Newspaper Page Text
It May Be
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Wbm&twr m
Children Ciy
for It
Castoria is a comfort when Baby is
fretful. No sooner taken than the little
one is at ease. If restless, a few drops
soon bring contentment. No harm done,
for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant
for babies. Perfectly safe to give the
iyoungest infant; you have the doctors’
iword for that! It is a vegetable pro
duct and you could use it every day.
But it’s in an emergency that Castoria
means most. Some night when consti
pation must be relieved —or colic pains
•—or other suffering. Never be without
it; some mothers keep an extra bottle,
unopened, to make sure there will al
ways be Castoria in the house. It is
effective for older children, too; read
the book that comes with it.
cllrroßfA
Orora's
Glsiil Tome;
Destroys Malarial Germs in the
Blood. Removes the Impurities,
Restores Health and Energy
and makes the Cheeks Rosy.
It fortifies the system against
Malaria and Chills. 60c.
For Caked Udder and Sore Teats in Cows
Try Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh
Money back for first bottle if not suited. All dealers.
A Plausible Excuse
The Exchange Manager—You’r*,
late this morning.
Carrie Coma, the Telephone Op
erator —Yes, I overslept. Y’see, 1 was
dreamin’ a guy was tryin’ to get a
number off’n me and I just couldn’t
wake up.
Highest Helpfulness
Who helps a child helps humanity
with a distinctness, with an immedi
ateness, which no other help given to
human creatures in any other stage of
human life can possibly give again,—
Phillips Brooks.
Like Many Others
“If you had five hundred dollars
What sort of car would you buy?”
“One that cost a thousand dollars.”
!> ; ' “
A scheme for uniting all transmis
sion lines into 10 main lines to serve
a district of 8,328 square miles is un
der consideration in England.
Some people are never satisfied
until they find out something that
jhakes them dissatisfied.
A literary man claims to have
cured himself of insomnia by reading
portions of his own work.
Every woman knows that she talks
too much, but what she doesn't know
is a remedy for it.
He isn’t very much in love if he
writes sensbile letters to his best girl.
~ rrs DANGEROUS GROUND
you stand on —with a
cough, a cold or
grippe, and your blood
impoverished. You JHml
must do something!
Dr. Pierce’s Golden ft MSm f§
Medical Discovery 9
enriches the blood — Jjy iw
builds health and §| V;
strength. •>. KB la
J. L. Ballentine of 622 k n_-' si A
South Virginia Ave., Gaines- J W \
ville, Fla., remarked: “I _ • ,
caught a severe cold. As *-
soon as I would lie down I ■ s Ay
would start coughing, break- ~ </ y) UA
ing my rest and sleep. I '/ Vt
took medicine but did not , 5>
get relief. I saw Sr. Pierce’s / * m
Golden Medical Discovery
advertised as being good for just such cases at
mine so I began to take it and it gave me
wonderful relief. I can go to bed and sleep
without coughing or being broken of my nat
ural rest and sleep.”
All druggists. Tablets or fluid.
Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 10c
If you desire a trial pkg. of tablets.
Fpiso’S^’ v l
b FLU-COUGHS j
C Quick Relief! Take Piso*®—relief is S
immediate. You get a good night*a rest >
—and renewed vitality. 35c and 60c.
mm Standard for 64 Years pj
SLAYER WHO FEARED
KISS IS GIVEN LIFE
Youth Is Sent to Prison for
Killing Girl.
New York. —The seventeen-year-old
murderer, who was afraid of a kiss,
has been sentenced to prison for life.
He is Vincent T. Rice, a Staten Island
boy, and he slew his fifteen-year-old
sweetheart, Alice Joost, when she
asked him for a kiss.
Having heurd two alienists express
their opinion that the boy’s act was
committed under the Inlluence of an
impulsive terror of intimacy with girls
—probably the effect of a too intensive
religious training on a backward mind
and an undeveloped sexual instinct
justice Selah B. Strong allowed the
boy to change his plea from not guilty
to guilty of murder in the second de
gree.
The opinion of these two mental ex
perts corroborated the statement Rice
had made in his signed confession,
that the murder was unpremeditated,
an act born of his exaggerated horror
of a kiss which he said Alice Joost
offered to give him.
Breaks Down and Weeps.
Rice, a pale, guod-looking boy neatly
dressed in a brown suit and maroon
tie, who had sat stolidly chewing gain
and leaning on his hand during the
taking of testimony, showed his first
sign of emotion when, after the court
room had been cleared, he suddenly
began to weep on his brother’s arm.
After Medical Examiner George
Mord had described the condition in
which he found the body of Miss Joost
the night of November 2, Mrs. Lucille
Joost, mother of the dead girl, a
white-haired woman all in black, calm
ly told how, when she returned to her
home that evening, she found her
daughter’s body across the bed in her
room, with a gash on her forehead
and a piece of electric light wire
tightly twisted around her throat.
Then’ Rice’s confession, signed the
day after the murder, was read. In it
Rice told of his afternoon with Alice
in the Joost home, how they sang and
played the piano, how, at dusk, Alice
tried to kiss him, and asked him to
“be a good sport’’; how her actions
and words filled him with uncontrol
able anger, how he struck her down
and then, overcome with fear, stran
gled her with wire.
Afraid of Kiss.
Then came the scientific description
of Rice as a young man deeply re
pressed sexually, afraid of girls, afraid
that to kiss them might cause him se
rious physical harm, who reacted with
terrible violence when a girl ottered
him a caress.
Dr. George H. Kirby, an alienist of
1111 I’ark avenue, engaged by trie
boy’s family, was called to the stand.
He had examined Rice in jail, he
said, and found him constitutionally
inferior.
“Do you think,” asked the district
attorney, “that this murder was pre
meditated?”
“No, in my opinion, it was not.”
Doctor Kirby testified. “I look upon
his whole act as impulsive and unpre
meditated.”
Q.—How did the defendant explain
his act to you? A.—He said he had
struck the deceased in order to pro
tect his honor and preserve his health.
Q.—How would you describe the
defendant’s life? A.—lt was one of
intense repression. I attribute this
to his religious training and the home
influence.
Doctor Kirby went on to explain
that Rice had had epileptic fits from
the age of one to four, and that these
had undoubtedly resulted in his being
mentally and sexually retarded. Some
where, he said, the boy had acquired
a real fear of intimacy with girls,
which would explain his abhorrence,
when, if his confession was truthful,
the girl attempted to kiss him.
Air-Traffic Cops Make
219 Arrests in Year
Washington.—Air-traffic cops have
made 219 arrests without a single
complaint that the aerial hluecoats
were sleeping on their posts.
Fifty inspectors of the Department
of Commerce air regulations division,
charged wiih arresting and prosecut
ing air-traffic violators, have been on
the job throughout the country for
more than a .year.
Sixty-five of the offenders drew
fines of $3,000 to $5,000 for their of
fenses, while 110 were reprimanded.
One hundred ninety-five cases have
come up for hearing since the division
was organized.
Charges included landing in un
authorized sections, low flying over
congested areas, stunt flying with pas
sengers "Voard and carrying explo
sives
Princess Gets Tortoise
From Japanese Diplomat
London.—A valuable tortoise, a pres
nt from a Japanese diplomat, is the
.atest pet of little I’rincess Elizabeth,
daughter of thr duke and duchess of
York. The tortoise has markings of
red and orange, denoting its aristo
cratic pedigree, and has been named
“Madame Butterfly.” One of the first
tilings the little princess does on get
ting up in the morning is to go into
the garden and feed her tortoise its
cabbage leaf.
Serious Problem
One crying need of the day seems
to be a method of disposing of old
automobiles. So many have been
dumped secretly on vacant lots in the
Bronx that fhe board of trade is dis
cussing the problem.
THE POCKDAI E REVOK'D. Corners. Gn.. Wed.. Jan. 30 19?0.
GREAT CLEMENCEAU
LEADS LONELY LIFE
Visitors Are Ghosts of Dead
Whom He Loved.
Paris. —Georges Olemenceuu, who has
wrecked many cabinets but won the
country’s gratitude in the war, is bit
terly conscious of a great louelineas
in the evening of his life.
When his sister died recently,
friends gathered at his Paris home
and one of them asked:
"How many ‘official’ visits do you
receive? How many ministers, how
many marshals call on you?"
The Tiger began, in what all
thought an evasive way:
“I sleep little; old men sleep little.
Often at two or three o’clock in the
morning I awake. I would be bored
itt bed, awake, so I get up. I come
out here, with difficulty, for some
times my legs go back on me, and
here, in the silence, 1 talk with the
dead —”
“It is during those night hours,”
went on the aged man who so often
governed France, “alone with ghosts,
dear ghosts, that 1 have written my
memories of Claude Monet. Ah 1
There come many of the dead, at
night, into this room.
“That is my destiny. I see them
go, one after another, those 1 love, ull
of them.”
Then, facing the one who was so
anxious to know who remembered him,
file Tiger snapped out:
“I am alone, monsieur, alone.”
Russians Clamp Lid
on Old-Time Music
Washington, D. ('. —The thorough
ness with which Soviet Russia is
attempting to supplant utterly every
part of tlie old order which
existed before the revolution is un
limited according to the reports
brought back by travelers who have
been investigating the Bolshevik ex
periment. It is tlie fixed intent of the
Soviet leaders to remake Russia so
completely as to leave not a memory
of the old days of the czar and the
nobility, or, at least, not a pleasant
memory. Knowing that intangible
as well as tangible tilings have a di
rect bearing upon the thoughts and
aspirations of a people, the Russian
officials have gone so far as to cen
sor music and to encourage a whole
new school of music.
Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, a
Scotch philosopher, is the author of
the famous observation: “Let me
write the songs of a nation and 1
care not who makes file laws.” The
Soviet leaders apparently have, every
confidence in that statement and
have effected a complete revolution
in music in flu? last decade, just as
they have changed the social order,
remade the government, altered all
practice concerning property owner
ship and generally set up anew Rus
sia.
With as much care as was devoted
to the dissemination of propaganda
of a political and economic nature,
the Soviet government created a
special department charged with the
revolutionizing of music.
Suitor Chains Girl
to Bed Post for 3 Weeks
New York. —For three weeks, forty
year-old William E Miles, senior,
held his fii'teen-.vear-old brlde-te-he in
captivity, chaining tier nude b-dy to
a bedpost so no more youthful sheik
could carry her otf and marry her
before her elderly admirer could save
up for honeymoon expenses, it was re
vealed.
Mrs. Sophia Sader, landlady of a
rooming house, heard groans ema
nating from the room and told tier
husband, who called the police to lib
erate tlie girl. She. however, told
them to mind their own business and
get out. asserting her sweetie could
make her a prisoner if he wanted to
and in any fashion he chose.
Next day the girl left her trunk
with the Sailers as security for two
weeks’ hack room rent and with the
money Miles might have had to pay
out for that item they tripped to the
city hall where a marriage ceremony
was performed.
Gets $12,500 a Barrel
for Bottled Crude Oil
Oklahoma City. Okla. —The market
price tm the grade of oil produced by
Oklahoma City’s discovery gusher is
around $1 <lO a barrel, but one pro
moter is selling a barrel of it for
812.r><K).
He gets 2T> cents for a dram bottle
of the oil attached to a postcard.
There are SI.201) drains to a barrel,
assuring him a net profit of sl2,fi(X).
at least, if he disposes of every dram.
The bottles are bought for souvenirs
and for gifts to be sent lo other parts
of the country.
• y -4' '4’ v -4- -4- --4- -4- -4- -4
: High Cost of Wives Is
! Worrying Chinese Men
! Shanghai. ('liinese business
• men whose importance is rated
! according to the number of
| wives are protesting against the
. increased price of helpmates.
I Since Nanking was made tfie
• capital and Nationalist officials
\ spent so much time in Shanghai.
• the price of a good wife had
| risen alarmingly. Lower Hass
• Chinese still can obtain young
! girls for as low as slllO. Stiang
• hni currency.
SEEKS QUIET AFTER
TEMPESTUOUS LIFE
“Black Hawk” Settles Down
in Gas Station.
Alpena, Mich, —Familinriy known ns
“Black Hawk," “The Boot Ranger”
and "Doc,” George 11. Connor, sixty
one ,vea*s old, wanderer and adven
turer, has found security from the
dangers of a tempestuous career at a
little gas station, called by him
“Ranger’s Rest," which he operates
on U. S. Highway 2!?, a few miles
north of Alpena. He got the title of
Black Hawk through having been
adopted by n roving Indian tribe in
Mexico In 1881.
“Doc" has been a ranger, practicing
physician, chiropractor, lumberjack,
bricklayer, railroader, tool and die
maker, contractor and entertainer,
lie is a prolific writer of poetry which
he signs with the sobriquet, "Black
Hawk.”
Life of Adventurer.
Connor has led a life of action and
adventure. He lived in Texas, Arizona
and Mexico in the early ’Bos when
those sections were spots which at
tracted the adventurer and the out
law. He has been shot three times
and stabbed twice and has had 21
bones broken. He is a musician of
considerable ability, playing the guitar
to the accompaniment of verse which
he writes himself.
Connor is a picturesque character.
Scores of tourists passing his Ranger’s
Rest stopped daily during the height
of the tourist season, attracted by bis
appearance and held as interested au
ditors by his ability as a conversation
alist. lie wears always the western
sombrero and other clothing affected
by the plains ranger. His mustache
and goatee add to his personality.
Connor was born in West Bay City,
son of J. 15. Connor, lumberman, lie
ran away from home when nine years
of age arid obtained employment in
tlie lumber camps of Michigan, peel
ing spuds and doing chores. Later tie
drove a tote team and then was grad
uated into (lie realm of a full-llel?ied
lumberjack.
Doc went to Texas in 1881 and re
mained in that state. Arizona and
Mexico for four years. While there he
had many thrilling experiences and
adventures. He returned to Michigan
and re-embarked in the occupation of
river driver. He worked in (lie vicin
ity of the An Sable river for years,
hut also did lumbering on the Rifle
and Ocqueoc.
Almost Killed.
Connor said that while he carried
on flirtations with peril in the South
west, one of the closest calls with
deatli was while employed in An-
Sable, April 1.1, 1885. repairing a giant
Gram mill burner. This burner was
80 feet high with a 20-foot neck at the
top, giving it a hotfle shape. Tlie
burner suddenly collapsed while Con
nor was working on the fourth scaf
fold. Seventy thousand bricks rained
down ti|ion liitn nnd tlie five other
workmen on the job. Four were in
stantly killed. One died from the
effects of being buried under 117 tons
of debris. Connor was the only one
who survived and was released only
after having been Imprisoned under
tons of bricks for five and one-half
hours. “The agony which I suffered—
buried alive —cannot tie described.'*
“Doc” says in telling of his experi
ence.
Subsequently he worked in Detroit
where he went to night school at De
troit college. He qualified as a doctor
of medicine and practiced six years in
Detroit. He also followed the profes
sion of chiropractor for one year in
Canada. The prosaic character of his
profession and tlie demands it made
upon him were too severe and he quit
practicing.
North China to Punish
Bribery With Beheading
Peking.—“ Off with their heads” is
tlie order issued hy the Chihli provin
cial government for officials who are
caught taking bribes of more than
ss<xt gold. The order lias been sent
out to all magistrates.
Capital punishment for corrupt offi
dais is anew regulation In China,
where officials have rega riled “squeeze"
ns a part of their fobs for centuries.
Some of the most notable officials in
tlie past have been most notorious
for stealing public funds.
But file Nationalists declare they
intend to discourage this practice and
will make an example of ihe first of
ficials in north China who are caught,
it has been rumored that Nationalist
officials have stolen large portions of
the public funds, following age-old
precedent.
Stone Age People Made
Toys to Amuse Children
Stockholm. —Whether or not there
was a Santa Claus in tlie Stone age
primitive people provided toys for the
amusement of their little ones. Ivar
Sclineli. archeologist of 1 tie state his
torian! museum, has found miniature
stone objects, clearly meant as play
things for children. One of these was
a tiny but well-made stone ax 2.5
centimeters in length, evidently fash
ioned by some fond Stone age daddy
for his liMle hoy to play with.
Fair Exchange
Pittsburgh. -.1 S Trees, who has
made money in oil. >s giving a peach
orchard to tlie school for hoys at
Warrendnle. In return tie is getting
an elm. weighing forty tons, which
will cost trim $5,000 to move to his
estate.
With Every Dose,
I Say: “God Bless
Milks Emulsion
"At last, nf.?r nine and one-half
years, I am really getting well. I
feel perfectly well (think of It!) nnd
I am sure no one came so near to the
pearly gates and missed going
through.
"Yesterday a doctor said to my
mother: ‘My God, Mrs. Stultz, this
tiling Is a miracle that she will get
well!’ My mother smiled her radiant
smile nnd said: ‘lt is time you gave
the public something for their money;
tell them to take Milks Emulsion.’
“I have spent fifteen thousand dol
lars in doctoring, climates, etc., and
one bottle of Milks Emulsion is worth
more than all they did for me put to
gether, and I have had the best med
ical advice in the world.
“As I said before, I am feeling fine
and the rales are all gone from my
chest; have no cough, but I am not
taking any chances of getting a re
lapse, so I am going to stay right iti
lied and take Milks Emulsion until I
get my weight back.
“I look down at my feet sticking
up in the bed and say: ‘By golly,
babies, you are going to do some
walking now. Cheer up; your day is
coming.’
"I can’t tell you how happy I am,
nnd I love the Milks Emulsion Com
pany. Faithfully nnd affectionately
yours, ANAMAE STULTZ, Colfax,
Calif.’’ Jan. 28, 1027.
Sold by all druggists under a guar
antee to give satisfaction or money
refunded. Tlie Milks Emulsion Cos.,
Terre Haute, Ind. —Adv.
Trees Retain Moisture
Cast by Drifting Fog
Trees and other vegetnt'on catch
water from drifting fog, and often
shed it on tlie ground below in imita
tion of rain. This is called fog-drip.
Tlie legend of the rain-tree of tlie
island of Ferro is explained ns a ease
of fog-drip, and tlie dewponds of tlie
downs are not fed by dew, hut to a
large extent by fog drifting in from
tlie sea and caught by plants around
tlie ponds.
A scientist made tlie experiment of
measuring fog-drip, by exposing two
rain-gauges on Table mountain, South
Africa —one in the ordinary way, the
other with a number of upright plant
stems attached to it in such a way as
to cateli water from tlie mountain
During 50 days tlie first gauge caught
only four inches of water, and tlie
other nearly eighty inches.
Table Used for 400 Years
One f the most famous tables in
England is in disuse awaiting repairs
after centuries of service. It is the
poor pilgrims’ table in St. Thomas’
hospital, Canterbury.
The table, which stands in the re
fectory of the hospital, is of oak, and
will seat 20 persons. Until recently
it was used every day, as it lias been
for nearly 400 years, by the poor pil
grims who came to Canterbury to visit
the shrine of Thomas a Becket, and
wiio had tlie right to a free bed and
board, and a few pence a day.
Attend the Party
In Spite of Coldi
Don’t despair some day your social
calendar is full, and you awake with a
miserable cold. Be rid of it by noonl
You can, if you know the secret:
Pape’s Cold Compound soon settles any
cold, yes, even one that has reached
deep in the throat or lungs.—Adv.
The College Perfect
Visitor—Those are nice dressing
rooms you have attached to tlie foot
ball stadium.
Professor —Dressing rooms? Those
are the college buildings!—Life.
That’* Plenty
Wifey—What did you ever do that
benefited any fellow man?
Hubby—l married you, didn’t I?
Judge.
■ : ,
SCHOOLGIRLS NEED HEALTH
•! . . ’ . -• • •
!-V ' . 'ffimrrnlmß ;
Daughter of Mn. Catherine Lamuth
Box 72, Mohawk, Michigan
‘‘After my daughter grew
into womanhood she began to
feel rundown and weak and a
friend asked me to get her
your medicine. She took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound and Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Herb Medicine* Her
nerves are better, her appetite
is good, she is in good spirits
and able to work every day.
We recommend the Vegetable
Compound' to other girls and
to their mothers.”—Mrs. Cath
erine Lamutiu
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Lydia E. Pinkhgm Medicine Go., Mass.
A MAN Works
on His STOMACH
A HUNDRED ycara
ago Napoleon said:
"An army marches . a|.l
on its stomach.’’ f.’Wljf f
Today it is abo truo S
that a man works Jk.
on his stomach! |
Your stomach must
be regular if you
are to work at your
highest efficiency. You can make*
it so with PE-RU-NA —for
over half a century the World’s
Greatest Stomach Remedy. PE
RU-NA tone3 the stomach, and re
moves that congested,. catarrhal
feeling which adds years to your
age and robs you of your vitality.
Your druggist has PE-RU-NA —buy.®
bottle of tliis famous remedy and begins
to enjoy its beneficial effects today I
PARKER’S ?
’ HAIR BALSAM i
'n /? Jaff) Restore* Color and _ |
135 m Beauty to Gray and Faded HairfL
v-'vYiwi / , 1 60c. and SI.OO at l>rug’u , i* , ts. v
IHmink Clicrii. W kB, Patcli.iL’ lie. N. Y.fe
FLORFSTON SHAMPOO—MeaI for uso la
connection with Parker’* Hair Balsam. Makes the*
hair soft and fluffy. SO cents by mail or at drug—
Hist*. Jiiscox Chemical Works, l’atchogue, N. Y.
FROST PROOF
Cabbage & Man Plants
Leading Varietie Now Ready
Postpaid S00—$1; 1,000 - $1.75. Bxprcss *1 per i,OOO
0000 for *4.60. Special price* on larae quantities.
P. D. FVLWOOU
TIFTON - - - - GEORGIA
KODAKERS
The FINISH you will like better.
Send quarter with roll or pack for
first trial order. Save this address*
for future reference.
S. HARTER
1914 7th Avenue, Terre Haute, InCk
Health Giving "BH
Hi!
ASS Winter lung JHBLm.
Marvelous Climate Good Hotels Tourinfl
Cam|>s—Splendid Roads—Gorgeous Mountain
Views The wonderful desert resort of tluiWeaM
Tc-1 Vfrlto Croo &. Chaffoy
ijWualEßa ©PETE 82
CAMTOHIXIA
FROST-PROOF CARTAGE AM) BKRMUD/l
onion plants now ready. All leading varie
ties. 100. 30c; 300, 75c; 500, $1.00; 1,000,
$2.00, postpaid. By express, 75c 1,000, In
lots of 3,000 or more. Write mo for special
prices on larger lots.
JAMES M. HENRI'. Rot 41-C, Doerun, Gau
CHICKS—Rest (Selected Missouri Accrefi.
White and Barred Hocks, Buff Orp, Red.*?*,
Silver and White Wyandottos. 100 for $12.00 ;
Heavy assorted $10.50. Alive delivery.
MARSELS VALLEY FARMS
F. O. Box A • - - Westphalia. Mow
Send No Money! Extra Fine Cabbage, Onlors
and Collard plants sent O. O. D. mail! or
express. 600. f,sc; 1.000, $1.00; 5,000, s4\sC*
Twenty million ready.
Quality Plant Farms, Box 813, Tifton, G nr.
58 WAYS WOMEN MAY MAKE MONEV
at Homo, described in SI.OO book, now soft!
for 50 cents — stamps accepted. Order now.
Merlin Sales Cos., Box “A,” Manchester, Gig
SALESMAN, for High Grade Roof Paints
oil., direct to property owners. Elegant re
muneration and future for willing workers*.
SAI L KLEIN MFG. CO., Cleveland, Ohio*.
FALSE TEETH.
Held tight and comfortable. Use Suction Tit©*.,.
Used .successfully in my practice 12 yeara-
Send $1.50. Dr. E. J. Lutterman, Antioch, IIL.
Exceptional Opportunity; sell DuPont's new—
est. Fairy Damask Hemstitched Tablecloths
No laundering. Colors. Beautiful. Durable
Castor Brothers - - Lakeland, Fla.
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 4-1929.
—. T
Uncle Eben
• “ ’Tain’t no use trying to lend a lazy
life,” said Uncle Eben. “When a mar*
ain’ got anything to do, lie goes fishin? -
an’ gits tired an worried jes’ de aitie.’"
—Washington Star. ,\
‘ 4 \
How can you say that you have
great will power if you have never
had occasion to test it?
When you forgive a friend don’t go
on talking to him about it.
jhki
',/"S
Sks* . *./ •' ' wxijfc &&&?*
Willi 111 'mti&M.i m
Daughter of Mrs. Eva Wood Hovrt
1006 South H. Street, Danville, 111*
‘‘l praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound for what
it has done for my fourteen
year-old daughter as well as for
me. It has helped her growth
and her nerves and she has a
good appetite now and sleeps
well. She has gone to school
every day since beginning the
medicine. I will continue to
give it to her at regular in
tervals and will recommend it
to other mothers who have
daughters with similar trou
bles.”—Mrs. Eva Wood. Howe*