THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
FIND OZONE BEST
SURGEONS IN WAR HOSPITALS
USE IT PROFUSELY.
HOTEL in the NORTHWEST
Eric V. Hauser, President.
Other Oxidizing Agents Have Beer.
Proved Open to Some Form of Ob
jection, but This Has Been
Proved Satisfactory.
75
550
Rooms
Sample
$1.00
Rooms
Day-Up
$2 Up
Another of America’s Exceptional
Among the branches of surgery to
which the exigencies of the European
war have acted as a sharp stimulus
may be mentioned the treatment of in
fected wounds. The proportion of pa
Appendicitis, Rheumatism, Cancer, Bowel Trou tients who reach the military hospitals
bles, Skin Diseases, Etc. Chronic diseases of
every description and kind cured in the shortest with their injuries thus aggravated is
time possible at the least cost. I have cured said to be so large as to have given
thousands of people in the last ten years without
operations by the use of Radium. X-Ray, Electric great importance to the subject of
Currents, Lights, Heat, Bake Ovens, Adjust antiseptics, since obviously the perfect
ments, Manipulations, Massage and Baths. Call
and see the wonderful office equipment. Consul aseptic treatment which most cases
tation free. Write.
can enjoy in ordinary hospitals in time
DR. W. E. MALLORY
of peace is out of the question for the
600 to 604 Broadway Bldg.
Portland, Oregon majority of battle wounds.
Many antiseptics, unfortunately,
though excellent germicides, are so
(Ir TTT) Veal, Pork, Beef,
toxic that there is danger of their
Poultry, Butter, Eggs
harming the vitality of the tissues sur
—a
and Farm Produce
rounding the wound. For this reason
to the Old Reliable Everding house with a
record of 45 years of Square Dealings, and
hydrogen peroxide is said to be admir
be assured of TOP MARKET PRICES.
able, since it is germicidal without be
F. M. CRONKHITE
ing in any way injurious to healthy
45-47 Front Street
Portland, Oregon
cells. However, it is not adequate in
those cases, so common in warfare,
where there is a serious amount of sup
puration. It is almost instantly decom
posed, not only by pus, but by blood
and most of the other liquids of the
For Real Musical Instruments in truest harmony. body tissues, so that the amount of
Made to see how good they can be; not how much
they will bring. Violin, Mandolin, Guitar, Banjo, nascent oxygen released is insufficient
Ukeleie. Slogan: “If you don’t find ’em better for the requirements of a serious
than any, send ’em back at our expense.” 311 to
315 Labbe Bldg., 227% Wash. St., Portland, Ore. wound.
The search for an oxidizing agent
ag
_ a . Free Information on not open to this objection, according
Ceebie) Le.2
% How To Do Tanning to a writer in the Scientific American,
gl t 190211
-From the worthless-
Bat C-oe Bloking
led to the trial of ozone, either dis
$0%
Te
li
299
to 1 he tines t. soft tan-
Mi -san Atei ned furred leather solved in water and used in copious ir
■MN ml
7 moth-proof,
we. ver
t AP"
prices. made lip rigations, or in a gaseous state, mixed
1 2010%, .2 into beautiful ladies’ with ordinary diatomic oxygen. The
Gate tener, furs. coats, robes,
“War sees
latter style of treatment is especially
Taxidermist work.
Send for catalogue. advantageous in the case of wounds
W. W. Weaver, Custom Tanner, Reading, Mich. which are slow in forming a scab, since
the most spacious bandages often have
HIDES, PELTS, CASCARA BARK, a tendency to rub off the fresh scar
tissue.
WOOL AND MOHAIR.
This difficulty is avoided in the
We want all you have.
Write tor prices and shipping tags
process
in question by surrounding the
T he H. F. N orton C o . Portland, Ore.; Seattle, wn.
wound with a hermetically sealed
shell, Into which can be passed the
O regon V ulcanizing C ompany
This method pos
moved to 333 to 337 Burnside St., Port gaseous current.
land. Ore. Largest Tire Repair Plant sesses the extraordinary advantage of
in the Northwest. Country service a
leaving the wound open to the bene
specialty. Use Parcel Post.
ficial action of the solar radiations as
well. Then, too, the total exclusion
FRED P. GORIN, Patent Attorney, of the ordinary air from the tissue un
Organizer and Developer; patents secured or FEE der treatment makes impossible the
REFUNDED; free book on patents. Suites 701,
of nitrogen compounds,
TOI-A. 701-B and 701-C, Central building, Seattle. formation
which might prove decidedly irritant.
The other mode of application,
through the use of ozonized water, has
Consult us about reduced freight rates on been found particularly satisfactory
household goods to all points.
Fast through
service. Pacific Coast Forwarding Company. 201 for large shattered wounds, where the
Wilcox Building, Portland, Ore.
Marshall 2467. tissues have been directly invaded by
septic substances.
19. Second-Hand Machin-
TUMORS, GOITERS
ARE YOU GOING EAST?
Machinery
szçpEAueaF xie l meld
boilers, sawmills, etc, J. E. Martin Co., 83 1st
St.. Portland. Send for Stock List and prices.
HENPHILLS TRADE SCHOOLS.
"
Largest and best equipped in the West. Gas,
Electrical and Tractor engineering.
Special
courses in valcanizing and tire repairing. Prac
tical work, short term, low cost. Write for in
formation and catalog. 20th and Hawthorne ave.,
Portland, Ore.
C . Granulated Eyelids,
(pres Eyes inflamed by expo-
. sureto Son, Dost and Wind
• . quickly relieved by Murine
Cetm Eye Remedy. No Smarting.
—a." just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Morine Eye
Salvein T ubes 2 5c. For Book oft he Eye Freeask
Druggists or Morine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
V
A Half Portion.
The lady of good family was show
ing her ancestral home to her small
son. She pointed with special pride
to a bust of her father.
“And that, Bobbie,” she said, “is
your grandfather.”
Bobbie looked somewhat perplexed.
“Is that all there was of him?” he
asked.—New York Times.
inevitable.
“Do you think it’s right to support a
large population in idleness?” asked
the man of reckless ideas.
“Sometimes It’s got to be done,” re
plied Farmer Corntossel. “I have a
whole barnyard full of chickens that
haven’t laid an egg all winter.”
—Washington Star.
Better Off.
"There is one of our best surgeons
passing over there.”
“Yes, I know him and he cut me
dead.”
“That’s a lot better than if he cut
you living.”—Baltimore American.
Why He Object*.
Jack—But
see in me to
Edith—He
you. That’s
Transcript.
what does your father
object to?
doesn’t see anything in
why he objects.—Boston
Cold Storage.
Cold storage people are engaged
In holding hopes unswerved.
An egg may now be middle-aged
And still be well preserved.
Every Night
For Constipation
Headache Indigestionetc
I
RANDRETH
PILLS
Safe and Sure
P. N. U,
No. 6. 1917
5
Chocolate in the Trenches.
This afternoon, everything being
quiet, I invited the neighboring sec
tion commander to come and spend a
little time with me. In the trenches
we rarely have anything to drink but
wine and coffee, and, by the way of
special feast, I decided to make some
chocolate. So I sent for a canteen of
water and poured some of the pre
cious fluid into my pan and devoutly
emptied in the chocolate and sugar.
It was simmering gently on my braz
ier, and I was just on the point of
adding condensed milk, when someone
called me from the outside. It was
my orderly coming to see if I needed
anything. I invited him to Join us,
but at the precise moment the stupid
battery of a 77 began to spit its six
shells at us. Two burst so near that
my faithful ’tampon’ stumbled in
fright and fell headlong, taking with
him brazier, saucepan and chocolate—
our chocolate so nearly ready, which
our eyes were drinking so hungrily,
The poor chap was most unhappy, so
I laughed ; but I must confess my
laugh was a bit sickly. At that mo
ment I detested the Germans worse
than ever.—From a French Lieuten
ant’s Diary in the Atlantic.
TURN FROM SAVAGE TO SAINT
Wonderful Transformation of Fiji
Islander*, Which Are Soon to Be
Visited by Roosevelt.
When Colonel Roosevelt pays his an
nounced visit to the Fiji islands in
February he will find the natives much
different from what they were only a
comparatively short time ago. Today
the Fiji Islanders are model citizens ;
once they were the most abhorrent
creatures known to civilization.
In his work. “How Christ Conquered
Fiji,” Rev. D. L. Leonard tells us
something of the Fijians of a genera
tion or two ago. He says:
“Physically and intellectually they
rank among the foremost In the South
seas, but before Christianity wrought
its astounding miracles of transforma
tion they had no equals for brutality,
licentiousness and utter disregard for
human life. The world over their name
was a synonym for all that is atro
cious, inhuman and demoniacal. It
was a part of their religion to be as
cruel ns possible toward their enemies
and to slay them with nameless and
horrible torture was a positive de
light.
“They had a habit of massacring
all shipwrecked sailors or other
strange visitors to their shores. Few
Fijians died a natural death or lived
to old age, for the feeble and the aged
were esteemed worse than useless mem
bers of society and by artificial means
were hastened to their graves. In
fanticide was so common that two-
thirds of the children perished at the
hands of their parents.
"When a chief built a house and
holes were dug for the posts a man
was flung into each one to be burled
alive. When a war canoe was launched
living men were used for human roll
ers, and their bruised and torn bodies
were afterward roasted and eaten. Hu
man flesh was eaten by preference, as
well as from hatred of their enemies
slain in battle. In one district the en
tire population was kept to be de
voured by their more powe rful neigh
bors. A chief would send to a neigh
bor or ally a roasted victim carefully
wrapped and escorted by a procession.
After one war the victory was cele
brated by cooking 100 human bodies
for a feast. One chief set up a stone
to commemorate each time ho had
played the cannibal, and 872 of these
tokens were counted by a missionary,
Rut the Fijians have since passed
under the mild yoke of Christianity
and the savage in them has yielded to
the subduing influences of the Gospel
of mercy and peace.
Hard Water Good for Rheumatics.
That hard water—meaning a water
that contains two hundred parts in the
million or more of lime—is better than
soft or distilled water for drinking
purposes is asserted in the New York
Medical Journal by Dr. Frank Leslie
Rector of New York. It never con
tains enough lime to do harm, but the
little it does contain is highly bene
ficial to persons with a tendency to
rheumatism, gout or hardening of the
arteries.
To get such a dose of lime as a doc
tor would prescribe one would have to
drink six gallons of hard water in 24
hours. A common glassful of such
water contains about three-fourths of
a grain of lime.
It is an error to suppose, as many
do, that hard water causes rheuma
tism. gout, kidney diseases and
arteriosclerosis, for these are the very
troubles that are cured by the waters
of such places as Kissingen, Nauheim
and Saratoga, the benefit of which is
In their alkaline content, and this Is
principally lime.
Make Brightness in Winter.
If you will notice the shrubs that
have attractive twigs through the win
ter, you will put on your list for plant
ing some of the following: Red or
river birch, which has flaky, reddish
brown bark and grows naturally in
clumps or colonie»; Siberian dogwood,
the brightest of the red stemmed dog
woods ; yellow dogwood, the stems
bright yellow ; staghorn sumac, which
has hairy twigs bearing stiff clusters
of fuzzy red berries; small native
roses, which should be planted in
masses for the red stems and cut down
every three or four years ; the black
Finely Milled Bread Seems Best.
Commenting on the recent order of raspberry, and the willows.
the British board of trade that in
American Foods in Russia.
milling wheat 80 per cent of its
weight must be recovered in flour, in Russian workingmen who are build
stead of 70 per cent as formerly. ing the railroad from Petrograd to
Nature remarks that bread made from Kola, the Arctic port on the White
80 per cent flour is not so nutritious sea, are living largely on American
as that made from 70 per cent flour. dried vegetables. They are being ex
And it adds:
ported to England and to South
“Although 80 per cent bread con America. Practically the entire prod
tains on the average rather more pro ucts of the three plants, which are in
tein than 70 per cent bread, the di New York, California and New Jersey,
gestibility of the protein in the for are at present being exported for use
mer is rather lower, so that the actual under conditions which make the most
weight of protein digested by the av of their special virtues of being easily
erage individual from one pound of transported and of being able to re
80 per cent bread Is rather less than sist decay indefinitely.
the amount digested from one pound
of 70 per cent bread. Again, the en
The New Dime*.
ergy value of 80 per cent bread is
The following description is given
rather lower than that of 70 per cent by the treasury department : The de-
sign of the dime, owing to the small-
bread.”
ness of the coin, has been held quite
simple. The obverse shows a head of
An Apple a Day.
“An apple a day keeps the doctor Liberty with a winged cap. The head
away,” is the old saying so often Is flrm and simple In form, the profile
proved true. Now, the best way to forceful. The reverse shows a de
provide these apples is to place them sign of the bundle of rods, with n bat
In a brown wooden bowl or basket, tle ax, known as “fasces,” and sym
where each member of the family can bolic of the nation's strength. Sur
help himself or herself. One of the rounding the fasces is a full-foliaged
new mahogany fruit bowls piled high branch of olive, symbolic of peace.
with red-cheeked apples is an orna
Well Worth While.
ment to any living room table or buf-
A cut of half a cent a day in one
fet. To go with the apples there is
now to be had a silver corer and ítem of naval expenses amounted to
parer with a wooden handle. This, a saving of $800.000 in two years. This
though sterling, is as sharp as any ap Is a very creditable example of econ-
ple corer in the kitchen, and much am y and it shows how the littles
more sightly
rount —Buffalo Times.
One Way Out.
SOME SMILES *
uodualudataki
Similar but Different.
They were meandering slowly to
ward the parental domicile of the
maid, after the theater and a little sup-
per at a swell beanery, when the spirit
moved him to do a conundrum.
"Darling,” he asked, “why am I like
the moon?”
“I don’t know, George," she stam-
mered, “b-but I h-hope It isn’t b-be-
cause you get f-full."
“No," he answered in a tone redo-
lent with sadness, “it’s because I am
down to my last quarter.”
Universally Known.
j 1
lk
I I
Xa<
. 2.
a
17
0—%
Tag
J AMN
La.
hoe
CI
“There Is one
thing,” remarked
the man who
thinks useless
thoughts, “that
* everybody knows."
“And what is
that?” asked the
party of the dense
part.
“Everybody
knows that other
people make mis-
takes,” answered
the useless think
er.
Well Cared For.
“The Grabcoin children are being
given an International education.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“They have two French nurses, a
German tutor, an Italian music teacher,
a Russian dancing master and the rep
resentative of an impoverished, but old
and aristocratic family, as governess.”
Cold Reception.
“Did you have any luck when you
asked Dr. Piller’s consent to marry his
daughter?”
“None whatever. In fact, he assumed
a professional air and prescribed a
change of scene In some spot distant
not less than 1,000 miles from his domi
cile.”
Retort Courteous.
Tenant (angrily)—I’m going to move
the first of the month. That house of
yours ain’t fit for a hog to live in.
Landlord (calmly)—Ah, I see. So
that is why you are going to move, eh?
The Sequel.
“What’s going
on around here?”
we asked Chief
Rain-in-the-Face.
“ U m p I ” a n-
swered the chief.
“Indians have big
meeting, After
meeting, have dog
feast.”
“Y e a. verily,'
we answered, “af
ter the pow-wow
comes the bow-
wow.”
Backache Just
Like a Toothache !
“My wife wants me to go shopping
with her. I don’t see how I'm going
to get out of It”
“If she were to send you back te
your office after less than an hour ol
shopping and told you she would never
take you on such an expedition again,
you would consider yourself well re
paid for your trouble, wouldn’t you?”
“Certainly. But how am I going to
do that?”
“Let her catch you flirting with a
fascinating girl clerk.”—Birmingham
Age Hearld.
Dear tir. Editor — Sometime ago I
had backache very bad ; it would ache
just like a toothache. I tried a new
discovery of Doctor Pierce’s, called
"Anuric.” This is for kidneys and
backache. I soon felt relieved of all
backache and had no more pain, and I
hope others troubled in the same way
will try this wonderful new remedy.
Yours sincerely,
M rs . LINCOLN S tearns .
I N ote : It is now asserted with con-
Sporting Instinct.
fidence that these painful effects due to
“You seem to get a great deal of uric acid in the system aro entirely eradi-
enjoyment out of your automobile."
cated. A new remedy, called " Anuric,”
“Yes,” replied Mr. Chuggins; “but I has been discovered by Dr. Pierce, and is
believe I’d have more fun if I were a i the cause of a drainage outward of the
acid with which it comes in contact
motorcycle cop and could race with uric
the body. It will ward off back
everything that came down the road.” within
ache, headache and the darting pains and
—Washington Star.
| aches of articular or muscular rheuma
tism—of those diseases which are caused
by too much uric acid, such as gout,
I asthma, sciatica, renal calculus. "An-
uric" prolongs life because old people usu-
ally suffer from hardening and thickening
of the walls of the arteries, duo to the ex
cess of uric acid in the blood and tissues.
Dr. Pierce, who is director and chief
physician at the Invalids’ Hotel and
Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has
I been testing this wonderful medicine for
the relief of over-worked and weakened
kidneys. The relief obtained by sufferers
has been so satisfactory that ho deter
mined to place "Anuric” with tho prin
cipal druggists in town where people
Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap easily heal could get this ready-to-uso medicine.
"Anuric" Is not harmful or poisonous,
most cases of eczema and similar skin-eruptions.
The first application usually stops the itching and but aids iwturc in throwing off those
burning tHihiHt'y. Sold by all druggists. For sam poisons within tho body which cause so
ple of each free, write to Dept. 3-T, Resinol. Ealti- much suffering, pain and misery. Scien
more, Md. Use Resinol Soapor the complc.rion.
tists assert this remedy is 27 times moro
potent than lithia.
For Diabetes and Bright’s Disease this
Mostly Holes.
remedy is building up a reputation as
“Aren’t you afraid the moths will good as Dr. Pierce’s other well-known
medicines which have been proven reli
get into this summer stuff?”
during nearly fifty years, such as
“They’ll find poor pickings if they able
Doctor Pierce’s Favorito Prescription
do. Nothing in that lot but a couple for the ills of women, Doctor Pierce's
of hammocks, some openwork stock Pleasant Pellets, the liver regulator, and
ings and four or five peekaboo waists.” Doctor Pierce’s Gulden Medical Discovery
for red blood.
—Kansas City Journal.
You can get rid
of itching with
I
Resinol
BY OUR BLOOD WE UVE
If you tire easily, are subject to cold hands or feet—if you
catch colds readily or have rheumatic pains—your blood or
circulation is probably at fault and you need
SCOTTS EMULSION
OF NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL
fy which is nature’s easily-assimilated food, to increase
% your red corpuscles and charge the blood with life-
" sustaining richness. Scott’s creates warmth to throw
off colds and gives resistance to prevent sickness.
.
No Alcohol in SCOTT’S. Every Druggist has it.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Bloomfield, N. J.
16-15
. ’ AT
If you have a sick cow—or one that Is not
alee 1» I I thriving
and producing as she should, why not
Ilir
I
break away from the worry and uncertainty
e I I W lei right now—get a package of Kow-Kure, the
f U I great cow medicine, from your druggist or
PlalebleP. feed dealer and prove for yourself that It has
/ITUA Je
no equal in the treatment o' most cow ailments.
I I gV On thousands of farms Kow-Kure guards the herd
LU Ve against the ravages of Abortion, Barreness, Retained After-
9 birth Milk Fever, Scouring, Bunches, etc. You don’t need to
2 use Kow^Kure on faith; a trial will show decided, visible improve
", i? (S1V‘
Uli 1 We
29.
f
ment Put it to a test—invest today in a 50c or $1.00 package.
for our free treatise, "The Home Cow Doctor.”
Send
DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO.. Lyndonville. Vt.
Unpardonable Error.
Mrs. Uppson— Is your new neighbor
a society woman?
Practical.
Mrs. DeSwell—Mercy, no! Why, she
“It is no use trying to get away
actually calls the kitchen maid u hired
from the solemn fact that the woman
girl.
of today is a most practical and re
sourceful creature,” said the man who
The Exception.
has known a few.
Miles—The Chinese claim to have in
“What makes you think so?" a
vented nearly everything.
friend asked.
Giles—Well, judging by the way in
“The unsentimental attitude of a
which they wear their hair, they didn’t girl I know. I told her that she had
inspired some of my best poems. She
invent football.
didn't say a word about the poems,
but she wrote to my publishers for a
Pertinent Query.
of the royalties.”—New
“Actions speak louder than words,” percentage
York Times.
quoted the moralizer.
“So they say,” rejoined the demoral-
Constipation, indigestion, sick-headache
izer, “but did you ever try to make and
bilious conditions are overcome by a
your wife believe it?”
course of Garfield Tea. Drink on retiring.
Vast Resources of Siberia
Are Unrivaled in Old World
Siberia is destined one day to become
the richest country in the world, for it
has a natural wealth so diversified,
and as yet almost untouched, that it
no rival in the old world. How
vast this wealth is is described by A.
Kammer In La Nature.
Before the war Siberia was produc
ing from 1,000,000 to 1,300,000 tons of
flour a year. As a grazing country
it has no limits and it exports large
quantities of leather, tallow and but
ter. Its forests are almost inexhaus-
tibie and it supplies furs to all the
world.
Its mineral wealth can only be
guessed at, for the greater part of the
country has never been prospected.
But there are several enormous de
posits of oil, that of Konznetz embrac
ing about 30,000 square miles and esti
mated to contain 920,000,000 tons of
oil ; that of Irkutsk, estimated to con
tain 250,000,000 tons, and those of the
Ienisseisk and Siemipalatinsk. Some
of these have as yet scarcely been
touched.
The Kouznetz basin possesses also
great deposits of iron ore, estimated
to contain 16,500,000 tons. Iron occurs
in large quantities in many other re
gions.
Other metals that promise wealth to
their exploiters are copper (5,600 tons
of which were mined in 1913), gold,
lead, zinc, manganese, wolfram, tin,
antimony, cinnabar, mercury, sulphur,
saltpeter, graphite, naphtha, quartz,
sulphide and sulphate of soda, white
clay and common salt.
Its rivers are as full of fish as those
of British Columbia, Much flax, cot-
ton and many cereals are grown and
can be grown to a virtually limitless
extent
Heartless Sister.
Mildred, who had a small friend to
spend the afternoon with her, found
that the care of her little brother in
terfered sadly with their plans.
John showed a tiresome persistence
in joining their games. Meeting with
little encouragement, he asked at last,
somewhat wistfully:
“Milly, can’t I play something?”
"Yes, John,” she replied firmly. Go
into the back room and play you’re
dead for half an hour.”—Exchange.
Square.
Man—I want your opnion in a mat
ter. Would you advise me to borrow
$10 to help me out of a tight place?
Legal Friend—Uy all means.
Man—Very good! Lend me ten.
Legal Friend—That's all right. My
fee for legal advice is $10, and we’ll
Just call it square.—Boston Transcript.
Afraid Of His Wife.
Babson—Why do you always take a
taxi home from the club nights?
Blbbler—When I arrive at my door
and learn how much the fare is, it
sobers me instantly.—Boston Tran
scrip.
Knew The Location.
Three-year-old Sydney had the meas
les, and was a real sick little boy. His
anxious grandmother bent over him
and asked sympathetically:
“Can't you tell grandmamma where
you feel bad?”
Without a moment's hesitation little
Sydney answered;
“Wight here in bed.”—Indianapolis
News.
Constipation can be cured without drugs.
Nature’s own remedy---selected, herbs---is
Garfield Tea.
The Best Solution.
"Bridget, you have broken as much
china this month as your wages
amount to. Now, how can you prevent
this occurring again?”
"Ol don't know, mum, said Bridget,
"unless ye raise me wages."—New
York Times.
One Kind Of Cleverness.
"How does Bliggins get the reputa
tion of being such a clever man? He's
always getting into some new kind of
trouble.”
"Yes. Where he shows his clever
ness is by getting out again."—Wash
ington Star.
Ask The Kid’s Mother.
Willis—That new baby of mine is
the smartest kid in the world.
Gillis—That’s what they all say. You
can’t prove it.
Willis—I sure can. If you don't be
lieve me, just ask the kid’s mother
and grandmothers.—-Puck.
But Not of the Tracks.
"What is the occupation of the old
man who is always asking at the li
brary for books on Indians and Egyp
tians and Orientals and the like?"
“He gives people tips on the races.”
—Baltimore American.
THOSE AWFUL
CRAMPS
Suggestions that may
Much Suffering
save
Marysville, Pa.—“For twelve years
I suffered with terrible cramps. 1
would have to stay
in bed several days
every month. I
tried all kinds of
remedies and was
treated by doctors,
but my trouble con-
tinued until one day
I read about Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound and
what it had done for
others. I tried it
and now I am never
troubled with cramps and feel like a
different woman.
I cannot praise
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound too highly and I am recommend-
Ing it to my friends who suffer as I did. ”
-Mrs. G eorge R. NAYLOR, Box 72,
Marysville, Pa.
Young women who are troubled with
painful or irregular periods, backache,
headache, dragging-down sensations,
fainting spells or indigestion should
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. Thousands have been re-
stored to health by this root and herb,
remedy.
Write for free and heipful advice to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (con-
fidential), Lynn, Mass Only women
open and read such letter*.