The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, June 01, 1920, Page 16, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    (WP1 ww
The Commoner
1
VOL. 20, NO. G
Rupture Kills
7,000 Annually
Boron thousand persons each year aro laid
ntfny tlto burial certificate being marked
Rupluro." Why? Uociuibo the unfortunate
ones lind neglected thomoolves or had boon
inorcly taklncrcaroof tUonlgn (strolling) of the
affliction and paying no attention to tho causo.
What tiro you doing? Aro you neglecting
yourself by wearing a truss, npplJnnco, or
whatever ntimo you cIjooho to call it? At best,
tho truno is only a makeshift a faloo prop
against u collupningvall and cannot bo ex
pected to act asinoro than a more mechanical
Hupport. Tho binding presifluro rotards blood
circulation, thud robbing tho weakened
muflolod of tliat -which they need most
uourlnlnnont.
Hut. sclcnco lias found army, and evory trans
tmfforor in the laud in invitod to mako a FREE
test right in tho privacy of tholr own homo.
Tho PLAPAO mothod is unquontlonably tho
moat nciontillc, logical and nuccosaful solf
treatment for rupture tho world has over
known.
The PLAPAOPAD trhen ndhcring closely
to tho body cannot possibly allp or shift out
of place, therefore, cannot chafo or pinch.
Bof t a velvet easy to apply inexpensive. To
bo used whilst you work and whilst you aloep.
No strap, buckles or springs attached.
Learn how to closo tho hernial open
ing an nature intondod so tho rupturo
CAN'T como down. Sond your namo to
day to PliAPAO CO., Block 4040, St.
liouia. Mo., for FREE trial, Plapao and
tho information necessary,
WILL RADIUM AT LAST
OPEN THE DOOR OF
THE GREAT UNKNOWN?
If -you are flick and want to Get Well
and Keep Well, write for literature
that tolls How and Why this almost
unknown and wonderful new element
brings relief to so many sufferers
from Rheumatism, Sciatica, Gout,
Neuritis, Neuralgia, Nervous Prostra
tion, High Blood Pressure and diseases
of who stomach. Heart, Lungs, Liver. Kid
neys and other ailments. You wear tho
Degnen Rudlo-Actlve Solar Pad day and
ight, receiving tho Radio-Actlvo Rays
continuously into your system, caus
ing o health' circulation, overcoming
slUKKlshness, throwing: off fniDurltlej
and restoring tho tissues and .nerves!
,vo a uoriuui conmuon anu vne next
thing you know you are getting well.
Sold on a test proposition. You aro
thoroughly satisfied it is helping you
before the appliance is ypurs Noth
ing to do but wear it. No trouble or
cxponse. and the most wonderful fact
about the appliance is that It is sold
so reasonably that It is within tho
roach of all, both rich and poor.-
No matter how bad your ailment, or
how long standing, wo will be pleased
to have you try it at our risk. For
full information write toduy not to
morrow. Radium Appliance Co., DflG
Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
$
FREE TO
ASTHMA SUFFERERS
A New Home Method That Anyoc Cn
Use Without D In co in fort or
Ijonh of Time.
We have a now method that controls
.Asthma, and wo want you to try U at
our expenso. No matter whothcr your
' caso is of long standing or recent de
velopment, whether It is present as
Hay Fever or chronic Asthma, you
should sond for a free trial of our
mothod. No matter in what climate
you live, no matter what, vnni n nt.
occupation, if you aro troubled with,
asthma, our mothod should relievo you
promptly.
Wo especially want to sond It to
those apparently hopeless cases, where
,all forms of inhalers, douches, opium
preparations, fumes, "patent smokes,"
etc., have failed. Wo want to show
evoryone at our expense, that this now
method is designed to end all difficult
breathing, all wheezing,-and all thoso
terrible paroxysms at once.
This free offer is too Important to
neglect a single day. Write now and
begin the method at once. Send no
Inonoy. Simply mail coupon below, Do
It Today,
Fitrcn TRiAir coupon
FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room
47f. K
Niagaia and Hudson Streets, Buffalo,
N.T. .S-
,Send free trJal of your jnqthod to:
$'
2.75 Beer and Even
Less Intoxicates
A Washington special to tho Chica
go Tribune, under dato of May 2iJ,
says: Dr. Harvey W. Wiloy, tho food
oxport, today said that 2.7 G beer was
intoxicating and that ho had seen
German students made drunk from a
beer with oven smallor alcoholic con
tent. Tho opinion was obtained by
Rov. Canon Chase, of Brooklyn,
chairman of tho board, of directors of
tho International Reform Bureau. It
was mailed to Governor Smith of
Now York.
Tho statement said in part:
"An intoxicating liquor Is one
which when ingested into tho stom
ach and absorbed into tho blood
creates a toxic effect on any or all
of tho body organs and functions.
That effect may bo unnoticed by tho
subject or those who surround him,
or it may be of such a character as
to render him at once evidently un
balanced in somo' way to those who
might happen to observe him.
"Visible intoxication is not essen
tial to intoxication.
"There are four well markod
stages of intoxication or alcoholic
pbison. Tho first stage marks the be
ginning of tho toxic effect. If tho
quantity of alcohol is small even the
subject may not be conscious of any
toxic effect. It may, however, be
measured by tho delicate methods
now in uso of determining the
changes produced in the brain and
the memory and in the nerve sensibil
ity of the subject. Thosp determi
nations slfow that even in very small
quantities alcohol produces a distinct
ly toxic effect. The functions of the
intellect are at once harmfully af
focted and the sensibility of the
nerves of tho eye and the so-called
knee jerks nerves are to a measurable
dogreo sensibly affected.
"The second stage of alcoholic In
toxication is one in which the sub
ject, if he is at all attentive. to such
matters, feels that his condition is
Unusual. Thoro is a certain feeling
of warmth wholly illusory and due to
a partial paralysis of the peripheral
nerves, which allows a greater Quan
tity of blood in tho capillaries. There
is also a certain feeling of elation
and an apparent' freodom of speech
due to a specific influence of the co
ordinating organs of the brain. There
is at the samo time a great depresr
slon of intellectual ncuteness.- This
condition may or anay not be ob
served by the bystandors just in pro
portion as th.o subject has greater or
loss control of his actions.
"Tho third state of alcoholic intoxi
cation is one in which tho, ordinary
symptoms of drunkenness are mani
fested. These symptoms varv with
tho individuality of tho victim. Ho
may become taciturn and morose, m
he may be boisterous and voluble, or
ovon hilarious. His control of loco
motion and other muscular move
ments aro more or loss disturbed and
ho may display an acuto locomotor
ataxia. All his companions know
that he is drunk.
RULING IN FLOUR CASE
"There is a fourth state of alco
holic intoxication in which tlie victim
sinks into entire insonsiblity. His
face and breathing remind one ot a
person suffering from apoplexy and
in extreme case's death supervenes.
"The Supremo Court in tho Blan
chard flour caso, decided in Septem
ber, 1914, that any amount of poison
that may be dangerous to children
may bo prohibited even though harm
less to the average adult. Therefore,
in defining 'intoxication tho question
is not what' intoxicates tho averago
tify when "delicious and re- 1
freshing" mean the most. 1
The Coca-Cola Company i
ATLANTA. GA. I
person but what may intoxicate tho
weakest and youngest." '
LATEST FIGURES ON, WORLD
CURRENCY, NATIONAL DEBTS
AND INTEREST CHARGES
In an address before the Sales
managers' Club of New York on April
30, Mr. 6. P. Austin, statistician of
the National City Bank of New York,
presented the latest figures of'world
currenqy, national debts, interest
charges, and other governmental ex
penditures,' showing that tfre paper
money of the world (exclusive of that
issued by the Bolsheviki) had in
creased from about $7,000,000,000 at
tho beginning of the war to $40,000,
000,000 at tho date of the armistice,
and $56,000,000,000 at the present
time; also that the nrttiqnal debts of
tho world had grown from $40,000,
000,000 in 1913 to $265,000,000,000
in 1920, while the -world credits, an
other form of inflation, had also
enormously increased. Meantime the
world's stock of gold available for
currency has increased but about $2.
000,000,000. Tho ratio of gold to paper currency
of tho world, he said. whtMi 0,wi i-
1913 at about 70 per cent, was at the
uiubo oi uie war is per cent, and at
tho present time approximately 12
per cent. Especially startling was
the fact that while the increase in
world-paper had-been $33,000,000,
000, during the war period; the in
crease 'since tho close of hostilities
had peen $16,000,000,000', or about
one-half as much' in the eighteen
months of after-war peace as in the
fifty-one months of actual war.
The world budgets are now ap
proximately five times as much as be
fore the war and the annual interest
charges on world national debts now
over $9,000,000,000 per annum as
against about' $1,750,000,000 im
mediately preceding the war.
As to the effect of these conditions
upon world prices, he declined to ex
press his own opinion althp ho had
one-- saying that tho duty of tho
statistician is' to present figures and
leave to others the expression of con
clusions theroon. He quoted, how
ever, liberally from many distin
guished experts who, he said, had
name-1 inflation as the "most con
spicuous" of the causes, and especial
ly quoted from the present British
Ambassador to the United States, Sir
Auckland Qpddes; who, in a recent
address to tho British Board of Trade,
of which he was then President, ex-
prest the belief that prices wouin
show little recession until deflation
could bo accomplished, and that even
after deflation they would still re
main materially higher than beforo
tho war. Literary pigest.
." .. .." .,.. . .
. 1)UmfaVlkJb4.inu-Z&l!tJm WW akl'A.-VAj'CtfWMWt iicjL
' -.tetJtefcafak&Ma.nA,
Stbsu.,-