Newspaper Page Text
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FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1920
THE -BOURBON NEWSPAWS, KENTUCKY
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NEW SAFEGUARDS FOB
MOTHERS.
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i Reliable Information E
1 All American women know o the great success of I
vomen
LydiaE. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound in restor
ing to health women who suffered from ailments pe
culiar tc their sex, 3et thereare some who are skeptical
a::d do not realize that all that is claimed for it is
absolutely true it they did, our laboratory would not
be half large enough to supply the demand, though
today it is the largest in the country used for the
manufacture of one particular medicine.
The Facts contained in the following two letters should
prove oi benefit to many women :
Eaffalo, X. Y. "I suffered -with
organic inflammation and displace
ment. When lifting I had enckpain
end bearing: down that I was not
able to stand up, and it hurttno to
vralk or go up or down stairs. I was
going to a doctor without any re
sults and he said tho safest thing
"would bo to have an operation. I
met a lady who told mo she had
three operations and was not well
until she took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
1 felt relief after taking twobottles
of Vegetable Compound and I kept
on with it until I was cured. I al
ways use Lydia 33. Pinkham'3 Liver
Pills and they are fine. Everything
used to turn sour on my stomach and
theldver Pills, relieved that." Mrs.
A. Kogees, 93 Fargo Avenue
Buffalo, N. Y.
Sacramento, Caiif. "I had or
ganic trouble and had such terrible
pain and swelling in the lower part
of my side that I could not stand on
my feet or even let the bed clothes
toucb my side. I gave up my work
thinking I would not be able to go
back for. months. My mother ad
vised me to take Lydia E. Pinkbam's
Vegetable Compound as it had saved
her life at one time, and it put mo
in a wonderful condition in a couple
of weeks, so I can keep on working.
I work in a department store and
have to stand on my feet all day and
X do not have any more pains. I
surely recommend your Vegetable
I Compound to all my friends and yon
may use mese lacts as a twuinon-iaL"-Bketha
J. Pa&kjer, 3320 M
SL. Sacramento, Calif.
The fact is, the Best Medicine for Women, is
sjffiBSafcaig
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&
Your figure
every woman's figure. belongs to a certain type.
Every type has its distinctive contour, its lines to
improve, its grace to enhance.
It is this law that our graduate corsetieres follow in
their fitting.
In our exclusive
corset shop
one of the very
few west of New
York you will
find a model
which is de
signed for your
type of figure,
priced from
$2.50 up.
Our complete
stock permits
you to obtain a
model that in
sures a faultless
ness of fit and
comfort and
figure improv
ing qualities not
to be had in any
other way. f .
If inconvenient for you to call, use our prompt, efficient Cor
respondence Service. Send for Spring Style Folder. Mail Order
receive careful attention. Out of town charge accounts solicited.
Parisian Corset Store
corner RACE and OPERA PLACE ciNCWNm
I
CINCINNATI, OHIO, March 18.
"In 1919 the total appropriations
available for the Children's Bu
reau, including an emergency fund
of $250,000, were $528,190; where
as, the Bureau of Animal Industry in
its regular annual appropriation was
granted $4,211,312. These figures
may be verified at the Children's Bu
reau and the Bureau of Animal In
dustry," said Mrs. Wood Park, Pres
ident of the League of Woman Vot
ers, in her third lecture on. "What
Congress Is Doing Now," which she
gave under the auspices of the Wo
man Suffrage Commitee of Greater
Cincinnati in the Library of the Sin
ton, Monday. Her subject for the
day was "New Safeguards for Moth
er and Child."
"This subject," said Mrs. Park,
"is one that has had only a few con
nections with , legislation actually
before Congiesa, because as yet most
legislators do not realize that legis
lative protection is needed for ma
ternity and infancy. Thus far it has
.happened that men have given their
first thought to the protection of the
subjects in which they are especial
ly interested business. They have
not intended to neglect or oppress
women and children, but have failed
to see the importance of legislating
for their needs, just as women woula
have been likely to fail if they had
undertaken to legislate for matters
which men know most about. We
see here one of the most cogent rea
sons for suffrage that both sides of
the house, as it were, should be rep
resented and that these subjects
which are of such vital interest to
women and children should be look
ed after by women who understand
their importance.
Mrs. Paik then described in de
tail a bill for the public protection
of maternity and infancy introduced
into the Senate by Senator Shep
pard and into the House of Repre
sentatives by Representative Turner.
The bill is similar to measures mor
tality in other countries.
"Next to tuberculosis more wo
men lose their lives through child
birth than through any other one
cause, hence the interest which wo
men are taking in this bill," con
tinued Mrs. Park. "It provides for
a federal appropriation of $2,000,
000 for the first year, the sum to be
giadnally increased until it reaches
$1,000,000 annually. It will be ap
portioned among the States in the
proportion which . their population
beais to the total population provid
ed that each State appropriates a
like sum. In addition to this sum
the bill provides for an annual ap
propriation of $480,000 to be divid
ed equally among the States without
guarantee of a like sum.
"The act is to be administered,"
baid the speaker, "by a Federal
Board of Maternal and Infant Hy
giene, to consist of the Secretary of
Labor, Chairman; the Chief of the
Childien's Bureau, executive officer;
the Surgeon General of the United
States Public Health Service and the
United States Commissioner of JSdu
cation. Plans for State work must
be submitted and approved by the
board. The administration of the
act in the States is to be in the
hands of specially created boards.
Advisory Committees, both State and
local, may be appointed to assist in
carrying out the act. At least half
the members of these committees
must be women."
Mrs. Paik digressed a moment to
i elate an amusing experience of Miss
Lathrop, head of the Children's -Bureau,
who was trying to enlist tho
interest of a certain Senator in the
bill, when the latter declared that
the United States was squandering
too much money on sentimental
schemes and that if he had known
that the Senate "was going to
fuss around with mothers and ba
bies," he wouldn't have shown any
interest in the bill at all. When
convinced by Miss Lathrop that tho
lives of innumerable mothers and
children were at stake, that 16,000
mothers lost their lives annually
from conditions caused by child
birth, which were largely prevent
able if proper care were given, that
the maternal death rate in the
United States is fourteenth in a list
of sixteen of the large civilized coun
tries of the world, Spain and Swit
zerland exceeding that of this coun
iry, and that its infant death rate is
nearly twice as high as the death rate
in New Zealand, where it has been
i educed from 123 to 48 in 1.000 in
twenty years, the Senator changed
his mind and became a vigorous
suppoiter of the bill.
THEBESTPROflF
SENATE PASSES HAMILTON'S
HANGING BILL.
approval, and its passage Tuesday
therefore assures its enactment into
law.
Reversing its action of two weeks
ago, the Senate Tuesday passed by a
vote of 20 to 15, Representative
Arch Hamilton's hanging bill pro
viding for public hanging, in tne
county wherein the crime was com
mitted, as the penalty for rape or at
tempted rape. Amended before its
passage in the House, last week to
provide that the execution be in. an
inclosure, with the attendance limit
ed to 100, the bill came to the Sen
-ito bearing the Governor's stamp of
THE BEST LAXATIVE.
"My sedentary habits have neces
sitated the use of an occasional laxa
tive. I have tried many, but found
nothing better than Chamberlain's
Tablets," writes George P. Daniels,
Hardwick, Vt. Mr. Daniels is pro
prietor of the Hardwick Inn, one of
'the model hotels of New England.
(adv)
Given By a Paris Citizen
Doan's Kidney Pills weie used
they bi ought benefit.
The story was told to Pany resi
dents. Time has stiengthened the evi
dence. Has proven the lesults lasting.
The testimony is home testimony.
The pi oof convincing.
It can be investigated by Paris
residents.
Mrs." J. T. Martin. 1024 Main
btreet, says: "Kidney trouble came
on from a fall and theresultb were
veiy severe, causing me more suffer
ing than the fall itself. No one can
ever Jtnow what I went through at
that time, for I suffered awfully. My
back ached and pained until I
thought it would break in two. Sharp
twinges shot through my kidneys
and if anyone had hit me in the
back with a heavy axe, it couldn't
have hurt worse. In one week after
using Doan's Kidney Pills, I felt like
a different woman, for they fixed
me up in fine shape."
After a Lapse of Eight Years.
Mrs. -Martin xsaid: "Doan's Kid
rey Pills have made a cure for me
and it has been permanent."
(adv)
5 HONir BACK .
.M without question if Hunt's Salve
SffiT KlJ 'al n tllc treatment of Eczema,
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JHsBbIbP For sale locally by sVeBs0'PsTv WsSsf IlwRI
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WAGE CUT WON'T REDUCE IIV- W - W
. ING COST, PALMER SAYS. - &4 TT Cm
1 . jv aur every pro- VSB 1
mGl fesslona act s Xi
I, jl performed in a satis-jlj I
'ill factofy manner. nil
W) Our experienced (JJ
&- methods and the just- pl
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conduct are above jj I
criticism. I 1 1
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"I am strong for reducing the high
cost of living," Attorney General
Palmer told the Chamber of Com
merce, at Richmond, Va., "but I
have no hope of doing itjby a reduc
tion of wages. I do not want wages
reduced and I do not think it would
be wise or proper for us ever to get
to a lower level."
Mr. Palmer said the nation could
not deny that the time had come
when labor should have a larger
proportion of the wealth produced
by it in . combination with capital.
Settlement of the labor problem, he
said, was fundamental to a solution
of domestic unrest, which foreign I
agitators hve cultivated in their at
temps to overthrow this government
and transplant here chaotic condi
tions existing in Russia.
Revolutionists, the (Attorney Gen
eral said, never will make such
headway that they may hope to de
stroy a government so firmly estab
lished in the hearts of the people as
the American government, but he
warned that unless checked they
might create such serious disturb
ances as would make life much less
comfortable.
o
Did She Mean Just That?
"I want you to forget that T told
vou I didn t mean what I said about
not taking back my refusal to change
my mind. I've been thinking it over,
and I've decided that T was wrong in
the first place." The Man "You don't
really mean tlat, do you, Dolly?"
London Mail.
ss"
To abort a cold
and prevent com
plications, take
n.
i ciiotrsDs
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, saf e and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
-only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
HHIE
The Housewife Longs For
Electric Labor and Time Savers Like These
Electric Irons, Chafins:
Dishes, Coffee Pots, Cook
Stoves, Hair Curlers,
Hot Plates, Egg Boilers,
Room Heaters, etc.
Electricity is clean, con
venient, safe and eco
nomical because it saves
you so much labor and
household drudgery.
GET THEM ALL
MERE
T. W. SPICER
MAIN
Ulllial-?.;
STREET
OPP- COURT HOIHE
'MHis.
Furs, Hides, Junk, Wool
We pay the highest market nrice for Furs, Hides, Woo
Scrap Iron, Rubber, Rags, Metals, etc. Also Poultry and
Eggs. It will pay you to trade with us.
STERN BROTHERS
Successors to Munich & Wides
Cumberland Phone 374 Eighth St.,opp. Martin Brte.
Paris, Kentucky
THE NORTHERN STATES HAVE ADOPTED THE 56 AUTO -TRACK WAGON
Over 100,000
Standardized Auto-track
Wagons Have Been Sold
This Alone Tells the Story of the Future
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DURING the wr our Government asked the wagon manufacturers of the
United States to conserve wagon-building material and labor from the forest
to the finished product by doing away with all unnecessary styles and sizes
of wagons. So the leading manufacturers got together and decided that the best
way to do this would be to tnake a standardized wagon. The 56-inch auto-track
wagon of today is the result.
This wagon was found to be so much better than any of the odd-track wagons,
like the old 60-inch wagon, that now the principal manufacturers are making
nothing but this type. It lasts longer, pulls easier, and rides better than the wide- .
track wagon because all four wheels iollow the automobile rut while onlv two
wheels of the -wide-track travel in the now universal 56-inch ruts that we find
wherever there are automobiles which is everywhere.
Today there have been sold between 1 00,000 and 1 50,000 standardized auto
track wagons, such as the Weber, in the United Siates and the number is increas
ing every day. Some manufacturers and dealers who were overstocked with
wide-track wagons and material are still selling the now out-of-date wide-track
-wagons, but there are not many farmers Buying them because the farmer of today
is just as up-to-date as anyone and is"too smart to let a dealer sell him out-of-date
goods and for which repairs may be very difficult to get in just a few years.
inatswny we sen rne weoer standardized Auto-1 rack Wagon. We f
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Know its inc wagoauiai eveiy progressive xarmer in inis community -will want.
The Weber has a number of patented and exclusive features that will interestyou.
Let us show them to you. . ;
THE C. S. BALL GARAGE
Cnmv f?miitTi and Pleasant Stsi
WVUW v.. - .,
THE SOUTHERN STATES HAVE ADOPTED THE 56 AUTO -TRACK WAGON
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