OCR Interpretation


The Ogden standard-examiner. [volume] (Ogden, Utah) 1920-current, September 26, 1920, LAST EDITION, Image 7

Image and text provided by University of Utah, Marriott Library

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058393/1920-09-26/ed-1/seq-7/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for 5

I J k
I The Utah
i Hot Springs
f OPEN
ALL
YEAR
4 f
Speciai Car Service
LEAVES OCDEN
" j Saturday Sunday
12 30 P. M. 12 30 P M.
fVH 3:30 P M. 1:30 P. M
5 30 P M. 2 M P M
;!? 6:00 P M. , - -
fK3 7:15 P M. .
8:00 P M 4:00 P- M-
8:30 P. M 0 00 P. M.
: 9:00 P. M. 5;3o p. M.
f?tjT'. 1 6:00 P. M.
List Car 7.,5 p M
Leaves
SprlnoG P OO P. M
for Ogdcn S 20 P M.
at 1 1 ;30 P. M. 9:00 P. M.
BIG FREE DANCE
SATURDAY NIGHT
CABARET DANCING
4 SWIMMING. CATHINC
.fi WATER SPORTS
I DAILY
COME OUT!
m Dr. Ray Paker V.
m Farewell Sermos
jrwyj Dr. Hay Palmer will preach his
UgaSi farewell sermon tonight at S p. m at
J1 11k First Ba pt i-l chin )i Jus! behind
?Wc? ,h ' l"''","llc' !! will speak on the
Kjjtjti question of "Immortality " The pastor
sS sahl
.' . ;, This hi- even been the on hum-
HH ing question of all age, especially
nSLg since the world war, and millions of
jS en have been swept from the earth
gjgJM the fields of carnage, the world has
jgflH rned, with t ear-dimmed eyca to the
mm Question: "If a .Man Die. Shall He
?2tW Lav Again?"
Wr AID YOUNG TEXANS IN
CASTING FIRST BALLOT
Al'STIX, TeX., Sept. 25. A hill pro
posing that men and women who.havc
HB become of voting age s.ncc January
BHfl 1 be permitted to obtain exemption
mUm dertiflcatcs which would entitle, them
to vote In all electli
UPR ordered reported favorably today bj
u the Texas legislature's hoti.se eommltce
on privilege, suffrage and election.
ISSUE ILBE11T ROXDS.
(Qy International New Service)
CTS EDM' INTON Albertn.--The tender
J of the United Financial Corporation
for $2,000,000 If-sues of Alberta bonds
Tm 1ms. been accepted. li is underste
that part, of the Issue will be offi r 1
IJl - j In Canada by the United P'in.i n j 1 1
if4 Corporation, but probably the bulk in
the Fnited Slates, where the corpor-
':,V. ation has Us head office.
I lere' ,oyrui rews for every Ccahy perftin
I who loves good things to eat, especially
those who arc denying thmcclvM the
; things they like most because ot their de
sire to keep down their weight or to re
duce the fat frith which they are already
burdened.
1 There is no further necessity to diet in
I "rder to keep your wciphl down or reduce
la: fat ycu Sivc already tcquired.
1 The famous Marmola Prcocriptioa has
j been put up in tablet form, and is now sold
by all drwtiisis at one dollar for a good
li s-zebox. To get rid of fat at the rate of two.
U thrccorfour pounds a week, iusttakeoneof
' these little table's after each meal and at
bedtime until you have reduced your
I weight to where? you want it Nownnkltj
j1 5 or flabbuicss will remain. Use Marmola J
B Prescription Tablets according to direc
j tions a few weeks and get results without
, I going throuKh long sieges of tiresome
I exercise and starvation diet. Get then, at 1
I I any drug store or send the price to the 1
IB I Mormol.aCo.. 93 Garfield BuildaiK. Detroit,
I Mich., and receive ttvcm by mail, prepaid,
j In plsln. sealed cover j
I Airman's Dog Mourns
GUARDS PILOT'slcOAT
y& SC MP
'Refuses to Leave It
B ai n UtDl
What is to herome of the dog.'
This Is the question that Is agitat
jing the minds of members of the
United States air mail service The
animal in question was th property
of Pilot Walter Stevens who was
I killed at Toledo recently when he
I crashed as he went to pick up the mail
of a comrade.
At Rock Springs, Wyo., the faithful
dog is still waiting beside his master's
coat waiting for the master who will
never return.
I.i: A ES PET BEHIND
Three weeks ago Stevens was com
I Ing west "ferrying" one of the first
planes in preparation for the trans
continental air mail service In the
plane with Stevens was his faithful
companion his dog They were in
separable. In effecting the landing at
I Roek Springs the landing gear of the
I plane was smashed. It ihen became
necessary for this aviator to take an
; other plane east and for the first time
I he was forced to leave his "pet'' be
hind Tim airman, hdwever, proposed
tO pick Up tKe drR on hi.- r turn W( St
which was to be his last Journey In the
air service and which resulted fatally.
1 When the body of the noted air man
lairlvcd at Rock Springs en route to,
the coast the? faithful dog wis taken
I to tiv a jkei ie ' he la said l " ha 1 0
displayed almost human intelligence:
In realizing that his master was gone !
I Tears filled the eyes of those about
tii. rhen the dog burled 111
(head Is his paws, and whined He I
(still demons-rating his fait hf nine--, bj
1 guarding bis owner s eoai apparentlj
i harboring the forlorn hope that some
miracle may vet bring hie master back
! The bods of th noted airman passed
through Ogden lajsl Sunday More
I than twenty representatives of the nil
s r ice Including flers. paid respect
to th! dead mail and many floral of-j
I feting were in evidence
DEI BXDS DOG
Mans tributes have been paid to the
BJ BlilCKS
APPEAR II
j IMPROVED FOB
"For twenty years the Duick Motor
j Company- has adhered steadfastly 10
LcTinite principles of motor car de
sign and manufacture," says E. T.
Strong. General Sales Manager BuiCK
Motor Co.
And. 1 he highest pinnacle in this
(long period of Duick development has
j been reached in the new lint for
Nineteen Twenty One.
"The casual observer on the street
lor In the showroom will note that
I the most striking change is in the
j new lines of the bod, iop radiator,
ihood and cowl, which blend into a
harmonious whole ot rare and giace
lul beauty. Yet, (here is nothing
spectacular or radical In the new
1 lines and those famlllr.r with Bulck
(methods will understand that the out
ward appearance merely betokens the
inner goodness of the new Bulck
"Throughout (he tntire chassis
I mechanical changes have been intro
duced wherevei possible to make for
(easier adjustments and care 01 work
ing parts For example the clutch
can now be readily adjusted wilh a
wrench direetlv beneath the floor
board.
"It is no longer necessary for one I
to get under the ear in oraer lo drain
oil from Ihe crank eae lust msido
of the hood there is a handle which
operates the plug in the crank case.
In a similar way, water may be
drained fiom the radiator by turning
an extended handle placed within
convenient reach.
" Another illustration of Duick at
tention to detail is seen in the ac- '
cesslbility of batteries in closed cara,
which are provided With a small door
In the floor board over the battery I
box.
"Owing to the growing demand for
a more roomy and luxurious road
ster, the new Model Twenty-One-Forty-Four
has been studiously de
signed with the result that it is dis !
tinctly a new model. As remarkable 1
as it is with Its improved lines, it
still possesses the characteristic
Duick style
"The rear of the body has been
widci.ed, making n exceptionally.
Comfortable, for two passengers be
sides the driver. These are two spac
ious compartments one back of the
seat and another beneath the rear I
l.dedk. that affords ample storage'
space,
1 "The five passenger opea car,
j Model Twenty One-Forty Five, has
la graceful, low appearance. The'
driving compartment and ihe ton
neau have been re-arranged slightlv
to provide more room and the seats I
have been changed so as to afford
the mosi comfortable position for
driver and p'issengers.
"Model Twenty One-Forty Nine, tho 1
seven passenger open ear, is con-'
tinned as the ideal car for the ram
ily. Door openings have been wid
encd and more room for extra pas- 1
sengers has been secured. Forty
Nice is a big. useful car. beautiful,
refined ;md easllj com rolled
All of the open cars are equipped '
with the ne Bulok patented top
which pecmits bo unobstructed vie
to all occupants Snug-flttlng cni
tains swing with the doora. Due I
to the fiiet that do few owners drive
w ith their tops down, top carrier I
Irons have been eliminated. How-
ever, irons ind slip covers may be!
secured by the owner if he so desires ',
"Duick closed cara have been
greatly improved also. The three '
previous models have been developed
and, in addition a new four pu ,
ger coupe. Model Twenty one Fortv
Eight
In ihe complete line the Duick
Motor company sees that a new
quality has b.en establishes)- a qual
ity that has logically resulted from
twenty years' experience in building
1 motor oar wording to accepted
engineering ideals. Master craftsmen
always finding new ways to express 1
. dog" by eminent men who have eome
t. realise the faithfulness of the ea
rn., to the human race. During ih''
war aa agitation was started to kill
I all dogs becauw it was olaimed that
I they were consuming much food that
should ho used for the human race.
'This movement spurred many wrltem
;t. defend the dog ' One of she mom
I Important was He- 'fi' ring of the well
known K. C B. In New York publi
cation which says:
"I wonder how manj thousands and
I hundreds of thousands Of men and
women and erii'Jren all over this land
1 will find today a little brighter and
! their hearts a little lighter because
Of the dog. And I wonder how many
men in our troinlng camps and how
many men across the seas are wonder
ing It" the promise that somebody guve
Una their canine friend would be cared
j for is being kept.
I And I wonder If perhaps it
1 wouldn't be better that We should suf
fer and hunger a tittle than that we
'should live Into a time when our hearts
'would say and our conscience we're
'sorrv. old man, that the price of food
'has Increased so much that We must:
kill you.'
You'll call this the maudlin some
of you. hut If I had my choice to live
In the world that would make demand
Of such saerifice and heed it not or
to go my way down Into the vale from
Ih- deuths of which, no path leads
back, I'd go that wav. for it might be
I'd have a fear that when age crept
mi and trembling hands and weaken-1
en Unit's had get me down as a useless I
thing, there might arise some patriot
who would point me out as worth
much less than my subtenuncc
And If it happens that while I live
the time should come when hunger
stalks. I 11 share what I have wilh my
dog And If this be maudlin, you ma' '
marl; me down .is a maudlin thing and
you may add that I one time cried at
the grave of a dog and was unashamed
NO STRIKE AT
CAN FflCTORYl
Eastern Trouble Will Not Af-
feet Oqden, Says Local
Superintendent
i
trouble la being experienced at
I the Ogden plant of the American Can
company, as the result of what Is
I said in the east to be a general strike
of o.OOO machinists employed by the
company in Its fifty-six plants through
' out the country, according to n state
ment made yesteroav b John C '
Leonard, superintendent of the Ogden I
plant
Mr Leonard stated there were less)
than ten men employed at the Ogden
plant as machinists and they have no 1
grleveance or reason to go on strike
He further declared that he expected I
no action on the part of his men.
either to strike or go out In synipath
rtlth the eastern machinists The
I present period, he sab), was the ex-1
treme dull season and the men feol
fortunate In getting stead emplov
ment. I Ih" eastern dispatch stated that a
I general strike against the company
1 was called yesterday, involving 5.O00.
men. by the executive committee of
the International Association of Ma
chinists, and approved by the conven
tlon of the association now In ses
sion at Rochester, . V
The strike w;;s su,ld by the officers
of the union to be the result of diss-1
SensiOn at the .Newark N. J. plant of)
the company.
Efforts at an agree'nunt are said
to have been made it eonterenres in
New York City and the other In San
f-ranclsco. Among the plants safd to
be affected by the strike are those In
San Francisco und Los Angeles j
" ' ,
their skill, have taken great pride In
the Twenty Due models. They have I
accomplished that wondreful thing in
making a highly dependable piece of j 1
machinery an unusually beatlful ub
ject. They have created a type of de '
sign which pleasing to look ai the
first time, becomes a source of
greater pleasure the more often it
Is seen.
"Lint, elegant as they are. the new
cars are more likely to be conspic
uous for their power and perform
an e their ease of control and com
fortable service. For Duick engin
eers have not directed their efforts
toward any sfQgle Hung. Thev have
rather developed all of the details '
that make up complete motoring ut
isfactlon. And their accomplishment
is nothing short of remarkable."
Attention, Eagles
You are invited to attend a special
meeting Wednesday evening Septem
ber 29, at 8 p m.
It is the earnest desire of the sec
retary that all Eagles of the past
and present be in attendance.
FRANK FRANCIS, Secty.
The Commercial J
National Bank 8
OGDEN, UTAH 1
I YOUB COMMER- II
I CIAL FINANCIAL II
N .is well as those of I'
I personal character, a
will have tin; very
9 beat attention and
m '.tie when entrusted
K i" the Commercial
G National Bank.
I I Ihei king accounts
I are invited.
LAST & THOMAS j I
Attractive Bargains " A H
1 r?zr:':'.Z. DemonstratinQ Our 1 I
Special Reduced cJ' 'M
50c to 65c colored , n- rX - 1 j 'H
.tonnes Spo-ial yd 35c V.jt 0)J? H
Kxeellenl lV.r reenvenn- U jMgk 'K?
and '4 ftffi'- To sell new wearing apparel fflft IH
'" ,,: r":f" at savings that are astoundinr 'Jrtlf&SBSBk s.H
v . i.i. i.iim',' of beautiful J '" Ji, f fL . AiSSScP 'bsBl
, Tu. lWti a W -JTi. to the most conservative Hl
' . "M" buyers (IgPPBfB 'bbssH
Cretonne Special 48c yard SjL '-me and isit our ready made JhRl H
1' .i in . retoiine, iv, nl, v?T'? vri department and v nn v.id no- UH BBB
Toe ard in a desiral'l lVf,-jyr ,h' r-nt redip.-iions. Right cL EfrWrOSHk LsssssH
r.Mi.'e of colored iIm'-'m. ' trend of the season. sMfl 'H
assoitmeiil to.ho-ee from Styl& CoGltS BbssH
I Fancy Cretonne L ' Foremosi tBifssl liaK
Special 58c yard rr, , wbSsm&B fl
b I f r nv women and misses in a pop- jjtfg9w Bi
N'.due, up i" $1 o yard 1 .j? ular range of prices in reach of all. ' j ssssKss!
are among the handsome t- v. Coats individualized in designing ( 9
assortment BvetJ' color f oremo garment makers AV ssssa
imaginable blended In rich w xc"' York and Pans. Developed A f)
combinations Special ap- in such fine materials as Duvetue, Jf HR
propriated for side draper f1 Velour, Peeo salt Plushes, Fur ' assHl
and curtains njiine bar- coats and fur trimmed styles 'Hsl
gain JJ (.harming in then- splendor and flftl
reasonable in pri eg !Lk!
Draping Cretonne sHnl
in Fancj ol'T bbsswS
Combinations THE BED SPREAD SALE COTTON BATTS K
Special 69c yard R drawing commim for .valu";' 4 Pounds in Weight, Special $1.55 81
H There are still some wonderful values to select IH
Assortment of high grade from $3.50. croehet bedspreads,. special . $2.25 For extra large comforts, snow white cotton, one I Bb
B colored cretonnes, values $5.60 large eiise crochet bedspreads, scalloped and solid size sheet, 81x90. Xot often you will find I 'h!
0 up to $1 50 Pull j'ard ''", corners special $3 95 such extra large cotton baits that will make a I
9 wide, beautiful flower an 1 $8.00 regular satin bedspread- scalloped .md eut real quilt at such a low price. iibUs
jf bird designs Eor lane- corners, beautiful patterns, exceptional bargain ' 'Li
work and home decorating Special $6.0. BLANKET SALE Bj
g The choicesl colors and BED PILLOWS
g designs, at a remarkable $2 68 Each Wool and cotton mixed heavy grade plaid blnn- 'iE'
B sale price kets, regular $8 value speeialh l edin ed to $6.75 2 HPt
Feather pillows regular (3.50 values, made up in H
Dress Ginghams the verj best qualitj fancj ticking, largi? pillows. Poll dopble bed size wool finish plaid blankets, iK'
0 stuffed with turkey and chicken feathers soft as conies in several dainty colors, genuine quality I Eg
uSc yard down. Remarkable sale price. blankets at a bargain price
!L' III' lie-; wide, soft fill- LsiSK
B ish dress ginghams Ret: . .
1 during this special seUing l V I S MONDAY, TUESDAY II
g event at this great price 3 flJ 1 kJ tl I AND WEDNESDAY B
K . pn ssion omes in a 'sWE
B large range of beautiful 'r'W Tlfc f T ITfc 'T T ITfHPi. To Buy Women's Fine .Ktf
plaids stripes and cl YOUK UP F OK i UINll Y Shoes Far Below Cost I IK
nnalit gingham lor wash r-m.
Fine Gray, Mustard, Brown and Black Shoes, with all the heels and toe3 tRteji
Special price $1.88 pair MadebyJ&T Cousins and Queen Quality &m?rjS3 I Wt
I ong glov es in bean, white, fl$&Z7rT sV. ssVB bsbT P-m bbO
8 L B
I '' I I
1 "Ig 'lo es gi-. , srrVh" BUY NOW f0 K'
I LAST & THOMAS-- 1 j
EXPERIENCES IN
UTSH DESCRIBED
Tom Fitch Writes on Beehive
State in Los Angeles
Paner
Under the caption, "Mosos Gath
ered by a Rollins Stone." Tom Pitch
writing In the L,os Angeles XI in Mi hay
the following to say of experiences In
Ltah.
in 1 $ 7 J professional business called
,me to Salt Lrfike City aa counsel In an
action involving the title of a valu
able mining property While there, I
Was employed by Bngham Young to
;islst in the defense of criminal nc
'tlons against Mormons In the tourts.
lund the intlmatr relations of COUnMl
Jand client caused Die lo obtain an ln
!.l' Mi of .MormoMisin in It-; com
merclal; Its social, anl Its religious aa
; iiecto,
i sTHl QOIE BEGINS.
The struggle between the United
I States government to expirats polyga
my and of the Mormon leaders to re
tain it. vo8 then in progress The
leader of the anti-Mormon forces w.ts
u New York lawyer named McKean,
who had been appointed ehlff Justice
of I tah territory He was appropri
ately designated as a mission-jurist
Ho wus a judge with a mission ' to
carry out; a judge panoplied with a
puipose as of complete steel With
Implacable and unswerving determin
ation he subordinated his judicial du
ties and his judicial character to tho
fulfilment of his 'mission'' and the
execution of his "policy-" He pos
sessed sufficient knowledge of law to1
comply with its forms, and sufficient
i " raonul courage to forward his pluns.
but ho was utterly destitute of the
spirit of Impartial Jurisprudence He
made a series of rapid-fire decisions
to accomplish his purpose of putting
an end to polygamous marriages
The American people had no tr.'er
ailCS for polygamy. It denied that dl
vlnest element of our nature: that
sweetest gift of God; that sacred pas-1
slon which no man ran feel at once
for two women, which no woman can
entertain l"i a man whom she does.
not believe to be exclusively her own
WHAT M'KJEAIS DECIDED.
McKean decided that the I'nited
States district attorney and not tho
local district attorney was the proper
prosecuting officer, that the United
States marshal and not the county
Sheriff was the proper olflcer to sum
jnion a Jury; that tho marshal was not
lobllged to follow the territorial law
and select jurors from the assessment.
roll, that the court could prescribe the
'method of selecting Jurors, and ho or
jdered tin clerk of his court to lssuo
to the Ulllted States Marshal an open
enlro to pick Jurors.
He ruled thut In prosecutions for
bigamy or polygamy, not only those
who practiced It, but those who be-
lleved In it should be excluded f roni
the Jurj lie ruled that the wife
I might be a witness against the hus
Iband; that marriage might be proved
' by general reputation) and that the
M ituie "f limitations should be no de
fense against charges of polygamy.
The mineral deposits of I tah had
I attracted b large number of active, nd
I venturous men. many of whom wire
unscrupulous, many of whom were I
I reckless, and some of whom wera foes'
;to industry, order and law This class,
j finding the federal officers arrayed,
against the Mormons, placed them-1
selves on the aide of the federal CQUrtsI
and officers. Ulements which are
, usually antagonistic blended thom-l
selves together. The officers of justice
found allies Id men who, under differ
lent circumstances, would have been
their foes The bagnios and the B unb
llng hells shouted lioaannas to the
courts: tho drunkard espoused the,1
cause of temperance md from them,
the marshal picked a grand Jury which
pi led lo Indict Drlgham Young
(aiNecR Ate (
MADE N OODEN BV
j STANDARD BOTTLING CO. l
and other Mormon leaders, not dnly
for polygamy, but for murder.
When these indictments were pre
sented In court., I moved to quash them
on the ground that the grand jury
which found them had beon selected
and impaneled in violation of law.
From the refusal of McKean to grant
the motion I took an appeal to the
United States supreme court and that
tribunal sustained my contention.
Id Tl Li: DII Uni' NCE.
Except in the doctrine of polygam.
the Mormon faith does not tllfler ma
terially from thut. of the Methodist,
the Baptist, the Presbyterians or that
ot n.in Protestant denomination The
Mormons accept the Old Testament
entire, with the Book of Mormon add
ed The New Testament they supple
ment with the revelations of Josepii
Smith
The success of Mormonism m be
attributed lo the fact thj' It was
something mote than a theology. It
was a co-operative Industrial society.
It was an educational, social, busi
ness, mutual Improvement and benefit
soclet) It not only promised spirit
ual benefit to Its followers but It
agreed to promote their temporal wel
fare, it found employment for its
converts It Instructed them where
and hov to work. It saw to It that
thai did not lack for food, shelter and
clothing Jt furnished them with po
. let) and amusement Nowhere were
lyric or dramatic performances in t
ifr rendered or better attended
In Utah every little town of 1000 In
habitants had Its opera house, and
the local dramatic and musical enter
tainments given by home talent Were
often far above mediocrity You
might listen to "Hamlet" or lo burnt-'
cork minstrels) one of the bast I ly
Macbeths I ever heard was rem i 1
by a Mormon girl named Carrie Carta.'
And the mother of Maude Adams ofi
nutlon-wlde histrionic fame was a
Mormon woman, who was at one tlme
leading lady on the stage of the Salt
Lake City theatre
NO 1KLXC1I PLAYS.
Yet you would never see on a
Mormon stage an adaptation of onoi
of those modern l-'nmch dramas In
which furniture, fornication arid for-
glvenewi nre all mixed up And when;
dances were given they were the;
itately minuets of Shakespeare, of Ad
dison, or of Goldsmith The half
cl.nd performers of the bunny. hug, the
turkey -trot, the sinful-spin and the,
r.im:o never eaporcd In Mormon dan-:
halls
There are In tho world lOOiOO.oOO
Buddhists who believe 'bat God is al
spiral staircase of whirling atomy, but;
I who nevertheless are a peaceful, kind- IBBe
:1 and law-abiding people There aro WK '
15-4.0u0.00u Mohammedans who do not Lwt
believe that women have souls, and Hr -.'2
w-ho arc polygamies, but who are total . fteX"
I abstainers fiom alcohol. There aro 'R''v
,000 Jews nrho repudiate Jesus of Ell I
Nazareth, but who live by the law of
I Moses, uid accept th..- ten messagacs iM
'of the thunder from Slnal. There aro Bp
418.000,000 Christians, active and Hh-
i passive, and some very passive. There " bkj
are 100,000,000 disciples of Huxley and
Ingersol. who, on the whole, sum to Wk-
behave themselves fairly well, and it O .
did not seem really necessary for the '
people of the United States to gel Into -
i frame Of mind about 400,000 Mor- BK
jmons because thej believed in tablets Ebk
of gold as well as tablets of stone. H
Aft. r the admission of Utah as a 1MB
state in the union polygamy came to H
Ian end It ceased to bo preached In
their tabernacles One ot tlulr first LH
senators Prank Cannon was the off- r k
jsprin of a polygamous marriage.
Reed Smoot, the other senator, is a Kr
Mormon apostle, but he never at any
time In his life had but one wife, oi H
preached polygamy H
I 1 1 HOME SHOULD HAVE R
COPY OS CONSTITUTION Bp;
(By International News Service) Kbv
DENVER The campaign to place a H
copy of the constitution of tho United
States In every home In Colorado will HSffl
open this week. Tho movement is a HSBj
part of the Americanization program H
being conducted by the Constitutional
League of America. School children
Will play a prominent part in dlsfrlb- LHSi"
utlng the pamphlets isBBssw'
WANTED 100 teams for M$
new excavation and gravel BP
haul. Apply Sperry Flour Co. Rg
To Women Who Overdo
Thousands of American women in sVI
our homes arc daily sacrificing their sEjV
Uvea to duty, ri order to keep th
homo neat and attractive, the children aawK'V''
well dressed and tidy, women overdo - WtSfc ''
Soon a weakness oi displacement Is mm&
brought on and they suffer in alienee, liBKv'"
drlfing along (fora bad to worse. For M&' .
forty years Lydia E. Pinkham'fl Yege BpS
table Compound han proved a boon LeHKh
and a blessing to women in this condi HhSl
tlon. by restoring their systems to a WPSi'
normal hea'ithy condition. Why dou'l fJK
you trj It Svr

xml | txt