although it was nearly one o'clock past the normal hour for adjourn- ment for lunch—neither the jury nor the audience seemed restive on count of hunger. Banning, flushed th pride at the sensation which his | testimony had created, went} the examination of the farm- son Anderson: Mr. Anderson, 1 want you to remember anything else ‘ou overhead, and tell this jury what it w. considered, his chin thoughtfully with hened forefinger, “I er yell out, ‘You thing! Don't tell me more!” le bit later she was crying | hard, real loud, and she med, ‘I'm going home! I won't live with yout’ | “Yes, ves, Mr. Anderson. And did! Banning u hear anything else?” ked exultantly, “Well, yes, | did—once.” Andérsog answered, his dull grey eyes lightini up, “I heard the lady say somethinj like this-'To thi got rid of Ralph Cluny for a thing like you!’ ” Cherry grasped at Churehill’s coats sleeve, her white face suddenly aflame with color. The lawyer listens eq attentively, nodding as Cherry whispered breathlessly. Banning's voice, as he put his next} “You say the defendant said ‘some- thing like this’—'To think I got ri of Raloh Cluny for a thing like you! Now, Mr. Anderson, remember you are on oath.+ Are those the actual words of the defendant, as nearly as you'can remember them?” s, they are. That's what she id to my wife, ‘Here's pretty y “Never mind what you said to . Y CHES NR us the girl,” Anderson grinned, “But! I heard him say once or twice, or maybe more, ‘Don't be a little fool!’, several years. . . . The professor and ‘We're married now, and you're manufactured a fragment of light. going to make the best of it!” And Now if he only could conduct an once he yelled out at her, ‘Shut up! You're making enough noise to wake up the dead!’ ” i “Very well, Mr. Anderson. Now| go on with your story. When did; you and your wife get up?”, “I got up at half past six and made a fire in the kitchen range, und then went out to do my chores— milking and feeding. When 1 got in from milking, my wife was cooking, breakfast.” “Had Mr. and Mrs. Wiley appeared by that time?” Banning prompted. “No, sir. Me and the wife had our breakfast about 7:15, and it was about a quarter of ejght when the: man—Wiley-—-come out of their bed- room and asked for hot water for shaving and washing up. He said’ him and his wife would have break- fast‘in a few minutes and then go on their way. Wiley said they was bound for Chicago on their honey- moon, was going to drive through, if the weather wasn’t too bad. My wife sive him a kettle of hot water and he went back into the spare room, and about ten minutes later him a new wife.come into the kitchen—' ‘Did they look like a happily mar- ried young couple, in love with each other?” Banning persisted. “Far from it,” the farmer answer- ed positively. Before Banning could put another atestion to witness, Judge Grim- shaw announced an adjournment for lunch, Just as Cherry was led away, she flung her arms about Faith's neck, and ¢hispered brokenly: “He's got it in for, me, Faith! I'm scared, I'm seared! But y didn’t do it, don’t you | ju know 1 deteeaed | xB >) PieSe TANGS CAN CAUSE A LOT OF TROUBLE IF TREY'RE NOT CLEANED OUT f RBS if MAKING THE STARS A scientist announces he has made a star in his laboratory, Many, who have no laboratory equipment what- ever, have been making “moon” for experiment or two in Washington| when Congress, renumes. ... . ‘The| movies have been making stars, too, | but we don’t know what makes some of them act that way. One of jable ‘WEDNESD: ‘AY, “APRIL 27; 192 Editor's Note: This is the 19th chapter in the story of a for- mer doughboy who, going back | to France as an advance guard of the “Second A. E. F.,” is re- visiting all the scenes he and his’ buddies saw during, the war. CHAPTER XIX Of course, in some of the war- wrecked regions, there are signs of ayety. In the cities the recovery as been magnificent. While traces still remain—a shattered wall here --a crumbling house there—commer- cial and social conditions are almost normal. While is may all be true of Chateau Thierry, of Rheims, of S sons, of Fismas, and of Bazoch ponder for a moment on Craone! on the Chemin des Dames, on Pon avert and on the Bois de Beaumarais. The peasants are working. They are tilling fields, But everywhere are the gaunt, dead trees, matted brush, and crumbling masonry. Desolation! Kilometer after kilometer goes by. Not a human soul can be seen. Down in a valley there's a wisp of smoke Over there two women are rising. just back of the public library and sendin; op-flies into the fashion- Fifth Avenue crowd we Summer must be just around the corner. . . . | + « . Oh yes, and there’s the story that’s been going around since | Boston went on its spree of literary + + .A man from Bos- yn scen in New York for several days. . “Say, what are you doing around here anyway?” asked a New Yorlé friend. . . . “Oh,” said the Bostonian, “I just came down to read a book.” . . | + + « The bearded lady of the circus moving her belongings from the freak museum on 42d street . . And her manager stops to kid her! with: “And sister, if you have your face lifted before you get back, what | ui¢. marvelous have. | eyebrows you'll Some day I'm going to find out -{where men get the time to pack six: | huge movie theaters every afternoon, to say nothing of the ball park and the matinces, the tea-rooms and the dansants. . . GILBERT SWAN. eal At The Movies | ELTINGE THEATRE j John Gilbert and Rence Adore, | the combination that scored one of the screen successes of history in! “The Big Parade,” are together for the first time since that picture, in! “The Show,” sensational romance of ; the professors we have known made three stars so well that the govern- | ment awarded him a degree at At- lanta. . . . Many who hitched their wagon to the three stars found there were too many conflicting pulls. For the Parisian opera star who i: driving a racing car now on Amer- speedways, we are anxiously, awaiting the headline: Sings ot on Boards, o¢ Drives It. oes Girls as well as boys are organ-| izing bandit gangs in Chicago, a, news dispatch. Those British tainly work their destruction strange ways, eh, Mr. Thompson? ge a A. co-ed is # girl who uses her arts on buenclors, i A period is only a dot, but it’s di the best thing to use in the end. aee Often the easiest weeds to destroy are i im A New Jersey woman. buried the wrong man as her husband. Many haven't even been able to bury the right onc yet. There’s & whisper down the field where the year has shot her the Budapest show world at the El- tinge today and gore A The play the central characters | in a-strange romance laid in a mys- | terious sideshow on the outskirts of | e sible. city”—a sideshow of illusions, magician’s _ tricks and strange grotesques, with a “decapit: tion” illusion in which Gilbert has! his head cut off in a “Salom travesty us the central feature. The settings, including the gro- tesque sideshows, with their floating living heads, mermaids, “spider | women” and other startling illusions, | are realistic to the extreme, whole | blocks of .. reproductions of quaint} Budapest streets and other incident- als being used in the gripping mys- tery story, Gilbert plays a swashbuckling side- | show “barker” and Miss Adoree a Salome dancer in the production, with Lionel Barrymore as “The Greek,” a sinister gangster leader, and Edward Connelly as the old blind. man who eventually brings about an astounding climax. : CAPITOL THEATRE i Striking a new and higher note iat motion picture production, “White Gold,”, a new picture starring Jetta! Goudal and featuring Kenneth Thom-' son as leading man, will be on view at the Capitol Theatre tonight, Filled with dramatic action, tenseful and compelling, this id to be one of the most unusui Phetosiaya in which the exotic Jetta Goudal has to PPANCES?, playing ball during the noon hour | | of the legs an back, PAUL. ADAMS @ MEA Serves spading on a side hill. Always the | But what a heart-breaking, seemingly endless task fo? those who have chosen to try! Those peasants do not smile They plod stolidly ahead of their work. ‘here couid be no joy there—it is all sadness. And all so lonely. ¥ You see the ppctery, vert where 20,000 Englis are buried. You see the cemetery at Fereen- effort. at Ponta- h soldiers Tardenois where almost as many Americans lie. Ther a monument in the dark recesses in the Bois de Beaumarais erected on the spot where a chapel once stood—a monument to all Al- lied soldiers. The Second A. E. F. will be a sacred pilgrimage, indced. Those » who go back will find their joys in meeting those they knew during the war. Paris has its pleasures. But up through the fields of battle, from St. Quentin and Verdun, every- one will know a great, all-powerf=l sympathy, It will be a sacred pil- grimage, indeed. TOMORROW: The American In- uence, See ST ae | Daily Health | | Service | Bt BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazino For at Icast four centuries men have, been acquainted with the dis- ¢ase Known as scurvy, in which there is loss of weight, anemia, swelling a ankles, swelling and biceding of the gums, and hemorr-~ tat under the skin all over the ody. ‘Ihe search for the ca and cure of this disorder culminated in the development of the fact that it re- 3 from an absence of vitamin C in the dict. Vitamin C is the most easily destroyed of all of the vitam- ins. Alth ugh present in milk, it disappears when milk is heated in the proc of pasteurization, espe> if it comes into contact win cially the air. For this reason babies suf- icularly with scurvy, ever fered parti. under good conditions in this coun- try. ‘A Scotch physician named James Lind wrote a book about scurvy in 1757, in which he pointed out that the disease appeared when persons were deprived of all fresh raw vege- tables and fruits. Today it has been | definitely demonstrated that the giv- ing of appropriate amounts of fresh ( orange juice, tomato juice, or even the juices of turnips or potatoes will revent this disease in infants. It is particularly important that such fresh fruit juices be given when the baby: is fed largely on. pasteurized , cow's milk. $ Dr. E. V. McCollum points out that ere has been a growing tentfency in’ recent times for people to: live more and more on bread, ‘eboked meats, canned: foods and otherwise phisticated and refined food pre rations. This tendency is unforti nate because such’ foods do not pro- vide sufficient amounts of vitamin C. Tomatoes, celery, carrots, raw cab- bage, lettuce, ‘watercress and any other vegetables: that can be eaten Taw are important in cee nine. th tance to the diet. When the ma- terials are cooked and exposed to the air at the -same time, the vitamin is destroyed and must be provided in some other. manner. Passengers Will: Walk on Clouds By NEA Service. London.—Glass-inclosed promenade decks, a dance hall, lounging rooms and a dining salon to seat 60 people are some of the features of the British super-dirigible, R-101, which will ply between London, Cairo and Bombay after its completion late this year. Many mechanical details of the construction are being kept secret n, that the system of farming now | your wife, Anderson,” Banning smil- ed. “Now, Mr, Anderson, can A reduction in expenditures in necessary items of the northwoods, but spends his ders” it can do for yor i said in his proclamation setting Forest Week aside |such as feed, fertilizer and labor indicates that ctt.woods hours in Manhatten, «| Oe reine, oe strong end active, Bn- { this year, “One-fourth of our soil is better suited even greater reduction has been made in expendi- bite, they tell me, suffered Sariee al Sond this notice and your address ie to timber growing than anything else. I can not |tures for clothing, travel, conveniences and luxur- enere hunt i. ie. t, pene of Flor- of The Pe Ws a) raion Con pt. | 3 escape the conviction that our industrial and agri- | ies which are not so essential. Although conditions Mrs. “Rodotph ¥. mntine. lace in|ton, Cone. a “Mere than 3,500 local committees invite the | pra cticed is not resulting in maintenance of soil ‘etary Hoover but echocs our individual opin-| those engaged in agriculture will make them more | ion: Most of us feel so busy with our own little| sympathetic and tolerant toward the industry. concerns that we give you 7 On~Ssure! yield, And the ricks stand gray to the dear lass, We've seen the seasons through, And it’s time to turn on the old trail, our own trail, the out trail, tenred and all who wifnensed herby the buildors, but it is known that in remarkable work wife who stneersly | inds herself neglected. Sam, |, a herder, seeks to win her; from her husband who, engrossed in the motors will burn oil instead of rica A A s aaioaile ! es, 2 | reme a hi 1 hat yor TOMORROW: Ali Cluny Alle ree Faces} = American people to join in observing Better Homes fertility and that some rural sections are virtually | Temamber anything else that Sor! eight is victim of big Jewel robbery sUn, / East” will await, her latest starring fsoline and jt is believed that, in- Week. These voluntary groups are doing much to| bankrupt. jcither by the man or the woman oc-] and Faith and Bob hopelessly review Singing: Otat: Aen: come EET: for effort with genuine sacra. laid on (for, the lifttae "peur instead’ of advance improved housing, home ownership and | Such a study of agricultural conditions by rep | ee eee ee eerie i loa7, NEA Service, Ine.»| And your English summer's done.”|a sheep ranch im Atisona.. Dolores: b¢liu aah the art cf home making and thus giving the Ameri-| resentative men from industry will prove beneficial. | ii : eee ‘| You have “heard the ‘beat of hei Carson, 6 Usnoer, leneing for Re8 107° five mmlilton Cable fort asq al cat me. ore tes the pines which it should | Ame: ss men, manufacturers and bankers And the ‘thresh’ of the deep-sea] sheep “rancher. ‘The “latter, dinap- uccommodations, abr: Ate spasee tenes ; have in American life, They have made so fine are an intelligent group. They have tremendous MR WR AI rain; proves of the marriage and makes “7d the crew o will be built in- F a contribution to the welfare of their communities power in shaping legislation which has a bearing THEY’RE ALL ALIKE vas have: heaed Abe, sare hem : a em pearibe Jer ers donghtersie ee the aldes il beeen es and of the nation as to deserve the gratitude of on agricultural as well as industrial matters. A | By Bess Bly Pull out on the trajl again! Killing off the sheep and the young. Uabreakable There will be every one of us.” |full Knowledge of the difficulties which confront | ; |Ha’ done with the Tents of Shem, Joves her hus-) Cor and cold shower baths, de luxe cabins with two and four bunks each, electric elevators running through the ship, and an observation tower on top. ing e little thought or effort to) Condemnation of the attitude of the industrial IM ALWAYS Pull cut; pall ont an the Long’ Teall | teniien tthe climes ie reached The usual journey of 15 days from the bettering of conditions around us. But there/east is frequently expressed. It is possible that —the trail that is always now! | Randall is killed by D lores after he London to Bombay will be reduced are thousands of public spirited persons who devote |the report made by this corittee may have a It’s North you may run ‘to the rime-| invades the young wife's room, to five days by the swift R-101. Its much time and thought and effort to this work of | tendency to change the attitude of thos¢ who have improving the American home, and it is indeed a!not heretofore appreciated the difficulties which worthy work. : ‘contront the farmers, because the source of in- The lo committees thrcughout the nation have | formation is from men in whose judgment they be- attractiveness and artistic quality, with a steady | tere: ed in farming as an occupation or as a source (Kansas City Star) | The preliminary announcement of the 1925 cen- | sus made by the department of commerce indicates | and their furnishing and equipment should be com- parable to the progress in any of the most rapidly developing fields of American engineering or in-| recognition and support. As President Coolidge your SHAVING .So IT CAN GET ringed sun, Or South to-the blind Horn’s hate; Or ed all-the way into Mississippi Or West to the Golden Gate; Where the blindest bluffs hold good, And life runs large on the Long Trail—the trail that is always' IN NEW YORK — New York, April | 27—Manhattan PRN STS RE AIS tas neue cultural stability will be strengthened by bringing into full productive use this great empire of land.” American Forest Week is an annual call to ali improved materially in 1926 and there is evidence of further improvement this year, it will require \several years of material Presperity to put farmers \ a new dance club of the flighty— Fifties. finale is as remarkable as it is nal ural but it would be unfair to tl public to reveal it. t —Tustajingle | And He wore it just this once, and say It looked "bout For many. are called, but few are! chosen.—Matth ew xxll:14. ary Dream after dream ensue! 3 dustry. The 3,500 local Better Homes committees | that there are over 6 million farms in the United | snap-shots: the incongruously located | Still they dream that they s “paul Pies altering an eshibition of progressive home|States- There sro more than 2%. million. fewer! Church of aor eeanes Ault. ocper ne ee Osevpeinet— # duilding which is a real, practical service to the People living on the farms than five years before. | ot" te new cloak ed. suit belt oR | sie 1 people of America. Only a few more than one-half of the farms are 83d street . . . One of its ti- ® Fy as [teegtad an liapeewsd Pause fully'srchjectared Spanish euteway| IF POISONED BY There has been a tendency to increase the mar- | ¥ - i. It clin 2 : Forest Week : keting of farm products cooperatively. A tre- | tenaclounit to i ti ile arden URIC ACID Forest week this year, extending from April 24|mendous increase in poultry and dairy products has | ‘or Gos SAKED hee a a Ds ‘of the street and | Try this FREE 85 cent Bottle to April 30, should be an incentive to all of us to/been made. That farmers have economized is in-| Ne HOPE I. baa the terribly inadequate earth base, 1. 1 ‘up thi ing ti do our share toward preserving our forest re-jdicated by reduction in expenditures for feed, fer- He's BEEN IN for ee roots, KY They have] isco fal; ack wehinge folate vind sourees, now in such danger of depletion. It is in- |tilizers and labor of more than 676 million daliars., | Tyger _g Ce Siiher side of thelr narrow home rise | ™uscles sore, weak all over? cumbent upon us to take whatever steps seem nec-|That they have met financial reverses is indicated | MINUTE of the sheer walls of skyscrapers. .. «| a) Palle Rey bet: Delf Hy essary to accomplish that desirable end. by a decrease of 3 billion dollars in value of farm THER rig ANT i Lar et & haedeiesee gerry = Are congested kidneys, irritated ; It is significant that out of the multifarious lands, 900 million dollars in value of implements ing his litanies in. the shadows of| bladder, sheumatle, pains and aches y “weeks” now extant, this is the only one to which/and machinery and an increase of half a billion Hi rag rath “ap Mamma, Piet god mere: ping Rh, Baers | the government of the United States has given dollars in mortgage indebtedness. is } of ames Oliver Guryood, who writes| Let The Williams Treatment prov You will. # > tle (se suas) trek, Wy Bi roel’ Bont No obligation fe vene ment, Thou- route may be extended to Australia. HOW DO YOU FERL ON ARISING? Very: likely your Kidneys’ control your answer, It is glorious to awake with a lively, healthy, energetic body. a record of five years of sound, practical achieve-|lieve. ‘The final report should be of benefit be. My BATH I! dear lass, It is miserable to drag an uching, * ane ass i 23 be. " tired, weary body from sleepless, ment behind them. The homes exhibited each year cause it will be an official statement of the con- IM ove ar THE And See SiMe tales A RS csusl We WING aah o Gat ane dar, Ltamlese Won” Bales Bilin o aitrate have represented striking advances in convenience, |clusions from a group who are not immediately it DENTISTS IN our own trail, the out trail, stepped out, brave and bold, | stimulant for the kidneys, constantly used over 25 vears, are a’ reliable; valuable medicine lowering in average cost. Last year’s demonstra- ! of living. new. 4 a stiudedand {-pealiatal, normal Malin at Nags & tiom houses cost, on an average, less than $5,000 to << —Rudyard Kipling: From “The and bladder. Cost little, contain no build. The progress from year to year in cbtain- ‘ : \ tove Fe A THOUGHT [Sette REE Foley Fille ing better results from money put into the homes ' The 1925 Farm Census | diuretic.—Adv. \ sands using this medicine. Estab- =) . 7 zccagitizens, young and old, to take part in bringing |back to the financial ition they. maintained wnmily Noe Rotting to Ms ¢ ious. way with ‘about better forest conditions. The American For- | in 1920. ais oh \ + Two more men looking, 5 fem sigalg orb: Nothing 10 thele emotions who away with,

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