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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 11 Nov. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-11-11/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
, COLDS • BREED CATARRH Nor Terrible Experience Shown Now Perna Should Be in Ever/ Nome to Prevent Colds. Mrs. C. S. 1 8 1 Wood- s) r • r, land Ave., Kansas City, /do.. writes: 'I feel It a duty to you and to others that may be af- flicted like myself. to /peak f o r Peruna. \My trou- ble first oame afterIa grippe Sight or eine years ago, a gath- ering in my bead a n d neuralgia. I suffe r e d most all the time.My nose, ears and e y • • were UAW' affected for the last two years. I think from your gesoription of internal catarrh that I must have had that also. I suffered eery severely. 'Nothing ever relieved me like Pe - rune. It keeps me from taking cold. \With the exception of some deaf - seas I am feeling perfectly cured. I int forty-six years old. \I feel that words are Inadequate to express my praise for Peruna.\ Catarrh In Bad Form. Mrs. Jennie Darling, R. F. D. 1. Smyrna Mills, Maine, writes: \I was unable to do my work for four years, as I had catarrh In a bad form. I ooughed incessantly, and got so weak and was confined to my bed. \Peruna came to my relief and by faithfully using it. I am able to do my work. Peruna IS the best medicine that I ever took.\ I NEWS Of MONTANA Important Happenings of the Week Briefly Told. RUSH AFTER LAND CONTINUES. Moro Women in Line at Missoula Flat- head Opening. 4 .. Alai . . s, seeemen., .are M e iss in o g.mla u i .. marr - i T aait he wriaisehsufgog suggested for on the Flathead reservation con - Thirty -five Slings were made out of a the action of the general land office in regard to the matter of filing on un- scheduled land. The mail applications for filing will not be attended until the , day that called forth protest. John M. that had been previously flied on b)' tinues. More women were In line than were in evidence the first day. total of 64 numbers issued. Of these filings many were suspended to await 124 numbers issued have been disposed Of. Two filings were made during the Hubbell, of Butte, flied on 160 acres Isaac Talert and Rose M. Rotate. The other dispute arose between Miss Elizabeth Dowd and Edwin C. Price. both of St. Ignatius. There were three 40 -acre tracts in section 22. Each of them wanted 80 acres. Miss Dowd Sled on the south 40 and the middle 40 and Price flied on the north 40 and the middle 40. The contest is warm, as each insists on having the middle sec- tion. • As both of the parties to the dispute • --.•, them; Mat We mews of settling the` .i argument was waived by both sides. ixtiB0101 \AFRICAN GINE TRAILS\ an Ideal lihrtattnas Vtt mum be brought by some one In every lonaLltLto Ile neighbors be . V.imorto & F i r ,f Said •nd a golokly ertil high eon= sakm. Write for seems to MILLIS WILIBIZIPS alma Ha ill.) Mb lee Twirl. Strong Preaching. The minister's eight -year -old daugh- ter was returning with her parents from church, where the district super- intendent had that morning occupied the pulpit \Oh father,\ asked the little girl, her face alive with enthusiasm. \Don't you think Brother C. Is a very strong preacher? I do.\ Gratified by this evidence of un- usual intelligence cm, the part of his offspring, the minister eagerly in- quired into her reasons for her state- ment. \Oh replied the little miss, art- lessly, \didn't you see how the dust rose when he stamped his feet?\ - Judge. An Awful Moment. The company always included many delightful women. and I remember the consternation caused among them one day by Burnham, the scout. He ex- plained that he attributed his success as • scout to the acuteness of his sense of smell; it was like a blood. bound's. \There's no one here today,\ he aflirmed, \who at any time anywhere In the future I could not recognize In the dark. Yes, I could tell you, and you, and you,\ nodding at an alluring group in modish apparel, \by the way you smell.\ For an awful moment the conversa- tion flagged.-McClure's. Expecting Too Much. It was a cold, raw day, but the Neversweats and the Fearnoughts were playing a game of ball on the prairie, just the same. The pitcher of the Neversweats, his fingers half frozen, failed dismally In getting the balls over the plate. \Aw said the captain, \I t'ought ye wust one o' dese cold weather pitchers!\ \I am,\ said the slab artist, blow- ing on his benumbed digits to warm them, \but I ain't a ice pitcher, blame ye!\ Capacity. Kt:Acker-How many will your tor car hold? Bocker-IrIve and s cop. FOUR BLOWN TO FRAGMENTS Accident Happens 1,800 Feet Down in Montana Mine. Butte. - In an eat:IL:Won which plastered mine timbers and sides of a cross-cust with human frag- ments, Gus Backlund, Oscar Maki, John Lillirose and Elias Skuri were Instantly killed, 1,800 feet under ground in the Leonard copper mine of the Amalgamated Copper company. N. P. Conductor Shot, Helena. -W. McAltine, a Northern Pacific conductor, lies in a local hos- pital here with a bullet wound in his abdomen. His condition is serious. According to the story given the hos- pital authorities McAltine and a brake- men were sitting in the carboose and examining the brakeman'e revolver. The train lurched and the revolver went off, the bullet entering McAltine's stomach and lodging in his' back. He Is unconscious and In a critical condi- tion. Teachers' Institute. Hamilton. -The annual institute for the teachers of Ravalll and Missoula counties will be held In this city Nov. I4,) 16, and 16. The instructors will be State Superintendent W. E. Har- mon, R. G. Young, former superinten- dent of the Butte public schools, Prof. ' W. F. Book of the state university at Missoula and Mrs. Gertrude Bell of Denver. Colo. All are prominent edu- cators of the west and are placed on a program that promises to be of a belpful nature. Relic For Library. Helena. -The rifle used by Jim Bridger, the noted scout, was present- ed to the State Historical library by J. I. Allen of Columbus. The relic is considered one of the most valuable in the library. The gun is a muzzle load- er with a bore as large as that of a 20 guage shotgun. Allen secured the gun from Pierre Chine. an Indian who got the gun from Bridger in 1866 at eld Fort C. F. Smith. Yellowstone 3,500. Billings. -With only a few of the outlying districts to be beard from, to- tal registration for Yellowstone county Is 2,762, that of Billings 2,106. Colum- bus 172. Laurel 290. Park City 156, and Thomas Ranch 40. It is impos- sible at present to get figures from the remaining precincts, but it is es- timated that the grand total will be approximately 3,500. Locomotive Explodes: One Killed. Billings. - While running at the rate of thirty miles an hour shortly after passing Newton station, east of this city, the engine of a Northern Pacific train exploded, killing Fireman Owen Jones, fatally injuring Engineer Ben Wilson and serious scalding John Pollard and John Peterson, two men who were stealing a ride. Increase In Gallatin. Bozeman. -There is a large increase rim' in the Bozeman registration and a fait ing off in the country precincts. This is regarded as favorable for the demo- crats, it being the rule that these An Attractive Food Post Toasties So Crisp So Flavoury So Wholesome So Convenient So Economical So why not order a package from Grocer.' \The Memory Lingers\ Post= Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek, Mich. country precincts return a republican majority. The total for the county will be about 3,600, or an Increase of 860 over last election. Big Registration at Missoula. Missoula. -The city registration here was 3.048 and the county registration was 6,600, a big increase over the fig. urea of two years ago. ONE BOY SHOT BY ANOTHER. Son of Miles City Alderman Injured by Companion. Miles City. -Ernest Rhode, 11 Years old, son of Alderman Rhode, was shot in the right hip this afternoon by Robert Arneberg, 9 years old, who was carrying a 22 caliber rifle. The boys were on thir way from the cemetery and Rhode was leaning over his bicycle. The bullet has not been located yet, but the wound is not con- sidered fataL No Error in Distance. St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 4. -That the bal- poen America II made 1,355 miles in the internitional race was maintained here today by the officials of the Apr* club when they read a cablegram from London that the distance was ques- tioned. Albert Lambert of the race eornmittee computed the (listen% the night Messrs. Hawley and Post re- ported and it is subject to correction only by the war department of th• United States. The America U landed eight miles north of Lake Tshistigama In the province of Quebec and not at ' Chicoutimi as the London oable states, ,THE NEW QUEEN OF ENGLAND Queen Mary Has Been a Favorite With the People From Her Earliest Girlhood. London. -Queen Mary has been a favorite with the English people from her earliest girlhood, and is the first English princess for many centuries to share the British throne. Two years younger than the King, born in Kensington Palace, brought up on rather strict mid-Victorian lines at the White Lodge in Richmond Park -where her mother, the Duchess of Teck, one of the warruest-hearted, most lovable and most self-sacrificing women of her time, maintained a simple but culti- vated and much -frequented salon - queen Mary was trained as few girls Queen Mary. have ever been trained to goodness, intelligence and usefulness and a fine tradition of charity and public serv- ice. Gifted with a quick and practical mind, a capacity for hard work, and that rarest of all attributes, common sense, she has persistently made the most of herself and her opportunities She can hold her own in French, Ger- man and Italian, she used to be a keen musician, and she is still an ex- pert needlewoman; before traveling with her husband to any new part of the empire she would diligently read up all that was to be known abut Rut the dominating interest of her Me outside ter home has been philan- thropy. Even now, says McClure's Magazine, when she is the mother of six healthy, happy, frank -looking chil- dren -five boys and one girl -who are the delight of the London crowds, she remains unwearied in her works of charity and full of practicality and the sympathy that Is born of knowledge In choosing the movement of her beneficiaries, usually children, she oieans to assist, and in seeing that they are assisted in the most effec- tive way. She has the administrative and all the other aptitudes that go to make a sensible mother and a most , •ompetent mistress of a household. THE FAST MAIL OF HONDURAS - - United States Magazines and Papers Are a Month Going to Tegu- cigalpa the Capital. Tegucigalpa, Spanish Honduras. -It takes one month to get magazines and papers from the United States to this city. From the end of the little nar- row gauge railroad to the capital is six days' hard ride over the moun- tains. All of the mall is transported on mules. During the rainy season, when the streams are swollen, the mail carriers frequently swim the streams with the letter bags on their beads. Owing to the slow mail service much business is handled by telegram, the government owning the lines and the rates being very low. Confidential messages, however, especially those Honduras Fest Mall, of government officials, are not sent by telegraph, because of the danger they are subjected to by the operators who \leak\ and make known their contents. As the country has enjoyed fifteen revolutions in as many yeare there Is always a strife by those out of office to get back in again and the different factions are always looking for opportunities to gain an advan- tage. The slow mail service naturally makes business drag along propor- tionately. The carrying of the mall Is ass eontract and the men who tee It through to its destination are subjected to much exposure and long hours of weary mountain climbing Along the coast the mail Is taken by Carrth sailors in small sail boats. They encounter storms that drive them out of their course and occasion- ally the boat is lost with all aboard. The sailors are frequently given to drinking and this enhances die dan- ger. Postmasters do not sell postage stamps for they cannot always be trusted to return 'all the money re- ceived. A reliable business man gen- erally sells the stamps for the gov- ernment. Penalties for Forest Destruction. Pittsburg.-Tbe streams in the an- thracite region of Pennsylvania were so low during the summer that water trains had to be run to keep the col- lieries in operation. The Schuylkill river, usually a good-sized ,,,stream, had only five inches of water. Conditions fully as bad have pre- vailed in some of the Hudson river towns near New York. Reservoirs went dry and e'en lakes turned Into mud, killing thousands of fish. We are beginning to pay the pen- alty for the destruction of our forests in another manner than by devastatr ina floods. doses. WELL AT LAST, Terrible Kidney Trouble Cured After NAMED DOG Doctors Gave Up Hope, Mrs. F. M. Hill, 188 W. 10th St, Waterloo, Iowa, says: \It makes me shudder to think of my awful suffer.. leg. I was languid and weak and nev- er free from dull pain in my back. My hands puffed and my feet became so swollen I could not wear my shoes. The kidney secretions were painful and frequent in passage. +Cf . I gradually grew weaker until the doctors gave up hope. It was then I began with Doan's Kid- ney Pills and soon improved. Con- tinued use cured me.\ 4 Remember the name-Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster -Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. EVER SINCE. Virginia -I suppose you and Harry have been thrown together a good deal lately? Grace -Yes; ever since he got his new automobile. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mal'rm'y will surely destroy the wine, of met and oompi.tUy demons the whole system lam Intense It through tie moron. surteem. Suet =eil f r rn sh m oul r.,d ut rir he u i la4 . ex i t pi= Intl do is ten toad te the good you aka pihly es. Cy\ r.\3' eltit ° 4 a th e`o n .\. 1 3 . 1'etZ'o C \ 5 \ contains no nter Purr, and bi taken Internally. acting directly upon I. blood and nunous mirrates of the eyelets. pe re b \ mg e \ ti l t s d un mag ra tier% val:i ft 'or V. J. Cheney Ca lY Trinitnorileleli ftl sold by flrooi.i. in Tea. fbi. Family 1 : 1Zio 7 ;ecin \ ;1:71::. Too Free. Seymour -What caused the Allem* Life Insurance company to fail? Ashley -It was altogether too fresh' accepting risks. I don't bellow, it would have even refused to insure the life of a turkey the day before Thaake- giving. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle ot CASTURIA, • safe and sure remedj , for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Years. The Kind You Hue Always Bought. A Terrified Hero. \Did you have any narrow escapee In the surf last summer?\ \Yes.\ replied the life-saver. One lady whom I rescued was so grateful that she nearly married me.\ What Murino Eye Remedy Does te the Eyes is to Refresh, Cleanse, Strengthen and Stimulate Healthful Circulation, Promoting Normal Condi- Ilona. Try Muria.) in your Eyes. • Can You Blame Him? 'Pa, what does 'skeptical' mean?\ \That describes a man's feelings when a woman tells her age.\ Fargo Directory Of THE PIONEER Lurk Pa reVii * n r yo bi t;r U jett l fo l : I is 1:::/:;12 seat ()wintry bankers may be. mole depositaries Policies star , an used by elate deposit. Adorns wanted. 0.5. FesideKlba, Fens, La KODAKS ....lies ; rite for oatal.guoin and Montana • do developing and printing. Mall orders gl yen prompt lettin.0 FARGO DRUG CO. Faroe. IL I. , s(hoiu'r Hides, Furs Pelts Fe BOLLES & ROGERS FARGO, N. 0. KODAK adds enjoyment to every sport or recreation. Ko- dak way is *may and simple. Kodak. IS to Did Ask u• for • copy of the Kodak Catalog. LA.RegstlesiN fa. frojt... SHOTWELL FLORAL CO. Growers and sidewise OPT Vi,oW sae, ri.AgoN e tc. The largestfaollIttei end best appointed nor - vice Is the West for haw Ming not of townotteme. Tnni'aldmitros essae se on abort notice. Phonier write es bight or Hay, listakilshed a ad • aentstry. &rod qu VitTall• Omer isimewst • Asa* haw /4 fla. 4 WE MAKE IT EASY For you to own a PIANO -sand will save you money no matter where you live. We guarantee safe delivery and entire Bathe. faction. Write ow Our prima and offer will interest you. LUGER FURNITURE CO. Fargo North Dakota JUST ARRIVED • carlosd of good pianos. Will be sold for old, $186 Cash roz: given pplf,:spriatrZZ::V. STONE PIANO COMPANY Fargo, North Dakota FAR TANNERY Receives bide, and skins for tanning tie kw-nese leather, robes and coats. Robes geed, Aldo, bought, leather and robes far male, lend toe price list, Andrew Monson P 7:ijg\ Fargo, N. D. DAKOTA CONIISKVATORY OF MUSIC C i tes. essitszl! ! t o nsI and Orantatio Art. .as- - ta. fir TROUBLE HAS BROKEN OUT IN HONDURAS -UNITED STATES MAY GET IN. U. S. GUNBOAT ON SCENE Revolutionary Ruler in Control -Hates Foreigner* end to Show His Con. tempt Has Named His Dog After Taft, New Orleans, Nov. 3. -Cablegrams were received last night by the rep- resentative of American interests in Honduras confirming the Associated Press dispatches of a revolutionary outbreak at Amapala. That the United States will within a few days take an active part in ousting Gen. Jose Valladares, the lead- cr of the rebellion, from his entrench- ed position on the Island of Amapala is the belief generally of business men of New Orleans, who are more or less interested in Central American trade. The Honduras government has • very small army and as Valiadares has several hundred followers and is re- ported to have several madern ma- chine guns it is thought President Davila will ask the assistance of this government in its efforts to get rid ot trauble maker of Antanala. • s. Noted ter tits- hatred ...I twetaiiii, Valladares recently publicly announc- ed he named his dog \Taft\ in order to show his contempt for the Ameri- can president. Washington, D. C.. Nov. I. -The United States gunboat Princeton, is in the harbor at Amapala ready to take a hand in the revolution' at the tint sign of hostilities towards foreigners or their interests. President Davila is preparing to send an armed force against Valladares and in the event of the government's fail- ure to restore order on de island the United States probably will be asked to interfere. It would not be surprising if Com- mander Hayes of the Princeton, act- ing under instructions from the state department, eheuld send an armed force ashore at any time to take Val - lathers' into custody. However. the department officials re - Nee to discuss the possibility of this beyond asserting that American inter. este will be properly safeguarded. FLYING MAIL CARRIER. aeroplane Re Transfer Mall From Ves- sel at Sae to New York. New York. Nov. 3. - It ems an- nounced last night that J. A. D. Mc- Curdy of Glenn H. Curtiss' staff, will attempt to fly by aeroplane from the deck of • vessel tut, miles at sea to • point on Manhattan bland next Sat- urday. The ICalserin Auguste Vic- toria of the Hamburg -American line sails at 10 a. m. Saturday and will carry McCurdy and his Curtiss bi- plane- The test, the first of Its kind, will be ebeerved by • glertY of navy and army Alcor* and a flotilla of torpedo boats will patrol the course. The aero- plane will be launched from a plat- form 100 feet in length, built on the ° forward deck of the ship under the personal direction of Mr. Curtiss, who is confident of the success of the ex- periment. The test Is to demonstrate the feasi- bility of equipping the new liner, Eu- reels, the largest ship In the world, which is now under construction, with a regular aeroplane service for trans- ferring mall at sea. McCurdy will carry on the test on Saturday a small waterproof mail bag containing let- ters from the passengers, which he will deliver at the New York post. office. Equity Society Eliot@ Officers, Carrington, N. D., Nov. 3. -The American Society of Equity for North Dakota held their annual meeting here yesterday and named the following of- ficers: President -F. rt. Squires. Kenmare. Vice President--Chaarle U. Pierson, Casseiton. Secretary and Treasurer -John M. Anderson. Board of Direetore-A. W. Ditmer, Vetva; 0. H. Olsen, New Rockford; Albert Piper, Casiwiton; L. B. Wood, Deering. The society made a number of leg- islative recommendations as follows: Compulsory hail Insurance by the levying of a tax creating a state hall insurance fund. The disapproval of Skulason's con- current resolution providing for • ten- year term for members of the supreme Mtn. Approval of the Dula resolution for terminal elevators at Minneapolis and Duluth. Semi-annual payment of taxes. The initiative and referendum. ' May En? Strike. New York, Yoe. 3. -The movement for a settlement of the strike of the exprdes drivers and helpers which has practically Med up the express busi- ness in and around New York city for a week past, took • more definite form today with the announceneent that representatives of the companies would meet representatives of the men this afternoon to discuss plans for ending the strike. Garment Workers Strike, Chicago, Nov. 3 -President Noren ot the Chicago council and a member of the national council of the United Gar- ment Makers of America, stated today that he had reason to believe that the Chicago tailors against whom there is a strike are sending garments to New York, Philadelphia and Cincinnati shopsh to be made p. \We are investtgating this matter,\ said Noren, \and if the report is ture, Thomas A. Rickert president of the national council of the organization, will call strikes in the cities named, providing the local trouble is still un- settled.\ May Find Missing Children. St. (\loud Minn, Nov. 3. -Although the story of their plotted suicide was published in all the papers in this sec- tion the authorities and relatives •ta yet have nd trace of Albert and Ala- linda Mosher, who left home the pre- vious eight with the expressed inten- tion rlf jumping off the Mississippi river bridge at this point. The father came to the city late IS the day to make Inquiries, but the children had not been seen by any one Thetr tracks led from the home to the railroad along which they walked in the direction of St.. Cloud. Received Highest Award World'. Pure Food Expoeition CALUMET BAIUNG POWDER The wonder of bak- ing powders -Calumet. Wonderful in its raising powers its uniformity, its never failing 'results, its purity. Wonderful in its economy. It costs less than the high -price trust brands, but it is worth as much. It costs a trifle more than the cheap and big can kinds - it is worth more. But proves its real economy in the baking. Use CALUMET -tile Modena Baking Powder. Mall Grocers. You Can Work Near a Window In winter when you have a Perfec- tion Oil Hester. his a portable radiator which can be moved to any part of a room, or to any room in a house. When you have a Ababa(?) , smokeless ood odorless you do not have to work close to the stove, which it usually far from the window. You can work where you wish, and be warm. You can work on dull winter days In the full light near the window, without being chilled to the bone. The Perfection Oil Heater quickly gives heat, and with one filling of the font burns steadily for nine hours, without smoke or smell. An indicator always shows the amount of oil in the font. The filler - cap, put in like a cork in a bottle, Is attached by a chain. This heater has a cool handle and a damper top. The Perfection Oil Heater has an automatic -locking flame spreader, which prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and drop back, so the wick can be quickly cleaned. The burner body or gallery cannot becom; wedged and can be unscrewed In an instant for rewlekIng. The Perfection Oil Heater is finished In Japan or nickel, is strong, durable, well -made, built for service, and yet light and ornamental. &Wog everywhere If re/ of \Pm rode pr dneryttee Mader fo Inc reerflit gm\ J the Continental Oil Company Ilemewetedi .22 CARTRIDGE The straight shooting, hard-hit- ting, sure -firing 22's. The reason why UMC .22 Cartridges are the best is that they are made with precisely the same care, the same tested materials and undergo the same rigid safe- guards, as the heavier calibre, big - game -shooting UMC ammunition. UMC .22s are also made with the heavy hollow point bullets, thereby increasing their shocking and killing power over the old solid bullet. Try Oar New \Lessook\ .22's UMC .22 short, .22 long. .22 long rifle Lennok,\ Smokeless and Black Powder -as you was. Targets Supplied Free THE UNION METALLIC CARTRIDGE CO. Agescy 239 Breeden,. New Teat City L EUREKA HARNESS OIL Will Keep Your Harness soft as a glove tough as a wire black as a coal Sold by Dealers everywhere 11/014111,C,11.1., s v FOR s•La MY Standard Oil Company Continental Oil Company or, ,ral , lineorpnratedj W. L. DOUGLAS 1 3 & 1 $4 SHOES 2:0 1 411: BOYS' 8140ES, s2.00,e2.50& $3.00. Bter ire Tiir WORLD. W. L. Douglas 63.00, 63.60 and 64.00 shoed, aro positively Iho best made and most pop- attar shoos for the, prism In America. and awe the moot goonomloal shoos for you io boy. Do you realise that Ony Shoos bore insen Ihe standard for over 50 years, that I make anti sell m,, re 03.00, 1113.60 anti 1114.00) shoe, than any other ntitnidnernrnr In the U.S., and that DOI,- LA it FOR DOLLAR, I OVA NANTES: MY AHORIA to hold their shape, look and fit hot ter,and wear longer than any other 111.3.80 or S4.00 shore yon ran buy Qualify Count*. It ham made my alleles THIS LEADERS OF TIIN: WORLD. Yon will be pistoled when you buy my shoes he/ranee of the St and appearance, and when It comes lime for you to pith- W L. chase anot her pair, yon will be more than pie/teed because Neches the list ones wore so well, and gave Ion so , mneh comfort. Mew (30, CAUTION! NO SUBSTITUTE 11 700.0 WWIW muss eupply yon with W. , Shorn, write fat Mall Order l'a.10 I. W. - 1001111rAii.\ Ileinirit idegumea, \rook ten. Maar Household Lubricant him Inman THE ALL-AROUND OIL IN THE HANDY, EVER -READY TIN OILER Is specially' selected for any need In the home. Saves tools from rusting. Cap can- not break. Does not gum or become rancid. m NUFACTURED 11, roe SALE SC Standard Oil Conaway Continental Oil Company (Incorporated) (Incerporsted)