The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, March 24, 1921, Image 6

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RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, GHIEF
I
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f'
ll'
Seek to Recover
Oil Now Wasted
Bureau of Mines Survey in Cali
fornia Shows 2,359,100
Barrels Could Be Saved.
WOULD BE WORTH $3,500,000
One Company Saya Lost Between Well
nd Storage Tank Is 40,000 Barrel
Monthly Oil Lost in Seepago
Along the Ditches.
Wellington. The gront demand for
(petroleum, resulting ehlelly from the
Increase of oil-burning devices mid
end motor-driven vehicles, forces pro
ducers to take advantage of every
opportunity to Increase Us production
by seeking new sources of supply,
and, what 1b more Important, to use
new methods for saving moro of the
oil brought to the surfuco than has
ttecn retained heretofore. As In other
kinds of mining, It Is thought possible
that a large uddltlonal recovery can
be obtained nt a profit by working
over the wastes In certain Ileitis and
Jby using more economical methods of
production In the future, says A. It.
Elliott, nsslstnnt petroleum engineer,
bureau of mines.
A survey of tho oil districts of Cali
fornia was made by tho bureau In
order to ascertain whether tho visible
musses of wasted oll-benring sands
would be a profitable source of supply.
Prom the data collected It Is estimated
that 2,350,100 barrels of oil valued at
more than $3,1)00,000, could be ob
tained from tho sandpllcs about pro
ducing wells and from tho outerop
plngs in the vicinity of the Ileitis. Also,
many times that amount of oil scat
tered over yearly the total oil-producing
urea might bo recovered from
eepnge.
Wasted Through Seepage.
A paper Issued by the bureau of
mines In 1014 said: "It is probable
that 10 or 15 per cent of the total
gross production of the state has been
wasted through seepago or evapora
tion." This represents a loss of 15,
000,000 bnrrels of oil yearly. I'robably
, one-quarter to one-half of this1 amount
seeps into the ground.
As n possible means of recovering n
large amount of nil from these wastes,
tho following should be considered,
ays Mr. Elliott: (1) Recovering oil
left In the sand that It produced with
the oil; (2) reclaiming the oil that
seeps Into the ground through waste
In production; and (3) mining and
treating the material In oll-hearlng
outcrops and asphalt beds that occur
In certain sections of tho state.
In the early days of a productive
field, the rush of gas Into n new well
frequently sucks nil and snnd with It
n large quantities. Oftentimes ade
quate means of holding In the well
nrn not available, and the oil Is per-
Long Chain of Family
Grandmothers Broken
Arkndelphla, Ark. A chain of
grandmothers without parallel,
In this section, at least, has been
broken by the passing of Mrs.
Emollne KUzu Idles, Si.
Before her death, two small
children of Mrs. Kllzn Hanson,
her great-granddaughter, had
six living grandmothers of whom
two were great-great-grandmothers,
two were front-grand
mothers mid two were Just plain
grandmothers. The oldest of tho
Hanson children Is 3V6 years of
age. Thus there were at one
time Ave living generations with
less than seventy-two years
separating the youngest from the
eldest.
The Hanson children had he
side their six grandmothers,
nine uncles, four great uncles,
two great-great uncles, four
great aunts, two great-great
aunts and forty second cousins,
but no first cousins.
Town That Follows Nature's Path
8W?ttUWWW
i W
Knoxvllle, Pn., n miner's colony on tho outskirts of Pittsburgh, Is n town
built along the lino of tho lenst resistance, tho houses being built In rows to
follow the course of tho hill. Tbero nre about one thousand houses In tho
group, nil of one design. This photograph of tho "windlug town" was made
roui u uear-by bill.
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mltt'Ml to How "wild" until the gas
pressure diminishes enough to enable
controlling the well. This may re
quire days or even months, says Mr.
Klllott. There being no commercial
use for this oil-saturated sand, It Is
removed from the Immediate vicinity
of tho well or othenvl.se disposed of as
valueless.
Throughout many of tho oil districts
of California, particularly In tho San
'oaquln valley, a noticeable feature Is
the large cone-shaped mounds near
each of the wells where sand Is pro
duced with the oil.
Sand Rises With Oil.
In wells where the sand Is loose and
fine-grained and agitated by n high
gas pressure, naturally u greater
amount rises to the surface with tho
oil. In the Sunset field, wells with
high gas pressure have produced moro
than 5,100 tons of snnd In two to four
years, representing nearly two-thirds
of their gross production. In tho
Midway field there Is n well producing
about 500 tons n month nnd wells near
It with an output nearly as large. In
the Kerno Itlver nnd West Sldo Conl
lugs fields tho oil is of heavy gravity
nnd, with the aid of an agitator such
ns air, largo amounts of snnd aro lift
ed to tho surface. Kuch well yields
ten to twenty-llvo bnrrels of oil dally;
tho proportion of sand carried with It
varies between 20 nnd CO per cent, and
probnbly nverages 40 per cent of tho
cross production. The nmoiint of sand
per well, becnuso of the small oil pro
duction, Is small, but owing to tho
great number of wells In these dis
tricts the aggregate amount Is large.
Whore wells produce only n small
amount of sand the so-called dnnd
boxes aro frequently used. Tho sand
hox Is n long, narrow, open trough
cHsed nt the ends nnd fitted with
baffles running crosswise to tho flow.
The oil flown slowly over tho sharp
barrios, the sand and emulsion settle
Is Hard Place to
Get an Education
United States Has Surprising
Number of Illiterates, Say Con
. gressional Investigators.
PAINT DISTURBING PICTURE
Millions of Immigrants In Country Can
Neither Speak Nor Read English
Committee Finds American
Teachers Are Incompetent
Washington, D. C The United
States of America Is one of the hard
est places In tho civilized world In
which to get n good education, In tho
opinion of a committee of the house
which has been investigating the ques
tion. A fourth of the men of fighting age
In the United States aro Illiterates,
many children never get adequate
schooling, mnny of the teachers nre In
comitetent. There are millions of Im
migrants In tho country who can nei
ther speak nor read Kngllsh, and many
negro children never see the Insldo of
n schoolroom. Thousands of schools
are closed because no teacher can be
obtained for the miserable salaries of
fered. This disturbing picture of educa
tion in America Is contained In tho
report of the house committee on edu
cation on the Towner bill, and abun
dant proof of Its truth Is contained In
the hearings which were hold In con
nect Inn with the bill.
This report Is surely one of tho
most startling Indictments of our civ
ilization which has ever Issued from
Capitol hill.
Facts Which Convinced Them.
Here, brlelly, are some ..of the facts
which brought tho congressmen to this
frame of mind:
to the bottom of tho box and tire shov
eled out as often as necessary.
Also In the districts that produce
heavy gravity oils, a convenient wny
of separating the sand and oil Is to
penult the oil to flow through long
open dlU'hes to reservoirs, whero the
free oil Is removed by n suction pump.
Evidently, great quantities of oil can
he wasted through seepage along tho
ditches and nrotind the reservoir. If
sniiu accurate method could be used to
compare the amount of oil ns It came
fiotn the well with the amount actually
recovered, the difference would bo sur
prisingly large. It Is reported that the
loss between the well and the Held
storage tank of one large producing
company Is approximately 40.000 bar
rels a month. Other companies report
n proportionate amount.
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Works of Art, Stolen by
German Army, Reappear
London. Numerous works of
art, heirlooms mid Jewels stolen
during the war by the Germans
in occupied territory arc gradu
ally coming to light and In many
enses finding their way back to
their owners. Tho Rumanian
papers publish the story of n
cache of stolen works of art
which the police have found In
the Transylvania homo of tho
fnthcr of n onetlmo Hungarian
ofllcer.
Ninety-two well known paint
ings, eight vases nnd two onyx
clocks were found at tho homo
of a mlno manager, who said
they hnd been given him by his
son on his return from tho war.
Tho son was an olllcer in tho
Hungarian artillery, and had
fought on the Cunihrnl front.
Tho objets d'art were found
to have been taken from the
chateau of the I'rlnce du Chi
may, near Cambral, nnd wero
returned to their owner. Some
of the pictures, Including works
of Joseph Merger, Millet and
Van der Heist had been hacked
out of their frames and badly
damaged.
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According to tho census of 1010.
there were In this country 5.500,000
persons ten years of age or older who
could not read or write, and tho com
mittee does not believe that conditions
have Improved since then. In ndditlon
to these, there were 3,500.000 persons
who could not read or wrlto Kngllsh,
making a total of 0,000,000 In the land
of the free who were uo more qunllfied
to exercise tho right of the franchise
than so many Australian bushmen.
The surgeon general's report showed
that of the men called to servlco be
tween the nges of twenty-one nnd thirty-one,
nenrly 25 per cent wero practi
cally Illiterate. This means that a
fourth of the young manhood of the
country, which Is Its main reliance In
peace and In war. Is to all Intents nnd
purposes In a state of barbarism. For
mer Secretary of the Interior Lnne es
timates that tho annual cost of Illit
eracy to the United States Is $325,500,
000. Tho director of tho burenu of
mines states that If all of tho miners
could read and speak Kngllsh n thou
sand lives n yenr would bo saved.
The coriimlttee emphatically refutes
the Idea that Illiteracy Is confined to
the South, nnd to out-of-the-wny sec
tions. It shows that while Georgia
has 83,000 Illiterates. New York has
100,000. and that Pennsylvania has
moro of them than Alabuma. Neither
does tho Idea hold good that tho II
literates are chlelly negroes. Thero
nro n million moro whlto Illiterates
tlinn colored.
Of the 15,000,000 foreign-born In tho
United Stntes, tho committee says that
5 000,000 cannot read or write Kngllsh,
and Hint 2.000,000 cannot read or wrlto
any language.
Luck Decides Education.
Tho committee says that getlng nn
education In the United States Is
largely a matter of luck, that tho op
portunlty Is not equal.
"In the South n Inrge number of the
negro children never see the Insldo nf
n schoolliouso," It asserts, "in tho
North there Is hardly a city that has
adequate school facilities for all Its
children."
The committee finds that In physlcnl
education our schools havo failed
even worse than In mental educa
tion, Tho "provost marshal gonernl's re
port revealed tho startling fnct that
moro than one-third of the men ex
amined for military service In tho Into
war wero disqualified by reason or
physical disability," It reports. "It also
stated that 00 per cent or these young
men could have qualified had they been
taught the simplest rules or hygiene
and health. It was Ignorance," gross
Ignorance, that In the vast majority
or cases was tho cause of their Incoin
lietonce." Tho committee finds that American
teachers are utterly Incompetent, that
100,000 or them nre less than 20, years
old, that 30.000 of them have no edu
cation beyond tho eighth grade, that
1200,000 of them have less than n high
school education, nnd tliut 300,000 of
them havo no professional training
whatever. It finds that tho average
salary paid teachers In this country
Is less than the wages paid scrub wom
en or ditch diggers." Frederic J. Has
kin In Chicago Dally News,
NEWS OF STATE
TERSELY TOLD
Recent Happenings in Nebraska
Given in Brief Items For
Busy Readers.
I'rnlrlo hay ly helling nt Callaway
Tor S.-, M ton.
An oil well Is being sunk on tho
Hamilton farm near Itlue Spring.
Mrs. T. K. Pullet or Callaway died
suddenly nt a hospital In (Srnnd Island.
The ItiiiTiilo county fair will be held
ut Kearney August :I0 to September '2
The district convention of the state
Klwanls clubs will be held In Omaha
April II.
Levels are being tnken for Arapa
hoe's lirst paving project and a sew
age system.
The Ord schools are arranging an
extenslvo oxhlblt of school and In
dustrial work.
Miss Helen Tracy of Pawnee City
Is dead or blood poisoning caused by u
carbuncle on the lip.
Drs. .7. Jones nnd K. (i. Cressman
have been appointed members of the
pension bonrd at Hastings.
Rev. W. C. Kelley or tho M. K.
church at Geneva has accepted a call
to the pastorate at Cambridge.
Fifteen automobiles were wholly or
partially destroyed In u lire ut Omaha,
originating In a clothes closet.
Hovlvnl meetings are In progress at
the Christian church at Hurwcll under
leadership of I lev. A. S. Hoove.
Hev. W. P. HIeronynius, A. B., Co
liifnbus, O,, bus accepted the call to
the presidency of Hebron academy.
The site for the new city hall nt
Ord Is still up In the air. A number
or locations are under consideration.
Mrs. Mollle Mead, wire or Ktl Mead,
chief of the Hastings lire department,
committed suicide by taking poison.
Albert Huberts, n 1." year old Wy
moro lad, had his right leg broken,
when he was thrown from hi horse.
Fire caused by defective wiring
damaged the First M. K. church at
Chndron to the extent of several hun
dred dollars.
A round-up of Cage e unty nutoino
Mlo owners who have failed to take
out their 1021 licenses Is being mad
by state agents.
Citizens or the Hastings neighbor
hood have organized the Adams coun
ty agricultural society, and will have
a ralr the coming fall.
The question of a municipal swim
ming pool, which lins been agitated for
some time by the Ord Community club,
Is still before tho people.
Tho Alnsley city council will not
grant a license to an open pool ball,
consequently thero nre several such
places In town run as clubs.
L. A. Morris of Aurora burned his
hand severely when n can of roof
cement he was opening caught on lire
from spontaneous combustion.
Three Upland youths who spent tho
night In Jail at Mlnden pleaded guilty
to the charge of selling liquor and
paid f I ties of $100 and costs each.
The 50th anniversary of the round
ing of the First Congregational church
at Crete was celebrated last week by
a banquet In the church basement.
A broken knee cap was sustained
by Henry Dickmnn of Plymouth, when
hi hor.se ran away and kicked him
through the dash board or his buggy.
Maurice Wilson, Pawnee City high
school student, was badly burned on
the hand and about the face when
the gasoline tank In his automobile ex
ploded. The home of William .7. Duffln,
tbreo miles west of Oreeley, burned
to tho ground, tho Hro starting from
lard rendering in tho oven of the kitch
en range.
Owing to providence of smnll pox
In thnt place, the Wyinoro city health
authorities have recommended to the
school board that all school children
bo vaccinated.
The pool hall nt Harrison, operated
by Frank IUerbower, was entered by
htirs-lurs and tho cash register robbed
of $.",0. All of jewelry on a punch
board card was also taken.
At the declamatory contest In the
McCook high school, eleven pupils tool:
part. MKs Agnes Duncan was chosen
to represent McCook high In tho dis
trict contest In Arapahoe.
Mrs". Wallace Pitt, residing near
Harrison, recently .gave birth to her
eighteenth child. This was the first
girl, the remainder being boys. Klevon
are living. Mr.. Pitt holds the
record family In western Nebraska.
John Ilerg, a farmer living near
Florence, was shot nnd Instantly killed
when he walked Into a gun trap which
he had set In his hen coop.
From the funds or the Havenna Hod
Cross and Canteen Workers that place
will bo presented with u large bronze
tablet, with tho names or all world war
men who enlisted from there.
The (Srnnd Island chamber of com
merce lias made appropriation for the
purchnse of u loving cup to be given to
tho American Legion basketball team
winning the state championship In the
state contest to bo held In that city
March 21 and 22.
Osceola Is taking under considera
tion the advisability of Installing u
municipal electric light and Ice plant.
Two hundred fires In Nebraska dur
ing December and January cost two
lives nnd did nenrly $2"0,(X)0 worth of
damage, according to tho March bul
letin of State Fire Marshal C. K. Hart
rord. Karly steps will 'ho taken to liuve
work commence on tho extenslvo Im
provement of tho municipal water
works system In Itedllold, In accord
ance with the result of a special elec
tion a few days ago, when bonds of
$123,000 wero voted for the purpobe.
Tho golden wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs, O. S. Wallace Was
celebrated ut their homo In Kxetcr
last week.
Several acres or spring grain havo
already been planted In the vicinity or
Callaway, and the ground Is said to
be in excellent shape.
A mother nnd daughter banquet was
held at the Methodist church at Fair
bury one evening lam week, plates be
ing laid for over 200.
A movement ha been started nt
Tiivlor to vote bonds In the sum of
S.'l.",0O. ut the spring election, for the
erection of u now school building.
Quick woik tat the part or the local
lire departmeiit saved the Burlington
depot of Morrill when tire bloke out
under the floor or the freight room.
Cnpr. A. M. Trimble. 82, died Mid.
ilonly nt his home In Lincoln. Captain
Trimble at one time was department
commander or the (S A. H. In Ne
hraskn. Henry Koenlg dropped dead at the
farm of hi brother near Coluinbu.
He had Just left tho house to do tho
milking when overcome by an attack
or apoplexy.
A slipping tackle, hoisting stone
cornice on the new Goring court house,
let a block of stone fall, and Herman
Soreroserl, a workman, had his right
hand badly crushed.
Tho Wheat Growers' Association of
America will soon begin a campaign to
get farmers to contract to sell their
wheat through the association for llvo
years In Phelps county.
To Sallii" county went the honor of
topping nil other counties In the Unit
ed States In tl Hotter Sire, Hotter
i.ie mock' campaign for the quarter
ending January 1, 1021.
Ir. C. C. Cone has recently stocked
his farm on the Republican river in
the north part or Furnas county with
pheasants, which were received from
the state game warden.
Fire or undetermined origin totally
destroyed the Catholic church at
Kmerson. Hut few of the furnishings
were saved. It Is thought that a short
circuit or detective Hue caused tho
blaze.
"P.eer Is dead, and can never como
back in Nebraska," said United States
District Attorney T. C. Allen, when
questioned as to the legality of brew.
Ing beer under the recent Palmer de
cision. Nil. Creek ha made arrangements
to buy electric power for lighting and
power of the city of Tecuuiseh. a
transmission line will be built tho
eight and one-half miles between the
two town.
Tho large statue of Abraham Lin
coln presented to the Nebraska City
high school by the class of 1020, has
arrived nnd will soon be placed In po
sition. The Maine Is .seven feet and
two Inches in height.
D. K. Thompson or Lincoln, now in
California, is the first Individual In
the state to donate a carload of corn
to the Nebraska Farm Huron u federa
tion for the gift-corn project to iu
Hove suffering In Kurope and China.
Secretary of State D. M. Anisberrv,
who sulVered a slight stroke of
paralysis a few weeks ago, Is fast
gaining strength, but his physicians
have recommended that he remain
quiet and leave his duties alone for
a while.
Dr. H. L. Paine, a resident of Lin
coin for forty-two y-rs and at ono
time candidate for governor of Nebras
ka on the prohibtion ticket, died Sun
day in bis rooms In u Lincoln hotel
following n stroke of paralysis sulVer
ed last week.
While fending a -lower driven sau
sage machine In his butcher shop nt
Havennu. Joe Suierda slipped, nnd In
trying to right himself stuck his right
imnil into the blades which lacerated
and maimed the fingers so that it was
necessary to iimpututc them.
Despite the unfavorable eondltl-ns
of last fall, the farmers of the Upper
Loup country have on hand a lingo
number or fat cattle ready for market
In the near future. The amount of
corn and hay on hand Is surprising
for the time if year, farmers say.
Miss Uuth filasser, deputy county
clerk, was painfully hurt when the
automobile In which she was riding
with her father nnd two sisters skid
ded on u sleet covered road near O.
coin and landed upside down In a
ditch, pinning tho occupants under
neath. Fontenelle chapter. Daughters of
the American Revolution, will pur
chase an expensive memorial tablet
bearing the names .of cns.s county sol
diers who made the supreme sacrllico
In the lute war. The tablet will bo
placed In (he Cass county court housu
at Plattsmoiith.
Several deaths from scarlet fever
have been reported nt Grand Isl.iud.
In order to encourage poultry nn
Ing and the marketing of "a hciwr
quality of products, several of tho
large produce companies of the suite
have agreed to pay a premium for
hlgh-grado eggs. Kggs that measure
up to the quality outlined by the State
College of Agriculture as Nebraska
Kxtra Firsts will command a prlco
within 5 cents or the New York price
for Fresh Gathered Kxtra Firsts, on
the day of delivery at Grand Island,
Crete, Omaha, Lincoln and other cen
tral points.
If tho plan of tho government to
publish the names nf slackers who
dodged the draft Is carried out, tho
names of 17(1 on the Gage county
black list will be given to tho pullle,
according to Deputy County Clerk J.
0. Kmory, who served ns executive
head of the exemption board.
A two-car shipment of 1,205-pouml
steers which Pete Cliuissen or Bloom
field shipped to South Omaha hiPt
week, sold at i?0.00. top for the day
on full loads. The cattle were bought
as calves u yqtji and a half ago, and
hnd been on feed tlvo and a half
mouths.
JOSEPH A. YORK, welMcnowa
buiineit men of Portland, Me.,
who ssys he faels twenty years
younger and has fained sixteen
pounds on (our bottles ol Tanlao.
Deolares he can now eat three
square meals day.
r" s v AjPjFx' " ' -. ?vvESL
"1 am now uble to eat three squur
meals a day for Uio first time In two
years," won, the emphatic statement
made recently by Joseph A. Yorlw
well-known business man and highly;,
respected citizen of Portland, Maine.
"I am now slxty-nlno years of age,
and In nil my life 1 have never run
across a medicine that I consider In m
class with Tnnlac. 1 have Just fin
ished my fourth bottle nnd this medi
cine has benefited me even beyond niyj
greatest hopes. Besides gaining six
teen pounds In weight, I have been
built up and strengthened until I feel
all of twenty years younger.
"For tho pnst two years I havo been
in n miserably run-down condition,
nnd was compelled a short time nfo
to give up all Idea of business as .1
was tco wenk to look after anything.
I was nervous, worn-out, hnd no appe
tite, and suffered most nil the tlflo
with Indigestion. Some days I would
tat scarcely anything; In fact I was
afraid to eat becnuso I know I would
suffer afterward. Sometimes I had
such severe cramping pains after ent
lng that I would almost die. My
nerves were nil unstrung and the lenst
thing would worry me nnd I never,
could get n good night's sound sleep.
In fnct I Just lost Interest In every
thing nnd was greutly discouraged
over my condition.
"The ordinary treatment failed to
do me any good, and as I hnd read so
mnny statements from peoplo I know
here In Portlnnd who had been bene
fited by Tanluc, I decided to give It a
trial. And now I know for myself
whnt It will do, for I havo slinplyi
taken a new lease on life. I am nowi
able to look after my work ns usual,
nnd never felt better In my life. I am
able to eat three hearty meals n day,
and everything ngrees with mo per-'
fectly. I eat nnythlng I wnnt and
never feel a tonch of Indigestion, r
never thought there was u medicinal
that could do mo so much good, and
am only too glad to have the facta
about my case given to tho public."
Tonlac Is sold by leading drugglatK
everywhere. Adv.
Motors Drive Out Horses.
The rapidity with which automobiles
nre superseding horse-drawn vehicles,
has been proved by an experiment ut
a popular point of the state highway,
nt Rurllngnnie, California, somo 1(J
miles from San Francisco and one of
the main arteries leading Into the city.
Keeping check ut u given point from
ii a. m. to 8 p. in., It showed that 11
horse-drawn vehicles ngnlifst 10,581
uiotor-drlven vehicles passed In the 14
hours. Last year a much greater num
ber of horse-druwn vehicles was shown
in u similar experiment.
"Cold In the Head"
Is an ncuto attack of Nasal Catarrh.
h ?"bicc ? froriuent "coldn in Uio
Jie.n.'J . wl" flnd thnt tho uso of HALL'S
JARUI.1 MEDICINE will build , ip the
bystem, cleanse tho Wood and render
them less liable to colds. Repeated ut
tncks of Acnto Catarrh may lead to
Chronic Catarrh.
IIALIVS CATARRH MEDICINE Is
nu?J "'"'"iyy nd acts throin-l, tho
Jiiood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys
tem, thus reducing the Inllammatlon wid
restoring normal conditions.
All DruKRlRts. Circulars freo.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Tolrdo, Ohio.
How Dates Grow.
Tho Arabs live almost entirely on
this fruit when crossing the desert.
Tho date Is tho fruit of the date-palm,
which grows best in Persia, Palestine,
Arabia, and tho North of Africa. Tho
tcm reaches a height of 50 feet to
70 feet and throws on a niagiilllcent
crown or largo leaves and a number
or spadlces. In the female plant the
bear hunches of dates weighing from
20 to 25 pounds.
Important to Mothers
Examine curcfully every bottlo of
CASTOHIA, that famous old remedy
for Infanta and children, and sec that It
Bears the
r
Signature
In DSC for Ovr !tll Viinru
Children Cry for Fletcher's Custoria
Impossible.
"Hoes your husband give you all the
money you ask for?"
"Oh, no) he's not rich enough."
Thero Is nothing moro satisfactory
after a day of hard work than n lino
full of snowy whlto clothes. For such
results uso Itcd Cross Hnll Blue.
The world stands aside for tho ma
who knows whither he Is going.
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