The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930, November 23, 1922, Image 3

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    PORTLAND
NORTONIA HOTEL
SAFE AND CENTRAL REASONABLE RATES
Excellent Cafe Kpeclul Weekly Kates Bus Meets All Train!
11th and Stark, Portland, Ore.
MEDUSA
Waterproofed
CEMENT
HEMSTITCHING AND PLEATING.
Buttonholing Buttons Plaiting Tucking and Chalnstltching
All Mall Orders given careful and prompt attention
ELITE SHOP, 128j Tenth near Washing-ton.
BAB'S RESTAURANT
PORTLAND HIDE & WOOL
108 UNION AVENUE NORTH. PORTLAND. OREGON.
Write for Prices and Shipping Taira
t SIradivara
Page
& Son
Portland, Oregon
KIMBALL
Pianos
429-431
RHEUMATISM
Jack King: Cures it. Ladies and Gents Exam
ination free. 207 Dekura bids., Portland, Ore
RAINIER HOTEL
Rates $1.00 -do 128 H. 6th Su Portland, On
Very Centrally Located. Convenient to all
Depots, and one block from main Postoffice
FINKE BROTHERS
Manufacturers of all kinds of Tanks,
hard and soft wood BarrelB and Kegs.
Write for prices, 264 Front, Portland, Ore
USED TRUCK BARGAINS
1 to 5 ton GMC, Republics, Whites, etc
Send for our List.
WENTWORTH & IRWIN, Inc.,
Oreeon Distributors for GMC Trucks
200 Second St., Cor. Taylor Portland, Oi
STT If your RADIATOR heats or
I I leaks, send it to us.
j Armstrong Auto Radiator Co.,
7Bunnlde Btreet, . Portland, Oregon
Wedding Bouquets and Funeral Pisces
Lubliner Florists, 348 Morrison St
Hotel Hoyt
Located Sixth and Hoyt
Strictly Fireproof and Modern. Near
both depots and convenient car service
to all parts ot city.
hees
rTHOUS ANDS of prominent NortKweK people
can testify that I permanently cure Pile with
out operation, pain or confinement. Your money
back if I fail in YOUR case.
Write or call for FREE booklet.
DR.CHAS. J. DEAN
CND AND MORRISON PORTLAND, OREGON
MENTION THI5 PAPER WHEN WRITIN&
IMPORTANT POINTS IN COWS
Missouri Expert' Tells Just What to
Look for In Buying High
Producing Cattle.
"The man does not live who can
pick the good cows from the poor ones
without ever making a mistake," says
W. W. Swett, of the Missouri College
of Agriculture. "Even the best judges
sometimes make a mistake. But there
are certain points about the dairy cow
that are almost always associated with
high production."
The udder should be deep, wide and
long with good attachments. It should
be evenly developed, level on the floor
and equipped with teats of good and
uniform size, symmetrically placed. It
should also be soft and pliable, Indi
cating that It consists of secreting
cells rather than flesh.
A good set of milk veins Indicates
that the udder Is well supplied with
blood. Long, crooked milk veins en
tering large wells or openings through
the body wall are usually associated
with high production.
,A cow cannot be a maximum and
continuous producer unless the. has
a strong constitution. Vitality and
strength of constitution are indicated
TRY TO SELL
American Peace Societ) Seeks to
Halt Auction by French Cred.
Itors at Lyons, France.
Washington. Disturbed over re
ports that a valuable collection of
Goethe relics Is to be sold it auction
by the authorities of Lyons, France,
the. American Peace society through
Its official organ is lnstltutl ; a cam
paign to prevent what it regards as
Th a -mm
OFFERS A MARKET
FOR YOUR PRODUCE
You Will F..I
Rilhl at Horn. Hera
Portland, Orejron
VAUDEVILLE PHOTO-PLAY9
Complete Chans Saturday. Adult, Matinee, 20c:
Evening!, 89c. Continuous 1 to 11 p, m, Children
10 centi all timet.
will make Silos, Granaries, Basements, etc., Water
proof, Kotproof, Hatproof and Fireproof.
Medusa Waterproofed White Portland Cement Is
the best for Stucco Plaster on outBlde for Bunga
lowsDoes not stain and dirt can be hosed off.
Write for Literature. Sold by A. McMllXAN CO.,
840-360 Kant Ankeny Street, Corner Second, Portland.
A good place to Eat and Live Well.
Remarkable 40c luncheon at noon.
Open 7 . m. to 2 e. m.. S2S Stark St
CO. hidpWWoW
CASCARA BARK.
Address Department B
The Phonograph Known for Tone
Agents wanted. Order direct from factory, 830 East
Morrison St, Portland, Oregon,
STRADIVARA PHONOGRAPH CO.
WE WANT
Turkeys and Fresh Eggs
Write for Prices
and Phonographs sold on Installment
plan.
Mccormick musk: co,
Oregon Distributors
Washington Street, Portland, Oregon
INFORMATION
DEPARTMENT
PLEATING SPECIAL
Cut. seam, hem end machine
85 cent
pleat skirts ready for band.
Hemstitching-, & cents per yard.
tASltKN NOVELTY MFQ. CO.
86V4 Fifth St.
Portland. Ore
BRAZING, WELDING eV CUTTING
Northwest Welding & Supply Co. 88 1st St
CLEANING AND DYEING
For reliable Cleaning and
Dyeing service send parcels to
us. We pay return postage.
k, 51 Information and prices given
viJptyW upon request.
W ENKE'S CITY DYE WORKS
Established 1890 Portland
CUT FLOWERS A FLORAL DESIGNS
Clarke Bros., Florists, 287 Morrison St
FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORK8
Commercial Iron Works, 7th & Madison.
FOOT'CORRECTIONIST
Featherweight Arch Supports made to
order. J. E. Tryzelaar, (18 Plttock Block,
Portland, Ore.
HIDES WANTED
We tan deerskins properly tagged, also
pay highest prices for horsehides.
West Coast Tanning Co., 892 Tenlno 8t,
Portland, Ore.
HOLER BARBER COLLEGE
Teaches trade in 8 weeks. Some pay while learn
ing. Positions secured. Write for catalogue.
234 Burnside street. Portland, Ore.
MONUMENTS E. 3d and Pine Sts.
Otto Schumann Granite & Marble Works.
PERSONAL
Marry if Lonely; most successful "Home
Maker"; hundreds rich; confidential;
reliable; years experience; descriptions
free. "The Successful Club," Mrs. Nash,
aox pod, uaKianq, aiirornia.
SHIP US YOUR WOOL
Cleaning, carding and mattresses. Crystal
Springs Woolen Mills, 760 Umatilla. Portland.
SANITARY BEAUTY PARLOR
We help the appearance of women.
Twenty-two Inch switch or transforma
tion, value 37.60, price 32.46.
400 to 412 Dekum Bldg.
VETERINARIAN Cattle a Specialty
Dr. Chas. M. Anderson, Kenton. Portland.
"IF IT HURTS DON'T PAY."
Guaranteed dental work. Crowns $5.00,
Plates $16.00. Bridgework $6.00 a tooth,
Teeth extracted by gas. Latest modern
methods. Dr. Harry Semler, Dentist, 3rd
ma Morrison, zna iloor AllsKy mag., foi t
land. Or. Write or phone for appointment.
INCOME
Expert advice on any
income tax problems.
Several years actual
experience in Govern-
TAX
DDflQI CllOment Bureaus Is offered
r II U D L C M O those unable to visit our
office. State your troubles briefly and
send In with $1 and we will give you hon
est to goodness advice. It will pay you to
get In touch with us now. E. J. Curtin,
Hoom goo Lewis Biag., romana, Oregon.
by" EroadT open nostril, and a "chesf
which Is deep and broad;
Feed capacity Is essential. In order
to produce heavily a cow must con
sume large quantities of feed and
water. A barrel which is long, broad
and deep Indicates a large capacity
Money la Made Where Cows of This
Type Are Used,
and good production. A large cow
nearly always has the advantage In
production, provided she Is not de-'
flcient In other points.
Alertness In temperament is an as
set, and a sluggish cow Is seldom a
high producer. Dairy temperament
includes those characteristics which
Indicate that the cow's feed Is used
for the production of milk rather than
for body fat Angularity, prominent
points, lack of heaviness and flesh,
and the presence of the triple wedges
are good Indications.
Quality refers to the handling or
pliability of the hide, the refinement
of bone, and the character of the ani
mal, which cannot be described but
which have to be seen to be appre
ciated.
GOETHE RELICS
an Impending calamity to the world
of literature. The society has been In
formed that the Goethe collection was
loaned by the Goettn museum of
Frankfort to a French committee at
Lyons for exhibition shortly before
the World war, was seized by the
French government, and now Is held
for storage costs of 500,000 francs,
which the Frankfort museum says it
cannot pay.
Uncommon
Sense
JOHN BLAKE
WIN, BUT ENJOY GAME
GENTLEMEN who play golf will
tell you that the man who tries
too hard, never does very well at It
Incidentally, ha never gets any fun
out of the game. . .
There are many parallels between
golf and life, which Is doubtless the
reason that so many people are devot
ed to It.
Golf, of course, Is a game, and only
a game. let there are many of Its fol
lowers who can see only the advantage
of winning, and who come In sour and
111 tempered If they lose.
Others, while they try to win, get
just as much fun out of It if they don't
And they never stamp on their clubs
or throw them away, or swear at the
caddies.
It is very Important to win In any
thing. But It Is more important to get
your allowance of fun out of It as you
go along.
Sitting wheezlly In any rich man's
club you will find old gentlemen who
wanted to win more than anything
else, and who did win fortunes, but
lost their health and their happiness
In the effort. And with all their
money, you can set them down as
losers.
There Is good sportsmanship In all
human effort. There are things the good
sportsman will not do, even to win.
One of them Is cheating, another Is
becoming so absorbed in the pursuit of
victory that he forgets everything else
as he goes along. .
John Burroughs, who probably never
had more than the necessities of life
In all his existence, got full measure
of enjoyment that was denied to many
who made a thousand times as much
money. Incidentally, he was a very
successful man, for he added to the
sum of human knowledge.
Win if you can. Get a fortune If
you can. Money means Independence,
and the ability to do good In the world.
But never forget that there Is en
joyment as well as trouble In life, and
that if you are not too intent on win
ning what the world calls success, you
will be happier as you go along, and
stand just as good a chance of mak
ing your life worth while, and the
world better off because you lived In It
(Copyright by John Blake.)
O
Something to
Think About
By F. A. WALKER
AVOID THE RUTS ,
IF YOU would surmount obstacles,
travel the great highway which
takes to sure success, and write your
name In lofty places, where future gen
erations may see, you must be care
ful as you go to avoid the ruts.
All about you are numerous mines
and pits, seemingly waiting to engulf
you, or put an air-brake upon your
progress when your safe passage
seems assured.
They are hidden In a thousand
places, many of them within your
own heart, which, if you would fre
quently examine with an Impartial
eye, you would discover to be the
most threatening and dangerous of
all.
A bad habit unconsciously formed
through months, and possibly years
of use, may finally wreck your fond
est ambition upon the very thresh
old of success, and land you helpless
on your back among the briars and
brambles.
You. may be passably well edu
cated, you may have good looks, the
manners of a Chesterfield, wear fine
clothes and even be capable of smil
ing and counterfeiting the grand air
of kings, but If you have become
habituated to ugly moods, sudden
bursts of anger In which you spout
poisonous words, you will find as
the passing years leave their lmprlnf
upon you, that you are In a terrible
rut, down In the sticky mire, from
which no one can possibly pull you
except yourself.
And at this period of your life you
will awaken to the sad truth that
you are a little bit shaky on your
feet, lack youthful Imagination and
courage, and, worst of all, have lost
your faith, the most helpful asset a
man or woman can possibly possess,
In spite of the opinion of the skep
tical and those thoughtless Individ
uals who openly deride Its potential
power.
To travel the devious ways of life
without faith, Is like trying to sail a
ship without rudder, or ride an un
tamed bronco without a bridle.
You may smile at such danger when
In company, but when you are alone
you may be likely to become supremely
serious, as millions of others have
done before you, when they found It
was too late.
There is no possibility of writing
your name on the eternal skies while
you remain In the ruts, which have
threatened the downfall of man or
woman since the sorrowful day Evt
bit Into the fatal apple, but If you
walk In the light and accept wise
counsel, nothing but death can keep
yon from the heights.
(9, till, by MoClure K ewspaper Syadleate.)
An Inventor has combined a small
caliber automatic pistol with an eleo-
trie flashlight of the tabular typ
Mrs. L. J. Foote
I i
Reap the Reward of
Perfect Health
Good Looks Follow Good Health
Fresno, Calif. "It is over twenty
years ago since I first heard of
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
and Golden Medical Discovery. It
was after motherhood and I waB
simply a wreck. My strength was
all gone. I never left my room and
rarely left my bed for six months.
This was my condition when I
heard of Dr. Pierce's medicines.
For several months I almost lived
on the Favorite Prescription and
the' Golden Medical Discovery. I
gradually gained in strength and
spirits. To the healing and
strength-giving qualities of these
remedies, I am sure I owe my life
and present good health. It is a
pleasure for me to give this en
dorsement and express my grati
tude for the good I have received."
Mrs. L. J. Foote, 2615 Merced St.
Dr. Pierce's famous remedies can
be procured of your neighborhood
druggist in tablets or liquid, and
you can have confidential medical
advice free by writing Dr. Pierce's
Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. T.
A Lady of Distinction.
Is recognized by the delicate fascinat
ing Influence of the perfume she uses.
A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hoi
water to thorcughly cleanse the pores,
followed by a dusting with Cutlcura
Talcum Powder usually means a clear,
sweet, healthy skin. Adv.
HERDS TESTED DURING JUNE
Of a Total of 250,886 Examined 8,810
Reacted, Disclosing 32 Per Cent
Tuberculous Cattle.
Cattle officially tested during June,
1922, for tuberculosis numbered 250,-
), according to a summary Issued
by the bureau ot animal Industry,
United States Department of Agricul
ture. This figure exceeds the normal
amount of tuberculin testing by sev
eral thousand. Of all the cattle tested,
8,810 reacted, thus disclosing about
3V4 per cent of tuberculous cattle.
The removal of such animals from
herds otherwise healthy Is gradually
bringing about better health among
farm live stock, safer milk supplies,
and many economic benefits. The pop
ularity of tuberculosis eradication is
evidenced by the length of the list of
herds waiting to be tested. At the
end of June there were applications
on file for the testing of 85,239 herds,
containing more than half a million
cattle.
SKIM CREAM MORE CLOSELY
Keeps Better During Hot Weather
and Makes Better Butter Keep
6klm Milk on Farm.
If It's to keep best during the warm
weather and to make the highest qual
ity butter, cream needs to be skimmed
closely. Better butter Is made from
heavier cream as the fine, Bandlike
grains that are precipitated In churn
ing are niore solid than the butter re
sulting from th In cream. Also It will
pay to ship the heavier cream, as
there Is no use to pay shipping charges
on skim milk. It will make better feed
on the furm.
Tester Is Big Aid.
Nothing compares to a good cow
tester In helping get the herd In the
way of bringing profits.
.Removing Wallpaper,
With a pastebrush give the paper
a coat of hot flour paste the Bamo
kind that Is used in putting wallpaper
on. This will quickly loosen it and It
can be easily peeled off. Keep a strip
ahead on the application of the paste
to give it time to soak.
If we could read the secret history
of our enemies, we should find in each
man's life sorrow and suffering enough
to disarm all hostility. Longfellow.
The Dull Point.
It is hard work to plow with a dull
point. Can't do as good a Job, either.
There is a man downtown that is
waiting to sell you a new point. That
is the way the world's business Is kept
up. Tou need the new point; he needs
the dollar you pay him for it. Farm
Life.
need for baby's clothes, will keep them
sweet and snowy-whit until worn oat.
Try hand for yours l(. Arn '
Are Yob Satisfied? !SW&
Is the bbrreat, most perfectly Mulpped
BusineH Training; bchooi in in wortn
weflt Fit yourself (or a higher poaltio
with more money. Permaoeat iMelttotu
aavrarea our ur&au&ie.
Write for caUlo Fourth and Yamhill
rei-yazuu
The Secret of
How l Learned It
Br GEORGE
"Hart you beard th news about Frank I
Jordan 1" Th queition quickly brought ut
to id uui group wucn naa garnered ux
th' center of th office. Jordan and X had
started with th Great Eastern Machinery
Company, within a month of each other, four
years ago. A year ago, Jordan was taken
Into th accounting division and X was sent
out as salesman. Neither of us waa blessed
with an unusual amount of brilliancy, but we
"sot by" in our new iobi well enough to I
bold them.
Imagine my amazement, then, when I heard: ,
"Jordan's Just been made Treasurer of the
Company I"
l could hardly believe my cars. But there
was the "Notic to Employees" on the bul
letin board, telling about Jordan's good for
tune.
Now I knew that Jordan was a eanable
fellow, quiet, and unassuming, but I never
would have picked him for any,-such sudden
rise. I knew, too, that the Treasurer of the
Great Eastern had to be a big man, and X
wondered how in the world Jordan landed
the place.
The first chance I got, I walked into Jordan
new office and after congratulating him warm
ly. I asked him ta let me "in" on the details
of how he jumped ahead to quickly. His story
is so Intensely Interesting that I am going
to repeat it as closely aa I remember.
"I'll tell you just how it happened, George,
because you may pick up a pointer or two
that will help you.
"xou remember how scared I used to be
whenever I had to talk to the chief! You
remember how you used to tell me that every
time I opened my mouth I put my foot into it,
meaning of course that every time I spoke I got
into trouble! You remember when Ralph
Si ii ton left to take charge of the Western of
fice and I was asked to present him with the
loving cup the boys gave him, how flustered
I was and how I couldn't say a word because
there were people around f You remember how
confnaed I used to be every time I met new
people! I couldn't say what I wanted t aay
when I wanted to say it; and I determined
that if there was any possible chance to learn
how to talk I was going to do It.
"The first thing I did was to buy a num
ber of books on publio speaking, but they
seemed to be meant for those who wanted
to become orators, whereas what I wanted
to learn was not only how to speak in publio
but how to speak to individuals under various
conditions in business and social life.
"A few weeks later, just as I was about
to give up hope of ever learning how to
talk interestingly, I read an announcement
stating that Dr. Frederick Houk Law hud just
completed a new course in business talking
and publio speaking entitled 'Mastery of
opeecn.- i sent lor tnem ana in a lew aays
they arrived. I glanced through the entire
eight lessons, reading the headings and a few
purugruphs here and there, and in about an
hour the whole secret of effective speaking
was opened to me.
"For example, I learned why I had always
lacked confidence, why talking had always
seemed something to be dreaded, whereas it
is really the simplest thing in the world to get
up and talk. I learned how to secure complete
attention to what I was saying and how to
make everything I said interesting, forceful and
convincing. I learned the art of listening, the
value of silence, and the power of brevity. In
stead of being funny at the wrong time, I
learned how and when to use humor with tell
ing effect.
"But perhaps the most wonderful thing
about the lessons were the actual example of
what things to say and when to say them to
meet every condition. I found that there was
s knack in making oral reports to my superiors.
FEED DRY COW ON ROUGHAGE
Dally Allowance of Bran or Oats Is
Favored Cabbage and Pumpkins
Are Very Good.
During the eight or ten weeks that
cows go dry, their food should be
chiefly roughage. A dally allowance
of two pounds of bran or oats, or a
mixture of two parts each of bran
and oats and one part of linseed meal
or corn-oil meal makes a proper feed
for a cow hear calving, Some roots,
cabbage, pumpkins, or squashes are
also very good. Highly carbonaceous
roughage, such as straw and corn
stalks, Is not good at this particular
time. Such feeds, with cold water,
cold drafts, or lying out at night on
damp or frozen ground, ore the chief
causes of caked udder or garget.
Cleanliness In Everything.
Milk palls and other utensils should
be free so far as Is possible from
crevices where dirt may lodge and be
hard to remove. Cream separators and
other dairy utensils should always be
cleaned properly Immediately after
use. This practice not only improves
the quality of the milk and cream but
makes the work eusler and the uten
ills last longer.
Clean Utensil.
All- utensils which come in contact
with milk and cream should be kept
clean at all times. It is well to use
palls with a partly covered top be
cause this keeps out 50 per cent of
the dirt and other Impurities which
would otherwise get into the milk.
Safeguards In Calf Feeding.
Critical In a calf's life Is when his
feed Is changed from whole milk to
skim milk. To avoid scours make the
change very gradually, adding a little
skim milk to thejyhole milk each day.
April Fooling Is Old Custom.
No satisfactory origin has been as
signed to April Fool's day. The cus
tom of hoodwinking people at this
time Is traced by some to the ancient
Kuli festival ot India, observed March
31. On this day the Hindus play harm
less pranks on one another, a prac
tice dating back to ancient times.
Optical Note.
We should think the awkward part
of wearing a monocle would be trying
to remember which eye you were sup
posed to see out of.
Forbidding Name.
A little fellow who had been to the
museum was asked by his mother it
he remembered the names of any of
the animals he had seen. "Yes," he
replied, "most ot the animals were
named 'Do not touch.' "Boston Tran
script. A man that hath friends must show
himself friendly; and there Is a friend
that sticketh closer than a brother.
Proverbs 18:24.
Being
a Convincing Talker
in One Evening,
RAYMOND
I found that there was a right way and a
wrong way to present complaints, to give esti
mates, and to issue orders.
"I picked up some wonderful pointers about
how to give my opinions, about how to answer
complaints, about how to ask the bank for a
loan, about how to ask fur extensions. Another
thing that struck me forcibly was that in
stead of .antagonizing people when I didn't
agree with them, I learned how to bring them
around to my wny of thinking In the must
pleasant sort of way. Then, of course, along
with those lessons there were chapters ou
speaking before large audiences, how to find
material for talking and speaking, how to talk
to friends, how to tulk to servants, and how
to talk to children.
'Why X got the secret the very first even
ing and it was only a short time before I was
able to spply aU of the principles and found
that my words were beginning to have an
almost magical effect upon everybody to whom
X spoke. It seemed thiit I got things done
instantly, whore formerly, as you know, what X
said 'went in one ear and out the other.' I
began to acquire an executive ability that sur
prised me. I smoothed out difficulties like
a true diplomat. In my talks with the chief
I spoke clearly, simply, convincingly. Then
came my first promotion since I entered the
accounting department. X was given the job
of answering complaints, and I made good.
From that I was given the job of making
collections. When Mr. Buckley joined the
Officers' Training Camp, I was made Treasurer.
Between you and me, George, my salary is
now $7,500 a year and I expect It will be
more from the first of the year.
"And 'I want to tell you sincerely, that I
attribute my success Bolely to th fact that I
learned how to talk to people."
When Jordan finished, I asked him for th
address of the publishers of Dr. Law's courss
and he gave it to me. I sent for it and found
it to be exactly as he had stated. After study
ing the eight simple lessons I began to sell to
people who had previously refused to listen ta
me at all. After four months of record-breaking
sales during the dullest season of th
year, I received a wire from the chief asking
me to return to the home office. We hud quit
a long talk in which I explained how I waa
able to break sales records and I was ap
pointed Sales Manager at almost twice nty
former salary, I know that there was noth
ing In me that hnd changed except that I had
acquired the ability to talk where formerly
I simply used "words without reason." I cun
never thank Jordan enough for telling me about
Dr. Law's Course in Business Tulking and
Publio Speaking. Jordan and I are both
spending ail ou.' spare time making publio
speeches and Jordan is being talked about now
as Mayor of our little town.
AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION
of Portland, Ore.
418-19-20 U. S. National Bank Bldg.
Gentlemen :
Please mall me Dr. Law's course, "Mastery
of Speech." I will pay the poBtman til. 50 on
delivery, which completes the transaction and
pays for the course in full. Thereafter th
course is mine absolutely.
Name
City
State
Write Plninly.
Cuticura Soap
Is Ideal for
.The Complexion
SoRp,Oinhnnt,Taletini,Sfio.flvars'wher, Fornamplmi
ddreiu: OsHqus L4borUriai,Dpt. X. Haidan.MMa.
And Still Good.
"Ever since I can remember," said
Uncle Eben, "de high cost ot llvin'
has been mentioned by careless peo
ple as a 'cuse for beln' broke." Wash
ington Star.
No Alternative.
"You see," said Dorothy, defending
her baby sister, "she hasn't got her
talk language yet, so she has to cry
for things." Boston Transcript.
Do Right Always.
Do right though pain and anguish
be thy lot. Thy heart will cheer thee,
when the pain's forgot. Do wrong for
pleasure's sake, then count thy galnn.
The pleasure soon departs; the sin
remains. Bishop Shuttleworth.
Today's Wise Word.
"Given a good cook, a good figure,
a good temper and a good bank ac
count, and a woman can outmarry all
the sirens of song, story and history."
WOMAN TOO
WEAK TO WALK
Now Works Nine Hours a Day.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound Restored Her Strength
Union Village, Vt. "I was weak and
nervous and all run-down. I could not
walk across the floor
without resting and
I had been that way
for weeks. I saw your
advertisement in the
paper and after tak
ing one bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com
pound I felt the good
it was doing me and
I took seven more in
all. Before I finished
I was able to work
nine hours a day in a steam laundry. I
cannot say too much in favor of your
medicine. I trust all sick and suffering
women will take it. It has been two years
since I took it and I am strong and well. "
-Mrs. L. A. GuiMANN, Union Village,
Vermont.
This Is only one of such letters we are
continually publishing showing what
Lydia E. Pinkham has done for women,
and whether you work or nqt Mrs.
Guimann's letter should interest you.
Many women get into a weak, nervous
run down condition because of ailments
they often have. Such women should
take Lydia E.Pinkham'sVe ge table Com
pound at the first sign of trouble. Good
health is necessary and this splendid
medicine will help you to keep iU
P. N. U.
No. 47, 1922
51
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