Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 293, 29 August 1910 — Page 6
PAGE CIS
THE RICHMOND PAI.LADimi AND OUX-TELEGllAXX, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1910.
ffiV YORK PAPERS
ROAST ROOSEVELT Shafts of Wit and Scorn Are Turned Loose on the Former President. CALLED "TRUST BUSTER" CARICATURED AS SITTING ON TOP OF THK STEEL OCTU PUSTHINK HE IS IN TRAINING FOR HIS ELECTION. New York, Aug. 29. When Theo dore Roosevelt was president the glaring rays of the political calcium II eha waa ha 4. I nnnn film Mil V more flxedlr than they are now. He Is the most entertaining character on the stage despite the fact that he Is now a prlrate citizen, but here in New Tork most of the metropolitan Journals are treating him as a soubrette Instead of as the most serious of the "AamnaMa MrunM." as formerly. The editors seem to feel there Is no impropriety In discussing him with perfect freedom since he Is no longer the official head of the nation. When he was la the White House they held themselves In restraint, "but of consideration for the office," they explain. But. how different! Their shafts of Irony, and scorn are fired at him day by day. The Sun employs Its most cutting ridicule, the Herald Its most deprecating cartoons, the World and Post their most powerful Invective. Herald's "Deadly Parallel." Sunday for Instance, the Herald published a caricature of the ex-pret-Ident apropos of his utterances concerning corporations In Cleveland and Toledo, Ohio. The title Is "The deadly parallel" and the Inscription reads: "Look on this picture and then on this." The first depicts "T. R." garbed In his "Rough Rider" uniform making a speech and fiercely exclaiming: "I will make the corporations come to time;", the personal pronoun is of exaggerated slse, being designed to represent egotism in pronounced form. On the other side is an ugly cartoon of the Steel Trust holding President Roosevelt on Its right knee, while on Its ample bosom Is this legend: "When U. 8. Steel Absorbed Tennessee Coal and Iron." A triumphant leer covers the expansive ebony countenance of the alleged octopus, while the colonel's face Is a picture of fear ant anxiety while he nestles shrlnklngly and diminutively In the , protecting arms of the metal giant. Those, who recall theabsorptlon of the Tennessee Coal and Iron company by the Steel Corporation during the panlo of 1907 require no diagram to understand the cartoonist's meaning. Facts of Deal Recalled. A subcommittee of the senate committee on judiciary, which Investigated the acquisition by the Steel Trust or lit leaoing competitor in wis country, reported that In Its opinion the transaction was not Inspired by the most benevolent motives and was also Illegal, being consummated In disregard of the Sherman anti-trust law. It will be recalled also that because certain high officials of the Steel Corporation conferred with the president before the Tennessee company was taken over. It was claimed that Mr. Roosevelt had extended assurances to tthem that the national administration would not Invoke the antitrust act to prevent or subsequently dissolve the merger. The Herald from time to time has the "Big Noise," and so has the World. The Sun which prints no cartoons, contents itself with characteristic editorial comment Saturday it coupled him up with Kaiser Wllhelm's divine Inspiration speech. Its nnmnu Kalnar tt ilAW that th flarw man Emperor was not alone 'In assuming to act by the express wish Personal Pronoun "I." Today the Sun printed what It called "Syllabus of a speech at CheyVHUCS wucu ivaua. i "I reached, I accepted, X was glad. I have a pecnlalr feeling. I lived. I count. I am tempted. I am now addressing. I myself saw. X have seen the herds. "I have seen the fortunate movement. I now travel, I first rode. I find cities, I have urged the word, I greet you, I stand for progress. - "I do not mean I would preach- fiery wrath, I would not preach such wrath. I wish to say a word, I speak. 1 thought, I wish. I hold. "My hunting trip, my neighbors, my nd of the country, my life, my The Gotham newspapers at any rate, most of them-are convinced that Colonel Roosevelt is engaged In a preliminary canvass for the 1912 presidential nomination. Arguments to the contrary pile mountain high would fall to shake their conviction In this respect The fact that they are ridiculing end cartooning him in the manner Indicated shows they are not 'In sympathy with his supposed asplratlena. .- P:::d! PIlcol Pllco! TriUlaM Indian Pile OtnUnvnt will cure ramd. Ueeeta sod Itching Piles. It absorbs the tumors, allays itching- at once. r a a poultice, alvr lnatmnt rU. . . . 3kSM Indian Pile Ointment Is pre r-wl for Pltoa and Itching of the private Drvilsts. mail too and tie). L;rJ lrX fLrCWsad, CMS ln salt by T. r. ucOoaneU.
HAtO liEfifl BULLS
EARN TIIEIR KEEP. From the Jean DuLuth farm In northern Minnesota come photographs 11lustrauag te what good use they are putting Bed Poll and Guernsey bulls, writes Joseph E. Wing la the Breeder's Gazette. It is evident that these bulls are much mere than earning their keep. They are splendidly doing very useful work. Doubtless by means of this hard work they are maintaining their Virility and potency as well. They are good and useful members of society on the Jean DuLuth farm. This Is as It should , be. A caged bull is subjected to the worst possible conditions. His lack of movement, of stretch of muscle, is bad for his virility. Imprisonment sours his temper or makes him stupid. He cannot live a natural life la such environment. Bulls are masses of huge muscles. It Is good for them to have use. Nor are they intractable, rightly broken, nor difficult to manage. There are certain classes of work where cattle come well la play. They are admirable to draw the bay wagons from meadow to barn. George Aitkin has always splendid great oxen doing this trick in Tern-oat. They also plow, haul manure, haul eff stone and upturn stumps. There Is a amazing lot of slow, resistless power in a good team of either oxen or bulls. la old Mexico I have seea very splendid oxen, gentle as horses, well fed and cared for, drawing Immense loads of stone or merchandise or forage. In France one sees tbe best oxen nowsdays. There It Is the practice on some of the best farms to buy young cattle adapted to work, often of the Nlvernaise breed, to work them on the farm for a BULL XX HAJurxas. few years, feeding them welL They reach very heavy weights and are finally marketed as beef. There Is la France no prejudice against beef from oxen. I think, and therefore no lessened price in the market for the great cattle of six years. We are far too Intolerant In America, too resolved to be "in the fashion." We refuse to avaft ouraelTes of many expedients and economies that would be good. This thing of the enormous dormant, wasted and worse than wast ed power of idle bulls throughout America should receive attention and reform.' Regularity In the Dairy. The cow is a creature of habit She comes up to be milked at the same time each day, and she expects to be fed and milked in her regular turn. Any disturbance of her quiet life or habits will affect the profit she re turns. MILTON, IND. Milton, Ind., Aug. 29. Miss Anna Tooker of New Castle, and Mrs. Mohr of Los Angeles, Californal. were a company with Dr. and Mrs. Sweeney lesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Mart Kellam and son of east of town and Mrs. Mason and family of Centervllle, are camping on the banks of Greensfork. Mr. and Mrs. Will Boland and grandson spent Thursday with them. Mrs. Will Klmmel of east of town Is reported better. She has been sick. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Whltely, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. William Ferris, Misses Blanche Moore Maude and Louie Hussey were among those who attended the Whltely reunion at Riverside park, Indianapolis. Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Whltely will visit at Muncle and Portland before returning home. A company of young people from Indianapolis, Hagerstown and Milton picnicked east of town yesterday in the grove at Richard Houseworth's. Tbe Indianapolis people arrived at about nine o'clock on the Interurban here, where conveyances were waiting for them and the jolly crowd drove out to enjoy the woods and the grand dinner In which chicken, meats of an kinds, cakes, and everything pertaining to a picnic dinner was Included, with Ice cream and luscious watermelons thrown In for good measure. The company was composed of Mr. and Mrs. Newell Kenyon of Indianapolis, who chaperoned the party. Misses Louise Mueller Mary Wasson, Mae Wicker, Edythe Stolz of Indianapolis. Misses Helen Hoshour of Cincinnati. Kathryn Hoshour, Katheryn Mueller, Mary Ward of Milton, Messrs. Claude Campbell. Henry Fink. Will Hutchinson. Indianapolis, Walter Miller. Petty of Hagerstown, Sam Thompson and Jesse HormeC Watson Faucett of near Milton. Alvin Lowery was at Madison yesterday. Miss Louise Mueller went to Brookvllle today. Mrs. James Doddridge last her pocket book. Messrs. and Mesdames Secord, and Brown, and Misses Edna Brown and Elisabeth Secord formed an automobile party at dinner with Mesdames L. A. Bragg and Carrie Johnson yesterday Boyd Mundelle was also a guest with Mrs. Bragg at dinner on Friday before leaving for his home at Washington, D. C Mrs. Ada Swearlngen is visiting at Dan Nixon's, Springport Messrs. and Mesdames , Borders, Passmore, Mesdames Walker, Verne Beeson, Bennett, Plnnlck and Miss
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Carrie Walker formed a social company with Mr. and Mrs. Marion Leverton Friday evening. David Little and Win Little of Anderson attended the funeral of the late Mrs. John Little at Doddridge on Sunday. Miss Helen Gordon visited at ConnersvUle yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Rob Beeson and family were at dinner with his father, Lycurgus Beeson and wife yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Stamm and family visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Hartzler at Richmond. Arthur Shepherd returned Saturday from Indianapolis. Mrs. Fred Murley Is able to be out again, John T. Manlove is sick. Mr. and Mrs. Branson are improved. Mr. and Mrs. Goorge Kelsey attended the Beach reunion at Broo aside park, Indianapolis Saturday.
THE PONY EXPRESS. , Fearless Riders and the Dangers and Hardships They Faced. Perhaps toe meet picturesque figure on the old trail was tbe pony express rider. The overland stage proved too slow for mail and express In Its flight from the Missouri and the Pacific. True, It bad cut down the months of the old ox team to twenty-five days, and still there was a clamor that the east and west be brought closer together, and It was done. Tbe pony cut the time to ten days. Those who were personally acquainted with tbe famous pony express of those days could never forget tbe Intrepid rider who braved all peril, forgetful of self. Intent . only on tbe speedy delivery of his. precious mochila to the next hardy horseman. Hard and fast be rode over mountain and plain, across scorching desert and Icy snow, through sunshine and rain, past friend, away from foe, to the final achievement the' safe delivery of his chargeForty fearless horsemen In saddle riding west, as many more riding east end this novel but useful enterprise was In motion. For two years the pony express carried messages of business and love across 2.000 miles of western mountains and plains, over a country peopled with a hostile race, destitute of cultivation or development, through a region wild, desolate and little known. It was in 1630 that tbe pony express was established. Tbe route, briefly stated, was due west from St. Joseph to Fort Kearney, up the Platte to Julesburg, thence, by Fort Laramie and Fort Bridger, to Salt Lake City, thence to Camp Floyd, Ruby valley, the Humboldt, Carson City, Placervllle and Folsom, to Sacramento and San Francisco by boat. The Intention of the pony express was to carry letters only and not more than ten pounds at a trip. It was decided that the safest and easiest mode of carrying the mall was to make four pockets, one In each eorner of the mochlla. a covering made of heavy leather for the saddles and generally used by the expert Mexican and Spanish riders. Tbe mochlla Was transferred from pony to pony and went through from St. Joseph to Saa Francisco, tbe pockets containing the mall being locked and opened only at military posts en route and at Salt Lake City. These precious letters were wrapped In oiled silk to protect them, but even this precaution sometimes failed. Rivers had to be crossed; horse and rider swam together. W. C Jenkins in National Magazine. Grew Too Tall. "I recall a case of genuine boneheadedness, mixed with enthusiasm, that cost a great many people a bunch of money," said an oil operator. "It was during the time when a big strike meant a drop in tbe price of oil. Tbe foreman of a drill crew bad been Instructed by the employers to use a code in the event of oil being found. If It was a big flow he was to wire. 'Pine trees grow tall.' If, on the other hand, the flow was small, 'Pine trees grow small,' was to be tbe code message. Tbe drill struck a gusher, and the following message was sent by the Ivory topped Individual: 'Pine trees grow tall as bell, and she is flowing all over the derrick I Of course there were a number of men about tbe exchange who could understand telegraphy, and the consequence was that the price of oil dropped about $2 a barrel in a few minutes." Louisville Times. Intoxicated by Tobacco. Giving evidence against a man on a charge of disorderly conduct at Bow street police court, a constable said that the accused behaved In a very violent and disorderly manner in Leicester square on Tuesday evening. He quarreled with a cabman, and eventually tbe witness took him Into custody, believing him to be drunk. At the police station the prisoner denied that he had been drinking, and tbe doctor who examined him reported that be bad chewed tobacco to such an extent that It bad bad tbe same effect upon him as alcoboL Pall Mall Gazette. - - - " Real Laziness. The Little Russians those of tbe south are said to be cleverer than the Russians of the north, but they are lazy just hew lazy may be gathered from this quotation from Mr. Maurice Baring's book. "Russian Essays and Stories:" "The Little Russian." said a Little Russian gentleman to me, "is so lazy that he will say to his wife, little wife, say whoa to my horse. I hsje a pala la my tongue.'" Progressive. "When did you commit your first fatal extravagance?" "When my boss referred to my wages as my 'salary.' " "And when did you perpetrate this latest folly r "The day my wife called my salary my income. "Cleveland Leader. Net Worth While. "I notice that you usually ten the truth." . "Yes: I found that telling- Ites gets you Into almost as much trouble." Kansas City Journal.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
MAKING LONDON GASP BY HIS EXTRAVAGANCE
Harry Payne Whitney, the young millionaire, who is setting a fast pace for money spending at London just now. He runs to expensive sport on tbe grouse moor and he has already spent over $50,000 to insure a good time for the guns over Holwick Moors. One hundred beaters were engaged for a day's sport. Immense sums have been spent by Mr. Whitney for jewels for Mrs. Whitney and on the voyage over the supplies of daily flowers were such as to increase the business of a New York caterer many hundreds of dollars. ATTORNEYS TO MEET American Bar Association to Hold Convention at Chattanooga, Tenn. FIRST SESSION TUESDAY (American News Service.) Chattanooga, Tenn., Aug. 29. While lawyers gathered from all over the country here today for tho thirty-third annual meeting of tbe American Bar association, to open tomorrow, various meetings were held by committees and other legal bodies. Including the Association of American Law Schools, The program was arranged to in clude a meeting' of tbe section of Patent, Trade Mark and Copyright Law at 2:30 p. m.. In the munciipal building, and the comparative law bureau at the same hour in the same building. For the evening there was slat ed the first meeting of the general council and the executive commit tee's first session at the headquarters, Hotel Patten. The law school organization's tenth annual meeting was called for 8 p. m. In the municipal building. The trade mark section's program included an address by the chairman, Robert S. Taylor, on "Mechanical Equivalents" and a general discussion of the -paper. s , Reporta were the feature of i tho Comparative Law Bureau - program, which was under tbe direction of Director Simeon L. Baldwin of New Haven, Conn, and Secretary William W. Smlthers, of Philadelphia. Each member of the Law School association was entitled to four voting delegates, and many sent full delegations. Tonight's program included the annual address of the president, John C. Townes, dean of the department of law. University of Texas, on "The Organization and Operation of a Law School," and a general discussion on "The Honor System as a means of Assuring Integrity of Examinations,' with papers presented by William Minor Lile of the University of Pennsylvania, the discussion being led by Professor W. 17. Moore of the University of ' Wisconsin. Tbe program - is in charge of William R. Vance of the Yale law school, secretary-treasurer of the organization. . AT SODA ramTJUNS OR CLSCWKtftf. Get the Original Genuine HOBLICR'S MALTED M I LCI TheFoodDrinbforAIlAles Ed b cy dni Trcrl ist on "nORLIClTO"
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Sixty Day Poll to be Taken
(Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Aug. 29. The next -ten days will be busy ones among tbe political workers all over the state. Both parties will take the sixty day poll within the next few days and on the result of this poll will depend much of the work that will be done dulng the campaign. Both sides hope to get through the sixty day poll a pretty fair idea of what the actual political conditions are over the state. It is admitted that the sixty day poll will not show how the voters are going to vote in November, but it will give tbe campaign managers a fair index to conditions , and show them the kind and class of work which will have to be done In the various counties and localities. It is the expectation, too, that the poll will show up the disaffection that exists in many places. Both sides admit that there are local troubles in their ranks, as there always are at the opening of a campaign. This condition is never confined to any one party. The republicans are having their tribulations this year and so are the democrats. Each side insists of course, that the troubles are local, but whether this is true or not remains to be seen. But, at all events, the poll will disclose the location and extent of these disaffections, and the campaign managers can then go to work on them to straighten them out'. It is understood that both sides will employ some new methods this year in taking the sixty day poll, but just what, they are Is not made public. Careful tabulations will be made of the conditions as they are found by the poll takers. Republican "State Chairman Lee is claiming that the republicans will carry the state by a good round majority, but he is not maglng any figures. On ' the other hand Stokes Jackson, democratic state ' chairman.ls claiming the state for the democrats by 40,000. But Jackson made loud claims two years ago that the state would go democratic by 40,000 to 50,000 and right up to the last minute he was claiming that the entire state ticket would be elected by big majorities. But when the returns came In It was found that only three democrats on the state ticket were elected, and that two of them had small margins. - Of. course, the figures compiled from the sixty day poll are never made public, and for that reason the public will never know what they showed. For either side to make known Its figures would be placing in the hands of the enemy the innermost secrets of the other fellow's campaign. Each side will, however, continue to make its claims, just as it is doing now, and therefore the poll will be of service only to the managers of the campaign. There are more than 3,100 preceincts in the 1,017 townships of the 92 counties in Indiana. It will take at least three men , from each party to take the poll in each precinct. This will mean that fully ten thousand republicans and ten thousand democrats will be engaged in poll taking, or twenty thousand, in all. These men have to be paid by the local organizations. Usually they are paid $2 a day for poll taking, and it takes two or three days to complete the work In most of the precincts. Therefore, the 20,000 men will earn probably $40,000 a day and this will make the total cost of their' services run up to something like $100,000 for the entire work. In addition to 'this enormous expense, the state committee has to furnish the . poll books, In order that they may all be uniform. Ten thousand poll books cost 'about $1,000. After the poll Is taken the books are returned to the local chairman and then the clerks are set to work making "copies and compilations from them. The doubtful voters are classified, and so are the disaffected and disgruntled ones, in order that workers may call on them and try to bring them around into line. This all costs money, too. So, it is plain to be seen that the next few days will not only be lively days among the political workers, but thatthey will also be expensive days. Further to add interest to the coming few days. Governor Marshall will be at his desk at the state house, John W. Kern will be at home, and Senator Beverldge will return from his vacation in New Hampshire. All LrormrJ Thno
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Gelt:cz3. ILc3 (Do.
of the State by Both Parties
of these men will devote their time to preparing to jump into the campaign. They will be the big smokes of their respective parties, when it comes to speech making, and they are all getting down to brass tacks in their preparatory work. Senator Beverldge will stop here a few days prior to going to St Paul, Minn., where he will make a speech at the national conservation congress, which convenes next Monday. President Taft and Theodore Roosevelt also will be there and make speeches. The senator also has a number of other engagements to make non-political speeches during the first half of September, but about that time he will lay aside everything else and start in on his active campaign. Kern has already made one political speech, at the Dekalb county democratic convention, in which be said practically nothing except that he was not going to pick a fuss with Senator Beverldge. He is making another speech this afternoon at East Enterprise, where the joint representative convention of Switzerland and Ohio counties Is being held, and It was understood that It would also be Informal and that he would not say much more than he did at Auburn. - He will make his keynote speech about September 20, but the place has not been announced. ' Governor Marshall has not announced the time or the place for his opening speech, but it Is believed that he will make his first speech at Fort Wayne. It la understood that he will not make as many speeches as he was expected to make. MARK TWAIN'S CLOTHES. The Great Humorist Always Had a Relish For Personal Effect. At tbe time of our first meeting Mark Twain was wearing a sealskin coat, wltb the fur out, in the satisfaction of a caprice or tbe love of strong effect which be was apt to Indulge through life. Fields, tbe publisher, was present. I do not know what droll comment was la Fields' mind with respect to this garment, but probably be felt that here was an original who was not to be brought to any Bostonian, book In the Judgment of his . vivid qualities. Wltb his crest of dense red hair and the wide sweep of his flaming mustache Clemens was not discordantly clothed in that sealskin coat, which afterward. In spite of his own warmth in It. sent the cold chills through me when X once accompanied it down Broadway, and shared the Immense publicity It won him. Clemens bad always a relish for personal effect, wbich expressed Itself in the white suit of complete serge which he wore In his last years and in the Oxford gown which he put on for every possible occasion and said he would like to wear all the time. That was not vanity In him. but a keen feeling for costume which the severity of our modern tailoring forbids men, though it flatters women to every excess In it W. D. Howells In Harper's Magazine. HIS BLACK EYE. How He Got It and tho Worst That Was Yet to Come. "Gracious! That's a peach of a black eye. Where did you get it?" "Got it on the left side of my nose. Where did you think I got it-over the ankle boner "Don't get heated. How did it all happen?" "That's different. It was all a piece of my confounded luck. I was up on tbe Blue Cliff road looking at a piece of real estate when along came a coatless and bareheaded fellow running for dear life wltb a lot of panting pursuers stretching in a long line behind him. I joined in the chase. Being fresh, I rapidly overhauled tbe fugitive. I had nearly collared him when a big ruffian grabbed me and profanely told me to clear out -1 spoke rudely to him and kept on running, and he suddenly reached out a fist like a bam and knocked me into a ditch. And what do you suppose It all was?" : "Give it up." "It was a rehearsal for a moving picture film, and now my portrait will go all over the country and be seen in thousands of theaters as a bruised and battered butter-in who got just what was coming to him f Cleveland Plain Dealer. JUNG'S Red Deart Deer Guaranteed by the JUNG BREWING Co. under the Food and Drugs Act June 30, 1906. Serial No. 19060. All Our Beer Is Pasteurized. . Family trade supplied by the Jung Red Heart Supply Co. J. F. R0WLETT, Mgr. Richmond Branch. Office . Phone 2185. 435-439 S. 4th St
TO OE PROGRESSIVE Kansas Republican Leaders Are to Prepare Strong ,i Insurgent Platform. FOLLOWS IOWA PLATFORM
American News Service.) Topeka, Aug. IS. -The republican nominees, members of the state com- -mlttee and other republican party leaders in Kansas are rounding up la' Topeka in readiness for tbe party council tomorrow which will "promulgate a platform upon which Governor Stubbs and the other candidates nominated at the recent primaries will conduct their campaign this falL There has been some talk of an attempt to be made by the standpatters -to gain control of the council, but present indications, are that the : progressives will have things well In hand. . . It is predicted that the platform will follow in national matters very closely along the lines of the Iowa platform. It will declare that the republican party of Kansas feels conn dent to judge of the quality of republicanism of its senators and represent atives in congress. President Taft it is expected, will be indorsed for the progressive legislation he favored, while the Payne-Aldrlch tariff meat ure will come in for condemnation at unqualified as will be the praise bestowed upon Senator Bristow and the Insurgent representatives who opposed it CRITTEHTOII LEAGUE (American News Service.) , Old Orchard, Me.; Aug. 29. The annual conference of Christian Worker and the Florence Crittenton League of Compassion opened on the Old Orchard camp grounds today and will continue for one week. The gathering Is in charge of Rev. William J. Cozens, superintendent of the Florence Crittenton League, who will be assisted by a number of well known ministers and evangelists. . KM JF1LMJ WAR Ccred by Lydia B. Piskhm'sVetcbleCoiapcd Milwaukee. Wis. "LvdiaK Pink. ham'a Vegetable Compound hat made me ft weu woman, and I would like to tell the whole world of it I suffered fromfemale trouble and fearful pains in my back. I had the best doctor! and they all decided that I had a tumor in addition to my female trouble, ana advised an operation. Xvdla XL finkham't Vegetable Compound made) me a weu woman ana l nave no more backache. I hope I can helpothert by telling them what Lydia E. Tinkhanrt Vegetable Compound hat dose for me." Mrs. ExxaIxse, 833 Pint St, Milwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thousands of grateful letters which are constantly being received by the Pinkbam MedlHnA fVtnmanv rf T.vnn Mass., which prove beyond a doubt that Lydia . Pinkham't Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, actually does cure these obstinate diseases of women after all other means have failed, and that every such sufering woman owes it to herself to at leastgive Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta. hi flAimwtnn1 lwnm ihmf. -r . yw.MwMiiw. mm iw&waw IT inrimir ting to an operation, or giving up hope of recovery. . lira. Pinkham, of Lynn, Maes her for avarice. She have raided thousands to health smd her tviY la free. REDiHEriRT mm. :ve
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