Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 05, 1918, Page 9, Image 9
Adelaide Kprmerly iriLMl 1 UK JUL & Ella Fleishman. Eg Spring Fashions Seen at Tea Dansant The reign ofthe oxford 'has begun I They are thev-very last; word in foot wear this spring and already 'numbers of mannish-looking brown, ones are being seen on our. smartly dressed women. Mrs. W. J5. Ppppleton.is wearing a pair of brown oxfords and Mrs. A. L. Reed wore a pair at the tea dance at the Fontenelle, on Sat urday. Pumps, too, are still very pop ular. Black ones, gray ones, tan ones, thev all twinkled over the floor of the hotel ivi.th hardly a high boot among them. - , Spring, bonnets and spring suits were very -much in evidence at the tea dance. Mrs. Glenn Wharton looked particularly well in a black satin gown with a filet collar. . A small black hat and black pumps with steel buckles were worn.,; Miss Sybil Nelson also wore , black '; satin, her gown being made with an overskirt lined with white. .'A hat of blue georgette with a wee pink rose in the front com pleted this smart outfit. - .Miss Grace .-"Allison wore a very striking suit of pinkish taupe shade. The color is decidedly new and very smart- .A hat of Alice blue was worn and brown pumps. . The one-piece dresses still remain popular. Miss Nina Dietz was very attractive in a dark blue serge made bustle effect Mrs. Jack Webster also wore a dark blue dress with light blue collar, and-cuffs. Black pumps, gray spats and a black satin hat were worn with this costume. Mrs. 0. S. Goodrich's gown was of dark blue serge. This young matron wore a blue poke bonnet and high on her shdulder a, large flat yellow flower made a dashing bit of color on her dark gown. For Bride-to-Be. 'Mrs. George Lamoureux will enter- tain at a bridge party this evening at her home in honor of her sister Miss June Parked Red roses will be used in the decorations and 12 guests will attend the affair. Miss -Parker's engagement -to Mr. George JJ. ;Mc Williams was an nounced 'Sunday, and the bride-elect will leave Wednesday for Deming, where her fiance is stationed. The wedding? will, take place Saturday at Deming, and It is thought that it will be a Rouble wedding, as a girl friend from Lincoln may" possibly accom pany Miss Parker,' as her fiancee is also1 at the cantonment Engagement Announced. "Mr. and Mrs. John Liddell announce the engagement of their daughter, Frances,, to Mr. Ralph Dunn. The wedding will take place April 3 at St. Cecilia's church.. -. Miss Liddell is a graduate of St John's High ' school. Mr. Dunn at tended Creighton for some time, later going into business. The young couple willfmake their home here. ,--;, s - .J : Forptsin Moore. . . jtf.vf- ,Mrt pndtst Knapp Entertained 'at a whijt -partyiai their-home ;Satnrday fcvenijn jionpr of Captain and Mrs. Clvde Moore.1 The barty was in the jiature-tf a farewell affair as Captain jMfeore leaves Tuesday for military tiitty. A wrist watch was presented to-him. Carnations and jonquils were used in the rooms. Malva White Shrine. The Sojourners' club of the Malva "White Shrine will meet Tuesday aft ernoon at the home of Mrs. A. A. Iifoltman, 1920 Locust street. Those assisting the hostess will be: Mes dames Sam Dresher, J. L. Holmes, Hattie Shrimps and W.- D. Neiman. Ladies' Relief Society. . Rabbi Morris Taxon will address the Jewish Ladies' Relief society at its monthly meeting Tuesday at 2:30 o'clock in Lyric hall. The club is planning a card party at the Black stone Wednesday, March 13. Pleasures Fast. ' ''T'he party given by the Winter Dancing club Saturday evening was such a success that the board of di rectors is planning another party. It fill probably be a. subscription" dance itater in the spring. Twenty-five couples attended the affair Saturday, a large majority of the men from the forts giving the dance a very military air. " v Birthday Party. !: A birthday party was given Satur day afternoon in honor of Mrs. B. A. Van Orman at the , home of her daughter, Mrs. J.. E. Knapp. Mrs. Hamilton's Dinner. .'.Mrs. H. F. Hamilton will entertain jtlght guests at dinner this evening at the, Blackstonc. For the Future. . iSMf.. XT H Victor urilt entertain 9 luncheon party of 10 guests at the ; Prettiest -if ile -club Tuesday. Mrs. Sherman Canfield has been ill with the grippe in her apartment at the Black stone. - ' Mr'.' W."S. Wright and hPs "sister, Miss Adaf Wright are spending some time at La Jolla, Cat . , ifr. arid Mrs: Raymond ' Sheehan and small son, Louis, are the guests of Mrs. :Sheehan's parents, Mr. and Mrs R. M. Downey. :- ; . Glenn." SV Reeves, son of Mr. and Mrs. J: C. Reeves, has' enlisted in the engineers' reserve corps, radio branch. Mr. Reeyes. was "graduated from the University pi Nepraska this , month. Will Theda Come? Theda" Bara may be in Omaha this month to address the. political and social s'ience department of the Qfnaha Woman's .club. Mrs. Benjamin S: Baker," leader, this morning -wired the film favorite'a New Y art manager asking if Miss Bara would consent to talk to her department March 11 or 25. -'- Film' fans await the-reply with keen interest - A spirited, discus sion of Theda Bara's interpretation of "Cleopatra" took place at a recent-meeting of the department 1 L Pers imals ::" Hail to King Cotton! ' By GERTRUDE BERESFORD. KING COTTON will furnish many a gingham frock for mi lady this summer, in fact this fabric, so long relegated to the "pig tail age," has come back to its own. Aristocrats of the gingham family, called silk ginghams, are being put ton variety is holding its own. Lav ender gingham and white pique de velop this model, whose deceptive waistcoat turns surplice and ties at the back in sash end bound with pique. Collar, cuffs and skirt border are of white pique, a purple sailor with rolled brim trimmed with bands of purple and white ribbon is an ex cellent example of the new variety of sailor hat .--.. t Colfax county, with only Id onoils. has the record in the junior work. The pupils raised $169 in one evening. L. W. Trester was in Columbus Saturday. He addressed 110 teachers in the Young Men's Christian asso- ciation building. Public and private schools in the district were repre sented. A record-breaking number of sur gical supplies for three weeks' time is claimed for Mrs. Lena Miskovsky's auxiliary. It has completed 3,600 ar ticles. . It meets but twice a week, on Tuesday afternoons and Wednesday evenings, in the Bohemian Catholic Turners' hall. Fifty women are mem bers. - Newest record for the Red Cross junior work is a 200 per cent school. It is a German parochial school in Schuyler. The entire number of pu pils paid 50 cents instead of the reg ular 25 cents for junior memberships. Three other schools in this district are 100 per cent Red Cross. Women in Wayne county who have been going to Sholes for instruction in Red Cross work walked several miles in a blizzard last week to attend the class. A ciphering contest and spelling bee was given at Fullerton, Neb., February 26, for the benefit of the Junior Red Cross. Three Nance county rural schools took part. The affair netted $119 for the cause. . Nebraska Cornfields Still Look Good to Western Sojourner Mr. W. W. Bingham, who is spend ing some time in Los Angeles, writes that quite a colony of Omaha people are , enjoying the California climate this winter. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Stroud, Mr. and Mrs. William Kier stead, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Dinning, Mr. George H. Payne and Mr. H. D. Bullock are all stopping at the Hotel Lee, operated by a former Omahan, William B. Clark. . . , "Los Angeles is a big, bustling, en ergetic city, full of optimists, autos, bargains, bungalows for sale or rent, tourists, pepper trees and palms. The best roads on earth, where the sun shines the brightest, the birds sing the sweetest the flowers the most lovely, the autos the fastest and the ladies the most beautiful. The cli mate, nay, it's not possible to even at tempt to describe ft and yet with it all the whole state of California last year did not begin to- produce as many dollars worth of the products of the farm, orchard and garden as the state of Nebraska.. The visitor here makes or saves the most money who fails to invest It's an undisputed fact it costs a whole lot less, money, time and worry to make a dollar out of a Ne braska cornfield. than out of a Cali fornia . orange ; grove," writes Mr. Bingham. .- - P. E. 6. Sisterhood.. v ' Mrs. Grace Stanton will entertain chapter B. X., P. E. .O. Sisterhood at her home Tuesday afternoon. Elec tion and installation of officers will be held. Odnlqpuiy of Modem O, these morbid minded masses! And their ridiculous camouflage. : : : : By ADELAIDE KENNERLY. 0 THESE morbid minded masses! Shouting with all their might, murmuring under their breath, 9 against the sin of the world. And we all belong to the masses. We belong to the censorship club. There are no dues, no initiation fee and nobody ever is ruled out. The requirements are many, but so naturally and easily complied with that none of us need discommode ourselves to be loyal. This club knows no class or clan thoroughly democratic in-so-far as its membership is concerned and nobody is jealous of anybody else. Let. an Evelyn Thaw, whose name has appeared in big type on every head-line daily in the United States, start out with a perfectly clean little show and the club begins its activities. "Disgraceful indeed 1 Notorious woman I Vile thing I Why should any body go to see her? Can she act? Not Well, then, she hopes to draw a curious and morbid crowd. I wouldn't be seen there 1" Such exclamations and expostulations are heard from all members of the club so we feel reasonably sure that this "notorious woman" who looks like any other woman, is assured a good house. But to make doubly sure, a large city bars her from its stage. - Horrors, it must be terrible I The news spreads like the wind. I won der how she must feel? is the question on every member's lips. But, try his best, her manager cannot persuade the innocent city to lift its bar. And so standing room in every other city in the country is assured. When communities recover from the shock of disappointment received when thev stood in packed houses to see a thoroughly decent, clean little show with not enough merit to be staged, but certainly no reason to be bar red, something else happens. A million or billion dollar picture in which a vampire or a screen beauty is starred in the "Clothes God Forgot" one member puts it is advertised at an exorbitant price per seat Will our vulgar rich attend this show? Will only the low-brows be there? No I The whole censorship club the masses who must skimp and save to get admission, will be there. Tell all our friends how perfectly shocking we think such a picture is and that we would not be "caught dead" there if we like, but when the lights come on during intermission we will see them all there, if we have not al ready bumped against them in the box office jam. - Do we go out of morbid curiosity? Oh, nol Neverl We go to censor for the other person. A Great Force Back of Seeing Things Through By BEATRICE Are you a quitter? There are about two chances out of three that you are, and have never suspected itl Sounds extremely unfriendly and critical, doesn't it? But, like many fairly disagreeable statements, it is true. ' When people criticize you, you want to hear the nice things. It soothes and gratifies you, doesn't it? It gives you a pleasant amiable, comfortable feeling to be told how pretty you are, or how sweet, or what a dandy voice you have, or wht a bully good game ot billiards you play; but suppose some one comes along and tells you that you are lazy, or that you don't put enough of your own personality into your work won't you put up an argument? Well,, you cairt talk to me arid I tell you that you are a quitter 1 You aren t getting on as fast as you'd like to, are you? A good many of the folks you know nave advanced far beyond you. You don't seem to get much chance. Fate isn't very kind to you. If you had any luck you'd be earning double what they're paying you. ; You say all these things and shrug your shoulders and let it go at that, don't you? Well, then I tell you you are a quitter; you don't see things through. Suppose you don't like your pres ent position, but stay lest you fail to get another if you give that up. Your cowardice has you beaten be fore you start the race. You are a quitter too timorous to try. - You started out in the game of life to make a success; now why let any sort of weakness make - you condemn yourself to failure? See Things Through. The man or woman who sees 1 things through is the one who makes a success of life. This doesn't mean starting half a dozen jobs and leaving them, because you were not suited to them, or they are not suited to you, marks you as a! failure; but it does mean that not hav ing the determination to fight to see your job through, to fight to get the best kind of a job you can do, and to fight to get recognition for your work, marks you as a quitter. A friend of mine who is unfor tunately a victim of that dread af fliction "writer's cramp" decided to do her bit and learn to knit There j seemed to be no particular reason why she should not knit with her left hand. So she devoted a great deal of time and energy to learning. She struggled wildly to gain con trol over her work with a hand which had never been trained. Discouragement and failure did not daunt her. She kept at it, knit ted a few straggling, uncontrolled rows, ripped them and started over again. - There was no inprove ment in her work, but she kept at it with perseverance, concentra tion and grim determination. At the end of four weeks she had made absolutely no progress. It was perfectly evident that the untrained left hand would need a vast amount of training in order to produce any kind of knitting that was not a collection of holes, tan gles and dropped stitches. "I won't quit I've started this and I'm going to see it through," j she told me grimly. "But you are quittingt You're stubbornly torturing yourself with a thing for wTiitfh you are not fitted, which requires a vast expenditure of energy and makes no return; you are neglecting the things you might, do and do well, because you want to do what everybody else is doing. Why don't you make some of your wonderful orange marmalade and send it to camp? Why don't you plant a war garden? Why don't you compose songs? Why don't you go out and get money for the library fund?" I asked. She glowered at me. "I won't quit" And at the end of three months Loraine is still struggling to do the thing for which she is not fitted and there was so many things she might do welll Too Stubborn. ' When you're too stubborn to ad mit that you are in the wrong field that you can't do the work that you jet out to do too stubborn to look FAIRFAX. for the work for which you are fitted then you are an absolute quitter; for the thing which you are lacking is common sense. Efficiency practicality and suitability are the things which an earnest worker and an honest worker look for. A quitter starts out on the path of life searching for a means of earning a livelihood. If he tumbles into something which pays fairly well and works at it he feels sure that he is not a quitter. But the man who refuses to look for the job which is supremely his is u quitter. The woman who shifts her re sponsibility on to someone else's shoulders is a quitter. So you quit when you give a thing up because it is too hard for you, and equally you "quit" when you insist on trying to do the . thing at which you cannot succeed just because you like the crowd of people with whom your fruitless efforts bring you in con tact. Do you start things you never in tend to finish? Do you shirk a chance to put real effort into your work? Do you make promises to yourself or others which you have no real intention of keeping? Do you avoid the . tasks which might make you bring new meaning to your work? Do you resent having an occasional extra burden placed upon you? If you do any of these things you are a quitter. A quitter is a man or woman who starts wrong and refuses to start over again, who starts and refuses to make the effort to finish, or who is too lazy ever to start at all. Find out what kind of a quitter you are and do the one piece of con structive quitting that is possible quit being a quitter. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Jealousy is a Terrible Thing. Dear Miss Fairfax: I hava ben ngagfl for two yeari. My fiance la very jealoue and aunplcloui. Ha la a cultured man a Wnl Point graduate. One afternoon I wae obliged to visit the denttat, and, being de tained there much longer than I had con templated, it waa already dark when I started for home. In the car I met a young man, a good friend of my father, and I accepted hla offer to escort me, elnoe the way from the trolley to my house la long and lonely. On reaching my destination I was about to thank my escort for his court esy and hurry Into the house when my fi ance, who had been patiently awaiting my arrival, suddenly rushed out and in a fit of temper and Jealousy struck my escort and demanded that I return hla ring. Our en gagement was broken off then and thera. Ever since my fiance haa shown hla regret In many ways. Ho says he has learned his lesson and Implores forgiveness. OLOA. R. I don't Ilka Jealousy. It Is ungenerous and it paya no attantloa to the freedom of the individual. A man ef education and the sort of training your fiance haa bad ought to have learned aelf-control and yet he conducts-himself with brutality, temper and shameful injustice. If you really love this man why not put him on probation T Olva him a ehanca to prove hla sincere re fret and if ha manages to control himself and to behave overlook hla past mistakes in the light of future good conduot. But I strongly advlsa agalnat your marrying him until he has proven conclusively that ha rec ognizes his own fault and Its really criminal weakness and haa gotten the better of It A Case for Your Own Aid I Dear Miss Fairfax: As you have given advice to so many lovelorn folka, I am going to ask you to please advise me. I am SO years of age and my husband la SO years my senior, we have been married for five years, and have real happy together, until of late we seem to be drifting apart We have no children. He tella me If I loved him as a wife should lova her husband that I would be willing to have a child. Now, Miss Fairfax, I do lova him dearly, but aa ha already haa tour children (by bis first wife) to support and is only a laboring man. I do not sea how he could possibly support another one. If I had a child I would want to bring It up in the right way and educate It and do lota of nice things for It, aa any true mother would want to do. Now, dear, will you please advise ma which to do, go on In life aa I am. childless, with a husbsnd who saya un pleasant thlnga because I do not become a mother, or bring a child into the world which would not be welcomed by his children and which would not hava any ahow for the future except by Its' own efforts when it became old enough to battle In Ufa for Itaelf. Hoping you wlU give me 1 an early reply through the columns of Tbs Bee. I thank you, WORRIED. Hla children hava nothing to aay about It They will soon be grown and hava homes of their own. Tour husband will grow old rapidly now and I should advise you, by all means, to hava a child of your own.. Heads South Side a ffwm3 Mrs. J. D. Ringer was elected presi dent of Chapter M of the P. E. O. sisterhood at a meeting Saturday at the home of Mrs. Bruce McCulloch. The vice president is Mrs. Hester Tou can provide for It Let the others share their father's earnlnga with the little child. Why Not? Dear Miss Falrfsx. Omaha Bee: I -am greatly Interested In your advlcee to others, and now come to you for an advice. I do hope you will answer In The Bee, so I ean read it I have never written to you before and will auraly appreciate your ad vice. I am a young lady of 11, and three weeks ago I met a nloa young man of 21. who la a aergeant In the algnal corps, and during these three weeka he has coma to sec me at my home quite often and hue also taken ma out Just two days befor. ha left he told ma ha had given up a lady friend for me, and he lovea me dearlj and wanted to know If his lova waa re turned and tf I would wait for him. that h a surely coming back. He haa knowi- thla lady friend two years, but haa only seen here three times, but ha wrote to het several times before he knew me. I told him I didn't want to inerfere and I told him I loved him dearly, which I do. He said I wasn't interfering, that ha cares for ma, and If ha couldn't have me he didn't want her, and he doesn't love her and waan't engaged to her. Now, Miss Fairfax, do you really think he loves me? He said ha waa going to do hla bit for hie country and ma, and after the vtctory la won he la coming back to wed me. I have promised hlra that I would wait for him. I do love him dearly and miss htm more each day. Do you think I ahould wait for htm f aad do you really think It la lmpoeelble that we hava fallen In lova with teaoh other inside of three weeks T Hoping I shall see my letter in print but please don't use my full name, becauae I don't want my friends to know Its me who Is asking for advloe. Thanking you greatly, I am, your dally READER. If the young man Is in earnest and was not bound In any way to the other young woman, I sea do reason why yon ean not plan for a future with him. 1 Of Interest to Women, Women are to be admitted to the medical department of the University of Maryland. Ten million women of the United States will be privileged .o vote for president at the next general elec tion. A university extension course soon to be inaugurated by the University of California will enable women to learn wireless telegraphy to prepare themselves to take the places of men who have gone to the war. A bill to enable the women of Texas to vote at primary elections will be presented to the state legisla ture by the suffragists of the Lone Star state at a special session of the assembly, to be called soon. In recognition of her distinguished services to the allied cause the queen of the Belgians has been presented with a special medal by the French government. Every student in Barnard college is now required to contribute at least two hours of her work each week to some kind of war service. STOMACH TORN UP Ifl&aca Lady Describes Conditioa Wtici She Sayi Was Doe To Constipation and Tells of Relief Obtained Froa Elack-DraofbL Scottsburg, Ind. Mrs. Annie Johnson,; oi this place, writes: "I well remember I suffered for a long time with constipa fton, which would get me down. I took doctors' medicines and any number ol purgatives. They would leave me in a worse condition than I was before taking, and my stomach so upset ... I know once I suffered . . . from constipation, I was so ill we had to have the doctor, Just so nervous and feverish. The doctor said I would have to quit medicines, my stomach was so bad .. . My husband was reading and found something about Thedford's Black Draught and brought me a package to try. 1 used it regularly at first until 1 be gan to feel better, then I used just a dose occasionally. I was cured of this con stipation and am sure the Black-Draught didit." If your stomach is out of order, you will suffer from such disagreeable symp toms as headache, biliousness, indiges tion, etc., and unless something is done, serious trouble may result Thedford's Black-Draught has been found a valuable remedy for these troubles. It is purely vegetable, and acts in a prompt and natural way, help ing to regulate the liver and to cleanse the bowels of impurities. ,,Try Black-Draugf EB-1J P. E. 0. Sisterhood Copper; recording secretary, Mrs. Cora Jackson; corresponding secre tary, Mrs. Minnie Laverty; treasurer, Mrs. Louise Sears; guard, Miss Louise Bratton, and chaplain, Mrs. Bruce McCulloch. Help Hoover Eat (ream of "Rue You will enjoy it served in many ways, Recipes on the package your grocer has it. Minneapolis Cereal Co.. The . s:s:::: War Pffl) ok spint yisjij) : EXPLANATORY For th duration of tho war wo shall ! t half tho usual profit call it tho "war" spirit if you will 4f of- fectivo throughout tho storo you do your part by paying cash. NEW SPRING WRAPS- i r NEW -BHjas Your They them cars. .1812 FARN M ? YY T 1 V C EffKaVS. Something Hen in Town From i "The land of the long leaf Ping A Remarkable Treatment From - North Caraiina That Relieves Croup and Cold Troubles W ith-f out the Necessity of Internal " Doslng"-Applled Externally, It Is Inhaled as a Vapor and also Absorbed Through the 8kln. Local Druggists Are Selling 25c Jan on 80 Dayi Trial No Charge if Not Delighted with the Result. Every year thousands of people, suffering from, various forms of lung trouble, make a pilgrimage to the yme barrens of North Carolina, "the land of the long leaf pine." The reason lies la the warm, dry air, perfumed vrtth the spicy odor of the pines. Local druggists, however, have re cently received a treatment that is almost as good aa a trip South. . This Is Vlck's Vapoftub, the invention of a "North Carolina druggist VapoRub comes in salve f6m and when applied over the throat and chest, the body heat releasee mU U.ted vapors that are inhaled with Canned Seal and Whale i Meat War Possibility Things to look forward to canned seal and whale meat! Miss Nellie Farnsworth, home demonstratipn agent, says it's the latest in meat sub stitutes. Both of these sea animals have up to the present time been useful oily for traveling bags and oil. One whale produces five tons of meat. This sea-food is said to taste like beef and is to be prepared according to the same recipes. VV,, v Because the whale lives fair out in the ocean-and nourishes itself only with shrimp, it is one of the cleanest of foods. According to Miss Farop worth, Americans eat only one ounce of fish, per person, per year. In England the -proportion is 50 pounds. Fighting Famine with Hoe To make, a garden this spring, njdj summer is truly a stern necessity, is'' well as a patriotic duty and privilege. The efforts of the small gardener, the horns gardener, are going to be of still greater .importance .than they- were last year; actual famine menaces all creation, and we are face to face with a situation that stirs every instinct of self-preservation, as well as the nobler, impulses of patriotism and humanity Look to the garden implements now; get everything ready for use, o that when the time comes to use it there may be not an instant's delay. Have labela whittled out and bunched; ready for "planting" at the end of every row when the seed is sown: have such charts as may be needed for daily reference pasted on card board and tacked up in the most con venient , place;, make sure that every mechanical device is ready, that spray materials are on hand, and" powders and fertilizers and make sure that you yourself are ready with a good general knowledge of how to use alt of these things. , . . save wheats Inc. Minneapolis, Minn. Store; Fetching modes iri .Tricotine, Silvertone, Duvetyne, Delhi, Gab-i ardlne, Army Cloth, Duvet d Laine, Ve--lotus, Crystal CIoth,;etc. ; i ' --f Tans sand clay putty--:-are among the voguish shades in scores of different distinctive , models. ' $25.00 Coats ' fc lQ 7E ' v during the war. . . ; V 1 O $30.00 Coats 7C : during the war. . . P6t p V $35.00 Coats--- . dfrorj 7E -s during the war-. . . P& M U . f $40.00 Coats ajSOQi 7C ' during the war.... ) tinnn rv.f. a mm m dnrlnv th war . ' 9aj4. OvM DRESSES ; r NEW BLOUSES' NEW SKIRTS Ul afaafMsaM ' 4 Early Inspection Invited Join the "Good Scouts" : earry their own packages put n. in the tonnean of their own motor- . . ; ..-.- ATretfOMEAsWi 'I STREET. eaeh breath, through the air passages, to the lungs, loosening the phlegm and boo thing the inflamed membrane. In cases of severe chest colds, bronchitis, tonsilltis or Incipient pneu monia, first apply hot, wet towels to open the pores. VapoRub is then ab sorbed through and stimulates the skin, taking out that tightness and soreness in. the chest ' vr. ; One rubbing with VapoRhb usually relieves croup within 1$ minutes nd aa application at bedtime prevents a night attack. For head colds, hay fever, catarrh or asthmatlq troubles. VapoRub can either be applied up the nostrils or little melted in a spoon and the vapors Inhaled. v , The progressive druggists here are anxious that their customers should try this new treatment and are. there fore, offwing VapoRub on 30 days' trial. -