Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 25, 1913, Page 11, Image 11

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Order Heaven's First Law
Therefore, Says Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Be Orderly in Your
Affairs and Do Not Shirk the Responsibility of Your Lot
By ELLA WHEELER WTCOOX
(They stood before tho Angel at the
gate;
The Angel asked: "Why should
, you enter In?"
Itne said: "On earth my place was
' high and great;"
And one: "I warned my fellow-
men from sin;"
7!&nother: "I was teacher of the
faith;
II scorned my life and lived In love
with death."
lAnd one stood silent. "Spqakl" tho
Angel said;
What earthly deed haB sent you
hero today?"
"Alas! I did but follow, whore they
led,"
TTa o n awnrrtA n n H 1 v 'IT tin 1 no f
my way
t5o new the country, and so strange
my flight;
i only sought for guidance and for
light."
, "You have no passport?" "None,"
the answer came.
"I loved the earth, tho' lowly was
my lot.
I J strove to keep my record free
from blame,
i And make, a heaven above my
humble spot
A narrow life; I see It now, too late;
Bo, Angel, drive me from the heav
enly gate."
jTho Angel swung tho portal wide
and free,
And took the sorrowing stranger
by the hand.
"Nay, you alone," ho said, "shall
come with mo.
Of all this waiting and insistent
band.
iOi what God gave you built your
paradise;
'Behold your mansion waiting in the
skies."
In one of the greater cities of America
lives a woman who has passed the halt
icentury rfiark and retained the -name of
a good 'woman." She ,has broker) no
commandment; she
jfcas nev.er been
"talked about;" she
Jaas been amiable;
,ahe has been chari
table toward the
poor. Yet the sins
of omission' of this
good woman have
f been formidable.
In early youth
phe married an am
ibltlous and studi
ous young man.
He was bent
npon making, a.
name for himself
jtunong the profess
plonal men of his
Illative state.
He studied hard; he worked harder; and
tie succeeded In placing his name beside
(those of older men of his chosen pro
fession. He established a home; and he pros
pered in a financial way.
But, being a busy professional man.
e had no time or strength to give out-
de of his own domain.
The home, he left to the care of hla
prlfe.
The wife left It to the care of the ser
fants. She never knew what food was coming
pn her table; she knew nothing of what
tame Into her home, or went out" of It,
jofttlmes supplying the tables of her em
ployes. Bhe took no carq of the home provided
Jiy her husband's money; she took no
nterest In her work other than feeling
f n abstract prld; that he was a buccoss
ul man.
She lived a life utterly devoid of any
pense of obligation.
She read the newspapers, but never
p. book of any literary value. She did
fcot study or think; she. Just drifted
through life.
She wore such garments as her dress
taaker told her to wear; and sent the
1.111. tn km tiiitKanil In nnv HhA wn nftt
iextravaant In dress, but her cloth
(carried no distinction, and as they were
fcjot welt selected, or well cared for, they
oon seemed shabby. .
The husband prospered so well during
ls middle lite that he did not worry
pver the financial situation, believing that
Keep Skin Clear
and Hair Beautiful
rProm Mae's Beauty Magazine)
Keep the skin clear, velvety and at
tractive by dally applying a lotion pre
pared by stirring two teaspoontuls of
glycerine into one-half pint of witch
hazel (or hot water) then adding four
Dunces of spurmax. This lotion used
Instead of face powder is invisible,
Jones the skin to a beautiful, natural
.color while curing surface blemishes
and oily, shiny appearance of the face.
Do often due to wind and sun.
Color and lustre can be restored to
hair by frequent use of this simple
ilnme-made shampoo which will also
Stimulate hair growth. Dissolve a tea
.Bpoonful of canthrox In a cup of hot
water. This makes enough pleasing
shampoo to remove all dirt and ex
cessive oil by Us delightful lather and
When thoroughly rinsed from the hair
,lt carries away all impurities, leaving
e. soft, healthy scalp.-Advertlseraant.
he would be able to weather all gales
which mtght blow over life's sea.
He wished his wife were different! but
being a kind hearted American husband,
he did not rise up In righteous indigna
tion and Insist upon her doing her part.
An only child married and went to
distant lands to dwell.'
The father fell 111, and, after a long
sickness found himself unable to work
as hard as of old.
Then the neglect of the home began
to show.
There was nothing from the cellar to
attic which was In order.
It required large outlays of money to
restore the ravages of neglect and t,tme.
And before the man and wife reached
the age of 69 they found themselves In
troubled financial seas.
Both loked prematurely'' old; the man
from overwork and worry, and the woman
from an Idle, Inactive life.
There was no bright prospect for them
of a restful and peaceful and comfortable
old age.
The man had never spent any money
In riotous living. He had never been a
club man or given to extravagant habits,
Ho had simply erred by being too pa
tient as & husband, and by not over
seeing tho homo, and Insisting upon the
o-operatlon of his wlfo In making their
future safe, by sane and senslblo methods
of housekeeping.
This Is not a solitary case.
There arc many women In America who
nro satisfied with themselves, believing
they are good wives and admirable
women, who aro doing Just what this
woman did sinning through the sins of
ommlsslon, and falling to usa tho greatest
of all opportunities which God 'can give
a woman, that of making her home a
successful experiment In an Imitation' of
Eden.
Order was Heaven's first law; every
homo must bo built on tho foundation
of order; system must bo the first law In
Its management; lovo and enthusiasm
must furnish the fuel with which to keep
Its altars ablaze with happiness and pros
perity and comfort, and freedom from
debt.
There Is no greater work on earth for
a woman to do. But how many such
homo makers and home keepers do you
know among your acquaintances?
Little-Bobbie's Pa
By WILLIAM F. KIRK.
Wife, sed Pa to Ma last evening, we
aro going to; a real old fashuncd dance,
you & me & little Bobble. Eddie Crow
ley Invited me. It Is at Tcnany Lake &
It will talk us back to the sweet days of
childhood. That Is why I always like
to go to a old fashuned ('.unco, sed Fa.
No frills, no social obllgashuns, no form.
Just plain fun, sod Ta. Naturat peepul
aotlrig natural, & fergltltng for tho fleet
ing hours of the dance the cares &. sor
rows of their workaday lives, sed Pa.
You seem to be vary enthusiastic about
this country dance, fled Ma. "Where wae
you & Mister Crowley wen you made
this appointment for tonlte? You are
the gratcst hand, sed Ma, for meeting
a trend at 4 In the afternoon & having
an evening arranged for without consult
ing yure wife. You mite, at leest have
foned me, Ma sed. Beosldes, I haven't a
thing to ware up here. I left all my
clothes in the city.
Bless yure hart, sed Pa, this tsent go
ing to be a dress affare. I am going In
by blue sute that I use to go fishing
In. Pa sed, & my blue flannel shirt. I
alnt coven going to shave, Pa sed. I
am going up to that dance & be one of
nature's noabelmen, like the rest of them
honest farmers. Ware the frock you have
on, sed Fa, & let Bobble go the way he
Is.
Ma dldent like the idee of going to the
country dance vary much, beekaus moast
of the plans that Pa matks on short notls
always turns out wrong, but wen she
seen that Pa was bound to go & bound
to go unshaved she sed Vary well. So
we went.
On the way to .the dance Pa was telling
us how he liked to be one of the sturdy
men that lives away from the cities. I
guess I. was always intended to be a
ruff, plain men, sed Pa. Sumhow like
In the big cities newer changed me
much.
Ma dldent say anything. She & I has
herd Pa talk so offen about beelhg a
ruff, plain man that we are used to It.
Pn 1'ent ruff like the ' men that does
hard and dangerous work at all. The only
way he la ruff Is wen he has on a blue
flannel shirt like the other man that is
used to them, & Pa's blue flannel shirt
always itches htm.
We had a good Joak on Pa wen we got
to the dance. Ma & me thot from the
way Pa had been talking that the dance
was going to be In a barn somware, but
Instead It was in a nice hal called Fred
Gales Pavllyun. Thare waa a swell band
& a lot of nice looking peeput. Mister
Crowley met us there .& he was all
dressed up fine & the gurl he had with
him was dressed fine too. tie. dldent
care, beekaus the dress she had on was
nice like all her dresses is, & I was
dolled up too, but I saw Mister Crowlsy
look at Pa's fishing clothes & blue flan
nel shirt He dldent say anything tho.
There was only two or three ruff looking
men there, & when Pa got to talking
to them he found out that thay wm
liverymen wtch had drove peepul to th
dance.
Thay only had two square dances atl
the eevntng & wen Pa got in one of the
sets I herd sum ladles say; The nerve of
that jasper butting into a nice crowd.
Wen thay was going around grand rite
& left the other ladles In Pa's set wud
dent give him thare rite hands or thare
left hand eether. Pa had a mlserabuls
time, but tho worst calm when w sat
down to the big supper at midnight & a
man calm oaver & toald Pa that thare
was separate tabels for the help. Ma
calls Pa her nature's noabtlman now.
For She
A Fashionable
By OLIVETTE.
A simple tallor-mado suit for morning
wear Is shown on the left. It is of Cham
pagne and brown checked chestnut gran
ite. The coat Is seml-tltted and three
quarter length. -The collar, square at the
back and making small revers in front,
Is faced with dull chestnut satin. The long
sleeves are finished In tho same way.
The coat Is belted In at the waist line
by a belt of tho satin under two little
straps. A stitched fold under the waist
line slants front to back seam and under
this is a simulated pocket. The skirt Is
round and straight, with a broad panel!
Paralysis Slowly Creeping Over God of Day
Dy GARRETT P. SERVIfJS.
The curious conduct of the weather re
cently serves to cull attention to the very
Important researches which the Smith
sonian Institution has been conducting
foi- some years
concerning the va
riability of tho sun.
Whether the re
cent sudden drop
of tempera t u r e
which carried the
the rmometer in
New York on June
S lower than It has
ever been known
to fall at this time
of the year since
the weather bureau
was established
was due to a fail
ure of radiation
from the sun cannot be definitely stated,
but there Is no longer doubt that the
sun Is a variable star, and that Its varia
tions are often sufficient to produce n
general fall, or rise, of temperature
amounting, In brief periods of time, to
several degrees.
The cause of these variations Is not fully
I'liderotood, but It evidently resides In the
sun Itself. In effect It Is somewhat like
the fluctuations of a fire alternately
dying down and then blazing more
fiercely, But tho sun Is not a fire, al
though It Is hotter than any fire we can
produce. It Is a globe of Intensely heated j
gases. In which substances like Iron, 1
which are solid upon the earth, exist In '
the state of glowing vapors. :
It remains in a constantly heated con
dition because of its lmmtnee mass (more I
Who Walks or Rides
Suit, and a Stylish Motoring Coat
front and a loose box plait at the back.
An original and effective coat for the
motor girl Is shown on the right. Tho
model was of pastel bluo tissue boucle,
with buttons, pipings and collar of white.
But the summer girl can develop this
model in tan pongoe with brown trim
mings, In gray mohair with touches of
king's blue or In any dust shedding ma
terial her fancy dictates, and In any com
bination of colorings her good taste sug
gests. But wherever she goes to res
taurant or tea house she may retain this
Hiimrt coat and feel effectively costumed,
as she never could in the ordinary loose
fitting motor coat.
tl on 300,000 times that of the earth.) The
mutual attraction of Us gaseous particles
draws thorn together, producing an Im
mense compression In the Interior, and
this compression serves to Increase the
heat. As the heat radiates away from
the sun's surface the supply within Is
kept up by the closer contraction of the
whole mass. The sun becomes gradually
smaller through this process, diminishing
In diameter, according to Helmholtz,
about 360 fcot per year.
But tho diameter of tho sun is about
8G8.000 miles, so that Its diminution In 1,000
years would not bo more than about fifty
miles, or less than one-seventeenth-thousandth
part of the whole, an amount
that would not be perceptible from the
earth. Yet, Helmholtz shows, by tho me
chanical lawn of heat, that this relatively
slight contraction of the sun Is sufficient
to account for all the heat that It con
tinually gives out.
Now phyHlcs teaches us that this pro
cess cannot continue forever. The time
will come (and wo cannot tell Just when)
when th6 sun will cease to contract, and
will begin to solidify. In the meantime
the partially condensed vajKJrs forming
(tn atmosphere will become thicker, until
they absorb so much of. the radiation
from within that the amount of heat thai
Is sent to the earth and other planets
will decrease enormously, and at length
be cut off entirely,
Millions of years will elapse before that
state of affairs Is reached, but meanwhile
many temporary variations aro. to be ox-pec-ted,
and the observations that we
have referred to indicate that such va
riations have already begun to manifest
themselves,
Here Is where the studies of astrono
The upper part of the coat Is cut to
simulate the up-to-date short cutaway
suit coat, and Is fastened (n a diagonal
line by three flat buttons. Pocket flaps
mark the waist lino under the chest, and
at tho back two of the largo buttons
mark the waist. A small square collar
finishes the coat at tho throut, and
sleeves, broad at the armhole, taper down
to tlie wrist, whero they are held by
three buttons. The lower part of the coat
continues tho diagonal line of the top,
and in fastened by three buttons, from
which It slopes In another diagonal line
In tho opposlto direction.
mers concerning other variable stars than
tho sun (and the hoavens are full (
them) becomo of Interest for everybody,
since they show us suns In every stago
of partial extinction. Some vary so little
that,, very careful observations are re
quired to show any ohange at all, but
many others loom and sink like a dying
conflagration, and seem to be quite near
their end.
For millions of years, perhaps, the
worlds that circle, around such perishing
suns have been experiencing conditions
that one cannot present to the Imagina
tion without a shudder. Gradually the
heat and light of their sun lave been
withdrawn; their Inhabitants have seen
the orb on whose radiation they depended
become fainter and fainter, with many
sudden but only temporary recoveries,
until at last It faded from sight, and
with Its disappearance tho frightful cold
of Interstellar space extinguished the last
spark of life.
To think that our sun is exempt from
such an end would be as foolish ns for a
man in the heyday of youth and strength
to flatter hlmsolf that he can escape the
fate that, one by one, overtakes-his older
companions. Tho variable stars are sym
bolic of the mortality of suns Just as the
patstng of our friends Into the shadows
of age Is symbolic of the evanescence of
our own lives, Henco the Intense Interest
whloh the detection of even the slightest
failure of tho energies of the sun must
have for all thoughtful minds. The sun
h the father of life for the earth, and ts
see him stumble ever so little Is to ex
perience a feeling akin to that of the
thlld who first notices the trembling of
Its aged parent's fondly protecting
and.
The Modern Girl
A New Species of the Feminine Sex
lly DOROTHY D1.Y
Have you ever considered the modern
girl and how she differs from the maidens
of the past? She's a new species of tho
feminine sex. and no moro like her grand
mother, or even
her mother, than
If she had been
wafud down from
the planet Mars
Instead of having
Just strollod out of
the nursery.
We haven't taken
much account of
her, but you've got
to reckon with her
in tho future, and
It's time wo sat up
and took notice.
Consider these lit
tle stories as Il
lustrations of tho
young person and
her point of view.
The first Is on
divorce.
The other day 1 overheard two young
girls talking.
Snld one: "When a girl marries she
should be very, very carettjl In choosing
her husband, nild after she Is married
she should do tho best she can to maku
a good wife and a happy home, but If sho
finds out that she has made a mistake,
and Is miserable, thnnk heaven, sho does
n't havo to stand It. She can always get
a divorce."
Sntd the other girl: "Oh, of course,
that's tho only thing to do under such
circumstances. It won't bo my fault If
my marriage turns out badly, because
I'm going to do everything I can, and
bring every particle of Intelligence l'''
got to making It a success, but nono of
that suffer .and-be-strong business In
mlnal If my husband Isn't what ho should
be. or treats me badly, or I find I'vo made
an error of Judgment, I'm going to cor
rect it Just ns I would any other mistake.
"I'm not going to stick to It as people
used to do In the Dark Ages. Aren't you
r-
Charles Dickens
By III3V. THOMAS 11. tlRHGOUV.
Forty-three years ago, June 9, 1870, as
the telegraph ticked over the world the
news that Charles Dickons was dead, mil
lions of hearts felt a genuine sorrow. In
th great story
teller's death each
one of tho count
Ichh multltudo felt
a personal loss, a
deep private grief,
Sickens came homo
to men's "business
nnd bosoms," made,
himself n living
part of the dear,
sacred domesticities
of their lives, and
when ho passed out
It was like losing
one of tho family,
llko saving good
bye to a most Intimate fried. V
Dickens wan the novelist of the people
the plain folk-as Sir Walter Scott hod
been the novelist of tho high nnd tho
mighty, the kings, the nobility and tho
aristocracy. In reading Sir Walter peo
ple were, of course, delighted, for the
"Wizard of tho North" always charmed;
but they could not forget the fact that
they wcro reading of n world that was
quite apart from tho one In which they
lived and moved, while In Dlckuns they
found themselves In their own world, a
world "ull of which they saw and a pnrt
of which they were."
And In addition to being thoroughly
democratic, human, realistic, holding the
mirror up to naturo and thus reflecting,
In the truest fashion, the actual facts of
life, Dickens was intensely sympathetic,
loving the persona and places ho wrote
about and making his readers love them.
The secret of Dickens1 Imperishable
hold upon us was clearly perceived by
Talne; "Leave science to the wire, pride
to the nobles, luxury -to. the rich; have
compassion on humbler wretchedness;
J the smaller nnd most despjsod being, may
In himself be worth as much as thou
sands of the powerful and the, proud.
Take care not to bruise the delicate souls
which flourish In all conditions, under all
costumes, In all ages. Belluvo thjft
humanity, pity, forgiveness, are the finest
thins In man. To live Is nothing; to be
powerful, learned, Illustrious Is little; to
be useful Is not enough. He alone has
lived and Is a man who has wept at the
romembranco of a benefit, given or re
ceived." It was because of this large and yet
tender humanity In Dickens that ho se
cured such a hold upon the world, nnd
was able, In the words of Daniel Web
ster, "to do more for tho amelioration
of the conditions of the English poor
than all tho statesmen Great Britain has
sent to Parliament."
Advice to the Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Then Don't Do Itt
Dear Miss Fairfax: I have known a
young man one year my senior for about
two years, and thought very much of
him, nnd we were on quite friendly
terms. A few months ago we had a
little quarrel and I got angry at him,
but regret It very much now. Although
I know that he does not love me, still I
care for his friendship very much and 1
am very axlous to talk to him again,
but I do not come In contact with him,
Therefore wish you would kindly advise
me what course to take, for I do not
want to apologize, as he would throw
tho same up to me. UKL.1A.
Your prediction is so unflattering to
him that I don't understand why you
seek a reconciliation. If he Is so unjust,
so petty as to taunt you for having apol
ogised, then don't consider It for u
moment. Let the matter. end as It Is.
This Will Not Suffice,
Dear Miss Fulrflx: What da you think
of a young man who has Just reached
the age when a girl would be the most
agieeablo companion, and although flat
tered by many such, turns a cold shoulder
to them, and In spite of disagreements my
love grows stronger every day? A S.
The right girl will appear some day to
open his eyes to the difference between
friendship and love.
thankful that you live In these enlight
ened days. Instead of In our grandparents'
and our parents' time, when people
you were In your marriage, or how much
you hated tho person you were married
to, you had to endure It?"
The first girl smiled Indulgently. "They
were bound In tho swaddling clothes of
superstition, all right," she said.
I gasped with surprise. These gtrls be
long to old. conservative, rather narrow- )
minded families, and they themselves,
ate sweet, modest. Intelligent, well edu
cated young women who haven't the
faintest idea of being revolutionary, or
anything of that sort. What they said
simply voiced the viewpoint of tho new
generation.
They didn't argue about the ethics of
divorce at all. They simply accepted' ' "
divorce as a fact, a modern convenience,
Something that tended to make Urn-
pleasanter, Just ns they did In elevators
In apartment buildings, or electric lights,
or running hot and cold water In bath .
rooms.
If you had made a mistake In marriage."
and your Hfo was being ruined by It, yoU
corrected It and took a fresh start, Just
as you would do If you found out that ,
you had engaged In a business that was .
bankrupting you. They could see np
moro reason for going on with a mar'
rlflPft thnt m,iinl ,1nllv mlaan, (hat Ut'
would be In going on with an enterprise; ' '
In which you lost money every day. -
You can't argue tho divorce question' u
with the modern young flrl. because she
simply doesn't recognize the ancient view" i
at the matter, that there Is anything
noble, or pious, or virtuous In living with r
an Individual that brings out all tho
worst that Is In you, or In keeping to
gether a family that Is engaged In a per
petual drawn battle at homo.
Nor can you argue the suffrage ques
Hon with young women, because they
accept It as a fact that Is Incontrovert- A
Ible that they are the equals of the A
young men they know, and havo Just as " r
much right to a voice In government.
You could find a needle In a haystack'
easier than a college-bred girl who Is art 3 "1
nntl. p
And this Is what the modern young girl
thinks about woman's sweet dependence.' 0
A very rloh girl said to me the other
day:
"I've got the best and most generous
father that any girl ever had. He show-
era on mo everything that money can f
buy. I've got charge accounts all the
way up nnd down Fifth avenue, and
every month he gives me a big allowance,
but I never seo a girl standing behind a '
counter, or sitting behind a typewriter
that I don't envy her. I would rathei-
have $L60 that I had earned myself than
1,600 Hint was given me.
"I would glvo anything on earth to -know
that I could stand on my own feet I
instead of being a miserable parasite'
hanging on somebody else. And every1
rich girl I know feels the same way. Dut
I'vo got one comfort, I'll never have ttf 1 '
bn dependent on a husband, How a,
woman endures the humiliation 6f having M
to ask her husband for every cent she' '
spends I don't understand. It's eough to,
kill her. nnd I don't hell
going to do it much longer. I think tn the
ruiure that when a girl hoan't got an In
dependent fortune of her own she'll con
tinue after marriage at whatever busl.
ness sho was In before marriage. Finan
cial Independence Is just as ne.Mtmrt,
a woman's self respect as it Is to a.
mans."
And here's another vlnwnnlnt nr th. m4
model of a girl. If vmi will .
ncroes ot ail-fssh oned nnvoi. I,.. a' -irt
bo men who had been sad rakes, They '
were men with dork pasts, such as Roch- r
ester, who fascinated Innocent little Jane
Byro, and oven as late as a generation,
or so ngo n man lost no prestige In n 1
girl's eyes from having hun ,im nA
having had romantic adventures. Recently
a,i uwioneni to me bin for requiring all
candidates for marriage to produce a
health certificate brought up this former r-
ottltude of women on this subject in ob.
Jcctlng to the rnssage of .h in tr.3 Jr
didn't know the modern young girl. I
saia sometning of this to one, and she
doflncd the modern glrl'a position on the
question In ono' phrase:
"We've read 'Damaged Goods,' " he
saia, ana we know what that sort of 1
romance moans-Insane asylums, sur- II
geons' tables. deiUh .
In former times, when a young girl
came to an older woman to confide lr. v
her, she naked for advice about some. S
love affair. Nowadays when a girl hast"
a heart-to-heart talk with you she con
sults yOU about her llfn wnrlr. Th.
girls are no longer looking forward t(" '
matrimony as tho one only desirable '
career In life. They are thinking of busl .?.
ness, of settlement work, of a thousarc
avocations outside of the home clrchi.
Love Is no longer the whole of th.ir
Istence. It Is a thing anart. lust u i "
of a man. If the right man comes aloni?
and asks one, sho'lb'marrv. hut it h
dotsn't, she can get albng very well with
oui mm, tnank you.
This Is only a cursory view nt th.
girl of the period. Take a look at her foi
youreoir. At present she Is the great
human conundrum, and .!,. h.
Interesting thing In the world.
Famous Dancer Gives
Complexion Secrets
(Alleen Moore In Beauty's Mirror.)
I've learned the secret of Dolores' en
trancing beauty the wondrous charrr
that has dazzled the courts of Europi
and captivated vast audiences overy
where, The famous dancer abhor
rouges and cosmetics. Yet. despite the,
strenuouslty of her life, she retains tho
Incomparable complexion best describ
ed as "Indescribable." An Intimate?
friend tells me the senorlta regularly
uses on her face what druggists know
as mercollzed wax. This is applied at
night In the manner cold cream Is used
and washed off In the morning. It ab
sorbs the dead particles of skin which;
dally appear, and a fair, soft, fresh,
girlish complexion Is always In evidence.
Dolores' skin ts not marred by a sin
gle wrinkle, not even the finest lln
She wards these off 'by dally bathing
the face in a solution made bv dloniv:
lng an ounce of powdered saxollte in a
jinu-i'im mivii iiuici. AO pour OrUg
stores keep these Ingredients, as well as
mercollzed wax (ooe ounce of the wax
Is sufficient), no doubt your reader
will welcome this information. Advertisement
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