Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 28, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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J THREE U
:j BARSS> I
■By
\ | KATE AND VIRGIL D. BOYLES
i ** »
(Copyright A. r. Mcciurg Co., lyui.j
SYNOPSIS.
George Williston, a poor rruvhnvin.
high-minded and cultured, searches for
tattle missing from his ranch—the "Lazy
9." On a wooded spot in the river's lied
Jhat would have been an island had the
(Missouri been at high water, ho dis
covers a band of horse thieves engaged
!a working over brands on cattle. He
creeps near enough to note the chang
ing of the"Three Bars" brand on one
*teer to the "J. K." brand. Paul Lang
ford, the rich owner of the"Three
liars," is informed of the operations of
the gang of cattle thieves—a band if
outlaws headed by Jesse Black, who
long have defied the law and authori
ties of Kemah county. South Dakota,
l/angford is struck with the beauty of
M.ary, commonly known as "Williston's
(title girl." Louise Dale, an expert
rourt stenographer, who had followed
tier uncle, Judge Hammond Dale, from
the. east to the "Dakotahs," and who
J» living with him at Wind City, is
requested by the county attorney,
■Richard Gordon, to come to Kemah and
take testimony in the preliminary
hearing of Jesse Black. Jim Munson, in
waiting at the train for Louise, looks
a t a. herd of cattle being shipped by
Bill Brown and there detects old
"Mag," a well known "onery" steer be
longing to ids employer of the"Three
Bars" ranch. Munson and Louise start
for Kemah. Crowds assemble in Justice
James B. McAllister's court for the
preliminary hearing. Jesse Black springs
the first of many great surprises, waiving
examination. Through Jake Sanderson, a
Jncmber of the outlaw gang, he had
learned that the steer "Mag" had been re
covered and thus saw the uselessness of
Sighting against being bound over. County
Attorney Gordon accompanies Louise
!>ale on her return to Wind City. While
Williston stands in the light, in his floor
a.l night a shot is tired at Idm. The house
IJie attacked and a battle ensues between
Williston and his daughter, on one side,
. snd the outlaws on the other. The house
is set on fire. As an outlaw raises Ids rifle
to shoot Williston a shot from an un
3ttiow« source pierces his arms and the
ritlo falls to the ground. Aid has come to
WilliHlon, but lie and his daughter are
captured and borne away by the outlaws,
iim Munson late at night heard the shots,
Aiaeovered tlie attack on Williston's house,
hurried to the Three Bars ranch and sum
atoned Langford and his brave men trt the
rescue. It was Langford who fired the shot
which saved Williston's life. Langford
readies Mary from her captor. The party
warch in vain for Williston. Louise comes
to nurse Mary. Williston is given up for
tk-ad. Hut meager evidence is obtainable
against Jesse Black, and it is concluded
that the case must be. fought out on the
note question of "Alag." Judge Dale ar
rives to sit at the December session of
the circuit court at which the cattle theft
'■ase is to be tried. Gordon has hard work
in securing an unprejudiced jury. Bed
Sanderson takes a seat in the hotel din
ing hall beside Louise and addresses her.
fie is unceremoniously shoved aside by
Gordon. Sanderson draws his gun. The
trial begins. Gordon makes a good im
pression. Wandering aimlessly on his
horse meditating In the night Gordon
finds himself beside the ruins of the
Mzzle S. He is called by his name. The
voice is that of Williston, and the long
lost man and needed witness is found.
CHAPTER XVl.—Continued.
"Tell me anything? Not they. She
was such a good girl. Dick. There
never was a better. She never com
plained. She never got her screens,
poor girl. I wish she could have had
her screens before they murdered her.
Where did you lay her, Dick?"
"Mr. Williston," said Dick, taking
firm hold of the man's burning hands
and speaking with soothing calmness,
"forgive me for not telling you at
once. I thought you knew. I never
dreamed that you might have been
thinking all the while that Mary was
dead. She is alive and well and with
friends. She only fainted that night.
Come, brace up! Why, man alive,
aren't you glad? Well. then, don't go
to pieces like a child. Come, brace up,
I toll you!"
"You —you —wouldn't lie to me,
would you, Dick?"
"As God is my witness, Mary is
alive and in Kemah this minute —un-
less and earthquake lias swallowed
tho hotel during my absence. I saw
her less than two hours ago."
"Give me a minute, my dear fellow,
will you? I —l "
He walked blindly away a few steps
and sat down once more on the ruins
of his homestead. Gordon waited.
The man sat still —his head buried in
l>is hands. Gordon approached, lead
ing his mare, and sat down beside
him.
"Now tell me," he said, with simple
directness.
An hour later the two men sepa
rated at the door of the Whites' claim
shanty.
"Lie low here until I send for you,"
■was Gordon's parting word.
CHAPTER XVII.
Fire!
The wind arose along toward mid
night—the wind that many a hardened
inhabitant would have foretold hours
aefore had be been master of his time
and thoughts. As a rule, no signal
service was needed in the cow coun
try. Men who practically lived in the
open liad a natural right to claim
30r.n0 close acquaintance with the por
'.enis of approaching changes. Hut it
would have been well had some storm
Sax waver over the little town that
;.ai. For the wind that came slipping
lip In the night, first in little signing
Thill's and skirmishes, gradually grow
ing more impatient, more domineering,
more utterly contemptuous, haughty,
ajid hungry, sweeping down from its
northwest camping grounds, carried a
deadly menace in its yet warm breath
t to the helpless and unprotected rattle
j huddled together in startled terror or
already beginning their migration by
intuition, running with the wind.
Ic rattled loose window casings in
the hotel, so that people turned uneas
ily in their beds. It sent strange crea
tures of . the imagination to prowl
I about. Cowmen thought of the de-
I pleted herds when the riders should
come in off the free ranges in the
spring should that moaning wind
mean a real northwester.
Louise was awakened by a sudden
shriek of wind that swept through the
siight aperture left by the raised win
dow and sent something crashing to
| the floor. She lay lor a moment drowsi
ly wondering what had fallen. Was
it anything that could be broken? She
heard the steady push of the wind
gainst the frail frame building, and
knew she ought to convjei herself suf
ficiently to be aroused to close the
window. Hut she was very sleepy.
The crash had not awakened Mary.
She was breathing quietly and deeply.
But she would be amenable to a touch
—just a light one—and she did not
mind doing things. How mean, though,
to administer it in such a cause. She
could not do it. The dilapidated green
blind was flapping dismally. What
time was it? Maybe it was nearly
morning, and then the wind would
probably go down. That would save
her from getting up. She snuggled
under the covers and prepared to slip
deliciously off into slumber again.
Hut she couldn't goto sleep after
all. A haunting suspicion preyed on
her waking faculties that the crash
might have been the water pitcher.
She had been asleep and could not
gauge the shock of the fall, it had
seemed terrific, but what awakens one
from sleep is always abnormal to
one's startled and unremembering
consciousness. Still, it might have
been the pitcher. She cherished no
fond delusion as to the impenetra
bility of the warped Cottonwood floor
ing. Water might even then be trick
ling through to the room below. She
found herself wondering where the
bed stood, and that thought brought
her sitting up in a hurry only to re
member that she was over the musty
sitting-room with its impossible car
pet. She would be glad to see it
soaked —it might put a little color into
it, temporarily at least, and lay the
dust of ages. But, sitting up, she felt
herself enveloped in a gale of wind
that played over the bed, and so wise
ly concluded that if she wished to see
this court through without the risk of
grippe or pneumonia complications,
she had better close that window. So
she slipped cautiously out of bed, ner-
CSigli
>■.
"Won't Save a Thing."
vously apprehensive of plunging her
feet into a pool of water. It had not
been the pitcher after all. Even after
the window was closed there seemed
to be much air in the room. The
blind still flapped, though at longer in
tervals. If it really turned cold, how
were they to live in that barn-like
room, she and Mary? She thought of
the campers out on the flat and shiv
ered. She looked out of the window
musingly a moment. It was dark. She
wondered if Gordon had come home.
;Of course he was home. It must be
nearly morning. Her feet were get
ting cold, so she crept back into bed.
The next thing of which she was con
scious, Mary was shaking her excit
edly.
"What is it?" she asked, sleepily.
"Louise! There's a fire somewhere!
Listen!"
Some one rushed quickly through
the hall; others followed, knocking
against the walls in the darkness.
Then the awful, heart-clutching clang
' of a bell rang out—near, insistent, me
| tallic. It was.the meeting-house bell.
There was no other in the town. The
girls sprang to the floor. The thought
had found swift lodgment in the mind
of each that the hotel was on fire, and
in that moment Louise thought of the
poisoned meat that had once been
served to some archenemies of the
gang whose chief was now on trial for
his liberty. So quickly does the brain
work under stress of great crises, that,
even before she had her shoes and
stocking on, she found herself wonder
ing who was the marked victim this
time. Not Williston —he was dead.
N'ot Gordon—he slept in his own room
back of the office. Not Langford—he
was bunking with his friend in that
same room. Jim Munson? Or was the
judge the proscribed one? He was not
a corrupt judge. He ceuld not be
bought. It might be he. Mary had
gone to the window.
"Louise!" she gasped. "The court
house!"
True. The cloudy sky was reddened
above the poor little temple of justice
where f#r day and weeks the tide of
human interest of a big part of a big
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, "RBUjRSD.AY, MAY 28, 1908/5
state—ay, a bis; part of all the north
west country, maybe—had been stead
ily setting in and had reached its cul
mination only yesterday, when a
gray-eyed, drooping-shouldered, flrm
jawed young man had at last faced
quietly in tlie bar of his court the
defter of the cow country. To-night,
it would dance its little measure, re
cite its few lines on its little stage of
popularity before an audience frenzied
with appreciation and interest; to
morrow, it would be a heap of ashes,
its scene played out.
"My note books!" cried Louise, in
a flash of comprehension. She dressed
hastily. Shirt waist was too intricate,
so she threw on a gay Japanese ki
mono; her jacket and walking skirt
concealed the limitations of her at
tire.
"What are you going to do?" asked
Mary, also putting on clothes which
were easy of adjustment. She had
never gone to fires in the old days
before she had come to South Dakota;
but if Louise went —gentle, highbred
Louise —why, she would go too, that
was all there was about it. She had
constituted herself Louise's guardian
in this rough life that must be so alien
to the eastern girl. Louise had been
very good to her. Louise's startled
cry about her note books carried little
understanding to her. She was not
used to court and its ways.
They hastened out into the hallway
and down the stairs. They saw no
one whom they knew, though men
were still dodging out from unexpect
ed places and hurrying down the
street. It seemed impossible that the
inconveniently built, diminutive prair
ie hotel could accommodate so many
people. Louise found herself wonder
ing where they had been packed away.
The men, carelessly dressed as they
were, their hair shaggy and unkempt,
always with pistols in belt or hip
pocket or hand, made her shiver with
dread. They looked so wild and weird
and fierce in the dimly lighted hall.
She clutched Mary's arm nervously,
but no thought of returning entered
her mind. Probably the judge was
already on the court-house grounds.
He would want to save some valuable
books he had been reading in his of
ficial quarters. So they went out into
the bleak and windy night. They
were immediately enveloped in a wild
gust that nearly swept them off their
feet as it ciime tearing down the
street. They clung together 'fur a
moment.
"It'll burn like hell in this wind!"
some one cried, as a bunch of men
hurried past them. The words were
literally whipped out of his mouth.
"Won't save a thing."
Flames were bursting out of the
front windows upstairs. The sky was
all alight. Sparks were tossed madly
southward by the wind. There was
grave danger for buildings other than
the one already doomed. The roar of
the wind and the flames was well
nigh deafening. The back windows
and stairs seemed clear.
"Hurry, Mary, hurry!" cried Louise,
above the roar, and pressed forward,
stumbling and gasping for the breath
that the wild wind coveted. It was
not far they had to go. There was a
jam of men in the yard. More were
coming up. But there was nothing
to do. Men shook their heads and
shrugged their shoulders and watched
'.he progress of the inevitable with the
placidity engendered of the potent:
"it can't be helped." Hut some things
might have been saved that were not
saved had the iirst 011 the grounds not
rested so securely on that quieting
Inevitability. As the girls came with
in the crowded circle of light, they
overheard something of a gallant at
tempt on the part of somebody to
save the county records —they did not
hear whether or no the attempt had
been successful. They made their
way to the rear. It was still dark.
(To Be Continued.)
QUEER NAMES USED IN CHINA.
Much the Same Idea as That of the
North American Indian.
"We Chinese," said the law student,
"give our children queer names. Our
girls, for instance are not called
Mabel, Jenny or Matilda, but Cloudy
Moon, Celestial Happiness, Spring
Peach or Casket of Perfumes. Our
boys get less delicious names. Boys
are made for work and wisdom, rather
than for dancing and pleasure, and
their names show this, as Practical
Industry, Ancestral Knowledge, Com
plete Virtue, Ancestral Piety, Discreet
Valor. To our slaves we give still an
other set of names. Yes, those dear,
pathetic little slaves of ours, some
girls, some boys, who do a hundred
various little tasks about the house,
these lowly creatures have names like
Not For Me. Joy to Serve, Your Hap
piness and Humble Devotion."
POWER OF THE ROTHSCHILD 3.
Accumulated Wealth Soon to Make
Influence of House Enormous.
It has been calculated that at the
present rate of accumulation the
Rothschilds will own by the middle of
the present century some £2,000,000,-
000 sterling, or nearly enough to pay
off the national debt three times over,
says a writer in the Grand Magazine,
of London, England. The imagination
is staggered and fails to realize the
power which is represented by such
figures. It. could finance, or it could
stop, a war; it could delay the indus
trial development of a country for a
generation; or it could, on the other
hand, enable a country which it fa
vored to beat all its industrial rivals.
A pejper like this must have its fingers
on all the arteries through which flows
the life-blood of commerce, the ebb
and flow of which it can regulate un
controlled.
I Picked Up in -##- 1
I -##--#(<#-Pennsylvania |
v.■;■ '•*:." •z&'ZixMtt*! trEC"-j'atv -?> <S».-i-rfC?sSte«S3^
NEW KENSINGTON.— The board of
health has directed that all cases of
typhoid fever in the borough bo pla
carded hereafter.
BUTLER. —With the skull frac
tured, the body of John Descenti, aged
4.">, a laborer, was. found in a ravine.
Descenti had SBO in his pockets and
this is misskig.
FRANKLIN. —Mrs. Mary Gormley
died near Franklin, aged 102 years.
She was born in Franklin and lived in
New York and Pittsburg before she
came back here.
SCRANTON. —The seventh annual
convention of the postoflice clerks
adopted a resolution asking legisla
tion by congress for increased wages
and summer vacations,
OIL ClTY. —George Buchanan, aged
55, janitor of the public schools at
Tidioute, committed suicide by hang
ing in the basement of (lie building.
11l health was the cause.
GREENSBURG. —Jacob Fox, aged
74, dropped dead at the Keystone ho
tel from heart failure. He was a
brother-in-law of Daniel Dillwiger, the
distiller. Mr. Fox was wealthy.
WASHINGTON.— Married June 6,
1902; divorced November 3, 1900; re
married May IS, 1908. Such is the
matrimonial record of Cannonsburg
and his wife, Margaret Henderson.
H ARRISBU RG. —The Pennsylvania
building at the Jamestown exposition
has been sold to private parties for
$3,000. The building cost $31,000 and
was a replica of Independence Hall.
WASHINGTON.— Of the 28 persons
who took the examination for mine
foremen in the Sixteenth district at
Brownsville, nine were successful for
first grade certificates and one passed
for second grade.
BROOKVILLE. —Edward Kerwin of
Arcade, N. Y., died of injuries sus
tained in a gas explosion in the Sigei
011 field. Sylvester Covil, who was
working with Kerwin, was seriously
burned, but will recover.
KITTANNING. —The comptroller of
the currency has appointed Frank R.
McCormick receiver for the First Na
tional bank of East Brady, which re
cently closed. William J. Robinson
held the office temporarily.
MONONGAHELA. —Dogs attacked a
flock of prize winning sheep on the
farm of Joseph Lytle aud kille.i 24,
besides injuring others. The sheep
were of imported stock and valued at
$350. The law will allow sllß.
BEAVER FALLS. —Lightning struck
the residence of Calvin Ecklin at
Homewood, tearing out a corner of the
building and doing much damage. Miss
Helen Nicholson and a little child of
Mr. Ecklin were rendered unconscious
for several hours.
LEWISBURG. —Through a miaun
derstanding of orders two Reading
passenger trains collided at a curve
just north of here. Both engines were
badly wrecked. Twelve passengers
and the crew of the southbound train
were injured, none fatally.
MONONGAHELA. After being
robbed of all their money and valu
ables, five foreigners on their way
home from Gallatin were cursed by
12 of their own countrymen because
they had no more cash and four of
them shot, one perhaps fatally.
UNIONTOWN. — Members of tile
state constabulary, county detectives
and a large number of citizens
searched this vicinity for the un
known assailant of Mary Kolesca, 11
years old, and Helen Swink, 13 years
old, who were seriously assaulted.
WASHINGTON. —NearIy 1,000 ne
groes were here recently to attend the
anniversary and thanksgiving conven
tion of the Second regiment of the
Grand United Order of Odd Fellows.
Members of the order came from
Pittsburg, Wheeling and other points.
PITTSBURG. —Ernest W. Bowman,
former assistant cashier of the Citi
zens' National Bank of Tionesta, Pa.,
pleaded guilty in the United States
court to a charge of aiding Joseph W.
Landers and William C. Wynian in
the abstracting of tlie bank's funds,
amounting to over $14,000.
BRADFORD. —WhiIe playing about
a storehouse, Lester Woodworth, a
young son of Mr. and Mrs. Riley
Woodworth, had the misfortune to
have a large grindstone fall over up
on him, breaking one leg at the thigli
and producing a number of bruises
about the head and arms.
GREENSBURG. —The property of
the Reese-Hammond Fire Brick Co.
at Bolivar, this county, and Garfield,
Indiana county, was sold to M. R.
Murphy, representing the First Na
tional bank of Pittsburg, to satisfy a
mortgage.
HARRISBUR G. —The charges
against St. Joseph's hospital in Read
ing have been found to be without
foundation and a report to that ef
fect lias been made to the state board
of charities. An investigation was
made covering several weeks.
FORD CITY. —Mrs. Emory Flat is
dead here from measles. Her three
children had the disease, and through
nursing them she contracted it.
GREENSBURG. —Harry F. Seanor,
ex-sheriff of We tnioreland county and
for years leader in county Republican
politics, died at his home here.
SH AMOK IN. —The body of .Michael
i sher, aged Hi years, was found hang
ing from a tree with a rope around his
neck. Foul play is suspected.
UNIONTOWN. Orin J. Sturgis,
managing editor and one of the own
ers of the Uniontown News-Standard,
shot himself in the head and died a
few moments later.
JOHNSTOWN. —Seven persons are
known to have been injured and great
damage was done by a terrific wind
storm which followed a narrow path
through Johnstown.
KITTANNING. —A violent rain and
windstorm passed over this section
recently, doing heavy damage. Hail
stripped the leaves from the trees
and it is feared destroyed fruit.
WASHINGTON. —Attorney A. M.
Linn of Washington lias sold to A. S.
Brastiell a tract of land in Center
ville for $35,000. There are 14 acres
of surface land anil 60 acres of coal
included in the deal.
HARRISBURG. —State police have
been called into a probable murder
case near Altoona, where a telephone
foreman was found dying along a
road. The belief is that the man was
assaulted by foreigners.
PITTSBURG. —The extensive prop
erty of the Federal Coal and Coke Co.
near Fairmont, W. Va., has been pur
chased by the New England Gas .anil
Coke Co. of Boston for a spot cash
consideration of $1,250,000.
WI LKESBAR RE. —William Capar
onet, a young Italian of Hilldale, was
shot while returning to his home and
he is not expected to recover. Two
other Italians were arrested on sus
picion of having fired the shots.
OIL ClTY.—James Green of Greens
burg was found near the Pennsyl
vania railroad station at Tionesta
with a knife wound in his throat.
Green says he was held up by two
highwaymen, who robbed him of sl7.
GREENVILLE. —Frederick Donald
son, son of a proiniuent doctor, and
.Miss Violet Carmen, his companion,
were shot but not seriously injured
by 1.. Thomas, an Italian, as they
were about to board a train. The as
sailant was arrested.
UNIONTOWN. —In an encounter
with chicken thieves in which shot»
guns were used George A. Stewart, a
farmer at Thompson No. 1, was pep
pered with more than 125 shot. One
of the shots punctured his throat, in
flicting a dangerous wound.
PHILADELPHIA.— Frank A. Mun
sey announced he has leased the
building on Chestnut street so long
occupied by the Evening Bulletin, and
says that within a few weeks he will
establish a new evening newspaper.
The new paper will be independent in
politics.
PHILADELPHIA. Thieves en
tered the armory of the Third regi
ment, of the national guard in this
city and obtained the silver and gold
medal bars awarded by hte state to
members of the regiment who had
qualified on the ranges during the
past year.
KITTANNING. —Hundreds of men
will get work on new roads to be
built in Armstrong county. Manor
township has awarded a contract to
P. F. McCann of Greensburg at $43,-
540.43. The bid of H. C. Hinkle of
Altoona, $40,446.20, for reconstruction
of the road in South Buffalo township
has been accepted.
UNIONTOWN. —The River mine of
the If. C. Frick Coke Co. at South
Brownsville, which has been idle
since April 1, 1900, will resume op--
erations as soon as the plant can be
putin shape to start. No coke had
ever been made at (his plant, but the
Frick company has engineers stak
ing out a string of 500 ovens.
BURGETTSTOWN. Mrs. Samuel
Bridgeman, who was found half con
scious in the yard of her home, told
on reviving a tale of maltreatment
at the hands of a foreign robber. The
woman was left alone. A roughly
dressed foreigner surprised ber in
the kitchen, took a pocketbook con
taining $7. and left her securely
bound.
UNIONTOWN— Frank Cocis, al
leged io lie an agent for Joseph F.
Freeauf, Pittsburg, was arrested on
a charge of bringing liquor into Fay
ette county and disposing of it at
Arnold City, which is in a local op
tion district.
REYNOLDSVILLE. —WhiIe attempt
ing to take a flash-light picture in a
room in the Imperial hotel I. D. Kelz,
a photographer, was hurt and four
men narrowly escaped injury through
the explosion of a new device for mak
ing the illumination.
MARK TWAIN ON MONEY.
Humorist Points Out What He Consid
ers Some Wrong Conceptions.
Mark Twain said that tho financial
panic had caused a wrong idea of the
use and value of money.
"The spendthrift says that money,
being round, was made to roll. The
miser says that, being flat, it >vas
made to star-it up. Moth are wrong.
"Strangely wrong, too, in their id* as
about money are the veteran Aus
tralian gold diggers. These simple
old fellows, though worth perhaps a
lmli million or more, live in the sim
ple dug-outß and chanties of tin ir ieaa
early days.
"Once, lecturing, I landed at an Aus
tralian port. There was no porter in
sight to carry my luggage. Seeing a
rough-looking o!d fellow leaning
against a post with his hands in his
pockets, I beckoned to him and said:
" 'See here, if you carry these
Hl> to the hotel ill give you half a
crown.'
"The man scowled at me. He took
three or four gold sovereigns from liis
pocket, threw them into the .sea,
scowled at ine again, and walked away
wiiliout a word."
AMENITIES.
-W
mm
"And you call yourself honest?
Hah!"
"Sir, I keep the commandments."
"That must be because you've got
an idea that they be-long to somebody
else."
His Quick Recovery.
"I was so glad," said Mrs. Oldcastle,
"to see Dr. Goodleigh in the pulpit
again last Sunday. He had such a
time of it. Dear me, it must be per
fectly dreadful to have one's appendix
removed. 1 dread it so that I don't
know what. I should do if I had to un
dergo an operation. They said, when
the doctor went to the hospital, that
he wouldn't be out again for a month
or more."
"I know it," replied her hostess a3
she started the diamond-studded
phonograph, "but I guess he re
puderated a good deal faster than they
expected."
The Objects of Her Feelings.
"Patrick," gushed the amorous Wid
ow O'i.eary, "Oi've long - anted t' eon
fiss t.' ye th' state iv me ft*elin's toward
ye, an' now Oi must tell ye thot. Oi
love ivvry hair iv y'r head!"
"Thin, if ye do," replied the o4ntnan.
tine Patrick, who has just come from
the barber's, "Oi'll toil ye, Mrs.
O'i.eary, thot wore ye in Casey's bar
ber shop around th' corner, ye'd foind
Casey sweepin' th' objects iv y'r feel
in's into his dustpan at th' prisint. mo
ment!" —Illustrated Sunday Magazine.
Thousands of American women
in our homes arc cTitily sacrificing*
their lives to duty.
In order to keep the home neat
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo. A female
weakness or displacement is ofte
brought on and they suffer in silenc<
drifting along from bad to wors
knowing well that they ought t
have help to overcome the pains ant
aches which daily make life a burden
It is to these faithful women tlnr
e.YO>3AE.PsNB€HAS¥i'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
comes as a boon and a blessing;
as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of
Mayvillo, N. and to Mrs. H r . P.
Boyd, of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say
"I was not abl * to do my own work,
owing to the femile trouble from which
I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound helped me wonderfully,
and I am so we'i that 1 can do as big a
day's work a- I ever did. I wish every
sick womai. vouul try it.
FACTS FOR S3C& WOMEN.
For thirty yer.rs Lydia E. rink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been tin
standard remedy for female ill?
and has posit ively cured thousands c
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, nice ra
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
t ion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. l'iiiklinm invites all side
women to write her for advice.
She lius guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass* -