TIIE 15EK: OMAHA, MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1015. - Jf j -M v rrsaK 0E New Thought Rosary of Content Few Convincing Phriusea Which Form "Beada" of Truth and Wisdom : : : , : L ! : - . By KM.A WHEELER WILCOX. ' Copyright, IMS, Star 0mpuiy. One of the oldciit and sweetest cue torn among- the religious denominations la the tailing of the beads of the rosary. The Buddhist the Mohammedans and the Roman Catholic har preserved thla custom, who orteln cannot be traced, ao remote ls.it There la something poetic and beauti ful about It. Without question the habit ha a been helpful In bringing the tnlnd of religion devotee under control and developing the power of concentration. ) New thought, which tafce Ita een . tral Idea of the unity of life and I: Yi - the divinity within from the oldcet religion known to history, ,.n he made atlll more Ktent by ttv ln ' traduction of the rosary ide. c0 beada are necessary-written phrase will acrv the p.irpo-and let each earn, eat aoul, seeking to find the light and to develop the latent power within, pro vide t own roaary. Are vou discouraged and given to mel ancholy and nervou mood? IX you feel that everything goe ageJnat you. and that the tuture hold nothing but aorrow for yon? Then let h be your roaary. Write down the phrases and put them where you can see them a you lt alone for your momenta of concentration. "String your beada" of theae sentence! ' 1 am peace bsolut. 1 am serenity. 1 am happiness sbeolut. Ijf liolda nothing but good to Hie. 1 am realising all my heart desires. After you have learned Hie word by heart vou will not need the 'written ro. ry; U Till become a part of your thought you will iAv your roaary over a you walk oil the at reel or lt in "Pbltc con. -ryance. or drive In your carrla-. or lie in vour lc'l. and you will tnd such ati-engtland power coming to you as you jinvcr dreamed of possessing. ' If .you aro worried about your health, Read it Here See tty special arranaemenU for thla paper a photo-drama correspond Ing to the in stsllments of "Runaway Juno" may no" 't, een at .the leading-moving picture theater. By arrangement with the Mu tual nim Corporation It Is not onlsvo1' title to read "Runaway Juno" caoil week, but Jo afterward to see moving ll. turea Illustrating our atory. Copyright. U1S, by Serial PubUcatl'ia Corvorauoo, YKorsia June, th bride ot Ned Wamr.ln. pulivl leave hur buHbftnU fiuneyiimon wioause she beauis to J-euJiaS thut Bho mntt be deienuut on hlin Jot tnujiey. fche deaire to be Independent. June la purnud by till'uert Hlye. a weaKliy married nion. She 'iti from liU t'.uu he with dill iculty." Hod search iitractriiy for Juno,- and. larntu ot kiiye'a Oentsn. vow venseanc on tittn. AUr many hdvonturea June 1 rescued Irom river pirates by Durban, an artlat. bhe paea as th "(spirit of the Mareh. Is driven out by Mr. Durban and la kia rd by Bly and Cunnlnsham. June enrapea, tries aweathrtl work and la Ul jioaaeaaed by her landlady. FOURTEENTH EPiSOIiK. la the rip of Poverty. C11AITKR 1. The cold eyea or th Uumpy Vantlady fcuddenly warmed. They hud auht Iho , gutter of a diamond. ' "Wait a mnute!" ahe rallnL "l thliU !( take a chaaoa on you, alter an. The beautiful young girl awayeq in tue i doorway. Mrs. waters caugm ner oy , the arms, put down th heavy bundle under which the girl had bent and led .her to a chair. "You need a cup of tea," the lundlady "jrattled on. and her eyes strayed comer Wife to the tapering white hand, upon which gleamed a sparkling solltalr. The irl alM wora a bright new wedding tins! ' Th woman waddled away, and 3une nrvnr the bjtidle of Ints which ahe !ad brourht with her and began to sew. "Put 'em tip!" th bustling landlady avUh a neck like a ervese cried. She lifted the garment from June's lap and tobsed it aaido. "You can't make a llv. Ing sea lug. pacts. A pretty girl like you ought to get a nlca Job In an office. Hcra'a cup of tua I got for yon from Mr. J niK.nt aiid a morning paper I sot from plr. Kedzle. ' Drink your tea. while 1 hunt you a Job." And energetically she turned the paper inside out. My nood tteas! She bad been about to drive away lla 'oeatttlful atri' And with that tostly tiiamond ring on her hand and a brand S I "7 For Shavers LUun, nil tore-ntced ghavtrtt ' For your comfort, do this: Moiata etrop wiia S-in-On fo trop- pin. W Spa tiad witli 54a-Oo nt khavinj;. ' Oh, don't manttan h w1! r4 N- . to r.alpt A bictlvnary f a buadrad u.r ua wita ty iv. lie. So an atoca. V.f 9-in-On OH Cow, I. hw Ywa ... U 1 -4 or about your financial condition, add new bead to the rosary and y: I am health, energy, vitality. I am prosperity and plenty. Opulence I mine, and the wisdom to use It wisely. Everything I do auoeeed. and I am filled with vitality and strength. Familiar! youraelt with theae woTd and make th roaary a part of our dally mental and a4rltul exercise. A worried and deapondent buainea man who believed he wa born to misfortune acceded to the wish of a friend and car. rled the roaary aha wrote for him in the lining of Ma hat. reading It orW whenever he felt the despondent mood approaching. Arter a tlm hi nerve were tea tenaely strung: he wa calmer and mere phllos- ophlcal. That was all. Then came a oomplcte bualneaa failure. a ad he aaid to his friend: "You eee, the roaary did not worn. I am oorn lor failure." But right after the failure came th beat fortune of hi whole life, and It came througrh the failure.- Just a the erection of a fine marble building wait upon the destruction of a cheap, wooded structure oftentimea. Health, happlne, aunceaa and power have coma to many Uvea thiOitgh the repetition of one of these new thought rosaries. String one for yourself, of uch mental qualities a you crave and auch possessions a you need for your happl ne and usefulness. The ex plana tional la perfectly logical and natural. Tou aim ply bring the vibra tion of your mind, to chord with those of universal good. You cease to make a dis coid in the mental and spiritual realm. The ceil of your brain undergo a phys ical tranformatlon by your change of thought, and "A a man think. so I he" prove to be literal fact as we.ll at a divine assertion. If you feel the romance of your domestic life fading, if loye seems to be dying In your-home, make yourself a rosary to help bring the happiness which I the earthly vestibule to heaven. Proclaim love, compatibility, ympathy, romance and constancy as your own As sort that you love, and are loved as In the days of your honeymoon and ahut your heart, eye and ears to any other belief. Tli new thought rosary haa been known to even bring Cuptd back to th hearth he was on the eve of deserting. Surely It Is worth the effort of a trial. Jt at the Movie3. , 4a7& a j i r new wedding lingl "I'll lend you car fare If yuu wnnt It." . Within two ir.lnutea mote she had "hef new lodger bundled out of the door and on her way ''to hunt a Job." Within 'two minutes after lit a luxurious limousine had atiipod In front of the new horn of the runaway bride. The door opened, and a man with a white mustache sprang out, followed by a dark man with a black Vanriyke. They dashed forth entrance, but a nolae, 'halted them." ' Th aounl fame frim the back of the car and was made by a large round lump which, oluttered around the spare tires. Th lump wa the private detective, BUI Wolf, and the face which be turned alde alae as the driver of the luxurious limou sine ran ba?k to him was covered with dust. The, driver, a wide faced Italian, grinned ns he saw that the Involuntarily faithful sleuth waai firmly attached to th tire covering by his cravat, which was entangled lu a strap. "Well, why don't yonu helpjne. you big wop?" com lained the trapped detective. "Help you? fure!' Th driver Jumped behind Bill W 'lf and kicked 'him with a : Mund .like the beatlnir .of a carpet. "S.attl!" called the black Vandyked man. ri.ibcrt Rlye, and the grinning i fl rjn to him. 1 Oil'Ji rt i lye pointed up the street. Ther t re tovnrd them a family can. on th Cum; r.'at of which, beside tha chauffeur, !. a handsome collie. June Warner's j H.iinccr! The Mack Vandyked man whla perea III the ear of the driver, and the lear.i -J joy cam Into the Italian's nurroTi' Mittea eyes Beautiful Juno Warner, more appealing than ever In her plain little black dreaa and her fragile pallor, entered the door which we lettered "Elisabeth Sawyer Heal Katate and Investment," arid found her self in th railed orf reception space of a large office which was allva with the hum of energetic business; A thin, stiff necked young woman came out and went directly to th beautiful glil with tha plain black dress. "Will you oom in?" she invited with an unexpected agreeablene. and she led the way Into the (very center of thU. web of Industry. Th family car (topped at th curb with, a slam, and the colli, Bounoer, wa on the ground- Frrin th car sprang th young huMband of June Warner, bis Jaw et and hi flats clinched. There followed the at em father and the gentle mother of June, her boaom friend. Iri Blether ing, and Bobbie. ."They're In ther!" called a duaty vole. It wa tht, well known and Justly famou private detective. Bill Wolf, etlll attached to th luxurious limousine by i his strong cravat, but no one heard htm. The party had rushed Into the dim hall way. , June Warner's eyes brightened as aha entered the private office of . Eaisabeth Sawyer. That pleasant featured woman eat at a deck piled high with a Utter t letter. A h passed th desk June saw, aUndtng amid th paper, th por trait of Kluabeth Sawyar, a tall, good looking man and three handsome ihll dren. - A Nw W enter ruahed impetuously in rrotn the street a figure spraug from the dim hallway. That figure was BcattL and, 'closely pursued bv the party from the family car. he tor aero th big vacant room which occupied th ground l'loor and darted through a heavy iron door, aud tlm pursuers plied iu after hlin It was then that the dark, handnom man with tha black Vanlyke allppcd frim hi concealment beneath the stairway. aped llghily serosa, the abandoned bank ing room and clanxed the Iron door, slip ping the heafy crowbar into Its place S ST 0 a4 CoBt'.Qued Tomorrow.) The Lake ' " , Vrrierever the smart sat congregate there will be noted the beflounced dree In on of It manifold varieties. . At Lake wood wa seen the gown depicted in the above sketch. It shows a moderation In tha flounce fullness, which will b wel comed by women whose figures do, not permit th bouffant expreoipn of fashion Pari ha imposed on th American woman this spring. ' ; . The Inevitable beige- color In the In evltahle .taffeta constitute th fabric. Tli,- skirt Is . .encircled at interval . by flounce of the material. These flounce are gathered, a I usual with such decorations, and cut on circular line so that th hem . assumes a godet ripple to elva the esnentlal flare effect. Kach flounce is rataed a trifle aero tha front to accentuata the undulating line. This 1b' something of a new de parture. Although till frook is entirely of silk, a pleasing result could be ob tained by making the foundation of doth an 3 th godet flounce of silk. , How to Live a By ELBERT irUBBABD. Man la a dynamo. A too. he 1 a trans former and a transmitter; , ' , , Knergy plays through him. In degree he ran control it, manipulate It. use . it. tren- " . mlt it. And the secret of being a good transmitter Is to allow - motion to equal emotion. To be healthy and sane and well and happy you must work with your hand well i a your head. Th cure for grief I action. The recipe for trerigiei I action. To hav a oouy that li. fre from disease and toxins you must let mo tion eaual emotion. liov foe love' aake creates a current ao hot that it bum out th fuse. But love that find form tn waste. sculpture, painting. poT ana nscrui work is divine and beneficial beyond word, That l. love t an Inward amotion, and if stifled, thwarted and turned back, upon itself tend to gloom, melancholy, brood ing. Jealousy, rage, dlseas and death. But lov that ts liberated In human effort attracts love, ao a ourrent l cre ated and exrea emotion Is utilised for the good not only of the beloved, but of the roe. Art I th utilisation of rove exhaust. The lover out of a Job la good man for a girt to avoid. Safety lie tn service. All emotion that take th focw. of urv with no outlet In the way of work. 1 dangerous. Thl way horror He. Emotion without motion tend to medne and despair, Expreaaion must equal Impression. If you study you must alae create, write. tech. give out. If great Joy haa oom to you. pa It along, and tliu da you double It. Tou are the steward ef tn gtftg th god hav gva you. and yeu answer for trelr uae wllh your life. Do not obstruct th divine current. The college that impair! knowledge, but i.ppllc no opportunity for work, i faulty tn the extreme. 1 A erhool that does not supply work si veil ss facts la falM In theory and roi, . j .ii practice. lu pui'tis air not poa health, h; pl- wood Girl The bjuh e has the fr'onfr ' cut in one f with the skirt, to Imnart a. nrlrtceaa lln. From shoulder to bolt there are braid ! band simulating the modish ouavo, j which seem to be the halt mark ot the Pari styles. Thvneck Indicates a vacilla tion between the hlgl) collar and the low, and by way of compromise ' th back, show, a double ripple extension of tha silk, while th front I left In round out line and uncovered , ' Uk many of th gowns ' well-dressed American . women hav adopted thla sprlnff, th (leeve of thla model are of chiffon cloth closely fitting th arm, and unlined They are wrist length, as In deed are th majority of sleeve in all manner of daytime apparel. A hat of browrt leghorn is wcrn with thla fetching frock. The crown la low and round and it is 'trimmed with two mag nolias,, whose wax-like petals approach the real blossom in point of perfection, and whose creamy tones harmonise beau tifully with th beige of the gown. Hundred Years nea or power, except on a fluke. Emotion balanced by motion eliminate dead tissue and preserve an(ty. Pot; lack of motion congestion follow. All sickness comes from a failure to rrake motion balajie emotion. Impress and express; Inhale and . ex hale; - work and play; study and laugh; lov and labor; exerciae and rest. flttMv vnne awm r mj anil H,Mii tA ael the moat out of life. . -s- Reallse - that you ' ax a . dlvtn trans former, 4 Make motion equal . erqotlon and you will ' eliminate fear, round out the cen tury run and' b efficient to the last. And to llv long and well. 1 to accept life In .every phase eva death Itself nd find It good.. . i Th fear of death tends, toward death. ''That which I feared haa com upon me," said Job thirty-five, hundred year ago. And the asms is true today. People who .are willing to go or atay, lay a long tlin. When we learn how to accept life and find It good then the average man will live to five time th length of time that It take to reach hi maturity; that la, five time twenty, or one hundred year. Advice to LoVelorn ' Iatredaetton. Dear Ml aa Fairfax: I am SI year old and hav boon allithtly acquainted with a Kiel five year my Junior forciiiht month. Would It be Impolite to try to gain her MitKmit an Intrcductiiti? 1 knuw of no manner In wtif.h I could rrang one. Do you think there la too great a dlfferenee In our ages? he la of a by dlitoi.ltton. and a neither one of u will flirt 1 aru at a loaa as to which course to pursue. - ! advise ine. as I reapect this girl very much. F. vl . Since you respect this girl you raurt keep on trying to arrange a proper ln- traduction. t ou will - probably admire each other the more and feel that your friendship la btillt on a better founda tion If you gain It with the dignified aane- tlon of aa Introduction, and not la the Carole taaphasard way in which seoule of questionable taste nk friends. " Never Haew Vee lsrk.M Dear Mis Klrfs: For son. t!nt I have hen calling on a young lady who Is far hov ijr ft?in!Uv. d she la ... oir ii,ehter. Our agea are Jut ine. 36 vera. .Mv pr-ewnt apiary t a week with excellent '-names rur ' l iiMceim nt. ' i-i.i.. ... . i.iv uilti.,fk t., a krrv l ... .7.,..,. .. . ....,!. 1 . tnaiii.w It. t l riaiiM at our own at mjr aiafr. when aa The Hot Springs Girl HOT SPRINGS JOWN ?or whit and black effects if excellently illustrated In a frocg re- ccntly worn by Mra. Arthur Qlbb.'at Hot Prtng, Va. Even among the galaxy of modish gown worn dfilly by patrons of the Homestead, that lady' was distin guished for Its demure lines and it sug gestion of the passing of the Lenten sea son, th later conveyed In the girdle and cording that trimmed th frock.' 1 Tunic, flounce and other furbelows found no place in the decoration of the Pari dress. Instead, the skirt was shaped on full circular line that brought Into effective play the two-ton shimmer of the yellowish-white taffeta with the regular stripes of blaok, - Eugenics and By RKV. MABEL IBWIN. That uncalendared aalnt, France Wil lard, one aaid: "There ar no llltgitlmate -children, only Illegitimate parent." It would seem ' tltat this . fact alone; when once recognised, would forever do away with t'-.o moral stigma that has al ways attached itself to certain children and which has "visited the sins of the father" with Nunwarranted ; vengeance. It I to call to mind. "Buffer little child ren to come unto me," th forgetting of which should cause a profeaaedly Chris tian social ordor to blush with shame. The time haa passed, let us hope, when an unmarried mother was regarded as th off-coiii'iiig of the earth, and so treated. It Is coming to . le recognised that these are often the gentlest souls, th most loving unsuspecting girls of all. The specious pleas of the man who rays he love her, that this is ttit supreme test of hor love, and that no priest or law ran make her more his wife In the sight of God than rhe already la, leads her to take a false step. The recent move In , Prance where, there are tens of thousands of "unmar ried wives and , mothers," to allow them to be married by proxy to their men now fighting tn the, trenches Is a notable ex ample of the rapidly changing public opinion. The wife and children of such soldier v-ill in the case of his death come under the protection ot the state. This seems but human, and worthy of -mutation by the other nations at war.' By Beatrice Fairfai haa tMHm used to o much in her present heme? S. J. M. Don't quarrel with your good fortune. Since the girl who love you i wtlling to forego a few luxuries for your- sake. and ts read)- t llv on your salary (which t a very good one), don't be too nalytlcul ahout it all. Just marry, her and proceed to work your way up. The gtepaaethrr. Dear Mis Fairfax: I am 1 yeara of Ke and am living with my ateinnodivr. sh tella w that ishe hates m and wishea I wouia get-nut her alKiit where ahe will never see me again. Would you advUe me to leave home; . ANXIOUS. Tou ar far too young to leave home. Try to win your stepmother' love. Oo to her and tell her that you ar Juat at th ag wher you need the advice and ympathy of a mother or older sister. Ask her It h won't at aud in the place of on ef the. Tell her you want to deserve hr lov and that If ahe will tell you of any often yoa have even given hf you will atrlva ts avoid that tn future. It hy vour aweetnea you can wiu her tfartiona It will b a triumph of which on may be proud. If tola falla, writ uu IN BLACK AND WHITE, At the hips the fullness wa confined by a broad girdle of violet satin spring- time In tone and giving Just the right note of relief to the basic fabric Tha and dropped at the aides instead ot at the back and they were embroidered in silver and violet floss In some conventional pattern. . , The short sleeves seamed to Indicate a return to . a " type never quite out of fashion and likely to be In considerable evidence a the warm-weather season ad vance; for they spell comfort and con sistency and even the fashionable woman ts never slow to avail herself of such style features. ' 1 ' ' . ''."" Illegitimacy I In attempting to aolve the problem of Illegitimacy for ' America, however, we are dealing with a somewhat different condition. Tn France In order to marry the consent of the parent must be ob tained; not always an easy thing to do. And In many of the other European coun tries a man mey not marry till after he has served his military term. In our country no such sertcus ob stacles are put in tha way of our young men. They have not th excuse-which the men ot other countries may plead. This brinsa u to consider the thousand of deserted glr(-mothers In eur own coun try, th problem of Illegitimacy here. I America leading In exemplary fashion th other nations of the world In Its treatment of young motherhood? The girl In times past has had to pay to th uttermost . farthing for her mis fortune pf her . fully,, while the man has ben allowed to go free socially If not financially. Whan ; his fatherhood has Been uno.estfoned, he has been compelled, sometime, to bear some-of the expense Ills tardy marriage of the gtrl tr mar riage there b Is often regaMed as an act of gencroMty on his ; pjirt which .loaves the girl-wife open to tha Uh-like .reflection that he married her from i compulsion rather than frorri choice. Vevei thf less such ein are each day be ing . lightly considered, If not condoned, by society In general, and by woman In Particular. How shall we account for thia7 la there any possible reason why a Sir) la and should be held more r sponaibio than the man in their .common tranagre&alon Against society and the child?' Slie always has been, so held. a;d as- atatiOtlcs ShOW. more rru,nalhl In j Amciica than snvwhre else. Should she be Must she continue to be? Is there anything In the nature of the case, that make th mother of th race rnorv responsible than the rather for the condition which call Into being a child? If o, then w are bound to conclude that woman la man' moral superior; for It Is commonly agreed that it Is the superior that la. the. more culpable. This may' help us to a better under standing of what has been called "wo man's injustice to womaq" an Instinctive knowledge which held her ex more re eporutible and give ua a hint, at least. for the aolutlon of the perplexing problem ) of illegitimacy. Eugenic look to the physical, mental and moral Inheritance of the child. It goca back of all man-made lawa and customs, questioning th man or woman as to their fitness to beoom parent at all, Th basic element of fttnes la found In mutual love. When thla condition I met. other may then be considered. What mutual Uve a th recognised con dition under which any child ha th right to be born, the problem of un fathered babes will hare been solved. Man always protects not "lay" the thing he loves. Any solution less than this of th problem of Illegitimate par nta can be put partial and pnitive In Chaimitea Speaking Seven Languages and Lookingforajob By MADISON 01 FETEHS. Recently on of our paper tan this ad vertisement: "Wanted Work at any thing by a manof ft, speaking seven laugungea" . If this young man had had tha courage t i he Ignorant of msny thing ha would have avoided the calamity of being Ignor ant of all thinrs. It Is not how much college yon hava ( gone throuph as how much of. tha ol- , lege has gone through you that th buai- I neas wdrid wants to know. I The best diploma Is the book of acta. The world always make room fpr the man who can bring thing to paa. Our country 1 full of person who can do many thing fairly well, bnt do hot know how to do one thing supremely well, ' The -heat workers In many lines are to Ipners whtt. In the old world, devoted the eitrly part' of their Uvea to learning a troae or proression, ana onwiini meir superior workwarshlp with tbem; hence i we soldim find such foreigner looking fbr a Job, The day of universal knowledge I past. ; The true measure of a suceesful mtn'l learning today Is the number of gtudle which he elocta to let alone. . Dread culture may be beautiful and j msnyaidodneas admirable, but it I , ! 1 ways the men with single aim and In- tense purpose, who nonoentrate their power,, who are in demand when anything worth whllo la to be done. It I not the diffused electricity nut I the concentrated thunderbolt that is tor- , rlble in its power. He who knows everything ts ' always looking for something. The specialist doea not have to look for a Job: tha Job ' I Is locking for him. To succeed you must jbe unanimous with yourself. ! Agassis wa asked his opinion touching the chemical analyst of a plant. He an swered "I know nothing about chemis try.". He was a naturalist. Even special lets have their specialty. ' ' It t does not pay .to know everything. Only ophomore are omniscient. The man who runs on Bide lines, tintacs I they run on to the main track, waste j his energies, smother his enthusiasm I and usually fall in all that ha under- 'takes. I To keep a gun from scattering cut In single shot, ' . The successful worker today Is he who J single out from a vast number of possi ble employments some specialty and to that devote himself thoroughly. This la a poor country for the average man,, and worse still for the untrained man or the miscellaneous genius. Every-, thing la orowded downstair! . , The men who get to thai top over th bead of a hundred other are not al ways the men of conspicuous ability, but availability. Th man who knows bow to take hold of things by their handles -haa the call. Young's phrase, "Time elaborately thrown away." applies to the man who attempts to know or do everything. There is a busyness Which is not busi ness. It is seldom that the most brll- .llant eohteve tha highest success. The 'sticker, like the postage stamp, get i there. Persistency la mora effective than bril liancy. . . The men at the summit were not shot up In an elevator; they 'ollmbed there. Men are not pulled into positions; they hav to push themaelve there. No matter what you undertake, don't leave it -until you can reach- your arms around it and clinch It with your hands on the other aide. A Dickens' friend would have ua un derstand, "It'a dogged doea It." i The only "good time coming" you "are Justified In boning, for Is that which you make for yourself. ". - . WAS MISERABLE COULDN'T STAND Testifies She Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ' Lackawanna, N. Y." After my first child was born I felt very miserable and could not itand on my feet. Hy sister in-law wished me to try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and my nerves became firm, appetite good, step elastic, and I lost that weak, tired feeling. Thtt was six' yeara ago and I have had three fine healthy children since. For female trou-. bles I always take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it works like a charm. I do all my own work. "Mrs. A. F. K reamer, 1574. Electric Avenue, Lackawanna, N. Y. ' 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.tumors.irregularitieg, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feling,fiatulency,indigesUon,dizziness, or nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound ia the stan dard remedy for female ills. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced ef the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound tore store their health by the many genuine and truthfur testimonials wa are con stantly publishing in the newspapers. If yon waat special advice write ta Lydia K. liakaam Medicine Co. (eon ft. etial) I.yna.Nass. Your letter will be opened, read and aaswerml y wgmaJ, JUilltia la lUlct ftUlfitoaci ME V v