THE
DRIVEN BY NATURE
HOW PACIFIC COA8T CITIES HAVE
HARNESSED WATERFALLS.
LARGEST and FINEST
HOTEL in the NORTHWEST
Eric V. Hauser, President.
I
550
Rooms
$1.00
Day-Up
$2 Up
Near Both
200 Rooms
100 Baths
Absolutely
Depots
Fireproof
I Hotel Hoyt
Corner Sixth and Hoyt Sts., Portland, Ore.
Thoroughly Renovated & Decorated
LOU HIMES. Manager.
} 3
KATES—7fc to $2. SPECIAL—Week or Month
FORD CARS
Every Ford Car should carry one ex
tra tire it save changing on the road.
THE TWIN RIM
fits both front and rear wheel. Applied in 6 min-
utes. Saves time, clothes, temper and religion.
Price $6.50. Sent parcel post prepaid, upon re
ceipt of price.
OREOON VULCANIZING CO., “The Tire Shop.”
333-335 Burnside st.,
Portland. Oregon
or un Veal, Pork, Beef,
he I 9 Poultry, Butter, Eggs
and Farm Produce
to the Old Reliable Everding house with a
record of 45 years of Square Dealings, and
bo assured of TOP MARKET PRICES.
F. M. CRONKHITE
Portland. Oregon
45.47 Front Street
We Are Buyers of
Veal, Hogs, Hides, Poultry, Eggs,
Etc. Your shipments to us will bring to you
prompt returns and best possible prices.
WRITE FOR SHIPPING TAGS.
VALLEY PRODUCE COMPANY,
116 Front St.,
Portland. Oregon
LEARN A TRADE. Gas Tractor and Auto
mobile men are in demand. We are giving a com-
píete course in both for the price of one tuition,
for a short time only. Large class now graduat
ing and have room for few more men. Catalog
and details free. Hemphill’s Trade Schools, 20th & Hawthorne
Portland, Oregon.
‘C. B.” MINERS & CO.
UNIVERSAL REPAIR and MACHINE SHOP
AUTOMOBILE
a.
REPAIRING AM REBUILDING,
PORTLAND, OREGON’
t. COR. FIFTH AND BIIMN ATI.
HIDES, PELTS. CASCARA’BARK,
WOOL AND MOHAIR.
We want
Write for prices Md shipping tags
N orton C o . Portland, Ore Seattle, *•
all you
THE H. F.
have.
FRED P. GORIN,
Patent Attorney.
Organizer and Developer. Patents secured or Fee
Refunded. FREE, Toy X-Ray Plate: shows every
bone in your body right through your clothing.
Suites- 1, 701 A, 701B, 701C. Central bldg., Seattle
STUDY bookkeeping, shorthand, telegraphy,
salesmanship, English branches, at an accredited
school; write, or phone Main 590 for catalogue;
graduates guaranteed positions. Behnke-Walker
Business College. 167 4th Street, near Morrison,
Portland, Oregon.
THICK, GLOSSY HAIR
FREE FROM DANDRUFF
Girisi Try It! Hair gets ■ ft, fluffy
and beautiful—Get a 25 cent
bottle of Danderlne.
If you care for heavy hair that glis
tens with beauty and is radiant with
life ; has an Incomparable softness and
is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderlne.
Just one application doubles the
beauty f your hair, besides 1 imme
diately dissolves every particle of
dandruff. You can not have nice
heavy, healthy hair If vou have dan
druff. This destructive scurf robs the
hair of its lustre, its strength and its
very life, and if not overcome it pro
duces a feverishness and it hing of
the scalp; the hair roots famish, loos
en and die; then the hair falls out
fast Surely get a 25-cent bottle of
Knowlton’s Danderlne from "ny drug
store and just try it
His Bid.
A wag in an auction room thought
it time to go home, and as the auc
tioneer raised his hammer and said:
“Going! Going! Will anybody bld
any more?” he shouted:
“I will bid more.”
"What will you bid?" asked the man
with the hammer.
"I will bid you good night,” an
swered the wag, walking off amidst
the laughter of the audience and the
rage of the auctioneer.—Exchange.
Boycotting the potato would be all
right if the potato had not beaten us
to it—Birmingham (Ala.) News.
Vast Power of Northern Rivers, Obedi
ent to Engineering Skill, Forced
to Do the Will of the Brain
That Conquers.
Few people know that trains are run
along the Pacific coast, cities lighted
and factory power obtained from har
nessed waterfalls up in the Sierra
mountains. It is a commentary on the
wonderful Industrial progress of Amer
ica, celebrated by America's Electrical
week, that the force which drives the
wheels of the Pacific coast commerce
is derived from heretofore useless
rivers amidst the whitecapped moun
tains of California.
The engineering world has watched
with interest the progress of the great
South Yuba-Bear river development,
which had its beginning in 1912 under
authority from the California state
railroad commission. At that time
the Pacific Gas and Electric company
entered upon the construction of a
225-foot dam at Lake Spaulding by
which it was proposed to back up the
waters of the South Yuba river and to
transform Lake Spaulding into a great
storage reservoir of 43,500-acre feet
capacity.
This work is again in progress and
is said by engineers to be the finest
enterprise in conserving national re
sources and in providing hydro-elec
tric power in great quantities that has
yet been undertaken in the West,
where this kind of motive force is rap
idly taking the place of steam and oil
power.
The idea of damming the waters of
the South Yuba at that point occurred
to electrical engineers many years ago,
but the great disaster of 1906 and the
troubles that followed caused the
project to be temporarily abandoned.
The project called for the diversion
of water from the South Yuba at the
dam through tunnel and ditch into
Bear valley, and for the construction
of a power house in the Bear River
gorge some nine miles below Lake
Spaulding, at a point where a head of
1,375 feet was obtainable.
From tilts It was proposed to utilize
the water after its release Into Bear
river several times over in its course
through mountain and valley down to
the point of Its arrival at the City of
Auburn, some 47 miles below. The
fall of the water between the two
points being approximately 4,300 feet,
it was found possible to survey sites
for a chain of not less than seven
developments In all.
Altogether, the plans called for an
aggregate development of something
like 162,000-horse power. The work on
Lake Spaulding was started in 1912,
and in the following year tunnel and
ditch work was begun upon the Chris
tian valley plant and also that ad
jacent to the city of Auburn.
On Thanksgiving day, 1913, Vice
President John A. Britton closed the
switch which sent the electric energy
humming along the wires from the
newly constructed power plant In the
Bear River gorge to the company’s
main high-tension distributing sta
tion at Cordelia, 110 miles away. This
enormous hydro-electric development is
fast nearing completion, to be added to
engineering achievements ranking
with the Panama canal.
An Optimist.
It was 5 a. m. He was starting
the furnace fire at this unseemly
hour.
Without warning a large lump of
coal leaped from Its berth on top of
the coal pile and landed squarely on
the captain of his toe brigade on the
left foot. In other words, the coal
landed squarely on his big toe. He
warmed up much more quickly than
the fire as he hopped about on one
foot in imitation of a Russian toe
dancer.
He swore, cursed his luck. Increased
the white space on his face, and then
—then—then he began to smile. And
his toe thumped like a stranded auto
engine !
“Why, I really am lucky,” he
thought "I'm lucky to have a coal
pile big enough for a lump of coal to
get a start on. Come on, do it again,”
he dared and smilingly cast his grouch
In the furnace, gave his aching toe
a rub or two and cheerily went to
work.
Knows Better.
• “What did you say Prof. Dippy’s
latest invention was?”
Mr. Carnegie’s Escape.
“A mutile for bumble-bees.”
▲ well-known American clergyman
"But they don’t sting from that end.” tells an excellent story about the
"So he found out when he attempted Laird of Skibo, when the latter was
to muille them.”—Judge.
earning $300 a year as a telephone
operator.
“Mr. Carnegie,” recalls the cleric,
“was a regular attendant at my busi
ness men's week-day services.
"One day, seeing him In the congre
gation, and unaware that he was not
Keep Kids Kleen
used to praying extempore, I said, af
ter the first hymn: ‘We will now be
led in prayer by Brother Carnegie.'
Mr. Carnegie rose, very red and flus
tered. ’Let us engage first of all,’ he
stammered, ’in silent prayer,' We all
immediately bowed our heads and
closed our eyes, and Mr. Carnegie,
tiptoeing out, escaped."
KOVERALLS
}
85c the suit
if your dealer cannot supply you
ve will send them, charges prepaid
on receipt of price, 85c each.
Rough on Author.
Mr. Pett Ridge tells a story against
himself. He offered to send to a
wounded soldier undergoing treatment
in a hospital copies of his novels, but
received the following reply:
"I am getting on fairly comfortable
as I am, and if you don't mind I'd rath-
ar not do anything that’s likely to
throw me back."
P, N. U.
No. 15,1917.
HERMISTON
HERALD,
Why They Laughed.
The English teacher was in the
habit of reading the day's lesson aloud
before the pupils recited it They were
studying Macbeth. In thia tragedy
Shakespeare introduces several storm
scenes.
The one preceding had been a
mighty one, where Macbeth curses his
luck and fate. Everyone was very
much impressed with his wrath.
The teacher read on, not noticing
the change of scene.
“Thunder!” she exclaimed, and stop
ped.
The class laughed, but almost as
soon as the young teacher realized
her mistake in accent, it would be
hard to say which laughed the hard
est, the pupils or the teacher.—Indian
apolis News.
10 CENT “CA8CARET8”
IF BILIOUS OR CO8TIVE
For Sick Headache, Sour Stomach,
Sluggish Liver and Bowel»—They
work while you sleep.
Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, indiges
tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head
aches come from a torpid liver and
clogged bowels, which cause your
stomach to become filled with undi
gested food, which sours and ferments
like garbage in a swill barrel. That’s
the first step to untold misery—indi
gestion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow
skin, mental fears, everything that is
horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret
tonight will give your constipated
bowels a thorough cleansing and
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a 10-cent box
from your druggist will keep you feel
ing good for months.
A Short Story.
Ruth loves Merrill, s
Merrill loves Ruth.
Merrill wants to wander.
Ruth wonders why he would wan
der.
Says Ruth, "Let us at least wander
together."
But Merrill doesn’t want to wander
that way.
Says he, "No.”
He exits Ruth-lessly, but Merrily!
(The end.)—Jester.
It Works! Try It
Tells how to loosen a sore,
tender corn so it lifts
out without pain.
No humbug! Any corn, whether
hard, soft or between the toes, will
loosen right up and lift out, without
a particle of pain or soreness.
This drug is called freezone and is
a compound of ether discovered by a
Cincinnati man.
Ask at any drug store for a small
bottle of freezone, which will cost but
a trifle, but Is sufficient to rid one's
feet of every corn or callous.
Put a few drops directly upon any
tender, aching corn or callous. In
stantly the soreness disappears and
shortly the corn or callous will loosen
and can be lifted off with the fingers.
This drug freezone doesn’t eat out
the corns or callouses but shrivels
them without even irritating the sur
rounding skin.
Just think! No pain at all; no sore
ness or smarting when applying it or
afterwards. If your druggist don’t
have freezone have him order it for
you.
HERMISTON,
OREGON.
GOT SAILORS’ "GOATS"
REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE UN
NERVED BRITISH SEAMEN.
Men Refused to Stay on Ship That in
Their Opinion Had “Seen the Bot
tom of the Sea”—Vessel Held
In Thick Mud.
Not so very long ago the appear
ance of a new island off the coast of
Alaska brought to mind other rapid
uprisings of land on the ocean.
An island suddenly came to light off
the coast of Sicily, remained for two
months and as quickly disappeared.
Sabrina, near the Azores, retired from
public life before it had been fairly
charted. The Gulf of Mexico has wit
nessed the advent and subsidence of
small islands. These upheavals of
the bed of the ocean suggests all sorts
of mysteries connected with the un
known depths. A British vessel onoe
had an uncanny experience In this con
nection.
The vessel was out twenty-three
days from Manila to the Hawaiian is
lands. It was a silent, dead-black
night. The lead showed a deep sea.
Suddenly those on board felt as though
they had grounded.
Daybreak revealed a low and misty
sky. The Britisher lay as if becalmed
In the midst of an oily sea strangely
discolored In patches. Suddenly the
water, to use the words of the mas
ter, "trembled." The ship rolled, and
in the distance rose a huge balloon
shaped mass of vapor, steam or smoke.
There was not the slightest sound,
but a long line of chafing water
stretched across the streaky calmness.
Then the vapor settled over all, and
the ship’s company could hear but not
see the seething and pouring water all
about them. The captain ordered a
bucketful to be drawn up. It was hot
and smelled like the product of a gas-
works. Whereupon the captain re
marked that "a new continent was be
ing poked up,” adding that he wished
himself well out of the way.
The air grew more oppressive every
moment. The vessel gave a gentle
side roll and word went round that the
ship was aground. Over went the
lead and came up covered with blue,
oozy mud. The Britisher was wal
lowing iu sludge, the darkness was
pall-like and the atmosphere suffocat
ingly close. Then the air was rent
with reports dreadful to hear in that
darkness. There were three of these
blasts and all was still again.
When the light came, red and un
natural, a strange sight met the eyes
of those on board. It was as if the
bottom of the Pacific had been laid
bare. They were helpless in a sea of
thick mud. The sulphur fumes were
choking and all had to take refuge be
low. Hour after hour they gasped,
facing the probability of a death by
suffocation. Suddenly they felt that
they were afloat. The bank of mud
that held them had disappeared and
after a time the Britisher made her
way out of the gruesome spot.
• When Honolulu was reached the
crew deserted, for they held that there
was no luck in a ship that had "seen
the bottom of the sea.”
Experience.
“Going to plant any lettuce in your
garden this year?”
"No; nothing but flowers.”
Cape Cod Canal a Success.
"But you can’t eat flowers.”
The government test of the Cape
“That’s true, and we couldn’t eat Cod canal has been declared a suc
the lettuce I tried to raise last year, cess. Two submarines made the trip
either.”—Detroit Free Press.
from Boston to Newport at the rate of
eleven miles an hour, and at a great
A Peace Maker.
"I don’t believe in war,” remarked saving of time, as compared with the
Broncho Bob. "Neither do I,” replied outside route. The eight-mile trip
Three-Finger Sam. “And I also don’t through the canal was made In forty-
believe in hoss-stealin’ ; therefor bein' five minutes, and by using this pas
willin’ to get out with a fire-arm- an’ sage the submarines saved six miles
discourage anybody wh tries to intro of distance and avoided much rough
duce the custom."—Washington Star. weather. The Kiel canal was built
by the Germans at a cost approaching
Commercial perplexities.
<100,000,000, mainly for strategic pur
“Let’s give that motion picture star poses; yet it is a fact that the reduc
an interest in the business,’’ said the tion of distance between the German
film manager.
“Let’s give her the whole business,” base In the Baltic and the North sea
replied the partner, "Under the agree by this canal is little greater than the
ment that we are to have reasonable gain to the American fleet, which
compensation. Then she can owe her would result from the enlargement of
self her enormous salary."—Exchange. Cape Cod canal to accommodate our
battleships between those two impor
Cm Granulated Eyelids, tant stategic centers, Newport and
. lisi» Eyes inflamed by expo- Boston.
.
sure to Son, Dastand Wind
Shocked by T. R.’s Informality.
Harry A. Franck, famous as a world
•
just Eye Comfort. • At wanderer, who has just returned from
a four years' hike in South America,
tells the following about the impres
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
sion left by Colonel Roosevelt with
the natives of Paraguay :
"I got near the trail of Colonel
Roosevelt, though not nearer than a
couple of hundred miles. He was on
his trip to the River of Doubt and I
heard much about him from the na
tives, and from two men who had been
with him, Father Zahm and Mr Sipp.
I heard many yarns about Roosevelt.
At one village. In the wildest part of
Central South America, hundreds of
miles from civilisation and peopled
only by a few Indians, the Inhabitants.
to heal your skin-let
I was told, had been greatly shocked
because the colonel walked about their
streets without his coat on I’’—New
York Times.
Eyeggkmlyeosmätune:
Resinol do it now
THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS
Chinese Minister Long a Diplomat.
Dr. Wellington Koo, who has been
appointed Chinese minister to this
country. In succession to Kal Fu-Shah,
reduced with
was until his appointment, minister to
Mexico, Peru and Cuba. Doctor Koo
was an undersecretary In the Chinese
also other Bunches or Swelling». Noblister, foreign office until recently, and as
no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco- such was a member of a diplomatic
nomical- only a few drops required at an ap- commission which conducted the nego
plication. $ 2 per bottle delivered. Bock 3 M free. tiations In Peking with the Japanese
ABSORBINE, JR. the antiseptic liniment for minister. He speaks English perfect
mankind, reduces Cysts, Went, Painful,
ly, and Is a graduate of Columbia uni-
Swollen Veins and Ulcers. $1 and $2 a bottle at
versity, where he received his doc-
dealers oe delivered. Book “Evidence" free.
8. F. YOUNG, IM, 403 Temple X, Springfield, Mast. topate.
that make a horse Wheeze.
Roar, have Thick Wind
or Choke-down, can be
ABSORBINF
W. L. DOUGLAS
“THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE”
$3 $3.50 $4 $4.00 $5 $6 $7 & $8 AKBRSN.
The Best Known Shoes in the World.
. L Douglas name and the retail
tom of all shoes at the factory.
guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes.
The
are
the
leaders
in
the
Fashion Centres of America.
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and
supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money
can buy.
Aak your shoe dealer fnr W. L. Douglas shoes. If he can-
not supply you with the kind you want, take no other
make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to
et shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price,
J return mail, postage free.
LOOK FOR W. L Douglas
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom.
GIVE “SYRUP OF FIGS”
TO CONSTIPATED CHILD
Delicious "Fruit Laxative" can't harm
tender little Stomach, liver
and bowels.
Look at the tongue, mother!
If
coated, 3 r little one’s stomach, liver
and bowels need cleansing at once.
When peevish, cross, listless, doesn’t'
sleep, eat or act naturally, or is fever-
tsh, stomach sour, breath bad; has
sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold,
give a teaspoonful of "California
Syrup of Figs,” and In a few hours
all the foul, constipated waste, undi
gested food and sour bile gently moves
out of its little bowels without grip
ing, and you have a well, playful child
again. Ask your druggist for a 50-
cent bottle of “California Syrup of
Figs,” which contains t ill directions
for babies, childr In of all ages and for
grown-ups.
Pimples, boils, carbuncles, dry up and
disappear with Doctor Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. In tablets orliquid.
Domestic Discord.
"Christmas comes but once a year."
"You merely use that as an argu
ment to bankrupt me,” retorted her
husband. “If it came 20 times a year
you’d pay no attention to IL"—Louis
ville Courier-Journal.
FOR PIMPLY FACES
Cuticura Is Best—Samples Free by
Mail to Anyone Anywhere.
An easy, speedy way to remove
pimples and blackheads. Smear the
affected surfaces with Cuticura Oint
ment Wash off in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and hot water, bathing
some minutes. Repeat night and
morning. No better toilet prepara
tions exist.
Free sample each by mail with
Book. Address postcard, Cuticura,
Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.
—Adv.
BEWARE or
SUBSTITUTES
GoicOtad
$3.00 $2.50 & $2.00
esident 4 W. L. Douglas Shoe Co.,
185 Spark St., Brockton. Mass.
Too Late.
“Darling,’’ he cried, “the firm Is go
ing to give me a 15 per cent raise to
help us to meet the general rise in
prices.”
"Oh,” she replied, “If we’ve got to
use it for that, what's the good of it?
Why couldn’t we have had it for some
of the things we haven’t been able to
afford?”—Judge.
Nor Good Collectors, Either.
“This world owes every one a liv
ing.’’
“True; but neither you nor I seem
to be preferred creditors."—Boston
Transcript.
A Brutal Attack.
An actor visited a beauty doctor to
see if he could have something done
for his nose. The beauty doctor stud
ied the organ, and suggested a com
plicated straightening and remodeling
process—cost, 20 guineas.
“I may go you,” said the actor,
thoughtfully. He stroked his nose be
fore the mirror, regarding it from all
sides. "Yes, I think I’ll go you. But
look here, do you promise to give my
nose—er—Ideal beauty?”
The surgeon gave a loud, brutal
laugh.
“As to Ideal beauty, I can’t say,” he
replied, "but, by gosh! I couldn't help
improving it a lot If I hit it with a
hammer.”—Baltimore American.
«
Misery in Back, Headache
and Pain in Limbs.
Dear Mr. Editor —For more than a
year I suffered with misery in Che back,
dull headache, pain in the limbs, waa
somewhat constipated and slept poorly
at night until I was about ready to col-
lapse. Seeing an account of the won
derful qualities of "Anuric,” prepared
by Doctor Pieree, of Buffalo, N. Y., I
sent for a box, and before using the
whole box I ielt and still feel improved.
My sleep is refreshing, misery reduced,
and life is not the drag it was before. I
Strict Thrift
most cheerfully recommend this remedy
“Did that taciturn old miser do any to
sufferers from like ailments.
thing at the charity bazar?”
• Yours truly,
W. A. ROBERTS.
"No; he spent nothing, not even his
breath.”—Baltimore American.
NOTE : You’ve all undoubtedly heard
Tested.
of the famous Dr. Pierce and his well-
She—Do you believe in phrenology? known medicines. Well, this prescrip
He—No. As an experiment I once tion is one that has been successfully
went and had my head read, and I used for many years by the physicians
found there was nothing in it—Life. and specialists of Dr. Pierce’s Invalids*
Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo,
N. Y., for kidney complaints, and dis
"I hear that young Wright has just eases
arising from disorders of the
inherited 15,000,000."
kidneys and bladder, such as backache,
“In that case I'd rather be Wright weak
rheumatism, dropsy, con
than be president.”—Boston Tran gestion back,
of the kidneys, inflammation
script.
of the bladder, scalding urine, and
urinary troubles.
Wider Field.
Up to this time, "Anuric” has not
“I want to reach people in all walks been on sale to the public, but by the
of life."
persuasion of many patients and the
"That's a narrow audience, old increased demand for this wonderful
man. Better include all makes of healing Tablet, Dr. Pierce has finally
cars.”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
decided to put it into the drug stores
of this country within immediate reach
of all sufferers.
I know of one or two leading drug
gists in town who have managed to
procure a supply of "Anuric” tor their
anxious customers in and around this
locality. If not obtainable send one
dime by mail to Dr. Pierce for trial
package or 60 cents for full treatment
«E ditor — Please insert this letter in
some conspicuous place in your paper.
Clear, Peachy Skin :
Awaits Anyone Who :
Drinks Hot Water |
Says an Inside bath, before break- +
fast helps us look and feel y
clean, sweat, fresh. ?
Sparkling and vivacious—merry,
bright, alert—a good, clear skin and
a natural, rosy, healthy complexion
are assured only by pure blood. If
only every man and woman could be
induced to adopt the morning inside
bath, what a gratifying change would
take place. Instead of the thousands of
sickly, anaemic-looking men, women
and girls, with pasty or muddy com
plexions; instead of the multitudes
of “nerve wrecks,” "rundowns,’”
"brain fags” and pessimists we
should see a virile, optimistic throng
of rosy-cheeked people everywhere.
An inside bath is had by drinking
each morning, before breakfast, a
glass of real hot water with a tea-
spoonful of limestone phosphate in It
to wash from the stomach, liver, kid
neys and ten yards of bowels the pre
vious day’s indigestible waste, sour
fermentations and poisons, thus
cleansing, sweetening and freshening
the entire alimentary canal before
putting more food Into the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache, bil
iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism,
cold; and particularly those who have
a pallid, sallow complexion and who
are constipated very often, are urged
to obtain a quarter pound of limestone
phosphate at the drug store which
will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient
to demonstrate the quick and remark-
able change in both health and appear
ance, awaiting those who practice in
ternal sanitation. We must remem
ber that inside cleanliness is more im
portant than outside, because the skin
does not absorb impurities to con
taminate the blood while the pores in
the thirty feet of bowels do.
WOMAN SICK .
TWO YEARS
Could Do No Work.
Now Strong as a
Man.
Chicago, III.— “For about two years
I suffered from a female trouble so I
was unable to walk
or do any of my own
work. I read about
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com
pound in the news
papers and deter
mined to try it It
brought almost im
mediate relief. My
weakness has en
tirely disappeared
and I hever had bet
ter health. I weigh
166 pounds and am as strong as a man.
I think money is well spent which pur
chases Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Mrs. Jou. O’BRYAN, 1755
Newport Ave., Chicago, III.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from displacements, inflam
mation, ulceration, irregularities, peri
odic pains, backache, bearing-down feel-
Ing, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness,
and nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound is the stan
dard remedy for female ills.