Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1902-1919, February 28, 1913, Page 4, Image 4

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    OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, FEB 28 1913
OREGON CITY COURIER
Published Fridays from the Courier Building, Bihth and Main streets, and en
tered in the Postoffice at Oregon City, Ore., as second class mail matter.
OREGON CITY COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, PUBLISHER
M. J. BROWN, A. E. FROST, OWNERS. ,
Subscription Price $1.50.
Telephones, Main 5-1; Home A 5-
Official Paper for the Farmers Society of Equity of Clackamas Co
M. J BROWN,
EDITOR
IS IT WORTH THE PRICE?
(
I may be in dead wrong on this
matter but I believe when the State of
Oregon gives a boy or girl a free
high school education, the State of
Oregon or any other state, has done
enough.
When a boy or girl graduates from
our high schools and wants more, then
let he or she get out and dig for it
earn it for the state has done
enough.
If the university turned out more
teachers it would be a different
proposition, but it turns out a never
ending line of doctors, lawyers,
preachers and so on, and I have yet
to see a place in Oregon that is clam
oring for more of these classes of
professional men.
There are about 16,000 students at
Eugene and about 600 of these are
from outside of Eugene.
Now see what Oregon has to pay
for their education. Here is the list
the present legislature has handed
out:
Appropriating $75,000 for repairs
and improvements at state university.
Appropriating $50,000 for main
tainance of university in addition to
annual maintainance.
Appropriating $100,000 for addit
ional building at university.
Appropriating $12,833 for improv
ment of streets in university campus. .
Appropriating $30,000 for univers
ity summer school and extension
work.
And all this in ADDITION to the
regular maintainance.
This is a part of the cost of turn
ing out a drove of lawyers, doctors.
etc., every year.
And it is my idea that we pay a
awful price that we might far bet
ter, as a business proposition, take
the G00 pupils and send them to
some college and pay all their expens
es and let Eugene do what it cares to
with the buildings.
It would be a big financial invest
ment to the state.
There is just about as much need
for a second state college as there is
for the letter "n" in pneumonia. There
is no reason in the world why th
two should not bo consolidated, if we
are to have both departments, and
save the enormous expense of scpar
ate colleges and maintuinances.
There is no more reason for having
separate state and agricultural col
leges than for having separate col
leges for lawyers, doctors and so on
Here is the budget for the agn
cultural college the legislature has
just settled, let this one soak in on
top of it:
Appropriating $(i0,000 for purchase
of equipment for suite agricultural
school at Corvallis.
Appropriating $0,500 for street im
provements at agricultural college.
Appropriating $107,000 for addit
ional bflildings at agricultural col
lege.
Appropriating $50,000 annuully In
addition to continuing appropriation
for support of agricultural college.
Appropriating $2,000 for library
purposes and heating plant extension
for agricultural college,
Providing millage tax of .04 of one
mill for support of agricultural col
lege.
And all this in uddition to the reg
ular muintuinunce,
Foot them up, over seven hundred
thousand dollars extras m one year.
Are they worth itT
Where the state puts the boy or
girl through our splendidly equipped
high schools it has given them a
splendid education, and I don't be
lieve the state should give them a mil
lion dollars a yeur more.
REASONS.
If there were less carping
newspaper criticism of the law
making body and less unreason
able predjudice created against it
and a stronger disposition to
give the Legislature credit for
the good it does do, we should
have better men seeking places
in that body. Many of our best
citizens do not care to have their
industry jr integrity wantonly
assailcc -t the voters must make
choice o .vhat is offered.
This is part of the Oregonian's an-
swer to the Courier's criticism of the
unrepresentative legislature. Let us
see whether it leaks or not.
Will the Oregonian point out the in
stances in the present legislature
where the newspapers have "wanton
ly assailed" the "industry or integ-
rity" of representatives or senators
who have stood right?
Will it please line up the newspap
ers that have assailed the men who
have stood for what Oregon needs,
and will it stand up the men assailed
Take Clackamas county for an il
lustration. What newspapers have as
sailed the integrity of Dimick, Gill or
Shuebel?
ECONOMY.
We believe in giving the legislature
all that is duo it, and when once In a
while or two wo flint that they have
really put one over in the interests of
economy and in compliance with their
liefore-election promises, why, we just
want to put it in capital letters and
make it emphatic. And hero's one:
McArthur's bill to substitute elec
trocution for hanging of murderers
was defeated Monday, and it was de
feated on the arguments that RE
SULTS WERE OHTA1NKD UNDER
THE PRESENT SYSTEM AND AN
ELECTRIC CHAIR WAS A WASTE
OF MONEY.
The 1913 Legislature has ex
erted unusual care and industry
in lawmaking, and has shown a
more progressive spirit than any
session in recent years. If its
work and record are now to be
assailed merely because knock
ing the Legislature is deemed
popular.
Now let us have a look at the "un
usual care and industry" 'of these
legislators, and see if we can find
that "progressive spirit" the Oregon
ian sayg has cropped out bigger than
in recent years.
bchueuel s water power bul was
killed and never a bill before the
legislature hud more of common ju-
tice in it. Was that industry ?
His bill to permit farmers to burn
slushings, under restrictions, and
clear their land, was defeated because
the timber trusts wanted it killed,
and he only got a part of it through
coming back with another bill. Was
that an act of progression.
Diimck's abolishment of the naval
militia and its appropriation was
killed, and ninety per cent of the peo
pie wanted it abolished. Is comment
on this "carping criticism?
Dimick's abolishment of the naval
supervisor law was a bill unanimous
ly endorsed by the voters and tax
payers, but the legislature stayed by
the eudcational combine and saved
its useless life. Is criticism of this
steam roller deal "unreasonable prej
udice?"
When Speaker McArthur wedged a
joker in the repeal of Chapter 202
and when both houses passed it and
the governor found "127" had been
put in place of it, does the Oregonian
think the legislature "exerted unus
uul cure?" The bill would have re
pealed the purole luw. McArthur said
it was "purely a clerical error." No
doubt. 202 and 127 are SO nearly
alike.
When the bill providing for state
life insurance at cost was killed was
it "carping criticism" to intimate the
big insurance companies killed it?
Was it "unreasonable prejudice on
the part of the newspapers becnuse
they criticised the killing of the bill
to provide free employment bureaus
and cut out the Portland shark bureaus?
Haven't the newspapers a license to
nrp when the senate mafle a joke of
Schuebol's nnti-lobby bill one of he
most needed luws in Oregon?
Hadn't the newspapers a right to
protest when they run the roller over
Gill's bill to repeal tho Thompson
swamp land drainage law?
And so on with tho vicioius bills to
kill the initiative; the bills to take
away the people's power we could
tring them out in dozens.
And then after a wild scramble of
a wind up to find a legislature going
back for an extra week for the openly
expressed purpose of passing vetoed
bills over the governor's head bills
they know WILL bo and SHOULD be
vetoed.
And then in tho wind up to read tho
following press dispatch from the
state capital, which shows how care
fully our representatives are looking
Wc Would Serve You
Do not think of this bank as being merely
a pluce to deposit your money. While the
primary function of a bunk is to safe-guatd
the public's fuml, we feel that our obligation
to the community requires n great deal more
of this bunk. It is our desise to render our
patrons every service and accommodation
that can reasonably be expected from vs.
Wc want our customers to come to us
freely when our advice will be ot value. It
frequently happens that our business exper
ience enables us to make helpful suggestions
. in business matters, and we are anxious and
willing to do what we can for your best
business interest.
THE BANK OF OREGON CITY
Oldest Bank in Clackuma County
to the interests of the "dear peepul
and are putting aside their own am
bitioss in their zeal for the Oregon
lan's "unusual care and industry:"
If the senate agrees to be good
. and pass the pet bills of the
house, that body will reconsider
and pass the senate bills. If the
senate won't be good its pet
measures will stay killed, that's
all. It's an underground under
standing, but it's an understanding.
And we wonder that people should
ask "Why a Legislature?"
They charged extravagance and
they pledged economy, and then they
went down to Salem and rolled us,
The income tax is now in force and
you fellows who are getting more
than $5,000 a year better ditch it.
Dimick, Wood and Kellaher were
the only senators to vote and work
against the passage of the millage
tax per the state university of Eu
gene. The tax will raise $270,000
year.
Representative Stephen of Nebras
ka, has introduced a bill in Congres
providing for popular election of post
masters in the third and fourth class
towns. Here's a 10 to 1 shot it gets
the ax.
The head machinists of the legis
lature say that in the present extra
session only the clerks and stenog
raphers as are "absolutely necessary
will be retained. Now don't get sar
castic and ask questions.
John Henry Patterson, president of
the National Cash Register Co., was
decorated with the Legion of Honor
of France, and now ne is decorated
with the stripes of a prison uniform.
It has taken years to close the prison
doors on the big fellows, but we are
sure beginning to get them.
Things are unbalanced when the
legislative expenses, totaling $01,471
carry $15,000 for senators' and repre
sentatives' salaries and mileage and
$46,471 for other items. And one of
the items that makes the budget top
heavy is "stenographers, clerks, etc,
$33,000."
President-elect Wilson has an
nounced that there will be an extra
session of congress called for April
He does not state what the nature
of the business will be, and the fel
lows will have time to worry a lot
and build a house on it between now
and then.
The house put H. J. Parkinson, the
Portland labor leader, on the punish
ment list Saturday when it cut out a
bill of $250 due him as an employee of
Attorney General Crawford in col
lecting data for a supreme court ap
peal. And Parkinson will put the ref
erendum on about $250,000 college ap
propriations later on.
A senate bill to re-emburse a pur
chaser of land canceled'' by the state
was passed by the senate during the
present session. Later the passage
was reconsidered and the bill killed.
Then Friday last it was given an in
ection, brought to life and passed
again. No later reports have been received.
At a lecture in Portland Monday
night on "The Abolition of the legis-
uture," J. A. Jeffery showed up that
the ways and means committee at
Salem was the arbiter of all legisla
tion, and that no members can hope
for recognition of a bill if he does not
stand in with the measures dear to
that committee.
Miss Kathlene Whitcomb of Port-
und, who is visiting with her aunt,
Mrs. T. L. Charman of Seventh and
Jefferson Streets, in this city, was the
guest of honor at the home of Mr. and
Mrs, M. D. Latourettc, of Fourteenth
nd Main Streets last week. The
evening was devoted to cards and
music. A luncheon was served during
the evening.
The Salem dispatches give it out
that the Progressive clement of this
congressional district is urging Senat
or Dimick of this city to be a candi-
iite for congress two years hence
gainst Mr. llawley. If the situation
nd sentiment in '14 is anything like
t was last summer, Dimick could get
way with it easily. Had he been a
candidate against Hawley then he
ould have won in the Republican pri
maries or at the pools as an independ
ent Republican.
As dirty a bit of Greaser work as
ever disgraced wnat is cancel a
republic, was the assassinotion of for
mer president Madero of Mexico, un-
er a cowardly pretext. Madero
spared young Diaz when he failed,
and he lost his kingdom and his life
because of it But that is the Mexi
can way. And this is the country and
people the capitalists would have us
conquor and govern. Well, we would
ave one of the biggest bunches of
trouble we ever tackled.
OVER HIS HEAD
Governor West used the axe on the
big appropriation bill of $1,230,000
Monday, and both Houses promptly
over-rode the veto, and the bundle of
fodder is a law by right of steam roll
er might.
The governor vetoed the bill be
cause 74 different items were rolled in
one ball and he had to kill the whole
works to take every blooming appro
priation that had been tied" to it.
In the list of job-making and pol
ltical-serrving appropriations that
could not stand on their own crutches,
were $24,000 for naval militia, $50,-
000 for immigration work, $40,000 for
bounties, $25,000 for Portage railway,
$12,000 for state board of horticul
ture and many other like sections.
Governor West said to the legisla
ture in his veto message:
"I am returning II. B. No. 628
with my disapproval, for further
consideration, leaving it to you to
act for the best interests of the
already overburdened taxpayers
of the 'state, or to force from
their pockets by doubtful legis
lative methods, questionable, un
just and excessive charges."
And our "reprsentative" legislature
went on and "jimmied" the bill
through.
It is against the wishes of the vo
ters; it is against the protests of the
great majority; it is against the.
pledges of the representatives to the
people who elected them.
Schuebel and Gill lined up with the
governor and stood with him against
this bunco game. Dimick told the sen
ate what he thought of the three
shell game in this characteristic way:
"Here jju have big appropria
tions for the so-called horse doc
tor, the alleged forest protection,
and the naval militia, all blank
eted in one bill. Your ways and
means committee have don this
just because the governor cannot
veto specific items. I, for one,
am willing to stay here and help
get out of the hole the ways and
means committee have put us in."
OF COUNTY INTEREST.
One of the house bills the senate
has approved of does away with
the 3 per cent rebate system and also
abolishes the 10 per cent penalty im
posed by present law upon delinquent
taxpayers. It further makes the
county treasurer instead of the coun
ty sheriff the tax collector, and it re
quires the roll to be made out by the
assessor instead of the county clerk.
One per cent per month is still to be
charged as interest on delinquincies.
SWAT THE FLY
And Swat Him in the Short, Quick
and Effective Way.
A great many cities all over the
country now "swat the fly." They dp
this beacuse a dead fly is the only
kind that carries no germs. We know
certainly that as we do away with all
carriers of infectious diseases, just
as surely do we kill disease itself. We
know the fly to be one of the worst
culprits in spreading disease, typhoid
being his specialty. So very properly
we aim to exterminate the fly.
In this, as in other undertakings,
there is a long way and a short cut.
The obvious method is to "swat the
fly." But a no less certain means is
to destroy its breeding places, for a
fly that never was in even safer than
a dead one, so far as its disease car
rying propensities go.
Filth feathers the nest of this pest.
In any accumulation of refuse it
breeds and propagates by the millions
The potential capacity of a singl
manure pile, considered as a habitat
for flies, has never been computed,
Multiply this many times and you
have the problem Oregon City has to
deal with.
The approach of warm weather
makes his problem a serious one. The
manure pile, individually and collect
ively, stands as a menace to tho
health' of Oregon City. WHAT
SHALL WE DO WITH IT?
I
That was an edifying remark of
Representative Forbes when Schuebel
wanted to know how much longer the
house was going to hang on. "Those
who don't like.it may go to hell."
The senate has passed Representa
tive Schnoerr's bill reducing license
fee for demonstration automobiles
from $10 to $2.50.
GETTING EARLY START.
Some time ago the Courier told you
that hte next move big business
would make would be otward the land
thut the open acres and the lax ways
of the farmers presented a golden
opportunity for investment for' big
money, and that the time would soon
come when you would see the move
ment start on this coast It has start
ed. Foreign capitalists have pur
chased a $500,000 tract of land in the
Coos Bay country and will try out
farming on scientific and co-opera
tive lines. And I wonder what will
become of the little farmer, running
it alone, by the side of this big syn
dioate.
The "blue sky" bill has had its
front teeth knocked out in the sen
ate, and if it becomes a law now it
will be a Castoria concoction that
won't hurt or help much. The sen
ate has knocked out the provisions
the bill was drawn to cover, the right
of the public service commission to
supervise issues of stocks and bonds
of the railroad corporations and to be
in a position to squeeze the water out
of them. The senate took awaythis
I power by exempting the railroads,
j Mighty nice of them, 'eh, Southern
i Pacini?
Nine Year Old Youngster Tries Kid
nap Game for Joke.
There has been some uneasiness at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Allen in
this city for the past week, the cause
of this being the notes received by
their little daughter, Velma, in which
she was threatened to be kidnapped.
One of the notes received stated that
it was from a man with a crooked
finger and that he would call at the
Allen home on February 28 at 12
o'clock and at that hour he would
steul little Vema and take her far
away. this was the limit, thought
the mother, and she at once notified
Chief of Police Shaw who has been
working on the case. An investigation
was made and Tuesday a little school
boy, about nine years of age, and son
of prominent residents, confessed to
being the big mysterious man with a
crooked finger, and stated that he
only did it as a joke. The parents
however did not consider it much of
joke at the time, nor would any par
ents, who had received such epistles.
It has been the custom of the little
girl to deliver milk to the neighbors
close by, but her parents fearing for
her safety have done the chores for
the little girl..
The little fellow, who played the
joke" is fond of moving picture
hows and can always be noticed
mong the other children on the front
seats. He no doubt imagined he was
to be a chief actor in one of the photo
plays but before he could steal the
little girl, who was several years his
senior, the curtain went down on the
first act, and he wag prevented from
taking the part of a "terrible desper
ado" in the wilds of Oregon City.
The first letter came in a valent
tine, and nothing was thought of this
but when it became a usual ocourence
it was then about time to "nip it in
the bud" thought the parents, and
they did. Velma has resumed her dut
ies in carrying the milk, while the
kidnapper is at his home busily pre
paring his lessons for school for the
following day, not dreaming of the
anxiety he has caused the parents of
the little girl. He has decided that he
will wait until he is of age before he
will kidnap a girl since the "lecture"
he received a few days ago. The lit
tle boy is one of the brightest and
most attractive looking little chaps
in this city, and if he retains his good
looks until he is a man there is no
doubt but many an Oregon City
young woman will attempt to kidnap
him, but will not warn him ahead of
time, so that they will lose in the
game.
This lud has already made his de
but on the stage before an Oregon
City audience not as a desperado, a
kidnapper or cut-throat but only in
a pie eating contest and was one of
the favorites on the stage and one of
prize winners.
What the Civic Committee is Doing,
The Civic Committee made the fol
owing report to the Live Wires Tues
day:
The committee wishes to report
that during the later part of this
week re-inspection of the ground
covered in the first trip will be made,
Again special attention is called to
altogether prevalent presence of dis
ease breeding manure piles. At a time
when the rapid approach . of warm
weather makes these nuisances es
pecially dangerous, it is earnestly
recomended that every effort be made
to wipe out this health menace. The
committee also wishes to report that
negotiations are under way to secure
a weekly cleaning of the suspension
bridge. The Willamette Pulp and Pap
er Company, thru the efforts of Mr.
McBaine, has agreed to furnish the
necessary men for the purpose of
hosing down he bridge. The necessary
hose and a suitable place for storing
it remains to be supplied and the com
mittee is at present in favorable com
munication with the county court re
garding this part of the proposition.
Maple Lane Equity Notes.
The Maple Lane Local of the Farm
ers Sociey of Equity held their reg
ular meeting Wednesday evening Feb
15th. Five new members joined at this
meeting. A vote was taken to see how
many were in favor of having a sell
ing agency at Oregon City, and it was
found every member of this local was
strongly in favor of it.
Mr. F. E. Parker was appointed
delegate to the state convention to be
held in Portland, March 1st.
The next meeting will be held in the
Maple Lane Schoolhouse Mar. 5th
1913
County Grange Convention.
There will be a county grange con
vention held in the cour house, Oregon
City, Tuesday, March 11, for the el
ection of delegates to the state
Grange to be held at Albany the sec
ond Tuesday in. May and for the
transaction of other business that
may come up.
nicrobes In Your Scalp
Authorities say that microbe
causes baldness. If you are losing
balr try our remedy at our risk.
Professor Unna, of Germany, and
Dr. Babouraud, tha great French
Dermatologist, claim that a mi
crobe causes baldness, and their
theory has been verified by eminent
scientists. This microbe destroy!
the hair follicles, in time causing the
ealp pores to elose and the acalp to
become shiny. Then.it is believed
nothing will revive the growth. If
treated before this occurs, baldneu
nay be overcome.
We know of nothing; that has
given such universal satisfaction in
treating the scalp and hair aa Rexall
'63" Hair Tonio, It has been de-.-eigned
after long study to overcome
the cause of falling hair as discovered
by Prof. Unna. Dr. Babouraud and
other scalp and hair specialists, and
we believe it will do more than any
thing else can to remove dandruff and
top falling hair; and if any human
agency can promote a new growth
of hair it will do that, too.
We want you to make us prove It.
We will pay for a month's treatment
of Roxall ,,93" Hair Tonio used dur
ing a trial, if you wiU use it ac
cording to directions, and are not
thoroughly satisfied. When we will
do this, you surely should not hesitate,
to at least try it.
Start the treatment today. Your
mere request will get your money
back if you want it. Two sises-60o-and
S1.0O.
You csn buy Rexall "93" Hair Tonia
Id this community only at our atoro:
BROS. CO.
Tht VaCl Stoft Ores on
HUNTLEY
Oregon
City
There is a Retail 8 to re in nearly evorv torn
and city in tho United States, Canada aud
Ortiat Britain. There it a different Retail
Remedy lor nearly every ordinary human ill
aoh especially deninn'M for the particular iU
for which it is recommended.
Th Rxll Storaa are America Greetee
Urug Store
CASTORIA
For Infanta and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
When Burton Holmes recently
pave his celebrated travologue on
"Panama" at Orchestra Hall, Chic
ago, he was seriously interupted by
continual coughing of the audience.
No one annoys willingly and if people
with coughs, colds, hoarseness and
tickling in throat would use Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound, they could
quickly cure their coughs and colds
and avoid this annoyance. Huntley
Bros.
Straight & Salisbury
Agents for the celebrated
LEADER Water Systems
and
STOVER GASOLINE ENGINES.
We also carry
A full line of MYERS pumps and
Spray Pumps. '
We make a specialty of installing
Water Systems and Plumb- . .
ing in the country
20 Main St. Phone 2682
Comparative
Digestibility
of Food
Made wiSli different Baking Powders
From a Series cf Elaborate Chemical Tests:
An equal quantity of bread (biscuit) was made
with each of three different kinds of baking: powder
cream of tartar, phosphate, and alum and submitted
separately to tte action of the digestive fluid, each
for the same length of time.
The relative percentage of the food digested is
shown as follows:
Bread made with
Royal Cream of Tartar Powder;
100 Per Cenit. Digested 1
Bread made with
phosphate powder:
I 681 Per Cent Digest kTI
Bread made with
alum powdery
67 Per Cent-. Digested
These tests, which are absolutely reliable and
unprejudiced, make plain a fact of great importance
to everyone: Food raised with Royal, a cream of
tartar Baking Powder, is shown to be entirely diges
tible, while the alum and phSsphate powders are found
to largely retard the digeoticn of the food made from
them.
Undigested food is not only wasted food, but it
is the source of very many bodily ailments.
Money to Loan.
I have various sums of money
on hand to loan on real property,
for long or short periods of time.
WM, HAMMOND, Lawyer.
Beaver Bldg., Oregon Gily.
Treasurer's Notice.
I now have funds to pay county and
road warrants endorsed prior to Apr-
ru 9, 1912. Interest ceases on such
warrants on date of this notice.
Februory 28, 1913.
J. A. Tufts, County Treas.
SUMMONS.
Audrey Meredith, 'Plaintiff, vs.
John Meredith, Defendant.
To John Meredith, the above named
defendant:
In tne hame of the State of Oregon,
you are hereby required to appear and
answer the complaint filed against
you in the above entitled court and
cause on or before the expiration of
six weeks from the date of the first
publication of this summons, to-wit:
on or before the 11th day of April,
1913, and if you fail so to answer, for
want thereof, the plaintiff will apply
to the court for the relief demanded
in her complaint on file herein, towit:
that the bonds of matrimony hereto
tofore and now existing between
plaintiff and defendant be dissolved;
and for such other and further relief
in the premises as to the court seems
equitable and just.
This summons is published by order
of the Honorable R. B. Beatie, County
Judge for Clackamas County, Oregon,
and said order was made and dated
he 2Cth day of February 1913, and
the date of he firs publicaion of
this summons is the 28th day of Feb
ruary, 1913, and the date of the last
publication of this summons is the
11th day of April, 1913. ,
JOS. H. PAGE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
liVWf Mixture Sack ' jtj
)MW4$mMMWJ Many men are Ml
iwn&m$MW J getting untold feU
mMSmmWS Pleasure out of M
WMWM! Duke's Mixture sack. K
itHS 0ne 50 P8ckae holds In
'fifWS many pipefuls of pure, mild ill
fr5lW smoking -or, if you please, ill
HWAA ' u W1" make iittei of krj
Oti-
o 1
Act
Many men are
getting untold
pleasure out of
he Liggett&Myert
e's Mixture sack,
ie package holds
'fuls of pure, mild
smoKing or, it you please,
it will make many cigarettes of
the good old-fashioned kind that you
roll yourself.
6
0
Duke's Mixture, made by the
Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. at Dur
ham, N. C, is the favorite with ciga
rette smokers. It's the tobacco that
makes rolling" popular with men
who want the true teste of pure,
mild, selected tobacco.
It. p"kin,f this brnnd the of
k y ;hat you ' -u nnot
Mixture graDulated tobsc tln Duke's
AU Sti" K1l the M,no bi "e and a
half ounce Mck-enough to make many
cigarettes-for 4c. And with each Met
you get a book of donate papers and .
present coupon, FREE.
Save the Present Coupon
With the coupons you can get msnr
."to, esirab,a presenta -
suitable for men, women, boys and girls
mM? for February "d
end, u, their name aa d"?"n0 "h
Premium Dept.
St Loui., Mo.