THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1919. 003 SAME PLACE FOR THIRD TIME; 0ETURNTII1 LOOT Transom Thieves Bring Back Part of "Stuff" Taken from Scout Headquarters at Previous Visit. Faf?e Diogenes, the in the barrel residing gent, who was searching through the world with an oil lamp i i'ji an iiuuim Juan. luuil nave lu lxciie Dioeenes for the oil lamn. but Tliomas Edison didn't live in the days or ancient Greece, and Mazda lamps, so much brighter, were not in" style. Several times Diogenes has been paged in the lastfew weeks. Some times it was for the honest man who found a bahy and wanted ;o return it; once somebody cheated i realroad company out of some loose change and later returned it. foday Diogenes has the biggest ; '. lies got to aid the Omaha j'.xilice to search for an honest thief J or thieves' gang, w ho Thursday j iight paid visit No. 3 in three days jio the Boy Scout headquarters in 1:he Patterson bnilrliiiff. Brought Back Stuff. On this, their third visit, the 'honest" thieves took a little more ut they brought back a lot of stuff they had stolen on previous lights. The war has brought about a Mortage of tin even Ford knows :hat. j The thieves are good-hearted fellows and patriotic, too. To re lieve the acute tin shortage, they jbrought back a half-dozen frying Hans, which they liad stolen at visit I N o. 1, and 10 or 15 salt and pepper phakers, which fell victim to their brey at visit No. 2. I Telegrapher keys and "bugs," dry i'-atterics and other scout equip j iient recently stolen, were also re turned. I But the thieves didn't want to iiay a visit to the place for nothing. They wanted some reimbursement lor their troubles of. crawling hrough the transom, their regular vay of entrance. I So they took more scout equip ment, valued at $10. Sh Sh. Don't wake old man Sherlock Holmes up. Wait a while. iUaybe the "honest" thieves will ay another visit. No. 4, to the scout headquarters and bring back the things they stole Thursday night. However, it would be advjsable to r trip the headquarters "clear for ac tion" and take anything out of it hat isn't nailed down. Otherwise I he thieves at visit No. 4 may steal fomcthing else to have something So bring back at visit No. 5. j However, the thieves are bum Oiembers of the profession of the long lingers. j It was conspicuously advertised hat there are some $40 in i tamps in one of the desk draw- -rs of the scout headquarters. The sip was furnished, but the thieves ivere too honest to take the stamps. Prepare for visit No. 4. Repatriation of Troops Delayed by Dock Strikes I London, March 14. One of the jhief causes in delay of repatriating I'verstas troops has been dock ! trikes in Ijondon, Glasgow and j -iverpool, Reuter's Limited announ ces. A large number of ships which Uere due to sail in February are till in harbor. i SuspU'ioufl. "It's natural," satd Senator Simmons tn jf (i after-dinner speech, "that we should susptc-fftutt, even unreasonably' auspi j .nua, of ths Germans for many years to "W can't help It we're sll Koine to like Aunt Tabitha. Aunt Tabttha and ncle Hiram started, you know, for a. 1 hristmas visit to New York, and at l'hil- liolphla Uncle Hiram got out to buy a I .-wspaper, and the train went off with it him. I ' But the railroad people were mors than , ind to 1'ncle HI In his predicament, j hey put him on an extra-rapid express, iicl he actually arrived iu New York umltes ahead of Aunt Tabitha. lie stood I r the exit In hi black Sunday siit, car i "'.base in hand, when she came forth, i " 'Hero we am aRain, hey?" he salr), ; imping her wait Jocosely, 'I tell ye, :: abithy, gal, I thought I'd lost ye for ..nod.' j "But Aunt Tabitha had drawn herself p straight and stiff. She was frowning ,: blnck as a thundercloud. " '-u clear out. mister!' she rilssed, i Vone o' yer New York confidence tricks : -l me. I left my Hiram fn Phidadolphta.' " -Detroit Kree Press. i Her I ltimatum. A miner lodging at a certain house on I outskirts of a northern city has a great rndness for music. A friend called to .' -end an evening with him and after s, : -iried program of music had been gone (irouKh. and ha was letting his friend ' if at the street door, he remarked: I "Aa-ni thlnkin' o' getting a pair o' imbhelsi, Oeordle; will ye cum an' prtve- re wt' me?" i This was ton much for the long-suffer-. IP landlady. "Ya hev a planner, a fiddle, -y a trumpet.'1 she shouted down the Lairs. "No malr musical instruments i inn Into this boose." London Tlt-Blta. The fragrance of ROSEMONT tells your friends that you are smoking the better kind of cigar. Shads-grown wrap par; fin Havana filler good all thru. McCORO-BRABT CO. Oataba DUtribotora 7 Likes Selling Elgin Cars Selling automobiles is more lucra tive employment, than battling with Hun bullets and mustard gas, de clares Don J. Ferguson, gassed in the St. Mihiel region and decorated with the divisional Croix de Guerre. Ferguson wears one wound stripe LINCOLN Yflfl! FALLS OUT OF 11H DIES Soldier, Recently Returned from Overseas, Falls Out of Fifth-Story Window of Des Moines Hotel. Des Moines, March 14. (Special.) Thompson M. Draper. 36 vears old, a returned overseas soldier and son of Mrs. L. C. Draper of Lincoln, died at Mercy hospital here today from injuries received when he fell from the fifth story window of the Manhattan hotel last night. Wheth er it was a case of sleep-walking cr whether he jumped from the win dow is unknown. Collector Death Victim. Roy Evans, 1903 Capitol avenue, a collector for the National Biscuit company.was found dead early to day under the Court avenue bridge. Police believe that he fell from the top of the stairs at the viaduct be cause o fa big bruise on the back of his head. They also have a theory that he was attacked by thugs for money he had collected for the company was unaccounted tor. Evans was 29 years old and is sur vived by a widow and two children. Representative Dean "Peeved." Representative Dean of Osceola county, author of the Americaniza tion school bill which requires that no aliens can be employed as teach ers in the public schools, was con siderably perturbed today when he learned that the board of supervis ors of Carroll county has ordered to have its proceedings printed in a German newspaper. A bill recently passed the Iowa senate to prohibit the publication of legal proceedings in foreign language newspapers. Old Timer Scores Saloons. President Perry Engle of the Pioneer Lawmakers' association scored the members of the Iowa legislature today in joint session assembled for failing to pass the woman suffrage primary law. "I am sorry you voted down woman suffrage," he said. "I be lieve the government of the state of Iowa should at least be as pro gressive as Russia, where 60 per cent of the people cannot read, but where women are on an equality with men. Twenty-six years ago in a bill conferring on women the right to vote at all elections I got 24 votes in the senate. He also attacked the public utili ties bill, now pending in the senate, saying it was unfair to the cities to take away their rate-making power and hand it over to a board of com missioners. The joint session of the house and senate to greet' the lawmakers was presided over by Representa tive U. S. Alderman of Story county. Judiciary Bill Fight. The Iowa senate late yesterday completed the job that the house started the day before in the repeal of the nonpartisan judiciary law. The Larson bill, which passed the house by a vote of 80 to 17, and which is an absolute repeal of the present nonpartisan law, was passed by the senate following several hours' debate by a vote of 27 to 21. Following the announcement of the vote on the repeal measure Sena tor Wilson of Appanoose county, tied it up against reconsideration ex cept by a two-thirds vote by se curing the adoption of. his motion to reconsider and to table the meas ure. Both friends and opponents of the repeal bill believe that the gov ernor will sign the measure. Two years ago he vetoed a repeal bill after it had been adopted by the Thirty-seventh general assembly. At that time it was said that it was the Salinger influence which pre vailed on the governor to veto the bill. Since then he has broken with the Salingers and other conditions have changed so that it is the gen eral opinion that the bill will soon be signed and wiped off the statute books. Under the Larson bill dis trict judges will be nominated at district judicial conventions and su preme court judges at state judicial conventions, delegates to which will be chosen at the regular county convention. Local laws will govern the nomination of municipal and su perior court judges in the cities where such courts are maintained. Iowa Casuals Sail for Home on Susquehanna Washington, March 14. Sailing of the transport Susquehanna from St. Nazaire on March 11 to arrive at New York March 24 with 56 officers and 2,323 men, was announced to day by the War department. The 27th regiment of railway engineers complete is on the transport. Also, there are a casual company from Iowa; 14 civilian passengers, 99 en listed men listed as bed-ridden and seven officers and 600 men listed as sick or wounded, but requiring no special attentio s Better Thari Facing Hun Bullets and Being Gassed i i 1 ! A w : and two service chevrons, having served with the First gas corp of the Second division. He enlisted in Des Moines shortly after the outbreak of war against Germany, and went overseas in January, 1918. He was in the trenches for four months. Mr. Ferguson fought along Clerk Changes Vision Off Actress Feet on Court Rule "Spite Fence" in Front of Witness Stand to Prevent Be fuddlement of Jurors, Proves Serious Barrier, When Attendants Try to Reach Fainting Witness. (By Universal Berries.) ' New York, March 14. The "spite fence" erected in front of the wit ness stand to prevent the befuddle ment of the jurors should there be an inch or so of display of silk stockings by Mrs. Betty Inch, the pretty and shapely actress on trial for alleged extortion of $215 from William P. Herrman, met with the fair defendant's approval today. But it caused some embarrassment to court attendant when Airs. Herrman, the second witness for the prosecu tion, fainted in the witness chair. According to Mrs. Inch it will act as a foil to protect her, when on the stand, from the eyes of the district attorney and his "rude" assistants, Fences Prove Barrier. When Mrs. Herrman fainted, a couple of court attendants tried to hurry to her assistance, but the "spite" fence proved as serious a barrier as a barbed wire entangle ment in No Man's land. Justice Davis saved the situation by hur riedly leaving the bench and prof fering the fainting witness a glass of water. The inability of Mrs. Herrman to continue her testimony caused an adjournment to be taken. "After all," said Mrs. Inch, when court had adjourned, "that 'spits fence' isn't so bad. It will at least save the embarrassment of being stared at by the district attorney and his rude assistants. "It is shameful the way I am be ing annoyed. I am being hounded by detectives, both private and of AURIGA MUST FEED RUSSIANS FOR SIX MONTHS Peasants Hesitate to Sow More Grain Than They Need, Fearing Its Seizure by Bolsheviki. Archangel, March 14. (By the Associated Press.) Information se cured by the allied food committee in north Russia and from persons reaching Archangel from the interior indicates that the American people must deprive themselves of bread stuffs until the Russian question is settled and the countr yis again placed on a sound agricultural basis. Peasants are hesitating to sow any more grain .than they themselves need, as they fear its seizure by the bolsheviki. Owing to the shortage of seed grain, which has been used for food, Russia will be compara tively without crops in 1919 and this condition will extend into 1920, even if the country is restored to peace. "The outside world, particularly America, must be prepared to feed the most of the Russian people for at least six months after peace is restored," a member of the food committee said today. "And so long as Russia remains without crops, the rest of Europe must also look toward America for the grain which formerly poured out of Russia's Bal tic and Black sea ports." Daniels Leaves Washington, March 14. Secre tary Daniels left Washington today for New York to embark tomor row on the transport Leviathan for his European trip. He will attend tonight in New York the dinner to be given by the democratic national committee in honor of Homor Cummins. The Proper Classification. Two negro volunteers, newly Inducted into ths service, met ln--a barracks and proceeded to Ret acquainted. Say," Inquired ths smaller, "whutwut you wen you wus In civil life?" "Ms? I wui a Hon tamer." "Tou wus a w'lch?" '1 wus a Hon tamer I broks Hons fur a llvln' than whut!" "Is dat so? Tell me, how does you tame a lion?" "It's very simple." stated ths big man, "Fust, you plrks out yors lion I 'most ginerally always picks me out a wiloi one,- Den you open the cage do' and jump Inside and slam de do' behind yoo. Course de ltori he come at you wtd i '1 his teeth showin'. Tou waits ontwill he s right on you and den you busts him crost de nose wtd an Iron bar or somethin'. Den you holds him by de power of de human ays whilst you backs him into a corner; and den you twists his Jaws open wld yore hands and you rab a holt ot his tonisue and drag him around de cage a few times jest to show htm who's ds boss. And sfter dat you tames him down and teaches him a few tricks, sech ss Jumpln' ovsr a pole and letUn' you stick yors hand down Inside his mouth and so forth and so on. I uster git a hun'ed dollahs a week for beln' a Hon tamer." "Say, nigger," quoth the little darky, "yoo ain't no Hop tamer you'ra a Iyln' Scoundrel." Saturday Evening FoiV at St. Mihiel Region 1 side of the Fifth and Sixth regi ments of marines that figured so conspicuously in the St. Mihiel re gion and Bellau-Woods. He re turned home just a month ago, and at present is connected with the sales department of the Western El gin Motor company. ficial, and during recess and after court adjourns flirts persist in show ing me attentions. I am a married woman and the only reason my hus band is not in court is that he has been ill for a fortnight." Stockings for the Year. A dozen pairs of silk stockings and a lot of American Beauty roses and orchids had come to her apart ment as anonymous gifts, Mrs. Inch said, and she admitted naively that she was wearing a pair of the Stockings. Mrs. Inch appealed ' to, Eugene McGee, one of her counsel, to insist that John Markey, one of Assistant District Attorney Talley's clerks, find some other object than shapely feet to attract his attention. He spent the entire day yesterday, she declared, in gazing. When she dis covered today, as she claimed, that her feet still interested him she complained to her lawyer. The clerk was asked to change his line of vision. Before her fainting spell termi nated the day's hearing Mrs. Herr man testified that a woman who said she was "May Hayes," but whose roice she recognized later as that of the defendant actress, offered over the telephone on June 14 to furnish her with evidence for a di vorce from her husband, who, she said, had, with a friend, entertained two women over night in his apart ment. A trap was laid, $215 in marked money was handed over and the defendant was arrested, the witness testified. BERLIN CLEAR OF SPARTACANS N017JISARMED Insurrection Suppressed, Says Minister Noske; Disarma ment of Population to Be Hastened. Basel, March 14. The Berlin in surrection may be considered as suppressed, Gustave Noske, the min ister of defense, announced in the national assembly at Weimar today, a German dispatch reports. Only one suburb remained to be cleared of the Spartacans, the minister stated. "The disarmament of the popu lation must be hastened," Herr Noske said. "It is especially the fault of cer tain newspapers, noftbly the Frei heit and the Red Flag," he contin ued, "that acts of pillage, brigand age and murder have been commit- CADILLAC The only aristocracy in motor airs, now, is aristocracy of merit" - - - - - - Jones - Hansen Farnam AMERICANS AND JAPANESE CLASH AT TIEN TSIN Marines Raid Consulate in Retaliation Treatment Given U. S. Soldiers by the' Brown Men. Peking, March 14. (By the Asso ciated Press.) American marines have raided the Japanese concession at Tien Tsin, forcing their way into the Japanese consulate and assault ing the consul, according to dis patches received here. The trouble is said to have been caused by the rough treatment given American soldiers who became dis orderly in the Japanese quarter of the city. Japanese soldiers drove cut the American with fixed bay onets, it is said, wounding two of them seriously. The next day 200 angry marines, who were off duty, paraded through the Japanese con cession and, it is alleged, they at tacked every Japanese encountered. When the marities reached the con sulate they forcibly entered, it is re ported, and assaulted the consul, whose injuries are understood to be serious. The consular body is deliberating on measures to be taken to restore normal conditions. It is said that feeling is running high at Tien Tsin. Brief Report. Washington, March 14. A clash between American troops, a Japa nese policeman and some civilians at Tien Tsin was reported to the State departmeent today by Minis ter Reinisch at Peking. The min ister said he had sent First Secre tary Spencer to Tien Tsin to investi gate and report. No mention was made of a raid by American marines in the Japa nese consulate and the wounding of the consul, reported in a Peking dispatch to the Associated Press. The minister's message was brief and gave no details. In the absence of complete infor mation, officials were not willing to discuss the incident for publication. Privately, however, it was said if the Japanese consulate had been violated, of course the guilty would be punished and a proper apology would be made to Japan. The Jap anese consulate is located in a sa loon and restaurant section of Tien Tsin and brawls there in the past are said to have been not -infrequent. Government officials were greatly disturbed today by the news from Peking that American marines raided the Japanese consulate at Tien Tsin and seriously injured the consul. . Navy department officials doubted that 200 marines were involved in the raid as reported, because no ma rines are stationed at Tien Tsin and the entire contingent at Pek ing, three or four hours' ride away, numbers only a few hundred. Only the presence of a number of Ameri can ships in port, of which the de partment has not been advised, could account for so many marines being ashore and off duty at Tien Tsin. The American force stationed at Tien Tsin is the 15th regular in fantry regiment, which has been there for several years and which is composed entirely of veteran sol diers. Czech Situation Delicate Warsaw, March 14. Notwith standing the request of the inter allied committee, the Czechs have re fused to evacuate part of the region near Teschen, and the situation seems to be i delicate. The Czechs claimed that the commission was in complete as a result of the departure of General Grenart, a French rep resentative, for Paris, and of Prof. A. C. Coolidge, an American dele gate, for Warsaw. ted in Berlin, as they have been in citing the people for months past. The independant socialists did all they could to support these dis graceful, shameless actions. The great mass of the workmen of Ber lin are honest men, but impure ele ments seem to have crept in among the loyal, thoughtful workers. The hyenas of the revolution began to intrigue before martial law was pro claimed and before the troops had been ordered to advance upon Ber lin." MAXIMS - Cadillac Co. at 26th Adriatic East Shore Must Be a Part of Jugo-Slavia Count Louis de Voinovitch j Transfer of Fiume District j Italian Rule, Would Would Subvert Cause Allies Fought For, Says Ad viser to Serb Peace Delegation. By COUNT LOUIS DE VOINO VITCH. (Special Adviser to the Serbian Delegation to the Peace Con ference.) Paris, March 13. Unless Italy givei up her claims to the east shores of the Adriatic and no longer insists on the annexation of Fiume, Istria and Dalmatt'a, Jugo-Slavia faces the same situation as did France when she lost Alsace-Lorraine. Those regions are Slavic, and if not given to the Slavs they will become the seeds of another war which will again threaten .the peace of the world. The last war was fought to make the world safe for democracy, to liberate people who have long suf fered under the imperialistic yoke of foreign masters. To transfer the Slavic lands of the Adriatic from the Austrian to the Italian crown, therefore, is to subvert the very cause for which the allies fought. Jugo-Slavia has arisen out of the ruins of medieval Austria. It must include within its boundaries all those countries which are ethnologi cally akin. Enumerating them in their order from north to south, first on the west and then on the east, these countries are: Carinthia, South Styria, the Goritzia district, Carni ola, east Istria, and its islands, Croa tia and Slavonia (to the eastward) Fiume and its hinterland, Dalmatia and its islands, Bosnia and Herze govina, Montenegro, Baranja, Backa, and Western Banat (southern Hun gary), Medjumurie, Synnia, Serbia (and Macedonia). Will Weld Nations. These regions constitute the west ern half of the Balkan peninsula, bounded by the rivers Maros, Dan ube, Timok and Vardar, the Adriatic sea and the foothills of the Alps. It will weld together into one na tion the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, who have long dreamed of national unity despite the oppression of cen turies under the Austrian, the Turk, the Magyar and the Venetian. Jugo-Slavia will thus possess a population of at least 12,000,000 and under proper democratic institutions and educational and industrial de velopments it should become a power that will bar German aggres sion and German intrigue from the reconstruction of German Mittel Europa. Jugo-Slavia has vast natural re sources, which can be made the basis of great wealth if proper con- Eiunication is established with the utside world. The country must have railronds and ports. If Italy, 1621 FARNAM STREET Newest Styles in Women s Spring Apparel Models that express the The NpW They are suPremely graceful and neat ' . in appearance and reveal all those Spring charming style innovations Box nr Coat and Blouse Coat styles Tailored OUltS Semi-Tailored and new vest effects in Tricotine, Poiret Twills, Poplins, All Wool Ser$e, principally Navy Blue, Tan and Black. $25, $35, $39.50, $45 up to $85 Dolmans, Capes, Coats We searched the show rooms of the most exclusive manufac turers for the prettiest we could find and we feel that we have them a splendid variety of fabrics Silvertone, V lourg, Tricotinei and Poplint. The season's new colors of "Pekin," "Henna." and "Navy", partial and full fancy silk lined - $25.00 to $75.00 Spring Dresses Many beautiful new dresses are arriving every day stunning models of Georgette,' Taffeta, Satin and Combinations, and the prices are pleasingly small $25.00. $32.50. $35.00. $39.50 NeW RIoUSeS Georgette, Crepe de Chine and Wash f c , Silks, $5.75, $6.75. $7.50. tor opring $8.95. $12.50. 1621 FARNAM STREET From Austrian Domain to Mean Another War as It however, takes the whole eastern coast of the Adriatic down to the southern tip of Dalmatia, Jugo-Slavia will be pu'ftically throttled to the westward. It will be impossible to connect it with western Europe either by railroad or steamshipjjnes without going through Italian hands. Among the railroid plans considered is one to unite Fiume on the Adri atic with Belgrade, where it can con nect with Bucharest, Salonica an-1 Constantinople, running through the valley of the Save. Agricultural and Mineral Wealth. The country of the Serbians, Croats and Slovenes can yield not only agricultural products, hogs from Serbia, cattle and ccm from Croatia, wood and fruit from all sections; but it also contains mineral wealth, which only awaits capital and industrial organization. There are iron mines in Bosnia and 'erze ffovina, coal and lignite in Serbia and copper mines which the Ger mans seized and operated. To the east is Bulgaria, which h a non-progressive country, alien to Jugo-Slavia. To the northeast is Roumania. To the north are Hun gary and Germany. Therefore neith er north nor east except through Roumania does Jugo-Slavia hope to find a commercial and industrial out let. No, it is to' the westward, that is western Europe and the United States; and if Italy takes away from us the eastern littoral of the Adri atic and the hinterland of Trieste and Goritzia this western outlet will be cut off. The only alternative will be German commercial and industrial vassalage, and the constant exten sion of German influence into the Balkans and southeastern Europe. Harrison Grand Jury Meets Logan, la., March 14. (Special.) Judge E. B. Woodruff, presiding in the district court of Harrison county, has been a busy officer since court convened here the first'of the week in the matter of assignment and equity cases. The following grand jurors were drawn for the term: E. M. Hitchcock, foreman; John Graham, George Holben, Gus Hamann, Fred Powley, A.W. Gaines. O. L. Case is clerk and J. B. Hardy baliff. Hold Caucuses Missouri Valley, la., March 14. (Special.) Caucuses were called for the different wards in Missouri Val ley for tonight to place iu nomina tion on the republican as well as on the democratic ticket candidates for mayor, city treasurer, city as sessor and two councilmen. latest fashion patterns. NO DISCUSSION ALLOWED HUNS ON FOOD PLANS Decision of Allied Powers for Turning Over of Shipping Presented to Delegates at Brussels. Brussels, March 14. The deci sions of the allied powers providing for the turning over by Germany ui merchant ships and securities in ex change for food was presented to a German delegation here today by an allied commission headed by Vice Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss ol Great Britain. The Germans wcr permitted to ask questions, but no discussion was allowed. It is said 'that Under-Secretary von Braun had prepared a speech in which he would tell the allies that the feeding of Germany was a mat ter of interest to all the western powers. The allies have offered to furnish food until next harvest, but the Germans were ready to urge that the only measure that would cause a great, improvement in the internal situation of Germany would be the sending of food in quantities pro portionate to Germany'g needs and the fixing of financial conditions which are satisfactory. Some Ifery Fine Victor Just Received Be Sure and Hear Then SATURDAY 18473 Smiles, 85c 18496 I'm Always Chasing Rainbows, 85c 18526 Till We Meet Again, 85c 18523 In the Land of Beginning Again, 85c 16967 Herd Girl's Dream, 85c Violin, Flute and Harp 64758 Valse Bluette, $1.00 Heifetz 183S0 Aloha Land, 85c 74570 Dance of the Goblins, $1.50 Heifetz 18493 When You Sang "Hush-a-Bye Baby" to Me, 85c 64644 Souvenir, $1.00 Elman MEM' Omaha's Mush: Center The Neusteter Company of Lincoln, Neb. Require the services of experienced salesladies for their suit, dress, and millinery departments. Apply in person or by mail, state experience, age, salary and refer ences. Apply at once. Fl Cuticura Healed After Two Months' Treatment. "I had trouble with falling hair, and found it was due .o dandruff. My hair was falling out by handfuls, and was ter ribly uneven and dry. The acales were contin ually falling on my cloth- lr rr mrA m .rain it r o that I could not sleep. v i (,(1 Cuticura Soap and Ointment and found relief almost instantly, and aftertwo months' treat ment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Gladys Cilbertson, Belmont Add., Owatonna, Minn. Once clear, keep your skin clear by using Cuticura Soap and Ointment for every-day toilet purposes. Be sure to test the fascinating frytrsnte of Cuticura Talcum on your akia. The Soap. mm F CAUSES FALL NG