Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, April 28, 1921, Image 8

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":' i'UirOA OMHTV iMAI, DAKOTA Gtrr, MRMAfllCA, ' ",,..
wjiy',"w'fr'-iffi
aniUmMiMt.i-.
Jil'Mityrtiliijiiryitijl)'i
ALL WELCOME IN LUXEMBURG
Little State Cosmopolitan In the E.
' treme, but Second to None In
Patriotic Spirit.
R
HaaBaaBWWaMti
)
TO QROW OLD GRACEFULLY
Desirable Condition That Greatly De
pends on One' Habltc of Mtnd
I Formed In Youth.
I The most inevitable nnd .one of tho
easiest of the things vc do Is to j;row
old. Vet whnta difference there Is In
lbeway different people do It I
You probably know, for Instance,
some little old lady who, although she
may not be beautiful or brilliant, Is
Just "nice" which is apt to mean
that Instead of bossing or scolding, he
tries not td be troublesome or unrea
sonable to those around her. Or ruth
er, she does not have to try, for It is
characteristic of elderly human beings
that they seldom try very hard to form
new habits. Youth Is the period of
endeavor, and old age of results. This
lis the reason for the futility of young
folks' displeasure at their parents'
"old-fashioned'' Ideas. Such Ideas are
fixed; they will not change.
Vet not all elderly people are age
hound In their thoughts; many can be
tolerant of Innovations, and n few can
even adopt them. Such a flexible con
dition of the elderly mind Is, like the
rigid, Intolerant sort, a product of
earlier life and habits; it Is not likely
to. Indicate any particular good or
evil trait In the person possessing It.
If the young man or woman who
feels impatient at the old folks' no
tions will cease to shrug a shoulder
and exclaim: "I hope I'm not like
that when I'm old," and will turn his
Attention to the younger gorierallon,
hfarllng with himself, hi- Is likely to
)o much more for human progress.
When he hlniK'lf has reacjied tl age
i( fixed Ideas his character will de
pend on his previous habits of mind ;
If, he has kept himself free from prej
udice and cocksurcdncKs and has hern
always willing to learn better ways of
'thinking and doing, he will be likely
toreiuula correspondingly more ration
al, with advancing years, and will, in
truth not be "llko that" when he Is
oli). Pendleton East Oregonlan.
n . ,
COMMUNAL SPIRIT IN JAPAN
Writer Notes the Fact That Natives
.Share Their Sneezes With Strang
(.( era on Street Care.
Japanese do things in public for
wfhleh we would ostracise n man or
fcend him to the lockup. From their
cjuumunul spirit which tolerates bath
ing In public together they go to the
)tlUT extreme of coming out on their
luilronles and clearing their throats
itMlve o'clock In the morning and ex
prte.toratlng Into thu open gutters be
low;! . They will hold their fans before
tnvlr mouths when talking or yawning,
hh,(Io we. but will cough and sneeze
In your face on street cars. And yet,
nnjong the refined, observance of cus
tom Is pathetically beautiful. They
come to celebrate the arrival of the
cherry blossoms by bringing with them
tjittlr geisha and their children; they
oVe In pe rftet hordes ; they go to the
station In musses to sec off some
friend or relative and crowd the plat
tonus, bowing and bowing and bowing
ifrn as though there weren't a thou
Wftfid strangers passing before them;
tey dress, undress, eat, sleep and
ilrmk whisky by the tumblerful on the
trains yet their Inner lives ure as secret-
to one another ns they seem to
lie .to the foreigner.
)t Is as though from behind the
r.-'enes In which many people are
nioie interested than In the play It
Jl.i' the actors had come, fprgettlng,
lp 'n moment of absent-mindedness, to
jhit on their make-up, or had come
I'jtnn the street, forgetting to take It
of, Sydney Oreenble, In "Japnn, Heal
uiid Imaginary,"
t Moral Forces.
' Above all Ifia ever to be kept In
mlrid that not by material but by
moral force are men and their ac
tions governed. How noiseless is
thought! No rolling of drums, no
tramp of squadrons, or Immeasurable
tumult of baggage wagons, attends
tfiey movement. In what obscure anil
reinicstored places may the head be
ntetiltiitlnjr which Is one dny to be
crowned with more than Imperial au
thority; for kings and emperors will
be among Its ministering servants; It
will rule not over but In their heads,
uiid with theso Its solitary combina
tions of -Ideas, as with magic formu
las,' bend jht'-world lo its will. The
tn(e may come when Napoleon him
telf will tie better known for his laws
than for his battles; nnd the victory
rf , Wnterloo provo less momentous
than the opening of the Irst mechan
ic's institute. Thomas Carlyle.
, Sought El Dorado In Vain.
When Blr Walter Raleigh started out
to. find his LI Dorado he was seeking a
fnbled city whoso bouses were covered
wll,h sheets of pure gold, and which
was surrounded by hundreds of square
miles of rook so filled with surface
KPd that when the sun shone It was as
If o gieut yellow mirror was blazing ns
fur- as the duzxled eyes could reach.
Rnlelyh, of course, found nothing that
vn came near to such a wonder, and
uinjiy u brave gentleman of Kuglnuti
loft lits life or Ms fortune In seeking
the, ame fubled Kl Dorado,
A ' '- , I ii .
The Elite.
"Dr. J'lllera seems to be u fulilon
hb'le physician."
r'l should suy hoi He bus patients
nt some of the jumst expensive health
retorts In America and u waiting Ifct
of people whose health will give way
as! sooo a they get money enough to
consult hltn." BlrmJojfbuiQ Aye-Ber-
THIS "ANOEi." WAS A KITE
Cut Superstitious Railroad Man Who
Shot It Down Was Certainly
Seared for a Time.
"The shooting," fnys n Texas man,
"occurred some yenrs ngo on the Pom
handle branch of the Santa Fe, and
the hero of the tale wns a superstitious
engineer who believed In 'warnings.'
"One night he was rolling along nt
a good? speed, when he saw a clear,
white light, 'Jlko n will-o'-the-wisp,
dauclng over the track a few hundred
feet In front. He shut off steam and
came to a stop as quickly as he could.
The conductor and train crew came
running up to the engine to see what
was the matter.
" There is some one swinging a Inn
tern across the track,' said the engi
neer, and the crew went ahead to In
vestigate. " 'We can't find anyone,' reported
the rear brakeraan, and the engineer
pulled out again, but he went slowly,
and In a few minutes stopped again.
The crew went nheud once more to
see what was the cause of the light.
The conductor, who was n good shot,
drew his revolver, and ntflils second
shot there was a crash, a scream, and
the light went out, and something
white came fluttering down from (lie
clouds.
"The englnepr wns scared. 'You've
shot an angel, sure,' he Mild lo tho
conductor, with n face as pale as
death.
"Investigation brought out the fart
Hint n small buy, with a limtern tied
to the tail of a kite, was the cause of
the trouble; but for a long time It
leased the engineer to be asked about
'Minotlng nngels.' "
HIGH PLACE FOR LEWIS CASS
Was Instrumental In Setting Up Amer
ican Form of Government In'
Western Territories.
"Those who pushed the frontier west
ward were themselves the products of
frontier conditions," suys William B..
Shaw in the American Review of Re
views. "Such u lender was Lewis
Cass, a native, of New Hampshire,
who went out as a youth to the settle
ments that were soon to be organized
Into the state of Ohio, took piirt In
lawmaking there, served as a volun
teer ofllcer lit the war of 1812, was ap
pointed governor of Michigan terri
tory, and for many years was engaged
In the difficult tusk of setting up nn
American form of government In re
gions that had barely emerged from
the wilderness stage.
"That Lewis Cass was In after years
a United States Renator from Michi
gan, a member of cabinets, a diplomat
and nn unsuccessful aspirant for the
presidency may have partially blinded
us to the really important services that
he rendered In the pioneer period of
Michigan's history. Neither he nor
any of the men' of his day could have
foreseen the strain that was to be put
on the states created out of the old
Northwest territory caused by the at
tempt to absorb vast populations of
northern Kuropean blood Into the citi
zenship. "I,ewls Cass lived to see great' ar
mies recruited among thoso newly
made Americans to fight for the Union
anil the principles of uutlonalltywhlch
he had himself defended throughout
his career."
First Payment of Rent.
It would be hard to find exact rec
ords of the first rent paid. It Is said
that when the Germans conquered
parts of (Inul, thu hind was parceled
out to chiefs, lieutenants and private
soldiers. In return the holders of tho
lands promised military service when
needed. Some of tlie land was given
to favorites, who were allowed to pay
In money Instead of service, and the
system was established. Rent was
certainly known In the days that Rome
nourished, there being Latin names
for rent under long leasehold tenure;
rent of a farm, ground rent, rent of
state lands and the annual rent pay
able for the right to tho perpl'tuul en
joyment of anything built on the sur
face of tho land.
Ancient Bible.
A Bible belonging to Htlznhcth Had
don, a Quakeress, printed In Ifitttl, bus
been discovered In the F.at. The Had
don Bible Is sixteen years older than
the IteluiN Testament sometimes
spoken of as "the oldest Bible." Thu
Hiiddou Bible Is an authentlu "Great"
Bible. It is also a "Treacle" Bible.
Coverdale, the translator, rendering
"Tho Prophecye of Jeremye," gave
the reading "I am bevy and abafhed ;
Is there no trlaelo at Gylyad." This
In the King James modern version
reads "halm In (Ulead."
The Hnddnn Bible Is Indeed "Great."
It weighs IS pounds, and Its dimen
sions" are; Thickness, -1J Inches;
Width, 10?; Inches, length, UHi Inches.
Detroit News.
Few Do Much Walklna.
Statistics of mankind's ambulation,
including jouug children anil old per
sons, and taking Into coiiNUK-rntloii
the fact that nowadays Uieiu are llu:
Inclination uiid (lie facilities to ride
more uud walk less Hum our fore
father did, show that n fair estimate
of the average distance walked dur
ing the 2-t hours by the men, women
uud children of continental United
StMes seems to be four miles. The
postman nnd the policeman uud tho
messenger boy walk far more miles
than four, so does the farmer, though
the use of the tractor has taken some
of the burdeu of agricultural work off
almnk's iptu.
We live nt the crossroads of the 1
nations, remarks the Luxemburg Zel
tung. We ore of all the peoples of
the world those most cosmopolitan In
spirit. On July 14 there was a French
evening on the parade grounds, and
everyone was enthusiastic for France.
On July 20 we had a Uelglan evening
in the same place and again everyono
was Inspired with enthusinsm. Should
there be nn American, Italian, Czeeho
Slovac or Polish evening any pleasant
summer night, the throng would greet
It with the same enthusiasm. We like
to have people, of other nations as
our guests. We wish them to feel at
home In our midst. ' -
A stranger who does not know us
and many who have lived among us
fall to know us might fancy that Wo
lack national sentiment.
Rut precisely the reverse Is true.
Our national sentiment Is so deep
that we arc like a tree whose trunk
stands unshaken when Its crown Is
rustled by the wind of sympathy for
other countries.
Last Wednesdny, after our French
and Relglnn evenings, we had n Luxem
I 'irg evening. The parade ground was
loo small and the firmament was too
low to contain the onthuMosm of the
multitude. We were at home among
ourselves. Tho leader had provided
a program of old, modem, and very
leccnt Luxemburg music. During the
choruses the thousands surrounding
the platform stood as reverently as
If they were In chinch. When -applause
was called for It was so thun
derous ns to be almost intlmldntlng.
The depth and sincerity of a na
tion's patriotism Is not measured by
the area of Us territory.
FEAR EPIDEMIC OF TYPHUS
British Authority Tells of Danger to
the World Because of Bad Condi
tions In Russia.
Dr. L. linden Guest of London, who
has been Investigating conditions In
Russia, reports to the Lancet (Lon
don) that the whole of that country
has been swept by typhus ami relaps
ing fever, and that all Indications point
unmistakably to a formidable epidem
ic In the coming winter. Cholera also
has made Its appearance and small
pox Is widely prevalent.
The Lancet warns the world at
large that unless Immediate and ef
fective steps bo tnken these frightful
diseases will spread through the bor
der stntes to other countries, nnd be
foro long will appear nil oyqr the
world. "The council of tho League of
Nations has thoroughly studied the
situation, with thu uld of some of the
best-known epidemiologists In the
world; Ihoy have a reasonable and
economical program, and hnve appoint
ed commissioners, but the actual
work cannot proceed until they hnve
obtained money guarantees from the
different nations, which so far have
not materialized, except In thu case
of a few count rles, Including Great
Britain nnd Canada. The future of
tho matter may well prove, In the par
lance of the day, nn 'acid test' of the
reality of the league as a family of
nations, ready to act for the common
good and to protect members of the
fnmlly who are threatened by disaster."
Modern Lover Practical,
"Harry," exclaimed the blushlnc
maiden, "this declaration of love Is so
sudden that I hardly know what to
sny. I wnsuuprepared for It. It un
nerves me."
"1 was afraid It might," said tho
young chemist, rising with nlacrlty
from his knees, "and I brought with
tne a bottle of my unrivaled nerve ton
ic. Tills preparation, my darling," lie
added, soothingly, ns he took the hot
tlo from his pocketi quickly extracted
Uio cork and poured a quantity of the
medicine Into a spoon he had also
brought with him, "will allay any un
due excitement, quiet thu nerves, aid
digestion and restore lost appetite. 1
sell It at GO cents a bottle. This Is a
dose for an adult. Tako it, dearest."
"Floatlna Fair" From Holland.
A company has been organized at
Tho Hague for the purpose of sending
a "floating fair" as It Is called, but
practically a ship loaded with sam
ple products ami commercial agents to
sell them, to various parts of the
world, particularly tho United Stutes.
Thu concern Is organized somewhat
on a co-operative basis and proposes
to send the Messagerles Monthlies ves
sel, tho Macedonia, of 0,100 tons bur
den, to the United States and Central
and South America for the purpoxo of
Introducing Netherlands products nnd
enabling Netherlands commercial
houses to establish Import and export
connections In the countries visited.
Scientific American.
Ice to Hold Stored Water.
Wectiuse the water supply of the
small city of Ashland, Ore., Is be
coming Inadequate tu the summer, and
Increasing the storage facilities would
cost ?100,lKX), the local engineers tire
trying an exerlineiit us Ingenious us
it Is simple. High up the side of
Mount Asliland, at the headwaters of
the supply, a system of piping and
sprays Is being Installed, through
which the surplus water of the win
ter will be directed iw'id allowed to
frceitf. The damming action of the
ice walls thus formed, and the grudu
ul thawing of tho lee Itself, ure ex
pectud to provide enough water for
nil the needs of summer. Populur M
fbuulcs Magailn.
I he
tjlr juSp9&v&' sS&idskt) ki'L9i
W10
mmmmmmmmmmmmammMKmMMKmwmwkmB8k
HEROISM SHOWN BY
AMERICAN WORKERS OF
NEAR EAST RELIEF
Cables Reveal Appalling
menian Need Hundreds
Thousands Starving.
Ar
of k By CHARLES V. VICKREY
General Secretary, Near East Relief
Approximately i T00
American men and
women ore stand
InK loyally and he
roically at their
posts In Armenia,
Turkey and the
Nc:i r Kust. Many
of them during the
Ions winter of Iso
lation ure undergo-
ing- wlmt we In
America call "hard
ship." Hut these,
our fellow citizen
In the Near Kat,-
Charles
are volunteers serv'ng with a high
purpose, and they do not recognize
hurdslilp when they meet It.
They have had their opportunity to
withdraw with honor from the field of
famine and desolation. They have re
fused to leave, because they know that
their departure would mean death for
tens of thousand of women and chil
dren whom their efforts hnve kept
allxe ami whom they are determined
to Mie for a better future.
A dozen cables are on my desk from
various centers In Armenia. Anatolia.
Cllicla and Syria plead ng pltonusly
for the lives of hundreds of thousands
wli'i are honielos: "Sixty-five thou
sand refugees fnutnntlnoplu alone;"
"Refugees Mocking Into Aleppo;"
"Twenty thousand refugees nt lsinld:"
"One hundred thousand people at
Alexunilropol will starve unless icllef
Is provided ;" "Refugees arriving from
Caucasus, escaping persecution, naked,
destitute I Urgent need to save most
of them from death;" "Two hundred
thousand starvlns between Kar and
Alexandropol I Severe winter adding
to dlslres."
Above all towers the mute appeal of
the moro than 11X1,000 little children,
orphaned, homeless, whom these Amer
ican relief wotkers have saved and
whom we here ut home must sustain
not only through the winter and
spring, Vt through tlie summer and
autumn us well. If we do not provide,
they perish! And with them dies the
hope of a New Near Hast.
The Kaster season is here- the sea
son that commemorates the drear Sac
rifice for mankind. Amer'cu Is known
as a Christian nation. She Is also the
wealthiest nation that history has ever
known.
Can we really enjoy our wealth and
claim the name of Christian If we turn J
a deuf ear to the appeal which (iemvnl
Leonard Wood, In behalf of the Nenr
Hast Relief, has sent forth broadcast
for a Lenten Sucrlfiee Offering to suve
tlioe little children In lUble Lauds?
nn:
HKKAI.D
FOU NKWS
riiii it m vmmi&uai
OgJL
rerun
VaEt
'"rH At
V. Vlckrey
tale m a cio
wi4h a uaotfol
THERE'S AN old gag.
THEY USED to pull.'
SO OLD that nowadays.
PEOPLE THINK it's new.
t-
ABOUT THE man who hcd.
TO SHOOT his dog.
t
AND A friend asUs.
"WAD THE dog mad?"
ft ft
AND THE first guy.
SAYS, "WELL, ho waon't.
SO DANG woll ploasod."
ft
AND A chap told mo.
THAT THIS described.
ft
SOME SMOKES lio'd tried.
ft
THEY DIDN'T exactly.
MAKE HIM mad.
ft
BUT HE wasn't.
a
SO VERY well pleased.
ft ft
OF COURSE that was.
AND
.. I OF COURSE that was.
C I6A&S Tl
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
ASK AID FOR THE
SUFFERING ARMENIANS
Distinguished Names on Lenten
Sacrifice Appeal.
Mnjor Oenernl Leonard Wood, U. S.
Army, Is head of a nntlon-wlde com
mittee making an appeal for a lenteu
sacrifice offering for the relief of t!ia
starving Christian populations of tho
Near Knst, In behalf of the Near Kast
Relief, l Madison avenue, New York
City.
Among those who Join General Wood
in ujKiug sup ort or tne won; or tiiuirf.i n;.i n4a r,.,r, ti o-ir.i ,i,.
Near hast Relief are: Andrew U.Mel-
Ion, of Pittsburgh, secretary of 'the
treasury; ex-President William 11. Tuft;
Frank A. Munsej ; W. Y. Atterbury o
the Pennsylvania Railroad ; Presi
dent John Uiier Hlbben, .of Prince
ton University; Dr. Alexis Cai
rel, of the Rockefeller Institute; Mrs.
Carrie Chnmpman Catt, the suffrns
lender; Mrs. Coiinne Roosevelt ltohlu
pon, tdsier of the late President Roose
velt ; Newcomb Carlton, president of
the Western Union Telegraph Com
(inny; John C. Shaffer, owner of the
Chicago Post and other newspapers;
Dr. Henry van Dyke; Miss 11. V.
II. Itied; Miss Elizabeth Marbury;
t'flinuel Oompers and Warren S. Stone,
labor leaders; John (!. Mllhurn and
Moorlleld Storey, of the American I5ar
Association; Mary 'Stmlen; David
ltelusoo; Mrs. Medlll McC'orm'ck;
Mrs. Thomas (5. Winter, president of
the (leneral Federation of Women's
Clubs; Mrs. Gcorg" Maynard Minor,
head of the D. A. It.; Miss Anna A.
Cordon, head of the W. C. T. U. ; .Mrs,
Percy V. Pennybiicker, of the League
of Women Voters; Mrs. Philip North
Moore, pres'dent of the National Coun
cil of Women ; Miss Alice Stone P.lack
well; Mrs. (Jeorge Horace l.orliner, of
Philadelphia; Mrs. Mary Roberts Hlne
hurt, the well known novelist; Rupert
Hughes and Emerson Hough, authors;
Senator Reed Smoot, of Utah; (lover
nor John M. Pinker, of Louisiana; Dr
Frank M. McMurry, of Teachers' Col
lege. New York City; William C
Uobbs, of Indianapolis; J. Thomson
Willing, the artist; Mrs. Cleveland II
Dodge; Mrs. Henry Mnrgenthuu ; Mrs
Edwin M. Ilulklcy; Rlshop-cleet Wil
liam T. Manning, of New York : Mrs.
Sinnley White; Mrs. William Nash
Read, of Montgomery, Ala ; Arthur
Hrl.vbane; John S. Drum. San Francis
co; John McPailund, l.-ihoi lent cr.
v o it s a ii i;
American Silver Laced Wyandotte
tggs. I hove (nil chased two fin)
cockerels from tho best breeder in
the state to head my pens of pure
bred, heavy laying strain hens, TIiojo
cocsorels me winners of the first ard
second prizes in all of the eastern
Nebraska Poultry Shows. Won sec
nnd prize at the State Poultry Show,
Holdrege. Special price, 15 eggs51..V.
Coo. .1. McClellMi, Waterbuij, Neb.
V o r H it 1 1'
Thoroughbred White Hock
60 cents per setting.
eggs.
Mrs. Kd. IreOo-ick,
Phone -16. Dakota City, Neb.
MY CUE lo clip Mm.
1
A REAL cigarette.
AFTER he'd taken.
ft "
A GOOD pull or two. .
INTO HIS constitution.
HE GRINNED and said.
...
"THE ONLY way these.
...
WILL EVER make you mad.
ft ft
IS THE way.
YOUR FRIENDS cat o:n up.
ft
I ONLY hope you've got.
t
A COUPLE of packs.
ft ft ft
FOR THEY sure.
ft
DO SATISFY."
OU'LL enjoy Chesterfields.
There's somclhinK in their mild
smoothnesn that fines riphtto the
spot. Choice tobaccos, Tuikuih and
Domestic a blond that literally can't
be copied a rpecinl nioiature-pioof
wrapper for theirextra protection on
everv count, Chesterfields "satisfy."
vfmmL!m&iymmsism
LKOAL XOTICKS
.' iTrPulT Apwl 28, 1921 -4w
PKOItATi: XOTK'i: TO CIti:i)ITOIlS
In the County Court of Dakota
County, Nebraska.
In the Matter of the Estate of
P.liles Riley, also known as Miles T.
Iloilly, deceased.
Notice is hereby given, that tho
creditors of the said deceased will
meet the Executor of said estate, he
fore me, County Judge of Dakota
County, Netitaska, at tho County
'court room in said county, on tin
2Srd dny of .Julv, 1021, unci on tho
'2anl day of September, 1021, at 10
o'clock A. M. ouch day, for the pur
pose of prcssnting their claims for
'.examination, .adjustment and allow
I nncc. Five Aionths are allowed for
I the creditors to present tluu claims
and one vear for the Executor to
or A .. ls21 ,rhi tip ., ,
( published in The Dakota County
Horuld for four weeks successively
prior to the 23rd day of July, J'j21.
Witness my hand, and seal of said
court, this 23rd day of Apii!, A. I).
1021.
SHERMAN W. McKINLEY,
(Seal) County Judge.
m&
nu:i:imiMtmiiiim:n:f3.;gcgWl
Cb&yowSthuipjiecL
m
Here is your opportunity to inture
ogainjt embarrassing errors in spelling,
pronunciation and poor choice of
words. Know the meaning of puzzling
war terms. Increase your efficiency,
which results in power and success.
WEBSTER'S
NEW INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY is an all-knowing
teacher, a universal question
uiisweier, made to meet your
needs. It vi in daily uso by
hundreds of thousands of sue
cissf ul wen i.lJ w omen t ho w orld over.
400.000 Words. 2700 Ines. 6000 IN
lustrations. 12,000 Illoflruphlcal En
tries. 30,000 Geographical. Subject a.
CBAND 1'HIZE. (IThrliost Award)
t'anama-l'acifio .Uipositiun.
Ill Gl'LAK and INDIA-PAPER Editions.
WRITIC for Srx-clmea I'nsrt. FRUE
I'm Let Mapjlf )ounanic IhU parxr.
G. & C. MERRIAM CO.,
Springfield, Muss., U. S. A.
1S55K
LOMBER
UIU.WOKK nJ rwiartl butkllns mirUI
25 OR MORE SAVING
to you. Don't rQOonldr buying vnlll rouhaTtwvt
Moomplctnljkt ul Lt luocfr) tud bavvour MtUuto
to nuru it'!!. W ahlp quick and paw th frlM.
fcrV-'HS LUMBER CO.
J.VJII UOVII KTItKCT OMAIU. NKH.
Wl s' Ul ! II tia lis'ssr'l jjismj. --
LET US PRINT IT FOR YOU
The Herald (or News when it la News,
piiiB
L SS. 11
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