Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 02, 1915, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TJ1M HKK: OMAHA, "WTWXKHlUY, JUNK , 1-Mft.
.lee Bees
bffle Magazine Pa
5r
i
!
V
The Breaking of Chains
By ELLA WHEELEH WILCOX.
Copyrlirht, 1315, SUr Company.
The thought of the world is 'waking; out of a slumber deep and long.
And the race li beginning to understand how Right can roaster Wrong.
And the eyes of the world are opening wide, and great are the truths
ther ee;
And the heart of the world is singing a song, and Its burden is "Be free:"
Mow the thought of the world and the wish of the world and the son?
of the world will make
A force so strong that the fetters forged for a million years must break.
Fetters of superstitious fear have bound the race to creeds
That hindered the upward inarch of man to the larger faith he needs.
Fetters of greed and pride have made the race bow down to kings;
But the pompous creed and the
things.
The thought of the world has climbed above old paths for centuries
trod;
And cloth and gown no longer mean the "vested power of God."
The race no longer bends beneath the weight of Adam's sin.
But stands erect and knows itself the Maker's first of kin.
And the need of the world and the
world I hear,
All through the clanging and clashing of bells, ibis wondrous time o'
the year;
And I hear sound like the breaking of chains, and it seems to say to
me.
In the voice of One who spoke of old, "The Truth shall make men free."
- ,1
Schools Should Abolish Test Bogie
I I - '
By WINIFRED BLACK.
' -The tests are comlns Main.
' ' I can tell tt by the color of the Little
girl's cheeks, or rather by the lack of
color, and by the hunted looH In the Lit
tle iBoy" eye.
We used to call
them "examina
tions" m my day,
and how we did
hate them!
.No quaking mis
creant ever - trem
bled at the gal-
lows' foot more
miserably than I
shook at the door
classroom on the
. morning" of exam
ination day.' '
..-I hated vithme
tfu, and ' knew I
wouldn't. "pass" In
.that. : so I didn't .
worry about It "
''The' W6rt 1st -always -bearable- when
you know K 4s the worst and make up
your mind It. k .
ut history I liked, and language and
spelling and literature and geography,
but what boded thatT Not a thing In the
world, not a thing. . .
I could rattle off the presidents of the
United Stales as glibly as the market
man rattles off the names of the vegeta
bles on his stand, but let there be some
' question In th ' examination about who
came from where and I was almost sure
to put Lincoln before Washington and
, John. Adams down somewhere with
- Rutherford B. Hayes.
' The capital of the Argentine Republic?
' I knew it as I knew my own name, but
let the, .chief Inquisitor In the chamber
of tortures ask -me to tell it and I was
Just as .apt to say Valparaiso, lnd., as
, anything else.
And well do I remember spelling Nice,
niece just like that at an examination,
and getting well scolded for it, too.
r what a farce It ail Is, the lest and the
' passing business.
You know the streets In your own city,
don't you? Stand up In a row with e
'-lot of other people, who want to get
ahead of you, and let soma one ask you
auddenly "which, street, comes firsthand
see what your answer will be.
Missed, failed to the foot of the class
'.or you! ....
. And yet the dunce who answered right
v knows Just about half as much of your
-JO', really, as you do.
"Teats are nothing but nerve wrack-
- arn," said a very fine teacher to me tha
', other day. "They're splendid to tell you
, Just how nervous a child , and that'll
, H.
"The cleverest children and the best.
tod, often pass the worst tests, I've no
, tlced that time and again. Of course,
we have to have some system of mark
ing or we'd never get ahead at. all, but
I wish somebody would invent something
to take the placa of tests."
So do I. dear teacher; so do I.
I've been in the newspaper business
long enough to know just a few things
about it, but I'd hate to have any one
put me through a test as to heads, bank
heads, cut lines and the rest of It,
wouldn't you, Mr. Copy Header?
How about you. Brother Business Man?
Tou seem to set on rather well In the
business world. How do you suppose
you'd pssa a test on accounts ana debits
and credits at an hour's notice?
Tour record holds you where you are.
Why should yeu go through an examlna-
tlon every onca in so often?
Don't twitch a germ-scat
tering duster. Put 3-ln-One
on cheese cloth and have a
dustless duster.
ausuess ouster. . y n
Keeps home bright,
clean, sanitary. J 1 li
clean, sanitary
Gives a fresh look
ih look I Li
.Tryit.
y of a i W
isea with ' sals.
to everything,
A Dictionary
hundred other naea with
every bottle. 10c, 25c, 50c all store
Three-in-One Oil Co.
J
. 43 N. Broadway, N. Y.
costly throne must yield to simpler
wish of the world and the song of th
I don't know a thing about it and
don't pretend to, but I should- think a
teacher could tell by everyday recitations
how much a child knows and what
grade she belongs In. Why not?
The melancholy days have come, the
test time for promotion.
Be gentle with little daughter, mother,
when she cornea home tearful and easily
moved.
Be patient with little son when he la
sullen and doesn't answer the moment
he's spoken to.
He Isn't sulking. He's adding on his
fingers under the table.
When daughter starts and flushes at
your voice she Isn't guilty of soma hein
ous crime, she's Just trying to remember
what to do when a greatest common de
nominator doesn't act the way the great
est common devisor thinks best. . ,
It's a matter of something almost like
life and death to the little girl to know
whether her paper Is marked 7 or. .75,
and you can' expect, her to pay much
attention -to little things' like food and
sleep and light-hearted laughter.
She's all alone in the dark, poor little
thing, and there's a bogle after her, a
great, goggle-eyed bogle, with big teeth
and clutching hands. Pltlpat, she hears
his feet behind her In the room, and his
name Is "The Teat." I do hope she gets
away from him alive. -
Make a Study of Your Job Girls!
Dorothy Dix Shows Ambitious Young "Women Workers How They Can Get Out of Mini
mum Wdcre Class. Real, Burning Heart Interest Counts for Much.
W I.K'l At- ,
Listen, girla. Do you want to get out 1 success and failure, between a ala-rva-of
the minimum wage class and into one lion , wage and a fat salary,
that gets a comfortable pay envelope on Do you ever stop and think that the
Saturday night? There's a way. It's by ! difference between a to a week cook and
studying your Job.
and taking a real,
burning heart in
terest in your
work.
There' a lot of
talk about women
not being paid : a
living wage, and
about woman'
work not being
paid as well a
man' work. -It's
all very . sad, and
the saddest part of
tt is that it's tho
relentless working
out of the law of
cause and effect,
and the reason
that women are
'. ") r.
poorly paid 1 be- .
cause so often their work is poor woikt
When a woman does good' work, when
she puts Intelligence and energy end
alertness and faithfulness Into her work,
she doesn't have to grumble about her
salary. For flrst-claas work" she gets
paid first-class money.
The great trouble with girls who go
ou to earn their living is that they don't
expect to work but a-little while, acd so
trey do not take the trouble to learn
their Job thoroughly, and they only feel
the casual and perfunctory Interest In It
that one does In a makeshift. They look
forward to matrimony aa their real ca
reer, and so they work with only one
eye. on thoir task and the other roaming
aiound In search of a husband.
"What's the use in learning to spell,''
says th stenographer to herself, "when
I won't be In this pesky old office prob
ally more than a year?" "Wliat's ,the
food of bothering, my head about learn
ing all about gloves, or laces, .or block
ings and all the details of salesmanship,
when I'll be on the other side of the
counter when I catch a husband?" ssys
the ahop girl.
"What's th need of speeding up or
eultlvating my ear and memory so they
are super-accurate, when I'll be cutting
out all of tills 'hello' business when 1
get a home of my own?" ssys the tele
phone girt. ,
And becaose they hope and believe that
their work is only temporary they do it
in a llstleas, half-hearted wsy that Teally
isn't worth any employer' good money.
They complain that they get llttlt pay.
Ho would any man who turned oit the
am grade of Work.
I Believe me. girls, the solution of tle
minimum wage for the worritm pr l)lem
law. but yon can solve It by maklns o'ir-
by
The Seasons Garden Party Frock
Has the Usual Ethereal Character
A (Jrvat
Deal of the
Charm of
Ensemble
Depends
Upon the
Choice
,of the Hat.
am
Hummer wardrobe plans include at least
one garden party frock,' which is uauntiy
of an etherlal character almoat suited
for the ballroom, except that the nock la
high, the sleeves long aud the character
istic train Is absent
rash Ion Indorses lovely nets, organdies,
sheer voiles and the revived cotton mar
quisettes for the frock that one will wear
when bidden to a lawn fete or for tua on
the veranda, in color, white and cream
are In the lead, but there are exquisitely
flowered fabrics, dainty in coloring and
which the young girl will choose In place
of the all-white gown.
The Illustration shows a French trock
of cream net combined with allover Cm-
selves efficient.
That one word 'effl-
! clency" measures the
dlstance between
a 5,000 a year chef is Just the dlffe-ence
between a bad cook and a good cook?
The woman who never bother to learn
even the rudiments of her profession, who
takes no interest In it, who ha no idea
of what degree of heat It take to cook
a roast properly, who slams together milk
and flour and lard and trust to luck a
to what sort of bread it turns out, will
be a cheap cook to the end of her days
Advice to Lovelorn
lave More Hrsnrd for Appearances.
Iear Mla Fairfax: I am a young aid.
rngaKed, and am employed aa a book
keeper. 1 had occasion to go out of town
with my employer on business, which
took about half a day. He Invited me
to take dinner wlrn him at a reatauraDt
and I went. At another time, he was out
of town and phoned m to come to him,
as he wanted to uive me some business
Instruction. 1 complied with his reifueat.
Was It proper for me to take dinner at
the one time and go out of town the
second time at Ills request? Have been
In hl employ for three years. He Is
married. INNOCENT.
If in the course of business you have
to go out of town to meet your employer,
you must regard it aa part of your work.
But be sure to keep In the role of busi
ness and not to act as a coquettish girl.
It would have been wiser to avoid dining
with your employer under the circum
stance. Tell Her the Train.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I iuii and have
been keeping comixinv with a Kirl two
yeara elder for the laat Jour yeara. I
loved thla girl very much for the first
three years, and now mv love la growing
colder toward her all the time, and my
salary Is small and I inuat give my
parents part of it. because they are poor
and old. o I ask you (or your advice
about this girl, and what I should toll
her and what excuse. G10OKOM.
Your letter is proof of Mie tragedy a
long engagement always brings to th
girL
If you do not love her, of course you
must not marry her. So tell her what
you have told me, end be sure yon never
do such Injustice to another girl.
Let It Kid.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I mt a girl about
two months ago and have thought the
world of her. 1 am tf year of age and
get tvW a week, with a very good future
I fore me. Do ynu think I love her after
only knowInK her so short a time? Hhe
is 21. My folks discourage me.
VOl'THFf!.. .
Ton run t keep yourself on tvW a week.
Vo'J hat in ! kniiMn I'.T Iiiiik enough.
Your f Ikx Hi'o rlht i
io lo worl, to
till foi t. -t ll1! .
ma k- a
f Oull
urnm mm
broidery net. The latter is employed Tor
the tabard panel of the front and back
of the bodice, and this is elongated to
give length of line to the figure.
, At the sides the bodice is slashed, iid
there are introduced .wide loops and float
ing streamers of a cerulean hue whose
intensity approaches that of the provcJ
lal blue of the Italian sky.
There Js no collar, since fashion has
dona away with the neck .covering for
ycuthful "frocks.. ...
A great deal of the charm of the en
semble depends on the sort of list choan
to crown the garden party frock.
one in the picture is a fine straw t
a fluted brim of set.
and out of a place half of the time.
But the woiran who makes a fine art
ot cookery, who understands not only
tho science of baking and roasting, but In
an adept In th concoction of soups and
sauces, may name her own price and
have people f.'ghtlng with each other
for her ervlces.
Why can one women get tin for makir.g
a dress and another $100? Because on
women has learned her Job she take n
Intereet In it. She ha studied tha com
bination of color and the effect of
lines. Sha ha mattered the art of fit
ting, and when a customer goes to her
she knows that she Is going to get first
class wcrk and that she will not have to
se-id the dress back for alteration. Tho
other woman Is a hack dressmaker, who
has never learned her trade, and when a
customer takes her a piece of goods only
heaven know how It's going to turn out.
Who are th women who have risen
from salesgirls to heads of licpartmentji
and buyers? The alert, energetic, wide
awake girls, who took an interest in their
work, who learned all about the particu
lar line of goods they handled, and who
were not afraid of doing a little mnrv
than they were paid for. Who are the
stenographer that rise to he private sec
retaries in big bualnes offices? Every
time they are the girls who took an in.
tercat in their Jobs, who turned out letter
perfect work, who charged their memories
with office details until they became In
valuable. Women talk about other women who
succeed a being ''lucky." ' There' no
auch thing s luck in bualnes It's Just
hrd work, and being so interestid in
your Job Unit you He down and rise up
with It, and eat It and sleep It, and.
therefoie, do It better every day. When
we see a pcraon suddenly advanced to
Home fine position, we exclaim at their
luck, but It Isn't1 luck. It's the reward
of weel.a und years of labor that
haven't noticed. They've been getting
ready for their big moment all along. .
Wake uu. girla. Put the. Idea out of
your heads that you are Just marking tlnw
by working, while you wait for a hue
bond and so it ian't worth while to do
your work well. Perhapa you will marry,
perhaps you won't Ther is no cer
tainty In theae days that you will catch
a husband, or if you do catch one that
you will not need to work after marriage
even more than you did before. Economic
condition are more and mora discourag
ing men from assuming the burden of a
family, nnd it becomes more and more
apparent that th wife of tha poor man
in th tuture w1l have to be a wage
earner also.
It bthoove you, then, to be one of the
well r-td Instead of one of the til raid
workers, and It rests with you to which
data vou belong. You can become on of
the efficient who can always command a
gi'od sultry or you can be one of the also
run, wlm are not unrih evwn the Dooreat
I wat'
' iUi'
I'on'l fir t that we all write
ll pi l lis--.
Is There Such a Thing
Many People Think So and Carry Netsukis
By tJAimKTT P. SKUYISS.
"I thi'ie lull s thins a link, li the
common acceptation cf the term?" A.
U C.
V hat I tho c ommon acceptation of th
tei ni? 'anuhtedlv It la that luck means
the tnt-rferent e, for or against the per
aon concerned, of some superior, super
human or unenmpre hendad power, acting
outside the ordinary laws or proceaava of
nntura. Taken In that sense, I answer
tli.it thrro la no aurh thing aft luck. But
this li merely the statement of my per
onal. reasoned hellef, and it art haprena
that uat at this moment there la brought
to my attention a remarkable aeries ot
phnti.jfranha, nome of which are her re.
produced, which represent. In material
form, the contrary belief of a vart num
ber of people, who think not only that
there la uch a thing aa in Ik, hut that It
can lie harneaned and controlled and car
rled atx.ut In the prw-ket or hlTiig from a
norkohain or watchchain In the shape of
a little Ivory, store, wood, hone or metal
Idol or linnet.
The objects herewith shown are Jap
anese "netaukla," or mascots, rarved In
Ivory or bone, and thousand upon thous
nde of such things have been made,
aold, given away and faithfully carried
and devoutly believed In, not merely on
the Oriental shores of Asia, but In Europe
and America.
The belief in mascots is another form
ef the belief In demons. Tou can see that
by almpt looking over the figures. Many
Of them, and eapefcally those t which
the greatest power is ascribed (aa for
Inirtnncc, the long-armed monkey and the
monkey wearing a striped cap and hold
ing a finger in his eye) are clearly In
tended to rop-esent hobgoblin, like the
monster that we see on mediaeval ra
the rtm In, nnd which were supposed to be
chained there and rendered harmless by
their Imprisonment within holy precinct
It Is an extremely perilous thing to be
lieve that you ate lucky. It bra da "the
Read
nmosvonii
EARLE WILLIAMS
aa T&mmr Saxolay
ANITA STEWART
as The Oeddeas
Written by
Gouverncur Morrif
(Oas f tae West aTotabla rtg
nraa la Aaisrioaa Zaaaara)
Dramatised Into a Photo-Tlay by
CMABUtl W. OODOABS.
Author ef
Th rerOa ef Vaallas)"
The Sxplolte of Blatas"
(Copyright, 1010, by Star Company.)
i
Copyright. 1W5. by Th Star Co. All For
eign Right Keaerved.
Synopsis of Prevloaa Chapter.
After the traglo death of John Ames
bury his prostrated wife, one of Ameri
ca's greatest beauties, dibs. At her duath
Prof. Milliter, an agent of the Interests,
kidnaps the beautiful 1-year-old baby girl
and brings her up In a paradise where
she sees no man. but thinks aha la taught
by angels, who instruct her for her nils-
aion to reform the world. At th aire of
IM a he Is suddenly thrust Into the world
where agents of the interest are ready
to pretend to find her.
The one to feel the los of the little
Ameabury girl moat after she had been
spirited away by the Interests ti
round himself living amid luxurious aiir
roundtngs as the adopted son of Mr. Bar
clay. Time in Its flight brings manhood
to Tommy and great expectation to Bar
i nvs" vv ft tjr w x
clay, who has planned to have Tjmm:f rod. hi thumb breaking th reel,
marry Into wealth. Hut Tommy lack
of lntereat In Barclay' business affairs
changes matter. Barclay ineata with
success In breaking up the match he had
really planned. Turned down by the girl
Tommy gues to the Adirondack to forget
the affair. While there he meets by acci
dent Celeatla.
THJUl) EPISODE.
"And 1 feel aa If my face were on fire,
loo." she complained.
"Feverish," thought Tommy with dis
may. And then he maid:
"Stand still a moment and let me look."
He noticed for the first time the ex
traordinary whiteness and delicacy of her
skin. It was as If she had always been
velU-.d from the sun.
"You're "getting unbumt," he said with
concern. "That' what' th matter."
"Oh, the un!" a he cried. "The un!
Ik show It to mo! I've bsard so much
about It."
"Ian't there any hi heaven?"
"How you talk, why heaven Is so far
cff."
"Well," said Tommy, pointing, "that's
it!"
"Tnat?" exclaimed Celesttav but she
could not look the lun In the face for
nioro than a fraction of a second.
"That! ' and she burst Into laughing.
"Do you know what I thought that
was?" sha said
"What?"
"Why, I thought, of course, that that
was the gat to hell. And so that' th
sun, and it' burning my face?"
Hhe touched her face with her finger
and then looked at their tips aa If expect
ing that the burn had com off on them.
"I've got una stuff at my camp that
will take the burn out." said Tommy.
"Look out for that gTeen stuff. It's got
thorns and you can't afford to tear that
dress."
They begun to climb th eminence on
which Tommy' camp wa perched and
with every step Celeatla (howed Increas
ing fatigue, lie walked a little behind
and at on aide, now helping her forward
and upward with an occasional touch of
th hand between her shoulders snd now
with a steadtlv maintained pressure.
"Of (purse I'm not used to walking,"
if I if
nasjiiiiniu ii i isi a i i mnmt.f S!KBBasrmmmamSG&A
These neleukla are carved In bone or Ivory or wood. 8onts like theae
above, are heirlooms In Japanese families.
haughty spirit that aoeth before a fall'
It tnvaiiably leads to disaster sooner or
later, bocause if upercdcs activity and
It Hdre See It at the
man Picture Sena I and&tory ever crShertlj
she said; "I'm sorry. X suppose I'll get
used to It,"
. "If you are determined to puah on to
New York vou will." said Tommy.
His quick ear caught the sudden appe
tising cluck of a partridge.
"Let's see If wa can get that fellow,
ho exclaimed. "You tit down and rest
yourself, Celeatla. Nobody hunts much
jn these woods, and the birds are tame
as chickens."
But Tommy's first move was really the
opposite of a move, for he stood as still
as he could and listened. Now a par
tridge er a ruffed grouie, If you give him
his right name, Is a born ventriloquist.
First the partridge clucked to tha right
of Tommy, then to tha left: then In front
of him and then back of him. Tommy
walked a few pace atu) ono more stood
still and listened. Thl tlm th clucking
cam from directly overhead, and Tommy
looked upward In th dens branch of a
young apruia irne, ana siwr ma iddiihi
for a few moment auddenly amlled. And
although ah did not know what Tommy
wa amlllng at, Celeatla amlled, too.
She eat down and leaned against th
stem of a birch, her breath coming and
going quickly, her great eye following
i very movement that Tommy made.
Having located th partridge. Tommy I
"aaaembled" hi trout rod, and, with the
end of the line, mad a running noose.
Then he began very quietly to pok tha
rod up among th branches of th spruce
trU i .h.,ri, ..ti .
th fact that mor eye than Celeatla'
were on Tommy.
Tommy, hi right hand clasping the butt
' reached gradually higher and higher until
his arm was extended to lt full length.
He added a few Inches to hi reach by
standing on tiptoe. But even thl wa not
enough. So Tommy bent hi knea a little
end then Jumped.
Before his feet regained the earth a
frightful aqawklng and Tapping arcs in
th sprue tree, and then there wa
dragged from It what looked like a pin-
wheel going at top speed.
Hunger Is th moat cruel tyrant In the
world. Tommy' thumb (ought and found
th base of an egg shell; ther wa a
sharp crutch, one laat wild whistling of
the plnwheel, and then ther wa one
cork grouse the less In th north woods.
But Celeatla looked polned now, and
troubled.
"It 'lias wings Ilk an angel," ah said,
"only darker."
Tommy wa Just going to say: "It's
got whiter meat than an angel," but
stopped himself In time and changed to.
"Even people who cotno her to make
th world better, Celeatla, hav to eat."
And be slipped th dilapidated bird Into
hi pocket.
A few minute later they reached
Tommy' camp, and after ha liad given
'Celeatla a cupful of aprlng watar he cut
fresh balsam botigha and made a thick
mat for her to rest on, and rolled his
coat and some other odd and ends into
a pillow, so that she could watch him
make th fire and do th cooking.
In the midat of thla he remembered thiit
ahe was suffering from sunburn, and he
made her bathe her face In a lotion that
smelt of camphor and nlUr and which
burnt a little and then felt cool.
For lunch they had tea. biscuits (on
of Tommy's moat lamentable culinary
failure) and the partridge. Cooked, ha
no longer looked Ilk the victim ot mur
der, but very beautiful and appetising.
Celeatla at her ful aliare and then lay
back on her balsam bough and watched
Tommy fill and light a pipe.
"Why do you do thatr aha aked.
"Wasn't th patrldge cooked enough?'
Tommy narrowed hi aw at her and
for some momenta dida't answer. Then
he aa(d: "I don't know what to make of
as Luck?
as Charms.
Induces carelesmeas. On the other hand,
the belief that you are unlucky Is a due
ot mental morphine.
Movies
you at all. First you say you corns front
heaven and act as tf you did. then you
talk and act like a regular) girl, then
you pretend that you never saw a man .
smoke before. And then what ere you
trying to do to me, anyway? Is that
really the only dress you've got In tha
world? Ih you always wear a golden
band around your hair wita stage Jewels
in It?"
And then suddenly a light dawned on
Tommy, and he smote his thigh In ap
plause of his own clevornesa
"I know what you are," he said.
"You're tho queen ot th movies. You're
up here staging a show, and you got
bored and let me run off with you for a
lark. Prof. Stlllltor has had something to
i do with the arenajHrt. Tha heroin ! aim
r pose(, u m ttlo ,oonrey. Xnfct.,
Celo.tla-nd you're practicing all th
. tlm- on na. We thamk lt.,
, only acUng. Why. I really thought you
( wepB m, , hatter!"
No," said Celeatla, "I'm not In the
least angry. But I'm sure I don't know
what you mean, but I Ilka you when you
get excited and talk fast and your eyes
smile. It rvsts me."
Tommy shook hi head at her and
amlled reprovingly.
(To B Coninued Tomorrow.)
WOMEN FROM
45 to 55 TESTIFY
TolheMeritof LydiaEPink
ham's Vegetable Com
pound during Change
of Life.
Wettbrook, Me. " I was passing
through tha Chang of Lif and had
pain in my back
and aide and was to
weak I could hardly
do my housework.
I have taSen Lydia
E. Pinkham'a Vege
table Compound and
it has done m a lot
of good. I will re
commend your med
icine to my friends
and give you permis
sion to publish my
testimonial." Mrs. Lawrencb Mak
7IN, 12 King St, Westbrook, Maine.
Mans ton, Wis. "At the Change of
Life I suffered with pains in my back
and loin until I could not stand. I also
had night-sweats so that the sheets
would be wet I tried other medicine)
but got no relief. After taking on bot
tle of Lydia E. Pin Wham's Vegetable
Compound I began to improve and I
continued its use for six months. Tha
pains left me, the night-sweats and hot
flashes grew less, and in one year I was
different woman. I know I have to
thank you for my continued good health
ever since." Mrs. M. J. BaowNELL,
Manston, Wis.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, Is unparalleled in such cases.
If you waut special sdflce write 1
Irdla . PluVham Medicine Co. (confl.
deutlal) Lynn, Hats. Tear letter will
be opened, read and answered by s
womas, snd held is strict cenfldeuce.
Hill j.ljl Ml . II I I . II" ! !! I.l,! li'l
:-i;!j'''-''j;'i:!::
fa 1