The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 11, 1906, Supplement, Image 8

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Columbus Journal
By COLUMBUa JOURNAL Ce.
COLUMBUS,
NEBRASKA.
Use of Vacations.
Most vacations which fail are un
sncceasful because they are mlsits. It
la curioas that in a matter where' in
dividual seeds and personal prefer
ences are so important, observes
Youth's Companion, the final decision
should so often be allowed to rest on
otHjr grounds. For the great ma
jority of men and women who work,
bat who have a vacation, two weeks
represent the limit of time which they
can devote to rest and recreation
That is only one-twenty-sixth part ol
the year, and most persons need all .of
It, and need to use it in the wisest
way. What is the wisest way? No
one but the person himself can tell;
and hence the folly of allowing one
self to be overiufiuenced by the advice
of others. One of the weekly maga
zines lately contained accounts of va
cations in camp, in an automobile, -on
a bicycle, on foot, in a canoe, in hunt
ing with a camera, in seeing Fifttt
avenue, and in searching for wild
flowers. Each of the articles is charm
ing reading, chiefly because the writer
had what he was after rest, recrea
tion and a good time. The reader may
easily be misled into thinking that
the charm belongs intrinsically to the
particular kind of a vacation which is
described. It does not It belongs
only to the exactness with which the
vacation fits. The wisest thing one
can do is to say to himself: "What
is it that I should most like to do?"
And if it fall within his means, and if
he has only himself and his own pleas
ure to consider, do that, regardless of
whether anyone else would enjoy it,
or whether anyone else has ever done
it The hobby or diversion to which
one gives his spare moments during
the rest of the year is often a wise
guide. It requires courage and com
mon sense to disregard conventional
conceptions and half-formed plans,
and to follow the inclination of the
moment; but the reward is nearly al
ways a happy and restful vacation,
and not infrequently at little cost.
Need of Americans.
Under the modest beading "Suits
Over Small Sums" the Boston Tran
script declares that the great principle
of fighting for rights, no matter what
the immediate material thing at stake,
is a thing that the American character
needs to assimilate. The Transcript
says: Highly important decisions
have been based on issues involving
very small money considerations. The
supreme court of the United States last
winter, gave a good deal of time and
research to a cause carried before it
on appeal involving' only $24. A rail
road was, in this case, the defendant
It owed one of its employes, a train
hand, this sum, which was attached
and collected by one of his creditors.
The employe contended that 'the money
.was still due him, and carried the
case up to the highest tribunal in the
land. Our own famous Chief Justice
Shaw wrote one of his most luminous
expositions of legal- principles in de
ciding a case which turned on the
ownership of a bull calf. It is related
that the bar snickered at the frequent
repetition of the phrase "the said bull
calf," and the chief justice rebuked
the laughing lawyers by saying:
"Gentlemen, you do not reflect what
1 a bull calf may be to a poor family!"
Robert Browning went to law over the
value of one bottle of wine, on the
great principle that he would not be
swindled for half a crown if he could
help it The "kicker" is often the
subject of ridicule, but kickers have
helped the world along at times.
Given a great scenic environment and
the "kicker" becomes a historical per
sonage of the first class. John Hamp
den would never have "felt" the
amount of "ship money" assessed on
his estate.
tf
The cse of fingermarks or thumb-
mnrks on checks as a means of guard
ing against forgery and preventing
dishonest persons from raising the fig
ures on them is one of the latest nov
elties in business. -There is a possibil
ity that it will become more than a
novelty. Apparently the first man to
adapt the idea to business affairs is a
merchant of Plainfield, N. J. After
writing a check he places an ink im
pression of his thumb over the figures,
completely covering but not obliter
ating them. It is manifestly impossible
to raise the figures without making
the interference obvious on the thumb
mark. His banker has an ink impres
sion of his thumb on file and compari
son with the mark on the check would
instantly reveal any forgery.
At the Miami university commence
ment at Hamilton, O., Senator Dolli
ver, of Iowa, appeared as the principal
speaker in the academic gown of a
doctor of laws. The senator remarked
that he felt as if he were in bathing
suit and a peekaboo bonnet When
the audience laughed Senator Dolliver
turned to President Benson and said:
"I have said nothing funny. I believe
the people are laughing at my clothes."
He then took off the gown and dropped
it upon the floor, where it remained
until he bad finished.
The Washington girl who was mar
ried to a son of the president of Nica
ragua, after a honeymoon of two
weeks, wants a divorce. What's wrong
with our own young men?
The president of tue Spanish Obrtez.
ays that Alfonso will make a good
&useaad. Meaning, of course, that he
will get steady work and bring all his
say home?
Mllltffliff no longer keep a man in the
pnaUeeye. It is what be
Talked Of
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Mr. Reynolds- was foremost in every good work in the quarter, and fair to add
that he combined with reformatory zeal the tact necessary to make friends ol
local politicians, corrupt or not They all respected him for his earnestness
and liked him for his jollity. The Hon. Jimmy is a good mixer.. So long as
University Settlements are needed, in short, to work among the poor, so Ion
is there are any poor of the East Side type, such men as Reynolds will be need
ed to work there.
When Seth Low became mayor Reynolds became his secretary, a post for
which his tact, good fellowship, knowledge of the city and of its queer char
acters personally highly qualified him. His mission in China and the east fol
lowed. Upon his return less than a year ago he began settlement work.again
but was called from it by the president's beef inquiry. He has for years been
too busy to go Into trade or a profession. He Is fated to public life, and adorns
it
JIMMY IK THE LIONS 2ENr AND WHY.
Why should Reynolds return to New York to
mix at the president's request in-Republican poli
tics? Why should Mr. Roosevelt Interfere?
New York Republicans hardly ask the ques
tion. On the east side of the city it is no joke but
the solemn truth that the Hon. Big Tim selects
the Republican as well as the Democratic district
leaders. However, Mr. Roosevelt is personally
popular there, and a man having his mandate, and
who is besides as well known as Reynolds, can
do a considerable work. From a politician's stand
point it is foolish to leave a great mass of friendly
voters at the mercy of leaders named by the op
position. It was this one-sided system that beat
Hearst for mayor last fall. The Republicans' elec
tion officials obeyed the Democratic leaders.
Hearst's watchers were sometimes bribed away
from him; sometimes they were mere boys and
were intimidated.
The larger outlook of the party in the state is as bad. It ought to get a
great boost from such a splendid piece of work as the Armstrong insurance
bills'. But how can it, if Piatt and Odell control the machine? And there are
signs that these men, long enemies, are combining in the face of the common
foe, which happens to be the decent clement in the party.
Odell was "caught with the goods" in the insurance inquiry. Everybody
expected it to be the last of him. He probably expected it himself. Yet he is
still the state chairman, and still the actual leader, cynical, epigrammatic,
coarse, naked in his defilement and unashamed. Who can blame him? He
could have been deposed by Gov. Higgins, but that official, a man of integrity,
lacks courage and is inclined to temporize. As for Piatt, his personal stand
ards are higher than those of many politicians, higher than he probably gets
credit for; he cares little for money; political power is his dream.
THE PRESIDENT A NEW YORKER
quite as curiosly, the people do not seem to resent his "interference."
What an absurdity, at best, is the present situation. Who is the "logical"
candidate for governor? Hughes, the peerless investigator of insurance,
though he doesn't want the job, probably would not take it. Who is the next
choice? Ex-Ambassador Choate. Nominate Hughes, under the chairmanship
of the man whose money dealings he exposed? Nominate Choate, under the
chairmanship of the man whom he has denounced from the platform? Ridic
ulous! Upon the Democratic side the situation ia simpler. Mayor McClellan has
gone to Europe for a long vacation, firing a parting shot into the Murphy
camp. The mayor is himself the boss of his own administration. That makes
him the leading Democrat of his state. He will not be a candidate for gov
ernor. But that does not limit his future. He is young. Rarely does a man
hew out his line quite so close to the chalk-mark as this slender, boyish fel
low has done. He was elected by Tammany In 1903 for two years, and for two
years he gave New York a Tammany administration. He was elected, or
rather got in by a fluke, in 1905 for four years for his own sake and in spite
of Tammany, and he is now giving New York a McClellan administration.
The party has an ideal candidate for the governorship in Judge Herrick, able
lawyer, born politician, honorable men, gentleman of the old school, a
thoroughbred; of course there is opposition to Herrick amcfig the baser ele
ments of the party, but he also is the "logical" candidate. And always there
is the spectre of Hearst No wonder the decent Republicans are not scolding
the president for "interfering!"
SOCIETY ASPECT OF THE $2,000,
Abram S. Hewitt once said "It takes ten years
to do anything in New York." He might have
added, "and costs millions." The city is about to
have, after at least ten years of talk, a two-mil-lion-doliar
theater. It is to be placed upon a
block of land covering a little more than an acre
and in artistic beauty and richness fit decoration
it will have no rival but the Paris opera house.
The fashionable architects, Carrere & Hastings,
have not forgotten the lesson of that opera house.
Gamier, its designer, was young and unknown.
He gave his design the most magnificent staircase
he could conceive and fitted the rest of the thing
to that. His design was accepted. The New the
ater that is to be its name will have a staircase.
It will have an immense foyer leading to the stair
case. It will also have elevators by which the
staircase may be side-stepped. Its 46 boxes will
be owned in perpetuity by the owners of the building, and if all goes well,
anyone of them will in ten years' time be worth as much as a seat on the
Ftock exchange
Certain it is that the society aspect of the new house will be as strongly
marked as it is in the Metropolitan opera house, which was really built be
cause the old Academy didn't have boxes enough for social display. The play
is not the thing, but secondary. Tfce boxes will placate those newly rich who
cannot get the best boxes at the Metropolitan. Between that home of the
lyric art and Hammerstein's new opera house and 'the $2,000,000 theater with
its 46 boxes society ought to be able to get along somehow for two or three
years without additional opportunities for the display of white shoulders and
shirt-fronts.
COUNTRY ABOUT OYSTER BAY
.j:.j.i Wltn the
suitable to the needs of a man with a
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them by the earnings of his pen and his official salaries, it has been greatly
enlarged and improved since, but is still a small affair compared with some
of the neighboring houses. '
The sum of 1200,000 was recently paid for 16 acres of land with not very
valuable buildings.on the road leading to Sagamore Hill. Five years ago it
might perhaps have been bought for $30,000. For ten miles west from Oyster
Bay and for ten miles sonth and 15 miles east is getting to be the spring and
aatumn center of the wealthiest and awst fashionable New Yorkers.
OWEN LANQDON.
in New York
t
2
Y6RK.I do not see how
the
Hob.
Jimmv Rernolds can longer be kept out of this
veracious chronicle. He belongs to" New York and'
New York letters, anyhow; belonged here before
he was boosted into fame by the, report; belongs
here now more than ever, since he was sent back
by the president to mix up in local Republican
politics.
The Hon. Jimmy was graduated from Yale a
quarter of a century ago, but has kept his youth.
For eight years he was the head worker of the
University settlement on the East Side. To this
day no one knows the East Side better than he;
no one, not even the Hon. Big Tom Sullivan, has
more personal friends and acquaintances there.
Indeed, where people regard the Hon. Big Tim
with awe they look upon the Hon Jimmy as an
..i .! o frionri It is unnecessary to add that
Up I
AND WILL INTERFERE.
The president has not the slightest idea of let
ting things go that way. And he is not deterred,
as most men would be, by precedents of non-interference.
Arthur's interference for Folger was
disastrous, though Arthur was a good president
and Folger an able and reputable candidate for
governor. This case may be different The presi
dent is responsible mainly for the selection of
Congressman Parsons, an honorable man of high
ability who will be heard from in Washington,
where he is serving his first term, as county chair
man. Parsons has had to suffer all sorts of in
dignities at the hands of the Odellites. It is to
aid him mainly that Reynolds is to come to New
York. The president was also responsible for the
selection of young Jimmy Wadsworth as speaker
of the last assembly. He has a curious liking, the
president, for honest men in political place, and.
OOO THEATER.
GAINS IN VALUE.
adjournment of congress Oyster Bay
takes on new activity. Mr. Roosevelt is the first
president in some years who has been valuable
as a social factor. Mr. Cleveland never erected
Marion Mass into a real summer resort even with
the help of Richard Harding Davis and Joe Jef
ferson. Grant was a financial rather than a social
factor. Long Branch, which he favored with his
society and horsemanship, would be dead as a
doornail now but for cottagers of a humble sort
and the automobile runs, which have revivified
hotel life for a hundred miles in every direction.
Hayes could not well establish a summer resort in
Ohio and McKinley and Garfield had quiet country
homes of the sort the average prosperous busi
ness man in a country town affects. So has Mr.
Roosevelt, for that matter. Sagamore Hill, when
he built it was a large but fairly plain house.
large family who had in part to support
lie RULER OF
.-"
'
MAS PaZ MUCH FOR HIS COUN
TRY AMD PEOPLE.'
Traifta of Character of the Man Who
, Has trust Granted a Constitution
3 t Mis TmjyU S tildes the
S3Bgd6m Has Made.
In the granting of a constitution to
his subjects a few weeks ago Nich
olas L of Montenegro has won for
himself the title of "Father of His
Country-" And well may his grate
ful subjects appreciate the service
which he has been able by his devo
tion and wisdom to render the coun
try over which hejbias ruled for some
40 years. 'S
Montenegro does not) stand out
large on the map, .claiming as it does
only 3,680 miles on '"the eastern shore
of the Adriatic sea, but as the buffer
state between Austria and Turkey she
NICHOLAS I. OF MONTENEGRO.
may yet play the important part in
the great near eastern question which
is certain to come up for solution in
the future. To those who have
watched the developments in Monte
negro during the past few years has
some the consciousness that she has
been advancing towards modern civ
ilization with leaps and bounds, and
Nicholas has been largely the inspira
tion and the moving spirit in it all.
Nicholas Petrovic-Njegos is really
a very remarkable man large in
stature and large in ideas. Only
twice can it be said that bis name
has come prominently into public
view. Once in 1898, when his daugh
ter Helena married the prince of Na
ples, now king of Italy, and again
just the other day when he placed!
the nation under a constitution and
won for himself that cognomen by
which Americans delight to refer to
their beloved Washington.
Montenegro has not marked time
SPORTS AND
Probably the only woman in the
country who officiates as a baseball
umpire is Miss
Amanda Clement,
a student at the
Yankton, S. D.,
college. Miss
Clement is 17
years old, hand
some and healthy,
and fills the on
erous position of
arbiter on the
diamond with a
grace and digni
ty that" renders
her decisions sat
isfactory to all
contestants. Her
sight is of the
MISS AMANDA
CLEMENT.
keenest, her knowledge of the
game is thorough and she has
jm intimate acquaintance with all
the fine points and ."inside
plays." Miss Clement's services are
equally sought by amateurs and pro
fessionals, and she has received urg
ent calls, both by wire and letter, to
hold the "indicator at baseball con
tests. Miss Clement, however, con
tinues her studies at the college and
is not at all disturbed by the peculiar
'fame that she has acquired. She re
ceives pay and expenses for her work
on the diamond, and could make an
excellent living by umpiring, but has
decided not to abandon her books.
iWith the money she already has
earned she will be able to continue
in school for a longer period than she
had anticipated. Miss Clement's home
is at Hudson, S. D. She received her
knowledge of baseball through her
brother, who is a professional player.
She first started umpiring for fun,
but her work at once challenged rec
ognition and she has become a prime
favorite. When she appears on the
field she wears a natty blue suit and
a short blouse, her wealth of hair
being tucked up beneath a captivating
cap. No hesitation marks her rul
ings and when plays are made at the
bases she is "right over them." Miss
Clement is now teaching physical cul
ture in the college summer school and
TeaCakes Win
London. When Thomas Charles
Aga-Robartes sought election to par
liament from the Bodmin division of
Cornwall just before the recent liberal
landslide he inaugurated something
.new In the line of electioneering.
He gave garden parties to the horny-
handed farmers and grimy-faced delv-
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ers in the Cornish mines. He serveiMis seat
tea cakes and cream, while his oppowf
nent, keeping open house in the otin
familiar way at the nearest "pub."
Jeered, laughed and wagered he would
win.
Then came the startling result The
tea cakes and cream beat the beer and
Bass ale. Thomas Charles Aga-Robartes
was elected.
But developments came fast after
this. After being startled at such an
unthinkable thing as being beaten by
garden parties the defeated candidate
charged election fraud. And even his
charge was unusual because it made
no mention of ballot box stuffing or
the intimidation of voters. Instead he
charged that the tea parties of Mr.
MONTENEGRO
under the rule of Prince Nicholas. In
1900 it boasted only, of two high
roads. To-day there are a haJf dosen,
completed or on the verge of com
pletion, and the vast wooden districts
of Kolashin and Andrevitza are prac
tically connected by what will short
ly be one of the finest highways in
the world. The rivers, which were
formerly crossed by fords, are now
spanned by bridges. Nicholas Petrovic-Njegos
has not been able to
make wealth flow Into his country,
but he has preached the gospel of
work and of sufficiency in the neces
sities of life.
For some 40 years he governed his
country not only as an absolute mon
arch, but as the head of a family
who owned the territory and whose
subjects were his children. His wife
is a most excellent woman, the daugh
ter of a personal friend and late vice
president of the council, Peter Vu
kotic. Subsequent to the marriage of
their daughter to Victor Emmanuel
Nicholas has paid several visits to
Rome,, usually in the spring, when he
might have been seen wandering
about the streets, as a rule unattend
ed, his great height, six feet two
inches, and his ancient Servian garb
the cynosure of all passers-by. These
visits to Rome and the conversations
that he had at the court of his son-in-law
gradually opened his eyes to
the fact that his people, who are
taught to memorize Homer and Virgil,
although few of them can read or
write, were almost capable of making
their own laws. So he decided, last
winter, to give them a constitution,
which was accepted, like his other
gifts, without demonstration, bnt with
a deep sense of gratitude. He also
abolished capital punishment granted
complete liberty of speech and of the
press, and even invited an Italian
cartoonist. to visit Cetinje and make
things lively with his caricatures.
Although still miserably poor, Mon
tenegro has greatly improved her
financial condition in the last few
years. Emigration, chiefly to the
United States, has been a boon to her,
for very few Montenegrans leave their
home permanently, and those who go
away to better their condition send
money home;
A curious incident marked the
proclamation of the new constitution.
A delegation of aged men waited upon
the prince and begged him not to
grant it. These men made use of the
word "barbaroi" in referring to those
peoples in western Europe who have
constitutions. For years they had
been accustomed to journey to Cetinje
to lay their wrongs before their "Fa
ther" Nicholas, . seated under the
shadow of the famous oak tree, and
they had always accepted his verdict
without murmur, as something abso
lute. And this new story that his
word was no longer to be law filled
them with incredulity and amazement.
ATHLETICS
is captain of the girls' basket-ball
team. She is the best all-around gym
nast in the school and can throw a
baseball 205 feet. She is modest and
unassuming and is a great favorite
in this city, where her skill in ath
letics, her fine voice and other at
tainments are fully recognized. An
eastern paper recently asserted that
Miss Clement already has received 60
proposals of marriage. This, she de
clares, is an absurd fabrication, laugh
ingly adding that so far she has not
received even one. This may be con
sidered jocular, but there is no joke
about Miss Clement's work as an um
pire. But see her once, mask on, be
hind the catcher and hear her call
the balls and strikes, and at once you
reach the conclusion that a young
woman of skill, judgment and deter
mination is performing with marked
ability.
The forty-sixth open golf champion
ship of Great Britain was won by the
present holder,
James Braid, at
the tournament at
Muirfield, Scotland,
recently. His
score after three
days' play and four
rounds was 300.
W. K. Taylor was
second with a
score of 304 and
Harry Vardon,
winner of the
championship i n
1903, third with
305. The leading
amateur, J. Gra-
JA.MES BRAID.
ham, Jr., totaled only one more, 306.
Braid i? a Scotchman, and this is his
third success in the classic event, and
puts him on even terms with J. H.
Taylor, who has won three times.
Harry Vardon has won it four times.
In 12 years Braid never has finished
lower than eighth. He has been sec
ond thrice, tiird once, fifth thrice,
seventh once, and eighth once. In ad
dition, Braid twice has won the News
of the World tournament, the greatest
prize of modern professional golf.
awlfAj JWei
M. P.'S Seat.
Rpbartes were unfair.
Most astonishing of all the royal
election court has sustained the oppo
nent of Mr. Robartes. It has said gar
den parties are an illegal election
method and Mr. Robartes, who is the
liberal son of Lord Clifton, a conser
vative viscount has been ousted from
Precocious Youngster.
"Tommy," said Mr. Tucker, "I've
been reading about the danger of boys
growing up with deformed shoulders
because of their always carrying their
school books under; one arm, and I
don't want to raise a lop-sided boy.
How do you carry your school books?"
"In my head, paw," said Tommy.
Chicago Tribune.
Forcing the Issue.
He (bashfully) I'm er going
to
klssjrou when I go.
She Well, here's your hat but
what's your hurry? Chicago Daily
News. - -.
tjbi
Me Wlanoaah. Voa OeJ a .New
Jersey girl 3 years oM, is making
ealte n reputation as a horsebreaker.
Five years ago. n slender slip of n
girl, she went to South Dakota with
her another, who had been sent thither
for a change of climate. Miss Win
nonah learned to ride bronchos oat
there and on returning east she took
to training and breaking horses, in
which work she has been remarkably
successful. She has never sustained
nay iajury while thus engaged.
Laundry work at home would be
nrach more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear
ing quality of the goods. This trouble
can be entirely overcome by using De
fiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Sacrifice Made by Judge.
Justice Holmes, of the supreme
court, in order that he may preserve
his mind free from distractions of in
formation and misinformation that
would impair his efficiency, and wis
dom as a jurist, does not allow him
self to read the newspapers.
Little Girl's Desire.
Mabel had always worn high-topped
hoes, much to hr own dissatisfaction,
and one day while admiring her moth
er's slippers she said: "Mamma.
can't I have a pair of low-necked
shoes next summer?"
Any man who has to get up and get
his own breakfast while his wife lies
in bed is likely to feel like turning
the "God Bless Our Home" motto to
the wall.
Defiance Starch Good, hot or cold
the best for all kinds of laundry work,
16 oz. for 10c
One-half the world doesn't know how
the other half lives, unless it Is by
not paying their bills. Puck.
Lewis Single Binder straight 5c. Many
smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HI.
The amount of work a boy puts Into
baseball would raise a lot of potatoes
for him to eat N. Y. Press.
Mra. Wlnalow's Soothtac Syrup.
For eMIdrto teetbln?. tof tens the Kama, reduce fe
lMamgUoo.mUajipaln.car wlartcollc. 2ScbotU.
It requires the burning of a good
deal of money to make a "hot time."
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Anerfect Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Stoaach.Diarrhoca.
VYoriRSJLonvuisiORS.revensn
oess andLoss OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPT OF WRAPPER.
CAUSE OF RHEUMATISM
An eminent physician says that rheumatism is the direct result of improper
eating arid may be absolutely cured by leaving- out your dietary animal foods
of all kinds and living on cereals, frnta, nuts and vegetables. A diet consisting
of milk and cereal foods will cure the most acute form of Rheumatism, while
those who live mainly on animal foods, cannot escape it.
DR. PRICES
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
FOOD
is rich in potassium and sodium which are the essentials of the det of persoai
with Rhewmatic dispositions. The whole wheat beny being used, the food De
comes a regulator of the bowels, while the celery acts asa nerve tonic.
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afflnTIQN AYMEI
EXPEMEaHtFMmMEtKLEY
Wu
How
It
When a physician tells a woman suf
fering with serioBs feminise trouble
that aa operation is accessary, the very
thought of the knife and the operating
table strikes terror to her heart, and
our hospitalsare fall of wobkb coming
for just sock operations.
There are cases where an operation
is the only resource, but when one con
siders the great number of cases ot
menacing female troubles cured by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound after physicians have advised
operations, no woman should submit to
one without first trying the Vegetal Je
Compound and writing Mrs. Pinkha i,
Lynn, Mass., for advice, which is fn. .
Miss Hargret Merkley, of 273 Thi.d
Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
"Loss of strength, extreme nervousness,
shooting pains through the pelvic organs.
bearing down pains ami cramps compelled
me to seek medical advice. The doctor, after
making an examination, said I bad a female
trouble and ulceration and advised an opera
tion. To this I stronglv objected and decided
to try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com
pound. The ulceration quickly healed, all
the bad symptoms disappeared and I aa
once (Bore strong, vigorous and welL"
Female troubles are steadily on the
Increase among women. If the month
ly periods are very painful, or too fre
quent and excessive if yon have pain
or swelling low down in the left side,
bearing-down pains, don't neglect your
self : try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
IK HIST rLfULLU affords comfort toe wjr
One Mb box larta the entire euon. lUrmlraa
to persons. Cln.
neat anil will not
aoll or Injure
njthlB-r. Try
them once and
you will nerer be
without them. If
not kept by deal
era, aent pre-iatil
tortlr. fttnH
tUniri. IMWriU
em.a-weUiaAI.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Dse
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMC CtNTaUM COMMMJY. MEW VON CITY.
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