The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 18, 1927, Page 6, Image 6

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    SSIS OREGON ETATE2IIAN, CALEiX, OXtSGO,
The Oregon Statesman
TtmmI Daily Kxeept Monday VJ
THE 8TATE33IAN PUBLISHISQ COMPANY -15
goats Comfreil Straat, Salam, drecoa -
ft. J. Haadrieka .
It! S. Mc8hrry
Ralph O. Curtis -Victor
D. CarUaa
Koicllt Buck
: -. UtMfn
Vturtof Editor
Cltr Editor
-Bporta Editor
Sociaty Editor
Ralph H. Klatainav AdTrrtiaina: Ifanazar
Gaa. r. Ifartiu. Soot. Meefcaaieal boot.
W. BL Hcsdorso. - CircataUaa Jtaaacar
. A. Kaotoa ) - LiTwctoek Editor
W. C. Conner, ii"' . Poultry Editor
Tl, '. j f" Or THE ASSOCIATED ?BBSS
1,t4r? aelesTty oatitMd to tha as. for puallcation af all
LJTf - !T itai or alhexwwa cradlt.d ia tbi aaast aad alaa taa
oeaj news pubuaacd baraia. 4.;
h!I- f Oraeoa Kppax Paeitie Coi.t BeprraUtiea Doty A
--f"l ' ,p"'V fcacar.ty B!df.; Saa rraaeiseo. Siaroa Bid.; Io
C1"k c-. KrwYtk. 128 138 W. lt St.; Ol!ro. Marqaetto Bldg,
Beiinoaa Ofriea.-.-ZJ or 583
eonety "dtor
TELXP HOSES
1M ' CHxeulatiaa Offiea
MS
..SSI
Eatorad at taa Pot Otiiea ia Saiem, Orsroa, a aawid-elasa aaattar.
Konoiifxf. B Q-r f
And If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out. and cast it from
thee; It Is better for thee to enter into life with one eye, rather than
baring two eyes to be cast into hell fire. Take heed that ye despise
not one of these- little ones; for I say unto you. that ln heaven their
angels do always behold the face of my Father which 'is in heaven.
JMitthew 18:9 end 10. r -,'
IS SALEM OVER BUILDING?
Salem is doing a good deal of building ; more than any city
cf her size in any one of the five' states in her territory
.. But is Salem over building? f r ..
- No; if she will keep on developing the industries already
here that employ, labor, and will continue to get new in
dustries. - ' . - i '- . - .
It was shown in The Statesman's Slogan pages of yester
day i that the great strawberry industry of this district,
which trebled in a year, for 1927 over 1926, is sound and
stable, and will be ready to take cn new acreage for the
1929 crop; win be prepared to take care 'of the 1928 crop in
better shape than the crop of the 1927 season was handled,
and at remunerative prices to the growers, though the
fignrejpvbe'a shade lower in the way of prices than the
luotetfpriCVs of. last; year-: s. ; lfim--i
... And information came., yesterday, thatjnotj be given in
detail yet, confirming the optimism of the leaders concern
ing the stability of the strawberry industry in this district,
far and away-the largest in the world in the realm of straw
berries put into cans and barrels for th markets. -
' All our industries on the land generally are stabilized, with
the exception of prune growingand that industry has some
evidences of better things ahead. . ''.; - r
- 'A new paint factory has just opened up in, Salem.
- There are several new industrial ventures just around the
corner. . -. K , ,
Now, if the people of; Salem, and of Portland and the
valley cities, and those on the farms, will get behind a move
ment to properly finance the linen mills of Salem and put
It over,, there will be no danger, of over building in Salem.
xnis will iinng large new payrolls nere. it will indirectly
' brmg lacrgefp retting-and
scutching plants aD over the valley. t l - V ;
The $150)00 bond issue far the Oregon Linen Mills, Inc
should be subscribed. All the stock in ,the treasury of that
company should "be sold - . ,
And these things ought to be taken tip at once, and pushed
to a successful conclusion. . - ' , : - -
Do; it now .". r " v-', '' "
.ndJSalgm wiU bein no danger pf over building, and every
city, and town in the Willamette vaDeyj will receive benefits
. that will grow into advantages "hardly dreamed of at the
present time. i - , j ' ,
Our flax and linen industries are due for gigantic expan
sion. It is in the cards. ' ' ; 1
cut their first billion yet. Under the selective plan cf the
U S. forestry' service the timber supply will be jperpetuaL.
No one living today will see even the beginning of the end
of the timber industry. ; - . . .
The Klamath basin covers an area of 800,000 acres and
nearly a third of it is now under irrigation. And lots of it
fertile as our own Lake Labish land. There are thousands
and tens of thousands of acres of range land on which range
sheep, cattle and horses. Klamath Falls sits as a queen
over; this vast realm all paying a willing tribute to her
coffers. - , '
Yes, Klamath and Eugene, we . extend our congratula
tions. There is room for us all to grow. ' We are all a. part
of Oregon. .And Oregon has just begun to grow. There's
a glorious future ahead for all of us. ,
- s- - , ; - a .
lnMMMHMiMttWHB.a..SSSM I
PRUNES BY NAME
' - The- community chest idea sounds j good Looks good.
Figures out to perfection on paper, -Jit is supposed to stop
, all other drives. But it does not stop -all other drives, any
- where. Take Salem. There Is to be-a drive for Kimball col-
lege. There should be.:. It shouljl succeed.- It 'should, go
over big-; It is not in any proposed community, chest. " The
. ' same as to the completion of the Willamette university for-
"ward movement. This is of .tremendous importance to San
im. There is another thing.: : A community chest must have
' head. He must have a salary,; It is:gneraHy" $5000 a year.
"JsLaome cities higherVrTJiat immediately arouses opposition.
The man earns his salary v: and more perhaps, "i . But it is
an overhead charge that is resented. There are many other
faults. And so it goes. The theory falls down.
LETS KNOW OUR NEIGHBORS -
; . By W. A. DelzeU
! EUGENE, KLAMATH FALLS and SALEM lead the state
in building permits. Our sister cities are to be congratulated
on their splendid showing. : We of Salem, the eldest sister,
extend esDecial consrratulataons to Klamath Falls, the young
ect of the trio, dnly twenty years ago she was a straggling
cow town of less thantwo thousand; shut" off from the rest
of the world hr mountain walls and accessible, only, by stage
caach over tortuous mountain roads-rdusty in summer and
. well, nigh impassable ' in'winter. ' . So isolated was she that
once upon a time her; representative in the legislature, the
late Senator Baldwin,-facetiously introduced a resolution-in
the senate to allow KUmathxouiity to be adopted by Cali-
forma, as 90 per cent of their trade went mat way tnen.t
The establishment of the Klamath irrigation project by
the U. S. government in 1904 was the dawn of, a new day.
Followed by the Southern .Pacific ; railroad branch; line , in
from Weed in 1909, Klamath began to grow and she still
has the habit. Lumber mills camehighways were buflt-r-
Crater Lake national park, in that county became accessible
to tourists," thousands and thousands of them every year, the
Southern Pacific completed its through '.line to Eugene, the
Natron cutoff.: Through .train service with some of the
finest eqxiipment in the land is In daily operation ajid after
vears of waiting the northern , unes are at last buuamg in
and premise to have their trains into Klamath FaUs by
ChristEiS3 of this year. Small wonder that our sister, La
gene, at the jenetipn cfthe two main lines of the Sauthern
Pr "ill:. Is faring her '"cezshis out party,, ehe's a teautif ul
" intTrSIIj bczzti 1 pqrrca cT around a cdisn tnTa
. -tf T-cth. And her lumber eperatiens hava just b
T.Vrrrh-u--r ' Is . . cstsDliiraar an -- enomous . " pxani.
T -V rra over THIRTY BHXI02T3 ofchclea p?na t
:3.it -
. r w -
"3 CT C3-C
. - - ". "- II . . I t
' - . - -. - s: - - -.
t!.3 Urjrrt-rA:Z-vT;':;!rh 1:-?
s ; (Portland Journal) '
"We shall be glad to know if it is' possible to Buy ..Oregon
prunes by name or what is the best way in which to point out
to our readers that, they can have the tart-sweet Oregon
prune if they ask for it correctly -
This is part of a letter received, from the executive di
rector of the magazine Delineator. It Is a paragraph from an
apology directed to Robert H. Kipp, marketing manager of
the Portland Chamber of Commerce, because the magazine
made a slurring reference. to the Oregon prune.
Mr. Kipp may be compelled to accept this also as an tpolo-
gy in advance. So may Oregon growers and packers. But
The Journal would like to know what the Delineator wants
to know. " f
In the grocery store at Shenandoah or Milltown what is
the magic symbol the consumer utters to obtain a wonder
ful prune ? Memory; suggests there was a word "Mistland,"
but it seems to have vanished with the organization that
proposed it. It should have vanished. It was a name tnat
pictured more the drear season of sere leaf and fog than
the Rood cheer of sun and sparkling air whereby nectar
plumps the purple - covering of that great plum which is
called the tart-sweet prune. Why not call it .v i
The Oregon Tart-Sweet i Prune ? ;
One national magazine because it misrepresented for lack
offacwantsiwithout charge to help -give Oregon prunes
the name and fame they deserve. Our prunes along witn
other of Oregon's best fruits have so long sailed under Cali
fornia colors that It is time to reform, u -if . ; ;-.j v--.; : ,
And there ought to be a state-wide organization of the
prune Industry to do. it.: . j5-':l?": -TK.
FAMINE MAKES CHINESE
CRISIS MORE SINISTER
' (Contlnned from Pseo Onei
the international . warfare : oX rad
ical laborites attemptlnjc to , un
dermtne the military leaders at
present" en -route- to Shanghai ito
attend 'the Knomintanff reneml
conference there' for party unifi
cation:;:.! J'4;- i"'f.
tSiiansj. May Fibt Again -
General Chiang Kai-shek, who
withdrew recently as commander
of the Kankinc forces, is rumored
to be planning, to re-enter mili
tary life,. or to assume leadership
of the cirillan element' of the na
tionalist, party.. .At a giant re
ception for Chiang' Kai-shek' he
was slaked " to : re-enter 1 milKary
life as' a general and he replied
erasiTely. , ' :
MeanwhUe the city of Nanking
virtually has been denuded of
troops to fill gaps In the nation
alist front, and the city Is appre
hensive over reports thai north
ern troops shortly may reappear
a Pukow. . ' - , . ; - ' . .v - ; ':
In addition to 4 Its I military
trouhlea, 33,000 villages In. China
are faced with famine conditions,
according ; to official ., reports
reaching the' Chinese ' internal fa
mine commission.- Ntne .minion
persons in the southwestern, half
of the Shan tuns; smaller area and
south ' central- Chihll, are In the
famine- region. v The - eondHionSt
caused by drought- and Jocusts,
are. aggraTated by, warfare and
banditry. . i
sight acalnst a nickname, but we
do not expect to witness it- Others,
however, probably will wage
heroic war for their . own pet ab
breviation 'Oregon 'Agricultural
college., " I 1 S
- I might, add vCthat when ! the
dur club -was neading. the- college
authorities sent us word that they
considered the movement inadvis
able, but our members decided
otherwise." . ; V"-'-'-
MrHolgatvacoordins; to -bis
latter, a-radnated from the Ore
gon Stat Agricultural college la
1S3C ' -
MThe only agriculture taught in
those -days. he "wrote, "was by
our chemistry professor and the
course was limited, to one text
book.
t
Bits For Breakfast
HUMOROUS SIDE, FIGHT
OVER NICKNAME SEEN
(Continued I from Page One) ,
dents. In California, the agricul
tural students are not considered
fit to associate with the 'high
brows at Berkeley and are herded
into 'a separate Institution at Da
vis a sort of a scholastic pest
house. -
"The Oregon State Agricultural
CoUege never has been and never
was, in tended to be strictly, or
even . primarily, an - agricultural
school.' . Nothing In the 1 S 6 3 act
of congress can be construed, as
Umitlng the courses of land grant
colleges to: agricnl tu re, Any one
who wUl read that law will see
that congress bed no Intention of
segregating agricultural students.
"There is no practical reason,
and no real sentimental one. for
calling the school an agricultural
college, r ft would.be as truthful
to term It the 'Oregon College of
Engineering 'College off Phar
macy', 'College "of Commerce or!
giving It the name of any one of
the other - departments: that make
up Jthe institution.: '' ?! r
"The most effective agricultural!
courses and experimentations are
ti such schools as Cornell and
Ames (Iowa Stats). None of the
rict!y sgriceltuTsl colf ges rsnkj
Tiu inese. nor oo ine iarmers 01
New York, Iowa, Washington and
other states consider it an insult
to their calling that their schools
which Include agriculture In their.
courses are not eaUed agricultural
colleges. V; V- ; r.-,j- ;J
-""1 nere is nothing to get exclt-1
ed about and we have no thougbjtJ
that anyone at Salem Is greatly
agitated because we peak of 'Ore
gon State or. because students at
the college shout 'Rah! Bah! Rah!
Oregon "State J, Nobody -at Salem
will bedispeied to act as a mod-j
rn Con Qulrcts over the matter
ef an atbr? iitlon. '-,., "-''.-.,:"
"It wetsl.l t d!Trag to see
-C;.-;: a . cIIU Ic n arrsr 5 . la. a
Highly good
In strawberry Slogan number of
yesterday, to our growers. . .
It did not look so good a fsw
day back. Looked dike the thing
had been over done, with a 13
million pound crop, against four
million, pounds for " It 31, which
was also a big- crop .compared with
former: years.:-.-p- -;y; ;f'.;;
A tlp - Some- more facts came
to the- Slogan , man yesterday,
showing that the conclusions of
optimism, of stability,, werl iuatl-
fled. W are sUblllMd.fcfl a 12.
000,000 pound crop, and will be
able to take on new acreage and
gradually push it up to 34,000,-
000, In good time. .
. Next week, annual apple Slo
gan. Our apple men are sitting
on the ; worlds ? And should
have an Immense Increase of apple
acreage, of . the few varieties we
ought to produce. Ana every
other kind grafted over or grub
bed out. .
j?:;v;-;4 V::! : Srl3A
- The paper mul people had a
grsatl time at the Salem T. M
a. A. , last -night; 400 to S00 of
them.9- counting their wires and
children" and sweethearts. P. JP.
Ltmou reeux. ' the " new general
manager, of the : mill," was there,
He has been in charge of mills In
New Tork and Michigan: but he
used to . be" in charge of the La-
cam as. Wash., paper mill, and he
likes the west, and Is In love with
Palem- The chiefs in the different
depsrtments of the .mUl -were
there, and - those s who- man" the
machinery. . A fine. . big, family,
About 500 all together, employed
In and about the big mill; besides
tnose in the woods and transport
ing the raw materia-? generally.
Thee: people 'are going io help
make the activities of -the Y for
the coming year still more vigor
ous and Interesting. ! - ;
There ar many Interesting
things about the Salem paper mill.
Take the matter of sulphur. It
takes a ,1000 pounds of sulphur
every hour; ,20 hours a day, to
put the wood Into shape for mak
ing paper. 'i ne aurpnur comes
from Louisiana and Texas, mostly.
Jt- was iZlrrled men's night at
the revival, and the minister iad
asked that everyone who had do
mestic, worries stand up. 'j
"Ah!- exclaimed the minister,
peering at the lone man who had
remained seated, you are one In a
million.' . ".i " ;- '-.cr -
"It ain't that." piped the voice.
as the- rest et the congregation
S&s3 at Mm . eturlcloutly. -i
c?a't get up. s.Iia raralyid"'.
THE I.IORNING ARGUT.1ENT
AUNT HET
. Ey Robert QaI2ca
"Men . may work hard, but on
lundav they don't do nothln' but
af and eat: and I ain't had a
;ood rest since I had that speU of
iickness three years ago. :
(Oopyrts-at. 193T. FablUhors Syadioato)
POOR PA
Uy Claude Call"
MRLWm.
PLEA FROM COUilT
One Knot In Famous Jury
Tampering Tangle Ap-...
pears To Be Removed
. "Ma don't say anything when
correct Junior except Just
enough to let him know that sht
hinks I'm wrong." C ' T
fCobTTia-at.' PabHakora SyadieaU
H NUT Pul!l6
COiUI OPERATES
Pearcy Nut Company Doing
Thriving Business In
Down Town Place
Giesy. who Informed Williams that
that the city had an amount of
about 334.000 , due as a refund
from the county court for the
1925 taxes, and the sam for the
1920 levy.
The county court admitted that
fhtk monrr was due Salem but
asked that they be relieved or pay
ing the 1925 figure as the money
already had been spent. The city
agreed not to press the claim. Half
of the 1926 amount was received
last summer, and another half will
be due some time in Tecember.
The Pearcy Nut company, with
Earl Pearcy in charge, is doing a
thriving business . In the down
town store room next to the
Pearcy Bros, place, at 178 South
Commercial street.
There Is a whole store room full
of filberts and walnuts, being sort
ed and packed and shipped to dis
tant ' markets. I They re being
packed into large sacks and small
ones. ' . ; ' ,' "
A bag of Jumbo Franquette wal
nuts went . yesterday . to : Miami,
jnortda,'and another, one to Hono
lulu and a third one to New' York
City. ... '. - . V
Filberts and walnuts .are .being
shipped all over, the country, In
small packages : and large 'ones.
Also" some fancy packed, prunes.'
The holiday, gift idea is bring
ing ; many buyers." There are 'no
finer nuts grown than pur fancy
walnuts and filberts, 'and no finer
prunes,' either. In fact, none just
as good to be had any where.
The new packing place, makes
an Interesting Sight' for" any one
not acquainted with the processes
of grading snd packing. ..:-
I!
N'S CAMPAGN
. out of piny
Is There a-Real Community
. Spirit In Salem? Ask
J.-E. Crothers
E DUTY L
n
GERMAISTf S TREATY WITH
v .TTJGO-SLAYIA BEXKPITS
Import duties on Oregon prunes
in Germany will be reduced as the
result of a treaty entered Into be
tween that nation and Jugo-Slavla
recently, according to a telegram
received here Thursday by the Sa
lem chamber of commerce : from
Senator Charles L. McNary, The
text follows: v : !
t ' - : .
"For some time I have been giv-t
Ing attention to Import duties Im
posed on Oregon prunes by the va
rious governments and . presented
state and today hare received ad-
the matter to the department: of
vice from Secretary Kellogg that a
treaty of commerce between Ger
many and Jugq-Slaria was signed
at, Berlin on October 6, 1927, and
it is understood that when ratified
this treaty will bring about a. re
duction In duty on prunes Import
ed Into ; Germany for ? Jugo-Slavla
in .boxes . from twenty to "eight
marks per one: hundred, kilograms
and on such prunes In bags from
ten to six marks per one hundred
kilograms. ;;? ''; tJ:. :S:
"Under the most favored nation
clause of the : German-American
commercial treaty, America .will
receive the benefit of this reduc
tion and the extension by Ger
many of .these new low. rates to
American prunes promises to
prove beneficial to the Interests of
the prune growers.
"State department further ad
vises that while there is no actlonl
wmcn our government can appro
priately take to hasten ratification
or tne treaty, between Germanv
and Jugo-Slavla, there appears to
be no reason to suppose that such
ratification will be unduly delayed.
: -m-T' S- CHAS. Lu McNARY."
TAXING LAW VAGUE
CITY AXT COUNTY AGREE OX
- . SEPARATE JEYY
Through an arreement reached
with the Marion eounty court; the
city of Salem will be .exempt from
the eounty road and bridge levy of
.s mule this jrear, and will rely
on funds . raised by th etwo mill
tax voted by the peonle in a snec-
lsl elscUon last June. The agree
ment was made at a meeting Wed
nesday.
Considerable confusion has re
sulted from varldus Inter nota
tions placed on the 1925 leslsla-
Uve act regarding this road and
Bridge levy. Prior to 1925. there
- ' " " i
were two laws on the matter. One
required the ' County to return a
certain percentage of the amount
collected under the levy; another
did not. t The 1125 legislature cor
rected this difference by raising
an act raakisg It eomBulsorv to
return 10 er cent ef th ravn n
and eliminatlng.ehancere( evasion.
, raaaag ef tt. act waa aot
noted by City Attorney WH-hru
at the t!ae. ar t lajt prrtej It was
called te his attention by ex-I!iyor
Editor StatemanJ" "
Your -slogan,; ."What . Salem
makes makes'Salem," Is very good.
It is also tru9 that Salem Is what
the people of Salem make it. A
great deal Is; said lof community
advertising, and the very best kind
of advertising costs nothing at all
If only the i people will do their
PaXt-'v " ;-.:V' . - . : .. . . .
. I wlit) to reiterate what you
have said recently about the val
uable advertising Salem, would
get if we would only support Mr
Owen Qgden in his life Insurance
campaign... .This, campaign is ou
of the ordinary, and if successful
would give us the kind of publicity
that we want,' not ; simply no
toriety, and best of all practically
every person who decided to take
out a policy. In a reliable life In
surance be thankful that - he was
prompted to do so.
I have always done what I could
do to Influence my friends to take
some life insurance, anything from
95 00 up, and have been. thanked
many times for doing so. : Now
we have a double incentive. Let's
get ; behind Mr. Ogden and ' give
him our practica support.
I am not personally acquainted
with Mr. Ogden, but that does not
matter. He has started something
in Salem that is Worth while. The
benefits to be derived, if the cam
paign Is successful,; are all out of
proportion to the efforts made. Il
a record Is not broken at . least
those . who take out a policy will
be benefited, and Salem-will Jose
an opportunity that will be taken
up by some other city In the TJ. S.
Is there a real community spirit
in-Salemt i A good way to prove
it Is to say to our friends, who
rave no life insurance,, or who are
uuderinsured, , "Eventually, why
not now?" j --."Uvf.t'
.'' . v v E. CROTHERS.'
Sa'em, Or., Nov. 17, 1927.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.
(AP) One of the knots in the
oil jury tampering tangle appary
ently was removed today when the
government and counsel for Ed
ward J. Kidwell, Juror number lt
agreed to take Kid well's petition
for redress temporarily , outs- or
court. . ;.";.'?'.- "i".- : ;-: '"-
Kidwell was accused by Don F.
u-i waaTi!nFion newspaper re-
aaail V -
I. Rav Akers. a street
car conductor, of "having said he
expected an automobile "as lout
as a block." at the end of the trial
of Albert B. Fall and Harry F, Sin
clair. He denied the charge and
petitioned the court to hold King
and Akers In contempt for having
talked to him about the case.
. Committee Named
Inasmuch as Justice Blddons has
appointed a committee to deter
mine if. there was any . contempt
anywhere In the events which led
up to a mistrial. In the case, Kid-
well's counsel agreed to wait for
the report of this committee be
fore proceeding further, if, the
justice ; would sgree to such, a
course. This attitude will be made
known In court tomorrow when
the Juror's petition is scheduled.
for hearing.
There was no further grand
Jury activity apparent today.
Henry Mason V Day, who.
Harry F. . Sinclair ana Chela on
Clark, are charged with conspiracy
in ' connection with the activities
of Burns detectives In shadowing
the trial Jury, failed in an attempt
to have his bond lowered from
1 125,000 to 110,000 when the gov
ernment objected. i
Both Men Accused
" The district attorney's office
contended Day and Clark, both
Sinclair officials, received reports
from the Burns agents. Both de- S
clined to testify-Hore the grand,
jury and todati.Bsistant DistrlctTQ
Attorney Burkinshaw argued that
Day had no regular place of resi
dence in the United States and
thit therefore the 125,000 bond
Ifiould itsnd.
; Day will be given a hearing
Monday.
Attorneys for H. M. Blackmer,
the western oil man who refused
torespond to a subpoena calling
for his attendance at the oil trial,
announced in New York today
they would place 1100,000 in a
tank designated by the govern- H
iMfit frt rorer the seizure ordr
issued yesterday against Blaa'i
mer. This order was made possi
ble through a law passed at the
instance of Senator Walsh, demo
crat, Montana, who prosecuted the
senate's oil Inquiry.
Blackmer will try to regain pos
session of the money through a
fight in the courts against the
constitutionality of the Walsh act..
O
: i v -A Fervent Hop ;
A young. minister, noted for his
jollity; was dining at a farmhouse
one Sunday, when he received a
plate heaped with roast .chicken
remarked facteiously:
"Well, here's where a chicken
enters the ministry."
"Hope it does better there than
it did in the lay work," rejoined
with the bright boy of 'the family.
A-
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This baby has never had a day's
sickness and never a cross or fret
ful spell that; lasted an hour. And
what do you suppose Is responsi
ble for this healthy, happy condi
tion? Not diet, for he has eaten
just about anything and every
thing a child could eat. Not
drugs, for he has not been dosed
with opiates; he has never had a
drop of paregoric : Nor has his
sensible mother ever made him
taste castor oil. Yet his nerves
sre sound and his little bowels are
strong, and when he -does seem
the least restless or wakeful, or
out of sorts or likely to be his
mother has him sjl serene again
In; ten, or fifteen minutes!
The secret of this complete free
dom' from the many Ills snd up
sets. so common to .infanta? Plain
old-fashioned Castoria. A million
and more mothers swear by Cas
toria, and no wander A 1 few
drops and an : approaching fever J
colic,, diarrhoea or eonstlpatton
seems to vanish In thin air. Can
toris Is purely vegetable; that? 3.
wft-v nfivafMana tTf itaramta ti
may use it freely with children ot
any age the youngest infant. And
how they love the taste I
One word of warning;-get the
pure, real Castoria. Fletcher's
Castoria Is the original. It Is the
kind doctors specify. And with
every bottle comes a . book on '
Care and Fee-ding of Babies" that
is worth Its weight in gold to any
mother or prospective mother. So,
remember; tell your druggist you
wish Fletcher's Castoria.
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