The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 10, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
"iV Favor Sways XJt; lYa Fear phaU Awe."
From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
- THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
Cba&les A Snucuz, Sbeldom F. Sacxztt, fVoIisAsrt
Chakies A. Sfbacub - - Xditor-Manager
Sheldon F. 8ackttt - itamaging Editor
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tue for
publication ef all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper ,
Entered at the Poet ff ice at Salem, Oregon. Secend-CUue
Matter. Published every vtornwff except Monday, Business
tee US S. Commercial Street.
Pacific Coast Advertising Beprssentatives:
Arthur W. Stypes, Ine Portland, Security Bid.
San Francisco, Sharon Bids.; Los Angeles, w. Pac Bldg.
Eastern Advertising Bepresentatives: ...'
Ford-Parsons-Stecher, Int, New York, 271 Madison Ave.;
Chicago, 360 N. Michigan Are.
Russia's Economic Revival
- "well, he esteemed Statesman
sets out to be right. We do. Indeed,
Af her weird Ideas on the subject
Of course, for ourselves, we are not desperately afraid of the contagion-
of the sovietlsm that repudiates its Just debts. At the same
time, knowing that evil communication corrupts good manners, we
ar not courting any diplomatic relations with the national outlaw.
welcher and pariah." Portland Spectator.
. Oh, we can continue to call Russia bad names and refuse
to riave anything- to do with her. ratinz her as one of the
bad, dirty children of a back alley; while we are well-clad and
possess superior virtue. But time is exposing the folly of
our policy of non-intercourse
America's policy toward Russia was from the first predi-
rated on the assumption tnat
short-lived. That was the expectation of David R. Francis,
American ambassador at the
President Wilson acted on that
(based on our1 hope) turned out
refused to succumb. In fact it
is most .firmly intrenched. It is
ernment.
In addition Russia is showing surprising economic re
vival.! Under the "new economic policy" (NEP) the authori
ties have prepared an ambitious
trial development which challenges the attention or tne west
era world. In this revival American industry and technicians I
and engineers are participating to a limited degree. In tne
face of this our government maintains an "incommunicado"
policy which is fast becoming utterly foolish.
The Statesman urges, not immediate recognition, but
the opening of negotiations to see if suitable settlements
may be made with Russia respecting (1) confiscated proper
ty; (2) Russian war and pre-war debts to the United States
and to our nationals; (3) abstention from propagandizing of
communism by the Russian government. We could atleast
put up to Russia our minimum demands. That would be pre
ferable to the rude, brusk rejoinder of Secretary Hughes to
Russian advances in 1923 and 1925. If Russia would not
"come through" then we would have some justification for
non-recognition. If Russia did make suitable engagements
the way would be clear for a marked stimulus to our own
commerce and to economic revival in Russia under its new
and somewhat more sensible policy.
Surely the United States is through jumping at shadows,
suffering from chills and fevers whenever the word "bolshe
vik" is mentioned. Our own social and economic system is
surely strong enough to stand up behind a "cordon sanitaire"
of three thousand miles of water, even if we could give f orm
nl recognition to the soviet regime. Our present policy is
based largely on our own fear; a fear, which like most fears,
is groundless. If we genuinely desire to collect the Russian
debts and recover the confiscated property, we most assured
ly ought to be making some moves. If Russia recovers in
spite of American hostility and aloofness our chance of col
lecting on the old debts is gone. Time has the effect of eras
ing national as well as private debts. If Uncle Sam Is merely
diligent as a bill-collector he will at least present a bill at the
debtor's door. So roughly did our state department under
Hughes and Kellogg turn down Russian approaches, we may
be certain that Russia will not invite such humiliation again.
Given the right hint, however,
diplomatic conversations.
We are little aware of what is actually transpiring in
Russia. If our people would read "A Business Man's View
. of Russia" in September Harper's Monthly, they would get
a more accurate picture ot real conditions as seen by . an
American executive. The author, Charles M. Muchnic, a na
tive of Russia, is a naturalized
of the American Locomotive
to Russia to sell locomotives,
parlor pink journalist or a member of a Sherwood Eddy ex
pedition. We quote some extracts from his letters:
"When one compares conditions in Russia before the war with
present conditions, there is no question that the masses are much
better off. There is no wealthy and no middle class, but there is
also less poTerty . . . The country is being run by a group of prac
tical Idealists who are trying earnestly to lift the masses to a higher
level of living aud culture ... Their system probably would not
work, In any other country, but apparently it Is succeeding here, pos
sibly a reaction to the tyranny of the past '
"This la the tenth anniversary ot the Third International .
This organization Is the bugaboo of the conservative press at home
and In Western Europe. If one should take seriously and literally
what they write. It might be disquieting; but after all It Is only a
repetition of what has taken place before, and the present Third In
ternational will lose Its sting Just
Improved. It could not make
workman aro so well off." ,
"The Russians publish a mass ot statistics to prove that there
Is an increasing measure. of progress from year to year. .Whether
their figures are correct or not, the evidence that I have myself seen
on my five-thousand mile trip: large new plants just' built or build
ing, the enormous development ot
la Baku, the Increased output of coal, manganese and iron ore, the
rehabilitation and expansion ot the railway, inhere before had been
waste and inactivity, bespeak progress more eloquently than could
any statistics, and they seem to justify a belief that Russia will suc
ceed In carrying out her program by sheer force of her faith in her
self. .
"During the past few years
ican has entered the U. S. S. R. tor
home with Ideas diametrically opposed to those with which he enter
ed that land of mystery. But the professional writers and propa
gandists hastened to assure our public that the stories those travel
ers brought back did not accurately portray the actual conditions of
the country, that the sly Soviet officials had taken them on a dress
parade and had shown then only the things they wanted them to see
pccuuy arranged . . , During jay
- namperea irom seeing anything i wan tea to see, hart circulated as
r freely as any native citizen, and have felt as free from molestation of
every kind as In any of our own cities or, In any ot the capitals of
enrvpe.
"However different Russia's political doctrines may be from
- our own, and however' little we may acquiesce ta the confiscation ot
; American property or the repudiation of debts to American citizens.
me mcommunicaao atutuae that
u. 9. v. . aunng tne past decade
' Bucking the
fUHS is a free country and
-. X suit himself; but we think the. Salem business men's
league has the right Idea on u&incr tradimr atamna in mer
chandising. It is reasonable
cuss priced rigbt ana properly aisplayea and advertised will
sot need the bait of green trading stamps. The public, ought
; . to lrfinw that In tru Inner vtm If jmvm tnv if Km -4
v the merchant knows or should know that he can't "give
. away" goods and thrive.
There is all too much of this "rive awav" idea in safe
promotion, rif ' merchant's
ami
Is right; bnt not In the way It
stand aloof from Russia because
of national honesty and honor.
with Russia.
me soviet regime woiuu ue
time of the revolution; and
presumption. But our guess
wrong. The soviet regime
has grown in strength till it
at any rate a "de facto" gov
five-year program for indus
Russia would again request
American and vice-president
Sales corporation. He was sent
so he is not to be set down as a
as soon as the workman's lot has
serious Inroads In America, where
the oil fields, the feverish activity
occasionally a venturesome Amer
a brief sojourn, and has returned
tea weeks her I hart not been
we have maintained toward the
seems hardly Justified."
Trading Stamp
a man can run his business to
to believe that good merchan-
rfitWrgin is ca widj ta sa
The
Bey?
S tMfc
afford to give away goodsin lines which other stores are try
ing to sell and make a living on, then the sounder practice
would be to reduce selling prices on his own lines of goods or
allow reasonable discounts.
Retailing nowadays is sharply competitive. There is no
chance for a gang-up to rob the public The trading stamp
is just a sales promotion device at variance with the sound
est principles of merchandising practice. We hope most of
the Salem merchants will continue on the no-trading-stamp
policy; not because it makes any difference to tjs; but be
cause that impresses us as far
Victory for
AN important decision of the interstate commerce com
mission affecting the handling of depreciation accounts
was recently announced. The city of Chicago sought to have
he Illinois Bell Telephone company reduce its reported val
uation of $145,000,000 by $45,000,000 which was the amount
of its depreciation fund. The commission's ruling favors the
city. The effect, if the decision withstands court assaults,
will be a substantial victory for the telephone users as it will
force the telephone company to charge off its depreciation
rom its valuation figure for rate-making purposes. The as
sistant corporation counsel for
will save telephone users about
. Wrong Guess. Try King Arthur
Bo the dictionary makers are using The Statesman and -The
Oregonlan. After studying them to keep In touch with the purest
king's English, they even wrap their dictionaries in them to see that
the books reach the buyers with words undeflled. Salem Statesman.
But you leave us curiously up
this purest king? Off hand we can think only of Henry Vm who
founded the Episcopal church, but of course. It might be somebody
else. CorvaUls Gazette-Times.
BITS for BREAKFAST
-By R. J. HENDRICKS-
Colonel William Thompson
's Urged by his father to continue
io school, instead applied for and
obtained the position ot 'devil In
the office of the Eugene Herald,
started by Joaquin Miller and
Tony Noltner. He saya Mr. Nolt
aer was ot the opinion that the
name was very appropriate In his
case. But Thompson remained in
that work three years and in all
that time did not lose three days
excepting the several occasions
when, for a week or two, the Her
ald was 'excluded from the United
States malls for disloyalty utter
ances. The war of the states was on,
and the Eugene paper was not the
only one In the Oregon of that day
that was denied the use of the
mails tor utterances friendly to
the southern cause. A large num
ber of the early settlers wanted to
malt Oregon a slave state. South
ern - sympathisers i were active
members of the constitutional
convention. General Joseph Lane,
first governor of the territory and
the only delegate In congress ex
cepting the first one up to the
time he was chosen one of, the
first two U. S. senators by the
state legislature, was a secession
ist and In favor ot slavery. John
P.) Gains, second appointed terri
torial governor, brought his slaves
to Oregon. -
,
Thompson says publication of
the Herald would, be suspended
for a tew weeks, then come out
under a new name, and the col
umns would be filled with 'strict
ly literary matter for a short
time. Then Joaquin Miller would
launch out and giro his opinions
oa things la general and certain
publlo me in particular; and after
a few weeks somethlg he said
would Incur the displeasure of the
postmaster and beginning would
have to be made under still
another name. The little vaca
tions were enjoyed by Thompson
he eould go hunting.
There was talk at different
times of sending JoaTola Miller
to j on aiauw, vo ooara at tne
expense, of the U. S. government,
la 1114, Miller sold out to his
partner, Noltner and " Thompson
Quit being the devU. Major Bine
heart, who commanded the troops
at that time at Eugene, had ar
rested Henry Mulkey for a polit
ical "oflense. Mulkey .was a friend
for ytmni Thompson, and the iat-
OREGON STATESMAN, Sato, Oregon,
Vorit Rock the Boat"
Bias toon T
better selling policy.
Phone Users
the city asserts the decision
$2,000,000 a year.
in the air. Who ta the world is
ter 'lied like a tombstone in get
ting a pass to see him, and plotted
with him for an escape. The ar
rangement miscarried, M n 1 k e y
was recaptured and the arrest ot
Thompson ordered. Toung Thomp
son got a tip, and mounted a swift
horse and escaped. The animal
was not his, but he returned it
through the good offices of a boy
friend who became a Baptist min
ister, and above the crime ot re
turning a 'lifted' horse. Thompson
crossed the Cascades by way of
the McKensle pass. He arrived la
the vicinity of where Bridge creek
enters the Deschutes tn time to
join a party ot six hunting a band
of Snake Indians committing dep
redations in that section. He wit
nessed the treacherous murder of
Queapama, chief ot the Warm
Springs Indians, at the behest of
Paullaa, chief ot the Snakes, un
der cover of a peace conference
Paulina had arranged for the eon
eealed assassin; the chiefs holding
the peace talk being unarmed.
V v
The little party of six filled
their "cantenas" with dried ven-
ispn furnished by their allies, the
Warm Springs Indians, and took
the trail of the band: of Snakes
under Pa-aHal." The Warm Springs
Urar33 feared and dreaded Paul
ina. They thought he was charm
ed; bullet proof, and had all sorts
ot 'traditions In .regard to this.
The little party including besides
Thompson, Jim Clark, Perry and
Howard Maupla, John Atterbury
and another man, surprised the
Snake band in camp, and killed
four of them, among them the one
making the second notch on
Thompson's rifle butt, and the
rest scattered and got away
though the whites pursuing them
were far outnumbered.
Paulina was called Paaina by
Bancroft. In another surprise at-
lacx tor was u this oner), ac
cording to Bancroft. Panina'a wife
and children were captured and
sent to Fort Vancouver as hos
tages, hoping la this war to bring
the wflr chief to terms. This suc
ceeded, and peace was patched
up. Bat ft was sot xept by Paa
ina and tils braves, a later Incl-
aents snowed. After many mur
ders and depredations - by the
Saakes under his charge Paaina
was tlnaDr killed 1st -Jane. -IS IT.
by J Jr. Clark, mecordlng to Ban
croft, bui Tnompso says it was
a bullet from the neary rifle et
Howard Maupla that finished the
career of that scourge of the white
settlements, and ended the Snake
or Shoshone war. Joaquin Miller,
then county judge ot Grant coun
ty, had led a company of 100 min
ers against the Snakes In the Har
ney vaUey. Jim Clark and John
Atterbury were with Maupla in
the final attack that put a quiet
us on chief Paulina or Paniaa, and
finished the war. Maupln's Henry
rifle was a present to him from
General George Crook, for bravery
and high service.
S
From the Bridge creek Des
chutes country, Thompson went to
the Canyon City district. Joining
a pack train at The Dalles, and
going through dangerous Indian
eouatry. At that time Canyon
City was a typical mining camp ot
that day, with the population
made up of an assortment of the
best to the lowest offscourings of
humanity. He returned after a
time from Canyon City to the val
ley and followed the hum-drum
life of a printer f ora year or more
and, in the spring of 1811, laid
aside all else and cared for an
InvaUd brother. Judge J. M.
Thompson of Lane county. He
was dying of ehronie dyspepsia.
The doctors had given him up.
With the invalid and a younger
brother, the party of three went
Inte the mountains up the McKen
sle tork ot the Willamette. They
took only unbolted flour and salt.
Game and bread baked from the
flour made up their whole biU ot
fare. Bear meat was Included. In
a short time, the sick brother
eould walk 100 yards. The party
remained la the mountains all
summer, till the early falL The
brother weighed 84 pounds when
he left Engene. His weight was
115 pounds when he returned.
Col. Thompson had gained SO
pounds In weight. They had lived
elose to nature. They found in the
forests all they ate, excepting their
salt and unbolted flour. They
walked much in the woods. They
ascended one of the Three Sisters,
and to the north of one of these
mountains, and, Thompson says,
"in a valley formed by the angle
of the three mountains, they "ex
plored the largest glacier to be
found in the United States.
N
Their long tramps often lasted
a week to ten days, and If they
ran out of flour and bread they
simply did without bread till (hey
got back to camp. In his book.
Col. Thompson recommends the
course pursued by himself and
brother in regaining the iatter'a
health when there appeared no
otuer way. He tells that story, as
na says "that others seeking that
most precious of all blessings,
perfect health, may know how and
where to find It by simply go
ing back to nature." There is
some more to tell ot the exploits
and experiences of Col. Thompson,
including his connection with the
Modoc' war, in which he partici
pated. Editors Say:
The Hawley tariff may not get
through the senate. In its present
form tt la almost certain to be re
jected. The Democrats will east an
almost solid ballot against it Bo
will the insurgent group, indad
Ink Borah. Now McNary and Stel
wer ot Oregon have served notice'
that unless tbe bill! changed to
give some protection to Oregon in
dustries, they, too, . will vote
against it. So tha bill will cither
be changed or It win not become
a law.
What was supposed to bo a bill
for the relief ot agriculture has
been distorted Into a bin to enrich
immensely , prosperous - manufac
turing industries ta the east. Farm
relief has been largely lost sight
Ot The tunny thing about it all Is
that the bUi carries the name of
Representative Hawley of Oregon,
yet tt carries to little protection
tor Oregon industries that the
state's senators find It necessarily
td proteet publldr against the dis
crimination. w , - r . " :
There is -a general feeling that
aaleas the fcflt ta nviit it anrfct
to falL The tariff tiakerers would
- - t - -
Morning. September 1929
have done' better to have slack to
President Hoover's original plan
and to hare, eonf lned the saw hill
to a revision of agricultural scnear
ales. But there were too many
selfish interests grabbing for fa
vors and as a result we hare a
bill that most ot the eeuntry op
poses. Baker Democrat-Herald.
HOPS FOB GEORGO
Bat a man who deserves and
enjoys the) reputation of being one
ot the jnost able ioarnallsts in the
Northwest, as does the editor of
the Capital JrnaS, is mot without
a eOaL When he took a fling at
Oregon's state song It was for the
want of a better subject for edi
torial comment, or perhaps a de
sire to knock a chip from some
body's shoulder. The Dalles
Chroniele.
L!
By MARTHA DALRYMPLB
(Associated Frees Staff Writer)
LONDON (AP) Seventeen
years' work ot renovating and
strengthening St Paul's cathedral
Is gradually nearlng an end.
The reinstatement of the huge
electric organ, a four month's
task, has been started, while the
final finishing touches probably
will be complete in a year. The
temporary harriers that hare ahut
off nearly half the historic church
from the puhUe will be removed
next June and plans are already
being made for a Thanksgiving
service to be held at the end of
the month.
After the installation of the or
gan, which has been electrified
and modernized in every respect,
the principal work to be complet
ed Is the refaclng of the strength
ened columns supporting the dome
and their recurving.
The Cathedral, the third St
Paul's built on the site, was start
ed In 168 by Sir Christopher
Wren. In 19zS city authorities
condemned the structure as un
safe and Dean Inge waa informed
that the hollow pillars supporting
the dome were badly cracked and
In serious danger ot crumbling.
Constant traffic and excava
tions tor subways and new build
ings In the financial neighborhood
about St. Paul's had caused the
weakening of the piUars. Steps
were taken Immediately to
strengthen them and the lobby
under the dome was shut oft
Holes were cut in the columns
and liquid cement was poured In
them.
The first work ot renovation
was begun in 1813 and the first
public appeal for funds was issu
ed shortly afterward. A total or
$2,000,000 has been raised by
public subscription, with a result
that there will probably be a small
surplus after the work is finished.
s
C1IK NAMES
BERLIN (AP) Some 4,000
persons in Germany each year re
quest official permission to change
their names and 98 per cent ob
tain It
Almost automatic permission Is
given when a naturalized foreign
er wishes to "Germanize" his
name. Hundreds of these cases oo-
cur among the coal miners ot the
Ruhr district many ot whom are
Polish Immigrants.
Sometimes the uthor!tles dis
cover that the real reason for
wishing to change a name is the
tact that a man's commercial cre
dit has been exhausted under the
old name. Especially frequent are
cases of men who wish to be
named after some ancestor who
belonged to the nobility. The re
publican judges turn these re
quests down cold.
The Oregon Statesman aad The
Portland Telegram, two great
dailies for CO cents per month.
To order phone 600.
It a PrwrtpMoa ttm
COLDS, GRIPPE, FLU,
DENGUE, BILIOUS FEVER
and MALARIA
H 1 tfca BMt spedr nma&y knows.
HI H
UPON
IS
ISIS
666
BIAftnSS THAT ARE
fa tfadfc
St'il
General Xssasv Ftoera f
ceistai etc. T&ess
private
oa note books fraici
nrrzz akd K3 turn cx
The Statesman Pnblfnlfc Co.
imn. rums tszAXizaJ&3'--J
Macedonian Revolt Tound
Successful Establishing
Under Cover Government
Br JAMES A. MILLS
(Associated Press Correspondent)
PETRITCH, Bulgaria. (AP)
This little town, about 160
miles south of Sofia near the Bul-
carlan-Greek-Juro-Slavtan border.
is the capital of a stats) which the
reader win aot find oa any map.
That state is Macedonia, do
main of Ivan Mlkhalloft dauntless
revolutionary leader aad bane of
Balkan governments, who boasts
of having exterminated thousands
ot his adversaries in order to win
autonomy tor his beloved Mace
donia. Officially Macedonia is a "coun
ty" in Bulgaria, which is a Balkan
kingdom about the size of Ohio.
But aetuawy Macedonia Is a pow
erful entity of its own, which
brooks bo interference from any
authority in the world. It has a
government- -ot its own in the Mac
edonian Revolutionary organiza
tion which Is absolute master in
this little land. It has its own ad
ministrative machine. Its courts,
its financial system. Its local pa
per, "Liberty or Death," its army
and its police.
It exerolses a censorship that is
absolute. No paper on its black
list comes into Macedonia. No
meeting ot which it disapproves
can be held. It controls pubUc
morals and enforces the Ten Com
mandments with the sternness of a
Moses, although it amends one to
read "Thou shalt not kill, except
in the name of the Organization.1
As a result, excellent order pre
vails In Macedonia. There Is no
brigandage in the mountains and
very little lust. Whatever you
lose 'Is returned. Wherever you
seek shelter or hospitality you re
ceive It. When a promise Is made
it Is fulfilled. Stern justice reigns
because evil doers are delivered to
the Organization, which works as
silently as a winged arrow.
The head of the Organization Is
a young man of quiet manners
who has a university education
and Is well Informed about Euro
pean affairs. He Is as attached to
books as to the revolvers which
he always carries.
This Macedonian dictator, Iran
Mikhailoff, is surrounded by bold
young men of his own qualities.
But along with the intellectuals
there are also ordinary gunmen.
Each revolutionist has his duties,
his area and his chiefs. The Or
ganization has emissaries in Vien
na, Geneva, Paris and America. It
sends observers to the league of
nations and all international
peace conferences.
It has organized the Macedon
ian refugees In Bulgaria and other
places into brotherhoods, women's
societies and youth's associations.
it has cooperative societies and a
Macedonian National bank. It
has sent 11 national represents
tives to the Bulgarian Parliament
la Sofia, and when they were
elected, there was of course, no
opposition.
The Macedonians divide their
activities into two categories: the
legitimate and revolutionary. It
is only the "legal' organisations
that appear la the open, and their
Children will fret often for na
apparent reason. But there's al
ways one sure wsy to comfort a
restless, fretful child. Castorial
Harmless as the recipe on tho
wrapper; mild and bland as if
tastes. Bnt its gentle action
soothes a youngster mora surely
than some powerful medicine
that Is meant for the stronger
systems of adults.
That's the beauty of this special
children's remedy I It may b
given tho tiniest infant as often
as there is any need. In cases of
colic, diarrhea, or similar disturb
ance, it li, Invaluable. But it hat
everyday uses all mothers should
'ctxy 113 tsgd tSrsla dtsd t
fsnss est csrcStr lrtt;J
2? ts 9
cstin
At3SS
representatives deny all relations
with the revolutionists; but the
supremo power behind everything
is the Revolutionary Organization
and Iran Mlkhalloft
The relations between the Or
ganization and the Bulgarian state
are not unfriendly. On the con
trary, the Bulgarians sympathize
with it tor the Macedonians are
Bulgarians of a special kind.
And it is Just for that reason
that the whole "Macedonian Move
ment" exists. Macedonia was par
titioned among Bulgaria, Serbia
and Greece, and Bulgaria got by
tar the smallest share, although
oa the basis of nationality she
thinks aha should have gottea
most of it.
It is stated by the Bulgarians
that the Inhabitants ot those parts
of Macedonia occupied by the
Serbs and Greeks are subjected tt
persecutions. The Revolutionary
Organization exists to "free
them. Its seat is really In Bul
garian Macedonia, but it endea
vors to operate against the Serbs
in Jugo-SIavla and that with
bombs and guns. It wants to
bring about a new European set
tlement which mesne war.
We print letter heads, business
cards, posters, signs, booklets, al
most anything in our job shop.
Call 600 tor prices.
.aw.
IT'S folly to suffer long from nca
ritis, neuralgia, or headaches wr-n
relief is swift and sure, with Bayer
Aspirin: For 28 years the medical
profession has recommended it It
does not affect the heart Take it
for colds, rheumatism, sciatica,
lumbago. Gargle it for a sore throat
or tonsilitis. Proven directions for
its many uses, in every package.
All drug stores have genuine Bayer
Aspirin which is readily identified
by the name on the box and the
Bayer cross on every tablet
SPIRIN
4Ma ta Um tnd aak tt Barer VmHehm
Of Moaowifmcjuir MiteTueacia
tmdentand. A coated tongue caHj
for a few drops to ward off consti
pation; so does any suggestion of
bad breath. Whenever children
don't cat well, don't rest well, or
have any little upset this pure
vegetable preparation is usually
all that'a aeeded to set everything
to rights. Genuine Castoria has
Chat. H. Fletcher's signature on
tho wrapper. Doctors prescribe it
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