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FAGE POtm
MBftffOfttT - MAfL' TRTSTTOTl. MEfttfolTD, ORK(.ONT, TUT?SDAY. AUOTTRT 20. 1f)2."
ifEDFORD Mail Tribunr
'AM INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
lUBUBHUD EVERY AFTERNOON UOIPI
BUNDAT, BV TUB
"' URDFORD PRINTING 00.
fa), llnlf&rd flundtr Morning 8un 1. rornUfaed
aoavriDcrt aw inf ui MTaQ-aaj aaiij nw-
Otdo! Hall
rtU Til atwat.
Trlbunt Building,
Pbou Ii,
A eortaolldatlOD of tb Demorratlo Tine., th.
Medtord llall, tbe Medford Trlliuoi, tit booUl
rli Orrgonlan, tha Aatilaiul Trlbuoa.
OBEKT W. Illlia, Editor.
8. SUM ITER SMn il, Manager.
By Mall In Aitranc:
Dallj, with Hutidaj Hun; jear ....'....17.80
Daily, wltb Sunday Hun. muitth 76
tllt.T. without Sunday Nun, jMtt 6.60
Dally, without Sunday Run, mouth ... .66
Waly llall Tribune, on rear I.
twday Sun, one ear 1.00
IT CARRIER In WwJfoni, Asblind, JtckMD-
nut, uentrai roinx, rnoeon. iieoi ca
fll.Tl.war-:
DaTlr, with Sundiy flun, month
(Hi If, wlttiout Buiid ty Bun, month....
(Hi) j, without Sunday Hun, oi. year..
;Dtllr, with bundiy Sun. one year...
411 trra by carrlar. oaab in advanr.
Official paper of the City ol UHford.
Q((i(;ll paper of Jack noil Couilj,
Sworn dally arerkg, rrrrulation for tlx
Montbi endliiK April lit, 1024, 3019, more rhaD
double the circulation of any other paper pub-
unra or rirci.iaieu in jacKaoq jouniy.
-The only
paper betwtei-. ATtamvt Ore.,
and
a. a aiKtanoe 01 over
too
Ilea, having
aerrloe.
leaaed wire Aaaoclated Preaa
Entered aecond-claai matter at tied ford
ureton, unier act 01 March , 1879.
MKMBKRS Of ThR nWmniTM) tftEHS.
The Aaaoclated Vthm In eirtualvrty entitled
to the uae for republication of all newa dla-
Ctchra credited to it or not otherwlae credited
thta paper, and ,-aUo td Uje local newa pub
All rigfati of republication of tpeclal dla
pawi uerein are aiao omenta. ,.
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur l'prrr.
Outside of the radiu, there seems to
be no punlHlinient ut tho state prison.
Lot's 8oo, what lower order of tin!
luals Is there in which tho female tie.
sorts ItH young? tToronto (Can.)
Ktur.) "Ouch!" squealed tho
culled huiiiun ruce.
Somehow, every time John D. Hock
efeller Rives awny a dime. It Is re
ealled that Air. Doheny, another oil
baron, save his friend. Mr. Kail, 100,
00(1; and was tried for it.
. The Portland Journal fearlessly
urisos to inquire cdllorlnlly. how the
Rose City shioks can keep their hair
groused, and do no work.
Hon. Injured Innocence, of (he Nice
isclllo branch of tho Political Purlfl
era or tho, Valley, has taken a solemn
oath, in u loud voice, to "stop tho
hostile und viper press from gnawing
moth holes in tho Constitution." Mr
Innocence recently stopped Ihp moths
from gnawing tho wild life of Oregon
und is un ardent fisherman, In a swivel
clmlr.
"IIOYK WILL IIM IIOVS"
(Los Angeles Kxuminor)
. PASADL.VA Horrouiry William
Dunknrly of l'asaduuu Chaiubor
of Commerce today saved tho
life of Hohort Lounshory, 71 -year-old
son of P. W. Lounsbory, as the
lud foil Into Pasadena Gulf Club
fewlmmlng pool.
A wldo-uwnko, ontorprislilg, ninl
uble, good-looking, sterling, steady,
broad-minded, active citizen left
Thursday for Nebraska, on tho cool
comfortable, convenient nnd careful
boulhorn pacific.
C. Wig Ashpole's pn Is a grand
father again. Wig could feel no gayer
if cows were selling al S;ioo each, and
hay was as free as tbe air.
'J ho pussywillows on Hear Creek
have sturtod to wither fruin tho sun
und denunciation during tho school
olootlon.
Thomas .Murray, desperado, hemic
as the crow fills, for a well-known
heated urea. In his last public Mtor
anco kuvo siune advlco w hich ho him
self might well have heeded, hut did
nut, ho inoro than will the bcncflcl
urles of his own wisdom. Ho was ad
dressing runner boys, held captlvo.
ami no admonished them "to stay on
tho farm." It seems tho rule for the
caught, to emit pertinent motitliHtiil
when it is too late.
coiNTi.Mi i:ini;s m.ioiti;
Til ICY AHU IMT(lli:i)
(Coos Hay Times)
While silling at tho table they
picked up it Coos Hay Times and
read an ucouut of their marriage.
The ordered nourishment was for
gotten for I he lime lielug mill
Itev. Nidi .1. Haines of Ihu llup
tlst church was hurriedly pressed
Into service, to iniike g 1 tho
article In I ho Coos Hay Times.
Algae has been discovered in (he
city water, when everybody expected
It to be something only doctors could
pronounce.
If the present rale of progress keeps
up Ihcro will be more eating houses
than Insurance ugcnis.
William Motley, of llalrnay, was
held for the grand Jury yesterday on
a Blunge of the dulunfill snd felonious-
possession of a still. (linker
(Oro.) Democrat.) sush tbptgnl.
Wo hail thought the rolled down
stocking, Willi the gart neath the
knee,
Were Intended for additions tu the
vlvhl scenery,
But .lt seems that we In error In our
promises Imve been:
They urn merely Incidentals M n hetier
hygiene.
Wo were wrong In speculation; were
in 'error In the guess
That the dear ones were but striving
for Improved attractiveness;
That the splendors of the fabrics that
we viewed by seml-steallh,
Were merely fur adornment nix. they
Wear thorn for their health. ff... t
llulletln.)
Tiring your rlenn rnr'on raw to thu
fff'V VV! l)iigt if
VICTOR
THE CAREER of Victor Lawson, publisher of the Cliicajo News,
who died yesterday, provides an effective answer to the frc
(ijeut assertion, that the power of the press declined with the pims
intC of personal journalism.
Mr. Lawsuit was essentially an impersonal journalist. lie wroU'
no screaming leaders, he directed no personal campaigns. Through
out his lii)f newspaper career lie kept far in the background, de
voting his energies to business administration, now and then re
organizing his editorial forces mid attending to his line of commu
nications, but never taking part in action himself.
And yet the Chicago News wielded n tremendous power in
the middle west, and is a tremendous power today, not through tliu
influence of a dominating personality, but through the influence
of accurate news, intelligently interpreted, free from selfish interest,
political entanglements, business bias anil personal ambition.
One frequently hears of the great influence of the personal jour
nalists like Oreely and Dana, whose orders, according to tradition,
were blindly followed by hordes of worshipful readers. This power
is probably exaggerated, and yet it is true that the old' New York
Tribune and Sun .exerted an influence, which neither the Chicago
News nor any large daily exerts today.
Hut this does not mean the newspapers of the pre-hellum days
were greater newspapers, nor that Urecly and Dana were greater
editors than there are today.
It means that the intellectual plane in America has risen, not
that journalistic capacities have declined.
Tho American people no longer take their opinions nor their
orders from the newspapers, as they did so generally half n century
ago. They think for themselves.
for opinions, but for information
This fundamental change men
Stone were quick to recognize. They concentrated not upon airing
their personal views, but upon news; and both their success and
power finally came from giving the people more news than any
other papers in their districts.
Mr. Lawson was u very peculiar man, in many ways tempera
mentally unfitted for taking part in public life. A grout advocate
of publicity for others, he detested publicity for himself. But lie
did great good; in an entirely impersonal way, he wielded great
power; and from first to last he was true to the very best traditions
of the New Journalism. ''
QUILL
You novel' see u sign reading: '
O, Evolution, what nonsense has been talked in thy name.
Feminine styles change and change. Only the habit of cussing
them remains fixed.
A good wife serves cheerfully
in failure.
Almost everything has been
vice to trim the boh at home.
Radicalism is that unkind opinion you have of. another man's
snoring when you can't sleep.
It s a queer game. A labor
operator and the consumer is out.
Ilelter a roadside tent and privacy than a swell summer cottage
and all of your relatives.
Another method of discovering
white pants 011 the trip.
It's fair enough. The tourists
those in big ears get shaken down.
If there were no luncheon
some other way to kill an hour at
Correct this sentence: ."He has
haven't had my finger iu'his motto
RipplingRhumos
S I
THE LIMELIGHT.
Wli HEAR so much of Itildatl lloo.e our hearts are sore dis
trust ; he figures daily in the news, nnd never gives us
rest ; if lie would like Vini Winkle snooze, he would be roundly
blest. Eor years mid years he's pranced around, a star that
isn't fixed, and there is neither sight nor, sound in which ho
isn't mixed; the pictures of his map abound the raging seas
betwixt. If there's an earthquake anywhere, this man is inter
viewed, and he expresses bleak despair since planets are so
rude; he's pictured seated in his chair, in all his pulchritude.
He's handing down his wise decrees that touch all human things,
and he rebukes the humble bees for having red hot stings;
wherever one may turn one sees the platitudes be springs. Ad
vising women as to dress, he scintillates and shines, and leaves
this subject to express bis views on beers and wines; and all
he says, lo our distress, appears in leaded lines. We sometimes
wonder how he works this linHight graft so well; how cun
ningly he always lurks where grandstand plaudits swell, and
keeps bel'yi-e us till he irks tile heilrls that in us dwell. We ,
Heavy or the pictured face and Tjf the printed name, when we
behold Ihrni every place, be they of man or tlaiue ; nud we re
mark, "It's a disgrace, Ibis endless limelight game." We wish
that llildad Hoo.e would go lo homo seelu.d gile, and btify
there for n ye:ir or so until his lining fade nnd lei sonic less
time bnttered iP. in limeli-hl -lories wade. n O
1 nut-mi, 0 vh
LAWSON.
They go to their newspapers not
upon which to base them.
like Victor Lawson nnd Melville
POINTS
"Ye olde face fixer."
as an ally in success and mi alibi
invented now except u. simple do-
official calls 11 strike on a mine
a weak place in a lire is to wear
in little cars get shaken up and
conferences, men could think
up
noon.
cut two teeth," said (the. "but I
1 'to feel'tlioht. V ? ' "
Art .V
, ' ,1 ..., :.TfL 1 .... u.' -
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE STORY
LULLABYE
i, -
I always sing 7-8 baby doll to steep 1-3 she would 2-6-8 and
that would 10-16 a pity.
My 10-11-12-13 doll has a beautiful 2-3-4-5 that has rockers
14-19 it. I 15-16-17 it is comfortable 18-19 that crib I
My baby doll always goes to sleep for 7-9 and wakes up again
11-17 once when I want to pretend it is morning again, ,
Answer To Last Puzzle
2-6-9-13-16-19 (notice), 2-3 (no), 13-14 (Is), 22-23 (go), 1-4-8-12-15-18-22
(smoking), 17-21'-24 (it's), 3-7-1U-14 (ones), 9-10-11 (ten), 19-20-21
(eat), 4-5-6-7 (moon). '.in
Copyright, VJ2S, by Tli International Syndtcatt .,
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY. M D.
Slinad lattara prttlnlna to Mraonal naanii aji lefiana, ml Is rflaaaaa 6luno.li or
iMjtmwt, will U TMitni by Dr. Brady II a aUmnd, .all adtSwaMl arw.lop. I. .iwlo4.
rli ln' brl " wrlttan In Ink. Owing to tha larg. numbar el lattara noalvad, .nly
7 Mn o. anmrare h.rt. N. raply un ba marft to awrlM not aoafflnalni to lMtryolkM
A66rw Dr. Wllllaja Braay, lr -r. .1 thl. awwmpw.
The -lrl Wllh (he
According tu a ncwHpaper item,
viiich wuh dutc U July 11, at Evuns
vlllo, a ffirl suffered serious poison
ing from "nitro
Jjenzine." which
coal tin derivative
was an ingredient
of shoe polish that
had been used on
h 0 r shoes. The
inference from the
Item is that the
plrl wore the Bhoes
'shortly ufter they
had been polished
with the pollHh' referred to, und ab
sorbed from the leather, through thu
skin of her feet sufficient nllroben
.Ino to cause the poison Ins. A char
acteristic f(f the poisoning being a
grave alteration of tho red blood
corpuscles culled J'li.ethemoglobine-
mlu,'
Interfering with their oxygen ijcrculosis in his own home. H. B. I these new schedules cancelled and re
g function, so that the victim . , ,. , ,. ... Iir,i Plio,.l tn i.nth
carrying runcllon, so mat tne vlct m. Answcr, kn. of n0 8ucn book.'qulrcd the railroads to publish new
becomes cyanosed that Is the skin." ,iut robllhiy mcan a. pamphlet schedules which would confirm with
lips, nails turn blue. The Evans,. whu.h , huvc recommmied entitled, the commission's requirements.
vll)o girl huppily recovered. There 1 How j Won ,he Ba,tlo Wlh Tu. Itadio receiving sets heretofore
have been some fatal cases of poison- berculo8,8 )n My 0wn Home .. by have bene shipped as electrical ap
ing by. nitrobenzene (as the solvent, Stmkm: This is distributed by ! PHances and musical Instruments,
should be spelled) applied In shoo ,h0 Det,.oit B w c Tu. ;
"'6 ci.io .u,o ie boo..-..
I,fn,.n ,V,n .i,.a J..U.I 1,. 1
before tho dye had dried out. l)r
C. W. Muehlberger, Wisconsin state
tnxicutogist, reports nine cases of
such shoe dye poisoning nnd cites
total of '17 cases recorded In medical
literature llo says the solvent gene
rally userl In such dyes in this coun
try Is nitrobenzene, but anllin Is often
used instead In Uuropc and anllin,
loo, is poisonous und produces (be
same train of symptoms, methemog
lobinemia, cyanosjs, vertigo, head
ache, somnolence, grent weakness.
These symptoms, by the way, are
Identical wltb the poisonous effects
of various coulter derivatives em
ployed as internal medicines, such us
acelanllide, brmuoseltzer, phenuec
tlne, iiutlpyrln, aspirin, antikumnia,
and scores of other pain killer, fa
tigue killer, worry killer, cold killer,
fever killer nostrums.
A few cases of occidental nitroben
zene or anllin poisoning have oc
curred through the spilling of these
liquids on skin or clothing, l'nlntera
using anllin containing paints havu
been poisoned and some chemists
and physicians hnve Jumped to tho
conclurlou that the poison was ab-l
.orbed through the skin. They llsot,
(o Imagine painters absorbed lead
thru the skin, hut wo knuw belter
now. Hair dyes containing anllin
its dcruvltlic haraphenyl-enilla-
mln have caused poisoning In some
cases und no doubt doctors of hasty
Judgment have assumed Unit the
paruphenylendlainlu was absorbed
oiougu ine sculp or hair or some
thing in these cases. Kven some of
the roreimist authorities on industrial
hygiene and occupational disease,
not lo mention officials of our slate
Industrial departments, havo accent
cu this same plausible notion, that
certain poisons are absorbed through
the unbroken skin. But there Is no
physiological ground for such belief
there Is no .convincing experimental
evidence to support It; tlmro Is not
e.cn good clinical or practical evl-
uence mat any such absorption oc
curs. Ur. Muehlberger himself men
lions in his published report that
"many cases of shoo dyo poisoning
nuve nccn unserved In which tho feet
01 mo victim were not discolored I
the dye. Indicating that the pigment
(dye) has not reached tho skin, tho
i no solvent (nitrobenzene or anllin)
has been absorbed In quantities suf
ficient lo cause marked cyanosis and
oilier symptoms of Intoxication." lo.
come If (he stuff never touched tho
sum? Why. I luil s easy enough: "t
course the soleul Is very volatile,
and the uarnilli of the feet hasten
the evaporation of the stuff. undli
Is Inhaled l,y the victim. The isoje
explanation applies to rases oflc"
dental poisoning from these or other
liquids spilled on clothing nr on
"kin. Uillo for hair dye poisoning,
rmto for l. nd poisoning In painter
I'liiiUrj or oilur ocmpTTiion.-. Ditto
Shoe Polt-h 111 lies.
for any known Industrial or occuua -
, . ,
tlonal poisoning,
QUESTION'S AXD AXSWEHSi
Ice Wilier As llytinotic.
My husliund suffers so much from
tho heat and finds it . difficult to
sleep on hot nights unless he takes
the hot water bag to sleep on. the
bag filled with Ice water. This
enables him to sleep soundly and to
go to sleep quickly, but we havo been
told it would bring on rheumatism
or heart trouble, eventually. Mrs.
1'. M. It. " ,
Answer Den Is1 spoofing, as usual.
It is perfectly harmless. Aside from
frostbite or freezing, no disease Is
ever caused by cold.
. .Mr. Slwker's .Story. .
Kindly tell me where I can pro-
cur.e a book written by a Detroit man
telling how he cured himself of tu-
,.,.,.,.,,,, ,..,.. ,ir,
' "
east, net rail. Mich fi-eo t realclenls
of Wayne, county, at five cents a A- P.)-Firc originating In the ad
copy to others. It does not tell how Jflnlnit Homestead tea room spread
the author "cured himself for he
was loo ivise to attempt fool experl-1
menls on himself; It tells how ho 1
..-. il,n 1...IH !.. ..r 1,1.. .
physician. That's tbe only way one
is likely to win under the care and
direction and advice aud, counsel und
T. , ,.i ii, i -
fight is In- following tbe gratuitous "'""'""f ,hl" ,wir- rn OK11"
advlce of Tom. Hick and Harry, chas- P"un?- ,:.C.,'U",,;y "7 1 m
lag hither and yon In quest of nJ ? T.f' ?
niiniKiiimu ,.u, i,i- ,n,. .i ' '"' p'ekoil, as the case is expected to
, ... , ....
" iiij qilllf-K li c,ll lllcilin ll im lll-
derful new cures, going west or some
other direction on wild goose chases,
pitching "doctors and dope", to -the
dogs and relying on "fresh nlr, sun
shine and pure food," Indulging In
foolhardy exercise1 or walking about
. ,. . ii. . - - J
ti.1 i .. .. .. .. "K"""K,thoir goods and flocks have offered
thomselves Unit It la only "weak
lungs" and tho doctors arc magnify
ing the seriousness of neglect. Mr.
Htockvr got well because ho hnd some
brains and conceded the doctors knew
a little more than ho did about such
reutment. Ills story was originally
published in the Journal of Outdoor
l.ll'e. and later reprinted us a pam
phlet by the tuberculosis organiza
tion. I believe It Is obtainable also
from 1 ho .National Tuberculosis As
sociation, 370 Seventh avenue.
Pimples mill 1'iH'iil Infection.
Would appreciate very much any
advice you will glvo mo about pim
ples and blackheads. Would a crown
ed toolli that has pus forming around
It havo anything to do with such
pimples? II, K.
, Answer Send stamped, selfrad-
urcsscd envelope und mention wheth
er you have tho pimples, , Such i
focus of Infection may keop tip tho
ucue. anu should be remedied in any
J
V. of W. Conch ;hch East.
HKATTU-J, Aug. 20 (A. P. )
Hubert S. llutlcr of this city, freshman
crew coach at the fniversity of Wash
ington, nnnnuncod tudny that he had
accepted an offer lo become couch nt
the I nlted States Naval academy and
Would report October 1.
Wrapping paper, cot to tit any 6 tie
paper holder, from white nrlnt naner.
al thta officii at prices much below the
nm!r wrapping paper prlca. call at
one or phnnn 78. af
SUNBURN
Apply Vtclii v.ty llghttT it
ooth.s the tortured skin,
vocus
V VapoRub
o O
Bllll1aTaeW1aTT1 1T7T " TBEflahil
lews mo Kw&fif -
f ''Knimy, nlluH rcniciiilrci t'
111' coffee pot tin' set It In lh'
sultl Gruuiiuiw Pasli, Sumliiy.- us she
passed away ill th presence o' 14
children un' seventy-one gnui-chll-(Iren.
Th' woldln' at til Heutley
home went off wllliout u hllch lust
nteh't. Tit' , bridegroom illdn' show
FOR RADIO SETS
WAHI4IXCTON, Aub. JO. (A. P.)
ltltdio rccoivliiB sets acquired '1
definite place in rnilro.id freisht
schedules und became subject to high
er freight rates in u decision today
by the intcrsUile commerce commis
sion. The docision increased the
, rate on radio sets and talklnr; ma
nhlnAD frtrvnhlMna In In. allt.iH r..,,.n.
chines combined in les slhan carload
lots from the first class rate to one
and a half times the first class rate.
In many classes tho increase in this
respect would be fifty per cent.
When shipped in carload lots the In
cvrease will be ubouC 20 per cent.
The commission's decision held that
the )resent praclice ( 9lll)1)lnff ril
dio 8ets tnk mchlncB corn.
b,.(i as 8econ ci,laa with a mlnlmum
wolgM ot je.ooo potlnds per car load.
should remuin unchanged.
Tho case was brought before the
c'ommlsslson when carriers published
new freight schedules generally nils-
ina .1,0 radio cliisslflcullon. nooera
t()n of tho schedules was suspended
I upon protest of tbe Uadio Corporation
of America, the Radio Manufacturers
association of Chicago, tho Music In-
dusllles Chamber of Commerce and
others. Today's decision ordered
lea noom ourn, i-obs rs,uuu.
, u a v r, r r t r vr t a un
' uiiuid, i. j., jiuB. ,iu.
through the North End ho e today,
"8in,a 'f aHam l" V?,"'"
0"1)- All of ho .iM Kuesta reached the
uov ill mucij.
Young Jury Selected.
I.OS ANGKLF..S, Aug. 111. (A. 1'.)
Young on the charge of "having
last six weeks.
Trench Claim Big Victory.
V'K'A, French Morocco, Aug. 2d.
(A. I'.) The Tsoul region lias been
completely cleared of rebels by the
French. It is officially announced, and
the greater part of the tribes with
i. a a li;i iui i ui I
unconditional submission.
SKINNY MEN
Thin Men
Run Down Men
Nervous Men
You probably know that Cod l.lver
Oil iff tbe greatest flesh producer In
the world. .
I'.ecause it contains . mora Vltu
inines than any food you, can get.
You'll he glad to know that Cod
f.lver Oil comes In sugar coated lab-
lets now) so If ynu really want to
put 10 or 20 pounds of solid healthy
flesh on your Jiones and feel well
and strong ask Heath's Drug Store.
West sldo Pharmacy, Medford Phar
macy or any druggist for a box of
.Mctoys Cod r,lver Oil Compound
Tablets.
Only 60 cents for 60 tablets and If
you don't gain . flvo pounds In 30
days your druggist will hand you
back the money you paid for them.
It Isn't nnythlng tinusunl for a per
son to main io pounds In 30 days.
"(let McCoy's. ' the original and
genuine Cod l.lver oil Tablet." Adv.
fpooipooooooooooooooooooooo
Insurance
First Insurance
Agency
it A HILL, , Manager
PhonO 10S 30 North Central
wedford, Ore,
SCIIIII
' 81111."
Children's r.ctvn'pl . .
, (!ross Woicl J'tiz.te
Running Across.
Word 1. What scared little
Mies Muffot away.
Word 4. A fruit. ,
Word fi. The act or process bf
coloring clothes or cloth goods.
Running Down.
Word 2. The name of the Amer
ican hero of the battle of Lako
"Erie who wrote tho message: "Wo
huve met the enemy and they are
ours."
Word 3. A city in Illinois.
-YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE '
: ANSWERED.
C'ofk with pns.
TWICE IN THIS
i WOMAN'S LIFE
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound Helped Her
from Sickness to Health
I Ellensburc, Washington. "When I
was first coming into womanhood I auf-
tered terribly every
month. My mother
did everything she
could think of, so she
took me to aeveral
doctors and they only
helped me a little.
Mother was talking
to another lady about
my condition and sho
told mother of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound.
Mother cot me six
bottles and at the end of the first month
I was much better, so I kept on taking
it until I had no more pains. When 1
pot married and had my first child I was
in terrible pain so that it was impoasi,
ble for me to do my housework. I
thoughtof how the Vegetable Compound
had been of so much benefit to me when
I was a girl, so I went to Perier's Drue
Stnto and got six bottles. It sure did
help me and I still take it I am a well
Woman today and I can't nay too much
about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound. I will- answer any letter that
comes .to me to answer about whatyoulr
medicine has done for me." Mrs.
William Carver, R. F.D. No. 2, Ellens
burg, Washington.
.
town
II 4 K, t
OPEN
K'U W.I
NIGHT
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PiippK Auto Park
Service
Highway at Jackson St
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