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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE \ = — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class, Matter. | EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They GEORGE D.MANN = - = =~) = _EBditor|| $n osdttstmay ‘have both aldes RR === | | 9f {mportant issues which are 3 Foreign Representatives Retng discussed in the press of 8 G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ad CHICAGO) =.) cal) eh ae? TSE DETROIT tea ent Marquette Bldg. mo . ere Kresge Bldg.| ASSAC HUGETTS THERE SHE PAYNE, BURNS AND SMIT Meera ee gy Satis NEW YORK - - - = Fifth Ave, Bldg.! cial iigures, the vote of Massacht- MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 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. i All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are aiso reserved. _|candidate for MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION leceaate sete ond a Cr setts on the questign of a public | censorship of motion pictures is | highly impressive. Not only did the people vote | overwhemingly against the censor- s) 545,919 against and 207,476 for—but the vote against it was a) larger figure than the vote for any andidate running in Massachusetts n this election. The. successful governor. received | Daily by carrier, per year..........006 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) : . $7.20 7.20! | Yet 83,462 more people lagainst censorship than voted for n winning the gov- | ved the highest | the man who, ernorship, Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00|number of votes cast for any can-/ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00 | didate for any office. | “THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | i LA FOLLETTE CALLS \ Senator La Follette has called, anda number have answer-.; ed. The pronounced “progressive” of the present and next session of Congress are to discuss a program’ in Washington this week. , Among)those in attendance will be Senators-elect Shipstead and Frazier. The make-up of the senatorial progressive blo¢;. dispatches say, is eight Republicans, four Democratics and’ one farmer-laborite, an impressive and | powerful number of votes in swinging the “balance of power.” Twenty-six representatives are to meet. The discussions are | to be’behind closed doors. ; ; | It-is safe to say’ that the La Follette group of senators is going to occupy the limelight most of the time in the next | congress. The program,as yet is rather indefinite, but it is proposed not merely té' obstruct but to propose. legislation | of far-reaching importance. The two votes of North Dakota | in the senate after March 4 next may wield great power in the nation. La Follette has been a great fighter, but has not been a great leader. His followers have changed frequently for he does not apparently possess those qaulities whigh attract to a man in public life a consistent and unwavering support. | Senators Borah and Johnson also are counted as leaders in | the progressive bloc, and they, too, are not men, who have | been accustomed to follow but rather seek to lead. The> progressive block has great potentialties but {t remains to be | seen what it will accomplish. \ HIS TROUBLES BEGUN ' : Perey Trubshaw, who will leave his editorial\ chair in Valley City to take a seat in the house of representatives here in January, is anxious, to have taxes reduced, and his! prongunced views have already brought: him trouble in his home bailiwick. He announced vocjferously that “if every institution will ask for just what it really needs and forget i about new buildings, it will be better. all around,” and now; the president of the Valley City, Normal rises to remark that the economy program of the Vai allowed to interfere with. the institution getting what it wants from the legislature. Mr. Trubshaw has an admirable purpose and a,tough task. If he knows of the disgraceful bartering of votes for slices of the taxpayers’ money on the last night of the session of the legislature two years ago, and if he then resolutely continues to wage battle against this principle in the cpming session} he will: have shown courage | pei sense, except, perhaps, in making hay for the next ejection. ' A SURVIVAL i aK One of the tenets of our political system which seems to | thrive heartily under “progressives” as well as “standpats” is that to the victor belongs the réward of political appoint- ments which do not carry mu¢h work and do carry comfort- able salaries. John Andrews, editor of the Courier-News, is one of the candidates for the Fargo postmastership. GLAND FAKERS . Beware of patent medicine fakers who, cashing in on the public’s interest in monkey glands, are flooding the market with pills and liquid dopes heralded as marvelous glandular “cures.” ; ‘ o . ‘ The arrival of these parasites was to be expected: Every new discovery is trailed by a mob of unscrupuluos fakers who fatten on public credulity. : . Thirty-three years ago the original gland doctor, Brown- | Sequard,, was ridiculed when he came forth with his theo- | ries about restoring lost youth and stimulating mentality: | through the use of endocrine glands. i Today legitimate scientists admit that Brgwn-Sequard, was on the right trail. Wonderful possibilities are opened up. = But the public should remember that tinkering with the | boy’s endocrine glands is in its infancy, and that the treat- | ‘permitted to become a. law. By an: rof the motion picture. | Duluth Herald. The fight was clear and straight- out, and there was no chance for ! confusion. The legislature had | passed a law providing for state | nsorship of motion pictures, The | eferendum was invoked, and the, people were called upon to decide whether or not this act should be overwhelming vote, they decided that they did not want it to become | a law. | And they didn’t mean by that | that the roughneck element among } motion picture producers should be j permitted to do its wretchedest; far | from it. They simpy meant that} though had motion pictures should , be cut out and all motion pictures | should be improved, censorship is | the wrong way to go about it, | And it is the wrong-way. There } can be'no doubt about that. Cen- | sorship of art, literaure, press, ; drama or speech is dangerous busi- | ness. Nohody, somehow, seems to be fit to handle it. There seems to be something about the job of cen- sor, the. opportunity to dictate to: other people, that robs even ‘sen- sible people cf their judgment Then they do foolish things, ridicu- lous things, tyrannical things; and | even if the process of censorship | does eliminate some minor evils, it | tends to bring on the greatest evil | of them all—arbitrary and tyran- nical suppression. If motion pictures or books get nasty, there are laws in plenty to handle them with, and they ought to be handled ruthlessly. There | should be no slightest encourage- ment for those- who would, if. they) could, make money by pandering. And motion pictures and books that | have unworthy. ideals should be visited ‘by the displeasure of an in-| telligent public. “But censorship! ig not the way. | Neither isa freedom made li-} ley: City ‘solon ‘should not-be'|cens2 by abuse the way, The mo- tion picture industry has warning enough of tendencies that will make trouble for it if they are; indulged. It has taken that warn- ing, and it has organized according- ly with Will \H. Hays, a man of! good sense and judgment, in! charge. That organization has worked much good already, and ‘voted | will work more; especially if it hag the support of intelligent patrons | Conditions | would have to be, pretty bad to be! ag bad as a censorship, and there is! no argument in favor cf censoring | mot'on pictures that is not just as! strong in favor of censoring books, | pictures, newspapers and speech. | The way to fight poor motion pic- | tures is with good motion pictures; | and the public can do its part by | patronizing good oneg and with-! holding’ patronage from bad ones,— PROFIT IMMIGRATION : RESTRICTION Statistics compiled by the bureau of immigration for the period from Jan. 1, to June 30, 1922, shed an interesting new light upon the effect of our national policy of limiting immigration. Inasmuch as the steel mills, some railroads, and other employers of unskilled. labor, not to mention various foreign; propagandists and domestic senti- mentalists, are repeatedly attacking the, immigration restriction law, it is well to put up a counter barrage}, when the fmunitions come to hand, ag inthis report. > The figures show a much wider + ment. is extremely dangerous unless administered, by a) medical man skilled in this line. ~ ‘ \ } | A great deal is already definitely known about the thyroid gland,in the neck—its partial control of intellect and its ayect on the general health, particularly heart, nerves and} lair. \ But thyroid treatment is dangerous except_in the hands of ay skilled physician. For instance, calming “down an over active thyroid is apt. to leave the heart. weak. : Of,the other glands, much less is known. Their general functions ‘have been defined. among’ experienced doctors —who can stimulate or calh these other glands without definite perils to the patient. = In.the hands of a quack, the endocrine glands are apt. to » Nervous col- become doors leading to physical breakdown lapse‘or downright insanity. MISTAKE eee © A postage stamp honoring Columbus is issued by the Leeward Isles of the West Indies.. The stamp shows the discoverer of America standing on deck, sighting land through a’telescope. % } * Columbus would not recognize the picture ,f¢r he died over 100 years before Zachariah Haussen, spectacle maker, devised the first telescope. The discovery was made by his children. They noticed that-two lenses, held apart, made a church steeple seem nearer. g | j ) | COINCIDENCE: | . National City Bank’s market letter makes this comment on the claim by Hoffmann, ‘German economist, that German! industrial productiveness has droppéd 16 per cent under the | eight-hour day: | “These figures have a curiou’ coincidence, for they are: exactly the figures for the annual (reparations) payments. fixed by the London, ultimatum of May:1, 1921.” Is it a'case of permeditated coincidence, as well as a sub- conscious reluctance to pay up? {rior to the lim{tation of immigra- ‘setts, ; portion. ‘clusion.’ , i But there are few —even 2re going where they can find work, and, wherg they can ‘be ‘absorbed, perpetuate that law. distribution of immigrants within the United States’ than occurred tion. | For (instance, instead of 50 per. cent of immigrants crowding into the slums of New York’ City, now Califgrnia, Texas, Massachu- Pennsylvania, Illinois and other states are getting a fair pro- There is one logical con- Immigrants now are going where thsy are needed. That means they | not onlv economically but socially | and politically. It promises their | Americanization. \Many, doubtless, are going into sections occupied by their relatives and friends... With- | in limits,'that is a good thing, They | are.at last welcomed, and may be taught ‘by countrymen who ‘have | shemsclves profited by primary les- son; in Americanization. | Jf such scattering gf immigrants within our borders is: due tb the 3) per cent restriction law, it should | be enough in itself to uphold and | Even under | the. 3 per ‘cent restriction, which | limits a year’s influx of aliens to 3! per cent of the number of their countrymen already within this, country, our doors are open to all! the foreign blood we can assimi- | late. { The total quota admissible in the fiscal year 1921-1922 is 355,825. Of | these approximately 250,000 have already come in, and approximately | 105,000 are still admissible. Of; the latter nearly all must be Ger- | mans, British,,and Scandinavians. | Imm‘grents from these countries in | dress, and she will gla tthe. nad€ Rave proved themselves! this valuable informa amenable to Americanization, and | potentially good citizens, If they} forget, AMONG THOSE INTERES TED IN THE OUTCOME | NEA SERVICE do nct, want to fill their quotas, we | cannot and would nog insist, But neither should we lower the bar- riers to others on that account. Before the war the alien . wave reached more than 1,200,000 in a year. It would promptly ga to that figure again if we admitted all who desire to come. The Jaw still :permits the immi- gration of enought foreigners to tax our powers of assimilation, That is, and should remain, the limit. — ; Chicago ‘Tribune. . BISMARCK’S RECORD At Bismarck they have been mak- ing a drive to get members for the commercial club and have ‘secured 472 members in three days. That. is what we call going some~and shows that the capital city is alive, to the fact that a live commer¢ial club is a great, asset to the city. Here in Valley city we have been had. trying to get enough pall bearers to help bury cur club which seems to ‘have expired from lack of ani- mation some time ago.—Valley City | Times-Record. Oe eet ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS | IE TNESS TAL SEL By Olive Barton Roberts The Green Wizard: was so kind and did so many nice things for everybody that he was very popular. This made Twelve Toes, the Sor- cerer, more angry and jealous than ever. Sc he called Light’; Fingers, the bad little fairy who worked for him, and gave him a good talking to. “You're not doing ‘your work half!” growled Twelve Toes. “When- ever you see the Green Wizard do- ing anyone a good turn you must stop it. What's he doing now?” “Please, sir,” said Light Fingers, “he’s making scme magic cough drops for - Phil Frog. wrote him a letter and said couldn’t sing any pretty tunes as his voice was so hoarse. All he can say is ker-chug-a-hunk and he’s tired of it, he says. So the Green Wizard is making him some magic cough dreps so he can sing like a skylark or a nightingale. Nancy and Nick are waiting. When the cough drops are finished, off they?ll go to Ripple Creek with them.” 3 “Hm!” said Twelve Toes. won't do.” So he went into his cave and re- turned with a box. ‘i “Take this,” he said to Light fingers,’ “and when the Twins are not looking, exchange it fer the box of magic cough drops.” ~ Everything came fo pass just as Twelve Taes wished and when’ Nan- cy and Nick, left the package at Phil “That Frog’s house, they never dreamed | that it was not the one the Green } Wizard had given them. Phil ate a lot othe magie cough drops and then opened his anouth tej sing.’ All the family gathered around to admire his new accom- plishment. “ “Hee-haw, _heo‘haw, went Phil, for the drops Toes sent made him bray mule, , “Goodness!” cried Phil in disgust. “ll have to send word to the Green* Wizard to give me back my own voice. It’s quiteagwect and* musical beside this. I’ve learned a good 1 son. It’s best to keep the gifts wo have and be satisfied.” CURED HER hee-haw,” Twelve like a RHEUMATISM} Knowing from terrible experience the suffering, caused by rheumatism, Mrs, J, E. Hurst, who lives at 608 E: Douglas Street, C-293, Bloomington, HL, is so thankful at having cured herself that out of pure gratitude she is anxious to tell all other suf- ferers just how to get rid of their torture by a simple. way at home. Mrs. Huse has nothing to. sell. Merely mail your. own name and ad- y send you ion entirely Write her at once before ys Adv. ree. N RA AA to .haye been provided especially for Criumphs of ¢ M.Jonquelle: by MELVILLE Davisson POST! . ©1909 ‘NEA Service,_inc. BY THE THING ON THE EARTH “The first confirmatory evidence He spoke English with a certain of he rans recess was the care in the ‘selection of the words, print of a woman's bare: foot.” s A \ He was an immense creature. He Pea eee fee ee ens is necessary to try to under- satin-an) upright chair that seemed stand this, because it explains the himZ“The great ‘bulk’ of him flowed Conception everybody got of th out and filled the chair. It did not. creature, when they saw him , in seem.to be fat. that-developed charge of, Rodman,,1 am. .using--pre- Itigeemed ‘rather to be some soft, | cisely the deserfptive words; he was totigh fiber, like. the puczy mass |¢xclusively in ¢harge of Rodman, ,as nigking up the body of a decp-sea|@ Jinn in an Arabian tale might have him. ‘Phil Frog | PEP rigen. sloWly into our world of hard. scientific ‘manufacture | thing. One got an impression of |been in charge of a king’s’ son. strength. The creature, was servile—with “fhe country was before the open |aimost a groveling servility, But one window; the clusters of ciWtivated |felt that this servility resulted from shzlb on the..sweep of velvet lawn |something potent and secret. One | some molecular theory that was in. extending to the great wall that in-,looked to see Rodman, take, Sol yolyed in his formulas. Giovanni! closed the place, then the bend of thé: river and beyond, the divtant mountains, }blue and mysterious, blending. indiscernibly ‘into the sky. A soft sun, clouded with the haze of atitumn, shdrie over it. ; “You. know. how the faint moisture in the bare foot will. make an im- pression.” He’ paused as though there was some. compelling, force in the reflec- tion. It- was impossible to! say, with accuracy, to what race the man be- longed. He came from some queer blend of Eastern\ peoples. Hisvbody' ticy. ‘the greatest authority and the cast of his features were ' synthetic chemistry in the world. Mongolian» But. one got ‘always, be-; Rodman was rich and, everybody fore him, a feeling of the hot East supposed, indolént; ‘no one 1 omon’s ring out of his waistcoat pocket. . I suppose there is no doubt about the fact that Rodman was one of those gigantic human intelligenceé. who sometimes appear, in the world; and by their immense edge—a sort of mental monster’.that we, feél nature has no right to pro- luce, Lord Bayless’ Truxley. said jthat, Rédman was four geneyAtions in advance of thg time; and Lord on “ever lying slow’ down against the stag- thotght very much about him) until nant* Suez, One felt, that he had! he published his brochure on the Then instantly - everybody with any pretension to 4 knowledge 1 iS aif.and sun out of the vast swelter> stones. ing’ ooze of. it. || EVERETT TRUE, BY-conDo | A, GVGRGTT, WHAT WAS IT THe Poer S415 ABoOvT WHISKERS F_ Tus IRON HoT’ WS - large; but the thing meant, pyacti- | the: fonger any | conceptions dwarf all human knowl- | Baylesg, Truxley was, beyond ques. | of: precious | . |of the body—the celibate ~ awful was. sure to happen. 9 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1922, » ‘i {of synthetic chemistry turned to-| | ward him. ‘ | The brochure startled the world. | | It proposed to adapt the luster jand beauty of jewels to commercial | juses:;, We were being content with | lerude imitation. colors in our com-| jmercial glass, when we could qui as easily have the actual structure| jand the ‘actual luster of the jewel | in it. We‘ were painfully hunting! over the earth, and in its bowels, for | {stones which we hoarded and trea: jured, when in a, manufacturing ,jJaboratory we could*easily produce | |them, more perfect than nature, and | jin unlimited quantity, | i -| Now, if you want to understand | iwhat I am printing here about Rod- |man, you must think about this, ithing-as a scientific possibility andj |not as a fantastic notion. Take, for | jexample, Rodman’s address before, ‘the. Sorbonne, or his report to. the. | International Congresg of Science in| what I mean. The Marchese |Gigvanni, who was a ddlegate to jthat. congress, and Pastreaux, said |that the only thing in the waygof an jactual practical realization of; what Rodman outlined was the formulae. |If Rodman could work out the for- mylae, jewel-stuff could be produced | as cheaply ab glass, and in any quan-| ,tity—by the carload. Imagine it; isheet ruby, sheet emerald, all the beauty. and luster of jewels in the! ‘'windows of the corner drugstore! And there is another thing that |want you to think about. Think jabout the immense destruction of i value—not to us, so greatly for our }stocks of precious stones are not. jeally, wiping out all the assembled} |wealth of Asia except’ the “actual learth and its: structures. | Put the thing some other way and leonsider it. Suppose we should} | suddenly. discover that pure gold ‘could be produced by treating com- | 'mon yellow clay with sulphuric! | acid, or that some genius should set |up a machine on the,border of the | Sahara that received sand at one end and turned out sacked wheat at the other! What, then, would jour hoarded gold be worth, or the | wheat-lands of Australia, Canada or our Northwest? | The illustrations are fantastic. |But the thing Rodman was after was a practical fact. He had it on |the way. Giovanni and Lord Bay- less. Truxley were convinced that! tthe man would work out the for-| |mulae. They tried, over their sig- | natures, to prepare the world for it | | The whole of Asia was appalled, ‘The rajahs of the native states in| iIndia prepared a memorial and sent| it to, the British government. Thé thing came out after the mys- |teriois, incredible tragedy. I should jnot have written that final sentence. I want you to think, just now, about} the great bulk of a man that sat in his big chair beyond me at the win- dow. It was like Rodman to turn up with an outlandish human creature attendig him hand .and foot. How the thing came about reads like a lie; it reads like the wildest lie that anvbody ever put forward to explain a big yellow Oriental following one} about. | But it. was no lie. Yo could think | up a lie to equal the actual éhings | that happened to Rodman. Také the | way he died! . . . , The thing began in India. Rod- | man had gone there to consult with | the Marchese Giovanni concerning a was digging up a buried temple on the ‘northern border of the Punjab. One night, in the explorer’s tent, |near the excavations, this inscrut- ‘able creature walked in on Rodman. | ‘No one knew how he got into the itent or where he: came from. Giovanni told about it. The tent- iflan simply opened, and the big! j Oriental appeared, He had some-Y \thing under his arm rolled in «! |prayer-carpet. He gave no atten-/ |tion to Giovanni, but he salaamed like a coolie to the little Amefican. | “Master,” he said, “you were hard |to find. Ihave looked over the world for you.” | And he squatted down on the dirty jfloor by Rodman’s camp stool. — » | The two men spent the remainder’ of the night looking at the present |that the creature brought Rodman in his prayer-carpet. They wanted | to know where the Oriental got it, land that's how the story came ou}. He was something, searcher seems our nearest English word to it—in the great Shan Monastery on thei} southeastern pYateau of the Gobi, Hé| was: lookine for Rodman because He | jhad the light—here was another! word that the two men could find no term in any modern language to} |translate; a little flame was the ‘literal meaning. @ | The present was from | sure-room of the + monastery; |very carpet around it, Giovanni sai |was worth twenty thousand the trea- | the | re. | There was another thing that came ; joyt in the talk that Giovanni after- | Ward recalled. Rodman was.to ac- | You leept the present and” the man who. jbrought it to him. The Orjenta! | would protect him, in evefy way, in levery direction, from things visible land invisible. He made quite a Speech about it. But, there was one \thing from which he could not pro- jtect him, ‘+4 f | “The Orjental used a lot of his an- |ecient worgs to explain, and he did | not get it very clear. He seemed to mean that the creative forces of the | spirit would ont tolerate a division \'ef worship with the creative forces , potion, in . ithe monagtic idea. | Giovanni thought Rodman did not lunderstand it; he thought he him. |self understood it better. The monk | was pledging Rodman to a high viv- ‘tue, in the lapse of which something i | ‘Giovanni wrote a letter to the| | State Department when he’ learned | {what had happened to Rodman. The | State Department turned it, over was one of the things that ir#luence? | | the judge of his decision. Still, at the |time, there seemed no other reason- fable decision to make. | | The ‘testimony must have ap-j ‘peared incredible; it must have ap. | [peared fantastic. No man reading | the record could have come to any | Pother conclusion about it. Yet it! seemed impossible—at least, it |seemed impossible for me—to con- | |Sider this great vital bulk of a,man-| jas a\monk of,one of the oldest re- [gions orders in the world. | t it , |to the court at the trial. I think it} Every common, academic ‘concep- tion of such a”monk he distinctly negatived. He impressed me, in- -stead,..as pdssessing the wtimate qualities of clever . diplomacy--the subtle ambassador of some new Oriental -power, shrewd, suave, ac- complished. \ - When one’ réad the yellow-backed court-record, the sense of old, ob- scure, mysterious agencies moving in sinister menace, invisibly, around Rodman could notsbe escaped from. believed it. Against your <reason, against ‘all modern ex- perience of life, you believed it. There was one man in the worid that everybody wished could. have been present at the time. That was Monsieur Jonquelle. Jonquelle, was chief ‘of the Criminal Investis: Department ‘of the Service de Surete in Paris. Hq had been in charge of the French secret service . ¢ on the frontier of the Shan states, . | Edinburgh, and you will-begin to sce and at the time he was in Asia. Another installment of (!.e unusual mystery story will appear in cur next issue. One day Harding .shook hands with 1,450 people. \This*would pump 786 gallons of water or milk 94 cows. Days are getting so short. Tight after supper: it is dark enough to * wear a dirty collar to town. Fashion note:'Sleeves are full this inter 2nd so are hip pockets. Five cf our most awk words are ‘Mama, the coal has come,” What is worse than learning you hunted all*day with blank shells? Michigan ‘man paid $25,000 for a strawberry plant. At that rate he will get into a strawberry jam, | Seattle college gir Idemanding the Tight to wear running trunks has the right and left also, Abba Ades was robbed in Brook- lyn, Teking them in alphabetical or- der. What this country needs 1s shoe strings that last as long as shoes. What's in a name? Millionaire whose real name is A. B. See says higher education for girls is yseles3. Radio miles in four minutes and traveled 5,200 18 see messages snds, but Christmas comes faster han that. There is a great shortage of preachers in France. Qur great preacher shortage is in their pockets, Short skirts give freedom of movw- ment, but it is much nicer to guess if they are’ bowlegged or knodk- kneed. They are working on a heatless fire for lights and many furnace firers are suspected of using it. In an effort to ‘get to the bottom o1 things a party has sailed to measure the deepest part of the ocean. Home helps: A splendid way to make a husband stay at home at night is to stay there with him. Nice things about wearing an old overcoat is you can eat in a cafe without watching the overcoat. Cheap alarm clocks are the best. Sometimes they don’t go off. Reason so many are calling aoe beers, and wines is prohibition makes \~ it harder to get a drink. Cross-country runners are trafn- ing for the 1924 Olympic. It is not the presidential election, which takes another kind of ¢ross-country run- ner. ' Beauty secret: . our eyes can be made bright and shiny by always having them on something you like, A foolish man seeks the pot: ot gold at the end of the rainbow while a wise man enjoys the rainbow. au ants en ee Blinded by the “living screen” of caterpillars hanging by their sus pesion threads, a motorist recently lost control of his tap and ran over + a bank. '|I\elieves soreness by warning and circulating Stop those dull, insistent aches, by relieving the painful cone Restion. Sloan’s does this, Without rubbing, it quickly penetrates the sore spot, stim- ulating the circulation to and through it. Congestion 4s ree duc soreness allayed, the pain relieved. § Sloar's relieves Hole balshee Tet ing 7 of rheumatism and neural | Breaks up colds in eet Stops suffering— wherever | congestion rouses pain, \