THE HE 13: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. APRIL J), 1013. ill "Jhe ec j-me Magazine f)a "Love Not Vanquished by the Strong, Modern Wothan of Today," Says Beatrice Fairfax V 8e Iy BGATIIICK FA1HFAX. There'ls a volurhe'whlch has Inter ested all the posts, philosophers, an tlata, historians and sages since the world began. It has a cover which allures. When this volume Is fresh from the hands of the great, printer the- cover Is dainty, pretty and In bright colors. The colors soon fade, and the protl liess and daintiness vanish, but un like any other volume, the greator the havoc time works on' the exter ior, the greater the store of knowl edge on the Inside. This volume Is called "Woman." And every mother's son many times during his brief span looks casually at the cover, perhaps turns a page or two, and claims he has mastered all the -secrets, the problems, the mys teries, the volume contains. Among these sons of Solomon, who glance and say", "I know," there are many artists who portray on canvas all that they have discovered. One, a Frenchman, Ar. Nemoz, has made a painting of his discovery which has excited great applause from other sons of Solomon, who say, "Wonderful, wonderful!" ' '. This picture Is called "Expulsion." and, you are Invited to look at the copy above. If you are a son of Solo man, &rt organization to which every juan believes his wisdom entitles him to membership, you will also say, ''NYfindertul!" .' iff you:are ,a woman you will know ' that no man really knows, but that the woman who has wisdom knows shmustlet him think he knows. The picture is supposed to repre sent the .attitude of the modern womajvpward the god of love, "for whom: she' neither has time nor In clination' With the forehead and ' expression of a Minerva, and.tberpjro ' poVtlVhs of a Juno, sho. sits securely euthroned' rn" power and knowledge, wfih "the" arrows wrested from the god of love In a hand Imperiously, raised to drive him from her pres y ence. . . This Is the picture of the modern woman as every , man thinks ,ho V knqwf.her. '.'What every ,wpman F khottsMslhat If any woman "has ever stifled the cry of her heart, and bld .; den love to depart, Bhe'has -called g upon him to return tiefore he was out of sight' ' He can tfome In no guise in which Ella Wheeler "The More People See of" the-World Petty Criticisms xney rinu I My ELLA WHEELER WILCOX Copyright, 1913. by the Star Co. .tt-ns- predicted that vo shall all be WvWIntf at the -'speed of 160 mites" an hour In a few raori years: No doubt the speed of ships will Increase accordingly and airships will v v add to the meth ods of transporting I human "beings about the earth. All this means , the ultimate edu- , cation of human ity, and the growth of 'liberal ity and charitable Judgment.! The inure people see of the world anri'o'f one another the fewer petty criticisms they find time or Inclination . for. There are always great souls In every remote community whose mental and spiritual horizon Is large, and there are always narrow gauged beings to be found Today's Beauty Recipes By Mine. D'Mllle. "Now comes spring whin sheer waists are worn and flat Imsud women will de precate their lack of Hhapellnesa morn than ever. The best micalre hdifie treatment for the correction of scrawnU ness is made bx stirring an ounce of gal lol Into a syrup made by dissolving 1U cupfuls of sugar In a pint of water. Dose Is two- tcaapoonfuls before meal. "To correct faulty complexion, sallow ues, pimple or blotches, dissolve 'an original package of mayatone In a half pint of witch hazel, and cover the face, neck and arms with this solution every morning. It takes the place of powder and makes the skin soft, lovely, smooth and satiny. "Dull, dead and falling hear the fore runners of baldness are caused by a puraalte. To keep the hair healthy and beautiful you must kill the parasite that destroys the hair. Mother's Shampoo does this. It leaves the scalp fresh, clean and wholesome and makes the hair fluffy and fine. A supply for many months costs only 25 cents at your drug ?Ut'a. "A beautiful eye deserves a beautiful letting. Just as a good picture requires a good frame. Thin, colorless and strag gly eyebrows and lashes will grow in long, even and darker In color If pyroxln s applied Into the roots dally. "Persons troubled with superfluous hair on face or forearms - can quickly and safely remove the humiliating growth with delatone. Make a paste by mixing powdered delatone with water; cover the . hairs for two or three minutes: then re move, wash the skin and th? hairs will Tie gone. "Spring colds are prevalent. The world never saw the" equal of --Mother's Salve as a remedy for caughs, colds In the head or cheat, catarrh and sore thruat It 5 easy to un and. quick tn act. ' '.other a Salve la sold In prepared form In every neighborhood. Advertisement. ho is not welcome, he can nover be such a plague or a torment that she would bid hfm deport. Sho mny be modern In ovory out ward expression; she may jeer at love; she may call those women weak and spineless who regard love as worth all the world beside; she may take pride In her scorn of him, but In the bottom of her heart there Is a longing for him which is never stilled. All that the giving up means in the" freedom of self-development and ambition; all the applause of the world, all honor, all fame, all the sweetness of the rewards of self-effort: nothing the world can orfer la worth In the final accounting the cost a woman must pay In driving out love. M, Nemoz la a very clever artist, but his hnnds are quicker than his earB. The women who decry love make their protest known with the blare of trumpets and In strident tones. They are" few In numbers, but they ,makea loud noise. At. Nemoz heard the noise, and thought he heard, the' Voice f all the women In the world,. Love has a language that la low and swoet and flute-like. It is the cry of the heart, and the heart never trumpets its nppeals. Women all over the world are longing for love, and all. that love mean!: A husband, a homo, shelter, the touch of a baby',s hand, and the Joy of sacrifice and service. But1-they do not inarch' with the 'blare of'trumpete to make this want known:' They do not hire halls and engage speakers to declare for them that love ,1s the aim, the beginning, the ond, the sole existence of woman, nnd that they want It. They keep this little. - lohglns hidden deep in their hearts. Sojne, . frankly honest, admif It Other's, to conceal their sorrow thaflovc nan never-come, claim they don't want' the little god to visit them. aild, would' drive him away If he dared appear. They deceive tho men; they do not de ceive other women; they do not deceive tuemselyes. .,, . Love sends many ambassadors, and these ambassadors sometimes have poor credentials, Ihut the wjoman, at,' .the doo pt whose hfyirt Ihey appear ..oplns ..tho Voor-ftnd Bets dowrt-b'R'her. knees. She does not ask to see the riedentlats. Wis dom; prudence, caution, self-interest, all arp forgotten, 'Jwhen love appeals. She Is no longer a "Modern Woman.' She lias lost the reckoning of time and Is Just woman. Wilcox Says: nd of One Another the Fewer ahuu ur mviuiuuuu everywhere who remain small and petty, no matter how widely . they travel and jObtcrve. ' Thi" majority ' of persons, how 'ever, are 'widened, and benefited by cm- ;lng in conta'tft wifrV tttclr' kind In differ- ,ent condition.;, . . Hundreds of men. ana women who have been brought up In a. locality, which does not'approvp of dancing make themselves miserable and obnoxious1 "by trying to prevent others, with -opposite ideas, from Indulging In that delightful pastime. 1 do not recall ever hearing" a cosmo politan denounce the social -dance. ' It is always tho man or wgmau who has walked In a circumscribed orbit. To the man 4vho has passed his whole life In the backwoods' a. "blltd" ahrrt Is the In signia of a dude, and a dress suit brands one of his sex as a conceited fool and worldling. Women who hnve lived with limited social opportunities cover their eyes at eight of a decollete gown, and waste breath in denouncing Its wearer as Im modest and Immoral. They believe their narrow view Is the only proper one, merely because they have seen and learned-little,, of any life beyond their small world. It Is all very pitiful when we stop to consider how large the world Is, and how old, and what: vast' concourses of human beings have lived good, useful, moral live s and worn "blled shirts," drrss suits, low-necked gowns and In dulged In dancing, games, cards and other worldly amusements. It Is a pity and a mistake to go through the. world trying to compel others to tt'tnk, believe and act exactly as we do. It Is this spirit of petty tyranny which keeps, the whole human race from mak ing the progress It might make were each one of us to live according to our own highest Ideals, and to let others do the tame, unmolested, so long as the great principles were not outraged nor the commandments broken. The Turkish woman thinks the ox poauro of tho faca In the presence of men highly improper. It Is her thoughts alone, we know, which make It so. The woman who has been reared to the wearing of the evening gown has no more Immodest thought in her mind than the Turkish woman hides under her veil. It Is all a matter of bringing up. The Turk will assure you that no man can look on the faces of women without covetous thoughts and Improper desires. We all know how absurd Is that idea. Just a absurd Is the Idea of theVrovln clai prude, male or female,, that no man Jean look on the lace framed neck or encircle a waist In the ballroon without evil thoughts. Remember to the harem. reared woman you, madame, are .bold and Immodest because you walk the street with your ace uncovered. You think her Ignorant. Try to not be as Ignorant as she Is In your criticisms of your sisters who dress differently from- you, Til" THE FTtHNCH AHTtST, WHICH TkNIXS TO SHOW THAT TUB WOMAN OP - TODAY HAS OVERCOME AL.1. IIHIt SUSCKI'TIBILITY'TO IX)VB, II I II . "WOtti orothy A Man Who Has Provided for His Family, Held His Wife's Love and Kept Peace at Home Has Made a Success of Life .By UOROTllV 1IX. living for himself and those dependent A man writes: "Do ;ou think 1 liaVo ' upon him. But this living does not In made a success or a failure of life? I elude- diamond tiaras and: limousines and am a poor man, who works hard for a Imported gowns. It means Just ordinary small salary. I have never been, able to 'oo ant clothes and lodging; enough to j www .w make much money or to give my fam ily the luxuiies of life. Sometimes they have not even had tho comfortH, But my, homo, al though It has al ways been shabby, has been filled with peace and love and happiness. "I had '-a wife wliomI adored and who I am sure .never regretted! marrying rrie, al though from her wedding day to the day of her death t r her lot was the hard one of a poor man's rlcllf-at man , ,he communlty ,8 a),vay wlfBi ';' the, most hated man. He's a failure as a "After her mother's death my .oldest I frjnj, because he has always thought daughter, then only 16. took her mother's ( nrst of hmelf nnd because ho distrusts Pluce, and has filled It splendidly ever , everybody, believing everybody to be as since, growing Into a noble and capable Belflsh and self-seeking as he la. It li womanhood. My other chlldren-tltcro j the i enalty of wealth that it Is friend are five of them aro fine little chaps. ' lens and lonely. healthy, hardy and Intelligent, and when ' The very successful money maker Is they see their old dad coming they swarm nearly always a failure as a hunbnnd. over him with yells of delight, ,for he's It takes all of his time and thought and their best pal, and the one who 'helps Interest to aocumulate a fortune, and them In their work and play. he has .ng leisure in which to be sym- "Hut I'm not ne of the men who pathetlo and tender to his wife, know how to make money, or get on In Divorce Is far more common among the the world. I began life humbly and I, ,r'ch th:in it i among tint poor, andi'lhare shall end it humbly, and when I see l. " probably no other women, as a dans, other people who have been more success- ! who" are mole unhappy than the" poor ful than I-some ot'ttiem od friends who r'en women who are married to our began on the same level "as myself n Kreat flnancUrs.' " ' mv bovhood-r wonder If I am not a fall- I. 1,6 0""T woman envies a millionairess ure. Then I look at my chlldrth and think that I haye got a right to Bcore' some thing to my account, after all. What do you say? Am I a failure or a success?" It all depends upon how 1'9" rate suc cess. If you think that the. dollar mark Is the high-water mark of human achieve ment, then you are a failure. Ilut, Judg ing iSy the same standard, you would be In pretty good company.. Any grafting police lieutenant could have given Abra ham Lincoln points on how to become a successful money-maker. And thousands of other great statesmen have died poor, although they had In their possession knowledge of legislation that was to be enacted that would have made .them millions had they been "successful politi cians." A man It a failure who cannot make a Dix i - " " - - Insure a decent Independence. Ileyond 'that the making of money la no criterion of the real success of a life. ' 'mat consists in doing something for your fellow creatures, not Jn doing some thing t- them, and the real failures nre those who, at the end of their lives, have nothing to show liut a little pile of metal I and a little bunch of printed paper, both I worthless at the Judgment bar. Of course, the success that proclaims Itsoir by the honking of automobile horns and the rustle of silks -Js of tho spectacular kind that catches the public eye, but the man who Is successful uh a money-maker has the narrowest success Sin the world because hp Is' nearly always a failure at everything 'else. , ' He's a failure as a neighbor, becauso . he has taken advantage of his superior shrewdness to those about him. Ti, her relationship" to-her husband. There have be.cn. too rtany. cases; of where a man celebrates Jila succecs es a money maker by trading off his od wife for a fresh one to match his new drawing room furniture. The men who are the most, successful financially are tha greatest failures as fathers.. In place of personal affection and guidance they give their children money. The result I. disaster. They Mr. oraU.Us he)(Jt Another of the ladle raise up wasters and spenders, who are wn, ,, ,n nome Rnd ehe Men the knUo are curse to themselves nnd a- disgrace I that Casea used on Julius Caesar. It will t.. the parents that bore them. There be a very interesting eevnlng. all In all. Is scarcely a rich man who has not had (,,,, Mo, an(1 j ftm shuro you wlli not to pay a son out of. some shameful crpe. , reBret laying at home tonight Now go or to buy a divorce for a daughter What- ' plU OI your eevnlng doc. Ma sed. ever else wo may envy" the nlan who haolall(1 nobble will find your shirt studs, made a great success as a money maker. , Wen Pa & m was in the next room, none of us envies the man his children, 1 Pa looked at me klnda ad and sed, well. ays: The man who has given his, family nothing but money ts a failure as a husv rr- D Little BobWs Pa . By WILLIAM F. KIUH, . Ma told ra almost a year ago that she would never ask any more of them club ladles, up to the house. Ma kept her world till lust night, which Is longer than Pa kep, his word on any promise he made to her. Deerest luv sed Ma I have a surprise In store for you -tonight. I'm going to entertain six of the most buttful wlmmcn that you have . ever saw. I do not mean. Ma ised, that they are butlful In face and form, but I do mean that they have wunderful Intellacks. TVs face got klnda long. Isn't there one of the six that has n -butlful face sed Pa? No sed Ma. Well uefl Pa, Isn't there one of the six., that h,as. a' butlful form? You might not think so' ied ,Ma) 1 cud see that Ma was getting klnda peevifih. The newspaper artists. & speshul writ ers Is going to have a banquet to-nlte ted Pa and wanted me to be sure to come. Thay have got a seat reserved for Tow Power and' me. Mr. Powers Is going. to be the glqom and I am going to be the Joy. bekaus I have a round fat face, Pa sed. The boys thought that would be a fine tnhlo. I gess I will leave at eight o'clock Pa sed. If that will be all right. Ma began to grin at Pa klnda meen. You have, got, a fat chanst Ma sed to put your foot outside this door this eve. You don't seem to realise that I am going to entertain the Roman Reginas. What Is Reginas sed Pa? Reginas la queens In latin sed Ma, and It would be a darect Insult to them six lii'-l- " husband wusn't here to help me receive them. Well, sed Pn, what Is the progrum? I suppose they are going to spout Latin potry all the eevnlng. No. sed Ma, but they are going Into sum of the deetalls o(, the rise and. fall of An)iunt Rome. Ono of the ladles was In Rome onst on a i Cook's Touwr & seen the bridge' which 0 Advice to My IIKATKICK KAIKKAX. It Need Not He n IHnmnnri. I am 24. hnlillns- n nosltlon unvlnc me a salary of 110 per month. 1 am engated to a young man receiving M.OW per an- num. and lie is now desirous 01 present Ing mo with a beautiful diamond ring, llecause of the .fact that he Is receiving nt this time but Jl.OOn a tea- my parents tvlll nnl rnmpnt tn hla slvlnrr lie the tlnir. He linn been calling nn me for the last two years without ohctlon en thr'r i Iffactory until this question nf giving me nn engagement ting came up. V' luid not nlanned tn be niarilcd for ! a IHtle time vet. but M ""e 'm';,' little time vet. bit ni ,wn"r".'V,t' en this course I d"lr to be married 5.n'.Rnii.kM,,;,mLL0afr2Mr?rif.rt n ''h '."hTi'I1 lll.l A1m.r Vt JieJ??dm - r'J"'?.'... linn soon Th ini'iin i.m.( hi... v..,. n - v .-. -r fnn a ...ii r ,- i il ll'nliiin in hfk ll'iirultlir III I help out flnunclallv. Our combined sal- arles would make us flnanelallv Indepon- lcnt and enable us to put quite n nice little sum awny for future need. OJHCOlTItAOKD. If he has been ealllns on you for two veara ho owes yon an eiiKnccment rlnz. but It need not necessarily be a diamond, iovo la Just ai true and Instlns when ex pressed In a less expensive slone. Your parents are rlKht In thlnklnft such a stone an extravaRnnce. It la not deRindliiR for a woman to work after marrlaeja, though It Is not de sirable. This Is whore the rlnimer lies. The husband Is an unusual man If he doesn't continued tn exnet It when the necessity no lonter exists. Most Certainly .Vol. Dear Miss Kalrfax: I have been keen. Ins company with a man who lias been separated from his wife about a year. We intend to marry when he secures n di vorce, wnion is now pending, la It proper rnr ma to appear In nubile with thlB man? A REAPI2H. It Is not only Improper for you to ap pear with him In public, but equally wronc to see htm at any time. No man honors a woman by wooing her when he Is bound to another woman, lie should be free first. He Is compromising your pood name by paying you attention so long as he ts another woman'n hus band. Don't Do It. Dear Alius Kalrfax: I am a youiiK Kirl 17 years of use, and am In love with a man four years my senior. We have been Kolnr together for the last seven months, and he has never had the opportunity or occasion to present nie with a gift of any kind. Hla Twenty first annlversury Is now approaching, and 1 would like to present him with a sig net ring. H. O. U There Is no reaaon for making him a gift of any kind, and If there were, you should not give him a ring. Write him n note of congratulation. I.Utcn to Your Mother, T-i.rtH nil- r.-1 .. . t n , a .. -j t oeen going with a young man of 19 forhl ul ' a little over u year, lie claims ho love me and I lovo lilni dearly. Ho promised mo a diamond ring for an engagement ling, but now his mother saya he can't band and a father. The man who has made his wife so happy that her heart sang for Joy alt her days, and whose children love and clng to him and make of him their best friend, is a success, no matter It they have only had bread and butter to eat. Instead of cafie and ale. Such a man Is a success as a cltlsen, because he has given to his country boya and girls who grow up Into useful men and women. The most successful man or woman Is the one who has the most Influence for good, and who gives the greatest uplift to those whoso Uvea touch his or hers. The moat suocesstul man I know la the one who will leave no fortune to build memorial libraries or hospitals w)icn he Is gone, because he paid hla employes such good wages and found Robbie, when do you expect to walk up the Isle? Jest think, Pa sed, of a full grown man that cud be having a grate sesshun 'with the artists and writers, every one of them a speed boy. helnir cooped up here all the eevnlng with seven Roman ReglnBs, Including your queen Mother. Take It from me, Robbie, sed Pa, that they will find me a kind of a bull In the china shop this eevnlng, when they begin talking of the rise and fall tf Rome. Jest wach me, that's all, sed ra. Your Ma gave me lier wurd that thar would be no more wlmmln clubs In the house A I guess after tonight she will keep It forever. After we had our dinner the Roman Reginas alt came. Ma sod the truth when sho sed they was butlful excep In face nnd form. Pa got In his Morris Chair over In the corner after he had bin In terduced A: I set neer him waiting for the show to begin. We will first heer, sed Ma, from the talented young poetls. Mlsi Anabel Ames. sne has prepared a butlful poem about the monster Nero, who drenched all Rome In blood, Ma sed, and fiddled when the town was burned down. Then Miss Ames got up and recited: Cruelty, thy name ts Nero. I,ong ago Much blood and anguish thou didst make the world no. Brave gladiators when their limbs grew nurn, looked up at thee & thou turned down thy thum. Thou tyrant who didst spnin each sacred law Thou wast tho worst the world ever saw. Wonderful sed all of the other Roman Reginas. Don't you think so said one of them turning to Pa. I think It In an awful lot of tripe myself sed Pa Let me recite you a little pome Pa sed, which X composed this minltt; Mark Antony was quite a gent His fame did not diminish Til Cleopatria came along & trimmed him to a finish. Then Pa got up and yawned. I have a awful pain over my right eye he sed and I think It Is nuraljl. I'm sure you ladles will excuse my little ion and my self 'til we skip over to tha drugstore. Then Pa and me skipped over to the drugstore, but we didn't skip back. 1; J the Lovelorn mnrrv until his sinter Rets married, and ehe has no tellow vet. My mother scolds mf every day. Tell me what I shall do. f. n. A scolding every day Is a try In fir ordeal, both for your mother and yourself. Khd It by putting n stop to all need for rebuke. There Is no prospect of mar iIkc; he can't afford a ring. Lt there be no engagement. in five yearn he will bo. I hobe. In a t.osltion to buy you a ring, regardless of hl lter a, unappreciated rlsht. Thrri- Are tlnnr Wn-ra. "laa Fairfax: If. while out waik- , t f whom you do !,lot cnr- nd yu " "t are to walk ! ,,omn wlt1' hlmi. Plee tell me how to rid of hlmV VKItPLBXED. 1Mr M, Ka)rfnJt. ,r, whlIe out WBjk, ' The most honorable way would be to 1 tell him you do not want hla company. , . .. , rk lh ,nnI..,i ,.,,,.. A di , ""l ,r ynl lacl ilna tnorJ courw to oo hht, you may turn In at aomo trland'a house, or turn hack to your home, or I "top the next cur that Is passing and ut 'on. Theio are majiy pretexts you might ilee. but the best way la to tell him tho truth. If ho persists. It will finally oom to that. Monnlnlm tint of Molehill. Dear Miss Fllrfair: 1 am a young boy 17 years or age. Hecently a lady friend of riiliiB wax luvltvd to a social gather ing and asked me to be her escort, t censonted ami wo attended the affair. The next day 1 noticed ehe wu vary argry at me. I think I know the reaaon. Is It proper to bring a present to a sociable? Was It proper for me to brine my lady friend a bouquet of rosea or only a low? Aro roses the right kind of rlowcra for a sociable? Was It proper for me to dunce with anol,j B You paid her a pleasant attention by takTng her roseer ,ho flower is mom ap propriate, and you did no wrong In dano Ing with another girl. Certainty. Dear Miss Fairfax- I am 18 and In lovo With, a young man Just my age. Uebently ha Introduced mi to a friend of hla and 1 wan taken seriously by his friend. Whenever his trlend calls he would encott him "over to the house, but "would not come In, nnd neither wouia ho walk with us. 1 don't think that ho Is Jealous, but ul Urn kumu lime i can t quite make out what the trouble U, as 1 have always treated him with respect. Hut do you think I ought to continue my frlenushlp With his mend? ANNA. The frlond has committed no offense, and the friendship may be mutually profitable. As for your first friend, I think hn acts as It he were trying to efface himself from the situation. Thnt SInkea n Difference. Dear Msa Fairfax: Which Is proper For a Voung woman to ask a young man to call, or a young man to ask the young woman If he may call, assuming; that tho miss has asked htm the first II. Lt. It Is tho wdman'a privilege to ask tho man to call the first time. The second call should be on his solicitation. so much poverty to alleviate as he went along that he has never been able to accumulate much money, in his old ago he Is comparatively noor. and h inm. times says to me that he feels that ha has been a failure. Yet his life has been an example of right living to all about him. Wherever he has gono he has carries hope and cheer, and given fraeh and Inspiration, and his presence has been like a benediction upon every house he entered. As hushand, as father, a son nnd brother, as friend and neighbor, he has been true and tender, im iar,AH and loyal. None has known him who haa not been the better for It Tcace has followed In his footsteps and hop bloomed where he trod, and the good that ho has accomplished Is not to b measured in terms of money. 3od alone can calculate that sum. Tho renl test of success Is not what you have got, but the goM you hav done. Are You I Was ONCE. I Reduced MYSELF i r'l IntomlortaUr, I-ookM Old, Flt lili rriblc, iul!rod wild itheumilUm. Aithm, Nta. rilgli When I worked or wkd. I tmtrt Ilk a PcirpolM I took everr tdrtrtUed nxilltlne I could tied. I Marred, gtted, Kierclitd. tlocured tad chinitd ellmitc, but I ruined my dlcutioa, f.lt llkt n Invalid, but lUadllr (ilnd wlthl Ttur i not t ilngl plan or druf that t heard of that I did not try I failed to redur mr wtliht I dropped aoulrty, aa I did not ear to be the butt of all the lokea. It was tmbarrajulni to ham mr frtanda tell m. 1 waa settlnc Stout, as no on knew It better than myaelf. SOMETHING HAD TO BE DONE I bum to etudj the cauae of PAT. Whan I dla covered tha cauae I round tho remedy Tho French Method gave me an Inaliht. I Improved dn that, Uemoved lh objectlonat featurei. added mora pleaaant onea, and then I tried my plan on myaelf for a week It worked Ilk Malc. 1 could har. SCKKA.MKD WITH JOV at the end o( the drat week when th acalea told me I had loat ten pounds by my almpl. ay. harm leaa, I)rulaa Method. It waa a plaaiur. tbn to ontl""8 nll I regained my normal wit In alia. I rl tlfteen yeere youmer. I look flRa years younger. My Double Chin has entirely dlaapeear d. 1 can walk or work now. I can climb a moun tain m normal In alt, I can wlh tun what I want to weigh. 1 am nutter of my own body now. I did not atarr. but eat all I wanted to. did net Uke Sweat Bathe. I did not Drue I uaed no Elee. IMeUy. er harmful eierclae. but I round tn sim ple, Bine. Common senae WAY ot reducing- mr weight and applied It 1 har tried It on other. My Doctor tayr I am a perfect picture ot health now. 1 am no longer ailing. I am now a happy, healthy wuruam Now 1 am going to help others to b happy I hart written a book on tie ub. Ject If you ar fat. I wast you to bay It It will tell you all about my llarmleea. Drugt Method. To all who tend me their asm and ad dreaa I mall It PltKK. aa long aa the preaent tup- ?ly laata. It will late you Money, Say you front larmful Drug, Sai you from Starvation Diet, Harmful Bierclaeo, poaalbly ear TOUR 14KB, It la youra for the aakluf without a paay juat and your name and addreaa. A tVatal Cfcrc will do and I'll b glad to aod It o that yon taa quickly learn how to reduce yoaraalt and be as happy aa I am Writ today as this advertleemeole may not appear again In thl paper HATTia ii i Kit in.Twi.., nan.r o1h