The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 29, 1914, Image 3

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    BUSINESS NOT 10
SAKS WILSON
President Outlines Plan for Regu
lation of Trusts.
SQUARE BUSINESS WITH LAW
tap it Dr-' t or of tn« Policy and
Mca- *>3 o* t* it ng Law* la of Fi-wt
mpertaec*—Antijjfi »ir Between
B~s -eaa and Government.
IS Horn Over.
* -~r « Jan y* —Prraident
»iWu delivered the following urn*
***•- today before a joint torsion of
(be two boo*** of eosgrer*.
iJe*tW**w* of the congrras
t — (»t the State of the
t • L:cfc ! had tfc. piirilege of
rnsdcL* ' oj ct the !« of Iierem
her ha*; 1 ret’.ared to name for
<s .- .». b *• a h»ter out*- the aubjert
>f aei: . ai leg.i>i*tiuc regarding the
*er. |£ and intricate matter of
trust- and tt Bopotier The time now
•ee'tLs . :» e turn to that treat
overt >-<s not only because the cur
re* <.. ie4 tiatiuE which ahoitH your
at’os ataii »hr a’t-ntion of the
r> uat > :e I** ember t» mo* diapooed
of b. i t '-a oj-ici-.s appear1
*-< • — • ;e4r.af ihout m with entrain
r* 9 - ' . • . e- great field of
a ’ - matter of ’he < nrretfr.
«' < s. a- r addi i.ly end very happily
**r v.-'1 *. ieh-oe bated art was
P-* * re* or* to the mooepolies
• iris hair mui’.pMod about u* and in
■ - at - ar. - »e*r> by w hich
‘hey ba*e t—es organised and main
tained. ■-* a* etna to be coming to a
•e*» at c *.. but mi vernal agreement
• - ■ • -a of our action a* if by
• - • »• - ret tratksn making the
»*» • a* - - t mw and • aster to ret
• it 4*’’ • ; Ltdeooe and without
duEifhulnb of i ounce!
6_* ft« of 'ctecoretatiori.
5 i ha* itm htvmapfcer* like
-**-r*Tfca* •-la# and the atmoapber* of
arcom® Nation and tautoa! uuder
•u=-4»»« »fe.ch *e bov hrewihe with
*• a! .-* -»:r-»ba.«-at i* ma'ter of am
-re - _ia»v t. It ought to make
>-r taak »-rt murk lev* diScult and
-rt.ha'rae. z.? than St »oald hare been
h*<: »e bee* t. r«-o to continue to
a*" am.4*’ the a'c. wpbere of auapi
<so» and antagonism mhirh ha* »■-•
Had* ;t :sr pc.** bir to approach
•tch dueauooa v.th dt*p»a*sonate fair
f'oaadrortivc leg-elation when
’* alvay* the embodiment
T r->- . ■ ■ f e*j*-rte®ee and „f the
taa ure public opinio* mhich finally
■ pf • g» ■ 1 of that e*pene**» Leg.
•- **.jt » a bvetueea of interpretation
oe <? te a.nation , and it i* aov plain
• ha* 'he op t. on la 10 which ae must
r e?* • thla safer it la not re
cent or haft «gdBtos It aprinc* oot
f •*>• eipej .-ace -jf a »bole gecerm
*l«*» If ha* 'landed Itaeif by long
oon'ej. and soar a bo for a long time
b*fl*d *-111 t and aoajrhr to change
It are tia* frankly and honorably
» • id :.* ’u ■ and » - t.to ojnfortt
(lot ac*Ki«a 10 «*
n» great *•■ * - -«*mr• who organ
*4 and f'cr'-rd monopoly and tboae
■ u adn r e*ed *t tn actual every
day :.r*»*acf :«■* have year after year.
* • iter dei ed it* existence
r . • fed It a* neceaaary for the ef
fecf*e fi!strMw« and development
of the -aa* ht'trw proreaaea of the
sir :s the modem clreumatan-'c*
.«» -rade ard -aufanare and finance;
‘ t e opinion baa made
-cad »r* - *• rbem The average
b - -;t- »sn i» roar aetd that the
• -' * ' are aiao the way* of
t* -C r »ay* of aucceaa a«
• B' fed a' -art the maafeir* of buai
s-»* «t he rreai tola have begun to
*.e*d ' h pgefeeepcv and purpoae.
P" * • *f - their ••..err-!,' *1» r. honor
a Me - ye-r 4. -
d- ; Mo?
d *' w * *r* ; u * posing to do, there
for*- •» happily non to hamper or ia
reefer- » *h business w enlightened
fci*iv ■ arr (rHrr to 4o H. or In any
ss-nee to j ( N end* r the bos The
ant - berwaeii t s.n->« and go?
•rtfR* t! It i ’-•r We are now about
la ft» enprcsaiM to thr bmt business
W*a-t« ttttrrn*. to what »e
kt « to be the buotarw conscience
aaS n •• or *' the land Thr govern
■ott asd bu»ka*aa awn are ready to
aot -»<t other half at; in a common
«-®ort ’a at >-ar- business method* with
both pub r i-pin..* and law The best
informed me® of thr business world
condemn tb- method* and procease*
mad ■•oaasnuences at monopoly as we
rood nr ti thr-tc and the instinct Ire
.•ufigse-ct of th»- *aat majority of bust
m> mm »>vr»wkrr» port with them
W* idtali to* be tbr-tr spokesman
That * tfcr atrmgfh of our position
act the »j» prophecy of what will m
•a wfce® our reasonable work is done
Whm scrians contest ends, whan
an unit* n opinion and purpose
those » t are to rtaifr tbelr ways ol
kaubw. nine with those wbo ash
for ti.» change H la possible to effect
it ah -n- way la which prudent and
thoughtful and patriotic mr-e would
wish to m-» it brought about, with at
few. aa slight. as easy and simple bust
tees* rewadfusta»-ste as possible la lb«
(htwaruiim nothing essential dis
turned nothing tors op by the roots
a* part* WD asunder which can b*
lift in whoiesome combination. For
tuntelv, no measures of sweeping or
novel change are necessary. It will be
understood that oar object is not to
unsettle business or anywhere serious
ly to break its established courses
athwan On the contrary, we desire
the laws we are now about to pass to
be the bulwarks and safeguards of in
dustry against the forces that have
disturbed it_ What we have to do can
be done in a new spirit, in thoughtful
moderation, without revolution of an
untoward kind.
Private Monopoly intolerable
We are all agreed that private
monopoly is indefensible and intoler
able and our program is founded upon
that conviction It will be a compre
hensive but not a radical or unaccept
able program, and these are its items,
the barges which opinion deliberately
sanctions and for which business
waits.
It awaits with acquiesence in the
hr*t place for laws which will ef
fectually prohibit and prevent such
interlockings of the personnel of the
directorates of great corporations—
banks and railroads, industrial, com
mercial and public service bodies—as
n effect result in making those who
borr.su and thote who lend practical
ly one and the same, those who sell
and :ho-f who buy but the same per
rons trading with one another under
different names and in different coni
!■.nations and thv.se whose affect to
«• [••• n fact. tuirTners and masters
of - me a hole field of business Suf
ficient t D.t should be allowed, of
course in which to effect these
i : g*-s of -ganization w ithout ineou
ver -nee or confusion
~ < a prohibition will work much
n. re than a mere negative good by
t rr« i\s the serious evils which
,*v an- n because, for example, the
men who have been the directing
-; -of the great Investment banks
-a * • :ip»,l the place which belongs
•< independent industrial management
w.-rk i.g : its behoof. It will bring
eu * n. : ew energies, a new spirit
f m.native, new blood into the man
agen n* of our great business enter
prts - 1* will o{<en the field of in
ns trial development and origination
to scores of men who have been
hkg-ii ti serve when their abilities
entitled them to direct. It will im
* r hearten the young men com
ir.c on and will greatly earich the
activities of the whole coun
ty
Harr- and Injustice Dene.
: the second place, business men.
a» wei! as those who direct public af
ta.rs now recognize. and recognize
■' rfc painful ciea-nese, the great harm
and injustice which has been done to
:: any / i t all of the great railroad
-• stairs of 'he country by the way
r wrh.cfa they liave been financed and
't«= r ow; distinctive interests subordi
' cased to the interests of the men
*ho financed them ar.d of other busi
ness enterprises which those men
j w ished to promote.
"The country is ready therefore to
accept and accept with relief as well
as approval, a law which will confer
upon the interstate commerce com
m ss n ’he power to 6Uperin’end and
regulate the financial operations by
gwhich the railroads are henceforth to
!*e supplied w th the money they need
for their proper development to meet
'the rapidly grow.ng requirements of
•be country for increased and im
proved facilities of transportation. We
a: tier p. r:pe te action in this matter
without leaving the railroads exposed
10 many serious handicaps and haz
ards and the prosperity of the rail
r<iids and the prosperity of the coun
try are inseparably connected. Upon
■h:s question those who are chiefly
responsible for the actual manage
ment and operation of the railroads
j have spoken very plainly and very
earnestly, with a purpose we ought to
be -.nick to a- cept it. It will be one step
ate a very important one. toward the
• -cessary separation of the business
: production from the business of
transportation.
Tin- business of the country awaits
also, has long awaited and has suf
•• red because it could not obtain fur
ther aud more explicit legislative defi
nition of the policy and meaning of
ne existing anti-truwt laws. Nothing
: ~r..pers business like uncertainty.
Nothing daunts or discourages it like
be neoessitj to take chances, to run
the risk of falling under the condem
1 htion of the law before It can make
sure .ust w hat the law is
Definition Now Possible.
Surely we are sufficiently familiar
ib the actual processes and meth
ode of monopoly and of tfce many
cartful restraints of trade to make
cefitiition possible, at any rate up to
the limits of what experience has dis
i lowed. These practices, being now
abundantly disclosed, can be explic
itly and Item by item, forbidden by
statute In such terms as will prac
tically eliminate uncertainty, the law
itself and the penalty being made
equally plain
And the business men of the
country desire something more than
1 that the menace of legal process in
these matters be made explicit and in
telligible. They desire the advice, the
definite guidance and information
which can be suppl.ed by an admin
istrative body, an interstate trade
: commission
■ The opinion of the country would
instantly approve of such a commis
sion It would not wish to see it em
powered to make terms with monop
oly or In any son to assume control
of business, as if the government
made itself responsible. It demands
such a commission only as an indis
peusible instrument of information
and imbiii ity. as a clearing house for
the fact* by which both the public
mind aud the managers of great busi
ness nndertak ngs should be guided,
and as an instrumentality for doing
Justice to business where the process
es of the courts or the natural forces
of correction outside the courts are
inadequate to adjust the remedy to
the wrong in a way that will meet all
the equities and circumstances of the
case.
"Producing industries, for example,
which have passed the point up to
which combination may be consistent
with the public interest and the free
dom of trade, cannot always be dis
sected into their component units as
readily as railroad companies or sim
ilar organizations can be. Their dis
solution by ordinary legal process may
oftentimes involve financial conse
quences likely to overwhelm the se
curity market and bring upon it break
down and confusion. There ought to
be an administrative commission ca
pable of directing and shaping such
corrective processes, not only in aid
of the courts but also by indepnisnt
suggestion, if necessary.
Make Punishment Certain.
"Inasmuch as our object and the
spirit of our action in these matters
is to meet business Half way in its
processes of self-correction and dis
turb its legitimate Course as little as
possible, we ought to see to it. and the
judgment of practical and sagacious
men of affairs everywhere would ap
plaud us if we did see to it that pen
alties and punishments should fall,
not upon business itself, to its confu
sion and interruption, but upon the !
individuals who use the instrumental- ,
ities of business to do things which
public policy and sound business prac
tice condemn. Every act of business
is done at the command or upon the
initiative of some ascertainable per
son or group of persons. These should
be held individually responsible and
the punishment should fall upon them,
not upon the business organization of
which they make illegal use. It should
be one of the main objects of our leg
islation to divest such persons of
their corporate cloak and deal with
them as with those who do not rep
resent their corporations, but merely
by deliberate intention break the law.
Hus ness men the country through
would, I am sure, applaud us if we
were to lake effectual steps to* see
that the officers and directors of great
bodies were prevented from bringing
them and the business of the country
into disrepute and danger.
utner questions remain woicn win
! need very thoughtful and practical
I treatment. Enterprises, in these mod
i •'ru aa»s of great individual fortunes, j
I are oftentimes interlocked, not by
being under the control of the same
: directors, but by the fact that the !
: greater part of their corporate stock
is owned by a single person or group
' of persons w ho are In some way in- i
I timately related In interest.
Holding Companies.
“We are agreed, 1 take it, that hold
:r.g companies should be prohibited,
but w hat of the controlling private
ownership of individuals or actually
co-operative groups of individuals?
. Shall the private owners of capital
stock be suffered to be themselves in
! effect holding companies? We do not
1 wish. I suppose, to forbid the pur
chase of stocks by any person who
pleases to buy them In such quanti
! ties as he can afford, or in any way
arbitrarily to limit the sale of stocks
j to bonaflde purchasers Shall we re- !
quire the owners of stock, when their
; voting power in several companies
which ought to be independent of one
I another would constitute actual cou
' trol, to make selection in which of
■ them they will exercise their right to
■ vote? This question I venture for
! your consideration.
"There is another matter in which
j imperative considerations of Justice
! and fair play suggests thoughtful
' remedial action. Not only do many
; of th“ combinations effected or sought
; to be effected in the industrial world
' work an injustice upon the public in
general: they also directly and seri
ously injure the individuals who are
put out of business in one fair way or
another by the many dislodging and
exterminating forces of combination.
I hope that we shall agree in giving
I private individuals who claim to have
I been injured by these processes the
right to found their suits for redress
! upon the facts and judgments proved
and entered in suits by the govern
ment where the government has upon
its ow-n initiative sued the combina
tions complained of and won its suit,
and that the statute of limitations
shall be suffered to run against such
| litigants only from the date of the
i conclusion of the government's action.
Individual Justice.
"It is not fair that the private liti
gant should he obliged to set up and
j establish again the facts which the
j government has proved. He cannot
afford, he has not the power to make
use of such processes of inquiry as
the government has command of.
Thus shall individual justice be done
while the processes of business are
rectified and squared with the general
conscience.
“1 have laid the case before you. no
doubt as it lies in your own mind, as
it lies in the thought of the country.
What must every candid man say of
the suggestions 1 have laid before you.
of the plain obligations of which I
have reminded you? That these are
new things for which the country is
not prepared? No; but that they are
old things now familiar, and must of
course be undertaken if we are to
square our taws with the thought and
i desire of the country. Vntil these
things are done, conscientious busi
nessmen the country over will be un
satisfied. They are in these things
our mentors and colleagues. We are
now about to write the additional arti
cles of our constitution of peace, the
peace that is ho»-3r and freedom and
I prosperity.”
•''orenooOtO
Mr* Ei»—Do <<m Off so i trout h
y*»r tuUa4i packet* BortUtfi be
fore be t up?
Mr* W>«—Caleb tte tUl
aortic; 1 co tbioucb tbetn before be
Coco st( at tbc rttfibc
£SKit(t<*|i
1 not r-uur wife >oat nt« and ahe
to*4 sc abe Lad lost bouefit a pmbemd
C**cfc OB"- "
• Well, i »a* tie pinbemd and tb«
ttart »** ib»«. mil right
The Styles.
Funny how women will go from
one extreme to another."
"'hat's the matter now?"
"Formerly they used to have darts
;n ’heir waists and now they have
dasher in their skins "
Business Reasons.
"Jukes Is a mean man, but he al
ways contributes to Sunday school
picnics and excursions."
Don't you know why? He is in
the umbrella business "
Unaccustomed Effort.
“I understand Percival van Pash la
under a physician's care.”
' Yes. one morning when his office
boy was late he undertook to tear a
date off the calendar without help
and he overexerted himself.”
Locality Counts.
"I am going to lay the scenes of my
play in Jamaica.”
‘‘Why so?”
“Because, then, it will have plenty
of ginger.”
CHICAGO’S MOST BRILLIANT 6ILLIARDIST
Calvin W. Demarcst.
Cal tin \V. Demarest, who has held ■
both the world's amateur champion- j
ship and the world's professional
championship at 1S-2 billiards, was
born in Chicago June 20, 1686. He |
made his first appearance in touma-j
ment play in a 14-2 handicap event at 1
Chicago in 1905, and did not lose a
game. Two years later he won the j
national amateur championship at i
14-2 at New York, defeating Conklin.
Wright, Poggenburg and Doctor Mial.
The neit year he won the world's ama
teur chtmpionship at the 16-2 game
Demarest next tried his hand as a pro- !
fessional. but his first appearance with
the "pros". was not encouraging. In
1W5, in a tournament for the world's
1S-2 championship, he finished last.
Later in the same year-the young Chi
cagoan proved that he could come back
by capturing the world's title from a
field that included such experts as
Sutton. Cline, Cassignol and Cutler
In 1910 Demarest lost the title to
Cline. Demarest's strongest point is :
his masse, which the critics agree is
almost perfect.
WHY FELKEY LOST TO SMITH
Couldn't Resist Temptation to Revert
to Old Manner of Slugging—De
feat Quickly Follows.
Tommy Burns. the one-time cham
pion of tjie world, who directed the
training of Arthur Pelkey for the lat
ter's New Year bout with Gunboat
Smith, attributes the defeat of his pro
tege to hjs ( Pelkey's) irresistible de
sire to slug.
Burns spent six months in an en
deavor to transform Pelkey from a
swinger into a straight hitter and just
previous to the fight Burns was confi
dent be had accomplished his purpose
The strangest thing about it all is
that Burns ifter his years and years
cf service, both as a ring man and a
Arthur Pelkey.
coach. should have considered the
transmutation of Arthur Pelkey’s box
ing complete and not be troubled with i
fears of a reversion to the old order |
of things.
Just one stinging jab on the nose '
caused Arthur to forget all Burns had j
been to so much trouble to teach him,
and then went right back to the old
windmill tactics he had employed in j
previous fights.
Priest Favors Boxing.
Rev. Father Bernard Vaughan, the j
eminent EnglUh Jesuit, favors boxing
as an exercise and -an educative ele
ment in the training of boys. He says:
"Every lad wto learns boxing has a
mark not merely on his nose, but on
his character. He is self-confident,
quiet and mcxSjst. The boy who learns
boxing fights straight, whereas the
people who wvote to me wait until a
man's back ii turned and kick him.
There is too much of this kicking
going on in England today. We want
more simple r.traight hitting between
the eyes and not below the belt.”
Ideal Gyms at Two Colleges.
Dartmouth and Bowdoin colleges
boast ideal gymnasiums for the 'de
velopment of the students. The gym
nasium at Hanover, with its athletic
building containing a dirt running
track, a baseball diamond and indoor
tennis courts, gives to the physical
instructor a wide range of interest
ing and excellent phyiscal exercises
which cannot but Interest and im
prove the students.
GOSSIP T
Y^IMCMG I
! 1 SPORTSl
Reports from the east are to the ef
fect that the Red Sox are going to re
lease Steve Yerkes.
• • •
Rill James, the former Cleveland j
hurler, has been secured by the Browns :
from the Pacific Coast league.
• • •
Virginia and Vanderbilt have signed
a two-year contract for football games, j
Virginia will play next season at Nash
ville.
Tattersall's December sale of blood
stock at Newmarket in December was
a record one; 713 horses brought $1,
620,000.
• • •
Infielder Eddie Grant, who was lucky 1
enough to be in for a share of the
world's series coin last October, is said
to be headed for Memphis.
Sixteen letters awarded at Cornell
mark the culmination of a really suc
cessful team for A1 Sharpe's eleven
tnd a justification of his methods.
The Miehigan-Harvard game next '
fall will be about the closest possible
approach to an ideal comparison of
eastern and western coaching methods.
* • •
A boot that would prove of real in
terest is that proposed for the National
Sporting club of London—a clash be
tween Gunboat Smith and Georges
Carpenter.
• • •
Fristensky, the heavy weight, brings
news from Europe about Xbysxko. He
modestly admits the reason Zbyszko
is in Europe is because Fristensky is
in America.
• • •
Joe Smith, world's bantam weight :
wrestling champion, has invaded the
ranks of the light weights and chal
lenged several ^aspirants for Johnny .
Billeter's title.
• • •
Manager Branch Rickey hRS a pick
of 37 athletes from which to build up
1914 combination. Thirteen of them
played with the Browns last season,
while 24 of them are newcomers.
Bobby Messenger, who has had sev
eral major league trials and who was
once with the White Sox, will get an
other trial next season. He will go
south with Rickey’s St. Louis team.
• • •
A close friend of Manager McGraw
says there isn't a chance of any team
landing Fred Snodgiass from the
Giants. He says that McGraw thinks
Snodgrass is the best gardener in the
business.
Bieland Success as Shortstop.
Southern league critics generally
agree that Rivington Bisland was the
best shortstop in the Dixie circuit, j
When Pittsburgh had him it tried to
make an outfielder of him. but Billy
Smith seemed to find the proper place
for him in the shortfield and he did
great work there. In addition he hit
over .300 and was fairly fast on the
bases. • _j
LEADING OFF FIRST BASE
“There is one outsider on the
Brawns who should be one of
the best baserunners in the
American league,” says Branch
Rickey, the manager of the
American t&il-enders.
"That he isn't is entirely due
to himself. I have watched him
all season and I have yet to see
him slide back to first when a
pitcher threw there.”
There is little doubt Rickey
means Bert Shotten.
”\Vhat does it prove when a
man has to slide back to first
to beat a pitcher’s throw?"
“It means that he isn't get
ting a big enough lead. It
means that, instead of worrying
the pitcher and'thus helping
the man at bat. the baserunner
is underestimating his own abil
ity.
"Every inch of? first base
means that much less distance
to cover on the steal, and every
out at second on a fast man Is
by a matter of inches.
"The baserunner should keep
experimenting on how far he
can lead off from the bag That
will be a regular feature of our
curriculum in the south next
spring. I want every man to
take as much off first base as he
possibly can. Then he’ll help
the batter and he'll worry the
pitcher."
YOST MUST BUiLD NEW TEAM
—
ivtichigan Coach Will Have Weak j
Nucleus to Prepare for Grueling j
Contest With Harvard in 1814.
Fielding H. Yost's ability as a foot- .
ball tutor will be put to its greatest
test on October 31, 1814, when his team
meets the best eleven developed in the
east in years
For two years the Harvard team has
swept through its schedule with never
a defeat and each season the men of
Harvard have won the gridiron cham
pionship of the east. Next year Har- I
vard will have practically the same j
team that Harvard had this esason. '
while Michigan may and again may
not have a team that compares favor
ably with the Yost eleven of 1913.
Had Michigan been able to meet
Harvard this year or in 1915 ber
chances against the great eleven of
Cambridge would be at an even mark, i
but next year—
Yost must rebuild a scoring machine
at Ann Arbor. He loses the pick of
his 1913 line and the stars of his back- i
field by graduation; the field from
which he must choose his new timber
is questionable:.
Paterson, Pontius. Musser. Allmen
dinger. Lichtner, Scott. McHale will be
missing from the Michigan line. !
Among them are some of the best line
men ever developed at Ann Arbor.
Jimmy Craig. all-America and al- i
western halfback, and the greatest
Pontius, Michigan Star Who Has
Played His Last Game With Yost.
back developed in the west in many
years, has played his last game under
Yost. So have Torbet, a dependable
fullback, and Quinne. an acceptable 1
substitute for that position.
And in place of those who drop out
this year—
To fill Paterson's job at center is
Traphagen. aggressive and a good
passer. He has the material and ,
Yost rarely fails to bring it out.
Johnny Maultbetsch will be eligible
next year. “Maultey" is the most sen
sational back seen in college circles in
Michigan in many years. He did won
derful work for the freshmen eleven
this year. He is a marvel at bucking
the iine or carrying the ball through
a broken field, but his value has never
been tested against big league” oppo
sition.
Swim Record.
Perry McGillivray established a new
American indoor record for the 880
yard swim at the Illinois Athletic club
in the fourth annual interscholastic
swimming meet, which was won by the
Evanston high school. McGillivray's
time was 11:29 1-5. which beat the rec
ord of 11:44 4-5 made by C. M. Dan
iels of the New York Athletic clmb at
New York in 1907.
Evanston high school won from its
rival competitors, having a total of 19
points at the finish, three to the good
of Oak Park, which finished second
with a net number of 16. Evanston
academy was third with nine points;
University high was fourth with eight.
New Trier and Lane Tech each scored
with a point.
Lynch Threatened Tener.
When Thomas J. Lynch was an um
pire he once threatened to put John
K. Tener, a pitcher, out of a game.
That was many years ago. But some J
players will go a long way to get even j
Better
Biscuits
Baked
Wiib^
You never tasted
daintier, lighter, fluffier
biscuits than those 4
baked with Calumet.
They're always
good — delichus.
For Calumet in
sures perfect
baking.
RECEIVED
HIGHEST AWARDS
WorWi Pure Food
Exposition, Chicago,
Paris Exposition,
France, March,
1922.
ATS
One p*cta?e of Jon«a*
Ke^renerr-Wd A b u n
dance Oats will be
sent fr+t to show Its wonderful product!vene**
Rents dmuth—<rrow» bisr crops where other* fell.
Lonjreet rtrewed.tninnest skinned, heaviest v ield’.ng:
—earliest larare grained oats in tbe world. Also free
—Jones' Bovk on seeds and crop growing Oats
guaranteed perfectl j clean. Send in yocrname u>»Ut.
0.1 JOSES SEED CO. 421 N. Mips An. Stout Falls. S D.
LADY AGENTS WANTED KSKLEl!: WS
«C ILHi lOXTKKSS (KOHiAl. lO«Fi.H, kiun Cltj,
Rather Warm.
At a school in Dudley a teacher with
whom I am well acquainted was tak
ing his class in their poetry, “Casa
b anca.” They came to the line. “The
boy stood on the burning deck ” He
stepped the class, and asked this ques
tiDn. “Why did the boy stand on the
burning deck?" He had a good show
of hands, but one lad in particular
seemed very eager to give the answer.
The teacher noticed this, and asked
him. whereupon he got the following
answer. “Because it was too hot to
si', down!” which put the whole class
in an uproar.—London Tit-Bits.
Disagreed With Science.
Bix—Scientists say that it is much
easier to support a weight than it
is to iift it.
Dix—I haven't found it so. I can
lift my wife quite easily.
Real Emergency.
"If the cook is in a bad humor,
don't take any notice of her.”
"But suppose she gives it?”
Be thrifiy on little things like bluing. Don't
•cce-.it w»;«-r fur bluing. Ask for Red ( loss
Bail Blue, the extra good value blue. Adv.
Shortly after marriage a man begins
to realize that he talked too much
during the courtship.
Ihitnam Fadeless Dyes are the
brightest and fastest. Adv.
F«ivy has been known to move mor
tals to perform wonders.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Carters
■ ITTLE
liVER
■ PILLS.
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never
fail. Purely vegeta
ble — act surely
but gently on
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis
tress-cure
indigestion.
Improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature