15 llllj 1)1.1, ( l.i V, I -hi li I V How Wireless Work? r Suffragists of the World Little Bobbie's Pa The Cry of Youth Elizabeth Freeman and the English Militants By GARRETT 1. SHRV1SH. 111 More truly than any other telegraphic dovloe, the wonderful wlre'ess la a speak ing voice. It makes Itself Heard Just an tho human voice does, b a series of waves moving (freely through space. The One Is as simple as the other, but they act through different mediums. When I speak, my voloe Is sent out In undulations of varying length and frequency through tho a I r (When the wireless "speaks" Its volco Is conveyed by un dulations In the, ether, which is a more refined medium than air, carrying the waves of light and electricity as the air carries those of sound. The oscillator ot the wireless Is a "mouth" sending out undulations In the ether as our mouths send out undula tions In the air, and the resonator of the wireless Is an "ear," catching the etherlal waves as they Implngo upon It, as our ears catch tho atmospheric waves that strike them. We see nothing wonderful In vocal sounds, because nature gave us. In our heads, one Instrument to produce them and another to receive them. But It left us to find out for ourselves how to produce and rocelve "vocal" waves In tho ether. Since we had to make the In struments that deal with them, the otherlo waves seem to us marvelous, al though they are In principle, no more marvelous than the waves ot air. Prom the beginning of time It has al ways been possible for man to speak across-tho sea. If he had known how to employ the electric waves that were at his disposal. But he started at the wrong end. He began to use electricity for con veying Intelligence by sending a current of It along a wire. He pressed a button at one end of the line and the electrlo current passing along the wire Induced a cprrespondlng motion In a tapper at ther other end( It was a roundabout way. ot employing an agency which wc now know can bo employed more simply and directly by throwing away the wires and making the electric waves "speak" straight through tho ether. It is true that the language employed does not consist of the words of any spoken tongue, but it Is one that can be dlreotly translated Into any other known to man, and so It Is the most uni versal of all languages. Now let us see how It Is employed. First as to the electric "mouth." When a charge of electricity Is accumulated on,a "condgnsoj" ,a..sjmllarjbut .opposite charge if Induced upon another condenser placed' near. The air between them acta ' as an Insulator because It Is a poor con ductor of electricity. But when the charge attains a certain degree of Intensity tho strain Upon the air becomes top great, and a spark passes between, the .two con ductors, by which equilibrium s restored b'ptween them. The passage of this Bpark produces, bo to speak, a shock In the ether, which, like the explosion of a gun, of the utter ance of a sound, sets up a series of waves In the surrounding medium, which radiate away ofi "all sides. These waves In 'the ether 'produce the electric "voice." If the sparks are regulated n ..number and frequency the consequent waves are similarly regulated. An Instrument for the production of such waves. Is called an oscillator or exciter. It Is a kind of vocal apparatus for speaking through tho ether Instead of through the air. But, just as wo should have no knowl edge of the passage of sound waves If we were provided with ears to hear them, bo tho electric waves would go unre garded If we had no apparatus for re Delving them. The receiving, apparatus Is called a resonator, or detector. It may bo sit uated hundreds ot miles from the ' os cillator, but It will catch the waves as they undulate to It through the ether, and It can be made to reproduce them In an audible, or legible form by causing them to operate a Morse dot-and-dash Instrument, as In ordinary telegraphy by wire. But the electric voice and tha electric ear are In some ways more manageable than the human voice and ear. We can only produce and hear air waves of limited range of frequency, and we can not do much to alter that limit Sound waves vibrating less than forty times per second or mora than 40,000 times are Inaudible to us. But electric waves varying In frequency from a few hundred up to hundreds of millions per second cam be rendered perceptible, and It is also possible to so construct the Instruments that they will send forth and receive particular ranges of waves and be mute and deaf to others. Then the distance over which tha elec tric waves can be detected Is almost In finitely greater than that of ordinary sound waves. It takes n strong-voiced man to make his words audible across a little river, but, as everybody knows, the electrlo cry of a ship In distress can be electrically heard from the middle of the Atlantlo ocean. And there are enthusi asts who predict that before very long we shall be able to speak by wireless to some other planet. If only there Is some body there to hear and understand us! FRECKLE FACE Ban and Wind Bring- Out Ugly Spots. How to SunoTi Easily, Here's a chance, Miss rreckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guar antee of a reliable dealer that It will not cost you a penny unless It removes the freckles; while If It docs give you a clear complexion the expense Is trifling. Simply get-an ounce of othlne double strength from the peaton Drug Co., also any of Sherman McConnell Drug Co.'s stores, and a few applications ehould show you how easy it Is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beauti ful complexion. Barely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othlne as this Is the pre scription sold under guarantee of money Sack if It falls to remove freckles; By Til LI AX LAUKERTY. Almost dally from across the water there comes the story of a new move lit the campaign of destruction planned by the militant suffragists. The foes of suffrage use militancy as a strong argument against "Votes for Women," The bishop of Lincoln, although himself a suffragist, has expressed him self against the militant movement: "Who takes the sword shall perish by tho sword." Bo the questions naturally arise: What real cause is there for militancy? What jiwr' "far r 7!r W UK." t mi SUFFRAGISTS OF EAST'lNDIA. This picture shows tho Indian empire contirt'genl of suffragists as they ap peared at the coronation ceremonies. Few persons, except those who have made the question of woman suffrage a study, are awaro that this great question la so fdr-reachlng. oven extending Into' the Punjab district. That young girls, as well as women of maturer age, are vitally interested In the fight for better con ditions, Is strikingly shown by th& appearance of the characters In the picture. Influence has It on the world's woman suffrage movement? For the answer to these questions I went to Elizabeth Freeman, an Ameri can girl, who has recently returned from six years spent In England, and who was there sw,qpt .lntothe, .great, cause of suf frage a'l Into thfi 'ToiV-frpnt" of 'the -militant movement. "The womun militant Is herself ready to perUh for tho cause but sho .respects human life since sho hns the mother In Btlnct to save, not to destroy life," said Miss Freeman. "The militant attitude of mind is forced on' women take my case, for example: One jilght I was on my way to meet some friends after the' theater. As my bus went through Parliament Square I looked down from the top and saw a big police man strlkmir a- UtUo woman. I got down and protested. He said, Too come along o' me; MlBsle" Gladly, said. I, meaning to bear witness Jo his brutality I did not know I had been arrested. But I spent ten days In Holloway prison amidst the most frightful conditions and In a state of mentnl agony. 'Assault and obstruc tion' was the charge you see that officer had been subduing a suffragist. "This whole movement seems to rouse the brute In Englishmen. But they con fess they are beaten by their fear of let ting tho suffragtBts starve themselves to death In Jail or go free. And' forcible feeding' Is horrible. It tears and lacer ates the throat beyond hope of recovery. But the treatment to which gentlewomen are subjected -beforo they lireydrflgged oK io Jail Is absolutely repellent 1 ''Let me te)l yoil of One riot I went f Wliat to ; By ELIiA WHEEIiEI WILCOX. Copyright. 1913. by American-Journal-Examiner. "What Imagination can compass the ultimata refinement and rarlflcatlon of the human body? Consider the result upon the body of continued absti nence from mat eating, wine and rum drinking and the elimination of the use of tobacco and all sorts of gluttony with uni versal refinement and virtue and the legislative evolu tion to civic peace and order. The body of man will become so refined that this transla tion Into a spirit body will be as natural and Instan taneous as the tranalt tlon of water tnto gas." William llemstrcet In "Electricity and the Resurrection Now, that the absolute facts have been given to a long-suffering public regard ing the tilth of meat as served to all classes by the trust. It would be an ex cellent opportunity to test the offteaoy of a vegetarian diet. I am not a vegetarian, as the word Is understood, although I omit red meat from my diet, and have for years. I shall become one In the course of time. But. I have llvejl. 't ' v'aHoos occasions :for ejght Weeks orf nothing but milk and 1 a few prunes a'hdt pfars and ihrlveil In health and strength always on that diet. Recently 1 mot and talked with a man . who was a msgnlclrant specimen of humanity Slx feet and some Inches in height, weighing 300 pounds, with firm muscles and" & face radiant with health, an eye full of vigor and a complexion . v. ..wi through. November 1, 1910, was known as Black Friday riot and bloodshed marked that day Parliament Square. But on the following Tuesday when we found that Parliament had risen' without keep ing Its promlso to present our bill, we marfihed round to the side entrances in Downing street. "Now Downing street Is a little blind 1 alley less than a block long, with ho fence of Sit. James park marking Its nd. ' "We reached the head of the street and suddenly the police arrived. We were crushed and driven forward forward ' agulnBt the- Iron palings of the park on uud on against an lmpassablz barrier so that at last wo became like cuttle milling around and around In 1 dazed horror. I "Stones as big as a man's fist hurtled . through the air they -found- their mark,, too. QnJ 'woman wasithrdtynj fo the grouna again nnd again, so that ner chest bone, wne broken And. mangled; and a, man who tried to stop her .or mentors was arrested for his pains. "I saw a burly policeman with nls hands at Mrs. Pankhurst's throat-throttling her and forcing her head backward until I fancied that I could hear her spine crack. In a nightmare of horror. In which I was not myself, but only a spirit that must save that gray head from torture, I forced my hand through the bandage that Is-worn around the London police man's forearm as a badge of office, and tried to twist his hond away. With a quick Jerk of his arm, he caught my fingers In that bandage as In a nooso, and twisted It once and yet again, so my strained muscles ached In torture. Eat How the Human Body May Be Refined Through Proper Diet The Evil Effects of Too Much Meat which would make many a woman en vious; this man told me that he had lived for six years on three quarts of milk a day. Each quart taken slowly. In small sips, morning, noon and night. He was a wreck when he began, given up as a hopeless dyspeptic by half a dozen specialists. After trying all kinds of health foods In the market he was advised to try the milk diet, and, as a result, he Is able to work twelve hours a day without fatigue and to forget that he has any digestive organs, so free .from all pains of uny kind or any ailments Is he. Having permanently Injured his Internal machinery by years of wrong food nnd pernicious medicines, this man finds it Impossible to return to a diet of solid foods for any length of time without dis comfort. Rut slnco he finds sustenance and health and happiness and good looks by keeping to his milk diet he does not find the sacrifice of the table a serious-, one. I know a man who has not touched any flesh, fish or fowl as food -for twenty five years, living wholly upon vegetables, fruits, nuts, milk and. eggs, andhe h vigorous and strong in mind andf body and never knows an. hour's Illness.' All the prevailing Ideas of the fo l ne- cossary to sustain life and to promote heaitn ana stimulate the brain wl d un' dergo n? fTept change rt the next d Hv in ipur years ,-ii siiji.jrreaier teinffa Will lUSarptLQIi..iE The revVlktlons.'lut thju food trust' and the exposures ojjhTj'Jja trust atrocities will help the 'human rave to a higher standard. " . The time will come, when man will no sooner eat any dead animal than he would today eit a dead human being. With the doing away of the uso of corpses for food a thousand and one Ills from which we now suffer and which we .m mi 4 A ft A: EMS5ABETH Fit E KM AN. An Interview with whom appears In tho accompanying article . by Miss Laufcrty. "Another officer arrested me. Ho took Imagine we are heir to will vanish -from the earth. When any man Is pronounced by the specialist to be suffering from kidney tioublo ho Is nt once put on a meatlens diet. Especially Is he forbidden tho use of beef In uny form. It Ih 11 natural supposition then that a vegetarian diet would render the possi bility of tho now common kidney mala dies most remote. Ho. If you are unable to buy good meat for your family do not get discouraged nnd do not Imaglno that starvation faces you or loss of strength. Hail Columbia" Uy. ItHV. THOMAB II. (iUKG'OllY. j April , 1708, Ih the 115th birthday of j "Hull, Columbia," one ot our two na tional Hymns. In Aih-II. 1TW, a namul Olbbcrt Fox , wus about to give n benefit perform ance In the Quaker 'lty. and Inasmuch us the sain of seuta promised (o be poor, Fox began thinking of ways and means ot brlnglHg the r celpts Up to the jMilnt whejp tin y would show a profit rtitlier than Philadelphia if tor a loss, and being acq minted v.ftM J '"Tl Hopklnson. a son of F'rani-ls llorklnson, one ol the signers of the Great Declara tion, he called on him to help him out ft 1 1:.1 my arm oinl dragged me along. 'J'll ro. officer, but won't you tuko tho other ann?' 1 moaned. He laughed and ave uiq aenmg nrm nnother twist. " 'Oood bye. Lndy Betty.' called some one, using my nickname 'Lady Ilnttv from across tho wnter.' I was led out of the street and rid rased. They do not like to arrest women of title! "Of courso, I wont right back, nnd Just ns 1 got into that pit of horror again. someone drove nn automobile In-brulsIng ann KnooKing oown tho women In Its way oui Killing no one. "Two days later Airs. Pankhurst's slstor died of tho Injuries she had received .that day but tho press gave t only two iluen, notice , "Tho censorship of the IJritJsli . ircsO does Inestimable harm to (hecduiQ. It nover ruDurts how we fill Albert hall with its suutiiiK ciWMPlty of litOOOugaln and ugaln. It does not tell how thinking men aro coming to spo tho righteousness of our eausVs. It only tolls of our 'out rages.' "Sometimes the press culls us hysterica -fanalicW6tf-rfHirdo martyrs'. Of equine, a martyr ls 'solf-mndo' ho chooses to suffer for u righteous cause. And It Is only for a causo. tha.t suffering like ours can be endured. Sofhe American nows li&por women wont over for the prison eNpi-rlcncc. After thruo days thuy paid their fines and got out' The English women did not become militant until 'the sword' was forced upon thrill and all constitutional ways nnd nu-a.i fulled. They woro arrested for street spoaklng ami for parading; when they went on their constitutions.! right to petition the king or his proxy, they were uirostod. ' But the American constitution allows for ever better constitutional procedure. If we petition legislatures hero, we re ceive courtesy all wo euro for nnd morrt thnn wo expect from politicians. "We need not b militant wo need only 'feel deeply enough hern In American and we will get the suffrage." -J Meat Is a stimulant, nnd you will, of course, miss it at first, but after a few days of abstinence you will cease to crave the corpses of animals, and you will benefit from the change of diet. If you knew all the horrible facts cruel and disgusting connected with the preparation of animal meat for the mar ket, you would nover be able to touch It Some of theie facts were given out by thn beef trust exposures, but not one tenth of the frightful truth Is known by some of the consumers of the meat. May progress speed tho day when no man eats a carcass to sustain life. by writing u song for the play that was about to bo performed. Fox was a "practical" man. Th coun try was all n-whlrl with excitement at tho time over tho probability of a war either with Franco or England, or both of them, and ho suggeHteil o Hnklnon that It might be well to make tile, piece strongly patriotic. Hopklnson sat down to write and the result was "Hull, Colum bia. " which wus sung tojhe, tune of the President's March." an T air that had been composed by a fierrpun-American named Roth for Washington's first inauguration, and pled for the first time In 'Tfenton us the "Father of His f ounto,"- pasd through there ou his way to ,New York. Tho song was an Immense success. Again and agalh was it encored, each tune with renewed applauev, and at tho end the great crowd sprang to Ita feet urd rapturous Joined In thn singing. A -few nights, utter the first presentation President Adams attended the theater 1 ! lly W1UMA.M K. K1HK Thta morning Pa had his breakfast erly, at the time I always have my breakfast to go to school. The reason Pa had his breakfast so crly was beentis he didn't go to the banquet last nlte which was gavo by the bowling club of which Pa Is a member. He tlldnt go brekaus he sed h was going and Ma said ho wasent. I cud see that Pa was klnda cross while he ws reeding his morning paper, btekaus Pn never Ilkcs to get up crly. Pa, I sed to him, I wish you would read mo sum of tho Hposrtlng news be fire I go to school. I don't get a chanst to see any po.pe.ra at school ft you always take the piuwr away with you when you Ko to the offls. lteod me something about Mnttlp and MJirqunrd. 1 sed to Pa, ft ro If there, Is anything nbout Clark Grif fith ft his Washington club, beekails I wan to see them win the pennant In the Amerlckali Ieeg. Pleeso daolit liother me. Bobble, sed .Pa. I am reading the market news and 1 don't want to be disturbed by any fool talk about bnso ball. 1 suppons, IV sed. that all your mother ft me will hear all summer Is base, ball, base ball. 1 newer could see anything to that galm, Pa sed. You must have changed a hole lot since last seeson. Ma sed, wen the Jtanta was at home, you harly ewer got home In tlmo for anything but a cold dinner. O. I usrnl to go ont In a while, Pe soil, but 1 have modo up my mind that I am thru bothering about the grate naohlnal galm. I see that there Is danger of moar trubhel In the Ralcans, sed Ma, A that another of them crnsy eastern princes has ran off that used to play In burlesque In the United States. Doesnt It say anything thare nbout how fast Walter Jonson Is pitching this season, I asked PaT I toald you onst not to bother me, Pa sed, now you hurry up ft gtt yure break fast finished and go to skule. It you ast mo nnother question about base ball 1 nm going to use the Pm o my hand for a bat, Pa sed, nnd preotend that your are a baseball yureeelf. So I finished my breakfast ft on the way to the skulo houa I bought a morn ing paper. I thot that If I got to skule rrly 1 oud git the prlnolple to reed me something about how the players was Kitting along at the beginning of the Bee son. Tho prln-olplo was thare when I got thnre ft I golv him the paper, and ast Mm If he would plees reed me- soma nows on tho spoartlng page. What do you want ine to reed the spoartlng page for, the prln-clpJo ast me. t want to knbw If Mattlos wing la alright, I toald him. Mat ties what? said the prln-ciple. His wing, I seil. his whip, I nieen his arm. 1 am pure I am not In-ler-ested In ths person you speck of, snr the principle, and beo sidos I think It would look a lot better .for a, llddle boy llk you to, come, to skule with bis skule books tinder his arm than .to walk In hvr and show me a vul-gar spoartlng page. Thare was never a gnvlt man, the prin ciple sed, that started erly In life read ing spoartlng pages. Do you suppoaa. he snd to me, that Abraham Lincoln would walk 12 miles to buy a newspaper with a spoartlng pulg to It? No. he sed, when ho walked 12 miles for sumthlng tp read, It was always a law book or the wor) of some grate master that he brought home with him. 1, am sur-prlsd and dla-sapolnt-ed In you, Bobble, he sed, give me that paper aod go to your seat. Study yurn jografy lesson, he sed, so you wont, tell aggen to day the way you did yesterday that Brazil was the cnpltol of Nue Jerzy. So I went to my sent and I studied my Jografy until the rest ot the skpllers calm, but I notlsed that wilo I wan elud ing tho prin-clple was all the tlmo reed ing tho paper I had brot him Sc. I woo ulmost sure that It was the spoartlng pngn ho wns looking at. All of the kids made mls-takus In their lessons all thn forenoon. I gesa thay was all thinking about baseball same as me, beekaus wen the teecher BBked Reddy Blake who was the graltest living Amar Ikan outside ot Rusevelt Reddy sed Johnnie Mcflraw, apd won the teecher nskel the boy next to him who was tho graltest Living Amarikan he sed Frank Chance, The teecher tlldent know what to think ft the prln-clple got ouful meen and gave all of us a skoaldlng. Ha sed he dldent have any little boys, but If he did have ho hnaped thay would not grow up to be silly ft go craiy over baseball. After skule was oaver some of us kids was going hoam ft we heard two men quarllng about baseball. We cud hear them a bloek. Frank Chance Is going to show ud McOraw In New York this yeer, sed one of thn men. Vou are nrnzy, plum crazy, sed the other man. MrOraw Is going to have another penant-wlnnlng teem ft the Ysnkles will be luckey If they finish In the 1st dlvlshun. I doant care to talk to a lunytlck. sed thn 1st man.. Naether do I, sed the other man. Oood nlte! Wen we got clost to the 2 men we seen who they was. One of the men was the nln-cloln of our skule, The other man was Pa. Birthday of National Song Haa Just Been Celebrated with his whole cabinet to hear the song, and in a very short lime the piece was being wildly sung all over the coun try. Thn effect of the song was as whole some as It was pronounced. As between tho belligerent nations some of our peo ple were for siding with France, some tor siding with England, but "Hall. Co lumbia," made them feel like saying. "No! we will give both England and France a grand letting alone. We will be the tall to neither kite. Wo will stand on our own dignity us a free, proud. Independent nation, und, without foreign entangle, ments, make all nations rerpect us while we aro attending to our own business." Hence It turned out that from the petty, personal ambitions ot Fox regarding the pecuniary success of his little benefit there sprang thn song which was to create a new spirit In the hearts of the people, even that spirit of Americanism which, fortunately, is still strong- In the land. lly HHATKICK FAIRFAX. "Anxious" writes: "t am a girl of 1 years, and as yet have had no ad mirers among the boys. 1 am anxious to have some boy euro for me and take me nbout. There arc a great many affairs I miss on this account." Anxious" evidently did not read 0 letter from one of my girls a week ago, In which she said: I "I find so much anxietv in Invln- much depression, so much fear, that many, many times I wish I had never grown up nnd wore away back there play ing with my dolls. They, at least, never caused any heart aches." Here Is n little miss of IS, who wants the e heartaches to begin. Free to iln m she pleases, with no tyrannical lover troubling her heart with his moods and his whims, she chafes at her freedom Bhe wants a tnsto of that bitter cup ot love which the girl who wrote the oth.r letter wishes had never been pressed t 1 her Hps. It Is the universal cry of womatiul . u Wh may know love nt Its rrsj wcrth, r attlm It In a value that Is flcutljus; may paint It nn cruel or hideous-but wo want ttl "Anxious" Is only 18. and when Klrls are only 18, It Is natural for them to seem very, very old. Elgutvon and no lover In sight seemn hopeless, so j;opi ess vmt Instead of going on In hr wel mrry way, taking no thought of tumor.'ow, knowing that In due tlmo a lover will wait at some turn In tho rood, sine wunta to heat the bushes! That Is tho modern way, and it U a way that robs love ot all Its sweetness. It Is a way of forcing love Mid Siive that Is forced stands as little chance In the storms of life rnt a plant i.t hothouse growth. "Anxious" exuggemtes her plight. 3h complains that she has no boy to take, her about, forgetting that there ore tlo places these days where a girl cannot go with .some other girl, and have a mors Independent and happier time. If "Anxious" Is one of the great nnd growing army of girls who are self sup Porting sho Is free to enjoy the greatest treat youthful Independence knowsthat ot escorting her mother. An occasional concert or lecture brings a Joy to mothel nil the greater because 'it 'has been siloh's rarety- and giving her pleasure is ftfi way for making time less tedious while awaiting the coming of a lover. And when he comes, the evenings b(is has spent with her mother will haye, unconsciously, given her wisdom and. discrimination. She will not rush as blindly to his arms as if sho had spent thn tlmo of waiting In selfish repining and moping. She will look him over dis passionately nnd critically, realizing that whllo ho may bring happiness to her, she has learned the way to happiness without him. Sho will be less llksly to love mis takenly; sho ;wlll not love for the out ward appearance, hut will look for the qualities underneath the surface. Having learned what pleasure these outings give her mother, she will have unconsciously taken note ot the dreariness and monp tony of married life, and be less fool hardy In rushing Into It By her filial lovo a girl attracts a bet ter man, and trains herself to discriminate when he comes. Advice to the Lovelorn lly BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Yon Need Not Fear. Dear Mlsa Fairfax: I am a young mom u years of age. I love a girl three years ray Junior. I love her not for her beauty but tor her settled mind and manners. She Is a very sensible girl. Dut she comes from a rough and uncivilised family. In that family the boys are like the father, rough; and the girls, llko the mother, are refined and very pleasant. I did not tell her of my love, though I know well that she knows It and cares very much for me, beoause I think It proper not to express It to her until I come to the conclusion that our future life, wfll not suffer from any family Inheritance on her part IL H. There Is an old adage, "Like mother, llko daughter." which .should glre you every assurance. I hope you are as critical of yourself. Aro you fit to mate with her? Citars Fact of Pimphs, Blackhtadt Wonderful ZBH0 Also Stops Terrible Itching: AT 0NCS; Cares All Skin Troubles. att a 200 Bottlt of ZSUO Today. "At last) At last! One application of ZEMO, the wonderful new treat ment, quickly put an end to those awful, humiliating plmplea and black heads. For the first time In months I haven't been ashamed to aro out In public." A trial of ZEMO will con vince you of Its astonishing results; In clearing the oomploxlQn. Vont Look this Way When ZRMO Will Cure Ton of Pimples ana Blotches, Barely sad yulekly. ZBMO Is a clean, anttaeptto solution, not a greasy paste or ointment. You simply apply It on the afflicted part your pimples, blotches and blackheads, all eczema sores and pains, prickly beat, rash, tetter Inflamed or reddened skin, all disappear. It alio oares dan druff, which is scalp eczema ZUMO is fuaranteed to stop Itching immediately, t gives instant relief. "I have had wonderful benefit from your famous ZEMO for the skin. It has cured my face completely," Mlsa V). N Rugby Place, St Louis. Mo. do to any flrst-clasj drug- store am) get a 25c sealed bottle of ZBMO, 01 sent direct on receipt ot price by IS W Uose Uedlcina Co., St. Louis. Mo. ' Sold and guaranteed In Omaha b; Sherman ft McConnell Drue Co., and sJ. ether leading drucsUts,