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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1910)
vm SUFFERED 30 YEARS. KIKJ f.H a m J3 fc'i t pi T v SnoDir iTTT ajLy J (D i . EHOMffill d the do- jW .. -.- .fin rV i-ars h;s witm se a unicpi aetiit il. i- t lew .luii. in nt in a unicpi- actiit. tiif pur- ;.f ..' if which N ti s;-t..-fy public curios- iv rei;ard.ng men and women who are prominent in one r auntie r of the con- picuou valks of life. This particularly up-lodate ocailem might In denoaiinat- ..ip .-,! ilt in g" oi celebrilie's, which means ' maMii:, or i:stJi:'a!i.-ous pheitcgraphs of tin' ;.. iplf ui.o ;:r- t niporarily or permanently in the mblif eye ami wIu'm. personal :tppe:irauc; is eonse- l"e:ily a ir.atJT of Interest to the people of all parts jf Tin' court rv. ! nwsiapr r'al is who take deligi.t in tl :na -.- it piftuite. spr"al ioM:i(!;r.h nv r ery print ! page. ever stop to retlert what a ouip.iratiied. short JiM- ago it war. that hr.-t saw such embellish j.i. tit of thf chroitie-l tf tin da;.'s happenings. Most of our reader.; fin do':htlcs rem-mber distinctl: the im wln-ti pictures were unknown m their favor ite newspaper, and .-t. -ii after crude rim b"gan to Tiialse tln-sr .ippearait"" in the advertising columns of Th- we.klie.-j. and Liter in the dailies, it was a Ions; lapse ,-re tin; pictures w r.- to lie foimil in the read ing r.tit:::i: and a ye t longer time 1 it' fore the reader ame to expect not mere s-renir .subjects but graphic- ptct tires of the current t.nppeniugs of the busy .'.orld. The vocation of map shotting celi-britl-. has 'ii the outgrowth the very latest eiulKP.vth. might b s rined--f.f the practise of rerordiitr in pic M:rc a well as in st'irv Tlie doings of all t'.v world. "Yhen the newspaper reading public came j expect he eutrk reflect Ion in picture form of great happen L r ' 2CY1sbbT JlJ.tfil Z' if 2asvftBBKmmBMn?liPJil C-MW MB. . M J Hfc-Jliilk "T . UammVammmwtYil mU-U NialHPnK WSKimh JsssmsssHlUaffl a w jf mrawn flBaii it - h ."d ae5jw - i iiii 'i ' Tnrr matsTrfrrifirT iui Will Scrutinize the Bank Borrowers tratcd many a lime during the colonel's trip through the west. Several professional photographers accompanied him, and a number of tho press correspondents also car ried cameras, and often it was a wild race for them to keep up with Mr. Roosevelt and he en hand at the time when tho good 'human interest" pic tures were to be had. Whenever Colonel Roose velt appeared, unless the po lice arrangements prevented, he was at once surrounded by a cheering crowd, every man, woman and child of which was trying to get close enough to grasp his hand or at least Jo say "Hello. Tedilj." At such tinTs a snap-shot usually yielded only a mass of heads and hacks surrounding a set of gleaming teeth. If Mr. Roose velt was caretully guarded by poliee or soldiers, as was tho ruse in some cities, the task of the photographer was al most as difficult, for the "con per.i" and deputy sheriffs of jlgwjfOAG' VOY ..MJTfFR PJTCWSi'C ?W l x j jl ijsi&Wtu sw ThF rsi& jvp a soamr ball l?B -Hi Ire ?5isiS5&Bte Asl fe-f3E'2i s&ss msvii?kjmmMamMKmMm Uly progressed from ?w12t Sk IBBBkTK C-BBK'BBH SJ-evfTXpy or srATr xavx. baj?oy WCXjyZ..&? zU5FCr MlrtS Afi'D o: 'SOtfV aiRfrFTT. ISg.s over tho world -p ei int. ret t i: places and things to curiosity regarding the actual app":r.ince of the people regarding whose ;. lilies the papers had much to say. It was not 'aough that the u w.spapers should jrint as a coun terfeit presentment of this or that public man a caivfully posed bu.t portrait, uiuched up to show the subject as he uanttd to appear rather than as !"e actually did appear Newspaper r.aders with a thirst for accurate informal i n came ti det'iand pictuies that would show the subjects as they actuali aj;ie.::red. Moreen rr. thc wanted not a Mmm!iTilace bust photei. but a full-length pie' ture that would repre'sent its object as he would appear to one who met him on the street and with a hint as to his distinctive characteristics as to dress, etc. From this demand w:is born the person .i "snap shot." Nowadays the snapshot is to a lare extent disponing the stereotped is-ige in the public prints. Almost everybody who achieves fame or notoriety must must needs fall victims tei the sharpshooters of tin- camera. The snap-shotter Is no respecter of petsons or callings so long as "hit I'jin interest" is present, and everylmdy. from prenchers tei pugilists an.l from statesmen to suffragists, is the epiarry of the camera scout at ne time or another. Some of the people who are snapshotted manifcth relish it: a gre-at number accept tt as a matter of course anil a minority .riggle and squirm and even tight at sight of a camera. Conspiciunis an.oag the latter are Marry l.ehr. the Newport society pet of monkey dinner fame, nnd J- Pit rpont Morgan, the finan cier. It must be admitted that the fa:hr of 'rusts docs not make u pretty picture when taken unawares anil he evidently realizes this, for he Is usually guarded by several private detectives when hrt a;.pears in public and carries a cane hich lie is quick to use em anv off ending camera that lie e.m reach. i'ubhc officials, headed bv the pre'sident of the T'nited State's, are usually the meist satisfactory st'bjects for snap-shots because, whatever may be their natural Inclination in the matter, they quickly learn to submit gracefully to this Fort of attention. A leading statesman or armv or navy ollicial who realizes that at public functions he is liablo to h" continually in the camera eye .s likely to instinctively avoid tho(. awkward ittitudes and facial grimaces that sometimeF spoil things in the catv ef a clehrity who Is new to The game and self-conscious In ccnseijnence. From the standpoint of the snap-shot t rs perhaps tho most satisfactory subjects in this country are the diploma's at Washington that is. the alien offi cials he are stationed at our seat of government as the imbassadors or ministers of foreign pov. rs. Fit one thing, these tit'ed foreigners are .ft. sussed of gorgeous uniforms that show up "11 in unconventional pictures, and then again they a-e accustomed to being cons.antly on dress parade. The snap-shotter must "quick on th trigger" and he cultivates ability in this direction almost as earnestly as the gun fighter of the west did :n the old das. The newspaper snap-shots an made by means of special cameras mad" specially for the purpose, and costing as much as $2.10 apiece. Only a fraction of a second is requ'red. of eo'irsr. to make a snapshot, enco the lens is foeusei'. upon a celebrity in a de'Sircd position, but the uncertainty lies in the fact that the celebrity '.s seldom actually posing for his picture. Mere nan likely he may not realize that he is being aught by the camera or mahrp may be trying to deidge the ,;lass eve point Ml toward him. In any event quick action is n c ssary at the crit ical moment if the subject sought is tei b"4 caught ere he mines away, ti.rns his head or otherwise spoils the picture'. Indeed the snap-shotter who would "catch on the wing" such restless spirits as C'olond Roosevelt i:;ust develop a sort of sixth .-use that will enable him to anticipate with rea scnable .ci taint the future moves of his subject. No either American of the day is so much pho tographed as Is Ceilonel Roosevelt, and yet ho is by nei me ans an easy subject for good pictures. It is not that he objects to the operation: indeed, he seems to utterly Ignore the cameras tint arc pointed at him a dozen times a day. Rut the colonel is one of the most active and sudden of men. and the snap-shotter must be on the aleTt every minute of the time or he loses the golden opportunist to catch the ex-president at the "psy chological moment." This was admirably Illus- ENTERTAINING THE BLIND. "In these days of specialists you can't just step' out and help yimr fellow humans In haphaz ard fashion." said the matron on an Institution for the blind. "You h:iv to take a course of training b.for you can e-ven do good in the world. In tliis position the task that requires most di plemiacy is declining the services of people who offer to entertain the blind. All sorts of incom petents volunteer. Their intentions are good, but their achievements are deplorable. Poor readers are most numerous and are hardest to manage. They have had no practise in reading aloud since they left the lowor grades In the grammar school, yet when the fires of benevolence break out that Is the first thing they want to do. "The blind are particularly sensitive to tho epial'ty of a voice. A hat-di. high pitched oice that rambles on without rhyme or reason gets on their nerves, and It is our duty to shut out all such readers. They have to be handled with care because their hearts are in the right place, ami with tact their good intentions may be du Ilected into some useful channel." i?s f-r- sffFtoJ TflB:! kZfmm w ryjr ,"VW THAT MURRAY IS EiTHREIY TOO FRESH - PRETTY xnoN A MAN - .J-S- !-" . WASHINGTON. Comptroller or the Currency M'trray is now hard at work in making sharper and more searching the official supervision and control of the national bauks. He re quires the examiners to make their investigations more complete and ex acting. He has changed examiners from one district to another, and If they thus lose something of knowledge about local conditions, they are set free from influences which breed par tiality and prejudice. Official inquiry is in this way lifted above cliques nnd the mastery of one or two institutions In a city. The latest step Is to call on the ex aminers in the several districts to make out lists of the concerns which are largest borrowers at thu banks. Such reports from the 11 districts are to be tabulated at the Washington office which will be so created a clear ing house of commercial credits. The record is to be kept in confidence, and the names of banks carrying heavy lines of paper will not be ex posed. Individuals and corporations which strain their credit soon get beyond the resources of their home banks. The go abroad for loans. Note brokers de rive their profit from this practise. When failures occur it often happens that the bankrupt is debtor to banks at points remote from each other. One lender does not know how many others have been buying the same sort of paper. Reliance, on business statements becomes trust on broken reeds by changed conditions as well as by over-sanguine estimates. The new policy of Comptroller Mur ray will tend to restrict credit at both ends of the transaction. Rorrowers who expand unduly will take warning when they learn that record of all their loans is kept for review. They will discern the need of caution in put ting out their obligations, and will do less business on other people's cap ital. They will feel some alarm at the broad semi-publicity of their affairs and will reduce their appeals to lend ers. The weakest of the large bor rcwers will first be compelled to re duce their loans. All who rely too n.uch on borrowing will see the veil lilted from their operations and will come to act knowing that they are do ing business in the open. Those who are fairly entitled to the credit which they ask can get no harm. The dan ger of the output of bad paper will be diminished, and banks will be warned against assets zut desirable. But Chronbj Kidney Traubl Wm Finally Curtd. Charles Von Soehm.. 101 A St, Colfax. Wash., saya: "For SO years I suffered from kidney trouble and was laid up for daye at a time. There was a dull ache through the assail of my back and I hadrheu matlc palaa In every Joint The kidney secretions passed too freely and I wai annoyed by having to arise at night. I could not work without Intense suf fering. Through tho use or Doan'e Kidney Pills. I was practically glrtn a new pair of kidneys. I cannot exag gerate their irtues., Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all doalera. 60 cents a box. Foster-Mllburu Co., Buffalo, N.T. By a Savings Made in the Naval Service V i"I fiSjCllfJSjO WITH a navy increasing in size, the estimates for the expense of the naval establishment for the next fis cal year show a saving of over $1. 000,000. as compared with the amount appropriated last year. For the pres ent fiscal year the estimates were $10,000,000 less than tho appropria tions for the preceding year. The two years taken together show econ omy with increased efficiency. Competition in the Meet has been encouraged and has resulted in better target practise, economy in coal con sumption and in consumption of sup plies. Full power trials of vessels under cruising conditions have been conducted. Tho fastest battleships on the recent full power trials were the only ones repaired at navy yards under the present system of navy yard organization. The greatest progress in the navy has been in target practise. It has been due tei carefully conducted com petitions, where ship has been pitted against ship, man against man and of ficer against officer. In this way every one has been put upon his mettle and results have closely measured the relative worth of the various ships and officers. The ccst of work at navy yards has fallen materially. Steel castings made at navy yards have been re duced from about 9 cents a pound to about 5 cents, and iron castings have been cut from about 4 cents a pound tef 2. Although the navy has increased In size., the cost of the coal is expected to be about $1,000,000 less during the current fiscal year than during the previous one. The estimates for fuel for the coming year have been de creased by, $1,000,000. Improvement has been made in the use of lubri cating oil. The cost of supplies has been reduced by more than 20 per cent., and in freight and transporta tion of supplies there has been a saving of about $100,000. The most serious waste of funds under the navy department has prob ably been that due to expenditures upon vessels that are not fit to take part in -any future war. There are many of these vessels that will prob ably be relegated to the reserve or be placed out of commission in the near future. Couldn't B Thankful. Bishop Charles W. Smith at a har vest dinner In Portland said of the harvest spirit: "The harvest spirit Is one of thana fulness, but there are some crabbed old farmers who couldn't be thankful if they tried. "I said to such an old fellow as ha conducted me over his farm on a gold en autumn afternoon and showed me a record harvest: "'Well. sir. this year, at least, you've got nothing, nothing whatever to complain of. "I don't know about that, bishop.' ho answered, with a shake of tho head. "I'm afraid there'll be no spoilt hay for the young calves.' " Hardly a Compliment. In the excitement of the moment public speakers often say the opposite of what they mean to convey, and "when Henry Irving gave a reading la the Ulster hall. In 1878." says Bram Stoker, in "Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving." "one speaker made as pretty an Irish bull as could be found, though the bull Is generally sup posed to belong to other provinces than the hard-beaded Ulster. In des canting on the many virtues of the guest of the evening he mentioned the excellence of his moral nature and rect Undo of his private life In these terms: "Mr. Irving, sir. Is a gentle man what leads a life of unbroken blemish.' " Supreme Court May Unsquat 300,000 KING'S BEARD MODEL FOR ENGLISHMEN. Beards are at present the order of the day among London's fashionable "men-about-town." In remarking about the innalencc of facial hir sute adornments, a prominent hairdresser said: "One would not h.v.e thought that the coming of King Crorte to the thro:i' would havo made much difference to the fashie.n of current hair drossing. in view of the fact that his father wore a beard for so many years, but I can assure you It has. and a very great difference at that. "In all pre.bability the present fashion of tho point beard is due in a groat measure to so young a man affecting one. I have been told that there was a great xage for beards among men-about-town" when King Edward first grew a beard many years ago. "In my opinion the average Englishman is tiemeadously imitative. The style of beard King George wears is appropriately named the torpedo" in the navy, and since the king's ac cession many of the younger men In the service have started to grow them." &vfip&&ror Ttf ?rst AMBASSADOR 'AJYD MPS. JAMSJ B?YCJT the western towns seemed to have much more se-If Importance than common sense. In Denver two of the camera men wore loft behind when the colonel and his party went to the auditorium and arrived to find that building packed to the doors and surrounded by a ring of mounted police. To e-ne eif these they appealed In vain. "But we aro :upposed to be with Mr. Roosevelt's party." said one eif them finally. "Well." was the chilly re spenre, "if you are supposed to be with them, why aren't you?" An.! the officer's horse 3cor!.':lly switched life tall in their faces. It was in Denver, too. that one of the most amusing scenes of tho trip was witnessed. The Press c!ub gave a "chuck-wagon" luncheon to the colonel iu a park. "Here." said the camera men. "is our chance for some good staff." So they put in fresh films or plates and hustled out there by tiie do7.cn. The colonel. In the' midst of a throng of self-imiicd Colorado deputy sheriffs, stood at the rough beard table and every time he reached for a bit eif meat or put a morsel of feed into his mouth there was a perfect fusillade of clicks from the cameras that surrounded him. The photog raphers were ranged in a triple ring about thw chuck wagon, thoie with little cameras la front, stooping low; next, the men with the larger hand cameras, and In the rear the local artists, who bad big machines on high tripods, it wa3 In truth a comical sight, but the colonel did not seem to mind it a bit, and went on eating and talking with the i!t"ot enthusiasm. The isil to Cheyenne, of course, gave the snap shctters their hvt chances for picturesque views, for there the colonel could be caught almost any time rhaking hands with the cowboys, cowgirls and gaudily painted Indians, or applauding the work of the broncho-butters. There is :i Chicago newspaper man who once lad the unique experience of being the only person with a cann ra present at the coronation of a king. The monarch in question was Mataafa. who had been elected king of Samoa by a majority of the inhabitants of those delectable islands In 1S9S. His reign, to be sure. last'. I but a few months, for after a gallant struggle he was most unjustly deposed by the Americans and British, who thereupon narti tioned the islands with Germany. The perform ance took place in the open, but the king and the chiefs who anointed him were not to b ap proached within some fifty yards. So rigid is Sa moan etiquette that the one man with the camera did not dare to break through the surrounding ring of natives, and had perforce to be content with such views as could be had from a distance. Krfe' V- V ZFCU?? m i rrr ' I i 1 WOriDAH IF I VVILL QWti THIS Place AFTER THE CtWRTCETS THROuCH THE legal battle which has raged in Kentucky for several genera tions over the validity of so-called "blanket" grants of land by Virginia, the mother state, and ex-en Kentucky itself during the earlier years of statehood, nas eome before the Su preme court eif the United States for elecision. Titles to lands now said to be worth at least $10,0.)0.000 depend upon the decision of the court. Orig inally some eif the land was procured at 2 cents an acre. Arguments were made as to the constitutionality of the Kentucky statute fender which it is claimed a forfeiture of the title to 40.000 acres of land, held by the Kentucky Union company, would be worked in favor of the occupants of the land. Imme diately after this case, it is expected the suits involving the title of the eastern Kentucky lands will be taken up. About 2.500.000 acres of land are said to lie under the doubtful title of these "blanket" grants. On the other hand. 300.000 citizens of Kentucky have entered these lands. Claimants under the "blanket" grants call them "squatters." The attorney general of the com monwealth of Kentucky has ap peared in the supreme court to as sert in defense of their claim of title that they are the people who have built up the state, and erected a com monwealth, with its court houses and school houses, its municipalities and internal improvements. They have for years, the attorney general has said In a brief, filed with the court, paid taxes on the land, while a search of the records, where such information would be found, he says, shows that the sum total of all taxes paid by the claimants under the Virginia grants in litigation, since the organization of Kentucky In 1792. to thu present time, does not exceed $75. "Beer" in Kansas. A certain Kansas editor always puts the word "beer," when printed in his paper, in quotation marks. "Why do you do that?" a subscriber asked him. "It Is for the same reason be re plied, "that we put quotation marks around tho word 'ghost.' We don't be lieve there are any ghosts." Kansas City Journal. He Never Shaved Again. Mannaduke What do you suppose that wrenched barber said when he shaved me? Bert It! 1 dont know. Mannaduke He said It reminded him of game he used to play whea s boy called "Hunt the Hare." Uncle Sam Goes After White Slavers Making of a Great Novel Many Things Other Than Powers of Description Enter Into Its Com position. The commonest fault of novels Is !ack o: knowledge and it is just be cause ri. this lack they fail in im agination. For imagination is encour aged and enriched by knowledge of all kinds, and flags for the want of It. Knowledge is, as it were, the soil by which the Cower of Imagination is i nourished; and the greater the writer i the greater bis passion for knowl edge and the more use he can make of all that he knows. Scott is per haps the most imaginative of all our novelists, and none of them has had a knowledge so vast and diverse. It is the same with Tolstoi. His novels interest us so much, even when the story seems lost in them, because he is always telling us of what he knows. He can interest us as in Levin mow ing, because he had mowed himself, or in Andrew Bolkousky fighting, be cause he has fought himself. If in these cases he were net writing out of his own experience, his narrative would be empty of detail and Illusion. And so it is with stories of poems of passion. They are dull if the writer can only tell us how he or some one else is very powerfully moved. He must, even in poetry, tell us facts about passion If we are to listen to what he says, though he may tell them Indirectly: and they must not be second-hand facts that he has learned from other writers. For it is easier to detect "cramming" in lit erature than in examination papers; and when the reader detects it he loses InteresL There is this fault in many of Zola's novels. He was thor oughly aware of the value of knowl edge in a novelist; but he thought he could cram it. His books are full of facts, but they are often facts too easily come by and acquired for a particular purpose. THE government of the United States has turned Its whole letec tive machinery towan unearthing and destroying the white slave tratlic. as it exists between the states or between foreign ' countries and the United States. It Is the plan of the depart ment of justice to make one sweep on all the large cities at once, and strike. If possible, one staggering blow at the traffic. The government's authority comes from the Mann act. imposing upon the interstate aspects of the crime penal ties of five years" imprisonment or a fine of $3,000. According to informa tion already received at Washington. Pittsburg is the center of the trade, though clues discovered in Chicago make that city an important Fubsta tion. The firsts swoop, it is intended. An Example. "I don't believe in spiritualism and I wouldn't have anybody in my employ who did." "Yet only yesterday I saw one of your clerks who had sold some inuor to a customer, and he was doing some spirit wrapping." Brilliant Idea. Uncle Treetop (on his way to the dentist's office) "Most likely It'll stop aching by the time I get In the chair. If it does, I'll pretend I've made a mls .vo and tell him I want a haircut" will be started simultaneously In New York. Philadelphia. Pittsburg. Chicago and San Francisco. Officers at ports or entry have been asked to increase their vigilance and to inspect female immigrants with pe culiar care. Meanwhile officers at in land cities will watch and report the movements of all suspects. In New York some months ago Dis trict Attorney Whitman made an ef fort to trap some of the men back of the trade in that city, but they es caped. The only way to capture the offenders, according to the agents of the department of justice, is to havo the authorities of all the large cities act together. The government agents will not try to "clean up" the vari ous cities. They will simply go after the leaders of the syndicate. In Chicago some arrests have been made, but these are only the begin ning of the general crusade, it is said. In several cases It was found that men in that city had brought women from France. Some of the lines developed in Chicago by these arrests can be traced throughout the country. Not the Only Sufferer. The domesticated ostrich had just been relieved of his "tips." "Trimmed again!" he- groaned; "I wonder why the S. P. C. A. doesn't agitato for auti-tipping legislation?" TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red. Weak. Weary. Watery Eye and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesnt Smart Soothes Bye Pain. Druggist Sell Murine Eye Remedy. Liquid, 25o, 50c. $1.00. Murine Eye Salve 1b Aseptic Tubes. 25c. $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. The Lawyers Won. Askit Old Skinnerd left quite a large estate, did be not? Nol tt Yes; but some of his rela tives contested his will. Askltt Was there much left after It got through the courts? Noitt Nothing but the heirs. ImDortantto MottM Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. a safe and aure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the X3r . V &i1.7X fG(AC&4t Signature of in Use For Over SO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Feminine Logic. Her A woman Is always right Him How do you figure that outf Her Well, a woman Is, Isn't she? Him Yes. I suppose so. Her And Pope says: "Whatever Is Is ilghL" See? Chicago News. A mother makes a fatal mistake when sho leads her children to be lieve that tbev are wingless angels. NEWSPAPERS TAKING IT UP Microscopic. "You'll not find a steak like this in a hurry," boasted the tall waiter. And the guest looked up with an Icy smile. "I should say noL It is so securely hidden under these few chips of po tatoes it is doubtful if I find it alL" Metropolitan Dallies Giving Advle How to Check Rheumatism and Kidney Trouble. This Is a simple home recipe now being made known in all the larger cities through the newspapers. It la Intended to check the many cases of Rheumatism and dread kidney trouble which hare made so many cripples. Invalids and weaklings of some of our brightest and strongest people. The druggists everywhere, even la the smallest communities, have been notified to supply themselves with the ingredients, and the sufferer will have no troublo to obtain them. The pre scription is as follows: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon. ono ounce, and Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, threo ounces. Mix by shaking well In a bottle. Th dose i3 ono teaspoonful after eacks meal and at bedtime. Recent experiments In hospital cases prove thi3 simple mixture ef fective in Rheumatism. Because of its positive action upon the ellmlmv tive tissues of the kidneys. It compels these most vital organs to filter from the blood and system the waste Im purities and uric acid which are the cause of rheumatism. It cleanses the kidneys, strengthens them and t moves ulckly such symptoms as backache, blocd disorders, bladder weakness, frequent urination, painful ecaldinir and discolored urine. It acts as a gentle, thorough regulator to tk entire kidney structure. Those who suffer and are accus tomed to purchase a bottle of medW cine should not let a little Incon venience interfere with making this op, or have your druggist do Rforys,