Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 340, 15 October 1910 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE RICH3IOXD PALIaADIUM AXD SUX-TELEGKAM, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 191(X
TO HAVE A GREAT REVIVAL Arrangements for the Chapman-Alexander Meetings Are Now Completed. A CAMPAIGN FOR SOULS CO-OPERATION OF OVER 400 CHICAGO AND SUBURBAN CHURCHES HAS BEEN SECURED HELD AT BIG PARK. (Palladium FpecUn Chicago, Oct. 13. Arrangements for the big Chapman-Alexander revival meetings art completed, and Chicago will tomorrow enter upon a campaign for souls which will be more vast In cope and promises to receive greater support, than any similar series of meetings ever conducted in this city. ." Through the efforts of the Laymen's Evangelistic council, the cooperation of over 4io Chicago and suburban Churches of Protestant denominations has been secure d for the meetings, which will begin tomorrow, and which will continue for six weeks. Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman has been secured as leader of these meetings and will be assisted by the noted choir leader, Charles M. Alexander and some forty or fifty evangelists and singers. Chicago's best known amusement park the White City has been completely turned over to the council for meetings and Dr. Chapman begins his meetings In the big ball room of this "White City" and will speak here each day and night for two weeks. The room seats about 6,000 with a platform for tho choir which will seat almost another thousand. Permits for two great tabernacles have been secured from the city fcouncil and are being erected on the north side district. Meetings will be held here for two weeks by Dr. Chapman and Mr. Alexander and during the last two weeks, meetings will be held In the great tabernacle which Is being erected on the west side. ; These buildings are under the supervision or Mr. William Gill, best known as "Billy" Sunday's architect. In addition Dr. Chapman will hold noonday meetings In the Chicago opera house and If the situation demands It, other meetings will be held at convenient points. It is "estimated that the 400 churches co-operating In this campaign represent approximately 100.000 church members. During the past week an organization of group committees and central committees has been perfected. There will be several conference days when ministers of Illinois and adjoining statea will attend. Prominent religious workers have been Invited to speak on these days, among them Commander Eva Booth of tho Salvation Army. Mr. Cherwu rnd Mr. Alexander have ttmt rrtmnrri frnm Ahmad whr they hld mifrrrnr-a In Oldham, Eng-1 I .1 . t ... - -!.! J . n..jm I wnui i. iiiur, ."out; mi, varum, ntwport and IpWch, Wales; and Chesterham. Englnr'I. At the close of the Chicago campaign Dr. Chapman and party will conduct meetings In Fort Wayne, Ind., and In January will go to Toronto, Canada. M. A. MARTIN. GARFIELD TO SPEAK HERE James R. Garfield, secretary of the Interior, during the administration of President Roosevelt, and one of the most aggressive Insurgent leaders In the county, will speak Monday evening at the P.vthlan Temple. This will be one of the most important republican speeches of the campaign In Wayne county and a large crowd Is anticipated. Mr. Garfield spoke here two years go and pleased a large audience. What Beauty la Called. Socrates called beauty a short lived tyranny; Plato, a privilege of nature; Carneadea, a solitary klugdom; Aristotle, that It was better than all the letter vf recommendation In the world; llomer. that It was a glorious gift of nature. Housekeeper.
CHICAGO
0!!E DOSE BIDS INDIGESTION AND SETTLES , Jl'lY SOUR, GASSY, DISORDERED STOMACH.
A little Diapepsin regulates bad Stomachs in five minutes. Every family here ought to keep some Diapepsin In the house as any one of you may have an attack of Indication or stomach trouble at any time, day or night This harmless preparation will digest anything you eat and overcome t distressed or -out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. ', If your meals don't tempt you, or what little you do eat aeems to fill you. or lays like lump of lead In your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that It a sign of Indigestion. Ask your pharmacist for a 50-cent cam of Pape'a Diapepsin and take a
King Manuel and Queen Mother
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WANTED Man Arrested Here While Enroute to California for His Health. SAYS ACTION SPITE WORK On a warrant sworn out by the Andcrston Fruit company, of Dayton, O., W. R. Prince was arrested by Patrolman Lawler, as he left a train from Dayton, this morning. Prince and his family were about to transfer to a west bound train for Chicago from where they Intended to go to California for Prince's health, they said. Trlnce Is charged with embezzlement of $nr. It is said he collected a sura of $3. which was owed the fruit company and did not turn in the money. Prince says he worked for the commission house 16 years. "They were sore," he Bald, "because I was leaving, and took this opportunity for revenge. I am not guilty of the embezzlement and have never been In trouble before." The Dayton police wired Superintendent Gormon to arrest the man and after being notified of his apprehension said they would send an officer to Richmond immediately. Fresh supply Mrs. Austin's Famous Ruckwnpat rlour at a11 crs. BOYS PLAY And One Member Is Tied Stake, but He Breaks Bonds and Kills Fire. to ANOTHER LAD IS TORTURED The court house gang caught two of the weaker members on Saturday morning and taking them into the river bottoms proceeded to play Indian In realistic fashion. One of the boys was burned to the stake or at least would have been, had he not been fortunate enough to get his feet loose and stamp out the fire. The other was tied on a board and bounced up and down for several minutes. The authorities are investigating but have not yet given out any names of the boys implicated. City Statistics Marriage Licenses. Ralph Maurice Jones, Indianapolis. 21. collector, and Hannah Lola Pardon, Richmond. 19. little Just as soon as you can. Ther will be no sour risings, no belchlngs of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in tne stomach, nausea, debilitating headacrea. dizziness or intestlnal griping. This will all go, and besides, there will be no sour food left over In the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin Is a certain cure for out-of order stomach's, because It prevents fermentation and takes hold of your food and digests It Just the same as If your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery Is at any drug store, waiting for you. These large .Went cases contain more than sufficient to cure almost any chronic case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other Stomach trouble.
INDIAN
!
Plow
WIRE FLASHES! UPHOLDS PRIMARY LAW. Springleld. 111., Oct. 15. The supreme court upheld the Illinois direct primary law today. :tchell IS SHOT. Springileld, Mo., Oct. 15. Stanley Ketchell, the champion middle weight pugilist was critically shot through a lung at Dickerson's ranch, near Conway, where he was recuperating, it was learned today. A posse 'with blood hounds is searching for a man named Hurd with whom Ketchell quarreled. Details are lacking. HEALTH RULES MADE. Indianapolis. Oct. 15. The state board of health decrees that physicians must henceforth report infantile paralysis and place quarantine warnings. The matter of compulsory wrap ping of each loaf of bread by bakers is compromised and rules are established requiring protection from dust and flies at the front and rear of cov ered delivery wagons; also cleanli ness of drivers and utensils is re quired. EXPOSURES COMING. New York, Oct. 15. The affair so far is of minor importance, the principal exposures are still to come! This statement made today by Wm. Loeb, Jr., collector of the port of New York, summed up the government's work to date in the great fraud charges made against Duveen Brothers, the International art dealers who are accused of bringing millions of dollars worth of rare art works into this country and unlawfully evading the customs duties. CHURCH KEEPS NAME. Cincinnati. Oct. 15. The House of Bishops of the Episcopal convention decided not to change the name to Holy Catholic church. Change of name was lost by one vote. ROBBERS JAKE HAUL. Churubusco. Ind., Oct. 15. The post office here was dynamited during the night and eighteen hundred dollars In money and stamps were taken. HELD F0RMURDER. Spiceland. Ind., Oct. 15. Mrs. Etta Young Johnson was arrested this morning on a grand jury indictment, charging her with first degree murder of her husband, George Edward Johnson, who died August seventeenth from carbolic acid. He carried one thousand dollars life insurance. The couple had three children. FRANCE (10W QUIET (American News Service.) Paris, Oct. 15. Railrcad conditions in France attained a normal condition today after the four days strike which threatened to paralyze France and wnicn virtually tnrew rarts into a state of martial law. Practically every striker returned to work today pending negotiations which will be carried on with the companies through Premier Briand. The men have been but mildly consistent In their demands. The French government continued massing troops in Paris and the city's environs today to put down the violence which has followed in tie wake of the great strike. More than 10.000 soldiers were distributed over the city and suburbs today whilst other battalions were enroute from the Provincial barracks. - -
GROWS IN POWER
Unionism Flourishes Despite Opposition. MASTERS ALL OBSTACLES. Record of tho Labor Movement Justifies Faith In Its Continued Progress. Ultimate Organization of All Workers Assured. In the writings and spoech of some men of labor 1 have uutk-ed a vein of j pessimistic discount si-mem wlii'-h It ! seems to mo is not warranted by facts ' or conditions n ihoy apply to orjrun- j Ized labor today, writf G. V. IVr- j kins in the Auiericnu IVderruioiiist. I It 1 true tliat we have received I many bard Jolt from some courts. some Judses. Injunctions, judge made j laws, damage suits, etc.. aiul u hostile I congress wit (sin the last few years, j but the membership Las increased and j Is still lncre.nsl!!. It Is true that we hare been assailed by the National Manufacturers' association, with Its "open shoppers;' by a hostile and Indifferent press, wblch has fed the public on half truths and all of our faults iul none of our virtues and splendid work. But what of it? The old tinier expects this and remains with undaunted courage, refusing to surrender. And why? He knows the past; he hns seen and experienced greater opposition and persecution when he had to fight almost single banded and has seen the movement grow and prosper beneath it. Thirty-five, forty and fifty years ago It was held to le a crime to even organize. Members of unions were arrested under allesed conspiracy laws, common laws and any old law, tried, convicted and sent to Jail for even asking for an Increase of wages. They did not Tvait for a strike in those days; they went after the workers right on the jump. Formerly organized labor was ignored, humiliated, browbeaten, bulldozed and Us members looked upon as worse than outlaws. Manufacturers' associations existed. Courts, Judges, public officials, police. Finkertons and the militia were hostile and bitter in their opposition, and the general public looked on with Indifference or with approval and satisfaction over the persecution. Wages were low. hours long, conditions frightful, with no rights for the workers that anybody was bound to or did respect. Despite all of this, the trade union movement has steadily grown In power, strength, usefulness and numbers and has the respect and confidence of a large portion of the general public. The fierce attack we are now undergoing. In which courts. Judges, congress, presidents and others have been drawn in and have taken a band in, Is a decided compliment to the stability, worth, effectiveness and usefulness of the present trade union movement. It justifies our faith In the soundness of the movement, our policies and leadership and argues well for the future. The record of the trade union movement, which under the severest opposition and relentless persecution has overcome and mastered all obstacles from within and without, proves that we will successfully combat and finally master all opposition, regardless of what it may be in the future. It justifies an optimistic outlook and means success. The methods, plans, work and policies of the past, changed only to meet changing conditions, such as experience and ripe judgment may justify. If adhered to in the future, will surely bring success and the final organization of all workers. The only danger, and that of a temporary nature, that can overtake us is the Impatience, discouragement and lack of faith In the movement in the minds and hearts of some, caused by the present onslaught. ' The same undaunted courage, persistence and determination that have characterized the men of action in the past are still with us and will carry forward the work despite all opposition just as surely In the future as in the past The trade union movement has raised wages, shortened the hours of labor. Improved the sanitary condition of the shop, factory and mine, abolished the truck system, decreased diseases, increased the length of life of its members, stood the workers on their feet facing in the right direction and fighting for more and has accomplished countless other benefits. The record speaks for itself and proves that the trade union movement is on the right track and Justifies optimistic hope and confidence. Faith, honesty and a rugged determination will carry us on to final success. Barber Scale In San Francisco. The San Francisco barbers' new schedule is as follows: Sixteen dollars per week and GO per cent over $23, $17 per week and 60 per cnt over $26, $18 per week and GO per cent over $28 or a flat rate of $21 per week. Any day or part of a day, Saturdays, SunCays, holidays and days before holidays excepted, $3 and 60 per cent over $5. Saturdays or any part. $5 and 60 per cent over $7. Saturday and Sunday mornings or days before holidays and holiday mornings. $7 and GO per cent over $10. Sunday mornings or holiday mornings. $3 and 60 per cent over $4. Wednesday. Saturday and Sunday mornings. $10 and 60 per cent over $13. Every evening from 5 p.m. to 8 p. m. and Saturday and Sunday mornings. $13 and 60 per cent over $20. Every evening from 5 p. m. to 8 p. m. and Wednesday. Saturday and Sunday mornings. $15 and 60 per cent over $22. COAL FOR THE POOR The contract for supplying the needy poor of Wayne township with coal during the summer was let late on Saturday afternoon by the township advisory board. The old coal yard has been dispensed with by Township Trustee James Howarth and this winter all coal will be delivered direct from the coal yard of the dealer which receives the contract.
APACHES OF PARIS !
Night Prowlers Whose Trade Is Murder and Robbery. THE TERROR OF THE POLICE. These Desperadoes Rarely Use a Cun. but Work With the Knife, the Bludgeon or by "Tolling" They Have a Short and Bloody Career. There are very few nisrhts In the year when Paris ml icemen on their rounds do not stumble upon a body lyini; in a gory pool. Sometimes the handle of a long, slender knife protrudes between the shoulder blades; sometimes an ugly gash bleeds from ear to ear: not seldom blood oozes from mouth, nose and ears, as though the dead had not sustained any an- ; parent wound, or three little starllke ' bruises may dot the temple, or a bluish ' line an inch wide may mar the back of the neck, just abore the collar line. "Lea Apaches." the "tops' whisper to each other (for Parisian police of JJcers always go two by twoi. nud the oaii for an ambulance, much relieved not to have witnessed the incident. The Steel blade, the blackjack, the brass knuckles, will serve the j-urpose of the Apacbe. according to his vie I tim's size and presumable strength For a prey of small stature, however, j the Apache reserves what in his slang he calls "tolling." A sharp blow dazes the victim and throws him down; tht ) Apache's knees bore themselves into I the chest, while his hands seize the ! ears, lift the bead and slam it a couplo of times on the pavement until a duller thud tells of a fractured skull. Until an Apache Is an adept at "sticking" his man in very much the same way in which a Spanish torero dispatches a bull, with a single thrust between the shoulders, or at cracking a skull bone at one slam, be is held In little esteem and never allowed to tackle "big jobs" in a dangerous neighborhood, for Paris Is a well policed city. The night hawk must strike like lightning, empty the dead man's pockets in a wink and slink away into tho dark. Therefore Apaches very seldom carry guns; the knife is silent. Tolling, too. is safe so many people ara known to have slipped and fractured their skulls! Unless the victim Is especially well dressed there is not much of an inquiry. When It is all over the gang, which scatters like a flock of frightened sparrows, meets again at some wineshop where no one Is welcome who is not "In the business." Apaches never try to conceal their social status. Their very clothes are a sort of warning to the public. They even affect a peculiar walk, the body bent from the loins, shoulders hunched and hands plunging deep into the trousers pockets. But who would dare to molest them? The Apacbe is a marked man. He Joins a gang at three or fourvand twenty, and by thirty or thirty-five he has gone. The maws of a jail hold him for the balance of his earthly existence. He knows that. He expects it. Therefore while his freedom lasts there is no desperate chance he will not take to get at the gold that alone could save him. Apaches are not born; they are made made by the peculiar laws of France. Every citizen of the republic, without distinction of rank or class, must serve under bis country's flag for two years. Only the physically unfit escape that servitude. At the end of his term In the ranks every Frenchman seeking employment must present as means of Identification his certificate of honorable discharge. Then it is that tragedy looms up for some unfortunates. Woe to the one whose certificate mentions the "Afri - can battalions!" The African battalions, garrisoned at the edge of the Sahara desert, are made up of all the boys who hud the i misfortune of being arrested before they reached the age of twenty-one. Trivial as their offenses may have been, whether they were due or not to the indiscreet exuberance of youth or to some absurd entanglement, they are sent to the desert outposts, kept on convict fare, sleeping mostly In trenches which they dig, watched over by sentries that shoot to kill. Under the broiling son that lays them down fast with fever and cholera tJiey build roads, crept over the next day by the sand. They are "the front" whenever Arabs or Moroccans threaten to shake off the French yoke. When they fall by the wayside they are tied to a horse's tail. When tbey protest spurs cause the horse to rear. And wben tbe creepy water of sand wells, bullets ftom the sentries or from tbe nomads and the hoofs of vicious horses have spared them they return to their native city with hatred In their hearts, with the loathsome memories left by association with the depraved and the morally diseased. They return to their native city to find doors and hearts locked to them. Their military book, which they must produce, proclaims them Jailbirds. Who wants to employ an ex-convict? Daring their two years in the African Inferno they have atoned for their errors of tbe eighteenth or nineteenth year. For the second time tbey have settled their account with society. And now society refuses them a chance to show that they hare (for some of them bavei shed tbe o d bide, to prove that a new beart is beating in their breasts. Hard is the plight of an ex convict in France. Andre Fiidon in Ni-w Tori Tribune. VISITS DR. CATHELL. Hon. George F. Henry of Des Moines, Iowa, is the guest of Rev. Dr. and Mrs. J. Everist Cathell. Judge Henry is the senior warden of St Paul's church. Des Moines, of which Dr. Cathell was rector for many years, and is a deputy from Iowa to the General Convention at Cincinnati. In the Air. East Wind Well, they have us harnessed. West Wind Tea. but they cant driT us tandem. New York Sun.
Asthma and
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Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is a wonderful remedy tor all diseases of the throat, luncrs and stomach'.
and all run-down and weakened conditions of the body, brain and nerves. It builds new tissue, - s5 :r,-nl iho rirriilntinn -nn.l ni,! in vSuUE stj. A
quickens the circulation and aids in driving out all disease germs. It is prescribed by doctors and is recognized as a family medicine everywhere. CAUTION When yoa ask vonr drugRUt. crocer or dealer tor Duffy's Pure Halt Wills key, be cure you get the genuine. It Is en ebolutely pure medicinal malt whUkcy, and Is sold IN SEALED BUTTLES ONLY never In bulk. Price $1.00 a large bottle. Look tor the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist." on the label, and make sure the seal over the cork le unbroken. Write Medical Department, The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. V., for an Illustrated medical booklet and doctors' dvice, both sent free. THE CAMERA OBSCURA. ?rn It Was Evolved Our Modern Phetographio Apparatus. The camera was Invented by an Ital!no named Baptista Torta, though it was not at first used for photographing. It was In reality merely a dark room. Into which the light was admitted through a little round hole in one side. The rays of light coming from objects outside of this room entered It through this aperture and made a picture on the other side of the room glowing In all the beauty and color of nature Itself, but rather Indistinct and upside down. This dark room was contrived by Porta about the middle of the sixteenth century. He Improved It later by placing a glass lens in the aperture and outside a mirror which received the rays of light and reflected them through the lens so that the Image upon the opposite wall within was made much brighter, more distinct and In a natural or erect position. This was really the first camera obscura, an invention which Is enjoyed to the present day. Now our modem photographic camera Is merely a small camera obscura In Its simplest form, carrying a lens at one end and a ground glass screen at the other. It Is, however, often much more complicated In Its construction. ROMANCE OF ARCHITECTURE. Origin of the Graceful Corinthian Style of Capital. in the winter a young girl bad died in Corinth. Some time afterward ber maid gathered together various trinkets and playthings which the girl had loved and brought them to the girl's grave. There she placed them In a basket near the monument and put a large square tile upon the, basket to prevent the wind from overturning It i It happened that under the basketwa. a root or an acantnus piant. wnen spring came tbe acanthus sprouted, but Its shoots were not able to pierce tbe basket, and accordingly they grew around it. having tbe basket in tbelr midst Such of the long leaves as grew up against the four protruding corners of the tile on the top of tbe basket curled round under these corners and formed pretty volutes. Kalllmacbos. tbe sculptor, walking that way one day, saw this and Immediately conceived tbe notion that tbe form of tbe basket with tbe plaque on top of it and surrounded by the leaves and stalks of acanthus would be a comely beading for columns In architecture, lie from t bis idea formed the beautiful Corinthian style of capital. Such, at least is tbe story as tbe architect Vitruvlus told It 1,000 years ago. Stringent French Customs. Tourists must not fail to note tbe stringency of the French custom a L to the smokiDg materials they may In nocently bring with them. A correspondent Is reminded of a significant little scene on the Dieppe landing stage. An English holiday maker wbo had come down to meet a friend arriving by the boat found himself without a light for his pipe and sang out to a friend on board. "Got a matchf" The latter was Just about . to throw bis
FREE TO YOU MY SISTER 'ZZ
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boo-."wO.HAN'S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER" with explanatory fflostrationa sbowma; why women saffer.and how they can easily eare themaehree at hams. E-err woman "f1 - 2l leara to think tor herseH. Then when tho doctor aays "Too must turyeaa operation. Tou am
deejfeforyoorseiC. T Bouaaaas women nave corea wmmmiTwm w ' . - . m ITJrT T MMk r nurktm. I will enhin a shnale home treatment which speedily
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Consumption
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Gave Health and Strength When All Else Failed. Six Bottles Have r.Icdo Mr. Nash Feel Like, a I Jew Man. He recently wrote: ' tzst Janu ary, a rear aco. I causrlu a severe colJ while working. I coughed all the time. I sent sot my doctor, and he said I ha'! consumption and asthma ; he gave ir.c some medicine which did me no ood. I saw your advertisement ta the paper and Jecided to try your medicine. I have taken 6 bottles u.nd it has done me much good, and haj ?jiven me lots of strength. I am sure it will cure me. I am still taking your Duffy's Turc Malt Whb&sy and I recommend it to my friends and will continue to do so." James W, Nash, Cottageville, Ky. women, ' like Mr. Nastt, praise restoring them to health. matcnoox acroV. toe intervening yard or two of water when the man en the . stage suddenly remembered and added with hasty pantomime. -No; wait till, presently r And by standing passengers had to explain to the astonished newcomer that If 'the box bad been, thrown under the eyes of the customs officers every match In It -might have had to pay a franc London Chronicle. The Polka. ; The polka Is the natural dance. for the feet of the people. Take in evldence Its origin. A Bohemian peasant girl was seen dancing "out of bejT own head." extemporizing from the sheer Joy of her heart song, rune and steps. This abe dW on a Sunday afternoon In Elbeleinltz. and an .artist, one Joeet Neruda. wbo spied ber, made a note of 11 be saw. The people of the town adopted the donee and called It the pulka. bait step. In 1S35 It reached Prague and Vienna In 1840: thence It spread rapidly through Europe, Wben M. Cellarius Introduced It to the Part lans we bear that alt else gave way before "the all absorbing pursuit, the polka, wblcn embracer tn ha qualities -the intimacy of the waits wits tmf vivacity or the Irish Jig." Casaell's Mag azine. It Wouldn't 8ound Walt. An English north country 'paper frowns upon the known ambition of the mayor of Its town to be made ft knight for his distinguished service la receiving royalty and narrates for the benefit of the aspirant tbts anecdote: Wben Adnm Black, the Edinburgh of receiving knighthood, be aald: MNae. nae; It wadna dee. f on see." be added, "if a boy ram into ma shop and aid. 'A ba'peth o' slate pencil, iSlr Adam,' It wadna sound weeL" A Meek Worm. Ton miserable wormT cried an. incensed wife. "It you was half a man you'd help me to turn tbe mangier "I may be a worm." . replied tbe spouse meekly, "but 1 ain't the .sort that turns." London MalL The Sweet Girt. -BelleNellie, dear, may 1 Introduce you to ps 0nce? Nellie Delighted to meet yon. Ir ! All of your predecessors have been such bully fellows. Cleveland Leader. He that rlsetb late mast trot an day and shall care Overtake hi business at night Franklin. ' ALMOST A TRAGEDY "Come quick. The street roller Is on fire," said a woman over the telehone to No. 3 hose house late yesterday afternoon. The engines were sent down in a hurry, as It was understood the road roller was about to explode. On arriving at South Fourteenth and A street, where the roller, was stationed it was found some leaves had collected under the fender, which caught fire from the furnace. Every I eUB WOBssUU I know woman's trafteizifS. I 111 Hal fnaMWl that MH. W :il 1 M- - m smm nVL fRV I seat with tdl taatroeooaa v V7 vomaa'a eiliiieals I want to tail a weeaaa etamt thiaeoier-ye.myfeB.ferisettJwdatrt your mother, or your ejeter. I want to iUJ haw to core Toursetres at home without the "f doctor. Men i aiaiiit understand women's sufferta.Whe wo women know frees ospertance. we know rLfflTJLr'rrr'jJr t that nr home treat ment ia safe and ears care togw?rk at Wbttlaa scaaras. UtceraUoa. Dfsplactssrnt or FesWn of the Wooaey wiae. Periods. Uterine or Ovartaai Takers a.OreytM also pases fa the back an .Jr?1'! aows) feeshws. mi ' uaeams. J lana it snne; en tepeTWianrhefy. etestre to err. fsa.be.. s. kldaey bleeder treaties where caused by t nacuUmr to oar sex. tcewMt to car's treatI want to i to prove tore ma you can core .... i f 1mm. ...fir omciur ana suieu. mm TI ZZJTmmt roa swtbtar to aire the - a, v) w u, - jTT.. V J rait am B .. -vi! and Painful or IireBtilar tseastraats ia Young Ha use. . wo - Hotr warns, in-., v. -.
