Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 12, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1920.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY.
NELSON B. UPDIKE. Publlihtr.
111 I '
i MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FKa ' - Dm aikUk 4Ka U la m ... ii I. aw.
ehislnli enUUea u tae um for publication of til sews dispatches
credited to II or lot otherwise credited In this paper, and also Hie
wcsi nw BtiMitnati tmln. AU rlLU ct publication of out special
aiigwirim era aiao nwifa.
BEE TELEPHONES
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OFFICES OP THE BEE
Main Office: 17th and Fan an
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Tjlar lOOsli
nil N St.
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tHaiar Bid. I I'erla Franca 4M Bus St. Honors
The Bee's Platform
1. Nsw Union Passenger Station.
2. Continued improTomont of the No
braska Highways, iacludiag the pare
msjnt of Main Thoroughfares loading
into Omaha' with Brick Surface.
3. A short, Iowrato Waterway from tho
Corn Bolt to tho Atlantic Ocean.
J 1
4. Homo Rulo Charter for Omaha, with
City Manager form of Gorernmont.
A
WHO SCRAPPED THE LEAGUE?
At Des Moines and in Omaha, Senator Hard
ing definitely stated that the League of Nations
had been scrapped by President Wilson. This
has been challenged by the supporters of the
president, who apparently have forgotten the
history' of the covenant. It may refresh their
mtSnories to give them a few excerpts from the
- record. Conceding that Secretary Baker is cor
rect in his statements attributing the genesis of
5 .the league, idea to the League to Enforce Peace,
and admitting that the subject had drawn forth
considerable discussion for months before the
signiifg of the armistice, it yet remains true tht
the covenant, as presented to the senate, had
wt taken on its form until after, the president
hacl made his second visit to Paris. . '
i, When Mr. Wilson came back from the Paris
conference in February, 1919, he brought with
him a draft convention, containing the 'outline
of the League of Nations covenant. This he
submitted to a conference of members of the
foreign affairs committees of the house and sen
ate. It was then discussed and criticized, and
some modifications ( suggested. But it is well
to keep in mind the fact that the president knew
the complexion of congress had been changed
by the election of 191?, and the committees vwith
whom he advised would not be the same after
March 4, 1919. . However, he accepted their ap
proval as warrant to go ahead.
On March 4, the day the Sixty-fifth congress
expired by limitation, 37 senators subscribed to
a resolution, which was inserted in the Record,
setting Vorth:
j That it is the sense of the senate that,
while' it is their desire that the nations of'the
world should unite to promote peace and gen- '
eral disarmament, the constitution of the
League of Nations in the, form now proposed
to the peace conference should not now be
accepted by the United States.
That it is the sense of the senate that the
negotiations on the part of the United States
should immediately be directed to the utmost
expedition of the urgent business of negotiat-,
ing peace terms with Germany satisfactory to
the United States and the nations with whom
the, United States is associated in the war
against the German government, and that the
proposal for a League of Nations to insure
the permanent peace ot the world should then
be taken up for careful and serioiis consid
eration. This was ample notice to the president that
the senate was disinclined to ratify a treaty con
taining the covenant provision. He disregarded
the warning, seemingly satisfied he could force
through the senate acceptance of his plan. . His
answer to the 37. senators, who asked that the
covenant be separated from the treaty, was
given at the Metropolitan opera house in New
York on the evening of March 4, 1919, as he was
about to take ship for Parte to conclude the
negotiations. He said:
: When that treaty comes back gentlemen
on this side will find the covenant not only in
it, but so many threads of the treaty tied to
the covenant that you cannot dissect the cov-'
nant. from the treaty without destroying the.
whole vital structure.
It is clear from the record that Mr. Wilson
acted with deliberation in the matter. He tied
.the treaty and the covenant together, and in
sisted on having all or nothing. He knew that
the treaty without reservations would not be
ratified; he instructed his supporters to vote
against ratification with reservations. They car
ried out his orders, and the treaty was twice
sent down to defeat by democratic votes, cast'
under instructions from the White House.
It was scrapped because Woodrow Wilson
could not have his own way, regardless of con-
sequences. - (
Navy Triumph Over Fog.
An important contribution to the , science
of navigation was made last week,' when the
destroyer Semmes was easily navigated through
the Ambrose channel leading into New York
harbor under fog conditions. One of the vexa-
' tions of entrance to the great American port
has been the delay occasioned by fog. Many
a good ship has come to grief through attempt
ing to negotiate the passage when all aids to
navigation are obscured. Delay has been an
" expensive affliction to the shipping industry, but
it is now fairly overcome. A cable "has been
stretched over; a distance of 16 miles, covering
the dangerous course, and from it the passing
Ahip picks up signals ' that enable it to pro
ceed as. safely as if sailing in broad daylight.
; The successful tryout of the device marks an
other step in the elimination of natural hazards
supported by "those that go down to the sea
in ships."' It removes a menace from the path
of the sailor, and will greatly facilitate the prog
ress of trade, for it is hardly likely that other
harbors will neglect to provide the simple and
effective1 means thus made available. With har
bor fog conquered, the mariner may return to
i his other task of overcoming fog at sea, and
presently it will come to pass that ships will be
far safer to ride in than automobiles on a city
street. v : ' S .
' ' A Less Tight Little Isle.
, Consternation sits in the British House of
Lords, or at least among what is" known slangily
1 as the "beerage." The cloud of prohibition that
hangs, over the tight little island has no silver
lining for those who owe their'wealth to brew-,
ery or distillery stock. The question of prohibi
tion rests largely Tn the hands of the people
themselves, through local option elections. The
. bitterness of the contest, and the fear of certain
elements of being deprived of their nip is indi
cated by the attack on the American dry leader,
"Pussyfoot Johnson, by a mob at Reading.
Reports from the northern end of the Brit
ish island tell of impending local option elec
tions in almost every center. Edinburgh, as
well as Glasgow, will vote on the question of
"no license" before the first of the year. More
than 300 of the 1,200 local areas in Scotland are
already dry, and many more are expected in the
November municipal elections. -
Wet orators in Scotland are pointing to the
United States as a horrible example of the re
sults of shutting off traffic in alcohol. The high
cost of living, the sugar shortage and labor
troubles are all blamed on the lack of a wee
drop. The attempt to take advantage of the
remoteness of America and paint a distressing
picture of our condition under the dry amend
ment is evidence of the weak case of the wets
in Great Britain.
"Truth in Fabric" Legislation.
A campaign begun long ago, having for its
purpose the protection of the buying public
against fraud and deception by unscrupulous
manufacturers, is now being extended to include
woolen products in its scope. What is known
as a "truth in fabric" bill is before congress,
introduced in the house , by Representative
French of Idaho and in the senate by Senator
Capper of Kansas. Its object is to require that
goods made of wool be plainly branded to show
whether they consist of pure or virgin wool, of
"shoddy" or worked over wool, or of a mixture.
This measure has the support of the wool and
sheep growers of America, who are making a
vigorous campaign in its support.
One feature of our national life that is not
all creditable is that we have been compelled to
enact stringent legislation, and to maintain ex
tensive and expensive organizations to prevent
fraud in foodstuffs, and now we are about to
be required to extend this to wearing apparel.
The purpose of the law is good. Just as a
buyer of spices is entitled to know if the article
consists of pure spice, orjs a mixture of inferior
and often deleterious substances, slightly fla
vored with the genuine, so when one buys a
woolen fabric it ought to be made plain that he
is getting virgin wool. If he wants to pur
chase shoddy under its own name, the bargain
is his, and he ought to have the privilege. De
liberate deception, however, should be punish
able. Many years ago the dairymen succeeded in
getting oleomargarine on a basis where it could
not masquerade as butter. But . the trade in
oleo has prospered, and millions' buy jt today
under its true name. So jt may be with wool.
At any rate, it is unfair to everybody to have
shoddy sold as anything but shoddy. , Pure
wool is entitled to the protection asked.
LeRoy S. Estelle.
The death of LeRoy S. Estelle will bring
profound sorrow in a community where he
spent the larger part of his long and useful life.
He w'!l he missed from the bench, where he
served with such distinguished ability; his breth
ren of the bar will mourn him as a kindly, genial
companion, whose nature was to be helpful and
of service to 'all, and those who-met him as a
friend will realize how much that really meant.
Above all other considerations, Judge Estelle
will be missed because of the high quality of
citizenship he exemplified. His loyalty to Amer?
ican institutions was proven by his service as a.
boy in the Union ranks, and his deep devotion
to the country he then helped to defend never
wavered. As a pioneer he endured the hard
ships and vicissitudes of life on the frontier, but
he aided in bringing a splendid state and city
out of the wilderness. Through it all he was
supported by a sturdy belief in the doctrine of
liberty and justice secured under the laws of
the land, was a courageous upholder of the cause
of right, energetic in the assertion of those prin
ciples on which free government rests, and
guided by a conscientious regard for them in all
his ways. His long years on the bench were
the result of public confidence in his probity, and
his record there will be his monument.
A Line 0' Type or Two
Hsw ts the Lias, 1st ths quips fall wasro they nsr.
AULD LANG SYNE.
Tn Scotia ylnce men didna think
It was a crime to take a drink;
They werna selfish, soor nor sad,
I And thought that whisky wasna bad.
They gathered every noo and then
Wi" cronies who were rantln men, '
And owre a glass or twa they sang
Until the ancient rafters rang.
But noo the unca guid will light
To tak awa' a Scotchman's right
To doucely meet and raise a glass
Jn honor o' some bonnie lass.
If they succeed then hearts will bleed
In mony names ayont the Tweed,
Where drofithy chlols will aften pine
JTor cantie days o auld lantr syne. ,
THISTLEDOWN.
WHETHER Mr. Wilson offered or did not
offer the United States army and navy to Rou
mania and Serbia toiay be of academic im
portance; but it is nothing to worry about. By
the time the army and navy were ready to move
the troubles of Roumania and Serbia would be
over. . .
, WHAT? "PERSONALLY?"
(Oliver Madox Huelter, Corr, from Mexico.)
From my conversation with members of
the present administration I am personally
convinced, etc.
GADDER H. S. E. offers an explanation of
the paradoxical sinking of the Cork mayor: he
has an iron constitution.
ANYBODY SEEN THIS BIRD?
(From the Mount Sterling Democrat -Message.)
Liost, strayed or stolen, one large yellow
rooster; young, in years but old In experi
ence. Reward for return to Mrs. Mary E.
Drew. .
Learn the Game.
Are you learning to play the game of life
or are you sitting in the bleachers?
'It is possible to look on without seeing,
listen without hearing, work without under
standing. All of us are on the side lines, in a
sense. For while we may learn our own job to
perfection; yet lacking that healthy sense of
curiosity we may remain ignorant of the work
done by the man at the next desk, the next
bench,, our superior's problems, or the require
ments, of the position just above the one we
hold. ; '
A story is told of two chess players who
had met every day for twenty years ,in an old
fashioned chop house, silently played their
game, and departed. All this time a third man
sat beside them, watching their contest of wits.
A day came after all the years when one of the
players failed to appear. Seeing the idler there
as usual, the player, asked him to take the part
ner's place.
"Sorry, but I don't know the game," was the
answer. .
For twenty years he had been idly looking
at the game, not into it. If it had been in a
factory or pffice, that the opportunity came to
this onlooker for advancement, he was the type
that would have had to reply, "Sorry, but I don't
know the game."
Henry Morgenthau says that unless the
United States joins the League of Nations it will
mean war with Mexico inside of a year. Mexico
hasn't been admitted into the league, and'would
seem to have more to fear tram it than from
its neighbor.
Some of us can recall that the Boston high
brow group also opposed our retention of the
Philippines in 1899. They have swung to the
other pole in the meantime.
F. D. Roosevelt says it is either join the
league or prepare for war. Pity he could not
have shown some of this foresight in 1916.
The drive for safer streets is on, its success
depending on your own personal contribution.
Help others by being careful yourself.
When a traffic "cop" asks you to stop it is
no time to discuss fine points of law.
W ' a ,
Colonel House has "matched" the president.
They are waiting on Mr. Bryan now.
Blazing cotton gins are not an indication of
returning reason.
"Billy" Sunday a big leaguer? You know it
CONDITIONS in Petrograd,as reported by
the Finnish Red Cross, indicate that bolshevlsm
is, if.anything, a shade worse than the bubonic
plague.
You Win, Probably.
Sir: I bet 6 to 7 that wfien the votes ape
L-rounted the Socialist candidate will be in. Do I
win or lose? - G. W. L.
WHEN we have canned "personally" (al
though, frankly, we have small hope of iarnng
it), we are requested by J. T. B. to pickle "in
conference." "When I call upon some 2x4
official," he relates, "the stenog shifts her gum
and tells me he is in conference." And his pious
hope, which we share, is that when these two-by-fours
call on St. Peter, the busy inside guard
will report that he is in conference with the
Angel Gabriel.
SMALL TOWN STUFF.
(From the Wolsey, S. D.. Herald.)
' Notioe to whom It may concern: If
Mrs. E. E. Lehman will be kind enough to
Cease talking about me and telling things
that are untrue she will save herself a great "
deal of trouble and worry, as I am sure it
would be very hard for her to prove the f
things she is telling, and as for me locking
my door when I see any one coming to my
house that also is an untruth, and will say
if she will only attend to her own business
she won't have time to help others with
theirs. Mrs. Thomas and Family. .
"I ASKED in an Oskaloosa bookstore," com
municates W. L. N., "for E. V. Lucas 'Adven
tures and Enthusiasms,' but they did not have
it. 'But,' butted the lady, 'we have other good
books of adventure.' " '';'
A MAC-EDOXIAV WAIL.
As one of your most faithful old contribs,
I d like to ask (you will not think me rude?)
If it is not a fact, your royal nibs.
That you possess some sense of gratitude.
Each day you practice your' seductive art
Is it not true (you are not bored, I trust)
You feel a nice warm glow around your heart
To'rd those who fain would make the Line or
bust? -
If you're the grateful cuss I think you are,
If you hold kingly memories of me.
You'll sit right down; light up a fresh cigar,
And then proceed to grant my earnest plea.
"' .. '
When you receive (as oft you must) a wheeze
That fails to fit ihe columnar design, '
Just tell the bird who sends it will you,
please ? 1
I'm not so damned particular In mine.
; MAC.
ACCORDING to Comrade Morley, Bob Hol
lidav claims that in San Francisco one can wear
a shirt and collar longer without being laun
dered than anywhere else in the United States.
Mr. Holliday is in error. In East Gloucester,
Mass.; a shirt and collar will survive a week
longer than in San Francisco.
THE POOR LITTLE CHAP WAS BURIED
WEDNESDAY.
Sir: Could you give me the name of'the mis
guided Boy Scout who gave my Janitor a "save
your coal" tag? FLAT DWELLER.
The Second Post. 1
(Received by a mail order house.)
Dear Gentlemen: I will kindly let you know
about my fountain pen. How she got the dam
age. I took her of my pocket and tried to un
screw the cap from the pen. But it didn't give
no way. So I put her in warm water for five
minutes and tried again. But dldent move yet
So I tried with a piece of cloth around it, and
she opened. And I wrote a little yet and then
she broke apart. But then that dident bother
very much. But then just as I had a good start
the foolish thing broke apart to pieces. So 1
thought I would send her to you and have her
reparied. Please repair her as quick as you can.
"WE have also augmented our selling force
by such men as Mr. Marshall, Mr. Lueth, MV.
Samuels and Mr. Watt." A.i, Starr Best (Inc.)
Boy, our earmuffs!
R. F. D.
(From the Red Oak, la., Express.) -
A baby boy was born this morning to
' Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McFarland on route 2.
"THERE will be a dance at the pavilion 8
miles south of Sundance-on Aug. 38." Crook
County Monitor.
I hat is one of the days we should pick out
tor tripping the 1. t. t.
PULL UP A CHAIR, WATSON.
(From the Evanston News-Index.)
Wanted to buy Twin beds and. high
chair. Tel. 4018. " 1
My Dear, You Should See Them! '
(A Pittsburg-. Kan., letterhead.) '
COMMERCIAL HOTEL
Corkle Sisters, Proprietors, "
Newly Decorated and Refurnished. ' ,
MANY readers have gratified our curiosity
about "the funniest thing ever printed in this
column;" and, as we expected, no two thus far
agree. Pray continue.
WE COULD NOT POSSIBLY GUESS.
Sir: Why Is it that when one wires to a hotel
for a four or five dollar reservation one always
gets the five-dollar room? W. S. L.
CAMPAIGN forecast: Slowly rising tem
perature. B. L. T.
Unusual Reward.
Prof. Goddard is to shoot his rocket on its
trial flight to the moon shortly. A perfect hit
entitles him, of course, to the usual prize, one
cigar or a chance on the kewpie doll. New
York Globe. r
MY OWN.
Oh, I must answer to a name
And live upon a certain street.
And stairs within a dingy house - J
Must bear the burden of my feet.
' Still, when the night is - dim and sweet,
In dreams I roam the silent hills;
Where aisles of shadow, vague with lights,
Are petaled soft with daffodils.
I foot it through the silver dark.
. I shout aloud to field and tree;
And all this gypsy heart of me
Is longing, longing to be free. .'
i f '
Oh, I must answer to a name '
And live upon a certain street:
But who shall take my dreams from me
Or keep my life from being sweet I
(Contemporary Verse).
' How to Keep Well
By DR. W. A. EVANS ,. ,'....'
Qutations concsrnlnt hy-flsns, sanitation and prsvsnllon si diaaaaa, subrrilttrd
la Dr. Evans by rsadsrs el Ths B, will bs answsrsd personally, subject to
roper limitation, wbsrs stamped, addrsssad envelops is enclosed. Dr.
vans will not make dlsfnasis or prsscr.be for individual 'diseases. Address
Isttsrs in ears of The Bes. , . . 1
Copyright, 1929. by Dr. W. A. Evans.
RURAL SCHOOL CONDITIONS
From La Crosse county, Wiscon
sin, there comes a story which up
sets many of the ordinarily accept
ed notions about contagion among
children. During the session of 1919
20 the superintendent of schools
decided that hS would find out how
many of the children in the rural
schools had had various form of con
tagion. What he was interested in
was in getting - information that
would be of help in preventing epi
demics in his rural schools.
The rule is that when one of txft
cases of contagion appear In a coun
try school the school is dismissed for
a month or a session and the pupils
miss the things on the schedule for
the next month or two. '
This superintendent was plan
ning to prevent that. He had each
teacher find out from each school
child and the parents just what
forms of contagion the child had
and therefore to what the child was
Immune. ' ,
Most mothers think all children
have measles. Not so. Only 62 per
cent of these children have had the
measles. At least one-quarter of
that group never will have measles.
The next most prevalent disease
had been whooping cough. Forty
per cent of the children had had
whooping cough. Should a case of
whotfping cough come into a rural
school district in La Crosse county,
the school teachers and parents need
keep an eye on only a little more
than half th6 school children.
Who thinks of chickenpox as a
widely prevalent disease? Thirty
nine and two-tenths per cent of
those children had had chickenpox,
and mumps was fourth with 31.2
per cent.
We have an Idea that children do
not have smallpox and that when
we see a pocmarked person he or
she is foreign-born, ignorant and
illiterate. One hundred and thirty
six of the children in the rural
schools of La Crosse county, Wis
consin, had had small dox. But then
why be surprised? Only 295 of the
entire 2,452 had ever been vaccinat
ed. The whole school population
could have been vaccinated for less
than the cost of one case of small
pox, and there had been 136 cases.
We do not think of tVDhold fever
as. a diseasei of children and yet 24
of ; these children had had typhoid
fever.. Typhoid fever has become
a disease of the smaller cities and
rural districts. There is good chance
that not more than 24 of the 600,
000 school children in Chicago have
had typhoid. It is reasonably cer
tain that no one could find 136 chil
dren who had had smallpox in Chi
cago. Fi'ty-five children had had diph
theria, 23 had had infantile paraly
sis, 124 had had scarlet fever, 11
had had tuberculosis, five had had
acute meningitis, and over 4,000 had
Recovered from influenza.
Bettor Bo Examined.
Hopeful write3: "I had typhoid
fever nearly a vear ago and still
fell the effects of it. I feel tired.
Could the fever be a cause of this
condition, and what can I do to
build myself up? I have taken a
tonic for some time, but it does not
seem to help me."
REPLY.
Have an examination. Bright's
disease, heart disease, and some oth
er organic diseases are- likely to fol
low as an aftermath of typhoid.
' Better See Physician.
D. F. S. writes: "For about a week
I. have had on my face a circle about
Specials!
All Week
At Bowen's
Doing things out of
the ordinary, such as
awakening interest in
true, values, induces
this store this week to
offer the great buying
public a week of bar
gains. Quaker Oats
Two Packafes
25c
Jet Oil Shoe Polish .
9c
Bottle
Wood Clothes Pins
2 dozan pins in packaga
Two Packages
15c
Bowen's Brooms
4 ,
33c -
WATCH
for the.
BAG of GOLD
FREE!
C
the size of a dime. It is red and
the inside is white and puffy. It
itches and gets no better. Can you
tell me the cause and what to do
for it?"
REPLY.
This may be any one of several
skin eruptions, among which Is ring
worm. If it persists and takes on
more of a ringworm appearance you
might try a salve of ammonlated
mercury; The chance is that you
need a physician's diagnosis i and
treatment. f
Smoking Probable CauNC. '
W. A. H. writes: "On; entering
the army my physical condition was
O. K.'d by the crmy doctors. Six
weeks" later I was examined for
overseas duty and was rejected. I
had trouble with my heart. It was
called "arythmia." Three years pre
vious to my entering the service I
had not put a clgaret near my
mouth, but when I got among the
fellows I became a very heavy smok-
er.i Do you think this sudden at
tack on the tobacco could have caus
ed imy heart trouble?
"I served about a year on this side
and when I was discharged in De
cember, 1918, I stopped smoking.
I have at times what might be call
ed an empty feeling around my heart
but never an ache, or pain. Would
you please tell me just what this
trouble is and my chances of get
ting rid of it?"
REPLY.
All that I can make out Is that
you developed an Irritability of the
heart while in the army. This could
easily have been a result of over
doing "With tobacco. Your trouble
seems to be over. An empty feel
ing around the heart is of no im
portance, provided there Is no evi
dence of heart trouble and the pulse
is regular and otherwise normal.
ODD AND INTERESTING.
An eloctrtfal novelty is a toaster
and fcod-wnrmer that will toast
sitles of 20 pieces of bread at once.
A hanger has been patented that
suspends a towel from two corners
tn air can circulate through and
ry it. ,
The Greek government is planning
direct communication with Rome, by
improving present railroads and
building some new ones that will
connect with a ferry across the Ad
riatic at its narrowest point.
An attachment for farm tractors
invented by a Loiislana man is
intended to stop 'them the instant
they strike ars 'obstruction which .
would cause them to overturn. '
The Union of Netherlands Daily
Newspapers publishes a notice that.
beginning July 1. the size of all th
newnpapcrs will be reduced to sav
printing paper, and that the charg
tor advertising will be increased 60
per cent.
Widespread interest having been
taken In a new artificial -wool, an
exhaustive investiRatlon Into tho
properties and merits of the fiber
has been made by Professor Kber
MidRley, head of the department of
textile industries of tho Bradford
tec hnical college.
The state of New York has ordered,
two and one-quarter grams of ra
dium, at a cost of 1226,000. to com
bat cancer and other malignant dis
eases, and ono gram, about ono
thirtieth of an ounce, costing $120,
000, has arrived in a lead cylinder
eight inches in dlasieter and 13
inches long.
BUSINESS IS COOP THANK YOlf
LV. Nicholas Oil Company
mmmmm
r
Joe B. Redfield
Spreading
Your
Gospel
Ask Mr. E. , Gurney, president of the
Lion Bondinffand Surety Company, how
well we have succeeded in spreading
"LION" gospel. '
. ' ,N .
K-B "Direct y Mail" service can put
your story across in the most effective
way. .- . . . -
Planning, copywriting, illustrating, '
printing, addressing, mailing "from
, , the desire to sell clear, to the cash ,
register.". '
K-B Printing
Company
Redfield & Milliken
Owner, ,
Printing
Headquarters:
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Harvey Milliken
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The Flavor Lasts
So Does the Price!
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