The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “The Bismarck Tribune An ludeyendent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the merck Tribune C mpaay, marck, N. D. and enterea at the postoffice at Bis- marck as second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann ...+.........Preatdent ana Publisher Subscription Rates Payable fe Advance Datly by carrier, per year .oss..++eeseeee Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ......++ Daily by mail, yutside of North Dakots . — 19 Weekly by mail, in state, per year . ‘Weekly by mail, :2 state, three Weekly by mall, outside of North Member Audit Bureae 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 spaper, also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of al] other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. boa « CHICAGO ETPOIT = Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. 4 (Official City. State and County Newspaper) THE INDIAN’S ELEVENTH YOUR Dy One of America’s most distinguished women is visit- © {ng Bismarck this week in Mrs. Gertrude Bonnin, au- 9: thor, prominent in the work of the National Federation _ of Women’s clubs. Mrs. Bonnin is a full-blood Sioux, born in a tepee, of Yankton Sioux parents who were relatives of Sitting BISMARCK'S STEADY GROWTH Bismarck’s growth continues. It is manifested both in business expansion and home building. Within the week two local business houses have an- nounced plans for expansion, a new business house has opened here and general conditions appear right for more growth. Every business house here alive to its opportunities has reason for contemplating the future with confi- dence. This city’s position as a distributing center is increasing. The territory it serves is developing with the growth of the state and all its institutions are growing. As a home city, however, Bismarck is beginning properly to appreciate itself as investments in homes here for the past five years show, Bismarck’s natural location is one of the most beauti- ful in all North Dakota for a city. No city in the state has» more beautiful natural setting. Woodrow Wilson on his visit here called the river view from the hills at the Country Club one of the most beautiful in America. There are other vantage points equally good. An investment in a home in Bismarck is a good in- vestment for the future. It can never be made more advantageously than now, A SPLENDID RECORD News dispatches fix total attendance for the t 10 days’ itinerary of the Dairy-Poultry special train over the line of the Northern Pacific Railway at 20,000 for 28 meetings. Railway and Agricultural college officials have every right to be pleased, for they are effectively reaching the people with one phase of the better farming mes- sage. And the people are to be congratulated on the cooperation shown in their interest as it is indicated in attendance. Better farming will go fa: to hasten the development of North Dakota. Everybody realizes that. The ac ties represented by the Dairy-Poultry special are con- structive and they will pay dividends, There has been a tendency to resent such undertak- Bull. “Her charming books, American Indian Stories, which appeared first in the Atlantic Monthly, and Old Indian Legends, illustrated by Angel Decorah, are well known. Her work in the National Federation of Women’s 2 Clubs resulted in that splendid body interesting itself * In welfare work among Indians. She is America’s most distinguished Indian woman as president of the Na- , tional Council of American Indians, 1 To her people Mrs. Bonnin is what Shashuma Tagore, ‘who seeks to take the Little Red Schoolhouse to India, ; (is to the Hindu. The Tribune prints an interesting in- ‘ “terview with Mrs. Bonnin today. 1 ! She declares Indian reservations are the most un- : “American spot in America. She sees four objectives in «Indian welfare work and she declares that the story of ‘the Vanishing American is true and that the Indian is jliterally at the End of the Trail. ;_ The objectives she names are proper educational {facilities, adequate health service, conservation of i§ndian resources and sympathetic administration of {indian affairs. Mrs. Bonnin is herself the best proof of what may be s@ccomplished for the Indian by education. She left ¢hese Dakota prairies a child of seven with memories {af the cries of Indian mothers in the hills along the Missouri river over the passing of a race never to be aflorgotten. She comes back to them today, educated, leultured, refined, a most able advocate of the rights of her people, numbered among the truly great women of {the world. 1 So much has education, the best solution of every t social problem, done for the girl who left the tepee. © Shashuma Tagore, Hindu woman, whose work for her People has commanded world-wide admiration, now in ‘t America for a study of primary and secondary educa- tional methods, pointed out some time ago that more money is spent annually in maintaining Columbia uni- - - versity than is spent annually for the education of all * the teeming millions of India. Yet in North Dakota alone there are 250 Indian chil- sdren who are of school age who have never had school “facilities. 4. This probably is a most conservative statement of ithe fact. It is well known that aged Indians suffer imuch, that malnutrition is claiming a deadly toll and lthat disease steadily is decimating the race. 2 ‘What we have done to conserve his resources is a story written large in the record of stealing his pine, toil and allotments of land. We are repeating rather ‘mercilessly here an old story. q It is the story of the clash between the philosophies £ g@f barbarism and civilization, pointed out by Dr. Nansen 3in his fine book “The Esquimaux People.” £ Gentimental interest toward the Indian and his wel- has never been greater than today. We are moved aa @ tragedy being enacted before our eyes, but we have never been moved sufficiently to do much about it. ‘Mrs. Bonnin points out that this is the eleventh hour {for the Indian, It is not yet too late. The survey of the United States senate committee covering Indian affaits is getting under way at a time when there is Smore sympathetic interest for the Indian and his prob- {lems than ever before. It will be thorough and it will eget the facts. For the Indian it is the most hopeful eign in many years. “I am an Indian,” says Mrs. Bonnin today in her in- 'tetview in The Tribune. “I believe in the Great Spirit. TI believe in a religion of universal brotherhood and itniversal love as it was taught me about the camp- fires of my people in the great out-of-doors at night, beneath the mystery of the stars, There we were close »pto the infinite.” 4 4 that be Paganism, all of us can afford to make the S . Bost of it. =) * Bismarck will be privileged this week to hear Mrs. ¢Bonnin speak on Indian affairs. It will be a rare } privilege, for she is « brilliant woman. s THE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION 1 H The svest turns its eyes today toward Kansas City, | Ywhere the issue for the moment in the Republican na- Etional convention is Hoover and anti-Hoover. . t.. That issue is too strongly emphasized at this time. )~ This, however, is natural in view of the fact that in this section Hoover is regarded as the man who will tarry on the policies of President Coolidge. . The agricultural west looks to its party to write ite platform s farm equality plank that will meet agriculture. That is the issue of issues, it is interpreted by a considerable group. Always in the heat of campaigns personalities ob- a I | | | ks sa $3 fell z 3 % & > ne aan ave ee ings in the past on the part of a good many practical farmers. Their economic wrongs were so evident and so omnipresent they were unable to appreciate at its full worth the value of such practical education as is given by this special train with its exhibits, trained speakers and record of concrete results. Happily that disposition is passing. The attendance upon the current educational exhibition is proof of the fact. In no walk of life was anything ever so well done that it could not be improved upon. Practical demon- stration of better farming methods is one way to hasten. the solution of the so-called farm problem, The inter- est in it from every viewpoint, including those of the producer, the transportation group and all others, is @ratifying. Better farming activities ate a fine point of contact for those who would build up North Dakota. People go to the movies to forget everything and some éven forget not to talk. Hunt the bright side. An auto license costs aj lot of money but there isn’t any upkeep on it. Amnesia wouldn't be unbearable if ona had some choice in the matter of memories tu be discarded. , ta | Editorial Comment | EZRA MEEKER TO CONVENTION (Danville (11.) Commercial-News) Ezra Meeker, planning to attend the Republican na- tional convention at Kansas City, has claim: distine- | tion which none of the statesmen, politicians, and | town characters can dispute nor hope to rival. His 98 years alone will make him a favorite with delogat and sightseers. The great beard and shock of ha’ white as driven snow, which set him apart among men, will distinguish the delegation from the state of Wash- ington. But years and patriarchal appearance are not all. As a lusty pioneer of 26, he voted for John C. Fremont, first nominee of the Republican party, in 1856, and he adds that he has “voted ‘er straight” ever since. But this is not all that gives him distinction. | Meeker has crossed the continent by every mode of | known to his youth and to his age. The} made in the early d Oregon Trail, with hardships and Indians dogging eve! mile of the route. Later he traveled it by rail. He hi made the journey twice by automobile. His most rec- ent trip was by airplane. His own career covers, the mobile history of the United States. HONEST EXPERTS NEEDED Dr. W. J. Mayo, distinguished Rochester surgeon, has given voice to the growing belief on the part of People generally that most of the so-called expert testi- mony in court cases is pure fraud. In his address before the American Psychiatric asso- ciation meeting in the Twin Cities Dr. Mayo deplored the disrepute into which “mental experts” were plung- ing reputable psychiatrists by their effort to sway the emotions of juries sitting on murder cases. These experts, he declared, were less interested in getting at the facts in an effort to aid justice than in influencing the jury toward an improper end. He cited the Remus and Hickman cases as examples in point: As a remedy he proposed that such information be Placed before juries by accredited psychiatrists inter- ested only in getting at facts admittedly difficult to ascertain. Certainly unless the whole business of such expert testimony is to be thrown out in disgust some sort of action is necessary. Under the present ridiculous system, experts for both sides testify for so much per diem and it is pos- sible to marshal half a dozen opposite opinions on the same situation. Probably what is really needed is some good old- fashioned honesty. BITTERNESS (New York Times) Watchers of the political pot, now beginning to boil at Ka City, are discovering in it many strange ingredients. But the one which they all see floating to the top is bitterness. This is the great danger to the Hoover candidacy. It may succeed in the conven- tion; apparently Secretary Hoover has the delegates and the momentum to win; but would not he leave so many embittered politicians along his victorious track that his campaign for the Presidency would be a failure and his party defeated? This is a question now solemn- \ reservation. . believe they are doing now. “WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Mies whi i have on their hands here is just one the bright splashes of moving figures. Schuster, the big Tea parties atop the roofs Studio buildings in the mid Fifties have been catching on .... crossword-and- After Roosevelt succeeded the|Trader-Horn man, is credited with assassinated McKfnley a row be- originating the idea. {tween progressives and conserva-|tertained nearly 200 ‘tives broke out in the Republican | roof of his office building. . . ‘party which was not mended until/ Daily this strange city gets of a sky-toucher looking down on color and the of .Max .. He en- ‘sons on the fur- more demonstration that party lines{after the dfsastrous split of 1912./ther from the earth on which it mean less today than ever. | The Democratic party is full of; actual Republicans and the eRpub- lican party has plenty of good Dem-! ocrates, no matter what one cor siders to be a real Democrat or a Republican, aside from the party labels. A western progressive farm relief Republican has as much in common with a Pennsylvania Republican as a southern dry Protestant Democrat has with with a wet machine boss in New York or chicago, oars Parker, in 1904, ent. What keeps the two parties to- gether is the fact that nearly all; politicians are anxious to keep their i The surest way to lose a po- litical job is to stray off the party | Houston, S There are plenty of men holding} Con office in both parties who feel that here ought to be a realignment. But if they were to organize for a hird party movement they would be reasonably certain to lose their seats in Congress or their gubernatorial chair and to lose the, opportunity to with each other. Of course the condition herein described may be somewhat altered nthe campaign. It is barely pos- sible, but not likely, that one or both of the candidates can unite all his factions behind him in_an inspir- ational campaign. The Republicans have demonstrated more of a faculty for this sort of thing than the Dem- ocrats, but this year groups in botoh | parties are threatening to knife the ticket if they don’t get what they want at the convenio 8. . New York, passing: One must go a long way back|damsels in ga: to find a time when factions rep- resenting completely opposite view- points weren’t fighting for control in both parties. classic ex-| st ample is found in the conventions of 1896, when free silver delegates bolted the Republican convention and gold standard Democrats bolted the Democratic convention, und. sudden|; air. thing in repetition of that convention at Bridges don’t make the chasm shallower, i . 8 proved this year that Republicans and Democrats differ far more among themselves than measure in the whole session, if; ton street. memory serves right, found the vote | divided on party line So if ithing like party leadership figures ' like do such good for the country as they|in the coming campaign it will have had no counte-snart in Congress, [IN NEW YORK 1)s¢: June 11—Noted The roof dwellers of man- hattan are out in their gayest sum- |f (mer rainment. Beach umbrellas and awnings of rainbow hues; tea tables of bright purple, green or yellow; chairs painted to match the awnings umberellas or tables; summer silks and sweaters reclining in steamer chairs Il this 12 to 14 stories above the Like some fantastically musical comedy. deck of a pleasure yacht that had become suspended in mid it’s quite the most unreal lanhattan, when you're leaning over the roofiof time....... The Democrats had been having/stands...... An amazing amount the same sort of a scrap, learning a hard lesson when they ditched] is spent well off the groun...... Bryan for the time being and nomi-| He works in an office building and inated the Wall Street candidate,| goes home to a skyscraper apart- ment, traveling on the elevated or The terrible 1924 row at Madison | under the city. . . . They dance Square Garden, ending after morejon the roof and attend roof the- than a hundred ballots by a compro-latres. .. . . Their feet rest on terra mise, brings us nearer to the pres-|firma only during those few hours That was a case of machine |when they shop or walk from sta- politicians, wets against drys, Cath-|tion to destination. olics against Protestants and north against south and west. t desire of most Democratic politi- cians to win with harmony rather carnation in his buttonhole each day than lose with discord will avoid a',.... |that ‘adorn the Central Park me- morial to the soldiers who died in . Those summer .. And the growing vogue of vari-colored berets. ..... Sidewalk merchants vending ragged- the average New Only the - The traffic cop who .« The wilted the great war... . = haircuts. . looking geraniums. . Not a_ single|The dandelion leaf ped going about sus.” .. Lon Chaney. nor, the overnig! movie: So if any- at every and a fine in She brings from Hol perches Broadway. . and pretty muscial comed; Helen Chandler, the deserting Broadwa: e sandwic! -can straw signs: “Straw hats Or like the particularly |and wait... . If Yorker's time wears a fresh wreaths that Jilers of Hous: Lon Chaney ith the “mis- mn And looking very much «. Janet Gay- find getting introduced to New swanky recep- . Very young, extremely of the little actress. Perhaps the best we have produced in many a year. . |And Greta Uissen sipping te: saree a new ‘ad. .... It’s a silk butterfly that tly on the left shoulder. arl Carroll busying about ++. And Willia thony McGuire, who though he wa: @ producer until he lost his mone; . Then they gave him to write ard he’s back in the Rolls-Royce list. . . m An. oung actress, for Hollywood. men who wear hats..... The old cle while you wait” are out again. But try = have plent; re: y- Hammon TALIS IN THE SMOKING CAR, SENATOR. MCFADDLE !—~ ESPECIALLY YouR PERSONAL W EYPERIENCES AND FRIENDSHIPS N WIth ALL THE FAMOUS MEN OF WASHINGTON! ~. I INSIST WAT NoU BE MY BREAKFAST N GUEST IN THE MORNING! ~~ \ ~wER-AH=UmM-m> T DONT MEAN To OFFEND YoUR PRINCIPLES ly put oF Mr. Hoover’s opponents. They ask each other, “Wil uu not be bitter if you are beaten By this man?” They all ‘answer that they certainly ile Moreover, they are submitting the bitter herbs to = tetary Mellon and imploring him to decide that the stuff is so sure to make the hepublican party sick that he could not think of turning over the Pennsylvania delegation to Secretary Hoover. In fact, there is at Kansas City and in various parts of the country a sus- picious readiness of prominent Republicans to declare that it will be impossible for them to escape the gall bitterness, not to speak of the bond of iniquity, in case Mr. Hoover is nominated, As an argument for temporary use at the Kanas City convention, this may pass. But as a prophecy of what will happen if Secretary Hoover is nominated, it is, too much to swallow easily. One of the great functions of y copenisetion is to whip men into line. No- ly could have been thore bitter than was Senator Conkling of New York when he was defeated in his historic attempt it did not take endorsement of National Convention at Chicago. it acts as a tonic to disappointed gegen 4 SENATOR ~~ BUT AH, How'D You UKE A LITTLE “NIGHT- CAP” fan L CERTAINLY EXSOVED YOUR Eq um-mM~ HARR-RR-UMF~- You ARE VERY KIND, - CITIZEN WATSON Ie A PS TASte orR“Wo, I Feel \ FROM A MEDICINAL STANDPOINT ONLY, You UNDERSTAND fa. 4 COURSE ~ ‘um-M- KAFF, {nant water which cannot be removed. .|or two all discomfort disappears and MALARIA—(Part 1) It has been definitely proven that malaria is a blood parasite which is introduced into the human being only through the bite of the female mos- quito of the genus anopheles. It is one of the most serious dis- eases encountered in the warm damp climates, as no other infection com- pares with it as a killing abling disease, with the exception of tuberculosis. In the United States malaria has decreased within the last fifty years. This is entirely due to the improved sanitary measures which have been discovered by the Government in- vestigators. f In all probability, within a few years, malaria w: be entirely stamped out in civilized districts. The best measures for its preven- tion are the draining of swampy lands and the spreading of a surface of crude oil upon any pools of stag- It is also necessary to protect in- fected persons from the bite of this mosquito because in no other way is the disease transmitted from one person to another. There are several types of malaria which are distinguished from each other by the frequency of the par- oxysmal fever. t shall not go into detail as to this difference, since the cause and the treatment are alike in either of the forms. This disease is characterized by three stages. The first stage is a period of internal congestion, when the blood leaves the skin, producing a pallor and the f.cling of intense chill, This feeling of coldness is only an illusion, however, since the fever usually reaches its maximum toward the end of this stage. The patient then feels flushes of warmth over his body which mark the be- ginning of the hot state and during which the face becomes reddened, and the skin, over the entire body, hot. The third stage begins with small beads of sweat upon the face. This sweati:.g gradually spreads un- til the entire body is covered with a copious perspiration. Much toxic ma- terial is discharged through the skin by this process, and within an hour the patient usually sinks ipto a re- freshing slecp. The total duration of this paroxysm averages from ten to twelve hours, but may be much shorter. The disease is frequently inter- mittent. As a result, the patient may be considered cured, but have a recurrence of the disease from sev- eral months or years apart even without any possibility of further contact with the mosquito. Occasionally the fever undergoes pernicious changes. The patient may sink inte forms of brain dis- turbance such as acute delirium or rapidly developing coma; or, the disease may attack the digestive system, peonclag vomiting, intense prostration and diarrhea. There is another type of a serious nature known as a black water fever. Quinine is generally regarded as a specific for malaria, but I have come to the conclusion that in some the erudite drama critic, who comes from Cadiz, Ohio. 2 8 When it comes to “rackets,”| Broadway is impossible to beat! The other day a theatrical man who is a golf liound was complaining in his office that scores of golf balls are lost n a lake on the Van Court- land course. He was overheard and within a week a “racketeer” had bought the “lake concession” for $30 a month. The concession gives him the exclusive privilege of dragging the lake and reclaiming the lost golf balls. These he re-sells to the golfers or to second hand sport store owners—the sale depending on the condition of the ball when found, Tie that one, if you can! ig GILBERT SWAN. | ARBS —_—_—-"—ese A bargain sale is an arrangement whereby a woman can ruin one suit and buy another. ‘ A school for infants in New York City has a jazz band. Discarding the idea that the little ones never should be punished, ; No wonder the movies started to talk, after all those years of listen- ing to people reading the subtitles. It was enough to make the movies ery right out loud. Who said there were no modern Solomons? A West Virginia man the other day divided a million dol- lars among seventeen relatives. It's getting to be quite a serious problem for’a man about to marry to choose a little woman that will help him with the, dishes, Ka.sas City has been allotted 825 tickets to the Republican national convention. The man who distrib- utes them successfully among 400,- 000 persons should get the nomina- tion, eee Cheer up! There can’t be any more divorces than there are mar- riages. peuaaie The Texas liquor act makes pos- and dis-|' individuals it acts as a poison, ana it is in these cases that the danger. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ous forms occur which were men- tioned in the preceding paragraph. One of the oddities of this disease is the fact that it has a tendency to cure certain other diseases. This fact is now bein; rimented with to some extent in the treatment of some severe chronic diseases such as tuberculosis, insanity, and syphilis. This benefit is probably caused by the fever and sweating of the ma- larial patient, producing oxidation and elimination of some of the tox- ins of the other disease. This is easily understood to a person who is familiar with the fasting cure, QUESTION” AND ANSWERS Question: K. L. writes: “Have been reading your health column and have read some very interesting things. Will you kindly tell me what causes one’s stomach to get sore—right in the pit of it—and to swell immediately upon eating any- thing?” a Answer: Your trouble may be gastritis which means inflammation of the stomach; or, gastric or duodenal ulcer may be forming. Give your stomach a rest for a few days, then use good food combina- tior& and if your distress goes not disappear, go to a ie diagnosti- cian or X-ray specialist and have a thorough examination. An incipient ulcer discovered in time can be easily cured, and through an early exam- ination you may save yourself need- less pain and expense, and avoid a serious operation. Question: Ruth J, asks: “Are cereals with sliced fresh fruit a good combination?” Answer: Cereals should never be combined with acid fruits. However, a glass of orange juice taken about an hour before a cereal breakfast is all right, as this fruit juice leaves the stomach almost entirely within that time. Question: V. C. W. writes: “I have been suffering with my back for four months. Either strained it or it is lumbago, don’t know which. As long as I am standing straight there is no pain, but when I stoop continually it seems to hurt worse than even heavy lifting. My work is very heavy. Have taken treat- ments from a chiropractor but got no relief. Seéms to be very low in My. back, sometimes going into my ips.’ _ Answer: If you received no -re- lief from chiropractic treatments it may be because you have a form of lumbago or rheumatism. In that case it will be necessary for you to eliminate the rheumatic poisons be- fore you will be free from your suf- fering. Send large, self-addressed, stamped envelope for article on rheumatism. else in the picture, no-one could possibly overlook Mary Brian. , As the mountain girl, Miss Brian is altogether lovely. There is an ap- Ppealing wistful quality to her beau- ty in this role which could scarcely go with a more sophisticated part. The picture gets off to a fast start with the Beagles renewing their old feud with the Hicks family when one of the Beagle boys catches his sister kissing Jim Hicks. Then Beery and Hatton, dressed in the garb Daniel Boone made famous, are introduced as “the greatest sharpshooters in the world,’ laying an’ act with a traveling carnival, CAPITOL THEATRE Laughter and tears are side by side in “The Last Laugh,” the re- markable imported picture directed by F. W. Murnau and starring Emil Jannings, will be exhibited at the Capitol Theatre for three days com- mencing tomorrow, Tuesday. This Photoplay played on Broadway to capacity audiences. During its en- gagement it was pronounced by the daily papers :o be one perfect mo- tion picture of the season. Special articles and comment were written about it because of the artistic pre- sentation of its dramatic qualities. tion of the joys and sorrows—the tragedy and hurianity—of an old Porter in a Berlin hotel is a human document so true, so vital and so profound that his audiences are held spellbound. No other portrayg! in Jannings’ brilliant career equals that which he gives in “The Last Laugh.” This old porter is an everyday man of our own time, one whom all le can sympathize with, laugh Seth and understaud. Ph phically the picture is as as it is dramatically and in heart interest. While Jannings is the center of interest throughout the picture the supporting cast is of that Continental excellence which presents an artist in even the small- est parts —__—_ It is estimated that a motor en- ine now being tested in Venice will give an ai a | theoretic speed of 625 miles an ind in. of 470_ mil session of more than a quart evi- dence of bootlegging. Some excep- tion should be made, of course, for politicians. eS | .. At the Movies ———<—<______.._. ° ELTINGE THEATRE Wallace Beery and Raymond Hat- ton have led gloom another knockout in “The Big Killing,” their team comedy, which is featured ‘on the Eltinge screen for today and lesday. As “Powder-Horn Pete” and “Dead-Eye Da these two of mirth are at their very jicture deals with the adven- pened aharpahootera,” ‘encounter sharps! 1 when they become involved in a Ken-| tucky mountain feud. While Beery and Hatton keep the laughs coming so fast that there is scarcely time to notice ¢ | °. best. The encounter | the One Thin Woman Gained 15 Pounds ~ in Five Weeks » urged to weight and get back their} and strength with ere Tablets. One woman ened 15 pounds in five weeks and that’s going fast svough for anyone, a . y takes all risk—Read this ironclad guarantee, If after tak- E 4 Basia, Balt ete thin, underweight man or woman doesn’t gain at least 5 and tary? oa, your t is authorized we return ice. The name y’s Cod Liver Oil Tablets h hortened—; ask ot McCoys Tablets af Comaa’s inne; drug stores, ~~ - w q

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