Newspaper Page Text
si ~"it\ fi If THE GATE OITY PUBLISH HID BY THE GATE CITY COMPANY C. P, •klrvin Manager tMAXL. .OAILT BT On* «.00|Four months...W-OJ 81 month* JL#OIOi»« month...... Sntered In Keokuk poatoffie* *nd claa* matter. Poatase prepaid tmrmn In *dv*nc*. All •utwcflptlon order* ttoould tfl i* the P. O. addreu and state whether I* a new or renewal order. If addre** I* de*lred. state both the old ana new addrea*. 1 Remit jy poatofflo* money order, express tioney order, registered letter. draft, at our risk. A* The date printed on W'The"data printed" on the address of •*ch paper note* when the subscription "XPubtcribers falling to r*o»«ve their P?PerB J"""™!*0? *'i: 1° confer a favor by giving notice' of tne fact Address all communication* to THE GATE CITY COMPANY. fMo. 1*. North Sixth St.. Keokuk. Iowa. THE GATE CITY 1* on *al* at tha ^Hotel "Keokuk!. cor° ThlM and C. H. RolUns & Co. «8 Main street. 'C Ward Bros., 525 Mala street. Depot Mews Stand. Keokuk, Iowa April 28, 1915 THE WONDER DAY8. April brings the wonder days—the fields so green and clean, The grass leaps out by magic -where the hills were dull and mean It drifts across the valleys like a whis per in the night. And gleams like priceless velvet in the laughter of the light And winter's thrall is broken It had held us overlong, But now the world is lilting with the gladness of a song. April brings the wonder days—the days of subtle change When even in a moment comes a transformation strange The blossoms in the orchard seem to breathlessly unfold. The meadowlands are blazoned with the dandelions' gold. The crocus nods its message and the lordly tulip burns In red and yellow glory as the flower time returns. The laughter and the singing, and the chuckle of the brook Which tosses foamy kisses to the shadows in the nook— And how the breeze is chanting in a murmurous refrain To trees upon the hillside and to briers in the lane 'Till all the world is smiling, and the very heart of things Is vibrant with the music of the song the whole wrold sings! —Wilbur D. Nesblt. & THOUGHT FOR TODAY. In the morning, when thou art Blug gish at rousing thee, let this thought be present: "I am rising to a man's work."—Marcus Aurellus. Salt Lake City is about to market $3,000,000 in bonds, the proceeds to be used in water plant extensions. The wind pressure on wires strung on poles Is estimated at half of that on flat plates of equal area. The municipal garbage reduction plant of Columbus, O., last year earn ed a net profit of $25,501.57. Gross receipts "were $66,722.36. The women of Sweden often work as farm laborers. In some instances the husbands serenely smoke and lounge around, while they contentedly view the movements of the industri ous wives. is considered worth at least one round of four fingers and as many kicks as the distance to the door will! permit. Mr. Bailey is said to be an enter tainer as well as" a teacher and lec turer. Because of his reputation as a persistent and observant traveler it is expected that his address will be abroad, and is not only the author of: sketches in Pencil made of subjects, in Spain. Egypt. TurItey Resinol heals babies' skin troubles Babies with eczema, teething rash, chafing, and other torment ing skin troubles need Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. They soothe and heal the irritated skin, stop all itching, and let the little sufferers sleep. Babies bathed regularly with Resinol Soap sel dom have skin eruptions Regmol Ointment and Resinol Soap have oeen used by physicians and nurses for inanr vara, and contain nothing which could pont oiy injure or irritate the tender eat skin. Sold «v all druggist*. France, Belgium, Holland, England and Scotland. Mr. Bailey Is the author of "All for You," "AmateiA- Handicraft," "Art Education," "School Sanitation and Decoration," "When Little Souls Awaks," and other books. He is the present editor of "SomethUig to Do," a magazine for children. BIG BLUNDER. A blunder signalized the legislative career of the present administration. The democratic tariff bill, first in the articles of democratic faith, and the one achievement on which natur ally they would be expected to expend their most exhaustive study and care, was so clumsily executed that it fail ed to accomplish the results intended. The failure was due to crude, hasty, unscientific, secret legislative meth ods. Designed to furnish sufficient reve nue to finance the United States treasury, it has proven absolutely in adequate for that purpose. In writing the tariff bill the demo crats dimly foresaw a possible reduc tion in customs receipts, although they did not know how much and did not ascertain the facts. So the in come tax provision was incorporated, in the hope that it would make up for any miscalculations in the tariff bill, although the democrats did not know and did not ascertain the facts. But what happened when these pro visions went into effect? Customs receipts were millions of dollars below the amount needed from that source, and at the same time collections from the income tax fell many millions below the amount needed from that source. The Inevit able result was to leave the treasury without sufflicent money for its needs. The failure was caused by careless ness. Had there been conscientious, open consideration of the revenue bill, sufficient to enable members of con gress to study and understand it, the reduction in revenue could have been properly safeguarded. But instead of •getting accurate Information and ade quate estimates, the democrats guess ed at it. And they guessed wrong. The results of this first mistake should have been a warning. But the startling* fa-ct remains that the demo crats committed the same kind of an error again. Forced by their heed lessness to provide more revenue, they passed a "war tax" in time of peace. Based on a guess Instead of an estimate, the war tax did not pro duce money enough. For months the receipts of the treasury .have been daily falling short of expenditures at a rate reaching at times more than a million dollars a day. According to official estimates the deficit will prob ably amount to one hundred million dollars by July 1, the end of the fis cal year. Xo chain is stronger than its weak- est link. The fatal weakness that lias characterized the work of this administration from its inception twojlcan years ago has been its eagerness to-tent propose laws, carelessness in drafting Every American citizen has had to help pay for these costly experiments. There will be still more to pay until the errors have been corrected by thoughtful, intelligent legislation. AMERICAN ISOLATION. The following strong editorial peared in the Chicago Tribune Sunday: Tbe ruling of a Chicago judge that! lessons of our own history or^ that of Lnd ap of The most important thing for thj American people to realize at this time is the attitude of belligerent Europe toward us. The American capacity for creating a fool's paradise is unequaled. Our optimism is impregnable even to ex perience. We do not permit our com fort to be disturbed by unpleasant !jcan g00is in Australia and New Zen 1 icaii KUUUB ii-i nuDinun auu .nou- a man doesn't have to pay for the! the world without our fortunate wain !Unlted states stimulated by the press, drinks he gets in a saloon on Sunday! Has the shock of the war aroused iu»!has to a sense of what our situation 'n the international complex may mean !to us? Certainly not yet to a very| Japanese resentment over the anti wakeful sense. But evidence multi- alien laws, though1 politely covered plies and becomes more and mora officials, is natural and inevitable. I pointed. Of German feeling toward the! As to Latin-America, from the Rio BAILEY TO ADDRESS LADIES. Henry Turner Bailey, former state! United States, if we may judge by [Grande to Tierra del Fuego, we ought supervisor of drawing In Massachu-' German papers of the first rank, lilte 1 to have no illusions. The other day setts, will speak before the biennial the Hamburg Nachtrichten. Bismarck's we were told of •convention of the Iowa Federation of Women's Cluhs to be held in Iowa •City, May 18 to 21. former mouthpiece, and the Cologne jus in Peru, where we were supposed Gazette, there is an unhappy certainty.! to be less obnoxious than in other In speculating upon the Arama inci- South American countries, but we 'dent and a possible war between!need no such recent testimony to the •Japan and America the Berlin post!mixture of fear, distrust, dislike, an"l 'says 'contempt which seems to be the em« 'Germany would view such a wqrjtion roused whenever the Colossus of jwith mixed feelings. While we do I the north is in the Latin-American one of the most attractive features on|no^ desire a victory of the yellow ra'jalmind. the program. (over the white, nevertheless America jt is hard for the people of the Mr. Bailey has made five trips bas no c]ajm t]le many articles and liopks but is also,to kn0w that this country, which first junlversal dislike, ranging from hatred an artist. He has one set of forty |,ecame a fierman blood and German energy, Fremdenblatt, land the Vienna the organ of the foreign office, reminds jus with diplomatic restraint that "tin* feelinp: of disaji).ointment which the attitude of the United States has pro iduced in Austria will not disappear for a long time." From the American point of viev jthis German reaction is unjust, exce^ :sive. and inconsistent. But at any rate it is humanly understandable sinco !our interpretation of our neutrc! duties and rights in the circumstance ,cf the war works to the serious mil itary disadvantage of Germany an-1 :lier allies. Vet what do we find on the side 'o jwnieli these benefits of our policv |accrue? Xot the anery resentment of ithe Germans, of course, but a mor {and more evident impatience against us. The most astonishing expression of this comes from a Belgian. Dr. I Charles Sarolea. professor of roms.icc I languages in the University of ®di.i Ihiirph an-! an informal emissary rt 'none other than King Albert. Dr., If you were in Italy you would surely eat Spaghetti in the best Italian restaurants. HEIN2 COOKC0 RBAOY TO IHV|j is cooked in the real Italian way with a sauce that puts it in a class by itself. And so easy to serve—jnst heat for 15 minutes in the can. At all grocers'. H. J. HEINZ COMPANY 57 Varieties Sarolea, we discover from his address the other evening before a small aud ience of ardent pro-allies, comes to us with a complain- It would seem that the United "iates and its people, al though the tier have shown a com mendable humanitarian Impulse to ward the Belgians which we are as sured in passing they will never for get, have nevertneless fallen far sho.-t of their duty as the allies conceive it. Dr. Sarolea is so frank as to in form us that our course, while it has purchased us the hatred' of the Ger mans, has not gained us the "respect" of the allies—the word is Dr. Sarolea's. The definite causo of complaint asked mU8t come wjth tsubject if the failure of the United States gov ernment. to lodge a formal protest .against the invasion of Belgium. Whea if allied opinion went to the ex tent of demanding that the protest should be backed by military action or the threat of it, Dr. Sarolea seeme.1 to be unwilling explicitly to admit this, out it is impossible to account on any other ground for the tenor and temper of his address, which, save for the brief allusion to American re lief, was a complaint and criticism from beginning to end. The same con clusion is to be drawn from the crit icism of the London Spectator, but it special force from the of a country into which Amor- relief hag been poured of over deaire to make a point them, haste in committee action, and ijrjyjng That was prompt, ungrudgin -, stubborn refusal to p.ermlt intelligent we believe we may say substan amendment in either house or senate after the party brand had been affixed •by the all powerful caucus. to the ex- 521,000,000. We have no of American tial. Yet if in spite of this succor and in spite of the fact that our mainten ance of a policy of neutrality and free commerce is one of the most vital factors of the allies* strength we are held to have fallen so far short of duty as to be without the "respect" of the allies, then it behooves Amer' cans to face the fact. Without respect there is neither friendship nor, in the long run, security. Dr. Sarolea re marks that if we. are not with the allies we are against them, and this frank admission seems to us to ex press not of course the reaction of a'l Britons or Belgians but the general temper toward us on the allies' side. A remarkable manifestation o? this feeling is reported from Australia. The representative or a concern which which does a large business in Amer wrltes that to the love or respect of! United States to realize that they Germans. We would be satisfied have become the object of an almost state at an expenditure- of t0 contempt. But it is most import- iant si.ould from its present condition otja5gerate nor to make ourselves the Greece, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, jmjgyjnpathetic contentment come victims of unnecessary alarms, but jknow the bitter necessities of war." shape ^ur policy and direct ourj The hostility expressed is intense, |actions with due caution, foresight, I 'passionate, and not likely to be di.~-:an(j practical effect. "Better to be jsipated by soft words. In Austria w?. despised for too anxious apprehens |probably are little better off. The re-jjon" sentiment against the become So strong as observably vo atfect tjje saje 0j American goods, says jcent note of Count Von Bernstorff to 'resolution, "than ruined by too: the secretary of state elicited bitter {confident a security." comment in the Austria-Hungary press the feeling against that we do realize it, not to ex- Burke in his essay on the: l&JNMELS cocoa. The superior quality and fine flavor of Runkel's Cocoa have made it famous. Nothing but the purest and best ingredients are used in its manufacture which makes it a pure and nour ishing food for young and old. Try it today. AmU Voar Grocer for a FREE Sampto Ttn. The Nauvoo Gate City Nauvoo, 111., April 27, 1915 Mr. H. J. King was a Nauvoo busi ness visitor a day recently. Mr. King is the gentlemanly subscription solici tor of the best daily paper printed in this section—the Keokuk City. Mrs. John Seiglemaier has been vis iting Mrs. Frank Spencer in Montrose for several days recently. Mrs. Ed. Boedecker is visiting her sister Mrs. EM. Koechlin in Rock Is land, ill. Mrs. Wm. Parker who has been vis iting her mother, sister and brother in Nauvoo for a number of days, re turned to her Fairfield, Iowa, home last Saturday. Wm. Reimbold, Sr., of Keokuk, vis ited his brother Rev. J. Reimbold, in Nauvoo last Saturday. Mrs. Louise Kruegger and daughter Mrs. Jos. Schilsung, were in Ft. Madi son the past few days, visiting the for mer's neice who has been ill Bechtel, Marion Argast and Ada Rahn attended a telephone operator's school held in Carthage last weak. Miss Leila, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Haggett of Nauvoo and who is attending school in Decatur, 111, was selected by Alpha Chi Omega sorority of the James Wilkin univer sity as a delegate to the convention to be held in Long Beach, Calif., from June 28 to July 2. The Harry La Tier dramatic com pany which played in the Nauvoo opera house the three first days of the present week, gave excellent sat isfaction. The company was a splen did one and should have had crowded houses every night during their stay in Nauvoo. The lap robe, buggy whip and storm robe thief is again abroad in Nauvoo. All three of these articles were stolen from a buggy standing at one of our hitching racks a night recently. The old city council of Nauvoo will meet in session for the last time next Monday evening when the new city administration will gather up the reins and conduct the city's business. If the United States will send a f^w more battleships down along the coast line of Mexico we may tip that coun try over Into the gulf. Bayard Baxter leaves Friday for Leavenworth, Kansas. He will take a carload of bees to be planted on his property possessions near the above city. Several more Nauvooltes have pur chased automobiles in the past sev eral days. If this thing keeps up, pretty soon Nauvoo will be making her kick for traflic policemen. who passed away at this institution on Friday evening of last week, had one of the most beautiful funerals ever seen in this city. The funerfel Daily Gate was held from the Nauvoo Catholic church last Monday morning and this large religious temple was filled to overflowing with people who went to pay their last respects to this noble lady. There were many priests pres ent to assist in the solemn and Im pressive ceremonies and the floral tributes were many, costly and beau tiful. Mrs. J. Furling of Keokuk, as sisted in the choir and Miss Culver," also of Keokuk, presided at the organ. The remains were taken to the Cath olic cemetery where interment took place and this worthy lady was fol lowed by an automobile cortege to her last resting-place. Mr. Phillip Hummel of Nauvoo died at his home last Monday afternoon. He had been very ill for several weeks Misses Edith McGregor, Gertrude and his ailment with his advanced Ft. Madison will send down to Nau- of Sonora township, died at his home voo its Empress Rebekah lodge Thurs- last Friday at the age of 90 years, 2 day of this week to attend the con-1 months and 27 days. The funeral oc vention to be held here. curred last Sunday afternoon. He Nauvoo's baseball team will play leaves several children to mourn. their first game pf the 1915 season The latest census giv.es Nauvoo a with the Hamilton club next Sunday, I population of about 1,00*0 souls, but In Nauvoo. A large crowd should gojwe have been losing by deaths and down to their diamond to witness the game. Nothing gives a ball team as much encouragement as a large crowd of rooters. There isn't a girl who hasn't got! in Louis Hudson's grocery store. The memorized the specifications of the ladles will serve cake. Ice cream, cof kind of fellow she means to marry I fee and sandwiches. and who misses it farther when the I The Nauvoo district board of edu bidg are opened. cation has re-employed Misses Sylvia age, hastened his end. Mr. Humme.li was over 83 years of age at the time of his death. Three sons and three daughters are left to mourn. The fun eral occurred this Wednesday after noon from the residence at 1:30 o'clock and from the M. E. church at 2 o'clock. Mr. Hummel was one of! Nauvoo's kind old gentlemen and numbered his friends by the score, He came to reside in Nauvoo from the 1 rural districts a number of years ago. Another one of the saddest deaths that has occurred to shock this com-! it to a in S a re a hospital at Ft. Madison last Sunday morning. Mrs. Ed. Hanansky died in: that institution after going through a el at a pa in at on a a be or at A ation it was thought that this young' and popular lady would recover her usual good health, but fate decreed otherwise. Mrs. Hanansky's maiden! name was Miss Kathryn Kelley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thos A. Kel-! ley, living about four miles east of Nauvoo. Her father preceded "her in death but a few years ago. This ex cellent young woman was in her 35th I year at the time of her demise. Mrs. Hanansky leaves her young husband,' aged mother, two sisters and five brothers to mourn, who have the sym-' pathy of this 'entire community. The funeral occurred from the Nauvoo Catholic church last Tuesday morn ing and was one of the largest seen here. The remains were interred in our Catholic cemetery. Rev. Hoffman and Rev. Reimbold were the officiat I ing ministers. I Mr. Wm. Kruse, an aged resident! families -moving away, with few births and no new comers. It is about time to launch a million club. The ladles of the Xauvoo Civlo league will hold a May day festival in the city park next Saturday, with Not even an old tin can was found in the business section of Nauvoo by the "clean-up brigade," which began a fine program of songs, recitations its work last Saturday. Ta Nauvoo1 and drills commencing at 2 p. m.'They Ladies' Civic league had charge of, also are holding a voting conffrflt' for the affair and had all wagons return the selection of a May queen, which empty to headquarters. The ladies costs 5 cents to vote for the one of had a pretty good Job made of it. Ave candidates. The contest is held This Is the first Nauvoo snake story Krueger and Verna Hohl as teachers of the season: "One of our ladies, for the next term. These young ladles while preparing a southern grown are good generals when it comes to cabbage for dinner, found a long' marshaling the kids under their sup-1 it it vi on a around one of the leaves. She grab- have selected them for another term bed it and measured it out on the of service. Best about these young table. Its length was seven Inches. adies and all their generalship is! It has the proportions of a piece of that they are so busy teaching the white thread." ideas how to pull the intellectual trig-: The Nauvoo district schools will ger? that as yet they have not both a 7 re he el a an Farmers are now busy planting suffrage. corn in this section and they are all: Memorial day may not be observed crying for more rain. Some of our' in Nauvoo in a public manner this rural brethren say there Is plenty of year. Nauvoo's lodges ought to Join! time yet to get In the corn crop. in with the old soldiers and help ob-1 Robt. Kuhn, Nauvoo's furniture! serve the day. It falls on Sunday this dealer, is about to discontinue his un- year and Saturday, May 29, would be dertaking business and will turn it over a good time to observe this memor-J to a Ft. Madison man who will at- able day. I tend to all calls. It looks like this Nauvoo will have a bumper crop of will necessitate an extra expense to' cherries, plums and pears. The trees Nauvoo residents when they areare loaded with blossoms. obliged to need the services of an un- Now that the Beeds are mostly all' dertaker and call him from the above In, the thoughless Nauvoo gardener, town, besides the delay. proceds to plan his summer vacation Several of Nauvoo's citizens claim for a time when the "sass" will be that they will raise a few peaches on! ready to eat. their premises, but the largest part of Thursday and Friday of this week !. the Nauvoo peach crop is killed for the Nauvoo Rebekahs will have the I this year. honor to entertain the assembly mem- The Nauvoo State bank is always b^rs of the twelfth district of Illinois, an up-to-date institution. It has now The Nauvoo Priscilla club o*f Nau installed a Burrows electric ledger! voo has about disbanded for the sea posting machine. It Is a wonderful! son as no meeting pla» has been an piece of mechanism and adds and sub-i nounced lately. tracts as accurately as the best of ex-j Miss Grace Argast entertained the perts. Young Ladles Sewing club last Thurs- N'auvoo K. of C. society has ap-1 day evening. Dainty refreshments pointed committee to get figures and leam the cost of placing a heat ing plant in the Nauvoo Catholic church. There will be a Mother's day pro gram in the Presbyterian church on a week from next Sunday. Mrs. Farn Whitcomb has been ad mitted into th.? Xauvoo M. E. phurch, Rev. Inman officiating at the bap tismal. ir all could be trusted to say th« right thing at the most propitious mo ment. good listeners would soon ac quire a majority. Rev. Wm. Hertel of the Lutheran church baptised the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bcnne last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Argast. Jr., were the sponsors. The little fallow was given the name of T.awrence Edward. The Rusliville, 111., Presbytery has decided to hold their next convention in Xauvoo in September. The dele gates wilj visit* the Keokuk dam and the Ft. Madison penitentiary while here Mother Ottilia Hoeveler, the found-. ver of Xauvoo'a St. Mary's academy. you can't get in quiet ly, oil the with 3-in-One Makes key turn easi ly—bolt move softly. Prevents grinding springs. Dictionary of 100 other bottle Against Substitutes Get the Well-Known Round Package 1 ^4 CAUTION void Substltut 4 **5!SS&* jCtPAMDTMfttfg 5aiXt»DMiLftC*fc Wk»S An American Flag Free. Ask Us How to Get One. AOJkmH mUOK. Prmmt. THOm. jom. m. mum* TRADE MARK Ask For HORLICKS %Wm:THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made In the largest, best •quipped and sanitary Malted Milk plant In the world We do not make"fm7&products"^ Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, ete. Bat wjy BUCK-REINER CO. Wholesale Grooorm and Coffee Roasters DttTfUBUTORS FOR THE HAffT BRANO OF CANNED AND VEGETABLES. OB* INDIAN HEAD HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from dean, lull-cream milk •nd the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. Best Food-Drink lor All Agttt llMd for over a Quarter Century Un§B— yon may "HORUOK'S" ':'k you nmy got Submtltutm, a Paokogo Home. That Friday, April 30, 1915, is the last day on which to pay the premium on Iowa Bankers Association, Des Moines, Iowa Illinois Bankers Life Association, Monmouth, 111, The Merchants Life Insurance Company, Burlington, Iowa. All due and payable at -V/ The State Central Savings Bank 1 Cor. 6th and Main Streets Keokuk Savings Bank Established 1868 KEOKUK NATIONAL BANK j. r** .. affords every facility for do ing your banking business that any bank can. 3 E S A I S E I 8 5 6 of tin largest Wholesale Dry Goods, Notion. Underwwr and Hoalarjr Houses In th« Middle West Ibinfastanrs of ladlaa Head Dress Shirts, Work Oblrts. Overalls-, ate. •ete Agent for "Tom Boy" Heelerj* of were served before the departure the yonng guests. The owner of the auto which stolen in Nauvoo a short time ago, went to St. Louis and Interviewed tne young man who was supposed to have Btolen the machine. It is said the fel low confessed and agrees to pay all expenses incurred If he Is allowed his liberty, which is a cheap lefeson for Shot in the abdomen in a light with St. Cloud reformatory Friday, is dying in a hospital here today. Ev*na wasl,nS Evans was hit while running away. Both men were in for robbory. FBUIT8 ALrrtmo m. buok. vtm» mr—t. JOHN, amor- A Trmat. aso. m. Tuonmm KEOKUK, IOWA Vol* Prices Duplicate*. FACTORIES Keokuk, U. Irwin-Phillips Co., Han:lton, III- OPEN NOSTRILS! END A him. Mr. McCalllster, the" owner, went catarrh disappears. Your clogged nos to considerable expense In trying to trils will open, the air passages of your locate the machine, besides the worry head will clear and you can breaths and trouble It caused him. The fel- freely. No more snuffling, hawking, low is fortunate in getting off so easy, mucous discharge, dryness or ben* {ache no struggling for breathe Escaped Convicts Caught. night. [United Press leased Wire Service] Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream J-ITTT-E FALLS, Minn., April 28.— Balm from your druggist and apply COLD OR CATARRH 1 "V How To Get Relief uttle of thl„ When Head and Nose are Stuffed Up. Count fifty! Your cild in L.ead or a fraKrant police at Staples, Fred Middleton, 27.: J"®.®1! through who. with James Evans, escaped from 5" OUr antiseptic and shot in the foot 'flamed mucous membrane, giving y° The men were recognized In a res- Instant relief. Head colds and catarrh taurant at Staples, but fled to a swamp yield like magic. Don't stay stuffed" throe miles distant after Policeman Kunz fired five shots, none taking ef jfect. Later, Special Officer Munson I surprised the convicts and shot Mid dleton while trying to overpower him. cream nostrJls- P,e"fl h®:d s00th- every a,r Pa88aSe thc head' 60 healins the swollen or 'ip and miserable. Relief is sure. .Cause and Effect. "Lincoln Journal: Sending the state legislature naturally resu in freak legislation,