Design for the George Rogers Clark Memorial
i
m
OREGON STATE NEWS
OF GENERAL INTEREST
Principal Eve n ts of the Week
Assembled for Information
of O u r Readers.
Carl Olson. 35, was killed Instantly
by falling timber while working in the
camp of the S. & C. Logging company
of Garibaldi.
First photograph o f the plana for the memorial to George Rogera Clark, noted western pioneer and explorer,
which bare Just been approved by the One arts commission at Washington. The memorial la to be erected at Vin
cennes, Ind.
Whaling Now
Is Big Business
Emerge« From Adventurous
Form o f Hunting to an
Important Industry.
Washington.— "W haling has emerged
from man’s most glamorous and ad
venturous form o f hunting to the sta
tus o f an exceedingly Rig Business,
with two big capital ’B's,' and a third
•B’—for the whale buslnesa Is Boom
ing.” says a bulletin from the Wash
ington, D. C., headquarters o f the
National Geographic society.
“ Certainly no other animal Industry
can show a 73 per cent factory In
crease In 1029, with the expectation
o f a further 30 per cent factory In
crease In 1930.
Wildest "Pasture" Range.
“ And this Big, Booming Business In
volves corralling the biggest animal
the world has ever grown, roving over
the vastest ‘pastures’ the world a f
fords— ‘pastures’ that range from the
Bering sen to the straits o f Mngellun,
from Spltzbergen to the Bay of
Whales, last airplane ports o f call for
the North and South poles.
“ New Bedford was the world's
whaling capital In the ’Moby Dick’
days o f venturesome sea dogs who
risked limb, life and wooden ships In
hand-to-hand encounters with whales.
In 1854 the American whaling Industry
reached Its peak production of 12,-
000,000 gnllons o f blubber for the
whale-oil lamps one can And today In
antique shops.
“Tiny Norwegian towns, whose
names you may find it hard to pro
nounce, If, Indeed, you have heard of
them— Sandefjord, Tonsberg, llauge-
sund and Larvlk—are the ports which
sent 39 ‘floating factories,’ , some 200
whaling boats, and nearly 10,000 men
Into the world's loneliest navigable
sens to bring back the major share of
an estimated production this year o f
nearly 70,000,000 gnllons o f whnle oil.
"Each huge steel ship that steams
ont o f the Sknggerak, with Its convoy
o f tiny, bobbing tenders, to go whal
ing In the antipodal land o f the mid
night sun, will return with half a
million dollars’ worth o f whale oil, or
more, to be used for the soap that
floats In American bathtubs or to
help make a butter substitute for Eu
ropean tables.
“ These steel ships are the ‘floating
factories’ which anchor In sheltered
coves, and there extract the oil o f the
■ea animals towed to them by the
tenders, or catchers, which actually
harpoon the whales. Most o f the float
ing factories have flensing platforms
alongside, where the whale Is stripped,
cut up, and fed to the huge vats
within.
“ A few new vessels are equipped
with a forward hatch through which
a whale’s body Is drawn by uu elec
tric windlass direct to u cutting up
floor In the vessel Itself. The modern
mlrnrle o f a ship swallowing n whnle
would afford Jonah a sardonic smile.
Shooting ths Harpoon Gun.
“ Anyone who thinks science hna
taken the adventure out o f whaling
should go aboard a catcher. These
110 to 120-foot vessels, with 300 to
750 horse power engines, and a speed
o f 11 or 12 knots, afford an ultimate
test o f sea sickness. They have no
keel, so they can whirl, twist and
double hack with the whale. On the
bow o f each vessel Is the Invention
which Is to whaling what the cotton
gin was to textile making—the har
poon gun.
“The harpoon gun Is a muzzle load
ing cannon on a swivel mounting
which shoots a harpoon o f tempered
Swedish steel, about six feet long. Set
In the harpoon’s end are four 12-lneh
barbs which spring out at a 45-degree
angle when the harpoon Is lodged In
the body o f the whale. And In the
harpoon point is a bomb, charged with
gun powder, automatically flred three
seconds after the shaft leaves the can
non.
“ Aiming a harpoon gun at a whale
from a notoriously unstable craft,
plunging from crest to trough o f the
Antarctic's rough seas, at the exact
moment a whale rises to the surface
for air, demands no mean marksman
ship. To the harpoon shaft Is attached
a rope which passes over a roller on
the bow o f the ship and is attached to
a powerful winch. The struggling
whale Is played as a fisherman would
play a fish with the reel on his rod.
Inflated, It Floats.
“This rope serves also to bring the
body to the surface while air Is
pumped Into Its body so that the bal
loonlike cnrcnss, with a flag stuck into
It as a marker, will float while the
catcher pursues other prey.
“ When the huge bulk Is towed along
side the floating factory the flensers
swarm about It, allce through the blub
ber the length o f the body, and a
winch Is attached to the end o f each
strip, peeling off the outer coating as
one would peel an orange.
“The remnant flesh and bones are
tom apart, and fed into the boiling
pans so that, to paraphrase a stock-
yards saying, every part of the wlmle
Is utilized except the blow. An effi
cient floating factory will slice and
chop a whale In two hours.
“ Whale oil Is graded as accurately
as wheat. Tw o grades are made en
tirely from the blubber, which yields
a pale, yellow oil with but a faint,
fishy odor, used primarily In cosmet
ics and comestibles. The residue from
which these grades are extracted Is
left In boiling pans, the flesh thrown
In and under pressure, a grade of
darker color and higher acid content
Is produced. The flesh and bonce to
gether yield 'bone oil’ and the lowest
grade o f all is the dark, odorous oil
useful only for lubrication.
“ It was the harpoon gun that
changed the geography of whaling, ex
tending operations Into the far south
ern seas, In pursuit o f the mammoth
blue whale, largest living anim al; the
sw ift fin whale, ’greyhound o f the
seus.’ and the flat-headed, hard-fight
ing humpback. These types were too
speedy, too vicious or too lean to at
tract old-time hunters of the sperm
whale and the aouthera right whale.
Moreover, they sunk when killed.
Tiny Islands Used by Whalsrs.
“ When one of the world's most prof
itable industries Invaded one o f the
EMPIRE OF RUSSIA STILL
U V E S! BEUEVE IT OR NOT
“ Cyril
I"
Has
Exiled
Subject«
Throughout World and an Am.
baaaador to United States.
New York.—In spite o f Stalin and
the Soviets, In spile of the red flag
that flies over Moscow, there Is still
a Russian empire with u czar and a
royal court—even with au ambassador
to the t'nlted Stales!
True, this empire doesn't possess a
foot o f the earth : It Is recognized offi
cially In none o f the world’s capitals.
Bui to many o f the 8.000,'4)0 Russian
exiles scattered around the glolie It
la a* real ns the administration of
H oover at Washington, according to
Gleb Kotkln, son o f the physician to
the murdered Cxur Nicholas, himself
once a monarchist leader, who de
scribes what he terms "the Empire of
Hhadowland’’ In the North Americnn
Review.
Botkin describes the services receut
ly held In Russian churches In New
York and other world centers outside
Russia to commemorate the fifth year
o f the “ reign o f Cyril I."
The Grand Duke Cyril, eldest o f the
four living first cousins o f the mur
dered czar, regularly holds court at
his present residence In northern
France and deports himself as If he
had risen to Imperial rank over a
material nation, he says.
Moreover, this Intangible empire
does not recognize officially any rear
rangement o f the map o f Europe, for
the title assumed by Its ruler Is ’’ His
Imperial Majesty Cyril Vladimirovich,
emperor o f all the Russia*, czar o f
Poland, grand duke o f Finland, etc.“
Ringleaders o f the exiled Russians
who cling to visions o f a re-estab
lished monarchy are dignified with
high poets In the shadowy empire, no
matter what tlielr present statu* hap
pens to he, relate* Botkin, who is now
earth’s bleakest and most barren re
gions It salvaged tiny islands from
desolate obscurity. South Georgia re
sembles a Matterhorn rising from the
frozen teas. The South Shetland* af
forded only markers for heroes' names
— King George, Nelson, and Living
stone— until some realist named ’Hell
Gates.’ Deception Island preserves on
modern maps, by Its shape, the tradi
tion o f ancient charts which bore sim
ilar strange forms o f coiled sea mon
sters.
“ All these Islands He In the Falk
land dependencies, Great Britain's
major political foothold In Antarctica.
British capital Is Invested In some
companies, British licenses must be
obtained by all operating from their
Island ports, but the major personnel
o f the whaling fleets Is Norwegian.
“ In one year one Norwegian com
pany reported a gross profit o f nearly
$3,000,000. A whaling captain, as be
fits a captain o f Industry, may re
ceive as much as $40,000 for a season
o f nine months.
Whalers Must Keep Diary.
“This year every whaling captain
has a new duty imposed upon him.
He must keep a diary—a record o f
the number, kinds and location o f bis
catches. This will contribute to a pro
posed scientific study o f the habits o f
whales— including the food they eat,
their migration routes from Antarc
tic to tropical waters, and other data
about their habits. Both the British
and the Norwegian governments have
passed restrictive legislation lest the
tremendous increases In whaling dan
gerously deplete whales, as Injudicious
sealing did the seals.
“ Science knows surprisingly little
about the largest living creature. It
can only guess, as yet, at the life
span o f the whnle. It Is known how
they eat. They open their mammoth
mouths, and as they plough through
the seas, thousands o f tiny crusta
ceans and other minute sea organ
isms are swept In. These catch on the
fringes o f their baleen (whale bone),
and are sucked down continuously,
like soda through a straw, while the
salt water filters out again through
the corners o f their mouths.
Plankton Is Oceanic ‘■Hash.’*
“ The generic name o f this food Is
plankton, which Is no more precisely
descriptive o f the Items therein than
the human appellations o f ‘hash’ or
‘pot pourrl.’
“ An elephant or a hippopotamus Is
a child’s Idea o f a sizable animal. It
Is hard for an adult who has not seen
one to comprehend the enormous size
o f a whale. Dr. Roy Chapman An
drews made exact measurements of
one specimen. It was 78 feet long and
weighed 63 tons, the equivalent o f a
hundred steers, or three score limou
sines o f fairly heavy type. Its bones
alone about equal the weight o f the
eight-ton winter's coal supply for a
small house. Its flesh tipped the scale
at 40 tons, it yielded 8 tons o f blubber,
and the blood, viscera and baleen
made up the other 7 tons.
‘The size o f a whale Is one o f na
ture’s most interesting examples of
adaptation.
Prehistoric land mam
mals grew too large to move about
readily and obtain food, so they be
came extinct. A bird, like an air
plane, cannot exceed a body size that
Its wings will support In air. But In
the friendly, buoyant oceans the whale
grew larger and larger. Even the
hugest dinosaurs never outweighed a
whale. Give him time, scientists be
lieve, and ns the ages roll on he may
grow larger still I"
a writer and artist living in New
York. The recently appointed “ Am
bassador to the United States’’ Is a
Russian lawyer, now a book seller In
this city, who unfortunately has been
unable to Impress official Washington
with his position. The door man of
a Fifth avenue botel Is nominally gov
ernor o f a central Russian province.
And the emperor recently Issued a
royal proclamation presenting peas
ants now living under the Soviet
regime with Russian lands.
Unfortunately, even this imaginary
throne Is not without those who would
unseat Its monarch, says Botkin's
North American Review article. The
followers o f the Grand Duke Nicholas,
who died In 1929, claim that he wua t
the legitimate successor to the last j
czar and that the succession goes to [
his family since Cyril's mother, Grand !
Duchess Marie, was a Lutheran at the
time o f hie birth, while the law pro- I
vide« that a Russian emperor must be '
born o f Greek Catholic parents. An- [
other clique acknowledges the "Prim
cess Anastasia.” now living In New
York as Its “ em press“
The first artesian well to be brought
In the Klamath marsh district was
completed on the Frank Bollinger
ranch a few days ago by C. E. Will
iams, Lake county well driller. There
Is sufficient flow to Irrigate 200 acres.
Despite the fact that every house
In Ontario Is occupied and that more
than 50 new homes have been erected
«lnce 1920, census figures Indicate a
less population than In 1920, when
the figure stood at 2039. This year
the preliminary count shows only 1941.
Five motor fire pumps were distrib
uted in the Cascade national forest
Six new 4-H clubs have been organ during the past week in readiness for
ized In Lane county. Tw o are cooking the coming forest fire season. Packs
clubo, two sewing clubs, one poultry were assembled In various sizes for
single fire fighters, two-men units and
and one flower.
Blx-man, ten-man, 15-man and 50-man
Fire of undetermined origin destroy
crews.
ed the Silver Star motion picture the
The motor vehicle department and
ater at Freewater and damaged the
the state traffic division, which
Angerman brothers’ bakery.
have occupied quarters In the state
The 75th anniversary of the found
printing office structure for two, have
ing of the Central Presbyterian church
moved Into the new state office build
of Eugene was observed recently at
ing. The two departments will occu
special services at the church.
py the entire lower floor of the new
Ralph Dunn, about 50, was burned structure.
to death in a fire which destroyed the
Two tracts of land located near the
Ed Parker residence on Bear creek,
Oregon Coast highway a short dis
about 30 miles southeast of Prinevllle.
tance from Reedsport are to be set
Census returns show that Jackson
mo__ ______
_______
aside by the Douglas
county
court ___
for
ville, former county seat of Jackson
park purposes, The parks will be do-
county, Is not a dead town. Since 1920
nated to the use of the city of Reeds
Its population has Increased from 469
port but legal title will be retained by
to 760.
the county.
The formation of the Forest Grove
Pendleton is to be northwest head
nnion high school district. Including
quarters for the Farmers’ National
19 districts, will be submitted to vot
Grain corporation, according to Henry
ers at a special election to be held
W. Collins, district manager. There
June 16.
will also be branches In Portland, Se
Fire broke out In the Jefferson ware attle and Spokane. Mr. Collins stated
house, and it was burned to the ground that there is about 225,000 acres of
together with a large quantity o f grain, wheat planted In Umatilla county this
chopped feed, a car of salt and other year.
products in storage.
Joseph Lee Weaver, 42, of Enter
Albany’s postal receipts for the first prise, died In a hospital from Injuries
quarter o f 1930 were $13,163.22, or suffered when he was pinned beneath
$167.37 higher than those for the cor an overturned automobile on the road
responding quarter of 1929, according between Sbaniko and Antelope. W eav
to R. N. Torbet, postmaster.
er’s plight was discovered by a pass
Harold Dobyns o f the United Statea ing motorist, who was unable to lift
Biological survey and Jim Carsner, the car from the injured man and had
coyote hunter, killed 163 adult and to return to Antelope for assistance.
pup coyotes during April In the Butter
Orders issued at the Oregon state
creek and Willow creek regions.
hospital In Salem were to kill a large
Arthur T. Yeaton, who has been a
resident of Salem for 61 years, cele
brated his 90th birthday May 1. By
the old reeidents he Is remembered as
one of the best horsemen of his day.
Miss Helen Pearce has the honor of
being the first woman graduate of
Willamette university to receive the
Ph. D. degree in English. It was con
ferred by the University o f California.
number o f squirrels which have roam
ed the grounds there for several years.
Dr. R. E. Lee Steiner, superintendent,
said the squirrels had killed a number
of trees and had caused other damage.
The squirrels originally were brought
to Salem from Pennsylvania by ex-
Governor Olcott.
P$¡cfa
SCIATICA?
Here is ■ never-failing
norm o f relief from
sciatic pain:
KEEP BULL UNTIL
QUALITY PROVEN
Sire Should Be Kept Until
Daughters’ Work Shown,
The value o f a dairy bull cannot be
determined until the production of hla
daughter« bus been tested. Then it
often happens that the bull has been
slaughtered for some reason and bis
valuable Influence lost to the herd.
John A. Arey. dairy extension spe
cialist at the North Carolina Stute
college, says the bureau of dairying at
Washington had proven the value of
834 bulls up until September. 1929,
through records kept by dairy herd
improvement associations, yet when
the bureuu began to search for these
bulls, only 126 were living. The re
mainder were dead or no authentic
Informtaion was available. For that
reason, says Mr. Arey, the herd sire
should not be disposed of until his
value has become known through
the production of his daughters. After
the bull has had a chance to prove
hts value, he should he kept as long
as he Is fit for service, provided he
ts a good one. If a poor one, he
should be slaughtered Immediately.
Many bulls are sold to the butcher
when quite young because they have
developed a vicious disposition. Vi
ciousness is not a characteristic on
which to condemn the animal, thinks
Mr. Arey.
Frequently such animal
Is one of the most valuable that the
dairymen could own and there are
ways In which a dangerous bull may
be easily handled.
One o f the best ts the method used
by a group o f farmers In Caldwell
county. These men have an eleven-
year-old animal owned Jointly. They
have constructed a pen with shelter
and with a breeding pen adjoining.
This equipment was built at small
cost to each individual and yet tt pro
vides ample facilities for handling the
bull and at the same time insures his
safe handling.
Such equipment Is
recommended by Mr. Arey to other
farmers who may wish to keep a herd
sire that has grown dangerous with
age.
Good Pasture Essential
to Keep Up Milk Flow
To keep up the milk (tow In summer
A bronze tablet erected over the it Is essential to have good pasture.
grave o f John Templeton Craig, early Grass probably provides the cheapest
feed that Is available for dairy cows.
The city council o f Heppner recent lay mail carrier between western and Because o f Its succulent character It
ly decided to number the houses and central Oregon, who died in a blizzard produces a larger flow o f ndlk than
name the streets. Meters are to be in McKenzie pass in 1877* will be ded an equal amount o f feed furnished In
placed on the city water, which soon icated during the state convention of some other form. Cattle showing a
will be piped from the artesian well. letter carriers at Bend June 12 and 1 mineral deficiency on many other
The Eugene playgrounds maintained 13, It Is announced. The grave is lo ! types of feed will generally show no
! mineral deficiency when they are on
by the city during the summer months cated near the McKenzie highway on
good pasture.
will open June 23, It has been an the west slope o f the mountains.
Overstocking Is probably as great a
Owners
o
f
cattle
running
on
the
nounced. A new playground has been
cause as any other for damage to pas
added, making a total of five In dif Swamp Creek range have lost 15 anl- . tures. They should be top-dressed
ferent parts o f the city.
mala from ticks this spring and the I with manure or a complete fertilizer
Transfer to the Eugene Lumber remainder of the stock has been to give them the proper amount ot
company o f vast timber tracts in the rounded up and treated to protect nitrogen and minerals. Lime and
The ticks phosphorus also have been found
upper Callpooia river district, hereto them from the Insects.
fore owned by the Dollar Portland gather in knots along the backbone helpfuL
Lumber company, Is made in a deed from the head back over the shoulders, i
filed in the Linn county recorder’s cause temporary paralysis and the New York State College
animal falls to the ground helpless.
office.
Favors Early Cut Hay
If the ticks are removed the animal
Plan to cat hay early and feed some
Work on the new downtown orna
joon recovers.
| of It. Feed well on grain. For Hol
mental street-lighting system for Pen
The federal government has allocat stein* and Ayrshire*. New York Slate
dleton will start soon, according to
word received by Mayor L. J. McAtee ed $125,000 for the Improvement of the college recommends one pound of
from the contractors at Seattle. Part Willamette river between Salem and grain to five pounds o f milk produced
during the early summer, and one to
of the lights are to be ready tor use Oregon City, according to a telegram
received from Senator McNary. The four as soon as pastures show any
by July 15.
original appropriation was $40,000. drought. Jerseys and Guernseys need
Howard Sherrill, 10, eon o f Mr. and
more. The college recommends one
The Increased appropriation will make
to four of milk early and one to three
Mrs. Charles Sherrill, of the Oakgrove
It possible for the government to build later In the season.
orchard district near Hood River, died
regulatory works, dikes and retaining
The grain mixture the college sug
after being run over by a car driven
walls, and Insure navigation between gesls Is 300 pounds wheat bran. 400
by Walter Regnell. The boy, playing
the two cities during the entire year. pounds hominy. 200 pounds gluten
tag, tripped over a loose shoe lace and
Members of the old W asco County feed and 100 pounds cottonseed meal.
fell in front o f the car.
Pioneers’ association from all parts of Feeding In summer boosts the yearly
Bids for the construction o f approx
the Pacific northwest were in The average of cow s; and all records
imately 55 miles of road and a frame
Dalles recently for attendance at the show that the higher the yearly aver
building for caretakers' quarters at
age o f a cow the greater the profit
annual gathering of the organization.
from her.
Emigrant Park on the Old Oregon
Despite a number o f deaths during
Trail will be considered at a meeting
the last year, there are still 698 mem
l-H -H -l' H -H - l-t-H ; |
¡ n i l l-H
o f the state highway commission to
bers on the association’s roll. Mem
be held in Portland soon.
bership is limited to persons residing
in W asco county prior to 1883, when l-l-HH -H "M-l-l I I I I l -H ' I I M i l l !
THE MARKETS
the transcontinental railroad was con
Portland
Calves should have all the milk they
; will take without causing digestive
Wheat—Big Bend bluestem. $1.1$; structed.
trouble.
soft white and western white, $1.02;
The Oregon state fair is the first In
• • •
hard winter, northern spring and the United States to require a dairy
Finish In calves Is highly Important
western red, $1 00.
abortion test for animals exhibited at
and It can only be produced by the
Hay—Alfalfa, $20 per ton; valley the fair, according to announcement
liberal feeding of whole milk.
timothy. »20 50 0 21 ; eastern Oregon made by W. H. Lytle, state veterinar
timothy, $2350 0 24; clover. $17; oat ian. The requirement becomes effec-
Breed cows in December and Jan
hay, $17; oats and vetch. $17.50018
tlve at the 1930 state fair. Dr. Lytle ! ,lary and try to avoid breeding In
Butterfat— 32 0 3ic.
said that beef animals would not be March, April. May and June,
Eggs—Ranch. 21 0 24c.
required to have the test this year
• • •
Cattle— Steers, good. . W
»10.75011.25.
_
as they will be Judged in the open as
Tbe bu" th* ' '* fRllln* fo »rive
Hogs—Good to choice. »9.25 0 10.50 In previous years, and will not come "U , P®. m®^ be to° ,nt r* ,s
P**-
slble that he Is not gening sufficient
Lambs—Good to choice. $9,50010.50
in contact with dairy animals.
exercise to keep him In good eondl
Seattle
Tax received by the state from gas tlon.
Wheat—Soft white, western white
• • •
j ’line and distillate eales during the
hard winter, western red and northern
irst three month* in lt$o totaled $1,
The barn should he whitewashed at
spring, $1.03; Big Bend bluestem
595.882.46, as against »4.802,192 44 fot least once a year. Proper gutters
$1.13.
the entire year In 1929, according to a should be constructed, so the cow»
Eggs—Ranch. 25029c.
statement prepared by Hal E Hoss can be kept clean.
Butterfat—38c.
secretary of state. Refunds for the
Cattle— Choice steers. $9.00 0 10,50
The milk pall should be so eon
first three months of 1930 aggregated
Hogs— Prime light, $10,40 0 10.50.
$165.603 65. with administrative c*»ts structed that the minimum amount of
Lambs—Choice. »90 1 0 .
'lin can get Into it during the process
of $3538 63. Of the gross receipts *»f milking.
Sookane
from the tax. »1.424.305.15 was turned
•
•
•
Cattle—Steers, good. »10 25011.
over to the state highway department
After the milk has been washeo
H ogs—Good to choice. $10.25.
for the construction and maintenance from the surface with warm water
Lambs—Medium to good, $9.5001«
f roads.
onlling water or steam should be used
Dairy Notes
to sterilize all dairy utensila,
Take Bayer Aspirin tablets tnd avoid
needless suffering from sciatica— lum
bago— and similar excruciating pain*
They do relieve; they don't do any harm.
Just make sure it is genuine.
BAYER
A S P B R IY
P e n a lty o f S u ccess
It Is the land o f the free until you
become a success, anil then you ar*
doomed to address luncheon club*
fo r the remainder o f your life.— San
Francisco Chronicle.
For Barbed Wire Cuts
Try HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
*1 U n u* uH
irisI to idul nu----- t
to» tto Km took H sel uiW.
M iu o u r i P h ilo so p h y
It's not the weather, nor where
they live, nor whether they are sick
or well, poor o r rich, that makes
people grouchy— It’s their disposition.
— Hopkins Journal.
FOR C O N S T IP A T IO N
Feenamint
O n the O ld B ranch L in e
“ Is this train ever on time?”
growled the grouchy passenger.
“ Oh,” replied the conductor, “ wa
never worry about It being on time.
W e're satisfied if It’s on the track."
— Stray Bits.
Makes Ufe
Sweeter
T oo much to eat— too rich a diet
—or too much smoking. Lots o f
things cause sour stomach, but one
thing can correct It quickly. Phil
lips Milk o f Magnesia will alkallnlze
the acid. Take a spoonful o f this
pleasant preparation, and the sys
tem is soon sweetened.
Phillips Is always ready to relieve
distress from over-eating; to check
all acidity; or neutralize nicotine.
Remember this fo r your own com
fort ; for the sake o f those around
you.
Endorsed by physicians, but
they always say Phillips. Don't
buy something else and expect the
same results!
P hillips
1 „ Milk .
o f M agnesia
TIRED W
REN
SHE GOT UP
Strengthened by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound
# St. Paul, Minn.— ‘ T used to be as
tired when I got up in the morning as
?] when I went to
bed. I had faint-
] ing spells anci pal-
j pitation. Of course
j it was my age. I
j read a Lydia E.
I Pink ham booklet
and started tak
ing the Vegetable
Compound three
times a day. I am
I now a wet] woman.
i T h r e e o f my
______I neighbors k n o w
what it did for me so they are taking it
too. la-ill write lo any woman if Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
will h"tp her as it did me I feel like a
young woman now and I thank you.” —
Mas. H. C. H f . nrt , 286 Fuller Ave.. S t
Paul Minnesota.