The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1922, Page 4

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| PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE {THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE f€ntered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. : GEORGE D. MANN” Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO -DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. { PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW-YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or Fepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other. el in this paper and also the local news published erein. ; All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE aily by carrier, per year.......... «++ $7.20 | Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in/state outside 5.00 *¢ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. . . x % aay Bismarck) . ee 4 a THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER it (Established 1873) ‘ ie SNAKE BITE i , Pall-bearers, step forward to bury another generally ac @epted idea, now exploded as false. Whiskey is not good for snake bite, announces Dr. Gilbert Vander Smissen, specialist im treating gents who have thoughtlessly stepped on rattlers, copperheads, water moccasins and other lovable pets. to lessen the victim’s chances of recovery. = Other scientists back Dr. Smissen’s views. They have been carrying on investigations started by the Brazilian in- stitute of serum therapy. % Science thus vindicates the legal ruling, a few months ago, . ky Judge J. C. Hutcheson of the federal court in session, at Gorpus Christi, Tex. A gentleman on trial for violating the Volstead act had explained that snakes were numerous and active in his com- munity, and that it was considered necessary to have a bottle of hooch on hand. « n « whiskey was good for snake bite, but that the idea has been exploded by science. .A heart stimulant hastens circulation gf poison through the body. He added: “Two hundred and fifty“dollars and costs!” Like most evils, snake bits is not as dangerous as gener- ally believed. The average mortality from American venom- ous serpents is only a little more than 10 out of 100 persons bitten, according to the government’s Biological ‘Survey. * Most snakes, the survey adds, skeedaddle at the approach ef man. And their striking distance:is only about three- . fourths of their length. Goodby, oldest of John Barleycorn’s alibis ! FLOWERS N. P. Lindberg, originator of the slogan, “Say it with flowers,” is killed'in an auto accident in North Dakota. As ' you suspected, he was a florist. = His famous four-word slogan has sold more flowers than any 10,000 florists that ever lived. And the slogan was not Carefully thought’ out.. Lindberg coined it off-hand, almost . absent-minded, in conversation ‘at a national florists’ con- 2D Ba Boe. 3 € Q Er yention. - . That is what a gambler calls chance. It is chance, the sidden appearance of the. unexpected, that shapes our des- 's tinies and makes life interesting. Never get discouraged. Chance-probably has something better in store. ; FLIES z, Muller, professor in Univerity of Texas, arrives in. Mos- eéw from Berlin with an airplane load of flies, which he studies to learn more about heredity. =.He:is welcomed by Russian fly enthusiasts, who have been-making similar researches. The same Russians, under Prof. Kolzoff, are experimenting on birds to learn how to prolong life, and getting results. Are you surprised to learn that science still is thriving in the ruins of Russia? Science is one thing that nothing { has ever been able to kill. That's because it’s based on the powerful force, human curiosity. dt BANQUETS ene Mme. Kalich, the actress, returns from Europe where she had’a long talk with the kidder, George Bernard Shaw. She says Shaw is weakening on his decision not to visit. America, and he might come if he could shake off his fear that he would have to attend American banquets. If George waits a couple more years, he can visit us safely, for prohibition is rapidly driving the banquet, to extinction. Oratory, except of the highest grade, goes begging when liquor is not served as an antidote. : BABY i A needle two inches long was swallowed three years ago by; Ethel Frinck of Stockholm, Cal. Then she married. Her baby, 22 months old, cries and rubs its shoulder. Mother « investigates baby’s shoulder and pulls the needl.e Mention this when you want to break up a dull talk about | the situation in Europe. ‘Why are the unimportant things of life most interesting? Answer: Civilization is dull. And whatever is dull is bound to be rather stupid. SPEED te fa a s- — plane ,arrives at Mineola,-L. I., from San Francisco. The trip took 27 hours and 11 minutes of actual flying. More important than her achievement is the purpose of her trip—to create public interest in her plan to have March ; 2 set aside as a memorial day for men who die pioneering aviation. : Miss Gatlin is a shrewd psychologist. She knows the ' value of advertising. Her trip was a flying ad. ee MIGHTIER ‘ >We aren’t quite as peaceful as we imagine. A govern- ment report says that about 13,000 American wage earners | are employed making typewriters and supplies, against 10,- | 000 making ammunition and 5,000 making firearms. Since typewriter is the modern pen and ammunition and gun the modern sword, the saying that ‘the pen is mightier than the sword” will bear checking up on its industrial side. APPROPRIATE : Hugo Stinnes takes over another gigantic enterprise— the printing of Germany’s flood of paper money. : Illustrating Stinnes’ instinctive grasp of fundamental | principles, he prints the-new German marks on the presses that turn out the colored comic section for one of his news- | papers. ~ —. “The world is so full of a number of things,” write Stev- enson. The other day three spoons were taken from an Ohio man’s stomach.’ Kresge Bldg. | In fact, says Dr. Smissen, a quart of rye or Scotch is apt} % The judge said‘he had been brought up on the theory that | ‘Lillian Gatlin, first woman to cross the continent by air- | ‘| After bathing in a river in East [eee ar A || EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments. reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are ptesented here Ir order that our readers may have both sides ‘| of import@nt issues which are being iscussed in the press of the . | ‘Wei BY Gum! F WeY Don'T FIND oes THEY CAN'T Sisame IT ONTO c me ee | MR. LEE ON THE “BIG FOUR” | It comes from W. G. Lee, presi- iv | dent of the Brotherhood of Railroa | Trainmen, that the “Bi i jroad labor organizations are fall- ling apart; that the spirit of alli- a for a common cause is weak- | ‘ening; that there is less chance} now than there has been for years cf standing together in a sort of |“One-Big-Union” idea and inaug- lurating a nation-wide strike. | This is an interesting statement | by one who may be considered an} authority on the subject he dis-| cusses. It catches the attention | jalike of organized labor and of the | | public, and it stands out the more | isharply because the country has | | been threatened at least three times |in the last six years with general {strikes by ‘these big unions. Mr.' | Lee says in part: | ! This whole business, with all | railroad labor om one side, all the railroads on the other and the Railroad Labor board in | between, got too big for the | one man or a few men to ; handle. It was loaded’ with | | dynamite for the country as | | well as for ourselves and the | | executives, * * * A nation-wide rail strike is not possible today. ; It costs the raliroads and the | unions which indulge in it more than they cam afford to | lose. The shopmen’s strike | proved that. When a strike | gets so big that it cannot be | controlled then the govern- | | ment will step in and contro) | | dt. This results in legislation | | detrimental to all concerned. | | * * * No sane government would permit any faction or | class to paralyze the transpor- tation business, and thereby punish the innocent, who are DECORATED " THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1922 | onto Drowned Valley -when Jake| meets up with me.” | “I got the packet, he sez, ‘and! |I'm going to double criss-cross Quin- | |tana, I am, and beat it. Don’t you wish you was whacks with me? — | “No,’ sez I, ‘honesty in my palicy, no matter what. they tell about me. ; Shelp me God, I ain’t never robbed | {no trap and I ain’t no skin thief, {| whatever lies folks tell, All I ever G, : ‘i aeee Nard run a little hootch, same’s | + | everybody.’” % | He licked his lips furtively, his | | cold, bright eyes fastened on Clinch. | “G'wan, Earl,” nodded the latter, | 1 | “heave her up.” | “That’s all. I sez ‘Goodby, Jake. | An’ if you heed my warnin’, ill-| j {gotten gains ain’t a-going to pros- \ [per nobody.’ That’s what I said to | |Jake Kloon, the last solemn words « {1 spoke to that there man now in ‘ \his bloody grave—” | “Hey?” demanded Clinch. | “That’s where Jake is,” repeated | | Leverett. “Why, so help me, {| ;wa’nt gone ten yards when, bang! jgoes a gun ,and I see this here | Quintana come, outen the bush, I | doy and walk up to Jake and frisk | him, and Jake still a-kickin’ the} | moss to slivers. Yessir, that’s what {I seen.” | “wan.” | “Yessir... ‘N’then Quintana he | shoved Jake into a sink-hole. Thas | wot I seen with my two eyes. Yes-| j sir, ‘N’then Quintana he run off, nl jest set down in. the trail, 1{ ; did; n’then Hal come up and acted |like I had stole your packet.” | The dusk in the forest had deep-| ened so that the men’s faces had be- | come mere blotches of gray, | Smith said to Clinch: “That’s his story, Mike. But I preferred he should te]l it to you himself, so I brought him along....Did you drive Star Peak?” i “There wa'nt nothin’ onto it,” said | Clinch very softly. Then, of a sud- den, his shadowy visage became con- torted and he jerked up his rifle | and threw a cartridge into the maga- | zine, “You dirty lose,” he roared at Leverett, “you was into this, too,! a-robbin’ my little Eve—” |. “Run!” yelled somebody, giving always in the majority. There never has been in thi: |country a nation - wide strike tha paralyzed the transportation sys- tem of the country. The shopmen’s! strike caused considerable embar. rassment and much loss to various | interests, but it was possible for the most part to keep the railroads | in satisfactory operation. If th “Big Four” had gone out on strik the country would have suffered a real digaster for a time at least, but Mr. Lee has made it clear that he had, or now has, a good under- standing of what would have hap-;| pened under those circumstances. The great majority would have! been the injured victim of the mi- nonity. Organized labor would have lost caste in the public mind. The government would have step-| dating tional. thief, ped in and operated the railroads! Sear international thief, by one means or another. on Te ane later stolen front gress would have felt in duty bound | ywieg CLINC b to enact legislation which it pre-| In his eabin in the Adirondacks. fers not to enact, and which the! ,); A general pubtic hopes it may mever eee te earene e s Ait te ee ie eaaee ‘d'posatbititien in 't8P8 and the secret motive of case of a paralyzing strike 1a to be JAMES DARRAGH, who, out of love ‘ | for the countess, had sworn to re- found in what was done at the be-/ Packs a minimize the adverse effects of the HAL SMITH, Phen Quintana | cap- shopmen’s strike. Whatever may | P tures have been the predominance of inch’ i American judgment as to the wis-| Ere iment: Clinchis., Beautital dom, expediency and justice of the! Eve cicavies from Quintana after court action affecting the shopmen,! .._1; - ke it cam be said with finality that the; 7Sking her life guarding a packet ality that the! which she thought contained the people insist on the continuity Of Fiaming Jewel, but which held conor io ehe fig sbedlutely Ne nothing but two bars of ‘chocolate. They expect that much'of condtitut. | This Talse packet, was seized by ed authority, as being one of the Crees a trap-thief, proper functions of a protecting} ; government. and Quintana in turn was robbed i ‘ by Hal Smith. Clinch and his men The public is. not against the s -. ae unionizing of labor. It has never pone Sonateee toiwipe out. Quin {spoken officially in condemnation " jot strikes, or even in favor of “the EPISODE SIX Katreas idua,’’.but /iyidoea not .re- The Jewel Aflame quire an offical expréssion to know CHAPTER I the public mind regarding any ac- : tion, whether. by employer or em-| Mike Clinch and his men “drove” ploye, that would result in tying up| Star Peak, and drew a blanket cover: the railroads, sometimes Aptly call-| There was a new shanty atop, |ed the arteries of trade. It is this} camp ‘debris, plenty of signs of fact which Mr. Lee and the rest of cent occupation everywhere—hot lus see more: clearly now than we embers in which efal still smoul-! did before the shopmen laid down. dered; bottles odorous of claret their tools. — Minneapolis Tribune.| dregs, and an aluminum culinary outfit, unwashed, as though Quin- | THIS STUFF PAYS paws and his men had departed in From, B. G. Loughren we learn; haste. . . that thé Tuttle Cream buyers have| _ Far in the still valley below, Mike paid out for cream the past year|Clinch squatted beside the runway the sum a $42,000 to their patrons | be had chosen, a cocked rifle across in that vicinity, and that $18,000 , his knees. Hq [has been paid for eggs during the| And, as Clinch squatted there, |same time. The eggs are only one|murderously intent, ever. the fixed jend of the poultry. business, And| °bsession burned in his fever brain, cf butter and eggs bought by the b a i fi jlocal merchants. This amount it is| cation, part chronicle, part a: thought will equal the amount paid a Seat A Rac a ae ‘at the elevators for wheat this sea. | S¥°. iti welasnee youTiet: that son. When you stop to think that the pate ae eit eueiee a idarrod, this aggregate sum for cream and) there tem ene. forest He to the farmers of that region, and | tion, and he put up a wall of law jthat there has been no heavy levy | 3 ands tie here iE agaeavnin ‘against it for harvesting and) 2" seein’ in Thy. nice, ‘ | threshing, you can see what a con- S aaneneiatt Mad nceneeice teh [tending of eticene eee a Me | here Quintana and robs my girl. Istrictly grain crop, Most of the|« «- I promised her mother I'd make jrmllkers have all raised grain but a ey oe Bee Sera Ones eee ithe Profit has been in the cows and| towed me a piece in the Bible—t berg This is worth serious study | vit never found it sense—but it j by all farmers, | The milk andj cid: ‘And the woman she fled into | | Poultry branch of farming are sub-/ (1. wilderness where there was a | Ject to far less hazards than is; place prepared for her of God... . jgtaln growing.—Steele Ozone. That’s what you wrote, into your WEATHER CHANGES CAUSE sick. °W" Bible, O God! ‘You can’t g0 | NESS. | back on it, I seen it. if i | “And now I wanta to ask, What pbstreme changes of wenther during Hace. aN aU a oma te ‘all cause many colds and coughs. idn’” ani G ’ did For quick relief from throat, chest YoU, didn’t mein my “Dumps aie and bronchial trouble, coughs, colds! #5, no lady... . And now Quintana and croup use Foley’s Honey and| jas went and robbed me of what I'd Tar. Contains no, opiates—ingredi- | .ived up for Eve.... Does that go ents printed on the wrapper. Larg- with Thee, 0 Lord? No, it don’t. est selling cough medicine in the And it don’t go with me, neither. World. “Foley’s Honey and Tar is, py a-goin’ to git Quintana, Then the most pleasant and efficient rem- jm a-goin’ to git them two minks jedy for coughs and colds that\I ever that robbed my girlie—I am!... | Saw,” writes Wm. Jones, El Dara, | Jake Kloon, he done it in cxhoots | Minois. Adv. with Earl Leverett: and Quintana | RTT set ’em on. BEGIN HERE TODAY Murder, tinged with a diabolical |of the Flaming Jewel, that priceless | gem first stolen from the i the forest stilled his and. stiffened every / ! A far crash ia | Africa a white hunter suffered’ twitching lips |from temporary blindness, suppo3-j iron muscle. jed to be due to some peculiar cle-| As he lifted his rifle, Sid Hone ly ROBERT W.CHAMBERS *@1022 GEORGE A DORAN COMDANY irony, appeared again in the history)’ COUNTESS OF ESTHONIA by the} {ment in the water, jeamie into the glade. called. “Yahoo! Yahoo!” “Where be. you, Mike?” he Clinch slowly rose, grasping his rifle, his small, gray eyes ablaze. “Where’s Quintana?” he de- manded. “Hain’t you seen nobody ”, “No.” ; One by one the men who hac driven Star Peak lounged up ‘in the red sunset light, gathering around Clinch and wiping the sweat from sun-reddened faces, y . ¢*Well,” inquired Jim Hastings finally, “do, we quit, Mike, or do we still-hunt in Drowned Valley?” “Not me, at night!” remarked Blommers _drily. “Not amongst added Hone. “Suddenly Clinch turned and stared at-him. Then the deadly light from his little eyes shone on the others one by one. “Boys,” he said, “I gotta get Quintana. I can’t never sleep an- other wink till I get that man, Come on: Act up like gents all. Let’s go.” The Hastings boys, young and rash, shuffled into the trail. Blom- mers hesitated, glancbd askance at Clinch, and instantly’ made up_ his. mind to take a chance with the sink- holes rather than with Clinch. “God A’mighty, Mike, what be you aimin’ to do?” faltered Harvey. “I’m aimin’ to stop the inlet and outlet. to Drowned Valley, Harve,” replied Clinch in his pleasant voice. them _ sink-holes,” j “God is a-goin’ to deliver Quintana into my. hands.” “All right. What next?” nen nn [EVERETT TRUE CONSPICUOUS GARGELING = SS BERDRE TAKING DRINK, OF WATER. \ SS | —= kei S —— cient Down two Block HORSES TROUGH IL Leverett a violent shove into the woods, In the darkness and confusion, Clinch shouldered his way out oz the circle and fired at the crackling noise that marked Leverett’s course fired again, lower, and again as a “Then,” continued Clinch, cal-late to set down and wait. “How long?” “Ask God, boys. I don’t’ know | AIKI know is that whatever is livi in Drowned Valley at this hour has/ distant crash revealed the frenzied gotta live and die there. For it) flight of the trap-robber. After h2 can’t never live to come outen that} had fired a fourth shot, somebody there morass walkin’ onto two lets) struck up his rifle. ; ke an. | “Aw,” said Jim Hastings, “that Clink WG oe akan oh 0 “daze | aint. no\ good: You act up like & keds re ike, ’Tain't t 2, strides before Hal Smith loomed up | Mikem ‘recpese might, hene: you,” ahengain ithe poy dusk, driving in| After a silence, Clinch spoke, his ev efore him. t vole th ith tion: An exclamation’ of fierce exulta- veaato ‘het share packet ie my lit- tion burst from - Clinch’s thin lips! ¢Je girl's dower. It’s all I got to as he flung out one arm, indicating | give her. It’s all she’s got to make Clawhet was that goledinged. catar| tor agiete TU RIL: any: man that pi hee ‘A-\ robs her or that elps rob her. piount that | Suspicloned ‘ eae | 'N’these fellas are a-going with me. wasr't worried ‘none,’ cither.. Hal’s| sy» | want you should go back to seene eee fe aa yer mv Dump and look after my girlie honest or they ‘ain’t gents.” oman rent," said Smith, briefly. Smith came up at his easy, tire-| He added: “Look out for sink-holes, less gait, hustling Leverett along) ize.” Nonna aera lds or, muz-) “Clinch tossed his heavy oe to cones ¢ +” “Let’s"gb;” “hey satdin mils tipsisones # Catned ai oahestlVAl eee tee eesot visage on Clinch, who, ignored him.) “ his pleasant, misleading way, “—and / I'll shoot the guts. outa any felia “Got my” packet, Hal?” “he de) that don’t show up at roll call. bidet? ti Our Next Issue) Sinithis poked’Leverett with -his|, (Comtinaed In, Our Next Issue) rifle: “Tune up,” he said; “tell Clinch your story.” “Jake dont it,” muttered Leverett, thickly. | | “Done what?” “Stole that there packet o’ yourn —whatever there was into it.” “Who put kim up to it?” “A fella called Quintana.” “What was there in it. for Jake?” inquired Clinch pleasantly. “Ten thousand.” “How about you?” “I told ’em I wouldn't touch it. Then they pulled their guns on me, and I was scared to squeal.” “So that was the way?” asked Clinch in his even, reassuring voice. Leverett’s. eyes traveled. stealthily around the circle of men, then re- yerted to Clinch. “] dassn’t touch it,” he said, “but T dagsn’t squeal... I was huntin’ : — poster coe | ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS . | ———— | ete By Olive Barton Roberts You'll never believe it, I’m sure, but at last Nancy and Nick reached the Fairy Queen’s Palace in the | | magic automobile. The magic pill that Light fingers dropped into the gasoline tank | (making the car go backward) was | the last of their troubles, or the Green Wizard stuck out his toe and turned the car around, and although it soon arrived at the Fairy Queen’s Palace. You should have been there to hear the rejoicing when the Twins appeared sound and well and as happy as harlequins (if you know | what that is, although Nancy would have to be a columbine, being a girk) i All the Queen’s councilors stood | |around and helped them out, while the new chauffeur, called Gloves N. | Leggins, looked over the queer little car and said it was as good as new. | All he needed to do, he said, was to | fix. thejigamacrank and mend the thingumabob and _ straighten the | whirligig and patch tires and re- | | i BY CONDO — pair the engine and send away for a new top. i Outside of. that everything was | lall_ right. | The Fairy Queen was so happy to | jhave Nancy and Nick back safely | that she made them a present of the | Green Shoes. | Before that, you know, she had | jonly loaned them to them. | “And now, my little friends,” said she, “would you like to rest, or go at onec on another advanture?” “Another advanture!” cried both children at once. highness, “I have one all ready. Mcther Goose has lost her broom and doesn't know where to find it.” i (SCA A ‘PROCLAMATION | Forget-Me-Not Day Whereas, in accordance with the plan originated by the disabled Am-| erican Veterans of the World War, the people of our state will have an oppertunity. to display their appre- ciation of the value of the services! jrendered by our disabled veterans,! and | Whereas, said services. were ren- dered, not alone to the Nation and State as governmental agencies, but | blso to each and every individual ‘citizen therein, it is\particularly | fitting, inasmuch as the records! | show that in our state there are be-! |tween five and six thousands of jthose worthy men, who are entitled | to the best the Nation, the State, and tie Individual ean offer, that official recognition be given to the/ plan promulgated by this honored: and deserving organization. Therefore, I, R. A. Nestos, Gover- nor of the State of North Dakota,} do hereby set aside and designate | “Well, then,” answered her royal i: Saturday, November 4th, 1922, as Forget-Me-Not Day. - On this day Forget-Me-Not flow- lers will be offered for sale upon the streets and in the business houses, in the villages and cities throughous the entire state, and the proceeds {from such sale will be used to fur- ther the interests of the members of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War. In my judgment, the mere announcement of the fore- going plan and its purpose will re- sult in the citizens of our state giv- ing to it the whole-hearted and spon- taneous support to which, it is en- titled. May every home in our state be decorated profusely on the eve- ning of November 4th, 1922, with Forget-Me-Not flowers obtained throcgh the day from the represen- tatives of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War! In Witness Wheerof, I have here- unto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the--State of North Dakota to be affixed at the Capitol at Bismarck, this 14th day of Octo- ber, A. D, 1922, R: A. NESTOS, Governor. By the Governor: THOMAS HALL, Secretary of State. A newlywed tells us he is assist- ant head of his house. Our Pacific Ocean is so dry now a big ship burned. Villa will open a bank, but not the way bandits usually do. Chicago has a grand larceny case and this ig not a misprint. Are you a puzzle hound? Then what was it we saw a girl dancing instead of wearing? Population |of this world is esti- mated’ at 1,702,000,000, all of whom are grouchy at breakfast. Health hint: Look ‘out for trains this -winter while’ hunting coal along the railroad tracks. Alabama man who paid $150 for half interest in a queen bee claims he did not get stung. Since skirts are longer figures are lying again. Mowrer says the German debt worries France. Germany should worry. The rumor that jazz is dying will be three years old soon. Astronomers say ‘there are no sounds on the moon. Then we will never hear from there. Every time it rains the pressing shop man sits down aid laughs. { The worst man we knew about Zot married because he heard a wife ‘was cheaper than a janitor. In Chicago. six bandits robbed the Sandack Jewelry Co. of $40,000 but didn’t get any coal. The Henry Ford will race for the famous fishing vessel cup and will \win if the ocean is hilly. Captain Salisbury has gone to the |Malay Peninsula to study wild men when -he could have hung around the tax collector's. office. World famous matadors are mect- ing in Mexico. Bryan, however, is kept busy in this country. One ‘of them tells us she suffers ‘n silence, That is—when in silence Ishe is suffering. A man about town is seldom about anything else. The bottom rungs of the social ladder are all kicked out. ; All the world quits a quitter. « At Alto Crucero, in Bolivia, wa- ter freezes every night of “the year, while at noonday the sun is sometimes hot ‘enough to blister the besh. DOCTOR ORDERED WOMAN OBEYED Took Lydia E.Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound and is Now Well Chicago, Illinois.—‘‘You surely gave when you put Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und on the mar- et. After I had my baby I was all run (down and so nervous ‘women one good icine and I am now a new woman.[ have had three children and they are all Lydia E. Pinkham babies. I have rec- ommended medicine to several friends and they speak highly of it. You are certainly doing work in this world.’”—Mrs. ADRITH TOMSHECK, 10557 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois. There is nothing very strange about the doctor directing Mrs. Tomsheck to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. There are many physicians who dorecommend it and highly appreci- ate its value. Women who are nervous, run down, and suffering from women’s ailments should give this well-known root and herb medicine a trial. Mrs. Tomsheck’s experience .should guide you. towards health. Yep t« ¢ ‘ % ° a 9% XN v ¥ Oe Qa c “ . « f 4 a 4 e ~ « “a ae y ¢ eer

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