The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, March 06, 1913, Image 8

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C. B. HALE, Publisher
RID CLOUD
NEBRASKA
FAREWELL SEND OFF
HOME FOLKS PAY TRIBUTE TO
WOODROW WILSON.
DEWEY VICTIMS LIST LESS
Omaha Qlrl Testifies as to Wage Con
dltlons Before Investigating
Committee Turkey Is
Very Secretive.
Princeton, N. ,1. Tlioiitmwls of the
homo folks of Princeton, and with
thoin tho students of Princeton unlvcr
Hlty, gnvo Woodrow Wilson ti farewel
demonstration Saturday its thoy badii
him godspeed to the white house. If
wuh ii unln.uo tribute to the tnim who,
after twenty-seven cars of rcsldencM
In tho historic town, hnd been elevated
to tho presidency of tho United States,.
In that both students and town folk?
Joined In cheering him. It was the
first celebration In which "town and
gown" mingled In such great numbers
and with so much enthusiasm.
FIND NO MORE BODIES.
Dewey Hotel Fire Victims Many Less
than Reported.
Omaha, Neb. Men working In the
ruins of the Dewey hotel, destroyed
by fire last Friday, have failed to un
earth any more bodies, and tho total
still Is three dead with a score more
or less seriously injured. That more
bodies lie within the ruins Is merely
conjectural and It will possibly be sev
eral days before any other fatalities
can bo definitely ascertained.
"I hnnlly think further search will
disclose more bodies than have been
found," said Klro Chler Salter. "We
know tho firemen saved about forty
from tho burning building and that a
number made their own way out.
Should thero have been more we
would havo found them In the rear
part or tho building. That part has
been thoroughly searched and men
havo gono through under tho boards
In tho front without finding others."
With tho exception of Floyd O. Pry
of Temple. Tex,, whoso absence was
reported Saturday, all thought to have
died havo been found, Is tho belief.
ONE MEAL IN TWO DAYS.
Deplorable Conditions Among Omaha
Wage Earners.
Omaha. Nob. A. half-starved girl,
with a pinched face, thin, trembling
hands and an anxious look, testified
before tho house committeo Investigat
ing wago conditions In Omaha that
sho had been eating only one meal in
two days in order to mako her wages,
meet tho demands made upon her. "I
get $3.G0 a week," she said, "and aftei
paying for my room I cannot cat every
day. I lost fifteen pounds In tho last
two weeks." Members of the commit.!
teo said she certainly appeared to
have been losing flesh. "Sometimes."
sho said, "I rat a menl every day for
a whllo. T only eat suppers. Then
again I can only have ono supper In
two days."
Many Visitors at Washington.
Washington. Fifty thousand visit
ors, It was estimated by railroad of
ficials, had reached Washington Sat
urday night ns tho vanguard of tho
quartor of a million expected to wit
ness tho first Inauguration In twenty
years of a democratic president of the
United Stnt03. The inaugural com
mlttee announces that every detail for
tho ulcborato ceremonies had been
completed, and the city, decked in pa
trlotlc and holiday array, has assumed
n Jovial spirit.
Turks Getting Secretive.
London. Turkey has become very
secretlvo regarding her efforts to
bring nbout peace In the Halkans. it
being difficult either here or in Con
Btnntlnoplo to obtain authentic infor
mation as to what was being done, but
in diplomatic circles It wns predicted
that before tho end or another week
tho Ottoman implro will have thrown
horaolf unconditionally on the mercy
or the great powers.
Seward. Neb. Word has heon re
ceived by frlondH in Seward to the ef
feet that Frank Nelson, who kept a
restaurant in Seward live or six years
ago, was frozen to death 'whllo out
hunting in tho neighborhood or Idaho
Falls, Ida,, eoine time In February
Nelson's homo wns at Friend and lie
was In the west temporarily. Whllo
out hunting with a companion ho be
came separated and was unnblo to
find his way to tho camp. A rescue
party, hiistlty made up. round Nelson's
body two days after he became lost,
lying beside a creek, frozen stiff.
Automobile Bandits Indicted.
Pnris. Tlio trial of the gang of
twenty-two automobile bandits who
held Paris In terror for months has
ended. A verdict of gnlliy wns re
turned against eighteen of tho prison
ers on counts including murder, ar
son nnd robbery. Four or the ac
viiBod, Including three wonion accom
pllces, were found not guilty by the
Jury. Among tho indictments were no
fewer than twenty-two murder,, tho
victims bolng motor drivers, bank
messengers, irelglit agents and
llcement.
po-
PRESIDENT WILSON
FOR JUSTICE ONLY
His Inaugural Address Calls on
All Honest Men to Aid in
His Task.
WILL RESTORE, NOT DESTROY
New Chief Executive Says Change of
Government Meana the Nation It
Using Democratic Patry for
Large and Definite Purpose.
r
Washington, Mnrch 4. Looking
upon tho victory of tho Democratic
party as tho inundate of tho nation to
correct tho evils thnt havo been al
lowed to grow up In our national life,
'President Wilson in his Inaugural ad
dress today called on nil honest men
,to asstBt him In carrying out tho will
of tho people. Following Is IiIb ad
dress: Thero has been n change of govern
imcnt. It began two years ago, when
tho houso of representatives becuinu
Democratic by a decisive majority.
It has now been completed. Tho sen
ate about to assemble will ulso bo
Domocrutlc. Tho ofllces of president
nnd vice-president have been put into
the hnnds of Democrats. What does
tho chango mean? That is tho ques
tion that Is uppermost In our minds
today. That Is tho question I am go
Jng to try to nnswer, in order, It I
may, to interpret tMb occasion.
New Insight Into Our Life.
It means much more than the mero
success of a party. Tho success of u
'party means Uttlo except when tho
'nation Is using that party for a largo
and 'dcflulto porposo. No ono can
Tnlstako tho purposo for which tho
nation now Becks to uso thq Demo
cratic party. It Becks to uso It to In
terpret a chango In its own plans and
point of view. Somo old things with
which wo had grown familiar, nnd
which hnd begun to creep into tho
"very habit of our thought and of our
lives, have altered their aspect aa wo
havo latterly looked critically upon
thorn, with fresh, awakened eyes;
havo dropped their disguises and
shown themselves alien nnd sinister.
(Somo now things, as wo look frankly
upon thorn, willing to comprehend
their real character, havo como to ns-
Bumo tho aspect of things long believ
ed in and familiar., stuff of our own
convictions. Wo have boon refreshed
by a now insight Into our own life.
We Bee tliat In many things that
llfo is very great. It la incomparably
great In its material aspects, in its
'body of wealth, In tho diversity nnd
weep of Its onorgy, in tho Industries
'which have been conceived and built
up by tho genius of Individual men
and tho limitless cntcrpriso of groups
of men. It Is great, also, very great,
iln its moral force. Nowhcro elso In
the world havo noblo men and women
exhibited In inoro striking form the
beauty and energy of Bympathy and
helpfulness and counsel In their efforts
to rectify wrong, nllovlato suffering,
and Bot tho weuk In tho way of
strength and hopo. Wo havo built up,
moreovor, a great system of govern
ment, which has stood through a long
ago as in many respects a'modol for
'those who seek to Bet liberty upon
foundations that will endure against
fortuitous chango, against storm and
accident. Our llfo contains every
great thing, and contains It in rich
abundance.
Human Cost Not Counted.
Dut tho ovil has como with the
good, and much lino gold has been
corroded. With riches has como In
excusable waste. Wo have squan
dered a great part of what wo might
havo used, and havo not stopped to
iconsorvo tho exceeding bounty of na
ture, without which our genius for en
terprise would havo been worthless
and Impotent, scorning to bo careful,
shamefully prodigul as well as admir
ably efficient. Wo havo been proud of
flur industrial achievements, but wo
Jhave not hitherto stopped thought
fully enough to count tho human cost,
tho cost of lives snuffed out, of ener
gies ovortnxed and broken, tho fear
'ful physical and spiritual cost to tho
men and women nnd children upon
whom tho dead weight and burden of
it nil has fallen pitilessly tho years
through. Tho groans and agony or it
all hnd not yet reached our ears, tho
solemn, moving undertone of our life,
coming up out or tho mines and fac
tories and out of every homo whero
tho struggle had its Intimate and fa
miliar seat. With tho grout govern
ment went many deep secret things
which wo too long delayed to look
into and scrutinize with candid, fear
'IcsB oyes. Tho great government wo
loved hns too often been mndo uso of
for prlvato and selfish purposes, and
thoso who used it had forgotten tho
people.
At last n vision has been vouch,
eafed us of our llfo ns a whole. Wo
eo tho bad with tho good, tho do
based and decadent with tho sound
and vital. With this vision we ap
proach now affairs. Our duty is to
cleanse, to reconsider, to restoro, to
correct tho evil without impairing tho
good, to purify nnd humanize overy
iprocesB of our common llfo without
"weakening or Bcntlmontnliztug it.
Ther. has been something crude nnd
.hcnrtlcea nnd unfeeling in our hasto to
succeed nnd bo great. Our thought has
heon 'Let every man look out for him
self, let every generation look out for
Itself,' while wo renred giant machin
ery which mndo It Impossible that any
but thoso who Rtood at tho levers of
control should hnve a chnnco to look
out for themselves. Wo hnd not for
gotten our morals. Wo rcmombcrcd
well enough that wo bad set up a
policy which was meant to servo tho
humblest as well as tho most power
ful, with an cyo single to tho stand
ards of Justice nnd fair play, nnd re
membered It with pride. Hut wo wero
very heedless and in a hurry to be
great.
Chief Items In Program.
Wo havo como now to tho sober
second thought. The sca1; vi heed
lessness havo fallen from our eyes.
We havo made up our minds to square
every procesn of our national llfo
again with -the standards we so proud
ly set up at tho beginning and havo
alwnys carried nt our hearts. Our
work is a work of restoration.
Wo have itemized with some degree
of particularity the things that ought
to bo altered nnd here arc some of
tho chief Items: A tariff which cuts
us off from our proper part In tho
commerce of tho world, vIolntoH the
Just principles of taxation, und mnkes
tho government n facile Instrument In
tho hnnds of privnte interests; n bank
ing nnd currency system based upon
tho necessity of tho government to
sell its bonds fifty yenrs ago and per
fectly adapted to concentrating cash
and restricting credits; an Industrial
system which, take it on all its sides,
financial an well as administrative,
holds capital In leading strings, re
stricts tho liberties and limits the op
portunities of labor, and exploits with
out renewing or conserving tho nat
ural resources of tho country; a body
or. agricultural activities never yei
given tho efficiency of great business
undertakings or served ns It should be
through the Instrumentality of science
taken directly to tho farm, or afforded
tho facilities of credit best suited to
Its practical needs; water courses un
developed, waste places unreclaimed,
forests untended, fust disappearing;
without plan or prospect of renewal,
unregarded waste heaps at every mine.
We have studied ns perhaps no other
nation has the most effectivo mean?
of production, but we havo not studied,
cost or economy ns wo should either
as organizers of Industry, as stutes
men, or as Individuals.
Matters of Justice.
Nor havo wo studied and perfected
the means by which government may,
he put at the servlco of humanity, In
safeguarding tho health of tho nation,
tho health of Its men und its women
and Its children, as well ns their rights,
in tho strugglo for existence. This is
no sentimental duty. The firm basis
of government is justice, not pity.
Theso aro matters of Justice. Thero
can be no equality or opportunity, tho
first essential of Justice in tho body
politic, If men and women and chil
dren be not shielded in their lives,
their very vitality, from the conse
quences of grout industrial and social
processes which they cannot alter,
control or singly copo with. Society
inuHt see to it that it does not itself
crush or weaken or damage Its own
constituent parts. Tho first duty of
law is to keep sound the society It
Bcrvcs. Sanitary laws, pure food laws,
and laws .determining conditions of
labor which individuals are powerless
to determlno for themselves aro intl
mate parts of tho very business of jua
tice and legal eiUclency.
These are some of the things we
ought to do, and not leave tho othors
undone, tho old-fashioned, never-to-be-neglected,
fundamental safeguarding
of property and of individual right.
This Is the high enterprise of the new
day; to lift everything thnt concerns
our llfo as a nation to tho light that
shines from tho hoarthUro of every
man's conscience and vision of tho
right. It 1b inconcelvablo that we
should do this aa partisans; it Is in
concelvablo wo should do it In ignor
ance of tho facts as they aro or In
blind hasto. Wo shall restore, not do
Btroy. Wo shall deal with our econ
omic system as it Is and as it may
bo modified, not as it might be if wo
had a clean sheet or paper to wrlto
upon; nnd step by step wo shall make
it what It should be, In tho spirit of
thoso who question their own wisdom
and seek counsel and knowledge, not
shallow self-satlsfactlou or tho excite
ment of excursions whither they can
not tell. Justice and only Justice,
shall always bo our motto. '
Task Not One of Politics.
And yet it will bo no cool process
of mero sclenco. Tho nation has been
deeply stirred, stirred by a solemn
paBblon, stirred by tho knowledge of
wrong, of ideals lost, of government
too often debauched and mndo an In
strument 'of evil. Tho feelings with
which wo face this new ago of right
nnd opportunity sweep across our
heart-Btrlngs like somo air out of
Ood'a ow: presence, whero Justice and
mercy are reconciled and tho Judgo
nnd tho brother aro one. Wo know
our task to bo no mero task of politics,
but a , task which shall search us
through and through, whether wo bo
nblo to understand our time and tho
need of our peoplo, whether wo bo in
deed their spokesmen nnd interpre
ters, whether wo havo tho piuo heart
to comprehend und tho rectified will
to chooso our high course of action.
This is not a day of triumph; it is
a day of dedication. Here muster, not
the forces of party, but tho forces of
humanity. Men's hearts wait upon us;
men's lives hung In tho balance; men's
hopes call upon us to say what wo
will do. Who shall live up to tho
great trust? Who dares fall to try?
I summon all honest men, all patriotic,
all forwnrdlooklng men, to my side.
God helping me, I will not fall them,
if they will but counsel and sustalu
me I
WILSON INDUCTED
INTO HIGH OFFICE
Inauguration of Twenty-Seventh
President Is Witnessed by
Great Crowds.
MARSHALL SWORN IN FIRST
Simple Ceremony In Senate Chamber
Followed by More Impressive
Affair on East 'Portico of
the Capitol.
By, GEORGE CLINTON.
Washington, March 4. In tho pres
ence of a vast throng of his fellow citi.
zens, Woodrow Wilson today stood in
front of the east portico of the capltol
nnd took tho oath of president of tho
United States. Thomas It. Marshall
already had been sworn In as vice
president, and with the completion of
tho ceremony tho ship of state wus
manned by tho Democratic party,
which had been ashore for sixteen
years.
As tho new chief executive of the
nation stood with bared head, Ed
ward DougluBS White, chief justice of
the Supreme court, held before him
the lllble always used In the cere
mony. Mr. Wilson placed his hands
upon the book und in a voice strong,
though somewhat affected by emotion,
swore to support the Constitution and
the laws of the country and to perform
the duties of his high office to the best
of Jits ability.
Thomas Riley Marshall swore feal
ty to tho Constitution and to the
people in tho senate chamber, wheie
for four years It will bo his duty to
preside over the deliberations of the
members or tho upper bouse of con
gress. Severely Simple Ceremonies.
Both of the ceremonies proper were
conducted in a severely simple but
most Imprcssivo manner. The sur
roundings or the scene of tho presi
dent's Induction into office, however,
wero not so simple, for It was an out-of-door
event und the grcnt gathering
or military, naval and uniformed civil
organizations gave much more than a
itouch of splendor to tho scene.
In tho senate chamber, where the
the oath was taken by the man now
vice-president of tho United States,
there were gathered about ",000
people, ull that tho upper houso will
contain without the risk of danger
because of the rush and press of the
multitudes. It Is probable that no
where elso In tho United States at
any timo nro there gathered un equal
number of men and women, whose
names are so widely known. The
gathering in tho senate chamber and
later dn the east portico of tho capl
tol was composed largely of thoso
prominent for their services in Amer
ica, and in part of foreigners who
havo secured places for their names
In tho current history of tho world's
doings.
The arrangements of the ceremonies
for the Inauguration of Woodrow Wil
son and Thomas Riley Marshall were
mado by the joint committeo on ar
rangements of congress. The senate
President Woodrow Wilson. ,
section or tills committeo was ruled
by a majority of Republicans, but
there is Democratic testimony to the
fact that tho Republican senators
were willing to outdo their Democratic
brethren in tho work or mnking or
derly and Impreselvo tho Inaugural
ceremonies In honor of two chieftains
of the opposition,
Ride to the Capitol.
President Taft and President-elect
Wilson rode together from the Whlto
Houso to the capltol, accompanied by
two members of tho congressional
committeo of arrangements.' Tho vice-president-elect
also rodo rrom tho
White House to tho capltol and In tho
carriage with him wero the senate's
president pro tempore, Senator Paeon
of Georgia, and thrco members or the
congressional committee of arrange
ments. The vice-president-elect took the
oath just beforo noon in accordance
with custom nnd prior to its taking
by tho president-elect. Every arrange
ment for the senate chambor pro
ceedings had been mado bo that thoy
moved forward easily and with a cer
tain ponderous grace.
Marshall Sworn In. ;
The admission to the senate cham
ber to witness tho oath-taking of the
vice-president was 'by ticket, and It
is needless to say every seat was
ZsW' ' . lAi!K19klsH8t'
occupied. On tho floor of tho cham
ber wero many former members of
tho seuato who, because of the fact
thnt thoy oncn held membership In
that body, weto given tho privileges
of the door. After the halt was filled
and all tho minor nlllcluls of govern
ment and those privileged to witness
the ceremonies wero seated. William
II. Taft and Woodrow Wilson, preced
ed by tho sergeant-nt-nrniB and tho
committeo or arrangements, entered
tho Bcnuto chamber. Thoy were fol
lowed Immediately by Vice-Presidentelect
Thomas H. Marshall, leaning
upon the arm of the president pro
temporu of tho senate who, nfter tho
seating of tho Incoming vlco-prealdent.
took his plnco ns presiding officer of
tho senato nnd of the day's proceed
ings. The president nnd the president
elect sn( in the first row of scats di
rectly In front and almost under tho
desk of the presiding officer. In the
same row, but to their left, wero the
vlce-picsldent-clect nnd two former
vice-presidents of tho United States,
Levi P. Morton of New York nnd Ad
lal A. Stevenson of Illinois.
When tho distinguished company en
tered the chamber the senate was
still under Its old organization. The
oath of office was immediately admin
istered to Vlcc-Presldent-elect Man
shall, who thereupon became Vice
President Marshall. The prnyer or the
day was given by the chaplain or the
senate, Rev. Ulysses G. U. Pierce, pas
nl ,-c-i.r
'"0 '
"-?
&
Vice-President Marshall.
tor of All Souls' Unitarian church, of
which President Taft has ben a mem
ber. After tho prayer the vice-president
administered tho oath of office
to all tho newly chosen senators, nnd
therewith tho senate of tho United
States pasced for tho first time in
years into the control of the Demo
cratic party.
Procession to"the Platform.
Immediately after the senate cere
monies a procession waB formed to
march to the platform of tho east por
tico of the capltol, whero Woodrow
Wilson was to take tho oath. The pro
cession included the president and the
president-elect, members of the Su
preme court, both houses of congress,
ull of the foreign ambassadors, all of
tho heads of tho executive depart
ments, many governors of states and
territories, Admiral Dewey of tho navy
and several high officers of the I sea
service, tho chief of staff of the army
and many distinguished persons from
civil life. They wero followed by tho
members of the press and by those
persons who had succeeded in secur
ing seats in the sennto galleries to
witness the day's proceedings.
When President Taft and tho president-elect
emerged from tho capltol
on to the portico they saw In front
of them, reaching far back into the
park to tho east, an immenso con
course of citizens. In the narrow lino
between the onlookers and the pint
form on which Mr. Wilson was to tako
the oath, wero drawn up tho cadets
of the two greatest government
schools, West .Point and Annapolis,
and flanking them were bodies of reg
ulars and of national guardsmen. The
whole scone was charged with color
and with life.
On reaching tho platform the presi
dent and president-elect took the
seats reserved for them, seatB which
wero flanked by many rows pt benches
rising tier on tier for tho accommoda
tion of the friends und families of the
officers of tho government and of the
press.
Oath Administered to Wilson.
Tho Instant thnt Mr. Taft and Mr.
Wilson camo within sight or the crowd
thero wns n grent outburst or ap
plause, and tho military bands otruck
quickly into "Tho Star Spauglcd Ban
ner." Only a row bnrB or tho music
were played and then soldiers nnd ci
vilians becamo silent to witness ro
spectrully tho oath taking and to
listen to the address which followed.
Tho chief Justice of tho Supremo
court delivered tho oath to tho president-elect,
who, uttering tho words,'
"I will," becamo president of tha
United States. As soon as this cere
mony was completed Woodrow Wilson
dollvered his inaugural address, his
first speech to his fellow countrymen
In tho capacity of their chler execu
tive. -
At tho conclusion of tho speech tho
bands played onco more, nnd William
Howard Taft, now ox-presldent of the
United States, entered a carriage with
the now president and, reversing the
ordor of an hour heroro, sat on the
left hand aldo or tho cnrrlage, while
Mr. Wilson took "tho seat or honor"
on tho right. The crowds cheered as
they drove nwny to tho Whlto House,
which Woodrow Wilson entered us the
occupant nnd which William H. Tart
immediately left as ouo whose least
bad expired.
x
WmsMmi&mk md
WZJM ?
&
BOY PAID FOR HIS WHISTLE
Obeyed Father's Instructions All
Right, but Made No Sort of a
, Hit With the Teacher.
It nil huppened in a wayside village. '
She was the village schoolmistress,
prim nnd proper, but a bad hand nt
settling accounts with the local trades
men; ho was ten years or uge, ono or
her pupils, and son und heir or tho
village grocer.
"Tommy," sho yelled in clnss one
morning, "don't you know It's rude to
whistle In tho presence or n lady?"
Tommy wus not abashed nor chas
tened. "Hut dad told me to whistle," he re
plied. "Your rather told you to whistle.
Tommy?" queried the school. teacher.
In considerable doubt.
"Yrs'm. He said when he sells you
anything we've got to whistle for our
money."
Tommy then took up a consplcuour
position In the adjacent corner.
Spring Clipping of Horses. '
The modern practice ntnong the best
poteil nnd mot progressive horse owner
and farmers in to clip nil bonnes in the
spring. It is done on the theory that in
their natural state hones were not obliged
to work, so could shed the winter coat in
comfort over a period of several wcclcs.
Since wc online them to do hard work on
warm opting day, the winter coat should
be rrmuAcd for the name reaon that we
lay off our heavy winter garments. Clipped
horses dry off rapidly, hence they do not
tnke cold ns cattily nor are they as prone
to be nffected with other ailments ns 'un
dipped nnimals whose longer hair hold
the perspiration for hours, llecatise clipped
horses diy off rapidly they rest better, get
more good 'from their food nrd come out
in the morning refreshed and fit for work.
Since tho advent of the ball hearing en
etacd gear clipping machine, the work of
taking off the winter coat is easy. With
the machine a horse can be clipped all over
in half an hour, whereas with the old two
hand clipper it required several hours to
do it. '
Dairymen also now clip the cows all
over two or three times n year. The flanks
and udders arc clipped every throe or four
weeks, to it is easy to clean the parts be
fore milking. This means less opportunity'
for diit and other impurities to get into
the milk.
HI8 IDEA.
Customer What can I do for fieaa
on a dog?
Druggist (absently) Dog fleas get
along all right without any assistance
from anyone.
ECZEMA IN RED BLOTCHES
205 Kanter Ave., Detroit, Mich.
"Some time last summer I was taken
with eczema. It began In my balr
first with red blotches, then scaly,
spreading to my face. The blotches
wero red on my face, dry and scaly,
not large; on my scalp they were
larger, some scabby. They came on
my hands. The inside of my hands
were all little lumps as though full of
shot about one-sixteenth of an Inch
under the skin. Then tbey went tc
tho outsldo and between and all over
my fingers. It also began on the bot
toms of my feet and the calves of my
legs, and ltcb, oh, my! I never had
anything like it nnd hope I never will
again. The itching was terrible. Mr
hands got so I could scarcely work.
"I tried different eczema ointment
but without results. I also took medi
cine for it but it did no. good, t saw
the advertisement for a sample of
Cuticura Ointment and Soap and sent
for one. They did me so much good
I bought some more, using them as
per directions, and In about three
weeks I was well again, Cuticura Soar
and Ointment entirely cured me."
(Signed) BenJ. Passage, Apr. 8, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of ach
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."
Adv.
Too Well Known,
Havo you a speaking acquaintance
with tho woman who lives next door
to you?" wo asked an east end lady.
Just to mako a little conversation.
"A speaking acquaintance?" echoed
the ludy, opening her eyes wide.
"Why I know hor so well that I don't
speuk to her at nil!"
Important to Mothers
Examino carefully every bottle of
uia t uiu a, a saro ana sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
rienra ihn
fTrl60&
.,i .,ou rur uver ou xenrs.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Some men aro novor satisfied until
they havo troubles that drive them
to drink.
I.LW IS Slngla Hinder costs more tlmn
other 5c clcirs. Mado of extra quality
tobacco. Adv.
Sometimes n man uses gold bricks
In constructing his air castles.
i
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