Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 307, 9 October 1919 — Page 6

rAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCT. 9, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Supday-, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa Seo ond Class. Mail Matter.

MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the nM for republication of all newi dlcpatchea credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. - ' Common Sense in Great Britain The application of common sense solved the railroad strike in Great Britain. A satisfactory compromise was affected, and after it had been accepted by both sides they exchanged greetings and expressed satisfaction over the outcome. The prime minister and the labor leaders expressed the hope that the same spirit of conciliation would be used to settle other problems that seem to be threatening the prosperity and happiness of the kingdom. All of which goes to show that great things can be accomplished without radical methods and the application of force and violence. The public and press were united in condemn

ing the strike which had been called in haste and without cause. There was no justification for crippling the transportation system of the country. The government on the other hand was perhaps too positive in its original stand. Both rides made concessions and the crisis was averted. A few extremists, who did not represent the solid and sensible British workers, called for a

general strike and the overthrow of the government, but the public and the millions of conservative workers decided there was nothing in the situation to warrant this radical step. They effectively checked a bolshevist movement in this direction. The common sense of the British people insisted that both sides be given a square deal and justice. They felt confident that this could be attained by a discussion of the grievances of both sides, without recourse to violence, or the overthrow of the government. Public opinion stood for the principle of justice, attained by orderly methods. j The settlement of this strike proves conclusively that the world is moving forward to a realization of the principle of the Golden Rule and that it is sick and tired of the false doctrines and destructive practices of irresponsible agitators. An application of common sense is what we need in the solution of our industrial problems. The example of the British people should be emulated here. They were convinced that the railroad men were wrong in precipitating a strike, so they mobilized their resources to overcome the transportation dificulties, succeeding admirably and proving that an intelligent democracy will not surrender to group control. And on the other hand, they were fairminded enough to see that the men had some grievances that ought to be relieved. Hence, they brought about a conciliation of interests that was satisfactory to both sides. There is no question at all that the difficulties could have been adjusted without a strike. It was passion that dictated the calling of the strike and it was a mistaken adherence to the preaching of radicals that led some of the strikers to believe that the British people would be foolish enough to overthrow the institutions which their forefathers have established in the many centuries. We need to acquire more of this spirit in the present hour. Our institutions and our government are precious inheritances, despite all the denunciation which a few radicals have heaped upon them lately. The hour is here when real Americans will demand that these attacks cease. We have an abiding faith in the flexibility of our institutions to meet conditions as they arise. Their overthrow will not solve the problems nor lead men to a happier plane of existence. Discussion of differences and their settlement in conferences is a gaod American method that has been tried and found efficacious. It far excels the soviet method and the destruction that attends bolshevism.

What Strikes Entail . The Outlook, after discussing the steel strike, summarizes the effect of interruptions of industry in the following concise statement, which is worthy of study and reflection: Whatever the specific issue in this strike may prove to be. however, one thing' is certain: At present, after five years of war, there is a shortage of things men need. There is more money than ever, but less of the things which it buys. Paralysis of industry through strikes (or any other cause) is certain to reduce the. amount of shelter, and therefore increase rent; reduce the amount of food, and therefore increase its price ; reduce the amount of all other things on which people depend for life, and thus increase the cost of living. The one thing essential now is to produce more in order that there may be more of these essential things for all. No matter what else a strike may accomplish, it will surely add to the root difficulty from which today all economic difficulties spring.

Condensed Classics of Famous Authors

Commercial Supremacy German goods are underselling British goods in the countries adjacent to Germany and in London itself. Great Britain is alarmed at this early manifestation of German enterprise. How are they doing it ?

Germany has an enormous debt to pay. She intends to pay it by manufacturing abundantly and cheaply. Evidently she is adding speed to her program. While other nations are in the throes of industrial unrest and turbulence, Germany, which effectively solved this problem months ago, is marketing goods. The profit on these sales will help her pay her indemnity and war debt. Germany has started on a program of industrial efficiency. Her workers are bending to the task. It did not take them long to see that the piffle and bombast of the Reds and the Bolshevists would lead only to one destination starvation and destruction. They soon realized the necessity of production, of work. They soon found out that no country can endure without work and that there is no truth in a program that teaches big pay with only a few hours of work. Industrial effectiveness, which spells prosperity to capital and labor, cannot be attained by a nation of industrial quitters. The man who will not work or consents to work only a few hours a day has no chance with the man who works steady. And so with nations also. The nation that quits work or paralyzes its industrial efficiency has no chance with the nation of workers. Unless the workers of this country begin to see the necessity of increased production, which won for us supremacy in the markets of the world, this nation is going to lose it. Our supremacy was not won by luck or a combination of happy circumstances, but by persistent and steady plugging at our tasks. The American workers were better and faster workers than those of Europe, were paid better wages, and were possessed of the spirit of dominate and excel. The drift toward shorter working hours and decreased production is a menace to every man engaged in industry.

DUMAS fv,,?1!6 matV?uJd. haAr,dly have written the extraordinary number of books that are credited to Alexandre Dumas. The fact was angrily brought up In the novelists lifetime, some hpstile critics pointing to an output of 60

volumes In a single year and asking how this could be justified. Dumas did employ a host of collaborators and his partiality for Jokes made his practice seem worse than It really was. On one occasion an ardent admirer ventured to remark that he had found a mistake in geography In one of the novels. "Which one?" asked Dumas. The worshipper gave the title. "Oh. the devil:" cried the novelist, "I have not read it. Let me see, who did that for me? It was the rascal Auguste. I'll fix him for that." The truth about "Dumas and Company" is involved and difficult to reach. There are novels bearing his name that the great romancer probably had little to do with. But these are not his great tales. His principal collaborator was Auguste Maquet. He was an able writer, but. as many critics have pointed out, Maquet without Dumas would hardly have been remembered today, while Dumas without Maquet would still be Dumas. Almost always, when he worked with Maquet. Dumas would 'suggesfvthe subject for a story. Then he would draw up an outline and put down chapter headings and divisions. Maquet would then till in the outline and afterwards Dumas

,, ... would rewrite the whole story, usu ally adding and altering a tremendous amount and infusing it with the e.?Q ,otnat was lacking. It was Maquet who worked with Dumas upon The Three Musketeers" and its scq.u:is.

7 'jsSSi8S

Caricature of Dumas by French Artist

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK PLEASANT DREAMS! Nothing influences our health and character qui'e so much as our daily attitude of mind and heart as we come to lay ourselves down to sleep. Show me the one who gets his eight hours of silent sleep, undisturbed, and I will point to you a human who is glad that he is alive. Pleasant dreams are always those of the right-thinking mind. No matter how hard your day may have been, no matter what the petty irritations or the big mistakes, go to your bed with a full faith and a heart untired. As you close your eyes, let them also lock from your memory every regret and every unintended act of wrong. What a wonderful time for meditation the last few moments before the soft curtain of night puts you into a lost world where every unhappy influence has faded away and a kind oblivion watches over you. You see, dreams depend largely upon yourself. But as you mediate, remember that there is to be a Dawn for you -into which you are to rise, as thru a re-birth, into a new and happy tho untried day. Sleep grandly, then, tonight so that tomorrow may be "A noonday light And truth to thee."

TWENTY YEARS AFTER BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS Condensation by Rev. R. Perry Bush, D. D. Few of us with red blood in our i parts of the city and the tumult swells veins ever lose our interest in deeds ! to a revolution. The rnob presses forof chivalric valor and adventure, and j ward to the very gates of the royal Dumas is a master in his delineation j palace, dc-manding the release of of soldiers of fortunetheir fatal ! Counsellor Broussel. who has been im-

Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON

As a result of a barbers' strike the

marksmanship, their matchless wield'

ing of sword and rapier, and their heari breadth escapes. In "Twenty Years After" he pre-

; tents nis tnree .viusKeteers some'

prisoned. Never!" cries the queen, but the gates are stormed and she yields, and Broussel is enthusiastically welcomed by the populace. Affairs are now so serious that the

! what more matured and not as rollick-! queen resolves to leave Paris. D'Artag-

ing as when we met them in their nan and Porthos effect her escape and early manhood, but just as ready to that of Mazarin, and the court is es-

cnampion the needy and unfortunate. tarnished at St. Germain; after which

Louix XIII. of France is dead. His son, the king is but 10 years of age. The mighty Richelieu is in his grave. Mazarin is cardinal, and though but a ghost of his illustrious predecessor, he

j holds almost absolute control over the

queen Anne of Austria. The conditions are opportune for a story of personal daring and bloody encounter.

the two cavaliers are sent to England with a message from Mazarin to Cromwell. They are ordered to obey an officer who proves to be Mordaunt, of whom Aramis has by letter warned them to beware. They make their way to the royalist camp at Newcastle, where Mordaunt bribes the Scotch Highlanders to desert their king and

Ohio Highway Commission Accepts Improved Roadway OXFORD. O., Oct. 9. Representatives of the State Highway Commis-

cafeteria barber shop has sprung up t were here yesterday inspecting in Philadelphia A man steps in andj'he newly paved portion of the Colershaves himself While doine so he ! in Plke. from the corporation lino tells himself all the baseball and prize-! southeast about two miles. The imfight dope and ends the operation bv ! provement, as made by J. M. Hennestipping himself a quarter. rf-' & Bro of Piqua, was accepted by the erate official?.

It is understood that all the tangles in the Patterson avenue paving question have been smoothed out, and that the state officials will at once authorize the commencement of th work. This improvement will connect with the Colerain pike.

Out in Colorado they propose a law abolishing the hip pocket. No hardship at all. Any Colorado man can carry a pint bottle in his bootleg.

WHO WANTS TO BUY AN INVALID OR A BABY? Dear Roy- In my daily rambles I came across the following sign: "We Specialize in Invalids' and Babies' Eggs." Canada will increase the pay of her soldiers to $3 a day. After a while the soldier will be able to live comfortably without an outside income.

At Hunter, N. Y., there is a combination barber and tailor shop and bowling alley bearinf the sifrn: "Have Your Coat Pressed While You Shave and Your Trousers Pressed While You Bowl."

Masonic Calendar

Friday. Oct. 10 King Solomon'3 Chapter No. 4, R. A. M. Stated Convocation.

Federal Control of Sugar is Proposed

Pittsburg man wants a divorce be-

when Charles attempts to escape, an

Mazarin is an Italian and is univer-1 engagement takes place, during which

sally hated. Paris is leagued against j D'Artagnan and Porthos take two !

vnv. luiiii.nij, aim uie Mmueis in uie , i'i'u"cis, nu luiu uui iu ue ineii ......-..,- ....... ........ ......... ..

;ioyai guard are .attacked and their I oiu menus Athos and Aramis. Mor-1 cause ms ne ?ies mm nunim urn. lieutenant Cummings is wounded. ! daunt recognizes them and is, by ' beans three timvs a day the year ' Everywhere there are forebodings and ! Cromwell, allowed to dispose of them i around. What this man reeds in his i cries of "Down with Mazarin." The as he aill, but they get away before family is not a divorce but a hired : cardinal disguises himself and inspects j he can seize them. j girl.

tne city, lie nnds the 'frondeurs The four musketeers meet and re.

sway. L.i. - , , I Fashion journals say women will

Somehow he must secure trusty sen- V, V". wear fewer clothes next winter than

Z : ;"1T Z, 7 "ithey did last summer. Some thmtrs

penile ui iiiu aim maive me attempt,

the insurrectionists in full

ants or downfall awaits him. D'Artag-

lian. thfi llfilltCinant rf rtinclrfttcnra !

, vv- uiftt.itLio, hnt TnrHonnf o t-,t,., ;K

!LeirdvdPeer Co!m e 1 to, disguise hemheB!? t0 i nt n'cwfll'se rheM

new; s aiicsmiii-f, aim is iieeu u.v me

are impossible and this is one of them. We are informed, though we don't know why, that Sexton Bros, are- undertakers at Long Branch.

capes from them by a secret passage

I and they plan to get back to France, j They engage a vessel to take them j across the Channel, but Mordaunt is i ahead of them, hiding in the cabin. ; There are five barrels of powder j aboard which he intends to exnlodo

: pftpr mnli-inc bit- cci no ir tl-, cm,n 1U

..... . .,..,.,,, ui.i vjvuiji in Linr Lilian i boat. But his diabolical plan is dis- . . . ,. . j covered; the four friends with their: . The 1axi ba?1,s frc b,:;y servants cut the small boat adrift; the1 Wk again- rhl:? doos not ; vessel blows up and Mordaunt, trying , the regular taxi drivers. j to drown Athos. is killed. j "

1 lie musketeers reach France and

WASHINGTON, Oct. r Federal control of commerce in sr.gar un'il December 31. 1(20. to prevent increased

rices to consumers, is provided in a

bill sent to the enat..1 Committee injvestigatirg the f.:gar situation by w. A. Glasgow, counsel for the food ?.dj ministration. Under the measure, import and ex- ! port embargoes could he proclaimed by the President and the -near , Equalization Board would be authorized to buy the lM'O Cuban crop. ! A license system for suear dealers i propose d and thore w ho viola i regulations of the board w ou'.d be subi jr-ft to .5,nnO fine and to years' ir.:I prisonmnt.

mob while being taken back to prison.

j Mazarin is in despair and he tells the queen that "the whole world conspires to break their bonds," and D'Artagnan is directed to find his three friends and attach them to the royal service. Aramis Abbe D'Heiblay is an ecclesiastic in love with Madame de Iongueville. He hates the cardinal and refuses. Porthos the giant living in luxury as Monsieur de Valon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds, desires above all else to .. n ....

, Athos-Monsieur ' d e la Fere-re- V formed from drink and devoted to a i .Vrn b",nthatked rettire' hfd ,a,nyTS7V7VT iTd ! -andaed uSa-rFn'retK Je e and'ltThe T fnr -nH Bw,-t u,rl I battle of Cliarenton Aramis and Athos 1 wo lor, and to against Mazarin. .,,, r.. . .

have been arrested. Athos goes to tlte

: The only features of grand open ! 'that many people don't like are thej words and music. I ! Human nature seems to be pretty! ' much the same the world over except j

Mexico. I

High School Works Up Pep for Conies F.r.thnshf rn nnd pep were worked up at a in' Mir:-; held by high :-cli -m:-

m Now refer to

Dinner Stories

! dnts in the auditorium. V." : afternoon. S-Vveral i.ew v.. -introduced short sp" i Couch Rock ami B:r.r Pin m I made. I Another p"P m -''::? will i Friday morning hen the ! lean leaves f r 11 t mi: ton.

lay ,

v e r ! 1 V we

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

STILL SEVERAL OF 'EM LEFT Toledo Blade. Another candidate for president has dropped out, leaving only the cabinet, the members of congress, the leading generals and the hardy perennial. Bill Bryan.

therefore, the musketeers make their way to Paris, where there Is great tx- . citement becau.- of phophecy that Due de Beaufort the grandson of ' Henry IV. ami tr.c- '.do! ot the popuiacs will escape from fne dungeon o; Vin- ' cennes before Whitsuntide. Beaufort hates Mazarin and uses ingenious means of ridit t.lir.f, him. Gnmaud. a

-e-rvar.t of Athos, is. set to guard him.

WATCH RUSH TO CINCINNATI Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Cincinnati in establishing schools to teach housekeeping, cooking, baking and sewing is surely appreciative of the welfare of newly wed husbands.

SENATE ALWAYS WAS UNREASONABLE Washington Star. A bureau designed to supply all the information desired by the United States senate would be even busier that the office conducted by Mr. Creel.

queen to secure their relea-e and is himself seized and a'd three are imprisoned in the pavilion of the orangery at Rouel; bii' they overcome the r.uard and seize Mazarin and bear him away to Porthos' chateau, where they make him sie-n a treaty with the Frondi.-ts, which is afterwards con-firme-d by the queen. Porthos obtains his barony and D'Artagnan is made captain of the musketeers. The queen returns to Paris. Aramis leaves for Normandy,

gue-

e at

Bragelonne. Porthos go.s back to Bracieux. D'Artagnan remains in the royal service, hoping some day to be marechal of France, saying to Madeleine, his hostess: "Give me your apartment or. the first floor: now that I am a

A Name for Him j "I think I should have named myj bov 'Flannel,' said Mr-. Binks. "Why?" asked Miss Jinks. j "Because." answered Mrs. Binks. i "he shiinks from washing." j He was taking her for a trip down the Thames. As they circled round, the old lightship which helps to ftuard the mouth of the river, she bfcamej

mo miner, it win . ; large delegation of

crompaup roo' ers.

b !ip'd foot ha i i Saturdav

d bv a

SCHOOL TO ENTERTAIN.

The district school number r:x, on the Middle boro plk- will zo an ice ci cam so.-i-il Friday - nine. Pbr ground imp: o c r.u-ins v.-ill be mado v. i'h the proceed.-.

captain in the musketeers I must, make he was asked.

TAKES ANOTHER KIND OF DRINK Louisville Courier-Journal. Buttermilk, it is asserted, makes you beautiful, but there are of course unregenerate persons who would rather feel perfectly lovely.

Europe Will Pull Through As Usual

From the Kansas City Star. SO many authorities who have professed to know the industrial and financial condition cf Europe have been given the shivers by it, and have communicated them to so many others who knew nothing of the facts, that most Americans perhaps have come to think of Europe as a continent of paupers, sitting around on the cold bricks of ruined factories, wailing for food. That was the picture Mr. Yanderlip gave us last summer, on which other returned travelers have laid similar colors from time to time. Looking upon it and getting the nightmare has taken the place of the sensations we experienced during the war when we didn't see how the Germans were to be kept out of Paris. But now comes an authority who tells us our shivers nave all been wasted. Oscar T. Crosby is president of the Inter-Allied Council on War Purchases and Finance, who ought to know what he is talking about, and we think lie does. Mr. Crosby says Europe is not ruined, either industrially or financially. The war, he points out, largely paid for itself as it went along. It has left debt, of course, but not bankruptcy. Production did not cease, as is apparent, for the huge armies were fed and equipped to the end. Actually, Mr. Crosby asserts, the war increased production. If Europe could maintain itself and keep up production in war it can do so now that war

j has ended and released millions of workers to industry, like devastation, though complete in places, is local, j France suffered heavily in the battle areas, but the loss j will be repaid by Germany which did not suffer at all so , lar as the sources of tools of production are concerned.

These assurances are relieving. Also they are convincing. The expectation that America would have to dry nurse Europe for years to come had no basis in reason or experience. Nations vilire enough to fight are virile enough to survive the results of fighting. With all its destructiveness the late war introduced Europe to little that was new in the way of scourges. Europe has been fighting on some sort of organized basis for a thousand years, and the fact that it could fight and continued to fight is the best proof that all its fighting never destroyed its powers of recuperation. America will like this picture better than the other i-nd for many reasons, but principally because it is a true picture and the other was the coloring of mere sentiment or fright. Of course, if America should insist upon feeding Europe with a spoon no doubt Europe might make a slow recovery, because it is always pleasanter to be fed that way than to have to work for a living. But countries that could fight for four years at the pace Europe was going can produce and reconstruct with equal ability when they have to. And Europe has to.

and he, with Count de Rochefort, effect his escape; and D'Artagnan and Porthos, seeking to recapture him, have an encounter in which they are taken

wn ... -vu auu rt,amia. accom panied by Madame de Lon set free and he four pledge mutual J1o 'Athos etires to his estat.

: i it uu: ..ip. .vieaii n;ie uie preparations foi insurrection are intensified and a new ally of the popular cause is . found in Abbe Scarron "the queen's invalid," who is in control of the mendicants of Paris and whose pension has. been cut off by Mazarin. Another important character is also introduced at this juncture a wounded soldier calls for a priest, and he who responds proves to be the Monk Mordaunt. a desperate character whose sole aim is to avenge the death of his mother, in which the "Three Musketeers" participated. Learning from the man to whom he ministered that he had been ' the executioner of Milady, Mordaunt ' stabs him to the heart and then makes his escape. At this time Lord de Winter uncle ' of Mordaunt comes with a letter from i Charles I. of England to Queen HenriS etta, who is an exile in France, telling of the desperate straits in which he is placed by the troops of 'Oliver Cromwell and directing her to entreat Ma- ! zarin to grant him asylum. Henrietta i goes to pleas with the cardinal, but is preceded by Mordaunt, who is an envoy of Cromwell, bearing from the Puritan leader the message that "to receive King Charles will be equal to i flagrant hostilities." The queen's petition is accordingly ; refused, and she is in great despair; but de Winter tells her there are four men who might be able to save her s husband. Of the four Athos and Araj mis are persuaded to make the venture and they leave for Boulogne

secretly, followed and spied upon by Mordaunt, leaving D'Artagnan and

Porthos in the service of Mazarin. I

But affairs grow worse in Paris. The archbishop of the city is ridiculed at court when he warns the queen not to provoke civil war, and though the

excited. "Where are we going now. Tom she cried.

"We're s;oine round the No

I

...I

GERMAN SOCIALIST SHOT.

dear," said Tom. as lie the venerable lisrhtship. "Oh. really. Tom'" she bounded surprise. "I've And is that 'is hark?"

pointed

ot

my to

un-'im.

BERLIN". Oct. !. Deputy Hugo Haa--e, !eader 0f the Independent So- ( ialist party of Germany was shot pnd wounded w hen ent rir.sr the Reichstr.g W dn sd.iy. His assailant, a native of Vienna, was arrested.

His pockets were empty, hut it was evident he had seen better day--. "Yes," he was spying to a sympathizer. "I was once the cynosure of all eves. 1 was the tatooed man in a : circus." j "And how did you lose your job?";

Mr

' an appearance. Nevertheless, still keep my room on the fifth story for me; one never knows what may happen." i Copyright, 191L. by the Post Puhlfsh- ' inar Company. CThe Boston Post). Copyright in the United Kingdom, the 'Dominions, its Colonies and dependencies. undr the copyright act. by the Pos- Publishing Co.. Boston, Mass., U S A Ail rights reserved. Published by special arrang-emerit I with the MeCiuro Newspaper Syndii cate. All rishts reserved. ; "Ramona," by Helen Hunt Jackson, as condensed by Mary Brcoks of .Gloucester, will be printed tomorrow.

"Public has cone dotty pictures," he replied sadly, won't budge."

on moving "and mine

! S Ej

Interest is being revived in a posal to make Galway, Ireland, a of call.

pro-port

Says Vinol, our Cod Liver and IronTonic,made her eat better, sleep better and feel better. ,

Sawdust is being pu to an increasing number of useful purposes.

yon kxckssive

Memories of Old Davs

l

In This Paper Ten Years Aqo Today

TRY

WILLIAMS TIlKATMl-: X ".

I

Ernie McKay, colored, was acclaimed county champion pie eater af the contest staged by the fall festival social committee.

75 Cent Bottle (32 Doses)

Merchants of the city were unanimous in declaring that the fall festival was an unqualified success.

Richmond high school won opening game of football from Greenfield. 15 to 0, and Earlham defeated Cedarville, 39 to 0.

.lust b?caus yn-i start th day wnr- ' rte-,1 and t:red. stitf Wss and arms ar.d r.iusrlfs. a;-, achirss head, burning an! bearinf? down pams in the back worn out befort- the day begins do nt think you have to stay In that condition, i Be strong-, well and vigorous, with ' no more pains from stiff joints. s-or-ir.uscles, rheumatic suffering, aching

back or kidney trouble.

If you suffe

rim

der weakness

"Mother Goose" was a real woman,

the wife of Isaac Goose, 1693.

cardinal tries to assuage his anger by j a gift of gold, he goes forth as a ieader i '"' ' of the Frondists and instructs his cur-j forerixxers op sickness ates to excite insurrection. Count de Medical authorities agree that indi

gestion ana constipation are tne xorerunners of half the ills of mankind. Don't let a mass of partly digested, decomposing food poison your whole system. When your food is being properly digested, you are free from biliousness, gas, bloating, sick headache, sour stomach, bad breath, coated tongue. Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome physic, thoroughly cleanse the bowels without griping or nausea, sweeten the stomach and invigorate the liver. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.

Rochefort commands a detachment of soldiers and Abbe Scarron, the Beggar of St. Eustache, displays a signal from the tower of St. Jaques which summons thousands to barricade the streets. Every Frondist wears a straw in his hat. Eveiy where there are cries of "Down with Mazarin" "Long live Broussel." Riot is rampant in all

with bur:i;:.g. scalding pains, or if you are In and out of bed half a dozen . times a night, you will appreciate the, rest, comfort and strengtii this treat- ! ment gives. j To prove The Williams Treatment' conquers kidney and bladder diseases. : rheumatism and all other ailments when due to excessive uric acid, no '. matter how c hronic or stubborn, if you ! have never tried The Williams Treat- j ment. we will give (32 Ioses free if; you will cut out this notice and send it with your name and address, and 10 cents to help pay postage. packing, i etc., to The Pr. D. A. Williams Com-j pany, Dept. RT05. General Postoffice i Bldg., East Hampton, Conn. Send at i once and you will receive by parcel post a regular 75c bottle. without j charge and without Incurring any obligation. Only one bottle to the same address or family. Art. I

Mrs. Grecnwald's Latter j Centra'aa. 111. 'I was run-down, could not tat or sleep, and mv lunr; p -lined me a good deal so I could hardly do my housework. Yir.ol built me ujvafter ail other medicines had failed so; now 1 cat better, sleep better and feetbetter in every way. Vir.ol is certainly, Kood for a run-down system." Mrs.' S. E. Greenwald. Such letters prove how nervous anaemic, run-down, overworked men? women and children increase their appetites, strength and endurance by takintf" Yinol. That is because it contains beefar.d cod liver peptones, iron and manganese peptonates the greatest tonicaT known. Your money back if it fails..

Talk It over with CECIL H. WALTER 301 Colonial Bldg. Phone 3233