The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1922, Page 4

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b Tyfarquette Bldg. i, NEW YORK yaa oer ereuaate _ PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE eee BISMARUA Riess f Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matter. k - Editor GEORGE D. MANN : Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY HICAGO . S - -DETROIT | Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH ° - -: Fifth Ave. Bldg. Be MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or ’ wise credited in this paper and also the local news published _ herein. “All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are algo reserved. .. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION “ SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.. $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)...... +. 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 2 (Established 1873) ee GONE FOREVER wasted each year in America through preventable evapora- tion in storage tanks. So announces Johns-Manville engi- neers, working with the U. S. Bueau of Mines. It seems like a big waste. Tt is. ut America is a land of waste. The old saying, that the food we throw into our garbage pails would feed Europe, is not far from corréct. ree “However, jike other people,.most of us are resonably eco- nomical. ‘We turn the carpet to distribute bleaching by the sunlight, instead of letting the fading concentrate on one end. We make the remains of the roast into. hash. We mend and patch. And, too, most of us save an attic full of stuff that “might come in handy”—but never does. people. The job is up to inventors and engineering experts. ©>A ton of ceal leaves the mine with 29,000,000 British thermal (heat) units locked up in it. But only 1,014,000 of thése heat units are actually converted into mechanical en- ergy. The rest is wasted—lost in transit, up the chimney oxzcarried away by the ashman. . | ;- You could fry an egg in a twinkling by holding the “spi- der” over the top of the average chimney. No one has ever been able to figure out how to save that wasted heat. Event- uafly scme one will. The solution may be in putting a hot water gank a few inches above the chimney top, or water éfes cross-wise within the chimney. 5 Slag in the steel industry used to be tasted, plied up in ‘small mountains. Now it is ground up and used as surfac- ing for bricks. ‘ime was, in the, oil country, in the days of kerosene oil lamps, when men around refineries washed their overalls in stub of gasoline and then dumped the “gas” out. The fel- lows who invented gasoline ‘engines and autos stopped that of waste by finding a use for gasoline. © © ° republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- | Enough gasoline to run a Ford car 1,440;000,000 ‘miles is| ‘The big ‘waste in“Amerféa cannot be prevented -by the: “ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1922 | EDITORIAL REVIEW || jes ica em, Comments reproduced in thie column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir. order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, ‘ WHEN HEROBS ARE | FORGOTTEN | { An ex-service man who had just | | returned from attending the funer- jal of a buddy with whom he fought {in France {s talking: “I wish you) ‘would. say something that needs saying. We have just buried a boy | who died ag the reuslt of his serv-| lice for his country. We had a sol-| dier and carried the flag. Several hundred’ people stood there as we | jpassed. Of all that number not! more than fifteen uncovered, One} little boy, who was helping-a man} do some work, uncovered and stood | atttention as the flag and the body | |or a soldier passed. The man kept} right on working. Tell me why} | people refuse to honor the flag. | Tell me why, when a boy who had |been out in front of those people | | defending all they stand for af! i citizens and Americans, tell me! | why that boy had given his life for! ‘those who stood there, why didn’t they offer his body the simple re-|_ jspect that belonged of right to ihim? What’s the matter with peo- | | ple here?” i | ‘That’s the way the ex-service, jman.in uniform coming from the} grave of his buddy talked to the| jeditor. There wasn’t much to say ito him. He might have been as-| ‘ gured that it’ was carelessness —/ \but would that have made the sit- uation better? It might have been argued that they do respect the; flag as the symbol, of patriotism | and nationality. That wouldn’t, 'have answered his questions. It, | wouldn’t have ‘salved-the hurt he felt—for this man was hurt and! cutraged in his feelings. He wasn't | angry. He was hurt at the appar- ert indifference of those who a few; months before had stood with tears | in their e¥es and promises on their tongues to see the~ boys march | away in the grandeur of a splendid purpose. That wouldn't have ex- plained the apparent indifference with which they stood without sign | to see him carried to his grave!/ beneath the flag: There wag noth- ing to tell him,''no answer. Let those who refuse to honor the flag | and to uncover as a dead soldier! goes by to his grave, let those an-| swer. Why?—Rock Island Argus. | COMMERCIAL SPLEEN For many years'St. Louis and Kansas City have been bitter com-| : mercial rivals, but on Sept. 29 they | » BEGIN HERE TODAY will “bury the hatchet.”. Mayor} , It was | Kiel of St. Louis and Mayor Crom- well of Kansas City have been! named to serve as the official dig- gers and the hatchet, suitably en- shrouded, will be qonsigned to the| hereafter with slow music and! solmenly spoken. words. .Thix cere- mony. is planned ag a féeatute of a big “get together” in St. Louis in ational thieves who first stole. Jewel, from the COUNTESS of ESTHONIA. For. love of the new beggared. coun: tess, JAMES, DARRAGH,, souglit the gems and traced: it. to the “disreputable”, “hotel” “in the Adirondacks owned. ROBERT W CHAMBERS ©1022 GEORGE HDORAN COMPANY QUINTANA and his band of ant that priceless gem, the Flaming “The profits of many big;corporations today are largely in! sueh economies as these. : ; . ' More opportunities for bright minds, in the stopping of weste, than any other field. p which =businessmen of both big Missourj markets’ will participate. The next week, very likely, travel- ing men from the two cities will/ by : MIKE. CLINCH. Under the name of HAL ‘SMITH, Darragh works at the Clinch hotel, where, he mects Clinch’s step-daughter, the beau- : FOREIGN DEBTS Bankers, 10,000 of them, at their convention in New, York, heard pleas for cancellation of debts owed to us by. Europe. Many were swept off their feet by the oratory. They join the “forgive” brigade. Those debts represent money raised by selling Liberty Bonds. When the bonds come due, they must be redeemed— aither by the European borrowers or American taxpayers. Very easy, to give away other people’s money. There vs no talk at the bankers’ convention, about banks furnish- ing the funds to cancel Europe’s indebtedness to us, or of ¥giving the private debts owed to some banks by Europe. : BETEL «Drug addicts in the orient chew the betel nut, which réikes.their teeth ebony-black. When the teeth decay and tall out they are replaced by artificial chewers. These false teéth dre manufactured black. Otherwise, the betel nut chewers spurn them. j:/)}*¥ ; i “The instinct of self-destruction is; highly developed in ~ man. It’s a queer brain crease, when the man who is slowly destroving himself takes pride in the job, as in the case of work as hard as ever to. land busi- ness in mutual territories, but chances are. many ,of them will, change methods, ruthlessness will ‘ve thrown into the discard and there will: be fewer manifestations | of the “rival city” grudge. At; least, this seems to be the hope of! those ‘behind the: “get together.” tiful EVE STRAYER, the one {great i fluence for good in. the ifireer of Clinch, Then Quintana! and_ his gang dppeared in the vicinity and both ‘Clinch’ and’: Darragh knew they would stop, at nothing to regain the loot filehed from the royal casket. + The idea is novel and it is not at! blued hte all bad. That-competition is the| CHAPTER 1 life of trade is universally admit-; | ted, but there are different brands of competition. The experienced and successful salesman does not call on his trade with a hammer in, his hand; if he has anything to say about his competitor it is with-, out a show of feeling and compli-| mentary more often than other- wise. He knows from careful study ot var eun ern ee for of the, game that it militates| years had happened, Quintana had against his own chances to “man- | found him—Quintana, after all these handle” a rival ‘and that abusive) years, had discovered the identity | tactics cannot be employed with: and dwelling -place of the obscure out overstepping the bounds of) American soldier who had robbed fairness—a thing any customer | him in the washroom of a Paris will resent. | cafe, And Quintana was now in, Ain- But all salesmen are not.so dis-| erica, here in this very wilderness, (Mike -Clinch regarded the jewels taken from Jose Quintana as legiti- mate loot acquired in war. sj He was prepared to kill anybody who attempted to take the gems from him. At the very possibility his ruling passioW blazed—his mania to make the betel nut:fiend and the hard drinker. No animal except man voluntarily destroys itself. : sah Se UNUSUAL Louie Flores, that Coney Island child born with 12 teeth, attracts attention merely because he’s an exception. Just as:much attention would go to a dhild born with no teeth, if | 12'teeth at birth were the rule. . . =: Human existence is rather monotonous, decidedly mechan- ical. And oh how the people delight in an exception, like Leuie Flores, that bursts the chains that bind us. “Mankind is in eternal revolt against its chains. That's! i why a cure-all easily gets an audience, no matter how ridic- | ulous. f GAMBLING creet, nor so successful. They “knock” the rival town and they “knock” the rival house, and wher- ever they go they make the atmos- phere’ ‘disagreeable. Customers hate to see them come around and they hurt business for, all concern- ed. It would be well if all rival) cities would bury the commercial hatchett and if all rival houses in the same cities would do likewise. More goods would be sold. Noth- | ing is, gained in business by “spleen.” —New Orleans Picayune. WHY NOT WHISTLE IT? It’s so early in the campaign that | there’s plenty of time for candi-| dates to take advantage of that ¥ special clasg in whistling in Bosotn. -In September 21,775,038 shares of stock: changed hands | Whistling, it is declared, will im-| on the New York Stock Exchange. ‘This was exceeded in| oh b Séptember of only three previgus years, 1919, 1916 and 1906. | taadtdaten comet oe culty, inae The stock exchange is nearly twice as active as a year ago. | Sreeches need improvement. “::Nine-tenths of the boys who are playing the present bull ,, BY 2!! means a whistling course | e b , if it will enable candidates to say | market will lose out, because they wil] not be wise enough | something that means something z isfied with his winnings. He reaches farther and farther for labout. A little plain speech would | more fruit, until he falls over the cliff. |So'a long way to help the voter find = i and what they will do if elected. | ‘ 3 Anyhow, whistling wouldn’t hurt ~-President Harding, says the, New York Journal of.Com- iZ ‘i , merce, plans so that “the nation will be given a year’: - | important question from the oppo» » PI n given a year’s free sition by whistling a few tuneful m Ss “4 S | bars, it would be more extertainin: A vacation in law-making would be a good thing. Fewer and just as instructive as a ten ni ; Americans have a national mania for mak- | ly ought to be set to music, or ver- ing rules and regulations. Most problems will solve them-|221 twisting of profiteers and tax s | bit. Hot air means just as much it’s no longer needed. j When transformed into sound .by t§ quit before the tide turns. A stock gambler is rarely sat-| about the subject they are talking | Ee out what the candidates stand for | LAWS any. If a candidate answered an dom from congressional legislation.” | iew laws, more attention to enforcement of old ones, should | high-minded platitudes, which real- be the program: . ; : | dodgers, whi i a selves if left alone. Usually, by thetime a law‘is putthrough, Sor ae ate BUTT Met 8 ‘puckered lips as by ‘vocal chords, SPs TRE IOI a FEET : | It’s the candidate’s turn to whis- Dr. Charles Cross of San Francisco tells a medical con- ne thevoten aera rae theta vention that a painful ailment known as “automobile foot” cast their ballots. t igeraued by enotorists Keening the rect on the accelerator. s starts a disease area, or lesion, at the second toe. ives i i A few more centuries of wearing shoes will eliminate toes, ' ativen inva shat Tittle buy made make people web-footed. Nature eliminates that which is|ftom bamboo. net used because no longer, needed. Even the brain must be exercised to ward off intellectual paralysis. In Papua, the unmarried woman | Titian, the gr)eat Italian artist, [died of the plague at the age of 99, acking ‘the man who had despoiled im. Clinch, in his shirt-sleeves, carry- ing a rifle, came out on the log ver- anda and sat down to think it over. He began to realize that he was likely to have trouble with a man cold-blooded and as dogged as him- self. Nor did he doubt that those with Quintana were desperate men. On whom could’ he count? On no- body unless he paid their hire. Noné among the lawless men who haunted his backwoods “hotel” at Star Pénd would lift a finger to help him. Al- most any among them would have tobbed him—murdered him, probably —if it were known that jewels we hidden in the house. He cpuld not, trust Jake Kloon; Leverett was as treacherous as only a born coward can be; Sid Honey, Harvey Chase, > Bloomers,’ Byron Hastings—he knew them all too well to trust them—a’ sullen, ,unscrupn- lous pack, partly cowardly, always fierce—as are any creaturgs that live furtively, feed only: by their wits, and slink \through life just outside the frontiers of law. | And yet, one of this gang had]: stood by him—Hal Smith—the may he himself had been about to slay. Clinch got up from: the bench | where he had been sitting and walked down to the pond where’ Hal \ Smith sat cleaning trout. “Hal,” he said, “I’ve been figuring some. Quintana don’t dare call in the constables. I can’t afford tof Quintana and I've got to settle this on our own,” ' Smith slit open ‘a.ten-inch trout, stripped it, flung the entrails out in into the pond, soused: the.-fish water, and threw it into a milk pa “Whose jewels were they in tl beginning?” he inquired. carelessly. “How do I know?” “If you ever found out—” \ “{ don’t want to. I got them in the war, anyway. And it don’t malé no difference how I got ’em; going to be a Indy if 1 go to the chair for it. So that’s that.” H Smith slit another trout, gutted it, | flung away the viscera but laid back the ‘roe. 4 : “Shame.to take them in October,’ he ‘remarked, “but people must eat.’ “Shame’s’ mé,” nodded Clinch; “I Aion’t want to kill no one, but Eve she’s gotta be a lady and ride in her own ‘automobile with the proudest’ “Does Eve’ know, about the wels 2) uaa ‘ |! Clinch’s pale eyes, which had b. roving over the wooded shores of Star! Pond, reverted to Smith “Vd cut my throat befér her,” he gaid> softly. “She wouldn't stand for it?” “Hal, when you said‘to me, ‘Eve’s a lady, by God!’ you swallered the hull pie. That's the answer. 4 lady don’t stand for what you and I, don’t bother’ about.” ‘ “Supose ~she . learns that youd robbed the man whe robbed some- body else of these jewels.” '-Clinch’s pale eyes were fixed on him: “Only you and me know,” he said in his pleasant voice. I'd tell | : ie VAMPED | “You think I’d talk, Hal?” Smith looked up into the light- colored eyes. The pupils were pin points. Then he went on cleaning fish. “Hal?” “What?” “If they get me—but no matter; they ain’t a-going to get me.” “Were you going to tell me'where those jewels are hidden, Mike?” in- quired the. young man, still busy with his fish, He did not look around when he spoke. Clinch’s murder- ous gaze was fastened on the back of his head. “Don’t go, to gettin’ too damn nosey, Hal,” he said in his always agreeable voice. Smith soused all the fish in water again: “You’d better tell somebody if you go gunning for Quintana.” “Did I ask your advice?” “You did) not,” said the man, smiling. “All right. Mind your business.” Smith got up from ‘the water's edge with his pan: of trout: “That’s what I shall do, he said, laughing. your private wat; it’s no button off my pants if Quintana gets you.” He went away toward the ice- house with the trout. Eve Strayer, doing chamber work, watched the young man from an upper ‘room. The girl’s) instinct, was, to like Smith—but that very — instinct aroused her distrust. What was a mah of his ‘breeding and education doing at Clinch’s dump? Why was yourg Mike,” ‘Quintana knows. His knows.” Clinch’s smile was terrifying. “I guess she ain’t never,likely to know nothing, Hal.” “What. do | Mike?” “Still hunt.” “For. Quintana?” / “I might mistake him for a deer. Them accidents is likely, too.” “If “Quintana catches. you. it will go hard with you, Mike.” “Sure. I know.” “He'll torture you to! make you talket K i gang you purpose to do, , RAR ne | EVERETT TRUE [COMS VP=IN FRONT HERE, £ he content to hang around and do chores? A‘man of his, type who has gone crooked enough. to’ stick up g tourist in an automobile nour- ishes higher—though probably per- verted—ambitions than a dollar a day and board. She heard. Clinch’s light ‘step on the uncarpeted stair; went on mak- ing up Smith’s bed; and smiled as her stepfather came-into the room, still carrying his rifle. He had something else in his hand, too—a flat, thin packet. wrapped in heavy paper and scaled all» over with black wax. “BY CONDO | WANT iTo DiSCusS THE SUBIESCT OF WINs IDow: DISPLAY. Wit ~ou ! — PD LOOK AT THESG CANNED: Soops And} BREAKEAST Foops! THEN'VE BEEN On DiSe {PLay SO LONG YOu Can jNAMes! WHERE rel y wx HARDLY READ THE THe SUN HASN'T FADED THEM OUT, THE FUGS HAve FINISHED 6 JoBs "POOR TRADE” — 8 e Get A HEAD= |ACHG Once In A WHILS Wet AND NOU BELLYACHE ABOUT I) % y Joa Ry 0G (Li !Only a year. Well, I aint’ cared none for nobody since—only you, “| girlie.” He touched the packet with his| forefinger: “If I step out, that’s yours. But I ain’t a-going to step out. Put it he said, “I want you should do a little errand for.me this morning. Ht you're spry .it won't take long—time to go there and get back to help with noon dinner.” | “Very well, dad,” “Go git your pants on, girlie,” | “You want me to go into woods?” |.“ want you to go to the hole in ithe rocks under Star Peak and lay | this packet in the hootch cache.” | She nodded, tucked in the sheets, ‘ smoothed blanket and pillow with | deft hands, went out of her own ; room. Clinch seated himself snd turned a blank face to the window. | It was a sudden decision, He | realized now that he couldn't keep | the jewels in his house. War was} jon with Quintana. The “hotel” | would be the goal for Quintana, and jhis gang. And for Smith, too, if jever temptation overpowered him. The house was liable to an attempt. !at robbery any night, now—anu day, perhaps. It was no place for the {racket he had taken from Jose Quin- tana. Eve came in wearing gray shirt, breeches and puttees, Clinch gave her the packet, “What’s in it, dad,” | smilingly. “Don’t you get nosey, girlie. Come here.” \ She went to him. He put his left arm around her. ; “You like me some, | girlie?” “All right, Youjre i matters to me . since your nother went and died + after a year. That was crool, girlie. |) “Girlie,” | | the she .asked don’t you, all ‘that with the hootch. You know how to ! move that keystone?” “Yes, dad.” ' “And watch out that no game pro- tector and none of that damn. mil- lionaire’s wardens, see you in the j; woods. No, nor-none o’ these here fancy State Troopers. You gotta) watch out this time, Eve. It means j everything to us—to you, girlie—- jand to fhe. Go tip-toe. Lay low, | coming and going. Take a rifle.” | Eve ran to her bed-room and re- turned with her Winchester and belt, : + “You shoot to kill,” said Clinch igrimly, “if anyone wants to stop ‘you. But lay low and you won't j need to shoot nobody, girlie. G’wan out the back way; Hal's in the ice | house.*& | (Continued in Our Next Issue) ADVENTURE OF | | THETWINS | pas | By'Olive Barton Roberta Light Fingers was as cross as 40 fears when the Twins got away in \the magic automobile out of the fog he had dumped down on them. “Oh, youre no good at helping,” he growled to Comet-Legs as he hop- ped off the star the two of them had Any man can prove he had good sense by saying that you have, Sometimey we think the book- worm is kin to the hook-worm. Kansas. City has a Tiffany Coai Co., and we can proye it. A London doctor: says our girls ‘work to much.” Our experience is they. work too many. If you want a max to growl at you treat him like a dog, Turkey is having her day. After Turkey. day come; Turkey hash. You can uplift « man by sitting down on him. Our new tariff is said to be‘an elas- tic tariff. It has to be to cover a multitude of sins. The man who doesnt know good manners frequently gets in the soup while cating it. This winter's coal shortage re- minds us of the saying “Many are ecld, but few are frozen.” | Men get intoxicated with That is why it is‘ bootlegged. love, The two principal eauses of divorce are men and\women, Raisuli, famous bandit, has quit. It is understood competition in his line wais too keen, Truth is stranger than fiction, It doesn’t, come, around as often. , nan : Carpentier lost, say the judges, be- cause’he was “hors de combat.” The English for this is “fin la guerre.” About the hardest thing to cure is injured feelings. A-woman paid a taxi bill with 42,000 pennies. Her children certain: ly ean save pennies. Every man knows he will acei- dentally mail a letter in a trash can before he dies. New airplane has a radio set so friends can be notified when it plans to drop on them. About the only difference between the girl of’ 1900 and the girl of 1922 is 22 years. 4 Gossiping is an sndoor sport that develops the jaw. Since oysters came back nine mil- lion pieces of shell have been mis- taken for pearls. “So go on: with | been riding. “I can think of more things by myself. Goodby!” proper to, act fool- He waved his han® and jumped, i it ely. down to the earth and hunted up the Sour Old Witch who lived in ander a waterfall. He was afraid) t@ go back to Twelve Toes, ‘his master, for fear of getting. another scolding. You see, it was Twelve Toes who had ordered Light, Fingers to stop the Twins and get the magic automobile.. He want- ed it for himself. Well, Light Fingers had done everything he couid, ‘but it ‘was of no use. The Twins were chug-chug- ging back to the Fairy Queen’s Pal- ace at that very minute as fast as they could go. | So off she hiked to the Sour Old Witch under the waterfall, just as 1 told you, “Greetings, son,” she cackled when [phe saw him coming. “Waste’ no words for I already know your trou- ble. You should have come to me | Sooner. f | “«t help you stop the Twins and get. the magic automobile for Twelve | Toes, your master. He is an‘ old friend of mine, you know, ‘and I’m glad to help him, I ask no reward except that he take me for a ride on each of my birthdays which come every hundred years.” | “That’s just fine,” said Light Fin- gers happily. “I'll speak to him {about the rides. ,And now what 'can | I do?” J The Sour Old Witch reached into! her deep pocket and took out an ege. ‘ : “Break this in the path of the} Twins!” she cackled, “and instantly | a stone wall will appear, so high and /\ so wide, they wil ncevr get over it!” | | Light Fingers thanked her, took } ! | the egg and flew off. 5 | 4 (To Be Continued. (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) | || A THOUGHT - | H ‘ ° He made the stars also.—Genesis | 1:16, | No& in the west is Thine appearance ended, i Neither from dark shall Thy re- | newal be, |Lo, for the firmament in spaces; splendid \, Lighteth her beacon-fires for Thee; Holds the and hides and drowns them and discovers, | Throngs them together, Them afar, Showeth, O Love, Thy multitude of lovers, | Souls that shall know Thee and the saints that are. ' NE NELIREELS Bs A 200:pound man would weigh: | 5200 pounds on the sun as the _at- | traction of the sun is 27 times that of the earth. kindles ey ‘DAILY PHOTO 1 w BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA -Kaorh all over the Northwest for Quality || @MAIL US YOUR FILMS © | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for SURVIVES, FAITH IN BUDD Tokio, Oct. 9.—Faith almost ap- proaching superstition still charac- terizes the simple-minded country folks’ attitude towards the image of Buddha, despatch from Oyedamachi, Nagano-ken, reports that an extraor- dinary manifestation of sugh faith was made in Shiotamura. Because of the continuous drought the villages assembled and held a prayer meeting wefore the local stone image of Butcha in the hope of calling down rain. The.meetiny continued for a week at the end of which, much to the disappointment of the villagers, no rain came. The men were, go serionusy excited at the “incompetency”, of ve Buddha that they beheaded the image. A few days later the rain came down in torrents. The intimidatedmen then pulled the headless Buddha by a rope up to a village physician for diagnosis after the additional custom... The physi- cian reinstituted the nead by means of cement and bandaging the neck declared that he would be ail right ine week’s time. The officer of the French army killed during the war reached 18.5 per cent, while 19 per cent of the: enlisted men died, i —————— PAINS ACROSS SMALL OF BACK —y- \ ¢ Husband Helped in Housework.— - Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Made Her Strong Foster, Oregon.—‘‘I used Lgdia E. pains across the small of my back. fee bothered meso iY Vegetable Com- pound is doing for helped me wonderfully? I am feeling fine, do all my housework and washing for seven in the family. I have been ir- regular too, and now am all right. lam telling my friends what it has done for me and_am sure’ it will do good for others, You can use this letter asa tes- timonia]. I will stand up forLydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound any time.”’— Mrs., WM. JUHNKE, Foster, Oregon. : Doing the housework for a family of seven is some task. If you, as a house- wife, are troubled with backache, ir- regularities, are easily tired ovt and irritable, or have other disa; able ail- ments: caused by some we: ive Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Gn pounda trial, Let it help you, ‘

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