THIS WOMAN’S EXPERIENCE Bring* a Ray of Hope to Childless Women Lowell, Mae*.—“I bad anemia from " i time I was sixteen years old and ■a very irregular. I did any house cleaning or washing I would faint and have to be put to bed, my husband thinking every min ute was my last. After reading your text-book for women I took Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegeta ble Compound and .■Used the Sanative rPash, and have never felt better than have the last two years. I can work, feat, sleepy and feel aa strong as can be. Doctors told me I could never have {children—I was too weak— but after leaking Vegetable Compound it strength ened me so I gave birth to an eight pound boy. I was well all the time, did all my work up to the last day, and had fa natural birth. Everybody who knew me was surprised, and when they ask me [what made me strong I tell them with [great pleasure, *1 took Lydia E. Pink iham’s Vegetable Compound and never felt better in my life.' Use this testi monial at any time.*’—Mrs. Elizabeth Smart, 142 w. Sixth St., Lowell, Mass. rThis experience of Mrs. Smart is surely a strong recommendation for Lydia K I Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. It is 'only one of a great many similar cases. New Life for Sick Man | Eatonlc Works Magic] “I have'taken only two boxes of Eatonlc and feel like a new man. It has done me more good than anything Oise," writes C. O. Frappir. i Eatonlc is the modern remedy for acid stomach, bloating, food repeating and Indigestion. It quickly takes up and carries out the acidity and gas And enables the stomach to digest the food naturally. That means not only Vellef from pain and discomfort but Eget the full strength from the food eat Big box only costs a trifle ti your druggist's guarantee. j Let Cuticara Be i Your Pznuty Doctor [ Smp 25c, OhmMl 25 mJ 50c, T.lc.m 2k. Women Made Young Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body toll of youth and health may be yours if you win keep your system to order by regularly taking GOLD MEDAL The worM’a standard remedy for kidney, Hver, bladder and uric acid doubles, the epetniM of Ufa and looks. In uee sine* 1688. All druggist*, three sizes. BY USINQ THE OENUINE Steams’ Bectric Paste klao SITU* DEATH to WAtefbogs, Am*. Rat* ana Mice. These pest* ere the greatest carriers of gtseaas and MUST BE MU.G1'. They de»lroj both food and property. Dteectlaos la U language* to every box. Beady (or nee—two sire* lie and UAL tf. S. Govern moo t buys It. h- -«L— --- dud Tunklna. lad Tunkins says since he looked £nto a Jewelry store window and saw eipos for lady smokers he’s about (ready to Join the anti-tobacco crusade. Lucky Strike cigarette mgz-x-s fc. J 4 4 Y 4 « Y44444444444J 4 CANADA'S TREES. 4 4 - 4 4 n>m the Columbus Dispatch. 4 4 The department of public high- 4 4 ways In Ontario has put a curb 4 4 on the tree butcher. On the 4 4 highways under its Jurisdiction 4 4 no individual or company may 4 4 hereafter remove branches from 4 4 trees without permission. When 4 4 permission is granted, It Is spe- 4 4 cifled that the work must be 4 4 done under supervision of the 4 4 official forester of the district, or 4 4 such other person as the forester 4 4 may name. The chief trouble 4 4 has been with the telephone. 4 4 telegraph, electric light and pow- 4 4 er companies. The Canadian 4 4 Forestry Jfagaalne thinks that 4 4 the larger companies will readily 4 4 fall in with the spirit of the 4 4 movement and employ expert 4 4 tree pruners hereafter, at whose 4 4 hands the health and beauty of 4 4 the trees will not suffer. Co- ♦ 4 operation in this way for tho 4 4 public good would be of more 4 4 value to them In good will than 4 4 the small amount to be saved by 4 4 employing an ignorant slasher 4 4 rather than the skilled pruner. 4 ♦ 4 4444444444444444444 PODUCING CLEAN MILK During the Paris exposition. H. B. Curler shipped some fresh milk pro duced on his farm at DeKalb, 111., to France. When opened, tills milk was found to be sweet and wholesome and !t received a gold medal. Although uo preservative was added, It did not sour for several weeks after It was produced. Immediately after being produced It had been Iced and at no time was Its temperature allowed to rise far above the freezing point. This was one factor in the wonderful record made by the Curler milk at Paris. Ths other one was claanlineaa. It was milked from healthy cows Into clean, small mouth palLs by cleanly people and that was the other factor. The dairy husbandry department ol the University of Illinois Investigated to determine where the germs get into the milk. They say unclean milk cans are the principal cause of the trouble. Bach 15 drops of milk (about) as It reaches the country dairy the morning after It is produced contains about 60, 000 bacteria. Most of those are of harm less varieties such as cause souring. The number may be increased to 60, 000,000 if the milk Is Improperly bandied. It may bo only a few hundred or a few thousand If the utensils are all clean and the milk Is kept cold. The University of Illinois Investiga tion indicated that at least SO per cent, of the germ Ufo getting into milk comas ordinarily from the utensils. The only perfect way to sterilize & milk can or pall Is to treat It with steam under pressure. A can sterilized after this fashion should be covered by a cap and kept tightly closed until ready to be used. The cover should be removed, the milk poured in and the cover re placed as quickly as possible. On the other hand If the can has been washed with water, hot or cold, or even treated with ordinary steam, the top should b» left off until the can ha3 dried out. In fact, if the can can be dried with dry heat so much the better. After dry ing. the cover should bo removed and the uncovered can and its cover should be set on a cun rack in the sun for as long a time as possible. If the coyer | be left on a fairly clean but moist non sterile milk can for several hours the stench will be fearful. No milk man who knows his business will put milk into such a can until It has been de odorized. In other words, covering the can Is good business If tho sterilizing has been done with steam under press ure. It Is the reverse If tho cleaning has been done with wa^er and ordinary steam. A farmer can produce clean milk with a low bacterial count in an Inexpensive and. not very clean barn If he will be clean In his methods ami especially if he will keep his cans and pails bacte riolagically clean. A demonstration made by Dr. North at Homer, N. Y., nearly 10 years ago proved all these points. The Univer sity of Illinois finds that what is true in New York is true In the upper Mis sissippi valley. If somo one would try it out in California, Mississippi and Minnesota they would coma to tho same conclusion Ln each instance. Repairing French Coal Mines. From the Columbus Dispatch. The difficulty of bringing a ruined coal mine book Into effective production Is strikingly Illustrated in figures given by the fortnightly survey of French economic conditions, published by the French commission in the United States. The mines at Lens were yield ing an annual output of over 3,500,000 tons in 1913. So thorough was the de struction wrought that only 3,165 ton9 Were taken from them In 1920. At Aniche, the 1920 output is a trifle over 600,000 tons, as compared with a pre war yield of over 2,000,000. At Escar pelle, It was possible in i920 to extract but one-fifteenth of tho 750.000 tons pro duced in 1913, while the mines of Cour iers gave but 13,000 tons as compared with 2,297,000 before tho war. It must be borne in mind that France has had every reason to push the reconstruction of these mines as rapidly as possible, since she has had to pay for English and American coal enormously higher prices than those at which tho output of her own mines is sold. There was no military advantage to Germany In the destruction of these mines, Just as there was no military advanUce li* Zeppelin raids over the undefended towns In which tho British and French soldiers had left the aged, tho women and the children of their families when they went into the army. The United States could have no higher mission, under present circumstances, than to take tho lead in a determined effort to outlaw these and other barbarities in troduced into modem warefare by the central powers, in violation of every humane tendency of modern civilization. A Move for Peace. From the Wichita Eagle. Now that President Harding has shelved our chances of getting into the League of Nations for at least four years, the American people, who fight and pay for our wars, should welcome any move that holds forth any promise of lessening the likelihood of war. We cannot have the league protection against war at this time; therefore, let us take what we can got, and take it gladly, if only it is a sincere move for peace. Representative John Jacob Rogers, ol Massachusetts, has introduced a resolu tion urging President Harding to invite Great Britain, Japan, Franco and Italy to send delegates to a conference on disarmament. While we plan disarmament we must go on building a big navy, says Repre sentative Rogers. Probably fundament ally sound policy. Unless we arc to have peace, we must be about building the ships to whip the world. Quite a few ships, that will take. What we want Is peace. Therefore, we hope Representative Rogers is sin cere in his proposal, and v.o hope Presi dent Hardin* will rw»lVB it. sincerely and thoughtfully. i Hero and Hero Worship "I am somewhat Interested." C. S. writes, "In the question of competitive athletics between grade school teams. Soma of us have felt that the college attitude toward athletics Is being in troduced Into the high schools, not al ways with the best results. Where J live we have had this spring basketball contests between schools representing the various towns In the county. These teams were composed of pupils below high school age. ’There was a cham pionship tournament with all the ac complishments of organized rooting and ‘please to stand behind the team.' etc. "Without wishing to degenerate Into the old fogy class that disapproves of everything the youngsters wish to do. I have my own feeling that such highly organised competitive events oetween pupils of the seventh and eighth grades are not desirable. "Moreover, it docs not seem to me to be a good thing to change the proper duties of a physical Instructor to those of an athletic coach whose mall) pur pose Is to build up a championship tcc.m. Naturally the larger and older pupils, some of them possibly In the grades because of backwardness, are made the heroes of such contests.* Your letter raises one or two interest ing questions not directly related to your main theme. One is the advisa bility of organizing the partisanship of pupils in the grade schools. Most peo ple hold that children of the grade ages are better off when their play activi ties arc left pretty much alone. Whatever we do, initiative, decision, self-reliance, individuality, inventive ness must be given opportunity for de velopment. Organization can be carried far enough to stifle these qualities. Or ganization of play activities runs this risk. The machinery of major competitions In college athletics has its harmful qualities as well os its good ones. These harmful qualities are not lost when the same machinery Is carried over Into high school major athletics. Why ex tend them to the grades? Another secondary point which your letter brings out Is the 1110b spirit and hero worship which it builds up behind the high grade feeble minded and the backward boy, Boys of this type rarely get to college, They have neither the capacity nor the appetite for college ed ucation. Not many of them arc passed or care to bo passed Into the high school. But their infirmity holds many of them In the grades when they are old enough and strong enough to be In the high school. * EV~ Find Queen’s Necklace. From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. San Francisco—The stolen amber “love necklace/* gift of Napolean Bona parte to Josephine, has been recovered. And with its finding is revealed a tale as intriguing as any of the historic iewel mysteries. Some twenty-five years ago. the neck lace was stolen from the Louvre in Paris. An international search was started. The French chamber of depu ties offered a reward of $150,OuO for its recovery. The French secret service was sent on the trail. But no trace could be found of the historic necklace. And as the years went by, its disap pearance was forgotten by all but a few secret service detectives and some ex perts on antiques. About six months ago the necklace found its way to a curio store in China town here. So little attention was paid it that there is but slight information at hand regarding the identity of the Indi vidual who peddled it. It is believed, however, to have been brought into port by a French sailor who sold it without any realisation of its value. And so the Bonaparte beads, unrec ognized by tourists and owners, were placed on display in a modest showcase with a price tag of $25 stuck behind them. In the assortment of valuable scarabs and cameos they were over looked. Finally, a ftew weeks ago, a New York couple, tourists In California, bought It. The remainder of the story has been gathered from correspondence chiefly with the Tiffany Company of New York, according to police reports here. Returning home the tourists went to a Jewelry firm in Maiden Lane. They inquired whether or not the beads were worth the $25 paid for them. They were amazod when, a few moments later, a price of $50,000 was offered for the neck lace. Going to the house of Tiffany they made a similar inquiry. It was then that they learned that the beads, when placed under a powerful microscope, bore the engraved words:. “Napolean to Josephine.*’ They were offered $85,000 and accepted that sum. Talk In New York. From the New York Herald. dust when we were beginning to think that New York was in advance of Gopher Prairie, some grownup New Yorkers who gather together under the ,iame of the Society of Arts and Sci ences held a dinner to discuss whether marriage Is a failure! There are so many comparatively sensible topics which might be debated that it seems too bad to revert to a dis cussion which was sidetracked by the Thursday afternoon clubs of 1888 as be ing a little too stale, flat and unprofit able for live persons to waste time over. Men and women who go to the ex pense of having a dinner in a fashion able hotel should ^ick a grownup sub ject for talk. Should relativity bft taught in the public schools? Is canned spinach better than fresh? Why are car seats double? On which side should an artichoke be eaten? Discussion of these questions might lead to some thing. This chatter about careers interfer ing with marriage and marriage inter fering with careers is too much. If the dinner debates do not improve there will have to be a censorship for them. They are so dull as to be utterly wicked. The Door Handy. Persistent Canvasser—This time, sir, I have quite a new departure. Busy Merchant—Good! Dot me see you do it. You Tell 'Em. You tell 'em, aviator. 1 can’t seaplane. You tell ’em, gold fish, you’ve been around the globe. You tell 'cm. Wells Fargo, I can’t ex press it. You tell ’em, Patent Leather. I’m a dull kid, You tell 'em Bradstreet, I’m Dun. You tell ’em leather, my longue’s in my shoe. You tell ’em cotton, you’re out on bale. —From the Commonwealth. Harding's Foreign Policy. From the Philadelphia Ledger, rep. 8▼ interact. Iowa Florida Oyster Culture Offers Life-Time In come to non-residents, without drudgery, rain, hoeing, plowing or fertiliser. Free infor mation—12,000 words—Including U. H. Gov eminent quotations. Government $10,000 sur vey. sworn statements.’/' Oyster Growers Co operative AswdaUos, Apalaehtcata, Florida. Why Suffer Chilblains or Bunions W'heu you can get Parker's Chilblain «n(i Bunicn Remedy Price $1. postpaid. Satis faction guaranteed or rroney refunded. Order direct. PARKER & PARKER. 118 8 Fourth Street. ALBUQUERQUE. NEW MEXICO. FRECKLES SIOUX CITY PTO. CO. NO. 1*-U2».