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‘PAGE FOUR \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE * THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | Fifth Ave. Bldg. 7 ; MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- =wise credited-in this paper and also the local news. published herein. i “All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are reserved. ; i MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION | ie. we Para | | 3 : : SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year. $ Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) eee ees Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck). . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........ Be THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER \ (Established 1878) 7 . THE PROHIBITION FIGHT 5 Since the hour when the polls closed: last week the “wets” -and the “drys” have vied with each other in claims of victory. Whit appeared at first reports to be an overwhelming victory for the “wets” now appears to be a matter. of real debate. | While California, the greatest wine-growing state in the ion, voted for a strong prohibition enforcement law, and the “drys” won in Ohio where there are many latge cities, | thé voters of Illinois declared for modification of the Vol- stead law by_a large majority. _ Representative Britten, lectéd from Illinois, announces he will introduce a bill in Congress to modify the law so obnoxious to the “wets.” But! in the city of Indianapolis, where the Republican candidate} or senator got a minority of the votes, a Republican Con- ressman was reelected in opposition to a Democratic can- idate who was openly appealing to’the “wets” for support. : The vote does not disclose any great demand in the.coun- try. for a return to the days of the saloon. If any lesson swith respect to this attitude on the part of the voters may be read it is that the people do not want to put the saloon back ‘upon the street corners. But the vote, especially. when a majoirty of the people of a great state such as Illinois de- lares for beek and light wines, does indicate a wide-spread dissatisfaction with the present conditions. “The result com- mends itself for close study by the ardent opponents of alco- holism and of the officials of the country. 7 ~The American has been taught that his home is his castle, nd yet under drastic “dry” laws this ancient adage has been ‘almost nullified. There are thousands who personally have witnessed what they” feel is, discrimination in enforcement ‘of the “dry” laws. Bootlegging. has flourished, and the shome-brew industry has growm ere are people drinking ow who did not drink before prohibition became effective. There is'a feeling upon the part of many‘ that the drastic ‘provisions of the Volstead law are an invasion, upon personal arights which may’ only lead to a control by the government: _ of the liberties which heretofore have been held to be securely sthose of the individual. And, yet, officials of the anti-saloon league present exhaustive figures-to show that there have been fewer arrests. under prohibition, numerous manufac- turers have declared that men in their employe have not only ishown greater efficiency but ate living happier and more con- ented lives, and more than one foreign visitor after a study “of American prohibition has gone ;home advocating world! rohibition. 7 ‘The “wet” sentiment has’ not reached such a stage that ;there is apparent any great desire or hope that the prohibi- ition amendment may be lifted from our constitution. The: shope of the “wets” lies in the modification of the Volstead slaw to permit beer and light wines. Their effort is opposed -by; the “drys” not alone because of opposition to the con-: ‘sumption of these beverages but also because they hold it ‘would constitute an entering wedge for abuses of the eigh- ‘teenth amendment. = The man or woman who has ardently supported the pro- hibition cause need not as yet fear a return to the conditions which prevailed. before the eigtheenth: amendment was jadopted. But there is.abroad a very strong sentiment in the fland’ in opposition to,,fhings as they .are now, and unless ‘many of fhe present*évils are corrected; itis not improbable that there will be a further reaction in the country. |__ Interesting new book*is Sir J. Rennell: Rodd’s “Social and ‘Diplomatic Memories, 1884-93.” -He: quotes Bismarck as; saying: age i“I want your countrymen to know that it was I, and only! ‘I, who alone made this'German Empire. And how do you | think I accomplished.this? How did I succeed in crushing every man who stood in my way? All this I achieved through | cunning. I set one man against another, and-again and again| ‘I broke them.” f { That was Bismarck’s “cunning.” In Germany, today, you! see what it all led to. In Amerita we are making similar mis- | takes, playing man against man. © } DETECTIVES ay fetand Yard, world’s most famous organization of detec- itives. ‘The burglars cart away many fur coats, fancy unbrellas and pieces of jewelry from the Lost Property Office, where jamissing articles are held for identification by owners. A London newspaper with a nasty sense of humor hints that lithe “Yard” may take out insurance policies to protect per- iisonal property of the detectives. \ 4 | This should get a chuckle out of American police, chafing under criticism. \ Hed BILL Malte | {Sir J. Rennell Rodd, in his memoirs, gives this picture of jexsKaiser Bill as a youth. . “He displayed a somewhat boister- fous geniality. It might gratify a certain. mentality. to be (smitten from behind with a tennis racquet by a future em- uperor. But, on the other hand, such gratification was quali- Hfied by the fact that. the blow could not be returned.” ‘| That was one of the chief things wrong with Bill, all ‘through his career—“the blow could not be returned.” return blows, however, gradually piled: up inte a-knockout,: } “OVER THERE” Reo | tion: that while Germany is doing her utmost to avoid a} ‘elaborate process of secret enlistment, together with far larger Downing Street suspects.” Matter. | 4GBORGE D.MANN~ - 7 - - - Editor tah m ree Mastalea ee Meine i Foreign Representatives Pe. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ‘ CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT {Daring cracksmen burglarize London headquarters of; The “The London Daily Mail says editorially: “Our informa-| _ just payment of reparations, she is stealthily preparing’ for} Na renewal of hostilities. . There is in existence in Germany, stores of. munitions, than Berlin -will admit or than! EDITORIAL REVIEW | D Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They ure presented here ir order that our readers; may have both of important issues which e || being discussed in the press of |) the day, OUR BACKWARD STEP The futility of voting for Frazier; ‘in June in order to elect O’Connor ; in the fall has been demonstrated, [it is to be hoped, to the element that took the chance rather than vote for McComber.- Mr. O'Connor | himself, though a brilliant ‘qnd_elo-| | Presidency .in 1924. jises decisive, constructive action, For the coming outlook is far from by the dangers of new legislation —Minneapolis ‘Tribune. years ago. But there is nothing to|| take its place, nothing that. prom- biennium we | must merely mark time, while the) _ | politicians and the agitators. pre- | pare for the great contest over ghe The political rosy. But while the deadlock holds, perhaps; |eccnomic revival and ‘business re- ‘suscitation can go/on, unimpeded ‘ \ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1922 Coming Events Cast Their Shadows Before - | | “It is this, monsieur,” replied the | Tom quent speaker, a staunch opponent | jof socjalism could not stem the itide tlat turned to Frazier with his | name under the Republican cap-| tion. | ‘ne splendid position which! 'North Dakota had. achieved in| Washington through the long per- jiod cf\ service of Senator McCum-} ber hag} been sacrificed and the; state takes rank at the bdttom :of; the list, with the assurance that) our junior senator becomes a mere; mouthpiece for Senator La Rollette. And the Republican national com- mittee that seemed to be so solicit- | ous over Frazier’s election will have an opportunity to measure up| the man as we in North Dakota! have measured him during the past six years, and we-trust before many months roll round they will appre- ciate why so many thousands of Republicans in this state preferred to support a Democrat for the sen-{ ate.—Mandan Pioneer. CALLS IT POLITICAL “FLU” | The flu igs a disease that spread all over the country.and we guess from the election returns that the npnpartisan league program>is on that order. It seems to bea dis- case that is spreading throughout the country. North Dakota has had it for some time but is graudally getting better, but in our neighbor- ing state of Minnesota it seems to be coming strong. That state has been sympathizing with us very much and hag been doing its best} to help us get rid of the disease but in go doing it seems to have contracted the disease itself. The election of Shipstead to the United States Senate and the election of a couple of league congressmen in Minnesota to succeed men like Sen-| ator Kellogg, Representative Vol- stead and Representative Steener- son, in cur judgment is a backward step, but this nonpartisan disease prescribed by A. C. Townley, is no respector of persons. Well,-all we can say about it is that we extend | our heartfelt sympathy to our} neighboring states. The senate, of the United States ‘has lost a valu- abel, man in Kellogg, and a man|, who haa been a friend to the farm-| er and aided them in legislation) every time he could—Valley City Times-Record. | THE VOICE OF PROTEST Tt was the voice of protestithat was heafd last ‘Tuesday all fret ‘the’ Country—protest and nothing else. The voter/was not inspired by any candidacy, particular; he was not moved with! enthusiasm for any personality or for any set of poli- cles. The ballot he cast was the vehicle for ‘his protest against, things. as they are, his notice to those. sent into office of his hope and expectation that things would be changed somehow for the bet- ter. ' The people last. Tuesday were not! looking for somebody. to vote for; | they sought for somebody to’ vote against. _When they found someone | ‘who seemed eligible to act as the sacrifiela] goat, they slew him on thealtar to propitiate the gods. | In Minnesotd-they offeted up the! faithful and indust \ Kellogg; in Ohio’ they fell upod. that high minded Democrat, Atlee Pomerene; in Nebraska, they ordered the ur- dane Hitchcock to the block;- in New York they turned Miller, the best Governor the State has had in years, a man who had _ brought economy and order into the busi- ness affairs of the Commonwealth; in, New Jersey they rejected Fre- linghuysen because he was dry; in Indiana they condemned thé able and fearless ‘Beveridge, because he was: reckless enough to talk sound sense to them; in North Dakota they took up the very Frazier they had recalled from the Governor's |" chair, to send him to the Senate. And so it went all over the Coun- try. There was neither rhyme or reagon to it on any theory of party or/policy sustained. It was pro- test. ; Protest against what? ‘Against the Republican Party and is fail- ure to make'the most of the won- derful opportunity presented to it two years ago. Against the low prices of farm products, which no man or party or policy could have prevented, and ‘which no man or party or policy can cure, except as economic law operates. Against the i severe restrictions of the prohibi- jtion laws which the Country in the !Spartan spirit of war sacrifice had j ordered. | Sims /|\Says The longer skirts are making men zound shouldered, We can all be thankful ‘this Thanksgiving we don’t have to wash our necks as much in:winter. Ex marks » number of congress- Yen who passed the tariff, Fashipn note: ,Coal shovels will be worn very little this winter. Most men tell their wives every- thing even if they don’t know it + Some of these modern flats are so emall the children have to stand gut in the hall to grow. eA Life and hash are what you make them, € Two robbers boarded an Ohio train, but the porter brushed them off. - Since 1918 prices have dropped 10 times and gone up 11. London doctor urges women to emoke pipes, hut you can’t taik with a pipe in your mouth, - In Boston, 2 man’s wine blew up. The drinks were on the house. So live that you think all people better ‘than you know they are. tm these days of frantic efforts to. modernize everything it isa relief to learn a horse thief was arrested in Reading, Conn. ply ‘ In Santo Domingo. frogs bark lik dogs. But that’s all right. .A;-frog leads a dog’s life. tt is not bad luck for a cat to cross in front of a*car. Not if the cat crosses all the way, / eNCey What/do you think? A Zbyszko ‘wrestling match was canceled be-| ‘chuse’ thé crowd) wanted to hear Paderewski play.; * Morgenthau blames America for Turk troubles, It is only a question of time until we get the bill, The longest run is the couple: who ‘an away from Alaska to Florida. Business tip: An increased de- mand for saws is noted at the. jail. ‘A loose screw on the door fs worth two in the head, ay — { You can’t keep a good man down cr a good for nothing man up._ A man is often misjudged by the company he keeps. Ses a : Many hands make ‘light work and many make light of work. eo —<$<$—$____——_——_* ADVENTURE OF | | ‘HE TWINS | By Olive Barton:Roberts Nancy and Nick looked and looked everywhere. They’ not only asked all.the Mother Goose people. sup, in the. sky but. all their.fairy friends. as well. It iwas Mr. Sprinkle-Blow, the ‘weatherman, who said something which made the Twins stop hunting and sent them hurrying to\the lit- tle chocolate drop’ of a house ona high mountain where ‘Mother Goose lived. * j ¢ “I wouldn’t wear out my Magic Shoes if I. were: you,” advised Mr. Sprinkle-Blow, “Mother Goose does- not need her old broom any more. This morning when I‘ looked down I saw a broom leaning up against her woodshed. She must have gotten a new one.” “Hello, kiddies!” Goose when Nick coming. “Tired hunting?” “Oh, no,” answered Nick. “Only we heard you had a new broom.” “Highty tighty!”\ she exclaimed. “New broom, indeed! Who said so?” called Mother | The great political overturn was in no sense an expression of confi-| |dence in the Democratic leaders) and polities, which had ‘but two ishert years ago been 90 crushingly \repudiated. The Democrats offer-| ed no great policies, no program of | | constructive readjustment. They! contented themselves with \ imegative work of pointing out how} ‘and” where’ the Republicans ‘had failed. | That failure can be neither de- nied nor condoned. Its root lay in ‘lack of leadership in Congress. , There appear to be no great leaders jon either side of the present Con- ;eress, nor of the new one just elected, for that matter. . u | The direct primary, the direct! election.of Senators and’ the conse-} ;quent decline of party spirit ac-| | count in i leaders. every man for himself, strong lead-! er cannot impose discipline any} more, and where that fails, there | can be no real leadership. Con- gress has degenerated into a | Plex of blo¢s and factions. | Well, the people have made their! Nick told her what. Sprinkle-Blow had said. 2 “Well, declare! I'll . have to look!” criéd the good fairy lady in astonishment. “I didn’t know a hing about it.” So they all rushed out. There was a broom, just as the Weatherman said!) But,not a new one! It was the same old , broom Mother Goose always used. j | “It’s been there all the time, I do, ' believe,” cried Mother Goose. “Yes, ; I remember now. ‘I was cleaning |up after the wood-chopper, and for- | got to put it behind.my door where always keep it. Will<yoa tell the jry Queen, my dears?” The Twins hurried off to spread ‘the: good news. RECOVERS FROM RHEUMATISM “Had rheumatism five months that part for the dearth of real! would go from my left knee to my | In a system where it is| back, Tried many remedies without | relief. Findlly used\ Foley Kidney Pills and in fifteen days was entir: lv_ cured,” writes W. J. Oliver, Vi dalia, Georgia. Backache, rheumatic blurred vision are/symptoms of ki ney disorder. . Foley Kidnev Pilis she saw Nancy and i 0 ey Dy TM )) “Cereals,” says a doctor, “are brain food.” That’s food for, thought. ” was empty. | (But it was not silent. A vague music, like some weird conception of Tschaikowsky, seemed to fecl about the room, extending itself— a thing that crept blindly and dis- turbéds'as though it would. escape Grom, {something that followed it tirelessly and invisibly. It required the fingers of a mas | ter, on the board of a keyed instru- ment, to produce these sounds. They ‘ame from the room beyond a sec- end drawing-room looking out, on fhe Rois de Boulogne. MonSieur Jonqucile had not al- lowed the sefvant to announce him. “One is. not permitted to disturb Lord Valleys at this hour,” the Ieervant had said. eee ‘ \ Monsieur Jonquelle’s card had j added to the man’s perplexity. One was also not permittdd to deny en entrance, anywhere, dt any hour, ¢> | the Prefect of Police of Paris. The man had made a hopeless gesture, ‘like one resigning himself to the in- | evitable. y Monsieur Jonquelle, after door had closed behind him, . re- mained for \some moments quite motionless in ‘the eddy, as one might \write it, of this strange, , weird | music, in which there was always a j}note of ruthless vigor—a note of \barbaric vigor, harsh and ‘ déter- mined. Monsieur Jonquelle could not. place the music/in any remembered. composition. It was not the work of any master that he knew. It was an improvisation of the fingers that produced it. Ny if Presently he advanced info the roonitfrom which the music issued, He‘pavised a moment in the doorway, watching the figure with white, nimble fingers hard steel. Then the spoke. ihe. “Your pardon, monsieur,” said the | Prefect of Police. “I am desolate? Ito disturb you.” ' The man at the piano sprang up and turned swiftly as though his body ‘accomplished ,the act, with a single motion. To the'eye, the man was strange. \ His shoulders,were very broad and stooped; his face was wide, massive —the face of a Slav. His hair’ was thick, close and heavy, but it ws jnot long, and affected no manner- isms, 4 ‘The man ._ was \ very carefully dressed, after the: English fashion, and with its well-bred restraint. But the impression he gave one wys de- cidedly not English. It, was that of a Slav adapted to an English aspect. The’ eyes one did not see. One |rarely saw them. They seemed to \be hidden by® heavy lids like cur- \tained windows. And .there was no |expression in the face. The face was a mask. It seemed always in repose. The big nose, the square. ‘brutal jaw, and the wide planes of the-face, were White as with a sort of. pallor. Monsieur Jonquelle had a sudden, swift impression. The man’ before him was either the greatest. criminal * or the greatest jgenius that he had ever seen, Jonquelle: had also a further im- pression of failure, He-had meant to startle this man, and observe what followed. And he had: startled him; but untrue to every experience, "there was nothing to observe. The man’s face remained without an ex- the from every eye. It was a mask that could not be changed.by the will of another. Monsieur Tonquelle won- dered in what manner hit so admirably obscured. It was a | thing he was ‘not interested to dis-- _ ,8teat protest. They have overturn- quickly relieve kidney and bladder cover. . :.ed the machine they set up two) trouble, It was only for an-instant ‘that Mi hy Mu sion} he was behind it hidden it woutd * com-|nains, dull headache, dizziness end| change at the will of the man that i | ( Hnyihit MAN lit OU \ Qriumphs of MJonquelle- by MELviite Davisson Post: ; ©1909 _NEA Service, . Inc. THE MAN WITH STEEL FINGERS The great ‘drawing-room though: which Monsieur Jonquelle, advanced | ‘Then he smilef and came forward Re the man. was wittoui expression.. into the room... The .smile began with a queer lifting of the lip and | extended:-vaguely -with but a slight changing of the man’s feature: / His voice, when he spoke, was low, ‘well: modulated: and composed. isi manner was enpy and" gracious. “Ah!” she: said, “it is’ Monsieur Jonquelle, the Prefect of Police of Paris. I am honored.” Monsieur Jonquellé removed _ his gloves; he sat a moment jtwisting them in his fingers like dne ‘in a certain embarrassment, His host, also seated, regarded him with the vague smile whieh appeared now as a sort of background on the mask } of his face. .The Prefect of Police hesitated. ' “Monsieur,” he>* said, . “I have called upon you for an opinion upon a problem which has always: per- plexed me. It is a problem upon which the opinions of persons with- out experience are wholly without value, and unfortunately, all those who have had experience and were, therefore, able to give me an opinion, haye ‘been always persons lacking in a certain element of in- telligence. I have. not had the opinion of a man of intelligence, who was also a man ‘of experience, upon this problem.” He paused. The man before him did not reply. He waited as’ in a profound courtesy for Monsieur Jon- quelle to complete the subject witi which he had opened his discours>. v eee He had taken, a small chair, and he ; sat in it as a man of great strength {and vigor and of an unusual bulk rests his weight upon something [which he is uncettain will support iit. a He did’ not ‘move, but, the ex- ly. His eyebrows lifted as in 4 courteous inquiry. Monsieur. Jon- | quelle went on. tirely at easé. “I shall not pretend at ‘ignorance of your affairs, monsieur. The, law courts of England are brutal and direct. They have no consideration for anyone, and the press of those islands has a less restraint. When one is charged with a crime in England, and: comes into its courts, no humiliation’ is .neg- | lected. That one is innocent means nothing; that this innocence is pres- ently demonstrated. does «not. pre- serve one, in the-events preceding such a .verdict, from every imagin- able humiliation.” Monsieur Jonquelle continued. to hesitate. But he went on, * . “Monsieur,” he said, “out of this unfortunate experience you will have come, I. feel, ‘witha certain épinion upon the problem which. dis- turbs me. And I am.sure, monsieur, you will not deny: me the: benefit of that opinion.” , |. The Prefeet of Police looked up [ue one who. with hesitation re- quests’ a favor from. another. Lord Valleys replied. immediately. “I shall be very glad to give you my opinion upon any point in éthe matter,” he said. “Surely. I, have | been spared little. I have had every experience of humiliation, The eriminal law of England is a bung- \ling and cruel device. Those who |find themselves concerned with it, I profoundly pity. “There is no consideration of fam- ily or culture that in any way miti- gates its severity or in any direction preserves one from odium, @nce the machinery of a, criminal court of England is “on its way. The ex- monsieur; but if it can\result in any | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | HANO Me Hat MSGCA PHONG. Hay DEAR NCIGHBORS $ T Cai 1 Know YoURE THERE $8 EACH ARTICLS OCF QUR HOUSEHOLD GOODS WILL PASS UNDER CRITICAC SCRUTINY, | iTHAT THERE. MAY BE NO CRROR YOUR APPRAISAL BT SHALL ANNOUNCE iTHE COST PRICE OCF GACH ARTICLS. WHEN j You FILL YouR EYG AND cu FICe L THANK “ou $t¢ < New. Ss iN <p A'S Wi IN | | mense, pression in his face changed slight- | He seemed not en- | perience of it is a horror th me,| \ SUCH PAINS AS | THIS WOMAN HAD \benefit-to you or to another, I am |willing to recall if, What~ is the | problem, monsieur, upon which you | would have my opinion?” Prefect of Police. “Is it your con- \elusion, upon. this experience of life, {that there is Providence of God that undertakes to adjust the affairs lof mankind—to assist’ the helpless jand to acquit the innocent—or do | you believe that it is the intelligence |of. man that accomplishes this re- sult? . . What’ is it, -monsieur, that moves behind the machinery of the world—chance, luck, fortune or | some sort-of Providence?” Lord Valleys seemed to reflect | while the Prefect of “Police was ‘lspeaking, and he now replied with little hesitation. “Chance, monsieur,” he said, “is unquestionably the greatest and most mysterious factor in all hu- man affairs, but it is modified and diverted by the human will. Human. intelligence, monsieur, and chance are the two factors.” The Prefect of Police continued to look-down at his hands. “IT have jbeen of a, different j opinion, Lord Valleys,” he said. “I {think there is an intention behind levents, a sort of will to justice, to righteousness, as ong. has said. It lis not chance as we ‘ugually define tthe word, and the human will can- |not circumvent it... . It is strange, {as I see it, Lord Valleys. “This thing we call human in- telligencé seems to be able to aid, to assist, to advance, the vague, tm- persistent _ impulse behind levents, and to delay and to disturb jit, but not ultimately to defeat it. | “Take the extraordinary ‘events |that have happened to you, Lord Valleys, and tell me, if youvean, how \they' could have,arrived By chance! fa-“Your uncle, Lord Winton,- tock the title and the whole properties of your family by the’ accident of birth: '¥our father, the second son, having jno title and no fortune, entered the diplomatic service and was allotted to one of the little courts of south- eastern Europe. ,He married your jmother there, and you were born and grew up in the atmosphere of Serbia. (0h <% “There “was little chance that. you i would ‘ever have fortune. or, title. Lord Winton had two sons; one of them. married ‘an~ American; the other remained unmarried. There were three lives ‘between you and this title and its immense estates in England. What chance’ was there, monsieur,. that these persons Should be removed and these, benc- ! {fits descend to you?” He paused. |. “But they were removed, mon- Jsieur, and the benefits ‘have de- scended. The war appéared. Both sons of Lord Winton lost their lives in it; Lord Winton is himself mur- dered; and you come, monsieur, from a paupered kingdom of sout*- eastern Europe to be a peer ‘of Ea- gland with an immense estate, Even the American granddaughter of Lord: Winton takes nothing under this extraordinary English law of. fentail. Would you ‘call this chance, monsieur ?” x Lord Valleys. found. no difficulty at all with the inguiry. He replied directly. ‘ “Monsieur,” he said, “it was all clearly chance except .the murder of Lord Winton. That was, of course; design—” Another installment in this thrill- ing detective story. will appear in ! our next issue. —____—__—__-@ THOUGHT | | o_O Let not him that girdeth on his itarness boast himself as he that | putteth it off—1 Kings 20-11. |We want straight men in this age i of light; a We want their counsel and sense of’, | of right; | Their valor and virtue and loyal sense |Of serving for only the recompense Of seeing a duty. that’s done, well done— i | We want straight men "to run! ee in tke race \ —Folger McKenzie. CONTRASTING MATERIAL. Combjnation frocks are the\ mode | this season, except in the very tail- | ered frocks, the. bodice. is usually of @ different material. from’ the skirt, er the coat contrasts. with the dress. _ The contrast .is more frequently of |'uiaterial than of color. + | The word “doctor” originally was iwsed to signify any sort of a Hreache?, ' Two Months Could Not Tarn inBed. Lydia E. Pinkharm’s Vegetable Com- | Pound Finally Restored Health “Thad drag- not stand on 1 was this way twomonths, trving. everything , any one told me, un- | table Contpe . | tilall the hard pains bad left me and I | was able to be up and. to do my work | again. The hard lump left my side and | 1 feel splendid in all ways. I know of many women it t ”_Mrs. G. | RicHARDSON, {610 Oreas | Washington. | . This is another case | Pinkham’s Veretah broughtresultsafter ‘‘tryii Fs Werytaing any one told me” had failed. If youvare suffering from pai: vousness and alw tired; if yo' ited and good fr» nothi . Pinkkam’s Compound. You may not only r: the p nt distress, but prevent the | development of more sczious trouble, } f oa | | r « " t ¢ 4 Y t ¢ F hi A ci ix bad tt 7g