Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 05, 1920, Page 4, Image 4

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The Omaha bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEX PUBUSHWO COMPANY.. ,.
NEL80N B. UPDUS. Publisher.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tht asiocistea rrta, of wbleti The Bm II amber. U a
elasttot eaUUod to lb dm for jn(csttoe of ill sees dtrateher
endued to U er not otlunrlte ndl'4 In this turn. a4 tin the
Iml atwt pabushoj hertla. All rtstsi of puMluUoo of ear special
dl && ore also mened. , j
BEE TELEPHONES v
SSS.JSJT pJ Tyler 1000
For NIfht Coll After 10 P. M.i
Uttorttl Derartnent ........... Trior 10001
2lKUltlon Doperuaent Trior 10011
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OFFICES OF THE BEE
Hsln Office: 171b and rinii
18 Boott BL I lomh aide 1311 R Si
Out-sf-Tmrn Offlcooi
Ms rtftb An. I ttfcihJrxto 1311 O at
Stout Bide I firli Francs 410 Rut St. Hooort
Ooanell Blaffi
lfo Tort .
CUomo
The Bee's Platform
1. Now Union Paasenfjer Station.' 1
2. Continued improvement of the Ne
braska Highways,. Including the pave-
-,. mant of Main The rourjhf area leading
into Omaha with a Brick Surface.
3. A hrt, low-rate Waterway from the
Core Belt to the Atlantic Ocean.
t. Home Rule Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager for on of Government.
THE REAL RATE PROBLEM.
Proceedings at Lincoln, which are generally
' being duplicated or will tie throughout the union,
indicate the intricacies jbf the rate problem now '
confronting the railroailr. "To bring the intra-,
late rates onto a parit with" interstate requires
the action of the state immisions, and to them
' the roads rriust preseijjt their pleas, supported
by proof' that 'the jryjease asked is justified.
There is af present a jide discrepancy between
the charges on local ajhd through business, and
the question o be dcctled is 'whether any justi
fication exists for the continuance' of the situa
tion. One interesting delight is thrown on the
matter by action just fiijgun in Minnesota, where
ther state railway commission is seeking toi re
vive a suit relative to; former rates which were
suspended by the couriji. Among other items in
this is the 2-eent farej; , '
' Local shippers are intensely interested in all
this, for the outeotnejwill affect them most vi
tally. It is not enoi-jh for the roads to-come
.Jnto court and show ijhat a great divergence ex
istsV bftwecii through and local rates. Under all
rulings so far laid down, they must establish
that the charges are not compensatory. When
the Interstate Commerce commissionmade its
recent order, granting a general increase on
through business, it bad in mind the expense of
operation, and took such action as would ensure
the roads a reasonable revenue, based solely
on through business. , Operating expenses
naturally include maintenance of local serv
ice, and if this already is compensated for
under the new general order, it may be ques
tioned if the generalise proposed on intrastate
business is entirely warranted.
The movement revives interest in the plank
of the republican platform of 1912, which pro
posed a unified federal control of all. rates. If
that plan had been adopted, it would now be
possible through the-regional rate-making bodies
to establish railroad tariffs that would bear
something of a proportional relation. As it is,
with the revenue of he roads secured tinder the
general order, a similar advance on local busi
ness is certain to produce an excess, and a fur
ther readjustment ill be needed , in order to
get the transportation charges on a proper basis.
The complexity of the problem leads to the
belief that it is not going to be answered im
mediately, or by rule-of-thumb methods. Gen
eral reforms can not be accomplished while so
, many agencies, all more or less detached and
, working frequently; at cross purposes, have con
trol. Before the transportation industry of the
United States is on a satisfactory footing, the
plan of the Tepublicans, so roundly denounced
by the democrats, orj something along the same
line will have to be adopted.
J
Place fat Class Distinctions.
Senator Harding
his declaration that
jhas struck a high note in
I the republican party does.
not intend to appeal jo farmers or wage workers
because of their greater numbers, but "we wish
the confidence of afl." It is on this basis the
republican party hai always approached the
voters. The party or cause that seeks temporary,
success by exalting one division of the citizen
ship above another! is certainly doomed to fail
ure. Prosperity that Is not shared in by all is not
prosperity; laws that: do not operate equally and
give the same chance to everybody are not just
lavs; a government that undertakes to dis
tinguish between its citiiens is an unsound gov
ernment. These truisms apply to the present
campaign, just as tbey do to all others. Efforts
are being made, and wilt be made, to array one
group of citizens against another; promises of
special favors or advantages are being made,
add pleas resting on clan differences have been
and will be heard. This sort of campaign effort
has Usually" been left to the socialists, or other
proponents of special panaceas. It is no part
of the republican program, for the party that has
stood for human liberty from the first is not yet
ready to cut away? 'from its solid anchorage of
truth and frstice. j A square deal and an ven
break is all it proves.
i ' '
' Camdeif Cornea Across.
'.Walt Whitman's old home town has
learned to honor tim. For years after, his.
death not a single topy of his works was per
mitted in the Camden library. Forty years ago
his "Blades of Grass," extremely indelicate and
very frank, was kept under lock and key in
many libraries ateng with Balzac's "Droll
Tales," Bob Irrfjersoll's "Lectures," the
"Decameron" and other tabooej works. Not
until Emerson pitised the book did it get
what we may call social recognition, or was it
allowed on the cf en shelves of most public
libraries. ...
Now Camden, J., has bought the house fa
which Walt resided, and will use it as a Whit
man museum." -1 ' ' .'
Easy Money in Soston,
If there is anything men go to with en
thusiastic abandon jit is easy money, and since
the shrewd Porui tamed how to make 400 per
cent by accumulating foreign money at a big
discount, sending it to the countries Which issued
ft, and exchanging t for international reply cou
pons at normal rates, which were payable in
American money, le has had the attention of
financiers the country over.
: la three in on fii In had Boston crazy, the
fraud fefieral deteiqtives running around in cir
cles, and the whole country wondering how he
did it. . Then came a run from his patrons, who
were paid SO per cent profit with an ease that
made bankers turn green with envy.
And Ponzi is still "doing business" with mil
lions to his credit. He bagged an idea, set it to
work, and ever since has been singing: "My
Lord, how the money rolls in," while would-be
competitors wonder how he beat them to it.
The Cruelty That Corrodes.
"I want it understood that Charlie did not
beat nie," says Mrs. Chaplin, discussing her suit
for divorce on the ground of mental cruelty,
"buthe caused me to suffer great mental anguish
by his neglect. I never knew where he was
or whatshe was doing. He married me, and as
soon as he married me he forgot all about me."
Cruelty indeed, refined and intensified. Mere
physical hurts are not to be compared with in-
juries to peace of mind and that composure
which is essential to mental health. The man
who slaps his wife, jerks and twists her arm,
knocks her down, or kicks her. is a brute unfit
for entrance into any home. Knowledge of his
conduct bars him from respectable society, and
puts him in universal contempt.
But there is a worse kind of mistreatment.
It is that which humiliates, distresses, and pun
ishes the mind of a wife. Women are hurt
worse by words, by unhappy facts that disturb
and distract their souls than by bruises of the
flesh. And yet, such is human nature" that many
a wife whowould leave her husband instantly
after ta physical blow, worries along under men
tal insults that all but drives her mad.
Let it be said also, that men are not the
only creatures who cause mental anguish. A
crupl woman can inflict agonies upon a man
who loves her. She can torture him beyond
all endurance by her words, her conduct, even
her glances, with never a physical touch. Many
a man has been nailed to the cross of an un
happy matrimonial alliance, whose sufferings
have made life" itself a hell for him. Cruelty
is not a trait of men alone. It degrades both
sexes.
Modern life, especially among those whose
circumstances,- permit indulgence and ex
travagance, and provide abundant leisure which
degenerates into idleness and discontent, is
prolific of marital troubles. The busy life is the
only safe one for either sex. When pleasure
becomes the ruling passion, and work is re
garded as unnecessary, when economy is aban
doned and duty ceases to press, the ties of home
and love and honor too often weaken. Then
comes domestic tragedy, and with it the suffer
ing by the innocent party that brings a great
and courageous soul to the heights of self-sacrifice
and nobility.
White's Irreverence1 for the League.
A a practical politician George White, now
the personal representative of Governor Cox,
has a canny belief that the people of the United
States are not enamored of a league of' nations
through which one citizen of this country ap
pointed by the president cart force us into war
or any other sort of political enterprise in
Europe by voting for it as America's representa
tive on the council of the league.
George has dwelt for many years under the
influence of Marietta college, a famous institu
tion thoroughly in accord with New England
ideas, in a community founded by New England
veterans of the Revolutionary War, and still
permeated with deep reverence for the original
principles of the Republic of Washington, of
the Declaration of Independence, and of thev
Constitution.
That is why George told astonished eastern
apostles of Wilson's heresies that "Ohio is not
thinking much about the League." It isn't; and
what little it does think about it is not of a
wholly complimentary nature. Marietta and
Ohio have not yet. learned to "think, interna
tionally," being kept sufficiently busy intel
lectually trying to solve the home problems of
"prosperity," and incidentally dodge the busi
ness penalties accruing from a presidential policy
that keeps us out of peace.
The New York Times and the World do not
like White's irreverent attitude toward the pres
ident's pet hobby, and have taken to lecturing
him. They'd better let him alone. We know
him and his disposition. As chairman of the
national democratic committee he is a man of
authority, and if he takes a notjon to discipline
a few New York newspapers caught in the
forks of Article X they'll not like it. A demo
cratic chairman who goes to Washington with
out craving permission to bow the knee at the
White House altar is not a person to monkey
with.
' An Ancient Plant.
The pedigree of asparagus is the subject of
a paragraph in an exchange, which remarks that
it was cultivated in Rome 200 years B. C. and
quotes Pliny as saying there was in his day a
variety of Which three stalks weighed a pound.
Whether its quality as a food ranked with that
of the Nebraska product" of the present time
may well be doubted, for epicures the country
over bow in ecstasy over the delicious Ne
braska growth. The soil here seems to add a
flavor not found in the product of other states.
In the Seventeenth century sparrow grass
was the common name, for the plant, but for a
hundred years that corruption of the word has
been out of vogue.
An Ohio Chairman's Scandals.
George White's Scandals of 1920. Globe
Theater, B'way and 46th St. Adv.
i Among them being, presumably, George's
naive remark: "Frankly, we don't know much
about the League of Nations in Ohio;" Cox's
White House side-step, with progressive varia
tions; the Dayton News' 1916 German editor
ials; the dry wetness of the democratic candi
date, and other political head-liners. A new one
coming every week! , r
"Snappy" parties have caused a scandal at
the University of Illinois. The only novelty is
that it is professors and not students who are
involved. " v
Another encouraging sign is that buyers are
commencing to ask "How much is it?" instead
of saying "Wrap it up."
Tyrus Raymond Cobb is going to "line 'em
out" for Cox and Roosevelt. Another sign that
Ty' is slipping.
New York democrats still declare in favor
of 2-point-75. Why put a limit on wishing?
"Home brews"
home broils.
is very potent in starting
Where dqe the democratic oarty stand'
THE BEE: OMAHA THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1920.
A Line 0' Type or Two
How to mo Liu. M Mm uIm fill hora thy mvt.
THE NIGHT TRAIL.
On misty nights, while raring o'er the hills,
I scan the sky for faint Polaris' light.
If Dipper's pointers show the place ft fills,
Full reassured I set my course aright.
If I could rearrange celestial things, i .
Could shift the fires in night's inverted bowl,
I'd pluck great Sirius from where it swings
And pivot it above the whitened Pole.
This matchless Jewel of the firmament
Would burn thro" mists that quench Polaris'
gleam.
Its splendor aeons hence will be unspent....
The camp Are embers die while thus I dream.
C. W. A.
THE original Bluebeard, -whom legend has
slandered, did not keep a dairy. The modern
Bluebeard keeps a record of his armours. Cer
tain items in the diary ot the frenchman Lan
i dru touch the imagination those which show
the purchase of round-trip tickets for himself
and single tickets for his wives.
MR. HARDING accuses the democrats of
"softpedaling" the league issue. Does he refer to
"Peace, progress, prosperity?" PPP, or ppp,
indicates pianissimo, which in the popular mind
is associated with the soft pedal.
SIR THOMAS believes the Shamrock would
have slipped more easily through the wave if
he had given her a coat ot blackieaci
The next
Shamrock, we understand, is . to be built of
slippery elm.
A TENNESSEE IDYLL.
(From the Houston County News.)
On Sunday, a day when summer showers
and open skies made a bewitching pano
rama of clouds and sunshine. floating over
pretty landscapes, symbolical of a fruitful
and gracious life, just at beauteous eventide
but before the shades of night began to fall,
occurred a pretty wedding at the home of
Mr. and Mrs W. C. Pegrim, when their
charming and accomplished daughter. Miss
Leta Mali was given in marriage to Mr.
Charley Banks.
MR. HERRICK, according tos the Minne
apolis Tribune, was received at the Hotel De
ville, which traveled Americans will remember
as one of the. best bostelries in La Belle
France. , t
The Dear Dead Days. j
Sir: I have just returned from Kentucky
and deplore the fact that every Kentuckian
hasn't a still in his backyard. In fact, I record
the awful Incident that I swapped sodas with
the gents in the Blue Grass' state. And speak
ing of Kentucky, reminds me to tell you that,
in the Good Old Days, a speaker of note, address
ing a Kentucky audience, inquired if anybody In
the crowd had a pint flash. There wasn't a
move in the room. Suddenly an old timer stood
up and said: "Will a quart flask do?" "Yes,"
replied the speaker. Whereupon the entire au
dience rose. BISH.
THIS Parley Christeneen parlevoos like a
poisson frit. You may never have heard one
speak, but as the phrase has been in use for
centuries it must convey some shade of meaning.
A PUCKERING STRING MIGHT SERVE.
Sir: The young lady who listens to dicta
phone cylinders went shopping for a nifty bath
ing suit. She returned vehemently asserting
that rather than pay $75 for a suit she would
go without. How can we keep them up? SIG.
lays of the lake
xiii.
sweet
love me
, as the gentle tide
breaks softly .
on the shore
I would not have you
love me less
you could not love me
more
caress me
as the rippling waves
kiss once 1
then fall
. to sleep
sweet r' , .''"
love me
as the tranquil bfue
tryst with the sands
doth keep
o love me as the setting sun
rests softly on the sea
i
and crimsons all the turquoise wave
so blushing smile
on me
when twilight fades
In purple haze
upon the opal deep
caress me
as the rippling wave
v still whisper
, in their sleep
then lov me as the amber rnon
makes magic through the trees
and silent falls
on raptured sands .
cooled by the hushed
' sea breeze
sweet love me as the gentle tide
breaks softly
on the shore
I would not have you .
love me less ' '
you could not love me mare
rlquarius
WE believe we have recorded the fact, but
if not let it be set down that the specialty of
Mr. Amorous, of the Hare's Motors company,
is chummy roadsters. . .
BY changing a word the compositor some
times makes an item more subtle than is neces
sary. Let us run this again and see whether
we can get it straight:
TES, WE KNOW IT, WHAT OF ITT
(From the Washington Times.)
Do you know thaf. During the middle
ages and in the renaissance period brides
were crimson to the exclusion of all other
colors?
"ASSERT Man Suicided by Laying on
Track." Manitoba Free Press.
"In Nashua five women were kept In a cell
k. . . without even a mattress to lay upon.
New Republic.
Nevertheless, the teaching of grammar in
the public schools should.be continued for a
while at least.
WONDER WHAT A SMALL TOWN
x SOCRATES THINKS ABOUT.
(Correspondence Marion Republican.)
Ezra Carter was heard soliloquizing re
cently, and the impression gained by the
ibne who heard htm was ample evidence
that his mind was inextricably conglomer
ated on the question of Woman's Rights.
SOUTH CHICAGO'S star cherry picker
averaged 121 quarts per day. His name is D.
Canter, and you iave one guess as to what he
does with the cherries.
"We Were Crowded In the Pullman."
. Sir: The Pullman company sold a lower
which I had already bought to a couple of
young ladles. Now, a berth is crowded
enough with two persons in it. let alone
three. SIM NIC.
TAKE your choice. Both examples of climax
have been criticised:
"Ready to serve ourselves, humanity and
God."
"For God, for country, and for Yale."
PLASTER CASTE.
(From the Barry Adage. V
Our school building is being replastered -'
by that prince of the trowel, Fred Glllings.
FRIENDS, the flood of bunk is rising fast.
Provide yourself with a mental life preserver
and book your passage on the Ark.
"Gov. Edwards: 'Westward hoi' Mr. Bryan:
'Westward H20.' "Detroit News.
WHO, sups with Lenin should have a long
spoon. . B. L. T.
Mutual Aid,
If Europe can get in shape to entertain
American tourists the financial stress over there
can be quickly relieved as the tourists are re
lieved. Savannah News.
Democratic Dogma.
The democrats also believe in party rule
but one m$n constitutes that party. Boston
i
Tnoiiru
water and hold on to it. Since there
is to be an effort to get the water
out of the tissues an effort should
fir?t be made to lessen the saltiness
of the tissues. Men who wi-ite about
canr.ibals say these people recognise
certain people t,s being saltier than
others. Some cannibals pick out a
salty fellow to eat just an some of
us prefer a salty herring.
Ordinary food cooked wit hout any
salt will contain about 1'i grains of
salt in the day's food. Even baJly
damaged kidneys can get rid of that
amount of salt without the help
given by th Rkin. Persons with
HiiSht's disc and drop?y should
rat no salt me t or -salt winter fish.
Thc-lr bread should be cooked with
out Fait, and their Jtmtter should be
um-alted. No salt shoul fl be used
in cooking and the use oil table salt
should be forbidden. Since the
principal desire for salt li i as a con
diment rather than a fond, a good
deal of spices, lemon Julo e, vinegar
and sugar should be us ?d in its
stead.
How to Keep Well
By DR. W. A. EVANS
Quootloao conceralaa hygloao, oonlto
tion and prevention of diieue, oub
mittod to Dr. Evans by roadoro ol Tho
Boo, will bo answorod poroonally, sub
ject to propor limitation, wboro . a
stamped, addressed envelops is en
closed. Dr. Evans will not make
diagnosis or proscribe for individual
diseases. Address letters in cars of
The Bee.
' Copyright, 1V20, by Dr. W. A. Evans.
MORE ABOUT BRIGHT'S DIS
EASE. There are a great many diet cures
for Bright's disease. In eddltion to
those with some standing anions
physicians, nearly every man who
has had Bright's disease for 10 years
or more has faith in some diet cure,
and many of them arc generous
enpugh to want to tell their fellow
man about it.
Whenever any disease gets a rep
Many Are UencAto d.
Undecided writes: "I ait i 19 years
old and have been taking the cure
for consumption for about t a year.
My doctor says I am imprl iving and
will be able to go home within a
fow months, but I read in your
paper that if a young adult gets t. b.
he always dies before retv ming 25.
If this fs ko, would it not be better
if I went home now, thertil y saving
my parents a lot of expena a as long
as there seems to be no exe eptlon to
the rule?"
It E PLY.
You misunderstood what I wrote.
I did not say that young consump
tives always die before re :hing 26.
On the other hand, a largi propor
tion of young consumptives get well
their disease is arrested.
utation for severity, which it does
not deserve, a crop or cures in;
evltably springs up. Dr. B. gives in
the 1920 Year Book of Medicine his
opinions on the dietetio treatment of
tho different kinds or Bright s dis
ease. With acute Bright's disease a man
should begin treatment by drinking
one quart of' sweet milk a day and
taking no other food or drink. He
can flavor his milk with a little tea
or coffee and drink a little out of a
spoon every three hours. In about
three days he should have increased
this to two and a half quarts. Of
this 10 ounces should be taken every
three hours. If he prefers he can
tako his milk as skimmed milk or
clabber. If everything goes well
aftei a few days reduce the milk to
two quarts and later to one and one
half quarts, and add three ounces
of biscuit and three ounces of sugar.
After the acute 6tage has passed
gradually lessen the milk and add a
smalj quantity of meat. This should
bo well cooked. Rare meats are not
allowed, nor is it safe to eat "high"
meats or those which have been
held until they have developed con
siderable "flavor." .As the kidneys
get into better condition consider
able latitude in diet is allowable.
Once a man has started to diet
for acute Bright's disease he is
liable to stick to his limited bill of
fare too long. In Bright's disease
wltli dropsy it is advisable to use a
salt-free diet. When too much salt
is eaten sonfe of it accumulates in
the tissues. Salty tissues pick up
Always Stands Hltche d.
Whatever else may be sa id about
Vice President Marshall, nol ody can
properly accuse him of havl ng mag
nified his office Dallas Nev is.
K. M. A.
A first-class Church
School for boys of good
character.
For catalog address
Col. Henry Drummond
The Kearney
Military Academy
Kearney, Neb.
Here's
fish
If
1 WA
h oa
, TH.
2 jjjll
ODD BITS OF INFORMATION.
The yearly milk bill at one of the
principal London hospitals now
amounts to-$S0, 000 as compared
with 125,000 before the war.
A cablegram received from Minis
ter McGoodwin Caracas, June 12,
1920, states that the "Venezuelan gov
ernment has granted a oontract to
an American citizen for the construc
tion of an eloctrlo railway from San
Kelix, on the Orinoco river, to the
C.uaslpatl gold fields, as veil as the
rental of the Caronl river falls to
furnish the necessary hydroelectric
power.
When William B. Maxey of Gardi
ner, Me., was a boy he put $14.06 in
the Gardiner Savings Institution. It
amounts now to $157.08 and Mr. Yax
ey is thinking of turnng tt ovev to
the city to be left at compound In
terest for a long term of years. A
state bank examiner has figured that
M"5"M"55--"J-W-M""'-
! Right Now j
is the time to have your win
ter garments put in shape to
wear.
Let us have them during
August, when we can take
plenty of time and pains with
them.
. We put new linings in coats
or overcoats, ut on velvet
collars and new buttons, make
new edges on sleeves and bot
toms of trousers, put in new
pockets, etc.
Send them now and be prepared.
77,,
Pantorium
"Good Cleaners and
ISIS Jonos St. Phone
South Side: 4708 South
Phono So. 1283.
GUY LIGGETT, President.
OMAHA
PRINTING
COMPANY
smesns
unmmms
UHariB
hov v Joes
star y really sfeied
VE CLAMBERED down.
3 JH ROUGH HEAVY thickets.
0 0 0
tND WE rowed the boat. ...
o o o
C lUT TO a rocky ledge.
0 0 0
V WERE BLACK bass bidet.
T HEN JOE let out a roar.
0 o o '
F OR HIS cigar box.
O O 0
H AD FISH lines In It
O O 0
It I8TEAD OF smokes.
0 0 0
A ND HE refused with icern.
O O 0
0 UR CIGARETTES.
0 0 0
H B SAID they were npL-
0 0 0
E,T rEN FIT for batt.
'000
H TO HAVE a man's smoke.
0 0 0
01 I NOTHING.
00
A ND FOR an boar.
0 o o
H E GOT nothing.
0 0 0
N JT EVEN a bite.
0 0
W HILE WE pulled 'em la. .
o o o -Al
. ' LAST h grunted.
a a o
IMME A cigarette."
0 0 0
Af 10 IT Jut happened,
0 o
HI I LUCK changed then.
.oo
SO i NOW Joe swears.
00
TH 1AT THOSE cigarettes.
0 0 0
Wl IRE 80 blamed good.
. - ,'
Ht u BAITED a hook.
O ' -O ! 0
Wl TH ONE of them.
a o o
AN J CAUGHT a whale.
PA RTICULAR FISH, be sas.
'
HII USELF AMONG them. ,
. o r o o '
E JUST the sort
IT' THEY satisfy.
so
in 604 years at Compou id interest
this 1157.03 would amount to $41.
144 692.2S, or about 10,538 times the
variation of Gardiner.
A
-'Xtnetfcan in nlmc
and ownership "
but worldwide in ft
matdUess siijjremacy;
itlieiTiiamliit
' cuisite small qrands ,
just; received .J
Htihesipriced-hiahest pitised
J '-
1513 Douglas Street
The Art and Music Store
Dyers"
Doug. 063
24th
St.
Phone Douglas 2793
umot
smiim
c TifP
at
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COMMERCIAL PRINTERS LITHOGRAPHERS STEEIOIECMSOSSERS
LOOSC LCAf OCVICCS
With acknowledgments to K. C B.
MANY a cigar smoker will agree that
Chesterfields "satisfy.?' They let
you knovr you're smoking. And yet
they're mild mild and smooth. What's
the secret? Just knowing how to blend
choice Turkish and Domestic tobaccos
just irightt
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