Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, March 01, 1918, Image 2
TiON AND THE WORLD BRIEFLY TOLD ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD A Condensed Record Of Happenings Of Interest From All Points Of The World Domestic. Capt. David A, Henker, 16t.h Infan¬ try, U. S. A., has been 'sentenced to dismissal from the service and con¬ finement at hard labor for 25 years by a general court-martial held at Governor’s Island, in New York har¬ bor. He is of German descent, and attempted to resign his commission, saying he did not care to fight against relatives and friends. A price of $2.20 a bushel, the same as tor last year’s crop—was fixed by President Wilson for the coming sea¬ son’s wheat yield. The price is for No. 1 northern spring wheat at Chi¬ cago, with a scale of differentials for other markets. The differentials dif¬ fer to a slight extent from those now operative and range from a minimum of |2 to a maximum of $2.28. In fixing a price for wheat, which will not be harvested until June, the president was believed to have had two objects in view. The first is to halt legislation pending in congress to fix prices at from $2.25 to $3, and the other is to stimulate spring plant¬ ing. Four national army soldiers were held in the guardhouse awaiting a presidential warrant from Washington which will mean their internment as enemy aliens who plotted not only to shoot their officers the first time they got into action in Europe, hut also to deliver all the American soldiers in their organization to the German army. The names of the men under arrest, have been withheld by the au¬ thorities in Washington. The men were arrested at Camp Lewis, which is located in Tacoma, Wash. Coming generations of Americans are endangered by ; the indiscriminate rush of women into industry. Women should enter only those lines of work not injurious to their health and mor¬ als. This is the warning of Mrs. Hil¬ da Mulhause Richards, chief of the -woman’s division of the national la¬ bor department. Alleged plots of the industrial Workers of the World to poison cat¬ tle and burn grain, farm houses and lumber mills along the Pacific coast were revealed in a ..confession at San dPraweiae#* of a Gej-irtan' who said he had participated in some of the ac¬ tions proposed. He'came to the Unit¬ ed States in 1910. E. B, Deming, sulmoto^adjhmititria tor for the federal government, has announced that by order of the food admiiiistration, all of the unsold sal¬ mon stock in the United States will be requisitioned for the United States army. The full influence of the national administration will be used if neces¬ sary to prevent, enactment of bills pending in congress to increase the price of wheat. Wheat is now selling on a basis of $2.20 a bushel and the price Is maintained by heavy govern¬ ment purchases for the army and navy and for the allies. Re-organization of the : quartermas¬ ter corps under Major General Goe thals has been completed. Radical changes are contemplated to insure the food and clothing supply of the army, particularly of the overseas forcep. Fire, which is believed to have origi¬ nated from a defective flue, destroyed the school house at North Boulevard and Irwin street, in Atlanta. The loss is $30,000. Forres Bigelow, of Columbus, Ohio, killed his wife and 7-year-old daughter then went to the home of his mother in-law and after wounding her killed his sfsfer-in-law. after which' he re¬ turned to his own home and killed himself. Secretary Baker issued a statement on hts return to Washington from an inspection tour of the army camps in which he praised the conditions of campk.at Atlanta, Augusta and Macon. Washihston. A Mexico City dispatch announces that “Wilhelm,” Ger “emperor and that “Wilhelm," German “emperor and ranza's felicitations on the emperor's birthday iti.a most flattering way. He further wishes the Mexican people “much prosperity." Overseas ship tonnage available to America and. the allies passed Its low point about February 1st, several weeks earlier than shipping experts had predicted. It is extremely, unwise for cotton farmers to assume that the freezes of thy..past .few weeks have extermi¬ nated the boll weevil. This is the an¬ swer of the department of agriculture to many inquiries from the South. A St. Johns. N. F., dispatch says that the crack Red Cross liner Flori zel, from St. Johns, for New York, by¬ way of Halifax, with 140 persons on board, including seventy-eight passen¬ gers, piled up on the ledges near Cape Race during, -a blizzard and it is be¬ lieved that -all .on beard were lost. The adnlinistration bill providing for government control of railroads until eighteen months after the war, in¬ cluding many “short lines." and ap¬ propriating a revolving fund of $500, 000,000 for federal ogpratjan, lias been passed by the senate without a roll call. THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND. GEORGIA. In a patrol fight American units un¬ der instruction in the famous Chemin des Dames sector, killed one German and captured another. One American was slightly wounded. An economic agreement with Spain under which General Pershing will get mules, army blankets and other mate¬ rials In that country in return for cotton, oil and other commodities from the United States, has been signed in Madrid, Spain. European. The Bolsheviki government in Rus¬ sia, represented by Nikolai Lenine and Leon Trotzky, has acceded to the de¬ mands of Germany and announced its readiness to accept the hard peace terms which Germany has laid down. The Russian surrender seems ab¬ ject. The Russians will immediately send a delegation to Brest-Litovsk, there to discuss with German repre¬ sentatives the final details of the peace proposals and sign the compact. At last accounts the German armies in the east were giving no heed to talk peace, but, on the contrary, were methodically pushing forward their en¬ tire line over more than a 500-mile front from the Gulf of Finland region to Volhynia. The American and Japanese embas¬ sies and the Chinese, Siamese and Bra¬ zilian legations are reported to have left Petrograd for Vyatka and Volog¬ da. and may go to Vladivostok. Roumania has at last entered into peace negotiations with the central powers for peace, becasue she is forc¬ ed to by being cut off from her al¬ lies. The British forces in Palestine have captured the city of Jericho, and Aus¬ tralian troops have entered the city. This is the city famous in Biblical lore because the walls fell down when Joshua marched his army around the city seven consecutive times in as many days. Heavy artillery fighting on both sides is reported on the western front around Champagne and in Alsace. No infantry fighting Is reported. It. is stated that the Germans have shot down twenty-four airplanes and two balloons in three days. Official dispatches from Rome indi¬ cate that (he recent closing of the 3-wiss frontier by Austria is prepara¬ tory to movement of troops to the Italian frontier. Italian aviators say that troops are continually coming up to the Italian frontier from the erstwhile Russo-Rou rnanian front. Facing absolute subjection, the Bol¬ sheviki are now reported to be beg¬ ging the Slavs to fight. Lenine and Krylenko have Issued appeals for a real revolutionary army and urge the people to lay waste to every place evacuated. $erUn reports regiments that in some instanc¬ es Russian have deserted and are offering their services to the central powers. It is reported that the Russian navy is’ completely disorganized. Five entente allied airmen flying over the Julinn Alps found the town of Innsbruck, Austrian Tyrol, was not protected by anti-aircraft guns. The airmen thereupon swooped down with¬ in 300 yards of the ground, picked out targets and copiously bombed them. Soldiers and civilians were surprised, and many are reported killed. Stephen Pic-hon, foreign minister of Fiance, made an address in Paris, in which he called America the "savior of the world.” An Amsterdam dispatch says that a Russian courier with the peace pro¬ posals of the Russian government has arrived in Berlin. British merchantmen sunk by mine or submarine in the past week num¬ bered 15. Of these 12 were of 1,600 tons or over and three were under that tonnage. A Berlin dispatch announces that the town of Kovno, Russia, has been cleared of Russians. Trains with about a thousand cars were captured. Important, railway and highway junc¬ tions have been occupied. Germans have passed through Wen den, 55 miles northeast of Riga, and are now before Wolmar, 70 miles to the northeast of Riga. Two hundred and four Americans lost their lives on the Tuscania, an¬ nounces a London dispatch. One hundred and ten persons per¬ ished when the steamer Dives was tor¬ pedoed in the Mediterranean on Feb¬ ruary 1. says a Paris dispatch. Close relations between the German embassy at Madrid and the most no¬ torious anarchists in Spain have been brought to light, according to The Paris Daily Matin. It is added that official Spain is shocked by the huge* ness of German plots. It is Impossible for the allies to de¬ termine in advance how serious and how prolonged will be the resistance of the Russians to the advancing Ger¬ mans. but the allies are not "banking” on strong resistance to the Teutons. British man power has increased on the western front, and the allies out¬ number Germany at present, but under secretary of war of the empire says this condition may not last long, as Germany is rapidly ing up reinforcements. Control of the air in the sector belongs to the enemy. All the American army officials admit this freely. Control by Germany is too ob¬ vious to arrive at any other conclu¬ sion. A London newspaper says that the German airmen knew that Ameri¬ can airmen were waiting for them, they would not fly so boldly over the western front. The British captures in the past year included 168 heavy howitzers, 68 heavy guns, 437 field guns, 1,055 trench mortars and 2,814 machine guns. ADMiNISTRtTISN TO PROBE PRICES PRICE ADVANCE IN ICE WILL CAUSE FEDERAL CONTROL OF ICE INDUSTRY OTHER NEWSJF INTEREST Brief News Items Of Importance Gath¬ ered From All Parts Of The State Atlanta.—Major D. F. McClatchey has received orders from the food ad¬ ministration at Washington to make an investigation of the ice situation at Savannah, where manufacturers* have recently decidedly advanced the price to consumers. A storm of pro¬ test has been reaching the offices of Major McClatchey from the people of Savannah. Ice was at first declared hot to be a food, but the administra¬ tion is now taking cognizance of the fact that it is used in preserving food, and the general indications are that on this account it may be placed in the food class. Over 4,000 Bags Of Stock Feeds Seized Atlanta.—The department of inspec¬ tion under the pure food and drugs law has seized 4,192 bags of concen¬ trated stock feed in various parts of the state for non-compliance with the state laws. Some of these seizures are because the feed was deleterious and injurious and in these cases the feed was destroyed. Others were be¬ cause the bags did not have the re¬ quired inspection tag, which is shru required under the food and drugs act. In these latter cases the state has been defrauded out of this tax reve¬ nue and the feed has been seized and is now being advertised by the sheriff for public sale. Hurley Is To Inspect Georgia Porta Washington.—Edward N. Hurley, chairman of the United States Ship¬ ping board and president of the Emer¬ gency Fleet corporation, will make a tour of inspection of ports in the Southeast at which large government shipbuilding plants are contemplated. The itinerary includes Charleston, Savannah and Brunswick, It is not improbable that he will also investi¬ gate the old St. Mary's harbor, that matter having been recently brought to the attention of the board most vigorously by a delegation of Geor¬ gians. Thirty Barrels Of Flour Saved Macon.—The trustees of the state sanitarium at Milledgeville reports that since the institution has been ob¬ serving wheatless days there has been a weekly saving of thirty barrels of flour. In observing meatless days it is figured that 3,600 pounds of meat a week was saved. Soy beans are be¬ ing used in the diet for pellagra pa¬ tients. . Concrete Ship May Be Built Savannah.—The Liberty Shipbuild¬ ing company, whose officials visited Savannah, secured a contract from the government for the construction of the first concrete ship as a nucleus of such a fleet. The cost of the ship will he $200,000 for the hull alone, and it will take about six months to com¬ plete. Savannah Is known to be con¬ sidered favorably for the site of the building of the ship. Georgia Officers Are Safe In France Quitman. A cablegram announcing the safe arrival in France of Lieuten¬ ant Wilbur Oglesby, Matt Elder, Jr., and Pope Oglesby, has greatly reliev¬ ed the family and friends of the men here. It was practically certain that they sailed with the troops, part of which were on the Tuscania, and when that boat was sunk the families here were very anxious. , The three .. me* are in the thirty-fifth engineers corps. Mrs. John B. Cobb, Teacher, Is Dead Macon.—Mrs. John.B. Cobb, for 25 years a member of the faculty of Wes¬ leyan Female college in Macon, and for several years secretary of the women's mission board of the Meth¬ odist church with headquarters in Nashville. Tenn., died in that city fol¬ lowing an illness with pneumonia. She was 75 years of ago. Sheriff Of Upson And Son Are Killed Thomaston.—Loyd Howell was kill¬ ed almost instantly and his father. Sheriff C. L. Howell, of Upson county, died later as the result of pistol bullet wounds received in a fight with police¬ men of Thomaston. Live Wire Injures Four; One Dead Moultrie.—Four men, all on differ¬ ent floors, were injured, one fatally and two dangerously, in the course of a minute or so, by a live wire in an elevator at the plant of Swift & Co. here. Autoists Are Slow To Seek Licenses Atlanta. — Automobile owners who defer application for licenses beyond March 1 will operate their cars on the highways with the legal status of trespassers, according to a ruling of the United States supreme court. Ac¬ cording to the official records, there j are still 10,000 unregistered than cars in Fulton county. Less 40,000 in the entire state have registered to date, and the books for 1917 showed a total of ,74,000. Applications are now pouring in at the rate of 4,000 per day. Insignia Of Honor For Shipbuilders Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey has re¬ ceived from Washington the first but¬ tons which are being given to the United States shipyard volunteers. These buttons will be worn by the men who have registered through their respective county councils of de¬ fense for the shipbuilding service. The badges are in bronze, obiung in shape and an inch in diameter. A ship bearing the initials TJ. S. is wrought upon the badge, also the title, “shipyard volunteer.” J. D. Weaver, director of the ship¬ building registration in Georgia, states that the progress of the registration in Georgia is satisfactory, the regis¬ tration being pushed by chairmen of the county councils of defense. He requests that all registration cards, as the work of enrollment con¬ tinues, be sent to him, and that he, in turn, will send them to Washing¬ ton. Taxable Values Gain $38,000,000 Atlanta.—Judge John C. Hart, state tax commissioner, has just completed his 1917 report, and it is in the hands of the public printer. A summary of the tax digest of the state shows an increase of $3 ,473,740 over last year, exclusive of railroad property. With the railroad property, the latter being returned to the comptroller general, the total increase will amount to $38, 000,000. The largest single Item of property returned is city property, amounting to $287,984,364. “Improv¬ ed lands" amount to $244,574,762, Railroad and other corporation returns amount to $157,697,806. With ail the othe# property of the state the grand total amounts to $991,659,816. Alto¬ gether the taxable values of the state has increased since the passage of the equalization tax act approximately $130,000,000. Fifty-Fifty Basis For Dixie Farmers Atlanta.—All Southern farmers this spring will be required by Uncle Sam to till their fields on a fifty-fifty basis, that is, growing an acre of food crop for every acre of cotton grown, If a movement started by A. O. Blalock, collector of internal revenue, receives the indorsement of the national food administration. Mr. Blalock has re¬ ceived the hearty support of Dr. A. M. Soule, federal food administrator for Georgia, and Dr. Soule has promised to present the plan at a meeting of the state food administration to be held in Washington the first. 25 Stills Are Destroyed By Officers | Atlanta.—Revenue Agent E. C. Yel lowly received reports of the destruc¬ tion in various Georgia counties of 25 srills. In the majority of these raids !■ operators were absent, and as they were unknown, no arrests were made, collectors stationed, at Macon, sent in reports of the destruction of a 40-gallon still in Bibb county, a 50 gallon still in Crawford county, 600 gallons of mash and a 40-gallon still in Washington county. Grand Jury Votes For A City Court Waycross.—The Coffee grand jury recommended that Douglas and Coffee county re-establish the city court to take effect immediately, and Governor Dorsey will be requested to name a judge. This will give the county eight terms of court—four terms of city court and four of superior court—and it is believed that it will require this number to get the docket cleared up. Negro Who Stole Baby Is Lynched Fayetteville.—"Bud” Cosby, a negro, | was lynched by a mob of Fayette county citizens after he had attempt -1 ed to rob the home of Mrs. Barney Mcllwaney, in the west part of the county, near Aberdeen, and had kid¬ napped her 2-year-old baby. The child was found by members of the mob in a briar patch, uninjured, and returned j to its mother. Embargo On Lumber Partly Removed Thomasville.—The embargo on lum¬ ber from this territory has been partly removed and, besides shipping lumber for government government use uge it it can can also b< shipped for building and repairing railroads. The freight situation has greatly improved also. Owing to the continued warm weather during the past week or two, there has been little demand for coal for heating. Eggs Are Abundant In South Georgia wonderful Thomasville. change — There in the has situation been a j j egg here in the past few days. The supply is much larger and there has been a ; vast slump in prices. Two weeks ago I being sold for from 50 60 ' eggs were to cents per dozen and now parties bring-; ing them m from the country are of¬ fering them for 25 and 30 cents. Woman Gets Fortune By A Decision Rome.—By a decision of the su¬ preme court, Mrs. Myrtle Wade Bur¬ ton, wife of a Rome barber, gains possession of an estate valued at more than $20,000, the property of her late foster father, Avery Dunham. Her claim to the estate, Dunham haying left no will, was fought in the courts by his blood relatives' Raise More Pork, Urges The Governor ; Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey has is¬ j sued a proclamation calling upon the people of the state to take concerted i action for a large increase of food pro- ! duction during 1918 and particularly for an increase of 10 per cent in the ; pork production by each individual in the state, over that of 1917. The gov¬ ernor also calls upon the farming, banking and commercial interests ol the state to attend a meeting in Ma- j con on February 27, to devise ways j and means for accomplishing this oh ject. UPAN Will SOON STRIKE IN SIBERIA WILL GIVE AID TO THE FOES THE BOLSHEVIKI AND TO THE GERMANS TO SUPPORT THE COSSACKS 2,000 Germans Are Said To Be Armed And Drilling At Irkutsk And It Is Said Force Will Be Increased Harbin.—The Japanese, according to reliable authority, intend to take ac¬ tion in Siberia at an early date, and there are evide.nces that the Japanese have long been preparing to carry out this move. The situation in Siberia is consider¬ ed extremely grave, owing to the in¬ ability of the Cossack General Semen off, head of the anti-BoIsheviki move¬ ment in that vast territory, to secure allied support, for which he has ap¬ pealed to the Japanese. General Semenoff’s movement now is officially recognized, and a general committee has been formed at Harbin, which will act as a general staff, divid¬ ed into three departments—financial, military and administrative. The Rus¬ sian consul, M. Popoff, has ben ap¬ pointed chairman of the committee. Two thousand Germans have been armed and are drilling at Irkutsk, capital of the government of Irkutsk in Eastern Siberia, and, according to an official report received from a for¬ eign consul, the Germans are making all preparations to bring much larger forces there. For some time Bolshevik elements have been operating at various points in Eastern Siberia and even in Man¬ churia. In December it was reported that Japanese had landed at Vladivo¬ stok, where large quantities of stores for the Russians had congested and where the Bolsheviki were said to be gathering preparatory to an attack with the object of capturing these sup¬ plies. The Japanese minister, how¬ ever, in an interview, denied that Ja¬ pan was mobolizing or landing troops in Siberia. GERMANY WILLING TO AC¬ CEPT FOUR PRINCIPLES STATED BY WILSON Chancellor von Hertling Tells Reich¬ stag President’s Message Consti¬ tutes Step Toward Agreement Amsterdam.—Speaking before the reichstag, the imperial chancellor. Count von Hertling, made this declar ation: <g£ “I can fundamentally agree with the four principles, which in President Wilson’s view must be applied in a mutual exchange of views, and thus declare with President Wilson that a general peace can be discussed on such a basis. “Only one reserve need be made in this connection: These principles must not only be proposed by the president of the United States, but must also actually be recognized by all states and peoples. “But this goal has not yet been reached. There is still no court of ar¬ bitration established by all the nations for the preservation of peace in the name of justice. “When President Wilson incidental¬ ly says that the German chancellor is speaking to the tribunal of the entire world, 1 must decline this tribunal as prejudiced, joyfully as I would greet it, if an impartial court of arbitration existed and gladly as would co-op¬ erate to realize it.” AMERICANS IN RAID CAPTURE 22 GERMANS Machine Gun Also Falls Into Hands Of Party—Germans Suffer Very Heavily In Encounter Paris.—An American patrol in the Chemin des Dames sector, in con¬ junction with a French patrol, pene¬ trated a few hundred yards into the German lines and captured two Ger¬ man officers, twenty men and one machine gun. There was some sharp fighting and a number of the eneipy were killed and wounded. There were no Ameri¬ can casualties. The Franco-American patrol was under command of a French officer. German Raider Wolf At Home Port Berlin.—The auxiliary cruiser Wolf has returned home after fifteen months in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans. “The Kaiser has tele¬ graphed his welcome to the command¬ er. The Wolf was commanded by Fri¬ gate Captain Nerger and inflicted the greatest damage on the enemy’s ship¬ ping by the destruction of cargo space and cargo. She brought home more than 406 members of crews of sunken ships of various nationalities, especial¬ ly numerous colored and white British soldiers. 12 Persons Killed In A Train Wreck Columbia, S. C.—In the worst wreck on the Southern railway system in 14 years, 12 persons were killed and 37 injured when train No. 42, bound from Spartanburg to Columbia, crash¬ ed into the rear of train No. 18 from Greenville to Columbia, at Frost 6% miles from Columbia. Both trains were eastbountd. The wreck was at 2:15 o’clock. All the dead were pas¬ sengers. Ten were killed outright and two died after being removed to Col¬ umbia hospitals. MOTHERS TO BE Should Read Mrs. Monyhan’c Letter Published by Her Permission. Mitchell, Ind — u Lvdia E. Pinkham’a me so 9: 1, it: : I/ 41k [U W ‘ 251,1" ,fi ‘ my housework. My baby pounds when and seven I months old weighed 19 feel better than I nave for a long do time. I never bad any medicine me so much good.”—Mrs. Ind. Pearl Monyhan, Mitchell, Good health during maternity is a most important factor to both mother and received child, by and the many Lydia letters E. have Pinkham been Medicine restoredduringthis Co., Lynn, Mass., trying telling period of health by the use of Lydia & Pinkham s Vege¬ table Compound. ** ABSORBIne ""trade MARX 8EG.U.S PAT. Off. will reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Boils, Poll Evil, Quit tor, Fistula and infected sores quickly as and it is a positive antiseptic germicide. Pleasant to ok; doe* not blister or rtmon the heir zr*d you can work the bora*. $ 2 . SO per bottle, delirered. Book 7 R free. ABSORBINE, JR..the antiseptic llairomt for mankind, reducer Painlut. Swollen Veiur, Wenr. Strain., Bruitett rtopr pain and infiatn, -nation. Price SI. 25 per bottle at dealerr or delirered. Will tell you more if you write. Liberal Trial Buttle for 10c in etampr. W. F. YOUNG, P, D. F.. 310 Temple Sf„ Sorlnofield. Man. Natural Sequence. “They didn't get a hand on that play.” Then how could they expect to get ahead?" WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY is her hair. If yours is streaked with ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use “La Cre¬ ole” Hair Dressing and change It la the natural way. Price $1.00.—Adv. Courtship is merely the preliminary skirmish before the regular battle. Only One BROMO QUININE" Yfkmn To get :et the^ the QClNINH. genuine, call fof ftill L.AXATTTB 8 HOMO % Look In for Bay? signature of IS. W. UROVB. area a Cold One 80c, The fewer steps a man takes the longer his shops last. PREVENT ABORTION IN COWS! or tb« ‘ <Ite* Hr* David Roberts* Anttsepfo and Flushing Outfit, Prie® $1 Km* Thousands of dollars and many calves an be saved by this simple prevent,, re. •Read the Practical Home Veterinariaa 8«ad for frw> booklet oo Abortion In Cow* If no dealer In your town, write Or. David Roberts' Vet. Co„ 100 Grant* Avenue, Waukesha, Wl* W-W FEED MILL Pulverizes Velvet Beans, corn on cob, corn in bnsk, alfalfa, peavlve ha.v, corn stalks, aH kinds grain, forage, etc. No bins, no plates, no fcharp edged knives, but operated on hammer or be.aten type. Capacity, 500 pounds to 8 terns per hour. Most economical and successful grind¬ er on the market. Write for large illustrated catalogue. Free on request. SEEGER-WALRAVEN COMPANY 34 W. Alabama St. Atlanta, Ga. /gr * 4 Soothe Your Itching Skin 1/p\ wuh Cuticura Soap 25c. Ointmeat 25c 4 50c FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Sue B. HERE. Delivered parcel post 100, 35c; 1,000. •*•50. Satisfaction guaranteed. D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C I HARVEY ind HOKE SHOCK oat ol ABSORBER FORK takes JOLTliV * It makes your cat LOOK and RIDE so Quell tetter, Yoa win be glad you own one. Write HOW for FREE Catalogue and SPECIAL offer. HARVEY KFG. CO., Lancaster, Fa, PERSISTENT COUGHS aredangerous. Relief is prompt from Piso's Remedy for Coughs and Colds. Effective and safe for young and old. No opiates in PISO’S during lookingforward the time I was to the coming of my little one that I am recommending other it to mothers. expectant Before I taking it, somedays suffered with neu¬ ralgia so badly that I thought I could not taking live, three but after bottlea |of LydiaE. Pink Compound! ham s Vegetable was en¬ neuralgia, tirely relieved 1 of had gained fn strength and was able to go around and do all