Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 15, 1915, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE KKK: OMAHA. M ON DAY, XOVKMHKR 15. 1015.
he Bee
tome Magj&ziiDie Pa
"
Children Who Never Grow Up
The Better We Can Care for Our Little Ones
the Fewer of Them Will Turn Into Criminals.
The Mystery of Petra
Womaw and Her Money .
Folly of Marrying a Man Who Considers that What's
His Wife 's is His and What's His is His Own.
8
1
ge
By Wood Hutchinson. A. M., M. D.
The World' Bert Known Writer on
Medical Subjeeta.
We have a faculty for overlooking plain
and obvious facta which nmounti almost
te a genius. Part of this la due to our
Method of education, both scholastic
nd religious, which irlvea ua the theory
of Ufa flrat and the facta afterward If
at all.
Rene our constant endeavor la to make
the facta of our experience of life about
tte fit In with the theortea that have been
drilled Into ua. Any facta that don't fit
In with the theorlea are Ignored In po
lite society, and ao, of couree, they don't
slat.
One of theae dogmas, which waa laid
dewn airea aro In that era of Ignorance
and cruelty and slaughter which we
usually refer to aa the rood old daya,
waa that all men are abeolutely and
dually reaponsmla for their conduct and.
If they are not food, can be made 'ao by
Banishment and cruelty. Upon that pure
assumption la baaed our whole unspeak
able ayatem of criminal law and so
called justice.
Whatever the causa, the painful fact
remalna that, up to. a bare third of a
century ago, the universal rule of the
law and the court In dealing with the
offender waa. If any man broke the law,
punish him; If he repeated the offenae,
punlah him again and keep on punishing
with Increasing severity aa long aa the
offenae or he offender laated, without
ever for a moment atopplng to look at.
ao to apeak, Ita raw material and con
alder carefully what manner of men It
waa who were thua being punlahed and
taipriaoned.
-About thirty-five year ago, under the
lead of the noble and gifted, but erratic,
Lombroao, an attempt waa made for the
flrat time In human hlatory to quietly
and dlapaaalonately alt down and atudy
the habitual criminal, the chronic of
fender, the actual population of our pris
ons and penitentiaries.
Unfortunately, the flrat atart waa made
along mistaken line; that I to aay, upon
anatomical differences which dlstln
gulahed the criminal from the normal
man, aettlng up a ao -called criminal
type, which could not be supported.
, But two things quickly atood out un
mistakably and clearly. First, that the
heavy majority of all our prison popu
lation on both sldea of the Atlantic con
sulted of what la technically known a
"reneatera" or recidivist. That la to
ay, 00 to 10 per cent of them had been
The Weariness of Waiting
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Nothing at all In the world I more
likely to defeat It own object than hurry.
From the enthusiasm that Inspire you
to do to the over-enthusiasm that Insist
on action at once, prepared or no, I Just
a tiny atep.
There la an old proverb that says.
"What one wishes for seems at the door."
If you wish hard enough you may often
feel that you hear the knock of your de
deslr. But when you open the door
there Is nothing there.
The old story of the boy who cried
"Wolf!" when there wa no wolf and
who perished miserably when the wolf
came, Illuatrat this fairly well. The
danger for which we watch with actual
Impatience becomes negligible through
familiarity and when It comes we have
no protection against It.
Nothing makes a person such a pessi
mist as the Indulgence In unfounded hopes
that prove wrong. Nothing makes a per
son ao criminally careless of danger aa
watching fearfully for accidents that
used never have been expected, and ao
VOLlAfMN
DAD CONDITION
Restored To Health by LycIU
E. Pinkh&m's Vegeta
ble Compound.
Montpeller, Vt "Wa have great
faith la your remedies. I waa very ir-
regular and waa
tired and ileepy all
the time, would hava
cold chills, and my
hand and feet would
bloat My stomach
bothered me, I had
pain in tny aid and
a bad headache most
of the time. Lydta
1 Pinkham'a Vege
table Compound haa
done me lots of rood
and I now feel fine. I am regular, my
stomach la better and my pains have all
left me. You can use my name If you
Lite. I am proud of what your reme
dies have done for me." Mrs. Mabt
Cavthieh, 21 Ridge St, Montpelier.Vt
An Honest Dependable Medicine
. . It must be admitted by every fair
minded, intelligent person, that a medi
cine could not live and grow in popularity
fur nearly forty years, and to-day fold
record for thousands upon thousands
of actual cures, as has Lydia E. I'ink
l..m's Vegetable Compound, without
possessing great virtue and actual
worth, buch medicines must be looked
rpon and termed both standard and
dependable by every thinking person.
If ,tu have the slightest doubt
that LydU 11 Pin Vham's Vegetay
Lie Compound will help you,wri to
toLydlalirtnkbamMedlcineCo.
(confidential) Lynn, Massif or ad
vice. Your letter will Io opened,
rend and answered by a woman,
..'! LtlA Lu strict coufidence.
r 1
' ' " 1
criminal by life-long habit, alnce boy
hood and even early childhood.
Second, that while no clear-cut crimi
nal phyalognomy or criminal bodily type
could be made out, the prisoners, aa a
mass, wherever simply weighed and
measured . In uf flclent number, were
from one and a half to three Inchea
shorter In stature, from fifteen to thirty
pound under weight, and had leaa than
two-third of the cheat expansion of the
average of the community from which
they were taken.
In other worda, nearly two-third of
our criminal "did wrong" a constantly,
aa instinctively and aa peralatently
nine-tenth of their fellow outside of tiie
prison walls "did right": and tnese
wrongdoers were under-elsed, under
weight, narrow cheated, stupid and aa
markedly Inferior physically and men
tally to the right-doers as they were
morally.
But here the matter hung In the air
for some time. The findings, though In
teresting, had no "bite" to them and car
lied little definite conviction.
Possibly habitual criminals and fre
quent offenders were under-elsed and
narrow-cheated and ' anaemlo and fear
fully subject to tuberculoala; but might
not much of thla be due to their vicious
and Ill-regulated habits of - life, their
drunkenness, ths gross sexual vices, the
Irregular hours they kept and the
wretched alums and dene In which they
harbored acd lay hidden from the
police?
Even If they were under-slsed and
under-wclght, so were some of the great
est men In history; and ft moment's
glance up and down our home streets
would show us scores of men below the
minimum height and chest-girth for
army recruits, yet who were, earning a
good living and playing a useful and
honorable part In their circle and in the
community. Just the mere fact of a
man being under-slsed and slack-muscled
Is no explanation of or excuse for his
being a criminal.
However, w drew on useful, If not
wholly logical, conclusion from the facts,
and that was: That If criminality and
stunted growth and narrow-chested and
consumptive tendencies go hand In hand.
then the better we can feed and house
and care for all our children, especially
those In the slum and the back alley,
the fewer of thorn witl turn Into crimi
nals.
blinding himself to the approach of real
trouble. -
Watting Is one of the most trying ex
periences In all the world. There is no
trial that puts stability of character to
a more terrible teat.
Have you ever waited for a letter that
meant life or death, love er Indifference
to yout Tou know the postman is due at
In the morning. You wait at T and
wonder how you will get through the two
long hours until he comes. Somehow
bathing and dressing, eating your break
fast and doing the taaka of the day
bridge over the time until quarter be
fore 9.
Then you station yourself at the win
dow and watch for the first glimpse of
the longed-for messenger' gray suit.
Suddenly you see him far down the
street. Cloaer and cloaer he eomea,
weaving hla path In and out of door
ways. With beating heart you wait,
agonisingly wondering aa he comes closer
and closer whether he brings what you
long for.
He-seems to have a tremendous mall
to distribute and to do It slowly and with
tortolae-llk progress. Now he I at the
door next to your own. He passes your
house and goes to the next.
Tou must wait bravely for the noon
mall, and the next, perhaps. The letter
you long for may come tomorrow. And
no blow It deals can hurt you more than
did the agony of waiting for what It
would tell you.
"The Impatient man believes that the
stars fight against him," says an old
proverb. And the only bad luck In all
the world la the bad luck to be weak
enough to belter In luck. Luck and
chance have very little to do with the
periods during which one waits. '
You wait for a letter because the per
son who sent It didn't get It off In time.
That has nothing to do with luck, but
depends entirely upon your human rela
tionship with that person and how unset
flsldy and considerately he thinks of
you.
To highly sensitive souls who are ner
vous and Imaginative, waiting always
must be a certain strain, but they can
control that strain and not let it spell
sgony. Because a loved on who said
he waa coining at I has not arrived at I
does not mean he haa been murdered
by bandit or I never coming at all.
It probably Indicate nothing mode trem
endous than that he started late, or waa
delayed by some trifling circumstance.
VI hen you have eonquered your own Im
patience ao that you raa endure Impotent
waltlug calmly, you have dune much to
assure yourself of a peaceful life. U la
chiefly women who Indulge In tormenta
of agony when waiting. Moat mn know
enough to f'H In periods of waiting with
ome activity, ao that their minds shall
nut anxl ualy dwell on apeculatlng how
soon the looked-for event wl'l occur.
A book er a bit of sewing will often
serve to tide over a period of waiting.
Force youaelf to concentrate on some
thing othor than the thing toward which
you are looking. If it cornea It will find
you calmly waiting to receive It, and If
It falia to come your conserved energy
will train you to go on waiting.
In-Shoots
We can forgive and still be suspicious.
Scatter sunshine and you will also en
joy its ray.
Remember that a vigorous howl will
always attract more attention thaa a
ftcble whine '
f
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11
V,
By GARRETT P. RERVIS8.
The atrangeat city In the world la Petra,
cut out of solid rock In a lonesome moun
tain valley In the Arabian deaert. Onre
a rich city. It I now an abandoned ruin.
It I ao old that Ita origin Is lost t
history, but It was well known In early
Bible times when the Edomlte Inhabited
It, and about a century after the be
ginning of the Christian era it was con
quered by the Romans. But a few cen
turies later It waa abandoned by civilisa
tion and for 1,600 year It lay forgotten
by the world until the traveler Uurck.
hardt rediscovered It In 181X
So Inaccessible la ita altuatlon, although
It once lay on a trade route, that not
more than fifty traveler are known t-
have vialted it slno Burckhardt'a time.
The lateat of theae la Donald McLclsh.
the Scotchman, who wa there last June,
and the photograph show some of the
wonderful sight ha saw In this unique
elty of civilised troglodytes.
No romancer ever conceived such a
plaoe. All around are barren mountains,
rocky, wild and trackless. Beyond the
mountains stretches the desert. A lav
age glen deepens Into a long, narrow
gorge, with perpendicular walls 100 or 200
feet In height Following thla ravine for
two miles, the adventurous traveler sud
denly finds himself at a kind of gateway
In the rooks, 11k the entrance to a
Roman amphitheater.
Her he I confronted by a temple cut
In the rock, with the most exquisite Cor
inthian columns, and entering the door
way he finds himself in the heart of the
hill, surrounded by subterranean architec
ture of the most elaborate beauty of form
and workmanship. This is the so-called
kheaneh, or treasury, supposed ta have
been built by the Roman Rniperor Had
rian, Who vla'.ted Petra in the year 1S1
A. D. Although called a treasury. It
was a temple devoted to IU. No descrip
tion of this strange building has ever ex
celled that given by Stephens, the first
American traveler to see It:
"The whole temple, Ha columt.a, orna
ments, porticoes aud porches are cut out
from and form a part of the solid rock;
and this rock, at the foot of which the
temple stands like a mere' print, towers
several hundred feet above, Ita face cut
smooth up to the very summit and the
top remaining wild and mtsshspen, as
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
Copyright, 1915, Star Company. .
In one of the many stock companies of
America In a college town the leading
man a few seasons sgo chance to be a
very good looking young bened ct, with
a wife and two v
children, who re
ceived the devotion
of his heart. The
handsome actor
made no secret of
this fact, and waa
alwaya talking of
hla family when
nnDortunlt v n r e-
sented. Yet this
I did not prevent
j htm from becoming
a matinee id j! and
the recipient of
Innumerable I t
lers from infatuat
ed girls and wo
men. The young man
at first Unored these Uttere; he then
tried returning some of them, requesting
the writers to discontinue semllng him
such missive, but the letters Increases
la spite of all hi efforts, .ben one
afternoon he stepped In front of the
footlights and addressed a crowded house,
tie stated that he was ao annoyed by
these letters that he should be rJjllfod to
publish the names of the writers tinleaa
there was a cessation of the romantic
folly.
"I am a married man." he said, "and
my wife and children are foremost In my
heart. I have no desire for any romantic
Intrigues, and unless these letters are
Stage Star Warns Frivolous Girls';'''
fa' :
wn
f fell
t!r ""
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Tlie Famous Tomb of Three Stories and the Sacrificial
Altar on the Mount of Obelisks.
nature made It. Neither the Coliseum at
Hone, grand and Interesting as It la,
nor the ruins of the Acropolis at Athens,
nor the Pyramids, nor the mlffhty tcmplca
of the Nile, are so often present to my
memory."
But this is only on Introduction to the
marvels behind. The gorge opens out
Into-' a narrow valley somo three miles
la circumference, everywhere sunk deep
benoath the enclosing mountain,' and
the wall of this .valley are filled with
the remains of other rocJc-cut temples,
tombs and dwelling place. In one place
are the remains of an. open-air theater.
Home of the atructurea, cut In the face
of the rock, are aev3ral stories in height,
while their architectural details excite
the wondering admiration of the beholder.
Of course they gain Immensely In the
eyes of tlio surprised visitor by their sit
uation and ty the air of total abandon
ment which surrounds them. They are at
various heights above the floor of the
valley and the uplifting of the eyes turned
discontinued the names of the writers
will be given to the public,"
A letter has Just been received from
an actor, who seems to have a very high
Ideal regarding young girls, and a very
generous desire to save them from folly.
He aeya; "In the course of a season's en
gagement I conie In contact with many
youag girls of a moat tender age and
beyond reproach; others wild, but not
wicked, and some Just standing on the
brink and ready for that terrible plunge
which means the beginning of the end
of youth and attractiveness, and hap
piness. "There la no need to say that often
times the actor ta burdened with accusa
tions which might more fitly be borne
by the young sons of floe families and
their mature fathers, who play truant
from the monotony of home life. Often
I have seen young girls tcken aside back
of the stage and warned by members of
the company to beware of respected
buaiiioss men. who were waiting in their
cars to convey them to late suppers.
"My blood has boiled when I have
seen these men, who stood high socially,
and ho are trusted at home, leading
these young girls astray. Girl are good
listeners, and cweetneaa and sentiment
lead easily Into folly and sin.
"There must be some way to bring
influence to bear upon such girls and
cause them to realise the danger of
their situation."
Ths writer of the above letter suggested
the publication of verse and prose which
would Interest such girls, and, at the
same time, warn them. His own letter
ought to serve as a warning. It breathes
the attitude of a Urge majority of the
best theatrical n.a, actor and man
tv3
- e i
Wi
V3
- in 'ill
j -i . Tan
to study them adds to the Impression of
lonely majesty which they make upon
them.
It la rare to meet any human being In
the place. Sometimes a few Arabs are
seen, but at night the voices of wolves,
hyenas, owls and jackals may be heard,
and occasionally one of these animals
may be surprised lurking In the dark In
terior of an open tomb. Large venomous
serpents are also sometimes met with.
It la not surprising that some visitors
have applied to Petra, which has been
supposed to be the Bel ah of the Bible,
the curses uttered by the Hebrew proph
ets against the land of Idumea, such as
these: "And thorns shall come up In her
palace, nottlea and brambles In the fort
resses thereof,, and It shall be a hab
itation for dragons and a court for owls,"
or "Oh,' thou that dwelleat In the clefts of
the rocks, that holdest the height, of the
hill, though thou shouldst make thy nest
aa high as the eagle, I -will bring thee
down from thence, salth the Lord,"
agers, in the country. So much do these
men see of the frivolity, the silliness, the
v-eakness and the wickedness In human
nature that they do all they can to save
girls from folly, and their love for purity
and virtue In woman amount to rever
ence, : ;
A theatrical man, who has risen from
the ranks, and who haa achieved great
financial sucoeaa In hla chosen field, spoke
on this subject recently to the writer
with Intense feeling. He I the father
of a little girl only a few years old. but
be says It is his Intention to give that
girl, by the time she Is a dosen years old.
a full knowledge of the dangers which
await her In life, and to make her under
stand the high estimate anion all good
men place on modesty and virtue.
He means that she shall learn very
early the seamy side of Immodesty and
boldness, and that she shall never be
tempted to lose her self-respect through
U; no ranee.
If there were more fathers and mothers
of this order there would be fewer girls
Tasking themselves ridiculous by pursuing
actors, rnarrlet or alngle.
Do You Know That
The old-time "minuet" derives its name
from the Latin "mlnutus " referring to
the short steps peculiar to thla dance.
More than a hundred eggs have been
found tn one alligator. They are eaten
In the West InJu Island and on the
west coast of Africa. They resemble t;
shape a ben'a egg, and have much tbe
same tase, but are larger.
aSc-iLtvi-.i.N
- -"1 t
By DOROTHY DIX
A young man writes me that he Is ko-
lng to be married to a gl.l who has a
few thousand dolla
demanded that the
over her little for
tune to him on
their wedding day.
He says he doesn't
care for the money
Itself, because he
haa plenty. but
that he doean't
want his wife to
have any money
of her own, be
cause, if she does,
she can buy things
without asking hla
permission. and
that would never
do.
Donti't vt hat
a. and
young
that ho has
woman turn
-',r.J.- . .. j
sentiment so u n d
like Hark from
the TombT Isn't it
an echo from the
far, dim past? I didn't suppose there
was a man left In the world that held
to thla antiquated notion concerning a
woman's inability to handle a dollar
even her own dollar without giving an
account of it to her husband. And I
am more than amased that a woman of
this day and generation can be found
who la willing to marry a man who
frankly avowa auch pre-Adamlte vlewa.
Any man who wants to rob his wife
of her little inheritance and who thinks
it dreadful for her to have a cent of
her own to spend, or to buy her a choco
late soda without asking his kind per
mission, will make one of the tightwad,
tyrannical husbands who send a woman
to the grave, or Reno, according to the
amount of spirit and backbone she has.
I wonder. In a case like this, how the
man would like It If the situation were
reversed, and the woman should demand
that he turn over to her all of his prop
erty, so that he would have to come
to her every time he wanted a dollar,
and explain what he wanted to do with
it. How would he enjoy having to hem
and haw and double and shuffle every
morning trying to screw his courage up
to the point of asking his wife for car
fare?
How would he like It If every time he
wanted a new suit or hat, he had to
have either a stand-up fight to get the
money from hla wife, or else cajole and
Jolly it out of her by a lot of lying flat-'
teriea that degraded him In hia own
Bight?
Suppoae he had some relatives a poor
sick old mother, for Instance that he
yearned to help, whom tie was willing
even to deny himself to help, but he
could never send her even so much as a
five-dollar bill because his wife held the
purse strings, and he had not a penny of
his own?
He would find such a situation Intoler
able . He would aay that no man can
maintain hla aelf-reapect and be finan
cially dependent on anybody elae.
He would feel that he would rather
die than go to even the most generous
Advice to
'it ssATBzca rAnrAX-
Are Yoa Mercenary T
Pear Miss Fairfax: I am a girl of to
and engaRed to a man of 23. Have met
through business, as we are both em-
Floyed In the same place. We are very
ond of each other, and he claims I am
dearer to him than his sisters and
brothers. Now. Miss Fairfax, the ques
tion Is this: My friend took out a Ufa
policy, making his brothers and sisters,
who are all married, his beneficiaries, aa
hla Barents are dead. Don't you think
he ought to make me hla beneficiary?
S. J.
Tour .letter sounds as If you were
very mercenary In your attitude toward
the man you love. Aren't you a little
bit ashamed to be sitting and figuring
on what would become of his estate If the
man you love were to die? The widow
Is legally entitled to one-third of her
husband's estate. In the matter of a
fiancee It would be natural for a man
to make some provision for the girl he
loves, but I think it would disgust him
If she insisted on this as a right.
Consider Thla Berloaaly.
Pear Miss Fairfax: T am'a girl of IS
and love a man 41 Now, my famlf
thinks he Is too old for me to marrv
but I love thla man dearly. So, In a Mto
of parental objection., should I marry
him? PRI8CIL.L.A.
The difference In your ages la ao great
that the difference In your tastes and
Interests must also be very great. Tou
are really only a child and the man you
love la middle-aged probably at least
ss old as your father. Under the circum
km..
father every time he needed money, and
as for taking It from one who gave :t
grudgingly, and berated him for his ex
travagance as he doled out every nickel,
why exery drop of blood in him wou! 1
rise In furious protest. -
Tet that Is what this man la calmly
proposing to Inflict on the woman h
thinks he loves, and is gong to marry.
His idea Is. of course, that women rtv"
mere chattels with no normal instinct
of self-respect or dignity that a husband
is bound to take Into consideration. -He
thinks that a woman would just as soon
be a beggar as anything else, and thot
she rather enjoys abasing herself before
her lord and master, and taking with
grat tude such alms as he is gracious
enough to bestow upon her as a token
of his generosity, and not at all In con
sideration of her performing the multi
tudinous duties of wife, and mother, anl
housekeeper, and social secretary.
Well, if he or any other man takes
that view of the matter, he Is maklna
the mistake of hla life. Women loi.g for
financial Independence Just as much ri
men do. They abhor mendicancy 1un
much as men do. They resent, wit i
their whole souls, the fact that th Job
of the housewife, which Is the hardest
work and the longest hours of any labor
in the world. Is not even listed amonr
6-slnfuI occupations, and carries with It
no pay envelope.
The ono complaint that you hear mor
than any other among married women U
that they have never a dollar of their
own that they can spend as their fancy
dictates. The one thing that makes every
working girl hesitate about getting mar
ried Is giving up her own poeketbook.
The thing that does most to promote
peace and happiness In a household I for
the man to rise to the supernal heights
of Justice and liberality and give his
wife a definite allowance for herself and
the housekeeping. Instead of having to
have It corkscrewed out of him bv the
penny.
If bad enough, goodness know, for
the man to arrogate to himself the right
to handle every cent of the family in
come when It's hi own money, but It's
glgantio nerve for him to assume the
right to his wife's property.
Of one thing every woman may be
certain, and that la that the right aort
of a husband will not want tn rnh Vimr
of her money, and from the wrong sort
he would best protect herself by hold
ing onto her own, for a poeketbook Is an
ever present help In every time of trouble,
domestlo or otherwise. Also even a hus
band treats a wife who la financially In
dependent of him with the respect that
we all show to those who have money.
A wise old banker once said, cynically,
that he waa perfectly certain that hla
daughters would all be tenderly cherished
by their husbands, and when asked his
grounds for this faith In matrimony, he
replied! "I have settled $230,000 on each
one of my girls, so their husbands can't
lounn it, ana me income on mat wl'l
maae any man polite to'any woman
who
has It."
the Lovelorn
stances you must consider the matter
very seriously and weigh your own feel
ings, their likelihood to be permanent,
the feelings of the man who cares f r
you and the opinion of your paron ?.
On general principles I dti!prje o'
such a match but how ran a stranger
play Providence and settle a q ties do t
like thla with no personal Vnowledge of
the people concerned?-
Consider Thla Caret nil r.
Dear Miss Fairfax-: I am !K and llvl is;
at home with my father and brothers
and keeping house. My fiance tNnks wn
should five alone, and I Insist that mv
folks snd I take a house tnsre'hcr, '
I do not like to leave my father.
What would you advUe tis o do?
MAKOARF.T B.
It would be far wiser for you to have
a home of your own after marriace.
Marriage means setting up a homo snl
establishing a family. If your father
and brothers can afford to have a house
keeper, I think It would be far wiser
for you to have a separate home. D
not Insist on anything that may wreck
your marriage. If you Hvo with your
father and brothers you may slight y3ur
duties as a wife. Don't insist any cours i
to which your fiance objects but try
Instead to work out a solution which will
give you the best possible chsnce t
make your marriage happy and which,
will not be unfair to your father.
mm
clears bad
'complexions
I ( you want s clear, fresh, glowing
complexion, use Resinol Soap at
least once a day. Work a warm,
creamy lather of It well into the
pores, then rinse the face with plenty
of cold water.
It does not take many days of
such regular care with Resinol Soap
to show an improvement, because
the Resinol medication soolkts snd
refrttkti the skin, while the pure
soap, free of alkali, is (banting k.
Wasa tb seat i la a vsry aclac4 cos:,
tloa, with piapkea, blackheads rtdnos er
roushoos, sprta oa lust a litils Ktsinol Ont
bwdi iar tea er tlusa miauics Ulora unnj
fcnisol Susp.
kaunoi Sua pot srtitciallr rol'W. lu
nch brcwa bsuif satirslv due n tlx l.,u.
Mdicshoa it contains. Ttnv.v c.nts SI
sil drucr-su nd dcaicn ri fMmt. Fa)
S trial tisrnke, m tu Iwt. 4-P, aatai4
SUiuauts. Ui.