ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR Women Tell Each Other How They Have Been Helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Perrysburg, Ohio.—*‘1 took Iwdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound be- LY cause I suffered with paing in my sides all ah : SEE a, py ih I can’t remember just how long 1 suffered, but it was for some time, One day I was talk- ing with a lady I met on a car, and I told her how I was feel ing and she said she had boen just like I was with pains and 2 3] nervous troubles, and sue took the Vegetable Compound, and it cured her. So then [ went and got some, and I certainly recommend it for it is good. Whenever I see any woman who 18 sick I try to get her to take Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com- ound. ”’—Mrs. ADA FRICK, Route 8, eer ey Ohio. In nearly every neighborhood in every town and city in this country there are women who have been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in the treatment of ailments peculiar to their sex, and they take pleasure in passing the good word along to other women, Therefore, if you are troubled in this way, why not give Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial, the time. ’ Gout, Eczema, dives, etc. Right in your own home and at trifling cost, you can enjoy the benefit of healing sulphur baths. Hancock SULPHUR COMPOUND nature's own blood fying and skin healing remedy —SULPHUR~grepared in a way to make its use most efficacious. Use it in the bath: use itas a | RIOD Sfthying to affected parts; and take it int y §0c and $1.20 the bottle at your druggist’s. I be can't supply you send his name and the price In stamps and we will send you a bottle direct. UTD SULPHUR Y HANCOCK 1 Hamgock Sulphur ( ment oc and On the Laguid Compoun DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ABTHMAREMEDY for the prempt relief of Asthma end Hay Fever. Ask your drug. gist for it. RS cants and one dol for. Write for FREE SAMPLE. Northrop & Lyman Co. Inc. Bufizio N.Y. 2 v3 LF A combined alfalfa tone lant mivined with the sifaifs is [irdrus for ita stimuiative a on the ne and Clpebona, fa 8 for ite A on the o% the appetite and aids in : 5 b wo adn lta, yne teaspoon fn) fore meals and af bedtime, Write us for pa " Haha & Hahn, 214 W. Sarategs St, Baltimers, Md. Ladies Let Cuticura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Young Soap 25¢, Dintmen® 25 sad 50¢, Talcem 25¢. sa as. 0 tl ol — A A SN AO in Wrong. The hing about being a pedes- trian in a tow inhabitants are that you get no sympathy when yon stuart the chronle cut-out flends and horn-honkers, worst motor ear owners is cussing ———— On Your Guard, Wher" you say a man loned, It means that you have got to look out for his prejudices, THE SAME OLD BACKACHE! Does every day bring the same old backache? Do you drag along with our back a dull, unceasing ache? Poinsin find you “all play out”? Don't be discouraged! calize it is merely a sign you haven't taken good care of your kidneys. Take thi easier for a while and hels your kid- neys with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Then the backache, dizziness, headaches, tired feelings, and bladder troubles will go. Doun's have helped thousands and should help you. Ask your neighbor! A Maryland Case Abraham Hoff. m=. man, Thomas Si. Bel Alr, Md. says: "My kid. neys were out of 1+ order and I had a dull aching 7 and sorenes:f through my back. When i stooped over it was ha rd : stra ten up and my kidneys acted irregularly. 1 used Doan’'s Kidney Pills and it wasn't long before I was free from the aches and pains and my kidneys were In good order.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c « Box DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS SE v 9.0 FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Complete Conservation for Our National Parks By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN HE opational lost a good friend when Warren G. Harding died. His appreciation and ap- proval of the national park move ment were signally shown at the 1023 opening of Yellowstone for its fifty-first year by an. official déclaration of administration pol. icy worthy of its place as the first pask In history and and most famous of all America’s nineteen public play- grounds set apart by congress for the use of the forever. That official declaration of ad- ministration policy was nothing less than absolute m ef the national park system against commercial lovusion and exploitation, Dr. Jolin Wesley Hill, chancellor of Lincoln Meworinl university, made the declaration He officially represented President Harding and See retary of the Interior Work at the Yellowstone opening. His statement was prepared, careful and emphatic. It contained the following: “And we are here today to celebrate the annual opening of Yellowstane park, the largest and most far-famed of our national parks, a wooded wilderness of three thousand three hundred square containing incomparable waterfalls, more geysers than are found In the rest of the world all put together, Irrigated by rivers like miniature beautified by Inkes like inland seas, carved by canyons of sublimity, decorated with defying the painter's art, ponctured with bolling springs whose steam mingles stuccoed with vast areas of sanctunry of safe retreat for and wild beasts, a wonder land, playground, sanitarium and university all in one, where the eye feasts upon the riotous colors of flowers, ferns and rocks: the esr Is surged with the symphony of melodious sounds: parks alt aa national largest peopie profex tie miles, innumerable with fleecy clouds, petrified forests, a feathered songsters “Yellowstone history la replete with crises plorera and discoverers to retain It intact against the bold and presumptuous claims of the advo- to build raliroads its mountains, dam Its lakes cialize this land of wonder, through It, tunnel “And regardless of all facts and figures, appeals torious on its face, for the commercial exploita- “Good projects, bad projects, Indifferent proj tained in absolute, unlnpaired form, not only for Harding. “This is the fixed policy of the administration, and I can assure you it will not Be modified. It ence, financial, political or otherwise, “If rights are granted to one claimant, others must follow, so a precedent must not be estab lished. It would Inevitably ruln the entire national park system.” Doctor Hill might have been more definite In the matter of the attacks by commercial interests upon Yellowstone. Since early In 1020 it has required increasing vigilance and aggressive or ganized effort on the part of the vast army of national park®enthusiasts to defeat these attacks. During the winter and spring of 1020 the Sixty- #ixth congress nearly passed the Smith bill cre- ating a commercial Irrigation reservolr in the southwest corner of Yellowstone for the benefit of Idaho. And it did pass the water power bill granting to a commission power to lease public waters, including those of the pational parks and monuments, for water power, 3 Se — : Te : ar. = ACKRSQN "AOD IZTONS A nations organization of defease, about 4,000,000 strong, was quickly effected. The Smith bill was killed in the house, after it had passed the senate. The Jones Esch bill exempting na- tioral parks, present and future, from the juris diction of the water power commission was intro- duced and forced forward. The water power in- teresis were powerful engugh, however, to force fi compromise amendment which exempted only the existing national parks. Tbe Jones-Esch bili was passed by the Sixty-sixth congress In December of 1020 Senator Walsh of Montana championed a bill to dun Yellowstone lake for an Irrigation scheme In Montana, A long ond hard-fought battle followed. In June of 1921 See retary of the Interior Fall reported on the bill nd straddled on the question of protection, hold ing that power and Urrigation development in the pational parks should be oply "on specific author- ization of congress, the works to be constructed and controlled by the federal government.” There upon Senator Walsh propased a new bill providing that the United States reclamation service should build and operate tba Yellowstone lake dam. The defenders of the park proved that the dam could be bullt to greater advantage outside the park. In 1922 the upholders of the parks won a victory by electing Scott Leavitt in Montana to congress over Jerome Locke, originator of the dam project. The final result of the fight was that the Sixty- seventh congress adjourned March 4, 1023, leay- ing the Walsh dam in the committee's pigeonholes. Efforts to revive it are expected In the Sixty- eighth congress, During these three years another victory of great importance along the same line was the smothering In committee of the All-Year National park bill, personally drafted and sponsored by Secretary Fall, This bill created a national park in the Mescalero Indian reservation In New Mex- fco out of several Insignificant spots widely sep- arated, plus an irrigation and power reservoir ninety miles away. It would have introduced both water power and irrigation into the national park systemn. There was a nation-wide protest against this bill, in which New Mexico Itself took an active part. The bill is too dead, It is believed, to be resuscitated, A third victory called nation-wide attention to another danger that threatened--and still threat. ens—the national parks. The victory was the de feat of the Slemp bill creating the Appalachian National park out of a Virginia mountain top. It was opposed on the ground that the area was below the proper national park quality.” It was favored by Becretary Fall, who in his report to the public lands committee sald that his policy was to substitute a wide-open recreational park system of many small playgrounds for our his toric natienal park system. The late Franklin K. Lane, as secretary of the interior in 1018, nalled down this plank in the national park platform: In studying new park projects you should seek to find “scenery of supreme and distinctive quality or some natural feature so extraordinary or unique a8 to be of national interest and importance ,. . .” The national park system as now constituted should not be lowered In standard dignity and prestige by the Inclusion of areas which express in less than the highest terms the particular class or kind of exhibit whigh they represent President Harding was the first president to an- nounce publicly a general administration policy system and for ull of its units. Both Roosevelt and Taft were good friends of the national parks, but preservation agninst corgmercial Invasion was not a question in their days. President ison, in his first term, signed the Hetch Hetchy bill giving Ban Francisco the water supply reservelr In Yosemite which has just been completed; Its secret water power purpose was not then gen- erally understood. President Wilson, hewever, stood by the national parks loyally and powerfully in the fight to exempt them from the jurisdiction of the water power commission, \ { est an? : : : ® ha President Harding, in snnouncing this admin istration policy, was pot aoticipating a popular de- maad so much as answering it. the American people have within the last three years adopted our nineteen national parks as a part of their conception of the greatness of their nation “Hands off!" applies to the national parks as well as to Old Glory. They are eager to defend them and to keep them inviclate. And they have developed organized strength through the affiliation of a dozen or so nation-wide organ- izations to see that congress shall legislate wisely concerning the national parker. The announce- ment of the conservation policy was received with nation-wide delight. asts hoped that the conservation policy would be broadened to uphold Secretary Lane's important plank. Yellowstone also gets into the limelight this season because President Harding paid It a two days’ visit on his way to Alaska. The President's and did about 150 miles of motoring In seeing various points of Interést. On the Continental ident went dammed. gingerbread and molasses to a black bear and her cub. He saw the Painted Terraces of Mammoth Hot Springs. Old Faithful geyser spouted 150 foet into the alr every sixty-five minutes for him-—as it does for every visitor. The photograph reproduced herewith shows the President and Mrs. Harding, under escort of Superintendent Hor- ace M. Albright, viewing from Artist Point the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone and the Lower Falls. The President was visibly Impressed by the sight—one of the grandest and most beau. tiful In the world. Just sixty-three years—I1807-1870-—-were re quired to put Yellowstone on the map; the Ameri can people simply. wouldn't belleve there was any such place. The Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804-08 passed close by It, but the Indians never mentioned it, considering it the abode of “Evil Spirits,” who punished all talk about them. John Colter, a member of the party who went back to trap beaver, discovered it In 1807. Upon his return to St. Louls In 1810 the people dubbed it “Colter's Hell” and laughed him and his tale out of court. James Bridger rediscovered it about 1828 and the public sald “Just another of Jim Bridger's ‘big yarns'"” The gold prospectors of 1862 described It and were set down as lars, It took the Washburn-Langford expedition of 1870 to make the people belleve in its wonders. The mem- bers of that expedition were for pre-empting the scenic points and making their fortunes. Con nellas Hedges rebuked them and the national park plan—-the first In all tory. The park was established by act of congress In 1872 and Yellowstone celebrated its senw-centennial last fall, Yellowstone contains 3.848 square miles—3.1 In Wyoming, 198 Ia Montana and 28 In Tah Big as It is, the plan Is to enlarge It by the addi tion of many square miles to the south—the Jack- son Hole country, which contalns Jackson lake and the Teton mountains and Is a natural part of the park, yachting on Yellowstone Take it home to the kids. Have a packet in ™ your pocket for an ever-ready treat. A delicious confeo- tion and an aid to the teeth, appetite, digestion, TYPEWRITERS | Remingtons, L. C. Smiths, Olivers, | Royals, Underwoods, etc. Used and | REBUILT MACHINES | We recently purchased a large number of | typewriters from the U. S. Government | and offer them much below the regular | prices. WRITE US, stating make "| the | machine you desire, and we will send you | ut-of town customers. Beltimore, Md. i ' Clenn’s Sulphur Soap Bin eroptions, excessive Pirstion | (nsect bites re ioved 8% onoe by this re frealing, beantifying toilet and bath soap. Best for Soft, Clear Skin Bobland's Btyyt'ec Cotton, To Contains 334% Pure Sulphur Occasionally, a loud laugher prises you by being as mean » pier —— p———————— SA po A op Ho AA 3 St.Joseph’s LIVER REGULATOR a ODE US AR purge The Rea! Reason. t was summertime, and the master boys in his with had been entertaining and feeding the garden them cream. “Have you enjoyed your strawberry feast?” he asked as they were leaving “Oh, yes, sir!” came the reply. “Then,” asked the master, seeking to point a moral, “if you had slipped into my garden and picked those strawberries without my leave, would they have tasted as good ?™ “No, sir” “Why not?" he asked. “Because,” sald one small urchin with an air of consclous virtue. “we shouldn't have had any sugar or cream with them.” / Found His Bones. If you sare a Buddhist monk and you die, they bury part of you and em: balm the rest of you In honey and burn you. If you have heen especially sainily, your bones will be pounded down, made Into a paste and molded into an image of the Buddha, to be placed In the monastery, Imitation ivory is made from the tagua nut, Wishing for sleep IS 4 poor way to get it. 4 Postum instead of coffee TOL LCT Nel A LIP 1S delicious ot
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers