The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 27, 1922, Page 4

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' , cubists had much the same thing years ago when Dr. Max ? : PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK. Entered at the Postoffice, RIBUNE Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D.MANN" -- - - - - Editor | es Foreign Representatives ° | & G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY — CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT ‘Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ‘NEW YORK Ss Fifth Ave. Bldg.| MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or irepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| wise credited in this paper and also the local news published erein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are | falso reserved. ‘ MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION : SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year..........+6+ a reigie s vee PUD Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)................ 7.20 ‘Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ACTION IS WANTED The request for employment by the city of an account- ‘ant to aid in the investigation of the rates of the Hughes Electric Company remains: unanswered. Nor does the fact that the state railroad commission has engaged an account- dnt of its own, now engaged in other work, answer the de- mand. The case is one in which immediate action is demand- ed by the petitiGHiers, and\in hich immediate action should be granted by tke state railroad commission. It is the claim of petitioners that approximately $40,000 excess was col- Yected for the year ending last June 1, and that the reports so far as they disclose the real facts, show that since the lose of the period the same condition continues., If the peti- tioners must wait while the buck is being passed between warious sets of officials, if they must see their case post- poned.and.bandied.thraugh the winter months they will not have a square-deal.:-‘Phe=city commission would establish no precedents:It already: has hired. an accountant to aid | petitioners, in another case and paid him at:the rate of $1,050 | per month. If the rates are, as the petitioners contend, ex- arbitant to the extent of $40,000 a_year, it would be real etonomy to ascertain the facts. In any'event the petitioners ought to get what they demand—a¢tion before the long win- Me months have passed, when eléctric and steam rates are neaviest. “THE TIGER’S” MISSION ‘ \ The’ war-time premier of France, the fighting, inspiring iS atid courageous Clemenceau, has received a welcome in Amer- ican that has touched his heart. He has been greeted, justly, asa great hero of the World| War. “The Tiger” has not mistaken this tribute to his greatness in France’s hour of need for acquiescence in the aim of his visit to the United States. He came to win the hearts of Americans and to bring them into Europe to settle the deplorable conditions. _ He will find many who believe that the job was not finished, and that it was badly bungled after the firing of guns has ceased. Indeed, “The Tiger” must overcome a widely prevalent be- |: lief that he himself issmuch tosblame for thé ‘muddled con-.|' dition of European affairs. Always suspicious‘ of the secret treaties and intense’ national selfishness mainfested in Europe, America hesitates to entangle herself in European affairs. If the former premier can convince the American-| people that the aims of France in peace as are laudable as they were when America joined in the great conflict, he will haye succeeded in his mission. But if the American people are left with the belief that it is vengeance and selfish gain that France and her neighbors seek in Europe the. aid of America will be refused, and justly so. is CENSORSHIP REJECTED “The people of Massachusetts emphatically protested aganist the undue political aggression of a moving picture | censorship in the recent election when they cast 545,919 votes against a referred act to 207,476 for it. It is a notable vic- tory for those who resent the intrusion of a governmental bgard upon what they jealously consider their liberty of action. Governmental restrictions and representative legis- lation usually are accepted by the people only because’they believe such action is necessary for the general welfare. Will H.. Hays, the “czar of the movies,” however, recognizes in the.vote “a definite and unmistakable challenge to the mo- tion’ picture industry to carry out its program for its own continual improvement in the full discharge of its duty to! the‘ public.” The future of motion pictures lies with the| preducers and the question of censorship must be answered byfthem. Mr. Hays. is a purposeful man with a definite pro- gram. Let tip;hope that fullest opportunity may be given to| him and to ‘his associates in the moving picture industry to plage it on such_a plane so no fair-minded man can urge the! negessity of. governmental interference in the business. ' 1 GOLF new grass, which gives golf balls a better bounce, is; developed from “creeping, bent” grass. ‘The development is the ‘work of Uncle Sam’s Bureau of Plant Industry. This interests at least 10,000 times as: many as care to! hear about the discovery of a new star. Don’t “pan” the human brain. We can’t use stars. But we can use golf grass. People are interested in the things that affect them per- | sonally. That’s why women read the ads first, unless a news- | | | || column may or may not express | | fined his Chicago as the sixth Ger- | many’s defeat accomplished by the United States. j our Nation’s ) Talk of politicians, recriminations — ——_—________——_ jglad to cee you! | Nanev. | said to tell you that he hoped you ‘would get a rest now and have more EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir. order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are the GOOD APPOINTMENT The election of E. G. Wanner to, of Administration is a distinct rec- | ognition of a capable man, and it will be received. with gratification | by all who know Mr. Wanner’s high qualifications for such a posi- | tion, where tact and ability count | so much. Personally we are tick- | led all-over, as are many friends of | Mr, Wanner in this city—Beach Advance. | THLE WAR A FAILURE AS OLD STUFF General McCelian in 1864 ran for president upon a platform that the | war was\a failure, and at one time in the campaign Lincoln is said to | have been apprehensive for the re- sult. There survived even r'ter | Appomattox a considerable _ senti- ment for years that the war for the Union had been a mistake. It re- quired time for the Democratic Party to shed that heresy. Now we. regard the Civil War, the North’s presistence and victory in it, as the salvation of our sTazion, | and the heroes of that conflict have bekn fairly deified in popalur re- | gard. They rank Lincoln with Wash. | ington, and the struggle between | South and, North is, becoming our Trojan War, with Lee as the Hector; and ‘Grant as the Achilles of the great American epic. i During the World War, there} were traitors and complainers who aspersed our national motives in| entering the War, or as “frankly wished for Germany's success as did the Copperheads for the success of the Confederacy sixty years ago. Senator La Follette made his Saint | Paul speech in the midst of the | Nation’s arming, and a Mayor de- man city q’ the world. Let us not rake over cold ashes, But there are those who seek to in- ject the War as an issue jnto day’s politics, who declare our participa- tion to have been a terriole andj costly error, and who regret Gers These speak not up- on econvictonso much as from a lively appreciation. of the favor of the pro-German vote. If there ‘is such a thing as a’ disloyal ,vote, truckling to it is certain to stimu- Yate loyalists to repudiation of to-! day’s Copperheads. No candidate is going to win on} the platform that «the late) War | was a fa'lure..“ It’ was “instead a glorious success. It overthrew the bully ‘of Europe, who’ had started | in on trying to, bully the United | States, We vindicated our manhood in France, and -in so’ forthright a, fashion that, as‘ Admiral’ ‘Benson says, the United Statés will ibe let alone for. -thirty ‘yearsito.comee Also. in that, War, we set our heel on all alienism; here at home, as our fathers’ in ‘the | Sixties’ did upon secegsion, . Aliénism :would be; ram- pant here “right now, .if the United States had not gone to:war. We had to go to war.in 1917, or. to resign as a nation. Our determination was ‘a success im every, sense, upon the} field of battle in’France, upon tne field of dissension here at home. The War cost us much, -Even | righteous wars are expensive. We! are paying for it, not only in taxes, but also'in unsettlemest. Mut the | victory abroad and here at, home was worth the price to us, and will | be even more worth. while to our children. ~The latest challengers to power and integrity have been thrashed to a/frazzle over there and here at home have been effectually suppressed. by pro-Germans, will not reverse the Argonne.—Minncapolis Journal. ——__________» ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy and Nick knotked at Mre. Squirrel’s front door. “Lack a'day on us!” exclaimed that, lady when she saw them. “I’m that My! May! It; seems like old times. Do come in and tell me the newsi” “We can’t stay very long,” said “We brought you a pack- age from the Green Wizard.” Mrs. Squitrel gave a shriek of de- ight. “A package! Then he must have received my letter. I asked him for a magical dish-mop as I get so tired of doing dishes,” “That’s just what it, is,” smiled Nancy, handing the squirrel lady’ the package. “The Green Wizard Paper headline catches their eye. : : | ‘Geometric art, picturing things in straight lines and angles, appears in Paris. It’s described as. new, but the ART Nofdau wrote “Degeneration.” { Nature works ih curves—horizon, sea-wave, star orbits. | When an artist sees nature in straight lines and angles in-, stead of graceful curves, he generally has an eye disease, uswally nystagmus. : JOKE s Congress losing its standing in Wall Street? ; "A Wall Street newspaper opens a long story with this: | ‘A.member of the International Molders’ Union of North America has represented for several years a district of Cali-' fornia in Congress. This statement is not made with the! intent to reflect on the Molders’ Union,” etc. | SLIPPING | ‘Uncle Sam’s income drops—steadily, alarmingly. Tax | money received during September totaled only about $354,- 000,000, against $631,000,000 in September a year ago. The old line, “Give until it hurts,” should be changed.to “Save until it hurts,” and pasted in every congressman’s hat. | More bond issues and a mounting of the national debt are! * inevitable unless economy is the first aim of Washington. | time for yourself.” When the Twins had gone, Mrs, Squirrel went back to her kitchen! being discussed in the press of |, day, | the secretaryship of the state Board) Qriumphs M-Jonquelle- by MELvILiE Davisson Post! » ©1909 NEA Service,<inc f THE GIRL IN-THE PICTURE I advanced to meet ‘the man chair, with a sense of victory. The Service| “Friend,” he said, “you've got a de 18 Surete had | searched the head full of brains or “you wouldn’t world for him, He had been long| be Chief of the Criminal Investiga- concealed. But my sense of victory | tion’Department of the Service de la vanished when I saw him. Surete and the English would not He sat in a great chair on the long | have you over on this case; now an- terrace that overlooked the’, sweep'| SWer..me a question—What’s the of lawn and the dark, rapid river,| biggest notion in the Christian He had been, all the time, under. our Church ? very+noses.. We had thought of every other place except an English, ryt country house within a jump .of| °“Well, I know,” he went on, “It's And he had been sitting) the notion that you'll git what's a-' London. here in every comfort that money could assemble. He did not rise when I> was brought out to. him, of eel, He leaned back in the chaif, lifted comin’ to you! He looked at me ith a, big, cyni- cal leer. as ey / “That's what happened to your Witte” Westridgeand the next time fete 3 , you see him he's agoin’ to get an- ae feed nies iene no} other jolt. He will be blamed sorry Saree emery at you found me. ‘He couldn't nde you finally .wormedrit out 'of) ada ‘any: place along:the ling; but Tcoyld aot keen’my voice level—|2™ ee a finger he didn’t let you for- res si eA get about me.” so effectively was the man escaping je 4 Ty ne OT saw an incident of us after all this search. oe this long search, for the man before And I did not know what the huge] 0° srom another angle. The ‘Black- creature meant. On the night be-| sor, Bank had kept the search hot fore, some one had called up the : : Felt se Service de la Surete ‘and said, our|£0F him, pretending the public wel- fare. I’ saw it: now, that was West- Th i man was here. The long distance | {65° mgpey-tox that would. e call from som shop in Regent | ™ \ey-bo: street, London, could mot be traced| little Westridge in the background. He. eyed me curiously in a mo- —so it had been a woman! I replied NY as though I’were in his secret, + | ment’s pause. 5 “She knew you were safe.” He laughed again. “Sure, she knew it!” ™N He poifted to a chair a few feet beyond him across a’ table. “Sit down,” he said. “I want to talk about her—that’s the reason I wanted you to come.” He laughed again. “You thought you'd sleuthed it out, eh? Not by a jugful. I sent her word to put you wise. I wanted to clear somethings up before I cashed in. But it was a clean lic. What I wanted was somébody to listen while I talked about her. Sit down.” : It was a strange introductory. But it was a mystery.that had puzzled |, everybody, and I was willing tq hear al that he had to say about it. I took the chair beyond ,him. He shot his head forward sudden- ly, in a tense gesture. es “She’s a heavenly angel!” he .said. “I don’t know what God Almighty meant by setting her in» the game with the bunch of crooks that He’s got ‘running }the world—unless He edunted on me.” The. laugh became a sort of chuckle in his big throat— “Ain't she a heavenly angel?” He whipped 'a worn photograph out of his pocket and reached it across the table to me, 5 and began to use the magical ‘mop on her breakfast dishes. “This is certainly a wonderful) help,” she remarked, for scarcely did | she touch a dish when it would be} washed and dried and over /n its| place in the little cupboard in an in- | stant. | So. Mrs. Squirrel made acorn soup| and “chestnut croquettes and .birch-| bark buns and set’ them on the! table. ‘ | She was hanging up a. stirring| | spoon when she knocked the magical | mop off its hook, quite by accident. | It flew ecross the room and touched | the sown toureen, then it bounded | over to the croquette platter and} lastly to the bun plate. Instantly | the food disappeared, leaving the | |‘dishes clean, “Scamper,” said she when her son | came in, “I wan't you to do an er- jrand. Go over to the Green Wiz-| quire; all the blood from the ori- | ard’s house in the pine thee and take | ginal’ Glasgow | this package and tell him I’ve de-| British say, would “Bite a shill- jcided that honest work is better ing.” But again I replied as though than all the magic in the world.” (To Be Continued.) \ (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) | It was the photograph of a girl with the face cut out. It had been taken from a_ painting, one could tell from the flat surface, and the strange background ‘of beauty and an indescribable charm in the pose of the girl remained even in the mutilated picture. “T cut‘out the face,” he added, “so she wouldn’t come into the case if yeu caught me; your little West- ridge m¥st have: been slaughtered at the loss of her.” Again he touched me at an un- pected point. Shortly after the thing, for which], After more than a year of reading we were seeking the man before ‘me, ! in aimote every magazine and metro. had, as the Americans. say, “ken | oiitan hewspapcrs of. the Amaizing F ; preformance of Charles S.. Gilpin, ed to England. He had gone to the\, astonishing actor, in Eugene visit some rich Americans, and there was a rumor that some’ adventure | O’Néill’s unusual drama, “The Em- had. befallen him. peror, Jones,” the announcement Nothing definite ever came to me,| that Adolph Klauber will offer this and I liked the man too little to in-] extra ordinary attraction at the as the} news. .° “The Emperor Jones” is’ a genuine success, one of the biggest solicitor, I were’ in his secret. “What happened to Westridge?” I said. The theater goers are fortunate in hav- ing an opportunity to sce it acted by Mr. Gilpin, exactly as it was man twisted around in his | played: for an entire season at thé “He kept slippin’ you the word, even if she didn’t know it.” \ There came a sudden energy into his voice, “Ant if the plague hadn’t got me I'd a’ saved her that trouble; I'd ’a' plaved ring-a-round-rosy with you.” He lifted himself, in the chair with ithe strength of his hands on the broad arm-rests. And I realized more fully what a physical wreck he was— the lower part of his body was mo- ; tionless, “IT want to tell you about this thing,” he said. “And then you can go ahead with your warrant.” “I fear,” I replied, “that a some- what higher authority has got in before your! King’s writ.” He chuckled as though the deadly fact were a sort of pleasantry. “Sure,” he said, “the big Judge has beat you ito it.” He looked out, a mément, at the “L, don't, know,” 1, answered him,| woolly Highland cattle in the djs- tant meadow, at the “age-old beech- trees and ‘the dark, ‘swift, silent water, and then the upper part of his big body settled in the, chair. “I thought it was a slick trick, but maybe it was God Almighty. Anyway when the thing was pulled off, I slid up to Bar Harbor and set down in a hotel. I figured it out like this—you look for a crook in the places that crooks go,!and you look for a gentleman in the places where gentlemen go. I'll switch it. “[' got me some quiet clothes. /I limped a little to show that I wasn’t golf.fit and I didn’t talk. I just set about with the New York Times and the Financail Register and lect the days pass, When there .was doings in the hotel I was there in my all- right evening clothes, in a_ chair against the wall, and I limped along the sea-path’in the afternoon for a\ little exercise. SENSATION OF EASTERN THEATER TO BE SEEN AT AUDITORIUM Princess Theatre, New York, and during its runs-in Boston, Philadel- phia and Chicago.~ For’ twenty years Gilpin pursued a stage career in practical obscurity. Minstrel shows, musical comedy and companies were his only avenue of exploitation... In 1920 he attracted attention in the part of the slave in in preparation, someone sug- The | was “ l gested Gilpin for the part. successes of recent years, and local! rest is theatrical history, his suc- | 'cess. was instantaneous, his fame | spread everywhere, and he became the most talked of actor in recent "years, ‘4 eh? Well, she blocked him at thas stock | | “Abraham ‘ Lincoln,” and when the; ‘Auditorium December 5, is welcome! production ‘of “The Emperor Jones” | D ~-- MONDAY, “I. looked some bored to keep the |Proper form. But -I. wasn't bored. {I was seeing something new and I {was getting more light on it all the time, “I was. seeing that this bunch. was living up to a standard that nearly jall’ the people I’d ever seen were jonly pretending. That was the dif- ; ference, I soon figured it out.” ‘ | | i | -|. He flung up his hand in a curious, |expressive gesture. “I'm a crook, keep that in your head, and the thing was like a |theater to me. I began to watch the actors; then I saw her and West- | ridge.” | He moved in his chair, | “She was there with an old, faded grandmother that read novels and smoked cigarets—and was a lady. And right there is where this’ real bunch has got the goods! They |don’t let down because they Jo jsomething that would make yon cross your fingers on the other set.” | He leaned back in the chair, |. “Well! I got to ‘watching her and |your Englishman. I watched them dancing in the hotel, and riding, and jplaying tennis’ at the Casino—I'd never seen any people like them. “And pretty soon I got onto some- thigg; this Westridge gentleman was ltryitg to buy the girl, but he didn't | want to pay for her. He was‘ putténg [out the bait, but he had a string on it, “I got on to his’ dope, “If he could dazzle her into marrying him she'd. get her board and clothes. The real thing that was next to his hide was his money: ‘All for me,’ that was the notion.” i He went on with no break in his words. “{ got to thinking about it. This little Westridge was forty; he'd never change; and the girl was at the age when the things he was ‘dangling were all mixed up with moonshine. He might win, and if he did she was headed for hell. “I saw it all clean out to the end.” | He moved in the chair. “I used to set about, and look at Iher, and it made me cold all over. The devil was on the job right here just as he, was in the Tenderloin. He was working on a_higher-class line, but it was only a different sort of road to his same old hell. “It would be a heavenly angel ‘flung to a wolf no matter how you dressed the situation up; an’ I said |to myself, ‘You can’t beat him. ‘The ldevil’s got a set of traps for any jIkind of a layout!” ' Another instaMment of this un: usual mystery story will appear in our next issue. | PEOPLE’S FORUM | —_— - WHAT IS SOCIALISM? Klm, N. D., Nov. 25.— Editor Tribune: Now that another political cam- paign is over, and O’Connor’s 300 sneeches failed to land him in office, might it not be possible that he de- vote sometime to gatherings the reni- nants, of the North Dakota Democrat- ie party, from the political scrap: heap, and try to: ride into office on a political donkey of his own con- struction—rather than to-ride to de- feat on a borrowed hybrid—even though defeated, he would still have a donkey for future use. And then; might it not Asa: be possible that, the Press, that throws out its pre-election smoke screen of Socialism, Bolshevism, I. W. Wism, and what not—will arrange for A study of some A. B. C.'on Socialism, and prepare for the predicted deluge of revolutionary legislation, . since such Socialists as Frazier, Wheeler, Shipstead, #rookhart, Ferris, How- ell, Borah, Kendrick, Dill, Johnson, Ladd, et. al., will line up with the Chief Comrade La Follette. In the study there will be an ar- ray of statements which purport an economic outline of history—and determinism, Class struggle, Social revolution, Evolution: of Property, ete,” and Capitalism will be blamed for it all—with no possible -relief until the tentacles, Rent, Interest and Profit are eliminated. Next procure a 1912 Socialist plat. form. and if there is none to be had, Col. Roosevelt’s 21-plank Bull-Moose platform of the same year, will an- swer; cross out the label, Progress- ive Republican; and’ then add 4,500,- 000 votes, which should’make a grand total, equal to the heady liquor of discontent—colored with various hues of redness, from the deep red of Anarchism, to the pale pinksof the | parlor Socialist. If taken straight, this will produce all the mental’and | physical tendencies neeessary to smash, tear down, overturn the free ‘ institutions” of Government, and pull down Old Glory, and hoist the red flag. For those, hanging onto the “fraz- zled” edges of radicalism, it will be better to take something more mild as follows: 4 Federal ownership, consisting of one nat Panama Canal, and one part Alaskan Railway, add to this a pinch of Bismarck Tribune’s proposed City Ownership of Water Works, and \while this ferments. apply ‘to Mayor Leach of Minneapolis, for a supply of his Anti-Socialist remedy, and ex- tract from this a portion of his pro- posed Municipal Ownership 6f High Dam—and add to the above until it shows Red. If taken liberally—this should loosen the editorial tongue. of’ the Press sufficiently, to tell its readers before another election; why State owned milk elevato} bank, ete, with all the well developed ap- pendages of Capitalism, “Rent-Inter- est-Profit” attached, is , Socialisin. | Precisely so. : J. M. RENZ. tape ne The “Acta Diurna” of ancient Rome, a manuscript record of cur- rent events which the government posted in public places, offered the earliest approach to a. newspaper mentionedinRistoty. =’ there will. be terms of “Economic; aj NOVEMBER 27, 1922 We have 65 per cent of the world’s j telephones and. goodness knows whag per cent of its wrong numbers. ° In Fort Smith, Ark., a hunting dog will be given some new gland. They should be rabbit glands. Picture in the paper shows a white baby which talks Chinese, They? all do that at first Supposed victim of amnesia in De- troit has forgotten all his friends. How lucky, with Christmas coming. A movie producer plans to drama- tize the ten commandments if the censors don’t cut some of them out. Six are going to the arctic regions in an airplane. arctic regions will come to them. December 3 to 9 is education week. Don’t sling any slang this week. You may think your luck is bad, but what about the Akron, 0., man who pawned his false teeth just be- fore Thanksgiving. Turnrentine will remove paint but it blisters the face. “A two-dollar bill is often unlucky because you haven’t got one. A new monoplane may travel 250 miles an hour, but ‘€hiristmas is com- ing along faster than this. Cafe cashier chased a robber with a broom. She is single so we don’t know how she got his-training. | About’1000 cartaries arrived in this country ‘in one Twad. Looks like a fine winter for the cats. The sultan of Turkey was chaced away from his home bnt a man with so many wives shouldn’t care. | The leading figure in a show is often the, leading figure because of her leading figure, we figure. A photograph makes a fine Chrisi. mas present. The/person you give it to cannot give it away,| \ | Earthquake was reported in Hawaii. Hawaii says~she had no earthquake. It may have been a shimmy dancer, The stork is voiceless, but a man with triplets tells us the bird is dumb in more ways than that. Last. presidential ‘election we jumped from one party to another. It may mean nothing, but 1924 :is Leap Year: * The 1923 model autos are said to be model autos. / The jail is empty in Ardsley, N. Y. Bet it shouldn’t be, ‘Weeks wants to know how t» make our airplanes safe. They might try carrying long rope laders. ‘A man wag fined $25 because he snatched a phone from the wail, but it was probably worth more. One senator is suggesting force be used against coal hoarders, We suy- gest the force be a police force. ie The U. S. S, Pittsburg has gone to Constantinople and may smoke out or out smoke a few Turks. They are urging this country to admit more foreigriers. Well, we wiis |admit,-we have more than enough. New device tells the depth of the sea by echo. If tried at the three mile limit the echo will return drunk. Only think in the way as mich as ‘a drum is a man as tight as a drum. All the world is a stage. don't play you have no show. If you { We can, be thankful that watches don’t clocks. every day strike like URIC ACID? |Try The Williams Treatment {85. Cent Bottle (32 Doses) FREE‘ TRY THE WILLIAMS TREATMEN1 Just because you start the diy worried and. tired, stiff legs and arms and muscles, an aching head, burning and bearing down pains in |the ‘back—worn out before the day begins—do not think you have to stay in that condition. | Be strong, well, with no - stiff joints, sore muscles, rheumatic pains, aching back or kidney trouble {caused by body made acids. If you Suffer from bladder weak- jness, with burning, scalding pains, or if you are in and out of bed half a dozen times at night, you will ap! preciate the rest, comfort and strength this treatment should give. We want te prove The Williams Treatment gets results in Rheums- tism, Kidney irritation, Bladder. excessive uric acid, no matter how chronic or stubborn. If you send this notice with your name and address we will give you an 85 cent bottle (32 doses) free. Please send 10 cents to help pay ‘post- age, packing, ete, to the The Dr. ‘D, A. Williams Co., Depty Y-2468, P. 0. Building, East Hampton, Conn. ;Send at once and we will mail you |by parcel post one regular 85 cent ‘bottle all charges prepaid. Only one free bottle will be sent to the same Person, address, or family, 0 If they wait the weakness and all ailments caused by °

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