Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 26, 1914, PART TWO, Page 5-B, Image 21

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    THE OMAHA RTTND VY BEE; APRIL 2fi, 1P14.
5 B
The Quaint Metropolis of Southern Peru
(Copyrighted, 1914. by Frank G Carpenter.)
manmtA reru.-l am In the
I A 1 metropolis of southern Teru.
I A- I It Is the city of Arequlpa,
LA 1 lln.l,t 1IY1 miU Itnr-lf nf lh
Pacific ocean, and perhaps
!, miles south of the Panama
canal The town is built In an oasis, made
by the Chile river In the arid Ancles of this
Pacific coast desert. It Is surrounded by
ragged dr. mountain?, but bedded In a
x alley of perpetual green. The city Is a
m le and a half higher than Philadelphia,
Rocton or Baltimore. It is about T,yvj
feet above the sta, and some of the moun
tains about It are four miles In height
.lust behind It Is the great volcano, Mount
Mlstl. which has a crater n half mile
In r t n r, a I . . i . . . ..... .
... u,u,Mk.t, nuu un nip oi wnicn
Harvard college has established a sort of
an automatic meteorological station,
which Is more than three miles above
Mount AVeather. Virginia. To the left of
the Mlstl Is Chachacanl, over 20,000 feet
high, and there are other Andean giants
behind.
Indeed, there is po more beautifully
located city anywhere In South America,
and you will go far before you find one
which Is so fresh, so bright and so
quaint. The houses of Arequlpa ' as
though they had just come out of a
bandbox. The most of them are of only
one story. Their walls stand close to
the street, and these walls are of all
colors of the rainbow. I bought my
postage stamps today In a building that
was the color of ashes of roses. I ate
my breakfast In a restaurant painted sky
blue, and next door was a house of rose
pink. This morning I visited the new
market of Arequlpa, It consists of great
walls of Spanish architecture surround
lng a court roofed by the sup. The front
of the market Is a yellow as gold, and Its
Inside as blue as the Andean skies that
form a part of Its roof. The surround
ing buildings are of the same bright col
ors, and the whole seems to fit In with
the gorgeous air of southern Peru.
Market Are "Wonderful,
But come with mo Into the market.
This will show us something of the way
the city of Arequlpa has been built
where It Is. The wares all come from the
valley of the Chile river. In which the
city Is situated. This valley has some
thing like fifty square miles of culti
vated land; It is a great onsls In the heart
of the Andean desert, and that on the
road that leads from the sea to the
mountains. The oasis makes Arequlpa a
great, agricultural and fruit center, and
also one for the raising of grain, alfalfa
and cattle and sheep. As you go through
the market you see everywhere evidences
of the fertility of the soil and the won
dirful climate. Nearly overy fruit that
can bo, raised in the United States la
sold here. There are apricots, peaches,
npples and plums and strawberries as
big as walnuts. There are oranges and
lemens. bananas .and figs and bushels of
I alias or alligator pears. There are green
watermelons as big around as the waist
of your sweetheart, some of which have
as red a flesh, as any that ever made a
darky's mouth water, and others with a
flesh as yellow as gold, although the
seeds are Jet black.
In the vegetable quarters you find fully
as .great a variety. You people at home
are, now in the heart of midwinter, but
here on the other side of the line It Is
summer, and they are, selling new .pota
toes and green corn. They have bright
red tomatoes, white cauliflower and great
quantities of cabbage. They have also
the yucca, sweet potatq.es and yams.
Peru Is 'the home of the potato, and I
understand that our Department of Agrl
cultuie nas recently sent men here to get
new varieties.
Ilale Fine Cralns.
The valley In which Arequlpa Is situ
ated raises great quantities of very fine
barley. It has fields of alfalfa and pas
tures upon which are fed -cattle and sheep.
The city Is the chief wool market of
Peru. It Imports vast quantities of al
paca and sheep's wool from Bolivia and
the Peruvian plateau, and ships It to
Europe and the United States. These
shipments amount to more than 10,000,000
pounds weight every year and they have
n value of perhaps $2,500,000. The leading
exporting houses of the city have their
gents In all parts of the Andean pla
teau, and the wool la bought from the
Indians and haclendados and sent to
Lake Tltlcaca, from where It comes over
the railroad to Arequlpa. Some of It is
consumed In the woolen mills here, but
the majority of the product Is sent
abroad. Nearly all of the vicuna and
alpaca wool passes through Arequlpa,
Returning to the city itself, Arequlpa
is quite a manufacturing center. It makes
harness and saddlery, boots and shoes,
and It has large cotton mills. It also has
the railroad shops of the Southern Rail
road of Peru, which makes this place its
headquarters. There are about 500 men
employed there; they are now making
their own passenger and freight cars, as
TERRIBLE ITCHING
RASH ON SCALP
White Dry Mass on Crown of Head,
Shed White Particles. Began to
Spread. Lost Hair Rapidly. Cu
ticura Soap and Ointment Cured.
6030 Rhodes Ave.. Chlcigo. 111. "Since
Infancy there has been on my scalp a rash
which prevented my even combing my hair.
H was a white dry mm on the very crown
of my head and It continually shed white
particles should I as much as shake ray head.
It never decrcaied in die. In fact It began to
spread. It made me very uncomfortable
and caused me to lose ray hair very rapidly.
Many a night I stayed awake tormented by
tho terrible Itching.
" 1 tried and It softened the sore
but, did not remove It, only making it Itch
worse. Seeing the advertisement for Cut!
cura Soap and Ointment In the paper I
wrote for a sample and even with the sample
I could tell I had the right thing. I bought
one cake of Cutlcura Soap and one box of
Cutlcura Ointment. 1 rubbed my bead every
nitht with the Cutlcura Ointment and
washed it .with the Cutlcura Soap each
morning. I used two cakes of Cutlcura
Soap and one and a half boxes of Cutlcura
Ointment and the rath which I bad a life
time disappeared. It took a month and a
half for the cure." (Signed) Joseph Krue
ser, Sept. 8, 1913,
It costs nothing to learn how pure, sweet,
effective and satisfying Cutlcura Soap and
Ointment are In the treatment of poor com
plexions, red, rough hands, itching scalps,
dandruff, dry. thin and falling hair, because
you need not buy them until you try them.
Although sold everywhere, sample of each
wilt be mailed free, with 32-p. Sldn Book. Ad
dress post-card "Cutlcura, Dept.T. Bosun."
tSTMen who shave and shampoo with Cu
tlcura Soap will find It best for sldn and. scalp.
well as all the repairs for the . rolling
stock.
Manufacture Chocolate.
The town also manufactures chocolate.
It has a flour mill and It does a great
deal of exporting and Importing, being
the center of trade for southern - Peru
and also for a great part of Bolivia. The
Southern railway Is the chief gateway
to La Pax, and It will always compete
with the other roads that go to and rom
Bolivia and the seacoast. It Is on this ac
count that Arequlpa will -probably be im
proved by the Panama canal. The .city
is 100 miles from Mollendo, the chief port
of the south for this part of tho world.
The landing Is poor, however. The ohlps
have to anchor far out from the shore
and the swell Is worn than that of, Jaffa,
which tossed Jonah's ship bo that the
sailors threw him out to the whale. The
Mollendo landing is often so rough that
passengers have to be taken up hy steam
cranes from the boats that bring them
to the port from the steamer, and goods
have to be put on and off of the launches
by cranes. The ocean was tamer than
usual, when I came Into port.' but my
boat went up and down eight or ten
feet, and I had to make a flying leap,
when It was on the up grade, to get to
the steps that led to the custom house.
Fitted not with Electricity.
When I visited Arequlpa. In 1S98 It was
lighted by coal oil, and I do not remem
ber that It had a car line. It has now an
electrlo light plant from turbines run by
water power and also an exceilent system
of tramways, which It la extending out
Into the country. It Is well equipped as
to telephone, both local and long dls
tance, and the telephone companies will
accept long-distance messages at tele
graph rates, which are only 16 cents for
ten words. For 33 cents you may talk for
five minutes between Arequlpa and
Mollendo, a distance of more than 100
miles. I venture the rate is less than one
half that of the United States.
With the completion of the canal Are
qulpa will become a tourist resort. It Is
a place or breaking the journey on the
long ride up the Andes mountains from
tho ocean to take Tlticaca and Cuzco,
and it ought to have good hotels. The
best of those It has now Is kept, by an
Italian named Moroslnl, who n"rters his
guests on one side of the plaza and feeds
them on the other side In a long, low,
cae-llke vault, which is known as the
comedor. or dining loom. The food is
good and the bedrooms are large, but
there aie'no modern improvements and
the sanitary arrangements are poor.
Arrqulpn la Interesting,
From a sightseeing point I find Are
qulpa quite as interesting as Lima.' It
has a great cathedral, built of white stone,
which must cover an acre or so of space.
Tills faces on the plaza, filling the whole
of one side of the square. The three
other sides are occupied by stores, mgre
quaint than any In Kurone. The build
ings are of only one story, and In frpnt
of them extend wide portals or-corridors
with huge columns separating them from
the plaza. On the other side of the corri
dors Is a wall of cave-lke vaults, lighted
only from the front and the roof. The
stores are fifteen or twenty feet wide
and twenty or thirty or more feet deep,
and' their ceilings are arched, so that
the whole looks like one long vault. The
goods are hung from the ceilings and
plied up on the floors. The market seems
to be a good one, and I saw many Amer
ican articles.
Nearly afl the houses of Arequlpa nave
vaulted, roofs and on some of the one
story structures the roofs extend up In
oval domes or hoods. The otty is under
the shadow of the volcano Mount Mlstl
and In the past has had serious earth
quakes. For this reason the skyscraper
will never be known, and today 'a five-story-building
would be the talk of the
town.
The clly Is one uf the oldest towns In
America and It dates back almost to th
JPlounzLcj in the Chile Valley
The i new zncirk&k
days of Plzarro. It Is a place qf old
families, and of considerable culture. It
Is an ecclesiastical and political center.
It has. a university and several colleges,
and also a school of 'arts and an agricul
tural Institute. Moreover, It boasts of
having the finest hospital In all South
America, and that although its climate Is
one of the finest on earth.
In fact I doUbt whether you will fjnd
many place's that have ffner weather all
the year around than Arequlpa. The sky
Is almost always blue, and the sun, al
most always, shines. At least this has
been the case until lately. The people
tell me there are more clouds In .the sky
pow ttian ever before, and I understand
that , this cloudy condition Is so increas
ing that Harvard university Is seriously
considering the removal of its obser
vatory from here to some. other place.
Harvard Observatory at Mlstl.
I. doubt not, many of you have heard of
the Harvard ' observatory. It Is one of
the most noted astronomical stations-of
the. whole world. It Is situated on the
slope of Mount Mlstl, 500 feet above Are
qui pa. at such a place that Its telescopes
have an unobstructed view of the heav
ens. The Institution has a fine plant,
and It Is equipped with great telescopes,
one of which has a lens two feet In
diameter enabling them to take photog
raphs on plates fourteen by seventeen
Inches In size. The tube of "that Instru
ment must weigh a ton, but It so deli
cately hung that a child could move It,
There are other telescopes for taking the
portraits of the stars and for the last two
or three decades these scientists of Har
vard have been making heavenly records
of this southern hemisphere. They haVe
taken as many as fifty a night and
thousands a year. The negatives after
having been developed are shipped to
iCumbrldgc, where they are kept on file
for scientific work. There Is no such
collection anywhere else and astrono
mers have to go -.there If they would
make certain classes of study.
Sky Is Individualistic.
There Is, I am tdld, nothing duplicated
In the sky. Bach half of the world has
Its own stars and constellations, and
there are some here that we never see In
the north. One of. these Is the southern
cross, but It seems to me that its beauty
has been greatly exaggerated. There are
only four stars In it, and they are za
small that you have, to look hard to find
them. They do not compare with the
great dipper. Many of v the other stars
are far more brilliant than In the north.
This Is so of the milky way and of the
most of the planets.' I have been on tho
equator when the path of a planet on
the still waters of the ocean was almost
as well marked as that of the moon, and
In riding at night up the Amazon river
the stars were sq close It seemed as
though I could almost reach out and
grasp them. Another reason for moving
the Harvard observatory Is that Its work
has resulted In the southern heavens
having been pretty thoroughly studied,
and mapped, and that reason for Its ex
istence has to some extent passed a way.
Established by nordem ,
The story of the establishment of this
Observatory Is Interesting. It Is now about
thirty-five years since Uriah H. Borden
died and left J300.000 to Harvard univer
sity, with1 the understanding that the
money was to be used to build an ob
servatory at the best place upon earth
for the study of the stars. The college J
authorities first tried Colorado and Cali
fornia, and then came to South America.
Their first work was done back of Lima,
at an altitude of about that of Mount
Washington on what Is now called Mount
Harvard, but In 1890 they changed their
station to Arequlpa. The change was
made because this place was thought to
have more clear days and clear nights
than any other locality on earth. Since
then the astronomers of the university
have been working here right along and
thai not only at Ui owtervalory, but at
w
the automatic meteorological ' station,
which they have placed on the top of
Mount Mlstl.
Highest Station In World.
Mount Mlstl (a 19,200 feet high, and this
.station Is said. to. be -the highest of Its
.kind In the world.' H Is higher than any
point In America outsldo Alaska, and It
Is fully a mile higher than our observa
tory 'on the 'top of Pike's Peak. The site
of . the station fs on the edge of a huge
crater, which until lately tins been send
ing out clouds of yellow sulphurous vapor
a thousand feet Into the air. These
clouds have now stopped and I am told
that the volcano has been spitting out
water and steam. No one knows what
this may portend. The automatic Instru
ments on the mountain are keeping a rec
ord of meterorologlcal movements and the
scientists vIbU them at Intervals nnd
bring back the results. Tho machines
work with great regularity, but some
times the mountain is so covered with
snow and at other times visited by ter
rible winds, so that there may now and
then be a break. Prof. Bailey,' who estab
lished the station, had great trouble In
getting the Indians to help him up the
volcano with the Instruments, and It took
a large number of mules to carry the ma
terial. At the top he .found an Iron cross
standing and at this the Indians fell
down and worshiped.
Country Dreary and Wild,
I wish I could take you up oven the
trip I made up the Andes frqm Mollendo
to Arequlpa. The country la more dreary
and wilder In aspect than that above
Lima. We rode for miles without seeing
a blade of grass or anything green. We
passed oyer great beds of sand, walled
with bluffs that had been ground so
smooth by the winds that the strata
showed forth. We passed traveling sand
hills, great crescents or dunes, made by
the grains of sand rolling over and over
up the hill until they reached the top of
the crest and rolled down the Inside. Fur
ther on the sand had cut Into the rock of
the mountains, making, great cracks In
it like the wrinkles on an old woman's
face. All the erosion here comes from the
winds. There Is no rain whatever, never
theless the rocks In many places are
ground to a ponder.
Further on up the railroad the Andes
grew wilder, and we seemed to have
reached the very heart of old mother
earth. Bverythlng whs rock, and there
was not a bit of green to be seen. There
was no soli. Indeed, It seemed as though
the skin of vegetation and life had been
peeled from the earth, and that we had
our great rooky ball before us at It was
before plant life or animal life had
sprung Into being.
At the same time, the scenery was
magnificent. The air is so clear here
that you can see for miles, and the clouds
painted velvet spots on the hills. Toward
DflBcmj F Bails r.
Sanatorium
This institution is the only one
in the central west with separate
buildings situated in their own
ample grounds, yet entirely dis
tinct, and rendering it possible to
classify case. The one building
being fitted for and devoted to the
treatment of non-contagious and
non-mental diseases, no others be
ing admitted; tho other Rest Cot
tage being designed for and de
voted to the exclusive treatment
of select mental cases requiring
for a time watchful care and spe
cial nursing.
fvi-ning the sun tinted the mountains
with the most delicate blues, pinks, lav
enders and mauve, and the whole looked
like h mighty picture In colors. Instan
taneously sketched by the hands of the
gods. Ah we started out we could see the
ncean rolling lis spray high on the beach,
ami at the clo of our Journey the moon
was hist rising over the snow of the
mountains above old Arequlpa. The
whole formed s panorama sueh as I have
seen nowhere else, and such as I venture
i an be seen nowhere else In the world.
THANK O CArtPRNTKR.
PRATTLE OF THE KIDDIES.
The Parson tattle, don't you , know It
Is wrong to worry your mother so?
Mttle Lottle-Huh! Ynu don't 'know
mamma' 8hc worries me more than 1
worry her.
' Why." asked the teacher, "did L'aesar
cri.SK the Rubicon?"
"I don't rrmombrr." replied Willie, "but
mtbby It was because he got a chance
to be the captain of a team on the other
side '"
"What the share of the earth?" naked
th teacher, calling suddenly on Willie.
Round," vina the answer.
'Mow do you know It's round?"
All right." said Willie: "It s square,
then. 1 don't mean to argue about It.
Teacher (explaining fractions) Suppose
new, Willie, you had eight little boys
visiting you and you had only one apple,
how much would each little boy get?'
Willie Wouldn't get any. I'd wait till
the) d nil gone homo nnd eat )l myself.
The school teacher with the eagle eye
saw n little girl chewing gum. "Mary,"
sh demanded, "put that Into the waste
basket " Tho child looked as though she
wtui Id like to obey but couldn't. "Did
you hear mo?" Insisted the teacher. "Put
tlmt wnd nf gum Into the wastebasket
'Immediately." "Please, teacher, I'd like
to, but 1 can't"' was tho quavering re
ply! "It It belongs to my mother."
"What's wrong, Johnny?"
Aw, ''taint nothln' much, I asked our
teacher to call th' boy that Is th monitor
of th' room th' umplrean' she did. An'
when she weiit out of th' room 1 had a
fight with him."
"Well?"
"Well, when teacher came back she
sent mo to th' bench where th' girls sit,
nn' fined me three recesses an' a hour
after school!"
Backers Still Mnsy.
Swindling, considered as an art, Isn't
on the decline to any noticeable, extent,
Is it" Washington authorities tell us that
wi'litn the last two years swindlers, hy
melius of get-rlch-qutck, matrimonial and
otner schemes operated by mall, havo sep
nrnted tho easy marks of the United
States from J12?,000,000 In hard cash.
These figures not only simply prove that
Sage Tea Puts Life
and Color in Hair
Dont stay gray! Sage Tea and
Sulphur darkens hair so nat
urally that nobody ban tell
Tou can turn gray, faded hair beau
tifully dark and i lustrous almost over
night It you'll get a 60 cent bottle of
"Wyeth's Safe and Bulphur Hair Rem
edy" at any drug st6re. Millions of bot
tles of this old. famous Sage Tea Recipe
are sold annually, says a well-known
druggist here, because It darkens the hair
so naturally and evenly that no one cab
tell It has been applied.
Those whose hair In turning gray, be
coming faded, dry, scraggly and thin
have a surprise awaiting them, because
after one or two applications the gray
hair vanishes and yonr locks become
luxuriantly dark and beautiful-all dan
druff goes, scalp Itching and falling hair
tops.
This Is the age of youth. Gray-haired,
unattractive foJIcs aren't wanted around,
so get busy with Wyeth'a tare and Sul
phur tonight and you'll be delighted with
your dork, handsome hair and your
youthful appearance wlthla a few days.
Advertisement.
kVVlltLL UI
Kranich &
AT A BONAFIDE $50 REDUCTION ON
EACH NEW INSTRUMENT
Thtsr are Bit AND NEW PIANOS. The reduc
dealers nnd Is made for the present only The sale p
be retkketed at Normal Prices, or S50 higher than n
the establishment of the Kranich & Bach factories,
piano. If you appreciate quality In a piano you w
occur again If you cannot call In person, be sure t
wrtlc'i Is sent free while the supply lasts, We show
ard ICRANK'M & BACH' PIANOS. There are many
ui nuniea wniie inis sale is
Style P, Upright,
i H
i .IIIIIH
Style PX, Upright, Regular price $500, NOW
Style M, Grand, Regular price $750, NOW
' HH Iffl.l DOUGLAS 8T.
1 Km
tho art of swindling Is flourishing like n
grern bay tret, but that the ratio of easy
marks to the dozen of population Is pr.io
tleally stationary Hnd Is keeping steady
pao with the growth of both city nnd
rural population. The progress of the or
dinary educational systems seems to have
no checking effect on the production tf
boohs ready to fling money In the face of
thi first faker to come nround the cor
ner. Possibly . special school for the
mental elevation of the goop might pro
effective. The chief difficulty would be to
Induce the goop to absorb the Instruction.
Detroit Free Press.
Pert rtetnnrk.
As for the command to "Inve they '
neighbor as thyself." perhaps the neigh-1
bor will be satisfied If you let him nlone i
In the ancient melodrama the nrlnc'pnl
visible differences between the villain and
"Now My Woolens
Will Be Safe"
aaHiaMH (smotbsspmssi asssssssssisssPBsaissaasssssssj
"The cedar bottom in the
makes it a practical cedar chest. The mild, sweet cedar odor is
very pleasant and just strong enough to discourage moths and
vermin."
Luger "Cedar-Line" Dressers
and Chiffoniers
1 -
Cost no more because of this desirable feature.
This ant! the dust-proof, mouse-proof bottom, tho
easy-sliding drawers, the strong inter-locking
construction and other valuablo features mnko
them better than other malto celling at tho
unino prito.
If your furniture dealer can't
the "Cedar-Line" we'll tell you wbo
Luger
Furniture
Company
Minneapolis,
Minn.
Mrs. A. T n. You are not shampoo
ing often enough and may not use the
best shampoo. Try my favorite, which
Is canthrox Just dissolve u teaspoonful
In a cup of hot water nnd rub briskly as
you pour It on the hair and scalp. This
makes an abundance of rich, clennslnR
lather that Is very soothing to tender.
Itchy scalps. Iltnslng leaves tho scalp
Immaculately clean, and each strand of
hair will be soft, shlmmery and full of
health. Canthrox shampoo are splen
did for correcting unnatural conditions,
such as excessive olltnsss, dryness or
profuse dandruff. 1 like Its drying
qualities, too.
i Mrs. ().: The symptoms you describe.
pains ami acnes in tne umiii ana smau
ot back, loss of appetite, lack of strength
and ambition, are danger signals warn
ings rour blood Is laden with poisons
which will cause serious sickness If not
eliminated from the system. The kardene
tonlo of grandmother s day Is excellent
to use and can be prepared at home.nt
little cost by dissolving H cupful sugar
and 1 ounce kardene (which you can get
at your drug store), In V4 pint alcohol
(not whiskey), to which Is then added
hot water to make a full quart. A table,
spoonful before meals Is the dose. The
timely use of this tonic frequently saves
serious Ills.
Maale: Yes, you can cure your weak,
watery eye with a soothing, healing,
strengthening eye Ionic which can be
made at little cost by dissolving an ounce
of crystos In 1 pint clear water. If you
will put I or 3 drops In each- eye dally.
It will relieve the Inflammation and sore
ness and reduce swelling. This crystos
toplr Is especially fine to make the eyes
sparkle and give them expression.
Hoclety Olrl. Here Is that weight-reducing
treatment which she told you
ULTRA QUALITY
53Rjh
PIANOS
tlon Is offered
osltlvely rljses
on.
Regular price $450, NOW
A. HOSPE CO,
Our 40th lear.
the h'ro was that th villain were f-o.
larger black mustache.
Some, good-natured people endure impo
wltlon, but more of them plan successful
escape.
Refusing to be 'treated" to a drink
sometimes knocks down a card hi tise of
make-believn friendship.
It Is better to be goeMped about than ti
gossip about others, though a Utile m-Tc
disagreeable.
No matter how gentle a cold In the
head Is In Its first tackle, don't be de
ceived It H only getting up stam
In the diametrically orjposlte opinions
of two or tl'ree physicians on his case, a
sick man ought to find hope. It might ba
depressing If they agreed.
Some times a clgnr needs a gilt paper
belt around the middle to keep It from
falling to plces.-Pt. l.ouls Globe Democrat
lower drawer of this dresser
LDL
jk
show yon
can,
Ul
The Home Beauty Parlor
would work without danger or Inconven
ience I'ut 4 ounces parnotls (which you
call obtain at any drug store), in Hi
Pints hot water. Htraln when cold, take
1 tablcspoontul before meals. Keep up
treatment Until weight is sufficiently re
duced. Parnotls U gentle In action and
positive In results and leaves the flesh
and skin firm and smooth,
(llrlle: It Is easy to make an Inexpen
sive hair tonic at home by mixing 1
ounce qulntoln with H pint alcohol, then
adding H pint water. Tho scalp should
bo massaged once or twice a week with
this qulnzoln tonic. Its regular use will
quickly banish the dry, scaly condition
nnd correct oxcesstve atllnons, and when
this Is done tho natural color and silky
softness returns and the hair will grow
In long and thick and havo a beautiful
sheen.
Marge: Ifrlends tell me I have every
reason to be proud of my complexion,
which Is the result of discarding powder
nnd using spurmax lotion. This Is tnex
pensive and easily made at home--I Just
dissolve 4 ounces spurmax In H pint
Witch hazel or hot water, then add 2
teuspoonfuls glycerine, and It Is ready
1 apply this lotion sparingly and rub
lightly for a moment until It dries and
seems to become a part of the skin, to
which It gives a. velvety smoothness and
refined color that Is delightful.
O. T The wrinkles of which you
speak will soon vanish If you npply at
mozoln cream-Jelly and massage the long
way nf tho creases or lines to fill nut
To prepare the crenm-Jolly, put 1 ounce
almnzoln (which you can get at your
drug store). In M pint water and add 3
teasponnfuls glycerine. Let remain over
night before using. An a skin-cleanser
and beautlfler this greaseless cream-Jelly
Is not equaled.
Betty Dean's Beauty Rook. $5. Adv.
Bach
by all American KRANICH & BACH
May 15 Kadi Instrument will then
ow offered This sale marks the !0tli anniversary of
home of the World Henowned KIlANICH & BACH
III surely take advantage or thlo orrer. it will not
o write for the KRANICH & BACH Jubilee Booklet,
below Regular and REDUCED PRICES of three stand
others, with a broad range of cases. Be sure to call
$400 ,
Terms
If
Desired
$450 V
700 J
OJLUIA, NEB.