The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR ' An independent Newspaper i THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) [5 AES SAARI AE accented i +k Tribune Company, Bis. Pe aie) satared’ et the postoffice at Bis- Marck as second ciass mail matter. George D. Mann .. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ....... .-- Daily by mail, per “ear, (in Bismarca) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily dy mail, outside of North Dakota ... in state. bet year eat Weekly by mail, in state, three years . Weekly by mail.’ outside of North Dakota, ar Les Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Weekly by tl Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusi also the local news of spontaneous origin herein. ter herein are also reserved. SSS Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW CHICAGO Tower Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) POLLUTED AIR It has been apparent for some time that the air prob- lem in large cities is assuming formidable proportions, and that smaller ecmmunities also must deal with this problem. This is largely due to the increase of motor cars, which exhale fumes as deadly as those of the classic dragon. Communities in low-lying areas are at present almost helpless against this menace, for menace it certainly is. In all likelihood, the time will come when action of some sort will be imperative against atmosphere so in- fected witi dirt and gas as to render it perilous in the extreme. Great strides have been taken in safe- guarding the water supply in large municipalities. But that is cbviously only half the battle. The American Society of Heating and Ventilating En- gineers has a little device called a “dust counter” with which it can measure the dirt content of the atmos- Phere. It shows the air of St. Louis to be the most im- pure of the twenty-four largest cities in the United States. By the same test Boston has the purest air. Pittsburgh loses its reputation as the “Smoky City,” its atmosphere being clearer and cleaner than either that of St. Louis or Cincinnati. New York City stands about midway in the list. Automobile engineers have virtually eliminated smok- ing exhaust pipes and heating and ventilating engineers say it is possible to keep soot and smoke in the chim- ney at a saving in fuel bills and to the purification of the atmosphere. Smoke control some day will be as effective and universal as the filtration of public water supplies. ASKING TOO MUCH OF EDUCATION In all ages man has been burdened with a self-im- posed idolatry, although by no means invariably in the field of religion. Today we worship school and col- lege courses. These are the graven images of the period. Whatever goes wrong, the school and college are expected to right it. To them we have given our and civic responsibility. When human behavior pointing, when injustice stalks abroad, when ‘k that the only remedy lies in education. or curative powers, The educational system is but one of countless factors for good that must be kept alive by the struggles of the race. The wise leaders of itutions of higher learning are the first to admit that there are both possibilities and limitations in the individual which transcend the influence of courses or even of teachers. It will take an incredible change indeed in the school curriculum to reform the motorist who hogs the road, or the pest who reads aloud the movie titles, or the moron. There are people with shallow characters and others with deep characters. There are those ‘whose selfishness exceeds the bounds of decency, and others who think of their fellows as well as of themselves, This distribution of qualities, good and bad, is the re- sult of heredity and environment and must take thou- sands of years to change. Education cannot correct these things with a wave of a wand. AN UNCONQUERED EVIL In the Harrison drug act the people of the United States have a law which was enacted for the control of the sale and distribution of habit-forming drugs. It is in no sense reform legislation, but a practical measure great national evil. Under its operation annually vast quantities of nar- cotic drugs smuggled into the country are seized and designed for the elimination of numerous arrests are made of peddlers and addicts. ‘The fact that the United States has the greatest per capita consumption of opium among the: leading na- tions of the world is an index to the ratio of consump- tion here of other and more vicious drugs, such as heroin. As more than 90 per cent of the drugs unlaw- fully used are smuggled into the country, and di tributed surreptitiously, there is no way of knowing how many addicts are at present in the United States. Estimates range from one hundred thousand to a mil- ' lion, Rigid enforcement of the Harrison act has not stopped the drug traffic. Dope of the deadliest kinds is still ob- tainable, particularly in the cities, and every commun. ity has its addicts. But the law and its enforcement have been reasonably successful, and have undone none of the effective work previously done unless it was by cooling the ardor of organizations and individuals fight- ing the drug traffic. : If it is true that young men and women, some of high school age, are forming the drug habit and most crimes of violence are committed by men under the influence of narcotic drugs, there is still a field for educational work, THE COMFORTABLE AGE ‘the man of the hour without naming him. The Bismarck ‘lribune eveesecees: President and Publishe cee STST 7.20 seeceeee 1.00 vee DED ely entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and ublished All rights of republication of all other mat- eee Fi . Bldg. YORK Fifth Ave. Bl F eTROIT Kresge Bldg. ———— ecm beyond solution, we shrug our shoulders is the power and influence of the universities es, but in simple truth they have no such Unknowingly, Henry Ford has delivered a campaign - speech that will rank among the most impressive of those that have been made and will be made for Her- bert Hoover. The Detroit automobile manufacturer is a » Hoover supporter, but he was not talking politics in this interview, which made the former commerce secretary nee, Those are his qualifications. He is fitted for the job of “social engineer” and ready and willing to assume the responsibilitiés it involves. Mr. Hoover has anticipated the thoughts of the mo- tor car maker. He has said that business must not be handicapped and restrained, but that, if this is to be the “comfortable” as well as the “indust?: age, busi- {ness must progress in such a way that it will add to the comfort and well-being of the people. . THE “FENCE” ‘Individuals and organizations dealing with the crime problem agree that the receiver of stolen goods, the “fence” in criminal parlance, is to a greater degree than any other factor responsible for the crimes of rob- bery and burglary. Stolen goods are of little value un- less they can be turned into cash, The “fence” makes it possible for criminals to obtain the benefit of their spoils. Do away with the “fence” and crime will have no market. The existence of the “fence” is explained by the fact that more than $3,000,000 in merchandise and jewelry is stolen ip New York City in the course of a year and the 90 per cent that is not recovered is disposed of through “fences.” The “fence” is an highiy organized criminal institu- tion. ‘The receivers of stolen goods keep carefully in the background, plotting and planning through numerous “lower-downs.” Frequently the “fence,” posing as a jobber or manufacturer, disposes of stolen goods through legitimate merchants in distant cities and towns. Stolen merchandise, therefore, offers competi- tion to honest trade. Society could help put the “fence” out of business if it refused to trade with firms and individuals suspected of dealing with criminals. Stolen goods usually betrays itself by its price tag. Pergons who knowingly buy from thieves, encourage them to prey upon society, and upon ren e those who aid them in disposing of their ill-gotten wares, Still, if the country must have thrilling entertain- ment, ocean hops are better for it than murder trials. The difference between stalling and petting is that stalling is done in a prize ring instead of a coupe. An Arkansas man was stung to death by bees, so you can’t blame everything on the night clubs. | Editorial Comment | HOW 26,000 CARS GAIN IMMUNITY (Minneapolis Journal) ¢ 5 Oil companies, allied in a well known nation-wide group, own and operate more than twenty-six thousand motor cars and trucks. These vehicles are on the road every day in the year, and at all hours, operating over good highways and bad highways. iat In 1927 not a one of them was in collision with a rail- way train. This singular immunity has no element of mystery. Every employee signs a card promising to stop before crossing any railway track. And every car or truck carries a tag announcing that it comes to a full stop at each grade crossing. Ks a result, not one employe of these oil companies was killed or injured in a grade crossing accident last year. If all drivers of vehicles voluntarily adopted and obeyed the same rule, they too would be immune. Universal grade crossing stops. would cost the average |; motorist not more than two or three minutes a day. A low price to pay for safety! Because too many drivers are unwilling to pay, for grade crossing safety, the ridiculously low price of two or three minutes a day, Collisions Setieanl Yailway trains and automobiles each year kill twenty-five hundred Americans and injure seven thousand. For two or three trifling minutes, daily saved for drivers going nowhere in particular and having nothing important to do after they get there, the American people pay in blood each year a far higher price than we paid to win the Spanish and Philippine Wars combined. A BOUNDARY THAT UNITES, NOT DIVIDES (Duluth Herald) MacKenzie King, premier of Canada, told the assem- bly of the ae of Nations in Geneva yesterday about the unfortified three-thousand-mile boundary between the United States and Canada, and in simple but eloquent and forceful phrases held it up as an example to Europe and the world. , That example is something that Europe ought to be- hold, and MacKenzie King did the world a great service by oread it up for the admiration and emulation of the nations of Europe. For three thousand miles, over lakes and plains and mountains, this boundary runs, an invisible line not marked by even a Fingle fortress and without a single gun aimed across it from either side. If Canada wanted to invade the United States, or if the United States wanted to invade Canada, there is nothing to stop them—nothing, that is, except some- thing that is mightier than great guns, stronger than forts and more powerful than armies and navies, That barrier is will. The barrier to invasion across that boundary, a bar- rier more effective than anything man can make of steel and stone, is the fact that neither nation wants to in- ivade the other, that neither nation wishes the other anything but good, and that both nations realize that the prosperity and welfare of either is the welfare and prosperity of the other. The spiritual is always mightier than the material. Europe may fortify its boundaries until they are tow- ering masses of bristling walls, but it can never achieve a pestegtion 80 complete and defense so sure as the fabric of good will that has been built up across the boundary between Canada and the United Stat A HUNDRED. YEARS SINCE TOLSTOI’S BIRTH (Minneapolis Tribune) was higher than ‘at any other time, |1ecrease, 26.4 per cent. of the first of the last two Republi- can landslides, and the voters turned out the party in power. in keeping with the times. All the up. 4 SS been equipped with set-ups. By RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) , Washington, Sept. 17.—In the elec-' tion year of 1920 the cost of living | cities. The largest decrease was shown in Jacksonville, Fla. Between drive and volley. ity showed the largest living cost \¥Sing a set for indoor practice. bef ince, tee ee aalnce, That was the year lat retail showed an average drop of {3.7 per cent between June last year [PPAnl Kinas of beef ing righ It seems likely that il kinds of beef kept going right were good and betes about, the Mak |UP> increasing in price from 12 to cost of living and that if running 22 Per cent. Pork chops remained expenses had been lower than usual Sout, stationary, bacon and ham at the time, the Democrats still Were 8 and 7 per cent cheaper, while Might be in control. “But this is only [aa ear Rice poets andl ip, speculati i A shat the ance seas propragdig Other notable decreases by per- litieally according to what happens 'Ce"tage were: Bread 1, potatoes 52, to be biting him most and worst, will prove better than the new. ‘+ of-town.” Y what this item is about. version of a big fight. | What a Whale of a Difference a Few Words Make | ing, I am told, has grown rougher ritzy country clubs now have a set- The Westchester-Biltmore and the Newport colonies; the literary round tables, and all such yh e ping pong tables, I am further in- formed, now measure nine feet. One is now allowed to smash, top, i Even Tilden, June, 1920, and June, 1923, Kansas | Richards and Kinsey are reoprted The time may come when, even Cost of various articles of food |S grandma said, the old pastimes Jack Dempsey, as most of the world now knows, has turned actor. His play is now being tried “out-|ec But that isn’t exactly /little money. It seems that there is a scene in which the ex-champ has to wham and pum- mel an opponent during a stage From Broadway comes the word that tice 7, onions 27, cabbage 43, prunes |Dempsey has insisted on being a .|to live, and as the post-war deflation 13, raisins 5, and without particular regard for basic | The principal corse ‘iving costs have been pretty well stabilized for the last a years, so they're not likely to figure in the present campaign except, perhaps, in the case of the farmer, miner, or mill worker who isn’t receiving the wherewithal to meet them. Sirloin steak The latest figures, assembled by |Blate Meee the bureau of labor statistics, show | reg that the cost of living, as accurately | jpeg £ lamb as it can be determined, is exactly, a ney: 10 per cent higher than in the last Milk pre-war year of 1913. That is, it was | ute: 70 per cent higher June 15, and has ‘By had little chance or reason to fluctu- | ate since. The high mark was 16.5 per cent, ' reported for June, 1920. There is nothing to show that the Wilson administration, rather than the war, was responsible for that, especially ° since 25 or 30 per cent was lopped | off that figure before it went out of office. At the end of 1921 we|® were still paying 74.38 per cent more (quart) . Potatoes . went on we got down to 66.3, but that’s rock bottom since 1913, ,. For more than six years now liv- ing costs have run from two-thirds to three-fourths above pre-war. Subsequent Percentages, taken from June in each year, have been: 1923, 69.7; 1924, 69.1; 1925, 73.5; 1926, 74.8; 1927, 34, and 1927, 70. From June, 1927, to June, 1928, decreases of from .5 to 4.2 per cent were shown in 32 of the principal “what's what” when.” It has | phisticated era. tell me it has better. The current year is being marked’ by a revival of in- terest in Tolstoi, who was born exactly a hundred years mre Everyone concedes that Tolstoi was one of the in- tellectual giants Enppeed by the nineteenth century. He was a many-sided figure, a novelist, land-owner, and social philosopher. We might assume that enough time has elapsed since his death so that a precise evaluation of his presning to civilization might be made. But that we shall loak for in vain. Tolstoi was a paring figure to many of his contemporaries, and he is likely to re- main a puzzling figure to students for many hundreds of \-| years to come. There is no disputing Tolstoi’s pre-eminence as a novelist, although it would be difficult to say where he should be ranked in relation to the other of all time. Probably “War and Peace” would be fa- vored by most critics as the best specimen of the epic- Panoramic novel yet produced. is was a remarkable product. At times Tolstoi was a brilliant ist in the narrow sense of the words; at other times he became the propagandist and the preacher. He was too full of nee 0 he a Sor ae aia oe 1 erhaps the most appeal ut Tolstoi was his insistence uy piritey ing thing. ob uestions about life and art. No conventional explanat fied him. As men—even tl they ordinarily become fonder of sett aq of raising them. Tolstoi, the individ something in common with Eee, the character. In their ual probings and losophizings about life, there was a strong affinity between the two. Tolstoi was for- ‘discarding beliefs which had become second nature . In the specials ot Tolstoi as an old man wan- over Russi mn ever satis- F shed : Mr. Ford, in a prophetic mood, sees America on the (YT SAY SOHN, ILLUSTRIOUS Y So. OF “THE CELESTIAL Hf \ CHANG, Do UP “THESE Few } COLLARS AND SHIRT OF MINE, —+AND IN A FEW DAS,: 1 wilt ser LE MN wis aig { Now! <I AM Goins To \ MAKE GREAT WEALTH.THRO A \ “TALKING SIGN- BOARD, WHICH WOULD BE FUTILE fo EXPLAIN “f Yas, fe BECAUSE OF VIS . INTRICACIES fe jCanned salmon 9, milk 1, butter 4, eggs 16, cheese 3, flour 4, beans 32, coffee 3, and oranges 27. The following table shows the av- erage difference per pound, in store prices, between 1913 and 1928: IN NEW YORK New York, Se: nothing in particular and every- thing in general... Ping pong is following wo back! That polite little parlor pas- time of grandma’s day is now be-| ing done by the “who’s who,” the like saying that sparrows are more ia rance in the mic |was acquainted with it intimately in my cradle days, the old-timers Sets are now on display in the Manhattan shops and the play- | OUR BOARDING HOUSE : By Ahc-n | realistic actor, after the best fash- ion of the modern school of acting. With the result, of course, that the management is hard put to find enough men to “play opposite.” Ralph Smith, a former heavy- weight whammer, has been taking ‘more than his salary’s worth of punishment. The “back stage” boys tell me that Dempsey finds it bananas 3. increases were: 25.9 cents 47.4 12. 18.5|all but impossible to “pull” his \ 43.2 punches, 27.3 51.6) From one authority I have it that 19.4 42.2 the management doesn’t expect to 219 87.1|keep an actor in the “opposite” role 8.8 14 |for more than two weeks at a time. 85.2 53.9|The call has gone out for pruisers » 22.9 38.8 | who will stand up to Jack’s knock- 33 5.7|down. To date, Iam told, three are 5.6 9.2|prepared to take a “murdering,” 8.6 9.9|each to appear for three-day pe- 10.6 12.8 riods and then lay off for repairs. 18 2.9|This is perhaps the most peculiar theatrical Broadway. situation to arise on se —————@| A prominent Tin Pan Alley song it. 17.— Notes on selector is on record as saying that successful songs contain one of the Is: “mother,” “home,” “moon,” “Mary,” or “love.” Yes, and the unsuccessful ones, too. It’s and the “when's abruphy. made its ist of this so- Although I never successful than \gold-finch. Try, for instanée, to find a gold-finch in New York! And try to find a song that dares go to press without men- tion of a moon, mother or love. grown bigger and! Musicians have begun to drift road tours and their revisits to HO, MAS HOOPLA. ALLA “TIME You CLUM IN MAKEE ME LOTTA TALK BY PAY UM BILL BLY ANY N BLY # + NINE “TEN LONG “TIME MoisTH Now, You-Alo PA ee | LEE DOLLA SICKY-FLN CENT!. Ho, WHEN Yad BLING IA LAUNLY, I LOSE MONEY, WHEN 4 Mou No CLUM, I AM ein MAAN -HAPPY fee ‘ Italy, and way - nations. lonesomely at the side entrance of |follow the dictates of his own desire the Metropolitan; the corridor of ‘to become a jazz singer, they did Aeolian or the*sunny side of Car-|not know they were asking him to negie Hall. They talk over their repeat in pictures the incident that summer fortune and wonder about developed his career on the stage. winter sym-!It is claimed that there has never phonies. They are a hearty, happy, |been a picture on Broadway that has backslapping, well - fed, well - wined looking crew — perhaps the jolliest assemblage to be found on any street corner. rehearsals for late Marquis de Mores, dent of western North featured in the history of the terri- back into town from their summer | tO7y an og early eighties, and her . marck and Mandan while attending the Mandan fair. The town of Me- dora, founded by Marquis de Mores, was named for his bride. The Ma: quise and her daughter were spend- ing some time at their Medora home. luth, va Lignite Coal company. LIGHTS AND SHADOWS If it isn’t worry about one thing, it is worry about something else. Sorry Seal ines that hi worrying usually imagines is financial problems are more difficult than those of his friends, or that his family difficulties are more serious, or that his health is more impaired, when the truth is that most People who worry have no more difficult problems than any other person has the habit of MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1928 You can cultivate a calmness of mind by the Hindoo method of not emotional geting to CS caged things. acti thing it ote care of Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. to face. The travel through life is a strange is not-nearly as important as Pale) at oe Oe ged the way we pred to it. - You can cur momenta of happiness and our {help yourself a great deal by using times of sorrow. fo is almost |healthful affirmations, but you must evenly divided between the lights and shadows. Problems that seem the most difficult often have a pe- culiar method of solving themselves in the course of time, When a person has two paths of conduct, and he is undecided which to take, he will usually find that Khrad one of them would be suit- able, The two problems that cause the most worry are finances and family affairs. you yourself Gas A 3 about something you shor take an inventory of your- self. A careful analysis with a pen- cil on a piece of paper will usually point out the trouble if you are han- est with yourself, Most people try to live beyond their incomes. This is only a foolish pandering to vanity. Most people can control their expenses by mak- ing @ few changes in their habits, You can enjoy a thirty cent picturé show as much as a three dollar play, and a round steak at thirty-five cents a@ pound is really more tasty and wholesome than an expensive steak at twice the price. It takes two to make.a quarrel, and you will usually find that where you are having difficulty with some member of your family, you your- self are largely at fault. A little concession will often make things feel pleasanter without costing any- thing. Worry and anxiety waste a terri- ble amount of energy, and so greatly imperil the functions of the body that serious diseases are often the consequence. It is a good plan to give yourself affirmative ere before you go to sleep, such as the following: I am improving myself day by day; physically I am growing stronger, mentally I am increasing my knowl- edge, and financially I am saving a 2 I am becoming con- tented with life and confident of my- solve as the problems of checkers or chess. Germany, Austria, the GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | Our Yesterdays | Dat TEN YEARS AGO A. C. Townley gnd Willianf Lemke of St. Paul were guests at a luncheon given by Lynn Frazier. Private Ben A. Mooney of Co. A, 1st N. D. national guard, was the first’man to return to Bismarck from active service in France. Mooney lost his arm at Cantigny,and was sent to a reconstruction hospital near Wash- ington. furlough, He was in Bismarck on a TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Marquise de Mores, widow-of the jioneer resi- akota who ise, visited Bis- r- Mrs. B. G, Skulason of Grand Forks was the house st of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Taylor. eapieaal Oe pity man were imported from Du- linn., to work for the Wash- Coffins of two unknown dead were unearthed in thi ling for the fy to ee FORTY YEARS AGO Oscar Will, local seedman and horticulturist, went to Grand Forks Pa an exhibit for the ‘air, territorial The W. C. T. U, held services at the state penitentiary. Mrs. E. H. Wilson was in charre of the meeti ital 00 Rev.Charles ker addres: risoners. The 8th beet which left T. about June 1 for Fort Yates was ex arrive any day. J. Penfield their home- came homes on theli lent, * or [At the Movies jes AT! \ arsadt THE CAPITON and Mrs, {ny eir ‘also learn to cultivate health through dieting, exercising and proper mén- tal attitude. The emotions upon which the mind dwells become the strongest. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: R. J.B. writes: “Am suffering from severe pain in my hip which at times is practically use- less, It is two years now since it first affected me. Doctors say no disease, but mention a ible ar- thritis. I get slight relief from elec- trical treatment. Might say I was all right for six months previous to this last week. Would like to know if you can,advise any treatment.” nswer: You should take the treatment I advise for the different forms of chronic rheumatism, out- lined in a series of articles which I will be fiad to send you upon re- ceipt of a large se ssed stamped envelope. Question: Mrs. K. L. asks: “Do you think custards are wholesome deserts? And if so, will you please state how they should be made, since you do not allow us any sugar?” Answer: A custard, when prop- erly made, may be used as a dessert or as the protéin part of a meal. While I do not advise the use of raw eggs and milk, when these foods are correctly mixed and cooked together the protein elements seem to com- bine freely. Raisins, figs, or any of the dried fruits added to a custard will give a sufficient sweet taste in Place of the sugar commonly used. Question: lary G. writes: “My chest—that part exposed where the dress is cut low—is always red, al- though sometimes I do not go out- doors in the sun for days. Do you think it is from nervousness or indi- gestion?” Answer: When the skin is very ted on the chest above the dress line it is sometimes an indication of the self. I feel friendly toward the systematic acidosis caused by an ae and things which I consid-|over-acidity of the stomach, but of ifficulties are as interesting to'course sometimes it is only due to |exposure because of the skin being thin and sensitive. ll el pas Russia They gather cantor, trained to follow his father’s career, running away from home to, scored such a sensational hit. While Jolson loves the stage, he admits that he loves the wonderful opportunities afforded him as a mo- tion picture star even more. In “The Jazz Singer,” which Warner Bros. will present at the Capitol theatre commencing today (Monday), is May McAvoy, who will be seen as Mary le, an exquisite star of musical jcomedy, who helps Jack Robin— played by Jolson—to achieve the suc- cess his genius demands. ELTINGE THEATRE “Beau Broadway” featured on the screen at the Elti for today and Tuesday has Lew Cody and Lear, Pringle in the leading roles. In “Beau Broadway” this per have brought to the silver sheet character delineations with an ocean of laughs through which runs a coursing current deep with whim- ant sencarDey tigh s a New Yor! it promoter, Cody is the typical man-about-town, And as the woman who seems toc worldly. Miss Pringle is the one who “understands”—and shows him the way to true love. Never before has a role so ideally suited Cody as does “Gentleman” Jim Lambert. And “Yvonne,” Miss Pringle fits becomingly into a Pak to great ad- that shows her talents vantage. The supporting cast is a most un- usual one, including Sue Carol, 1928 Wampas Baby Star, Hugh Trevor, collegiate young actor who Lp as a “high- brow” boxer. einie Conklin, former Sennett comic, vyweight champion, it Guard, Jack Herrick, and a galaxy of prize- and sporting world characters who play “as is” in the production. ° BARBS The so-called busy bee really is a loafer, says a scientist. Let it be mentioned as an extenuating circum- saps. erty me the bd pro-¥ juces si more honey scientist. ie a ene It takes a ray of li te haere) Sree er ‘| oo in New eck tn Ostowen scored the pets = fv taht eresteat pret his’ career. He they may get mad larged 6 Roatis ohs of the ttarstet BROWN Hi , one stars HOSIERY the. se: but fo: chas h ‘in are two new somber browns, Samson Raphselson’s Which russet acajou browns devise Wary of te aly abn of m | itn Steg tcnige tr® BoE Wat oahgtes Pali gt Beh on health fod dt uddressed to him, |i) ly

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