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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1913)
yjaga z i rp 7 " LBV (-A s Oh! It's Great to Be Married Come on - AFTERNOON OH5- PLANINq Good Women and By WINIFRED BLACK. -. ,8o ypu don't believe that the wages a pcod Woman Bets have anything to do - with tier, being good. Is that so, Mr. Chi cago,-. philanthropist, millionaire and so- clat uplift -worker? You "fi&ve Just said so at a public "hearing of the IIU- 'liols Vice commls 'slon, and I agree with yoj. I Aon't - believe the wages a good woman gets Jias much to do with her being good cither. . Let's see, Mr. ' p h 1 ,1, a n t h r o -plstiidldn'fyo'u and your" partners ad- ;mlt that you make something like NMKM ' seven millions a .'yeat? You admitted that you employ ifome thousand or so bf your glrlsi who Yare?pa(d soma ot them five, and some ''of tnemVhrse, dollars a week. ' ' S, You said that you consider sucbwage) Tali thy earned, and "you declared'' that tyoii were hot at all ashamed 'of It; that' Vyoudia'ii't know that It was our affair Vwheherij they lived or could live upon Xsuch .wgges or not a QQlte so very lucid, very lllumlnatlhg ,of you. "A good woman Is good whether 'she ,1s poor or rich." you said to the-Vice commission, "and her wages have noth ing flo 'do with tho case," Again, .quite so. You are a clever man; JuBt about (ha cleverest man I have ',heard deliver himself of any opinion pn .'tils terrible question. Most men don't ;know any more about a good woman than a -hyena knows about a little brown henfWe brown hen couldn't laugh' like ',a liena to .save her life, and a hyena would be absolutely useless when It camfe (to providing omlets for tho family table. 1 "Good women are bom good. Nothing .can make them bad. They will starve, they will suffer, they will die before they wlll do what Is wrong." Some men would rather die than, turn pickpocket. Come men would steal very handily almost any time to keep from ; .Bolng without a meal. I fear that there are many fairly good men who belong .to this latter class, but women, are dif ferent, entirely different In such mat iters. j You know and I know of hundreds of - women who die every -year In the hospi tals of great cities lust because they are different." They starve, and they freere and -they go without decent cloth ' Ins 'and, dee'erit, shelter till nature says .''enough," and "then they creep "to some 'hospital to dlo of Inanition, of tubercu losis, of cancer what's the difference 'what name you call this final disease they all come from the same beginning nature ts too tired to recoup, and those ' women die by .hundreds, by thousands, every year Just'becauEe neither you nor BETTER THAN MEDICINE , Breathe Byomel and Be Rid of Ca , tarrah Clears Btopned-un Head, Nature has a remedy for catarrh and" -troubles of the breathing organs,' a treat "ment that Is far better than dosing the stomach with medicine. It is the healing oils and baliamn of ; Hyomel which medicates the air you breathe, reaching the most remote air cells in the nose, throat and lungs, kill- Ing the catarrhal germs, and restoring ' health to the mucous membrane. " VIn -using Hyomel you are treating your, catarrhal troubles with the natural rem- edy, for It ClVs a curative air bath to the air passages. It has a powerful heal ing and. antiseptic effect similar to the air in the mountains where the forests give off the fragrant and healing baU t sums. Hyomel has benefited so many suf ferers of the worst cases of .catarrh, with offensive breath, raising of mucus, fre quent sneezing, droppings in the throat and spasmodic coughing that it Is sold under an absolute guarantee to refund th, money if It doe not do all that Is claimed for It. t the treatment does not luTi you thero will not be a penny's x iwn. While If it cures the cost is noml W'. A "t -' ;i"nM Outfit Bells for . tf.i v vi a ' if nw- 1. v ' --;" I 1 1 KDV7 1 I I W . I jiT. . I I l "V 1 ' 1 11 1 -ftiP r " ' 100 OCT I AM- . N . " ,H ' trl WBLt, DEARIE- Sk hwlftALm MSO-S " fT" V 'M HOMt EARLY 1 waJS'SS io ' - rQrS PIE.-I'M J M,,e-r . OF At. I Vru 1 m'rn 1 .... Starvation Wages any other philanthropist who ever lived can drive them to the streets for food, no matter what pittances you pay them. Where does that let you come out. Mr. E'hllanthroplst? The fact that a woman tarved to death rather than earn her board and clothes by the cruel road of shame wouldn't make me any prouder of the fact that I waB the roan who starved her to death, would It you? Good women don't turn bad because they'll die if they don't. They die be cause they won't turn bad. They sicken and faint, and starve, and freeze' on the'r $3 a week, and they dla good women not because we have; helped them to hfe good with our philanthropy, but because we would not help them to live by being Just, That's alt: Is that a thing to be proud of? Shall such knowledge rejoice our hearts? It always makes me smllo a little bit terly to hear a refprmer-i-tell how hard It is for a poor woman .to .be good. It Is not hard far a poor -woman to be good: It Is hard" 'for a- good woman to "be, -poor. .' . ' Jl Is natural, rfor hcx.ta.bs.'gpod; It Is part of er, like her sWh"'andhe,r hair and her yhfy eyeB. She's brave, and she's honest, artd. ..she's h& 'working because -that's the way she Is made, and, thank heaven, tho w.orld Is ' full, glori ously full, of women-Just like her, women who wdnld walk, to the scaffold If they had td rather than give up one lnstant'8 right to look the world o .tempters straight In the face and say, "No, I thank you; such' comfort Is too dearly bought." Is that any reason for keeping her at .work on starvation wages? Do you say to yoMrsslves, you employers who do this thing, "She's good, this girl; she won't do wrong, thpugh I starvo her to death at 'my vory door," and are you glad that you do It when you think so? "Iiow wages drive a girl to shame." No! low wages don't drive a good girl to shame nothing on earth or over the earth can do that but they do drive a good girl to misery, and want and hun- gor, and cojd, and because they can't drive her to shame. Is that any reason to be proud that you've done your best" to do It? . Weak girls, loollsh girls, vain girls; yes, these poor things go the dark road Just because It 18 the easiest way, they think, poor hungry things but they might have gone there any How, poor creatures. I've known as many, girls who got J 20 a week go wrong as I have girls who got four. . What has that to do with the case? I suppose I am an- eccentric, but sonie how I'm afraid I'd feel worse about kill ing a good woman by stow starvation than I would about drlvjng a poor girl to the streets who was perhaps bound there anyhow from the very day she was born. "I pay over 1,000 of my glrjs JS and much under t5 a week. I don't think that has anything to do with the white slave conditions. A good girl Is good no matter. what she gets." Precisely, Mr, Philosopher, but It that any reason that men of high business abJJIty should keep her hungry all the time she's being good? I should think that w.ould be the very reason they'd want to help her be happy and comfort ablejust because she Is so brave, just because she Is so fine, Just because she Is so good. Seven million dollar a year profit, and the girls who help make It get Just enough to-, keep a feeble body and a struggling soul together. Brave hearts, true souls, how shall we Idle loiterers at the easy gates of life vr dare to look them straight In the eyes. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATJUOK FAIRFAX. Dear Kiss Fairfax: I am a young girl of 18 yeara and considered very attrac tive. About six months ago I met a young inan through business and he offered to ttake. me out I accepted" and he called several times, after that, at my home. Then he went on Ml vacation and we corresponded. On his return I saw him once, then did not hear from or see him till three weeks ago, when he wrots and asked If he might call. I answered yes. and we spent a very delightful evening. I have not heard from him sines. Now 1 know that I have not offended htm, and as I think a great deal ot him, what shall I do? PATIENT. S 4. . 1 ..III t. 1 b . .t ho out find seek him. Such would oai result In driving ttlm ' ' 1 'I No Other Part of an Animal's Body Serves So Great a Variety of Purposes as the Teeth 1 Br GARRKTT P. 8BRVISS. I have been reading some recent sta tistics about elephants' tusks which are of great Interest, not only In themselves, but In what they suggest about the future. A n elephant's tusk, In the lan guage of tho shoot era of big game, Is a tooth. Science also rec ognizes it as a tooth, because ot Its structure and mode of growth. Our ordinary ideas about teeth are very restricted. In fact, there is no part of an ani mal's body that serves so great a variety of purposes as the teeth, They ara'used not only for "slezlng, tearing, dividing, pounding, or grinding food,' but also for weapons of offense or de fense, for aids In locomotion, for means of anchorage, for uprooting or cutting down treefl, for Instruments of trans, port, and for handling building materials All these uses were noted by the great naturalist Owen. The elephant's tusks are, of course, examples of teeth used as weapons, but they also serve as means of transport ing heavy loads. The bearer uses Its teeth as cutting Instruments, as well as to aid It In -arranging the .materials of Its houstv" The walrus employs Its long, downward pointing teeth, or tusks, for hooking up seaweeds and for helping it In locomotion. Even man has developed many other ways of utilising bis teeth besides that of chewing his food. He can fight with rr Begin With. the. At If from childhood up a girl has never been taught to enduro anything, disagree, able, has had everything made 3.1100th and pleasant for her, and has grown to consider her own way about as Important a thing as she knows of. she Is going to be as willful about falling In, love si about everything else, and equally wllltui ln-fallng out again. Caroline DUer. B BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A girl baby is born, and so miraculous a thing Is birth that her fatht-r and mother get down on their kne-j before this little pink wrinkled roseleaf of a mortal and vow such a miracle was never wrought before. ' They become slaves before a ruler too young to know wisdom or justice. They become obsessed with one ambition, and that Is to gratify every whim of the ca pricious little queen of their nomo. She cries for toys her father cannot afford, and he mortgages his future peace of mind in getting them. She demands service from her mother that sails for weary hours of hard labor, and shows no gratitude at the result She came Into the world unspoiled, and the two to whom was Intrusted tho plan of keeping her so pervert their 'ove to such ends that before she' Is t she nam't a grace of her babyhood left She had her way as a child in cbooslnr that which was not good for her. She will have her way with more tragic re sults when the wrong man comes woo ing. Yet in the face of the experience of others, parents continue to let the whimper of a spoiled child send flying every bit oC Judgment and common sense they ever possessed, 'T cannot see what possesses her to act this .way," writes a motfier'of ,a girl who Is encouraging the attentions of a man ot bad -reputation. "We have been the most Indulgent parents, to her, never de nying her" A thing, yet when we bg her to haVe nothing to do with this man, she laugtur at "us. What can -we dor' My dear woman, you can do nothing. You have'aIready""idone too-much. In the days that were gone you permitted your daughter to have her own way in all things. It Is too late to convince her that sho can't have her own way now that she Is IS. A girl grows up and strays, and soma ono discovers that ber natural guardians h&va- been paying no heed to her foot etep. and they are blamed. Always, al- Xho blame. laid, pn Ibe .parents,. Copyright, 1915, International News SorvlQe. ( "1 4 ; ' - them If necessary. If ho Is "strong jawed" ho finds that they give him" a better hold on a rope than his hands afford. There are not many seamstressos who do not find their teeth a ready sub stitute for sclssorB in cutting thread.. If the prediction, which one often reads, that man will eventually become a toothless animal should be fulfilled, It Is evident that It would not be merely the power of mastication that he would lose. He would lose weapons and tools, of whose utility away from the dinner table he seldom thinks. There would be one aesthetic gain, how ever, in the loss of the human teeth It would abolish the gumrchewers In the street cars and subway trains. In the statistics that X have mentioned, the fact is stated that a single firm of blllard ball makers uses In one year the tusks of 1,140 elephants! Three, hundred tons of elephant tusks are sold yearly In the London market But the.lophant Is a vanishing animal, and -manifestly this thing cannot go on Indefinitely, unless elephants can be raised uti farms, like ostriches, and "cultivated" for their teeth. In fact, It would Impossible to keep the Ivory market supplied were It r.ot for the "fossil" tusks of mammoths, whloh died thousands of years ago, and are now found In Siberia and elsewhere, preserved In the froion soil. The African elephant's tusks are the most esteemed, becauso they are un-t usually hard and white. The tusks of the hippopotamus are also used. Man has never been able to lnvont a substance that can fully take the place of Ivory. It owes Its wonderful elasticity to Its structure, which it shares. In a general way, with all tooth-like pro cesses. The hard substance, says Owen, is ar ranged in hollow columns, which aro j Girl as a Baby Often unjustly, but never unjustly when the child has grown up knowing nothing but indulgence. 'A spoiled baby, a willful child, a .stub tern and unreasonable young woman. The transition la easy and natural, and when the stubborn and unreasonable young woman falls In love with the wrong man, the tragedy begins. To those parents whose love still kneels before a cradle there Is tlm to avert such a tragedy. The baby girl may be taught filial respect, self-control and Little Bobbie's Pa By WILLIAM F. KIRK. There was a awful smart gentelman up to the house the other nlte. his ruvlm wan Btllle Lee, at leest that is what he seemed like. He Is the boss of the Public Skool playgrounds, & all he has to do Is to go out ft find out what Is the borft places for the kids to play. 1 , I had a trend that was a member jf the Bord of Kducashun oust, sed Ma. He was a graduate of Cornell, too, Ma sed, & If tharo Is anything in this wurld thai I luv It is a college graduate. Doant you that way? I doant know that I do, sed Billy Ie, beckaus I newer loved a college grad uate. I aro paying no attenshun to col lege graduates anyhow, beekaus all of my attenshun Is beelng deevoted to little bits of kids, the age that kids like yure little kid Is. I always flggtred, Mister Iee sed, that If we talk care of kids that slxe the college graduates will talk care of themselfs, the best that any college grad uate can talk calr of -hlsself. I nevver was one, so I doant know, sed Mister Lee. Well, sed Pa, I won't say too much about this question of children sitting educated in publlo .playgrounds Instead of In public skoolst beekaus wsn I was a Httel Wd tharo wasn't much' In the line of public playgrounds, The only publlo playgrounds that we had was rite out In the open air beehlnd the old red barn, te It was as free as the air we are breethlng now. Of course It was In a small town. Pa sed, ware thtm things Is always frt. but you may bo sure It Was sum playground, te you may also b sure jjiat I was always the cuarapeen at overjMa. Drawn for CLCArt THt STOVE - press Tour. 5UIT- J0 TO The VTORE ' tAV TM& VS OILL- HAN THE- CURTAINS AND.,OlU THE MACHINE placed perpendicular to tho plane of pres sure, and the elasticity Is due to the curves ot t,he columns, A piece of Ivory under a microscope ts a very interesting object The average welght'of a full grown tusk ts about sixty pounds, but In excep tional cases It msy reach 17& pounds. Thoro Is one pair of tusks In oxlstenco which weighs In the aggregate 4C0 pounds, tho weight of one being 35 and that of the other 233 pounds. The length and girth are very variable. An eight-foot tusk Is regarded as a notably large one, but there are some In museums measuring from ten to over eleven feet. Some yeara ago Major Powell-Cotton shot at elephant In the Congo whose tusks weighed, together, 372 pounds. Sometimes the greatest cir cumference of a tusk may reach nearly two feet ' It only noeds a glance-at some, of -the current uses of Ivory 'In order to' under stand why the olephant Is fast disap pearing. The largest quantity Is prob ably employed In making billiard balls, but It is also . used for planofort keys, combs, brush backs, cane handles, chess men, carved figures, In whloh the Chi nese and Japanese excel, panels for min iature paintings and many other things, and. In addition, the pigment called ivory black Is formed by burning Ivory shav ings and dust In a crucible. In ancient times some of the most famous sculptured figures, which were occasionally of glgantlo itr. tike the great cryBelephantlne statue of Athena In the Pathonon, were made of alternate plates of gold and Ivory. But Is ts the Increasing demand of modern Industry and luxury that has brought about a threatened famine of ivory. Not many years ago It was estimated that from S.OOo to 12,000 elephants perished every year to supply the trade. ' learn that her parents know' best For those parpnta who surrender to every childish whimper, there la only one thing to do when a girl loves and marries a man of, whom his own parents cannqt approve'' and that Is to make the best of It. They did not punish her when sho suffered In ' having her 'own way as a child; they must be patient with her now. And so I ask forbearance, pity, char ity and an all-enveloping love for tho girl who will not listen to reason. She was given a patience as a child that had long ceased to be a virtue. She Is In greater need ot patience, and' how muoh more It would prove- a virtue to show it to her nowl one of the sports the boys Indulged In, Children, children, sed Mister Lee. I am Interested in playgrounds, but not In prize rings. That was nice of Mister Lee beekaus It stopped the fite, but he has moar rite to be happy than I have, beekaus he cud talk hfs coat & hat &. go hoam tc I have to be with Pa A Ma all the time. I knew that last was cumming. Ma sed. I was sure that you was going to flgger sumthlng grate In the playground ot yure childhood that you are deeskrlb Ing. It Is too bad that Jim Jlffrles woient xnaiklng boilers around thare, sed Ma, so you cud havo 'licked hi in nn top of all them othsr acheevements that you say you had as a boy champeen. You mussent mind my husband, Mister Lee, sed Ma. He Is all the time going on that way. & you mussent mind my wife. Pa sed to his frend. She Is all the time contra dlckttng me. I nevyer contradlckted you In my life, sed Ma. Yes. you did, sed Pa, No, I didn't, sed Ma. & I ain't going to start wen I am so old. But you do arjrue with me, sed Pa. I newer argued with you In my life, Ma sed, .Yes, you have argued with me, Pa sed, Newer, sed Ma, I vud die as soon as J wud argue with you. No. you wuddent. Fa sed. You wud dent like to die till you git in one more argument. Yes, I wud, you Impossible husband, sed The Bee by George McMaiius O0S- HAVE VOU- ANOTHER, AND ) Great By KliBBRT UUBBARD. -Copyright 1012,- International News Service. - An epoch Is a pivotal point, something that changes old methods, cleans up the slate, and starts the game ot life tofresh. In the lives bf Individuals there are pivotal n o I n t b.' Loss, ' calamity, grief, may be pivo tal points times when an Issue bravely met adds cubits to oilr sta ture. Great successes are usually those where vlotory Is snatched from tle jaws ot defeat.'And the old Idea of the Indians that when they billed an enemy they ab sorbed his strength Into their own 'Is poetically rU9.-. The' 'greatest; tn.- ventlon ot modern centuries lis. the steam engine. The principal of the expansive power, of water under heat w.aa known to ry,tna goras, who lived 000 years .before. Christ,' However, the value ,of .steam as a pro ducer of power was of no avail until we had a receptacle that would contain, t ' The rolling of Iron plates vras.lha.. thing that made the steam engine practicable It was the steam boiled and not tho steam engine that ushered In the age ot steam, nobert Fulton said his job was to make a boiler to hold the steam the engine was easy., Stephenson rigged up. an engine and' boiler on a wagon, ran a Chain ovor the hub, and this chain ran around the fly wheel of his engine. With- this Bteam wagon he could travel on "a good road way at the rate of four 'miles an hour. Four miles titi hourMs the speed of a traction engine. . . Stephenson found that when he In creased the speed of his .wagon, It; Jarrl his engine so that It was Impossible to manipulate It The wheels of a wagon hit the ground and every Inequality: caused a shock. Driving horses ore - a stone pavement faster than five 'miles an "hour ' Is not practical. - " I once rode to a fire with Chief Hale, In Kansas City, at the rate ot ten miles an hour. ' We certainly did ronke the sparks fly. We swung from curb" to" curb, and the racket, the friction, tne pounding were terrific. I vowed that' If Lever got out of that red wagon I would1, never climb Into such a vehicle again. The Invention of the rubber tiro, made the automobile possible. And it rubber tires had been Invented before iron wheels were utlllxad, the railroads would never have existed. When Stephenson discovered that It was Impossible to make speed oh a roadway with an Iron wheeled 'Vehicle s ho laid wooden rails and covered " them w'lth TcnrlnK the Pathos to Ilairs'. "It's going to be funny when some body gets up twenty years from now and tries to sing the songs of long ago." "That's right. Imsglne the way they will choke over 'Swinging lrt the Tree Top With My Little Honey Doll.' " "Or, 'Do Not Tell My Waiting Dear One That I Stopped to Drink With Jim.' " "Or, 'What Is Home Without a Garage and a 'Lectrlc Built for Two?" Cleve land Plain Dealer. , d0ttEm I' flBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsKYsr jBBBBBsilBBBBSS MAKES YOUR BACKACHE VANISH, DRIVES RHEUMATIC PAINS AWAY 1 . , Eases Stiff, Bore, Swollen Jolnta nnd Muscles, Relieving Uackacke and Bladder IHsodorp Altep Few Doses are Taken. This In. what.Croxone, ,thft new scien tific discovery, does for sufferers ot such troubles. It promptly relieves these diseases because It reaches the- cause. It sosks right Into the walls -and linings of the kidneys, and cleans out the stopped. up,' Inactive organs like- water does a sponge neutralises, and dis solves every particle of uric 'acid and makes the kidneys sift from the blood all the waste matter and poisons that lodge In the joint and muscles tb-scratch and Irritate and causa rheumatism. It soothes and heals the delicate linings of the bladder and leaves the kidneys In a clean, strong, healthy condition, so they Inventions'' . ... - 4 .1 S - " . v 1 .arl . .rf ' " Z.J strips, of Iron, thus gc(tjng a' compara tively smooth surface'. When I. used to. Jgg horses with' iny neighbor. T3d. Oeefs. .the silent 'roan, I realised,, in driving a Angle block1 oVer a macadam pavement rdm the' barji'to the track how Impossible' speed was on any road excepting one specially propared. The race track .vfas' roade 'up o'f 'loam and tan hark. Here, was a soft Tooting for the tronshod feet of the Jierses jind a yielding-pavement .for t(te . Iron .tires of our sulkies. ...... One fine day someone sept to 3d Gears a present of -a little tow-wheeled, sulky. The wheels were evidently those taken front a bicycle. , - , At that time I had "never-fteard- of ball bearings. "But X bon understood 'tnthe ball-bearings shift the friction froftr,one place to a great many. The little low-wheeled sulky wan laughed at,- then admired." Flnalls'.iJM Goers hitched a horse to Hi - Two turns around the halt-mile tracK 'an ft jtabere was use tb the coBtrlvaHcev A h ran fis silently- as 1M-Gecrs hMMeK. and ;wh soUtle-rrfctlbh tftat ltc seemed to be chasing tVie V.p)'.s!',aridv.touiihfhif'hlm along .And I. saw that "the" Horse' waa .drawing thosulky by ,the 'reins, aiKT-not And so we, came dpwn the homestretch, neck and ,ieck. .Anil thjsn Edw'jGen drew, jut In front pf,rne-.YVy esjy',ind went under the wire three lengths' ahead. We. tried It-ngain, and the silent man-fle-livered thlmaelf thus;, "It tpeana .abcut ten' seconds on'the-irnlte' .Then he, dived into silence and pulltd the; silence to-After him, 1 - A few days1 later "Ed Geers droVe to this little low-wheeled; "ball-hearing sulky In a race at Buffalo. 1 When he drove, but to warm Up he goi the laugh fromthe grandstand. But he' walk'ea'awayv wlth the 'robe' 'Just the same; 'He had" Just te'ri 'second's leeway ove! the rest The next year pn the 3faTid Mfclrfcult npt a single high-wheeled sulky was seen. The bicycle tire and tno hatt-Dear--axles .were b'ere to stay1. t " .As Emerson' shoetnaker' carpeted the earth with. leather, so ha's the pifewnatia tire paved, the roadway with rubber." Fifteen years ngo the principal use for rubber was In making gum shoes' for politicians. Tlie gum shoe Is not-now-so rrtuch In demand as It was then. Dr, B. J?.- Goodrich, ! was' a- prellnr physician at Tarry town, N, Y when 'the high' blcyc)e - came In. - It had a sollet ifre. One 'day Dr, .Cteodrlch Just took a piece of garden hosa and fastened It on l)hj high wheel4 wljth.tboatd jef wires. He found that "tms 'lessened the "bumpe, but the hos'e' flattened? t- : , Ten he pufjismallar hose Inside of tho other. And the'thtra move was to blow the little hose that waa Inside of the big "one up with air andfthe pnetimatto .tire was borp, , 1 Curiously, enpu$hj man Jft. th Ijaroe of Dunlop, ln-EngWnd,-dtd, the same-thlnff at about the saro time. It. was very much lUte,, the. Invention of the telephone. Gray of Oberlln, bedbear of Tufts, Alexander Graham Bell of Boston and Thomas Alva Edison of the round world,' -turned the trick" at tbe-sams time. . Everybody now agrees that If Is the rubber tire, and the' pneumatic Inner tube that. make the automobile possible, With the Iron tire we wbuld still b' hit ting the paveme'nt at five miles'-n bcur and, no' nor;. ' "' ' ' can filter the blood and keep you welt If you suffer wlth1backache have pVln In the neck or. sides nervous pr dluy spells a few doses ot Croxone, will re lievo the.copgestlon and you will be, .surprised- hew quickly all kidney, bladder a.nd' rheumatic troubles). -will disappear, Croxone Is different from- all 'Other remedies. It (a so prepared that It Is practically Impossible to take It Into the human system without resflltrf. An orig inal package -of "Cr"ox6ne cofeia tnlf a trifle, ahd all drugglstr are authorised to return, the -purchase price If Crpsione should fall In a single CMerAdvrtJseT menV