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. PAGE FOUR : published herein. All rights of republication of all the foreign policy tere teen cats ary vee te Seuee anne 5URTA neat ae arr rane s0tee tee 3 5 “ great body of people hold with the president, and! ‘merely giving his own exposition of the govern- * clea#ly that the course the government is follow- . ing_is the only wise and just course. ; Journey, forgetting hardship and chance misfortune | tions and in some of the remote towns. : summation of the creed that has motivated ex- that are not receiving government aid. —— “The Bismarck Tribune |" afar through the skies to the other side of the moon and back. If so, the race of the restless- pendent Newapa An Inde paper footed will be saved; not in many, many centuries THE See IRON toe could they even finish their explorations of the far corners of the milky way. by the Bismarck Tribune Company, D., ey entered at the postoffice at cond c! i Published N. The Railroaders For more than 50 years Steve J. Standart of Kansas City has been a locomotive engineer. He is not only dean of engincers on his own railroad; :¥7'20 | he is believed to have just about the longest serv- (in state outside Bismarck).... ice record of any engineer in the country. Bei yan oitslte of Norte Dakota... 6.00 Standart was a railroader when locomotives and Member Audit Bureau of Circulation their equipment had not been perfected as they are now. And he makes a remark that we think is Member of The Associated Press rather apropos: Fee A eecia ed rete of cll news “Hinpetshes “’The man who travels on the de luxe trains of sredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- today, with all the comforts of a modern hotel, | per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin dues not realize the toll in human life and suffe 8 mail matter. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ... noe Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). waily by mail, per year, ing the present-day standard af railroad service | has taken in its building.” i Foreign Representatives He's right. We are accustomed to take our rait.| our ne: LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ecporr roads for granted. We fuss and fume if, on a! Koger Side, Kresge Bldg. ‘eczing winter night, the Pullman car is not heat- PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH ed to just the right temperature. We complain: NEW YORK - - -__ Fifth Ave. Bldg. joudly if, on a thousand-mile run, our train is twenty minutes late. When the roadbed over a} (Official City, State and Ceanty Newspaper) cvuniaincus region is a bit bumpy and uneven we He Speaks For America vew we shall never travel by that route again. President Coolidge’s speech before the United When we read of a wreck we shake our heads and Press association last night served a great purpose. bias pelt baat SLi aaa By this speech, the president has clarified the site eee ene nen ve formet, how | uation which, up to this time, has served to cloud | {ne the modern railway boca ear assae| of the United States in the| ™"y years of effort have gone into bringing it} minis of some people. He has given a lucid and (its Present standard. dks als logieal exposition of the attitude of our government ae cll Feo) Se art aia as ae tie toward Mexico, China and Nicaragua. He has ree JTakes fo a ain was not a ample plese ole affirmed the fundamental principles of American. '"® # ee Lai ee Pee Sar a — ism as they apply to the present strained situation. Lie tall birt bode ditebied Sali Maat ea oa PRU Of American lives and property con- | Zeer threw his weight on a long lever; on top o (GAs 8e widin ptoblems of the ‘Aimérican govern: jevery car 2 trainman did likewise. Standart oints ment in Mexico and China, the president said, and | OUt that many times in the old days he blistered by making this point clear he has shown that the [eles a wrists “Ito the elbow” pulling on the much-feared program of military aggrandizement te a i ae is in reality ba a tevertdcitenra inthe mibdnat| oes am execu callin. Bain’ a Se MBheHilse?: the: administration. shine, winter or summer, the Se must go out on What must these people who attribute imperial. |ime- This means hard Libis erclees total alt ism to the United States think of this: met ees ils iard CLT BURR STAKE } We donot wish to pursue any course of aggres- |_,/¢* worth while for'ts to give a thought, ‘occa- Afi fAxainst the ‘Chinese: people. We are there to | “0Uslly to ‘the man in the re i ieee Prevent aggression against our people by any of NOTTS 00 Au Mane ate pur SEG ici ey their disorderly elements. Ultimately, the turmoil |TCsPonsibility sits on these ange We dak Ute) will quiet down and some form of authority wit |S!&ht peg Pract yeonettie Fn aaa ae ean emerge, which will no doubt be prepared to make @5t": Their wba esr I aE a 8 adequate settlement for any wrongs we have suf ee eceece fered. We shall, cf course, maintain the dignity of our government and insist upon proper respect Mee aii ctithe Chinese. pecale: a memorial arch dedicated to the memory of the | The majority of people will agree with the presi: MUMY Oberlin graduates who were killed in the dent's opinion that arbitration of the Mexican situ- Bexer rebellion in China. Probably no other Amer- ation is not feasible. He makes it clear that “the |i College contributed more names to the list of | ‘wae ;: those who were killed in that outbreak. principle that property should not be confiscated : fie and the duty of our government are so well estab-|_ “ Year ago Oberlin gave its Higae senor lished that it is doubtful if they should be permit-|LU-D- degree—to a Se reas ee ped serene ted to be questioned.” When the president enun-| {0m Oberlin a score of years be! viecaee! Be ciates these principles, he is simply reaffirming a| Kune: ® direct descendant of the philosopher, Con- way, well and good. But if she will not, the, iter of finance and industry for all China; Ameri- United States should take the necessary steps to|‘2P* in the far east, it is said, look on him as the protect the lives and property of its citizens. [coming “strong man” of the orient. ; Again, when he says that American marines are Bear Deane atten: eek oe aha pint not in Nicaragua to make war, but to “lend every ois a ane Maughiers ies yas Chivers! enccuragement to the restoration of peace’ and to replies by sarang shes Sb AIUATS Ene enna protect our citizens and property from being de-|™4Y help to bring China order and pence and pros- stroyed by war, he is restating what most Ameri-| Périty. cans believe. Despite the stories of “persecution” which have emanated from certain sources, the other matter herein are also reserved. so Pranks of Destiny Destiny plays queer pranks, sometimes. : Editorial Céminent | rightly, that the Nicaraguan occupation is the only | - logical step our government could have taken un-| The Veterans’ Service Commission der the prevailing danger to our interests and to| (Fargo Forum) the interests of Central American peoples. The appointment of T. 0. Kraabel of Fargo as| Our course of duty is plain in these three coun- | veterans’ service commissioner for North Dakcta tries: China, Mexico and Nicaragua. What ha ¢ocyses attention this week upon the purpose and been done, has been done because of a very real| importance of this new office, established by the necessity. So the president has done more than jtegislature at its recent session. Briefly stated, | the object of the office is to assist all veterans in ithe state to get the insurance and ¢ompensaticn | they are entitled to under the federal laws. i The importance of this work cannot be grasped without an understanding of the situation. It is jestimated that the statute of limitations on all gov- 3 a ernment laws for the relief of service men wounded ! z The Adventurers or disabled in the world war will expire by 1929. ' Knud Rasmussen, distinguished arctic explorer, In the meantime, there are a large number of serv- i went through some rather uncomfortable, trying | ice men who are not securing this aid or compen- days on his long journey overland from Danish’ sation, and it is to help them obtain it that the | Greenland to Alaska, a few years ago. Yet, in a office was created at the behest of the North Da- preface to a book he has just written about his kota Department of the American Legion. | exneriences, he says: The legion has done an admirable work in assist- | “I bless the fate that allowed me to be born ating its members and other service men to secure | a ip when arctic exploration by dog sledge was \ their compensation, but it has been humanly im- not etitirely a thing of the past. I bless the whole | possible for it to reach all the men in the rural sec: | By a weli by the way, in the exultation I feel in the success- organized publicity campaign and with Hagges of | ful conclusion of a high adventure.” its member posts, the organization has reached | Mr. Rasmussen’s remark is probably a simple many of them, but there still are a large number | ment’s foreign policy. He has spoken for the ma- jority of Americans, who sincerely subscribe to the principles which he has enunciated and who see plorers and adventurers since the first primitive! There are many of these service men who do! + man ventured out on the sea in his dugout canoe not understand the details of securing compensa- to see what lay beyond the horizon. tion. They figure that all that is necessary is to Explorers and adventurers generally are imprac- file an application with the proper authorities, but tical folk. Like Columbus, they discover new the government requires proof of claim by affi-. worlds and see others collect the rewards, They davit and other evidence. Not knowing how to may talk bravely enough of “opening new trade | proceed, they become discouraged and let the mat- arteries” or of “paving the way for new empires,” ter drop. Given the proper assistance, they: would } but in reality they care little about such things. | file their claims and proof and secure the help they It is enough for them if they may have the high are entitled to. privilege of risking their lives on the far frontier; It will be the duty of the veterans’ service com- ‘if they may sail seas that no one else has sailed. | missioner to assist in this work. One of the first or stand on mountain peaks that other men have things will be to make a complete survey of the but glimpsed from the long distance. physical and mental condition of all former service | These men are seldom well paid; and so we are men in the state. He, then, will have to form of-' forever in their debt. They are our advance ficial contacts in all the cities and towns in an ef- : guard on the march of civilization. They stay well ‘fort to get in touch with the men of the various ahead of the procession; let a new continent be- | rural districts who are not receiving their compen- | come civilized and they fly on the the next. They sation. Once they are located, it will be but a are forever restless, forever seeking the new and ' matter of routine to secure their government relief. | the strange, By doing this, the office will save the counties One wonders what these men will do when the of the state a tremendous sum of money.- It will! earth no longer has any. unknown corners. Some | place the responsibility of the care of disabled vet- day there will be nothing left to explore. eore | cca on the government instead of the several | will be no escape from civilization anywhere. For |counties. Besides this, it will bring considerable | the most of us, probably, they will be no hardship; | money into the state. | too closely tethered to our own doorsteps; With the statute of limitations expiring in 1929, strange dawns on distant seas. the time is limited, but the work can be accom. born adventurer the world will have | plished with the prcper amount of cooperation on very flat and insipid. the part of all the communities. It is a worthy un- Perhaps, by that time, some’ genius will have|dertaking and should be pushed to a successful con- | & new kind of flying machine, that can | clusicn, : | SDE AGAR |to Banning’s question as to the na- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ! i Stung 1927 & NEA SERVICE, INC. “Beaverbo: ailed to strips of | “Sounds of crying and quarreling,” lwo of wer- Anderson raised his voice, as if he Anderson explained, in answer realized how important his testimony thi 4 intended to make the most the glare off Row A. . Again | : Fa : ——____.______4 WILBERT, YOUR WIG! The beauty culture clan has de- ided that Americans should wear wigs. A great help for the eyes of horus folk who nightly brave ~ Wigs will ture of the partition between — the ys to me, ‘Jeff, be in colors according to moods. farmer's room and that occupied by at it already! Can Thus, at breakfast, blue; on the golf Cherry and Chris > course, ar but what ee is a “Is. this beaverboard — partition The farmer flushed at the quickly M4” supposed to wear when paying sound proof?” Banning asked, quelled burst of laughter that greet- Pe ee eck RR ht Mi t by a long sight,” the witness ¢d his naive bit of testimony. Habeastlel see bear yect Bit Nbe is eet ae we ae : li toupee shall find himself ostr answered emphaticall, Could you hear what was sid in cized because he should wear purple “Did you sleep undisturbed for the the great room, Mr. Anderson? to mateh the lines in his nose... . rest of the Might?” Banning asked, “Not much of it.” This wig movement is. probably a isfaction radiating from his flushe “My, Anderson, ean you repeat) part of tne propajeanddt 2 any remarks or ‘single words that| Longworth presjdent jof the United sir, Me and the wife lay talkg you overheard?” Banning asked, lean-| States. , bi y about an hour talking about ing upon the arm of the witness ie a elopement and what old Mr.‘ chair, The authoress, of one of Broad. Cluny must be thinking and feeling) «yw, ‘ PS - way’s banned plays says. that .on : and cll: I heard a good many words! her first night in jail shé gathered nd price sags material enough for ten plays. Proaching there, first and last " ; os Cluny and) Misg. “Repeat, as nearly as you can re-|Pardon her, governor, pardon her! member, any sentence or } words that you overheard,” Bi directed him a little impatien “Well, it musta been toward ing when | heard the girl's scream out, ‘I hate you! 1 hate ‘ou made me do it, and it wi your guest for the night was bi | 3 ame Cherry Lane?” S Seen her name on her mar: Me and my wi connected anning tly, morn- voice e you! iN ki Some name less'n we'r@| Maggie!” Or leastways, it sounded ied.” the farmer like she said ‘Maggie!’ answered virtuously. like that!” “Could you heu conversation; ‘aith put her arms about her s) through the partition before you ter, as the white-fa little def went to sleep?” Banning apked. {hint broke into bitter weeping, her “We could hear low talking going) ashen lips murmuring over and over, on, but they: wis pretty quiet,” An-| “Muggy! Muggy! derson answere “Couldn't: make! In the deathlike stillness that fol- out any words id we wasn't list-" lowed, a reporter's hoarse exclama- ening anyw: “All right, Mr, Anderson. Go right | head with your story in your own ‘Banning urged. superb Well, me and the wife hoth dozed| testimony breaks Cherry's off, but we was waked up about! nerve, three o'clock in the morning -” 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) (Copyright, “Can you fix the time, Mr. Ander- Ao son?” ONE CONDITION “[ struck a_match and looked at my watch a few minutes after we woke up, and the hands pointed to a quarter past three,” n stated with belligerent positi “Can you fix the time, Mr, Ander- Banning asked significantly. ee ’ THEY’RE ALL ALIKE By Bess Bly from papa! Bridegroom (eagerly): he say? Wha: will be forgiven.”—Answers. SEE -HNERES THE Paint To MoRRow A MAW IS CoMING To Do THE Woop WoRrK —IT wilh CoST 3630.00 For aw ILL 00 THe JoB RIGHT NoW-AN' SAvE THAT QonT BoTHER ME TMS 15 LOTSA FUN. SEE How SLICK’ ion! it does Not every bad lie happens on the links. 7z The urmy is to have a new cook book. You can lead an army cook to a cook book but you can't make him change his. stew. It would seem that honesty is the .; best fallacy these days. |.) (Copyright, 192%, NEA Service, Inc.) is | ——_ —— el g | Old Masters , , © kid confessed!"—was as|I saw the Conquerors riding by s if it had been shouted, TOMORROW: Anderson's damning With cruel lips and faces wan: Musing on kingdoms sacked and burned There rode the Mongol, Ghengis And Alexander, like a god, ‘Who sought to weld the world in ‘: * 4 one; Eloping Bride: Here's a telegram! And Caesar, with his laurel wreath; And like a thing from Hell the Hun; Bride: “Do not come home and all! And, leading-like a star the van, Heedless of upstretched arm and groan, Inscrutable Napoleon went f Dreaming of empire, and alone. Then “4 they perished from the eart! As fleeting shadows from a glass, And, conquering the centuries, _.__rerspay, APR 26, 1927 " b FRANCE 7.2%%° Wy, soit @ MEA Serves Editor’s Note: This is the 18th jover and adds ed a pore ae To- f a form- | morrow, or maybe next week some- ceeeeer ot who coing back to time, a junk dealer will come along France as un-advance guard of in a high cart. And he'll buy the the “Second A. E. F.,” is revis- vlece for a few sous. ROS iting all the scenes he and his e trees on all sides are blasted. puddies s i hi 4 Everywhere the returning veteran parca eye diets will find evidence of the desolation CHAPTER XVII Up along the Chemin des Dames! that followed the four years of con- Louis the Fifteenth built this stant shelling. It is a weird scene. |But the heart of the observer is road as a drive for ladies of his| touched. The peasants have been ‘court—it was used by Germans and| working nine years to correct the ‘French as the seene of some of the/damage. And they will be working |most sanguine fighting of the war for ten years more. i—and Americans knew it from Fort | Craonne—, |Malmoison to Craonne and Craon- Many New Houses tele, | The old gelise - ona a ! races of war exist. many new houses wi right re eee a elget | roofs are there. The city hall is of | modern construction. ‘There don’t Aux Munitions |seem to be many people in town, Up Danger de Mort.” la side street—a clatter of shoes— | Many Explosives |ten children—all born since the war | There's a sign: “Defense de Toucher id ‘are piled high; |—ruddy-cheeked and healthy —the 1 eats free custing, tes Second | only suldats Americans these kids 1a. E. Feers will see more war than! will know will be the Legion's the papers would lead you to believé. | “Second A. E. F.” |The road has been perfectly recon-| They surge up to the door of an |structed. And peasants are working |old barracks. A cross is at the in the fields. A ploughman, four|gable. An aged padre comes. He horses in e, strikes a. snag. untocks the door. The children fol- “Arrete,” he yells. low him in. Above the rim of the high hill, ia up and away from the valley and the padre’s s, the trees show gaunt in the gray light of the late | His heavy steeds pause. Ne leans over.. He tugs and grunts at an object at his aga point. With a mighty heave he loosens it— afternoon, A bomb from a German aeroplane.; The sun is going to sleep behind It might have exploded. But it; the Chemin des Dames. didn’t. If it had—! The plough-! |man carries the rust-encrusted piece | i evens w Tomorrow: War's Seats. ———_______+ ‘the subways selling gum out of his leap. In a single ride between two | Bills Allowed By itations 1 saw him sell a couple of | i Ci y jollars worth, get o! an ick up Co iss’ more stock. "AC this. rate his. daily ity MMISsION | income should have been anywhere \ PRIN NTRS bl from $15 to $50. ‘ x Which reminds me—the circus once | !more is holding forth in the very) heart of the frothy Forties. In mid-afternoon a couple of ele- . | House marking expense...... $ sol5s John Bur grounds. Standard Oil C Lewis Motor Co. | Street Dept., p: phants go strolling down the ‘theatre | J, A. Montgomery, rent ..... 30.00 belt followed by scads of newsboys,|J. “6. Fredericky, board and shoe-shiners and loose urchins, Who| ‘room ........ 20.000. -+6 ». 80,00 later hang hungrily about the wooden | Brown & Tiedman, grocerics.. 17.64 doorways. It’s a far cry from the | Quick Print, Inc. supplies.... 8.50 jhome-town circus grounds where,! Ruder's Furniture Exchange, even if one cannot get in the mai tent, there is the allure of the hor: \tent, the blacksmith shop, the side-| posting {show spielers, the popcorn and/Sam 8. Shi ‘lemonade stands and all those side| fee attractions of the “big show” that Pioncer . Co. compensate a fellow for his time and Washburn Lignit trouble. Here the whole things goes off: with the commonplace routine of an Coal Co. coal .. ; B, K. Skeels, labor plies. average theatre. Only the presence French & Welch, supplies of hundreds of youngsters at various Police Dept, pay roll... hours of the duy fopnishes a clue to L. 8. Fredericks, services ns the sacred presence. The side-show dog catcher ...... v6.00 is held in the basement of the build- American Ry. Express Co., e ‘ ing and the vendors are tucked away press... 1.80 cabo Adatde. : Water Dept., pay roll........ 108.60 —GILBERT SWAN. ' Bisntarck Tribune, advertising 50.00 (Copyright, 1927, NEA Serviee, Inc.) Archie Olson,” orchestra 00 . paiement recto 1. H. Pilmoor, signs nents) ¢—_—____6 U.S. Tax Dopt., admission tax 55: Square Deal Store, groceries.. 10.00 \\ At The Movies: Quanrud, Brink. & Reibold, —-~ ©“ supplies en ve 8028 CAPITOL THEATRE Soo Line, freight. . A drama that sweepswith irresisti- Fire Dept., pay roll... .. ble poner teen the picturesque dance J. W. Stratton, labor and sup- | mans of Mexico to the barren plains’ plies eae of the western sheep country—involv- Mrs. Anny Bfych, lauodry... ing a beautiful dancing girl, a rich. Dave Smith, labor... us young sheep hérder ‘shit ‘the’ Giga pooled pay roll man.” 1: The story of a beautiful woman roll ee ee F who loved life-—two men who loved ’ her—and one who huted—played out lashes of Life / with graphic realism on the arid > plains of the great West. | Here in a nutshell is revealed the theme of Jetta Goudal’s new star pic- ture, “White Gold,” which will. be displayed at. the Capitol theatre for two an beginning tomorrow. Ken- neth Thomson and George Rancroft are featured im support of the star. The supporting cast includes Geo Nichols, Robert Perry and Clyde Cook, ‘The picture is scoring a tre- mendous hit everywhere and it is said to be one of the most tense pho-; toplays: produced this season. It was (By The Associated Press) Nfw York—Said the governor of New York; as he relates, in substances: to the president of the United States: “Welcome to the state. Do anything you .want to, provided you don't get caught at it.” Said the president of the United States to the governor of New York: “Well, I'll tal a chance.” Mr. Smith called on Mr. Coolidge at thetr hotel. London—There seems\to be a mark- directed by William. K.-Howard and ¢d absence of mention of Princess i imax. Beatrice in dispatches from Spain has» highly oo. aa pbout: the | visit of hat handsome TINGE THEATRE jor, the Prince of Wales. Latest “phe Shows" re deapei advices are that be danced with the laying at.the Eltinge Wednesday J Thursday isa an queen at a night club and then with terpiece of the thrill-maker’s art. ome senoritas. With John Gilbert as a character out | of the underworld and Renee Adoree as the girl who loves him and through her devotion brings down on his head the murderous~ lousy of their world's mest ferocious charac- ter, it briaties with romance and ed- venture that. make the nerves of the ‘audience tingle: Gilbest-and Adoree each give:a temarkable performance and are supported by a capable cast. ‘od, Browning, its director, makes a — New York—Unel gets $12,100 @ year through the popularity of the Statue of Liberty. private company ys that sum to the war department for the transportation privi id charges 30 ‘cents for a boat ride to and from the statue. New Yosk—Since there is no money ilable for Uncle Sam to pay the of men he is to entertain in the a ft Came Christ, the swordless, on an| notable addition to his ery of Atlanta penitentiary, LaRoy Present ass! crook pictures. The Dial is ee in wad Fa tere and ee af = $ “ \- against tl round 0} Bh ad ear ee ee how. As vain, daredevil fel- him. He was convicted of concei _——— | IN NEW YORK | —— New York, April 26.—Since the ‘urchin of Manhattan will never know the joys of sneaking under circus tents or many another thrill known to any kid of the small town back lots, he has invented’ variations on the theme of “getting in for nothin’,” In front of the movie theatres of Ninth avenue and, thro many arteries of the East Side, small queues of youngsters may be ry standing ‘in solemn line, The the front end of the line first chance. He waits until a ticket purchaser comes up and then pleads: “Hey, please take me in, mister!” If he is turned down he loses his place in the line and must go to the back of the line and start all over the pears that there will be little hope of crashing the gate the youngsters try their next racket. This consists of stopping any passerby and saying: “Hey, mister, I've got nine cents for a movie, gim- me a penny and make it ten.” Gen- erally this works and is kept up until a necessary sum has been raised. Such methods lack the hdalthy sense of adventure to be found in the tent crawling and fence climb- ing of the small town. There is no more sniveling and whining beggar to be found anywhere than the aver- age street gamin of Manhattan. Bde ng A on scores at én, plicate the struggling youngsters o: the Horatio Alger tales, almost any side streets finds a couple of tod- dlers ret. a, pretty fair imitation of a dyed-in-the-woo! ir. Some. their Boegary, and) juntas enretaly ir ry. just as al dres lor the part by scheming relatlves who send the youngsters forth, ao One of the most pathetic you sters am ng “the "seven million” ry Mttle one-armed lad, about six or seven years old, who goes through you it adi le, d—ah- ¥ . _A THOUGHT with us on our honeymoon Pusch, & — Ye are the light Matthew v:i4. | Is not light grander than fire?— ‘ablyle. j INVERSELY TRUE. I've had this car for years Thus it goes, and if it ap-| Cc, low who laughs at loves and hi thén awakens to a better through the faithfulness of a girl, Gilbert gives a true portrayal of a difficult but fascinating role. Here is drama, pathos and adventure of 2 high. orde: MIGHT COME HANDY | Justajingle | Guest (whose wedding gift of a ‘When asked ‘where she was going, she coal scuttle has not been acknow!l- Said, “Milking, sir, right now!” edged): I hope my little present A_fibber, she turned out to be; ‘arrived quite safely? “She couldn't find a cow. Bride: Oh, indeed it did. Didn't : It’s perfectly absets in bankruptey.’+ 7 i ‘ New York shoving. paid for com- muting 1,144,348 miles in 50 years, Meaty. W. Gaine: yer, may now ride 73 miles dail y. from Huntington to New York afd back, free for a month. The Long Island rail: 4d has presented him a ticket for May, t my letter? FLAPPER FANNY cee of the world— ra Aching, Swollen Feet Money Back Say All sis IE | Emerald Oli Doesn't Do Away ‘With All Swelling and Distress: in 24 Hours... . Two or three applications of Moone’s Emerald Oil and in fifteen nutes the pain’ and soreness dis- ppear. A few apnlications at lar. intervalaeed the swelling * luces, ‘i And best of all.any of is gone for formula—this tial oils with phase 80. of bottles are sold annually for re- ducing varicose or swollen veins. * good druggist rantees Moone’s Emerald Oil to end your foot troubles or money back Adv. ‘