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2 THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5, 1920. fl I FAR EAST AND I UKRAINE JOIN I TO FIGHT BEOS ' Reports Indicate Soviet Are I Menaced by Foes on All j Sides BAREFOOTED CONSCRIPTS SURRENDER TO WRANGEL News of Day Indicates Grow incj Strength to Anti-Bol-j shevik Movement fl IIAKB1X. Manchuria. Oct. fBj Th Associated Press.) General Lo khvitry. In command of the former Kolchak troops which wore led by i;iniMi Kapelle, commander-in-chief .f i he western armies of the old Omsk government, ths' time f Ma death, ii reported lo have telegraphed Gen--ral Wrangel offering his submission j the WrangeJ government. I SEMENOFl JOINS. 1 General Semenoff, the antl-bolehe ik Cossack lender In Siberia, b&S alBO offered his aid to General Vv" ran gel. General Semenoff s chief lieutenant. General Ungem-Sternberg, is reported to be starting a raid on Irkutsk from Daurta, Trans-Balkalla, hoping to H compel ihe Russian soviet to divert troops from the Polish front. It .l L GETS H i JONST NTIN iPLE, Oct. 4. (By The A.isoi Isted Press. ) Force 1 manded by General Baron vVrahgel, Hf head of the an ti-bolshevik government of south Russia, have been .lolneii b U the armies led b General Makno, the B I'kranian chief, which have been op- H crating against the troops in the m region of Kharkov, The junction was m effected at Sinslmkova. village L'S '' mile southeast of Bkaterinpslav, and h j the bolehevlkl have been trapped In tl ihat vicinity since the antl-bolshevlk . forces have been approaching each Other during thi- pail tort nigh i were Barefooted conscipts of the bblahe- j v Ik arhl) continue to surrender Ir. , a i e numher.i without rijlsiin. , B the bolsevlk regulars and student H regiments contintn- (heir retrt IN DT S0( EASY LIQUOR Agreement Between the Eu-l1x,-ne Willards to Split Cellar S'ork May Be Upset by Prohibition Laws I By Inurn.-itlonal ovvs Zcr tre) SKVf fORK. Eugene Sands vTIU ard. lawyer and member of the Union Racquet ami Tennis, New JTork Vacht ar.d Piping Rock clubs faCCa the sad prospect of losing his private liquor supply via 'he divorce courts dm- t'i the drastic provisions of the Volstead act. Mr. r:i;a Guthrie Willard, daugh Ler of William I . '"luthrie. has ap plied to Justice Benedict rr an abso lute divorce from Mr Willard. and ttied as part ot the legal papers ani agreement between herself and her husband for a fifty -flft) division of (heir supplies of liquors foi beverage purposes. The agreement rpllowi The plaintiff iMr.v W'illard and the h iendant (Mr. Willard agree i" a"n equal division of the wines, llquort and cordials at Locust Valley, L. 1.. and at No 33 Park avenue, Manhat tan. The plaintiff agrees to submit to the defendant a list of all wines. 1 1 llqiibris and cordials owned bj them, ; wherever situated. The defendant . vrees to assume all liability under I Lhc Volstead act for removal." At the legal department of the local prohibition enforcement office at the Custom House it was said that the circumstance indicated there was no way In which Mr. W'illard could trans Port the liquor from eltncr of the homes mentioned without violating I the enforcement act. The law would permit Mr. W'illard I ere he moving his own domicile from oie place to another, to apply i or S. permit for the transportation of liquors. but both ihe honies men tioned are the propertv of Mrs. W'il lard. having been given to her bj bOf fgthpr Moreover. Willard has not been living at either Of the homes re i eiitly. He and his wife separated and ; In went to live elsewhere. Mi. W'illard did not defend thi di vorce a tlon A recommendailon ihat Mrs Willard receive an absolute dl orc has been made by a referee. I HIS ASHES INTERRED IN f TOPMOST ROCK OF J MOUNTAIN Hl (By International Newt Service ) M T. tVHITBFACK, N H; The H unostentatious character of the life of H ihe ut-- I.ouis s Talnter, who was n H promlnni Boston huslness nmn, was H r, fle ld the exercises attending i icinc hi.- ashes In the lopmosl rdck H here above the clouds In accordance H with his lestamentsjr) wteh; H of the 'I'nlnter's former associates brought his ashes over the Appalueh- B lan trail and on their arrival at the H n OUITlaln's summit found aliout Iwen H tj five persons Including women, who H had Journeyed from surrounding towns to witness the simple service. John II. Knapp of W'eyland. read hurls I service following which F; V Watson, of Rrookllne, Mas:;., ex. ,iur of Talnter will, placed the urn Into the drilled rock on the mountain tup. Over the urn, was placed the bronee tablet Inscribed "In the acquisition of lands for thil national forest he rendered a notablr Hervlre. and In conforming to hli wish his ashes repose hen ln ' H , nn ' Hl Kelicate recording instrumenis have Hj been Invented for registering the vi- j I, rations of ships in such a manner j ,J)lt then causes can be traced and H inidled. oo H ,tks made of a fabric woven from Hj uaoer siil's thai are twisted with a Hj short vegetable fibre are being suc- H ceeefull) used for transporting ore In f QhHs GIVES IIP TO WARDEN AFTER j VISIT TO WIFE! i (. ..Mflnuoil I rum IV'S One.) count of m.v travels and everyone whoiii I have worked t r. Kvery penny; 1 liave had since leaving you I have ained h hard manual labor and I an, proud of it. 1 hope you will not, place me behind the walls or punish j i o e f,, in .,, i Ions, bui if ou t hink I 'deserve It, all well and good. I stand I read) and willing to take my punish-1 ' ment like a man. "You may see my unclt ami inform j him as to just what is best to do on returning. I think It bod for me to i telephone you to meet me some place outside of Ogden or Salt Iake. us I i would iurel he picked up should 1 at tempt to make my way out lo your I place alone. "Please give my very I" i regards to Mr. Dyer and your famlli J Will i lops for thi- time and hope to seo vou In the next twenty-five days. I am. tl ever, your old friend and commls sary clerk." i i i i H S i I PRlSOJi Her, is .Martin's story, told to W'ar deh Stous at the slate prison: I ' After 1 was tried unit convicted on jcircumslunttal evidence 1 went to prls lon and hud been thore for a period of five years, at which time 1 had con f eased to the crime committed by me. I ,i s t . i lot, tt,. boa rrl "I pardons hi I I e, em her. a year ago, asking a pa-, role, and the people who had proso- Icutcd me. were there in a body to pro-j test any element y being granted. They ;told mo 1 was guilty. They would fight in, until I straightened ibe matter up h. view of the fact that they talked fail I" me. I gained the impression that th. y would help me If 1 would lielp nivseif that is, fully clear up the matter, i enis given to understand bj ithc gentlemen ihat they held no anl- I moelty toward ths Mr. Laatherwood, M. Porter, Mr. Bristol and Mr W.illln were the gen- tlemen I ti.lkcd to. I withdrew my ap plication at the December meeting of thi board of pardons with the under-, Islanding that these people would come back to me and secure u more detailed st itemeni and bring theii wives so that i could clear it up with a confession, -0 that the, would have no fear of me in ihe future PMtDilN Iti HI Ml l "My case was laid over until Febru ary. In the meantime ihe papeis got hold of the story and spoke of my be-, Ing Maid over.' At the rVd.-ruarj mi ll ing 1 Was flatly denied a pardon. Pre-1 vlous to this meeting a (i-w weeks, the I same people came to the prison and, secured a full confession from me. I had gone to th warden before my confession was made and told him I . wanted to make a full breast of the' matter. The warden culled Judge i hi rWOpd Up and he suggested that; coil ih people down iroin Ogden, .a I Bald I would do that If the mat-1 i' were kept from the papers for the . m m wife anil children and rel ,ves. 1 ..i.. . if, believed me innocent and ij tamed her lo continue to believe thai, gy, and i felt that the continued pub-; . it) would hurt her- It waa upon the, uaderstandlng that there would be no1 j publicity that I made n full and de-"j .tailed confession of tny Crimea. My confidence In the Ogden people; .o wnom i coincided, wa- betrayed bj the fact that my detailed confession ;n . . ui U.i y was pu' UMhed in an .gden jpapcr. Mi UrtStol wrote me a letter and told ire that he was in uo wayto, Dlamc ttiat it happened, i telt pretty bud about It. All tne papeta w i re con demning me and had left till vilh the I Impression thai there was .ulte a bu , of bitterness agumsi me. and I fell1 that I was being unjustly condemned, 'although I did not feel untugoflietlc. W'n-n the board of pardons pructl-j ed me a parol. In 'eoi uar) l ,- mi w in, i he Imprei lon I hat i WaJ denied this parole becuusi of the; I undue publicity. The people who had1 prosecuted n:- : tav d avv.i;. from (he meeting and made no protest, nor did i tnev sa a word in my iavur. They1 igave me ihclr word that they would I not appear at the board In protest and ifexpreefeed hope that i would be grant-' ed clemency in the near future Mis FOR Oil H 1 1 "I sought an interview with Mr. Leatherweod on two different occa-1 sio.is aiter the board of pardon meet-; .in; in Keoruury and on tite 7tn ot Juiy, the day before 1 escaped uom priion. 1 called him up for the third time and LusKed film to come and ko me i wait led for him to come out and when he .ailed to fomt 1 became thoroughly convinced that 1 had been double crossed and iclt my confidence be trayed. ' "1 had made up my mind that if Mr. LeathcJGVOOd did not come to the jirls on on July S and listen to m.v story I would attempt to escape. "I hated lo leave the prison, because ,.i the Way 1 hud been treatd by W'ar ideli btorrs. lie had always been fair ti, nie ami treated me nicely. It hurl Inie to know that I was betraying the I trust of a friend. j "After being In prison three and one-half years 1 was made a trusted 'inploye and made assistant comn.lr Bary Clerk, which work 1 was doing w.i 'i I escaped from ihe prison I had I endeavored since coming to prison to I v.i m.,aie ....a i.. , ., a j a better position in the prison ittid do isomethlng that would cause favorable OtlMderation b, ths bourd oi pardons. IlKlUZI s 1CI L8 WRONG. 1 "I hud access to the outside of the! pilsou and at 10.45 o'clock on the' night of July 1 walked through the outside gate, telling ths guard that it was tOO hot Inside the prison. I Walked, tor fifteen milSS up Kmlgratlon canyon There 1 sat on ths ground and pond ered ths advisability of going on or re-, turning to the prison. i studied the Situation and 1 knew I .as doing' wiong. Jiid thai ihe warden had all, I the confidence In the world In me- I rl( d nd I sat on the ground for halt, an hour and at lust decided that 1 OOUld not make It back to the prison b daylight; and if I did i might bel pul In prison behind the bars So II decided thai I had committed en error lth"u,i was loo late to rectify, and 1 start-! ed on up the canyon. "I was possessed of J30 which I huti i obtained by selling my typewriter, overcoat and banjo. I was In my shirt sleeves I crossed a ntream coming at last to Kast creek. I then made my Way to Morgan and to the rallroud. TRAV1 SLED Vt VH.in . "The trip from Ihe prison lo ihe railroad ui Morgan was completed on ths il ird night 1 walked at night and In the daytime secluded byseir In the underbrush, away from the road. I saw many peple, but none saw me. 1 1 reached Morgan at 10 o'clock on the night of July 10 and obtained mv first i nourishment In the form in a glas." Of ,mllk. from a woman there ' few minuteji later I caught a i train for oden and secreted rnvseif ; In the Icebox of a refrigerator ear. ; The train slopped in front of the Union depot In Ogden for one hour and I was very uneasy that someone would dlAcover me As the train started north for Md'ammon. 1 sought iifuKc- in a coal car. t arrived at M.eCammon on the llih of July, bought suit of overalls, then ,on- m tinned to pbcotello on a freight train; got nff on the BOUth side of town arid walked to the west end. T caught a train out of Pncatcllo, arriving In Glenns Ferry the next morning There I caught a freight to Nampn. arriving about 30 o'clock. went to a hotel got a room, laid down and slept until the next day. "leaving Nampn ai night I caught another train to 1 1 unllngton. where I stayed four hours, then got on a pas- i enger train and rode on the top to The 1 lalles, Oregon. ( HIT MNS I'Ml'I.OYMI A'l . ' From there I wont to Portland, then caughl a street car to Vancouver, Wash. i bought my first railroad ticket at Vancouver and went to Ta coma. secured employment In a lum ber yard, doing utility work at 4.$0 a day fter working ten days I wen; by steamer to Seattle, took the train to Everett, Wash, caught a boat to Llremerton and went from there to Vancouver. B. f, to work with a car-1 penier gang I did not go to work,! hi , I'use they wanted mo to work as I a laborer Then I went to Calgary I and worked on a ranch. After four weeka I ler't for Medicine Lodge, Al betta, From there I went to Winnl- I peg, and, failing to obtain employment, I went to Durand Wis, and obtained work on an electrical road After working fourteen days. I went to Hum boldt la., and worked as a carpenter, tin n went to Des Moines. My next stop was Springfield, Mo R T UN's TO N l V From Springfield I went to iJonca City, Okla. i worked there six months as a carpenter. On May 1. L920, I re turned to Canada find Went to work for the ('anadlan government at Lake ikenogon as a carpenter, building camps for employes on a government i irrigation project In half S month I left for Seattle, then to Spokane, and , at Ruby, Wash, 1 worked four weeks' for the Diamond Mutch company.! From th re I went to Great Falls, Mont then to Greybull. W yo.. where I I worked for four weeks on ., grain elevator. "I returned to l'otua City, and con trai led to build a house. It was dur ing the construction of this house thai I wrote to Warden Stores, telling him; of my Intention 10 return to Salt Lake and try and straighten up rny trou ble. 1 used only one alias throughout the trip. I have saved $00 and sent I 50 to mv wife in January." i.Kl.l Tl 1 U I MILY Warden Qeorge a storrs aid aat night I hat he had considered Martini a reformed man for a long lime He j received first Information from Martin about his return to Salt Lake direct. Thereafter Martin communicated with his uncle, John Martin of Ogden Martin upon arriving In ugdeii went directly to his family, where a surprise reunion was held. While with hi, family In gden Martin did not leovi the house and no visitors came to dla i turb him Lat night he telephoned Warden Storrs that he was ready to 1 1 return. k The parting of the convict and his 1 family was exceedingly pathetic Mar- 1 tin broke down and cried, on the ar- I 'rival of the warden at the house, the youngest daughter of the three was siting on his lap. enjoying the com j fori of a father who was taken from j her seven years ago, when he was, ! three years of age. in telling his story night. Martin faltered when ho I lold of his toruunt after he had left j ; the prison, and fears welled in His ' eyes. for a space he could not con-; tinue becau.se of emotion. Before! leaving for his room In the prison, he gave Warden Storrs $260 in cur rency he had saved aiSTORl l si Martin was Hri senttneed Lo serve, flvt years for robbery hy the' Second district court of Ogden on April 23,' 1914; At a subsequent trial he was' : found again guilty of robbery and wus I thia time sentenced to life Imprison- ' mt in under the statute which permits auch a sentence for a confirmed crim inal. ' Hortin'e record included three years of depredations, during which he ter rorized prominent citizens of Ogden with his blackmail letters Among ;her deeds ascribed to him and to' hlch he confessed to Warden Storrs. vv.,. an .i:iiiilt and robbery of Mrs Qeoigi Culver of ogden, from whom hi took jewelry valued at $1500; the , blowing up oi the Ogden home of Le roy Ereles. the robbery of Mrs. Isa belln Boyle Walllri; tne holdup of emissaries sent to him in response I to blackmail letters and a number of other similar crimes. Martin was captured on December ; -I. 1913, after hfl had shot and aerl-i oijm' wounded I 'av id Ld wards, a I'lnk- erton detective, who had imporson-1 ated Leroy Bccles In an endeavor to' I apprehend the author of many black.! mall letters. Edwards had donned I ! some of Mr. Eccles' clothes and with ) a companion concealed in a buggy I Wj approaching a meeting place, I where Mr. Eccles had been told to J deposit $1000 In gold, and Ralph E.I I Bristol $500 In gold. Wheb he approached the place I shots rang out ar.d Edwards was left! on the field after an exchange of sev-, eral shots. o, Mis FOR CLEWS. Martin was apprehended as a result of suspicions cast on him by virtue of wounds In his leg. It was thee wounds,! which the prosecution said were caused J I by shots from Edwards cun. that proved one of the strong pieces of circumstantial evidence which result ed in conviction, i The trials were long and attracted great Interest, both because of the si - rlous nature of the crimes alleged I against the defendant, the number of, crimes, and ihe prominence of the I victims and intended victims Involved 1 It was brought out In the course of the trials and later admitted by Martini , In the uenitenllar' that be li,,l threatening letters to .Mrs Walltn, Mrs.: Culver Leroy Eccles, Dapid C. Eccles,, Mis David Eceles Mrs Carl Wallace, Mr Bristol and others, all of Ogden. Martin had been sending these lel tis for a period of about thr e years and despite the efforts of police, de lectives and other agencies, no cluej lo his identity had boen received. He' had former!) been a railroad man em ployed on the Oregon Short Line at l tgden, The man escaped from the state: prison on the night of July 8. 1919.' when, ai a irust.v. ho walked through the prison gates and disappeared. A 1 - .though a search was Instituted lor him within a few minutes after his disappearance, no trace of him was found until he surrendered voluntarily last niglyL PRESENT CHIEF OF CONFED VETERANS TO BE RE-ELECTED ' HOUSTON, Tex.. Oct. .4. Announce I ment today by General K M. Van zandi. of Fori Worth, Tex., commander-in-chief of the I'mtcd Confed erate Veterans, that he wouid be a I candidate for re-election practically eliminates all probability of a contest ; for any of the major offices of the organization, according to official! j here to attend the reunion of the ircl , erans, which begins tomorrow. Savannah, On., und Little Rock, I Ark., will con'est for next yea- ,e I union. oo To over.-orno delays In wire con'nii nicatlon Paraguay has arranged for radio service to outside countries through stations in Argentina Kf For all beverages, as coffee, w cocoa or tea, use rich, creamy I Carnation Milk,undiluted. You M I will find it delicious and far X ' more economical than cream. In the kitchen, Carnation Milk I WBm:j$b. is the aide to good cooks. One I ";." ' "- if water and one half Carna- S vv: , tion is the correct formula for rj all cooking. Buy this good milk from your grocer regularly. LOO tested recipes free. Write J Carnation Milk Products Co., Dooly Block, Salt Lake City flf Carnation B Milk "Fro m C on ten ted Co w 6 " Th?aMi, r. landau EVAPORATED JL TRIED TO DEFRAUD U. S. SHIP BOARD, SAY INDICTMENTS X B W YORK, Oct. u. Victor S. POX and William II Kal.-er, steam ship operators, today were Indict ed by the federal grand Jury here 1 chatged with "engaging In a con spiracy to defraud the I'nlted Slates by making false accounts and vouchers with Intent to de fraud the United Siutes shipping moard." SEAMAN DROWNED, FIVE INJURED ON U. S. DESTROYER WASHINGTON. Oct. I. Eugene. Paciuctt. Dover, X H , a seaman, was drowned, and an officer and four olhe; men of the cre of the destroyer Goldshorough were Injured while thai vessel was outward bound from Tam plco, Mexico, last Thursday, said a dispatch received at the navy deprr inent today from the vessel, which reached New Orleans Saturday oo LARGE BEQUESTS FOR CHARITY SEEN IN SCHIFF'S WILL Xkw York Oct. 4. Charitable I bequests totalling approximately l,-l 350. n00 are made In the will of Jacob' H. Schlff banker and' phliantroplst, I filed iate today In the surrogate's of- ; flCC The value of the estate Is given merely as "more than 1 10,000 in real and personal property," In the accom panying petition IRISH CALLED QN TO STOP GRIMES Dt'NLiAI.K, Ireland. Sepi 17. ! t Correspondence Father Nicholas Lawless, a noted Louth priest, told to the promHers of a meeting recently i held in Dundalk in aid of expelled' Belfast workers that they were "begin-J nlng at the wrong end." 'The way to save our people In the north Is to end at once the crimes that are disgracing Catholic Ireland both) norlh and south " he adds: "It Is those crimes that enraged land no wonder the workers of Bel- i fast who have nald they will let Catho-' ! lie workers return to work when the I shooting of men of the Royal Irish. Constabulary und others stops It Is all verv well lo denounce 'reprisals' but! who will say ihat reprisals are s, i wicked as the crimes that provoke' ! them Instead of boycotting beifast let us' all Join in boycotting murderers and! I burnings. There Is no other way to i cure the Ills of the north and south.'; After research extending over .'.0 I years a proces- has been discovered for bleaching ihe papyrus plants of the Kongo so that their fibre will oe 1 available for paper pulp. New repeating mechanics for phono graph records automatically set the noodle hack to any desired point on a record or will continue to play It as many limes at wished. UNCROWNED KING OF THE WORLD! THAT'S HARDING NOT WARREN, BUT WILLIAM King William P. G. Harding ll III M MO I ON, n.i . staff Correspondent, WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. Power to drive a king from his throne and a sparse shock of straw-and-gray hair that hasn't been trimmed in five weeks Pewer to ruin a million farmers or bankrupt a million merchants, and a heap broadcloth coat that puckers at the seams. William P. tj. Harding, governor general of the I'nlted Stales federal reserve board, Iiils greater power than any ruler of the earth. Nero could olf with their heads'' to a hundred Christian-.; with a wave of his hand He ate his food from golden plates and his roast suckling pigs hud diamonds In their eyes. Harding can say three words and around the world and Into the farth est country panic could follow. Thou sands to Nero's hundreds might die. Harding has no diamond crested sujek luiK plga and I think his scarf pin Is agate. .As governor general of the super bank of the world, Harding Is per haps the world's greatest Individual power today. America Is the world's banker Her banks are financing the nations of the earth. Harding and his advisers control the fate of Ameri can banks and hence the fate of every nation dependent upon them. Ancient rulers waved a Jeweled scepter and perhaps a massacre fol lowed Harding litis his voice to say. "ral.-e the re-discount rates, and every man and woman and child on earth Is affected. Kor example, cotton Is nn essential of civilization The United States is a heavy cotton producer. Cotton growers today have millions of bales unsold In their warehouses They must sell the cotton or go broke The cotton market Is low. If they sell now they must make a little profit and every cotton buyer will buy cot ton cheaper If they hold their cot ton every buyer must bu dearly. The) Wish io hold They go to their banks and they ask the bankers io loan them money on their cotton until th" market rlse.s and they sell. The banks haven't enough money The) can loan the money If the federal re- I serve bank will buy the notes from them. If the federal reserve bank refuses to buy, or rulses the re-dla- ' count rate ' the bank can't loan the cotton growers can't hold and cotton goes cheaper. "The federal reserve bank doesn't care whether prices rise or fall, " Harding told nie, "It simply cares to keep Its reserve within the legal limit.1 Hov.i er, If we loaned money to the cotton people we'd have to loan the wheat people and the oat people and the barley people and soon we'd have four or five billion dollars loaned So we don't help any agricultural Indus try hold Its products for price raises 1 We help ihem move the crop to the market and that's all " Whut does this uncrowned king of the world look like? He looks like a banker and he is u banker His spectacles are rimmed with light celluloid and are hooked to his ears. His face Is lined deep about the mouth tie has a slight atoop yet an easy, cautious' sort ot walk and carriage. I don't think he .veais socks that match his tie. though, J think mostly thc-y do, because blac'k I appears his favorite tone, FOREST FIRE THREATENS WISCONSIN VILLAGES EAT i . I I: K. Wla.. Oct. 5 -Reports received here today from Kalr chtld and Augusta, where a fprest fire fanned by a strong west wind yester- ; day threatened to destroy a consider able amount of farm property, said the fire was virtually under control. Efforts to reach Tiotsa, In Clary ! county, by telephone were unavailing Tire fighting crews believed the town! had not been destroyed l no ! A I bread of spider's silk Is 50 per cent stronger than a steel thread ot I the same thickness. 1 4ii, I F -A I Argentina has been, experimenting! with camels imported from the Can ary Isands for agricultural purposes! In regions that are not suited to I horses or oxen. Numerous advantages a,re claimed for a motor driven hair clipper In which the motor is behind the hand Bl gripe instead of between them and the' LVm cutting t.i.i.i, PI 8 !rlwlei I L i& can a mm am m m aua 1 Wmhm W5l The scientific blending of reliable vegetable remedies) Ii of benefit to persons who suffer from Ncrvousr zss Sleeplessness j Depression Loss of Appetite Brain Fag Digestive Troubles Slow Recovery from Influenza and Kindred Ailments I Are vou run down? Ar? you irritable? Aro you overworked? Then I try this approved remedy and satisfy yourself of its beneficial I J ingredients. iiM- . , , . ... Sole Menufaeiunrt 1 BjtaU fM Ml original BBIACEA DRUG COMPANY I 16-oz. bottles only . Refuse Kacity M ' , j