The Ione independent. (Ione, Or.) 1916-19??, December 06, 1929, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    John's Mother
Praises Doctor
There Isn't a moth
er living who won't
agree that no hnlf
Ick child should be
the subject for an ex
periment with medi
cines of uncertain
merit When your
child is bilious, hesd-
schy, half-sick, feverish, restless, with
coated tongue, bad breath, no appe
tite or energy, you know that nine
times out of ten it's a sign his little
stomach and bowels need purging.
And when you know that for over
fifty years leading physicians hare
endorsed one preparation for this con
dition, there doesn't seem to be any
reason for "trying" things.
Rich, fruity California Fig Syrup
clear the little stomach and bowel
gently, harmlessly and in a hurry. It
regulates the bowels, gives tone and
strength to them and to the stomach ;
and help to give your child new
strength, energy and Tltallty. Thou,
sands of Western mothers praise It
Mrs. Joseph W. Hill, 30 Bedford
Ave, Omaha, Nebraska, says: Til
never forget the doctor who got me
to give my baby boy, John, California
Fig Syrup. Nothing else seemed to
help his weak bowels. That was
when he was Just baby. He suf
fered a good deal before I gaT him
Fig Syrup, but it stopped his trouble
quick. I have used it with him foi
colds and little upset spells ever since
I consider him a Fig Syrup boy."
Insist on the genuine article. See
that the carton bears the word "Cali
fornia." Over four million bottles
used a year.
Garfield Tea
Was Your
Grandmother's Rented
For every stomactt
and Intestinal 111.
This good old-fash
loned herb home
remedy for consti
pation, stomach 111
and other derange
menta nf tha ava-
tern so prevalent these days Is In even
greater favor a a family medicine
than in your grandmother's day.
Raids Fed to Cattle
Cattle feeders are buying raisin
from the Fresno (Calif.) district for
feeding cows, bogs and sheep on the
basis of 116 a ton. Records show the
raisins have fully this value a feed.
On former tests. It is said, the raisins
were of such poor quality that feeder
were discouraged, but when a better
quality was tried good results were
obtained. If a large enough demand
is created It is thought that the aver
age market price can be brought up
by this use of surplus raisins. Cap
per's Weekly.
Centeaariaa's Record
A Sussex (England) lady who re
cently celebrated her hundredth birth
day received a medal from the British
Red Cross society for her war service
which Included sewing over 400 shirt
for the men St the front
Record Gain in
Butter Profits
Dairyman Who U$t"Dandelion
Butter Color" Say ft (Ac
Bett Investment of AIL
The biggest creamer
ies In the country, who
are most careful tocater
to the whim of the
public, are earning reo
II L JVM thj-lr butter that appe
B iJ telngJune lor every-
cent of them are doing
It with "Dandelion But
ter Color." It's the
most economical and satisfactory but
ter color mode. Half a tenspoonful
colors a gallon of cream I It doesn't
color the buttermilk. It's purely vege
table and tasteless. Approved by all
Stute and National Food Laws, Large
bottles, only 85! at all drug and gro
tery stores or write Wells and
Richardson Co, Inc., Tiurllngton, Vt,
for a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE.
Oregon & California Directory
Hotel Roosevelt
Om a PORTLAND'S Hol.lt
AH room. hava abowar or tub, IS.'JU up. FliiPMOF.
til W. frk at. Collet Ktaup. Ciuhi ioaiia.
HOTEL WILTSHIRE, San Francisco
S40Sloratfi Hl..nr Luton Ninam Sflliaf JfiW
tHANKI.r. K SMITH. UlNwr
Omalda r-KiuiA with bath. 17 '4 alntf. t 0 dnnble
Cou-t mruua vita bath. 12 ' !nl. tt M tfc.nbia
Vn-faU I6e. ate. Ific.a! Ij.QBit, ttc; bunda ata
Pll If.,., EARN BIG MONEY
Mail NOW "Pr-ntpldwbilf
S1WSI i.arnlof Portion amr4
Lacturaa waaaif Sleollaa-aa Wrttaforcataloe
Mnirn system or colleois
l,,utL" Ui Kanauda Str Ml Pbrtlwd, Ort
Pipe Valves, Fittings
Pump Engines
Farm Tools & Supplies
ALASKA JUNK CO.
first and Taylor Sla, Portland, Oregos
HOTEL ROOSEVELT
SAN FRANCISCO'S NEW UN I MOTEL
(vary rtm with batb or ihnwar. 12.00 to Id. 64
Jonaa at Libia, Canga outdoor.
W. N. U, PORTLAND, NO. 47-102C
PI
'Vrr Ethel Htiesfon
WIrwitx Myets
InL HI CoaM-TaKt BaUt-Hari-III Co. W.N.U. SERAICt
STORY FROM THE START
la the usually qulst horns of
Rav. Mr. Tolliv.r of Had Thrush.
Iowa, tala motbarlaaa daughtera,
Ualan, Miriam and Elian "Oln
far Ella" art buajr "(rooming"
thalr slater Marjory tor partici
pation la tha "baauty pageant"
that avarilng. With Eddy Jack
son, proaparous young farmar,
bar eacort Marjory leavaa tor
tha anticipated triumph.
CHAPTER I -Continued
a
While Ginger complained, bowsver,
she obligingly did ber share ot the
straightening, and the dusting, and
the rearranging.
"Nice sensible girls Uke ours, no
trills, no nonsense, no put-on about
them. Work bard. Good natured
Easy to lire with. But let s man
darken the borlson disgusting, sim
ply disgusting. Do you understand it
father r
"Well, perhaps at least, I am used
to it" be evaded adroitly.
Helen, returning, laughed good
naturedly. "Now, oow, Uttls one.
dont be jealous," she said.
"Jealous Jealous I ale. Jealous!
Jealous of a a male school teacher T
Helen frowned. "Father. 1 wlsb
yon wouldn't let ber say male school
teachef in that Insulting manner. A
professor of mathematics with two de
grees Is not the same as a male school
teacher. And besides, as you know
very welt bs lent going to teecb for
srer. He Is going to writs textbooks."
"Textbooks 1 But they're already
got textbooks. Don't tell me they're
going to discover more mathematics to
make as learn."
"Ginger, don't talk so lond, for good
ness sake. Hell be here In a minute.
Eh I Here he la."
"Disgusting simply disgusting."
Ginger burled herself ones more In
the despised paper.
Horace Langley cams In, greeted
Helen with a perfunctory, before-t he
family kiss, and shook bands wltb Mr.
Tolllver.
"What's the matter wltb Glngerr
Ginger looked up. "Oh, hello are
you beret I was just Interested In
oh," she stole s look at the pair.
"what Lloyd George said to the Elks
1 mean, to Coolidge." Ebe nudged
ber father wltb a sharp little elbow.
"Ellen, suppose we run down and
bare a cream conet I feel quite
fatigued wltb the strain of II ring op
the Marjory's beauty. Wool you
come along, Miriam J Helen, why
don't you and Horace come, toot"
"Oh, I don't think so. father. Not
this time, thsnks. Too go. And do
keep so eye on Clnger. She's so apt to
break out unexpectedly, you know."
But Ginger, disdaining answer, with
great hauteur led the way down the
flagstone path that curled through the
green grata.
CHAPTER II
It was a pleasant tonse, the old
brown Methodist parsonage at Ited
Thrush, Iowa. While it was old In
point of years. It was oot cslled the
old parsonage for Its age, but because
s new one was In projection.
It Is true that It twisted all modern
Improvements, but ihey were Im
provements so obviously added to cuter
to a progressive generation that they
fitted but Inharmonlously Into Its gen
eral contour. The bathroom bad been
painstakingly Installed In a corner
bedroom. Electricity bsd been wired
in, st ss little expense ss possible. A
furnace bad been Introduced Into a
cellar room, and st that time, to fa
cllitate the piping, the partition be
tween parlor and sitting room bad
been removed to make one targe llv
Ing room. Id strict conformity with
the style.
It was the living room which boasted
the second charm ot the old bouse,
in the form of a circular staircase rls
Ing grandly from tha back of the
room. Perhaps. In the most technical
phraseology. It was not altogether s
Clrcdlar ktalrcase, but It curved grace
fully upward, and gave lbs some
effect The girls loved It
But where the old pnrsonnge was
merely of s drab pleasantness, the
new one was to be a mot.el of modern
architecture. It was to have electric
refrigeration a parsonage I Only five
bouses In Ited Thrush had electric re
frlgerallon the new parsonage would
be the sixth.
in the truk sense ol the "Discipline.'
the old parsonage was uo pursoiiug st
all. It was merely j house, owned by
a member, and rented to the church
for Its pustornl use for ten dollars s
month. The Methodist church had
thrust Its small spire above the sur
rounding maples wnen there were no
more than s dozen nouses Id the
township, s staunch Utile testimony
to the Indefatigable determination ol
early Methodism. The bulMIng It self
bad oot beea much In Its best days,
sod was Dothlng at all In these, Its
worst ones As anything but a church
It would have been abandoned for
practical purposes years sgo.
It was the growing realization and
It takes s church group niuny years to
grow np to this realization of the
aboalute need for more ample accom
modations that brought Mr. Tolllver
to Red Thrush. The district super
tntendent bsd been asked to pick out
a "hustler" to put the new church
over on the congregation. Mr. Tol
llver was known as a bustler, and so
bs came with bis four daughters to
tha shabby brown parsonage In the
maple grove beside the old brown
church.
It was the nervous strain of ovtr
work attendant upon bustling tha new
church into iRed Thrush that finally
resulted Id a nervous reaction and
physical wearing down which led si
laat to temporary blindness, a cloud
over bis eyes, a thick mist fogging bis
vision. Rest the specialists in Chi
cago said he needed, good food, good
air, a general bulldlng-up. The eyes
It Was a Pleasant House, the Old
Brown Msthodlst Parsonage at Rtd
Thrush, Iowa.
would be all right, when he was sll
right lie must take It easy for s
while. And so bis eyes were car
fully bundaged from even the faintest
light, to Insure complete relaxation
and freedom from strain, but bis en
tire system must an In strength in
order to feed strength to the weak
ened members Ul txxlj must rest.
Ills mind must rest Ills intense and
eager spirit must rest.
But before this catastrophe, the
church was an assured fuct Within
a few weeks, by the first of Septem
ber st latest, It would be ready for
Its formal opening. The new par
sonage existed In blue print After
all, a few months of blindness was a
small price to pay for this achieve
ment Freedom from worry, the doctors
promised, complete real and mental
ease would soon restore his sight, and
Mr. Tolllver. although greatly Imuill
capped In his work. :ld not worry as
to the final outcome. True, upon his
first visit lo the doc-tors, some three
months previous, they bad thought s
month's time would ue amply suffi
cient for bis recovery, and at the end
of the month the mis" wus still chirk
upon him. Another month, and still
the mist tie should have returned
some dnys ago for 4 third examine
tlon and treatment, hut the tlnumlnl
situation In the parnnge wus such
as to render this iMposslble. Iletoid
himself there was no hurry, he would
go soon. For what with the travel,
and hotel extivrises. and medical (rent
menu the burden of his misfortune
waa more financial tluin physical.
But all this was only foi s short
time When the new church wus a
fact accomplished, he fell it would
- teieeeeeeeeeee
Reveals Simple Method
An ex-convict who spent if terms
in prison, rcmitly visited the utile e ot
the London Oully Chronlrle. and left s
letter purporting to reveal s se ret
method of Invlalhle writing by means
of which prisoners were aide lo com
muntcute Willi friends outside. In the
letter he clulms thut this was the
method employed by two prisoners
who committed suicide, when, as slated
at the time, they were able to send
a request to friends to forward them
poisoned sandwiches under the sys
lem which enables prisoners on re
mand to receive food from outside
Ths letter continues: "In this lettet
Is the method under which tliey sent
out their mussiiges, Can you find It J'
bs easier for his ardent spirit to find
the rest thai would uieitn restoration
for his eyek He folt no sort ot re
sentment for his alllU'tlon. Ho got on
very woll. The girls wore good, they
htdped him greatly. The meiuheit
were patient, full ot sympathy, W
vnuse thvy loved hliu. Ue knew his
ltlltle from cover to cover, and his
every thought was centered upon his
work, so that his sermons did not
dtitertorute. Just a little rest, free
dom from killing worry. It ouly thore
were more money I
If the girls fell anxloty on his ac
count, bravvly they gave do slgu, A
hundred dollars s month Is not s
greut deal of money on which to sup
port s family and mulmnti three
daughters In school And Mr. Tolllver
had never relinquished h's old custom
or tithing a tenth of his mite for the
l.ord. If sometimes the girls felt that
tea dollars s month could belter be
spared from tht church than trom the
parsonage, that the Lord In Ills afflu
ence might heltei be deprived than
the pastor In his poverty, they did
not complain. Ellen thought shout It
of course, for she was turbulent
given to turbulent thoughts It was
her birth which had coat tha borne
Its mother. I'erhaps It was sorry
kuowlerige ot what she bad cost the
family that stirred ber to s great
eagerness to do something for them,
that determined ber to carry life be
fore ber with s blgb and triumphant
hand. I'erhaps It was only her youth,
for she was not yet seventeen. It was
for this turbulence ot hers that she
waa known as Ginger Ella.
Helen, who was twenty-three years
old, after two years of training at the
normal school, bad served for two
years as a tescher Its a neighboring
town. Her small check coming Into
the parsonage every month had meant
something almost akin to richness,
antll the unaccustomed expense of
medical treatments bad made sucb
voracious demands opoo them. Now
the twins also were tvadv to go into
the normal school for training In the
full, (linger felt that It was a real
extravagance on the part of the fam
ily to assume the expense ot educat
ing Marjory to teach ex-hoot That
money might better bs saved. Mar
jory was beautiful The obvious end
of beauty Is marriage to great for
tune, from her 'earliest childhood.
In her queer, small heart. Ginger Ella
had sacredly dedicated ber beautiful
alater to that high estate. Bhe would
en rich the family by man-luge.
In ber Inexperienced youth. Ginger
divided sll men broadly Into three
general grout regular mex romantic
figures and base pretenders. Regular
men wete like her father, settled, or
bune, and Immune to sex. Like Eddy
Jackson. Ginger called biro s regular.
Eddy Jackson had been one of their
Brat friends when the Tolllvers csme
to Ited Thrush. Ue was S farmer.
Not 'hat tllnger called what Eddy
Jackson did rarmlng. The neighbors
did oot call it that either, (linger
Ells called It playing. They called
It kid glovltii,. Eddy Jackson was an
agricultural, an experimentalist He
was of the new school, one of those
who studies the land aa a mechanic
Studies his tools The neighbors
Isughed st what tbey called bis high
dink uses but the fact that be made,
lo spot cash, every yetr, nearly twice
ss much money as they did from ths
same amount of laud, gave bits s
certain authority sruong them. They
said be was lucky, but they wtnt to
him for advice. l
There wss s long low building oa
bis farm which tilnger called the
sacred shed. Eddy Jackson called It
ths lab. And there, wltb microscopes
snd plates and curious tubes snd
queer liquids and funny Utile boxes
and bottles and cans ol sand snd soil,
Eddy JackK.o did strange things,
wltb mil, wltb seeds snd sprouts
Often, during ths summer, young
men, studi-ntu from the stats univer
sities, came and stayed at the farm
which Eddy called I'uy IMrt-aad
tiobnolthcd about with him fraternally.
Hut when Kddi told them to do any
thing, they obeyed US If they were
servants And so they were. Hut
oot the servants ot Eddy Jackson
servunts of the soil, it the state, the
greut farming stale of Iowa.
8o Eddy Jackson, for sll his youth
snd his sometimes ttlppunt way of
deullng with serious subjects. Kited
Into Ginger's cliisstlti-atloo as regular
Just like her father. Us never
waxed sentimental. Us never suc
cumbed to what she bitterly termed
"pawing." He went about with Helen
until I'roft-ssor Uugley attnlned the
heights of monoHily Id ber time aa
well as her a (Ted Ion. and then hs
obllglngl) tiansferred his attentions
to the twins, taking them Inter
chniigeahly according to rtia occasion,
or both together, snd sometimes, al
though she always protested, Ginger
herself.
ITO DE CONTINUED.)
of "Invisible" Writing
The explanation and a test of the trick
were finally volunteered. In Hie blank
spnees nl the letter the ex-convlct had
penned an Invlxllile message by dip
ping the pen nib In Ills month and
writing with en I! via. Lightly done, this
ennnot hw seen hy the miked eye. To
reveal the writing all thnt had to be
dune Is In rub ordlnnry Ink over the
hlnnk space, blol In quickly and the
Invisible words stand nut like ordinary
neninnntdilp
Steady Hand
If you want a standnrdlxed worker
call Mr. Iloliln. He has been digging
worms the sumo way since the Icr
uge. flipper's Weekly.
WHY WE BEHAVE
LIKE HUMAN BEINGS
Dy GEORGE DOHSKY, Ph. D LL D.
ti
Gives Vagaries of Appendix
hpllU function of tho re-tml organs or
s- kidneys Is to preserve a certain
coiiRliuicy In lh blood stream and to
eliminate cortalii noxious elements
from the body. To perform this
double function, three, types of kidneys
have been ovolved, Tho developing
human embryo, as well as embryos
of other mammals, rehearses tills
story, nil three typos appearing In
preimtnl llfo.
The alimentary canal appears first
as a closed tube within the body, It
opens Inter lit each end, the tipper
opening becoming part of the mouth
cavity, llelow tills opening four
crevices sppear which represent the
Internal arrangement of the flsh-llke
gill-clefts llelow these crevices a
single aac-llke structure npiieursi this
divides, and hy further subdivisions
becomes the right and left lung. From
the region of the crevices outgrowths
of the alimentary canal develop Into
thyroid, epltbyrold, and thymus glands
From the extreme upper end nf the
embryonic canal develops s portion of
another Important gland, the pituitary.
The stomach at first is merely an en
largement of the citnal. Just below
the stomach two oul growths of the
cntml develop Into the Important
glands of digestion, puncreus and
liver.
Without further details of fetal de
velopment It will lie worth while to
recall certain variations In the sys
tems of digestion, respiration, and cir
culation, which are aigntflcant Id tight
of our animal ancestors.
Our dentition Is ss well adapted
for spinach aa for beefsteak, special
ized for neither.
Man, apes, snd Old world monkeys
have thirty-two teeth, right on each
aide of each Jaw; two Incisors, one
canine, two hlctmplds, three molars.
Man's mammalian ancestor had forty
four teeth, three Incisors, one canine,
three bicuspids, four molars.
Most Dalies have teeth In the roof
of the mouth ss well as In the Jaws
proper. They do not occur In "sets."
but are endlessly abed and repro
duced. In the flah embryo the dental
genua appear before the Jawbones:
In the human embryo also. In the In
fant's mouth Is s ridge with from
five to seven pairs of crma ridges;
they are even more pronounced In Ihc
fetus. They dlsappesr with age. Apes
have ten pairs of these ridges. In
pigs, they are strong enough to rruh
food. Their presence In man, with
an occasional more or Ices complete
third set of teeth, points to fish and
reptile days; teeth In the roof of th
mouth, endlessly replaced.
Tonsils apiear In Mnl life as
pockets. They shift position ami de
velop Into prominent bodies. With
adult life they begin to dlMtpenr,
leaving pockets prone to disease. They
are not understood and are never
alike.
The cricket's chirp waa the first
music on earth, but It was Instru
mental. The first voice was the sm
plilblnns. Frog, bird, rat. dog, and
man would lie silent without a larynx;
without the human larynx there could
have been no human speech or Tower
of Bnliet. Ours ts a wonderful
liirynx; let ns get an. h Joy aa we can
from It. Our developing respiratory
system suggests fish; In our youth It
is) a hoi bed of Infection. Our vocal
cords are human only In their high
development Hut we all have tha
blind pocket between true and false
cords which served aa a resonal.n
and so strengthened the ronr by which
our ancestors frightened their foes
and culled their mates. In man it
vnrli-s, but Is never s deep as In lbs
gorilla.
The vermiform appendix Is the
worm It name Implies. It Is a
feeble, narrow, tnierlng blind alley,
opening hy s small month Into the
large Intestine. At birth. In size and
form It Is like an ape's. At puberty
It begins to shorten: It Is about closed
In every fourth aduft ; In every thir
tieth adult II Is clorn-d throughout It
shrivels up with old age. It may be
ten times longer In one brother than
In another. It Is a true vestige. It
Is predisposed In dlseuxe; appendi
citis Is s fashionable operation. Only
ies In captivity develop appendi
citis. For an appendix Hint functions
we must go to the lowest monkeys.
The liver Usually has two lobes It
may have none, It rm;y have twelve;
It may have two gall bladders It may
hove none,
The abdominal viscera In the human
embryo are not hunmn In I heir ar
rangement. Only later does the
mesentery, or sheet of membrane con
necting the bowel, become attached to
the hack wall of Hie nhdomon and sn
hold It In place and In perpendicular
position. Kometlmea the rnotVnlcry
la found arranged as In monkeys.
There are more Ihun mere struc
tural variations In our food canal;
there are signs of degeneracy In
teeth. In Jans and throat, and In the
large Intestine. Changed diet docs It.
To digest raw food our ancestors had
to chew It. They had strong Jaws,
heavy muscles, sound teeth properly
aligned, big throats, end a colon Hint
could digest husks of grain and skins
of fruits and vegetables.
The lobes of tliti lungs vnry In num
ber and poslllon, Due to man's up
right gall, Ibe heart has come In real
on the diaphragm. In monkeys Hit
nxygoe lobe of the lut.g lies between.
In man there Is always a remnant, ol
vurylng site, of this b be.
l hi (latirse A. Duraav.t
Take Care of
Your Kidneys!
One $hould not nr elect
kidney and bladatr
irregularities.
TOO many people sacrifice health
by tail log to bead the early
danger signaU of kidney diaortlera.
L-.vcn minor irregularities should be
dcwlt with promptly.
A drowsy, liatlaae Wing I lamaw
naas and atillnoaai constant back
ache and bladder Irragularilice are
often timely warnings. Don I
naulact them.
To promote normal kidney action
and aaaiat your kidneys in deanaing
your blood of poiaunous waatas, uao
boon's I' tit: Kacocnmatuled the
world over,
50,000 User Eruloria Dosn's:
BanlamiN rauohar, SU Bit St
Manakaalat, N. H., aaral 'T a Sm I
aiuU.'l aar wk. laf aa I baal mrm
mi kak Ut a. ha, Mr Maa aaiaal
arr ittaaalaily ant I tall all ol 4 aatla.
Alut aains Uaaa a IMIa, I tall aaa aaM
Chlldrea Read a School
Nearly lot) pupils of the Newnuttna
district of Lanarkshire, Hcotland, who
had been locked out of school, mails a
wild rush recently, forced their wsy
Into the building snd stopped the
classes, Tbey then took possession of
the auditorium and permitted tha
classes to rearwembla. The children)
had been bnrred from the school dur
ing a dispute between School author
Itles and parents following their trans
ference to another school. I'arents
finally took the strikers home.
i
HANFORD'S
Balsam of Myrrh
A Healing Antutptlc
MaaakaaawaaSaibiSlaaaWiiiisalislavaW
Or UMb S I II t.
Wireleaa Worakif)
The congregation of the village
church st Klelnow, Germany, has de
rided to economise by dismissing their
pustor, Ilia place will be taken by
a wireless 'act to be placed In ths
church. On Holidays the congrega
tion will meet ss nsual, and the set
will be tuned In to retelvs sermons
broadcast from llcrlln.
7mcooo?,
Moat ellaaante atari fraataawattaa. I
lnatla(aMUatMl a aaal-all. f
SaUoal. lataatfcMl paham aa vital, f?
Itr. taaavatna rour aWta aM maaa
Ufa Maatabla. Tanhrtl tri Ml
SJIWUaS-S BfMSJDr-aUaaaaaaJe
aafrarliva ay aa arttaarv laaaU.
Saa an Nf anU al4 la raalartaa yvmr
aesatlu ai4 rid raa at tual kaan.
fcvirr. Saflaaa faaUnar.
bai. mh. aardr faialaala-at -.. aata tla
triL uk A arrxww. tit
Of Cearae
nector Volpone, the Kansas City
banker, said on his return from Italy I
"Italy progrerawa vcy faist because
she has done away with her old polit
ical parties.
The old political parlies In Italy
and mayhe this holds true In certain
other countries as well the old po
litical parties were Just groups or
blocs of men that prevented one an
other from doing anything except, of
course, the taxpayer." Exchange.
Acelili-ntnlly an Arkansas lady cured
fits In a valuable dog with Unas Hall
lllue. Many others now uss It Ne
er fulls, she says. Adv.
Happlneis
Hnggs Happy are they who look
before they marry.
Hoggs Yes, ami overlook after.
Teople who like tu make s self
sacrifice are likely to want to sacri
fice you, ton.
ALWAYS KEEPS
ON HAND
LvrJlg, E. Pinltfiam's Vegetable
Compound Helps Iter So Much
Pittsburgh, rs. ''I was Just conv
plotoly run-down. I had tired, bivy.
. -i..-..i.,k .
lUKfcinu IWIIIIKO
and I could Dot est
I was losing In
weight I read so
much shout I.ydla
II. l'lnkliam's Voge
table Compound
and what a rood
medicine It Is, that
I started taking If,
I have taken eight
bnltlss of Lydla EL
I'lnkbam's Vcgn
and about the ramo in tablet form. This
Is ono medlclno a woman should havt
In ths houxo all the time. I am Improv
ing every day and I sure am able to
tat I sm willing to snswnr any lottera
I get asking- shout ths Vegetable Com
mmnd." ft. Ki.i.a !tiriiAana, ?l
CuauUua tt N. S rutsbui'iab, ra
fit
i