Newspaper Page Text
Used Lydia E. Pinkh&m'fl
Vegetable Compound
. and Recovered.
■ •“The doctor said I
uble and treated me
for aeveral weeks.
Attimes I could not
suffered with my
back and limbs sol
often bad to stay in
bed. I suffered off
and. on for eight
years. Finallyl
heard that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound was
a good medicine and
tried it with splen-
now do my house
work and my washing. I have recom
mended your Vegetable Compound and
mr Blood Medicine and three of my
mends are taking them to advantage.
Tencan use mj*name for a testimonial. ' ’
—Mrs. Theresa Coventry, 75 Burnett
8L, Newark, N. J.
fan are invited to write for free advice
Mo other medicine has been so suc
cessful in relieving woman's suffering
as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. Women may receive free
and helpful advice by writing the Lydia
IS. Keith am Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
Such letters are received and answered
by women only and held in strict
Mr. Fletcher In hlsjetter'suggested that before any recognition
Mr. Fletcher In hisjetter' suggested that before any recognition was extended
an Informal agreement be made'with the Mexican authorities that American
citizens would not be deprived of their property rights without compensation,
and that such property as they were deprived of during the Carranza regime
without compensation would be returned to them.
Times have changed, and In Ger
many as elsewhere. Here’s a change
that has set Berlin talking. Printed
In the old style it would read:
“Princess
Bamboo for Paper Making.
■ .According to Sir Harry Johnston,
- fc famous African explorer, the in-
Aaustlble supply of grasses, reeds
Id rushes of tropical Africa can be
lltzed in making paper. William
ftriU, the cellulose expert of the Brit-
lab government, points out many seri
ous difficulties in making paper from
fltese grasses, but says that these are
wot found In bamboo, which renews It
self annually.
Alexandra Victoria,
daughter of Prince Frederick, duke of
Schleswig-Holstein, has been divorced
by Prince August William of Holien-
zollern, fourth son of the kaiser, antf
has eloped with Fritz Meyer, her
chauffeur.”
Anyway Frnu Meyer, the princess
that was, is now on a honeymoon.
“I’d rather be the loved wife of a
chauffeur than the unloved wife of a
she tells her friends,
comment was
AaulDt the eyelids with Rnm.n Bye B»l-
aun at night, end In the morning your eyee
wBl (eel refreshed end strengthened.—Adr.
royal prince,’
" , Her ex-husband’s ... . .
the bland announcement royalty Is ' -I/',,
well rid of his quondam spouse. But jp £
the people of Berlin are still gasping fk flNB
from the shock of the affair. LW -$I***W* 1 8BM
i At the time Prince August Wil- f ll 4 . l |. Hlli|
linm brought his suit tor divorce from HKHffiEHL 4® WSShkJL WH
the charming, beautiful* and reputedly- ——,
extravagant princess he charged she bad fallen In love' with an officer of
“common tastes and democratic name.” %
Fritz Meyer, before the war, was a snappy figure In the ex-kaiser’s livery.
Victoria Is a statuesque blonde of large figure and with reddish hair and
complexion. She radiates vigor, health anjj activity.
gll^Hchievement.
Igl^Brnm the restraint of
gl^Kny not lie difficult,
Broe’s new freedom sub-
■aping and guiding power
v Is the supreme achleve-
huinan will.—Ralph Philip
Sure
Relief
| SNDIGESrlOfij
incurs.
Mrs. Annette Abbott Adams, ap
pointed by President Wilson as assist
ant United States attorney general af
ter serving for nearly six years as
assistant United States district attor
ney In San Francisco, Js a living con
tradiction of the theory that a wom
an who successfully fills a position
traditionally held by a man must
eschew all feminine Interests and be
come a short-haired imitator of the
6 Bsll-ans
MSu Hot water
Sure Relief
and a charming woman; a prosecutoi
feared by criminals, and a good cook.
She can untangle tt knotty law prob
lem and select a becoming hat with
the same success.
MrA Adams’ native town la Pratt-
small village la the Sierra
Chickens and Chickens.
"Do your neighbor’s chickens both
er you any?” asked an East side gen
tleman of his neighbor, who lived near
a large family.
“No,” replied the other, thinking
that reference was made to the neigh
bor's three cojnely daughters. “They
go down town every day, so we don’t
see much of them.”—Columbus Dis
patch.
Don’t wait until you are
down on your back with
(Stills and fever. Make your
system immune from Ma
drid disorder.
Vine,
. _______ mountains’ In California,
i^^BSQBSSB " ^ "'here she was born in 1877. Het
'Wmm early education was In the California
2—s s - — " j*wwmsi achoola, including the Chico Normal
school and tho University of California, where she received her B. L. degree
ln'1904. After graduation she was first a schoolteacher. She was admitted
to the bar In 1012. - r' - ^ .
Nevada
A man who rides a hobby Is In dan
ger of riding rough shod over his ac
quaintances.
OIIUS & FEVER
be germs of the dis
tore they get a foot-
ti your blood, and
p thei system making
11 and . Akiw
j&e/ore Meals
T WO SPOONFULS of JACOBS’
LIVER SALT In a glass of hot > A
water before breakfast, keeps the £ A
Hear and kidneys active and the system Uhfi
cUar—nuiu port fit fit for o rmJ
Sept’ wotfc v<
ztMsBr* |
jaoobs* pharmacy a
Wanted: Building of More Houses
Senator Colder of New York is
chairman of the United States senate
committee on reconstruction and pro
duction which la making an Inquiry
into the. unsatisfactory conditions
of the construction Industry. The
committee recently opened headquar
ters In New York and began hearings.
Next on the program was a visit to
Chicago, with probable hearings also
in Minneapolis and Kansas City.
In Chicago, for example, it Is esti
mated that there la a shortage of 100.-
000 houses and’ that thousands of
building trades employees are out~.qf
employment because of lnablUty to
have developed the fact that Imme
diate relief for the construction In
dustry must come through improved
transportation faculties, and Senator
Calder urged the Interstate commerce
commission to permit the building In-.
THE CLAYTON TRIBUNE CLAYTON, GEORGIA.
Fletcher Doesn’t Trust Mexico
Warning against premature rec
ognition of the new Mexican govern
ment has been given the administra
tion by Henry P. Fletcher, former am
bassador to Mexico. In a letter to
Balnbrldge Colby, secretary of state,
he urges that in no case should the
recognition of the De la Huerta
regime be other than that of a de
facto character, with the understand
ing that even this would be withdrawn
should subsequent events prove that
It was prematurely extended. '
Mr. Fletcher’s letter resulted from
negotiations now In progress between
the state‘department and Dr. Igleslas
Calderon, Mexican high commlssloneij
to the United States, regarding recog
nition of the new government at Mex
ico City.
Dr. Igleslas Calderon has assured
the American government of the de
sire of the new regime to live up to
the obligations of a government, but
A Sign of the Times in Germany
First Woman to Hold This Office
Will Not be One Day Without
PE-RU-NA
This Lady TELLS Hsr FRIENDS
l '°®,
• sut *
i—
Mrs. Mary Frlcke, 607 Bornman St, BeUevllle,
Ill., Is just one of the many thousands of ladles
throughout the country who, after an agony of
years, have at last-found health, strength and
vigor in PE-RU-NA.
Her own words tell of her suffering rfnd recovery
better than we can do it: “I suffered with my
stomach, had awful cramps and headaches so I
often could not lay on a pillow. Saw your book,
tried PE-RU-NA and got good results from the
first bottle. To he sure of a cure I took twelve
bottles. I have recommended PE-RU-NA to my
friends and all are well pleased with results. I
will not bo one day without PE-RU-NA Have not
had a dbetor since I started with PE-RU-NA, which
was about fifteen years ago. I am now sixty-three
years old, hale, hearty and welL Can do as much
work as my daughters. I feel strong and healthy
and weigh near two hundred pounds. Before, I
weighed as little as one hundred. I hope lots of MRS. MABY ERICKS
people use FE-RU-NA and get the results I did.” An experience Ilka
that of Mrs. Frlcke la an Inspiration to every sick and suffering
woman.
If you have catarrh, whether it be of the nose, throat, stomach,
bowels, or other organ!, PE-RU-NA Is the remedy. It Is not new;
It Is not an experiment PE-RU-NA has been tried. PE-RU-NA has
been used by thousands who once were sick and are now well. To
prevent coughs, colds, grip and Influenza and to hasten recovery
there is nothing better.
PE-RU-NA will Improve the appetite and digestion, purify the blood.
Booth the Irritated mucous linings, eradicate the waste material and
corruption from the system. It will tone up the nerves, give you
health, strength, vigor and the Joy of living. Do what Mrs. Mary
Frlcke and thousands more have done—try PE-RU-NA You will bo
glad, happy, thankful.
Tablet or Liquid. Sold Everywhere!,
SOLD FOR BO YEARS
For MALARIA,
CHILLS and
FEVER
Also a Fine General
Strengthening Tonic.
MU IT ill DUG SWUS.
W°MEN
WILL
For three generations women have been talking about Stella
Vitae—“Woman’s^fielief,’ 5 “Mother’s Cordial.’* Telling each
other what Stella Vitae has'done for them, and their dangh-,
ters, and their friends. Any woman may fry-Stella Vitae on!
the positive guarantee that if the first bottle doesn’t help, the
druggist will refnnd the money. Ask your druggist.
What Some Women Say About
STELLA'VIIVE
MR. H. L. HALL, of LarklnvUle,
Ala., a well-known merchant who
sold STELLA VITAE and used it
In his family, writes: “STELLA
VITAE has proved to be the best
medicine my wife haa ever need
for a run-down system.”
THACHER MEDICINE CO,
MRS. LILIE REYNOLDS of Mad
ison, S.C., says: “I have been using
your STELLA VITAE with won
derful results. It is the most won
derful medicine for women that I
have ever used. I want all my
friends to try STELLA VITAE.”
Chattanooga, Tout., U. S. A*
Paging Herself.
While a member of a college society,
I was called upon one evening to net
as recording secretary In the absence
of the one elected to that office. After
a short prayer, with which all pro
grams were opened, I began to call the
roll. When I came to my own name,
which I called several times, I waited
so long for the “here” or "present”
response that a smile and titter ran
around the hall. I then became con
scious of what I was doing, and pro
ceeded to finish the roll call In a
hurry.—Chicago Tribune.
M-