s S AC Till; BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, FEBRUAIIY A 1315. c-rr:-T'. .1 itetB!SHflmC J I r ! ' e , Renewal of Power in Dynamo By GARRETT P.'SeRVISS. - "Will you kindly explain the philosophy of the roneaal of power In the esse of a running dynamo? I em. of course, aware that the excitation the potentiality, but of metals generates would tike to have explained where the ultimate reser volr Is: whether It la constantly drawn from the earth, or air, or where: F. T. C. Here la a defini tion ef a dynamo, taken from a text twite, which will ferre to put the nature of ycur question more ! . ? clearly before ' the mind of the average reader, who la prob ably familiar with the nam "dynamo" without knowing Jimt how the machine 0ft called works: The dynamo la a tnarhlne for con verting mechanical energy Into electrical enrrjry by mean? of elcctro-mnirnetle in Auction. A dynamo doea not crcat elec tricity but peneratce. or producea, an In duced electromotive force which cauaea a current to Tow through a properly In sulated system of electrical conductor rxternaJ to It. The amount of electricity obtainable from such generator (the dy tiamo'), la dependent upon the mechanical energy aupplled." . , For the sake of still creator clearness, ft ahould be added that the "electromo tive force" generated In the dyanmo la produced by keeping an fletrlo conduc tor In rapid motion ecroaa tho- field of ac tion of ij magnet.. The same effect reaulta If it' I" the magnet eVhfch mov'ea while the conductor remain at rest. To maintain the motion, I mechanical power must, of cnurae, ba expended, and this fact luaually regarded aa furnish ing a aufflclent explanation of the mys tery of the origin ef the electric current which flowa from the dynamo. Am In the definition quoted above, the maintenance of that current la ancrlhed 1ely to the mechanical power expended. But thla ex planation ignore the part that the mag twt plays In the phenomenon. You might' whirl your conductor round by mechanical Jyiwrr until doomsday without getting a rten of electricity if there were no mar net at hand with It Invlelhle "llnea of force," filling the apace about it a they curve round between Its polca. . It 1 the ''"cutting" ef the llnea by the moving coniuctor that gives rtae to the electric current, and th wonder f It la that the magnet aeema never to become Treakened or exhauated. We see how w j keep tip the mechanical power, but we do i IteAd it Here Sco Py special arrangement for this paper a phto-dreina corresponding; to the tnstall rnrnis ot "Itunanay June" may now be at the leading moving picture the ater. Ity arraiiKinent miule with the Mutual Film corKratlon It la not only piioio to read "Itunaway June" each Say, hut aleo afterward to ace moving j i. lurea U;u--.rting our story. tCopyVlnht, 1916. by Serial Pulblcatlon Corporation.) roi'RTH 11 SOD Poor IJttle RunAway Juno. CHAPTEH, IU (Continued.) ' "Mon Iilcu!" ehrliled an excited arotc, and Ollbert lilye found hbnaelf confronted by the decorative Frenchman. That ox- lu-d Individual surveyed Gilbert Blye's !vK bx k Vandyke and tweaked at hi end eud'cr.ly threw up both hand end !Kn to laugh. in that aaine moment Sneaky Tavl 'caught up with the electrlo cotipe and rrrnn.l.K'd on tha step and hung hi thick arm In a the door. ' iuh la.lt huh liuli1" fcineaky In formed her, strangling for breath and Jiuiiiiit; hie arms out of the car. "I aay, what do you want?" in la ted Jlortorla. 1 , Sneaky pcUiird batkwafd with his tiittmb, "Vour huh-huhhuh-huaband:" h hiult ci, eutKiitg in all the air In tha car. ' I'&iiicll" And again ha pointed back- Yiud with bis thumb. Honorla Plye without a word grabbed her nil !aas flower vase and cracked l.'-r txvwrt det-tlv on the knuckles, V, !th a rai"tlt!e gap'hc dropped off back ward. Where a June while aa many people ifff f luy about liei ? In a horse cab, !ih Jlarl. and the cluthea, far down Ji. r the tat river, wheie. In full eight ff !! the barges and ell the grimy ship 1 tin y found a !!- of a bouec, o l ujiotv that it ahould have had a weathnr vane to kwp it hnuded into the wind. It va thrue atorica hlsh and Markened v'ii ate, but there were geraniums and a. r?-..jf'jl light in iho rtor.tlr front :nnwi, This was where the elevator t"'y a mother llvj-d. and It wa ax clean i'v.iie ai It wee gtiinniy out. hhe had t fl.,or let, furitlshvd. tao rooma and a real hath, tin and .'viiahlerably ' dented, lust kept irenh palnttd la apotlt-e white. "Von y you want It quiet." said he. WHAT TO DO FOX ITGIIIIIG SKIliS 1. 1 .-iu a, Ji'igonu and other itching, I' tkln rruttuna are o eaully ma le "i"- by imi roi er treatment that oue to le try careful. There is oue ij.-iho'l, t.ot,er, t,at you txd not hi-t.- uoe. vtn jo a b&tys tender Kin - i! t U, l.'.e realuol treatment. Iltaii.ol i ic pns.-ni.iioo ef a UnlUmvre dovtor. Ju.t up In the folio of resinol olr.tment and iiin,.l aoap. Tits pro '.ad eo r!ra;irkhty :l -..Ikiful that t!ioueIil ui other ph '- t. -'.i ha'e brtii j.uct rilui.g It contnt. J y I r -r. i.. .-'....I m.;.B it-hli.a li.ttei,t:y, aud l 2. ' (iIhiji t.aU the tmptiou qm.kly f. : i ):' u,.t Itre.'iK.l v!iiin.i,t aud I ic tuukiii at auy drug. not aee how the magnet keep up Ita aupply of force undiminished, it reetorea Ita "cut" linea continuously and Inatan taneoualy. or keepe their strength Intact, In aplte of the fact that energy la being constantly taken from them. ' In fact, the mngnt exhibit the aame myateriwua property quite Independent of Ita uee in the dynamo. Take an ordinary bar manet, which la elmply a piece of magnetised steel, and with It you can magnetise, by were touch, hundred of other bar without apparently diminish Ing the original tore of magnetism. Perhap the moat intereattng explana tion ot thla myatery 1 that offered by vr. iustave Le Bon. He believes that jthe Inexhaustible stor from which the I energy la drawn I o be found i In the i heart of the atnma of matter. It la that , marveloue thing called "Intra-atomic" energy, the demonatratlon of whoee ad dition to human knowledge that, haa eren been made. The energy .shows lt elf In the hommbardment of aimoet In finitely minute projectiles which radium Indicates upon Ita surroundings. What radium doea conaplcuoualy, there la no reason to think. that all other klnda of matter do Imperceptibly. Thla process, by which Infinitesimal partlclea called corpuscles are shot off from the atoma of material thlnga, la named diaauciation. Tho corpuscle may he. In effect, nothing more than moving electric chargee, biiTpv wa have here nothing to do with that aspect of the question. What Immedi ately concern ua la the probable tact that all matter tend to turn, or to be t ran formed Into a form or state which w know aa energy. Here, then, ta the source from which the dynamo draws ita Inexhaustible supply, Thla la trTa form In which Dr. -Ia Bon put the explana tion: "When wa see at work those glginatlc dynamo whence torrents of electric fluid flow, wa ahould not aay that they represent movement transformed Into electricity. It Is simply the Intra-atomlo energy of dissociated matter which ap pear under the form of electricity. If this explanation la correct, what occurs when the electrto conductor, or "armature of a dynamo revolve in the field of tha magnet, cutting across the latter lines f force, ta a transformation of those lines of foroa Into an electric current, and as faxt aa they are thus drawn off they are replaced by nsw one originating In the Intra-atomic energy locked up in tha magnet. This seems to all our nieana of measure ment to be Inexhaustible, but, f course. It is not necessarily Inexhaustible, unleas there Is a regutar round In nature from matter to energy and' from energy back ta matter. But. in any vwnt, tha supply of energy-charged atoma la so vast that w an never produce even tha semblance of exhaustion at tha aourca from which wa draw. . i ' it at tho Movies. "and my son Sammy sent you heret Well, my huaband. before ba died, was the moat popular policeman on tha force, and the whole department, darltn', h your frtonds." CHAPTHin in. . t Tor a moment une bestitated before the door of an employment agency next morning, and then she sharply beat down her reluotanca. People who have made up their minds to bo Independent and to earn their own day In life must have no timidity. Bh turned tha knob with sud den boldness and opened it; then she smiled at her own sentitlveneaa as aha stood before a pleasant faced woman. In tha comer of whose eyes, however, there was a veiled sharpness which June did out see. A very pretty woman came In as June turned to go awayK and with her was a little girl of great beauty. June hestltated as she heard the word "governess." The woman at the desk smiled to June. The newcomer followed that smile and her self smiled at June. Tl little girl had been studying June frankly out of round gray eyea. Now she. too, smiled and, walking over, took June' band. "I Ilk you," she said, with startling candor; then the employment agency woman laughed, and pretty Mrs. Wile laughed. June dimpled. "I like you, too," she acknowledged. Th employment agency woman roe. "Mrs. Uurdock la listed aa a gov erneaa," aha observed, and June winced at her new name. How queer this all seemed! "Ferhape you would tike to have a little chat." y Mrs. Wiles and June Moore-Wamer-Justlu-Day-Murdock ' were both agree able to that suggestion, particularly since little Dolly Wiles had appropriated June for keeps. They sat In one of the cosy corners, and when June rose ah waa en gaged. Mrs. Wiles waa a most appeal ing woman. All threa were perfectly happy aa they left the office and rode tn Mrs. Wiles' Victoria up Fifth avenue to one of those Khle. vleaa elrets which lead, oft from Central park. Juno waa considerably impreared by lie i!f' apartment and after luncheon took Dolly tor a roller akatlng lesson la the park. Suddenly a voice from the road way CaJled: "Bravo! How do you do?" It was Ollbert Blya, who stepped out of a linv ouatne car -Hello, younk lady! He held out his baud to Dclly Wllea with a familiarity permtaaable to the very young and to the ery old of femininity, and the child took It hesitantly, with a aby upword Fiance at June. Her big gray eyea wld- eued. however, as they fell on the lim ousine. She dropped the hand and raa forward to th machine. What a lovely car!" shs exclaimed, patting it on Its smooth, swelling side. ' Juat tbs kind mother wants, but daddy ays ws cant afford It." Bty Uiughed lightly. "Would you like a spin around the park In it" ba sug gested, "you and your playmate hereT And be bowed- Dolly. Jumping up en down, was al redy tugging si the door handle, snd !!!e. laujft.liig. opened It tor her. Dolly cry of positive J" s ahe saw the rlih Interior, and she was among the !t ruiihions tn an lr.ti;t. v tl'o i c'oultuued Tomorrow.) r :0 I' '""J " 1 ',' 4 t ri i it iiiwi. r. , , ''. ' , . ''iA'; '-'li','" -' S v.v'i: vv ': - - - A "" - z - r-i ---' ...w.'-vi ...'., f ''(' y I. WV ' ' '' ' ,'t ' ,J?-'"' ;'' V. '-''.''' !' t ' ' . V ' . S"" - ; ,ev;-' :; il. ".,1', ' ..'v . - . '':v:; ';t' ' z;Air . vtu; ;'' u;v;-- ''4-. ?ir.. - ..f.... AiCjsi 'iv;tM W$M Z ? H He g&sg me to chair by my necktie while he continue on removal of art from sideboard " When this accomplished he scratch me in seat of my stummach with end of shooting revolver, then back out slyly as if less welcome - " ' Uf WAULACK IB WIN. ' To Editor "OoAd HouMekeepIng Mvra . sine," who carry truth like gaspipa t through. very American home. Sear Blr: My last recent departure were from job of employment at horn of Mrs. and Mr. J. W. Cae- Landslide, Mo. Reason for thla were wlcxed plumb ing which were not my own. I tU you. Location of this Casey home were resi dence ot dear old fashion whero family portraiture are everywhere containing whiskers and bathtubs can be found sur rounded with wood to resemble giant' a of fin. "This placa are full of sweet as sociations." report Hon, Mrs.' with ro- maoca expression. , "I notice slight drip of water .under beneath kitchen sink," I explain with Edison eyebrows. "Hweet associations and good plumbing eldomly go aide by side," she recom pense;. "Howeverly, If leaking continue to drip, I suppose we must telephone to that . Burglar to com agatiwwlth tools and pretend to make reparation while do ing nothing except robbery." Flashes from her yes while she said this. ( "In this town does persons obtain bur glar by telephone?" I ask ahockly. "When we wish burglary we aak for plumber." she acknowledge. "They ax similar and tha same." "Both are good ways to know," are bright, remark tor me while sh go to telephone and rerjulra harshly for Knocker A Scamp, Gen. Plumbers, and Oaaplper. . ' That afternoon p. m. ona trampflr gen tleman of considerate disrepute approach up with rude valise and leisure expres sion. , ,'',., ''' . "BhQW me at that sink." he dement with conslderablo brutality. r . "Are you Plumber?" I ask ' to know. "What do you think I am an osteopath Istr ha require nlggerly. ' . "I am not acquainted with either ot those," I say so. "Fhow m at that sink," ha glub mhlle 1 lead him to kitchen-side where was. When he se tt he stand on his elbow awhile looking under below. - Then ha make grunts with scornful tobacco mouth. "Everything mut be removed, he re nts aurgtoally. , .. "What so r1 I horrify. "You mean say you Intend, take away that entire dluh washing department?"' ' ' "Of suredly yes!'V h vampire. "It are bualneaa of plumbing to take thlnga away." "When shall you bring It. back?" I nar rate heckly. "Perheps sometime, -perhaps never," lie olllcute. . , , "Why you no enter some honest pro tcaalonT" I snagger, while standing with Jlu ttau knees. ' "There are too many running ottomo blle garages already," he-tell. "Home one must attend to the crimes, so It. might aa well be I. It I. can enter homes and obtain 137. to. doing nothing and taking long tlm about It, why should it be dla guatlng to you? Now kindly to please atand away from my daylight while 1 remove off that sink." "Ah. not to do!" I snagger. "Hon. Mrs Boas say you are spec-lea of robber." "I am proud of such terms, yet I per mit no Japanese achooiboy toV-luttcr up my ork." "J ahull not permit!" I holla with Sum. ural warcry. "Thun I ahall wreatn you out of here!" he reproach with aweara while attaching hi charred thumbs to my kneck. Thla arouaed my enrage. aad, commence mak ing akllful lu Jitau. on hi sttuumaoh while chaira, curtains & dlithwara con tinue exploding from that murder which wc enjoyed amldnt delicious wreoksgs of kitchen. "!ietheilh imKAn!" be anarrel. "Harra klrl!" i rlapaa making stern strokes upon him. . While this dleplraaure tlupned blond screech were luaid st dixr. ."Togo! !! I??'"' Thla troiii Hon. Mia. J. W, t'aney. "Why aie you 'tioli g that plvuubat.-l t ' "Togo and the Republished by Permission of I ' V Togol" called Hon. This gentleman ar robber," I, snag- snag- - . .. . . "It ar business of lady .of houae and not servant to attend to robbery, grocery, butchery and all other forma of domes, tlclty." Thla ahe report with scorns. "Mr. Plumb, kindly proceed on with your. In dustry o- worki" - Mr. Editor.. . we learn i Philosophy by making hand-shake with calamity. Sorry part of this Is that ou: ur hand-shakes be- w learn consider- com worn-out ceiore aoie. : . . D not Hon. Mrs. Casey tell ma b gen- tlemanly byall plumbers? Yes. Bo why I blame? There is no answer to this question.' On Wedcnsday aftemoon p. m. Hon. M.7: d!? V'Vor """ U"-dr unk Little Mothers' Patchwork Club. Togo, you appear less thoughtless than usual today," she report while biting veil. "Therefore I expect you to keep house for three (3) 'hours.' ,- . 'I. shall keep as much as possible," r stem vole I make, so ah depart oft Slylelxhly , . v . . . . At hour i.ti daikiah gentleman of con- aMerable . respectability and refined satchoi encroach at kitchen. . "I am Plumber," he . report with nlce oeaa In his voice. "Ar there sum leak age?" r "There ar plenty now without your help," I snsrrel. "1 were cent her by Hon. Mre. Casey," he derange chivalrously. "I shall go at onoely upatalrs to attend It." "The leakage ar downstairs," I anug geat kindly, because I was told not Insult plumbers. "1 am an upstairs plumber, so must at tend pipes entirely on eecond floor." "I how you upstairs." I narrate ewcet tahly, because I like ila refinement. "Not to do, eminent Blr," he repos with ambaaaador bows. "I am accustomed tcJ such Jobs without help." Mr. . Editor, I were surprised how quietly that geatlemiua worked. No crude bank-pipe ewear, or beer-call. In H hour tUus h emerge down again with his pe ine satchel looking considerable stufied. "Yon fiiiUii that work" t aak to know. "Entirely complete?" he say off. "I sie talug away touaiderable fixture needed lu plumbing buslneaa." "lou are uckorued. I am s ue.'- I de pone tor sweetly siuillcg. "liun. Mrs. i2r . i .'':V-.;V Hon. Plumber Good Housekeeping Magazine. , . . . :3 iaI'S;-" 1 Mrs. Casey, "why are you destroying that plumber?!' . Boss permtt plumber to take away with - , Boss permtt plumbers to take away wlth- lout regard." ' f "She ar mora obliged than most ladlca," he narrate. "In aome homes I enter I enjoy feeling f butt-tn which humiliates.". ''Anything more you wish take away?" I snuggest for politeneaa. "Maybe t could use silver from slde- hnarri.- hs w 1-.. . m m V. L. j should not mind that obtrusion;" , "Not the least!" I . snlglf y. ' . "It ail 1 rtllimhArM war mn .Vl.tl,.n.i . iur. iike vou. raw euraa. wm.id-h. Vou work wtth ,Uenc Md no .. hamm.r. ..d ,t. i'hr Bn H.V.,. 1 i.ri.)i'.i..n.iuii . i -v-o douhrie..!- rr. .. hi. .hiu : lectlng .poon. which could fit Inald. hi. cost. While I admire hi akillfulness of auddenly he turn ' round and poke one enlarged . shooting-revolver to my eye. 'Stand In corner!"- he relate while re moving all pity from his face. "Say noth. Ing In compete silence or I ' shall blow your head from your brains. Did you suspect I was not a plumber?"' . Pretty soonly I hear lady-sound of feet amldet slam ot.door andi waa sure Hon. Mr. Casey was there. I like to explain her aomcthlng. but could not do, thank you, becaua gagg from Hon. (Necktie continue to tangle my conver sation. At lastly ahe mc whit was. Startles tor her. Dora ll 1at Teat I'eur Misa Fairfax: I am S and in love with a young man al years my Junior, and we are contemplating inorria.se. -lie la now earning tia per week (ha a chane of advai'i-nifii t) ami 1 am earning (U. lo you think the differences in our ages ahould mar our happtneaa? I d.ilej thai I would continue to work for Bone tune after we were married. lo you aivie me to go Into businefie aa haretufore staled in orir to accuiuu lute a. If dollars for a may day? UIOJAN A. P. Are you sure that this boy of 8 Is capable of a stable an 3 loyal affection. The difference la your ages is not aa In surmountable barrier, but is ona you I Advice to Lovelorn : B't'- 1 k 5 " c" i- . ' : ! - r i . "Who heVn here?" aha vallnn ' whtta "Who nloosnlngme. . 'Plumber,' I acknowledged. TIow coultl her This from her wito gsspa. . , . "Ar you atirprlaed at what they d'oT" I aak to know. "Thla plumber, were en tirely refined workman.- - He refuse to handle brutal lead plpes go he took sli ver candlesticks and other .etceteras," Screeches. Hhe Jounoa upstairs. Bh plounoa down again, , ."Al- gonel" .sh holla with, consider, able mania - while), run ring back and again. "All gone! . Dlmlnd. '.depart, necklao walk away, stlck-ptn . ' mlaa, watch quit, money clop ' entirely everything "ruined." Thievery have been In home. He shall never com beck 111" Weeps. . ' . . "Ah, gweethearted Mrs. Madam, ooo taln leas grief," I - report. "This robber ar quit expensive, andfahlonabla, yet In some ' way ha ar ' better than other plumbers." ' ' "What .-you mean-t say-: It T" aha growell. , ,. , . "If he" never "come hack )to your home, then ha , will never brlna tha bill for what he done," j I . waft corisolely while walking away frorn that employment before belnk kicked' there. Hoping you are the same, Yours truly, : ' ' HA6H1MURA TOQO. . should consider carefully. I thiyik you would be foolish to try living oi tii a week when you ar capable of Earning more than that yourself. By all I taeana continue going to business for & ilm If you decide to marry this boy. Yea are Bleat. ur iiam x airrax: i ana a girl IT an o.d and am in low wtth a young mi three year senior. He tell me he loves me and I beiiev he doe. He has ijked me to marry him and I tell hiiw I) wait unUl 1 am 18 years old, but he does not wsnt to wall. ;l, c. P. You ar too young to marry. If ha Is worth while ba wiu decide ou ar well worth wsJtUi for. . Kingdom of Dust Dy ELBERT IIUBBABD waaaaaMaaB( In our Pullman the other day colored brother doing extra, dead-heading home. He was aahy-yeHow In hue, sad and ultramarine in spirit, Immersed in gloom. ' , I sought to disen tangle him from his melancholy. Ts is dyln ff fast," he remarked. And then he ex-. plained that he had been up to fit Paul to attend th funeral of his partner, who had died of tubercu losis. - 'It's- the dust In these ye re kyars," he said. ' And I said nothing. because there was nothing to say. Dust Is not only to ban of tha pauV- I ewn but tt Is- Um bane of palace, cot- tag and tenement altte. To relieve the booms at dust fa to add to th length of aay of Its occupants. I have' beent reading; a remarkable ttl hook entitled. "The Kingdom of Dart. by tn S. Gordon Ogden. aa erjifnent pro fessor of physics' and cheantetrr. 'Tji Kingdom of Dost is th Kingdom f Death. In thla book Dr. Ogden says: "Dost ta th right hand of death." v Dr. Or den then goes on to say: More than half of an death in the - world.-from th equator to th poles. Are doe to the diatrtbution and breath Ins; ta f dust." - Bacteria exists in all dust where human beings live. eat. sleep, move, work. Wherever we go, w are throwing off particle of animal matter. Bacteria are a form of vegetation, so small, so minute, . that 60.000 of these germs may sit on the edg of a knife' blade along a Una on inch In length. . -Some are visible under the microscope. Others are so minute that the highest power of the microscope fails to . find them. We only know that they exist by watching their growth. They com out of the unseen and evolve until the .microscope can dctect-them. Bacteria ar divided into three classes; the spherical, or cocicl; the rod-shaped, or bacilli, and the spiral. These grow by fission. That Is, they divide, and a piece so small that It can not be seen by the microscope sometime breaks off 'and can be caught by, the sclewtist on a "Petri Plate" or culture bed, and evolved. . ' .Bacteria are mostly of a septle order, and these are the cause of various dis eases. The best examples t septic dis eases are pneumonia, tuberculosis . and such contagious diseases aa dtptherla, scarlet fever, measles. Dr. Ogden maintains that tha 'diseases caused by bacteria are avoidable. . The thing to do is to. minimis dust, v Dust is everywhere, but the worst kind of dust ts that which Is confined within the four walls of sf room. This dust is always germ-ladon, beoause it ta Infested with effete matter thrown off by human bodies. . . . In tha Boston City hospital, where the most rigid. . possible sanitary condition prevail, bacteria are found to be to the. cubic foot ot air. 1 In Central . park, "New Tork. ' bacteria ar found to the extent ot 1,600 to every cublo root. These conditions are not specially tin- -avoruble to life. But when you get up to 20,000 living germs to the cublo fot you ar getting into danger, and thla often happens tn homes that are not prop erly swept, and .cleaned. Th average house, where th room ar only fairly ventilated and the house- keeping I Indifferent, may have from 10.000 to 15,000 bacteria to the cublo foot. It we would be well we mast devise a plan by which the bacteria are not slm-' ply scattered through tha room by sweep ing and duJtlng, but by which they are picked up effectively, captured and destroyed..- LOSING HOPE Ml AH VERY ILL Finally Restored To Health By Lydia E. Pinkham's ' Vegetable Compound. Bellevne, 6ulo. 'I was In a terrible) t&to before I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound. My back; ached until 1 thought it would break, I had pains all over me, nervous feelings and periodic troubles. I t was very weak and run down and waa losing bope of ever beina well and strong. ' After tak ing Lydia E. Pink- bom's Vegetable Compound I improved rapidly and today am a well woman. V cannot tell you bow happy I feel and I cannot aay too much for your Compound. Would not be without it in the house it it cost three times tha amount" Mrs. Cbas. Chapman, R F. D. No. 7 eUe vue, Ohio. Woman's Precious Gift. The one which she should most zeal ously guard, is her health, but it is ,tbe one most often neglected, until aome ailment peculiar to her sex has fastened itself wjSon her. When so af fected such women may rely upon Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Com pound, a remedy that has ben wonderfully suc cessful in restoring health to suffering women. ' If you hare the slightest doubt that LydU K. Pink hum's Vegeta ble Compound will help you, write to LydU L:.PinVliam Medicine Co, (contideutlal) I.ynn,Mass-,forad- - yioe. Your letter will be opened. r-ad And answered by a voruitn, vid 4 A - i held la strict confidence. I . ) 1