Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 04, 1913, PART ONE NEWS SECTION, Page 4-A, Image 4
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 4, 1913. 4 A JOHN A. SWANSON, Pres. WM. L. HOLZatAN, Treas. j Senior Class of the University of Omaha Startling Values, Spring Suits, 10 J35 True Economy in Clothes Making and Selling f A d A V 4' 4 jf i I y Ii grn. gCQiS Hogoifll jMnEflliS wtuins Jfj YOU'RE not asked to pay $40 or $50 for -clothes here. "Why? The greater Nebroska'B buyers know the details of production; qirect the making; employ tho best Eochester, N. Y., journeymen tailors; fabrics the oreamjof the looms and bought direct from the mills. Here'a a new standard of value, style, fit and satisfaction, a guar anteed saving of $5.00 to $8.00 for you here. Wonderful showing of newest "weaves and f i. (DQC models, at iA...tpJLU LO tpOO Furnishings'" Best Values Choose your summer furnishings here this store and stock stands today tho best in tho West. Shirts 50c to $2.50. TJnderwear, largest stock, 50c to $2.50. Men's hosiery most extensive variety 15c to $1,00. Arrow and Barker collars all sizes always. The grcater"Nebrasku invites the critical attention of all men and young men the Btoro that's NEW in every sense of the word. On Friday evening, June 6. eleven Deo fle trill go forth with their sheepskins to battle with tho problems of the world ni toe first graduating class of the Unl verslty of Omaha. Prior to the gradua tion thle June there have been two Erad ttatee. Mlis Claudia Callaway In Ull and Hurry Jerome In 1912. IJoth of those, bow ever, entered tho reboot with more than the required number of entrance credits. The claaa which graduates this year U the tint to complete four yean' work it tno local institution. Though rather mall la point of number, considering tho percentage of those who were In school the flrit year, the number la tre mendously large as at tho cloao of the first year there were but nineteen en rolled In the university. Two of tho nine teen havo graduated from educational In stitutions since that time-Mr. Jerome Jast year from the university and Miss Jean Hamilton from Northwestern uni versity of Evanston, III. Clinton Halsey, another member of th'e first class to enter, was out of school last year, but Is npw attending and will complete his course In June, 1914. Of those who wero In attendance when the school ovenert every student was a resldont of Omaha and all with the oxceptlon of Mr. Jeromo arid Mebane Ramsey were graduates of the Omaha High school. The great majority of the c'.ass became alumni of the Omaha High school Jn 1500. SM A - - . NllfflK WKKK HkI.PKFI TWTAV iiu.iu uuuiuu IHlVtf Comparisons of the Relief Heoordi -v y huibs. " 1 I tern MAte k . I KO COXFOKATIOITS AFSTSTT.Tl "HsIm KstahksheA Fma mn& Xr Thousands ef BalUra "Wwm Distribute AnetR StrieUsn Xnylsyes, The relief eemmlttea (a gathering reo erSa ot the amount ef. rMlaf Bloyea by certain carnori.tinna,&. t.nr-Ut fums of the eljy, In order that this may k Included in the commlttoe'a recorda as an aM ) deciding- on ths relief to be rraiited In oases that apply. The. com mlttee has not ssued a formal call for thes reports, hut has Intimated to some f ths corporations that such reoorta I would be welcome, aa they would form a valuable part.ot the cmmlttee's roc- end. for example, a man called at tne relief station Friday and told how much os ho had sustained, and declared he Vaa In great need. Ha was halscd hv.th. committee. Then the record of the hnn4 of Mayor Dahlman and Commls Uplon Pactflo relief came In "and It was ,ontr Ryder, who are expected to effect found that this same man had, received a aettlemenfc The Omaha Taxi company aoxnethins over WW from the Union Pa- dotmtltl the UM 'fEo taxi again u clflo Jena- hafara ha hbbIib.i h r. fw days ago. The operating committer lief eommlttos. In stating his case to the committee he had not mentioned what the railroad corooratlon hid dona for vi m. I at v . i w tv4b smtae cclvtd Is that ot the Omaha & Council JJlutls Street Hallway company. It shows that a fund ot $7,994.14 was raised by the company acd tho employes and expended la relief of employee ot the company. TWrtyoco canes wem thus carod for tlth this fund. They were, given anything from exceedingly small amounts ot money, as the case might require, up to f5 or more. Tho fund was raised In tho following amounts: Company .14X00,03 Officers and directors , t00.00' Vinton street barn 811.51 Shops , 8)0,00 Pierce street bam ,.,....v. iTO.9) Amu avenue barn .. 1U.7R Central power station l&tO Council BluJIs 9T.50 Twenty-socond street statldn U3 Office clerks to.U Total 7.m Untoa Poclfto Pnstd. The Union Pacific relief fund expended fey the Union Pacific among tta employes Hotray! Baby To Rule the Hwse 1 KoLose? Do Voroen Fear Th Great mii of All Huaan Blasting. It Is a joy esq contort to tnow thai the cuti-taltcdet pahii and otber Civ tresses list are tald to precede eh'.ld-bcar- Icff may estllr be arrOd. No waacn ntti fear ths slightest uUort if tie w!:j fortify herself vrlt'a the wll.kaown t4 tlae-honorea retsedy, "ilether's Prlead." TbU ta a most crstefvl, rn'ratlDc. . ftsroal application thit t ones sottess au' BasJtes pitta t the 1 abdominal muscles and Nfaauala. They sstcril!? expsod wlthcet Mte allxhtsst ttraln, and thus net cr'; MaUh all tendeacy to nerrous, twltcux: oetlt, bet there U as eatlrt freedem froa 9MHa OlteoBifort, ('.cep'.essneu aad drcti Jshat oltsa leave their laprew open the TS eecaslosi hi taUrtfore one of an- . Joyful aatUlpatisa, and too tnuca aot be laid ttpon the remarkab'.c wtttefc a nother happy, pr-naU HsBnlMiti Us vpob toe health and ter of tat teaeratlon to eoas. rrs Friend Is recommended, only for aa ceesfort of, expectant metier. of whoa nays usca ana recess- it Too will find It ca sslt at all ftnig t 11.00 botm Writ. tr w Bssrahitor Co.. 130 Lamar Kdr. nemta. Osu. far a saest lastrectlw bak oa I la' mate U all urtjtcU. aothwlMod, I - " jip? Those who wilt graduate and the school and class of graduation are; Zella Dccbe, Omaha '03 1 Gladys Solomon. Omaha "CO; Clara Hendrlcksen, Omaha '03 ; Katherlne Mathtcs, Omaha '03: Helen Hansen, Omaha '00; Pansy Williams, Omaha '00; George Parish, Omaha '09; Btanton Balls- bury. Omaha '09; Mebane Ramsey, Chi cago "09! rorne Nlcoles, Omaha OS: George Perclval, Omaha 'M. amounted to IH.lM.Mi Besides this amount of cash the company gave thirty eight tons of coal, besides great nunn t,tis ot clo,hln bedding and other sup- pioyes of the Union Pacific were aided In nmnunta ranirlnv Vi tv. jv H i .ii0tisA kibu am iiw in in- dividual cases. Qeneral Manager Charles ware or me union Pacific submitted the report to the relief committee as the final arid complete report of the relief furnished by the Union Pacific. Hallder' Expenses. The payroll of the reconstruction .com mittee of the tornado relief committee for carpenters, bricklayers, plasterers and laborers , tor" tho Week amounted to (CM. was made up at the relief station and ,d t0 th m'n noon wnn thoy quit Kork. .It .want to some fifty men In h var," branches of the. rcconatruo- tlon wor't' Next week tie( committee, eje- pct' ,0 hnv ft lArKer roree working, " mr T" investigated and ","ou , y iiioi ume Tax! Bill Unnuld. Taxlcab bills of the relief committee nav not yot DCt, ntt'd. This la because on ot tno ,arC hlllu gained some little notoriety a few weeks ago. The taxi h'V. h.aye now all been placed In the 18 n0 lonfr '"K Private owners oi automobiles ,io donate the services ot car' " w thought this courtesy had been accepted a,i long as the com ImltUe could consistently exDoct It POLICE INSTRUCTED IN NEW TRAFFIC RULES As requested by Chief ot Police Dunn, the shifts at ths station have, been read the traffic regulations, In a body, and Instructed to carry out tho ordinances to the tetter, aergeant Vanous corralled his menials In police court Friday after noon and forced thtm to listen to every word of a twenty-elght-page booklet KoV erntng the trafMs. Vanous- expounded the following In the course ot his read- tngt "That all vehicles. Including trl cyolea, and velocipedes, must be equipped with one headlight at least, and a rear llsht. after dark." Bo, If your 5-year-old son or daughter la incarcerated while pedalling the streets after the shadow have fallen, you will know It Is because their velocipedes aro not equipped with lighting systems. ERE JONAH WAS BURIED Banotttr of th Prophet's Tomb ait Xflaevah Upheld by the Moslems. The site of Nineveh Is almost perfectly level. Out adjoining the western wall are two huge mounds concealing the pal ares ot the greatest kings of Assyria. The lower, or southern, mound Is oc rupled by a mosque and a village of con slderable slxe, Its name Is Kebt Yunu, or the Prophet Jonah, for In the mosque Is the tomb In which Jonah Is Hid to have been burled. The age of the tomb Is uncertain, yet probably It dates from long after the Hebrew prophet time However, the place Is now sacred, so sacred that pilgrims visit It from afar, I rode up the steep narrow streets ot the villas to the mosque, and to the amassment of the natives I dltmounted and entered' the moique yard. A crowd of excited men quickly surrounded mo. To a priest I explained that I had come to see the grave of Jonah, and with motion of the band I made It understood that he would be rewarded Removing my shoes, 1 followed the priest through a. dark passageway. Tnere ne pointea t0 wan an( laid that the tomb was I jUJt beyond. I wtihed to enter the prayer room from which the tomb Itself might tx seen, but the place was considered far too r acred for my profane feet However, the few Christiana who have, .been per mltted to see the tomb may look only thrnuvh ft small window Into a dark chambsr m whlcrt a cloth covered raound i MTteW discernible. It Is said that I co Moslem, even, will enter the Inner lgnxJn.-ChrlsUn Herald. The Persistent ana Judicious Use ot Newspaper Aave J un)n ftuoteaa. newspaper Aaverusins; is ute noma 10 II kisssssssssssssssssssssssssK Jlk KmsmiaBBBBBBl I I MRS HE A?Y3IV ,11, Commerce School to Add New Studies to Present Curriculum Prlnetpat I C, Rusmlsel of the Omaha High School of Commerce has announced several additions to Its curriculum- One of the most striking changes Is the In troduction of commercial Gorman. Ger man Is used a great deal In tho buslnest world and It Is therefore a useful addi tion to any ono's list ot capabilities. Commercial chemistry Is to be taught next term also, This study will enable tho pupils to perform all the chemical tests Usod In tho creameries, wholesale houses, and In similar activities. Tim stenographic department will also bo broadened, and It la believed that the students will ba given actual practice In court reporting at the various law trials at the court house. The students of this department will also be taught the use ot the Gammeter multlgraph. .of which It la likely that this school Is the only pos- seesor and user of any school In the west. It Is Intended that the entire curriculum shall be strengthened In every way pos sible. "Commerce," the school paper of Com merce High school, Is out for this month and 4t Is certainly maintaining Its stand ard. AinntiB lt various itepnrtmentB nre tho story of transportation, by Miss livolyn Cppelnnd, sevoral poems and va rious rhymes containing advice on every day policies, and numerous other articles. The Gregg shotthand pin which was offered last month as a prise for tho best tmnnorlptton of n poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, written In shorthand, was won by Miss wltma Van Hymlng. This month a year's subscription to the Amer ican Penman, a monthly Journal devoted i ixmmananip ana ousiness, is oticrod as a prlxo for the best copy of a set of capital letters appearing In the Com merce. Those writing tho next four best copies will receive honorable mention. A call has been sent out for candidate for the Commerce staff and several re sincuons nave ceon laid. No person having a "D" In any subject, or no per son having a general average below "B," is eligible for candidacy. A recent visitor of this school was tl. U Hamilton, who la the head ot the commercial department of BIoux City. One of the teachere of this commercial department visited this school not lung ago and upon her return to filoux City took with her a copy of "Commixe and a heap of good Impressions ot com merce, school. Mr- Hamilton said that the good things he had heard of thla school and the copy of ''Commerce" which he saw Influenced him to visit hare. He even iwent so far aa to acknowledge that commerce school has hjs own beaten, but cald that the school board ot Sioux Clly did not show such a lively spirit of co-operation aa has the Omaha achool board. Possibly success doesn't lie so much In having a generous school board as In having a good hustler for a principal. The senior commencement announce ments have been printed and may be obtained by those graduating, at the price ot ( cents apiece. The usual weekly meeting of the Junior Commercial club waa postponed Friday afternoon because ot the "Know Omaha" class excursion. Movements of Ocean Steamers, Perti. Arrl4. Ull.d. ROTTERDAM Itou.nUm AM3RA OtrnuaU ' TfOKAHOM Utfacburla YOKOHAMO mltle. QUEKNSTTOWN Mtj.stle. 11011TA Rams. ST JOHN, AthtBls. BAN FHANCIBCO Nlptwl Mini. QlXEN'tlTOWN . . ......... AlrUtU, rHIUADKtrtilA AMB VI'TOHIA liumtMu4 COIUKKl ButUto., iMMtlTIl ...... TsM ... i.i HELEN rtAVSEV VOYAGE F0R CARAVELS World's Fair Iletlca Booked . for Whter Trtp to Pnnamn A memorable lerson In history, .bring ing home one of tho chief events of .the world with a vividness unapproachable by books, will be afforded by a voyage which replicas of the three tiny caravels of Columbus, will Bhortly makft down the Mississippi river to the Gulf of Mexico, whence they will proceed through the Panama canal to tho San Francisco exposition. These quaint vessels, almost ! forgotten relics of the World's Colum bian exposition, have lain for years on a lagoon In Jackson pari:, Chicago. Here they will represent the spacious old days when the Atlantla Ocean was called tho Spanish Main; when all Europe, upon the discovery of the now world, was uplifted with such exulta tion aa mankind would feel today If a highway of Mars wore opened up; when men In frnslie barks adventured boldly Into the perilous mysteries of unknown seas. They will meet here the contrast of a great twentieth century city, throbblns with modern machinery, towered with skycrapers, and binding tho Mississippi river with the glnnt fetters ot the Eads bridge. Sailing against currents and wind by the aid of ft force which might have bctn called mnglc In tho days ot Colum bus, steamboats will ply about the queerly rigged mementos ot olden navi gation. A comparison between these steamboats and the craft which braved the uncrossed Atlantic will awaken an enhanced ad miration ot the audacity of fltteenth cen tury sea captains. It will bo een that If the Santa Marie, the Plnta and the Nina wero placed In line, stem to stern, on the deck ot the Eagle Packet boat Alton, their combined leng hs would over lap the length of the iteamboat only nine feet. If -the three caravels were placed side by side on the Alton's deck, room would stilt remain on either flank for a man to pass. The calculation will be mads that It a parr ot balances large enough were at hand and the Alton were placed In one acale, five Santa Marias, tour Flntas and two N'lnas, placed In the opposite scale, would together still lack twenty tons of tipping the beam. For the Alton's displacement Is 800 tons, aa against 100 for tho Santa Maria, fifty for the rinta and forty for the Nina. The Alton is 211 (jet long, the Santa Marie 100, the Plnta eighty-five, and the Nlpa only sixty-five. The Alton has a maximum beam of seventy-two feet, as contrasted with twenty-three tor the great admiral's flagship, twenty.three for the Plnta and twenty for the Nina. In place ot the square yards, queerly combined with lateen rt suing on the rear masts, which propelled the Spanish cara vels, the Alton has In Its hold a device which, fed with water and fire, pro duces the might ot 1.3SQ horses. The' three caravels, and particularly the Santa Maria, were built with the most careful art so- that they might reproduce tho ships ot Columbus as exactly as pos sible. The most learned archeologtsta In Spain were employed to reconstruct the originals. St Louis Post Dispatch. To the Woodahed. Little Willie, aged t and a half, had been very bad. lie had forgotten his table manners before "company." so his father waa celled Into service to ad minister reproof. "Willie you have been a very bad little boy." said he. "You have shocked your mamma, your grandma and your aunts by your conduct and I want you to know that I do not approve your aetlonx It may be that I shall havo to cha?tlse you. Do you understand what I am saying T" "I got you, Etsve." aaU WUUe-In-linsUa Mews, junrt TV. Wrt.l MUWtnA,?utjs COliHEOT APPAREL FOR MEN A No WOMEN SUIT FOR FIFTEEN MILLIONS Iowa County Will Ask Rock Island Road to Pay Back Taxes. FAILURE TO LIST SECURITIES Amount Sought So Great that Its Collection Might Eiiitmrrnss Line and Hidden Mennlnif ! Sonsrht for Move. Suit for approximately $15,000,000 In back taxes wl'.l be brought against tho Chi cago, Rock Island & Pacific Pallroad company by the supervisors of Polk county, Iowa, In which Des Moines Is lo cated, If the company refuses to pay thla amount, according 'to an announce ment yesterday. The supervisors In a resolution authorized format demand tor tl)e sum and lugal proceedings If neces sary. It Is asserted the Rock Island company has concealed $160,000,000 tn moneys, cred its and corporation shares and stocks during the laat five years. A firm of Council Bluffs attorney was retained by the Polk County Board' of Supervisors to bring action. Under the terms of the contract these attorneys are to have 40 per cent of tho total amount of alleged back taxes collected. llnnil Attnmryn Protest. Tho Rock island company's attorneys assert there Ib no- foundation for the su'.t and that the taxes have' been promptly paid. But If the suit which has been author ized for taxes should succeed, the Pock Island would have to stand for a loss ot so many millions that It might be forced Into bankruptcy. The case Is a) peculiar ono and railroad officials and county officers do not know what to make of It. The claim Is based upon the conten tion that the railroad company should have listed for taxation Its corporate shares, in addition to Its moneys and ci edits. The attorneys hold that since the company Is Incorporated In Iowa. Its stock I? llablo for taxation, as Is also all ot Its moneys tfnd credits. The dls- ! covery has been made that approximately JISO.000,000 worth of this property Is sub ject to taxation, although It has nover been listed with assessors. Covers Five Yenrs. Under the law taxes cannot be col lected for a period longer than five years after due. and the suit authorized by the Polk County Board ot Supervisors asks tax payments for the last ttve years. In the resolution adopted by the board a demand for tho payment ot J15.K9.4I0 was made by the county treasurer upon thft railroad company,- Gcorgo S. Wright, attorney of Council Bluffs, and M. L Ktssell, connected with the tax-ferreting business In Council Bluffs In connection with Ben McCoy. have made the contract with the county supervisors of Polk county, whereby they have undertaken to enforce the demand in the courts. Snyn Clntui Is Valid. Attorney Wright yesterday said that the claim Is collectible and that It would bo fought through the courti as tar as the company chose to carry It The Incentive to make vigorous flcht Is ex collcnt. The two Council Bluffs men are to get 40 per cent of the gross amount finally collected. "Wo wanted W per cent," said Mr, Wright, "but they would not let Us have but 40 per cent and I told them they had robbed us ot about U.CW.COO." The suit Is taken seriously, however, as' It Involves Important points, some of which have been partially adjudicated nnd others entirely undecided. If the suit should be won the state will get ; a considerable proportion ot the amount tlpally paid, but Po)k county, next to the attorneys, will got the largest share- It Will, ot course, be a federal court case when It la fnally Instituted. AUTOS SPEEDING THROUGH SMOKE COLLIDE; NONE HURT GRAND RAPIDS. Minn.. May t Speeding up his automobile to make a dash through a smole filled lane betwteri walls of brush tires, O. H. Dickinson, manager ot a local mercantile company, late yesterday closed his eyes and darted Into the smoke. Mr. and Mrs. Pear of Hlbblng. on the way from Hlbblng to Grand Rapids, closed their eyes, added speed to their car and dashed Into the same lane from the opposite direction. Midway the two cars collided. The oc cupants of both cara bounced up, turned over and landed In each other'a car. None was hurt seriously. Tho Persistent and Jud.dou. Use SS-eiSr ONE OF TH$ MEMBERS OF THE BURLESQUE STOCK. PLOW COMPANY MANAGER SAYS HE HAS COMPETITION SIOUX FATjLS. S. P.. May 2. At the opening of the fourth session of the hear ing here In the government antl-trusj suit against the International Harvester company today, 8. p. waasworm or BIoux Falls, manager ot the Rock Island Plow company, which la a competitor pt the International Harvester company In this territory, declared in hl.i testimony that TO per cent of the lino of his com pany was In direct competition with In ternational Implements, that "We always found them fair competitors, In fact bet ter than the other fellows." , Pointed Paragraphs. Method Is the offspring ot punctuality. Fortunately, one's Ambitions are not limited to the attainable. ben women vote there will be a cur few for married men. perhaps. There are Just as good compliments floating around as ever were fished for, Make the bqkt of your life. You may never get another chance to be happy. Qlrts may not be much good at play ing base ball, but they can play the players. But a man's obituary notice always comes along too late to get him a bet ter Job, Before burning your bridges behind you It might be well to see that they are fully Insured. Chicago News. .73bVbbbbbbV r 1 'bbbbbHbBsbH I Xmii-J. JBssflEaV I assl Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey because of Its known freedom from Injurious Ingredients and 1U long suc cessful record aa the best tQnld-aUkiutant, Is r.iii ot pui. aaa betu. sruti, Be Sure You Get Duffy's Sold tn aealed bottles only by most druggists, grocers and dealers at ir.00 abott'. otr I Tin. Dully Mail Whiskey Co.. Rochester, IV, V. 1 LIFE INDICATIONS ON MAR'S Recent Investigation Strengthen Gnrtlrr Belief that Planet - Is Inhabited. Investigations reentry conducted unor an elaborate scale at tnu great observa. tory ot Flagstaff, Ariz., prove to th , satisfaction of many astronomers that tne networK ot cana.is on ?n pianet Mars Is evidence of mighty f forts on tho part of the Martians to preserve tho fast diminishing supply of water. Tho i telescope has revealed that Mars Is evl- dently a world of unusual beauty, but bearing signs of great age; a planet In habited by Intelligent beings, but a world which has rearched the period when Its scib have practically dried up. The here- totoro startling claims of Prof. Perclval Lowell, who waa one ot the first sci entists to Insist that Mars Is the abode of a race ot highly civilised people, an now being aoly auupported by Prof. Jamei II. Worthlngton, another noted scientist who says that there can nb longer re. main any doubt nf the existence of canal builders on Mars. The earn authority also declares that th'e construction -of these canats Is rriode comparatively easy because the Martians have no' mountains to contend with. In another section of his report on this Interesting subject Prof. Worthlngton says "Assuming that thft Martian atmosphere exerts a pressure of'IVi Inches of mercury upon the sur faceand It can scarcely be greater than this Lowell has shown that water would boll at a temperature of 11 degrees F. Aa the solar energy falling on Mars is certainly not Itss than that which heat the rocks of the Sahara to at least W degrees F., It Is clear that evapora tlon Is much more rnpld there than here; anV consequently, water traveling In an open channel would evaporate long dc foro It reached the tropics of the planet a Journey which we know occupies sev eral , weeks. It Is, therefore, probable that the water is carried In something Lakin to pipes, and this Is rendered the more plausible by the fact that the water does not flow naturally, but Is driven, a, conclusion to which the shape of the planet has led us" The professor fur ther declares that "on account of the weakness o gravity on Mars. It Is prob. able that, though water may be scarce, yet, ,th commoner parts of the earth's utmpephere may be present there. Among thcf gases are those which make life possible here, namely: Water, vapor, oxygen, nitrogen and carbon dioxide. It appear, therefore, that we are Justified In concluding that the atmosphere of Mars may be like our own, though less dense, and that It Is disappearing grad ually." Popular Mechanlca. Unblen Tlirentened Vy croup,' Coughs or colds are soon re lieved by the use of Dr King's New Dis covery 50c and tl.00. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Advertisement TOO GOOD TO ESCAPE IMITATION it a merchant tries to twist you away from Duffy's when you ask for it and offers tsometbing "Juat as good" or "more for the same money ' he does so because he makes more money on the sale of Inferior goods. When you nok.or Duffy's be sura you get Durfy'sako no other. Sub stitutes are Imitations, and imita tions are dangerous. Get what you go after and, Refuse Substitutes Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey it made from b&rleyarid other strength giving nourishing grains, by skilled experts. All the gTAln is thoroughly malted and only sound, perfect grain can be malted, which, insures a rich, pure &nd wholesome -distillation, Because of Its known purity Duf fy's is used and indorsed by doctors everywhere. It is ma4e for medl- cinal purposes only.