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Elbert County tribune and Elbert County banner. (Elizabeth, Colo.) 1920-1921, December 24, 1920, Image 6

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AN EPITOME OF
LATE LIVE NEWS
CONDENSED RECORD OF THE
PROGRESS OF EVENTS AT
HOME AND ABROAD.
FROM ALL SOURCES
SAYINGS, DOINGS, ACHIEVE
MENTB, SUFFERINGS, HOPES
AND FEARS OF MANKIND.
Hesters Nsvrpsper Ucloo Newt fNVtas.
WESTERN
Four persons were blown up and In
stantly killed when z charge of pow
der exploded on a dredger scow In Wil
lapn harbor, near South Bend, Wash.
Resisting capture at the hands of a
large posse, Frank Wagner, notorious
ly known as Dutch Frank, safecracker,
was killed ut Columbia Bead), near
Astoria, Ore.
Nine officers and men flying from
San Pedro to San Diego in F-5-L sea
plane No. 11 were rescued from their
disabled plane by a destroyer off Del
Mar, 25 miles north of Sun Diego.
Six nurses were seriously Injured
and thirty-nine others narrowly es
caped death when firo of unknown
origin completely destroyed the nurses’
home nt the University of Nebraska
hospital nt Omaha.
Sixty thousand applications for tick
ets for the Oalifomla-Ohlo State foot
bull game nt I'asadenu Jan. 1 have
been received by the Tournament of
Roses Association. This is approxi
mately 24,000 more applications than
seats, and the association is experienc
ing difficulties in making equitable al
lotments of tickets.
By a vote of 100 to 105, the House
has decided to give encouragement to
California grape growers by develop
ing, through experiments by the agri
cultural department, new uses for
wine grapes. Purchase of a plot of
land near Fresno and Oakville, where
the experimental work now is being
done, was authorised.
The Southern Pacific Land Com
pany, ns vendor, filed a deed nt Fres
no, Calif., transferring to the Pacific
Oil Company, as vendee, all its oil land
holdings in Kings, Tulare and Fresno
counties. The consideration was stated
to be npproximuteiy $3,810,000. Tin
transaction is part of the recently an
nounced plan of the Southern Pacific
Company to divest Itself of its oil land
and oil holdings by transfer to a new
corporation organized In Delaware.
WASHINGTON
A tax of % of 1 per cent on all bank
deposits Is proposed in a bill intro
duced In the House by Representative
Treadway of Massachusetts.
Cnpt William A. Moffett, formerly
commandant of the Oreut Lakes train
ing station and later commander of
the battleship Mississippi of the Pa
cific fleet, has been appointed director
of naval aviation, It lias been an
nounced by Secretary Daniels. Cap
tain Moffett succeeds CapL Thomas
Craven, who will be sent to sea, prob
ably In command of a battleship.
Authority was granted by the Inter
state Commerce Commission for per
manent consolidation of the transpor
tation business and properties of the
Adams, American, Wells Fargo & Co.
and Southern Express companies into
the American Railway Express Com
pany. The commission said that it
was their belief that the public would
best be served by one consolidated
company serving all lines with equal
rates.
Recommendations that the states
assume part of the care of disabled
World War veterans and for consoli
dation of all federal agencies dealing
with ex-service men were made by
Director Cholmley-Jones of the bureau
of war risk insurance. In his annual
report.
An example of the exploration and
research work which the United States
Department of Agriculture Is doing in
its search for new' plants available
tor cultivation In this country is fur
nished by the recent 9,000-mlie explor
ing trip taken by Dr. H. L. Shantz,
agricultural explorer, botanist of the
office of foreign seed ami plant Intro
duction, with the Smithsonian African
Exploration.
The Anti-Saloon League will ask
Attorney General Palmer to reconsider
his ruling that the use of cider in the
borne by its manufacturer, even after
It has become intoxicating by fermen
tation, Is lawful, Wayne B. Wheeler,
general counsel for the League, has
announced. Neither the letter nor the
Implied purpose of the prohibition act
Justified such a ruling, Mr. Wheeler
asserted.
Senate and House leaders have prac
tically agreed at a conference on a
program for the enactment of an
emergency tariff meusure to serve as
an embargo on the importation of
wheat, cotton, wool, beans, potatoes
and livestock and meats.
Joseph Tumulty, secretary to Pres
ident Wilson, lias announced that he
had declined the appointment as u
chief Justice of the Court of Custom
Appeals, which had been offered him
by the President, and that he would
begin the practice of law in Washing
ton after March 4.
FOREIGN
Rumania has asked the league of
nations to send an international army
to the relief of Armenia.
Austria has been elected a member
of the Ix*ugue of Nations by the
assembly of the league at Geneva.
First reports from the general elec
tions held In Spain indicate a govern
ment victory. Unofficial estimates
are that the majority for the Monarch
ist parties will be a large one.
Two Russian refugee ships, bound
for Bulgaria, have been held up In the
Black sen by Turkish nationalist
forces. The steamers were overtaken
by a storm and sought shelter at the
port of Zongudnk.
Three thousand well-armed revolu
tionaries, alleged by tlie Mexican gov
ernment to he Bolsheviks, have invad
‘**l the state of Campeche from Yuca
tan and are attempting to drive out
the federal authorities.
Japan's population, as revealed by
the census recently completed. Is more
than n million under the estimate. The ,
totr.*. number of persons In the empire j
is 77,003,000, of which 55,900,000 are j
in Japan and 17,284,000 In Korea.
Charges of murder have been filed
In court at Manila by the city i
prosecutor against seventy-seven Phil
ippine constabulary soldiers ns n result
of the rioting in which four Americans
and seven Filipinos were killed.
Correspondence which has been go I
ing on between Premier Lloyd George
and Father Michael O'Flanagan, "vice ,
president of the Irish republic," In an
effort to bring about a truce between i
England and the Sinn Fein orguniza- j
tions, apparently has been ended.
Andre I/efevre, French war minister. :
has resigned. His resignation resulted j
from his opposition to the new mili
tary service bill before the chamber
of deputies, which provides for eight
een months’ obligatory military sere
ice. M. Lefevre had insisted upon two
years' service with the colors.
Tin? members of the reichstug at
Berlin went on rations of black bread
without butter, and coffee without su
gnr or milk when the managers and
employes of the reichstng restaurant
refused to serve the forbidden foods,
"In view of the government's apparent
intention to continue raiding hotels to
compel them to obey the rationing reg
ulations.’' The hotel proprietors have
closed the restaurants in virtually all
the principal hostelries ns u protest
against the government insisting on
obedience to these regulations.
GENERAL
Robbers stole from SO,(XX) to $15,000
in “overflow" deposits from the Indi
ana National bank at Indianapolis.
The deposits had been placed in the
hook vault, which was rifled. The
robbers entered through a skylight.
Twenty-five individual plumbers and
twenty-sqven plumbing firms, members
of the Master Plumbers* Association,
were charged In a blanket indictment
reported to Justice McAvoy In New j
York with violation of the anti-trust
law.
Federal grand Jury indictments
against sixteen officials of the Dan- J
iel Huyes Company of Idaho, charging
conspiracy to use the malls to defraud,
were announced at Chicago. The In
dictments were returned Oct. 24, but
were kept secret until they had been
served. According to federal officials,
officials of the company sold from
$3,000,000 to $5,000,000 worth of Call
fornla land which they are alleged to
have misrepresented.
Criminal carelessness upon the part
of Capt. George IL Ilart, master of
the United States steam launch Mar
garet, that sank in the Ohio river,
was responsible for the tragedy,, ac
cording to the verdict returned by the
coroner’s Jury, following the recovery
of the body of one of the eleven vic
tims. Captain Ilart, his daughter and
the latter’s husband were drowned,
having been trapped with three others
In the upper cabin.
Stockyards’ workers in Chicago will
abide by the recent wage decision of
Judge Samuel Alschuler, federal medi
ator, It has been announced by George
Youstru, secretary of the stockyards
labor council. A muss meeting called
to protest against the award, which
denied most of the wage increases
asked by the employes, was attended
by less than 100 workers.
The National League, at Its animal
meeting, extended for three years the
term of President John A. Heydler
and granted to him a substantial In
crease In salary. President Heydler's
present salary Is SIO,OOO a year and
the Increuse, while It wus not of
ficially stated. Is said to have been 50
per cent. The additional years will
make his terra expire Dec. 31, 1924.
Tw’enty-nine cut stone contractors
Indicted for violation of the Donnelly
stute anti-trust act pleaded guilty be
fore Justice John B. McAvoy hi the
eriminul brunch of the Supreme Court
in New York. Twenty-seven of the
contractors having corporations were
fined $2,500 us individuals, with a $2,-
500 fine for each corporation. Two
contractors not having corporations
were fined $5,000 each.
Reversal to war methods in fighting
high food prices was adopted in Chi
cago when Russell J. Poole, secretary
of the fair price committee of the city
council, announced that "fair price”
quotations for meats will be Issued
dally by the council committee.
Population of the United States on
Jan. 1 this year, as enumerated in the
fourteenth census was 105,708,771, as
announced by the census bureau for
certification to Congress as the basis
for reapportionment of the members
of the House of Representatives from
the various states.
ELBERT COUNTY TRIBUNE: ELBERT COUNTY BANNER
Pithy News Notes
From All Parts of
Colorado
Western Nnrspsper Union New* Benin-.
The Western States Sugar Company
plans to build a factory in Durango.
A new $90,000 consolidated high
school building bus been dedicated at
Del Norte.
The Western Concrete Products
Company pluns to erect a four-unit
system plant in Sterling.
The citizens of Boulder will vote on
a $50,000 bond issue for the construc
tion of a bridge over Boulder creek on
Feb. 4.
Montrose merchants rejoiced when
It was announced that dally express
service t»etween Denver and Montrose
was assured.
Final arrangements for putting the
recently adopted “two-platoon” system
for firemen into effect in Denver on
Jan. 1, 1921, have been reached.
John Colbert and Allen Fossen were
killed when an automobile, in which
the two were riding, was struck by a
Rock Island train at the Byers dep.»t
railroad crossing.
Permission to substitute tri-weekly
for dally passenger sere-ice from Jan.
3 to April 1 has been grunted the Mof
fat road by the Colorado Public Utili
ties Commission.
At n meeting of the board of educa
tion of the Colorado Agricultural Col
lege plans were made public for two
new buildings to be built In the near
future on the campus.
Up to the present time Olathe has
shipped 850 big carloads of potatoes
this year. There are still 150 cars of
spuds to be shipped. This will make
the total crop for 1920 1,006 cars.
Henry F. Southard, formerly over
seas war veteran, Is In Jail in Durango
on a charge of obtaining $11,700 under
false pretenses from the Durango
Trust Company about a year ago.
The 1922 convention of the Western
Surgical Association will be held In
Colorado Springs, Dr. L. H. McKinnie
reported on his return to Colorado
Springs from the convention held at
lajs Angeles.
The Blende plant of the United
States Zinc Company at Pueblo Is be
ing converted from a smelter plant to
a zinc oxide plant and already one
unit bus been completed at an Initial
cost of about SIO,OOO.
It bns been decided by the American
Legion Post of Fort Morgan to pre
pare at once for a huge Fourth of
July celebration to last the entire
week of the Fourth, and to bring
many national celebrities to Fort Mor
gan for the festivities.
Blood was transfused from the body
of Isaac Pettinglll of Norwood, who
volunteered to do this so as to pro
long the life of W. F. Hallett of Mont
rose, an ex-service man who con
tracted pernicious anaemia during his
service In French trenches.
Almost 2,500 gallons of sacramental
wines have been used by various
Churches over the state for commun
ion services during the past nine
months, according to datu compiled by-
Frank J. Medina, federal prohibition
director for Colorado.
A rehabilitation training school Tor
disabled soldiers will be established in
Pueblo by the United States govern
ment ns soon as suitable quarters can
be found, according to a statement
Issued by W. H. Logan, supervisor of
vocational education at Pueblo.
It has been announced nt the state
house that no New Year reception will
be given by Gov. and Mrs. Shoup.
However, plans now are under way for
a reception or banquet to the members
of the General Assembly, which will be
held the second week in Jnnuary.
Motorists have been warned not to
try to make it over Tennessee pass
any more this year, as the recent
Snow' has piled up more than tw*o feet
of snow on a level.
Jesse J. Hlttle, well-known rancher
of the Plateau valley, thirty miles east
of Grand Junction in Mesa county, has
been bound over to the District Court
by Justice of the Peace It. C. Phipps
on the charge of killing a calf which
did not belong to him. He has been
released on bond.
Although the aggregate production
of nil crops in Colorado in 1920 was
by far the largest In the history of
the state, their value will be consider
ably less than that of last year’s crops,
as a result of the heavy decline In
prices of farm products that has
occurred In the past four months.
A denial of the motion of Attorney
la. W. Jordan, attorney for Antonio
Cozcorrazo and Tont Repolado for the
return of contraband liquor and mash
seized In a raid of officers on the
Spanish pool hall several weeks ago,
was announced In County Court at
Grand Junction by Judge N. C. Miller.
Beet growers of Colorado, Wyoming,
Nebraska and Montana in January will
present to the sugar manufacturers n
contract calling for a fifty-fifty divi
sion. the growers to be paid half of
whatever sugar may bring on the mar
ket. This Is the decision of the an
nual convention of the Mountain
States Beet Growers’ Association which
was held in Denver.
S. E. Ijind, superintendent of the
state fish hatcheries, arrived at Steam
boat Springs a few days ago with
640,000 eastern brook trout eggs for
the new fish hatchery there.
CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS.
The Colorado State Editorial Asso
ciation will on Jan. 22, 1921, Join hands
with the Denver Press Club in staging
[at the Denver Auditorium, during
i Stock Show week, a “Cowboy Stam-
I pede." Extensive preparaUon is being
! made for one of the biggest times ever
' pulled off in the West. Excellent vau
i deville acts for an hour and a half will
: entertain the crowd, after which the
; great Auditorium floor will be given
over to dancing. The Editorial Asso
ciation holds Its annual gathering in
j Denver, Jun. 21 and 22, and this splen
did feature is booked to close the ses*
sion. Held ns It will be during the
week of Denver’s big Mock Show, the
attendance will be large. It Is expect
ed that every publisher In Colorado
! will attend.
Charged with picking up his two
year-old daughter and throwing her
ucross the floor nt his wife after the
, couple had quarreled over his alleged
' previous inhumane treatment of the
child, Arthur Christiansen, formerly a
Denver photographer, was taken into
custody by Undersheriff Robert Mc
-1 Naranra of Littleton. He was later
transferred to the Denver city Jail by
State Humane Officer Harry Richter
and is being held pending the outcome
j of the Injuries alleged to have been in
i fllcted upon his daughter.
Grant McFersou, state bank conimis-
I sb»r.er, s<?nt examiners to Tlmnath and
Kirk to take charge of the Fanners’ |
Bank of Tlmnath and the State Bunk
at Kirk, which have closed their doors.
The hank commissioner’s records show
that the Farmers’ Bank of Tlmnath
had a capitalization of $30,000, surplus
of $30,000, undivided profits of <510,-
000. and deposits of $205,000. The Kirk
State Bank had a capital of SIO,OOO,
surplrs of $3,000, undivided profits of
$5,000, nnd deposits of $60,000.
Benjamin O. Cook, former Salida
rooming house proprietor, convicted of
the murder of Charles Cope, a business
rival, has been pardoned by Acting
Governor George Stephan. Cook was
sentenced to serve from twenty to
twenty-four years for the crime. He
would have served his maximum sen
tence by Jan. 9, 1922. Finding of new
facts tending to show that Cook had
acted in self-defense was given by Gov
ernor Stephan as his reason for grant
ing the prisoner his freedom.
Nearly a score of deputy sheriffs,
heavily nrmed with machine guns,
have been placed on the Colorado-Utah
line to be In readiness for an emer
gency that may arise in the sheep war
that Is menacing the western slope.
Cattlemen all over the White river
district are suld to be up in arms be
cause of the strict quarantine that has
been placed, holding nearly 40,000
head of sheep near the line pending
investigations by the authorities.
Another Industry has been added to
the long list of new factories which
have been started In Delta during
1920. This will he a concrete products
factory, being a combination of the
Uncompaligre Valley Cement State
Silo Company nnd other interests. The
company expects to spend SOO,OOO In
the erection of a suitable plant In
similar to the one they recently
erected at Rocky Ford.
The demoralized condition of the su
gar market has caused construction of
three sugar factories In the mountain
states district to he discontinued. The
Great Western Sugar Company an
nounced that work on their new plants
at Johnstown, Colo., and ut Mi nature.
Neb., bus been stopped. The Industrial
Sugar Company Is holding up building
at their new factory in I*n Salle.
The central offices of the Mountain
Stntes Beet Growers’ Association are
to be located In Greeley Instead of at
Longmont. Directors of the organiza
tion have elected George M. Houston
secretary and treasurer of the organ
ization in place of James H. Golden
of Longmont.
Inquiries received by the State
Board of Immigration during the past
twelve months showed some decrease
in the interest of people from other
states In Colorado lands and business
opportunities, as compared with the
preceding two years, though the Inter
est is still considerable and indications
point to a reasonably good movement
to the state In 1021.
While guards from the state hospi
tal for the insane were searching the
countryside for her, Mrs. Andrla Da
vick, 47 years old, died of exposure in
a vacant shack on the Beulah road,
seven miles west of Pueblo.
City Manager E. P. McDaniel re
ported to the city council of Montrose
that It would take approximately
$39,637 to pay the expenses of the
city government of Montrose during
1921.
Fifteen hundred farmers and stock
growers of the Uncompnhgre vallev
are expected to attend the farme.V
conference to be held nt Montrose on
Feb. 4.
Jesse Duree, charged with robbing
the bank at Parker, Colo., last March,
wus acquitted by a Jury at Castle
Rock.
The Colorado Sheriffs' Association
will hold their annual convention Jan.
21 and 22, according to notices that
have been sent out over the state re
cently by Undersheriff Merle E. Gil
bert, secretary and treasurer of the or
ganization. The place of the conven
tion is designated as the Albany hotel,
Denver.
| Representatives from eighteen West
ern slates, who are to have charge of
the campaign for funds In the Europ
ean relief council drive, headed by
Herbert Hoover, held an organization
j conference nt Colorado Snrln;^
COMMONS PASS
HOME RULE LAW
MEASURE TO BE EFFECTIVE
AT DISCRETION OF BRIT
ISH GOVERNMENT.
MODIFIED BILL ADOPTED
CRITICS ASSERT IT WILL NOT BE
ACCEPTED BY SOUTH
IRELAND.
Western New*paper Unioo News Herrlcr.
London, Dec. 21.— The Irish home ;
rule bill, as slightly modified by the |
House of Lords, lias been adopted by
the House of Commons. The meusure
now needs only the royal signature to
become a law.
The measure will be effective at the
discretion of the government at any
time within three and one-half years.
The government reserves the privilege
of applying the law when the oppor
tune moment arrives.
The home rule bill as It finally
emerged from parliament ready for
the royal assent Is not fundamentally
different from the measure the gov
ernment first presented. Months of dis
cussion and efforts to amend in both
bouse resulted in certain safeguards
being added, which its adherents be
lieve will make it more acceptable to
the Irish people.
The bill’s critics argue that the
events of the past few months have
not served to change the Sinn Fein
attitude that they will not set up the
government suggested by the Imperial
parliament.
The bill as presented did not pro
vide an alternative If either Ulster or
the south, or both, declined to accept
It, but it has been amended to the
effect that If either does not accept it
within three and a half years, the
measure automatically dies, so far as
the section refusing to accept it Is
concerned.
In the meantime either section de
clining to accept can be ruled as a
crown colony. The limit of three and
a half years was adopted because by
that time there must be an election
and a new of Commons.
The bill now provides that there
shall be set up by popular elections
two parliaments, one for Ulster and
one for the South. Each parliament
shnll decide upou the method of select
ing senates. The connecting link be
tween them will be the Irish council
of forty, tweuty for each section. Each
senate will select seven of Its council
members and each parliament thir
teen.
The original bill provided that the
president of the council should be the
lord chancellor of Ireland, but as
amended he will be appointed by the
lord lieutenant on the advice of the
crown, which means that the govern
ment in power can put anyone at the
head of the Irish legislative body It
pleases. The idea expressed by minis
ters explaining the bill is that the
council will form a bridge upon which
In time the two parliaments can get
together and form one body for the en
tire country.
The measure provides that when
that is done the powers of police, fi
nance and other branches of the gov
ernment will be turned over. The im
perial government will keep a pretty
firm hand on the fundamentals of the
Irish government during the life of
the two parliaments, but holds out
many attractions for a united parlia
ment that Its sponsors hope will coun
teract the prejudices that always have
existed betweeu the North and South.
The changes made in the powers of
the parliaments as set forth In the
bill when It was introduced are Incon
sequential.
Its critics, however, still maintain
that it will not be accepted by South
Ireland, and In this connection It Is re
called that Arthur Griffith, Sinn Fein
leader, said some weeks after the bill
was Introduced that there probably
were not ten influential men In Ireland
who had even taken the trouM.- to read
it.
Must Provide for Workers.
Topeka, Kan. —Flour mills In Kansas
which have curtailed production must
take care of faithful and skilled men
during the period of Industrial depres
sion so that these employes may pro
vide a living for their families, the
Kansas Court of Industrial Relations
has ruled. The court held the mills
had the right to curtail production be
cause of market conditions over which
they have no control.
Fighting Rages in Tipperary.
Dublin. —Troop reinforcements were
rushed to the mountains of Tipperary
where eighteen persons were killed
and many were wounded In a pitched
battle between soldiers and Sinn Feln
ers. A detachment of British troops
was ambushed near Mulllnahone.
Sharpshooters Scour New York.
New York. —Armed with repeating
rifles, twenty picked sharpshooters of
the New York police force scoured the
city in automobiles In a hunt for ban
dits. Each sharpshooter was accom
panied by three detectives and a pa
trolman. They were under orders to
shoot every suspect who attempted to
escape them. Other drastic measures
to curb New York's crime wave have
been launched by police officials and
Judges.
Grove's
is the Genuine
and Only
Laxative
Bromo iqj
Quinine
tablets
The first and original Cold and
Grip tablet, the merit of which
is recognized by all civilized
nations.
Be careful to avoid Imitation*.
Be sure its Bromo
J W~O
The genuine bears this signature
30c.
Not Too Thrifty.
“How much do you charge a feller
to take a wash?” asked a grimy look
ing individual of the cashier at a pub
lic bath house.
“Fifty cents a bath, or 12 for $5."
replied the cashier. “It would pay
you to buy a $5 ticket.”
“Nothin’ doin’" answered the grimy
Individual, decisively. “How do I know
I’m going to live 12 years?”—Toledo
Blade.
There Is very little waist material la
a fashionable evening gown.
Bad Stomach
Sends Her to Bed
for lO Months
Eatonlo Cots Hmr Up!
“Over a year ago,” says Mrs. Dora
Williams, “I took to bed and for 10
months did not think I would live.
Eatonlc helped me so much I air. now
up and able to work. I recommend It
highly for stomach trouble/’
Eatonlc helps people to get well by
taking up and carrying out the excess
acidity and gases that put the stomach
out of order. If you have Indigestion,
sourness, heartburn, belching, food re
peating, or other stomach distress, take
an Eatonlc after each meal. Big box
costs only a trifle with your druggist’s
guarantee.
WRITE OR OALL FOR OATALOO
Attention, Ranchers
Opening sale horses and mules. Stock
Show January 17th to 22d and every
Thursday. Send address for market letter.
DENVER HORSE A MULE CO.
Union Stock Yards Denver,
HOSIERY AGENTS
On* for cacn lucuuy. i«k<- oium; and dta
trlbuie our hlgh-srade foil-fashioned and
seamless ladl<a‘. men'a and childrens hosiery.
Silk, mercerised and cotton. Pull or aparw
time. Blr money earned; work for yourerlf
Sample outfit, eluht (8) full pairs beautiful
hosiery, price $4.00; retail valor W 00. Prompt
delivery ahlpped. Full Information for aeeota
on receipt of certified check, money order
or C. O. D Write If Interested. Rose Hea
lery Co.. $244 N. Howard. Philadelphia. Pa
PARKER’S
KraESajjpfll- hak balsam
M Restores Color a mil****
EI&9L Beoofy to Cray aed Faded Hail
HaWßt He. m 4 iLNat leartidi
wtaenx Chem. W >a Patchoree. W. T,
HINDERCORNS o~ aw
tmM. <Ui. «... ui (.1. mnn. U.
Shave, Bathe and
Shampoo with one
Soap.— Cuticura
Catkei SeeplaU»ofavart>alaiaafaUiaa«iaha»^.
PATENTS
ftuoa reasonable. Hi,
iff ante I?L r 9*P rerma»s«4 Non-Skid Chains
AGENTS, Eider Sex, Earn $5 la SIS Per D»
Plgntfled. easy. We require your pledge to devote!
KRiMOUia&s^lll
Coughs Grow Better
soon, throat InAammatioa disap
pears, irritation is relieved and throat Bek
Un« stops, when you use reliable, time-tested
PI SO S
w. N. u., DENVER, NO. 62-1920.

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