Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, December 14, 1905, Image 6

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    He Had to "Wateh Them.
The late George M. Stearns , tbe no
ted Massachusetts criminal lawyer ,
ivas a great lover of poker. He was
also very fastidious in his personal
habits and immaculate in his dress.
One night he was out until a late
hour with a convivial party , indulging
in his fav orate amusement. The next
morning at the breakfast table his
wife , observing with surprise his un
tidy appearance , remarked : .
"George , can't you spit without soil-
Ing your shirt bosom ? "
"George" looked at her a moment ,
and then remarked solemnly : "Mary ,
if you had been in the party I was last
night , you wouldn't have turned your
head to spit. "
Tennessee Praise.
r > ayton , Tenn. , Dec. 11. ( Special. )
Among many prominent residents to
praise Dodd's Kidney Pills is Mr. N.
K. Roberts of this place. He tells of
what they have done for him , and his
words will go deep into the hearts of
11vho are suffering in the same way.
lie says :
"I was a martyr to Kidney Trouble ,
but Dodd's Kidney Pills completely
cured we. I shall always keep them
on hand in case there should be any re
turn of the old trouble , but I am thank
ful to say they did their work so well
there has not been the slightest sign
of my old complaint coming back. The
pain in my back used to be terrible.
If I got down I had a hard job to get
straight again. But my hack is like a
new one now and I can stoop as much
as I please. I don't believe there ever
was any medicine half so good as
Dodd's Kidney Pills. "
A Tip for Her.
Mr. Stammerton Oh , Viola ! er
that is , M M Miss Sere , I er lul
lul lul
Miss Sere ( coyly ) Yes , Mr. Stam
merton , say it Don't be afraid.
Mr. Stammerton I'm afraid it's g
g going to t t t take me so lul
long to say it that you'd bub bet
ter remark "This is so sudden" now.
Philadelphia Press.
THE TOWER OF BABEL.
Hi.siory Leaves No Data by Which
to Estimate Its Heifrht.
The exact date of the building of
"Nimrod's Folly , " as the Chaldeans
say in alluding to the Scriptural tower
of "Babel ( the Armenians speak of it
as theTower of the Confusion of
Tongues ) or the height to which it pen
etrated the rarefied atmosphere of the
oriental plains will perhaps never be
known. The date of the laying of the
foundation of the famous structure is
usually set at 2,257 years before Christ ,
or in the year of the flood 101.
The expression of the sacred his
torian that its top was to "reach un
to heaven" is now generally set down
as a strong Hebrew phrase denoting
a ver3r lofty tower , but not necessarily
moaning that one would reach to the
abiding place of the Lord and His
hosts. Proof that this is probable may
be found in several places in the holy
writ. The walls of the cities of Ca
naan are described by Moses in similar
phraseology. The spies sent out by
him returned and reported that tho
cities of that country were great and
wore "walled up to heaven. " See Deu
teronomy 1:2S , 9:1. There is a Jewish
legend in the Talmud which tells us
that God did not put a stop to the
building of the tower until after It had
reached a height of 30,000 fathoms ,
which is equal to nearly twelve Eng
lish miles.
The sacred historians have not In a
single instance left data upon which
we can base a calculation of its exact
Sieight and general dimensions , and it
3s because of this omission that the
Imaginative orientals and other ancient
writers have given such fabulous ana
extravagant traditions concerning it.
Even St. Jerome alleges from the tes
timony of eyewitnesses who claim to
have seen and examined the ruins of
the skyscraping shaft that in his day
< born 3-15 A. D. ) it was over four miles
high. While considering these unten
able notions it may not be out of place
to mention that other fanciful writers
make its height range all the way
from a single furlong to 5.000 miles in
height. Pittsburg Press.
I
A BRAIN WORKER I
Must Have the Iviiul of Food that
Nourishes Drain.
"I am a literary man whose nervous
energy is a great part of my stock in
trade , and ordinarily I have little pa
tience with breakfast foods and the
extravagant claims made of them. But
I cannot withhold my acknowledg
ment of the debt that I owe to Grape-
2\"nts food.
"I discovered long ago that the very
bulkiuess of the ordinary diet whs not
calculated to give one a clear head , the
power of sustained , accurate thinking.
1 always felt heavy and sluggish in
mind as well as body after eating the
ordinary meal , which diverted the
blood from the brain to the digestive
apparatus.
" 1 tried foods easy of digestion , but
found them usually deficient in nutri
ment. I experimented with many
breakfast foods and they , too , proved
unsatisfactory , till I reached Grape-
Nuts. And then the problem was
solved.
"Grape-Nuts agreed with me perfect
ly from the beginning , satisfying my
hunger and supplying the nutriment
that so many other prepared foods
lack.
"I had not been using it very long
before I found that I was turning out
an unusual quantity and quality of
work. Continued use has demonstra
ted to my entire satisfaction that
Grape-Nuts food contains all the ele
ments needed by the brain and ner
vous system of the hard working pub
lic writer. " Name given by Postum
Co. . Uattle Creek , Mich.
There's a reason. Read the little
book , "The Road to Wellville , " In pkga.
f'V- ' -
f 4 l llNi > fl 4 f9 H $
*
§
*
Opinions of Great Papers OQ important Subjects.
* * & &ww&w&w4t4t&44t444'4 & $
THE CHEAP AND VICIOUS PLAY.
REMARKABLE and , we are glad to think , ex
*
ceptional illustration of the evil effects ofcheap
and vicious plays upon young spectators is
found in the case of the 13-year-old Toronto
girl , who kidnapped a baby in the hope of ob
taining a reward and afterward killed the child
when she found it a nuisance and herself liable
to detection. The girl Is of low intelligence , like most of
the frequenters of the very cheap theater , and she was
stimulated to crime by seeing a play in which the plot
hinged upon the kidnapping of an infant with the usual
expectation of ransom. It mattered little to her that the
villains or villainesses , we do not happen to know which ,
were subsequently foiled , and the child restored unharmed
and unransomed to the millionaire's family from which it
was originaly stolen. The "beautiful moral lesson" which
plays of this stamp are frequently advertised to teach does
not Invariably have time to strike home. In fact the idea
that vice is always punished and virtue always triumphant
Is worked out with such painful attention to criminal de
tail that its value as a moral corrective amounts to prac-
tiaclly nothing. It is to be regretted that no plan can be
devised for the legal suppression of the vulgar , sensational
and cheaply vicious play. Theater-going is a matter of
Individual taste , and so long as a production keeps within
the limits of ordinary decency it cannot be interfered with
by the law , whether it be fhe story of a nasty intrigue
Imported from Paris for Broadway consumption or the
adventures of a Western desperado as exhibited on the
Bowery. Some day we may change all this , but for the
present the only check upon the evil is the spread of social
work by the churches and settlements , the increase of free
lectures and other forms of entertainment by the educa
tional authorities and the development of clubs and gym
nasiums in the neighborhoods from which the patronage of
the cheaper play is most largely drawn. But the play has
already a long lead in the race. Brooklyn Eagle.
HANG ON TO YOUR POLICIES.
jOME New York reports say that many hold
ers of life insurance policies are refusing to
jpay further premiums on them , on account of
the recent revelations of crookedness in some
Jof the companies. This is folly. By allowing
Jj their policies to lapse without making any sort
of terms with the companies the holders would
lose everything which they have paid in. Not only so ,
but they would thus increase the funds which would be
at the mercy of the crooks in such companies as the crooks
dominate.
There is a strong probability that most of the insurance
companies are managed honestly and economically. More
over , the big companies which are being looted by some of
their officers are likely to be solvent still. It is not certain
that they are solvent , for the examination of their assets
by the committee has yet to take place. In the absence
of a careful , impartial examination from the outside , the
public will be in doubt as to those companies' exact finan
cial status. There has been so much crookedness in the
conduct of some of their leading oflicers that the word of
those persons as to the monetary standing of their coin-
panies would carry no weight with the policy holders. The
death claims can undoubtedly be paid , but the holders of
the ten , fifteen and twenty years term policies will not , at
those policies' maturity , get anywhere near the amount
which they were led to belicvve they would get , although
the technically guaranteed payments will probably be met.
The sensible thing for the policy holders is to hang on
to their policies and make the best terms possible with
the companies. When the committee of inquisition in New
T
STRENUOUS STILLNESS.
Perfect stillness is something that
scarcely seems compatible with physi
cal strenuosity ; nevertheless , posing
for an artist may become , in the main
tenance for long periods of a difficult
attitude , one of the most trying of ath
letic feats. When Mcissonier , the fa
mous French artist , was painting one
of his battle scenes he hired several
old soldiers for models , seasoned , tough
veterans , whose experience and endur
ance would , he thought , be useful in
enabling them both to understand the
positions required and to hold them.
They did so , indeed , as well as any
one could ; but it was an every-day
affair for a model to faint , and more
than once to collapse with exhaustion ,
find require the services of a physician.
Especially difficult were the poses
representative of cavalrymen slain or
wounded and falling from their sad
dles. Despite an ingenious arrange
ment of straps and slings hung from
the ceiling of the studio to afford such
support as was possible , these poses
remained so hard that one old soldier
declared fervently when the picture
was finished :
"Monsieur Meissonier , I have been
six times wounded , and once nearly
frozen on the field , but it was all noth
ing to this. Nothing ! Nothing ! It Is
not hard to fall out of the saddle ,
really. A bullet helps one so neatly
one scarcely knows when one touches
the ground. But then , you see , one Is
allowed to fall all the way : one is not
halted in mid-air.
"You are painting a great picture ,
monsieur , and I am proud to be in it :
but if you could have put me there
with a pistol instead of a paint-brush ,
I should have preferred it. "
It was long a current tale that the
model for another painting by Meis-
Bonier , entitled "The Brawl , " actually
died as the result of long posing in an
unnaturaJy strained position for one
of the two intertwined and struggling
combatants in the picture.
This was not true. Indeed , he lived
to boast much and volubly of his
achievement , and it served him as his
chief professional recommendation af
terward.
Rolling up his sleeve and displaying
an arm heavily corded with muscle , he
would say to a prospective employer :
"Monsieur , behold ! Is not tbat an
York finishes with the Mutual , the New York Life and the
Equitable it will , take up some of the other companies. It
it fair to presume that the Hydes , Alexanders , McCalls and
McCurdys will not be found diffused through the whole
insurance fraternity , or through any large part of it. St
Louis Globe-Democrat.
HE WHO NEGLECTS HIS COUNTRY.
HE notion prevails among some Americans
that there is something degrading and debasing
T
in being in politics. There are many American
citizens who pass as educated , Intelligent and
respectable , who yet pride themselves on their
'Snorauce of politics and their abstention from
, . ,
in-- n -
political activity. This false and foolish notion
is passing away , but there vs still too much of it. Such an
attitude is based on the delusion that politics is a small ,
petty , and almost unnecessary business , with which men
of ability need not concern themselves , because almost
anybody can attend to it as well as its requirements de
mand.
The truth is , of course , that what Abraham Lincoln
truly called "the great business of government" is the
greatest and most important business on earth , on whose
capable , intelligent , and upright transaction the welfare of
every other business depends.
Furthermore , in this country every citizen is a share
holder in this business. Furthermore , this nation offers to
its citizens such opportunities for personal freedom , pros
perity and advancement as no other offers. Hence both
gratitude and self-interest should move every citizen to
take an interest in politics , that this great business , which
is his in every sense , may be efficiently and uprightly car-
vied on.
Politics is corrupt only when and where honest and
able citizens neglect to attend to their business. Yet hun
dreds of thousands think themselves more respectable be
cause they neglect their business ! The shame and the
folly of it !
May the day soon come when the American citizen who
docs not take an interest in politics the American citizen
who neglects his country will be classed with the mar ?
who neglects his family. Chicago Inter Ocean.
BUSINESS WOMAN'S HOME.
I HERE is something radically wrong with the
[ woman who never longs for a little home of
iher own. I know some brilliantly successful
business women who live the year round in
hotels because they declare they cannot shoul-
| der household responsibilities , but they are al
ways more or less restless , lonely and pettish.
It is very nice to be able to touch a button and know that
a small uniformed boy is running to do your bidding , but
there will come moments when you wonder why every
thing tastes alike on the handsomely appointed table , and
you wish you might cook just one little meal , or know the
joy of buying the pretty furniture you see in the shop win
dows , or lay in a supply of dainty linen. Furthermore , 3011
do not have to be married to feel these yearnings. It is
the little touch of femininity and gentle womanhood that
you do not want to crush out of your life.
But you say , "What has this to do with my succeeding
in business ? " Do you expect to remain always in busi
ness ? Are there not moments when you look forward to
having a borne of your own , financed by some good man
and managed competently by yourself ?
Then let me give you a tip. Don't lose your grip on
liome life and home interests. Keep your hand , if ever so
lightly , on tho domestic plow , or you will forget how to
steer it. Woman's Home Companion.
WEALTH OF ALASKA.
NOME CITY AS SEEN FttOM SNAKE IlIVEK.
Word conio.s from Nome that the gold output of that locality for 100. >
will be $10,000,000. This breaks all previous records for that district. Its
yield in 190-1 , which was its highest up to that time , was $7,000,000. Nome
is only one of Alaska's gold-producing districts , but it is the most prolific
of them. Extending along the valloy of the Yukon and its tributaries fron\
the Canadian boundary westward to P.ering Strait there is a string of gold
camps Eagle , Circle. Fairbanks , Kampart. Council City , Nome , and others.
All of them are increasing their contributions .to the country's annual gold
yield. For 1005 Alaska's entire gold production will be about ? 15,000,000.
And this is only the beginning.
arm ? Aha ! Truly ! You are not thn
first to admire it. And a log to match ,
monsieur ; a leg that is veritably su
perb ! But I do not praise them. I.
There is no need. These anus and
these logs have been immortalized.
They belong to art ; they are conse
crated to art at any sacrifice- per
sonal convenience. Monsieur , it was I
I who posed to Monsieur Meis-
soniev for 'The Brawl ! * "
Bees' Morals Corrupted.
On landing in Australia , says a
writer in Nature Notes , our hive of
bees industriously collected quantities
of honey. Finding , however , that
there was no winter such as we have
in England , it gave up laying in stores.
Its morals are corrupted , for it is no
longer "busy , " and leads a butterfly
life.
Asliert n.ti l AiiMivcreil.
"Dessert , " said he. "I hope is pie. ' '
His manner made her smart.
She was not cross , but her reply
Was "just a little tart. "
Philadelphia Press.
Too Many Vindication. * .
A man named Bill was always get-
iing in trouble. "But , " he would say
to his friends afterward , "I was vin
dicated. Wicked men said cruel things
about mo. but I was vindicated. " After
this had happened seven or eight times
an old fellow said : "Bill. I quit you
right here. You have been vindicated
nioro often than becomes an honest
man. " Atchison Globe.
Arre.tlcil tlie Actors.
The law against smoking in theaters
in tho City of Mexico is so strictly en
forced that recently the entire person
nel of the actors in the licnacimiento
Theater were marched oil to the com-
isaria and fined at the close of the
performance for smoking on the stage
in an act of "Zaza. "
Confidence.
"The new brother appears iiko an
oily sort of person , don't you think ? "
"Yes. Seems to think he'll slip past
St. Peter without any trouole. "
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Senate convened at noon Monday ,
and prayer was offered by Edward Ever
ett Hale , the chaplain. Sixty-eight Sen
ators responded to tbe roll call , and the
oath was administered to the new mem
bers. Senators Allison and Morgan were
appointed to wait upon the President ,
with a similar committee from the
House. Resolutions in memory of the
late Senator Platt of Connecticut were
passed. The House convened at 12
o'clock , and Joseph G. Cannon of Illinois
was re-elected Speaker , over John Sharp
Williams of Mississippi. Oflicers of the
House were sworn in and the oath ad
ministered to new members. The rules
of the Fifty-eighth Congress were adopt
ed , and seals were assigned by lot. Many
important bills were introduced.
" " "
The Senate gave practically all of its
time Tuesday to listening to the reading
of the President's message. The docu
ment received the closest attention. Pres
ident Roosevelt's message receive' ! the
attention of the House for two and a
half hours , and it was applauded. The
House received and ordered referred to
one of the regular election committees
a protest from the Fifth Congressional
District of Illinois stating that Anthony
Michalek , who was sworn in as a mem
ber of the House from that district , is
not a citizen of the United States. Up
on motion of Mr. Goldfogle of Ne\v York
n resolution was read expressing the
sympathy of the American people for the
distressed Russian Jews.
The Senate began business in earnest
Wednesday , several hundred bills and
resolutions being introduced. A resolu
tion directing the committee on judi
ciary to inquire into and report wheth
er under the Constitution Congress has
authority to supervise marine , fire and
life insurance was adopted without de
bate. At Ir.jG p. m. the Senate Avent
into executive session , confirming the
appointments of Secretary of State Root ,
Assistant Secretary of Stale Bacon and
Justice of the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia McComas. The
House , in committee of the whole , con
sidered the emergency appropriation bill
for the Panama canal , after the com
mittee on rules had prepared a rule to
force consideration of the measure , and
providing for unlimited debate.
The Senate on Thursday adopted a
resolution directing the committee on
naval affairs to investigate the condition
of the old frigate Constitution with a
'view to its repair. Mr. Tillman's reso
lution calling on the Secretary of the
Treasury for information as to campaign
contributions by national banks was
adopted. In executive session the nomi
nations of Charles J. Bonaparte , Secre
tary of the Navy , and Truman H. New-
bcrry of Michigan , assistant Secretary
of the Navy , were confirmed. The ex-
trodition treaty Avith Denmark was rati
fied. The House passed the Panama
canal appropriation bill without opposi
tion after adopting ait amendment by Mr.
Bonynge of Colorado cutting the amount
from $10,500,000 to $11,000,000 and
defeating amendments by Mr. Williams
of Mississippi limiting the appropriation
to $ G..S5Sjj : : : { and by Mr. Prince of Illi
nois fixing the sum at $10,000,000. An
amendment by Mr. Williams striking out
the bonding feature of the bill under
which a tax disability against the pro
posed bonds is removed was defeated ,
152 to 107. An amendment by Mr. Bur
gess of Texas giving the Secretary of
War authority to fortify the canal at
each terminal also was lost. An amend
ment by Mr. Mann of Illinois requiring
detailed statements of canal expendi
tures and estimates to be furnished to
Congress at each regular session and
restricting all expenditures to money ap
propriated by Congress was adopted.
Both houses adjourned until Monday.
Xalionnl Capital Xotc.s.
Senator Kittredgc presented to the
President the other day eighty members
of the South Dakota Press Association.
Secretary Bonaparte has sent to the
Speaker of the House an urgency defi
ciency bill calling for $1,000,000 for the
n-ivy.
Bills wore introduced in the House by
Mr. Smith of Illinois for 1-cent postage
and by Mr. Munlock of Kansas creating
; i commission to investigate railway cap
italization.
Senator Boveridi o introduced a hill
providing joint statehood for Oklahoma
nml Indian Territory and for New Mex
ico and Arizona. The bill is identical
with the one introduced in the House by
Lleprcseatative Hamilton of Michigan.
Captain Frank Frantz. who recently
ivas nominated to be Governor of Okla-
lioma Territory , has issued a statement
ibjecting to the incorporation of a pro
hibition .chi use hi the measure providing
statehood for Oklahoma and the Indian
IVrritory.
Representative Morrell of Pennsylva
nia introduced a bill providing that all
; icrsons desiring to operate automobiles
[ Kissing from one State to another must
ibtain a license granted after an ex-
; mination under the direction of the in-
erstate commerce commission.
Commander Cameron McR. Winslow ,
"onnerly naval aid to the President and
low in the command of the Mayflower ,
'as been selected to command the new
protected cruiser Charleston , which will
: o to the Pacific station early in the
fear to become the flagship of the Pa
cific squadron , taking the place of the
Jhicago. which is badly in need of re-
lairs.
Representative Hardwick of Georgia.
eintrodnccd a joint resolution declaring
; lmt it is the policy of the United States
o grant independence to the Philippines
is soon as a stable government is estab-
ished in the islands.
Odds and Buds.
The paying out of the second half of
he claims of revolutionary soldiers of
Juba began Dec. 4.
Mark Pitman , head master of the
Jhoate school , founded by him in 1893
it Wallingford , Conn. , d'ed , aged 75
ears.
WOMEN GAMBLERS OF YORE.
Lord Kenyan' * Threat Proof Prac
ticeVm Common 10O Years AJJO.
However one may deplore the pres
ent craze for gambling among women ,
it can at least be urged in their favor
that they do not indulge their love of
cards to anything like the same extent
as did their ses a century ago , when
Lord Kenyon made his famous scath
ing comments from the bench and
threatened that any women convicted
before him of public gaming "should
cortainly exhibit themselves in .the pil
lory , though they should be the first
ladies in the land. "
Only a short time before his lord
ship made this severe threat three lead
ers of the world of fashion ladies of
high rank and moving in the most ex
ulted of social circles had ea'ch been
fined 50 for making their houses cen
ters of gambling for high stakes , and
it was stated at the time that there
were hundreds of other great ladies
whose drawing-rooms were nothing
less than gambling Infernos , where
tens of thousands of pounds were lost
and won in a single night and the
floors of which , when dawn broke ,
were strewn ankle deep with cards.
"There is scarcely a house of any
Importance , " wrote a chronicler of the
time , "the hostess of which has not
her faro bank , and where the world
of fashion , including royal princes and
princesses , does not congregate daily
to play for the highest stakes. It la
notorious that many of these ladies
adJ. ten of thousands of pounds yearly
to their pin money in this discredit
able fashion. "
Nor was this encouragencent of
gambling by women any innovation ,
for a couple of generations earlier It
was a common thing for ladies of
rank to open gambling-houses for the
entertainment of their aristocratic
friends and the plenishing of their own
*
purses and this they did in defiance
of the law. Tit-Bits.
Knnsn.1 .Lazy
The laziest man in Kansas was sit
ting under a tree pufling his corncob.
"Why don't you start cutting down
your corn ? " interrogated the strange *
on the slate-colored mule.
"Too much trouble , pard , " drawled
the lazy man. "I'm waiting for a
storm to come and blow it down. "
"Well , why don't you chop up soma
wood ? "
"What's the use ? Got a horseshoe
stuck in the woodpile so the lightning
will strike it and make kindling wood
out of it all in a second. "
"Then why don't you prepare din.
ner ? "
"Too tired. Wait till a cyclone
comes along and blows all the feathers
off the chickens , so I won't have ta
bother picking them. "
Mm. IVlnslow'a Boomno BTZOT for CbUdrm
; softens th gams , redacts inflammation. * 1 >
tothlnc , euros wind colic. 2i o nts a bottl * .
i
The JumpingExplained. .
Gagley I was just watching Mark-
ley while he was talking to you. It
was so funny the way he kept jumping
up and down. What did he remind
you of ?
Eorroughs Of the $10 I've owed
him since last winter. Philadelphia
Press.
Seem * to He "Wanted.
"I notice that Hall Caine is cred
ited with saying that he does all his
best thinking in church. "
"Wonder where he utilizes it ? "
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
A Positive
CURE
Ely's Cream Balm
is quickly absorbed.
Gives Relief at Once.
It cleanses , soothes !
heals and protects j
the diseased mem-i
brane. " It cures Ca- [
tarrh and drives
away a Cold in tho I
Head quickly. Re-1
stores tho Senses of '
Tasto and Smell. Full size 50 cts. , at Drug
gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by maiL
Ely Brothers , 56 Warren Street. New York.
Positively cared by
these Little Pills. |
They also relieve Dl *
tress from. Dyspepsia , In
digestion and Too Hearty
EatlBg. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness , Nausea.
Drowsiness. Bod Tasta
In tlio Jloutn , Coated
Tongue. Pain In tae Side.
TORPID UVEE.
regulate tie Bcmels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE , SHALL PRICE.
GARTERS Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
IIXED FARIMN6
WHEAT
RAISING
RANCHING
Three great pursuits have again
shown vronderful results onthe
FBEE HOMESTEAD LAHDS GF , ti
WESTERN G&EiABA
Magnificent climate. Farmers plowing fn their
shirt sleeves in the middle of November.
"All ire bound to t * nor * than pleutd with the Snil remit *
of th put Kuan's har U. " Extract.
Coal-wood , water , hay in abundance ; schools ,
churches , markets convenient. THIS IS
THE ERA OF * fiJl.OOVHEAT. .
Apply to-into matlon to Sope-iat ad ntof Immizr * .
Lion , O Uwa. Ctuiadb. or to K T. Holm315 Jackioa
St. . StvPaul , M niu. nd J. 1L MdLachUn. Box 1M , 1
. So.Dai.oUi , Authorized Uoramment Acactt
wlir jo * MW tills adt