The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, August 25, 1921, Image 6

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RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF
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DIM ELOPES.
Synopsis. Snmson nml Fnrnh
Traylor, with their two chlMruti,
Jnsluli and Uelty, trnvol by wiiiton
from their homo In Vrneiinea, Vt.,
to tlio Went, the l.intl of plenty.
Ttielr doMlnatlon In tlio Country of
the Siin;;umon. In Illinois. At N'laR
nra Kails they meet John McNeil,
who nlno lc(l(lt' to ko to the Hun
Kiunnii ooiiiitrv. Sarah's tnlnlnlni
tlons nave the life of Harry Noodles
ntid ho nrrouiMMiles tho Traylors.
Thi-y reach New Halttn, IIIImoIh,
and nro wch omoil by yonnn Ahe
IJncoln, Jack Kvlso and his prcttv
datiKhl'T Win and ntlicis Hamson
nines his riihln. IJncoln thrnshes
ArniHltmu;. Harry Httlkcn Hap Me
Null Harry In nttnckod hy MeNotl
and his K.mtf, nnd llhn drives off
his u8s.ul.intM with a shot j;u'i. Me-
" I uiurkpdly attentive to Ann
nutlcdee. I.lnroln Is In love with
Ann, hut has never had ctioimh
urngn to toll her n llnrry loves
ll.in. Traylor helps two nluvcs, who
hnd run nwny from Ht. IxjuIs.
I'llplmlct IllKKH, ownor of tho
slaves. haH IiIh arm brn'ten hy
Travlnr Mkps meets Dim and
mikes lovo to hor. Abo announees
that he In a enndldnte for tho legis
lature. The Dlach Hawk war makes
Aim a captain and ho and Harry ro
to tho front.
CHAPTER IX.
10
In Which Dim Kelso Makes History,
While Abe and Harry nnd Other
Good Cltlzeno of New Salem Are
Making an Effort to That End In the
Indian Var.
In tho midst of springtime there
came cheering new from the old home
In Vermont n letter to Sarah from
her hrollier, which contained the wel
come promise that he was coming to
visit them and expected to he In
ltonrilMown about the fourth of May.
Samson drove across country to meet
the steamer, lie was at the lnndlng
when the Star of the North arrived.
II saw every passenger that cnine
uuhore, and Kllphulet IJIggs, leading
his lilg hay mare, was one of them, hut
the expected visitor did not arrive.
There would he no other steamer
bringing pusscngers from tho Kust for
n numher of days.
.Samson went to n store nntl bought
n new diess and sundry bits of finery
Xfor Sarah. He returned to New Salem
with n heavy heart. Sarah stood In the
ojien door as he drove up.
"Didn't come," he said mournfully.
"Without n word, Sarah followed him
to the barn, with the tin lantern In her
hand, lie guve her n hup; as he got
down from the wagon. He was little
given to like displays of emotion.
"Don't feel bad," he said.
"I've given tliem up 1 don't believe
we shnll ever ace them again," said
t&irnh, as they were walking toward
Yhe door. "I think I know how the
dead feel who are so soon forgotten."
"Ye can't blame 'em," said Samson.
"They've probably heard about the
Injun scare and would expect to be
mussacrecd If they came."
Indeed the scare, now abating, had
Hproad through the bolder settlements
and kept the people awake o' nights.
Samson and other men, left In New
Salem, had met to consider plans for
n stockade.
"And then there's the fever an'
ogue," Samson added.
"Sometimes I feel sorry I told 'em
about It, because they'll think It worst
than It Is. I'.ut we've got to tell the
truth If It kills us."
"Yes; we've got to tell the truth,"
Samson rejoined. "There'll bo a rail
road coming through here one of these
dnys and then wo can all get back
and forth easy. If It comes It's going
to make us rich. Abe says he expects
It within three or four years."
Sarah had a hot supper ready for
him. As he stood warming himself
by the fire she put her amis around
blm and gave him n little hug.
"You poor tired man!" she sold.
"How pntleut and bow good you are I"
There was a kind of npology for
this moment of weakness In her look
and manner. Her face seemed to say:
"It's silly but 1 can't help It."
"I've been happy nil the time, for 1
knew you was waiting for me," Sum
fcon remarked. "I feel rich every time
I think of you and the children. Say,
look here."
He, untied the bundle and put the
dress and llnery In her lap.
' "Well, I want to knowl" she ex
claimed, as sho held It up to the can
dlelight. "That must have cost a pret
ty penny."
"I don't care what It cost It ain't
linlf good enough not half," said
Samson.
As he sat down to his supper he
Bald :
"I saw that slnver, Wggs, get off
the boat with his big bay mare. There
was a darky following him with an
other horse."
"Good land!" snld Sarah. "I hope
lie Isn't coming here. Mrs. Onstot told
me today that Ulm Kelso has been get
ting letters from him."
"She's such ah odd llttlo critter and
jibe's got a mind of her own any
body could see that," Samson reflect
ed. "She ought to bo looked after
purty careful, nor parents are so
tnken up with shooting nnd fishing
and books they kind o' forget the girl.
I wish you'd go down there tomorrow
Man for
Ages
and see whut's up. Jack Is uway, you
know."
"I will," snld Snrnh. "
It was nearly two o'clock when
Snmsou, having fed and watered his
horses, got Into bed. Yet he was up
before daylight, next morning, nnd
singing a hymn of praise as he kindled
the (Ire and tilled the tea kettle and
lighted his caudle lantern and went
out to do his chores while Sarah,
partly reconciled to her new disap
pointment, dressed and began the
work of another day. So they nnd
Ahe and Harry and others like them,
each under the urge of his own ambi
tion, spent their great strength In the
building and defense of the republic
and grew prematurely old. Their
work began and ended In darkness
and often their days were doubled by
the burdens of the night. So in the
reckoning of their time each year was
more than one.
Sarah went down to the vlllngo In
the afternoon of the next day. When
Samson came In from the fields to his
.supper she said:
"Mr. lllggs Is stopping nt tho tavern.
He brought a new silk dress and some
beautiful linen for Mrs. Kelso. He
tells her that 151m has made n new
man of him. Claims he has quit
drinking and gone to work. Ulm and
her mother are terribly excited. Ho
wants them to move to St. Louis and
live on his big plantation In u house
next to his rent free."
Samson knew tlint Biggs was the
type of man who weds Virtue for her
dowry.
"A man's Judgment Is needed there,"
said he. "It's a pity .Tack Is gone.
Higgs will take that girl nwny with
him sure as shooting If wo don't look
out."
"Oh, I don't believe he'd do thnt,"
snld Sarah. "I hope he has turned
oer a new leaf and become a gentle
man." "We'll see," said Samson.
They saw and without much delny
the background of his pretensions, for
one dny within the week he nnd Ulm
rode nwny and did not return. Soon
n letter came from Him to her moth
er, mulled at Ilcurdstown. It told of
their marriage in thnt place and said
that they would bo starting for St.
Louis In a few hours on the Stnr of
the North. She begged the forgive
ness of her parents and declared that
she wns very happy.
"Too bud! Isn't Itr snld Snrah
when Mrs. Waddell, who had come out
with her husband one evening to bring
this news, had finished the story.
"Yes, It kind o' spyles the idace,"
said Samson. "I'm afraid for Jack
Kelso 'frald It'll bust his llddle If It
don't break Ids heart. Ills wife Is
alone now. We must nsk her to come
and sta; with us."
"The Aliens have taken her In,"
said Mrs. Waddell.
"That's good," said Sarah. "I'll go
down there tomorrow und offer to do
anything we can."
When Mr. and Mrs. Waddell had
gone Sarah said : "I can't help think
ing of poor Harry. He was terribly in
love with her."
"Well, he'll have to get over It
that's all," snld Samson. "He's young
und the wound will heal."
It was well for Harry that he was
out of the way of all this, and entered
upon adventures which absorbed his
thought. As to what was passing with
him wo have conclusive evidence In
two letters, one from Col. Zuchary
Taylor, In which he says:
"Harry Needles Is also recommend
ed for the most Intrepid conduct as a
scout nnd for securing Information of
great value. Compelled to abandon
his wounded horse ho swam a river
under (Ire and under the observation
of three of our ollleors, through whose
helit tio got buck to his command,
bringing a bullet In his thigh."
With no knowledge of military ser
vice und n company of untrained men,
Abe had no chuuee to win luurcls In
the campaign. Ills command did not
get In touch with the enemy. He had
his hands full maintaining a decent re
gard for discipline among thu raw
frontiersmen of his company.
When the dissatisfied volunteers
were mustered out late In May, Kelso
and McNeil, being sick with a stubborn
fever, were declared unlit for service
nnd sent back to New Salem as soon
us they were able to ride. Abe and
Harry Joined Captain lies' company
of Independent Hungers and a month
or so later Abe re-enlisted to serve
with Captain Knrly, Harry being under
a surgeon's care. Tho latter's wound
was not serious und on July third he
too Joined Kurly's command.
This company wns chiefly occupied
In the moving of supplies and tho bury
ing of u few men who had been killed
in small engagements with the enemy.
It was a bund of rough-looking fellows
In the costume of the frontier farm
and workshop ragged, dirty and un
shorn. Tho company wns disbanded
July tenth nt Whitewater, Wisconsin,
where, that night, tho horses of Harry
and Abe were stolen. From thnt point
ihey started on their long homeward
tramp with a wounded sense of de
cency and Justice. They felt that the
Indians had beou wronged, thut the
i4 Story of the Builders
of Democracy
IRVING
greed of hind grabbers had brutally
violated their rights. This feeling had
been deereniJ by the massacre of the
red wometi ami children nt Had Ax.
A numr-er of mounted men w"nt
with their iw( gave them a ride now
and then. S?me of the travelers had
little to ea, or the Journey. Hotli Abe
and Harry sneered from hunger and
sore feet litfcfe they reached I'eoiia,
where they benight a canoe and In the
morning of a hlght dny started down
the Illinois ttvtr.
They had a long dny of comfort In
Its current wiM) good store of bread
and butter nnd cMd meat and pic. The
prospect of Kiin fifty miles nearer
home before Mgrtfall lightened their
hearts and they ilughed freely while
Abe told of his td";n lures In the cam
paign. To Mm 4t "vns all a wild com
edy with tragic scenes dragged Into It
and woefully ort cJ place. Indeed he
thought It no mono 1ke wnr than a pig
sticking und thuA w3u the kind of thing
he hated.
Harry hnd net Penrd from homo
since ho left It. Ah had hnd n letter
from Hutledgc whli guve blm the
news of Mini's clnpenent. The letter
suld :
"I wns over to Re.fdstown the day
Kelso and McNeil fcot ff the stenmer.
I brought them hone ''Ith me. Kelso
was bigger than Ms triable. Snld that
the ways of youth wer a part of the
great plan. 'Thorn's I Thorns !' he said.
'They are tho teachers of wisdom and
who am I that I should think myself
or my daughter too good for the like,
since It Is written that Jesus Christ
did not complnln of them?'"
They Had a Long Day of Comfort in
Its Current.
"Hnvo you heard from home?" Abe
asked us they paddled on.
"Not a word," said Harry.
"You're not expecting to meet Him
Kelso?"
"That's the best part of getting
homo for me," said Harry, turning
with a smile.
"Let her drift for a minute," snld
Abe. "I've got a letter from Jumes
Hutledgo that I want to read to you.
There's a big ltsson In It for both of
us something to remember as long
us we live."
Abe read the letter. Harry sat mo
tionless. Slowly his head bent for
ward until his chin touched his breast.
Abo said with a tender note lu his
voice as he folded the letter:
"This man Is well along In life. He
hnsn't youth to help him as you have.
Sre how be takes It and she's the Only
child he litis. There are millions of
pretty girls In the world for you to
chooso from."
"I know It, hut there's only one Dim
Kelso lu the world," Hurry nnswered
mournfully. "She wns the one I
loved."
"Yes, but you'll find another. It
looks serlons, but It Isn't you'ie so
young. Hold up your head and keep
going. You'll be happy again soon."
"Maybe, but I don't see how," said
the boy.
"There nro lots of things you enn't
see from where you are at this present
moment. There are a good many miles
ahead o' you, I reckon, nijd one thing
you'll bee plainly, hy and by thnt It's
all for the best. I've suffered a lot my
self but I can bee now It has been a
help to me. There Isn't un hour of It I'd
bo willing to give up."
They puddled olong In silence for n
time.
"It wus my fault," sajd Harry pics-
L ently. "I ilever could say the half I
wanted to when sho wns with me. My
tongue ts too slow. She gave me a
chance nnd I wasn't man enough to
take It. That's all I've got to say on
that subject."
Some time ufterwnrd In n letter to
his father tho boy wrote:
"I often think of that ride down tho
river nnd tho way ho talked to me. It
waa so gentle. Ho wns u big, power-
I ful giant of n mu who weighed over
By
BACHELLER
Copyright, Irvine; Bacheller
two hundred pounds, nil of It hone nnd
muscle. Hut under his great strength
was a woman's gentleness; under tin
dirty, ragged clothes and the rough,
brown skin grimy with dust nnd
perspiration, was one of the cleanest
semis that ever came to this world. I
don't mean that he wus like u minis
ter. He could tell a story wnii pretty
rough talk In It, but ulwuys for a pur
pose. He hated dirt on the hands or
on the tongue. He ioved llowecs like
a woman. He loved to look nt the
stars at night and the colors of the
sunset and the morning dew on the
meadows. 1 never saw a man so much
lu love with fun and beauty."
They reached Havana that evening
and sold their cuuoe to a man who
kept bouts to rent on the river shore.
They ate a hot supper at the tavern
and got a ride with a farmer who was
going ten miles lu their direction,
i'roui his cabin some two hoi'rs Inter
they set out afoot In the darkness.
"tiolng home Is the end of nil Jour
neys," said Abe as they tramped along.
"Did It ever occur to you timt every
live creature has Its home? The flsh of
the sea, the birds of the air, the beasts
of the Held and forest, the creepers In
the grass, all go home. Most of them
turn toward It when the day wanes.
The call of home Is the one voice heard
and respected nil the way down the
line of life. And, ye know, the most
wonderful und mysterious thing In na
ture Is the power that fool animals
have to go home through great dls
tunces, like the turtle that swam from
the Hay of Hiscay to his home oil Van
Dlemnn's Land. Somehow, coming over
lu a ship, he hnd blitzed a trail through
the pathless deep more than ten thou
sand miles long. It's the one miracu
lous gift tho one cull thut's Irresist
ible. Don't you hear It now? I never
lie down In the darkness without
thinking of home when I am away."
"And It's hard to change your home
when you're wonted to It," wild Hurry.
"Yes, Its a little like dying when you
pull up the roots nnd move. It's been
hard on your folks."
This remark brought them up to the
greatest of mysteries. They tramped
In silence for n moment. Abe broke
In upon It with these words:
"I reckon there must be nnother
home somewhere to go to ufter we
have broke the last camp here, nnd a
kind of n bird's compass to help us
Hnd It. I reckon we'll hear the call of
It as we grow older."
lie stopped and took off his lint and
looked up nt the stnrs and added :
"If It Isn't so I don't see why the
long procession of life keeps hnrplng
on this subject of home. I think I see
the point of the whole thing. It Isn't
the place or the furniture that makes
It home, but the love und pence thut's
In It. Hy und by our home Isn't here
nny more. It hns moved. Our minds
begin to bent about In the undiscov
ered countries looking for It. Some
how we got It located each man for
himself."
For unother space they hurried nlong
without speaking.
"I tell you, Hurry, whatever a large
number of Intelligent folks have
agreed upon for some generations la
so If they have been allowed to do
their own thinking," snld Ahe. "It's
about the only wisdom there Is."
He had sounded the keynote of the
new Democracy.
So, under Hie lights of heaven,
espeuklng In the silence of tho night of
Impenetrable mysteries, they Jour
neyed on toward the land of plenty.
"It's ns still as a graveyard," Hurrv
whispered when they hnd climbed the
bluff by, the mill long after midnight
nnd were near the little village.
"They're all burled In sleep," Rnld
Abe. "We'll get Hutledgo out of bed.
He'll give us a shakedown some
where." His loud rap on the door of the tav
ern signalized more than a desire for
rest In the weary travelers, for Just
'then u cycle of their lives hud ended.
Raiders try to burn out
Traylor' "underground rail
road station."
CTO HE CONTINUED.)
"Frankenstein."
"Frankenstein" Is n rotnnnco by
.Mrs. Shelley, wife of the distinguished
poet, Percy Hyssche Shelley, The
hero, Frankenstein, contrives to make
and animate hy his Intimate control
of the mysteries of nature, t monster
In human form, who becomes the con
stunt torment of Its creator's exist
ence. The monster wns created with
out n soul, yet not without tin Intense
craving for human sympathy, and ho
found existence on these terms such
o terrible cuie that In the end he
e'ew his maker. The story of "Frank-uiif-toln"
Is said to lie consciously or
unconsciously an allegorical portrayal
of tho character of Shelley himself,
who, In "Alustor," has pointed himself
us nu Idealist Isolated from humun
syi thy. iieien iwoore, in nor nro
of Hhelley, bus u chapter on this mib-Uuet,
MAKES NEW BED
River Indus Changes Its Courso
With Regularity.
Inhabitants of Wazirlstan Face Per.
petual Peril, as Water Constantly
Moves In a New Direction.
The frequently heard news that an
eastern rher has changed Its course
Willi danger to property and lite
seems Incredible until one has actually
seen un ucllvo river "getting busy" on
n new course, writes u correspondent
from Wnzhistiiu, India.
Thus the Indus Is u perpetual proln
lem, nnd for this reason: All provi
sions must cross Its broad witters, as
Wiizliisiiiu s on the west bunk und In
desert country.
Kvery October the river hibernates,
and u bridge of boats temporarily
.solves the problem.
Hut each May It wakes up, shakes
Itself out of Its sleep and probably
out of Its original course.
The bridge Is hurriedly dismantled,
and there ensues anxious sirectiliiliou
iiinnni! the engineers.
Which way is the wnter coining?
After observations and soiindlug.s tho
new position of the port, quaintly
called "Steamer Point," Is llxed. There
follows a piocesslon of railway men,!
provision expeits, coolies (lauorers)
nnd camels. Lines are laid, "dumps"
arise and within u week the erstwhile
lonely river hank Is populated and be
comes ii "going concern."
Kven then a wary eye has to be kept
on the encroaching water. Hoth the
railway and the supply "dumps" have
to be moved farther and further back.
Sometimes even lu u single night the
river will flow nwny Into a new und
unexpected channel ; or, maybe. It will
forsake a portion of Its bed. leaving a
yellow sandbank In Its place. '
The bunk Itself becomes Jugged like
n piece of bread Into which a child hu.s
tiiiulo lnrge bites.
The wnter swirls ever Inwnrd nnd
cracks appear ten feet within thelmnk;
the crncks deepen, und without warn
ing another large lump of shore
crumbles nwny. A motor car that
stopped on such n piece disappeared
Into the river und hns not been seen
since.
And some of these effects are curi
ous. A cluster of three palm trees, which
were well nwny from the wnter Inst
week, were little Islands yesterdny.
This morning they hnd disappeared I
Probably they are miles down rho
strenm for the current Is swift nnd
gives no qunrter.
You may Inmglne these quiet trees,
torn from their native soil, turning
feverishly round nnd round nt the
mercy of the sweeping current.
The flotsam nnd Jetsam of life and
death go eddying past on the bosom of
the strenm. Here n dend camel, there
n bevy of Jam tins cntches the eye nnd
fades nwny downstream.
Yet with all the turmoil and trouble
the Indus has n churm of Its own. nnd
It Is most fuselnatlng to watch the
work of elemental mi t tire.
This evening, ns I saw tho bank col
lnpdng bit by bit. I could not help
thinking of the story of the engineer
who bulli his bununlnw a comfortable
mile from tne river. The next year the
witter was lapping nt his garden gnte.
And I wondered If In n year or two
the river would Threaten our own little
homesteads nwny buck In tho distance.
Is President of Assyria.
Just as George Washington in Amer
ica became known to posterity as tho
"Father or His Country," the first
woman president of u nation may bo
known ns tho "Mother of Assyria."
Lady Surma, first executive of the
new Assyrian republic, practically cre
ated the nation when she obtained
from England the grunt of 80,000
square miles of laud In the Kurdistan
mountains, nnd this, it Is snld In Lon
don, mny win her the unique title.
Lady Surmn was ambassador to
England from the Assyrians nnd In
cidentally the first woman nmhassu
dor In the world when she obtained
the grunt of tho new territory from
Britain. Hor brother, Mar Chlnon,
hnd been pntrlarch of tho Assyrians,
and following his murder n new form
of government was outlined. When
the now assembly of tho Assyrians
was organized, tho nmbassador who
won for the country Its new territory
was nt once urged for Its ruler.
Lady Surma was educated hy Brit
ish tutors and Is an accomplished,
linguist.
Arabic Literature Recovering.
""Arable literature, writes a corre
spondent to the London Morning Post,
Is recovering from u period of depres
sion Induced by the wnr. Of the books
published during the last month or so
one of the moot Interesting Is "Nawn
dlr al-Harh," containing rnro and In
teresting comments on the war rare
In the sense that every fact Is narrated
from the standpoint of tho Oriental
philosopher. The little volume closes
.with appropriate comments on the pow
ers nnd their post-war conditions
culled from the works of the classical
Arabic poets. Perhaps thu most ninus
Ing pnssngo Is that which Is selected
for Montenegro: "I hnvo sold my
house nnd my donkey; I hnvo, there
fore, nothing nbove or beneath me."
Really Clever.
"Madge Is an awfully clever girl."
"Why, she'B n regular dummy with
the men."
"That's where her cleverness comes
In. She leads a man to bellovo that
1 Bbe thinks ho la worth Ustculng to."
Many Ills Duo To Catarrh
Tho mucous membranes through
out the body arc subject to catarrhal
congestion resulting in many scr.'oua
complications.
PE-RU-NA
Wall Known and RcllMbf
Coughs, colds, nasal catarrh, storn
ach nnd bowel troubles nmongtho
.most common diseases due to catairh
ol conditions.
A very dependable remedy after
protracted olekness, thogr'P or Span
ish Flu. , , .
PE-llU-NA Is a Rood medicine to
have on hand for emergencies.
TiSIeUirlknM S m
IN USB TIFTY YEAliS
Cuticura Talcum
is Fragrant and
Very Healthful
Soip 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
TIME NOT WHOLLY WASTED
Youth Missed Acquiring AcademL
Knowledge, but Probably Learned
Something Worth While.
The pursuit of learning Is not nl
ways un easy matter, as a young stu
dent found who set forth from Bris
bane to study nt Edinburgh, for when
ho reached tho port of Falmouth ho
found thut, owing to having tnken IIUO
days on the Journey by sea, the term
wns over. Contrary witjds und other
contretemps uccouutcd for the deluy,
during which the crew had to set
about finding means of turning some
of the corn they were carrying lis
enrgo Into bread. They found tin old
berry-mill but the story Is loo long
to tell. It Is one of the sea's many
ynrns, and leaves the conviction thnt
that student, if he Is worth Ids salt,
will not object to having lost some ot
the academic year learning of tho
wuys of n barque on thu ocean.
Christian Science Monitor.
Tho use of soft coal win make laun
dry work heavier this winter. Red
Cross Ball Bluo will help t rcmovi
that grimy look. At all grocers, Cc,
Advertisement.
Between Two Fires.
The young couple were dining out.
In the middle of their mcnl n tall ant
benntlful womnn passing near their
table gave the young man a look of
recognition nnd n smile.
So dangerous wns the smile thnt thw
girl said, "John, who wns that wom
an?" John held up his hand.
"Now, for goodness sake," hb saiA,
"don't get bothering me about who
she is. I shall have trouble enough ex
plaining to her who you are."
Obvlouv
"In dat dah Sassafras Simpson toolt
n wife ylt, Ilustus?" "Beckon ha
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RATS
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MICE
Br Utlno (hi
Genuine
STEARNS'
ELECTRIC PASTE
BEADY FOU U8R-1IKTTEI1 THAN TRAM
Directions In 16 languages in oerytwx.
Rati, Mlon, Cockroaches, Anta and Waterbnta
dRstmrioodand prnpprtjand am carriers of dlsoaa.
nirnnn iiiwma i-asin lorccs Uipm, MU
from Uin building for water and frehhatr
Uo and IliO. "Money back If It falls."
to n
V, a. UoTerument buys It.
Lucky
Strike
cigarette
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16799
DIED
In New York City alone from kid
ney trouble last year. Don't allow
yourself to become a victim by
neglecting pains and ochc3. Guard
against this trouble by taking
t3SS
Tho world's etandard remedy for kidney,
liver, blnddor and uric acid troubles.
Holland's NnUonal Remedy oinco logo.
All druggists, thrco elzes.
Look for tho nam Cold Medal on every La
and accept no Imitatloa
Uoastecy
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