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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1921)
TTTE MORNING OltEGOXTAX, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 30, 1921 WILSON BEATEN BUT T DISHEARTENED No Bitterness Manifested Defeat at Polls. in CHEERING LETTER COMES Nation's Welfare President's Sole Concern to Iast Day of His Term, Says Tumulty. BY JOSEPH P. TUMULTY. (Copyright. 1921. by Doubleday. Paae 4 Co. All right reserved, published by Arrangement.) CHAPTER XLIV (Continued). Ths loneliest place in the country on election night ts the White House office, especially when the tide of opinion throughout the country is running strongly against you. I have noticed the difference in the atmos phere of the place and in the crowds that come to congratulate and to re joice when you are winning and the few loyal ones that remain with you throughout the night of defeat. It takes a stout heart to withstand the atmosphere of the White House on election night. The first reports from the country were overwhelming, and there was no upot in the country where we could look for hope and consolation. In the 4arly hours of the evening I sent whatever few optimistic reports 1 could get to the president, so that at least he would not feel the full weight of the blow on election night. His intimate friends had told me that they feared the effect of defeat upon his health, but these fears were ground less and never disturbed me in the least, for I had been with him in many a fight and 1 was sure that while he would feel the defeat deeply and that it would go to his heart, its effect would only be temporary. My feeling in this regard was Jus tified, for in my talk with him the day after tho election no bitterness was evident. He said: "They have disgraced us in the eyes of the world. The people of America have repudiated a fruitful leadership for a barren independence. Of course 1 am dinappolnted by the results of the election, for I felt sure that a fit at programme that sought to bring peace to the world would arouse American idealism, and that the na tion's support would be given to it It is a difficult thing, however, to lead a nation ho variously constituted as ours quickly to accept a programme such us the league of nations. The enemres of this enterprise cleverly aroused every racial passion and prejudice, and by poisonous prop aganda made It appear that the league of nations was a great Jug gernaut which was intended to crUHh and destroy Instead of saving and bringing peace to the world. The peo ple will have to learn now by bitter experience just, what they have lost There will, of course, be a depression in business, for the isolation which America covels will mean a loss of prestige which always in the end means a loss of business. The people will soon witness the tragedy of dis appointment, and then they will turn upon those who made that disap pointment possible." When I intimated to him that the Cox defeat might in the long run prove a blessing, he rebuked me at once by saying, "I am not thinking of the partisan side of this thing, it is the country and its future that I am thinking about. We had a chance to gain the leadership of the world. We have lost it, and soon we will be wit nessing the tragedy of it all." t'hrrrful Letter t'oniesj. After this statement to me with reference to the result of the election he read to me a letter from his old friend, John Sharp Williams. United States senator from Mississippi, a letter which did much to bolster and hearten him on this, one of the most irying days of his life in the White House. The letter follows: Ttemr Mr. President: God didn't create the. world In one act. 1 never expected that we would win in the United states the first battle in the campaign for a league of nations to keep the pearo of the world. Out people were too "not" by our past history and by the apparent voice of the fathers In an opposite course, a course of Isolation. This course whs hlth rrto the best for accomplishing tho very purpose Wfl must now accomplish by a seemingly contrary course. We must now begin the war la earnest. We will win it. Never fear, tho stars In their courses are fighting with us. The league Is on its feet, learning to walk, senate coteries willy-nilly. As for the vials of envy and hatred which have been emptied on your head by all the un-American things, sided by demagogues who wanted their votes and got them, abetted by yellow Journals, etc., these lines of Byron can console iyou: "There were two cats In Kilkenney, They fit and fit until of cats there werc'nt any." Thia Is almost a prophecy of what will happen now between Borah. Johnson & Co. and Root, Taft & Co., with poor I-odgc mewing "peace" when there Is no peace except a larger peace outside their hori zon. They have been kept united by hatred of you, by certain foreign encour agements and by fear of the democratic party. With the necessity to act. to do homething, the smouldering fire of dif ference will break forth into flame. Con serve your health. Cultivate a cynical patience, dive them all the rope you can. Now and then, when they make too big fools of themselves, throw in a keynote veto not often never when you can give them the benefit of the doubt and with it responsibility. They have neither the coherence nor the brains to handle the sit uation. Events will work their further confusion, events in Europe. God still reigns. The people ran learn, though not cjuickly. With regards. (Sig.) JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS. In Ore at Never Lag. One would think that after the election the president would show a sickening of Interest in the affairs of the nation; that having been repu diated by a solemn referendum, lie would grow indifferent and listless to the administrative affairs that came to his desk. On the contrary, mo far as his interest In affairs was con cerned, one coming in contact with him from day to day after the elec tion until the very last night of March 3 would get the Impression that nothing unusual had happened and that hia term of office was to run on indefinitely. One of the things to which he paid particular attention at this time was the matter of the pardon of Kugene V. Debs. The day that the recom mendation for pardon arrived at the v.'b.it House he looked it over and examined it carefully, and said: "I will never consent to the pardon of this man. I know that In certair quarters of the country there U a popular demand for the pardon of 1-iebs, but it shall never be accom plished with my consent. Were ,1 to consent to it, 1 should never be able to look Into the fnces of the mothers of this country who sent their boys to the other side. While the flower of American youth was pouring out its blood to vindicate the cause of civ ilization, this man Debs stood behind th lines, sniping, attacking and de nouncing them. Before the war he had a perfect right to exercise his freedom of speech and to express his own opinion, but once the congress of the United States declared war. si lence on his part would have been the proper course to pursue. I know there will be a great deal of denun ciation of me for refusing this par don. They will say I am cold blooded and indifferent, but it will make no impression on me. This man was a traitor to his country, and he will never be pardoned during my admin istration." CHAPTER XLV. I was greatly concerned lest the president should be unable by reason of his physical condition to stand the strain of Inauguration day. Indeed, members of his cabinet and intimate friends, like Urayson and myself, had tried to persuade him not to take part, but he could not, by any argu ment, be drawn away from what he believed to be his duty to Join in the Inauguration of his successor. President-elect Harding. The thought that the people of the country might mis construe his attitude if he should re main away, and his firm resolve to -show every courtesy to his successor in office were the only considerations that led him to play his part to the end. When I arrived at the White House early on the morning of March 4, the day of the Inauguration, I found him in his study, smiling and gracious as ever. He acted like a boy who was soon to be out of school and free of the burdens that had for eight years weighed him down to the breaking point. He expressed to me the feel ing of relief that he was experienc ing now that his term of office was really at an end. I recalled to him the little talk we had had on the same day. four years before, upon the conclusion of the ceremonies in cident to his own inauguration in 1917. At the time we were seated in the executive office. Turning away from his desk and gazing out of the window which overlooked the beau tiful White House lawn and gardens, he said: "Well, how I wish this were March 4, 1921. What a relief it will be to do what I please and to say what I please, but. more than that, to write my own impressions of the things that have been going on under my own eyes. I have felt constantly a personal detachment from the presi dency. Job Joyfully Surrendered. "The one thing I resent when I am not performing the duties of the of fice Is being reminded that I am president of the United States. I feel toward this office as a man feels to ward a great function which in his working, hours he is obliged to per form, but which, out of working hours, he Is glad to get away from and resume the quiet course of his own thought. I tell you, my friend, it will be great to be free again." On this morning. March 4. 1921, he acted like a man who was happy now that his dearest wish was to be real ized. As I looked at Woodrow Wil son, seated in his study that morn ing. In his cutaway coat, awaiting word of the arrival of President elect Harding at the White House, to me he was every inch the president, quiet, dignified: ready to meet the duties of the trying day upon which he was now to enter, in his counte nance a calm nobility. It was hard for mo to realize as I beheld him, seated behind his desk In his study, that here was the head of the great est nation In the world, who. In a few hours, was to step back Into the uneventful life of a private citizen. A few minutes and ho was notified that the president-elect was in the blue room awaiting his arrival. Alone, unaided, grasping his old blackthorn stick, the. faithful companion ol man) months, his "third leg," as he play fully called it, slowly he made hU way to the elevator, and in a few seconds he was standing In the blue room meeting the president-elect and greeting him in the most gracious way. No evidence of the trial of pain he was undergoing in striving to play a modest part In the ceremonies was apparent either In his bearing or at titude as he greeted the president elect and the members of the congres sional inaugural committee. He was an 111 man but a sportsman, deter mined to see the thing through to the end. President-elect Harding met him in the most kindly fashion, showing him the keenest considera tion and courtesy. (To be concluded.) HI E ED S BURTON University Head Pronounces ' Americans Superficial. TEACHERS GET MESSAGE llctiriug Premier CrUici.setl. OTTAWA. Dec. 29. W. I Mack'en zie King, premier-elect of Canada, yesterday attacked what he called Premier Meighen's "high-handed and unwarranted course" in issuing writs for a bye-election in Gren ville county, Ont. "One thing is cer tain," he declared, "that Mr. Meighen's last act as prime minister, like his first, was one of usurpation." President of Ann Arbor School De clares Rhodes Scholarship Men Are Lacking. "American schools must place new emphasis on the old-fashioned de mand for accuracy, for America's chief vice Is superficiality," said Dr. M. L. Burton, president of the Uni versity of Michigan, in an address on "What the Schools Must Do," yes terday afternoon at an assembly of delegates to the annual meeting of the Oregon State Teachers associa tion in session at Lincoln high school. "Americans are superficial in many branches of business and other activ ities." said President Burton. "We stress the importance of having ac complished the construction of a bridge or a building or the writing of a book, rather than the actual work on the task. We have achieved great results in developing a type of man who has remarkable abilities in passing responsibilities to others. Srbnlnrahip Men Larking. "Americans who win Rhodes scholarships at Oxford university are men far above the average and stand ard of our educational system. Yet Oxford professors have told me that these men lack many important qualities. Knglish teachers assert that American Rhodes scholars lack accuracy and ability to stick to a hard grind: that they have been taught nothing very precisely; that they are deficient In scholarship, and that they are unable to settle down to a long spell of thorough, work. "A fault of our system lies in the failure to consider the individual personality and ability in choosing candidates for colleges and universi ties. We base these selections on a cold, mathematical system of credits and courses, which the student is told to pile up like so many pieces of wood. Some classrooms are remark able monuments to the genius of stupidity. Stimulation In Needed. "Our schools must arouse and stimulate students and modernize them for the problems of the day. There is a stratum of disrespect In the nation at this time, a contempt for courts, law and order and the 18th amendment. "The modern student must be taught patriotism and nationalism that are not narrow, for America has ideals and visions that are needed in all the rest of the world. The settle ment of a war in central Kurope, for example, would have a vital effect on the life of Portland." Discussion of topics of special In terest to teachers and disposal of a mass of routine business of various departments of the association fea tured the session, yesterday. Nine teen such meetings were held, i ne departmental sessions started at 1:30 P. M. and adjourned at 3:15 P. M. to hear the second address of President Burton. Ir. Charles H. Judd and President Burton both addressed the association in the morning. Klectlona, Are Held. Departmental elections yesterday Included the following: Department of vocational education, A. It. Nich ols. Corvallis. chairman: K. K. Horn ing, Portland; secretary. Department of libraries. Miss Cornelia Marvin, Salem, chairman: Misa Gertrude Mor ton. Salem, secretary. Department of music. Franklin B. Walsh, Portland, chairman; Mrs. C. H. Henney. Hood River, secretary. Klectiona in other departments will be completed today. Mrs. Mary Ij. Fulkerson, retiring president of the association, made a brief annual address yesterday morn ing. In which she commended the co operation of her associates in the teaching profession. As a closing feature of her speech. Mrs. Fulkerson presented Miss Margaret Reid, a teacher in Franklin high school, with a medal from the near east relief In appreciation of Miss Reid's heroic work in two years' service in the near east. Drrresse In Reported. A decrease in the number of do mestic science departments In Oregon schools was reported yesterday by K. E. Elliott, state director of the board of vocational education at Sa lem. On the other hand there has been a marked increase in the estab lishment of manual training and "farm shop" departments, he said. Features of the closing sessions of the association today will be speeches by Dr. Judd and President Burton. The former will speak on "American School Organization as Contrasted With That of Other Countries." and the latter will discuss "The Crucial Test of American Education." President and Mrs. Burton will be guests of about 20 members of the University of Oregon faculty, includ ing Colin Dyment, Dr. George Rebec and Mrs. Mabel Holmes Parsons, at a breakfast at the Benson hotel this morning. LOGGED-OFF AREAS TO BE INVESTIGATED Chamber Takes Up Problem! of Providing Farms. GOLD HILL MINES ACTIVE OliDTIME PROPERTIES PRODUCING AGAIN. ARE "Pocket" Discovered In 1857 Esti mated to Have Yielded $700, 000; Other Mines to Reopen. GOLD HILL. Or., Dec 29. (Spe cial.) There is an Increased activity in this region in the reopening of old-time producing gold mines to put them in a producing condition again. Among them is the Gold Hill "pocket" group two miles northeast, which is located near the top of the hill of that name at an elevation of about 2000 feet. It is owned and operated by C. R. Ray and associates of Med ford. Or. It has been idle since 1914. This "pocket" was discovered in 1857 and has produced at least $700. 000. The outcropping rock was so full of gold that it could scarcely be broken by sledging. The crystallized quartz associated with the gold was not honeycombed as it generally is where sulphides have leached out of the rock, leaving sprays of gold in the cavity. The gold in this pocket went down only 15 feet and occurred in a fissure -ein, striking about south 20 degrees east, and dipping about 80 degrees east, with a gash vein cutting the Assure nearly due east and west and dipping vertically. The fissure vein averages fully five feet between walls with one to two feet of gouge on the foot wall, which contains some calcite and quartz mixed with a little sulphide of iron. in spots containing free gold. A mass of micaless granite, about five feet wide by possibly 200 feet long, out crops in the foot wall side of the fissure. The country rock is pyrox-enite. DATA TO BE GATHERED BURNETT IS TRANSFERRED State Hospital Attendant Faces Charge of Manslaughter. HOOD RIVER. Or., Dec. 29.-MSpe-clal.) Charles Burnett, indicted in November by the grand jury on a charge of contributing to the death of Nick Topick. an insane patient being removed from Portland to the eastern Oregon hospital for the in sane, where Burnett was an attend ant, has been transferred to the Wasco county jail at The Dalles. Bur nett's trial will not come up before March. The indictment by the grand jury followed a coroner's inquest. 1500 Get Auto Tags. ABERDEEN, Wash.. Dec. 29. (Sne- ciul.) Approximately one-fourth of Grays Harbor county's motor cars have been licensed for 1922. according to a statement by Miss Ethel Baker, county auditor. A total of slightly more than 1500 licenses had been Is sued last night. There are more than 5600 autos in the county. All car li censes must be obtained prior to Jan uary 1. according to the new state law. Automobile owners were lined up In long lines at the auditor's office yesterday owing to delay in obtaining permits. Head The Oregonian classified ai. Decision Is Made at Meeting of Ag ricultural Committee; Mr. Dot! son Speaks. A thorough investigation into the subject of the logged-off areas of Oregon in relation to their utilization for agricultural purposes will be made Immediately by the Portland cnamoer or commerce tnrougn me agricultural committee, of which E. E. Faviile Is. chairman. H. B. Van Duzer, president of the chamber, appeared before the com mittee yesterday and presented the plan in a formal way. Mr. Van Duzer did not take a decided stand. "I believe utilization of logged-off timberland for agricultural purposes is as important as any problem now before the people of the northwest." Mr. Van Duzer said. "I have no set tled ideas as to how the matter should be approached, but I am sure i that this Chamber should lend all of its resources to obtain information that will help in the formulation of plans as to how the problem can best be solved. Large Arris In State. "There are in this state and Wash ington large areas of cut-over lands which present themselves for culti vation if handled properly in their clearing. It may be that it will cost too much to do this at present. I do not know. I believe that by Investi gation and discussion we should come to some decision so far as this Cham ber is concerned and give the public the benefit of our conclusions. "In my opinion there are vast areas of logged-off lands, especially in the western part of the state, available for colonization. These lands are near transportation facilities. I be lieve these lands can be put under cultivation at reasonable cost. Others do not believe this. Through your investigation a decision should bear rived at." 3lr. Dodsoa f.lvea lewra. "There Is no question that the sub ject of using cut-over lands for agri cultural purposes is as important as any other land problem In ths state," W. D. B. Dodson, general manager of the Chamber, said. Mr. Dodson took part in the discussion. Among the questions that arise are whether these lands should be cleared by in dividuals or by companies; also whether this is the" time to attack the problem. Out of the meetings which will be. called from time to time through a period of months it ts hoped that we can come to a common mind as to what should lie done." Tho meeting resulted in a decision that the agricultural committee im mediately obtain all Information ob tainable on the subject. From the United States forestry reserve rec ords there will be obtained the exact number of acres in Oregon and Washington available for agricultur al purposes. All other information also will be presented at a future meeting of the committee. It is probable an Oregon and Wash ington conference to discuss means to attack the problem will be called shortly after the beginning of the new year. Thousands of men throughout these United States have learned that a Hart Schaffner & Marx suit or overcoat is a really safe garment to buy. Suits and Overcoats Expertly tailored by Hart Schaffner & Marx 1 A. OFF You'll find nothing but the finest goods here! Remarkable values at the regular prices now the values are extraordi nary! Do not miss this chance! $39.00 Suits and Overcoats $42.50 Suits and Overcoats $45.00 Suits and Overcoats $49.00 Suits and Overcoats $55.00 Suits and Overcoats $60.00 Suits and Overcoats $67.50 Suits and Overcoats $29.25 $31.90 $33.75 $36.75 $41.25 $45.00 $50.65 Choice of any suit or overcoat in our entire stock at 25 reduction Sam,l Rosenblatt & Co. Fifth at Alder Gasco Building Toledo Lodges Install. TOLEDO, Or.. Dec. 29. (Special.) Lincoln lodge No. 124, Ancient. Free and Accepted Masons, has installed the following officers: M. N Ander son, worshipful master; R. V. Mann, nenlor warden: A. M Oildersleeve. junior warden: W. E. Ball, treasurer: It. S. Van Clcve, secretary; F. W. Chambers. senior deacon; C. E. Hawkins, marshal; W. H. Campbell and . E. Xewklrk. stewards: and J. B. Booth, tyler. J. J. Caither. past mas ter, was the installing officer, and C. E. Hawkins, marshal. Officers of Pacific chapter No. 79. Order of Eastern Star, were installed by Edith Howell, past matron, and Stella Wade, marshal. They were: Martha Goln. worthy matron: R. V. Mann, worthy patron; Edith Van Cleave, associate matron; Aileen McCluskey, secretary; Virginia Ball, treasurer: Bertha Peter son, conductress; Annie E. Hawkins, associate conductress: ElizaDeth Mc Cluskey, chaplain: Nellie Galthf-r, marshal; Winifred McMillan, Ada; Cecil Hawkins Esther: Stella Wnrlo. Martha: Ruth Nye, Eleclra; H.ir rlftla Dflnitt. warder; and It S. V Cleve, sentinel. After the Install tlon a lui liquet w;i" served by I rlfic ('llHt'lT Mr. Lssr !M. Hoy Itecommenda I hambrrluln'a Tablets, "I have frequently used Chamber Iain's Tablets, during the past three years, and have found them splendid for headache and bilious attacks. I am only too pleased, at any time, to speak a word in praise of them." writes Mrs. Laura M. Hoyt, Kockport. N. Y. Adv. JOHN BARRYM0RE IN The LOTUS EATER We have heard numbers of people say, "The best show I have seen in ages." And that is going some, for the Colum bia always has good shows. The present bill is excellent from start to finish, feature comedy and Screenland News. TODAY 3WATCH WRIGHT'S WINDOWS mtlomu Mem! u c 5 a. H UJ O -J I n Why Pay $5, $6, $7 or $8 ? SO 00 Pairs Shoes and Oxfords,, Any Size, Any Style SOOO PAIRS Entire Stock on Sale JLo west Prices on Good Shoes Any Style Any Leather Values to $8 All the new styles as well as the more conservative lasts. Vict kid, calfskins and side leathers, in black, brown, tan, mahogany and two tones, in lace, blucher or but ton. All sizes 5 to 12. A to EE widths. All leathers and guar anteed shoes. $dJ)85 B D a 2 r WORK SHOES Heavy or Light Chrome or veal leath ers, single or double soles, sewed or stand ard screwed grain leather insoles. Guar anteed counters. Sizes? A fit for every foot! $ej)85 Men's Rubbers, 6 to 11 BET, 79c hi Have You Enough of This Wonder Working Sub stance in Your Blood which science say you must have to enable yon to transform the food yon eat from lifeless matter Into living cell which produce firm fle.h (not fat). irons nerves, energy end endurance, fc-s tion. made by doctor, show why thousar people are always weak, nervous and run-da spite of everything they do. The most remarkable) miracle of of your body to transform ordinary reus tnat ootid flesh, bono, mui Every minute and every second change takes place within you. what you eat or how much you en I thing is lacking .in your blood it ii solutely impossible for yonr body change food into living cells and tissue. Therefore, this wonderful precious substance might well be called the connecting; link between lifeless. Inert food matter and life itself .This marrelon wonder working sub stance la a strange unusual kind of iron which science has named Or ganic Iron. This is found in minute quantities in spinach, lentils and apple. It is an entirely different tiling from metallic iron which is med in manufac turing and which 1 the kind of iron people usually take. Science has shown that without organic Iron, your blood can not take up oxygen from your lung and carry it to your di gestive organs. The food yooeat con tain carbon. A your digested food Is ab sorbed into the blood. -wn In rA I jclo and tissue. Vl-ar-s. r f s this miracle AfT? jA l manor ft m r -f v g -J if one yff stfrl WASHINGTON AND ALDER. O FOI'RTH ST. Opposite Circle Theater. o WHOLESALE AU It K TALL. 7;.vn 11 fA E l s ri Quality? Excellent! Fit for any man, $385 5 OPEN SATURDAY TILL 8 P, M. C Impoverished Hood corpuscles highly magnified the carbon in your food come in contact with the oxygen carried br the organic iron in your blond. The carbon and oxygen unite and by so doing they give off tremendous energy, thereby giving you great force, strength and endurance, and also resulting in the produc tion of material which becomes active living cells and tissue. Without organic iron, your blood carrie no oxygen and without oxygen there is nothing to unite with the carbon in your food, so what you eat does you no good. It l like putting coal intoa stovewithout fire. You cannot get any heatout of it unless the coal unites with the fire. Therefore, if you want plenty of good Arm flesh (not fat) pep and energy, if you want strong nerve that radiate magnetic force and power, if rou want a keen brain that think the thought that win, you must be able to utilixeand get strength and nourishment out of your food. If you were to Mean actual blood test made on all people who are ill, weak, thin, tervoui and generally run-down, you would probably be greatly astonished at the exceedingly large number who lack Iron and whose troubles are doe solely to this lack of Iron. The moment Iron 1 supplied a multitude of dangerous symptom disappear. For centuries scientists tried in vain tomake organic Iron. At last the problem wa solved, so that you may now obtain pure organic iron like the iron in your blood from any druggist under the name of "N mated Iron", which is ready for immediate absorp tion and assimilation by the blood the mo ment it enters the , system. Unlike me tallic iron, organic ' Nuxatrd Iron doe not injure or blacken the teeth nor upset the stomach. If you want to in crease your physical and mental vivor, strength, snd endur- snce you should take Nuxatrd Iron. It is often most surprising what a tremendous amount of "pep." viaor, force and energy a little more oxygenated organic Iron will give person whose blood is dencirnt in this magic-like substance. Over four million people are using Ntixated Iron annually. theirexper ience proving that it increases the strength and endurance of weak, nervous, run-down people, in many cases, in two weeks' time. If you want that virile force, that stamina and strength so necessary to success and power in every walk of life, you owe it to yocrtelf to commence taklDgNuxstedlrnn today. It Is sold to you with the distinct understanding that it will give you greater power, energy and endurance within two week time or we will refund your money. Sold by all drorgtsta. Healthy Hood cm pusclrs highly magnifird SUFFERED FOR EIGHT YEARS Rheumatic pains, lame back, sore muscles and stiff points most fre quently can be traced to overworked, weak or disordered kidneys. Daisy Bell. R.F.D. 3, Box 234, Savannah, Ga, writes: "1 was suffering: for eight years from pain in the back and could not do any of my work, but since I have taken Foley Kidney Pills, I can do all of my work." Foley Kidney Pills have given relief to thousands who suffered from kidney or bladder trouble. Try them, SOLD EVERYWHERE. Taklnar Heoperate Chanrea. It Is true that many contract severs olds and recover from them without aklng any precaution or treatment ind a knowledge of this fact leads others to take their chances Instead of giving their colds the needed at tention. It should be borne in mind that every cold weakens the lungs, lowers the vitality, makes the system less, able to withstand each succeed ing attack and paves the way for the more serious diseases. Can you af ford to take such desperate chances when Chamberlain1 Cough Remedy, famous for Its cures of bad colds mar bs had for a trifle? Adv.