Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1922, Page 2

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1 : r s n 2 € i ° f 3 1 Sh, See TU ae oa y T ] i hi it x 3 te ¥ 4 4 ls, PAGE TWO moe ed Che Casper Daily Cribune Natrona Issued every evening except Sunday at Caspe:, > County, Wyo. Publication Offices, Tribune Building- 15 and 16 BUSINESS TELEPHONES ..........--..-- 15 an Bramwed, Telephone Exchange Connecting Ali Departments Entered at Casper (Wyoming). Postoffice as sccond class matter, vem! . 1916. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ident and Editor > PrSusiness Manager Associate Editor . City Editor ‘Advertsing Manager Advertising Representatives. Pradéen, King & Prudden, 1720-23 Steger Bids... Chicago. UL; 288 Firth avenue, New York City; Globe Bids; Bos ton, Mass. Copies of the Daily Tribune are on file in the New York, Chicago and Boston offices and vistto are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier $7.5 3.90 195 65 30 90 2 05 v 3. 1 sik M Three Months No subscription three months. All_subscriptions must be paid ir Daily Tri: will not insure delivery tion becomes one month in arrears. : 93 ‘by mail accepted fo# esa period than advance and the after subscrip- Member of Andit Burean of Circulation (A. B. ©) Member of the Associated Press. e Associated Press is exclusively entitled to ee publication of all news credited in this paper an local news published herein. Kick if You Don’t Get Your Tribune. - or 16 any time between 6:30 and 8 o'clock p. m. if you faib-to receive your Tribune. A paper will be de livered to you by special measenger. Make it your duty to let The Tribune kn~, when your carrier misses you. a A Distinguishing Trait T WAS CHARACTERISTIC of John Hay, when the American Legion committee having in charge the raising of funds for a community house for their purposes, wrote him a letter asking for a donation, that he took up his telephone and told those in author- ity to set himi down for five thousand dollars. Mails between Rock Springs and Laramie, for even that short distance, were too slow to afford the expression of encouragement he felt for the efforts the former soldier bove were putting forth. The American soldier boy of the World war is near and dear to John Hay, for ithe pride of his life, his eldest son, was their comrade on the fields of France and there gave his life for the flag they followed in common, With Mr. Hay’s substantial gift, the boys will carry to successful conclusion the object of their present campaign. Purposes of Wilson Foundation ROTESTS FROM Democratic sources relative to .. a ruling of the internal revenue bureau that dona- tions to the Woodrow Wilson Foundation fund were rot to be considered on a parity with donations to the| Roosevelt Memorial Association and the McKin] Memorial Association ‘have served one good purpose | That has been to invite public scrutiny of the Wood row Wilson; Foundation fund. The closer it is ex- amined the harder it is to escape the conclusion. that the whole movement is a Democratic campaign for the return of the Democratic party in congress and later the presidency. There is this vital difference between the two me- morial associations and the Woodrow Wilson Founda- tion fimd. The two memorial associations are incor- porated for specific purposes, ‘which are set forth in the articles of the corporation, and have trustees for the legal administration of the funds they raise. On the other hand. the Woodrow Wilson Foundation is not incorporated, it has no legal entity and it has no board of trustees to administer the funds collected. There is a distinction even more vital than the one involving legal technicalities. The Roosevelt Memo- rial association and the McKinley Memorial associa- tion were created after the death of the men for whom they were named for the purpose of paying honor to the memory of those men in some concrete manner. ‘The Woodrow Wilson Foundation is an association of Democrats engaged in collecting a fund of a million dollars for the purpose not of paying tribute to the memory of Mr. Wilson but for the avowed purpose, as set forth in their literature and in their speeches, of consummating the policies which he, as president, espoused. He is still the leader of the Democratic party. To raise a fund of a million dollars for the avowed purpose of consummating the policies of the living leader of a great political party can scarcely be viewed in any other light than the raising of a campaign fund to bring that party into power. That this is the purpose and hope of the leaders of. the Woodrow Wilson Foundation .movement is set forth in the literature of the foundation and in the speeches of the leaders. On January 16, 1922 ,the initial meeting for launch- ing the Woodrow ilson Foundation fund in New York state was held in New York City. One of the speakers was James W. Gerard, former ambassador to Germany, and Democratic leader in New York state. The New York Times quotes him as saying at that meeting: “When the league of nations wag presented at Ver- saillies it was the realization of the hope of centuries. In the battle for that idea a champion came forth who today 1: wounded, stabbed by envy, hate and ignorance—Woodrow Wilson. Had he won the day clouds and threats of war would not be here. We cannot restore that champion to the lists but we can see that his cause is not iost.” Henry Morgenthau was a speaker. Morgenthau was another Democrat whom President Wilson re- warded by giving him an ambassadorship.. The New York Times reports Mr. Morgenthau as saying: “Thank God, Wilson is not dead. Our prayers have been heard and he is going to lead this country back 2s it stands for constructive principles and not merely for opposition.” . Later on in his speech. according to the news col- umns of the Minneapolis Journal, Mr. Holt said: “The opposition won the campaign in 1920, but Senator} Lodge and his conferees committed the worst act of/ any set of public men in the history of the republic.”| An advertisement inserted in the New York Times, | Sunday, January 15, by the Woodrow Wilson Foun-! dation fund, explaining its purposes, said: “The ap-| peal is issued to all who beljeve in those liberal Dem- ocratic principles that Woodrow Wilson so conspicu-| ously championed and who wish to perpetuate the in-! fluence of America’s great war leader.” | Inasmuch as the Woodrow Wilson Foundation fund} is not incorporated, has net taken out a charter or| filed any other papers defining its purposes, the only| definition of its plans which may be classified as “offi-| cial” are those which are furnished by its officers. On January 15 Franklin D. Roosevelt, charman of the national committee in charge of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, issued a public appeal to “the| friends of Mr. Wilson’ and those who believe in his| principles.” Mr. Roosevelt was assistant secretary of the navy under Mr. Daniels, and was a candidate for vice president on the Democratic ticket in 1920. In this appeal he said: “Since 1913 liberal thought of mankind has moved faster than in any similar period. One man, an Amer- ican president. is now recognized by all but the wil- fully blind reactionaries as having been the leader in this forward movement, and everywhere in our own land, as well as in other nations, signs are manifest | that his ideals will not down. It is in accordance with this that the Woodrow Wilson Foundation has been| formed so that we can in some slight measure render a tribute to Woodrow Wilson and at the same time| through this practical and useful means create an| instrument to stimulate service in the cause of justice and democracy.” : On March 9, 1922, James W. Gerard, state chair- man for New York, of the Woodrow Wilson Founda-| tion, appealed to the workers throughout the state to} speed up. In this appeal Mr. Gerard said “It must be remembered that this campaign is not a drive in the usual sense of the term. * * * What we hoped to achieve through this campaign we have every reason to believe is happening. We are cement- ing the people of the country to the ideals of Wood- row Wilson, and we are mustering hundreds of thou-/ sands of people in this foundation which will have a far-reaching effect upon the country. Through the| foundation subscriptions we are appreciating the re- surge in sentiment that has set in for the ideals of| Woodrow Wilson. The campaign is serving. there- fore, a great missionary purpose and you as one of the chairmen are contributing in a great degree| toward this end.” On April 10, 1922, Franklin D, Roosevelt. national chaizman of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, made public in New York 2 telegram received from Wood- row Wilson in response to one sent him by the officers of the foundation. The telegram reads as follows: ] the deepest pleasure and gratification. whole body of our people and that we are upon the eve of a notable reassertion of the principle for which we sacrificed so much. In this revival a very great part will undoubtedly be due to the splendid men who| have organized and developed the foundation.” pe ead | Fallacy of Quick Draw Af eS MELANCHOLY accident to Bud Ballew,” says the Kansas City Star, "seems to show that| if a man wants to live to a green old age he ought tol have something more to rely on than a quick draw. A quick draw is something, to be sure, but there is no telling how long it will remain good. , It is a chang- ing world and a competitive world. What was good| yesterday may be no good today, and the man who tries to use yesterday’s draw in today’s shooting event —well, he’s very likely to fet it where Bud got his. “It's a changing world. The draw, no matter how} quick, is rapidly going out as a life preserver. A} careful man can do better in these days with a sensi- ble diet and a few demonstrated rules of health than’ the draw ever did for anybody. “Look at John D. Rockefeller and Chauncey M. Depew and Joe Cannon. They never relied on the draw. They realized, like sensible men, that if they went in for the draw and perfected themselves in it, it would only be a matter of time until somebody with an improved technique beat their draw. The science of the draw is a pro- gressive science. Somebody is always adding a touch to it somewhere, a riffle or a twist, that little shade of difference that separates mere talent from genius, and then what worlds away. “Bud Ballew might have lived to be as old as any of those named if he hadn’t believed his draw to be the quickest going. He relied upon it and trusted to nothing else. Yet it was an old draw, really. There is nothing to show that he had bettered it or tried to bring it up to date. Probably it wasn’t anything better than a 1910 draw—and look what science has done since 1910! Bud couldn’t see it. He Had a closed mind. His draw always has been good enough and he believed it always would be. “The lesson is that no draw is quick enough when it meets a quicker. Probably it’s better and safer never to cultivate a draw at all. If a man wants to live long he should learn how to live, not how to draw. hat seems to be the lesson of Bud Ballew, the man who had the next to the quickest draw in Wichita Falls.” ° Consolidation of Relief HE FINAL STEP in the consolidation of all govern- ment veteran relief agencies under one head was taken in the executive order signed by President Harding April 29 which transfers from the United States public health service to the United States Vet- erans’ bureau all hospitals caring for disabled world war veterans. The transfer was effected under the authority contained in section 9 of the Sweet bill enacted by the present congress. The order affects 57 ho&pitals now in operation, one purveying depot and nine hospitals under con. to where it belongs.” On January 9 Hamilton Holt, executive director of the Wocdrow Wilson Foundation, opened the Massa- chusetts Foundation Fund campaign in Boston. The Boston He:<ld quotes Mr. Holt as saying: “The peo- ple are coming to see that the country has in Mr. ‘Wilson a good asset. He carried the banner and the people are again coming to follow it as. they did in the stirring days of the war. The moral slump is passing and we are returning to where he left us in the golden age of statesmanship.” An advertisement inserted in the New York foun-| dation fund campaign in Minnesota, speaking in Min- neapolis. According to the news columns of the Minneapolis Journal, Mr. Holt said: “Tf anything can bring the United States into the league of nations it is the Democratic party. Let us become active in every state where a senator is to be elected this year and elect prp-league senators. The United States should get in and play the game with the other nations of the world. I believe Woodrow Wilson may never again take an active part in poli- ties, the people are coming to see that he is a great national asset. The Democratic party is coming.back and will have the confidence of the people as long struction. The institutions are scattered among two | states and include such well known hospitals as Fox! Hills, New York, and the Edward Hines Jr., Hospital | at Maywood, Mlinois, as well as several reconverted army camps. All facilities, property and equipment! jin these hospitals are transferred to the Veterans’ |bureau. The commissioned personnel of the United States public health service on duty in these hospitals will be detailed by the surgeon general of the public} health service, who are paid out of Veterans’ bureau funds, will be transferred and given appointment in the Veterans’ bureau, The number of beds in the hospitals thus taken over is 17,000. Approximately 13,000 patients are now under treatment therein. Coincident with this transfer of existing hospitals has been the passage by congress of the Langley. bill and its approval by the president, carrying an appro- priation of $17,000,000 for the construction of addi-| tional hospital facilities. pfopriation made by , $9,050,000 was appropriated on March 3, 1919, and $18,600,000 on March 4, 1921, which, with the present appropriation and three deficiency acts, makes a total of $46,145,000 for hospitals. ‘The latest appropria- tion was made in order to enable the Veterans’ bu. This is the third hospital i the congress since the war;| be Casper Daily Cribune reau to care for all pa tients now being treated in outside pitals under the «Veterans’ bureau supervised and managed by the government. The chief dissatisfaction among the veterans has| ministration entered office to find the work of veter- been the contract institutions which the bureau,)/an relief a chaos of conflicting jurisdiction. through inadequate resources of its own, was obliged’ unfortunate veteran, under the old system, was to utilize, With the passing of the contract institution obliged to pass through the red tape of the United it will be possible to standardize the care of all the States public health service for his hospitalization, 30,774 patients now under the bureau’s jurisdiction.| the Federal Board for Vocational Education for his That the former crowded condition of veteran hos-| rehabilitation, and the War Rick Insurance bureau for “The message from you and other members of the| pitals has been effectively relieved since the organ-, his compensation. executive committee of the foundation has given me/ ization of the Veterxns’ bureau is evidenced by the clogged with delays. I have the, records of the bureau that there is now a surplus of assured faith that the ideals with which we entered| 7,000 beds in bureau hospitals. The additional space] t : the war are still held and earnestly believed in by the! is required, however, for a more adequate care of the, tape has been eliminated, delays red: 2,893 tuberculous and 4,236 neuro-psychiatric pa-| ani every effort has been made A WORD TO THE WISE 1 institutions. and available to The consolidation of the public health service hos-| consolidation of the hospital service of the bureau -| will make it possible to bring a marked efficiency into fication of veteran relief agencies which has been the| that most difficult branch of the veteran relief admin- constant aim of the present administration, and which’ istration. f completes the uni A Word From Wyoming The fates they have given me bless- ing thrice (whoever the fates may be) And if ye regard the gold reward, then oil is first of the three; My heart heaves hard beneath its road; my very veins would burst; To them belongs my rich life blood who pierce my bosom first. Or if ye regard a healthy life as the thing that ye first would choose, By the selfsame voice that you make your choice ye may have what ye would use, Or if ye regard it character, that shall ye also see, For whether it's health, manhood or wealth, I give you one or three. No love I hold tor dainty deeds nor » Pride in weakling men; I take the best of the winds of the west and send it out again; I breathe it forth to the south and north; I drive it far to the east And those that blame my biting blast are those that know me least. But those that love my open ways are those that know me best; To them I shall give the right to live in the open heart of the west; To them I shall teach the silent speech that comes of the clasp of a hand— ‘ So let them know, whose love I hold, it was this love that I planned, —GENE MARTIN. Casper, Wyo. How Does It Ride? “Comparatively few people who use our highways are sufficiently well versed jn the technique of road con- struction to know whether or not a highway was constructed under the most approved specifications,” notes the Concrete Highway Magazine. “In the absence of any obvious defects, the average motorist’s opinion of a high- way is summed up in his answer to the question ‘How does it ride?’ “Engineers and contracturs, on the other hand in the past directed their attention to getting the proper amount of cement into the pavement, cutting down the amount of mixing water, adequately preparing the subgrade and other technical details in which the average user of, the highways took little interest. But with the present universal interest in highway matters, the motorist is learning more of the engineering side of highway construc- tion and the road builder is, to a great- er degree than before, considering the |motorist’s point of view. The need for |great care in securing an even, true |riding surface is being recognized by highway builders to an increasing de- gree. Many states now specify the al- ‘lowable surface variation in a certain guage length” from a straight line. |Some states require the use of split floats at joints, finishing with special tools and careful testing of the fin- ished pavement with a straight edge to insure an even contour. “It is not enough that the pavement be made of good concrete. For maxi- mum comfort, economy in operation and durability of the pavement itself the surface must be free from irregu- larities. Recent experiments indicate the importance of an even riding sur- face from other considerations than the comfort of the motorists. Tests made by the U. S. bureau of roads have already shown that the impact of (ruck wheels caused by compara, tively small surface irregularities pro- duces very high stresses in comparison with those of static loads only. Only tests now under way indicate that tractive resistance depends largely upon the surface and materia] of the road. Here is one place where trac- tive resistance, already very low on concrete pavements, may be made still lower by good construction. “The common methods of finishing a concrete road usually result in a surface free from noticeable bumps and depressions. Further, this mate- rial has the great advantage of re maining in its original condition, un- affected by temperature or by traffic. There is still room for improvement: sufficient attention to forms, uniform consistency, finishing methods and testing the surface must be given to in. sure a truly even pavement.” pee ree at Tax Exempt Amendment The Green resolution proposing an amendment to the federal constitution which would prohibit the issuance of tax exempt securities by the federal government and by any of the states or other governmental units has been favorably reported to the house by the ways"and means committee. Represen tative Green, Republican of Iowa, whe introduced the resolution, also wrote the committee's favorable report rec ommending its adoption. In this re. port it is declared that the mass of tax exempt securities ‘will continue to increase until e¥ery inducement will be offered to the man having a large income to make his investments solely in them., and even the compara- tively small taxpayer will find it to his profit to invest in them. Meanwhile, the revenues of the government from large incomes wjll continue to shrink and income tax will be collected large- ly from those whose incomes are com- paratively small.” The report states the present system enables much property to escape tax- ation; that it unfairly discriminates between taxpayers; impedes private financing. discourages investments in new enterprises and creates social un- rest. According to conservative esti- mates obtained by the committee, tax free securities now amount to at least $15 000,000,000 and the amount is steadily increasing. The fact that such securities find a ready market is a temptation to states, municipali- ties, counties and other governmental units to issue such securities in much larger amounts than is necessary for the economical financing of their. re- spective government’ The Trial Up-Sky Too soon Fades that last whiteness of the moon, The face of noon is wrinkled, old—| Like Pablo’s of the sheepfold, Who has seen all youth go by On the long trail, up-sky. Evening waits At her turquoise gates To fondle us, And sing and sing, With croon of mothering. We ask not whither, Ask not why, On the long trail up-sky. —William H. Simpson. If the sea dried up there would be five million square miles of salt one mile thick. tents in institutions owned, | was made possible by the Sweet law, enacted by the Republican congress last summer. The Harding ad- The As a result, the whole service 17:8 Under the present system, with all agencies cen- ralized in the United State: Veterans’ bureau, red iced to a minimum, to make relief easy every needy veteran. Finally, the Producing Citizens ‘The bureau of the census compiles volume after volume of figures from which the statistician draws many in- ferefices. Dry reading, if not under- stood, they tell a graphic story to the trained student. Recent results show the distribution of workers in various lines throughout the country. Male workers engage in agriculture’ to the number of 29.9 per cent (9,867,- 000 men). Three and three-tenths per} cent do mining (1,087,000 workers). Thirty-two and nine-tenths per cent manufacture (10,882,000 labprers), while 8.6 per cent (2,852,000 men) are engag- ed in transportation. Trade uses 10.8 per cent (3,574,000 workers); 3.4 per cent of the male population are in professional work (1,136,000 doctors, lawyers, dentists, scientists, teachers, etc.); while 5.1 per cent are clerks 1,- 696,000 pushers-of-the-pen and punch- ers-of-the-typekeys).) Domestic and personal service uses 3.7 per cent, or 1,216,090 valets, butlers, waiters, cooks, Janitors, porters, etc. f Women are 12.7 per cent in agricul- ture (1,084,000, dairymaids and far- merettes), 22.6 per cent in manufactur- ing (1,931,000 machine tenders and skilled workers), 2.5 per cent in trans- portation (214,000 ticket choppers, con- ductresses, car-cleaners, etc.), 7.8 per cent in trade (670,000 standing behind counters, buying, selling, stock clerks, etc.), 11.9 per cent professional (t,- 016,000 nurses, teachers, governesses, doctors, ete.), 25.5 per cent in domes- tic service (2,184,000 cooks waitresses, chambermaids, and housekeepers), and 16.7 per cent doing clerical work (1,- 424,000 stenographers, typists, book- keepers, file clerks, etc.). Superpower Plan Secretary Hoover says that a com- plete development of the proposed RaPecrat a Propject by which a ser- es of electric power station ns, estab- lished adjacent to coal mines ‘to sup- ply power to the Atlantic coast re- gion from Maine to Maryland, would save the nation thirty million tons of coal annually. In a discussion of the project in a cabinet Meeting. Secre- tary Hvover said it was pointed out that such a project would have a great offect upon future coal strikes and the reduction of unemployment by’ producing regular work for min- ers. It is noted that the coal saving would come in two ways: First, the coal expended in locomotives to trans- port the coal to be burned would all be saved: and, second, the loss occas- joned by burning plants would be say- ed by having much coal buined in large quantities in a few plants. The government is now working on development plans for the project through the geological survey, which already has issued a inary re- Port on the subject. It is not the in- tention of the government to finance the project. The government is inter. ested in the estimated annual saving of coal and man power and increased employment which, it is believed will be made possible through the carry- ing out of the ‘superpower plan. Plans of the geological survey will be made available for utilities com- panies which desire to use the super- power plan, leaving the financing of the project in the hands of private enterprise. ‘ te 38 ha Ey fe “Honor thy Father and thy Mother,” and agree to obey it. menting on the sentence, a court offi cer said: “It may sound foolish but his neighbors will know it and talk about it, an@ public opinion will keep him well-behaved in the future!” In a Virginia court; a woman ac- cused of a serious crime of forgery was sentenced to pay a fine of one dollar and to spend one hour in jail. The court tempered the stern justice of impersonal law with the tender mercy of compassion for the helpless ‘The trial developed that woman and her baby had suffered hunger and cold from lack of necessities the hus- band failed to provide, though able The woman opened a letter addressed to her husband found a government check for disability allowance, wrote the husband’s name on it, cashed it and spent it for clothes and food for herself and child. An Indiana wore: “died and kept on living,” according to the doctors who attended her. The strange case was that of a mother, run over by a train and fatally injured, who wes kept alive and conscious for hours, with mother-love anxiety over her children, after her heart had ceased to beat, uccording to attending physi- clans. Decrezse in Unemployment The president's conference on un- employment reports that during the month just passed the ratio between job and job hunters has ¢ecreased. There being 160 seekers for every 100 jobs, as compared with 226 unem- ployed for every opportunity at the beginning of the year, In January 44 per cent of unemployed could find work, whereas now 62 per cent can find places. With the jobless esti- mated as 3,500,000, the figures work out to the opening of opportunities for an army of 630,000 men, Further evidence of returning pros- Perity is seen at the capital in the growing numbers of travelers who ask,for passports for foreign jour- nys. So great is the rush for the little greencovered evidences of American citizenship that almost 20,- 000 were issued in April, and the state department, which has jurisdiction over granting them, warns would-be travelers to apply early if they would receive thelr passports in time. Department of labor statistics in- dicate that living costs are steadily decreasing, a further evidence of real prosperity. The ‘fall in the cost of’ living in principal cities between June, 1920, and March, 1922, the de- partment estimated, was greatest in Detroit, where it amounted to 26 per cent, In New York the decrease was 22.5 per cent in the same period, and in Chicago 23.1 per cent. The small- est decrease found was in Los Ange- les, where it was 14.5 per cent. Comptroller of the Currency Cris- singer, sometimes called the govern- ment's official optiniist, said in an The People’s Business “The postal business is the people's business,” says Postmaster General Work, “which the postoffice depart. ment is charged with operating for the public. It is only by the greatest possible interest and un heartiest kind of cooperation, that the Postal system can attain its highest deals. Postal service affects more people either directly or indirectly than any other sgency in the United States whether it be public or private. The ideal postal service, therefore, is that service which discharges all of the functions of the postal establishment to the satisfaction of all of the people all of the time. This will be attained ¢ every postal employe from the post master general throughout the service will do sll of his duty and do it all of the time. In its last analysis, postal duties are accommodations performed for our neighdors and friends and should be so regarded rather than asa hired service performed for an ab- sentee employer. Inconsiderate Neighbors Editor Tribune: 1 am a regular subscriber for your paper and have read many times, where you have ad. vised people to own thelr own homes, keep them clean, attractive, etc. Now 1 fully agree with you, but what can one do in a town Wke this when some People have ny regard for other peo- ples’ property? I bought a place more than a year ago in the east part of town, just east and south of the school and my family and I lke to see and have things attractive. We put out young trees, planted grass, made a nice gae- den and the stock and chickens ruin- ed everything. We were up all hours in the night, running horses, cows and mules off the place. I have seen men lead their horses right in front of the house and turn ther. loose. One indy had a lot of chickens and when I asked her if she wna going to keep them penned up she said, ‘No! You ‘an't raise any thing in this d—— town and chickens need the green srass.” I bought this place on time and am making monthly payments was out of work last winter and have not paid for the place yet. and do not feel able at this time to fence and do a lot of improving. Now, I ask through your paper— haven't the people any protection? 'Must we have the same conditions this summer we had last? Intoxication Justified Magistrate Black of New York set free Samuel E. Malcolm, 55 years old, married for 28 years, when he cele- brated the birth of his first son by get- ting drunk, The magistrate held that Volstead low or no Volstead law, there are occasions whe’: & man simply must celebrate, and tone ‘the end of 28 fatherless years Was such an occason! _ FIFTEEN In a new package that fits the pocket— At @ price that fits the pocket-book— The same unmatched blend of * TURKISH. VIRGINIA and BURLEY Tobaccos Sieemmntoed \

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