Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 215, 21 June 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1919.

i THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM " ; - AND SUN-TELEGRAM ' Published Every- Evening Except Sunday, ' by 'Z ,.; Palladium Printing Co. SPanadlumVfcuii&ag. North Ninth and Sailor Street isntered at -the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Se t , r ond Class Mail Matter. ' . MEMBER. or THB ASSOCIATED FIIESS ??" Assoclaua Press is xclulvely entitled to th iM ror republication of all news dlcpatchea credited to tt of not otherwise Credited In this paper and aleo the local -Sf.T ?uWUil &!." All rights of republication of i?W eiai dlspatchea hireia are also reserved.

The New Spirit Between Labor and Capital "Out of the crucible of war. invisible forces have been released which are today affecting every phase of economic, political and social life," said Francis H.Sisson, vice-president of the Guaranty Trust Company of New York, in an address before, the Virginia Bankers' association, "Barriers of all sorts seem to block the path of progress. Prophets of despair are crying 'woe, and-the "faint-hearted take counsel of fear. Yet there are those of us who cling to the legend that the-:shiaid still has two sides and are disposed to consider.as fialmly as may be the important factors which enter into the situation in the inborn hope that good may come "The" obstacles which confront us must be removed if we are to take the place in world leadership i awaiting, us. Among the most important of these are th.e barriers to a better understanding and" working basis between labor and capital. President Wilson did not unduly emphasize the importance ' of the problem when, in his latest message to bongress, he deplared, 'The question which stands at the front of all others in every country amidst the present great awakening is the question of labor.' - "Nd:f air-minded man can take exception to the sympathetic attitude expressed by the president concerning the desirability of improving labor conditions, nor can any generous spirit challenge.. the . suggestion to ' make the men and women who perform its daily labor happier in their industrial and social lives. "But labor must be on guard against a grave danger, from which no one but labor itself can save it.- Ineanthe peril of being misled by false friends,- by impractical and unsound thinkers, who seek' to exert an influence that Js unwarranted by their experience, or rather lack of experience, and ta lead labor into the morass of untried, impractical; and unsafe experiments, which cannot solve labor's problems, and serve only to erect greater barriers between employes and employers, as well as to injure the interests of society generally. Labor should be deaf to the parlor exponent of dangerous socialistic theories and avoid as a pestilence the agitator who comes to

them in the guise of their own kind but who!

would wreck the very house that labor is building to protect itself from. the elements of industrial strife. "It may be that we shall have to institute in this country something comparable to the industrial councils in England national, district, and plant organizations for the various industries, in which employers and employes are represented and which can act with authority and in orderly fashion for their respective industries. The degree of protection against certain objectionable competitive practices within their own groups, which this type or organization offers employers, will-probably prove one of its principal benefits. "But whether this or some other plan is adopted, labor will doubtless insist increasingly upon the right of collective bargaining, and, in the long run, those employers will fare best who are disposed to take labor by the hand rather than by the throat. Likewise, those laborers will gain most and permanently who deserve -to be taken by the" hand. ' "But collective bargaining is not a panacea andalone cannot safeguard all the interest involved in the wage system.' Back of all the machinery for collective bargaining, if it is to f unction well, must be the spirit as well as the form of cooperation. Benevolent employers, sincerely desirous of giving thfr employes generous treatment, have time and again failed to win their employes' confidence or loyalty. If such well-intentioned efforts can fail completely and so frequently, may it not be that neither side in the labor controversy really understands the other? , Mutual understanding affords the only basis for cooperation in productive enterprise. "Admittedly, labor is not always sufficiently interested in the quantity and quality of production which constitute the source of wages and

the only continuing wage fund. For this attitude labor is not solely to be blamed. The advantages which may revert to the workers as consumers generally are too remote to elicit any special concern in individual efficiency in production. Profit-sharing schemes and the like are often suspected because arbitrarily controlled from above. Scientific management, so-called, whatever may be its potential merits, has had few if any real trials, for it can have a fair test only when more cordial relations exist between labor and capital than are usually to be found today. Such means, alone, then, do not promise general recognition of the basic partnership of capital and labor in production at its best. Is there no way out? Must we charge the whole difficulty to the short-comings of human nature? "The first essential is an understanding of the magnitude of the undertaking. To secure in the average worker genuine interest in his product, when, as is so often the case, he is subjected to .the deadening monotony of the routine of machine production, is a formidable task. And he would be a bold reformer who could confidently set forth in detail a plan fitted to every exigency in the adjustment of industrial relations. "Something has been gained, we may be sure, in the recent ;spread of the idea that the management of men is a function that not every man with money and a factory under his control can exercise; that it requires special ability and consequently special training. The employment managers "today and their numbers have multiplied rapidly represent a departure in industrial engineering which merits encouragement. When there are more and better qualified managers of personnel we shall be farther advanced toward an acceptable adjustment of industrial relations. ' "But, in the final analysis, lasting progress in this direction must rest upon a spirit of cooperation, which finds expression in a genuinely democratic control of the conditions of employment. This does not mean that the direction of enterprise can be handed over bodily , to a committee of workers lacking special ability and training for managerial tasks. It does mean that neither those who receive nor those who pay wages have an exclusive right to determine the whole range of conditions under which the work of the world shall be done. In present day corporate activity in business the actual managers represent other people who supply, in whole or, usually, in part, the capital employed. Since the managers direct the human as well as the material factors in production, it might, perhaps, be well to allow the workers some direct participation in the choice of managers or a voice in management."

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

AL MUST HAVE HIS LITTLE JOKE New York Telegraph. "' One thing that makes the congress sore is that Burleson seems to have sent his latest wire message "Collect,"

TROUBLE WHAT IS TROUBLE Houston Post. Bahia In Brazil is moaning and groaning because a strike there has compelled it to go three days without bread, milk or meat. That is nothing. Cincinnati has gone eighteen days without beer.

SHOULD HAVE AIMED AT WAR Detroit Free Press. Gustav Stresemann, leader of the National Liberal party in Germany, says the Kaiser's aim was peace. He was a bad shot.

SAID IT WITH FINGERS CROSSED Indianapolis Star. Germany wants it understood that while it is saying "No", that reply is not to be taken too Beriously by the allies.

BURLESON NEEDS SAME AMBITION Pittsburg Gazette-Times. To .Secretary Baker's announced ambition to retire to private life we hear no vociferous protest.

GUESS THAT ISN'T A SAFE BET! Toledo Blade. And we suppose that the Senate would'nt read the dern treaty if it did have it.

LIKE TEACHING WOMEN TO TALK Detroit News. Europe, we are told by Frank A. Vande'rlip, must be taught to help herself. Just which nation in Europe needs any instruction In that art?

MUST COME FROM WEATHER BUREAU New York World. It comes from Paris just as confidently now as two months ago that the President will be able to return week after next.

Leaving School

From the Indianapolis News. BETWEEN compulsory education laws to keep a child in schooland child labor laws to force him out of industry, the country has made rapid strides toward eliminating the child labor evil. The part-time school has done much to extend the advantages of formal schooling without completely sacrificing the economic value of the child Just past the compulsory school age. But, like every other human device for htunan betterment. Improvement costs constant vigilance and the

v willingness and ability to meet every emergency. The opiponents of child labor have had war problems, and now j they are trying to regain ground lost by the war demand : for labor. . : - The child labor and compulsory School laws- have i always been violated rather flagrantly because In many i states there is no official record of births. Parental affidavits are of no value because j?arents who desire to send their children to work at an early age are not likely to jhesitate at adding a year or two to the age of the child.

On. the other hand, statistics on the subject from many large cities in the country show that in many cases children prefer work to school and annoy their parents until ihey are permitted to have their way. In either case the parent 13 Immediately to blame, but the state which permits child exploitation is also responsible. . Family difficulties, such as illness, death of the breadwinner, poverty and ignorance, are given as legitimate reasons why children should leave school at an age when a year or two more of schooling would add immeasurably to their future welfare. The compulsory school law Implies that a child shall go to school until ready for high school, but hundreds fall below this standard. High war wages won many from school during the last two years, and the effect is still to be felt In many cases, wages have lagged behind living costs, forcing children into some work helping to support the family. Society, however, owes the child a fair start. In life. No effort should be spared to discharge this obligation.

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Baptist Flrat Baptist Church North Eleventh, near Main street; 9:15, Sunday school, Kendrick E. Kenny, superin

tendent; 10:40, morning worship, subject, "Prayer the Soul Waiting Before God"; 6:30, B. Y. P. U. service, subject, "Christlanlilng the Social Order"; 7:30, Evangelistic service, sermon subject, "His Love Continued." Midweek prayer and praise service Thursday evening, 7:30. Shelby C. Lee, pastor. Brethren United Brethren Bible school at 9:20, Fred White, superintendent ; prayer meeting, Thursday evening; Rev. J. A. Kissell of Greenville, O.. will preach at 10:30; C. E. at 7:30. Catholic St. Andrew's Catholic -South Fifth and C streets. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector; Rev. Clement Zepf, assistant l-ow mass and communion at 5:30 a. m. Mass, with singing by children and five mltute sermon at 7:30 a. m. High mass and sermon at 10 a. in. Vespers, sermon and benediction at 3:00 p. m. St. Mary's Rev. W. J. Cronln, pastor; James Ryan, assistant. Sunday mass at 6, 8 and 10 o'clock a. m.; instructions, 2:30 p. m. Vespers and benediction at 3 p. m. Holy hour at 7:30 Wednesday. Christian First Christian South Tenth and A streets. L. E. Murray, pastor. Sunday school, 9:15 a. m. A. B. Harrison, superintendent. Hours for worship, 10:30 a, m. and 7:30 p. m. Sermon themes morning, "Thrift, a Christian Virtue." Evening, "Loyalty of Jesus." C. E. prayer meeting, 6.30 p. m. Friends East Main Street Friends Main street between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets. Rev. John R. Webb, pastor. Bible school, 9:15 a. m.. Prof. A. M. Charles, superintendent; meeting for worship, 10:30 a. m., subject, "The Victories of Love;" evening services, 7:30 p. m., subject, "Partway People;" Ladies' Aid society,

1 PARROT WATCHED J

FOR REVEL'ATION OF ' MASTER'S SLAYER

Thursday, 1:30 p. m.; mid-week prayer meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. West Richmond Friends Charles M. Woodman, pastor. Sunday services, 9 a. m., Bible school, Millard Markle, superintendent; 10:30 a. m., meeting for worship; 3:45 p. m., Christian Endeavor meeting; 5 p. ra., vesper service, on the east lawn, weather permitting; Thursday evening, 6:30, roll call supper, the committee ureent-

jly request that all members be pres

ent; Friday afternoon. Good Will club. Whitewater Friends Corner of North Tenth and G . streets. Irvln Stegall, pastor; sunday school at 9 a. m., Russell Burkett, superintendent; morning service at 10:30; Christian Endeavor at 7 p. m.; Sunday, June 29 being regular missionary Sunday the topic for that day will be used this Sunday; Evangelistic service at 7:45 p. m.; if the weather permits both evening services will be held in a tent on the front lawn of the church; prayer meeting Thursday evening 7:30. South Eighth Street Friend's Bible school tomorrow morning at 9:10 a. m., John H. Johnson, suoerintendent.

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

The Rev. H. R. Keats, pastor of the South Eighth street Friends church, handed his resignation to the board. Summer evangelistic meetings were abandoned at a meeting of the Ministerial association. The members planned a revival for the fall.

Presbyterian

First Presbyterian Church North A and Tenth streets. The church with a message and a welcome. Bible school at 9:15, Percy C. Sprague, superintendent. Public worship at 10:30, subject of sermon, "Does Death End .Anything?" Service will last one hour only. No Vesper service. Deaconesses will meet with Mrs. Rlndt on Tuesday at 2:30. Session will meet at the manse on Tuesday at 8 o'clock. Mid-week service Thursday at 7:30. Topic is "Life's Outer Edge." Joseph J. Rae, D.D., pastor. Second Presbyterian North Nineteenth street. Elmer E. Davis, pastor. Bible school at 9.15., Darrel Thomas, superintendent. Morning worship at 10:30. Subject, "The Minister of Mercy." Evening service at 7:30. A cordial invitation to these services. Reld Memorial United Presbyterian Sabbath school, 9:15, Mrs. D. W. Scott, superintendent. Morning service, 10:30, subject, "The World's Great Need;" no evening service; Junior Missionary society at 2:30; prayer meeting Thursday evening, at 7:30. J. S. Hill, pastor. Scientist First Church of Christ Scientist

North A between Fourteenth and Fif-

Lesson: "Love" 1 Cirr 13 Hour of ueiween rourteentn and Firworsh?P. S. 4ail.' oEvo-! 1? JK'J '

Atomic Force?" Sunday school at 9 a. m. Services at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday evening testimony meetings at 7:45. Public cordially invited. Reading room, located in south end of church edifice, open daily except Sunday and legal holidays from 1:30 to 5:00 p. m. Union Mission Real Pentecostal Mission Meets

every Sunday on the corner of Butler and Sherman streets. Mothers' meeting the last Friday of each month. Next week, June 27. at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Percifield, supt. H. C. Smock, pastor.

Achilles Unthank, well known here, died at his home in Los Angeles.

Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON

He was one of those vegetarian bugs, and in the course of his remarks before a group of thoughtful persons, he exclaimed: "Friends, two years ago I was a walking skeleton, a haggard, puff-eyed, anemic physical and mental wreck. What do you imagine wrought this great change in me?" And in the silence that followed, one of those young men in the onebutton coats, the two-toned shoes, and three-colored caps sang out: "What change?"

lution of Nature and Grace" will be

the pastor's theme. Mid-week meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. Lutheran First English , Lutheran South A and Eleventh streets. F. A. Dressel, pastor. Parsonage, 110 South Eleventh street. Sunday school at 9 : 00 a. m., E. B. Knollenberg, superintendent. Preaching service at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Bible study Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Subject at 10:30 a. mi, "A New Note." Evening, "We Want to Govern Ourselves." Second English Lutheran Northwest Third and Pearl streets. C. Ray

mond Isley, pastor. Sunday school, '

9:lo a. m., a memorial service for Ellen Knollenberg, deceased, will be given by the Live Wire class; morning worship, 10:30 a. m.. sermon, "The Temple of Living Stones;" evening worship, 7:30 p. m., sermon, "The Whole Duty of Man." A cordial welcome to all. St. Paul's Lutheran 401 South Seventh street. Rev. F. W. Rohlfing, ing, D. D., pastor. Sunday school at 9 a. m., Jesse A: Wiechman, superin-

' tendent. German farewell service

on Sunday morning, with an offertory by Miss Marjorie Beck at 10:30 a. m. The sermon topic for the evening service will be the question "What Is the Matter with the World?" Clifford Piehl will render a violin offertory. Council meeting at the parsonage on Monday night. Trinity English Lutheran Corner Seventh and South A streets. Oscar T. F. Tressel, pastor. Residence, 29 South Eleventh street. Phone 2861. Sunday school, 9 a. m.; divine service, 10:30, theme, "The Earnestness of the Eternal Separation;" special congregational meeting after service; no evening service; annual meeting of the brotherhood Tuesday evening; the Senior Luther league will give their play Friday evening in the basement of the church.

CHICAGO, 111., June 21. With horned beak and claws, Weezie, a par rot, makes the rounds of his wire cage. He screeches unintelligbly as. he ruffles his bright plumage, and now and then utters a word. Weerle Is alone. He was In the room when his master, Frank Kouty, 65 years old, owner of a bird store on Archer Avenue, died with his throat cut. Among all the birds in the store Weerie alone was not for sale, for he was the companion of the aged man. Kouty talked to him and Weezie would reply. The parrot learned to repeat words ottered by the man. Now Kouty's body Ilea In the hack room of an undertaking establishment and Weezie is being watched by detectives. Does Bird Know Slayer? Was there a word, a sentence, a familiar name, ottered in his death by Kouty, that lies locked In the feathered pate of Weezie? Is there a word or a name or a sentence that will solve the mystery of Kouty's death that Weezie, In his rambling saw-filing and screeching jargon, will utter? The detectives hope there is. Kouty's body was discovered by Miss Jessie Balding, who tcld the police that she had been a nurse to the old man and that she had been his life-long friend. She was later held by the police because of a story told by Walter G. Pfeiffer, who entered the Kouty home with her. Money to Bury Him. "He told me he had some money there," she explained to the police, "and that if anything happened to him I was to take It and see that he was given a proper burial." Miss Balding said she was afraid the money would be stolen if left In the coffee pot. However, she is being held; the police are looking for the two negroes, and Weezle's weird cries are being studied to see if the peculiar brain of a talking bird will give up the important clew.

Methodist

There is good news for the New York workman who likes to drop in for breakfast on his way to work. Delmonico's, under a new system of financing, will be kept running after July 1. At least during the telegraph strike, a lot of gentlemen who are awav from

uuiue aim nave promised to send ai

night letter every night, will not have to rack their brains for something to say.

Western papers refer to the plaintiff in a breach cf promise suit as a "a handsome, hashing young woman." And maybe she never worked in a restaurant at all.

NOT KNOCKING. Charles McCauley and Edith Parsins were married Saturday at Omaha. The bride has many friend3. Mercyville (Iowa) Banner.

Wesleyan M. E. The Ladies' Aid Society of the Wesleyan M. E. church will hold an all day rally, Sunday, June 22, 1919. The morning services at 10:30 will be in charge of Mrs. Manly and Mrs. White. The Bethel A. M. E. Aid society and the Caroline Reeves Sewing circle will have charge of the exercises at 3:00 p. m. At 7:30 p. m. the Second Baptist Aid society and the Wesleyan M. E. Aid society will conduct the exercises. Everybody welcome and cordially invited to attend these services. Mrs. Mary Gilmer, president; Mrs. Blanche Hughley, secretary. Boston Methodist Rev. L. H. Bunyan, pastor. Sunday school at 2 p. m. Preaching at 3 p. m. Class meeting at 8 p. m. E. C. Jerome, leader. Nazarene Church of the Nazarene Fifth and North A streets. W. I. and Lida Brandyberry, pastors. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m., J. W. Mount, superin-

i tendent. Preaching at 10:30, Mrs.

Brandyberry in charge, subject, "God's Financial Plan." Evangelistic service at 7:30, Mr. Brandyberry in charge. Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. Fift ythree were at the

meeting last v ednesday. Youn

Dinner Stories

At a carnival in a southern town, ! two negro boys stood near' the edge j of a crowd that had assembled to watch a high dive. As the daring athlete slowlv mount-'

ed a tall pole to a tiny platform, sixty feet in the air, a brass band on the ground played "chills-and-fever" music. When the diver left his high perch, plunged head downward into a small tank on the ground, and "scooped" out on the ground like a flash, the music broke out into a lively strain. The negro boys held their breath until the dare-devil feat had been accomplished, then one said to the other as they turned to go: "Some time dat ban' am gonna play, and dat man ain't gonna hear it." A little boy of five was traveling south with his parents to visit an aunt whom he had never seen. He was very curious about this relative and asked his father and mother endless questions concerning her. As the journey drew to its close the little fellow was amazed to see many negroes at every station. -Suddenly a look of consternation dawned on his face and truning to his mother he cried in a voice of alarm, "Mamma, mamma, what color is Aunt Jen?"

"I can't help thinking sometimes," said the discouraged farmer, "that the worse you treat your hens the more eggs you will get from them. I remember an old joke where one man asked another, 'How do you get so many eggs?' " 'Why,' said the other, T treat my hens so unscientifically they're all laying for me.' "

MARTIAL LAW IN HAMBURG COPENHAGEN, June 21. Martial law has been proclaimed in the entire zone of Hamburg harbor as a consequence of an increase in raids upon food depots.

WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY

This column, containing news of Richmond and Wayne county soldiers and sailors, will appear daily In the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed.

Benjamin C. Knollenberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knollenberg of this city, has arrived in Richmond, after fifteen months overseas.

Chauncy Edgerton. who has been overseas for a number of months, has arrived at his home in Richmond.

Harold Mann is spending a furlough in this city. He is on a U. S. S. battle ship, and has seen service in foreign waters.

Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Curtis have received a card from their son Chariea dated June 7, at Sarge, France, saying that he was leaving Erest on June ll, and expected to sail for the States soon afterward.

TEACHER KILLED BY TRAIN

(By Associated PtrbO FORT WAYNE, Ind.. June 21 Miss Allie Gildsmith, aged sixty, was struck by a locomotive on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad at St. Joe, Ind.. northeast of here Thursday and killed! In avoiding a westbound freight train she stepped in front of a "light" engine going east. She was a well known music teacher.

GOT GOOD RESULTS This honest, straight forward letter from a woman who has suffered should bo heeded by all afflicted with backache, rheumatic pains, sore muscles, awful tired feeling and other symptoms of kidney and bladder trouble: "I havegrot such good results from Foley Kidney Pills that I can sleep much better and the pain In my back and sides Is a good lot better. I am going to keep on taking them." Mrs. Chas. Gray. 270 6th St.. Detroit, Mich. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. AdV.

SOMETHING MISSING.

Catering to the needs of the fair!

patrons at Belle Isle bathhouse, which ! reL US V.. ?5 opens Thursday, the city has purchal T- mpje3 nmee"Dr! S?8? tajLi d Ann Hrwr,,, v,tn j home of Mrs. Bertha Porter of

ed 400 dozens bathing caps and 200 i

dozen

News

Richmond. Remember the Temper

ance meeting.

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK IN THE MIND'S WORLD Your Mind is a world within a world, and holding worlds within its arms. For within that strange and much undiscovered area live all the hopes and dreams and life, the expression and living of which you are capable. The great phases of invention and creation are there. All the vibrating chords of art and music and every touch of day-drama every caress of pity or of love these find a sympathetic mothering within your Mind. From the faintest spiritual blend toward better and richer things, to the bold and dominating standards cf a man led on by his own instincts for the right, is your Mind fathomed and fashioned forits workt in the world of all. Into all things possible does your Mind search-light its way revealing, condemning and building. In the Mind's world Is God. Master at the helm. His back and forth messages, from the heart-realm teach and tell over their golden wires, every great impulse that may serve the one God-Mind which is in every one of us. There is at least one world that should always be kept clean and free it's YOUR Mind World! - Because, no matter what else may be there. All-divinity is' sure to be there. Not everyone realizes this grat fact but poor and unlearned indeed is he who does not FEEL it there. Unconsciously does your Mind absorb. Shrouded in mystery as it so much is, yet every passing minutest-thing of time and earth goes thru its living place. - In your Mind's world you may play and laugh and cry. There never has been an emotion of great or less estate which has not lodged within its walls. Take care of your Mind and the thots that feed It. Without It, you would be less than a sound.

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RICHMOND, FRIDAY, JUNE 27TH And Every Four Weeks Thereafter.

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Epuepsy. Dropsy. Female Diseases. Nervous Debility. Functional Weakness. AEtN5r,fJ,eedy' fennan an3 lasting cure is what I give you bevond !V wtl ,s,curabl- K not. I will not accept your money 'and clnn Jl rPMhmtv 10T yOU- best "Irenes I could give as to profe slonal reliability Is the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN 1 will give the POOREST man a chance, as weU as the RICH, to receive a cure from me at a SMALL COST. The la no rm pnrrn tn t ho.t

I advice FREE.

VARICOCELE AND HYDROCELE Our one treatment cure Is what you should have. Only one visit Is required. We do no cutting. All signs dlaappear in a few davs or a few weeks. BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES We will fclve you treatment that will In a few days or weeks cure all rash and sores. . STRICTURE, KIDNEY, BLADDER, BLADDER TROUBLES Are scientlncally treated by us. Our methods immediately benefit you. PILES, FISTULA We can cure yoo so quickly and so easily that von will be surprised. We will tfve you Just the result and cure you are looking for. RUPTURE TREATED After an examlnatVin we will tell you Just what we can do for you. It we cannot benefit or cure ou. we will frankly and hon. estly tell you so. Call on or address , W. R. MAYO, M. D. 843 North Delaware Street Indianapolis, Indiana

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