The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, June 23, 1921, Image 6

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    BED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF
A IMan for
the Ages
NOW HE BELONGS TO
"A Mnn for the Arcs" It Abrnlinm Lincoln. The book it fiction
denting with fnct hhtory in tlio guiic of fiction. It it an intimate
ttutly of Abrahnm Lincoln during hit formative period at New Salem,
III. It tells a chapter in hit life that no mnn can read without tmilet
nnd ten, find wonder.
Abraham Lincoln arrived at New Salem in 1831, "a stranger, n
friendlest, uncducntcd, pennilcst boy, working on a flat boat for $10
n month," at he hlmtelf put it. In 1837 he left to take up hit law
practice in Springfield. In thote six ycart he trantformed hlmtelf to
a itvin of acknowledged ability, of promise, of more than local repu
tation. It wat at New Salem that ho carhrd the nickname of "Honett
Abe)" that he wat defeated for the legislature and elected; that he
won and lost by death Ann Rutlcdge.
Irving Bacheller it one of the very few men who could write
tuch a book. Hit work it well known. This will add to hit fame.
O:
CHAPTER I.
Which Describe! the Journey of Sam.
son Henry Traylor and His Wife and
Their Two Children and Their Dog
Gambo Through the Adirondack Wil
derness In 1831 on Their Way to the
Land of Plenty Furthermore It De
ccrlbes the Soaping of the Brlm
steada, In the onrly summer of 18IJ1 Sam
on Trnylor and his wife, Sarah, and
two children left their old home near
the village of Vergennes, Vermont,
and begun their travels toward the
setting sun with four chairs, a bread
board and rolling-pin, n feather bed
end blankctH, a small looking-glass, a
skillet, an ax, a pack basket with a
pad of sole leather on thu same, a
water pall, a box of dishes, a tub of
salt pork, a rllle, a teapot, a sack of
meal, sundry .small provisions and a
violin, In a double wagon drawn by
oxen. It is a pleasure to note that
they had a violin and were not dis
posed to part with It. The reader must
not overlook Its full historic signifi
cance. The Htem, uncompromising
spirit of the Puritan had left the
house of the Yankee before a violin
could enter It. Humor and the love
'of play had preceded and cleared n
way for It. Where there was a fiddle
there were cheerful hearts. A young
black shepherd dog with tawny points
and the name of Sambo followed the
wagon.
If we had been at the Congrega
tional church on Sunday we might
huve heard the minister Raying to
Samson, after the service, that It was
hard to understand why the happiest
family In the parish nnd the most be
loved should be leaving Its ancestral
home to go to u far, new country of
which little was known. We might also
have heard Samson answer:
"It's awful easy to bo happy here.
We slide along In the same old groove,
that our fathers traveled, from Ver
genncB to Paradise. We work and
play and go to meetln' and put n shin
plaster In the box and grow old and
narrow and stingy and mean and go
up to glory ami are turned Into saints
nnd angels. Maybe that's the best
thing that could happen to us, but
Sarah and I kind o' thought we'd try
a new starting place and another route
to heaven."
Sarah and Sampson had been raised
on adjoining farms Just out of the
village. lie had had llttlo schooling,
but his mind was active and well In
clined. Sarah had prosperous rela
tives In Boston and had had the ad
vantage of a year's schooling In that
city. She was a comely girl of a
taste and refinement unusual In the
place and time of bet blrtli. Many
well-favored youths had sought her
hand, but, better tlinn others; she
liked the big, masterful, good-natured,
humorous Samson, crude as he was.
Naturally In her hands his timber had
undergone! some planing nnd smooth
ing and his thoughts had been gently
led Into new and pleasant ways.
Let us take a look at them as they
slowly leave the vlllago of their blrtli.
The wagon Is covered with tent cloth
drawn over hickory nrches. They are
sitting on a seat overlooking the oxen
In the wagon front. Tears are stream
ing down the face of the woman. The
man's head U bent. His elbows arc
resting on his knees; the hickory
handle of his ox whip lies across his
lap, the lash nt his feet. He 6oems to
be looking down nt his boots, Into the
tops of which his trousers have been
folded. Ho Is a rugged, blond, bearded
man with kindly blue eyes and a
rather prominent nose. There Is a
striking expression of power In the
head nnd shoulders of Samson Trnylor.
The breadth of his back, the size of
his wrists and hand.'), the color of
his face betoken n mnn of groat
strength. This thoughtful, sorrowful,
attitude Is tho only evidence of emo
tion which he betraya. In a few
minutes he begins to whistle a lively
tune.
The boy Joslah famlllnrly called
Joe sits beside his mother. He Is
a slender, sweet-faced lad. Ho Is
looking up wistfully at his mother.
The little girl Betsey sits between him
nnd her father.
That evening they stopped at the
house of an old friend some miles
up the nibty road to the north.
"Here we are goln' west," Sam
son shouted to the man at the doorstep
O.
THE AGES STANTON
Ho alighted and helped hl family
out of the wagon.
"Ymi go right In I'll take caro o'
the oxen," said the man.
Samson stnrted for the houso with
the girl under ono arm and tho boy
undor the other. A plensant-faced
woman grceled them with a hearty
welcome nt tho door.
"You poor man I Come right In,"
she said.
"Boor I I'm the richest "inn In the
world," snld he. "Look at tho gold
on thnt girl's hend curly, fine gold,
too the'best there Is. She's Betsey
my little toy womnn hnlf past seven
years old blue eyes helps her moth
er get tired every day. Here's my
toy mnn Joslnh yes, brown hair nnd
brown eyes like Sarah heart o' gold
helps his mother, too six Umca
one yenr old."
"Whnt pretty faces 1" said the wo
mnn as she stooped nnd kissed them.
"Yes, ma'am. Got 'cm from the
fairies," Samson went on. "They
have nil kinds o' heads for llttlo folks,
an' I guess they color 'em up with the
blood o' roses nn tho gold o' butter
cups an' the bluo o' violets. Here's
this wife o' mine. She's richcr'n I
nm. She owns nil of us. Wo'ro her
slaves." ,
"Looks as young as she did the day
she wns mnrrlcd ulno years ago,"
said the woman.
"Exactly!" Samson exclaimed.
"Straight as an arrow and proud I I
don't blame her. She's got enough
to mnke her proud, I sny. I fall in
love ngaln every time I look Into her
big, brown eyes."
They hnd a Joyous evening nnd a
restful night with these old friends
and resumed their Journey soon after
daylight. They ferried across tlnj
lnke at Burlington and fared awny
over the mountains and through the
deep forest on the Chntcaugay trail.
Since the Pilgrims lnnded between
tho measureless waters nnd tho path
less wilderness they and their des
cendants hnd been surrounded by the
lure of mystery. Tho love of adven
ture, the desire" to explore tho dnrk,
Infested nnd hcnutlful forest, the
drentn of fruitful sunny lands cut
with water courses, shored with sil
ver and strewn with gold beyond It
these were the only heritage of their
sons nnd daughters snve tho strength
and courage of the pioneer. How truo
wns this dream of theirs gathering
detail nnd allurement ns It passed
from sire to son. On dlstnnt plains
to tho west wero lnnds moro lovely
and fruitful thnn any of their vision;
In mountains far beyond was gold
enough to gild the dome of the heav
ens, ns the sun wns wont to do at
eventide, and silver enough to put a
fairly respectable moon In It Yet for
generntlons their eyes were not to see,
their hands wero not to touch, these
things. They were only to push their
frontier n llttlo farther to tho west
and hold the dream nnd pass It on
to their children.
Those enrly years of tho Nineteenth
century held tho first days of full
flllment. Snmson nnd Sarah Traylor
had the old dream In their hearts
when they first turned their faces to
the west. For years Sarah hnd re
sisted It, thinking of tho hnrdshlps
nnd perils In the wny of tho mover.
Samson, n mnn of twenty-nino when
he set out from his old home, wns said
to bo "always chasing the bird In the
hush." He wns never content with
the thing In hnnd. Thero wero cer
tnln of their frjends who promised
to como nnd Join them when, nt Inst,
they should have found tho land of
plenty. But most of the group that
bado them good-by thought It n fool
ish enterprise nnd spoko lightly of
Samson when they wero gone. Amer
ica has undervalued tho bravo souls
who went west In wngons, without
whose sublime cournge and endurance
tho plains would still he nn unplowed
wilderness. Often wo henr them set
down ns seedy, shiftless drenmcrs
who could not mnke n living nt home.
They were mostly tho best blood of
the world nnd the noblest of God's
missionaries. Who does not honor
them nhovo the thrifty, comfort-loving
men nnd women who preferred to
stay nt home, where risks wero few,
the supply of food sure nnd suffi
cient nnd tho consolations of friend
ship nnd religion nlwnys at hand?
Snmson and Sarah preferred to enlist
and take tholr places In the front
battle line of Civilization.
They had rend a little book called
A Story of the Builders
of Democracy
IRVING
The Country of the Sangamon. The
latter was a word of the Pottnwn
tomles meaning land of plenty. It was
the name of a river In Illinois drain
ing "boundless, flowery meadowH of
unexampled beauty and fertility, bolt
ed with timber, blessed with shady
groves, covered with game and mostly
level, without n stick or n stone to
vex tho plowman." Thither they
wero bound, to tuke up a section of
government lnu'd.
They stopped for a visit with Ellshn
Howard nnd his wife, old friends of
theirs, who lived In the village of
Mnlone, which was In Franklin county,
New York. There they traded their
oxen for a team of horses. They
wero Inrge grny horses nnmed Bete nnd
Colonel. The Intter wns fnt nnd good
nntured. His chief Interest In life
wns food. Bete was alwnya looking
for food nnd perils. Colonel wns the
near horse. Now nnd then Samson
threw a sheepskin over his buck and
put the boy on It and tramped along
within ami's rcncli of Joe's left leg.
This was a great delight to tho little
lad.
They proceeded at a better pnee to
the Blnck Blver country, toward
which, In the village of Canton, they
tnrrlcd ugnln for a visit with Captain
Moody and Silas Wright, both of
whom had tnught school In tlio town
of Vergennes.
They proceeded through DoKnlb,
Bienville nnd Gouverneur and Ant
werp and on to tlio Sand plnlns. They
had gono far out of their wny for n
look at theso old friends of theirs.
Samson's dlnry tells how, at the top
of the long, steep bills ho used to
cut a 8mnll tree by the roadside nnd
tlo Its butt to tho rear axle and hang
on to Its branches while his wife
drove the team. This held their
lond, making an effective brake.
Traveling through tho forest, ns
they had been doing for weeks, while
the dny wnncd, they looked for n
brooksldo on which they could pnss
the night with water handy. Samson
Tramped Along Within Arm's Reach.
tethered, fed and watered their horses
and while Sarah and tho children
built a fire and made tea and biscuits,
ho wns getting bait and catching fish
In tho stream.
"In a few minutes from tlio time I
wet my hook a mess of trout would bo
dressed and sizzling, with a piece of
salt pork, In tho pan, or it wus a bad
dny for fishing," lie writes.
After supper the wagon wns partly
unloaded, tho feather bed laid upon
tho plnnks under tho wagon roof and
spread with blankets. Then Samson
snng songs nnd told stories or played
upon tho violin to nmuso the family.
Often If tho others were wenry nnd
depressed ho would dance merrily
around the fire, playing a lively tune,
with Sambo glnd to lend a helping
foot and much noise to the program.
By nnd by the violin was put nwny
nnd nil knelt by the fire while Snrah
prayed aloud for protection through
the night. So It will bo seen that
they carried with them their own
little theater, church and hotel.
Soon after dnrkness fell, Snrnh
and the children lay down for the
night, while Samson stretched out
with his blanket by tho fire In good
weather, tho loaded musket nnd tho
dog Sambo lying bcsldo him. Often
the howling of wolves In the dlstnnt
forest kept them awake, and tho dog
muttering and barking for hours.
Snmson woko the enmp at dnyllght
and a merry song was his rcvelllo
while ho led the horses to their drink.
When thoy set out In tho morning
'Samson was wont to sny to the llttlo
lad, 'who generally sat besldo him:
"Well, my boy, what's the good word
this morning?" Whereupon Joe would
sny, pnrrot like:
"God help us all and make His
face to shine upon us."
"Well said I" bit father would an-
By
BACHELLER
Copyright, Irrlnir IHeheller
swer, and so the dny's Journey began.
Often, near Its end, they came to
some lonely farmhouse. Always Sam
son would stop and go to the door
to ask about tho roads, followed by
llttlo Joe and Betsey with secret hopes.
One of these hopes was related to
cookies and ninple sugar and buttered
bread and had been cherished since
an hour of good fortune early In the
trip and encouraged by sundry good
hearted women' along the road. An
other was the hope of seeing a baby
mnlnly, It should he said, tho hope
of Betsey. Joe's Interest wns merely
an echo of hers. He rognrded babies
with an open mind, as It were, for
the opinions of his sister still had
some weight with him, she being n
yenr nnd n half older than he, but
babies Invariably dlsnppolnted him,
their cnpnbllltles being so restricted.
Still, not knowing what might happen,
he nlwnys took n look nt every baby.
Tho children were lifted out of the
wngon to stretch their legs nt sloughs
and houses. They were sure to be
close behind the legs of their father
when he stood nt a stranger's door.
Then, the night being near, they were
nlwnys Invited to put their horses In
tho bnrn and tnrry until next morn
ing. This wns due In pnrt to the wist
ful fnces of the little children n fuct
unsuspected by their pnrents. What
motherly heart coiild resist the silent
nppenl of children's fnces or fall to
understand It? Those were memorable
nights for Snrah nnd Joe and Betsey. In
a letter to her brother the womnn said :
"You don't know how good it seems
to see n woman nnd talk to her, and
we talked and tnlked until midnight,
after nil the rest were nsleep. She
let mo hold the baby In my lnp until
It wns put to bed. How good It felt
to hnve n little warm body In my
arms again nnd feel It breathing 1 In
all my life I never saw a prettier
bnby. It felt good to bo In n real
house nnd sleep In a soft, warm bed
and to cat Jelly and cookies and fresh
meat and potatoes nnd bread and but
ter. Snmson played for them and
kept them laughing with his stories
until bedtfmc. They wouldn't take
a cent nnd gave us a dozen eggs In a
bnsket and a piece of venison when
we went, away."
On a warm, bright dny in the snnd
country they came to a crude, half
finished, frame house nt tho edge of
n wide clenrlng. Tho snnd lay In
drifts on one side of the rond. It
had evidently moved In the Inst wind.
A sickly vegetation covered the field.
A ragged, bmefootcd mnn and three
scrawny, Ill-clad children stood In the
doorynrd. It was noontime. A mon
grel dog, with n bit of tho hound In
him, came bounding nnd bnrklng to
ward the wagon and pitched upon
Snmbo and quickly got the worst of
It. Snmbo, after much experience
In self-defense, hnd learned thnt the
best way out of such trouble wns to
seize n leg nnd hang on. This ho
did. The mongrel began to yelp. Sam
son lifted both dogs by the bncks of
their necks, broke the hold of Snmbo
nnd tossed nslde tho mongrel, who
rnn nwny whining.
"Thnt reminded roe of a bull tbut
tackled a man over In Vermont," he
said. "Tlio man had a club In his
hand. He dodged and grabbed the
bull's tnll nnd bent him nil over the
lot. As tho bull roared, the man hoi
lered: Td like to know who began
this fuss anyway."'
The stranger laughed.
"Is that your house?" Samson nld.
The man stepped nearer and an
swered In a low, confidential tone:
"Say, mister, this Is a combination
poorhouse and Idiot asylum. I am
the Idiot. These are the poor."
He pointed to the children.
"You don't talk like an Idiot," said
Snmson.
Acrott New York Stat.
(TO DE CONTINUED.)
Right View tf Life.
It Is time to get over tho Idea thnt
we have to be comfortable because
we were brought up that way, while
others were predestined to misery
and are so hardened to their condi
tion that we needn't bother. One ef
fect of travel if the traveler Is lm
presslonnbW, and some travelers are
not Is to show us that no country
has ' n monopoly of certain homely
virtues that tnke root nnd flourish In
the bleakest, as In the richest soil.
Nor Is nny other country pnrtlculnr
ly Interested In our Introspective
studies of how good we are and out
Ingrowing Imagination of our great
ness. Boastfulness Is a posture as un
lovely for the millions as It Is for one.
Let us give credit to others for pos
sessing some of the qualities we ad
mire so much In oursclveir. Ex
change x
But It's the Fashion.
Wlfey Aren't you positively nshnmed
that your wife nnd daughter are all
out at tho elbows?
Hub Nope. But I'm ashamed that
they are nil out at th knees. Amtr-
1 lean Legion Weekly.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNA! IONAL
Sunda) School
T Lesson T
(By UKV. I'. H. PH'ZWATKU, I). 1).,
Teacher of Kngllsh Ulble In tlio Moody
liiblo Institute of OIiIluko.)
(, 1W1, W'OHtern Newspaper Union.)
LESSON FOR JUNE 26
REVIEW: THE SOCIAL TASK OF
THE CHURCH.
GOLDHX TEXT-He shall dwelt with
thuin, ami they shall bo his people. Hev
21:3.
DKVOTIOXAl, BUADINU-Kev. 21.1-14,
J'HI.MAllY TOPIC The ,Vuy Jcsub
WnnlH I'h to Live.
JL'NIUIl TOPIC Soma Things Jesus
wunts t's to Do.
INTKUMEMATK AND SENIOK TOPIC
Thu Chullcngu ti) Hoys and Clliis.
YOUNU PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
The '.iiullungo to thu Church.
Revelation 21:1-14 Is the passage
of Scripture helected for devotional
reading. Instead of attemjitlng to re
view the lessons of the quarter It
would be of great Interest nnd profit
to enter Into a detailed .study of this
Scripture. The following outline may
be helpful. I. The New Heaven and
the New Kurth (vv. 1, 12) ; II. Tho New
People (vv. H-8) ; III. The New Jeru
salem (vv. I)-1 1).
Another way would be to assign the
Golden Texts to different members of
tho class asking them to give the part
of the particular lesson which illus
trates the teachings of the text.
Still unother way would be to sum
marize the different Scripture pass
ages, giving the leading lessons of
each. The following Is given by way
of suggestion :
I. The believer's supreme obliga
tion Is to present himself as n living
sacrifice to God. The grand reason
for so doing Is that he has received
the mercies of God. The one so yield
ed will love his fellow believer sin
cerely. II. The believer's body Is God's
property the temple of the Holy
Ghost ; therefore wo are under solemn
obligation to use It for Ills glory.
III. Since God the Father and
Jesus Christ work, It Is Incumbent
upon till to work, and the man who
will not work should not eat.
IV. God hates the greed that moves
men to dishonest methods In order to
get rich. His Judgment shall fall upon
such.
V. True education will lend one to
Christ. The one only book which tells
about him Is the Bible. No one can
call himself educated who Is Ignorant
of the Bible.
VI. God rested when Ills work of
creation wns done. On this hauls He
has established the law of labor and
rest. The obligation to cease from lu
bor Is that one may remember God.
VII. The church Is an organism ns
the human body. In order that there
may be real helpful co-operation there
must be membership In thnt body.
VIM. Jesus should 4)0 welcomed ns
a guest Into every home. He Is an ex
ample of an obedient son In the home.
IX. The most Important question is
not "Who Is my neighbor?" but "To
whom can I be n neighbor?" Being
n neighbor Is seeing those about who
need help and rendering such help In
loving sympathy.
X. Tho Christian Is n citizen ns well
as n church member. Intelligent Chris
tians will show proper loyalty to the
state.
XI. When Christ shnll reign ns
King there shall be peace nil over the
world between anlmnls and men. The
supreme business of the believer In
this dispensation Is to preach the gos
pel to all the world ns n witness.
XII. Jesus came and preached the
gospel to the poor, but shall come
aguln to Judge the world and reign us
King.
Since the whole of mnn's duty Is
summed up by Christ In duty to God
nnd duty to mnn (Mntt. 22:.50-40), It
would bo profitable to go through the
qunrter's lesson nnd set down the
teachings under
I. Duties to God; II. Duties to Mun.
House Divided Against Itself.
He Who sits above the waterlloods
Is still working out Ills ways, and
man's extremity Is, ns ever, God's op
portunity. But if we nre to be real
shnrers In this tnsk of divine recon
struction, and fulfilling of God's pur
poses for tho humnn family, It be
hooves us to do our utmost by prayer
and effort to repnlr the breaches which
human waywardness has wrought In
thnt Instrument which Ho has de
signed, nnd through which He has cho
seu especially to work out Immunity's
snlvatlon the church of the living
God, the One, Holy, Catholic and Apos
tolic Body of Christ. For until theso
wounds uro healed the church must
present herself ns a houso divided
ngnlnst Itself; and, because the Sav
ior's prayer for a unity In the "one
fold" remains unfulfilled, His enemies
contlnuo to triumph, and the forces
which make for righteousness are
thwarted. Bishop Howden.
Blessed Mysteries of Life.
Both death and sleep uro blessed
mysteries of life. It Is of little conse
quence what time tho angel of life
opens tho door of denth for us; tho
supreme concern for us Is whether our
hearts shall be pure, and our souls
strong In grace to rejolco In the vision
of tho Kverlustlng Duy. Newman
Smyth.
Jesus' First Preaching.
Jesus began to preach, and to say,
Ropcnt: for tho kingdom of heaven
It at baud. Matthew 4:17.
SUFFERED ALL
A WOMAN COULD
Mra. Meyer Finally Found
Relief and Health in Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
Ornnrrn Cn.."1 nlwhvn feel verV
I fratefui to you, as somo twenty years
ago inree uuuiuro
said 1 had to nave a
i nous operation. I
had a tumor, and ul
cers which would
gather nnd break. 1
had displacement so
badly thnt I could
hardly sit down at
times, nnd it seemed
that a woman
could 8ufTer. Then
some ono advised mo
to tnko Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetablo
Compound, nnd I 'took it until I waa
cured and saved from tho operation, i
have told women of your wonderful
medicine times without number, and I
nm willing that you should use theso
facts and my name if you like. I also
used your Compound during tho Change,
and I can do all my own work but tho
heavy part, and can walk miles every
day as 1 help my husband in tho office. '
Mrs. J. II. Meyer, 412 South Orango
St., Orange, California.
It is quite true that such troubles as
Mrs. Meyer had may reach a stage whero
nn operation is the only resource. On
the other hand, a great many women
have been restored to health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Times Have Changed.
Thirty years ago It took .'1,000 worms
to spin silk enough to make n lady's
evening dress. Nowadays, of course,
one small worm, working short time,
can easily manage the Job. London
Passing Show.
WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND
SWAMP-ROOT
For many years druggist) have watched
with much interest the remarkable record
maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver and bladder medi
cine. It is a physician's prescription.
Swamp-Hoot is n strengthening me
cine. It helps the kidneys liver and blad
der do the work nature intended they
should do.
Swamp-Root has stood the test of years.
It is Fold by all druggists on its merit
nnd it should help you. No other kidney
medicine has fo many friends.
Be sure to get Swump-Root and start
treatment at onrc.
However, if jou vih first to tc3t this
great preparation Fend ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be euro and
mention this paper. Adv.
Really Quite Simple.
Betty was late for hiiiool several
days In succession, and her teacher
took her to task for It, saying, "Can
you give me a good reason for your
being Into?" Betty was quiet for a
moment, nnd then snld, "We Just
sleeps Is all I know."
Have you
tried the
new 10c
package?
Dealers now
carry both;
10 for 10c,
20 for 20c
It's toasted.
$LsJlhuiXi$IM'?
Rotation of Numbers.
Numbers run ns follows: Units,
tens, hundred, thousands, millions,
billions, trillions, quadrillions, qulntll
llons, Kcxtllllons, septllllons, octillions,
nonllllons, decllllons.
The chnrm of n bnthroom Is Its spot
lessness. By the uso of Red Cross Bnll
Blue, nil cloths and towels retnln their
whiteness until worn out. Cc.
Good Point of Motion Pictures.
Jud Tunklns says motion pictures
appeal to him because the nudtencu
Is not expected to npplnud nnd cnll
the actors out to spoil the effect of a
good scene.
Sure
Relief
VBUV-KW1
iNDiGEsnoirj
-"----
'v:
6 Bell-ans
tegto-mL "OT waTer
WTWA Sure Relief
B
LL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
mmrnsmsnimu
ttim&&Ev.iiit
lUCKY
IIstrikeJ
IGARETTE,
W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 25-1921. (
.
C
v
x