Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, July 10, 1902, Image 2

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    f HE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT
X. M KICE , I'
YALKNTINE , NEBRASKA
Theworlf armc * ; t.as time to listen
to the man who has something to say.
Chicago boasts of 1,100 churches.
- tomeuseful ; some merely ornamental.
TJoaey doesn't grow on trees , but It
teem * to develop pretty rapidly in oil
The chances are that Russell Sage
triohea that Hettie Green's aim may be
and her nerve strong.
DM It ever occur to you what would
happen to the country if the women's
dob * were all suddenly to dissolve ?
"Mr. Carnegie talks of buying and op-
mtlng a number of newspapers. Per-
Jtopj he Is not getting rid of his money
lut enough.
"Weare a thrifty people. Belling as we
lo warships to Kussia , and mules to
d meantime carrying on quite
ft , war of our own.
John Plerpout Morgan is simply a
great big overgrown promoter. And he
Deceives great big overgrown commis-
ttons on his deals.
If all actors were like the late Sol
-mUh Russell iiobodj' would have any
fanse to complain of the demoralizing
Influences of the stage.
Having invented ( for publication )
* one of the greatest wonders of mod-
trn times , " Mr. Tesla has turned his
Attention to something else.
* * It is presumed that the money con
f
tributed by Americans will last Pad-
.jrewski about four years. He is com-
kig back at the end of that time.
New York is going to expend $1,500-
& 00 for churches during the coming
fear almost as much as the average
magnate Is willing to lay out on his
lummer cottage.
A Kansas man has named his baby
Jaughter B. Pluribus Uuum. He isn't
is crazy , however , as might at first be
Supposed. She is his eleventh , and the
ther ten are living.
A college President died of grief be-
tause the students didn't like him.
What a dropping off of college presl-
lents there would be If that complaint ;
became generally fatal.
R. Stockton , Sol Smith Kus-
fell. J. Sterling Morton , Amos J. Cum-
ilngs. Potter Palmer , Archbishop Cor-
rlgan , Bret Harte and Admiral Samp-
Ion constitute a list that the world can
) K > t lose without painfully missing.
Food sharps state that what the
Working man needs for his proper
fcourishment is about : j. < V)0 ) calories or
heat units. The man who attempts to
leed a hungry workman on calories is
likely to get slapped with the tin din
ner pall.
Here Is a lovely refrain for a news-
Japer poet When Hetty Pulls Hdr
Gun. Reference to Walker's rhyming
Dictionary will show scores of suitable
Chymes for "Green" and "gun" and he
must be a pretty poor order of poet
Who cannot work up a poem of solid
Indiana merit on such a theme. And
when Hetty does pull her gun there'll
fre something doing In legal circles.
Dr. Cyrus Edson , health officer of
New York , finds many reasons why
reputable physicians should advertise
their business in the daily newspapers.
Besides the benefits to the doctor him
self benefits to which he is clearly
entitled and of which he is robbed by
neglecting , to advertise it it is a great
tronvenieuce to the public to learn at
first hand where to find a physician
who makes a specialty of a particular
class of diseases. Dr. Edson is confi
dent that the ban on advertising will
soon be removed.
Ton may go about
tenths of the comfortable homes in al
most any civilized country and find
that the sun is counted by the typical
housewife her especial foe. She does
not allow him even to peep Into her
parlor , that holy of holies , where her
"best furniture and her finest carpets
and costliest hangings are oh , no !
Science has clearly shown that sun
light properly used decreases mortali
ty. Both physically and morally we
should let the sunlight have free right
of way into our lives. If we lot it into
tue physical sphere it will find its
Tray into the moral. There is no such
thing as too much sunlight.
When you arc yearning for wealth
did you ever stop to wonder if you
could stand it ? Poverty has wrecked
the minds of many. Sudden affluence
lias had the same result. It takes a
level head to withstand the shock of
sudden prosperity. A young man in
one of the West States always wanted
money. He tried a lot of ventures
that didn't pay. and finally went into
a Jo.nd speculation. He took la $3.000
hi three weeks and went stark , glbbpr-
Ing crazy. Three thousand dollars isn't
much. Mr. Morgan could put twice
.that amount in his , inside pocket and
forget it. But riches are comparative.
'A dollar" a fortune to a beggar and
2T cents looks like great wealth to the
average boy. To the young uai t'jls
Tucney seemed like unlimited wealth.
He gave diamond rings and music
'boxes to his friends , presented a gold
J .
watch to a hack driver. Then he was
sent to an Insane asylum. The posses
sion of money is good and an
ambition to honestly gain pos-
sion of wealth is laudable. This case
simply shows that money without
brains to care for it , without mental
balance to make good use of it , is a
calamity instead of an advantage.
When you demand from Destiny great
wealth , ask for wisdom with it.
"A New York man recently called on
me , " said ex-Commissioner Evans re
cently , "submitted a list of fifty men
and asked me if the names of any of
them were on the pension rolls. 'Dur
ing the Civil War , ' he said , 'there was a
bank on the river front In New York.
Across the street was a recruiting sta
tion. One day fifty recruits came Into
the bank In a body and each deposited
his bounty. None of them has ever
called to obtain his money. Interest
was allowed for twenty-two j'ears. My
visitor was trying to locate these men ,
so the accounts might be closed. I had
the pension rolls examined and found
six of the names of the fifty men who
had deposited the money forty years
ago. Each of the six , by proving his
identity , will receive a large sum. "
The appreciations of Francis Bret
Harte called forth by his death have
strangely omitted to give him the credit
he deserves as the'father of the modern
short story. His service to literature
in this respect Is more clearly discerned
in England than In America. We have
not yet fully grasped the fact that to
Bret Harte , more than to any other
writer , belongs the honor of giving the
short story its most perfect and human
form. Poe and Hawthorne had brought
the older type of story to perfection ,
but their tales dealt largely with an
imaginary world. It remained for
Bret Harte practically to create the
story of local color and of local char
acters. From the appearance of "The
Luck of Roaring Camp" in the Over-
laud Monthly in 1870 we may justly
date the rise o the modern short story.
With a Hash of genius the y'oung author
put into his tales the strange , wild ,
kaleidoscopic life of the mining camps
as he had seen it in his most impres
sionable years , setting each picture
into sin exquisite framework of Sierra
scenery , and casting over his unkempt
characters just enouirh of the glamour
of romance to make them attractive.
The distinctive thing about the stories
was their essential realism their frank
portrayal of real characters in a pe
culiar environment. This type of story
has become so universal now that we
take it as a matter of course. Mr. How-
ells has applied the method to New En
gland , Mr. Cable to Louisiana , Irlr.
Page to Virginia , Mr. Allen to Ken
tucky , Mr. Kipling to India , and so on
through the list of the best story
writers of the day. The short story
now is closer to the hearts of the peo
ple than any other form of literature.
It will ever remain Bret Harte's chief
glory that he brought it out of the air
and down to the soil and the lives of
real men and women.
Social customs are matters of lati
tude and longitude as truly to-day as
theyere when St. Ambrose declared
that iu Rome he kept fast on Satur
days , although in Milan he did not.
There is but one invariable rule for the
young woman who wishes her practice
of all social forms to be "correct. " It
is of no use for her to write to the
mentor of some "Woman's Column" in
a newspaper , to beg for n tinal edict on
this , that or the other problem of man
ners. The verdict will be of no avail ,
for other questions will spring up
around it like mushrooms. The only
course for the inquirer is to study care
fully the community in which her lot is
cast. Then she must select the highest
standard there set up , make it her own ,
and adorn it with suchj special and per
sonal graces as she may possess. For
example , in the older Eastern cities
the people have been slowly driven ,
by influences varie/1 and numerous , to
something resembling the European at
titude toward ehaperonage for young
girls. Even when the chaperon is a
more or less unwelcome burden to the
"bud , " ' she is now accepted as a matter
of course. But to introduce such a
scheme of social life into a Western
frontier town or into many a New En
gland village would be an absurdity.
On the Western prairie the girl would
probably have to take care of the chap
eron as well as of herself. In the New
England village the straightforward ,
sensible , capable girl would be in
sulted by the suggestion that she did
not value her own self-respect the
fruit of her best wisdom far above
rubies. The very freedom of the prairie
is a protection. The simplicity of the
village makes the complicated motive
; ind the clandestine attitude unthink
able to the "nice" girl and the high-
minded boy. Conduct that would be
unwise to the girl bred to European
traditions is not so unwise in other so-
lal conditions of lime or place. The
xirl who determines lhat she will al-
ivays choose "the first best" wherever
; he is need not fear being judged rustic
> ecause her social observances are not
jxactly those of Boston or London.
The Welsh
At a recent eisteddfod at Dolgelly ,
iValcs , one of the principal speakers
stated that in 1871 as many as 1,00J.-
XX ) persons spoke Welsh , but in 1S91
he number had fallen to 1)11.280 ) a de-
rrease of 05,811. though the population
lad meanwhile increased.
Short-Liived.
"His musical compositions achieve
ionic little popularity , but not for
ong. "
"That's so ; just thirty-day notes , as it
vere. " Philadelphia Press.
Work Is pretty hard. Make it count
Irrijjatinc a Farm Garden.
Mauj' farmers feel so sure of success
with artificial watering that they are
putting down artesian wells and in
tend to build reservoirs as soon as pos
sible , the past dry seasons causing
them to realize the necessity of a most
constant supply of moisture. Nearly
all the wells are 2 inches in diameter
'and ' cost from oO to SO cents per foot.
The flow amounts to from 15 to 85
gallons per minute. One SMriuch well
that cost $200 and is 295 feet deep
flows about 1,300 gallons per minute ,
though the amount has never been ac
curately measured. K is thought the
flow of some wells near this large one
has diminished and it is possible that
the artesian water supply may be lim
ited.
ited.A
A few fields have been flooded or
"wet up" direct from these wells dur
ing the fall and winter , and have pro
duced the following season 25 to 30
bushels of wheat to the acre , and other
crops in proportion , while fields not so
treated produced less than half this
amount. Irrigation here is largely con
fined to gardens , the water in most
cases being used direct from the welK
but a few farmers have reservoirs
which aid in the economical use of the
water , thus giving much better results.
One garden has been irrigated five
AX AKTESIAN VATER 51 PI'LY.
years and is producing all kinds of
vegetables in abundance and of fine
quality. A few gardens have been
watered by wind-pumps. This method
gives excellent results , especially where
a small reservoir is used. Other gar
dens have been watered by pumping
from streams. This mode of irrigation
must necessarily be limited , as the
amount of water in streams is very
small ( luring a dry time. In fart , I
have seen it almost dry.
The water is usually run between
the rows of the various crops , some
times between every row. or at most
every third or fourth row. The plan
proposed is to have main ditchesviih
several sets of laterals dividing the
fields into squares , varying in size ac
cording to the slope of the ! : ind. In
stead of ditches for the second set of
laterals , back furrows may have to be
substituted if the fields have much
slope , for the water is too valuable to
permit of waste. The illustration
shows how a few "catch" the water
from artesian wells. It may be dis
tributed as best suits the gardener or
farmer. L. G. Hendricks , in Farm and
Home.
The Gradiia Pea.
Those who find the best profit in rais
ing the wrinkled varieties of peas will
be glad ro have the Gradus. shown in
the illustration. Not only is the quality
3t" Hiis variety equal to that of any ,
kvrinklecl sort , but it is better than any )
> f the smooth sorts that are early in I
season. The Gradus combines quality
ivith extra earliness and extreme pro-
luctivoness. .Most of the wrinkled sorts
ire ratlur lender , but this variety may
THE G1SADL& PICA.
> e planted as early as any of the
smooth sorts without injury , and .s
( aid to be the only wrinkled variety
vith which this can be done. The ,
growth of the vine is strong and
lealthy. and the bearing qualities are
if the best. The pods are large , holrt-
ng from eight to ten peas. While the
ort is comparatively new. it has been
ested quitet extensively , and if it does
s well generally as in the localities
rhere it has been tested it will be an
cquisition.
Deep T lowinj ; .
We used to believe in what we read
vhen young about the value of plow-
ng deep to bring up the fertility that ;
iad leached down through the surface
oil into the subsoil. Our opinion was
hanged when we tested the deep
( lowing upon a field with a clay sub-
oil that we planted with corn. Later
xperiments have more thoroughly con-
inced us that deep plowing , by which 1
re mean a depth of more than four to i
ix inches. Is se. ' m beneficial .in this t
limate , whatever it nuiy be in other f
ectious of the eouiuThe crops like , j
, corn , that like to spread their roots
near the surface where the soil is
warmed by the sun , certainly not
need to have the earth stirred very
deeply for them , while those that send
their roots down into the subsoil , as
' onions , clover , beets , etc. , can do so
1 almost through the hardest subsoil or
anything excepting a gravel in which
there is no moisture. American Culti
vator.
Select Good Seed.
Replauting in the field Is obnoxious to
the farmers , hence they should select
j good seed. When plants are missing In
j the hills or rows the appearance of the
I field is not attractive. It is better and
j ' cheaper to buy selected seed than to
perform the labor of replanting that
which would be unnecessary and which
could be prevented by making a proper
beginning. The failure to properly pre-
| pare the ground , too little care given to
the covering of the seeds and economis
ing in the use of seeds are also causes
of loss.
Sorjchnm for Stock Feed in sr.
Any farmer who can grow corn sue-
' cessfully can succeed with sorghum ,
and will find it a decided addition to
the winter supply of stock food , al
though those without a great deal of
experience with it seem to think it
can be used to advantage only as a
supplement to the pasture. To grow
sorghum successfully the soil must be
put in good condition , broken up deep
and well prepared. Make the seed bed
fine and sow the seed any time this
month. Grown for hay , the seed is j
sown broadcast at the rate of two
bushels per acre and harrowed in , but
it is better to grow it in rows two or
three feet apart , the latter distance
being preferable , enabling one to culti
vate with the horse. When grown in
rows the culture should be the same
as with corn , and the plot should be
kept free fromeeds. . Stock of all
kinds eat sorghum readily and it will
pay to experiment with a small plot
of it this season. In feeding it , ns
with all foods that are new to the ani
mals , it should be given in small quan
tities at first until the animals get
used to it.
An Uudertjronnd Cistern.
Mrs. Lou Detwiler. of O'Brien Coun-
ty. writes Iowa Homestead : "Will you
please give a good plan for an under- '
ground cistern ? I
would like one " 0
the pump can be in
the house. " To this
the editor of the
. Homestead replies :
"A cistern is built
according to the
customary methods
with an inlet for
the rain water. In
the bottom or to c n > ,
side of the cistern is built a filter , i
which consistse of a solid brick wall
made of soft brick. A lead pipe lends
from this to the cistern pump in uie
kitchen. All cisterns should be provided
with an overflow pipe to let off the sur
plus water in time's of flood. We nnd
this a better plan than to depend on
cutting off the flow in the inlet , as that '
will sometimes be neglected. " |
Trimming Plnm Tree * .
The trimming of plum trees is simi-
'
lar to that of the peach. Do not trim
a plum tree for two or three years , as
the little shoots bear the first fruit ,
and let them remain until yon have
had a good crop. Afterward trim the
trees systematically , says Mr. Skill- ,
nuin. a successful New Jersey plum j
grower. '
Fnrrn Notes.
Bordeaux mixture controls downy
mildew on lima beans.
The Iron Mountain is a rich peach
Hid almost melts in the mouth.
A haphazard , go-easy way in farm- *
ing is not going to bring a big profit
; his year.
Make the boy's interest in the farm
io profitable that he will be anxious to
make farming his life work.
Chicory culture was started by Long
Island farmers several years ago , but
t did not pay and has been abandoned.
The-farmer as well as the business
nan who is going to forge to the front
liese times is the one who thinks and
ilans.
Broom corn should have frequent
Motivation till the plants are two feet
ilgh. Then the cultivation may be
stopped unless needed to retain moist-
ire.
It has been demonstrated that in the
sections where thorough drainage is
micticed larger crops are produced. [
ind at less cost than wher drainage is < ' i
icglected. j
The currant worm is ready to begin I i
vork on the first approach of warm [ {
veather. Powdered hellebore is the ! c
emedy , which may be used with i p
vater or applied in the dry condition , ' i
vhile the leaves are damp from rain1 t
dew. jj
String beans can be obtained during a
he entire summer by planting once a ' f
nonth for successive supplies. The0
eed germinates quickly in warm
veather , and the plants grow rapidly.
Chey can also be extensively grown ,
or pickling.
When the old strawberry beds are |
ut of use plow them under for late
abbage or turnips. If preferred the'
and may remain for a garden plot
text spring , but If such is preferred ; ,
he bed must be seed. Late in the
ail cover the beds with manure and 3
low the plot neit spring. |
fcfl
A MAN'S WAY AND A WOMAN'S.
CCORDING to the Ladies' Home
Journal , this is one of tiie differ
ences between mankind and
womankind :
Why is it deemed so necessary for
a woman to affect knowledge when
the affectation is perfectly apparent ?
I do not say that this affectation of
(
knowledge is confined to women. But
one sees it less among men. A man
Is quicker to say , "I don't know any
thing about it , " and that ends the
matter for him. What is it that makes
woman consider it necessary that she
must be au courant with the passing
Tads of the day ? It is palpably appar
ent that she cannot be. Then why
pretend that she is ? This higher de
velopment is rapidly drifting into a de-
| velopment of altogether the wrong side
I Df woman. And it is due very largely
to the fact that she does not seem to
be able to concentrate her powers. The
intelligent mastery of any one of the
great sciences for which woman's mind
ind temperament are peculiarly adapt
ed is sufficient to absorb all her en
ergies and power. Why must she turn
aside from an honest grasp of one
thing to acquire a scattering knowl
edge of a doj.en things ? Nothing is ac-
' iually accomplished thereby , luforma-
'
Uoii picked up at random is not knowl
edge. Knowledge , in its final analysis ,
! s a clear perception of something ; a
Quality , behind which you cannot get.
It is rare to find a woman who can
put one great thing first in her life and
then make all other things secondary
to it. A man does this , lie puts his
business first , and all things are ad-
Justed thereto. In that very adjust
ment of things lies his success.
Mothers never have any trouble with
the naturally curly locks of their chil-
3ren. It is the straight ones that per
plex them. If a child's hair be brushed
upward instead of downward from in
fancy it will acquire a tendency to curl
by the end of the first year.
Hairdressing is a detail that does not
receive much attention in the case of
little girls. Probably not one inolher
tn fifty studies the contour of her i
flaughter's face with a view to ascer
taining the most becoming head-dress-
tog.
tog.To
To the intelligent mother a baby's
jry should be the best index to its phy
sical condition. The healthy baby cries
rcry loudly and in a lusty , explosive ,
ingry manner , and the tears flow free
ly. The sick baby , or the one on the
rerge of sickness , cries peevishly or
svhines in a low tone.
Watch the manner in which the baby
takes its food. If it is perfectly well it
ivill attack the bottle greedily and will
express its satisfaction much in the
Mime manner as any other young aui-
nal that is , by soft and inarticulate
loises and grunts. If , on the other
land , the baby contemplates Its food
) efore touching it , or , after tasting
urns from it , be sure there is some-
hing wrong.
Don't play "up to the sky and down
: gain , " suiting the action to the words
iy tossing the half-delighted , half-
cared and wholly excited baby several
eet skyward and catching him as he
omes down , while he gasps and trem-
les , undecided whether to laugh or
ry. Babies have nerves , ; md such
ames will make neurotic martyrs at
n early age.
Education Ts Her Life Work.
The first woman in the history of the
kmgregational church to receive the
egree of bachelor of divinity is Miss
Florence A. Fen- }
sham of Constant- ! (
nople , upon whom
the honor was re- .
cently conferred in }
Chicago , after she
had taken a course
in the Chicago The
ological Seminary.
Miss Fenshain is
a native of East j
Douglas. Mass.
MISS KEXSHAM. while young she
noved with her family to Albany , N.
f. She received her education at Cor-
lell and Harvard , subsequently study-
ng at the University of Edinburgh
nd at Oxford University , England.
Lfter her Oxford course she went to
Jonstantinople. where she occupied the
hair of Biblical literature and com
parative religion in the AiwrY-in col-
zge for girls , an institution founded
> y Americans. She now holds the iui-
tortant position of dean of the college ,
nd when she returns to the Turkish
apital. she will also assume the duties
f chaplain.
The Characters of School Teachers.
The rank and file of the teaching
rce from the highest to the lowest
ositions non-progressive and
are non-
fudious. Few are close , thoughtful
indent in any line of education or of
nnd scholarship. Thi is just as true
f a majority of university ad college
rofo.-cors as it is > if the omiMi.md
I'uded school teachers. Such a coud--
on can only tx accounted for on the
jrpotheste that most persons who se- . : <
cure a position as teacher have reached
their highest ambition.-and are content
to spend most of their time in merely
holding what they have as the way of
living out their monotonous lives with
the least annoyance and friction. They
are satisfied if they draw their salaries.
If they read , It is not the quality of
reading that develops mental power or
broadens or deepens the sources of
knowledge. As much as many do is to-
read something of a fugitive nature Iu
order to pass away the time or , as they
say , "for recreation. " Their reading la
chiefly mental dissipation. The Worldr .
Work.
Advice to "WiveH.
Max O'Rell , In his book , "Her Royal
Highness , Woman. " gives this ad vie *
to wives : "To rule your husband , my *
dear lady , do exactly as you please , but
always pretend that you do as h
pleases. That is where your ability
comes in. Men are ruled , as children
are , by the prospect of a reward. The
reward of your husband is your ami
ability , your sweetness , your devotion ,
and your beauty , of which you should-
take constant care.
"Always let him suppose that it Is for-
him that you wish to remain beautifuL
The woman who believes she is assert
Ing her independence every time she-
puts on a hat particularly displeasing :
to her husband-is as clever and Intelli
gent as the Irishman who buys a re
turn trip ticket at a railroad office , and , ,
on entering the car remarks to the pas
sengers , "I have bought a return tick
et , but I don't mean to come back. ' "
Glycerine.
Many people think glycerine a per
fectly good and healing application for"
the skin. This is a mistake ; pure gly
cerine Is very heating'and parching.
Sometimes it has to be taken instead or
cod liver oil. and it leaves a very un
pleasant and burning sensation in the-
throat. It has a strong affinity for
water , and absorbs all - the moisture
from any surface it touches , so that It
dries and hardens the skin. Mothers
and nurses will sometimes apply pure-
glycerine to a baby's tender , chafed
skinwhich gives it much pain and'
really injures the skin. Glycerine oughc
always to be mixed with an eq.ua !
quantity of water. Hose water or elder
flower instead of plain water makes it
more agreeable to use. and it can thea
be applied with great benefit to the-
most tender skin.
Girl "Who Has 3Tade a Tiecord.
Miss Lillian Glotfelty , who carries
the mail on the rural delivery route out
of Hampton. Iowa , is one of Uncle-
Sam's faithful * ser
vants and has just
distinguished her
self for making the-
best money order
record in the rural
system in Iowa.
Slip is II ) years old
and was one of the-
first girls to become
a rural mall carrier.
Miss Glotfelty for
merly lived In this
UL.OTI'i-i.T\
. . . . ,
city and was edu
cated in the Eldora public schools. Her
brother , Charles Glotfelty , has beert
given a position similar to that of lite
accomplished sister and both have the
warm regards of the farmers they
serve.
A Hint to Girls.
It was a little thing , but the other
flay a young girl was noticed following-
lier callers , two young lads , into the-
ball as they took their leave. She even ,
accompanied them to the stoop , this ,
undoubtedly because she did not quite
know how to say good by and dismiss
them hi the parlor. There was noti
ng formal In the call , which was mere
ly a drop-in of some schoolboys , but it
svould have been a good time for that
roung girl to practice the little digiil-
3ed conversation of the hostess , that
presently she will very much need. A.
; irl may be all that is charming and
companionable and cordial and hospit-
ible , and yet preserve the ceremonious
"orms that are the necessities of social
ntercourse. Harper's Bazar.
Health and Beauty Hints.
Summer freckles are easily removed
> y applications of diluted lemon juice.
To remove the odor of onions from
rour breath eat a little parsley dipped
n vinegar or drink a cup of strong cof-
ee.
Cucumbers and strawberries are s'ov-
treign cosmetics if prepared properly , ,
ind even when used raw the former
ias a bleaching effect on the skin and.
he latter a bleaching effect on the-
eeth.
Tooth powder containing camphor
ometimes causes the enamel of the
eeth to crack , and therefore It is better
.voided , since the cracking of tfae-
narnel means the first stage in the de-
ay of the teeth.
Sleeping with flowers in your room is.
langerous , for during the night they
ive off the carbonic acid gas they have
aken up during the day , and , more-
ver , they consume some of the oxygen
f the room , all of which you need for
ourself.
WomanTs greatest charm Is perfect
ealth. The healthy woman , full of
ounding life and enthusiasm , centers
ttention on herself is
, admired by men
nd envied by other women. She is
ever meiicholy , jealous , irritable , ex-
itable. nervous , hysterical or subject
> fainting.