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THIS TIME GONE FOR GOOD New Yorker Might Say Goodby to Watch and the $50 He Had Con fidingly Given Up. In a subway crowd not long ago a New York man was "touched" for his watch. The watch was not valuable, but the New York man wanted It back for sentimental reasons, and in serted divers advertisements in the pa ' Ders, offering $50 for the return of the jratch and "no questions asked." The "dip" who had "lifted" the watcn saw uie aaverusemem. o.u.\a concluded to take the i>50. He called on the New York man, handed him the timepiece and demanded the re ward. The owner of the watch was only too happy to give it to him. After ex amining the watch he returned it to his pocket and handed over five $10 bills. The "dip" pocketed the money and departed. There was little said. A .few minutes later the New York man reached for hi3 watch. It was gone. fF BACK HURTS CLEAN KIDNEYS WITH SALTS Drink Lots of Water and Stop Eating Meat for a While If the Bladder Bothers You. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kWneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must re lieve them like you relieve your bow els; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the ? ? back or Bick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before v breakfast for a few days and your kid neys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is Inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoid ing serious kidney and bladder dis eases.?Adv. Looks Possible. Bill?Here's an account of a man who accidently ran against a dynamo In a factory, and for several minutes afterwards staggered like an intoxi cate 1 person. Jill?He was probably drunk with power. Distress After Eating. Indigestion and Intestinal Fermen tation immediately relieved by taking a Bo.ith-Overton DysDeDSia Tablet. Buy a 50c. bottle at Druggists. Money refunded if they do not help, or write for free sample. Booth-Overton Co., 11 Broadway,' New York.?Adv. The Usual Wayr | "How did Mrs. Jones discover that her husband was spending his money on cigars?" "Her youngrat boy smelled smoke and gave the alarm." Only One "BROMO QUININE" To get the genuine, call for full ?me, LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of ?. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold ia Oue Day. 2Sc. The Proper Kind. "Brain experts declare that fish is the best brain diet." "Then some people I know must live on sheep's head fish." Dr. Peery's Vermifuge "Dead Shot" kills and expeld Worms in a very few hours. Adv. Perils. "Does that play tend to remind you of the dangers of a great city?" "In my opinion," replied the uncom promising critic, "it goes farther. It's one of 'em." MOTHERS DUTY! Is Your Daughter tin Good Health7 The responsibility for the perfect wife and mother of TOMORROW rests with the mother of TODAY. How are YOU rearing your daughter? Are you fitting her for the responsibilities that are sure to come to her? Are you endowing her with a sound body, robust health and a clear, forceful mind? Or, are you, b/ neglect, condemning her to a life cf suffering invalidism? Argue as you will, plead as you will, YOU CANNOT DODGE THE RESPONSI BILITY?your daughter will be just what you make her. ' STELLA-VITAE is the happy combina tion of harmless but wonderfully effective natural remedies that give to the budding *>"* ?,? ?'J ? successfully from girlhood to womanhood Are you availing yourself of its remarkable virtues to give your daughter the assist ance she needs so touch? Or are you allowing prejudice or reluctanct to try a remedy you have never tried be fore, rob your daughter of her right to re ceive every help you can give her? If it is prejudice, dismiss it as utterly unworthy of you. ? If it is because YOU have never tried STELLA-VITAE, remember that untold thousands of wom?n today bless the hand that pointed them to health through the use of this greatest of remedies for women It is GUARANTEED TO BENEFIT?I: it don't you get your money back. All tc gain and nothing to lose. Do YOUR duty. TRY STELLA-VITAE You don't need to buy a second bottle i the first bottle fails to benefit. Your dealer sells and cuaranlera this cea' remedy in S1.C0 bottles. See him TODAY. Don'' delay the start to cood hculth. Thacher Medicine Company Chattanooga Tennesse< sour stomachs in five minutes ?Time Itl "Really does" put bad stomachs in order?"really does" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes?that?just that?makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, re member the moment "Pape's Diapep sin" comes in contact with the stoma-eh all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing?almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dla rrlvTA VAH o fjj' ycyom win ftirc jvu u uuuuivu uvuuau worth of satisfaction. It's worth its weight in gold to mrra and women who can't get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in yol*r home?Bhould always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the (fay or at night It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world.?Adv. Singing for Advertisement. He had obtained a place In an es tate agent's office, and was doing ev erything he could for the interest* of his employer. The other evening he was at a so cial gathering, and was asked to Ring. He responded with "Home, Sweet Home." His friends were a little sur prised at the selection, but he was heartily applauded. Stepping forward, ne saia: ' "I am glad you like the song. There is nothing like 'Home, Sweet Home,' and let me say that the company I represent is selling homes on terms to suit everybody, within 40 minutes' ride of the city. Everybody ought to have a home. If you don't want to live In one of these houses yourself it's the chance of your life for an in vestment." SAGE TEA DARKENS GRAY HAIR TO ANY SHADE. TRY IT1 Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark, Glossy and Thick With Common Garden Sage and Sulphur. When you darken your hair with Sa^e Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because It's done bo naturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home Is mussy and trouble some. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready-to-use tonic called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and fKwnnrrVi ttaitt* Tioir falrlnc uiavv luio imvugu jvu* one small strand at a time. By morn ing all gray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also dis cover dandruff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no dis grace, is a sign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and attractive ap pearance, get busy at once with Wy eth's Sage and Sulphur and look years younger.?Adv. At Forty. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, congrat ulated on her Titantic memorial, said at a tea at the Brevoort in New York: "Success, in sculpture as in other la vorv nlpnsnnt:. Rllt PVPTl fftiK ure is bearable. Failure admits of so much hope. "A failure, running his hand through his pepper-and-salt hair, said in my studio in McDougal alley: " 'Today is my fortieth birthday. When we reach forty we begin to look up the names of men who become famous after forty-five.'" ffllT LAXATIVE FOR SICK CHILD "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realize^, after giving her children "California Syrup of Figs" that this is their ideal laxative, because they love its pleasant taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels with out griping. When cross, irritable, feverish or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit laxative," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bow els, and you have a well, playful child again. When its little system is full of cold, throat sor6, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic?remem | ber, a good "inside cleaning" should I alwavs be the first treatment eiven. Millions of mothers keep "California Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a teaspoonful today Eaves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50 cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-upi printed on the bottle. Adv. The Proper One. "How is the company going to pay for all the divers they must employ?" "Naturally, out of the sinking fund." ? IF YOU'RE GROUCHY it is likely that your liver needs stir ring up. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills will set you right quickly. Adv. Tho eyes are the windows of the soul, and every man must look out for himself. Doctor up that Cough?Dean's Mentho lated Cough Drops are a sure relief for ail coughs and colds?5c at Druggists. Happy is the man who is too busj to make enemies. Also scarce. >-. Y VILLA VICTORIOUS IS NOW III GOMEZ ESTABLISHES HEADQUARTERS IN TOWN AFTER THREE DES PERATE SIEGES. MANY MEN DEAD OF THIRST The Dead of Federal and Rebel Sides Are Piled Up in Cities Streets and Air Filled With Smell of Blood.? Wounded Carry Stretchers. Gomez Palacio, Mexico.?Four days of fighting, including three desperate assaults by the Rebels were crowned with success when General Francisco w,intn the r>itv and estab v ilia muvcu tuwv vmw v.v,, ??? tablished his headquarters on that side of the town looking toward Thornton and within three miles of that goal of the campaign. The final and deciding assault has been deliv ered. It was preceded by a bombard ment, after which the infantry and cavalry dashed into the streets. Rifles, machetes, pistols and hand grenades were used in a hundred dif ferent encounters. General Villa does not know his own loss, except that it was heavy. The wounded suffered terribly from thirst and many died for lack of water and surgical attention. The dead of both sides were piled in the streets or hudled under adobe houses or corrals, wrecked by Rebel shells. Veterans say no more furious battle ever was fought in Mexico. General Villa did not stop to mourn his losses, but began prepara tions to move on to Torreon. He expects to co-operate with 400 men linripr fJen?ml Herrftra. who is under orders to attack the town from the East. ( The day was hot and the air reek ed with smell of stale blood. Those with fresh wounds disdained to de sert and many a wounded soldier was seen among the stretcher bearers. * Villa's first assault took place four days before. There was comparative ly a small number of Federals in the city, and premature reports of victory were sent out. Soon, however ,the Federals received reinforcements and in the desperate fighting which fol lowed the HeJjgJs had received the worst of It flflt.General Villa with drew. BRITAIN'S aILy UNCHANGED Another Cabinet Council Will Be Held But Outcome is Doubtful. London.?The political situation ap peared unchanged, and no official dec laration as to what course Field Mar shall Sir John Spencer Ewart, Adju tant General of the forces, will take Willi ItJgttiU IU men iCDJguauuuo ID expected until after the meeting. Sir Edward Carson, Unionist lead er in Ulster, has left Craigavon for London, but the report that Brigadier General Hubert Gough, of the Third Cavalry Brigade at Curragh camp, is coming to the Capital, seemed to be premature. He still is at Curragh camp. The continuation of the crisis is at tribuated to Premier A^quith's reluc tance to remove Colonel Seely from the post of Secretay of War. Colonel Seely's relinquishment of his portfolio doubtless would satisfy Generals French and Ewart and Premier As quith's objeotion to having him do so seems to indicate dissensions in the Cabinet itself. Miss Eleanor Wilson In New York. New Ydrk.?Miss Eleanor Wilson, daughter of the President, spent sev eral hours'shopping in New York. She made several purchases for her trousseau. Orders Sale of Nantucket. Norfolk, Va.?United States Judge Waddill directed sale of the Mer chants' & Miners' Transportation Co.'s steamer Nantucket held in limited liability proceedings following her liber for 11,000,000 by the Old Domin ion Steamship Company, after the Nantucket had rammed and sunk the Monroe at sea January 30. Suffragists Threaten Ulster. Belfast, Ireland.?Suffragettes burn ed down Abbeylands, the country res idence of Major General Sir Hugh McCalmont, near Whiteabbey, on Belfast lough. The house was not oc supied. The loss is $75,000. Suffrag ettes recently threatened to start war against the Ulster unionist leaders because of the refusal of Sir Edward Carson to support the suffrage move ment. The grounds of Abbeylands have been used recently for drilling the Ulster unionist "volunteers." Keith of Vaudeville Fame Dead. Palm Beach, Fla.?Suddenly strick en with heart failure, Benjamin F. Keith, pioneer vaudeville producer in the United States, droped dead in his room in a local "hotel. He was 68 years old but apparently had been in the best of health. The day before he was wheel-chair riding with friends. The theatrical magnate's sudden death came after a conference over business affairs with his son, Paul. The latter stepped out of the room for a few moments. When he return id he found his father dead. Indians Condition Serious. Washington.?The health conditions among Indians are described as de plorable by Commissioner Sells in his report. Approximately 2^,000 In dians are suffering from tuberculosis he says, while available hospital facil S.ties for all will no'f exceed 300 beds. During the past fiscal year 1,905 Indians died from tuberculosis. The Indian death rate was 32.25 a thou sand against 16.00 a thousand for the entire registered area of the United State*. jMW 4: Nedy Hall) \ HOME-MADE INDOOR CROQUET SET. By DOROTHY PERKINS. The illnatrnHnnn show hnw a anlei> For Handu Girls to Ma (Copyright by A. TOY TRAVELING CRANE. > By A. NEELY HALL. This 1b an easily carried out idea that will be productive of a great deal of fun. The crane may be used to d hoist earth, and dump it to one side c out of the way, in building a miniature i Panama canal, or for excavating for a toy well, or any other play engineering feat you may think of; it may be placed upon a porch when it can travel back and forth with its boom, or swing ing arm, extending out over the rail ing, and the hoisting cable lowered to the yard belofr, to hoist things to the porch; and it may even be used to right "wrecked" toy wagons and trains. The toy crane may be built upon your express wagon, or a home-made wagon of the form shown in Fig. 1. A clothes-pole or short rug-pole may be used for the mast (A, Fig. 2). The lower end should stick through a hole cut in the wagon-bed, and the two crosspleces B should be nailed to the sides several inches above the bot tom end so they will rest upon the wagcm-bed. When the mast has been set in place, nail a pair of crosspieces J similar to pair B to its end, beneath 1 the wagon-bed, to brace it. The stick B, nailed to the upper crosspieces, is * the lever by which the mast is turned. 1 The mast-top pulley is a thread c spool, mounted on a long spike driven e through the blocks D, and blocks D are * securely nailed to the end of the mast. 8 t t I i e I __1 The swinging boom (Fig. 3) is made of the two side strips G, .separated 6 inches from the onter end by the block H, and its spool pulley is mounted in the same way as the mast pulley spool. Fasten the mast end of the boom with nails driven through the sides of strips G into the mast. The wrapping-twine* hoisting c^jle has a hook bent out of heavy wire attached to.Its end, and the cable runs over the Ijoom pulley, then through a screw-eye in the mast at E, and from there over to a windlass, while the ca ble which raises the boom is attached to a nail in block H, runs up and over the mast-top pulley, down through the screw-eye at F, and over to a second windlass. Figure 4 shows how the windlasses are mounted upon the edges of a box, and Fig 5 shows how the drums are ' nJl iP5rooLsH % 1 PS the crank strip B has a hole bored through It for the shaft to fit In, and the spool C Is fastened to the end for a handle. Drum D Is a baking-powder can, and It is nailed to the wooden end i block F, and the can cover E is nailed to the end block G. Holes must be cut through the end blocks, and the cover I and bottom of the can, bo all will slip I onto the axle, and, after the cover has 4 been fitted on to the can, the end blocks must be secured to the shaft with nails. Notch the top edges of the box, to receive the drum shafts, and nail strips of wood over them, as shown, 4 tme Windlasses to hold them in place; also drive nails through the ends of the shafts, to pre vent them from slipping lengthwise. Nail the windlass box to the wagon. It Doesn't Apply. Mrs. Nicholas Longworth was con demning village gossip. "They say," she ended, "that one- j half the world doesn't know how the j other half lives. That, though, doesn't j axiDlv to the averace vlllace." I [id croquet set for indoor use may be :onstructed inexpensively. Clothes )ins, a few sticks, some small tacks, md 6-cent rubber ballB are all that is equired for making the outfit. A completed arch is shown in Fig. , and Figs. 2, 3 and 4 show now to nake it. Two clothespins (A) have a xosspiece (B) fastened in their open inds, and cardboard shoes attached to heir other ends. Cut crosspieces B ibout 5 Inches long, and fasten each ind with small tacks driven through he clothespin ends into them. Cut he cardboard shoes by th^* pattern of i^ig. 3, and fold each in two places as ndicated by dotted lines. The folded ihoes will have the form shown in i'ig. 4. Tack the shoes to the sides )f the clothespins. Make nine arches. Two end stakes are necessary, - and rigrs. 6, 6 and 7 show how each is nade with a clothespin (D), a card joard shoe (E), and a small wooden vedge (F). Cut Wedge F to fit the )pen end or tne ciotnespm, ana aiier jutting the cardboard shoe E by. the pattern of Fig. 7, fold it as shown in ftg. 6, tack to the edges of wedge F, ind slip into the open end of the ilothespin as shown in Fig. 5. Then irive a couple of tacks through the clothespin Into wedge F. Figures .8 and 9 show how the cro luet mallets are made with a clothes pin head and a stick handle. Cut the stick about 15 inches long, and thin enough for one end to slip into the opening in the clothespin, and fasten t with small tacks driven through the sides of the clothespin. Make malleta '.or four or six players. It is customary to mark the mallets svith colored bands, a different color !or each mallet, and to mark the cro juet balls with bands of corresponding :olors so each player may know his sail from the rest. The croquet stakes are usually striped also, and the players take their turns in the order In which their colors come on the 3takes are usually striped also, (Figs. 5, 8 and 10). The way to arrange the croquet irches upon the floor is shown in the liagram of Fig. 11.. Following is the proper spacing for the arches when he end stakes are placed ten feet ipart. Stand arches No. 1 and No. 7 8 0 m n r r ' its . n n , 0 1 -Fig. ll< Fig. 11) 12 inches from the stakes, tand arches No. 2 and No. 6 12 inches iway from, and in line with, arche io. 1 and No. 7, and stand arch No. xactly half way between arches No. ! and No. 6. Stand arches No. 3 and Jo. 9 24 inches to the sides of arch Co. 2 and three inches nearer the enter, and stand arches No. 5 and No. i, 24 inches to the side of arch No. 6 ind 3 inches nearer the center. lilt) ruies iui ymjruift, xiiuv/v. iuet are the same as those which ;overn lawn croquet. Start the ball t a^ch No. 1, drive it through arches sTos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0 and 7, in the order lamed, and make it strike the end take. Then, returning, drive the bull uccessively through arches Nos. 7, t;, !, 4, J), 2 and 1, and strike the stake. ?ho first player to cover the tuurso i-ins the cams. "CASCAREIS" FOR UVER, BOWELS No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. \ Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your bowels, liver, and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters? Stop having a bowel waeh-day. Let Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg ulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the bowels. A C as caret to-night will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep-^never gripe, eicken or cause any inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents a box from your store. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipation. Adv. 13,000 Mites In Submarines. Two submarines of the E class, AE 1 and AE 2, are to leave Portsmouth, Eng., in a day or two for Australia, making the journey of about thirteen thousand miles under their own oil power. They will Btop at Gibraltar, Malta, Aden, Colombo and Singapore,* and then proceed via Batavia. As far as Singapore they will be es corted by H. M. S. Eclipse.' There they will be taken over by H. M. S. Australia, which will escort them to Sydney. The majority of the crew of 40 are Australians, who have been in England for instruction. ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED Falmouth, Ky.?"Two years ago I was troubled with akin and scalp troubles. I would have pimples that would break out and form sores on my face and head, with terrible Itch ing. The eczema on my face and bead Itched and burned and when I scratched it, It made sores and I was very disfigured for the time be ing. My head became so sore I could not touch it with a comb; It became a mass of sores. My hair fell out gradually. "I was afflicted about a year before I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after using them three weeks I was getting better and in less than three months, after using eight cakes of Cuticura Soap and five boxes of Cuticura Ointment, I was completely cured of eczema." (Signed) Frank Vastine, Dec. 12, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv. Explained. "I always call a spade a spade." "That's because you always like to give a dig at things." . Why blame a doctor for thinking ill of his patients? /7 CYU U f/tA - . ' I Those of Middle When you have found no oppress you during change o hours of the day it seems as t\ when your head aches con< pressed and suffer from those don't forget that Lydia E. Pir is the safest and surest reme of women safely through this Read what these three w From Mrs. Hornu Buffalo, N. T.?"I am writing: medicine has done for me. I fai and summer and every one remar fered from a female trouble and appetite and at times was very we; "I was visit ing at a friend's hous< Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con eight pounds, have a good appetit Everybody is asking me what I an Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, wish and I hope others who have get health from your medicine a Stanton St., Buffalo, N. Y. Was A Blessing ' So. Richmond, Va.?"I was trou a female weakness and could not s medicines I took nothing helped r table Compound. I am now regu cannot praise the Compound too n and I hope it will be to other \ Clopton St., South Richmond, Va. Pains in Side, Cot Lodi, Wis.?"I was in a bad a trouble, and I had such pains in m fore I had taken the whole of one 1 etable Compound I felt better, ?nd day's work. I tell everybody whaJ ?Mrs. John Thompson, Lodi, Wis For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkh Compound has been the standari male ills. No one sick with wo does justice to herself if she doec mous medicine made from root has restored so many suffering"*? Hl^^Write to LYDIA E.PINKHA (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, M, Your letter will be opened, read by a woman and held in strict co For Sprains, Strains or Lameness V Always Keep a Bottle In your Stable HANFORD'8 Balsam ofMynh For Galls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrash. Old Sores. Nan Wounds, Foot Rot, roP^USJCt^^'. <?OUP AM) PWlWOKtA. MO UK, VMMIC.MtvnnUU.JUttQOOD A Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. ^ Hade Since 184^^3^ Price 25c, 80o ud $1.00 < All Dealers HAIR STAIN "Walnutta" For Gr?rt Streaked, Bleached and Red Hair or 'j MouiUcne. Matches Shade?Ugkt Brown to ' Blade. Docs not tooth nor mb off Sold by your Druggist. Regular size! 0 J cents, f -- ? ? Send to Howanl Nicbok. Free^^Frea 1 \OOOSE GREA5E CQ^ 6oose Grease Liniment cores all aches and pains GETS AT TML JOINTS FROM THE INSIDF. RHEUMAGIDE LIQUIO-TABLCTS?UNIMENT The Old Reliable Remedy for muacular, articular and Inflammatory RHEUMATISM thftt the 1 At All Dran>lgta COME TO WAYNE COUNTY, GEORGIA to live where climate ifr ideal, fer tile lands, healthy. Can sell you from 5 acre farms, good terms, to 20,000 acres, for subdivision. Tbos. J. Ariine,Real Estate & Imtmace, Jenp,Ga. irnniirs Finishing. Mail W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, ir OTft&M . K f f . I I y Age Especially. remedy for the horrors that f life, when through the long 1 - lough your oack would break, ;tantly, you are nervous, de dreadful bearing down pains, lkham's Vegetable Compound dy, and has carried hundreds critical period. omen say: j, ; ng, Buffalo, N. Y. to let you know how much jour led terribly during the last winter ked about my appearance. I suf always had pains in my back, no ak. 3 one day and she thought I needed mound. I took it and have Brained 0 and am feeling better every day. 1 doing and I recommend Lydia E. You may publish this letter if you the same complaint will see it and a I did."?Mrs. A. Hornttng, 91 To This Woman. bled, with a bearing down pain and tand long on my feet. Of all the oe like Lydia E. Pinkkam's Vege lar and am getting along fine. I mch. It has been a blessing to ma romen."?Mrs. D. Tyler, 23 West lid Hardly Stand. Dndition, suffering from a female y sides I could hardly move. Be x>ttle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg . now I am well and can do a good k your medicine has done for me." consin. am's Vegetable i remedy for fo man's ailments