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Show THE TT 7 r A T T T7 A 1 Wall Through to PHONE RULES In-abili- ty Time to File Briefs and Answers in Saloon Man's Suit utist-t:e-- .- -- -,!. I ........ te envied - !!;irr. t': J- tpmcoritrab.tiPi - i ot all Ins iellow American business nr-n-. nr.n'eaynraSMV vors last year when the feilities t no longer u :e available. More than one firm had e!:el j panels o ;f its fi-f(n- e lv tl is fi'an-- . ! . 1n!f a irore it su'"i ilary toiuiTiis fiotii eighty to .i r f: r t : .1 i'f.-;'- i t ... r. at concert 'ty. at Last !evl- - iho 5"firms Thr sitti.-.tifH-i. t;.i !.. o ;. '. T: ; i bri consisted of Hie 'P. .. or :'r,'. an. I to tlM:in In nif h ini.-u- l in are not oi'ly f Iiecainc rlou? tl.ey li"ti tUrs h the riiori 8ii,rriu-nto Import thfir m.iciiiaf?". tut '.rfi. ri- ir; A s latioi: of Commerce not tvm Fhl;.nont. of "partV are for 'ni.' action. T::.le." pi ;rajinf i H.ey iMimot rontciMontly Tin i ii first rnt to rnusf of ;on.,l.Ju.ruolcontracts made before the M;- i.'v. i. ) luisl firms la rnrry Mt:ntin lie i .,, ) n fr ! 5 i . . - l..-U- E 1 ; l ! ru.i : i.if t , 3 ? i ; f 'V ii t u- tti n;ot ,1 St 'lit Vol nft, r. ult If you tontin ie . - I I U ' riil iiarninri.1 The r."l v Ainerkan firms vhl..h ii:ive t!,;ii. i!t ft" i !tase iinaMo to t,(t linl an almost ho:-lM;'it T'i.' .innoT fcrlei In wurilins. t.nl ;arr those principally t!c manufactur-t- r ! In t' e rrpl r,f the ! .r.4 of fartnioK mat b'inery which have . . t i :, o r. t r "finii! in herri..r Jertnsny nl w hlch j,ts , .. ) , t r linn-re : ;nm fore ,;..,!-largely imlpenletit of ii:f'.. r.. U' l i it 'port. Many of theio are sahl to he l ' f 'is 'nrMwrhu- - ly UverllistC temtorarlly il,. t. 'h t f f n-.t- ' i. h not,ti.i!on'. l!,.'tl of r. f I - o-- , ti.' t.-;- I i (.,.-.t . i f 1 ( pf.ir. . ( .'o ir . I t ; tiviti a i or to the pro.'.m t.oa llrr', K0!-- of rs An.crh an j k'ti.l oriz sico rav- op lloltaiitl as a o i'irii. ( i whtch they co'ihl pet k !i,iri! minlry through u.ie i.ie Hrandinavia ha" fri.l. A A'-"n! J ot r r'Oto!rt tSsroosra whkli the little drib-h. ' C"i.e A i.J the ScanJi-navla- n f o"-.s Ihit h In. .HiV.iM to the con- In est;ihtih- . arrnnllrs rjrttMi.hmiit. ;rrf.ny ht-of opinion. ;r.- iu.uy wMMni for lite rl vHav II rfTu?( l i tl In y:il n'?fl n looking .ut for thPi"."lvp.. .rn are eriiitii.ii of tit" Ann rir in bii'lnss men .fir lo.jnit C. rnnr ami Austrian tu'lnff. but ir (Jermanv have fU.icardeJ all scruple n tlir. matter of declarations and very ita i',r r ;na n v i.forr tut, tvjri. itci! nt o'.pori-nfjard i'otietiintty that whenever frankljPii'-'- i . j intended for I'en- -with le l.r.,l to r;ootls th.ir lr.n.' .,t . n - , r: o to Iern rk or Nornav are reshippel tfat. f;Ilom ,:id .i1.t . trie immv. Onlv in ll;n way nave fi; e unns ner ahle to continue in buslne. l ave lllx I'trni ItnrJ till. i oth.-of men. in the minority, it tn'tn.t.tl the laret wlthoui teat v. n.ti is uim.hu writer ...mptnv r the v.orll. th- - lari:- -- Kv." thev would not try on--to drir,l:ios;pp!v flrri inin eiten-.-of t need-- t.eane ,,t Thnia nattT of a reat hisr-point .onipany. hax several hur.Jreo in a ;: rn Ci f.errnany '"rn ir.v. rrir..n .'...,t,. t i f I i ; ff tf i ?i . t ! r. t t t i ; to en t iE,n!l ':.-- - ri4 rrtv v!v f.iit t' W - II- " vr-r- S - i - o i , - l. rr,-.!ln- t'-- ci.t' fr ii-- f r-- n-o- - I ? v J ; 1 Pi-.- - r- .... -- . t s ! h- a. I. tin: m o hln- - ., x rorporat ion. . of - . lare e J ;U-eeive- l pos-'UJ- !t i s mo hinei In Swr.N u v. hich he . oiild an- iis nice tit were to maf; fact' irin 're in were intended ronrern.-- one of the larKeM maniif.- o- thatti. the raarhines o ti a declaration would in Amrrlci mui t.trers .t t"it-- t arti.-le" the machine and they could n -t ror.. ern. hot to to I v.-- ! r mad- - 1 . the- - po.isihtiIiih; in con- - 1 t'v I'ouf'shly e can s- I ..... r-.- r i M-iii- J f re-t!- ir a-- At".er-tra!.,fi- fo-ve- ii -f bu.-in- rt f 1 ? I'-m- - j 'ri y .t fc; -- ''-" a m-r- V impo-.-ihile l- . . r ! de-,f- m-- par-Amerit.- "l sr i'-- ; t- - u--- tl . .;-- ! i . r t- t V ctn-io- ri I! Ar-erPa- I . J i ,..'..'. a-l- . f- j . i. V . . . i r pos-lbl- ex.-pfio- T ! I- 1 -- be-M- v i '. - Attorney .Maiilon K. Wilson argueJ before the supreme court yesterday that rules limiting umrp ofbeen telephones put In by subscribers which have force in Salt I.akf by the Mountain States Telephone Telegraph company are unreasonable and deeply conflict with the common law. The arguments were in connection with hearing of the reinwrit of mandamus which peeks W. statement of the telephone of H. Johnson in the Metropole bar. which was disconnected because patrons were to use the telephone. permitted In behalf of the telephone company. Wa I mar Van Cott endeavAttorney ored to show that regulations in a ths use of telephones embodies with the Rfii-ernecessity in connection of the defendbusiness protection ant company. He set forth that when the telephone company fcave a suba contract to use a'telepiione it scriber was with-ththat purpose of enabling' convensubscriber to enjoy certain iences and that it was as unreasonable of the subscriber to expect to let others use the telephone as It would be to expect to ride on street cars without pay-I- n rThefar".rule of the telephone company which Attorney Wilson declared was as Is unreasonable follows: "Subscriber agrees, that Instrument shall be usej comonly for the purpose of personal munication of the subscriber and- his employees and Immediate household, upon the subscriber's business." He ndd'-that in the case of Munn nicalnst the State of Illinois it was held that telephone were dedfinally icated to public service. In this connection he endeavored to show that tclwere common carrier of communication ami that thev.wero consecrated primarily to public service and should he r.iailf to obey service laws. He declared that the rule under which the tele;. hone company had placed its subscriber van a brazen violation of the common law, both In ppirit and construction. Wilson said that he repreAttorney sented the interests of .1.the people In .1. Whltaker, the case, while Attorney the directly, was representing Klvcn five day inplaintiff which to file briefs with the supreme court. Counsel for the defendant company was allowed five day after that time In which to file answers. lim-itin- x?9 I J y i' t There's Order From Your s n Haliny Touch of Spring in the Sky Above just tie sort cf weather for you to appreciate hovr unusually good the famous Utah Coah Castle Gate and Clear Creek-reall- y are. eiV u ,1 THIS mm? proves. r ra VI K5 l fait dfMJ&x ! K Lr j1 iie-' i iHil I N p ff I immm life; Mm PHI . fill j III 1 I ilii Ti FACTS: The current Goodrich "Fair-List- " price on Tires, is based upon what it costs the largest, and best equipped, Rubber Factory . in America to produce ' them. NORMAL No "Insurance" Premium added to the retail price of Goodrich Tires, in order to protect the Reckless Driver at the expense of the Careful Driver, through a fancy List Price which is high enough to absorb .that Premium. The excess Mileage each Goodrich Tire is reasonably certain to deliver, when given reasonable care in driving, thus becomes clear "Velvet" to the Owner of GOODRICH Tires. Money cant make, and can't buy, better Tires of Fabric construction, Goodrich than Safety Tread Tires, as Test will prove. And, money can't buy the B. F. Goodrich Co. to produce Tires which would discredit the 269 other lines of Rubber Goods made by the B. F. Goodrich Co., for which its name stands Sponsor. -- Ms mmmm MiBM ir-ui- i s. neers in the typewriter Industry. In competition to it. a whole row ft Herman firms spranjf up a number of year aco. and flourished because they put out cheaper. thouKli Inferior, machines. Gradually an intense trade The numerous Jealously was evolved. German concern In time outstripped. In point of business done, the American firm with It three subsidiary companies, but the American company nevertheless made gigantic strides In Germany and Austria, until its annual business had risen into the millions. All that stopped when the war began. The head of the concern refuse to resort to any subterfuge in obtaining either machines or supplies and the warehouse of Goteberfj are clogged with typewriter originally Intended for Berlin. The Berlin office has orders for hundreds. If not thousands, of machine which it cannot fill. Germany has always been a mecca for American dentists. Thousands of Germans go to the "parlors" of Americans. In consequence, the largest dental supply house In the world long ago established a large branch In Berlin. From this branch American and other dentist. all over Jr'urope have drawn their supplies. Thrs concern was doing, at the outbreak of the war. a business of between $30,000 and $75,000 n It is doing chiefly month. of German goods a sale the through business ranging from $7000 to $0000 a month. It struggled along while the parcel post was still working. Such things dentists chairs, electric motor and th like have long since been sold out and cannot be replaced. But. by mail, it was able to get gutta percha and rubber, nmalgam. and the various Ingredients for fillings, but even that Is impossible now. Office Force Itedueed. Its office force has had to be reduced by about So per cent. Its headhave the appearance of a barn quarters with a few articles standing forlornly about. For weeks and month. Its manager has been fighting to stave off the eventual closing down until the end of the war. An adding machine company is another one of several American firm that had comparatively large stocks on hand at the beginning of the war. The firm at first was not at all Inclined to side in with other American business in establishment. their complaints against the F.ngllsh blockade. The fell off only during the. first months of the war. and picked up" during the first half of 191.'.. Then the pinch began to make Itself felt. Old machine were returned for repairs that could not be made, in spite of contracts. ecause of the lack of "parts." Order for new machines continued to pour In until existing stocks were exhausted. They are practically gone now. and the manager looks with regretful eye at the $60,000 worth of machine that, at the last accounting, were held at Kirkwall. England. With varying details, it Is the same story with half a doen American firms who sell farming machinery. For month it also has been almost an Impossibility to buy American toilet articles in Berlin. The wife of an American recently spent days and considerable taxicab fare In visiting every drug store of Importance In the residential sections of the city In a vain search for a few thin;: which she and her husband wanted. A big American In toilet article has for firm year maintained a branch here, but business has gone so hopelessly bad that the manmrcr even has left, and the office Is merely kept open by subordinate In th,. more or less indefinite hope that affairs will better themselves coon. American hat. formerly had somewhat of a vogue here, but they now are excluded. So did radiator, separators, pumps, presses, elevators and a dozen other things. For a long while the Americans who deal In all these things have been Inclined to take matters philosophically. Most of them have taken the of an Important dealer whosestandpoint home office does a large business with the opponents of Germany namely, that too loud a protest is apt to Injure trade in the entente countries. Now, however, that it lias become literally a matter of commercial life or death, most of them have stopped befnjr silent sacrifices, and are seeking way and means whereby they can voice their indignation. I Ljk . e-- 6' fit. ."rf Tires with present prices prices on Goodrich "Fair-List- " in field Tires the COMPARE responsible bearing in mind that NO Tires (type for type and size for size) than Goodrich are made in America. out least ONE pair of Goodrich black-trea- d Test at Tires, on their Then, in to cost you, against any other Tires the field, at any abide Result. the and, by price, Why (if YOU are not a Reckless Driver) should YOU pay MORE than the "BUSINESS" price of the Goodrich Tire, for ANY Fabric Tire in the field? Get a sliver of the new Goodrich "Barefoot" Rubber from your nearest Goodrich Dealer or Branch. THR B F GOODRICH RUBBER CO. wholly from American raw material. AMERICANS who want their money s worth, who dislike to pay for the Reckless-drivin- g extravagance of Others, in the price JL JL of their oivn Tires, should sit up and take notice of following I ;i 1 0 are now turning out coal tar colors at the rate of 15.000 ton annually, and a report on the the present dvestuff situation issued bycombureau of forelsn and domestic merce calls attention to the importance of the fact that these color are being-n- n' ill FiiSa mmm s roth tip. American dyoworks cs Car-Owne- rs d coi-oit- , - Car-Own- er Speed-Mania- - - But, they can also be sold on a PREMIUM basis, whereby the "Safe and n A rat to tho. American who hates to be "the Goat'! Tirea CAN be sold on a "BUSINESS" basis, with sufficient to both Manufacturer and Dealer, as Goodrich experience pays for the Speeding- Propensities, and Careless Driving-- of an extravagant "Guarantee," knowingly burn up leaning-ipoOthers who, Tires in half their natural Life and Mileage. and Careless-Driver- s may very PROPERLY pay the Preis an Insurance Premium), on fancy-price- d mium over normal Value (which really Tires. Because, the Premium they pay may be less than half what other Careful indirectly contribute for them, when buying the same brand of Premium-price- d Tires, and using them so reasonably that practically no "adjustments" are, in their case, demanded, though paid for in the Premiumed Price. Sane" sl Black-Tread- s, J.i.a ttSCV V X .wnw.v: 2. Local Address, I J?x Ford Sizes 20x3Jj t x Akron, Ohio. S. State Street. f10-- 0 ($13.40 32x3 33x4 34x4 36 uS NOTICE. $15.45 Concern In America made, or sold, during iff Ifitcst fiscal year, nearly so many Motor-Ca- r Tires as did The B. V. Goodrich Co. "Our published Challenge, still unanwered, proves "NV $22.09 Safety Tread...... .$22.40 4 "Fair- - List" 37x5 33x5 $3 1 .60 $37.35 this." $50.60 To-la- bu-lne- Jf v.v)V jyi IK Tor Ierinany. ovit of t Vei y ten i! L. of men have little ho,n that or even in on.1 it iona con t ra ituatiou is lo f or an he rem-pat..i,,d xeept a th- litter constitute of th" iiT.tort- or t' e Jntal soo-- j died. the criprded tdt- in form of irutta j -- r ha and' A typical example an business enterprise in tier- Arneri, T! e correp""Hi.'nf InvestK-a-r,,M1(-..... . i. t.wmm i.. m. firm linnr!!!nir - conrmei v ! ..rt iriinsr ai i"b- .... i... .i,.. l t.T.. tthiri, A!!ir!can iroods In the empire. This t..i.i . ii 'i t." to war purt'o-e- . iirii.theitcaverace could rot directly n of half a business on nillltor. of doliar.s" worth of It maintains coo. - rither have f.ffn held up or. million dollars a year. Frankfort-on-the-Maiin iterlin. store f!.oUi;h nee,lJ, have rot I'fn rjered it a"d in Hambursr. b'Ca'l-- e of he of KCttlrUE ln.AuKust. 1011. the firm had an orthem. .Many rnitliooji of Invested worth of shoes placed be lot completely, der for mpfta! or oKa t I y will has to th opinion f their invtors. if In New York an order which never evibeen delivered. When it became . there - not a apeeJv r rti'th'. or inuireci. sonpmeniJ. dent that dtreei. nomen and children' (d oe. It Impos-ibl- e it resorted to the were Yet the are not contraband. e.oitu!e,. cm- In driblets, it has received in tlermanv Pst. of Roods. able to rret nnvl'ip to date about J00 worthwould rn.ir of ever have Knc-jl- n normal times the stores that n,or,, (.,. ,,,., they t ,,.. artlcl- - on the Imported j:oo.o.o worth of Koods. Stock t, ith'"Id- - the,, been nr. exhausted that In one day oo.l. theorv that, without American 1. 1. , one store had to turn away I. ra t... recently ,,.,.t oti, 114 customer.who wanted American itof leather toK to supply shoe.--, porto-had houplit before as such if- - civilian they American With population. elsewhere. not could them and Kl women 'oe- for tlijs;r:Jfor ehlMrer footfor malntainiiiK the three stores Ie.it her could he sldlers amount to about $2Tai a day. The owner tv r. down hi force as fast as I: lines type- is outline rnii in ther but at last has arrived at the wr'f.-nf.ii! to onler-for exi nple . t v .1 t!.e loo. hde can point where a definite and perhaps perarif v , h Anirrb-aar.d Mr. erica only, tl.ey manent dosing of hi establishments is m.;i!t.iin. - b.dn-- burl. lfrrn;mv. t f ey j necessary. S . of ri'lAi. and' ,ir abundant"rjpenrlter Urm I nil- -. t , of The largest American- typewritertypewriters! an Invests the ijcrin an manufacturers company in (lermany haIM - ' '' t ano nrr nt i't"y j meni nere ni aooui ni chtn .ta t! mt;iae - it. vain sir-- e the Intro- - elshteen months of war l as "Riven up ! .t. 'v:Sfed v Ion of the . .''i-tr-..... the ichost." It Kuldinc official, after . i. ..,,. r.. .i i -- to in ine "i.imiKP trvinu everv ooslble diplomatic and mean of relief. has settled r a , official tued v the. blockade an Aln'O-- t P j dot" n to the task of "tmioadinK overhe.i.l expense-.. ri Tile assets of rt t..e principal firm Juiliciouyly a h" fitnl h rri e v with lor-l- i nil this concern are creat but they canl.'t-r- th-- ir ri Thou a: h they not turned into cash at the present of "shutri;.! Up t'me. The concern's representative ha y fire (he rie. e broitirht to believe at last that he o..;t" itpin a short time, their rent r.mst he o?!tiri d :if hofiT as they have will be lucky if he can liquidate so as to .,iv tv.ent All have ol io ome out even, that Is to ay. if he the m.o-.ea n.l nil have ran wind up his affairs without sacto lis. hare ';;' ! me-- i wh toalrti; I.,, ii hampered rificing more than the capital InU. r th- .- arr.t. t vested. into '.e :r;w'i io ad1. iri; ti. hine eorapny h .1 reduced This company was on.- of the pio- to wtermute - 1 - 1 -- k Designated. For nnrlv a rear nI a half the American i;iUX,r n ari'l firm- - in (ionium v. rut off almost entirely from tin trtxxl ! th-- v .n - . iiavf been ni alii it: ilesjxTate but comparatively V. !' tlitm in :!::.? ' tlorl- - to tr.ve ojf toe ruin tiiat has been while other stocks Irieil lo import v haw surreptitiously, t t storm. crrtailir.'-nHut, the oeonornv ami hv weather .IV t at U'?n,lr.l " a t so ;raiiiv as tl;i'V luxw nrt.i ut l. ,in-- h hteaililv a lias Knuiamlof uphi j any- neeives ir.an shipment lls hUirw.nl", urttil totUiv B turnersoiiis im ire 'Why pay fa 1 From United States 1!- 1 ARE PROTESTED to Secure Necessary Imports M.tr.-- 15 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1916 , ! 1 A 7k T BUSINESS IN GERMANY Hiwe Firms Forced IIF.RLD-REPUBLICAN- .-s 1 . BAREFOOT hi I IT TIr I IK.aiMl.rer7? ALLEGED FORGER TO LEAVE REVIVALISTS PROMOTE fhlcao I'ollcomnti Arrives I'rlson-o- r Captured Here. Detective Sergeant Kdward P. Birmingham of the Chicago police department will leave tomorrow with Joseph ltoaehe, arrested here several days ago for the Chicago police on a charge of forgery. Detective Birmingham arrived here yesterday with requisition papers. Boache is alleged to have stolen 200 municipal pay checks while employed as an accountant in the pub-- j lie services department of the Chicago He alleged to have city government. of the checks, obcashed thirty-tw- o approxlmat ly $1400. Boac he, taining when arrested, was living with hi.s wifct and three children on the northeast bench. famicial cars carrying twenty-fiv- e in Idaho lies from Arkansas to points 5. The were attached f toi trainn n i No. t ill S a' t w ' U1V ' 1WIU1HI.V' ' Vi l CitlCl "I f,I in and near Boi.se, while a part will Jjje go lo Hansen, icia. On the Union Pacific system there was a large colonist party occupying cars These colonists came from special Iowa and Illinois and the greater part are going to points in the southern part of Utah and into dry farming sections in Tooele county. Cuba is to advertise its attractions in United States newspapers. Mica deposits sufficiently large to develop exist in twenty states. I PLAN HELP4KE-NEED- Y Contributions to Be Received Tomorrow; Announcements For Today's Meetings. 3 night will be observed by the Sis revivalists at Immanuel Baptist church, Fourth East and Second South streets, tomorrow night. All day tomorrow the following committees will be at the church to receive clothing, food, money and also on jobs" and names of any per"tips o assistance or work. sons in need 1 r committee F. J. Lucas, Soliciting Mrs. 1j. S. Doivennan, Mrs. W. C. Orem. Mrs. J. 13. Berkley. Mrs. V. A. Lang-fotMrs. Sherman Beck, Mrs. 10. V. of goods N. Y. Senior. Keception It. L. lavls, Mrs. H. L.. j Corser, Mrs. F.aynes, Mrs. Ellen Bloomfield, Mrs. J. II. Chister, A. E. Bont.'. Distribution' . M. commi ttee--- V Sanderson, J. J. Hale, Miss Frieda A. Dressel, J. "NY. Brown, Adjutant A. D. Jackson, Major J. H. Sample Pick-r- e Berry. A Tuesday the distribution of goods 4 K. At .j F n mofo tbe u m Will commence, and work rt Pyramid Pile to that end has been carriedpreparatory on by an raent Treat committee during tne "ow Offered investigating week. Free to I'rove past Today the Rev. Y. T. Shcrrod. the What It Will evangelist, will preach at 11 o'clock on IJo for You. "An Eternity of at 3 o'clock this afternoonInfluence," he will speak to and boys only on "Chains That Pile men r eatment T Pyramid Bind" and at 7.45 o'clock tonight to rethe general congregation on "The Final gives quickitchthState of Lost." The lare,e chorut lief, stops n i g, , Dieecung choir, led by A. T. YVhitteker, will be v. iJiuiiuuiiig pues, Innemorrnoicis ana a feature of these services, all ot all rectal trouble.. the privacy of which will be at Immanuel church. your own home. 50c a box at' all Special niKhts this week are Tuesday, druggists. A single box often cures, Salvation Army; Wednesday, Westminster college; Thursday. Rio Grande Maniple for trial with mailed free in plain wrapper, booklet if you shopmen, and Friday, Presbyterian, the eend us coupon below. services all at Immanuel church. errod-Whittek- J Vt C o- , 1 c; - DEVIME CONGRESS RUNNER of State Capitol An. nonnec Candida-y- . James Devine, superintendent of the state capitol, announced yesterday ho will be a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress subject to the congressional convention to bo held for the Second district this summer. A larse number of friends of Mr. Devine have been urging him to enter the race for several weeks. Tuberculosis is the chief cause of the condemnation of meat by the United i Superintendent States inspectors. , er d, Hirers li''A Instant Relief from Indigestion, Gases, Sourness, It! Heartburn or Sick, Upset Stomach-T- ry "Really does" put bad stomachs in order "really does" 'overcome indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and IDAHO COLONISTS ARRIVE sourness in five minutes that just that makes Rape's Diapepsin the largAlo Tooele County Settler Heaeh est selling- stomach regulator in the ivorld. If what you eat ferments into Here From r.iislern J'ointx. lumps, you belch gas and One of the largest parties of colo- stubborn sour, undigested food and nists to be brought through Salt Lake eructate is dizzy and aches; breath acid; foul; since the colonist rates went into ef- head coated; your insides filled with fect the early part of the month ar- tongue bile and indigestible waste, remember rived over the Denver &c Rio the moment "Rape's Diapepsin" cornea Pacific yesterday Two sye- - in contact with the stomach all such be-in- s FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 29 Pyramid B:dg Marshall, Mich. Kindly send mo n Free sample of Pyramid PilcTreatment, in plain wrapper. Name Street City State. - Grande-Missou- ri distress vanishes. It's truly astonishalmost marvelous, and the joy is ing its harmlessness. case of Pape's DiaA large fifty-cewill give you a hundred dollars' pepsin worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs in your home should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach regulator lu tbe worltL Advertisement nt |