Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 181, 8 June 1920 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
LABOR RESOLUTIONS, DEMANDING SCORES OF CHANGES, GIVEN (By Associated Press) MONTREAL., June 8. Resolutions covering political and economic conditions in the United States, and labor demands upon the administration forjes ot that country were presented by the score -when the American FederaItlon of Labor' opened its second day's Session here today. These resolutions demanded a rubllo -ownership of railroads with Democratio administration; re-affirmation of home rule for Ireland, appointment of a committee to lay foundations for an American Labor party, lifting of fthe blockade of soviet Russia, rekstabllshment of trade relations with (Russia and recognition of the soviet government, impeachment of Attorney General Palmer, condemnation of postmaster General Burleson, condemnation of industrial courts, repeal of recently enacted railroad legislation enforcing compulsory arbitration and establishment of an educational system en management for the workers. Another resolution presented by 'Abraham Lefkowltz. of the American Federation of Teachers, asks for the "democratization of the school syskems". bv giving the teachers a voice (in framing the educational policies of leach community. The resolution also liecommended that he school houses of Ithe nation be thrown open for use as (public forums for political and ecolliomlo discussions. ! The teachers federation, now organ ized three years, has 180 locals. Ask Free Speech in Pennsylvania. ' The national committee for organiz ing Iron and steel workers today pre Vented a resolution asking the federa tion to suonort the committee's fight for "free speech" in Western Pennsylvania steel towns and aid in financing a legal battle to carry cases now pending to the "United States supreme rourt. Owing to the absence of President Samuel Gompers, who left yesterday for Chicago, the convention will enact little business until Friday, when he Is expected to return. While the election does not. come up until week, opinion apparently was unanimously that Mr. Gompers will be unopposed for re-election as president of the federation for the thirty-ninth time. AGGRESSWE IS (Continued from Page One) ivnjustified prices, which are stupid jas well as unlawful, are subject now !to ample punitive laws. Those laws 'should be enforced, others if necessary, added, and the offenders both great and small should be pursued and punished, not in the headlines of the newspapers after the manner of the present attorney general but quietly thoroughly and efficiently, in the courts of the United States. Another deep-seated cause of the rise of prices, more effective In its results, although less obvious than profiteering, is the abnormal increase per capita of the circulating medium. This has doubled since the war began and if in the space of a few years the amount of the circulating medium is doubled it has a most profound effect in stimulating and advancing prices. During the war credits have been enormously inflated and there have been large additions to the currency through the federal reserve banks. Here it is possible to check the advance of prices by law. We can provide for the control or credits in such manner as to give preference to the most esential products. We are also able to reduce the amount of the circulating medium in the form of fed eral reserve bank notes, the authority having been given during the war to increase the issue of these notes from two billions to four billions. It should be one of the first acts of congress to deal with this esential point and it would have a marked effect in reducing prices by steadying them and bringing them down to a lower and more normal level. Remedy Lies in Production. The most potent remedy of all against advances in the high cost of living, however, lies in production, which cannot be reached directly by statutes. If production begins to fall and fall off. the cost of everything will be advanced by the simple force of scarcity which inevitably drives prices upward. The most essential remedy for high costs is to keep up and increase production and particularly should every effort be made to advance the productivity of the farms. There is, however, one measure which cannot be passes over, a single great law which has been enacted and. which in any period would be sufficlent, to distinguish a congress as one of high accomplishment. This is the railroad act. i For six months able committees in both houses, committees where no i party line was drawn, toiled day after , day upon this most intricate of problems. There was much serious debate! In both senate and house and then the! bill, signed by the president, hecame law. No doubt, time and experience will show that improvements in the act can be made, but in the main it is a remarkable piece of legislation and in general principles is entirely sound, and nothing could be more unfair than to criticise the present owners con--ending with the legacy of mismanagement, waste and confusion bequeathed by the government when it returned the roads only three months ago. The railroad law possesses also an importance wholly distinct from its provisions, which have been framed with extreme care. Declares National Policy This act declares a national policy and. so far as any law can do it. establishes that policy as a rule of action. The policy embodied in the bill concedes at the outset that it is of course imposible to return to the old system or lack of system in the management of railroads. They must henceforth be under thorough government supervision and also the government must have over them a large measure of control. The transportaton system of the country can no longer be suffered to continue without such supervision and control. But the policy also represents the principle that the government must not assume the ownership of the railroads. Their operation and management must be left in private ownership. The phrase "government ownership"
THE
means not only that the government shall own the railroads but. also, it is to be feared, that those who run the railroads shall own the government. General government ownership under our political system would Inevitably bring about the mastery of the government by those who operate the machinery of transportation or of any other industries which come into gov ernment possession. The rights of the general public, for whom all industries exist, would disappear under this scheme and nothing would le left to the people except the duty of paying taxes to support the roads. That is a very perilous position for a repre sentative democracy. Our government must not be dominated by any one man or any class or any selected body of men who represent a part of the people and not the whole people. Moreover, in the United States, government ownership wherever applied to an industry, whether it involves transportation or telegraphic and telephone communication, or shipbuilding or manufacturing, is a very inefficient and wasteful system, badly managed and certain to be intolerably burdensome to the tax payers. The government management during the waf, was inefficient, the railroads were wretchedly conducted and money was spent and wasted with a prodigality which nothing can defend. During the time in which the government undertook to manage the railroads they sustained despite a generous increase in freight rates a loss of over a million dollars a day and the total payments out of the treasury to support the railroads have reached the enormous sum of one and threequarters billions of dollars. There was universal dissatisfaction with the government management and it was a just dissatisfaction. The experiment failed and should not be renewed. After reviewing events in Mexico during the Wilson administration, Mr. Lodge continued: We have watched and waited long enough. It is time that this condition disgraceful to us, and ruinous to Mexico, should cease. We need a firm hand at the helm. We need a man who will think not only of the rights of the United States but of the welfare of Mexico. The Mexican people would not resent the influence or interven tion of the United States if it would only help to bring them peace under a president of their own choosing. Let the Mexicans choose as their president some strong and upright man who is friendly to the United States and determined to establish order and then let the United States give him a real and cordial support, and so strengthen and uphold him that he will be able to exterminate the bandits and put an end to the unceasing civil war which has well nigh completely ruined one of the finest and most valuable countries on the face of the earth. Armenian Question Relative to the mandate over Armenia, he said: We are anxious to help Armenia in all reasonable ways and no doubt shall do so, but to take a mandate to control, protect and govern that country would involve our sending our sons and brothers to serve and sacrifice their lives in Armenia for an indefinite time. This is a mandate which we in the senate of the United States think should not be undertaken. It is a plan to get us involved in the responsibilities of the league of nations and all the wars in which it may be engaged, without our being a member of the league. To such a proposition ine oniy answer is a plain refusal. An th pront xru in tt,,, ,.i A ! Mexico into the ..... u.wj-o imsiieu I background and turned the thoughts of all away from it, so there is at. this moment annthcr great question of our relations to the civilized world overshadows every other. When the armistice with Germany was signed, the course to be pursued was clear. It was urged by Republican senators before the armistice and immediately afterwards. That course was to make the peace with Germany at once and then take up for reasonable consideration the question of establishing such future relations with our associates in the war as would make for the future peace of the world. Prevents Peace If this had been done we could have had full peace with Germany three months after the armistice. This Mr. Wilson prevented. He went to Europe with the greatest onnortnnitv for large service to the world ever offered I a to any one man. He insisted on going' 11 himself, for he trusted no one else. we then had the confidence, the grati-1 tude and the friendship of every Eu ropean nation, which thanks to the president we possess no longer. If Mr. Wilson had said: "We came here to help you win this war in defense of civilization. The war is won. All we now insist upon is that Germany shall be put in such a position as not to be able again to threaten the peace and freedonm of mankind. Our own questions in the American hemisphere we will care for ourselves. We have interests in the Far East AS BUSHNELL
m I . I Mil -'?v5
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
There are more beautiful women attending the convention than ever before, says Bushnell. The reason is plain woman is coming into her own politically.
which we shall wish to have protected, but your own European questions you J must settle and we will accept the j settlement to which you agree. We are
not here seeking territory or to die-j thus were able to keep up a continual; be forced to give their lives in quartate what you shall do in regard to j cry for ratification. j rcls not their own at the bidding or
either territories or boundaries. Then indeed we should have been entitled to the gratitude of the world not only for our decisive services in the war but for our generous assistance in making a lasting peace. But Mr. Wilson did not do this, apparently only one aim. to
maker ot a league ot which he should who did not write letters to the news- which robbed a friendly nation and be the head. He was determined that papers or publish circulars or spend ' gave the proceeds of the robbery to there should be a league of nations millions in spreading their views; her worst enemy, and that finally we then and there and in order to nullify through powerful organs and active ! were to have in the assembly of the the powers of the senate given by the associations but who simply loved league only one vote to Great Britain's constitution of the United States he their country and thought first of the sjx. These provisions were all indecided to make the league an integral ' interests of America. The debate in tolerable. Reservations were adopted
part or ine treaty or peace witn uermany, tnus ne presented to ine senate, and intended to present, a dilem-j ma from which he believed there was no escape. In order to have peace with Germany, he meant to compel ; the senate to accept with it the league of nations. It was indeed a dit'icult situation which he thus created. Senators Stood Pat But Republican senators believed their duty to be clear before them and did not shrink from fulfilling it. Thirty-nine of them in March, 1919, signed a statement setting forth that the first draft of the league as Mr. Wilson brought it back, announcing that it must be taken just as it stood, could not be accepted by the senate in that form. The president returned to Europe with this warning before him and before the world. He admitted a few slight changes in the covenant ,. . - . . . . for the most part unimportant, and 1 some of which made the second draft ; worse than the first. He forced the! allied and associated powers to yield to his demand that the covenant of the league should be interwoven with the treaty of peace. To accomplish this he surrendered the principle of the freedom ot the seas whatever that may have been ' to Great Britain, and he made promises and concessions to France not 1 yet fulfilled which brought him thej French support. Having thus carried his point abroad he brought the treaty home and laid it before the senate. To the great mass of the American people he said: "This covenant of the league of nations will bring to the world a lasting peace." Everyone desired lasting peace and without pausing to consider or even to read the covenant, thousands upon thousnds of good people united in the de mand that the senate ratify and take ' ,ne league at once and without consideration, just as it stood. The Republicans of the senate, perceiving the dangers of the league, determined to resist Mr. Wilson's demand, even at the cost of delaying the treaty of peace with Germany. Thev felt that the one thing necessary was; to have the people understand the treaty, that they might realize what it: meant and what it threatened. So thej long debate began and it has lasted: iui muic Luciii v 'cm. .-u me uuii that portion of the people who wished an instantaneous and unqualified acSEES GOV. LOWDEN SKETCHfP AT norei. -cw.
SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,
PEACOCK ALLEY AT THE CONVENTION
ceptance of a covenant which most of' them had never read had possession in large measure of the press and other methods of obtaining publicity and ;
People Saw its Error foreign governments. , The vocal part of the community j It also appeared that our domestic j felt almost universally, as they lis-' questions, like immigration, could be i tened to each other's voices, that the , interfered with, that the interpretawhole country was with them, but; tion of the Monroe doctrine was to be they forgot the great inarticulate ! left to the decision of the league, that
He had! masses of the people who went si-i be theilently about their work and business, j
me senate spread to tnenj. They react ine speecnes, tney nsienea io ine ai guments, and, what was far more im portant. they began to read and dis cus the covenant of the league them selves, in the street, by the firesides wutfi-ever men anu women meet io-
j v iv v. iij jjmwjjvj yn au; iviT-ifia Fw ' " , fcu CU11S lull liy f Illy lidSlieu uy luc geiner. and wijich xefuscd our assent to the ; .periments which scientists are makThey began to understand the, cruel wrong of Shantung. i ing that everyone who is weak, nervloague. They began to know what it j Protects People I ous or run-down should read the inmeant. They saw it was an alliance . . SKi - ! tcrricw nHntr.d hoinw with Fnrmpr
and not a league for peace They saw j that it did not mention The Hague , conventions which we all desired to have restored as foundations for fur-; ther extensions, did nothing for the development of international law. j nothing for a world court and judicial i decisions, and nothing looking towards; an agreement as to dealing with non-' justiciable questions. These real ad- i vances toward promoting peace, these j constructive measures were all disre-! garded and the only court mentioned was pushed into an obscure corner. ! People Acainst It
iiit- peuuie u'Ln i i it i)trcei e wnii n , , , j . o ,.1 . 4i . .i it- were all firmly united in our deteran intense clearness that this al nance. . . , , .... . . , , . nnnation that the eague as submitted
iir-in a? i ' i i fell yecu e reeiiieiu:-, contained clauses which threatened the very existence of the United ' States as an independent power j threatened its sovereignty, threatened j its peace, threatened its life. The masses of the people became anion late. Public opinion steadily chanced and today the number of Americans who wmilfl he willino- to aent tl,r -.,.t o n .f v. . . : v. riittiiv tut- irauc ul iiaiioil just as the president brought it back from Kurope is negligible. The American j people will never accept that alliance! with foreign nations proposed by th president. The presvlent tne;"tirv. 1 has remained inflexible. He is dej termined to have the treaty as he i brought it liaeV or nothing and to i
that imperious demand the people will ! constitution and which are clearly nn1 reply in tones which cannot be mis- i onsti.utional in time of peace. They i understood. No man who thinks of : woul(1 tmls havf relieved the business i America first need fear the answer and the dai,y occupations of the people I The Famous Article 10. i from the burden of war legislation and Mr. Wilson said in a recent letter to at thp same time have preserved to I Senator Hitchcock: "For mv own part I ,he Unitefl States under the terms of , I am not willing to trust to the counsel I thP resolution all benefits accruing J of diplomats the working out of anv'to the United States under the provisalvation of the world from the thin,f:iori of the treaty of Versailles. This
which it has suffered." And he said 'this in behalf ot an alliance whose renresentativf s will all he Hinlnmits and politicians. They will all act in behalf of the interests of their respec j five countries and they will ha ve nothing judicial about them. Strip the
league ot every clause which involves ; : a, ine nouse aiso passed a resoiuthe action of political representatives 1 tion repealing all war legislation with in the assembly and the council and ' ,hree exceptions. The president you leave but one article in which the 've,oe(1 il- His autocratic powers must
diplomats of the league as such wili;not De disturbed. have no power. 1 Question Before People That Is the famous ArtiolP 10. Most! There the story ends. We. have
of the league covenant was prepared Dy General Smuts, of South Africa, but Article 10 was the work of the president, of the United States. It is true this article is free from diplomat?, but it rests entirely upon naked force. In that way peace is to be prepared and the nations freed from war by multiplying the opportunities for the use of force. Nation is Bound More.
Each individual nation is bound bv ' ,ne Republican party, to approve Article 10 to go to war for the protec-' OUI" course and stand by what we have tion of the territorial integrity and the , done. The rest act will fill a larger political independence of every other stage and the people will decide henation in the world et the time of sia- tween us and the president. The
nature; that is, for the protection of 'league must be discussed in every disstates some of which are not yet de-.trict and In every state and we desire termined or established, for the pro-1 to have the verdict so clearly given tection of boundaries which no man that no man who seeks to represent can define. We were to give such a, the people in the senate, in the house
guarantee and any of the countries in the league in the event of exterior aggression could have demanded our armed assistance, and our soldiers id sailors must then have gone forth at the command of foreign countries un - less we shattered all hope of world
peace by breaking a solemn moral ob- scene in-Europe, with Its wars and disligation. The Republicans of the sen-! putes, its changing governments and
ate, no matter what their future fate might be, were determined that the covenant containing that article unmodified should never be ratified. It became every day clearer to them that the alliance called a league of nations instead of being a guarantee for the world's peace, was a breeder of war and an enemy .of peace. As we studied it and a majority of senators desired to have some league if possible which should be a genuine league .ofjpeace
IND., TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1920.
CHI. we found that it dragged us not only into every dispute and every war in Kurope and in the rest of the world but that our soldiers and sailors might we were to be made participants in the outrageous disposition of Shantung which relieved us from every obliga tion under Article X. which took all ; our domestic questions completely out of the jurisdiction of the league, which once and for all placed the MnTirno Hnptrino hovnnit onv intorfpr k. ir",, o,r ri v,ct ,he l;nitt,(1 Srafp, t0'the proposed , fqualitv in voting power, for we profoundly believed that the United States must never take part in any council of the nations where her vote was not fqual to that ot any other power represented. Some of us were deeply convinced that there ought to be no league at all and that absolute safety could be obtained in no other way; others of us, more numerous, believed that the reservations I have described would protect the United i States against the perils of the cove- . by Mr. Wilson must never pass. We I were also agreed that Mr. Wilson's league with what he eallrd "interpre tative reservations?. "Or with anything those obedient to him approved, was j jus; as bad. just as me nacing as the ! l "V?.1 l" e preslueru ana nis most laitnrui sut pporters . d" oppoiiu.my to ratify the treaty ; with reservations. Twice his follow ers, obedient to his orders, rejected A Veto Without Reason The Republicans of the senate then made another effort to put an end to the state of technical war with Germany and at the same time rid the country of those measures which were adopted under the war powers of the resolution was passed by both j branches of congress and vetoed by ; the president in a message which furnished neither argument nor reason ! for tnp veto Dut w'hich it must he ad11111 "u ,m1 a P'easam toucn oi numor in its allusion to the freedom of the ' stopped Mr. Wilson's treaty and the question goes to the people. In 191fi Mr. Wilson won on the cry that "he had kept us out of war." He now demands the approval of the American people for his parly and his administration on the ground that he has kept us out of peace. We of the senate believe that we have performed a high and patriotic duty and wo ask you. representatives or in any place or any degree, can have the slightest doubt as to his amy. we maxe tne issue; we ask approbation for what we have done.; j The people will now tell us w hat they j think of Mr. Wilson's league and its; i sacrifice of America. The shifting fleeting boundaries which we are asked to guarantee, will instruct the people from day to day and we confidently Have the future and the protection of their sons and brothers and of the j country's rights in their hands. Ready for Issue. That future no man can predict but the country knows well in what spirit we Republicans will meet it. a spirit as different from that of the Presiident as day from night, ' The neople
know our policy: they know Mr. Wilson's and they will choose between them. They will tear aside the veil of words woven to blind and deceive and come down to the essential and vital point Mr. Wilstin's plan on one side, the Independence and safety of the United States on the other. To de-
termine aright this question, involving the fate and fortunes of the United States, all Republicans, all Americans, must join together and in their own way and with their own arguments do-( feat Mr. WiTson-s League as he desires it, whether amended by him or in its rristine simplicity. We must all fight side by side to keep safe and untouched the sovereignty, the independence, the welfare of the United States. No Fear of Isolation. We hear the timid cry that America will be isolated. Have no fear. The United States cannot be isolated. The .,t , , .i h " w r";:..V "I .B ..u...u.,.. j, " ""vt ' 1 " co must be done in our own way, free ly and without constraint from abroad. With no outside help since the revolution we have come to where we are today. We shall march on and not neglect our duty to the world. When i ! we were called to the defense of I freedom and civilization in 1917 we; cud not fail. e threw out great I weight into the wavering scale and we j were all the more effective, all the i stronger because we went without ' alliance and of our own free will, as we should always go to help mankind. Let us stand fast by the principles and policies of Washington and Monroe and against utterly against, those of Mr. Wilson. We must be now and ever for Americanism and nationalism. and against internationalism There! is no safety for us, no hope that we can be of service to the world, if we do otherwise. For the Future of the Country. One word more before I close, during all the tedious weeks and months of
Don't Blame Your Physician If You Are Still Weak, Nervous and Run-Down Only Recently Has Medical Science Made The Amazmg Discovery of What You Actually Need To Build Health and Strength and Even Keep Yourself Alive. NEW YORK, (Special) That lack of those recently discovered substances in our foods, the vitamines, is responsible in great measure for the break down in health of thousands of people is the opinion of many experts here. The importance of vitamines as an element absolutely necessary for health,
strength and even life itself is being ,.. i .i v,.. Health Commissioner John J. Rudolph, j M. D.. late of the New York Post-Grad-uate Medical School and Hospital and
Columbus Hospital of New York. and7enlralea iaD1ei iorm an eiptri buKa Graduate of the University of Bal- gested that it be given the distinctive
timore. Dr. Rudolph says: "It is certainly not surprising that the diets we physicians have recommend-
j ed and the tonics we prescribed haveprom my own personal use ot VITA
failed to come up to our expectations, since they, one and all, lacked a sufficient proportion of vitamines which we now know to be as essential to life as air itself. When a person falls to get enough vitamines there is a
continuous starvation process going ')SUits jt produces that no matter what on all through the system. The tis-;anyone t(,ns you i 6o not believe sues become shrunken and flabby, the there is any tonic or preparation circulation is sluggish, the blood does . whatsoever to which it can be comnot receive proper nourishment forlparf.d Not until you .have taken strengthening the bodily organs and j ITAMOX vourself and felt its efthe whole nerve force is depleted. As,.,-,. (an vou form anv jea of the
o. result you Decome generally weaKened and run-down and frequently develop all sorts of conditions without ever even suspecting the real causa of your trouble. You may be tired, nervous, depressed, worried, unable to digest your food or to sleep well at night your skin may be mottled, and your complexion sallow, pallid or lifeless. No matter what the symptoms may be, however, there is a lack of strength, energy and vitality which must be overcome before you can enjoy the buoyancy of perfect health. Nature supplies vitamines in v. ltius raw foods such as potatoes, turnips, carrots rice, milk and others but owing to methods of preparation and ordinary cooking the greater part of the vitamine substance is lost the foods reach the table robbed of one of their most vital elements. But to attempt to eat enough of the raw foods which contain viamjnes to get the full amount of nouriobment which the system requires for liealth and strength is almost a physical imtssibility. Therefore had it not been for the discovery of preparing vitamines in a concentrated easily assimilated form that would give a quick and pronounced benefit, all the i , .. -n-i 4c c tr findir,?r
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the protracted struggle to save Amer- t ica from what we conceived to be the dire perils lurking in the covenant of
the league of nations, which Mr. Wilson presented to us, party was scarcely ever mentioned nor was the tffect of our action upon the party considered. To this spirit I think our success was largely due. We made up our minds as to what our duty and our general policy ought to be and . then the only difference was as to the best way in which that duty could be erformed. 1 believe that the great party which we represent here today has made up its mind as to its attitude upon Mr. Wilson's league and all that is carried with it of danger and of menace. In making our contest before the people let us think of what the public interest, the future existence of the United States, demand without any consideration of party effect. When we put the word "gold" Into our platform in 1S96 we took from the ordinary .political point of view great risks but we went to the people confident in the ,,, tio of mi- eanco arid unn Tli i way to assure victory now is to rej irember always what Mr. Wilson and ' his party threaten, not only in the ! league, but in regard to the very foundations of our government. Let us for our part think of nothing except our cause and with that great end char before us let us behold with In difference "the lesser chances and inferior hopes meantime go pouring past." So thinking, so believing, we must win because the fight we are making is for the right. IIICI.PKI M' AMI WIFR Walter Karraud. 1093 Jrrinf leld Ave., Irvin jrton. N. J., writes: "My hark ached continuously, as did my wife's" After takine Foley Kidney Pills we were surprised with the quick results. I reenmend Foley Kidney Pills to anv one who has kidney or bladder trouble." They help rid the blood of Impurities that cause rheumatic pains, swollen, aching and stiff joints and muscles and other symptoms of kidney trouble. For sale by A. tJ. l.uktn & Co., 630 Main it. Advertisement. , their value might never have been of such practical usefulness to the human race. But once this had been accomplished and numerous tests by men, women and children in various conditions of health had plainly proved the extraordinary merit of the conname 11 ajiu.. i nus la me puonc safeguarded and made certain of always getting the pure, health-giving vitamines and not something inferior. MON three times a day with meals nd from carefully watching the patients to whom I have given it I am convinced that here indeed is a masterful triumph of medical science. Sj Dronounced and amazing are the revast difference it may make in your health, strength and appearance." NOTE: The suhject of vltamfne Tis taktn preat strides since the eminent scientist. Dr. Oaslmer Funk, of London, n a mod the substance In 1911. Osborne and Mendel at Yale Medical, and E. J. Mi't'olnm of Johns-Hopkins University perhap.? have done most Iti this rounj try. The London "Lancet." one of the leadine: and most authoritative medical I journals of the world, devotes considerable space in nearly every issue to a discussion of vitamines and their inI flu'-nce upon the sreneral health. Food ! c-xi'crt health service bureaus, life InI sMr;l,,(.r. i-ompanies. me.liral societies. I thys.T.-l:ns ami th pul.lic Knrallv ar:- givwm- mor nnn more attention to this i::iportan' suniect. The concen trated tablet form known as VITAMOV aff orils a simple easy method for quickly biiibiinir up the strength and; energy and may b taken with bencfitj by either m.-:i -r women, vouiik or old.' a tany time when the strain of over-' work or worrv or the result of improper nourishment ha..-e brought on a weakened, run-down condition. Th? chemists who hae undertaken th manufacture of VITAMON have agreed that It shall he offered at a price low enouph to be within the rea ?h of all and guarantee satisfactory results or money refunded VITAMON may now be obtained in this city from all leading druericists. such as Thistlethwaite's Prus: Stores. Quipley rrus? Stores. Fos-1-r I 'rue Store, and Paffler & Spmagel B. FULGHUM 1000 Main JAN. 1ST, 1920 ON ACCOUNTS WITH ALL SAVIN Q3
