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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1924)
AT " . ' ' Xwaed Daily Except Monday ly TBI STATSSKAJT TVZUSBXSQ COMPACT 215 gout Commercial R. 3. Hendricks John L. Brady frank Jaikoiki fc ' MEMBER Of TBS Th Atioeiated Free la exclaiively new despatches credited to it or not otherwige credited in thia paper and alao Ue wcm nawa puoiiapea nerein. B.JHEXDRICK3 v "., m Pretident CABLE ABRAX3 ! i Secretary ' BUSINESS Taomaa T. Clark Ca, 5ew Tork, 141-145 Wet 86th St.; Chicago, Marquette Build tar W ft ftmthwihl Urr (Portland Office. Sol Worceater Bid.. Phona 6637 BKoadway, K a". WiUiama, Mgr.) Bnalneaa -Office . . 2is Department ' - . Jon Department Entered at the' Poatofflce in Salem, Oregon, aecond-caaa matter. THE There is a good deal of agitation in Salem just now over the curlew law. This is riot a new law. It is an ordinance that was passed back in 1912, by the Salem city council. The present " council is merely falling heir to ordinance. The ordinance provides that the warning whistle and at fifteen minutes to 10 in all children milder 18 years of homes at 9 and 10 o clock respectively. , Those who are contending that the ordinance cannot be en- frTPfnf no if Tinur etnrwla ,sm savincr flint wnst Tnpptincs rf the " V. V - ..1 -1 .1 : aifiu sciiuui, me vuuivuva, inc a. m. v. .jn., in.., aic nui uia- missed in time to allow hundreds of boys and girls to avoid be ing law breakers under the ordinance., The other side of the case is argued like this : The hours of 9 in winter and 1Q in summer evenings, and the age limit of girls in many outlying neighborhoods, what otherwise are led into all sorts of mischief through the "gang" spirit, shall be in iheir homes after those hours , And it is tfanighty easy matter to get. up an argument and .almost to get up ft fight in regard to the ordinance as it now stands. . . . t ,! uue pareni win say u leacnes dos ana gins 10 lie; 10 ctatm they are 18 when they are not. He will say it is not a crime for boyg and girls under 18 to attend church or high school functions, and that it ought not to be stated to be a crime, by any law or city ordinance. He will say his boy" or girl is no criminal, and . he does not want either of them to be branded s such.- He will declare that it is worse than foolish to expect the officers to enforce the ordinance as it stands ' : v. And so on and so fourth. 7 r There is no end to the anrument. . u i. uc viimuu ui incii vi. uic ijpc ui. luc.vue quuLCU ttuuvc, vthis is a most important matter; not one to be joked over or Jaughed down. They want the ordinance amended. Just.howi Ithfeydo not sajr; definitely, r jPerhapai jsbm'Yeadera will be interested in the history of the curfew. The following is what the Encyclopaedia1 Brtttanica lias nidep thatJieAd , ,..v 4 f -" ';' : I ; . , "UURFllw,?urfew, or Cpuyre-feu, a signalas 'byTtolIFng a bfjll,, to wara the habitants of a town to estjnguisix their, fires and lights aiid retire to rest. This was a common practice throughout the ; various countries of Europe during the.middlt ages, Specially in citrea" taken, m war. In the law Latin of thos times it was termed ignitegium,' or pyritegium. The curfew is iinnimnnl if oqi1 4A. lini'A 1--v iMinAiliinA.1 4. L7dtMl J"',! . 1 'TITM Jiam the Conqueror, who ordained, under severe penalties, that at the ringing of the"curfew-bell at eight o'clockln the evening all lights and fires should be extingiiishedVvIt seems probable, however, that he merely enforced an existing arid very common police regulation to that effect. The absolute prohibition of ngms aner tne nngmg ot the eurtew-beil ws abolished: by Henry I in 1100. The practice of tolling a belt' at a fixed hour in the evening, still extant in many places, is a survival of th ancient curfew. The common hour was at first ieven, and it "was gradually advanced to eight, and in seme, places to nine o'clock. In Scotland ten was hot an unusual -hour!,' As a pre caution against ; conflagrations, the curfew was" a most, useful regulation, at a period when it was the customo'piace the fire in a hole in the middle of the floor, under an opetaing in the roof to allow the escape of the smoke. When a family retired for rest for the night, the fire was extinguished by, covering it up; and hence the term couvre-feu, jbr curfew. ; But this salutary regulation served 1 another ; important end, Hince by obliging people to keep writhin doors, nocturnal brawls; in rt-je streets Avere m a great measure prevented. There li a'popular tradi tion, for which no historical authority can be assisrned. that the seventy exhibited by William ureuce 10 me curiew, was more f Via TCnn1 left 1-1 m niMni lion against himself. The ringing of-the 'payekbelV as ' it is called, which is still practiced in some Protestant countries. ungmaiea jn inai 01 me curiew - . I A 1 al " a M . 1 Jt .. This will remind some readers of. the sfories their.'mQthers nsed to tell them, of the times before matches were invented. This was not so many years ago. Perhaps your mother how living, renjembers the time. Some now living chxv So the fire's, Jnihe fire places in the United States (for there wefeiio Stoves and ranges then), were kept alive all the time ?beingvcoyered with ashes at ifight." When the live embers were lost, they went to ineir neign&ors and borrowed live, coals unless some one had a' flint and steel and tow, or had mastered the art of makinr- lires by the (friction of dry taught to do now. : , f AOT TRUE t.U la ralShtr tiresome to hear a", . maa declare that "every man hag his price." This Is not true except of those doing the talking. Tery man does not have his Vrice. The dishonest ; man is an CKception in any walk of life. De tilte; the talk of - corruption ; in , VafchtnKtoit, the standard of pub lic itervlcft is higher than It has ever been - and 4 fewer men go crooked. ; It is-Wo rato that they are bawled ottf now, whereas they ust'd to i covered "up. Twpnty five years "ago -th 'Fall scandal would liave1 been hushed up for fear it would hurt tho party, Now the Republicans are demanding that we go to the bottom. Sit men who ray that "every man lia hU prloe" oaly knew it, that low opinion of mankind is a re flection upon the character, f the f puakep. Tho dishonest policeman, the grafting legislator, orthe bribe taking admlnUtrative employe 1 the fellow who - believes ithat "every , man has Jii price,", who iUiuka that tho gouerality of man v. i"i?i St, Salem, Oregon ' ; Manarer . . Editor Manager Job Vtpt. ASSOCIATED PRESS entitled to the aie for tmblieation of all J. L. BRADY Vice Preiident OFFICES: , . TELEPHONES: 23. Circulation Office 23-106 Society Editor 583 106 683 CURFEW renewed attempts to enforce the the summer months, to notify age that they must be in their IT IT 1 A A the Conqueror jnHorcing- obe- particularly aesigneq to prevent tiAiHn 'wsl a' tl.L. 1 .i 0) . , t - " t . Den." wood, like the Boy Scouts are J . . kind is dishonest, and who salves his blunted conscience by telling himself: "They are all doinc it" Pessimists to the contrary hot- withstanding, the level Of private and public morals is, higher in America, than it was in the past; and the higher standards extend all the way from tho ballot box to the legislatures and congress. Votes are not bought on election day as once they were bought; city eouncilmen are not bribed as once ' they were bribed; nor leglaiators, nor members of con giess. ; : '- 'r ', ' look out for the man who goes around asserting that "every" man has his price." Don't trust him far. ,. -:i ' ... Ji A 4 , lUuTTKIt MARKKTS it is a hard matter to convince anyone that almost any thing can ne raided in tno Willamette valley We produce so wonderfully that It astonishes the world, yet we are not as ; prosperous as- .WQ should be,'. ttlthoughrwe are raore 'prot,' peron .thaa will admit. The 4..'. y .1 . . one tning peecui is markets. 4 We ust'haVeCaariictivi cam paign of sales promotion to stimu late the use of our products. We heard it stated recently that if every Chinaman would eat one slice of bread a day there would be no more talk of a glutted wheat market. Of course, the Chinamen will not eat that much more bread There are millions of Chinamen who have never heard of our bread, but what is meant by this is that somewhere in the world there are enough people to eat all of our surplus products if we would just find them. We have gone beyond the point of an apple a day, a pear a day, a plum a day, a prune a day, or even a loaf a day. We must take higher ground than this. Instead of trying tq stuff our own people w must reach-out and find hew people who really need these things. We do not need the extra apple or the extra prune, but there are millions of people who do need them and who would be the bet ter for having them. Therefore hear ye the conclusion of the whole matter: Reach out and get more markets. THE AMAZE 1 MeADOO Bill McAdoo is horrified, amat- ed, perturbed, terrified and a lot of other adjectives we cannot think of. When he heard the hor rible disclosure in the Fall case he was so paralyzed that he could not sign his name to a separation of himself from the oil Interests. There never has Tbeen anything like it. The Fall case Is, tfca worst that ever happened and Mc Adoo took two weeks to recover his breath sufficiently to write hia resignation. Oil Is a dangerous thing. It slimes men all over. The Republi cans are demanding the prosecu tion of Fall. How many Demo crats are demanding the prosecu tion of McAdoo? By the way. the name of Frank lin K. Lane is mentioned as an ax-cabinet official in connection with this scandal. No criticism can be attached to Mr. Lane. He said frankly that he was coming to be an old man and had nothing to .leave his family, and when profitable employment was offer ed he -took the j public into con fidence as' he felt forced, to take It. "Mr. McAdoo covered his up and would have accepted money right along if he had not been exposed. .Tha unspeakable George Creel was ' so horrified ' when he found out-that the $5,000 that went to him was oil money that he blew up, but ,so far as the report goes, never-restored a cent of it. It was fine punishment . for the oil interests we must admit. ' CARRYIXG VOICES A balloonist tells a pretty story. He says that when going up in the air the voices he can hear last are the children's voices. This is true all , through life. A child's voice will carry through the years even more than a mother's voice. A child's gentle touch will last just as long as a mother's gentle touch. The man who hears the voice of a child through the years Is stop ped from many wicked things and atartedon the road to many good things. I There is nothing like the voice of -a child , to sweeten life and niake It endurable through the, hard, places wherein all men must travel. V-'- REMEDIES The Northwestern National bank of Minneapolis which is an author ity on conditions in the north- est, said In one of its recent re views: "Out of all the flood of talk about the farmers' problems in the one-crop grain regions of the northwest, the main conclu sion of those with no axes to grind that the simple expedient of fos tering the practice of mixed farm ing Is the only practical solution. If some of our districts have ar rived at the point where they can not extricate themselves from tlv consequences of the all-wheat habit, then the next move in all heighborline83 is to give them a lift. "More and more clearly Is the northwest Impressed with the fact that dairying, the raising of alfal-i . sugar beets, poultry, hogs, etc.; as important component part of diversified farming, have a direct bearing on our business and our banking." SIBERIA For many years Siberia was looked upon as the most forlorn place in the world. It was held up "as omforllesB und an ideal prison for .the heartless Russian autocracyV As a matter ot fact the very opposite is true. Siberia is about the richest country in the world. t can produce more things and produce them easier than any other country. It offers oppor tunities that' lio other country of--fers. Some of these days it is go ing to. be developed,, .- , - wucu 'otueiia cornea luio ua own, the'r northwestern .pacific states will reap the reward. They will be the natural port of which and to which 'will flow the merce between the two countries. The moment Siberia gets on the map, that moment our importance will be doubled. GRADING WHEAT The good news comes that in the northwest, which in wheat par lance is Minnesota and the Da kotas, a new means of grading whet is to be provided. It is true that Minneapolis and t. Paul rob the Dakotas out of millions of dol lars year after year. They have the advantage and keep it. The Nonpartisan movement was a pro test against the grading of wheat aud the unfairness of Minneapolis. That movement has been suppres sed,, but it will break out in some other "place. more violent than ever unless the farmers get a square deal In the grading of wheat. rUICE CUTTING We saw a very pertinent pro test the other day. It wns on price- cutting in cooperative institutions. Of course, until they are strong enough to hold up the price they must meet competition, but there is a difference between competi tion and price cutting. Meeting competition is simply using busi ness sense in an emergency, but price cutting means to set out on a new field with A determination to: sell things cheaper than any one else is selling them. Price cutting canont be justified and will wreck any cooperative asso ciation that undertakes to do it. GLAD THEY CAME The Oregon Statesman wishes to compliment the Business Wom en's club" for bringing the Stuart Walker players here. It todk nerve to do this, but it sets the standard for high attractions for Salem. We have always lacked nerve in getting the better things and the only way we can get them is to get an organization of de termined citizens back of them. The business women have per formed a distinct public service and we desire to congratulate thein. FOOLISXKSS A man over at Bend claims to have invented a process to tell whether or not a; person in a grave is dead. That is a terribly foolish thing. Men ought to be in better business. No gtod -can come out' of that in the world and the only thing it can do is to alarm and make uneasy those whose loved ones are buried. No one is ever buried Alive, and if they were they would not live a minute after they revive. No alarm would work quickly enough to let in any air. It is all a piece of nonsense. DIFFERENT IDEAS Out in this country we sit on the front porch when the weather is cool and when driven inside are very apt to leave the curtains up. Americans are supposed to love publicity, an'1, yet Mrs. Belmont, an American, has just paid $100,- 000 for a lighthouse because in no other way could she close the road that interfered with her pri vacy, LITTLE INTEREST It is surprising how little In terest is manifest In wheat' sub sidy." There is a reason for this. We- have talked so much abou't it and done so little that the far mers have lost all interest. They ha've settled back into a hopeless ness that is not healthy either as citizens or as a community. The farmers have been fooled so much that only the performance and delivery of goods can convince them there is a way out. COMING AROUND When Dawes and Young landed In Berlin it looked as though they were facing a stone wall. The German money lords re fused to give them assistance. We arc now told that the wall is crumbling down and by the end of another week thqse haughty lords will be eating oAit of the hands of Dawes and Young. TOO LATE ' Senator Jones has a bill regu lating such employment as ex-government officials can accept. It Is too late. The damage has been done. Moral laws will govern hereafter. You will never find high officials resigning and, so getting their names on fat pay rolls with limited or no service. : , 4 . v ' ' - . W have before us this morning circulars calling attention to the national coin week. That Is enough of this. There t only one week that has been neglected and that Is national newspaper week. Tb.o newspapers ought to bo " given j ft place next or refuse to play dx 1 -'. , ' " it nil. .. .... ; J ., ..: L t ' Cap'n Zyb WHOOPEE! COWBOY LASSOS! For real fun, get a lasso and start fooling with it. By choice, these lassos should be made from 'grass rope" about three-quarters inch in diameter. The loop of the American lasso should be made by bending over about seveji Inches LASSOS AMERICAN of one end and iwiring it into a loop yith picture wire or fine piano wire. A bit of this wire should also be wound on the other, of free, end of the-lasso to keep, it Ironi unraveling An Australian or South Ameri can lasso can be made by wiring two tails to a regular piece of rope. These tail? should be about five feet long and have weighted balls firmly fastened to their outer ends. This foreign lasso is worked just as the American lasso by swinging it around the head and then letting it fly a,t the object to be caught. This Australian lasso should never be used in attempting to lasso a person, ; as the weighted balls might cause inury. CAP'X ZYB. RET YOU CAN'T SOLVE IT For a real tricky puzzle this one takes tne cake. Take a plain. Ordinary cigar box and save. the top of it. This too should be cut sp as to fit fn the bottom as a false bottom. Dia BASEBALL PUZZLE vQ7 w" " ac-J A TLI-. BEARING? ptrr capsules frt-XEEPQALL DSARAGS our gram a diamond on this false bot tom andbore a bole U inch in di ameter in each of the places shown In the illustration; catcher, pitch er, batter, first .base, second base, and third base. : Make the whirligig capsules by putting a BB shot in pill capsules six of these are necessary. Two small ball bearings are also needed. With sail these things made, put the false bottom in the cigar box and j the capsules and ball-bearings in. the box. . The idea is to get the six cap sules in the holes without getting the ball-bearings in. This is to be done by shaking box around. The capsules or ball-bearings niusjt not be touched with the hands. , CAP'N, ZYB. MARRIAGE PROBLEMS Adele Garrison's New Phase of . REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Copyright 1321, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. CHAPTER 93 WHAT KATIE BEGGED OF MADGE 'Oh. Mesis graham! My dar ling Meesis Graham! You come home to your latle you safe me: You safe me!"j- Over aud over again as my little maid clung convulsively to me, her twisting 19ps repeated the words with wliieh she had first greeted me. From the depth of the hall I saw Mother Graham look back, pause f irresolutely, then shrug her shoulders and co'Hl'nue her juorney upstairs to minister to Junior. Marion, on the steps, turned, stared at us in frightened fashioned, whfjo from th.? hall, three boys anj a girl. Elizabeth's children, came; running out. .Lillian descended from tho. car quickly and put a reassuring hand on my arm. (: "Take her Die ky st studio," she whispered! "fll see? Mrs. Ti cer, and be witii you in a few miu- NvtoB,; - - f. . . . . She ran up ft he : steps to the children as lightly as Marion her self and I .tarned--half-ieadinir- nau-carrrms-Jvaue toward the i. ijlfw&GHTED BALL v mm r a-wxc aw; .i Ml ' Things . ! To Do ; Copyright, 1023,, Associated Editors. I THE ANIMAL IN K2MOR1AM IS A WHEN ELECTRICAL EXTENSION 7V, CORD SEC ARTHUR. BAT CAS BLDO. SKi. CXoof. nina, Hmu, (But dUJL aiSLcuJ;. OUR EDITORIAL POLICY BY EPHRAIM OWL Our talcs are not batty, our gossip Hot catty, Though cat aiid bat news both we haudle, "We're meek as young lambs, as tfilcnt as clams, Suppressing the animal scandal. Of false news imparted, we're e'er chicken hearted, We'd speak our subscribers no ill, We're a free news dispenser, our columns we eensor At point of a porcupine quill. If a beaver dam broke or a bullfrog should croak, "We'd print the news on our mule press, Then to speed circulation of our publication Deliver by pony express. Snoppyquop This is Aladdin, tlie Sherkyquop of the desert, crossing the hot sands of Egypt. Aladdin's wonderful" lamp is on top of his bean serving as his headlight. Once he shied at a piece of paper, skidded and fell on his dome. Then Aladdin got up and rubbed his wonderful lamp. The Sheikyquop has just asked the Sphinnicks how to get to King Tut's tomb. Sphinnicks said, "Do you think I'm a Trafficquop?" This is the famous riddle of the Sphinnicks, that has come down through the ages. Aladdin married a tricycle and they have a little velocipede. "You know me, Al," his wife says to him jokingly. "Good bye-cycle," the baby calls to Papa. "E-gypt pedals up the pyramids. picturesque old corn-crib which Dicky had transformed Into a stu dio, and which had been the scene of Grace Draper's terrible scheme to kidnap my baby boy. I shivered as I drew near it. and knew that never again would I be able to en joy the place again. But it gave me the seclusion I needed for my talk with Katie, and I welcomed its quiet isolation now. With one hand holding her firm ly, I unlatched and flung open the door with the; other. Then I led the sobbijig girl inside. As I closed the door after us, I caught a glimpse of Jim leaning against an apple tree; his arms folded across his. chest, his eyes watching us closely. It was but a glimpse I had of his set, white face so dif ferent from the good-humored, a bit stolid, countenance which I al ways had associated with Katie's liusband. The consciousness of something sinister, menac'ng, in the atmosphere surrounding my faithful little maid settled upon me oppressively. 'Come:, Ee Sensible!" I drew her with me to a couch, sat lown. and held her close. Hut she twisted away from me to her knees, bowed her head upon my lap and gav herself up to the fit of tempestuous sobbing which 1 knew must precede any confidence upon her part. . While the paroxysm continued 1 smoothed h-r hair and murmured the soothing words i Would have given to a frightened child. And it was not until Khe lifted her tear-swollen face to mine after her fobs had tiubnided that 1 epoke to her directly. "Tell mc all about it, Katie," I commanded. Her eyes Svidcned with terror, her face blanched. "Dot's shoos t vat I no -can do, Mecsis 'Graham," she replied piti- The Boys and Girls Statesman The Biggest Little Paper nl the World STATESMAN AVaO EYE STRAIN READING ' DELIGHT YOU USE OU3. NTW Land here Xothing Seems Queer me," mutters the Sheik, and fully. "I no can tell you puttings. I get me keeled if I do." "That's nonsense, Katie," I re turned, trying to keep a common sense attitude toward her emotion, but secretly feeling myself inflict ed with the terror that was so pat ently obsessing her. "There is nothing you cannot tell me. And we'll make short work of anybody who is frightening you. Come! Be a sensible girl and tell me ev erything that's troubling you." I felt a convulsive shudder go through her slight figure, and she looked at me with pitiful, apolo getic, yet obstinate defiance. "Oh, Meesis Graham! You no ask me ven you know " she stoo ped, trembling. "Know what, Katie?" I encour aged. "What Is It?" "Know dot I swore hip rrpat big swear on my life. Jeem's life, my soul, Jeem's soul, on every thing I lof in dis vorld and you know dot means dot Junior babee dot I would never tell till he gifes me leave " "Until who gives you leave. Ka tie?" I interposed, quietly, for she wa3 too quick for me. "Nobody.- I no mean dot," she said sullenly. I knew by the look which was In her. eyes. It was the fanatic su perstition whiebfher years in this country had never entirely banish. ed. Some Olio had lirnn-h It ti - k. (, ail back to her, and he would be cut into pieces lmfore she'woUid break the letter of her oath. But there was Komi hint. in', her eyes, also, a childish cun ning wnicn told me that she had some scheme in mind. I tnnv. as matter-of-fact a manner as 1 could manage: , , YOU Want llln in An wimnif.!--' - mi v m I UK for you. Katie, don't von? wm! Jg - . Load of Fun Edited by John M. aiiller. Peter Poaalo Says '. i A Behead to cry aloud and obtain a dairy product. Behead ' f af ain and get 20 quires. : ; ; ; - Behead a precious stone and get a fruit. Behead again and get a vegetable. . Curtail . the art of play acting and obtain ah eighth of an ounce. Behead the latter and get a bat lering engine of war. - Double curtail a floor covering and obtain a fish. Curtail once more and obtain a conveyance. '" Behead a creeping animal, and obtain part of your finger. p3& head again and obtain to decline. Silence ,' Line from a Senior theme: "Ev erything was so still you could have heard a gum drop - Answer to tolajr't brheadingt and ear tailing: Srrcara, cream, ream. Paarl, pear, p a. Saail, nail, ait. Irama, dram ram. Carpi t ,carp, car. ANDY ANDREV75, FAMOUS ARTIST, EXHIBITS WHAT HE L1KE5 TO DRAE7 BEST r. ONE REEL YARN . , TOOTS WATCIIDOa , "Watchdog!" aniffed Aunt Em ma. "Why, that dog makes up to everybody that comes around the place!" "He is awfully dumb," admit ted Billr sadly,, "but somehow "Oh. let Billy keep his' dog." Uncle Will settled the argument. So Toots stayed and got "under everybody's feet and made friends with the butcher and: the 'baker and even the tramps. One night Toots was half asleep in his warm' box In the basement. Suddenly the window by the fur nace opened and a man stepped in. Toot3 was. pleased. Here was a i nice man come to. keep him com pany. t Vj The man did not seem glad to see. him. He walked past him in a hurry and started up the cellar : 6talr8. But Toots wanted a play- mate, so he sneaked along behind him ''!? t i : The man went Into the dlfSJc??' room. lie turned and saw Toots ? I and patted him on the -head and tjt palled him "nice doggie.", .Toots IH rubbed against him happily. .Then ; the man put some things in" a bag, ff opened a window, and stepped out, closing it after Talm." t " . Toots was hurt. He had nevd : seen a man he liked better. An now he was left behind like this; He lifted up his voice and howled ' angrily. Then he barked loudly. Everyone came rushing down. -stairs. "There he goes!" yelled , Uncle Will. They ran to the phone policemen excitement Toots ran in circles. 'Well," remarked Billy proud- iy, noiuing Toots in his arms, no ; one can say Toots Isn't a watch-1 dog. He's a hero," that's what. I'll 1 never call him dumb again." ' : And Toots, snug and happy, J never told them different. ; vfi Her clutch upon my knees tight ened, and her eyes were , full , of wild hope as she replied: "Oh. Meesis : Graham! You shoos t sate me safe everything eef you shoost do vun ting for me tonight, but I f raid , to tell you vot eet ees-; Promise you do ect (To be continued) le HILBMgtstoiicc j I r III i Stops Colds la 24 Hanrtl k RUl'a Casfara PmmM. rw.:: i r i tracker rehef than any other cold or h t tppe remedy. Tablet diamtegrate in I V u .seconds. EHectivenew proved in - f nulhonsof cases. Demand red boa bear- ing Mr. Hall's portrait. All drucEistt f 30 cents. ' (aSCAL'A m W. tf HIT r.m u .V j FUTURE DATES T Febmary 8 U 1 t-KaUon.l Boji 6ct .. February , Saturday Maat ineetine dinnlt'Tf lhi TrT Uorol. l.y- J ehniat-v i t ul-j . rvmmiZZV Th"ad.y - Ao't r.rk 'party aod ldic' nlsht. iltio . Fpbrnarv . r . Ur 9 ' ;?ub low. Grand HsVPrtt 1 A j - p. O&VL r-rrh.sry lwtkS. li if i ''k t s : t 3 vy