Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 290, 19 September 1919 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TiELEGRAM, FRIDAY, SEPT. 19, 1919.
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The Voice of the People An analysis of the trend of revolutionary thought and its methods is contained in the current issue of the Christian Science Monitor. The editorial follows: "Any person who has watched with care the methods of the revolutionary groups throughout the world must have noticed that they are proceeding along comparatively common lines of attack. One of these lines has for its object the suborning of the military forces of every nation and the police. To put it succinctly, as it was put by one of the revolutionary leaders, to a representative of this paper in a great industrial center of the United States, not long ago, 'Let us
once wm over the soldiers and the police, and then look out !' It Is perfectly easy to understand the point of view, for a very slight knowledge of history should be sufficient to convince any
.person that so long as the discipline of the mill
tary services remains, the hopes of revolution must be necessarily circumscribed. So long as a
.single regiment remained faithful to the king,
the revolutionary fury of St. Antoine was un
able to burst its bounds. It was only when the
blue-coated Gardes Francaises assumed the revolutionary rosette that the guillotine became a possibility, and it was when Murat, riding like lury to the camp at Sablons, gained possession of the artillery that Section Lepelletier had to own its defeat. "It was just the same when the French Terror was repeated in the Russian Terror. The beginning of the trouble was Kerensky's destruction of the morale of the army. When, finally, the troops melted away from Korniloff there was nothing left for Kerensky and Socialism but
flight before the Red Terror or death. It was
D3 repeated exactly over again in 1917, and thenorancQ 0f the American idea of government so
in order to see how the red tide comes in. That may be seen in the wrecked shops of Liverpool last winter, and in the streets of Boston within the last few days. Revolution, to a certain section of the public, has no political meaning whatever, it is nothing but a synonym for license. Very few revolutions have been carried out in the etaid manner in which the English disposed of the second and fourth of the Stewarts. As time goes on the red terror seems to become more
of a pattern than the methods of Pym and Cromwell. The ways of the Latin, the Slav, or the Magyar revolutionary are hardly those of the Anglo-Saxon, and the Anglo-Saxon revolutionary, wherever he exists, will do well, as Captain Cuttle would say, having found that out, to make a note of it. "But the most ridiculous form of revolution is when a perfectly free nation proposes to revolutionize itself, not at the ballot-boxes, but in the streets. For nearly a century and a helf the United States of America has been a model of liberty without license. But today there comes an element, imported through the immigration offices, which proposes to extend liberty through license, which is a topsy-turvy way of limiting liberty by license. In the United States of America every man has a vote, and before very long every woman will have one. In such conditions to suggest a revolution as a means of carrying out the wishes of the majority is about as sane as sitting on the branch which you propose to saw off. The form of government in the United States today is that deliberately chosen by its citizens, voting in public elections, and obviously constitutes the direct wishes of the majority. The very next time that the polls
are opened, the voter can go into the booth, and by the very simple process of obtaining a major
ity, make any changes he likes in the government of the country. This is by no means to the liking, however, of the alien, who frequently is
not even a citizen, and does not even know the
language of the country he desires to control. He still lives in the atmosphere of Moscow or Vienna before the war, and seems to imagine that the only way to effect a political change in a free country is to break the windows, loot the shops, and shoot the nearest policeman. The entire process and the entire idea are mere travesties of
the methods of a free state, and exhibit an ig
Condensed Classics of Famous Authors
BESANT Sir Walter Eesant. novelist and biographer, lover of London and of tne poor folk who lived in the slums of the Brltih metropolis, was born at Portsmouth, England, Aug. 14,
IS35. He died on June 9, 1901. Beeant was one of the most manyBided men of his time. He was educated at Kips' a College. London, and at Cambridge; he taught In a college on the picturesque Island of Mauritius; he was secretary of the Palestine Exploration Fund. He earned the undying gratitude of scores of struggling young writers by establishing the Society of Authors, which kept them from being duped by unscrupulous publishers and editors. He labored indefati(?ably to improve the conditions of the poor. Of his many novels. "All Sorts and Conditions of Men" stands out above all others a tale of the poor that gripped the minds of his readers. So profound was the impression that it made that it may be said to have raised the People's Palace, the "Palace of Deliffht" described in the novel, where the oppressed had some chance to know social improvement and recreation. The author, who was knighted in 1835, wrote many other novels, among them "The Children of Gideon." "Armorel of Lyonesse," and "Beyond the Dreams of Avarice." He also wrote numerous biographies of writers and men who had lived adventurous lives, and he left unfinished "A Survey of London," a book published after his death, which is a storehouse of Information for all who are interested In the past and present of the great city.
y 4 jmk
Sir Walter Beaant, 1S36-1001
ALL SORTS AND CONDITION OF MEN BY "WALTER. BESANT Condensation by Charles H. Lincoln
historical student is interested In watching the
parallel of the denouement. All of which makes j it abundantly clear why, from London to Bos-j ton, such desperate efforts have been made to unionize the police forces and to demoralize the military forces. It is all very well for the most conservative of Labor leaders, like Mr. Gompers, to explain that there is to be a sort of union within a union wherever the police are unionized. That is to say, that there is to be an understanding that the strike is not to be resorted to, and that the discipline of the force, on the present lines, is to be maintained. B,ut does Mr. Gompers seriously believe that of the police were once unionized it would bo possible to draw such an artificial line, and that it would not merely be a matter of time, and a very short time at that, before Mr. Gompers was compelled by the advanced section of his own party to make further demands, or before he gave place to those who would make such demands with very little circumlocution? The French revolution, which began with Mirabeau and Necker, passed into the hands of Danton and Robespierre, and did not end until it had consumed most of its own children. "With the warning of France historically be
fore them, and the very practical warning of Russia under their very eyes, the people of the United States may estimate the attempts to un
ionize the police force at something approaching their true value. The unionizing of the police force is only a preliminary step, in the words of the revolutionary leader already quoted, to the effort to demoralize the army, the belief being that when these barriers to revolution are thrown down, there will be nothing to prevent the incoming of the tide. Nor is it necessary to go back a hundred years to the Place de la Revolution, or even three years to the Nevsky Prospekt,
deep as to make it difficult to accept it as mere ignorance. The implication, the whole time, is that a certain minority is not so much innocent as committed to a conspiracy for the overthrow of the constitution by that means which it has itself stigmatized so violently in the hands of autocracy as a coup d'etat. "In such circumstances all that is sane in the nation had better exert itself to checkmate the insanity of the group. All that it is necessary to do this is, first, to be sure that the laws are just, and that the execution of justice is above suspicion, and then to insure that that execution shall be carried out without hesitation. The revolutions of the past have been made possible because the laws were unjust, and those responsible for their execution were without conviction.
Washington, however, is not Petrograd. For the people who vote for the legislatures to contend that the legislation is unjust is either foolish or criminal. The government of the United States today, as it always has been, is in the hands of the people, and has been stated once and for all by Lincoln, in the phrase, 'government of- the people, by the people, for the people.' "
The girl was the greatest heiress in England. On the morrow the was to leave the University where in anticipation of assuming the responsibility of her fortune, she had acquired all of the theory of political economy that text book3 could give her. Speaking to a girl friend, she summed up the sources of her wealth: "To begin with, there is the Brewery. You cannot escape from a big brewery If it belongs to you. You cannot hide it away. Messenger, Marsden & Company's Stout, their XXX, their Old and Mild, their Bitter, their Family Ales (that particularly at eight-and-six the nine gallon cask, if paid for on delivery), their drays, their huge horses, their strong men these things stare one in the face wherever you go. I am Messenger, Marsden & Company, myself, the sole partner in what my lawyer sweetly calls the Concern." Also there was an unconscionable sum of money in the Funds. And whole streets of houses. They lay all about Whiteehapel way. Her grandfather had bought houses as other people buy apples. Yet Angela Messenger never had been Inside one of her own houses.
Never had visited her brewery. She knew all the theories about people,
net-maker with wages of a shilling an hour for mending broken furniture and doing similar Jobs at the brewery. Their talk naturally would come around to the wealthy Miss Messenger whom none of those concerned with the story except Miss Kennedy ever had seen. They would speculate as to what they would do with her money, if they had the opportunity. The cabinet-maker, Harry, had ideas. He had observed a lack in the life of the East End of London, with its two millions of people. "We have no pleasures: a theatre and a musio hall in Whiteehapel Road. That has to serve for two millions of people. Now if this young heiress wanted to do any good, she should build a Palace of Pleasure here." "Let us talk over your Palace of Pleasure," she said. And as time went on they elaborated and amplified the idea, as the needs of the people among whom they lived became more apparent to them. To him it was a fanciful idea, largely of interest because it gave him opportunity to talk with the little dressmaker. To her, it was the opportun-
i ity for which the greatest heiress in
England had gone searching in Whiteehapel.
But first came the "Stepney Dress-
since discovered the secret of Harry's life. Harry saw his Palace of Delight only when all was completed. It contained a great hall where a thousand couples could dance without crowding. On wet days It was to be a playground for children. There was a concert room, with organ and piano and a platform; billiard rooms, card rooms, rooms with chess and dominoes laid out, school rooms for painting, drawing, wood-carving and all manner of small arts. "In the Palace of Delight," said Angela, "we shall not be like a troop of revellers, thinking of nothing but dance and song and feasting. We shall learn something every day; we shall all belong to the 6ame class. This Is our palace, the club of the working people; we will not let anybody make money out of it. We shall
use it for ourselves, and we shall
make our enjoyment by ourselves."
The first notes of the great organ of the Palace were the wedding march of
the girl and the man. The first fe6tivi.
ties within the walls attended their
wedding feast.
And still the man whose imagination had given birth to these marvels had never guessed that his bride was anything but what she seemed; and he rejoiced in her possession. The truth came to him only when,
in the evening, she came to him no longer clad as a simple dressmaker, but radiant in white satin, mystic, wonderful, with white veil and white flowers, and round her white throat a necklace of sparkling diamonds, and diamonds in her hair. "Take her, my boy," said Lord Jocelyn proudly. "But you have married not Miss Kennedy at all but Angela Messenger." Harry took his bride's hand in a kind of stupor. "Forgive me, Harry," 6he said, "say you forgive me." Then he raised her veil and kissed her forehead before them alL But he could not speak, because all in a moment the sense of what this would mean poured upon his brain in a great wave, and he would fain have been alone. Copyright. 1919. by the Poet Publishing Company (The Boston Post). Copyright In the United Kingdom, the Dominions, Its Colonies and dependencies, under the copyrig-ht act, by the Post Publishing Company, Boston, Mass., U. S. A. All rights reserved. (Published by special arrangement with the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. All rights reserved). "Anna Karenlna," by Totstol, as condensed by Mrs. Mary F. Russ, will be printed tomorrow.
Dinner Stories
but she didn't know people themselves. makers' Association." Never before
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
WORLD IS WELCOME TO HIM Philadelphia Press. The idea that there is objection to President Wilson becoming president of the world needs proof. The general feeling seems to be that he ought to be president of anything except the United States.
YEPI HE CAN KISS IT GOOD-BY. Providence Journal. Mr. Wilson sees a peril in the treaty delay. There is a peril to his League of Nations scheme. The more it is studied the less the American people like it.
She resolved:
"I efface myself. I vanish. I disappear. Your Angela will be a dressmaker, and she will live by herself and become what her great-grandmother was one of the people." This was in June, 1881. For a long time to come, fashionable London would see Angela Messenger no more. But in Whiteehapel district, a charming young woman claiming the name of Kennedy appeared from nowhere in particular, to open dressmaking rooms. At Mrs. Bormalack's boarding house she met the man. The man had all the personal refinement, education and aristocratic poise that was to be expected in the favorite member of the family of Lord Jocelyn Le Breton. Reaching the age of twenty-three, he had been told the secret of hia birth; his only claim upon that home of wealth and social distinction was one of gratitude. For, in truth, he had been the child of a sergeant in the English army; and instead of Le Breton, his name wa3 Goslett Harry Goslett, the first name being pronounced 'Arry in the neighborhood where he had been born. Free to make his choice, he resolved to go back to his own people. Mrs. Bormalack's boarding house was old and mean. Everything was old and shabby; everything wanted polishing, washing, brightening up.
The boarders numbered an elderly couple from a New Hampshire town, hugging the delusion that they were rightful owners of a peerage, and awaiting the day when their rights would be recognized; a sleight-of-hand performer out of employment, who bored his fellows by practising his magic upon them; a learned scholarfrom Australia, who claimed the dis
covery of the original tablets of stone upon which the Ten Commandments had been written, but -itho was deprived of the glory due such an achievement, by the jealousy of hl3
An old lady was going to Stamford, Conn., to visit her daughter, and tool! her seat in the railway car for fha first time in her life. During the ride the car in which she was seated was thrown down an embankment and demolished. Crawling out from beneath the debris, she spied a man in a 6itting position, his legs pinioned. "Is this Stamford?" 6he anxiously asked. The man was from Boston. He was in considerable pain, but he didn't lose sight of the fact that he was a Bostonian. He said: "No; this is a catastrophe." "Ohl" exclaimed the lady. "Then I hadn't oughter got off here." "I never was so disappoined in my life!" said Rankin. "What's the trouble?" asked his friend.
"In the city the other day I saw an aquatic exhibition advertised " "Yes" "And I Immediately bought tickets." "You were disappointed?" "Yes; all I saw was a lot of men in diving suits." "But what did you expect at an aquatic exhibition?" "Girls in bathing suits, at leapt,"
What Other Editors Say
IMMIGRANT STATISTICS From the Indianapolis News. ANTHONY CAMINETTI, commissioner-general of immigration, has issued a statement showing that only 102,000 unassimilated immigrants or foreigners have left this country since the armistice was signed, and incidentally taking advantage of the excess of Immigrants over emigrants in the same period to refer to tho "hysteria that exists in relation to emigration."
Tho statistics bear out the opinions expressed several '.
times within recent months by immigration authorities, and prove that warnings circulated by commercial and banking associations were either effective as a check on emigration or in the main uncalled for and an unwarranted cause of alarm. The government figures show that at present the flow of aliens into and out of this country is entirely satisfactory. The employers of unskilled labor would doubtless welcome a flood of immigrants, and certain elements Wxjuld welcome a policy of complete exclusion. But the business of the country, as it touches the immigrant jutfon Is to formulate a sane immigration policy which hall neither clpse the doors of freedom and democracy 1o desirable aliens nor invite a horde of radical idlers fcent only on spreading the political ideas of a crowd of hunted assaseins Now, while the movement Is naturally thiggish, is the time to revise the regulations without ganger of giving offense to friendly powers. A special plea for lax immigration laws can easily fcased upon the official statement that ta the five
years ending June 30, 1919, some 600.000 emigrants left America. But the causes for the large exodus are not given, and in the absence of official information it is only fair to conclude that thousands of them returned to fight the civilized world's battle under the standards of their native land. This was especially, true In the case of the Italians. It Is an indication that they were suitable material out of which to make good Americans, and it is no indication whatever that they were dissatisfied with conditions In America.
had London seen such a business, con
ducted upon such extraordinary principles. The young women employes actually were encouraged to leave their work at certain hours, to exer
cise and play. They were furnished appetizing food at the expense of the shop. Lawn tennis courts were provided for them. In the evenings, they were encouraged to dance and sing. And a share of the earning of the establishment was theirs. Miss Kennedy's backer in this venture was supposed to be the wealthy Miss Messenger, of the brewery. The young cabinet-maker, already deep in love with the dressmaker, suggested that Miss Kennedy might persuade Miss Messenger to start the Paiace of Delight, as he now called It. "What is a Palace of Delight?" he was asked. "Truly wonderful it is," said Harry, "to think how monotonous are the gifts and bequests of rich men. Schools, churches, alms-houses, hospitals that is all; that is their monotonous round." Then he proceeded to give his imagination full sway in a day-dream that, unknown to him for the time being was to become a wonderful reality through the magic of the Messenger millions. While the Palace was growing, Miss Kennedy, through her supposed influence with the unseen Miss Messenger, was bringing sunshine into the lives of the poor folk of Mrs. Bormalack's boarding house. The seekers for a peerage were set up in the Messenger mansion in the city, and had a taste of all that wealth could bestow. The discoverer of the Tablets of Stone had his discovery put into a book, and was sent home to Australia glowing
with joy and pride. The sleight-of-
hand man was given opportunity to prove his skill, and proposed marriage in return. All this through the dressmaker's "influence" with the heiress of the brewery.
The young cabinet-maker, for his
Memories, of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
Editors over the state were Invited to the Fall Festival Thursday, October 8, as guests of the association. Herbert Cotton and Robert Graham returned home from a two weeks' bicycle trip over southern Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. They posted bills
teiung or the annual fall festival here at various places over their route. Local merchants predicted that the coming season would be one of the most succesful they had ever experienced.
f Good Evening
I BY ROY K. MOULTON
THE EVIDENCE "How doth the little busy beeT That's very hard to known. For when he doth we cannot see And yet we feel It's sol A MUSfCAL INCIDENT The young lady attended a concert. As the violinist finished hl3 solo sha wept loudly. "Ah!" he said, "she is a lover of music" Rushing to her h clasped her. "1 understand." he siid. "you have true appreciation." "Yos," she said, "you played grand. But I wept because I neglected to remove my dog's dinner from the stove, nnd I know it is ruined. " M K. T. GOOD TO CHILDREN. ANYWAY Mr. Dock Owen, our efficient bucket lander at the McPherson shaft, is indeed a very generous-hearted fellow. He supplies all the children with tobacco. Ducktown, (Tenn.) Gazetto.
)
rival scholars; a clerk in the great ! part, found the long-missing valuables
brewery, who for thirty years had labored under suspicion of stealing certain valuables from a safe of the Concern holding on to an Ill-paid position through the decades, without hope of promotion or fear of discharge, until guilt might be proven or the missing valuables discovered. In such surroundings, Angela and Harry naturally gravitated toward each other. Without question, they took each other at face value; she, a dressmaker with a little money to set herself up in business; he, a cabi-
:md freed the eld clerk from the suS'
picions he had labored under for thirty years. At the same time, Harry discovered proof that he himself was a fairly well-to-do person. He laid his heart and fortune at the feet of the dressmaker. The day for the wedding was set All this time, be it remembered, the young man had no inkling of the girl's identity; nor did he know that his imaginary Palace of Delight actually was taking form in brick and stone. The girl, however, had long
Propaganda for League
Mast Stay Oat of Govt Bulletins, Order Reads
WASHINGTON, Sept. 19. Peremptory orders have been issued by the joint congressional committee on printing to all government departments to discontinue propaganda in behalf of the league of nations, articles in favor of which have been appearing in the bulletins issued by a number of government bureaus. Publications violating this order will be in danger of suspension, it is stated by Senator Smoot of Utah, chairman of the committee. The bureau of education has been especially active in its missionary work for the league. Its publications go principally to teachers and according to an official of the league for the preservation of American independence, "teach the teacher to teach what the government wants taught," Longest Lock in World is Opened at Saalt Ste. Marie (By Associated Press) SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich., Sept, 19. The fourth lock in St. Mary's falls canal connecting Lake Superior with the lower lakes, was formally thrown open to lake steamers Thursday. The government inspection boat General Lydecker, carrying a
number of officials, was to have the
honor of first passage. The new lock, the longest in the world, has been four years in construction. It is a quarter of a mile in length, SO feet wide and has a least depth of 24 feet. The "fall" from Superior to the lower St. Mary's river ranges from 17 to 21 feet.
HOLD3 DISTANCE AIR RECORD From the Bulletlin. of the National Geographio Society. Amazing as are the recent flights of airplanes across the Atlantic, aviators must Cj farther and do it more frequently to warrant a literal appellation of "bird men." There is the golden plover, for instance, which summers in the Arctic and winters in Argentina. This species nests along the Arctic coast of North America, and as Boon as the young are old enough to care for themselves fall migration is begun by a trip to the Labrador coast, where the plover fattens for several weeks on the abundant native fruits. A short trip across the Gulf of St. Lawrence bring3 It to Nova Scotia, the starting point for its extraordinary ocean flight, due south to the coast of South America. The golden plover takes a straight course across the ocean, and, if the weather is propitious, makes the whole 2,400 miles without pause or rest.
THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK
HAND IN HAND
The world is too big and the Jobs In It are too many for any one man to expect to get far by working alone. More than at any other time In tho history of the world, does tho time call for co-operation. Hand in hand should all men strive. There can be no successful one-man business, any more than there can be a one-man government. Even the individual who seeks to be a one-working man or woman soon discovers that the impossible has been attempted. For the first time in the history of the world, both Capital and Labor are realizing that each is necessary and essential to the greatest Interests of the other. , Hands work a billion times better clasped together than when clinched at each other! Pulling power at its maximum is combined strength each one who puts out his hands to pull, contributing his greatest. Only thru co-operation is the end of happiness acquired. Hand in hand with those who are able to help you, go forward. Build your ideas to greater heights by working hand in hand with ideas already evolved. Respect the humblest suggestion. It may prove to be the greatest of all! The spirit of service everywhere is to work and help, hand in hand with others.
Save your two dollar bills. They are valuable. We learned this the other day at the Belmont race track, A gentleman of color had performed a service for us, a diplomatic service, for which we owned him one dollar. We tendered him a two-dollar bill. He turned it down cold. "No sah," he said. "I wouldn't evt-n touch it. You couldn't pass a twodollar bill on any man in this crowd. They is jes naturally onlucky. o. you kin owe me one buck, but I di-n'i want no truck with no two-dollar bi'.V' We tried to slip it to several r.'! -men who were recording bets, lu ;t was no use. We saved that two-do"! v bill nine times that day, so we w : -really $18 ahead of the game, to :-e the latest approved League of Na:i jmj figuring. It Is almost a sure bet that the letter which took thirty-seven years to travel nine blocks did not contain a
bill. There Is, according to the "Star," a man In Kansas City who is 60 old he can remember when there were $3 pants. Another canard! When William Wheeler of Hempstead, Tex., offered $1 a pound for the first German captured by a Waller county boy. Charles Hawkins joined the marines. Hawkins returned heme and colected J17G.
OPPOSE PRINTER'S STRIKE.
TO RELIEVE CATARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES Persons Buffering from catarrhal deafness, or who are growing hard cfi hearing and have head noises will be glad to know that this distressing affliction can usually be success-fully treated at home by an internal medicine that in many instances has effected complete relief after otice treatments have failed. Sufferers who could scarcely hear have had thfir hearing restored to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven or eight Inches away from either ear. Therefore, If you know of someone who Is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deafness, cut out
this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means cf saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be prepared at home and Is made as follows : Secure from your druggist 1 oz. Parmint (Double Strength). Take th'.s home and add to It 'i pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tatlespconful .four times a day. Parmint Is ured In this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflam
mation and swelling In the Lustacniaa
By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sep. 19. Opposition to a general strike on October 1 in tho
book and job printing shops of the Tubes, and thus to equalize the air ciy is outlined in the draft of a state- pressure on the drum, but to corn et ment to be considered today by the 'any excess of secretions in the mid.iie board of governors of the national ear, and the results it gives are nearly printing trades unions. Arbitration or .always quick and effective, conciliation must be tried before a Ever person who has catarrh in any
strme wm be sanctioned. This, it is, form, or distressing rumbling, hissing
said. Is the opinion held by the members of the board.
sounds In their ears, should give this recipe a trlaL Adv.
HERE IS ONE THING THAT IS ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE
Rheumatism Has Never Been Cured by Liniments or Lotions, and Never Will Be.
You never knew of Rheumatism that most painful source of suffering being cured by liniments, lotions or other external applications. And you will never see anything but temporary relief afforded by such makeshifts. . But why be satisfied with temporary relief from the pangs of pain which are sure to return with increased everity, when there is permanent relief within your reach? Science has proven that Rheumatism is a disordered condition of the blood. How then can satisfactory results be expected from any treatment that does not
reach the blood, the peat of the trouble, and rid tha system of the cause of the disease? S. S. S. has for more than fifty years been giving relief to even the most aggravated and stubborn cases of Rheumatism. It cleanses the blood by routing the disease germs. The experience of other, who have taken S. S. S. will convince, you that it will promptly reach your case. You can obtain S. S. 3. at any drug store. A valuable book on Rheumatism and; Its treatment, together with expert medical advice about your own Individ- C I ual case, will be sent absolutely free. Write today to Medical Department, 250 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. i Adv.
