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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Profiteers Responsible
For General Unrest,
States Labor Leader
BY EDWARD MARSHALL
NEW YORK, May I.—Are we tu
I enter upon an era of many and dis
: astrous strikes? The intimation of
a recent government report and of
certain very costly actual difficulties
of the kind indicate we are. The con
clusion of Hugh Frayne, general or
ganizer of the American Federation
! of Labor and one of the best known
j Experts in the world, is that we are
not.
“If we are to have many strikes,”
I said he somewhat cryptically, "they
I will not be of labor against capital,
out of lagalnst labor.”
There are certain details of the ex
isting- situation which Mr. Frayne
would not discuss. One of these was
the so-called “outlaw union” phase
of the labor movement as it exists
in the United States today.
“It is my feeling,” he said, “that
those matters will take care of them
selves.”
“Do you believe that the condition
in America is seriously alarming?”
I inquired. “Prophets are not lack
ing who declare that radicalism has
entered Jo deeply into the labor
movement that there is real danger
of a development out of economic
disputes into revolution.”
No Signs of Revolution
"I am not prepared to answer that
inquiry, either,” he said slowly. “I
certainly will not say that dissatis
faction with things as they are is de
creasing among American workers,
and I surely shall not say that I see
definite signs of an industrial revolu
tion or a real movement in that di
rection in the United States.
“I shall leave your question un
answered, for the present, I be
lieve. I don’t wish to be an alarm
ist and I don’t wish to say that
everything is as it should be.
“But I repeat that today most of
the strikes in the United States are
of employers rather than of em
ployes.”
"And about tne so-cailed ‘outlaw
union’ movement?” I persisted.
"I have no tendency to deny that
some of the procedure of unions
which acted independent of the au
thority of the executive officers of
their organizations have had real
provocation,” he replied. "Such pro
cedure in most instances has been
due to the failure of employers to
adjust real grievances after they
have been brought to their attention
Ly reasonable methods.
"But that is not saying that I
would encourage so-called ‘indepen
dent action’ on the part of union men.
If the labor union movement is to
accomplish for the worker the best
of which it is capable, discipline
must be maintained and the authori
ty vested in the general offices of
the unions must be respected.
“These men have been chosen for
the offices which they occupy, pre
sumably, because of special fitness
for the tasks which have been as
signed to them, and, having been so
selected, they can do nothing else
save to proceed in accordance with
the definite rules, regulations and
laws laid down for their guidance.
Public Need Not Worry
“I do not think the public need
worry about it seriously, no matter
how vital its manifestations occa
sionally may seem to be. Those in
authority in the ranks of labor will
adjust these difficulties in due time.
“I think I will reply to your query
by. stating my positive knowledge
that organized labor in America, as
a whole, is not now revolutionary,
and, I think, is unlikely to become so.
“I will not attempt to deny that
outbreaks which properly may be
called revolutionary do occur in the
nation, from time to time, but I do
not hesitate to say that investigation
of such outbreaks usually; jf nqt al
ways, has developed evidence that
they have been caused by employers
whose methods have been both un
worthy and short-sighted.
"It has been the failure of such
employers to grasp the seriousness
of the situation, and, having grasped
it, to deal with it in a business-like
manner, which has given birth to
most of that which is called radical
ism, although, when I z declare that
by no means all the trouble properly
can be charged to the worker, I must
not be misunderstood as saying that
no radicalism whatever has crept up
ward from the bottom or has been
created by irresponsibles animated by
ulterior motives.
"Often the charge of ‘radicalism’
has been brought by an employer,
however, with no thought other than
clouding of the issue so that the pub
lic, misled as te facts, may be
prejudiced against the worker.
“Charges of radicalism” have
been brought against workers who
have been fighting for the correction
of conditions furnishings real grie
vances or to prevent their employers
(Continued, on Page 2, Column 1)
from taking away various benefits
already achieved through long nad
self sacrificing effort, such as the
eight-holr day and other principals
established as the result of a long
struggle for the betterment of in
dustrial conditions.
The Peril of the Profiteer
"Again, I am not afraid of revolu
tion in the United States. America
has had her revolution.
“But if another ever shall occur it
will be due, I think rather to the at
titude of these short-sighted employ
ers and the misdemeanors, actual al
though not perhaps in the legal sence,
of the dangerous class which has
sprung up so luxuriantly in almost
all parts of the world as the result
of the War and has been given the
expressive name of “profiteers”.
They constitute, perhaps, the most
baleful influence of all today.
"In the United States the profiteers
has made the lot of the majority of
the population almost unbearable and
it is reasoable to believe that pure
Americanism, which glorifies in the
fact that it had its origin in revolt
against injustice, in due course
will revolt against this most fla
grant of all injustices if it is per
mitted to continue.
“It is my belief, indeed it is my
postive knowledge .that unchecked
profiteering is responsible for the
greater number of the strikes, which,
after all, have not been abnormally
Profiteers are not working peo
ple, they are buyers and sellers,
what labor thinks.
“The situation at the present Is
numerous.
different from any which hitherto
has existed in. this country.
Citizens Organization
“A significant illustration of this
is the fact that it has become almost
the custom for citizens to organize
themselves into groups, perhaps
loosely, perhaps very compactly, on
bot hsides. and appear before our
national legislative body or before
the legislative bodies of our states,
in the spirit of definite battle for
the legal protection of what edch
side has regarded as its rights or
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yearned for as its possible special in
terest.
“This was evidenced recently in
New Yor keity when organized ten
ants, many of them labor union mem
bers, but certainly many of them not
union members, were compelled to go
to the state capital and force the
passage of laws against rent profit
eers.
“I have heard it said that that the
chief reason for all this is that we
have elected to our legislative bodies
non-representtive men, but there is
a better interpretation of it than that.
People Are Aroused
“Does it not mean, instead, that the
people have at last bqen sufficienty
aroused so that they have become
willing to take the time and trouble
and to spend the money necesary for
the conduct of definite and well or
ganized efforts to achieve that which
is justice?
"Unquestionably it has been true
in the past that Americans have
cometimes been willing to accept in
justice rather than to take the trou
ble to cambat it. If at last the re
verse is true, then these are good
times that we live in. Otherwise they
are not. Perhaps the nation may
have gained through the fact that ex
treme offensiveness, upon the part of
these who in the past have erred less
boldly, at last has fully aroused the
people.
"?f it shal prove to be the case that
the orgies of the profiteers have so
aroused the citizens of America—and
I very definitely but not especially
include organized labor when I speak
of American citizens —that in the fu
ture they* will pay more attention
than they have paid in the past to the
administration o ftheir government
and the justice o fthe laws upon
which that government is founded,
then the movement now progressing
is truly one toward constructive de
mocrary rathei- than toward anarchy,
although the men hit by it may cal it
the after in tones as oud as they can
manage.
Pubic Datcheu Government
"It seems not improbable to me
that careful analysis of several
things now happening and glibly
characterized as anarchistic by those
opposing them would reveal them to
be the logical results of public atten
tion to the minute detail of that gov
ernment which, in the past, before
conditions became utterly intoler
able—as they recently have in certain
details—have been left to the tender
mercis of th politicians and those
whom they have sent to represent
them In the nation’s legislative
bodies.
“What makes a thing ‘revolution
ary?’ During the war, we cheerfully
accepted many things which were ex
actly that, because we recognized
their grim necessity if we effectually
were to meet war conditions.
“These and other abnormal condi
tions may have produced situations
which will in the near future require
other legislation quite as ‘revolu
tionary’ to those hit by it. In other
words it may be that we shall have
to make an effort almost as great
in order to get out of war as that
which we made in order to get into
war. The thought seems not unrea
sonable to me.
“And from our participation in the
war came some things which were
good, I think, as well as some things
which were bad. Personally I do
not look with real alarm upon the
fact - that the American workman
now regards as necessaries some of
the things which in pre-war days
he and his wife and children classed
as luxuries and unattainable.
War Demande Penalty
"It is said that every war demands
a penalty and gives a gift. Heaven
knows that this war has asked and
had its penalty. Is it not within the
bounds of possibility that it has
given to the vast majority of men
in the United States a gift—the gift
of a determination to live fuller, more
comfortable lives, and give greater
opportunities to their loved ones?
ican majority' ’would be not out of,
but in line with the American ideal;
would not be ‘radical;’ would not be
revolutionary but would be fully con
sistent.
“I believe the worker in all parts
of thd world realizes that he was the
greatest factor in the war and that
his eyes have been somewhat opened
by this realization. Understanding
that he was the greatest factor in
the winning Os the war which saved
human liberty, he feels it not unrea
sonable to demand his fair share of
that liberty, and considers that it in
cludes a higher standard of living
than in the old days was possible
not only for himself but for his fam
ily.
Nation. Will Benefit
“This nation ’as a whole will bene
fit, in the end; it is benefiting now
by this evolutionary process.
“We have a tendency, I think, to
consider too minutely the present
generation and to forget completely
the generations of the future. In
variops recent speeches I have asked
the question:
“ ‘Do you realize that fifty years
from now every man and woman now
active in every department of this
nation’s work either will have gone
on to whatever lies beyond the grave
or at least will be past the peak of
power-value?’
“It is a thing worth thinking of.
We, the workers, not more nor less,
than the employers, must remember
this, thinking of it gravely now and
then. A favorable future will come
to the nation and the race only if
we develop all men and women to
a higher competence than that
achieved by those of today. If they
are nothing more than equal to this
generation then we shall be at a
standstill and a standstill inevitably
means -retrogression.
“To go forward is the natural
thing.
"In the last analysis most of the
aspirations of organized labor today
are rather for its posterity than for
itself. It realizes that no lines must
be drawn which can hinder the nat
ural development of the people if we
are to have as good or better in the
future'.
Profit from Profiteers
“War service has aroused men to
this realization; war service ever
makes men think. Anything which
makes men think is beneficial, at
least to the degree that it accom
plishes this.
"To that extent the profiteer has
been a blessing. Ido not regret him
utterly, for with his greed he has
offended and oppressed us, and our
offense at our oppression has stirred
us to activity. He is responsible for
most of the unrest and discontent,
not only of the worker, but of the
entire nation, because he unbalanced
and disorganized the entire social
fabric.’
“There is no nook or cranny in the
whole civic or social life of this or
any of the other advanced nations
of the world to t which the baleful
influence of the profiteer has not
penetrated.
“By doing so it has threatened the
stability of some nations to the point
of wreckage, but has threatened the
stability of this one, I believe, only
to the point of stirring us out of
a lethargic tolerance into a militant
determination which in the end will
not only refuse to let the swindler
have his loot, but will get fuller,
fairer value for all genuine effort.
"I think I have plainly indicated
my opposition to the processes of the
revolutionists, but I do not hesitate
to say that American labor cannot
and xvill not cease demanding till the
cause which is responsible for justi
fiable discontent has been removed.
As to the Pnture
“Does this presage a turbulent and
unhappy future? I do not think so.
It is my belief that if it were not
true then we would see a real threat
against the well-being of the race
to come.
“If labor did not utterly revolt
against injustice/ then, I believe, it
would soon be impossible for work
ingmen to live at all, and, little as
some folk think of workingmen, the
world could not get on without
them.”
I reverted to the statements sen
sationally commented on by some
newspapers of conditions as they
have been revealed by a representa-
L “COUNT ME A FRIEND”
i ■ .Wdk ■ ■
.US''///
SIR AUCKLAND AND LADY GEDDES AS THEY ARRIVED IN THE
UNITED STATES.
NEW YORK.—Sir Auckland Geddes, the new British ambassa
dor to the United States, said when he arrived here en route to
Washington: “I hope the American people will, when they come to
know me, regard me as a friend.” He discussed the Irish question
frankly, advising Irish in all parts of the world to ‘‘stand aside and
leave the Irish in Ireland to grapple with their own political diffi
culties.”
tive of the federal bureau of labor
statistics.
“To make a sensation out of this
announcement,” Mr. Frayne declared,
“is to confess ignorance concerning
its true meaning. It says that at
a specified time 95,000 workers were
idle in the nation through strikes.
“That may seem like a large num
ber, but it is a small proportion. Our
population is 100,000,000 and we
should be encouraged, rather than
alarmed, when we find that only 95.-
000 out of 12,000,000 workers are on
strike, have stopped work through
other causes or are involved in in
dustrial disputes.
“Os the 12,000,000 workers only
5,000,000 are organized and the 95,-
000 mentioned form but 8-10 of 1
per cent of that population. In my
opinion this does not offer an excuse
for great alarm.
Striking Employers
“The prediction which follows
these statistics is that millions will
be on strike during the yeai- 1920.
I do not believe that alarming state
ments of this kind should be made
by anybody in the absence of that
positive or direct evidence which
surely does not at the present time
exist.
“Let us review the field. The
miners are now in conference with
the mine operators, and in the course
of a few weeks will reach an agree
ment which will remove the possi
bility of a serious strike in the min
ing industry. The workers in the
building trades of the country have
come to an understanding with the
employers; so have the printing
trades, the needle trades and many
others..
“These are not bad signs but good
ones. It is my belief that if there
are any serious strikes in the imme
diate future they will be caused by
the unwillingness of employers to
come to reasonable amicable under
standings with their employes.
Strikes originating thus will be of
that sort which I have said are not
of labor but of employers. That is
an idea which I wish I might get
firmly fixed in the public mind.
Radicalism of Employers
“The employer who is unwilling to
deal fairly with his men in ordei- to
avoid strikes and lockouts may prop
erly be held responsible ' for that
which comes to trouble him and the
community. If the employers refrain
from radicalism in the conduct of
their affairs in the next year it will
be marked by fewer serious strikes
than any previous year has been for
a long time.
“The American Federation of La
bor is the greatest body of organized
workers in the country and today it
stands a little more than ready to
do its share toward seeing that in
dustrial peace shall be maintained. It
asks only for the basis of justice
and equity to all concerned.
“A constructive force is growing
and coming forward with constructive
remedies for the old evils in the
ranks of organized labor in this coun
try.’ No movement having for its
object the uplift of society as a
whole is without the earnest sym
pathy of the American Federation,
which cheerfully will give its time
and money to the task of its ad
vancement.
Eabor Ready for Service
"March 12. 1917, before the nation
had gone into war, all the national
officers of the American Federation
of Labor, headed by President Gom
pers, met at Washington and passed
a resolution notifying the president
and congress that if it came to pass
that the United States should be call
ed into war, the American Federation
of Labor stood ready to render any
service in the mills, the mines, the
factories of the nation which would i
Another Royal Suggestion
DOUGHNUTS and CRULLERS
From the New Royal Cook Book
Doughnuts made
the • doughboy happy
during the war and no won
der. There is nothing more
wholesome and delightful
than doughnuts or crullers
rightly made. Their rich;
golden color and appetizing
aroma will create an appe
tite quicker than anything
else in the world.
Here are the famous dough
nut and cruller recipes
from the New Royal Cook
Book.
Doughnuts
3 tablespoons shortening
% cup sugar
legg
% cup milk
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon salt
3 cups flour
4 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
Cream shortening: add sugar
and well-beaten egg; stir in
milk; add nutmeg, salt, flour and
baking powder which have been
sifted together and enough ad
ditional flour to make dough stiff
enough to roll. Roll out on
floured board to about % Inch
thick; cut out. Fry in deep fat
hot enough to brown a piece of
bread in 60 seconds. Drain on
unglazed paper and sprinkle
with powdered sugar.
Afternoon Tea Doughnuts
2 eggs
6 tablespoons sugar
% teaspoon salt
teaspoon grated nutmeg
(i ßake with Royal and be Sure”
enable it to fight a winning battle;
if offered service in every place
where service could be useful. And
all through the period of the war it
kept its solemn pledge.
“It stands as ready now as then
to do everything it can to advance
this nation and stimulate the prog
ress of tlje world. It is as ready
now to strive earnestly toward those
victories of peace which are no less
renowned than those of war as it
was to help in any detail of the
great combat for liberty.
“The war solidified the ranks of
labor everywhere throughout the
world. To an extent it has divided
capital, for it has stimulated jeal
ousies and distrust. This reacts in
an antagonism in the newly born
labor organizations. Labor now
must use the strength of its solidity
for constructive purposes. I hope
and believe that it will do so.
“I might recount its services in
the war, but they have been re*
counted many times. Now its serv
ices in peace must be as great.
“Among those which are certain
of accomplishment, no matter how
far from it they may seem to be
at present, is not only a restoration
of public education to its old
standard of efficiency, but the rais
ing of that standard.
What Eabor Has Bone
“Organized labor was responsible
for the Smith-Hughes law creating
a federal board of industrial educa
tion and today it stands firmly for
an abatement of the scandal of low
wages which is emptying our schools
of teachers or putting on the shoul
ders of those devoted enough to
stand by their task the burden of
intolerable poverty.
“Labor never has protested over
paying its fair share of that lib
eral taxation for the public educa
tion which has made, tjiis nation a
progressive one, and now it not
only favors the most modern and
up-to-date schools, but the best
trained and best paid teachers in the
world.
“Labor well knows that in edu
cation lies the real hope of the
world and is willing to do every
thing it can to see to it that that
hope shall not be dimmed by nig
gardliness or lack of understanding.
“All life is selfish. But he who
gives the greatest value for that
which he receives is the more ad
mirable. Today and always labor
has given most and got least. This
perhaps, is changing. If so, all
will be well, for this is a land of
the majority, and labor comprises
that majority.
“And so, indirectly, I have after
all answered your big question. It
is my belief that American labor,
taken as a whole, far from being
ripe for revolution, is merely eager
for that evolution upward which the
whole world must approve.
"If it protests, through strikes or
otherwise, a sympathetic 'search for
the animating motive will reveal
the feeling, I believe, that the things
to which it makes objection are
obstacles in the way of real prog
ress "not only of labor but of the
nation as a whole.”
(Copyright, 1920, by Edward Mar
shall Syndicate, Inc.J)
Former Senator’s Will
Disposes of Estate
Valued at $7,000,000
CLARKSBURG, W. Va„ May I.
The will of Nathan Goff, former
United States senator from West
Virginia and once secretary of the
ROYAL
BAKING
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 11)20.
IMOICILMSFOII
MAY DAY STRIKE
ARE FLATJAILURE
WASHINGTON, May I.—Plans of
radical leaders for nation-wide May
day demonstrations, involving strikes
and destruction of more than a
score of federal and state officials,
fell flat, reports to the department
of justice tonight indicated.
Extra precautions taken by federal
and state authorities to block the
radicals’ widely disseminated appeal
for a “May day show of power” were
described at the department as de
cidedly successful. Publicity given
by the department to the radicals’
plans in advance also was held to
have had a large part in thwarting
disturbances.
Reports to the department men
tioned a number of strikes instituted
during the day, but in nearly every
case the reporting agent emphasized
that the walkouts were local in na
| ture and due to the regular May day
[ expiration of wage contracts.
The appeal of “show of power,”
i the cry of the radicals for a demon
-1 stration to the government in behalf
of soviet Russia also was without
i avail, the reports indicated. Speeches
and demands that the United States
resume relations with Russia were
made at meetings in several cities,
Assistant Attorney General Garvan
declared, but the net result was
negligible.
Despite the fact that there were
no reports of attempted assassination
of public officials marked by the rad
icals, it was said tonight that the
government intends to maintain its
guards over the persons threatened
for some time. Mr. Garvan pointed
out that. foiled by government
agents, the designated assassinators
might postpone their work until
later
NO MAY DAY DISORDER
REPORTED IN NEW YORK
NEW YORK, May I.—May day
came and passed without disorder,
bombs, or bloodshed in New York or
the rest of the east.
Not since the war, however, has
this city been under such heavy
guard. With the warning from At
torner General Palmer that anar
chistic demonstrations might be ex
pected here the police force of 11,006
was held ready for any emergency,
federal agents kept extremist lead
ers under surveillance, ammunition
was issued to troops at Governor’ o
Island, and preparations were made
to call out the state’s military
forces if needed. Public buildings,
railroad properties, churches and the
homes of public officials and leading
citizens were under constant guard.
While thousands of boys were
marching down Fifth avenue in a
“Loyalty parade” thirty May day
meetings were being held throughout
the city, all “covered” by federal
agents.
One open air gathering of Social
ists was dispersed in Rutgers Square
where a clash with the police occi>v
red last year. At the Labor Temple
on the East side, the New York de
fense council of the Industrial Work-'
ers of the World was allowed to hold
a meeting.
Rumors that a demonstration had
been planned to mark the departure
of Mollie Steimer, 20. who left today
lor Jefferson City, Mo., to begin a
fifteen year sentence for violation of
the espionage act, failed to material
ize. She left the city under heavy
federal guard.
15,000 NOVA SCOTIA
MINERS GO ON STRIKE
TORONTO, Ont., May I.—May day
activities in Canada were featured by
a strike of 15,000 coal miners in the
Nova Scotia district, the men quit
ting work as a protest against the
refusal of the authorities to release
the Winnipeg strike leaders on bail,
pending the hearing of their.appeal
to the higher courts.
In Winnipeg a great labor demon
stration was held as a protest against
the imprisonment of the strike lead
ers. Processions were held and
there was considerable speech mak
ing in the public squares, but
throughout the. day the crowds were
orderly in all parts of the city.
Joel Chandler Harris
Is Suggested Nominee
For N. Y. Hall of Fame
NEW YORK, May I.—The names
of Mark Twain, Grover Cleveland
and Edward Everett Hale were in
cluded in the first list of nominees
for the Hall of Fame at New York
university to receive the approval
of the university senate.
Other nominees announced todaj
were Philip Francis Thomas, Bor
den Parker Bowne, Carl Schurz. Joel
(’’handler Harris, Francis Marlon
Crawford, Charles A. Dana, Thomas
Bailey Aldrich, Daniel Great Mitch
ell, Henry Charles Lee, Edmund
Clarence Stedman. Bronson Howard.
Charles Ellizitt Norton, Richardson
Watson Gilder. Augustus Saint-
Gaudens, Charles Follen McKin, John
Quincy Adams Ward and Winslow
Homer.
Ten more nominees will be an
nounced* next week. Final election
will be made by one hundred elec
tors.
navy, filed with probate today, dis
poses of an estate estimated at $7,-
000,000.
Immediate members of the family
are benefitted in the disposition.
2 tablespoons shortening
6 tablespoons milk
2 cups flour
3 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
Beat eggs until very light; add
sugar, salt, nutmeg and melted
shortening; add milk, and flour
and baking powder which have
been sifted' together; mix well.
Drop by teaspoons into deep
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Drain well on unglazed paper
and sprinkle lightly with pow
dered sugar.
. Crullers
4 tablespoons shortening
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
3 cups flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
% teaspoon salt
3 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
cup milk
Cream shortening; add sugar
gradually and beaten eggs; sift
together flour, cinnamon, salt
and baking powder; add one
half and mix well; add milk and
remainder of dry ingredients to
make soft dough. Roll out on
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Fry in deep hot fat. Drain and
roll in powdered sugar.
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New York City
TENSE PRESSURE
OH HER HEAD
“My Sides, Back and Head
Pained Me Just All the
• Time,” Says Alabama
Lady, Who Took Car
dui and Got Well
Uniontown, Ala.—“ After the birth
of my baby, I came near dying,
writes Mrs. Maude Felts, of Union
town. “I was in an awful condi
tion. ... It just looked like I
would die.
"I couldn’t bear anyone to even
touch me, I was so sore, not even
to turn me in bed. My sides, back
and head all pained me, just all the
time.
“We had the doctor every day and
he did everything he knew how, it
looked like. Yet I lay there suf
fering such intense pains as seems
I can’t describe.
"Finally, I said to my hiisband, let
us try Cardui, • . . He went for it
at once, and before I had taken the
first bottle the . . . came back,
the soreness began to go away, and
I began to mend. The intense pres
sure seemed all at once to leave
my head, and before long I was up.
“I took three bottles and was well •
and strong and able to do my work.
I believed Cardui saved my life.
... I cannot praise it enough for
what it did for me.”
If you are a woman, and need
a tonic —
Take Cardui, the Woman’s Tonic.
(Advt.)
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Rheumatism
A Home Cure Given By
One Who Had It
In the spring of 1893 I was attacked
by Muscular and Inflammatory Rheu
matism. I suffered as only those who
have it know, for over three years. I
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after doctor, but such relief as I re
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have given it to a number who were
terribly afflicted and even bedridden
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cure In every case.
I want every sufferer from any form
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velous healing power. Don’t send a
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After you have used it and it has
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may send the price of i* one dollar, but
understand, I do not want your money
unless you are perfectly satisfied to
send it. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer
any longer when positive relief is thus
offered you free? Don’t delay. Write
today.
Mark H. Jackson, No. 243-F Gurney
Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above
statement true.— (Advt.)
H MERTOUS DISORDERS
H yotf suffer with Epilcpiy,
Spasm* or Nervous Disorder*,
I no matter how bad, write to-day for * large
I bottle of W. H. Peeke’* Treatment, ABSQ
| W. H. Peeke, 9, York.