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Show MINDS IN COMPLETE ACCORD For Once, at Least, Mr. and Mrs. Smith Found Themselves In Abtoluto Harmony. "Wo nro united in this movomont," said Thomas M. Heed, a Denver physiologist, physi-ologist, npropoa ot n fight ngnlnst tho drug habit. "Yes, n single thought possesses us$ nnd in that respect we're llko Mr. and Mrs. Smith. "At 3 a. in. of a bitter cold morning Mrs. Smith in hor thin nightgown was pnclng tho floor with her colic-tormented bnho in hor arms! Tho bubo's squawks of pain wero terrlblo, yet they wero easily drowned by tho cnr-apllt-ting roars ot young Smith, Jr., who tossed nbout hla crib with a tooth-ncho. tooth-ncho. "Mr Smith, shivering in his pnjamas, bent over the wnBhatand, trying to prcpnro n cotton filling for his son nnd a mustard plaster for hla babo, when IiIb wlfo's voice, Bcarcoly audible nbovo tho uproar, reached him. "'John,' alio Bnld, 'if bovoh yenrs ago, I could havo looked forward and beheld tills scene, do you know whnt I'd havo dono?' " 'Yes, love,' Smith nnBwercd. You'd hnvo dono JiiBt whnt I wish I'd dono. " |