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Cheyenne Wells record. (Cheyenne Wells, Cheyenne County, Colo.) 1???-1969, December 28, 1922, Image 6

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THE WORLD IN
PARAGRAPHS
A BRIEF RECORD OF PASSI.NO
EVENTS IN THIS AND FOR
j EIGN COUNTRIES.
IN LATE DISPATCHES
DOINGB AND HAPPENINGS THAT
MARK THE PROGREBB
OF THE AGE.
"WESTERN
Muriel Stark, aged 3 months, was In
stantly killed when the water jacket
of a kitchen range near which her cot
had been p'aced exploded In her home
In Vancouver, B. C. The child was
struck by a flying fragment of Iron.
Air Mall Pilot Henry G. Boonstra,
lost In a blizzard while flying with
government mall from Salt Lake t**
Rock Springs, Wyo., was found alive
and well at Rigby ranch, near Coal
ville, Utah, by a searching party.
Police authorities of Salt Lake City
have announced that, through the me
dium of photographs, Arthur Haan,
under urrest at Richmond, Calif., had
been Identified as the slayer of 10-
year-old Rulon James during an at
tempted drug store robbery in Salt
Lake City recently.
Three Mexicans were killed In a
running fight with mounted customs
Inspectors and Texas rangers near Mi
rando City, Webb county, Texas, ac
cording to u report received lu San An
tonio by Deputy Collector of Customs
Ed Cotulla. No member of the federal
force was injured.
William A. Farr and Rex Aylett,
confessed that they were the two ban
dits who shot und probably futally
wounded Miss Roylunce Fitzgerald on
a road south of Salt Lake City us the
culmination of a series of highway
robberies that have terrorized Suit
Lake City motorists for months past.
The charred bodies of the missing
aviutors, Col. Francis C. Marshall und
Lieut. Charles Webber, have been
found on the Pablo Indian reservation,
about seventy-five miles west of Tuc
son, Ariz., the Southern Pacific rail
road offices In San Francisco were ad
vised In dispatches from Tucson. A
cowboy, the udvlces stated, cume upon
the bodies neur whut Is known ns In
dian oasis. The bodies lay In the
wreckage of the flyers' airplane.
WASHINGTON
Nearly half a billion dollars —$433,-
447,000 —was loaned to American agri
culture by the War Finunce Corpora
tion during the critical period of de
pression in the past year, the annual
report of the commission sent to Con
gress disclosed.
An attack on the Norris bill for gov
ernment development of Muscle Shoals,
Alabama power project, was made In
the Senute by Senator Ladd, Republi
can, North Dakota, who also criticized
the author of the bill, Senator Norris,
Republican, Nebraska, for having sup
ported the federal reserve act. Both
ure members of the new progressive
group and ulso of the Senute farm
bloc.
An Investigation by the Senate for
eign relations committee to ascertain
“the true state of uffairs" In Nicara
gua, the facts concerning American oc
cupation of tliut republic in 1010, why
American forces are still quartered
there, and “tiie connection between
certain New York commercial houses
and the Chamorro clan government of
Nicuruguu,” was proposed in a resolu
tion Introduced by Senator Ladd, Re
publican, North Dakota.
Announcement was made that tho
Department of Justice was preparing
to file a suit ugainst the Wriglit-Mur
tin Aircraft Corporation to recover a
$3,001,715 war claim.
The State Department has Informed
Ambassador Mathleu of Chile of the
American government’s acceptance of
that country’s Invitation to attend the
fifth Pan-American conference at San
tiago in Murch.
German overtures through Informal
channels for American Intervention to
obtain a revision of German repara
tions schedules, reported in Londo**.
dispatches, throws the first definite
light on the method by which Ameri
can Influence Is being drawn into a
new attempt at flnnl adjustment of
the vexing reparations problem.
The refusal of Representative Kel
ler, Republican, Minnesota, to respond
to a subpoena requiring him to give
under oath the information upon which
he based his Impeachment charges
against Attorney General Daugherty,
has created a precedent of such possi
ble far-reaching Importance that the
House judiciary committee decided to
refer the whole matter to a sub-com
mittee for Investigation.
Senate and House conferees have
reached an agreement on the Bursum-
Fuller pension bill. It Is planned to
press for an early ratifying vote In
both houses to aid soldiers und widows
of the Mexican, Civil and Indian wars,
and also for the maimed soldiers of all
wars —including the World War.
Ed Hayes entered the headquarters
of the I. W. W. In Salt Lake City and,
it Is alleged, at the point of a revolver
held up Put Mee, secretary of the Salt
Lake City branch of the I. W. W., and
Thomas Hodges, who happened to be
In the room.
FOREIGN
Stanislav Wojclechowskl has been
elected president of Poland to suc
ceed President Narutowlcz, who was
assassinated recently.
Ismet Pasha has announced that
the American colleges and institutions
In Smyrna will be permitted to reopen
under the Angora regime.
The Supreme Court of Leipzig, in a
secret session recently dismissed nine
ty-three **war guilt" cases tried In ac
cordance with the Versailles treaty.
Lord Curzon announced at Lausanne
that the near east conference will con
tinue, the Turks having adopted a con
ciliatory attitude toward the allied
plan for settlement of the straits
question.
A disturbing discovery was made at
the rear of Buckingham palace, Lon
don, when a grenade bomb was found
In an ash cart which bad Just arrived
to remove the palace refuse. Bow the
missile got into the cart is a mystery.
The strike of the dock workers in
Vera Crux was settled at a conference
between representatives of the men
and B. E. Bollway, general manager of
the Mexican Railway and Vera Cruz
terminal. The workers get a 22 per
cent Increase for three months.
Seven Republican Irregular prison
ers were executed at Mount Joy pris
on recently by the Irish Free State
government. The men executed were
former railway workers. They were
arrested near Kildare for tearing up
rails and threatening to wreck trulns.
Guerilla warfare, similar to that in
Ireland, broke out between Fusclstis
and their opponents in various parts
of Italy recently. A bomb thrown in
to a group of Fascistl at Trieste
wounded twenty-four persons, three se
riously. A former Fascistl leader was
alleged to have hurled the explosive.
A stirring altercation occurred at a
meeting of the sub-commission on min
orities at Luusnnne, between the for
mer Greek premier, Venizelos, and the
Turkish delegute, Kiza Nur Bey. Ac
cording to spokesman of the Turkish
delegation, Rizu Nur Bey declared thut
the Greek army wus not so much re
sponsible for the recent military disas
ter us was Venizelos himself, because
it was Venizelos who had inaugurated
the idea of u "military invasion of An
atolia.”
GENERAL
Pressroom crews on New York even
ing papers who refused to work over
time to print election extras on Nov. 7,
were not Justified in their action, Fed
erul Judge Learned Hund declared us
arbitrator in the controversy between
the pressmen and the publishers.
May Walker Ollle Homestead, a Hol
stein cow owned by the Minnesota
Holstein Coiupuny at Austin, Minn.,
has broken the world record for a
year's production of butter, her figure
for 365 days being 1,217.27 pounds of
butter fat, the equivalent of 1,521.0
pounds of butter, according to A. L.
Eberhart, president of the compuny
and manager of a packing plunt in
Omaha.
It was a corporal who captured and
held the lust heights of the Meuse be
tween Oct. 23 und 28, 1018, according
to an official cltution received ut the
First Army corps ureu headquarters in
Boston. Jumes A. Cresswell, then cor
poral of Company K, One Hundred and
First lnfuntry, Twenty-sixth division,
now going to school in Boston, wus the
mun, and his feut has gained for him
the Distinguished Service Cross.
According to the annual report oi
the U. S. forest service, a large purt
of the danger to the nationul forests
from mun-cuused fires is due to the
seasonal influx of tourists, campers,
hunters, und fishermen, und other vis
itors from the cities und from distant
parts of the country. A national cam
paign of public education on the sub
ject of forest fires is demanded if the
task of protection of the vast ureu of
the nationul forests, from Maine und
Florida to California und Washington,
is to be successfully performed.
Twenty-two civilian employes of the
Brooklyn nuvul base were arrested by
Department of Justice ugents from
New York city in connection with
grand Jury Indictments charging more
than $1,000,000 worth of goods huve
been stolen from the buse since the
war. Goods stolen from the naval
buse Included clothing, oil und other
materials, according to the federal
ugents.
Soldiers' bonus and highway Im
provement account for approximately
85 per cent of the $370,085,115.12 uu
-85 per cent of the $370,085.12 au
thorized Indebtedness of thirteen Mid
dle West and Northwest stutes, ac
cording to reports of stute treasurers
from the various stutes. Of this
amount $181,735,115 Is represented In
bonds or certificates of Indebtedness
ulreudy issued. Voters of Illinois,
Michigan, Missouri, Kunsas, Minne
sota, Wisconsin, lowa and Ohio have
authorized the payment of $207,705,000
to veterans of the world war, a por
tion of which already has been dis
tributed. Illinois, Mlchigun and Mis
souri have provided for a system of
good highways representing an ex
penditure of $115,000,000.
Mrs. Huzel Hirsh, charged with
shooting her husband after u purty lust
summer at the home of Miss Reine
Davies, motion picture actress, at Min
eola, N. Y., was acquitted by a Jury,
which accepted her defense thut Hirsh
was shot ucddentully when she tried
to prevent him from committing sui
cide.
Four persons were instantly killed
and another was slight injured at
Fort Arthur, Texas, when a street car
struck the truck In which they were
riding. All of the party were en route
to their work.
CHEYENNE WELLS RECORD
CRISP
COLORADO
NEWS
COMING EVENTS.
Jan. 13-20. 1923. —National Western
Stock Show. Union Stock Yards, Den
ver, Colo.
Fort Collins.—The Republican legis
lative program was formulated at a
party caucus here Jan. 2. A general
caucus of stute senutors and represen
tatives was held in the morning, and
separate caucuses of senators and rep
resentatives in the afternoon.
Denver.—Unless the General Assem
bly amends the game laws at Its com
ing session there will be an open sea
son on male ring-necked pheasants in
November, 1924. The session will pre
sent the last opportunity for legisla
tion for protection of the birds.
Colorado Springs.—Colorado College
officials denied' that there was any
truth, us fur as they knew, in the re
port that President C. A. Dunlwny has
accepted a position at Harvard and
will resign here In January. President
Dunlway has been In the East for
three weeks.
Denver.—Automobile license plates
and application blanks have been allot
ted to every county clerk and recorder
In Colorado's sixty-three counties, Carl
Mllliken, secretary of state, announced
here. The first 45,000 license plates
have been allotted to Denver, then fol
low El Paso, Pueblo, Weld and Lari
mer, and ufter Larimer the other coun
ties In alphabetical order.
Denver. —The famous show herd of
▲. B. Cook, bunker and railroad con
tractor of Townsend, Mont., has ar
rived In Denver for the National
Western Stock Show. The herd Is
headed by Panama 110, a 3-year-old
bull, which won first in Its class In
aged bulls at the recent Chicago In
ternational show in a class of twenty
head, and later at the show was made
grand champion Hereford hull over all
the winning Hereford bulls.
Grand Junction. —Postponement of
payments by landholders and farmers
under the High Line canal in Colorado
was the gist of a request made by Ed
ward T. Taylor, Colorado representa
tive, to Albert B. Full, secretary of the
Interior, in Washington. The reason
of the request was that “farmers in
Colorado are up against It." Secretary
Fall lntlmuted that, although he would
do his best to grunt extension of pay
ments, lie doubted if anything could be
done without appropriate congression
al uctlon.
Denver. Financial condition of
farmers and stockmen Is reflected in
the biennial report of George Stephan,
register of the Stute Lund Hoard, sun
mltted to Governor Shoup, which
shows cash receipts for the office dur
ing two years of $2,053,990, or $1,100,-
652 less thun for the preceding bien
nial term. Money received by the de
partment is derived from the sale of
and leasing of state lands, and In his
report Mr. Stephan tells the governor
that the falling off in receipts Is di
rectly due to the Inability of farmers
and stockmen to purchase, lease or
moke payments on existing certificates
of purchase or leuse.
Denver. —Colorado's seven leading
Industries, exclusive of agriculture and
mining, puid n total of $100,430,485 to
00,575 wage-earners, 14,541 of whom
were women, during 1922, according to
the biennial report of the State Bureau
of Labor Statistics, made public here.
The report was compiled by Carl S.
Mllliken, secretary of state and ex-of
flcio labor commissioner, and Carl De
Loclite, deputy state labor commis
sioner. The report shows thnt an av
erage annual wage of $1,759 Is puid in
Colorado In the following industries:
Automobile, films, department stores,
hotels and restaurants, manufacturing,
public utilities, and ralirouds.
Pueblo.—Police are seeking two em
ploy6s of the First National Bank of
this city, alleged to have absconded
with $5,000 of the bank’s money. The
names of the men have not been di
vulged by the police, or tfie bunk of
flcluls, who udmit of the robbery but
refuse to give out the names of the
men Involved until the detectives have
had an opportunity to make a capture.
Golden. —Bumping over a country
road behind nn ancient horse, distrib
uting hooch In the munner of a milk
man, was a highly profitable business
until Sheriff Gary Kerr of Jefferson
county arrested the alleged purveyor,
James Lett, a negro. Lett was nubbed
at Midway after Sheriff Kerr had
carefully investigated his route und
laid a trap.
Denver. —"The fact that federal re
serve messengers and guards were
robbed of $200,000 in the street In
front of the United States mint here
has Led to erroneous reports that the
mint Itself was robbed," said Robert
J. Grant, superintendent of the mint.
"United.. States mints are not robbed.
Each Is like a fortress und Is so heav
ily guarded that bandits never Invade
themj">
Deliver.—Names of thirty Denver
citizens, living und dead, have been
pluced upon a list of civic benefactors
announced recently. These names, se
lected by a committee appointed by
Mayor Bailey two years ago, will be
Inscribed In bronze on the colonnade
of the south end of the Civic Center.
The design of the dedicatory Inscrip
tion In the colonnade and the design
for arrangement of nnmes has been
placed In the hands of Robert Garri
son, Denver sculptor. The tablets will
be placed soon after the first of the
year.
COLORADO NEWS NOTES.
Caflon City.—The first of tlie fa
mous Beaver Park damage cases
growing out of the floods of June.
1021. when the Shaeffer dam, on Bea
ver creek, broke nnd flooded the farms
on lower Beaver creek, was culled In
the Fremont County District Court
here. The case culled was that or ».
S. Emerson against the Beaver Park
Water nnd Irrigation Company. Emer
son’s ranch Is on the Arkansas river,
a short distance below the mouth of
Beaver creek. There are fourteen
other complainants usklng damages
from the same cause, the aggregate
amount asked being $125,000.
Greeley.—Somewhere In the sand
hills of northern Colorado or western
Nebraska, four men believed to be the
bundits who robbed a Federal Reserve
Bank truck of $200,000 in Denver and
killed Charles T. Linton, a bank guard,
are hiding, while Denver police and
Weld and Morgan county sheriff’s offi
cials are searching for them. “Jumped
from Dr. J. W. Fuequa’s untenanted
farm house, eight miles northeast of
Greeley, where it is believed they were
hiding, the suspects, driving two large
automobiles, divided und sped away
before posses, hastily organized, could
get on their trail.
Golden.—On the ground that the
Colorado Supreme Court held constitu
tional a law that first should have
been submitted to the direct vote of
people In the district Involved, an ap
peal will be taken immediately to the
United States Supreme Court in the
Moffat tunnel case, Edwin 11. Parks,
attorney, announced recently. Park
represents Mary L. Milheim and Fred
erick Metculf, who brought the orig
inal action attacking the constitution
ality of the tunnel law.
Pueblo. —Elmer Beasley, 19 years
old, found guilty of the murder of Os
cur Kronke, Continental Filling Sta
tion employd, when given trial last
week wns sentenced to hang during
the week of March 31, by Judge J. S.
Trimble in the District Court. Beas
ley took his sentence with no comment
other than that he was sorry Kronke
hud died and that he felt sorry tor his
mother. He shot and killed Kronke
when the latter resisted the robbery
of the oil station.
Brighton.—John Jones, negro, ar
rested with Fred Merchlon, negro, on
the churge of murdering George Mil
ler of Denver on Nov. 20, pleaded
guilty to the charge when arraigned
here. Merchlon entered a plea of not
guilty. The triul of both men Is set
for Jan. 2. Itesulting from the in
tense feeling generally aroused
through the sluylng of Miller in Globe
vllle, both men were taken to the Weld
county Jail at Greeley for safe keep
ing.
Greeley.—Grant Haldeman, acting
for the State Public Utilities Commis
sion, sentenced Greeley citizens to
walk for 100 days. lie wus here to
pass on the application of a bus line
for the right to run Its cars on Gree
ley streets. He decided that the com
pany must procure a franchise from
Greeley before It cun muintain an up
pllcutlon before the Stute Board for
the right to run autos. He guve the
company 100 days to get this fran
chise.
Denver. —Colorado’s memorial win
dow to David 11. Moffat, which stands
on the right of the lieutenant govern
or’s rostrum in the Senate chuuiber,
wus unveiled recently in the presence
of Governor Shoup, Carl S. Milliken,
secretary of state; W. P. Itohinson,
chairman of the Moffat tunnel com
mission; A: M. Stung, state treasurer;
James Williams of the state Board of
Capitol Managers, and other state of
ficials.
Denver. —W. E. Carver was granted
a certificate of convenience and ne
cessity for the operation of an auto
mobile passenger stage line between
Denver and Steamboat Springs via
Idaho Springs, Empire, Fraser, Hot
Sulphur Springs and Kremmling, by
the State Public Utilities Commission.
Denver. —Apportionment of $(5,777,-
590 for construction of highways in
Colorado In 1923 was announced by
the highway advisory board in a report
which has been approved by Governor
Shoup. The budget for next year culls
for an expenditure of $3,101,091 on
highway construction, the remaining
sum being left over from 1920, 1021
and 1922. Federal uid projects total
$5,272,700, and stute projects $1,494,-
896.
Estes Park. —Painting vivid word
pictures of the peaks and ranges, flow
ers und birds nnd beasts of the Rocky
mountains, Charles Edwin Hewes, Es
tes Park poet, has Just completed a
book of verse, “Songs of the Itoekies.”
Mnrked by a simplicity of style that
reflects keenly the beauty of mountain
nature, many of the verses show u
depth of feeling unusually beautiful.
Denver.—Four armed and masked
bandits nttucked four Federal Reserve
Bank men In charge of a bank truck
ut the Colfax avenue entrance of the
Denver Mint, They shot Churles Lin
ton, bank guard, through the abdomen,
bundled $200,000 In $5 bills into their
big black touring car and fired on
guards at the door of the mint. Lin
ton died at the county hospital.
Steamboat Springs.—When they ran
nn errand for their parents, who were
visiting nt the Dunlels home, nnd at
tempted to start a fire with kerosene
In the kitchen, Harold Daniels, 5 years
old, and “Buddie” Ives, 7, were burned
to death In the latter’s home at Coal
view Spur, fifteen miles from here.
The fire destroyed the home. The two
boys were either killed Instnntly by
the explosion of the kitchen stove
county authorities believe, or were
stunned and then suffocated before
they could attempt to flee.
PLAN TO SOLVE
EUROPEAN DEBTS
LIMITED POSTPONEMENT OF PAY.
MENTS BY ALLIES BUQQESTED
BY OTTO KAHN.
BIG LOAN DISCUSSED
BANKER SAYS FAIR AND FINAL
SETTLEMENT SHOULD BE
MADE.
New York. —Otto H. Kalin, banker.
In a letter to Senator Reed Smoot of
Utah, member of the debt refunding
commission, made public by the com
mittee of American business men, lias
outlined a plan whereby lie believes
America can consistently aid toward
relieving the European situation und
at the sume time meet the sentiment
of the country which seems opposed
to the cancellation of the ullicd indebt
edness to the United States.
Mr. Kahn expressed himself us be
ing strongly in favor of the policy of
cancelling at leust a portion of the in
debtedness of the allied nations.
“But If public opinion and Congress
will not at present consent to the re
linquishment • n our putt of u por
tion of the allied debt,” the latter con
tinued, “which relinquishment, be It
understood, is suggested only in re
turn for, and simultaneously with,
measures on the part of the European
nations to bring übout that change of
mental and moral attitude and uctuul
conditions which is indispensable if
tlie world again is to be on an even
keel—then my suggestion would be the
following:
“Of the two und three-quarter bil
lion dollars or thereabouts, which our
givernment loaned to the allied na
tions after the armistice, that portion
ut least was not applied to the settle
ment of war contracts here, or is off
set by valid counter clulm, is intrin
sically distinguishable from the bal
ance of the allied debt to us.
It should be promptly put in the
way of repayment with a reasonable
rate of interest. For Instance, Amer*
icu might stipulate interest at the rate
of 3 per cent or .*l% per cent, and an
annual sinking fund of 1 per cent, b -
ginning after, say five years. The re
funding commission ought to be em
powered, according to its Judgment, to
postpone the beginning of Interest
payment likewise for five years.
“As to the remaining seven and a
quarter billion dollars or tliereubouts
there should be no attempt to apply
the same formulu to every country.
Tlie refunding commission should go
thoroughly into the economic and fi
nancial and general situation of all
countries concerned and make u fair
and final settlement, subject to the ap
proval of Congress.
“Even upon America's financially
most potent debtor, (treat Britain,
she should not impose the exceedingly
heavy burden of paying -1% per cent
interest from the start and redeeming
tlie principal within twenty-five years.
1 would suggest in the case of that
country, as an illustration, that there
be paid an annual sinking fund of
three-quarters of 1 per cent. Such a
sinking fund, If invested at the rate
of 4 per cent, would extinguish the
debt in forty-seven years. In addition
to tlie sinking fund of three-quarters
of 1 per cent, interest should bo
charged on tlie debt at tlie rate of, say,
2 per cent for tlie first period of eight
year, 1% per cent for tlie second, .*1
per cent for the third, 3% per cent for
the fourth, 4 per cent for the fifth, and
per cent for the final seven-year
period.”
Russia Will Make Own Automobiles.
Riga.—The soviet Russian govern
ment lias entered the motor car man
ufacturing business, and the first cur
to come to Riga attracted much inter
ested attention. It is gruy In color,
of forty horsepower, weighs 2,530
pounds, lias u speed of fifty-three
miles un hour, and seats seven passen
gers. The operation of tlie factory
where the first cur wus produced is in
the hands of u stuff suid to liuve been
truined in the United Stutes.
Seeks Aid in Distributing Coal.
Washington.—State officers should
commandeer und distribute coal neces
sary to prevent suffering, Senator
Wulsh, Democrat, Massachusetts, said
in a statement sent to his constituents.
Prompted by reports of distress caused
by coal shortuge in New England, iSen
utor Walsh, who said he hud received
many letters on the subject, took the
unusual course of sending u circular
letter to his constituents reciting Ills
efforts to prevent u fuel fumine.
Labor Problem Near Solution.
Washington.—Tlie employment situ
ation is encouraging and prospects are
bright for the remainder of the winter,
according to a survey Just completed
by the employment service of the De
partment of Labor. Nearly ull states
reported a condition much better than
at this time lust year. States uffected
by seasonal suspension of logging op
erations or farm work, and those
where transportation is hampered by
strikes were tlie only ones reporting
unfavorable.
Merchant Now*
Anything J
Table
had suffered from t w
5-« r»," lg the emphatt, “
Norman W. Brown,
paper and pnlnt denier SB
Cedar St., Charlotte, N. c ' ■
“My stomach wna aii,,'
and everything disagreed
was troubled with heurtbomß
ness, and at times there »,,B
aure of gas arouud mj h
most cut off my breath ■
“Since taking Tunlae m, B
Is fine. My appetite Is a »--»
I eat Just anything I wa nt ■
my stomach acts and feels j J
new one and my nerves are 3
as a die. To put It all in a
I am Just the same as a :,,g
It's a pleasure for uie to®
friends about Tanloc." ■
Tunlae Is sold by all good J
"—Advertisement B
Not There. I
“Plillosoi.bers nn plentiful.®
“You never run across one I
waiting room of ■
A FEELING oTsecJ
You naturally f ce | teemt vj
«dow that the medicine you m 3
take ia absolutely pure and
harmful or habit producing IUI
Such a medicine is Dr. KilmeTfl
Root, kidney, liver and bladder J
The aame standard of purity, iM
and excellence is maintained ia n 3
tie of Swamp Hoot. B
It ia scientifically compounded!
vegetable herbs. I
It is not a stimulant and it tj
teaapoonful doses. g
It ia not recommended for ctbj|B
It ia nature'*) great helper ia nl
and overcoming kidney, liver and 3
troubles. 1
A aworn statement of purity a|
every bottle of Dr. Kilmer 1 ! 9
Root. 1
If you need a medicine, you J
have the heat. On sale at all dreg!
! n bottles of two sizes, medium ladl
However, if you wish fint to J
great preparation send ten eeati M
Kilmer A Co., Hinghamton, N. Y,l
■ample bottle. When writing btl
and mention this paper.—AdrertS
More than iiO.tKKi s ten mere, toJ
barges ply tin* River Rhine. |
No man ever does ns much todl
he Is going to do tomorrow. I
■ Not a Laxative J
I Nojol Is a lubricant— ait J
■ medicine or lax»Un-«
■ cannot gripe. I
■ When you are couti|iiaL|
■ not enough of NstvaU
■ lubricating liquid ia pH
■ dneed in the bowel to Ml
■ the food waste soft nd
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