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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1920)
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD. DAKOTA CITY. NERRASKA. IE STEPS 10 END' GREftTGOAL STRIKE BRITISH CABINET AND MINERS LEADERS CONFER. PARLEY LASTS THREE HOURS Negotiation Are to Be Resumed Neither Side Discloses Nature of Conference. London Prumlor Lloyd George, cablnut mombors, unil members of tho striking coal minors conferred for throo hours in tho promlor's official resldonca In Downing Btreet. After tho miners' delogntos hnd dopartcd tho cabinet members continued In bob Ion with Lloyd Georgo. Frank IIpdgCR, a mlnorB' representative, said tho dls cuBslotiB would bo continued. Tho conversations with Lloyd Georco will bo rcBumcd, It was as serted. IIopo scorned to provall that thcro would bo a settlement of thu eosl strlko as n result pf tho runownl of Uio direct negotiations between tho miners and tho government. Mean while neither sldo has disclosed tho BRturo of Uiobo nogotlatloua, but, ac cording to unofficial roportB, 1'ronilor Uoyd Georgo auggestcd some now formula which would satisfy tho gov ernment, that If a 2-shllllng advnnco In wages was concedod It would bo accompanied by, an Increased output. Thoro Bcoms to bu n strong belief that tho full executive committee of tho minors' federation will moot tho government within u few days on a basis which can bo submitted to tho minors for accoptnnco or rejection. At tho conference, In addition to Lloyd Georgo, tho government repro entntlvcs included Andrew llonar Law, tho government lender In tho hoiiRo of commons; Sir Robert S Home, president of tho board of tradu; tho minister of mines, thu coal controller and njhor exports. Robert Bmlllo, president of thu Minors' fed eration, Frank Hodges and Horborl Smith represented tho miners. Lloyd Georgo outlined n number of Ideas ho suggostcd might ultimately load to a peaceful solution of tho sit uation. Whllo tho conference waa in progress Baron Stamfordham, prlvnto ocretary of King Georgo, arrived and remainod for a brief period. When tbo conferonco ended tho min ers' dolcgutos met tho entlro miners' oxecutlvu committee ' Mr. Hodges declined to stato' tho nature of tho government's sugges tions, but bo appeared to be hopeful that thoy would lead to somoaccept. able arrangomouL Ho assorted that nothing further would bo done pend ing a renewal of tho confoienco. i Boston Subtreasury Closed Washington. Secretury Houston made public orders under which tho subtreasury at Doston was closed and tho oftlco of nBslstant treasurer of tho United States there discontinued. Un der tho act carrying tho appropria tions tor tho treasury, passed at tho last bouhIoii of congress, nil subtroaB urles must bo discontinued by July 1, 1921. Thoy includo thoso nt Now York, Philadelphia. Baltimore, Now Orleans, 3L, Louis, Ban Francisco, Cln clnnatl and Chicago. Mexican Revolt Story Denied. Mexico Clty.-Donlal of reports clr culalcd In the Unltod Statea that Can dido Agullar, son-in-law of tho lato President Cnrranza, haa entered Mex ico to orgnnlto a revolution wan niado by Minister of Wnr Callus. Ho as sorted that government forces com pletely dominated tho states of Vera Cruz and Chiapas, in one of which Agullar was roported to have estab lished his headquarters. Shops Durned In Irish Town. Cork. Several shops wero burned nnd tho windows of tho principal busi ness concerns woro smashed nt Bando, In tho vicinity of this city, near tho aceno of an ninbuuh of military lorries lit which an officer nnd a prlvato wurn killed and five soldiers woro wounded, one of whom died later It Is reported the village of Innlnhnnmm also was considerably damaged Anthracite Production, Philadelphia Pa. Current produc tion of anthracite coal Is well up to normal and distribution from tho mlnos Is proceeding more rapidly than which pro vn tied last spring nnd re cently, according -to a statement Id suqd by tho nuthruclte bureau ot in formation Ratify Pollsh-Rui;:! Treaty. Wnnww. Thw illot has unanimous ly ratified thu Pollsh-HuBslun prelimi nary ponce treaty signed recently at Higa. Wireless Operator Held. lanama. Panama maintains sov relgnrlrfita QYer the territory upon wliloJi American wireless Buttons have beau erected, Secretary of Jus tiru Alfarorulod in unlcrliis tho arrest of a wireless opralpr at Puerta Obaldla on a churo of wounding a citizen ol Panama. Tho operator will no tried under tbo Panama laws. Payllnhl Saving Ends. Umdon. Too annual slimmer day. light tviDB Hpgij jj Great llrltalu endeif a't 3 a. m, Monday' moralHK,, GREAT BRITAIN'S .INLAND W Zak M Uv. The shaded areas show the coal and Wales, where more than n million REDS BEAT WRANGEL Anti-Bolshevik Forces Fail to Take Kakhovka Bridgehead. Heavy Losses Suffered In Dead and Wounded and In Material Cap- tured by Soviet Troops. 1'nrls, Oct. 20. A Copenhagen dis patch to the Havns agency says a re port has reached tho Danish cupltnl that n stato of siege has been pro claimed In 11! Russian departments, In cluding Moscow anil l'otrogrnd. London, OcL 20. Tho Russian Bol Bhovikl hnvo reoccupled Minsk, which, according to their olllclnl comiuunlquo, tho Poles have nbandonod. The Bol shevist troops, under pressure, how over, nro retiring to now positions In tho SlutBk-Polcstn regions. Sebastopol, Oct. 20. The efforts of Gen. Huron Wrongel, unU-HolshcvIk lender In South BusBla, to take the Knkhovkn bridgehead hnvo resulted In failure, with heavy losses to his forces In kilted and wounded and In material captured by tho Bolshevlkl. The killed Included tho general com manding (ho llnranovltcli cavalry corps'. General Wrangel's troops have been thrown back Into the Tnurldu nren, be hind tho Dnioper, which they still con trol. Leon TroMky, tho Russian soviet war minister, Is said to bo personally directing the Dnieper campaign from Orel. General Wrangcl has signed a law- creating local zemntvos, which will ex ercise fnr-reuchlng powers. In sign ing the law the general said ho hoped civil war would soon end. LOWELL MAKES A DISAVOWAL President of Harvard University Repu diates Wire on League of Nations Day. Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 20. Presi dent A. Lawrence Lowell of Harvard university has disclaimed knowledgo of tho telegram sent to governors by the League of Nntlons nay committee, of which ho is a member, asking them to proclaim Sunday, Oct. 21, ns r. day for tho public to lie Informed on the league covenant. In a letter to Gov. Coolldge, who refused tho request, President I,owell said he had no Idea that governors wero to be asked to make such n proclamation. He ills approved the suggestion In the tele gram that the covenant be read In the school 1 and said that If It was the Intent of the telegram to advocate the use of religious services to disseminate the covenant, as the governor had In timated In his letter of refusal, he dls apprmed ot that also. YANK FLYERS OVER C0BLENZ Germans Again Hear the Drone American Airplanes First In Two Years. of ParK Oct. Ill Amerlenii ollleors mid men, us well us Oernmiw In the Cohlcus area. gllmiwud airplanes for the llrst time In nearly tw o years when Captain Arthur's American pursuty squadron. Just nrrled from Auierlen, performed stunts or the Uhlne city. The folilim authorities protested bitterly because they were ordered to prepnro a new alrdrouio costing 1,000. WO mark for tho squadron. Iowa Merchant Ends Life. Davenport, in.. Oct. 23. Fred We uieiitln, Jr., prominent business iiiau and civic workor. Jumped Into the Mls slsslpul rlor aud was drowned. Ho escaped from his bonus where ho was under watch after a breakdown. Two-DIt Hair Cut Returnt. T.os Angeles. CnU Oct. as.Tlie 2J" cent hair cut has reappeared here. It had been abiout for koku time, wlnie thane resting W and St) cents touk Its place. Its reappearance wan noted I pnly lu n few shojis. COAL STRIKE mining fields of Knglnnd, Scotland workers hr.vo gono on strike. MEXICO TO PAY DEBTS D: ciAi nu di,j President-Elect Obregon Pledges Word of Republic. Declares He le Sure That United States Would Recognize New Government. Dnllas, Tex., Oct. 10. The new Mex ican government will recognize nil legal foreign debts qf Mexico nndinll legal lights of Mexicans and foreign ers In Mexico alike, Gen. Alvnron Ohregon, president-elect of the south ern republic, who assumes olllce De cember 1, told an audience at the In ternational banquet here. , The banquet was tho main event of General Obregon's visit to tho Texas stnte fair, and ho and his personnl suite of nearly one hundred were guests. General Obregon's speech followed tho welcoming address of V. P. Hob by, governor, of Texns, In which Gov ernor Hobby; declared Hint "so fnr as Texas Is concerned General Obregon already Is recognizee!." General Obregon said ho was sure tho United States would recognize the now government of Mexico ns soon as thu stnblllty nnd Intentions of the gov ernment had been established In the public mind nnd that "Mexico would not become a province of the world or of tho United States." FIFTY HURT IN LONDON RIOT Unemployed Clash With Police Great Coal Miners' Strike Falls to Spread to Other Industries. London, Oct. 20. Disorders o curred In Whitehall during u demon stration by unemployed men who had sent u delegation to Premier Lloyd George In Downing street. Several persons wero Injured In attempts to brenk through a police cordon and oth ers wero hurt when some stone work from a window on tho treasury build ing fell. Fifty Injured persons, including two policemen nnd n woman, received treatment when tho trouble ended. Tweilty of these woro sent to hospit als. In connection with the chnracter of the detnoiiHtmtlon, It was pointed out that the appearance of a red Hag does not necessarily have particular sig nificance. London, Oct. 10. Whether the great Hrltlsh coal strike, which Is on In full In all the coal fields, will tend to ward the formation of n soviet will be Indicated through the week' nt the meetings of the executives of the oth er trade unions to decide their course of action. Until now the miners stund nlone. None of the other great unions have called out their num. In the nieiintline the government Is prepnrlng for the w orst. NEW VICTORY FOR SUFFRAGE United States Supremo Court Refuse to Advance Hearing of Restrain. Ing Suit Against Colby. Washington, Oct. 20. The Supremo court refused to advance the hearing of the suit broiiKhl by Churle S. Fair cltlltlA fur nu Injunction rotruliilin Secrvtary Colby from promulgating the federal suffrage nmeiulnumt. ThU prurludeH any possibility of the caso being heard before jhe November elec tions. Train Hits Auto; Ono Dead. Ktreator, 111., Oat. 22. Mrs. K. D Coons of Hiitlnud. III.. w-n killed and her husband and Mrs. H. T. Dwver were probably fatnlly Injured wheu a touring car In which thoy were rldlny was ntnick Uy a train near Streater, Nanler Gets Now Trial. Madison. YVR. Oct. BH--L. B. Nag. ler. former nsslntant secretary ' of Mate, who whs tried and convicted two year ago In the Federal court on charaes of violation of the espionage net, has been granted a new trial CDRNHUSKER ITEMS News of All Kinds Qrtthercd From Various Points Throughout Nebraska. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS A baby hIiow, under the auspices of the county medk-al association, was the feature of the Johnson county fair ut Tectimseh. There wore twenty-live mitoliiu It til t jt tii tittlttlwtt fll ttll t fl ! t 1 anil thirteen boys were ..warded pre-1 ,,. mluiiis, Preparations are being made to en tertain :i,.r00 teachers from over the state, who will be In attendance nt the teachers' convention which meets at Omaha November 8 to S. Walter II, Johnson, u Ilolilrege boy, and student at the state university, was drowned In the Y. M.,C. swim ming pool nt Lincoln. His body was taken to his home for Interment. The discovery of two llres nt the vards of an Odell lumber comnanv j within the past few weeks leads resi dents of that village to believe that tire bugs are at work there. 1 Harold Hlg Fire, Gordon, Neb., In dliiu, enlisted nt the Omaha recruiting stal Ion' recently. He was given a fur lough to go nfter some more braves In his home town. As a result of the death of Theodore N'ordluml from n broken neck, sustain ed In a game Inst week, foot ball has been discontinued In the Stromsburg high school. ' Casper II. Shrader, one of the few remaining civil war veterans In the neighborhood of Ituvomm, Is dead. Mr. shrader was a pioneer farmer near that place. Sixteen head of horses, two barns, a granary, n threshing machine and several stacks of wheat were destroy ed by a fire near Heaver City last week. A barn belonging to Joe Fisher at Columbus was burned to the ground when his automobile caught lire lu the barn. Ilewas unable to get the car out. Lincoln was chosen as the place for next year's state gathering of the Odd Fellows' bodies ut the session of the Grand lodge ut Hustings last week. Dorsey schools have been closed us a precautionary measure following the Illness of Karl Anderson, reported to have spinal meningitis. Two Inches of hall fell near Hamp ton nnd Uenedlct followed by a heavy rain. Damage was done to roofs of buildings nod to trees. At a special election nt Nebraska City $100,000 bonds wero voted for the erection of a municipal community hull in that city. Work on the Shermnn county court house, which has been held up for over sixty days by lack of materials, has been resumed. The Coulter farm southeast of Hen trice has been bought by Hen Kroos of Gage county for ?1S0 an acre, or $27,!!S0 cash. A special excursion rnte has been secured for the state teachers' asso ciation which meets fii Oiunlin Novem ber 3 to 5. Nearly 200 persons were continued by lilshop James Duffy at St. Patrick's church at Grand Island Inst week. Genoa Is excited over traces of oil found In shale at a depth of 200 feet while deepening the city well. Tho Chappel high school foot ball team was defeated by the local eleven at Sidney Inst week, 123 to 0. The stnte farmers and co-operative grain and live stock association will meet In Omaha Nov. 10 and 17. Eight hundred men and women, practically all foreign laborers, attend night school at South Omaha. Tho fourth annual mil call of tho Nebraska lied Cross will be held at Lincoln Noember It to 2.1. Itev. J. M. Leldy, former head of the stato anti-saloon league, died, at his homo In Omaha last week. A married folks dancing club has been organized at Wahoo with a mem bership of fifty couples. The Grand Chapter of the ltoyal Arch Masons will meet nt Oinahn December 10. Over 300 blacksmiths attended the fourteenth annual convention at York last week. Leahy lake, near Peru, Is being drained and the ganie llsh removed by the state. Six antes, valued at $2.O0O, were stolen at Omaha In forty-eight hours. The next session of the grand lodge I, O. O. F. will be held 111 October. 11121. The equal suffrage amendment to tho stato constitution has been de clared by Governor McKclvIo effective from after tho 11th day of October. At a special election held In Lewis ton to vote on the proposed Issue of S 1,200 In bonds for the purpose of con structing a llght-plunt in the-village, the proposition carried by a vote of -12 to I. In no effort to raise Nebraska's S.000 quota of a $.'.00,000 fund for n memorial to Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, sentinels will be posted nt many otlng places November 2 to take up a collection. Work on the now $2.-0.000 high Kcliool building nt llnynnl has been re sumed after a delay of several weeks. Tho structuie will rank ntt one of the bust In the state, being the last word and will bo built by the boys of tho In modern nelmol building. imtnunl training chijw under direction Th meetings of orgunltud agriciil- , of Instructor lltAib. Student fund will turn, the largest gathering of farmer , be largely iumh! In the 'const met Ion. and livestock ntUers In Nebraska, will K. H. Barbour ot the stnte uulverlty be held at l.lncoln.lanuary II to T, In-1 lm uneurthed tbo skeleton of a pre clusive, according to an nnnnuncemoiit ! historic animal, which he boilevee to of the committee In charge. Between j bu more than 200.000 jetrs obi. TW thirty and forty producer' aseetn- kU-toti was found In the famodj fundi tlooB will meet nt that time, represent-! bod of Cook's rannh, netir Scoutbluff. Ing every orgnnlrntlou of farmers, It will l prosarved and sunt to tbo livestock rnlsera and related Industries. Unlu-o-lty museum Delegates from nil eiiiip.n ut tli( l Nclu.-iskd Welt stnte regional conference ut Lincoln last week. Dr Livingstone Furrand, chairman of the executive committee of the American Ued Cross, Just returned from Europe, was present unil gave a graphic tie scrlptlon of conditions existing there and urged the people of America, for their own mike, not to forget the piti ful plight of the European people, especially children, who needed tho help of prosperous America. Other speakers Included .lames U Floser, as sistant .general manager of the Red Cross, J niter Davidson, acting man- rUU'.T"! DM?T T' !" is - M'Mnllen, director of the F..urtli Koll Call. j The State Farm. Bureau has nn- i nounred Unit It considers (J or 7 tenia a bushel u fair price for hu iking corn. This announcement came nfter a seras of conferences with country farm bu reaus to learn the sentiment of fnnuer.i In the different sections of the Mute. Six cents Is the ilgure agieed on where nn elevator "Is provided for unloading ' and seven cents where there Is no ele- I ntor. A Held of potntoes from which tho I tubers average slightly over a pound ! lu weight Is the result of three ears' experimenting by It. II. Murray, a Holt county farmer. The yield Is un usually heavy, even In a most produc tive potato country, and the spuds ex ceed In size the prize specimens of tho Irrigated sections. Itev. Roland Mackintosh and wife of North Platte were presented with a chest of silver by the Episcopal con gregation at that place on tip eve of their departure for Houston. Texas, where they go In search of health, Itev. Mackintosh hnvlng been gassed whllo In service over seas. The Hayard sugar beet acreage Is larger than ever before lu Its history and the yield Is exceptionally large, with tho quality line, Some enrly re ports of yields hnvo exceeded twenty two tons per acre, with the prevailing price at -$12 per ton. Leon Martinez, alleged auto bandit. Is dead from wounds sustained in n gun tight with John Llngreen, watbr commissioner, and Chief of Police Webb at Hayard. Llngreen Is also dead, and the police chief Is lu a serious conditions. Otoe, formerly called IJerlln, suf fered u disastrous wind storm last week, In which a number of buildings were badly damaged. On March 23, 1013, the town was practically demol ished nnd seven persons were killed by a tornado. When D. C. Hlbbnrd, Potter farmer, could obtain no cars In which to ship Ills grain to the Omahn market he loaded 110 bushels of wheat on his two-ton truck and hauled the wheat IfiO miles to Omaha over the Lincoln highway. The Johnson county fair at Tecum sell Is said tp have been one of the best shows of the kind held In tho stnto this year. There were over 1,300 en tries lu the several departments, tho showing of live stock being especially good. Florence Dctmeller, n cripple, was burned to death at her home near Osceola, when n gasoline can exploded. Her crippled condition prevented her from extinguishing the llniues, which enveloped the upper part of her body. A cottonwood tree, measuring seven feet In diameter and twenty-three feet lu circumference, and claimed to be tho largest In the state, Is growing on the Uyan fnrni In Dodge county. Mrs. Clnyton Hymn, whose husband has charge of an American packing plant at Montevideo, Uruguay, traveled 10,000 miles to her former home In Omaha In order that her baby might he born on American soil. An enormous porcupine, weighing nenrly CO pounds, wns shot and killed by Hen Price, u farmer near Homing ford. Old residents cannot recall see ing one of the animals In the neigh borhood before. If plans under way materialize, a special train will accompany the Uni versity of Nebraska football team on its tour east, where they play Kutgera nnd Penn Stnte. One of the longest parades ever seen In Hastings was held by the Odd Fel lows In tho annual convention at that place. 1 number of cltle sent tlontH trtid there were ninny uniformed men In line. Honda for Improving the waterworks and lire .station at North Platte wero voted on at a recent election nnd car rled by a ltirgo mnjorlt. A new cholera outbreak amongst Saunders county hogs Is reported, but prompt attention has saved nearly ev ery case. The following Nebraska pliyslelnns were mnde members of the American College of Surgeons at a conference held ut Montreal, at which 001 dele gates were In attendance: Henry A. Johns-on, Teknmali; Albert Lynch, Fulrbury: Charles lK Mulllns, Itrokeu How; Charles O. Klch, Omaha; Donald H. Steenburg, Aurora ; Herbert C, Sum ney, Oninhu. The free employment buieau at Omaha Is receiving many calls for corn jilckers. These calls are from Nebraska and -Iowa towns and the pay offered is front 0 to 10 cents per bushel. The McCook public enools expect to shortly Iikvc a separate gymnasium building on the high school ground The building will cost about JfS.tWO, liSTS Stomach Satarrh Ctuo untold mtwry nd rufltrinx. II ot which U necdlm , l'o-ru-i art aa nuleklv and surrlv on ex Urth ot tho itomach nnd boweU. j in csma ol that common. forcn.nual. I ct Una. IN USE YEARS Excreta Booth- .e.hoftUnz effect ut- 11 mucoui Unities. Bclehlnc em. Knit stom- ch. nsuiea. vomitlne. crumps, palm In tha abdo men, uiarrnoea, coniupa tlon ara all symptoms ol o catarrhal condition iu thu orrans of deration. Uon't aurfor another day. It Is ncodlens nnd daneer oua. Two KcncruUoni havn found Pe-ru-na lust tbo modidno needed for such disturbances. Gold Evorywhero laoiotsor Liquid Stomach on Strike 20 Years Eatonic SettBetS HI "Entonlc Is wonderful," says C. W. Burton. "I hnd been a sufferer from stomach trouble for 20 yenrs and now I am well." Entonlc gets right nfter the cause of stomnch troubles by taking up and carrying out tho ncldlty and gases and of course, when the cause Is removed, the sufferer gets well. If you have sourness, belching, Indigestion, food repenting or any other stomach trouble, tnko Eatonic tablets after each meal nnd find relief. Big box costs only a trllle with your druggist's guarantee. SKKOi: imr.SSK.S, $10. Trlcotlne, J 12. Oc.od luallty; fall style, lletnll nt wholesale prices Send bust measurement llemlt money order Mona Dress Co., JUox G9, Sta. J, New York. FRECKLES POJITIVILY RIMOVlObr lh- H FrMki. OLctm.titaYiir (fnxrl.t . Hrrrr 1.1 ItBf U. R.rrw m.D, v Ktm bock Dr. C.li. Of fry Co., 297S MkhJan Anu, Cfiicag o Well-Known Remedies. Mr. B was ill with h cold, and tho doctor who was summoned prescribed old-fashioned remedies, "calomel nnd quinine internally nnd aiitiphloglsttno to be applied externally." It proved very effective and the mntd bonsted of his quick recovery to one of the relghbors. "And Mrs. B didn't do hnnlly anything to cure him," she added, "She gave him qui nine nnd cnlumus and covered his chest with nlabastlne." DYE RIGHT Buy only "Diamond Dyes" Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman enn diamond-dye worn, shabby skirts, waists, dresses, coats, gloves, stockings sweaters, draperies every thing, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new, rich fadeless col ors. Have druggist show you "Dia mond Dyes Color Curd." Adv. One Eloquent Word. An old negro brother, seated fiu back In a crowded experience meeting, stood up, gained the attention of the lender, and said: "Kin 1 say Jos' one word?" "You enn," said the lender. "Go ahead." Then, with all his might, he shouted, "Halleluiah l" Atlanta Constitution. Catnrrli Can Be Cured Catarrh Is a local disease greatly Influ enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treat ment, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICIM5 Is taken Internally and acts through tho Hlooil on ttio Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MED1CINB destroys the foundation of tho disease, glvos the patient strength by Improving the general health and assist nnturo In dotm? Its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio. Her Turn. "A wife should be u helpmeet," re marked the near-philosopher. "That's my lew, exactly," replied Mr. Clipping. "Only the other day I reminded Mrs. Clipping thut I washed our llvver the last time, but she didn't take the hint." Birmingham Ago Herald. To Have a Clear Sweet Skin Touch pimples, redness, roughness or Itching, If any, with Cutlcuru Oint ment, then bathe with Cutlcuru Soap and hot water, ltlnse. dry gently and dust on a little Cutlcuru Talcum to leave a fascinating fragrance on skin Everywhere 'J5c each. Ail v. The Worst Kind. First Bed It can't bo so bail u the American prison's. Thoy toll me they hae no tortures there. Second Bed Don't you bollexe It. They gle you u bulb and make ,uu work. Cole' CnrbollauUc Quickly Hrllec and heats burning. Itching and torturli akin dlMskca. It Instantly stop the imln ot burns. Heals without sears. Sta and XX Ask your drucKlit. or send 6o to The J, W. Cole Co., Rock ford. 111., for a pkg.AUv. No Great Matter. "No more brandy on plum pudding." "No matter." "I lull V "You couldn't eat enough to get a kick." Detroit Free Press. (L A r - c 'a nSA- - "itaWM wiialftvw. V i- - - ,. &&& i. mjmmmmk$&., . -m .