The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 9, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR URDAY, JUNE 9, 1928 The. Bismarck Tribune! Ap Ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune C mpany, Bis- \ marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- Daily by carrier, per ysar . Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, vutside of North Di Weekly by mail, in state, per yea Weekly by mail, 1 state, three y for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako a, re- year ..... seeeee sseeees Member Audit Bureau of Circulation * Member of The Associated Press ¥ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news uispatches credited | to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and| also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. DETPOIT Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) 2 2 € 4 THE LATEST MACHINE 14 Erich Graichen, a young German scientist, claims 4} to have invented a machine that will “isolate and split” { Stoms. 44 He is primarily interested in finding something to !} pure cancer, and he believes his invention will do it; +4 but he says that it can also be used as the most 2: Westructive war weapon ever known. It emanates rays 1} Yhat will kill any living thing they touch; if directed 2 bn a ton of coal, he adds, these rays would cause it } be explode with a force of 90 billion horsepower. * He wants to build a bigger machine than the ex- {4 perimental model he is now working with, he con- | ¥inues, but is afraid to for fear it would wreck his 1, daboratory and kill everybody in it. 73 In the absence of confirmatory reports, it is im- b possible to tell how much of his story is sober scientific {{ fact and how much is pure brainstorm. The thing is o| interesting, however. Assume for the moment that 4} his invention will do all he says; would it not be a 9; strange, terrifying device to let loose on civilization? >! A cure for cancer would be an unspeakable bless- h §ng. But suppose that the cure, if mismanaged, could © blow physician, patient, hospital and city into cosmic “| dust; what then? Would we be willing to see it used? int As a matter of fact, nearly every great advance in 1 Civilization is a gift of that kind. Every great boon 4 can be a curse if misused. The steam engine has made \ possible modern civilization, but in its early days it ‘ brought into being man-killing factories that made | hopeless drudges out of thousands of men and women. h; The automobile is a great blessing, yet it kills more £ than 20,000 people a year on American highways. Even } the printing press, which has done so much to en- i lighten humankind, has its drawbacks; has it not made t Possible the tabloid scandal sheet? : That, as it happens, is the way civilization makes A progress. Men toil on from discovery to discovery; ‘y and each new weapon, forged for the service of h humanity, is two-edged and proves destructive to the users until it can be properly managed. Nothing comes easily. We pay a great price for every step for- ward. Assume that this German’s machine actually is a .? practical, usable affair. As long as we keep our 4 sanity it will be a splendid thing. But if we go to war it may wipe out civilization. Our salvation is strictly up to us. 3 So it is with everything. It is useless to blame 2) our “machine civilization.” The fault always lies with ourselves. If we are wise enough to handle our mod- ern tools all will go well. 4 For the first six months or so a traffic problem +} in a town is pointed to with pride. RADIO IN THE CAMPAIGN * In 1924 the radio enabled thousands to sense the ‘| futility of the wrangling at Madison Square Garden. Through it many felt the spirit of harmony that pre- wailed in Cleveland. In that presidential campaign a i Calvin Coolidge and John W. Davis addressed unseen , @udiences that numbered into the millions. The privilege of seeing the rival candidates was denied to many, but all could hear their voices. Eight years ago the radio was first used in a presidential election when a Pittsburgh station broad- cast the results of the Harding-Cox election. That was @ pioneering event. This year radio will play an ex- tremely important part in the campaign. The conventions in Kansas City and Houston and 4 ubsequently the campaigners will reach many millions | by radio. One hundred radio stations will be linked in broadcasting networks that will carry the proceed- §, ings in the convention cities to every state and com- | munity in the United States. In addition, two high- powered shortwave stations will keep South Americ: Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand in touch with the conventions. It will require more than 15,000 miles of telephone wires to effect this vast radio hook-up. There will be a battery of microphones on the speak- ers’ platform and others near the bands that will-en- liven the dull sessions of the conventions. More 4, microphones will pick up the cheers and jeers, the announcers will tell the story as it is enacted before 7 fheir eyes. } Millions will “attend” the conventions and go cam- paigning with the nominees. The inevitable result must be a more intelligent and better informed voter in ? November. The voter who is easily swayed when he is part of a crowd under the voice of a seasoned spellbinder may be bafflingly calm as he listens in| lights a couple of to a particulcrly in an Ibsen Revival. that she would attain certain star- New York, June 9—What ever the may be on the do hover dom a great first heights. igwise nor out lew York. » Tam ibe I i is : = & | percentage of the pecple of the United States @ roars and even the whispers of the party hosts. And'!he raises—that it involved government price fixing hustled out of the ol trunks for her. She received good notices in the papers and had one to} or two chances to but she never quite reache from his own home. Immune from mass psychology, he may be more critical in his judgments of partisan pleas and promises. The radio tempts the demagogue, yet it limits his influence. A fiction writer has to get a move on these days and complete his book while it yet is a fiction. VACATION THOUGHTS At this time of the year this is a nation with but a single thought—vacation. Independence Day will find vacation time in full swing. And during the succeeding two months a large will have their annual summer furlough from the cares and labors of making a living. For some the vacation will be a week, or perhaps only a day. A larger number will drop their tools for 15 days. A few more fortunate ones will extend their playtime over a month, two months, or three months. The vacation is an all-revealing barometer of pros- perity. There is no other country in the world where wage earners and workers for small salaries can afford the luxury of a vacation trip, which is expensive and during the period of absence from work. American workers are so little the slaves of that machine called industry and business and have so little craving for gold for its own sake that they collectively forfeit hundreds of millions of wage and salary dollars for the sake of a vacation tour of sojourn. Since the war the vacation has approached uni- versality among salaried workers in the United States. Most office and store employes get a weck or 15 days with pay. But the fact that he gets no pay while away does not deprive the skilled wage earner of his motor trip, plunge in the surf or camping party. citizens who always had a perfect alibi. OUR YOUNG DREAMS Patrick Hurley is 13 years old and lives in Detroit. If we're not mistaken, he is a young man who is going to make his mark in the world some day Patrick built a sailboat the other ¢ It was eight feet long and two feet wide, and highly rickety. lie got up before dawn, left his father a note saying, “I am going to Alpena,” and embarked on his 300-mile cruise, By luck he didn’t drown. His boat was swamped in Lake St. Clair, but he managed to cling to a buoy until rescued. He returned home quite undismayed. Every boy dreams xt some time of meking a boat and going adventuring. Few actually do it. Young Patrick seems to be a lad with determination. The quality should carry him far. | Editorial Comment | PITY THE PLATFORM-MAKER (New York Times) Senator Smoot, who is to rough-hew the Republican platform, is said to be suffering from hag fever at Kansas City. He may run a temperature for other reasons before he gets through. Especially is the drafting of the farm plank likely to inflame the tissues of all concerned. The exasperating thing is that Presi- dent Coolidge desires to get not only a general well done, good and faithful servant, from the National Convention, but a specific approval of his veto of the MeNary-Haugen bill. And he even wants his party to be honest and courageous enough to condemn out- right the equalization fee, which Governor Lowden said was of the very essence of the McNary-Haugen bill and essential to any effective plan of farm relief. Sec- retary Jardine is said to be on his way to Kansas City for the express purpose of demanding this ex- plicit statement in the platform. The effect is already to throw the compromisers and trimmers into a state of nervous excitement. They |Just have a farm plank headed northeast by south- west and the trick would be done. Praise the Presi- dent, but also laud the farmers. Give. Mr. Coolidge a blanket endorsement, but leave room under it for the professional friends of the farmer to cuddle. De- clare that the past is secure, but don’t forget to have an eye to the future. These are the customary neat little prescriptions to men who write party platforms, but they are in danger of being thrown out of the window if President Coolidge has his way. He actually wishes to be straightforward and consistent, with both his party and the country. There couldn’t be anything more trying than that to a platform-maker, as Sena- tor Smoot will soon be in a position to admit with sorrow. THE PRESIDENT PLAYS FAVORITES (New York World) In vetoing the McNary-Haugen bill for farm relief and approving the Jones-White bill for a ship sub- sidy on the same day President Coolidge has run true to form. There is no inconsistency in his ‘favoring government aid to shipping and opposing it for agri- culture. This is wholly in keeping with his general policy of backing up the large scale ind y with all the power of the government while ig the mass of small producers to shift for themselve The President’s action of yesterday a forceful reminder of a like performance last year. In the same week in which he vetoed the farm relief bill at the last session of congress he increased the duty ig iron by 50 per cent under the flexible pro- ions of the tariff law. Both then and now he has shown that his sympathies are wholly with the industrial east. The two measures to which the President. yester- day accorded such unequal treatment were in many respects similar. The shipping bill provided a re- volving fund of $250,000,000 to be lent at low interest for long terms to shipbuilders. The MeN: bill set aside a revolving fund of the aid of agriculture. Like the shipbuilde beneficiaries of the farm relief measure were re- their behalf, or equalization quired to repay the advances made and in this case by means of a tax fee, levied on their products. We have no fault to find with the President’ dis- THe objections which approval of the farm relief bill. and the bureaucratic control of agriculture and would stimulate overproduction and encourage profiteering against the consumer—are all well taken. Even a con- siderable tion of the farming population, we be- lieve, has little liking for the McNary-Haugen scheme. This, however, does not excuse the administration for its wholly negative attitude toward the agricultural problem, as contrasted with its positive program of government aid in every practicable form for big busi- ness. season’ ago, due fine performance It seemed way into the pages of a theatrical newspaper. The aftermath ame the other day when the mother suddenly an- nounced that she was taking the idaughter aw.) from the theatre and heading for Hollywood. Oh, yes, these Broadway mothers really do protect their brood. eee Edna_ Ferber’s story, “Mother Knows Best,” is said to be based on the life of one of the stage’s best known mimics. The Ferber tale revealed that the mother had been practically denied a chance for ro- mance and had given practically all roles.were manuscript shine in— her of the theatre in told, whispered to that she should read |of her life an” her time tc her work about life. At an her mother. Once :. romance in while the mother lay pital. But the mother, sing danger, left her bed and down to the theatre in time accurately was the character that, for a ‘ire, a Be ey at. motes are mn ‘mother” be found te Broadway! GILBERT SWAN. enjoyed at the addifional expense of loss of earnings Few of our larger public monuments are erected to | THE BISMARCK TRIRUN (ere Ries rouble Ahead for the Elephant | WHERE HINE | BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington—The Washington correspondents have been guilty of considerable kotowing in their time, but many of them have. been im- had thought it would be so easy to please both sides. | be bued with a gveater feeling of self-' respect since they hooted Premier Mussolini's name from the mem- bership of the National Press Club. A movie press agent returning from Italy proposed Mussolini as a non-resident member and the club’s board of governors tenta- tively approved his election, A club officer actually cabled Mus- solini that he had been elected and that “all fellow members” joined in best wishes. The board’s recent _announce- ment that consideration of Musso- lini’s name had been withdrawn following a “constitutional pro- test of more than ten active mem- rs, citing reasonable cause,” er little indication of the great howl that went up from working newspa- permen here. Some of them threat- ened to resign if Mussolini were placed on the rolls. When a protest petition was cir- culated in the Senate press gallery, citing Mussolini's ruthless exter- mination of opposition newspapers in Italy and }". overt acts against American correspondents in Rome, 25 members of the first 31 ap- proached signed promptly. Three of the other six explained that they might be assigned to Rome and didn’t dare protest openly. A score or more members came to the next meeting of the board, assailing Mussolini as the world’s| thi worst enemy of the press and de- tailing specific instances of his suppression of its liberties. No voice was raised on behalf of the Italian dictator and as soon as the i: solini group had _ finished ithdrawn, the board of gov- ernors gave him the gate. If Governor Alfred E. Smith is nominated at Houston, there will be some discussion of this question: WASHINGTON LETTER SEENTHAT BEFORE ?!! How cre the Smiths going to vote? ie There are more than a_ million persons namcd Smith in the Unit- ed States; no Smith has ever been honored with a presidential nomi- nation before: Because there are more voters named Smith than anything else they might, if they voted practically as a unit, be an important force. Of course they won't, but they might theoretical- ly some time decide an election. In the Washington city direc- tory, one observes, there are 18 pages of Smiths, with less than one age of Hoovers. Will the Smiths, Filled with a denominationat- pride in this most jsp of all Smiths, vote the Democratic ticket? And how would you yourself vote if the family name headed one of the national tickets? i And how will the Schmidts, Smithers, Smithsons, Smyths and Smythes feel about it? ° Mrs, Leona Curtis Knight, daugh- ter of Senator Charles Curtis, is on the Rhode Island delegation at Kansas City. Except for Mrs. Knight, it’s a Hoover delegation. An interesting stcry lies behind Mrs. Knight's selection, according to what one hears in Washington. The Rhode Island Republicans, needing | some money, are reported to have persuaded Webster Knight, Leona's pe rege et it Neola a thing to have a son-in-law in the White House. Knight saw the point and, it is said, did his stuff. Then the Hoover wave struck Rhode Island and cumstances Pips the Republican lead- ers in the Hoover column. Some- reassure of cir: | his the address was over the head of the assembled multitude or else the crowd wasn’t impressed. One eye- witness reports tha Mr. Coolidge paused several times at points in his speech where a more enthusiastic audience probably would have ap- plauded, and appeared to miss the accustomed cheers. Along toward the end the platform group started the first real applause, as if wak- ing up to its duty, and, of course, there was some more at the finish. But the president wasn’t miffed. His party found him in excellent spirits, going and coming. Qear Marye: What will you do next, Marye? I’m ever 80 sorry about your ac- cident which both you and Alan have assured me is slight, but I do in another way—for I am sure you have hurt Alan keenly by persisting in going about with this “Pede,” of whom he disapproves so keenly. In the same mail bringing your letter, I received one from Alan. Fortunately yours was the first one I opened, and after your rather light account, I could 1.0t believe you had been seriously injured. Alan’s reassured me. It was really a very thoughtful gesture on part. He said your injuries were mere scratches, and that he would take good care of you. It was con- had to be done for the Knights so Mrs. Knight went on the delega- tion. Anyway, ite & good story. According to some who went along with President Coolidge on the occasion of his speech at Gettys- burg, the pregidant was a little em- barrassed br failure of his audience to applaud at the right time. was noticeably necessary for the of- ficial Vite on the platform to lead off the hand-clapping. Either | OUR BOARDING HOUSE (Y.. WELL THERE GoEs -TH” N COMPLETE WEATHER REPOR For NEXT WEEK IN \ KANSAS cry, ~~ ly VERY WINDY, AN” HoT! aa} \~-HE WON'T BE MISSED BY NOTHIN’ IN “THIS “TOWN BUT A PARK BEN CH t ae IN Ny y’ < I ONLY HAVE A NODDING ACQUAINTANC! MYSELF “To SLEEP AT-TH” POOL PARLOR «BET THERE AINT ANYTHING A IN TH’ SUITCASE BU RUBBER COLLAR, POKER CHIPS, SET OF DICE, AN’ A CORKSCREW ! WITH HIM, —-ANODDING LISTENING “To Him “TALK siderate of him, I thought, not to mention the fact that you had been injuted in another man’s car. Just think how humiliating this would be, Marye, if you had really been hurt—or suppose Pede had been injured, or even killed. Think|@ what a scandal might have de- splnned from just this innocent little ie. You know nothing about Pede ex- cept that he is a foreigner with nice manners who flirted with you and By Ahern | NY EGAD, A ROUSING EN Senvore They JN GAve ME. AT N THe House !~ \ (a4 EXCEPT THAT TOMATO THROWAS WW DEST! K N ° tm SAT * INDUSTRIAL POISONING There are several types poisoning which result from using poisonous chemicals in manufactur- ing processes. The most common occupational disorder that a doctor is called upon to treat is chronic lead poisoning. It occurs in almost every type of industry which necessitates handling this metal or of *lexcessive contact hope that you have not suffored| Al its compounds, such as white lead paints. The lead enters the body very gradually, and it seems to enter through the skin and through the inhalation of dust or vapor. Most cases of metal poisoning may be prevented by keeping the rust and fumes from entering the mouths and noses of the workers. The symptoms of this rm of poisoning are abdominal pains, con- stipation, and a peculiar leaden hue | of the gums, the palate, and even} the skin. When this poisoning be- comes chronic, it produces severe kidney disorders, paralysis, and} sometimes blindness. Death from | lead poisoning resembles the symp- | toms of blood poisoning. Another type of industrial poison- ine which is very frequently met | with but not often recognized is | mercury poisoning, caused by an) with mercury. | |When “frying gold” was practiced, these cases were fairly common. The mercury was used to absorb the gold by amalgamation from the small rock and gravel with which the gold is mixed, and the mercur: was evaporated from a frying pan, leaving the gold as a residue. There are other occupations that use mercury, and usually precau- tions are taken to avoid this poison- ing. This disorder is ver: insidious, as its worst effects often do not! occur until many years have passed. ! It produces symptoms very similar | to those of advanced syphilis, such! and softening of the Phosphorus poisoning at one time was quite common in match fac-| tories, but modern methods of pre-| paring the phosphorus have almost eliminated this dis Gasoline and kerosene poisoning | usually occur by accident, more fre- quently in children, but even the! inhalation of gasoline vapor will produce poisoning. In swallowing as little as ar ounce of gasoline or| benzine, unconsciousness will gen- ally resuit in from ten to fifteen minutes, and the death may occur shortly after. Some individuals have more resistance and can swal- low a larger amount without pro-| ducing death. It produces a burning | pain in the throat and stomach, Vomiting thirst, dizziness, headache, } ea HEALIH“DIET ADVICE Mec » 3! Dr Frank McCoy shortness of breath, drowsiness, and finally unconsciousness. If 4 person has swallowed any of these poisonous substances, vomit- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. —_ ES ing should be induced as soon as possible. Some form of fasting is advisable in the case of the metallic poisons, and phosphorus. I, have found that a citrus fruit fast, fol- lowed by a milk diet until the worst symptoms have subsided, is the most valuable method of curing these diseases dietetically. Of course, any person who re- ceives an occupational poisoning should change his occupation so that he will no longei absorb these poisons. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: R. H. J. writes: “What can be the cause of violent dizziness when lying on back or right side? Bowels are regular.” Answer: The dizziness may come from high blood pressure or harden- ing of the arteries. In some cases, plain biliousness is responsible. Question: Schoolgirl asks: “Are pickles harmful to one’s health?” Answer: You will notice I do not recommend pickles in my menus, They must be classed as condiments and not as food. If used at all hey should be used with a meal containing no starch. ‘ Question: K. P. writes: “I have a case of kidney trouble. Have been ;on a diet of just milk and one orange a day. Everything has cleared up in the urine but the albumin, which is three plus. I have no more casts or acids, but - still doesn’t go down.” Answer: You do not say how long the albumin |you have been on the milk diet, but as this is an excellent treat- ment for abuminorrhea, I would ad- vise you to continue on such a diet until you show still more improve- ment. If the albumin does not dis- appear rapidly enough it would be a good plan for you to take an orange juice fast for a few days, then go back on the milk. Question: J. O. writes: “I have a fallen stomach that hangs several inches below normal. How can I bring it back in place?” Answer: You can bring your stomach back to normal position by taking certain kinds of exercises. Write me again, sending a large, self-addressed stamped envelope, and I will send complete directions for these exercises, with illustrated chart. has pursued you since—all, I might say, with your encouragement and approval. But you can rest assured, Marye, that if either of you had been seriously hurt, his identity would have been revealed. And had he turned out to be an imposter—as many foreigners are— that would have reflected no credit on your or lan. I think, as I have told you be- fore, that you take long chances, and that you should consider the consequences, not only of your acts, but of your chance acquaintance;. Certainly I disapprove most highly of your being in the company of men that are not friends of Alan. I am sending you a homemade cake and some cookies, and some of the raspberry and pineapple jam I made last year that you like so much. I hope they reach you in splendid shape, and that they re- mind you of the home that has been lonesome for you ever since you left. All my love, MOM, NEXT: The scene. Sy | BARBS | pe a George Bernard Shaw calls ac- cumulated money the root of all evil. It seems as if we've heard that before somewhere, maybe the Bible. ae ter wagon in the present decade seem extravagant, but may be true. R. M. CALDERWOOD. {Dr. McCoy Suggests | | Menus For a Week | —<___—_——_—_"“———-0 Dr. McCoy’s menus suggested for whe eek beginning Sunday, June Sunday Breakfast: Coddled eggs, Melba toast, stewed prunes. Lunch—Cornmeal muffins, string beans, raw celery, ripe olives. Dinner—Roast veal, zuchini, spin- ach, salad of head lettuce, ice cream. Monday Breakfast — French omelet, tcasted triscuit, stewed apples. Lunch—8-ounce glass of orange dnice. inner—Vegetable soup, Salis- bury steak, baked egg plant, salad of tomatoes and celery, jello, with cream, Tuesday Breakfast—Wholewheat muffins, Peanut butter, stewed raisins, pune Rolled new potatoes, with chopped parsley, cooked asparagu: Taw carrots. ~ Dinner—Roast mutton, *baked ground beets, cooked celery, shred- ded lettuce, raspberry whip. Wednesday Breakfast—Baked toast, stewed figs. Lunch—Pint of buttermilk, 10 or Americans spent $167,000,000 net abroad last year, according to Sec- retary Hgover’s figures. And prob- ably more drank at home than abroad, too. ear : Millions of eligibles will not go to the polls and express their choice for president, according to an edi- torial in a New York newspaper. Who said we have nothing to be thankful for? iN * Dr. Max Mason, former president of the University of Chicago, an- nounces that he sees no Utopia ahead right now. It probably will be several years before there are enough seats in the street cars for of us. ‘2 12 dates, Dinner—Baked white fish, cooked spinach and parsley, salad of sliced Lanatooe and cucumbers, no des- se Thursday Breakfast—Waffle browned through, crisp bacon, applesauce. Lunch—Stewed corn, cooked let- tuce, salad of raw grated beets. Dinner—Tomato jelly served in cubes, roast pork, mashed turnips, string beans, salad of chopped raw cabbage, stewed apesents Frida: yy, Breakfast—Poached on shred- ded wheat - biscuit, dish of berries (canned). Hanehe-Seamnee glass of orange milk, Dinner—Broiled filet of While the Democratic convention hall in Houston was being built hundreds of sparrows built their homes in it. Not the only birds who'll feather their nests there, by any means, seit A Nevada jury freed a man who used a gun to chase away an auto- mobile salesman. Thus Justice, slowly but surely, doth advance. * | PEOPLE’S FORUM } | PEOPLE'S FORUM A HOPEFUL SIGN’ Carbonneau, N. D., June 5, 1928, Editor Tribune: ‘ A press dispatch from London carries the rather surprising news that Rosslyn Mitchell wi labor member of the Briffsh par- liament has resigned from a newly organized political club because the club has decided to serve liquor. Surely that is a 1 sign of the times. In an interview, Mr. Mitchell stated that he e: that the other labor members from Scotland who are also prohibitionists will resign from tye club as well and protest against practi¢e of serving liquor. The prophesies of dry lead- ers that Britain will be on the wa- is &lthe cooked asparagus, salad raw celery, pineapple wolati, no cream, Saturday Breakfast—Cottage cheese, baked OS Dun of truth exces unch—Dis} BI a molded salad of celery, cucum!| nd cooked beets. Dinner—Broiled lamb chops, baked egg plant, greens, cauliflow- er salad, junket. “Baked ground beets: Cut into pieces without peeling, small tender beets and run through a food chop- per. Place in a dry flat bakin: Pan to a depth of one or two inches and bake in a moderate oven for 15 or 20 minutes. Brown slightly on top if desired, and season with but- ter and a little salt as served. An agreeable change may be made mixing raw turnips or carrots wit beets in about half and half pro- Portion. ees Sealed bi I be reesived by th ry ved by undersigned, Cl Binh lerk: of Guilford Bchoot un ledina, North Dako’ P. m., June 20, 1928; for 186 tons or more of Screend Lignite Lu: Coal, F. O. B. Cars Medina, and FO. B. Bins Schoolhouse Medina, ‘The Board reserves the right (o re- Col any or all bids without notice to ldders, H. A. NORTON, 6/6--8-9-11-33-18 ‘4 ‘ eRe a »

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