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) _ ww y os ~ , THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 193 «RULE IN GONGRESS MAY BE TAKEN BY HOPEFUL DEMOCRATS Returns Indicate Closest Party Ballot in Many Years (By The Associated Press) Republicans and Democrats were battling for control of congress today as additional returns from yesterday's election indicated the closest party balance in many years. In the senate, where the Democrats need a gain of 10 for a majority, they already had netted five and were leading for Republican seats in three cther states. Still another disputed state—Kentucky—was yet to report. In the house, needing a net gain of 53, the Democrats had picked up 21. In 21 additional Republican districts Democrats were leading, while six others remained too close for definite forecast. In Kentucky, from which no returns have come, five districts ‘nave been stubbornly disputed. It appeared that much might de- pend on the Blue Grass state, which under a new law did not begin ballot- counting until today. Maintenance of existing Democratic leads, which was, of course, by no means certain, and a Democratic victory in Kentuoky, could conceivably bring both senate and house very close to even divisions, The Democratic attack shook the crowns of several house Republican leaders. Speaker Longworth was ahead in the first Ohio district, but he was having @ hard fight. Repre- sentative Hawley, Oregon, chairman of the ways and means committee, and co-author of the Hawley-Smoot tariff act, likewise was in trouble. The first woman candidate for the senate, Representative Ruth Hanna McCormick of Illinois, was over- whelmed by her Democratic opponent, J. Hamilton Lewis. The election brought back the blind Thomas Gore, a Democrat, to his old seat in the senate from Oklahoma. Another blind senator, Thomas D. Schall, Re- publican, Minnesota, was trailing in his race for reelection. New Democratic List Democrats who were elected to sen- ate seats held by the Republicans were Lewis in Illinois, Gore in Okla- homa, Neely in West Virginia and Costigan in Colorado. Five other Democrats were leading Republican incumbents. They were Bulkley of Ohio, Bulow of South Dakota, Hoidale in Minnesota, Coolidge in Massa- chusetts and McGill in Kansas. The veterans, Borah of Idaho and Norris of Nebraska, were safely ahead, but three others, Republicans, were not faring so well. Pine was de- feated in Oklahoma, while McMaster in South Dakota and Schall in Min- nesota were behind Democratic op- ponents. Senator Allen, a staunch supporter of President Hoover, was behind in the usually Republican state of Kan- sas, It was one of the real surprises of the election. Republican senatorial candidates who won included Secretary Davis of the Hoover cabinet in Pennsylvania; Dwight W. Morrow in New Jersey; McNary of Oregon, the assistant Re- publican leader; Hastings in Dela- ware, Couzens in Michigan, Capper of Kansas and Keyes in New Hampshire. ‘Was Swing to Normal Most of the house seats captured by Democrats on the overnight returns normally belonged to them, and were lost in the 1928 Hoover landslide. Their onslaught on the seat held by Representative Tilson, the Republican leader in the house, failed. The Democratic opponent of Represent- ative Will R. Wood in Indiana, chair- man of the appropriations committee, was waging a game battle. The chairman of the powerful rules committee and one of the Big Four Republican leaders— Representative Snell of New York—was returned. Three members of the house grad- uated into the senate, Representative Dickinson of Iowa, a Republican, overrode Senator Steck, Democrat, in- cumbent. Down in Tennessee, Rep- | resentative Cordell Hull, a Democrat, | was practically assured of @ senate | seat. In September, Representative | ‘Wh'te, Ma‘ne Republican, was elected to the senate. With the exception of Mrs. McCor- mick who failed to get her senatorial | cap and gown in Ilinois, all the wom- en members heard from have been reelected. In the silk-stocking dis- ltreasurer, the same precincts indicat- Propose ‘Dirigible on Whe The swiftest of railway vehicles, this whale-like “omnibus-dirigible’—driven by the propeller of an airplane motor—traveled 100 miles an hour in a test run over disused tracks near Hanover, Germany, recently. ventors have pointed out that a fleet of these coaches, traveling fifteen minutes apart, would give passenger serv- ice equal to the slower steam and electric trains now in use and speed almost equal to air transportation. The strange, silver-gray car has both automobile and railway brakes, is 85 feet for 40 passengers in parlor car seats. Note that the entry vestibule is in the center. There is a smoking room, @ non-smoking room and a baggage section. WET AND DEMOCRA trict of New York, Mrs. Ruth Baker | Pratt, Republican, overcame the lead | of her Democratic male opponent. In Florida, Representative Ruth Bryan Owen retook her Democratic | Seat without opposition. Similarly | unopposed, Mrs. Effice Gene Wingo was | elected in Arkansas to fill out the; it term of her | : tate Mrisbend; "RAPLeRGnInLIVe otis | Dry Governor Is Elected in Wingo, previously the Democratic’ | andslide, However; Sever- al Congressmen Lose nominee. She will be seated in De- cember and with Representative Pearl | Peden Oldfield will give Arkansas the distinction of being the first state to have two women members of the same congress, Alabama in Doubt ‘The outcome of the race between Senator J. Thomas Heflin, Alabama | Independent, and John H. Bankhead, | Democrat, still was in doubt, with} Bankhead favored by late returns. | “Robert J. Bulkley, Cleveland Demo- Marcus A. Coolidge, a Democrat/crat, an advocate of repeal of the 18th who opposed prohibition, had @/amendment, who defeated Senator healthy lead over the Republican sen-/ Roscoe C. McCulloch for the unex- atorial candidate, William M. Butler: pired two years of the late Senator in Massachusetts. | Prank B. Willis’ term, will be the first Democratic senators from southern | anti-prohibitionist Ohio has sent to states, reelected, included Robinson! the senate since former Senator Atlee of Arkansas; Harris in Georgia; Har-| Pomerene retired in 1922. rison in Mississippi; Glass of Virginia,; The state’s wet tendency also was and Sheppard of Texas. Senator further emphasized by the apparent Bratton, Democrat, Josiah William Bailey of North Car-| gressmen. Several other Republican olina, Governor Long of Louisiana, dry congressmen were in danger of and James F. Byrnes of South Caro-' losing their seats to wets early today.! lina, all Democrats, were elected to Even Speaker Nicholas Longworth | the senate. | Was in great danger of losing his seat | The Democrats were depending to a Democrat, John W. Pattison,| largely on hotly contested seats in| son of a former Ohio governor. | Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky and/ He was leading Pattison by a very | Ohio, however, to bring them a ma-, slender margin. Pattison is wet. | jority in the house. They expected} Governor Cooper also went down in| to take a large portion of the 12 Re-|the Democratic landslide, yielding to! publican seats in Indiana and nearly | George White, Marietta, Democrat, | &s many in Ohio. by an apparent decisive majority. | One upset was the defeat of Repre- | White was leading Cooper by more} sentative B. Carroll Reece of the first | than 55,000 votes in 5,611 precincts out | Tennessee district, who was supported | of 8,985 and his majority continued by President Hoover. O. B. Lovette, | to increase. Republican Independent, won. Reece was one of the house conferees | on the Muscle Shoals controversy with the senate, and it was around him that much of the discussion was Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 5.—(}—Ohio ‘has gone Democratic on United States | senator and governor and increased the Democratic representation in the lower house of congress. It has gone more than Democratic. It has gone wet to a certain extent, the first time in many years. fourths of the state and his iead con- tinued to increase. Possibility of both hous:s of the waged last spring. state legislature also havi..y Demo- cratic majorities was indicated as 1 iced after county reposted ele.- i tion of Democrats. Both braiches Hall, Lanier C jose | have been overwhelmingly Repub- In Sheridan Battle can tor severai years. am criteee votes with 458 of the state's 1,493 pre- Mochuky, Nbr Nov, Se cGOneress:| Early Emmons Reports | cinets reported. He had polled 38,194 man Thomas Hall and P. w. Lanier, Give Hall Large Lead | ‘os to 24.445 for his Republican op- were running neck and neck in Sheri-| dan county this morning, according to} (Tribune Special Service) tabulations made in the office of/ Linton, N. D., Nov. 5.—Eleven of County Auditor Christian Essig after Emmons county's 37 precincts gave the first 10 of the county's 30 pre- Congressman Thomas Hall a ‘wo to cincts were reported. Hall was leading 288 to 281. | nounced today by E. T. Atha, county All other incumbents on the state | auditor. ballot were given good leads by the} The vote was: Hall 685; Lanier 316. same voters. | Incumbents in all other state races H. A. Schafer and Dan Rosenau| were given large leads by the first 11 were staging a hot battle for county precincts. The races for county offices proved ed. Schafer was leading 345 to 326.\ interesting in the first 12 precincts |Phililp Mauch, the incumbent, is not/reported. In the sheriff battle, Rott | had a 669 to 529 lead over Klein. The jincumbent, A. H. Fischer, is not in ‘the race. Register of Deeds Lang had | & 779 to 410 lead over Fischer. @ candidate for reelection. BEATS G. 0. P. REGULAR Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 5.—(7)—An independent Republican apparently gained the seat of Representative B. Carroll Reece, regular Republican, in| yesterday's balloting as Tennessee | G. O. P. RETAINS NEW HAMP- SHIRE Concord, Nov. 5.—(4)}—New Hamp- IS RESULT IN OHIO * ve sw, ne roms New Mexico,! defeat of several dry Republican con- | Bulkley had piled up a majority of | almost 100,000 in approximately three | one lead over P. W. Lanier, it was an-| —___—_—_—_—_— | reelected a Democratic governor and | Shire clung to its normal Republican- els’ The in- long, weighs 20 tons, and has room |’ Montana Officials | || Are Taken by Death | Ps stole into the ranks of Montana office | seekers at this off-year election and claimed at least six aspirants. First of those to succumb was Sen- ator Ervin A. Richardson of Big Horn county, Republican incumbent. Walter G. Wilson, of Boulder, seek- jing reelection on the Democratic ‘ticket as Jefferson county attorney, |died in the midst of the battle of| | ballots, | John D. Weir, of Libby, Democrat candidate for assessor of Lincoln {county, passed away a few days be- | fore election. |, A tragic accidental shooting during | @ chase for bank robbers took the life {of Sheriff Frank S. Metzel, veteran | Republican nominee in Madison | county. The Democratic ticket of Silver | Bow county for the lower house of | the state legislature suffered the loss | of one of its members in the death of Sam Kinville. | Last night, as the countirg of bal- jlots started, John E. Moran, unop- posed Republican candidate for coun- | ty clerk in Cascade county, died. He | had held the office 16 years. MONTANA RETURNS WALSH TO SENATE Teapot Dome Prosecutor Is In- creasing Lead Over Al- bert J. Galen | Helena, Mont., Nov. 5+()—Thomas J. Walsh, famed as prosecutor of the oil lease investigations, was returned to the U. S. senate by Montana voters. Senator Walsh, a Democratic sen- atorial leader, will go back to his post to approach a quarter century of serv- ice. He has said it may be his last | term. Early today he was leading Judge Albert J. Galen by more than 13,000 | ponent, and his election was conceded |by_ Republican headquarters. i | J.D. Scanlan, chairman of-the Re-| | publican state central committee, pin- ned the defeat of Galen to reaction from economic depression. Prohibi- tion, he said, “cut no figure” in the balloting. With almost half the precincts in the first district reported, Congress- |man John M. Evans, Democrat, was | almost 4,000 ahead of his Republican ; Opponent, Mark D. Fitzgerald. Con- gressman Scott Leavitt, Republican, | neld a similar margin over Tom Stout, Democrat, in the second district. | The totals: 468 of 1,493 precincts gave: senate, Walsh (D) 38,194; ‘Galen, (R) 24,445. 199 of 442 precincts gave: congress, first district, Evans (D) 16,941; Fitz- gerald (R) 13,138. 336 of 1,051 precincts gave: con- gress, second district, Stout (D) 16,-) 312; Leavitt (R) 20,143, | CE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- NOTEAGE FORECLOSURE. SALE ven that a cer- executed and jorson, a wid- Notice 1s Hereby tain mortgage, mad delivered by Thorval ower, of Bismarck, County of Bur- Yeigh and State of North Dakota, mortgagor, to Northwestern Mutual Savings and Loan Association, a cor- poration, mortgagee, dated the 2nd day of January, A.D. 1929, and filed for record in the office of the Regis- County of Bur- rth Dakota, on January, A.D. 1929, ut 2:40 o'clock P. M,, and duly record- ed in Book 178 of mortgages at page #88, will be foreclosed by a sale of the’ premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the city ot Bismarck, in the County of Bur~ Jeigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P.M. on Sutur- day, the 29th day of November, A. D. 1936, to satisfy the amount due upon id’ mortgage on the day of sale. That the default occurr the, terms and conditions of 5: mortgage | consists in the failure to p ® y interest, principal, delinquent installments, in- surance premiums, taxes, and other defaults provided ‘for in’ said mort— gage, when the same became due nd Jegal notice was given as provided by Jaw of the intention of the holder of said mortgage to foreclose the same. The premises described in said mortgage, and which will be sold to satisty me, are situate in the city of rek, in the County of Dakota, a Burleigh and State of Nort! and are described as follo The center 50 feet of lots 2, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block 37,’ o! Flannery and Wetherby Addi- tion to the City of Bismarck. ‘That there will mortgage at the date of sale the sum of two thousand, one hundred sev- enty six and 80-160 Dollars sesionare:| due on said besides the costs of this foreclosure. Dated at Barge, North Dakota, this day 0: tober, A. D. y 13th day CRTHWESTERN MUTUAL | VINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, Mortgagee. Shure & Murphy, No. 1, Broadway , Nort akota, Or! Nortgagee. 10/19-28-29: 11/8:12-19 again sent Democrats to congress to fill senate terms and eight house Posts. SPEEDY JUSTICE James Gallagher (left) and Thomas Martin were sentenced to life Imprisonment in Michigan state prison less than 24 hours after they held up the Old National Bank of Battle Creek and shot and killed a state trooper. They were captured pleaded guilty. {ism in yesterday’s election but the | majorities of the party's leading can- Gidates were somewhat smaller than ; | those of 1926. FOR BANDITS Heflin Roaring as__—| Returns Swamp Him | Montgomery, Ala., Nov. 5.—(P)—A weve of regular Democratic votes, | rising with the reporting of belated returns, today seemed to have defeat- ed the independent candidacy of Thomas Heflin and swept John H. Bankhead into the senate seat Heflin has held since 1913. Despite the mounting unofficial majority, Heflin who failed to support the Democratic presidential ticket in 1928 and was barred from the party primary, refused to concede defeat. |He charged yesterday's election was PROHIBITION TAKES BEATING IN THREE STATE REFERENDA Wets and Drys Break About Even in Senatorial Races Where It Was Issue (By The Associated Press) Weis and drys divided up about equally the senate seats in yesterday's election where prohibition was an 1s- sue, while the anti-prohibitionists cut into the preponderantly dry majority in the house. Three states holding wet referenda —Illinois, Rhode Island and Massa- chusetts— went overwhemingly for repeal. The anti- prohibition forces made one of their oiggest raids in Ohfo, birthplace of the Anti-Saloon League. Robert J. Bulkley, Clevelana Demo- crat, advocate of repeal of the eigh- teenth amendment, won over Senator McCulloch, Republican prohibitionist. He will be the first dry law opponent Ohio has sent to the senate in eight years. In other senatorial contests where prohibition figured, the antis put over James Hamilton Lewis in Illinois against the “personally dry” Ruth Hanna McCormick and apparently sent Marcus A. Coolidge emocrat, to victory in Massachusetts against William M. Butler, Republican sup- porter of prohibition. j. Secretary Davis, regarded as a dry, won in Pennsylvania over Sedgwick Kistler, Democrat-Liberal-Repealist; Senator Hastings, Republican incum- bent opposed to tinkering with. the \ary laws, defeated Thomas F. Bayard, Democratic Repealist, in Delaware; ; Senator Walsh, Democrat, and promi- nent dry leader, heat his Republican opponent in Montana, Albert J. Ga- len, a modificationist; and Repre- sentative Dickinson, Republican, who is claimed by the drys, won over Sen- ator Steck, Democrat, listed as a re- pealist by the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment. Leading Drys Win Other prominent Republican prohi- bition supporters returned to the sen- ate included Borah, Republican, Ida- ho, and Sheppard, Democrat, Texas. Rhode Island, which never ratified the 18th amendment, voted almost four to one for repeal of that consti- tutional provision. The complete vote was: For repeal 172,545, against 48,540. * Incomplete returns in Illinois showed big majorities for repeal of the 18th amendment and state en- forcement act, and for modification of the Volstead act. Incomplete returns in Massachu- setts also gave more than 150,000 ma- jority for repeal of the state enforce- ment act. States now having no enforcement codes to supplement the Voistead act are Maryland, New York, Wisconsin, Montana and Nevada, In Michigan, Seymour H. Person, in the 6th, and Jesse P. Wolcott, 7th, won house seats formerly held by prominent dry leaders, Representa- tives Hudson and Cameron. Person favors repeal, while Wolcott is an ad- vocate of a national referendum. Another repealist, Arthur P. Lam- neck, Democrat, upset a Republican dry incumbent, Rep, Speaks, in the 12th Ohio district, while Ralph A. Horr, Republican repeal advocate, took the seat in the first Washington district formerly held by Rep. Miller, Republican prohibitionist. Ohio Was Stronghold Senator-Elect Bulkley, who had an- nounced he was for repeal of the 18th amendment and Volstead act and for state control, said the Ohio results showed that dry stronghold was “ready to bring to an end the federal government's prohibition activities and restore to the several states the authority to deal with the question in accordance with the original and fun- damental principles of our constitu- tion.” He added he was ready to give his best services to carry out the “will of the people.” In the gubernatorial races having wet-dry angles, Gifford Pinchot, for- mer Republican governor of Pennsyl- vania, who had said his second term j Would be “as dry as my first,” had a 17,000 lead on incomplete returns over his Democrat-Liberal-Repealist oppo- nent, John M. Hemphill. fea Another gubernatorial candidate described as dry—William M. Bruck- er, Republican—won in Michigan over William A. Comstock, an advocate of state and national dry referenda. Joseph B. Ely, Democrat running in Massachusetts on the state repeal Platform, had a 20,000 majority over the Republican incumbent, Frank G. Allen, who favored retention of the state enforcement act. ESTIMATES WHEAT YIELD Melbourne, Australia, Nov. 5.—(P)— F. M. Ford, minister without portfolio, today estimated this year's wheat yield in Australia at about 210,000,000 bushels, of which 160,000,000 bushels “one of the most fraudulent and cor- rupt” ever held in Albama and said | jhe would seek an immediate sena-; {torial investigation. The scnator! claimed the election was rightfully his | by “between 50,000 and 100,000 votes.” | Tabulation of 1,658 of 2,115 ballot | boxes, representing incomplete figures | from 6§ of 67 counties, gave Bankhead @ lead of 46,238, he polling 130,371 | votes to Heflin’s 83,133. ! YOUNG BRYAN BEATEN —_| Minneapolis, Nov. 5.—(P)—Silas M. | Bryan, nephew of the late William Jennings Bryan, and a son of U/aries Bryan of Nebraska, was defeated in his debut as a political cat.didate here Tuesday. x Running for representacive in con- - ‘ gress from the fifth diswrict, com- ‘Associated Press Photo posed of a part of M'nreapolis, his Demowstie eho"-m79 was turned back by W. I. Nolan, Republican in- cumben.. \vnen half of the precincts had reported, Nolan led with a ratio jot 3 to 2. a short time after the robbery and |causes and treatment of epilepsy. out res would be available for export. | | NAPOLEON SUFFERED — FROM EPILEPSY Many of the World's Leaders Were , Epileptics New York, N. Y. The leading sct- entists and physicians have for some time tried to discover the various During the recent world war a new method of treatment was used on thousands of sufferers with remark- able results, An interesting booklet describing this new treatment for epilepsy Will be sent free to all people who are interested. It tells how fit attacks can be quickly stopped with- rting to harmful habit form- ing drugs. This booklet explains how this terrible affliction has at last been conquered. Thousands of epileptics who have the new treatment are once this newspaper can get a copy of this! interesting booklet by writing direct | to the Educational Division Desk 919, | 509 Fifth Avenue, New York City. It's ee for the askin av. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford are RETURN FROM EUROPEAN TRIP. when they arrived in New Yerk after several weeks abroad. | day the title of Honorary Air Com- | modore had been conferred on Wing Commander Charles Kingsford. Smith, long distance aviator who re- cently flew from England to Australie in less than ten days. CAPITOL Theatre Last Times Tonight torn ated Presa Photo shown on the deck of the Europa VICTORY SCORED BY LA FOLLETTE’S SON Governor; Name Demo- crat to Congress Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 5.—()—The sons of Robert M. La Follette have carried on for him. i Philip will be the next governor of Wisconsin. Robert, Jr., is U. S. sen- ator. In the short space of five years, young men the honors it toox their father more than 30 years to achieve. At the age of 33, Philip wiil assume the office his father first won in 1900 —in the capitol his father built--and he will live in the executive mansion where he played as a baby. The voters gave La Follette a plurality of nearly three to one over Charles E. Hammersley, Bemocratic nominee for governor, in yesterday's general election. In congressional races, one Demo- crat shattered the traditional solidar- ity of the Republican delegation. Michael K. Reilly, former congress- man, won in the sixth district over Philip Lehner, Republican. In eight of the 11 districts, Repub- licans were elected, among them Henry Allen Cooper, dean of the house, It was Cooper's sixteenth term. He and the other Republicans are mem- bers of the so-called “insurgent” bloc. The result of voting in the two Milwaukee districts, represented by Republicans, remained in dsubt. Socialist candidates were see-sawing with the incumbents. La Follette carried into office with him the entire slate of minor state officers, Candidate Is Accused Of Criminal Slander Red Wing, Minn., Nov. 5.—(AP)— F. H. Shoemaker, Red Wing, Farm- er-Labor candidate for congress from the third district, today was to ap- pear in federal court in St. Paul Philip Will Be Wisconsin's Next, Wisconsin has visited upon these two! for arraignment, on a charge 0 criminal slander, Congressman August H. Ardros-r. complaining witness, was accused during the campaign by oaceuasr with selling cement to the govern- | ,;ment for construction of the Hast-| ngs, government dam. Shoemaker s taken into custody last night and’ released on his own recogniz- ance. He is to appear also in eee! court at Faribault Thurs- day. * Queer Election ‘ | Quirks Recorded | 2- “ Panorama Of Amazing ro oN A COLUMBIA PICTURE (By The Associated Press) Chicago.—A television broadcast of the election was put on’ the air by station W9XAP with images of charts ; Showing the progress of the senatorial lrace. ‘Ten years ago in the first broadcast of returns of an important election, the choice of Warren G. Harding as president was sent from KDKA, Pittsburgh. Chicago.— James Hamilton Lewis, victor in the contest with Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick, drew the line on motion pictures being taken in his hour of victory. “No, boys,” he said, “I don’t want the aspect that I am exulting with pride or joy toward a defeated woman. I am not in the vaudeville business.” East St. Louis.—Of 121 persons vot- ing in the first precinct on the pro- {hibition referendum, all cast their , ballots for repeal of the 18th amend- ment and the Illinois prohibition act. New York.—Election Commissioner |John R. Voorhis, who has been a voter for 80 years, cast his ballot for governor. He is 101 years old, with JACKHOL DOROTHY REVIER MATT MOORE DAVEY LEE ZASU PITTS Night Clubs . {Polls and voted without assistance. Gang War Prison Riots Heart Throbs EXCITEMENT GALORE! Huntington, Va.— Annie Simpson, j% got up early and walked to the Holyoke, Mass.—Miss Mary E. Nut- ting, whose 100th birthday was cele- brated Oct. 29, received a telegram of congratulations and thanks from Governor Allen, for whom she voted. HONOR KINGSFORD-SMITH Canberra, Australia, Nov. 5—(?)— The defense ministry announced to- DIRECTED BY HARRY JOE BROWN ailments Are repared to render first aid andicaice comfort the moment your youngster has an upset of any sort? Could you do the right thing —immediately—though the emer- gency came without warning— perhaps tonight? Castoria is a mother’s standby at such times. There is nothing like it in emergen- cies, and nothing better for every- day use. For a sudden attack of colic, or for the sete relief of constipation; to allay a feverish spell, or to soothe a fretful baby that can’t sleep. This pure vege- table preparation is always ready to ease an ailing youngster. It is just as harmless as the recipe on the wrapper reads. If you see Chas. H. Fletcher's signature, it is geniune NOTICE TO GAS USERS Get your garbage and waste $1.00 per month, Ashes and Garbage, hauled from basement, $1.50 Have done this work for years. T. M. BURCH P. C. 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