Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1924)
The Omaha Bee MORNIN G—E V E N 1 N G—S UNDAY THE BEE PUBLISHING CO., Publisher N. b. UPDIKE. President BALLARD DUNN, JOY M. HACKLER, _- Editor in ChiefBusiness Manager MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS • The Associated Press, of which The Bee is • member, J1 is exclusively entitled to the use for republlcatlon at all " news aisfMtches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication ot our special dispatches are also reserved. The Omaha Bee ia a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the recognised authority on circulation audits, and The Omaha Bee’s circulation ia regularly audited by their organisations, Entered as second-class matter May 28, 1008, at Omaha postoffice under act of March 8, 1870. i • ‘ BEE TELEPHONES • Private Branch Exchange. Ask for » j Untie 1(100 1 the Department or Person Wanted. A1 IBPtlC 1UUU ; OFFICES Main Office—17th and Farnam Chicago—Steger Bldg. Boston—63 Dovenshire St., Room 8 Seattle—A. L. Niels, 614 Lary Bldg. Los Angeles—Fred L. Hall, San Fernando Bldg. San Francisco—Fred L. Hall, Sharon Bldg. New York City—270 Madison Ave. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES DAILY AND SUNDAY 1 year 86.00. 6 months *3.00, ? montns 11.76. I month 76c - DAILY ONLY 1 year *4.50. 6 months *2.76, 3 months *1.60, 1 month 76c SUNDAY ONLY 1 year *3.00. 6 months *1.76. 3 months $1.00. 1 month 60c Subscriptions outside the Fourth postal sone, or 600 miles from Omaha: Daily and Sunday. *1.00 per month; daily on'y. 76c per month: Sunday only. 50c per month. CITY SUBSCRIPTION RATES Morning and Sunday.1 month 85c, I week 20c Evening and Sunday.1 month 65c, 1 week 16c Sunday Only .. I month 20c, 1 week 6c • ___—--' ,f - j e,nabaWha& fhe'Mjst is dt its Best GABBLE AGAINST ACHIEVEMENT. When Hon. Byrfin Patton Harrison, who likes to call himself “Pat,” was keynoting the democratic * convention into its hectic life last June, he indicted ; the republican administration on many counts. ' None, however, received more careful or general at ‘ tention than was paid to the foreign policy of the \ administration. Among other things, the keynoter J said: ’’Hovy different were the foreign policies of our government under Woodrow Wilson and under the Harding-Coolidge administration. It was the differ ence between a keynote and a keyhole policy of statesmanship. In the good old democratic days we did not send out spies to peep in, but diplomats to sit In; not observers without authority, but repre sentatives with credentials. . . . Never before l In all history has America turned a deaf ear to the I nppeal of humanity or the call of civilization. 'For eign countries have sought our advice. They have - pleaded for our counsel; but lo, their supplications have been ignored and their pleas rejected." On the day following this tirade, Senator Thomas J. Welsh, permanent chairman of the ronvention, added his testimony, after this fashion: ’’Why trouble ourselves about the troubles of Europe? Let her stew in her own juice. . The people of Europe have been constantly calling upon our private citizens to nid in bringing order out of the chaos there, intensifying the impoverish - nient due to the war. ... But the government ■ of the United States must do nothing, lest the irreconcilables disrupt the republican party.” * * * Now, all that sounds ominous. It would be im portant if true. Plenty of proof is available to show that it is not true. No one is better aware of its I untruth than Senators Harrison and Walsh. They were pleading for the League of Nations. They were present in the convention, but unprotesting, when the report of the platform committee scuttled the League and it was “spurlos versenkt. The world, even the democratic newspapers, re joices at the happy issue of the London conference. Due entirely to-the efforts of Americans present, not as spies, not as private citizens, but as official and ‘ unofficial representatives of the government. Help ing to carry out a plan for restoring order and prosperity to Europe, worked out by a commission i headed by Charles G. Dawes. He is now the repub I lican nominee for vice president, and was when Har risen and Walsh w^re trying to make it appear that ‘ he Harding-Coolidge administration has abandoned ■ Europe and skulked from duty to the world. When the Woodrow Wilson administration was * e’.'minatcd by consent of the voters, among other ; wreckage left was the fruit of “watchful waiting.” * This has just been cleared away by benefit of the 5 course outlined by Charles Evans Hughes, with the J approval of Warren G. Harding, and carried on by f Calvin Coolidge. Accepting the resignation of Charles B. Warren ' ns ambassador to Mexico, President Coolidge writes: "Your mission to Mexico has been attended by the most gratifying success. We have established • the most cordial relation? between our government I und the government of that country, which had been Interrupted for a long period of years. . . . J arn not unmindful of the extremely good Influence that your presence in Mexico had in promoting the • \velfaro of the Mexican people themselves." Contrast the outcome of the Warren mission with that undertaken by John Lund, who went as emissary of Woodrow Wilson, not as ambassador to the government of a nation with which we were trying to keep on friendly terms, but a messenger to a rebel chieftain. The first treaty of commerce and l amity with Mexico since 1848 is coming out of the J Warren visit. Senators Walsh and Harrison will • have a chance to vote on it when the senate comes J together next winter. ■. Mr. Warren has successfully concluded three im portant foreign assignments for the administration, One of these to Japan, two to Mexico. He says: “I feel that the Coolidge administration will be credited with putting the international relations of America on a better basis than has existed for a long time.” Thus does the fact of achievement, undisputed „,i<» pinin, reply to the gabble of partisan orators, exercising their rabble-rousing talents on a demo cratic national convention. Coolidge haH not spouted in platitudes, but he and his assistants have worked fn Europe, Asia and America, to help humanity and have succeeded. That is what counts. FOR DECENCY AND ORDER. A move made by the La Follette leaders in Wis consin deserves more than passing consideration. W^len Ira S. Lorenz and Mrs. Julia Anderson Schnetz resigned from the republican national com mittee, because of their fealty to La Follette, they opened the way to a reformation of the party's structure in Wisconsin. Their withdrawal from the organization thut is to support Coolidge and Dawes was the only decent course open to them. As sup porters of La Follette, they could not expert to re mnin as representatives of the republican party. It ' even intimated that their action was but the pre lude to the formal withdrawal from (he republican party of Mr. La Follette himself. This may not be necessary, save as a formality The party has moved on and left “Fighting Bob” where he has been standing ever since he entered the senate, a hopeless, persistent opponent of every forward looking policy the republican party has championed. For many years he has held supremacy in Wisconsin because he has been permitted to move ^ under the name of republican while holding fast the socialist element that now forms the major portion of the support he has in his independent candidacy for the president's office. Along with La Follette will go Nelson, Voight, and some other congress men, who run as republicans, but really owe their offices to the socialists. There are republicans in Wisconsin, and plenty of them. When the malcontents are withdrawn, and catalogued under a distinct label, the real re publicans will have control of their own party af fairs. The campaign for Coolidge an‘d Dawes will proceed apace, and the machinery of the party will not be used to destroy it. That much of decency must be credited to the La Follette following in his home state. > SUGAR SUBSIDY IN ENGLAND. Those earnest advocates of the proposal to do away with all tariff duties on sugar, among whom is included Hon. Robert Marion La Follette, might with profit observe what the laborite government of England is doing. Philip Snowden, chancellor of the exchequer, supports a bill providing for a sub sidy on beet sugar. He will begin with 19 shillings 6 pence per hundred-weight, dropping to 17 shillings at the end of four years, four years later to fi shill ings 6 pence, and so on until at the end of 10 years the industry is self-sustaining and the bounty dis appears. Sugar beet raisers in the United States are con tinually menaced by the free traders, who propose that the tariff duty of 2.2 cents per pound be done away with. Their argument is that sugar will be cheaper on the table if no duty is imposed. Snow den’s action is a perfect answer to this contention. England has had free trade in sugar for many a year, barring the McKenna duties, that really were a war tax. During all those years the English break fast table has been at the mercy of the foreign producer. The labor government is now convinced that the better way to bring down the cost of sugar to the home consumer is to produce some at home. This is regarded as so valuable an asset that a sub sidy more than double the amount of duty levied in the United States is proposed to encourage beet sugar production. If the policy advocated by “Jake” Thomas or “Bob” La Follette goes into effect, the sugar beet growers of the North Platte valley will be the ones to suffer. As soon as the sugar barons of Cuba can gain full control of the American market, we will reach the point attained by the British, where even the socialists are willing to pay a bounty to have some sugar produced at home. RAILROAD WARS ON MOSQUITO. Railroads, as organizations of wide diversity, have had to contend with a great many perplexing prob lems that were not in sight when first organized. Usually these have been met as Jamie Stevenson proposed when asked what would happen if a cow got in front of his machine. “It wull be bad for the coo,” said Jamie. Bucking snow, sand, rain, wind, all these things are part of the day’s work for the railroad man. Alkali water, that used to be the terror of enginemen in the transmissouri coun try, has succumbed to water treatment. Many similar problems have been solved. Now the Missouri Pacific is bucking the mosquito It is amusing to think of a big 10-wheel-connected engine chasing a mosquito, but it is not so funny when one thinks of Anopheles chasing a man Anopheles, you know, is the mosquito who has the exclusive contract for spreading malaria, bette*. known as “chills’n’fever.” Only the female of th» species is harmful. So, down in Arkansas, the rail road company has set about to practice all the scien tific methods of doing away with malaria among it’ employes. The warfare on the mosquito is earnest ly carried on. The state medical authorities help and very gratifying results are reported. The incident is noteworthy because it is the sort of welfare work that counts. Picnics and parties, baseball teams, and all that sort of thing are useful in Iheir way. But a campaign to improve the health of the men will d* more to cement good feeling than any form of game. The corporation will get big dividends on the funds it has invested in quinine, screens for windows, draining stagnant ditches, and the like. If the Arkansas bottoms are ever freed from the terror of Anopheles, a new paradise will be open to man. The Los Angeles man who stole a ear to ride six blocks, because his corns hurt him, will have a lot of sympathy from others who have felt like doing that same trick. The parking problem would he rendered easier of solution by eliminating a number of filling stations and using the space for car storage/ We nre not surprised that Saskatchewan repu diated prohibition. It is so much easier pronounced when one is slightly lit up. The trouble with Cain was that, he had no judge and jury before which to plead that he was suffering from sort of complex. The prince of Wales is to he a luncheon guest at the White House. His grandfather once stayed over night there. Mr. Gillette, who Is running for senator in Mas sachusetts will probably be pretty well strapped be fore his finish. Of course the increasing price of wheat is just another device of the Money Devil. -—-- ^ Homespun Verse —By Omaha’s Own Poet— Robert Worthington Davie --- I.OKKS/.O MII.I.N AND MK. Ixtrenao Mills wuz alius grout for flxln' up bis lawn: lie liked to hnve n pretty yard to look with pride upon, An' miry a bit of garden seed did be In springtime Sow He'd ruther do most anything than operate a hoe. All through the balmy summertime his petted lawn he mowed, While 1 wui hillin' up the spuds an' other things 1 sowed. He often snt upon his porrh when his brief task wur. done. An' smiled while 1 war. pickin' hugs beneath the Idlin' sun. Along in autumn when his lawn wur. /titlin' brown an' dry I picked my punklns an' we had a good old punkln pie. My talers- after all my feme—turned out like ever' thing— We liad enough of them to Inst until the coinin'spring I,orenso Mills goes ploddlit’ on ns ever wur his way The beauty of Id" loll la-gins to blossom forth In May. An' I trudge on while summer files, an' when Ids grass in nrre My punklns ripen an my spuds commemorate the year ^Wonder If It Isn’t Going to Be Kmda Hard to Attract His Attenion] $ \ \_> \ f ez-'RA - OH EZRA* we RE READY TO GO FOR. A SIP WHEN*/ Ever you- I \^ARE £ 0~ N Letters From Our Readers All letters must lie signed, but mme will be withheld upon request. Cnm muideations of ton nurds and less will be gl\rn preference. V__-___' History Might Guide. AVinnetoon, Neb—To the Kdltor of The Omaha Bee: "Do we want an other Aaron Burr." Mr. Chapman, writing In "Betters From the People" of July 29, certainly hit the nail squarely. There should he more who dare to speak out against Ba Kol lctteism. Mr. Chapman is right. In the na tlonnl campaign Af 1800 John Adams and Aaron Burr, both federalists, and Thomas Jefferson, anti federalist, were the presidential candidates and the election went Into the house of representatives. Mr. Hamilton, know ing that Mr. Adams could not be chosen anil that Burr was ft scheming trickster and unsafe f,.r the high office and believing Mr. Jefferson a sound, safe man, threw all his politi cal Influence for -Mr. Jefferson and succeeded In throwing the deciding vote to Mr. Jefferson. Alexander Hamilton, who had more to do with making and the adoption and ratification of the Constitution fe" that although Mr. Jefferson was of another party, that the Constitu tion would ho safe with him and Mr Hamilton loved the Constition as he loved his life. Aaron Burr, angered and full of revenge, shot Hamilton and then attempted to divide the Ohio f Abe Martin l___' flittln’ ther names in th* police court news makes lots o' folks speed all th’ fnster. Ike I,nrk hnd quite a scare t’dny. He went home an' found his wife there, an' supposed, a’ course, she’d broken a leu. (Cop?right, 1124 I NET AVERAGE PAID CIRCULATION for July, 1924, of THE OMAHA BEE Daily .74,010 Sunday. 74,792 Doci not Incit'd* return*, left river*, tample* or papeia spoiled in j piloting and inr ludra no aperlal ■ ale* nt free circulation oi any kind. V. A. BRIDGE, Cir. Mgr Subscribed and awnrn to before me thl* 8th day of A«igu*t, IP24. W M. QUIVtY, (Heal) Notary Public and Mississippi country west of the Allegheny mountains. La Follette. not heing able to boss the party that mada, him and because he cannot, seeks to wreck it. Do people forget? Have they forgotten La Follette's war record? Iio they forget the mul timillionaire lumber king. Stephenson of Wisconsin, whom La Follette made senator to pay off political help? This money king In hla dotage and not orie single qualification necessary for congressman? We challenge any right thinking person to show wherein Mr. L« Fob lette has shown any great statesman ship in his career to tit him for the office of president of the Volte-! States. A. A. 8IFEKT. l’aetor and teacher of history. On the Farmer’s Side. Burwell, Neb—To the Editor of The Omaha Bee: The Bee of August . contains an editorial entitled, "Plain Truth Good Enough," that Is a posi tive pleasure to fend. The condition of agriculture is plainly and fairly s'ated. That was to be expected, however. Hut what was not expected ts that It failed to give credit for the good turn of fortune s wh*-l in favm of the farmer to same all-wise party or the kindly intervention of some "dirt-farmer" olfice holding politician, whose heart fairly arhes at sight of the awful condition of the noble asm culturlst. The omission Is so notice able that we fear the orthodoxy of the writer's, political faith will be called In question. Of course. It would I-e hard to make such n claim stick, but that doesn't often deter the "conscientious" poll tlclnn from making It. The truth is that neither the politician nor the farmer had anything whatever to do with the present condition of the gi tin market, it was brought about by a power far greater and more pow erftil than any or all of these can wield. God Almighty stepped In and did for tho farmer what the farmer neglected to do for himself, viz; short en the visible grain supply. Hut here the scientist will step In and assure us that wo are absolutely wrong, that the shortage was due to weather con ditions. Well, as Able would s-iy. Did 1 say no’" If God can make* not only a world, but myriada of worlds, and run them on schedule ttme. what Is there to prevent Him making weather conditions? lank of organization Is wholly re sponsible for the farmer's deplorable condition: and he needs It more to control the acreage and output than tho marketing If the supply Is less ithan the demand the marketing will Lake rare of Itself. Just now. for Instance, the fsrtner Isn't In need of \pert advice to dispose of Ids corn nd wheat, simply because the de n)!ind I" greater than the supply. Does It not seem that our great ex pert advisers are working on the .■.'rung end of the farmer's prohlem? Let them try the other end—the seed ing end—and the ever puzzling prob lem will be solved. A bumper nop is not a benefit to our f irmer* if the rest of the world lies a bumper crop also. It Is a bene fit only when the rest of the world has a failure. Therefore the farmers best bet is a smaller output, which would mean less acreage, less expense and a larger income. But if we keep on committing the same old blunder of raising more grain than the world needs. Just so long wfll we be getting poor and un remunerative prices. Keep the supply well below the demand, as all other industries do, and the farmer can name the prices for his products in stead of, ns now, Jetting the other fellow do it. MICHAEL O'CONNOR. Iler Brunette Forebears. Mrs. X. who is very proud of her aristocratic ancestors, was showing Iter maid the silhouette of an aunt of hers. The girl had" never seen any thing of the kind before and she gazed at the silhouette portrait long and earnestly. 'Tair' mum," she said at length. "I a I stays thought you had some rel stives like that, you're *o dark com plected yourself, mum.” — R-vston Transcript. An Investment of lino or more, rlored after careful intfi»t i gat ion of the merit and Ivctti* mary of an offer I will make you by mail upon reqtieat. ahouM at leaat dou ble your money with aeery reaaonable provixi' n for xafety of prlnoral. which is later returned out of a kinking fund provided therefoT. My offer t« atrictly limited and for aerioua-roinded people only who can realise when ahown the unlimited poa mhilitiea in the manufacturing of Elec tric Heating Equipment. Write me today for proof. P. J O’Keefe. «2 Church St.. Room 5-C, New Haven. Conn. No Internal mdiriM will ran Fctenaa Only by ih« ftppifcwtioa of CRANOlJCNF., the ye—a ulrmaf nrowaty, ftn the latent micro©# be .Iratmyed Wro*# thtae«#«—»#«t fwrywwewwlf •« ewr •«###»*. Writ# foe fre- is*t triet im ai. mMiwaa C-rwnoWne, Dept. D A.uwrvi Kan “Sleeps Like a Plow Boy" **| a»ff#nd for » reara with Fc**w»a In fta »rr*l farm. Affected all over th# Nxl? t FANOLF NR left m« a# line aa while ailk. ami I tUeet* bk# • plow .**—J. M-’Ceacken. ,l,<hnaon tlty. Tern < Written twn rear# after ue>(<g C-aANv-ll .SB ) aa#aerws Stores. Monty PoslUwly Rttumnl If Wot Satisfi#a Stop that Com | this new way HERE is instant and immediate r« lief from that corn. All the pain gone in a minute, and soon the com itself gone. Get Blue-jay at your drug gist. A noted scientist discovered it — different from any other corn remedy. Does away with the danger of paring a enrn tianpsalf Cafa ' IIN 1 SUNNY SIDE UP cJake Comfort, nor focoet | f j; NEBRASKA TOKAY. i'. The unwinding miles of a vast panorama Entrances the sight as the train swiftly rolls; Depicting the scenes of a wonderful drama. The actors who played It—the pioneer souls— Who. braving the dangers of uncharted regions, Fared forth to the west, knowing naught of dismay; The humble and hardy and God-fearing legions. The fruit of whose faith is Nebraska today. The harvested wheat, the corn blades waving gaily, The spiraling smoke of the threshers afield; An army of toll that goes forth singing dally, Are visible signs of a bounteous yield. A swift flying train the vast distances unreeling, Fapt flashes by farmsteads that line the whole way. The wonderful story of success there revealing— A world's masterpiece—our Nebraska today. A tribute of praise to the pioneers ready, Who never allowed their great courage to fail, But working away in a faith firm and steady. Made homes the whole length of the Overland Trail. Their courage and faith not a moment unbending. They visioned a time when their children would say: "Our parents fared forth on a desert unending, IAnd from it they wrested Nebraska today!" While wafting for an Inspiration, or should we call it "hunch," for the next paragraph, we began wondering how our good friends, J. E. Davidson and Ben Baker, would look wear ing bobbed hair. Life Is full of compensations. About the tlm* the women began wearing their hair shorter they began wearing their skirts longer. We shudder to think what might be had It been otherwise. A plaintive wail from a desk in the outer office incites to wonder why it is that when you pick the horses but do not ^ lay a wager, the horses picked always come home. The oppo site being that when you do pick them and lay the wagers, the dogs invariably show up tardy at the wire. Because we pay but little attention to feminine fashions, it took a long time for it to dawn upon us that the dear creatures no longer wear Mother Hubbards They now wear House I Dresses. So far as a cursory investigation reveals, the only difference is in the price. I It hardly seems possible, as one reviews the ever passing parade of automobiles, that less than 30 years ago the auto was practically unknown. This fact has just been recalled by the city council of Denison, la , which body has Just repealed an ordinance enacted In 1S97. The ordinance, designed to safe guard human and equine life, provided that the traveling mo torist telephone ahead to the next town, notifying the people of intended arrival, probable route through the town, and 1 length of intended stay. Now every city, town and village Is ' dotted with signs: "Speed Limit 10 Miles per Hour," to which nobody pays the slightest attention. WILL M. MAUPIN. , J ' - —■ ^ -4 LISTENING IN On the Nebraska Press. The Schuyler Sun has just entered upon its 53d year. Fred Carroli hasn’t been with it all that time, but he intimates that he will be with it that long. • e • The Llnooln Journal Is at a loss to understand why Governor Bryan does not step to the front with the claim that he is responsible for the In creased price of w heat. • • • lev Shelley of the Falrbury News says that even If he considered Davis the best man for president he could i hardly afford to vote for him. "Life is too uncertain," concludes Lew, looking towards the state house at Lincoln as he says it. • • • Youth must be served. George Benschoter announces that he has When in Omaha Hotel Conant 250 Rooms—250 Bsths—R«te» I. to $3 turned his Hay Springs News over to his eon, W. G. Benschoter. The boy will have a year in which to try him self out, and prediction is freely made that Dad is permanently oil the job. • • • "If people wbo never did anything for their home town really want to give it a boost, they will move out." remarks the Shelton Clipper. • • • "Like most cheap things gasoline is cheap stuff," asserts Tim Sedge wick in his personal column of the York Republican. Anybody wonder ing in what direction Tim was look ing when he aaid it? _ £*»y to reach now and twice as Interesting as you ever dreamed. Only 10 days (on a Canadian Pacific Empress) to Japan, then to China, and Manila. Cherrv Blossoms and Wisteria. The Forbidden City and 0mm ' j Wall snd Temple of Heaven. All manner of quaint costumes and customs. And luxurious ease aboard vour swift Empswss lunar. Further Information from local steamship acwata at FL S. Eiwocthy. Steamship General At«t, 71 E. Jackson Blvd , Ckicaro. III. For Fre.iht apply G. F. Nichols. 1025 W. O. W. B.d»., Omaha, N'eh. Canadian Pacific IT SPANS THE WOULD VMMMMmuWMwwiBwmaBaumaMuauaiHHr Teach Children To, Use /> Cuticura Soothti and Heals Rasbcs and Irritations « E'vyp Kix»p« th* <Vln ( Wr How to build up your Weight TO be under weight often proves low fighting-power in the body. It often means you ar* raiiiue_ji*rve-power, minus red cells in your blood, minus health, minus vitality. It is serious to be minus, but the moment you increase the number of your red blood- .ells, you begin to become plus. That's why b. S. S., since 1876. has meant to thousands of underweight men and women, a plus in their strength. Your body fills to the point of powei, your flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that coma from thinness disap pear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel it, too, alt over your body. Mors red-blood cells I 8. S. S. will build them. ^ 8. 8. 8. Is sc Id st til MiiiJ 8iuf storss Is two sins. Th# Isrgse SM« is store •ceaowi.sU TCOjwWirfd'iBsrt LJ.JL ‘/hood Medicine lit 1 \Y YM ,Y1»M MUMi »;t.,s(5|.Tb RECOMMENDED BY HER JOCTOR Found Strength by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vege table Compound Kankakee, IUinoia.—'* My mother in-law always took your medicine for weakness, and then in the Change of Life it did her so much gc>od that she induced me to take it for a weak ness 1 had for a year and a half. It has strengthened me and now I have a nice haby boy. I do all my own housework _ now, and 1 recom mend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ble Compound whenever 1 have the opportunity 1 am taking it again for weakness, as my family doctor ha* recommended it for this purpose."— Mrs. H arry CorvoM. North Har rison Av*.. Kankakee. Illinois. Real Evidence of Merit For the relief of female weakness pains and backache, nervousness anc irregularities, with other troubles common to women. Lydia R. Fink ham's Vegetable Compound is a de pendable mcdK'ine. Its worth is thoroughly , stabhshec by such letters as the above There are women every whore, wh . having received benefit, gladly tell other women about it. rot sale by drug gists everywhere. i