Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, November 03, 1921, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE MORNING OREGONIANY THURSDAY, NOTE3IBER 3, 1921
HANG I EVIDENCE !
PROMISED SENATE!
Senator Watson Offers to
Back Up Charges.
PUBLIC HEARING WANTED
Georgia Democrat Says He Does
Not Want Committee to Bot
tle Cp Army Scandal.
WASHINGTON. D. C, Nov. 2. No
t!ce was given In the senate today by
Senator Watson, democrat, Georgia,
that be intended to present to the sen
ate evidence of his charges that
American soldiers had been hanged
overseas without courtmartiaL
He declared he would not be
bundled up In any committee room,"
and have his evidence "entombed with
senators In a report nobody would
read," but would make his Tight in the
senate. He added that he would re
serve a decision whether he would ap
pear before the special senate commit
tee appointed to investigate his
charges. ,
Clash Lasts It oar.
Senator Watson's statements today
were made in another hour's clash
over the Investigation when Senator
Brandegee, republican, Connecticut,
chairman of the special committee.
presented a resolution authorizing the
committee to take testimony under
oath and subpena witnesses. The reso
lution drew sharp comment from 'Sen
ator Watson .and also involved him
and Senator Reed, democrat, Missouri,
In a spirited discussion with several
republicans.
Senator Watson reiterated his
charges and declared they had been
made In 1918 by ex-Senator Chamber
lain of Oregon, now a shipping board
member. He also declared that today
he had received letters and telegrams
from ex-service men and soldiers in
Philadelphia and New York support
ing his charges.
Committee Has Resolution.
According to his information, "gal
lows other than that pictured in the
photograph he presented yesterday
had been erected and used in France."
Senator Brandegee bad his resolu
tion, clothing the committee with full
authority, referred to the senate ex
penditures committee. It was re
ported favorably after today's debate,
but went over. Senator Reed, during
the discussion, advised senators to
"think over" the case and hinted at a
motion to quash the Inquiry.
Jilt. BAKER SCOUTS CHARGES
Ex-Secretary of War Says That
Affair Is Preposterous.
CLEVELAND. O., Nov. 2. Charges
of Senator Wataon that American sol
diers in France were hanged without
trial and were subjected to barbarous
treatment were declared "preposter
ous and Incredible" by Newton D.
Baker, formerly secretary of war, to
night. "If a single American soldier had
been hanged without trial," he said,
"word of it would have come to the
country -and proper measures would
have been taken. The senator's
charges are preposterous and In
credible." RUSSIAN AID PROPOSED
Surplus Army Supplies May Be
Turned Over to Hoover.
WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 2.
Chairman Kahn of the house military
committee today introduced a resolu
tion providing that surplus army
medical supplies valued at 94,000.000
be turned over to the American relief
administration. Secretary Hoover, head
of the administration, earlier had
appeared before tne committee and
appealed for the supplies to aid in
flKhtln?' starvation and disease in
Buasia.
Disease In famine-stricken areas of
Russia, the secretary said before the
committee, is "taking: an enormous
toll." Medical and hospital supplies
in most localities, he added, were ex
hausted. He estimated that agencies
co-operating1 with the American relief
administration were feeding- 1,400,000
children.
NOTES SENT DAIRYMEN
Manager Wants Remaining Mem
bers to Stay in League,
"With a -view to retaining the re
maining membership in the Oregon
Dairymen's Co-operative league in
tact following the action of the mem
bers In the Clatsop district in with
drawing from the organisation. K. C.
KIdrldge, manager of the league, has
vent out letters to ail remaining mem
bers explaining the situation in detail.
I trust that the remaining members
of the league will understand the sit
uation and will stand by the preeent
organisation so that we will be able
to weather the atorra said Mr. Eld
ridge. Mr. Eldridg said yesterday that he
offered to give the dairymen of the
Ciatsop district local control in that
he agreed to let the bookkeeping of
that division be done In Astoria rather
than Portland and to lft tne Astoria
bank handle the Clatsop dairy ac
counts. ROAD CONTRACT SNAGGED
Legal Question Arises in Highway
Cu.se at Baker.
BAKER; Or., Nov. 5. (Special.)-'-A
request of the state highway commis
sion that the Baker county road
bonds be deposited with that body
at the rate of 90 per cent of par,
s:nce the letting of a grading con
tract last week for the bridge sec
tion of the Baker-Cornucopia post
road, has caused a new snag in the
letting of the contract, it was an
nounced at the weekly luncheon of
the Baker County Chamber of Com
merce today.
The contract was let to Coponhagen
Bros, of this city for $106,641. In
bidding for the contract Oxman
Harrington, also of Baker, bid 1112.
170, but offered to accept the bonds at
par in payment.
When voted, the bonds were to be
sold at par on a par bid' and the ques
tion now arises if it is possible for
the county legally to place them with
the state commission on a 90 per cent
basis.
TAILORS ASKED TO CITY
Merchant Tailor Points Out Value
of January Convention.
An Invitation to merchant tailors
to attand the third convention
of the Pacific Merchant Tailors'
association to be held in Portland
January 10, 11 and 13, is contained
on the front page of the "Merchant
Tailor" for November, official organ
of the Pacific association published
at San Francisco. Accompanying the
Invitation is a large cut of the city
of Portland with Mount Hood in the
distance.
"Now is the time to make youf
plans to attend the third annual con
vention. Portland, January 10, 11, 12
and to take your wife with you."
declares the announcement of the
convention.
"It means better business during
1322. The style show including yout
exhibit will be the best ever held in
the west. It will make history. Tou
will meet the big men of your in
dustry. Tou will have a hand In
your association's big affairs labor
problems, legislation and a hundred
matters of the utmost importance
not merely to the trade but to you.
DJURT PLOT IS DENIED
ASTORIA MEN PROTEST STATE
MENT OF MR. ELDKIDGE.
Effort Declared Made to Keep
Zone in Organization and Aid
Given Dairymen.
ASTORIA, Or, Nov. 2. (Special.)
A strong protest was voiced by busi
ness men. and bankers here today
against the statement of K. C. Eld
ridge, manager of the Oregon Dairy
men's Co-operative league, published
in The Oregonian, charging that As
toria business and banking interests,
and, not the dairymen themselves,
were responsible, for the withdrawal
from the league of the 521 members
in this zone. J. E. Roman, cashier of
the Bank of Commerce and one of the
committee- of the 'chamber of com
merce appointed to assist in solving
the problem which confronted the
local dairying interests, saidi:
"If Mr. Eldridge made the statement
accredited to him, he is undoubtedly
endeavoring to create a false impres
sion, as his assertions are not true.
Judging from hia actipna and state
ments made during the recent con
ference in this city, Mr. Eldridge evi
dently was imbuedi with the notion
there was a de'Hber&te -plot among
the business and banking interests
here to wreck: the league, and he ap
pears to be possessed with that idea
yet. That is far from the truth, and
the business men and bankers had
absolutely nothing to do with the
withdrawal of the dairymen from the
leag-ue. In fact, everything that was
done here was with a view of keeping
this xone In the league, andi our com
mittee worked lm conjunction! with
the dairymen in an eXfort to accom
plish that result.
"What our committee did want was
to make some arrangement through
the league whereby the dairymen
could receive their checks within a
reasonable time after the delivery of
their products, and not be forced, to
wait five or six months as at present.
TRAFFIC COP NABS MAYOR
Pendleton Executive Takes Chance
and Is lined.
PEVDL.ETON, Or., Nov. 2. (Spe
cial.) Pendleton hired a new traffic
officer late Tuesday afternoon. A
few hours later the new man became
active in rounding up violators of the
city's traffic ordinances. This morn
ing Mayor Hartman appeared in po
lice court and paid a $5 fine after
pleading guilty of parking his car
on the wrong side of the street.
"Didn't you know that you were
violating the traffic ordinance gov
erning narking?" Judge Fitzgerald,
police magistrate, asked.
"Oh. yes," the mayor replied, "1
kt.ew better, but thought I would
take a chance."
BILL HITS LAND OFFICE
Measure Passed In House Reduces
Walla Walla Post Materially.
THE OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU,
Washington, D. C, Nov. 2. Under the
terms of the bill which has passed
the house, providing for the consoli
dation of all the duties of local land
offices under the register, and abol
ishing the office of receiver, the
Walla Walla land office will become
a one-man establishment.
The Walla Walla district, the rec
ords show, is more nearly settled up
than any other district in the three
northwest states. The land offices
at Spokane, Waterville and Yakima
and in Oregon will not be affected by
the new law.
GREEE TRIAL DUE TODAY
Spokane Woman Charged With
Reckless Driving Near Salem.
SALEM, Or.. ' Nov. 2. (Special.)
The trial of Mrs.- Edith Grebe of Spo
kane, Wash., who was arrested here
last summer charged with reckless
driving in connection' with running
down C. W. Fenn, a Portland stage
driver, will start here tomorrow. The
accident occurred on the 'Pacific high
way two miles north of Salem. Mr.
Fenn suffered a broken ankle and
other Injuries.
Mrs. Grebe also is defendant in a
damage action filed against her by
Mr. Fenn in the local courts.
Students to Judge Stock.
OREGO:! AGRICULTURAL, COL
LEGE, Corvallis, Nov. 2. (Special.)
Six seniors in animal husbandry will
go to Portland Friday to represent
Oregon Agricultural college in the
intercollegiate stock-Judging cin'.ests
at the Pacific International Livestock
exposition. Men selected for the team
are G. F. Loy, Buena Vista; Joe Kas
berger, The Dalles; Warren Daigh,
Ontario, CaL; J. G. Hogg, Salem; Law
rence Brown, Corvailis, and Porter A.
Brimmer, Rialto, Cal.
Phone us for prices on your winter
coal. Diamond Coal Co.. Bdwy. 3037
Adv.
SNIFFLES, SNEEZES,
HOARSE WHEEZES
DR. BELL'S Pine-Tar-Honey has
for years relieved thousands of
cold and cough suffering men,
women and children. Severe colds tr
colds newly contracted are benefited
by its pleasant balsamic and healing
antiseptics. Phlegm is soon loosened,
irritation eased, inflammation allayed,
breathing made less difficult.
You can give the children Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar-Honey, too. Get a bottle
today from any druggist. 30c.
me4af-rionetj
for Coughs and Col
SOVIET EMBITTERS
Willingness to Pay Old Rus
sian Debt Criticised.
WORKERS HELD BETRAYED
Bolshevists Are Declared Ready to
Do Almost Anything In Order
to Retain Power.
(Copyright by the New York World. Pub
lished by Arrangement.)
BERLIN. Nov. 2. (Special.) Mos
cow's willingness to recognize the
old Russian debts so aa to prolong
Its power b&s incited unprecedented
bitterness among German socialists.
They cannot find words hard enough
to express their disappointment and
contempt.
To them it Is obvious that the bol
shevists are throwing over all prin
ciples to maintain power and the Ger
man independent socialists, who are
honestly led, have, through their
organ, the Freiheit, voiced an ani
mosity which has been accumulating
for months.
The independent socialists, who won
most of the votes away from the com
munist party at the last Berlin elec
tions, have been bolshevism's best
apologists, but the bolshevists' last
move, whether it be a capitulation
or a maneuver, has provoked their
disgust.
Socialists Are Alienated.
Whether the bolshevists pay the
old Russian debts is of no concern to
them, but to knuckle under and
"make Russian workmen slaves to
a so-called soviet state," has finally
alienated them.
The Freiheit has reviewed all bol
shevik history just as unprejudiced
observers' have always seen .it. It
has said the bolshevists seized power
in the name of the Soviets when they
were destroying the Soviets It has
said they carried out a systematic
destruction of the country with the
"mad Idea of building it all up again
along bolshevist lines."
The Freiheit has declared that the
bolshevists have been explaining
away the too evident misery in Rus
sia by saying it was caused by the
counter revolution and the blockade.
The paper added fhat while these
were the contributant causes the real
cause of Russia's present plight was
making Russian workers a plaything
In the hands of theorizera who have
coldly sacrificed the workers in try
ing to prove their theories.
Burden of Flrchtlnsr Borne.
"The Russian workers," exclaimed
the Freiheit. "have borne the burden
of all the fighting and of the restitu
tion and have not had the slightest
profit from it. On all the fronts, for
four years they spilled their blood.
They have followed spiritedly com
munist leadership only to be weak
ened, disorganized and decimated and
to become a football for soviet power.
The bolshevists established a dic
tatorship over Russia in the name
of the proletariat, but they have
built up a bureaucracy of which the
proletariat is the object.
"The proletariat has only such
rights as those in power permit. No
press, no right to assemble, no Inde
pendent workers, unions, no control
over those in power, hundreds of
proved old revolutionists in priBon-
such is the picture of proletariat
freedom in the communist soviet
paradise.
New Enslavement Alleged.
"Socialism's worst enemy could not
imagine a worse caricature than that
at which the bolshevists have actu
ally arrived," concluded the Freiheit.
"In all these new notes, pouring out
from Moscow, is a new enslavement
of the Russian workmen. So also.
In the new decree to settle working
conditions liy Russia. That means
the end 'of the eight-hour day and
the handing of Russia over to for
eign capitalists.
"Slowlpr but surely is awaking, in
the Russian proletariat, the knowl
edge that they have been the victim
of illusion and despite prisons or
executions they are assembling
strength to liquidate the bolshevist
experiment and to save the remnants
of the Russian revolution.
According to the Berlin communist
newspaper. Rote fabne (red nag),
Karl Radek wrote in the Moscow
Pravda on October 19 1ast:
'To save the hungry masses from
death and to restore Russian in
dustry, which was destroyed by the
entente armies, the soviet govern
ment accepts the obligation to pay
Russia's debts, but we will pay only
when we have, with the aid of new
loans, begun business again with the
capitalist world and when inanistry
is actually re-established, and in no
event before the soviet government
is recognized by the entente gov
ernments. For without such recog
nition, our promise to pay has no
international value."
Bddy ot Soldier Home.
CENTRALIA, Wish., Nov. 2. (Spe
cial.) The body of Joseph Zurfluh,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Zurfluh.
who was killed in action in France,
arrived in Centralla this afternoon
from overseas. The soldier will be
given a military burial, probably Sun
day, under the auspices of the Ameri
can T.eRTtnn.
COMING
TOMORROW!
Get inside one
of my Overcoats
"and laugh at
wind and weather!
Woolly, warm, and wearable!
Medium-weight or heavy ! Double
breasted, single-breasted, belted or
half -belted! Browns, .greens, grays,
heathers ! Fabrics galore and styles
to the moment! Priced with greater
moderation than ever!
$25 to $80
Sole Portland
Highland Heather
BEN SELLING
Leading Clothier
Morrison Street at Fourth
SECTION OF PACIFIC HIGHWAY
INVOLVES BIG CONTRACT.
La Center-Woodland Section Will
Be Paved Next Spring Along
With Kalama Extension.
RIDGEFIELD, Wash., Nov. S. (Spe
cial.) The' Tjnlted Contracting com
pany, at work on ttte Pacific high
way between La Center and Wood
land, practically has completed all
team and truck work and about three
or four weeks' work for a steam
shovel will finish- grading. A num
ber of dangerous curves have been
eliminated and the highway widened
at various places.
The length of this section of the
highway is 4.81 miles and the con
tract price Is $230,698. the largest
contract let by the state highway
commission last summer, it is said.
This stretch will be paved next spring
the same time. that the highway be
tween Woodiawn and Kalama will be
hard surfaced.
Work is going on rapidly on the
Woodland-Kalama contract, which is
Being done by CcJlucclo & Erikson
of Seattle at a price of 1326.316. The
grading will be done this year and
the highway paved next spring. The
length of this project is about eight
and one-half miles.
A new bridge will be constructed
near the Hanson ranch between
Woodiawn and Kalama. The exca
vation for new piers is about finished.
Seattle Suicide Formerly Nurse. .
CENTRALIA, Wash., Nov. 2. (Spe
cial.) Mrs. Florence M. Langer, who
committed suicide in Seattle Monday
night, with $5000 worth of stocks and
bonds in her lap, was well known in
Centralla, having been employed for
several years as a nurse in a local
hospital. At that time she was known
as Florence Diffon and was promi
nent In local music circles. While
ONE
ARABIAN
NIGHT
GO NOW1
TODAY 1
SOON
JOHK HAMRICK'S
I pii 2-Zl.".J) ;' ,
I- ) I , lK
: iwJhr . " 5 1
Agent
Overcoats
here she was married to Von C. Ja
cobsen, from whom she was later
divorced.
WOMAN ASKS DEATH DATA
Disappearance of Sea Captain May
Be Cleared at Centralla.
CENTRALIA. Wash.. Nov. 2. (Spe
cial.) C. L. Stlcklin. a local under
taker, today received a letter from
Mrs. Frances J. Ayer of Emeryville,
Cal., seeking Information as to her
husband, John C. Ayer, a sea captain,
who disappeared from his ship at
Mukilteo in February, 1915. Records
filed by Mr. Stlcklin with the state
registrar of vital statistics showed
that a John Ayer was brought to a
Centralis hospital in January, 1919.
in an unconscious condition, and that
he died1 without regaining conscious
ness and was buried in a' local ceme
tery. Local records that might have
thrown additional light on Ayer's
identity were burned in a fire that
destroyed the undertaking establish
ment several months ago. Mrs. Ayer
says she is nearly blind, has' three
children and is endeavoring to estab
lish proof of her husband's death in
order to collect his Insurance.
CLUB PRESIDENT WORRIED
Action of Minute Women Against
Radicals Causes Division.
CENTRALIA. Wash.. Nov.V2. (Spe
cial.) Mrs. Victoria Trumbull, presi
dent of the women's legislative coun
cil of Washington, arrived! in Centra
lla last evening from Seattle, prepara
tory to the opening of the mid-year
assembly of the council. She expressed
herself as being much perturbed over
the resolutions passed Monday by the
minute women of Lewis county ac
cusing several speakers on the as
sembly programme of being radicals
The council's president partially ad
mitted that there was some basis for
the minute women's action when ht
said that "we have been gradually
we f t n fr the ra rH ra's out."
POLA
NEGRI
A romance of the harem.
(Not intended for children.)
STRIKERS GET JOBS BUCK
CHANCE GIVEN RAILROADERS
TO GO TO WORK.
Federal Judge in Order Excludes
Four Local Chairmen of Union
Which Ordered Walkout.
HOUSTON, Tex.. Nov. 2. Federal
Judg'e Hutcheson late today ruled
that the 600-odd members of the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen of
the International & Great Northern
railroad, who have been on a strike
since October 22, should be taken back
into the employ of the road.
This does not applx. however, the
decree said, to the four local chair
men of the union, whose status should
be determined by James A. Baker, re
ceiver of the road.
The men were given until Friday to
determine whether they will accept
or reject he decree.
The trainmen would go back on
probation under the court's decision.
After 30 days, if the receiver and of
ficials of the road are satisfied that
the men have returned in a spirit of
conciliation, "tfie wage scale existing
previous to October 22 and full senior
ity rights will be restored.
High School Dance Is Success.
TUAIjATIN, Or.. Nov. 2. (Special.)
The students of the high school
fave a dance Friday night. The
grand march was led by Charles
Vlaene and Ruby Nyberg. Viola I
Alien, in the garb of a Romany maid,
told fortunes, and Beatrice Cole and
Alice Mudge, asissted by Florence
Viaene, Leta Tiedman and Miss Mae
Gyberger, all dressed in costumes of
Halloween yellow and black, served
supper. The cider featured at this
Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes
Most Women Can Have
Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known
Ohio Physician.
rw. F. M. Edwards for 17 years
treated scores of women for liver and
bowel ailments. During these years he
gave to his patients a prescription
made of a few well-known vegetable
Ingredients mixed with olive oil. nam
ing them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets.
You will know them by their olive
co 1 o r.
These tablets are wonder-workers
on the liver and bowels, which cause
a normal action, carrying off the
waste and poisonous matter in one's
system.
If you have a pale face, sallow look,
dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue,
headaches, a listless, no-good feeling,
all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you
take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tab
lets nightly for a time and note the
pleasing results.
Thousands of women and man take
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets the suc
cessful substitute for calomel now
and then Just to keep tbem fit. XSc
rA - '., aj-tf 1f
A xmwr m.iW m.Mft.nn sac, t
gif lxnrm AOc.
,,.. 2 AUr 5 P. M. -
"vu j) ailralwinn A4)c.
W, 1jtr and
A CLEAR COMPLEXION
and 30c Mr, . . .. .
How Mastiffs Yeast
Vitamon Tablets Give
firm flesh "Pep"
And Increased Energy
Round Out The Face and Figure and Beautify The
Complexion Easy To Take Results Quick.
If you are thin and rundown, if your face is drawn and haggard, your
flesh flabby and your figure angular and ill-proportioned, you are probably
Why Ml hat tka fnctiwl, aluaalr, .
waU-i aaudad 6rata " aa-awa-ttaa
tarn "aaa" aaa1 flaw
Malt Md af
aof tlua, aa I
anMfM. acrawBr md Ucftioc I 11
- rl.'T II wM , rao A V J J
m .d lk. aad Mil. kultb l&, rZ
la try Matlia's VITAMON Tab- . yKi-a-
lata far aaarl fiat to lYuj
watch tha aatvmaaf ra J 1 S
r
not upset the stomach or cause a bloated feeling; on the
contrary, they aid digestion and bv acting in a natural way
as a general conditioner of tiie whole system help to put
on firm flesh, correct constipation and increase energy.
The best way to satisfy yourself and prove exactly
what Mastin's VITAMON Tablets will do for you is to
make this simple tost: First weigh yourself and measure
yourself. Next, take Mastin's VITAMON two tablets
. . I m, -l IP 1
with every meal, men weign ana measure yourscu eacn
week and continue taking Mastin's VITAMON Tablets regularly until
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So remarkable are the benefits from these highly concentrated tablets
that entire satisfaction is absolutely guaranteed or the small amount you
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name Mastin's VI-TA-MON the original and genuine yeast-vitamine
tablet. There is nothing else like it, so do not accept imitations or sub
stitutes. You can get Mastin's VITAMON Tablets at all good druggists,
such" . Owl Drug Co.
TyMASTINS
VtAST
VITAMIN!
TABLtl
supper was made from apples grown
on the campus.
Fte-ad The Oreconian clsnslfle a-d.
NOW PLAYING
present hi fj X A
fhotodwmahcrf. Iff
iutunxituxw
BOIV10 CRIKIIK, LTD,
A Two-Reel Cmrdy.
LIBERTY IXTFRXAno
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comix; PATTiiniY
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la TI1K IWIMUI.K KEAR"
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EIMER A AMEND, SOS Third A--. New York
ItTHaV Ts a aTsw X
CSNUIMl '
1
IT TV a
iP 4 levies
14 stars
If M?' "Kksley 5arry
ATTRACTION X !' aj I gffl
HITS?
lJ'wm
not getting irom your iooa
enough of the health-giving,
tissue-building nourishment,
called vitamines. To supply
these larking vitarruncs and
put on firm, solid flesh in the
places where your face and fig
ure most need it you should
try taking two of Mastin's
Yeast VITAMON Tablets
with each meal and watch the surpris
ing change that takes place 'in your
physical condition and appearance.
There are throe kinds of vitamines,
and all three are regarded as absolutely
necessary for perfect health, vigor and
proper physical development. Mas
tin's VITAMON Tablets contain all
three vitamines in an active state,
highly concentrated, together with
other such valuable tonic ingredients as
calcium glycerophosphate, mix vomica
and peptonate of iron.
By increasing the nourish
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Mastin's VITAMON Tab
lets supply just what your
body needs to feed the
shrunken tissues, strengthen
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and renew shattered nerve
force. Under their influence
pimples, boils and distiguring
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ONE NEIGHBOR
TELLS ANOTHER
Points the Way to Comfort
and Health. Other Women
Please Read
Moundsville, W.Va. "I had taken
doctor's medicine for nearly two years
Decause my pe
riods were irregu
lar, came every
two weeks, and I
would suffer with
b e arin e-do wn
pains. A lady told
me of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vege
table Compound
and how much
good it had done
her daughter, so
I tank it and now
V - 1 anan, mnnth O tl H httVA
A BUI rcguittl ciwi .... -
no pain at all. I recommend your
medicine to everyone and you may
publish my testimonial, hoping that
the Vegetable Compound does some
other girl the good it has done me. "
Mrs. George Tegarden, 915 Third
Street, Moundsville, W. Va.
How many young girls suffer as
Mrs. Tegarden did and do not know
where to turn for advice or help.
They often are obliged to earn their
living by toiling day in and day out
no matter how hard the pain they
have to bear. Every girl who suffers
in this way should try Xydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound and if she
does not get prompt relief write to
the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.,
Lynn, Mass., about their health.
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
When the body begins to stiffen
and movement becomes painful
it is usually an indication that
the kidneys are out of order.
Keep these organs healthy by.
taking
COLD MEDAL
The world's utandard remedy for kll
nfy, liver, bladder and uric acid trou
ble. Famous stnr 1616. Take regu
larly and keep in (rood health. In
three sixes, all drugKluta, Guaranteed
aa represented.
Look fur the nam Gold Medal on
every box and crrpt no Imitation,
Lose Your Fat,
Keep Your Health
Superfluous flenh ! not hUhy. nfth r
lm U healthy to diet or extreme too muh
for Its rmnovitl. The Iimp1nL :nThn1
known for rcducinB the ovrfMt body eamiy
and trndlly ! the Marmoia Method, tri'd
and en dor !."(. by thotixunda. MatiiKi I'r'
rrlption Tablet contain mn emct :1m nt
the famou Mar mo. a l'r-acrlpt.iti. mid mi e
old by drUKlt irita the world ovt-r h t 01..
dollar or a rase. They are harm ' d
leave no wrlnklea or f:abbinena. They an
popular beramw effert ive and r,nvnln;
Ask your druKtnt for them or ml frwe
dirert to the ,Mrmo'i Co., 4T.1J Woudward
Avfl., Detroit, liicb., and procura a cw.
k , if',