The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1920, Page 3

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Y { } | ] “New York. ‘Pennsylvania and New SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1920 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE-THREE . TENNIS SHARKS. COMING TO CITY TOURNAMENT Both Tennis and Golf Tourna- ments Tomorrow and Mopday coun with almost three to on against ity PLATFORM BATTLE San°Francisco, July 3.—The battle over the Demacratic paltform last night was one of the most spectacular convention fights in the party’s his: tory. . W. J. Bryan led the fight for adop- tion of his. bone-dry plank, but it! aebate by a majority so overwhelming calls on the four other minority re- ports which he had prepared. j A cider, wine and beer championed in an emotional speect, by W. Bourke Cochran, of New York, also was thrown out by the convens tion along with a plank. for recogni. tion of the Irish republic backed by several organizations of Irish sympa- Important events are scheduled for, the Country club on ‘Sunday and Mon- day. i Tennis teams from Mandan, Hazen. Fargo and Bismarck will meet on the. club courts in a round robin tourna, ment. tomorrow, each team playing| thizers. two_ si a In the battle for the platform as See ne ae cones mmateh framed, the administration forces against every other team, the winner of the greatest number of matches to win the tournament. Play will start at 9:30 a.m. This will be the first tennis tournament play in Bismarck since 1916. Many of the Yismarck players entering the army and matches were discontinued. The tournament tomorrow will last’ all day. Visiting players will be guests of the club at lunch. On. Monday-there will be both golf and tennis matches. The tennis matches will be round robin mixed doubles. The golf will be two-ball mixed foursomes. Both tennis and golf will be in order until 3:30 p. m. when the married men meet the single men in a fierce ball game. F. W. Buchanan, captain of the married men’s team and Alfred Hunt- Phries, captain of the single men’s team, have plans under way to cap- ture the ‘tournament. Buchanan will pitch and Russ will catch for the mar- ried’ mén, but Humphries will not di- vflge his battery, saying he has a great Surprise in store. Afler the ball game there will be a driving and “approaching contest, and in the’ evening a putting * contest; There’ will be‘dancing at night. ‘There Will be a band concert on Monday night from 7 to 9 p. m., and dancing ‘will follow this. EFFORT TO PUT ACROSS! FORMER CABINET MEMBER MEETS WITH OPPOSITION were led by Secretary Colby and Senator Glass of Virginia. During a debate in which both sides stirred delegates and spectators to repeated bursts of emotional enthusiasm, Mr. Bryan got a howling demonstration of 20 minutes after he concluded his speech for the ,bone-dry plank, but when the balloting began it became apparent that much of the enthusiasm was a personal tribute to his past service to the party, and no an ax- ‘pression of sympathy with his present views. William Jennings Bryan with one of his old-time speeches in support of a bone-dry plank for the Demo- cratic platform, tuyned, the conven- tion almost upside down late this afternoon with the magnetism and force of his oratory and started one oft the greatest and noisiest demon- strations the assembly had yet seen. When Bryan had concluded his re- ply to the advocates of a wet plank che derhonstration cut loose on the Joor, and it proceeded spontaneously and resisted all efforts to get the zonvention back to order. Bryan, stinding smiling in the timelight at the edge of the spcaker’s platform and with tears of emotion zoursing down ‘his cheeks; reviewed a procession of prohibition enthusi- asts who tore up state standards ing column of del gates about the hall. There wi more than ‘one fight over ,whether tion. Women in Fight A particularly spectacular battle raged around possession of the Cali- fornia standard when Mrs. Georgia G. 0. Ormsby of Oakland attempted to carry the standard into the dem- onstration and a number of men endeavored to prevent it. Among them was-an assistant set geant-at-arms. . Francis J. Heney pounced on the man and threw him into the crowd, All that remained of the standard when the wreckage was cleared away’ was a tattered part. of the pasteboard top which once had borne the letters of the state's name. Alabama’s — standard suffered a similar fate and the bits were trium- phantly boren about the hall by the prohibition forces. s During the demonstration someone boxe the standard. of Bryan’s home state to the platform and reaching out Bryan lifted it high above the rest, while the crowd roared. Finally after the crowd had been quieted Chairman Robinson’ recog: nized Senator Glass. Liquor Interests Propose Change In. presenting his bone-dry plank, Mr. Bryan said the liquor interests were not trying to re-open the ques- tion but now had come down to ad“ vocating” wine and beer for home consumption only.. He argued that to remain silent on the subject would leave open to the possibility to change in the law to increase the alcoholic content. ~ “I want to leave no opening for misunderstanding or quibble,” he said. “So I have put into my plank the provision that there shall be no relaxation of the law. What we hate is alcohol, and we hate it whether we find it in whiskey, in wine or in beer. They tell you that wi is a harmless drink. But you il find that thru the ages it has vcen wine that has cursed mankind. “If you can’t get enough alcohol to make you drunk, why do you want alcohol at all? Some tell you that if you pass my plank some people will leave the party. That’s true. But while you may lose some you'll bring in a number indefinitely great- er and when they come they'll come out of love for the principles for which we have declared.” (Continued from Page One) tiight. On the first McAdoo had 266 votes, Palmer 256 and Cox 134. Gov- ernor Smith, of New York, had 109, of which his own state gave him its full quota of 90 votes, On the second ‘ballot McAdoo received’ 280, ‘Palmer 264, and Cox 159. © Smith’s vote dropped to 101 on the second ballot. Another big crowd was on hand to watch the delegates pick the par- ties nomince, the ‘final act of the convention which has ben in session six days. The convention went into session at 9:30 a, m. (western time). Predict McAdoo Early Predictions of a McAdoo victory on an éarly ballot filled the air and they were ‘accompanied by a desperate at- tempt to block it. (McAdoo or ‘Cox, and McAdoo and Cox, were the leading predictions, coupled with talk -of McAdoo and Meredith. On the other hand’ the forces pitted against McAdog pointed out \in answer to the claims of a “glagial movement.” toward President Wiison’s son-in-law that he had failed in the two ballots already taken to make the, gains that were claimed for him; that Cox, in fact, made greater access in the one day's’ balloting than did McAdoo and that so far there had been no positive evidence of the McAdoo landslide his sup‘ porters have been predicting. Palmer Loses The Palmer people made no par- ticular gain. Although in the one day’s vote they gained more than ten votes they lost more from their original délegates and replenished from their reserve. The McAdoo appeal today was be-. ing directed to larger states such as York and much missionary work w.s being: done. Fatigued and filled with emotion amid by roaring tribute. of thousands of W..J. Bryan last night stood be- tore the convention at a new cross- ing in his quarter-century of public life. With sober eyes his heavy fig ure clad in wrinkled black alpaca,’ under the merciless glare of the spo:- light, he ‘heard ‘a sonorous chorus of “noes” strike down ‘isues he had rais- ed, but there was no gainsaying the genuineness of the tribute he receiv- ed even in defeat. It was given to the man with an utter abandon, It sprang from the galleries, the vote- less multitude that made the moment its own and swept into tumult ‘its admiration of the man. ‘But there were others who sat unmoved. From the moment when the read- ing of the platform was finished and he took the stand among cries of “Bryan, Bryan, Bryan,” to present the planks for’ which he proposed to fight, the old: leader was keyed for the effort of his life. Against him. he knew were giants of debate. It was plain it was the bone-dry isue on which Mr. Bryan would center his efforts to sweep the convention and on which he wént down to defeat. Final Appeal When the twenty minutes of dram- atic appeal which closed his crusade he reached new heights of fervor his audience was swayed until it seemed he played on its emotions at wiil. When he hurled his last defiance at the liquor traffic with the prediction that when the veil is torn aside when the women of the nation are given full liberty to vote, they and the children would be found battling for the cause he championed a great shout went surging up into the vaulted dome of the roof in an endless sea of sound. After the threat that the galleries would be cleared Bainbridge Colby rose to answer for the administration of the league issues. €ool, unhurried in speech, President Wilson’s spokes- ‘man struke at once at the emotional qualities in. the appeal of Mr. Bryan liad made. He dismisses the great effort of the Nebraskasan on prohibi- tion almost without notice approach-’ ed his own topic with a lightness of touch, that brought laughter at timés and skillfully Sought to turn aside the rush of feeling. Mr. Bryan had counted upon. He also was accorded a reception fand a demonstration, this time with the noise and cheering sup- ported by band and’ organ. : The* vote: ‘on the y,. Plank’ ‘wa. overwhelming; a Toll having bel Interests Controf Pavers As he worked into his speech the Nebraskan mixed many biblical ref- erences with his rounded rheotorical periods. His full voice filled the hall and he got the galleries and some of the delegates going into longer and longer bursts of applause as he went on. His plank for a national bulletin to publish official news, he declared, would put the party on record as favoring “light and not darkness.” Many of the newspapers, he ar- gued, weer controlled by predatory interests while many other erred unintentionally thru the influence of advertisers. _ Briefly he prsented the merits of the profiteering plank he offered “and could not get into the Republi- can platform because “nearly all the profiteers were there in the conveh- tion or in the galleries.” The plank now was offered to the Democrats, ‘he ddded, in order to driveout of the party any profiteers who might re- main in it. The plank against universal mili- tary training also was argued very priefly by the speakers and then he turned to his league declaration. Declares for Majority Rule “T want the constitution changed,” he said, “so we can get out of war as easily as we can get into war. We fought the war to establish the great principle of democracy, the principle of majority rule. If we de- clare here for ratification of the treaty with reservations that a ma- jority of the senators agree on, the Republicans will have to join us in that declaration or else we will take most of the Republican party away. “Ign’t it better to take this, stand ‘which will insure acceptance of the Jeague of nations, which the people want, and put the banner of progress into the hands of Woodrow Wilson to carry forward?” 4 At the close of the speech the ap- plause swelled up again as Mr. Bryan Jeaned over the front of the platform and received a large bouquet . of peonies sent/up by Mrs. George E. of Lincoln, Neb., his home town. ‘was buried after a dramatic day of' that he did not even ask for roll) plank], a state should go in the demonstra-}- tichmond -Pearson Hobson of Ala- demanded by ‘Mr. Bryan and it went] bama was presented to support the Bryan dry plank. Hobson stirred up “a raumpis when he charged that there was on foot a “conspiracy” against the constitu- tion. “In the center of the hall Rep- resentative A. K. Sabbath of Illinois jumped to his feet and shouted; - Mrs. Oleson Speaks “ah “You are saying something that is not true,” and hisses mingled with thé applause. The chairman got order, but the disturbances started up again, when, a moment later, the speaker shouted that those who did not like the constitution should leave the country. f Irich Plank Debatéd Thomas J. Spellacy, . Connecticut's member of the platform committee, took charge of the fight for the min- ority ‘plank and introduced * Repre- sentative Augustine Lonergan of that state as the first speaker. Anchor- ing his argument to President ‘Wil- son’s principle of self-determination, Lonergan declared that to do less thdn recognize the right of full de-| termination in America would” be to throw overboard. the teachings of the party’s leader, T, J. Duffy of East Liverpool, Ohio, took up the argument for the’ min- ority Trish ‘plank, declaring that’ ‘it seemed to have become apparent. that it was impossible for Ireland to win | 3 its independence’ by the sword/ Senator Walsh of Massachusetts, who had led the unavailing ‘fight’ for the Irish plank in committee, took the, stand to conclude the argument ‘or its adoption by the convention, ‘The Irish movement concluded, Tom Lyons of Oklahoma took the plat- form to argue for his plank on soldier relief. It provided for appointment, of a ‘commission to study the’ ques- tion of “fair and just compensation” for ex-service men. RENT GOUGING IN SOUTH LAND MAY BE CURBED Bill Introduced in Beunos Aires Congress Limits Rent to Small Sum Buenos. Aires, July 3.—Reni profi- teering in Buenos Aires which in the pinion of many traveled visitors, yields to no city in the world in the measure of the excesses it has reach- ed, will soon be curbed if certain bills about to be introduced into Congress meet with success. The most radical of these measures limits the rent of houses to the equiv- alent of about $10.50 United States money. Rents at twice this rate are not uncommon for the ofdinary one story house with which Buenos Aires *!abounds, rates of a year ago having been in some instances trebled., Ac- cording to the author of the measure, Deputy Tamborini, rents in Buenos Aires now average 40 percent of a family’s domestic budget. The billealso provides that an own- er shall not collect from any prop- erty a rent in excess of eight percent of its assessed valuation. Landlords cannot,.tvansfer. their contracts for rent without consent of the tenants, nor can they evict a tenant on the ground that he has _ violated some municipal ordinance, except by: court order. Such excuses have been em- plowed by landlords against tenants refusing to pay higher rent. Jail penalities for violation of the provis- ions of the proposed law. There has been but an insignificant amount of buildings in Buenos Aires since the beginning of the war. Only within the last few months has jit been resumed and is on a small scale compared with for the building boom which the war halted. GAIN DISTRICT. IN LEGISLATURE Beach, N. D., July 3.—Thirty-ninth legislative district, composed of Gol- den Valley ,Bowman, Slope and Bil- lings counties, has nominated follow- ing anti-socialists: K. L. List, sena tor; C, B. Olsen, J. A. hen for House and C. R. Martin, socialist, for House. The six remaining precincts in Slope county may defeat Martin in’ favor of J. C. (Hart, regular repub- lican. List’s majority over Pollywog is 166. The entire Golden Valley county ticket carried by 221 majority, same majority: for: state ticket, increase of 84 votes over’ two years ago. The regular republican county committee has also been elected. Come and get cool at the New Eltinge Theatre. The only ar- tificially cooled theatre in the northwest. * "100 LATE TO CLASSIFY * &. —e FOR SALE—New piano. Will sell cheap, $225.00. Also two rooms for rent for housekeeping. Call at 713 Third st. 7-3-lw FOR RENT—Three rooms for light housekeeping. 1014 Broadway. T-3-1w FOR RENT—Large furnished room, suitable. for two. Phone 295%, 722 5th St. T-8-8t FOR RENT—Furnished room. Gentle- men preferred. 619 6th St. Phone 619L. 7-3+! FOR SALE—Slightly used 7‘Passen: er Buick, at bargain. Carl Ped son.’ Phone 922. v TB Bt FOR SALE—Adjustable dress form. Inquire 117 First st. or prone 6h) 6-2-3t, FOR SALE—One 5-room house, partiy modern. Also good quick “meal range, and a garage for rent. In- quire at 523 Sixth st. or phone 574%. “ 7-831w, Come and get cool at the New Eltinge Theatre. The only ar- tificially cooled theatre in the northwest. Mexico’s national'debt is about 540,- 000,000 pesos ($270,000,000). The railroads of the United States” own nearly 2,500,000 freight ‘cars. Before the war the British con- trolled’ the coal trade of ‘the ‘seas. Debate on the Irish plank began, RAE: oa i RATE OF EXCHANGE HURTS GERMANS HOLD FAIRS. IN DRIVE Belgians Alsq Take Initiative in Recovering Lost Prestige \ én: World Commerce puter rye | BY MILTON BRONNER, European Manager N. E. A. ‘ Frankfort, July’ 3—The Belgians recently, had a big trade fair in Brus- sels, the French are having one in Paris and-I have just come from view- ‘ing. one the Germans are holding in this’ city. i Whatever else you may say about the Germans; you have to hand it to them for their nerve and persistence. They are hammered down into the earth, their mark’ is worth only about cents instead of 24 in foreign ex- hard time with coal ‘shortage and la- bor troubles, and yet despite all ob- a very presentable’ trade: fair. Mostly Germans. True, most‘ of ‘the merchants that I saw looking at goods were Germans. There were supposed to be headquart- ers for Americans, Englishmen and ‘Frenchmen ‘at one of the leading ho- tels, but -I saw none there, ’“'The’ principal ‘things exhibited were machinery, electrical appliances, textiles, women’s lingerie, baskets, fancy work and art objects. You judge the lack of raw materials in Germany “by the comparatively smaall display of men’s and women’s clothes. The same applies to some kinds of machinery. Will Be German Made. But along went next Christmas purchasing season, American and English women are going to pay fancy prices for pretty obects that may be labeled French or Belgian or Swiss by the merchant, but which will really be German in origin. For instance: I saw a ‘nest” of four circular baskets made out of yattan. They were adorden with ex- quisite bunches of red silk rosebuds. ‘They were the kind of baskets women like to have on their dressing-tables on on their dining room table, _ The way the rate of exchange is at present, those nests of baskets are sold at wholesale in Germany for 32 sents a set. The import duty upon chem, when they come into the Unit- ed States, is about 16 cents. Then there is to be counted lin the cost of sending a. busintss representative to Germany and -the cost of sending the stuff by freight to its American destination. A liberal allowance would make the antire cost of the set of baskets $1. But they will sell at anywhere from 35 to $12. 4 Still Can ‘Compete. One ‘ Nuremburb manufacturer, who specializes.in this class of dainty wares, swore that he had sold 100,- 000 marks-werth of .ggods. to’ one big New York firm and similar amounts ‘to English firms. In these little lux- ury articles Germany can still com- pete with the: world. iS ie: *"Also, to begin the rehabilitation of ts business, Germany is willing to take a very small profit. What she wants above all things on earth at present is to feel that the world will once more do business with her. ARRESTED THREE © TIMES, YOU'RE PICTURE TAKEN Asuncion, July 3—Persons ar- rested for drunkeness more than three times a year in Paraguay wili be considered confirmed drunkards and their photographs posted in saloons and police stations under the provisions of a bill which has been approved by the senate and is now before the lower house. The law would also forbid the sale of liquor in theaters, moving picture houses, race tracks and other places of public gathering and within two hundred meters of places whete laborers ‘work. The president is em- powered to issue a decree determining the alcoholic content of intoxicating liquors and fixing other restrictions tending to make their consumption less injurious to the public health. Provision is also made for anti- alcoholic propaganda: in the public schools. GIVES $2,000,000... . TO INSTITUTIONS Philadelphia, ly < and religious organizations were left more than $2,000,000 urder the will of Harriet Blanchard of this city, who died about a year aio. The will just has been probated. The requests include $250,000 to the domestic and foreign missionary society of the Protestant Episcopal church, and $25,000 to the trustees of the genera] clergy relief fund of the church, GENERAL GORGAS RALLIES TODAY || London, July Major General William C. Gorgas, former surgeon general of the United States, who was believed to be dying early this morning, rallied slightly ‘before noon, “| hospital authorities said. His however, remains critical. condition, YOUTH KILLED IN AIR CRASH Volga, 8. D., July 3.—Martin Bergh, 24, of Volga, was killed and Lieuten- ant John Hoag of Minneapolis, was in- jured late today when a plane in which they were making an exhibition flight crashed to earth from a height of 600 feet in a field just outside of town. Bergh was rushed to a hospital where he died a few minutes later. Hoag’s injuries were not serious. The plane went. into a nose dive from which Hoag was unable to extricate it. Lieutenant Hoag served 3 years in France as a member of the British royal flying corps. He flew yesterday from Minneapolis. change, their factories are having a |; Sstacles they have ‘succeeded in having |} July -3.—Charitable “BLACK AND Coming Monday, Tom Mix own super special, “THE DARE DEVIL”... Mh, piece orchestra., The selection Madame Butterfly from the opera. Fatty Arbuckle in his new 2 act comedy in GARAGE” A positive riot. -A continuous laugh from start to finish. Added attraction, Dorothy Dalton in WHITE” Admission only 15¢ Wa Mary Pickford THEATRE offers ren Kerrigan a powerful drama of the oil fields the Card’ MONDAY, ‘ 2 fiotnla fi WOOL GROWERS — TO BE GIVEN FEDERAL HELP Federal. Reserve Board Works Out Plan to Tide Wool Growers Through Crisis HARDING APPROVES PLAN Washington,’ July 3.—Plans for fi- nancing the wool growers until a mar- ket for wool is reestablished, have been worked out at conferences be- tween the growers and the federal re- serve board, it was announced today by F. R. Marshall of Salt Lake City, secretary of the National Wool Grow- ers’ association. Under the plan as approved by the board, Mr. Marshall said, “A wool grower may ship his wool to one usual point of distribution obtaining from the railroad a bill of lading for the shipment; the grower may then draw a draft against his bank for such an amount as may be agreed upon by the grower and the bank, secured by the bill of lading. The fed- eral reserve act authorizes any mem- ber bank to accept a draft secured ‘in this manner at the time of accept- ance, provided that the draft matures in not more'than six months from the time of acceptance. After acceptance such a draft bearing the endorsement of a member bank is eligible for re- discount or purchase by a federal re- serve bank, provided that it has a maturity of not more than three months from the date of rediscount, or purchase. t : While the board’s statement refers | only to acceptances based on bills of lading, Mr. Marshall said, Governor Harding had called attention to the provision of the federal reserve act as to eligibility for discount of paper secured by warehouse receipts. It was the unanimous opinion of the wool growers, Mr. Marshall said, that the plan suggested was practical and feasible and that no extraordin-} ary difficulty would be encountered in the necessary financing to carry along the present season’s wool clip until a normal buying market reasserts itself. CANADA VOTERS ADOPT NEW PLAN ‘Manitoba seemingly have adopted thu group system of government. Yester- day they defeated the Norris govern- | IT’S AN ILL WIND that blows down uninsured property. Why put uv with ill winds when Tornado Insur- ance will repay you in case your buildings are de- stroyed? A wind may never come your way, but isn’t it worth the premiums to know that if it does come it’s the Hartford’s loss, not | yours? We write Hartford Tor- nado Insurance. You need it. Let’s get together. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck, .N. D.. other ‘ thirty-nine FOR. ELECTIONS | Winnipeg, July 3.— Electors of |] ment. The Norris candidates could not today command a majority over all’ other groups in the legislature. Followers of the ‘Premier, however, will number twenty-or more and will constitute the largest single group in the house. Labor’ will have a group of ten or twelve ‘members, and pre- dictions are here today that F. J. Dixon, who received a tremendous vote in Winnipeg; will be leader of the provincial labor party. The ten members’ from ‘Winnipeg are for the most part still unknown, but it is conceded that Dixon and Hon. T. 'H. Johnson, attorney general. are elected because they lead the candidates by a large margin. It is claimed that of the remaining eight seats three probably will go tv labor,’ three to the government and two to the conservatives. LLOYD GEORGE IN . MESSAGE TO U. S. Boston, July 3.—A letter from Pi mier Lloyd George of England urging establishment of a “good understand- ing between the American and Brit- ish democracies,” was read to the In- ternational Congressional council in session here last night, by the Rev. J. Morgan Gibson, of England. CLAIMS $5,000 FOR MAID’S DELAY Winnipeg, Man., July 3—The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway has received a demand from a Saskatchewan farmer for $5,000 because of an alleged delay of ‘six weeks ‘in securing transporta- tion for his housekeeper, who was coming from Louisiana. A later let- ter compromised 6n $1,000. “Please do not make me go, to law about this,” the farmer urged, “for I know that you have more money than I have. Just send the money along and I will call it square.” NAME FITS HIS JOB Sacramento—Archibald Yell is the name of the city attorney here. Some African tribes pull their fin- gers until the points crack as a form of salutation. WOOLWORTH HEIRS ARE TAXED $8,000,000 New York, July 3.—Heirs of the late F. W. Woolworth have obtained from the Prudential Life Insurance company a five-year loan of $3,000,000 on the Woolworth building. The money has been borrowed to help mect the state and federal inheritance taxes, amounting to $8,000,000. which the estate owes. BORDEN WOULD QUIT Ottawa, July 3.—'‘Desire’ to retire from public life was expressed ‘by Sir Robert Borden, Premier of Canada, at a penetra caucus of Unionists here oday. Come and get cool at the New Eltinge Theatre. The only ar- tificially ‘cooled theatre in the northwest. ‘ ms I beg to call the atten- tion to the public that there was a news item given out to the effect that the An- nex Cafe was now incor- porated..I beg to state that the Annex Gafe is not in- corporated and I;am_ sole owner and. have taken over ; 2 full charge.and control of | the, business. 1 solicit the i public’s business and will FH see to it that. everybody ; will get the. proper care and attention at my first- class cafe. ae ANNEX CAFE FRED BOBB, Prop. Attention and Courtesy is my motto ‘| will go down patriots. the country. But you mothers, who The mothers of the Twentieth century into ‘history as being true They have tearfully, ungrud- ingly and bravely given of their own flesh and blood that true Democracy might pre- vail throughout the world and that ‘the strong:arm of Imperialism should be shat- tered once and for all. won it can be said, in more ways: than one, that it was won by.the Mothers of Now the war is sent your dear‘ boys: “over there” to fight for world wide liberty, ‘also have‘a:duty 4 to perform with reference to the babes in your.arms and your sons and daughters of tender age. that not long ago, at the Y. Do you know M. C. A. at Kansas City fif- teen hundred boys were examined and fifty per cent of them were found to have some form of ‘spinal trouble? If those boys had been examined by a'competent: Chiro- practor when they were yet infants, these faults could have been corrected, If your little baby is sick, , weak, puny or not properly developed in some part of the body there must be a Cause and nine times out of ten it is' found in the ‘spine. Do not wait with the expectation that the baby will outlive the weakness; have'the spine palpated and if necessary adjusted. Many a boy, many a girl has gone to the prem- ature grave or lingered through life a miserable cripple when a Spinal Analysis made in infancy would have de- tected some weakness which Chiropractic Adjustments would have’ corrected. NATURE IS. THE ONLY TRUE HEALER. . Spinal Adjustments eliminate the cause of the trouble. and MOTHER NATURE HEALS. You say, “Oh, yes, that’s a beautiful theory, but like it’s too good to be true.” all other beautiful: theories, It is not only a ‘beautiful the- ory, but it is beautifully true, as the thousands of men and women who have.been helped will attest any day. “Save the Children.” the men and women of tom The children of today will be orrow. You can do this by . safeguarding their health while they are still in your ' arms. Consultation and Spinal Analysis Free. R. S. ENGE, D. C., Ph. C. CHIROPRACTOR Lucas Block Telephone 260 ., Lady Attendant |... Bismarck, N. D.

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