The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 20, 1922, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR ° THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1922 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D,- a8 Second Class Matter. GEORGE D.MANN - - a . _ or Edit Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO - - - - - | Marquette Bldg. \ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. ] MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DETROIT Kresge Bldg. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or | republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. ; All rights of republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. are | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.............. } Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... Reraicere dees M20. daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) we, Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota....... : . 6.01 THE STATER’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) FUSION AT AN END? The State Democrat, published at Fargo, which purported ta speak for the Democratic party in the last campaign and pported the O’Connor-Nestos ticket, says that “So far as fusion is concerned this campagin probably will be the last along that line.’ The newspaper also displays considerable resentment against Republicans in other respects. It sends this editorial shaft at President Harding: “The morning sheet. suggests. Frazier for the presidency. Won’t ‘do— Resembles the present incumbent too closely.” . All of which>is not discouraging but rather-the opposite. | If the Republicansand Democrats of North Dakota can again rally to their party standards, settle their quarrels within the parties, hew to the line and ‘in a spirit of fairness | apd unfettered fealty to the, state propose platforms in keep- ing with the spirit of representative government, North Da- t kota:may at last get ‘rid of the endless bickering and intense hatred which has impeded the progress of the state. STRENUOUS ; “South Africa cables that the Transvaal has just had the | These bills will run the range from | biggest diamond rush in its history, a new field having been| proposals to modify the Volstead opened up at Kaalplaats. At the crack of a pistol, off rushed 8000: claim-seekers, lined in a row over a mile long. | . Included in the rush were hundreds of women who, mak- ing their own living, were anxious to dig for diamonds. | is something new under the sun. In previous “rushes,” wo- men were present—but as wash-ladies, keepers of eating houses and dance hall girls, not as miners. What will they try next? -’ ‘ x ; Y Z EYE : William Rettig is. killed and Charles Douglas scriously | injured when an airplane crashes into a street of Okeechobee, ! Fla. They were in the plane. Luckily, no pedestrian hurt. | Such crashes into city streets may be common later.. If so, according to laws of evolution, men — to guard themselves 1 from danger overheard—may develop a third eye, at the top | ef the skull! Some scientists think prehistoric man may:have had a third eye in the back of his head, to guard him against jungle beasts approaching from the rear. * | « All forms of life adapt their bodies to fit environment. \ It| real fight probably will go over Comments reproduced in this || column may or may not express || the opinion of The Tribune, They || are presented here tr order that) i] our readers may have both sides \| of important {ssues which are '| being discussed in the press of the day THE COMING PROHIBITION FIGHT going to be exceedingly in- 2 to observe what, if any- , happens to the ‘prohibition j laws in the next few months or the jue t two years. Results of the election Tnesday. show. unmistak- jably that in various parts :of the} ‘country a strong tide of oppos‘tion ito the Volstead act ig in motion. |The'surge was felt perceptibly ‘in| ! Minnesota, despite’ Mr! “Bryan’s 'statement that prohibition was.not | ‘an issue in this: state, -but it awas j more violent in some ‘other giates | jand parts-of states It ~! The voters of Ilinois and Gali- | fornia put theniselves on record in | 'a popular referendum ds in: favor | | 2 kindy of‘ prohibition that “im- | a sharp relaxing ‘of the rigid of the Volstead~ act.’ As ht have been ected, the big: ‘most of the “wet” yo but it is a distinctly arresting ciréumstance * .ithat the rural vote seems to have | ard thé idea that! {it passed the sent law. Despite its big ¢! , Ohio | voted a, ta light wine and beer j | program result that helped ‘to! modify the disappointment; of the | |“drys” over the genega lelection; j results, 6S j Edwards of New Jersey and thi | cf Missouri are s to owe ‘thei election as senators tothe fact ot their avowed opposition to the Vol-; stead law and to the prohibition! principle as now applied. The pro- hi ion question contributed very | materially to the defeat. of other | candidates for senatorships, ‘and / that issue enters substantialy into | the causes that combine to make| | ithe complexion of the House . of Representatives of the prospective ixty-elghth Congress ‘markedly ent from that of the present Congress. | There is bound to be a flood of} bills on the prohibition question. | \law to proposals for a repeal of the| | Eighteenth amendment. Some of| them probstly will appear in the short sessi'1 just ahead, but, the} juntil the next Congress, sometime} after March 4. i Friends of the present prohibition | laws are not likely to close their eyes to the possibilities. They | imight as well prepare to be’ up; against a fight because a fight: is coming, and they will ‘beless -but- | tressed by poltical fears in, Con- ‘gress than they have been hereto- | fore. The commonest expectation that the first effort of the modifica- tions will be directed to procuring , an amendment to the Volstead act which would permtj the manufac- ture and. sale of light wines and beer. The alcoholic percentages proposed in a bill to be introduced by an Illinois representative are 14 per cent for wines and 4 per cent! for ‘beers. ! \ If modifications of this kind are voted by Congress, the law thus) | a || EDITORIAL REVIEW : | these states contributed ) al | lh M- Jong, by MELVILLE Davisson Post’ © 1902 NEA Service, .Inc. THE LAUGHTER OF ALLAH il Criumphs of f uelle. SN \ - AAW) AN ec elas He knew of them only what ap- peared before the eye. And, while he saw the beauty which they as- sembled, he saw also the thousand follies that “seemed to give them pleasure, and he wondered in what terious charm lay their appalling Linfluence on his soldiers. ‘ And on thi mysterious city, he be an to be as- der. He began to doubt the vaiue of the one thing that he had gotten ont of life. What was this other thing that gave an ignorant soldier ; ; and a common housemaid, motion- Monsieur Jonquelle, the Prefect. impressed with the value of what] jogs and. silent in the shadows of of Police of Paris, told me ythis,|he paid—his y youth shad been ie-|y flowering vine, the faces of the story. We were on the deck of his’ quired: of him. When he should | angels? : What did this mysterious yacht it\the Mediterrancany:* the | come up out of this desert he would ne EbaReien asad: Ue dese coast ott Atriea was a the dit [be old, And what had Re got—what thing? He knew what the love of lif We had been talking these strange, famous Englishman ; wh tragic death in the North Sea; had stirred the world, é as, for he had seen every sort of ceature fight desperately to. live: and he knew the love of gain and the vould he get out of honors? The man réde slowly, holding the great 4 Aeevsiy 1 neryous Arab in. [The strange, in-]love of power. But men, all ‘men, Why had he, never inarried—the ¢ongruous current of the eity passed | everywhere, imperiled and aban: greatest Englishman of his time*| him, but he was thinking of some-|doned these things for the love of We did not name him. Monsieur oe Jonquelle ¢alled him “Sir Hen the story. ry in The Prefect of Police of Paris pre- sented the story as though it a detached tale of ‘an oriental were story teller in a bazaar gf Cairo. And | i thing else, and he gave it no st- | tention, There was another thing. He mused vaguely. He had seen on this very day, in the shade of a] tue in the thing that he had, in the | magnificent flowering vine,.a young) thing for which he traded away his soldier and an English girl. They |1i women, and they did it with doubt, like one who trades glass for a jewel® $ fe He reflected. There was no vir- js to his companions pouring a cup of sailed by a curious consuming won- . thus to transfigure the human ; ee . FEAR 5 Alfred Durieu, Frenchman, 31, feared he had cancer of | the stomach. The fear became an obsession. To cure him- | self, he began rigid dieting. enacted would be carried very | promptly to the United States Su- preme Court for a test of its valid- ity under the Eighteenth amend- m4 ment. The “dr: would contend Now he is dead. The autopsy reveals that he had no can-jthat the percentages suggested < cer, and that death was due to starvation. Getting back of|above signified that the beverages | that, death was due to fear—to imagination, Fear, a mental |'° aaa ey applied were intoxi- i illness, is one of the deadliest of diseases. To help conquer | ¢{tts and that the Jaw was there- | ms i Fy jfore in direct conflict with the’spe-j t it, read Basil King’s new book, “The Conquest of Fear.” cific terms of the Highteenth/| amendment. It would be up to the} court to settle that question. If Me YES AND NO jthe court should decide that light Are we “kidding” ourselves when we talk about the great. Wines and beer were not admissible | advantages derived from labor-saving devices? [ander the amendment, there would | Ae The B Ivania Rail x ei : «4, [| be nothing left for the “wets” ex- , The Pennsylvania Railroad prints this on the cover of its rept to wage war on the amendment dining car menu: ( 5 Kitself. A successful, warfare . of “Millions of jon of ore are carried in solid trainloads Fehat kind would be somenung moval over: the Pennsylvania system every year to feed. the blast!.?,“\memican governmental history. furnaces of the iron and steel industry. ‘ | vamea polls TEpane * “In order to transfer the ore from cargo boats of the NORTH DAKOTA'S’ QUEER GIFT | Great Lakes to railroad cars, the Pennsylvania system oper-| TO THE NATION , Hates giant electric unloading machines at its ore docks on) North Daokta’has had an experi- | Lake Erie i iment with government. as Town- i listened with my eyes closed, on’ the cool deck, moved slowly by the long swells. . . listened to the tragic love story of this strange, reserved, famous inglishman who had lived “|face. And when he should come up out of this great desert south toward Khartum, he would be old! Suddenly. he realized that the horse could not go on, and that he were sitting on a bench; — neith moyed, and only, their hands touched. They did not speak, ‘and yet their faces were like the faces of angels. in mystery aad, died in mystery: This was a thing that he had al-| was controlling it with difficulty. The man, who rode north from) ways hated, It was not the enemy|He had traversed the Rue Muski, the citadel, along the Boulevard! i, “the front that threatened the| skirted the Place Esbekiya and was Mohammed Ali, was no longer! amy, it was these loving ereatures| about to cross the Kamel Pasha, young. ||. He sat! firmly in the saddle, and to the distant eye, he was hard and lean like a hunter in condition, but his face discolored by wind and sun, in repose, was tired. It was an} unusual face, seamed and c with lines, the mouth firm, almost harsh, with the muscles developed along the jaw. But it was not these features that impressed. lin the rear. Buthiess and*deter-| that shore boulevard entering the mined, he. had set his face agaiasti Place Esbekiya from the ‘north, it. The y should be celibate.! when a procession stopped him. {And he had broken and elbowed out} The sacred carpet had arrived the men who would encumber them-| from Meeea. The streets before selves with a lo heart. him were gorged with people, and Well, he had lived by the rule! the whole city echoed with weird himself! ‘There had been no woman} Ogjental cries. There was little new about him on the frontiers of the; to him in the’ orgy of’ these native Empire! When he came, now and} ceremonies, with the t of sound then,.to London, the cufrent of life hand color, and their vast medley of It was the man’s extraordinary |i which they moved failed to touch! tribes assembled from ‘the — waste ¢ Titey were ieee ard act ie him, They-were creatures apart. "1 places of the earth, saw—a dark metallic blue-the blue enmnmannamanaes | — “Prior to 1882 this work was done by hand-shovel Ta pce etna a wheel-barrow at the rate of About 100 tons a day. * “Today four machines at Cleveland can empty a vessel and load cars at the rate of 3000 tons an hour.” and The actual mining and transportation of iroh ore have also been speeded up by lavor-saving devices, the same. as handling the ore at the docks, All this is generally accepted as “more economical.” However, in the days when iron ore was handled by | wheel-barrow and hand-shovel, the ore cost $4 a ton at Lake i Erie docks. ’ Today the price is between $5 and $6 a ton. i} . It looks as if, the more economical the process, the higher | tHe cost. : : You find the same state of contradiction in wheat. In 1860 the cash price of wheat at Chicago was as low as 66 cents a bushel. Today, even with farm prices far too low EF compared with other prices, wheat costs a lot more than in f did in 1860. ‘ All this, despite the introduction of tremendous labor- saving devices and processes in growing the wheat and ship- pihg it to market. | © In general, it seems that labor-saving devices tend to in- te ease selling price, on the average and in the long run. This is counteracted by two important things: . FIRST: The buying power of the dollar has changed. A | ddllar represents less buying power, today, than 50 cents did ‘at all pleased with the results, and lis steadily rejecting it-for further} use there. Yet, oddly enough, North,Dakota j seems to want to pass it aA to the j nation, for while it is. voting for anti-Leaguers for its own govern- | ment, it is sending League senators jte the United States senate. ; _While North Dakota has re-elect- ‘ed Governor Nestos, anti-Leaguer, hy a very large majority,. it has elected Former Governor Frazier jto the United Statés senate, ; To emphasize that queer view-) | point is the interesting fact that before'North Dakota sent Mr. Fra- er to the senate, it recalled him} from the governorship, And it had already sent Senator —_ Ladd, Lenguer,to the senate. | To vote anti-League on local af-! fa and pro-League on national! ta Ss, in manifesting one of the | oddities of this queer, disorganized !time.—-Duluth Herald. | ANAYLSING THE ELECTION | One of the main causes of the , overturn of the republican major- i ity in the house and the loss of half the republican members in the sen- ate, was the prohibition question. The wet and dry forces had a con- test in certain states, and the re- ports are unanimous in stating that an | hatred of ceftain remote spaces in the ; : tropic sky. The lids drooped, giving ERET?Y TRUE ‘BY CONDO the man an ‘impression at once of { ; te i serenity and menace. : : <= RE ; ie rode a erny tray and ee (How- Do, MEESTER! TELLHA tou clothes were: evidently est | f Ste: ' product of a Bond Street tailor. He} ‘GOOD FORTONS & ComG, 1 TELA rode like a soldier—like one a nights tomed to live days and the saddle. The man felt old and tired. The vi pect of Egypt oppressed him, H all human’ effort equally futile, Here, as in India, one grew only old and accomplished nothing. | And, on this evening, he felt a ly the menace of Exypt. ngland had only extended fi on this great desert running south | . She/had { yee. onet; and | behind’ the indolence, the listles | into impenetrable myste only the peace of the b: resignation of these desert pe there scemed to lie a of the invader that lessened, and that waited al with, an unfailing eternal unchanging vast, inheren patience, India, this thing skulked in the dis- | acute- ngers onle neve 1 | You Good FORTUNES } L TELL“A) POY ~ >> Two Bits ! | 1 os <@ yc FOR A MERE PITTANCE YOU WOULD tance, but here it seemed to ap-| _ ach—-to be at hand. AH, FAIR ONG, P ! Mborhaps, whit i the.” man. kien IREVEAC TO ME EVSNTUALITIES SUBSEQUENT t 2 ADS OF staged this impr . The whole! ITo THe PRESENT TIME $ MYRIADS Ma been_despeiled. in Sr; IRECOULECTIONS, BORN OF THE PAST, RISE timed, She felt that weak rulers. EVEN UNTIDDEN, AND INCIDENTS OF Tt for gain or the love of life, had held | ht to her in leash when she been loosened with a gr a holy war. The heads of were quict, but the tribes were have t shout to Islam. rest- MOMENT ARE ALL TOO REAL, ate TANGIBLE, BUT THE FUTYVRE — THE Puroee LO THAT MISTY REALM, THAT VAST, ELUSIVE, INTRIGUING ----7— organized campaign was made by the wet interests for the modifi- | {cation of the Volstead act. The modifi vo! for the first time on the issue in-several states. A definite program of legislation to amend the present jaw is no doubt when grandpa was a boy. Every one has more dollars, too, | so the dollar is not a fair measure of price. ark | « SECOND: The introduction of labor-saving devices and | processes has released human labor for other work. This enables humanity to produce thousands of articles for gen- | eral use, where in the old days such commodites were num-' to be presented to the present con- bered by the hundreds. We of today have a wider assort- 8°59 Which has been called in ment of articles, both necessities and luxuries, than a few je Lee eeu we | generations ago, | assembles is doubtful. It is highly | _ That is the long-range trend, a higher standard of living. probable that the issue will sbe set- | Price is secondary. When a. dollar would buy almost any- tled in some manner before the i Deng, 88 old men put it, “the trouble was, no one had the ,7°Xt Presidential election by the ollar. congressmen elected at this No- ; Yember election.—Jamestown Alert. | S. England, fecling always with her delicate antennae, knew this ano. always wise. moved first. She had withdrawn this man from India and sent him here to set the butt of the Lec-Endfield a little firmer in the sand south toward Khartum. He had a fortnight in Cairo before he took up this tremendous labor, and he used it to be free, to be alone, to ride when he liked wi out an orderly always ‘at his hee! Tt was great honor that Envland did him. He might, in the end, be- come Viceroy of India or Sirdar of Egypt. But, on this evening he was IN AZZ | ; 77a | fh ‘small. | For a moment, as a soldier, he ap- ‘proved the precaution taken by the | company of and there, to | English authorities—a | troops thrown in, here |divide the tribes and the horde of |‘ ‘natives that surged along with every | color, and with every sort of ery. and every extravagant gesture. | ‘He approved, too, the diplomacy that gave these regiments a gala air, j with their bands of music, as thouga j they r ed the Arab and the fellah ! }in doing honor to the holy relic,| | While, in fact, they hold the fingers | [of England on the city lest they ‘slip off in a sudden rising of these | i native hordes. i | Then his mind retutned to its; | reflection, with an idle interest hej | watched ' the strange, half-naked | primeval creatured that appeareil,| [issuing out of the vast limitless | ocean of,sand that lay endlessly to {the south, from tribes, old and un-; ‘changed since the days of Abraham |--ceatures from the uncharted dceps of the Sahara, naked and sub- iz like the Baptist. | What lay far off there in the dead cities of this sand-swept wilderness , |whence came these mad men, gaunt, covered with\ hair, and in- finitely old, no ‘human . creature could say. Perhaps the. magician and the wizard of old times lived on there. And there in ancient tombs. | in honeyeombed walls sifting full of | sand, in strange wilderness eterna:- {lv dead and silent, old wise. men; abode who knew the ancient formu- las by which the inexorable course of nature could be turned aside. Perhaps they maintained there to| this day that mysterious power which the sacred books of all* re- ligions agree that certain dread members of the race posseSsed in the morning of the world. ; And the streaming horde, with its cries and colors, slashed and inter jsected by smart European reg |ments, mingling the -drum and the| Highland. pipe with the wailings of | the desert, beeame.a thing unreal-— |a fantastic background for that | other mystery that so profoundly | disturbed the man, |. And while he sat in the saddle |looking down ‘at these wild people of ;the desert, another looked down at} him. : ‘A woman, accompanied by the [resident doctor and a maid, entered ithe English’ hotel on the other side} 'o fthe square, crossed the foyer and {got into the lift. As she passed, a ‘little dapper man, bald, dressed like |a tailor’s print, and with the air of/ ‘one who is a social register, spoke tea at a table by the wall. “That's Nelly Landsear—used to be a famous Southern beauty in the "States. Jove! She’s gone'to pieces! \Had a devil of the a life! Married \Bristed Ames—dirty little beast! |My word, she was a, wonder once! |Looks fifty today.” oe | And he began to tell the dramatic ory of this woman and the} creature that she had married, the ‘story of a tireless effort to keep a weakling on his feet, to make a man jof him. Thc story over again of Daude’s “Kings in Exile.” A story ithat was a tragedy of failures. | ADVENTURE OF ‘| THE TWINS ———_—_—_—_—__—————_-_* on By Olive Barton Roberts | Nancy and Nick followed Mr. | Green Wizard over the tree-tops. to} | his work-shop in the pine-tree—up 4the thickest, blackest part, where | ‘no mortal eyes could see. | It was a queer place and it seem- ed that everything in the world was | there. | In one corner of the room hung the Invisable Magic Sheet, in an other stood the Seven League Oars, | |in another was the Enchanted Bridle ‘and in the fourth corner was a table jon which Ntood the golden box con-| ‘taining the Wishing Ring. i | In the center af the room was a | great desk piled high with letters. |. “Hum ho!” sighed the Green | Wizatd, hurrying over and picking lup the top onc. “More trouble, I see. | 1 I'wonder who wants some magic | now.” | He opened the letter ant read | | aloud: | “Dear’Mr. Green Wizard: “Could .you, would you, plcase to ; send me a pair of magical ylasses that can see through anything?, Ys |’ “Sometimes when I go to cotlect |my rent, the people of Whisp-ring | Forest, and Bright Meadow and Old ‘Orchard pretend they're not at | home. Then I have to go away with- jout it. As the Fairy Queen needs jall the rent she can get, will you please give me the glasses. | | ‘Yours in need, | | Finkle T. Tingling.” | “Oh, oh!” cried Nancy. “ffs the | iry landlord!” | The Green Wizard smiled. “He | has a k.nd heart so he shall have j the glasses,” he Ceclared at once, -—_—___—__,, Be content with such things as ye ‘have—Hebrews 13:5. It is thought by some persons that ; if the common people rule the world there will be millennial conditions. But the trouble is the commou peo- ;ple have been ruling the warld) Now «the world is in sore need of uncom- mon people.—Elmer Willis Serl. ON HUNGER STRIKE, (By the Assbciated Press) Dublin, Nov. 20.—Miss Annie Mac- viney has joined her ‘sister, Mary, hunger striking against tre lat- ter’s detention by the free State gov- | ernment. t She arrived| at Mount Joy prison, | Where Mary is’ held, last night, ac- | companied by 12 other women. She snnounced her intention of staying at the prison gates and taking no | £od until her sister was given spirit- | ual consolation or released. The women- remained with Annie ‘os guards, relieving one another at | intervals, while, she watched and fasted all night, \ Some scientists maintain that the | equator is not an exact circle, but | they have not proved their ‘case, and, in any event, it is agreed that | |the deviation, if there is one, is BRAKEMAN _ SAYS HE BREADED TO ” MAKE TRIP “Tanlac certainy put me on the right road, for I am feeling as good as I ever did, and everybody tells me iow much better I am looking,” declares Roy Clark, 213 Summit Ave, Beloit, Wis., well-known brakeman for the C, M. & St, P. Railroad running from Milwaukee to Savanah, Ill. Vs “My stomach was all out of er- der, I had no appetite and was in a badly run-down condition. b would bloat up with gas, and felt so tired out all the time I just dreaded to eojout on my run. ,;My nerves were all unstrung end at times I simply wasn’t able to, make the trip. “Four bottles of Tanlac gave me such a big appet'te I just want to he eating alt the time. My nerv- cusness and tired out feeling have entirely disappeared. I am cer- tainly strong for Tanlac and I make no secret of it.” Tanlac is sold by all good drug- gists. 4 Tom Sims |Says. Congress threatens to hold special sessions instead of one. two Dempsey may fight Will: and where there is a Wills there may be a way. We can all be thankful this Thanksgiving that turkey is cheap- er, ~ . What’s in a name? Willie Plant is a famous walker snd not a gar- dener, 2 Gone are the days when we got three ycars out of an overcoat. Mackerel are: so thick a Nova Scotia ship found sailing difficu't, so boarders are out of luck again. Influence bootlegreérs is astounding. Califorhia voted dry. A dancer is with 26 trunks. The funny part is they are not dancing trunks, Small towns are so lucky. In Washington, it is considered proper for girls to pay their own way. Bryan’s: brother elected gov- ernor of Nebraska, but. it doesn’t run in the family. Times are so hard: aute makers can’t catch up with their érders, What makes you want to go some where. like not: being invited? All the men sitting in bo scats at burlesque shows are not bachélors. With so lmany other things to worry about some men insist on won- dering if their hair is combed. Nothing takes a man off his, feet like seeing a comfortable chair. The older a man gets the mere he {hates to buy a new hat. ' Children are a great handicap in doing the things you shouldn't Jo. The man who gets by on his !coks isn’t going very far. Turkish situation is about the same except the names are’ looking a little more familar. More college girls stay single be- cause they are harder to fool.- Three of our mpst beauthful words_ are “it’s a check!” The hardest part about being a ‘Professional politician is keeping fat. Even cautions business men have reckless spells, Rockefeller gave dimes to several photographers, The road to wisdom has*never been mapped. ‘ The safe side of every argument is the middle. Seems as if the backbone of sum- mer is about broken. ba time Lifes is too short’ to waste hating everybody. The law helps those who help themselves. educes swellin : — starts blood chedlating The pains of strains and sprains are. due to congestions. Just quicken the circulation, and the » inflammation and pain subside — disappear. Without rubbing, Sloan’s penetrates and breaks up the painiful congestion. Sloan's, re ves rheumatic pains, soothes neuralgia, warms and comforts tir backs, Loosenscon colds in chest.” Kes are gaining: returning to Russia” \

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