THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1914. 10 SEPTEMBER'S first dance was given last night by Mr. and Mrs. James P. Barron" as a compliment to their charming daughter. Miss Anna Barron, who has Just returned from a trip to Alaska with her parents. The Barron residence was decked artistically with a profusion of yellow chrysanthemums and blue delphinium, which were ar ranged in the dining-room, huge clus ters of American Beauty roses and ferns being used in the drawing-room. The porches were lighted and arranged lor promenading. The guests included the younger contingent, and during the supper hour coffee was served by Mrs. Charles T. Whitney, aunt of the honor truest, and Mrs. M. G. Munly. KnJoy ing the delightful affair were Mr. and Mrs. Whitney, Judge and jars. m. "j. Munly, the Misses Anna Barron, Mar garet Mears, Elizabeth Jacobs, Carrie Lee and Fannie Chamberlain, of Wash ington, D. C. ; Helen Honeyman, Grace Baxter. Ruth Teal, Kiioua rtumenn Anna Munly, Florence Burke, of San Francisco: Charlotte and Katherine Laidlaw, Esther Tucker, Helen Ladd, Marv Brownlie. MacCormac and Berke ley Snow. Maxwell Mears, Howard Stokes. Philip Jackson, J. E. Steven son, Robert Barron, Ray Munly. Don Tarpley. Donald Sterling, Willard Haw ley, Maurice Dooly, Seaton Taylor, Ice land Smith, Lansing Laidlaw. Carroll and Hunt Hendrickson, Lieutenants Robert T. Snow and Frank J. Riley, of Vancouver, Wash. Mrs. John Nissen left yesterday to speak before the Women's Civic Club at McMinnville. Mrs. Harry Chipman and son, Elgin, of this city, are house guests of Mrs. N. R. Donlin at the Brady cottage in Long Beach, Wash. Mrs. William C. Knighton, of Salem, is passing the week in the city as the guest of friends. Miss Pauline Avery Chittenden has returned from a delightful Summer passed on the Tillamook beaches. She is now with a camping party in the mountains of Washington. Miss Eunice D. Moylan, daughter of Mrs. E. K. Moylan. will leave next week for New York, where she is to study music. She will make her home with Captain and Mrs. W. F. Kilgore (Mrs. Moylan's parents). Master Lloyd Moy lan will enter Bishop Scott Academy September 23 to continue through the year. Dr. and Mrs. J. Whitcomb Brougher, who have been Summering in their cottage in Gearheart, left yesterday on the steamer Bear for their home in Los Angeles. Mrs. Sol Baum and children. Miss Anne and Master Ted Baum, with Mrs. Charles Lauer and Henriette Lauer, will return Tuesday from a six weeks' trip to the Breakers. A charming affair of yesterday was the luncheon presided over by Mrs. Edgar Bramwell Piper at her home rn honor of Mrs. E. D. Cusick, of Albany, who is visiting Mrs. Piper. The table was attractively appointed and was decked with a broad low bowl of lav ender asters, covers being laid for Mrs. Cusick, Mrs. John F. Logan, Mrs. John Claire Montelth, Mrs. Walter Holt, Mrs. D. C. Bogart, Mrs. Anderson Can iron. Mrs. George F. Nevln and the hostess. Mrs. Clifford T. Allen has just re turned from a visit at Dallas with the family of V. P. Fiske, editor of the Polk County Itemizer. Mrs. A. A. Flynn, of Medford, arrived In Portland yesterday. She is now the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. Shafer, at their home near Oregon City. Mrs. E. A. Brower announces the marriage of her daughter, Mrs. Bertha Agnew, to -Arthur Harris, of Oakland, Cal. The wedding took place last night at the Argonaut Hotel, Denver, Colo., where they will visit until September 10, when they will come to Portland and spend two weeks with Mrs. Harris' brother, F. F. Brower, at the Mallory. They will be at home in Oakland, Cal., after October 1. Mr. Harris is a brother of Mrs. Charles Smith, of this city, and is a bank cashier in Oakland. The young people will visit Mrs. Smith during their sojourn in this city. The bride was a former Portland girl. Alfred H. Brown, the noted lecturer of New York, who will be remembered by a number of Portland people who heard his lectures here three years ago on modern drama, again will visit rortland and give a series of lectures on modern drama. This series, like the last one, will be given at the homes of prominent society women, and Mr. Brown is expected the latter part of this month. William J. Prendergast and family are at home In Piedmont after a de lightful August outing passed at Ocean Lake Park, on Tillamook Beach. Miss Alice Buckenmeyer returned last Monday from an extended trip to Cali fornia. While away she studied under both New York and Paris dancing in structors. " -WHAT Sfr tre S Anne QrrgNHousE L saar vSA-y.s J Black Velvet linn. Big and Little. PARIS, Aug. 12. A period of transi tion is always full of possibilities. This Autumn, when we are going from the smallest hats we have worn since we had tiny bonnets perched on the top of our heads to hats as large as any we have ever worn, perhaps, there Js no excuse for any one to wear an unbecoming hat. For although the big hat has arrived, the little hat has not taken its departure. If your face looks well under the overshadowing influ ence of a hat as big as an umbrella, wear that kind of hat. If it is of the rather piquant type demanded by the email hat. wear that kind. About Black Velvet. The black velvet hat, both big and little, is sure to have a long stay in fashion. It is popular; but even popu larity cannot spoil anything as usually becoming and attractive as the black velvet hat. Georgette favors the huge Spanish sailor shape; Reboux and Tal bot cling to the small toque. A style that ought to become popular is the tricorn. for in these warlike times it lends itself easily to a military look. Perhaps the best established mode of trimming the black velvet tricorn is to bind it at the top of the three-cornered brim with gold or silver braid. Sometimes this metallic braid is not put on in the form of binding, but ex tends half an inch above the edge of the brim In a finely pleated frill. Metallic braid and various other sorts of metallic trimming are much used in combination with black velvet hats of all descriptions. Sometimes the sole trimming of a big hat will be a big silver gauze rose Sometimes a gilt or silver cord will be bound about the crown and loosely knotted at one side. Again a transparent brim of gold, or PROMINENT PORTLAND WOMAN DUE TO ARRIVE HOME TO DAY AFTER AN INTERESTING EXPERIENCE IN THE EUROPEAN WAR ZONE. f .' . ' 1 f 1 F'' :; . ' ' , v ' . i W " ' " i 1 . ' . . - ' - j r . i MRS. WILLIAM silver lace will have a puffed or shaped velvet crown. Fur, too, is used on black velvet hats and will probably be more usual when cooler weather comes. One large black hat has a fringe of monkey fur flat on the brim, witn : silver band about the crown and a sil ver ornament at one side. Other Trimmings. White flowers of various sorts are used on some of the black velvet hats, and pansies are as much In vogue as they were two months ago. Big, deep pansies they are, of velvet usually, in all the loveliness of natural pansy col orlng. A novelty is a white kid rose not a stiff, shiny rose, of the sort of kid milliners' gardenias have been made of for a season or two, but a soft, luster less kid, as soft as a suede kid glove. This rose is huge and is finished with a big black velvet button in the center. It is placed as the sole trimming on the left side of a big black velvet Spanish sailor. Colored flowers and colored feathers light, pale colors are also used to trim black velvet hats, and one decid edly striking hat, a big sailor, is sim uly trimmed with three or four brown stems of deep pink peach blossoms that look actually as If they had been bro ken from a flowering tree five min utes ago. STOCK THE FOUNDATION OF SOUPS AND SAUCES. A ;t... fnr Stork. tn b a. i in flai-npinw wanrps and bastintr cheap meats, as well as a foundation for all clear soups, is this: Three pounds shin beef. Three pounds knuckle of veal. A ham bone chopped In pieces or quarter pound lean ham. Two carrots. Two small onions or one large one. One large turnip. Four cloves. One bay leaf. One teaspoonful mixed herbs. Kive peppercorns. A good-sized lump of sugar. Salt to taste. Three quarts of cold water. Chop the ham bone and cut the beef and veal into two-inch square pieces. Wash, pare and cut the vegetables in thick slices. Now put them with the meat and the ham bone into a large saucepan, cover with the water and bring slowly to a boil. Keep the stock well skimmed, adding a little cold Black Velvet Hat, Tied Under the Chin With Black Velvet Ribbon and Trimmed With Large Pansies. water to prevent it from boiling too quickly. When it is quite clear add all the other Ingredients, and simmer very gently for five hours. Strain carefully through a cloth or fine sieve, and when quite cold remove the rat and it is then ready for use. When the housewife has learned the wisdom of tastily preparing cheap meats, she will find that she has bones at her command almost every day. If, for instance, she learns to save the bone taken from the center of a steak, the ribs from roast and the carcasses of chickens or turkeys, the liquor from these will form an excellent founda tion for many soups. Say that she has a frame of a roast chicken and the center bone of a steak. Let her crack them up. lay them in the soup kettle, cover with cold water and when they come .to the first boil, skim carefully. Simmer gently for two hours and a half or three hours, then add vegetable flavoring. Stick half a dozen cloves into an onion, take half a bay leaf, a few green tops of celery, a small carrot sliced fine, and add to the stock with a dash of pepper. Simmer gently for another hour. Strain through a soup sieve; set away to cool, and, before using, scrape off every bit of fat that has risen in the cooling process. This stock oi be kept in porceiaia bow; M'MASTER. or a glass jar in the refrigerator, and will remain sweet for some time. (CoDyright. 1914. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Dvoreedlife IGsIenliessanpfiiessIo. Copyright The Adams Newspaper Service. At the Cabaret. ON an oblonge of gleaming floor space hardly bigger than the top of a billiari table, nearly a score of dancers were one-stepping. It was in the Ballin grille, a quaint little Bohe mian nook, which the restless, rising, falling waves of popularity at Atlantic City had for some reason carried ab ruptly to the very crest. The manage ment, making the best of the sudden, glorious turn of fortune, had hired the best obtainable cabarettists, whose an tics were calculated to lift the most blase irresistibly out of their slough of ennui. The little retreat was chic and Pari sien; it might have been transported bodily out of a Leonard Merrick story of the wonderful Montmartre. A tiny balcony, festooned with arti ficial vines, was crowded with a hol low square of little tables, and afforded observers seated upstairs a snug van tage point from which to watch the drama of night life unfolding itself be low. Hither Challoner brought Marian after they had dined irreproachably at the Shelburne. There was a dancer at the Ballin grille, a creature of dreamy charm, youth, well-nigh physical perfection, and wondrous grace. She had taken her place among the grille's attrac tions less than a fortnight before, and vet already a cohort of admirers flocked to its doors nightly to gaze In rapt enchantment at the handsome girl, to dance with her in rapture if they were fortunate, and to follow her with eyes smoldering with poignant envy if they chanced to behold her in the arms of some more fortunate man. Marian and Challoner watched the various interesting angles of this dan cer's conquests with powerful inter est. Without the formality of even an Introduction, Marian saw this girl taken Into the embraces of successive lucky men and go whirling forth on the miniature floor In one of the latest dance movements. "How can she do it?" asked Marian, puzzled. "Why she's dancing with perfect strangers!" "She's here for that purpose," an swered her companion. "She's one of the attractions a bit of the place's properties." "They must pay her well Marian inquired. "Perhaps $75 a week. Grace and the charm command a good price in open market," observed Challoner. "Horrible. Isn't it, for men to ploit a young woman that way! ex She can't be over 22." "In a few years she'll have disap peared from night life. Unless some young spender, or old spender, for that matter, falls sufficiently in love with her to marry her she'll probably be crowded farther and farther down. That's invariably the way of it. Piti ful, too." Marian, reflecting on what she had seen and heard, felt terrifically con scious tonight of the burden of being a woman in the midst of a world of exploiting men. Womanlike, she failed to generalize very long. Her line of thought, gathering swift momentum, whirled around and centered sharply upon herself, her own problems, her own future. Never had she felt lone lier. Her unfortunate marriage, her divorce, seemed to her tonight to have cut her off from the real values of a woman's life. "Come," said Challoner, catching a vague glimpse of her mood, "this is too depressing for you. Let's go. Let's get a bracing whiff of the ocean breezes at night. They're a tonic for soul and body." Tomorrow Challoner Speaks. 1b-NlGHT The Fireflies and the Fairies. ONCE the firefly was just a plain bug flitting about in the night like any other bug until the fairies gave it the power to give forth the light which we now see at night. The fairies were always bothered by the .goblins, who, as you know, are always bent on mischief, and they would, lie in wait for tcs fairies a; night and then jump out from behind stones and trees and frighten them. One night they frightened one fairy so that she dropped her wand and ran. Of course, she was quite powerless without it, and she wandered about the woods vainly trying to find her mates. After a while the fairy queen called a meeting. "Something must be done," she said, "to put an end to the pranks of those goblins." "There are all those little brownish flies with red marks on their bodies," said a fairy; "they fly about so slowly that we are always bumping into them; they could carry the lanterns and we would always have lights, for those flies are everywhere." "I will ask them," said the queen. The little brown flies were sent for and the queen told them her plan. "You will be the handsomest bugs that fly at night." she told them. "But the goblins will surely try to catch us," said the flies. "We do not like them, and they will take us to their home under the rocks. If you will protect us from the goblins, we will gladly carry your lanterns." "The goblins will try only once to catch you," replied the queen, "for the heat from your lanterns will burn them and the bright light will blind them. They will run away from you, I can promise you that." So each little fly was given a tiny lantern with a dark and a bright side, so that when they did not wish to be seen they could turn the dark side out. The next night the fairies started out and the fireflies with them. The goblins were 'lying in wait for the fairies, but when they saw all the fireflies they thought at first that the weeds were on fire. But one of the goblins saw a firefly when he turned the dark side of his lantern out, and he told the others: "Let me catch them," he said; "they are just what we want to light the dark passage leading to our homes." But when they reached out their lit tle hands they quickly dropped the firefly and ran, but the fireflies chased them, swinging their lanterns, and blinding the goblins so they could not see their way. They were glad when the fireflies left them, and they went Into their rocks, and after that the fairies were safe and the fireflies also. Copyright, 1914. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate, New York City. Tomorrow's story "Tom Kitten." Snapshots Barbara Boyd. A. Mother's Work. HE WAS a good-looking fellow, tall, broad-shouldered, with handsome dark eyes and good features. In addi tion, he was good company, jolly, capa ble of devising entertainment for the camp in which he was the worker in a construction gang. But either his mother had been neg lectful of the duties devolving upon her or he had failed to profit by her teach ings. And since a boy, if trained in certain things in early childhood, will carry the results of that training all through life, the evidence seemed to be that the mother had not done her duty. For at the long camp table where all the men ate, he lolled, he spilled his food, he dribbled his coffee, he scat tered sugar, he spilled cream. In fact, his table manners were those of a boy of 8 or 10 who had never been trained. By this lack of training, he offset many of the good qualities which he himself possessed. To be sure in the course of time, when one got to know him. these table manners might be overlooked. But, nevertheless they were a handicap, a handicap imposed in all probability by a mother careless or indifferent of her duty. One does not like to seem to criticise mothers, for generally speaking there is no one who looks so self-sacrificing -ly to the welfare of her child as a mother. But we do all know that now and then there is the careless or Indif ferent mother, the mother who does not train the little ones entrusted to her as she should. We all know the man who never shuts a door, the one who is noisy,' who bangs and slams his way through life, the one careless in dress. That and many other little but nevertheless ex ceedingly annoying faults or habits are often the result purely of lack of train ing, of living In a home where the mother gave no heed to such matters. But for the sake of the child's future, should net a mother look upon train ing in these things as quite as impor tant a part of her work as feeding and clothing her children? To be sure, to most of us, food and clothing seem terribly important, to be sought first in life. And if one must make a choice between food and clothing, and train ing, the decision would be easily and quickly made. But in few homes are things at this pass. And if the mother thinks she is so overburdened that she had time for little but looking after the child's physical welfare, the proba bility is she could, if she would give the subject some thought, reduce to some extent this work of cooking and sewing and thus have time for the oth er. Food and clothes could be simpler. and she could make the opportunity to give attention to less material but no less important needs of the little ones. For, say what you will, it is a hand icap to anyone, man or woman, to grow up with these aencienc.es or training. He may in later life overcome them himself. He may be able to supply what is lacking. But it is uphill work. And while he is making this fight to gain what he needs- he is suffering from the lack. A mother cannot consider her work for her children all done when she sup plies only their material wants. She needs to give them the graces of char acter, the little refinements and cour tesies of life, quite as much as bread and butter. PERS0NAL MENTION. J. P. Kayes, of Bend, is at the Sew ard. F. E. Ward, of Los Angeles, is at the Oregon. E. T. Farris, of Eugene, is at the Carlton. W. W. Heiskeel, of Seattle, is at the Oregon. D. W. Jenkins, of Seattle, is at the Cornelius. E. Rollins, of Pendleton, is at the Cornelius. F. J. Berger, of Springfield, Or., is at the Carlton. R. M. Clark, of Eugene, is at the Washington. J. H. Albert, a banker at Salem, is at the Imperial. F. W. Emerson, of Berkeley, Cal., is at the Perkins. Mrs. Andrew Rust, of Pendleton, is at the Perkins. D. L. Kimball, of Lethridge, Or., It at the Oregon. Mrs. F. E. Foreman, of Palmer, Or., is at the Carlton. J. Berkman, a Seattle wholesaler, is at the Multnomah. Helms W. Thompson, of Eugene, is at the Multnomah. Mrs. S. M. Timberlake. of Coronado. Cal., is at the Benson. G. W. Burrow, a stockman, of Ridge field, is at the Cornelius. W. C. Knighton. State Architect, of Salem, is at the Seward. A. M. Crawford. State Attorney-General, is at the Imperial. E. F. Tindolph, a lumberman from Seattle, Is at the Perkins. Mrs. John Galven and daughter, of Centralia. are at the Perkins. Q. 1. Xhompgon and Mrs. Thompson, Sixth and Alder Sts. Extra Special Sale New Fall and Winter Suits For today and Saturday we will place on sale an es pecially attractive assortment of new Fall and Win ter Suits at $ 25 These Suits are fashioned on Redingote, Polonaise and Cossack (Blouse lines, with tunic or tunicless skirts. Fabrics consist chiefly of Broadcloth, Peau de Soie, Needle Cords, Wool Poplins and Serges, in the most popular Autumn colors. Every Suit in the lot was made to sell from $35 to $40. Your choice for these two days only at Twenty-Five Dollars See Window Display on Sixth Street Cor. Sixth and Alder Streets Opposite Oregonian Bldg. of Fossil, Or., are registered at the Multnoman. Patrick Welch, a i-allroad contractor, of Spokane, is at the Oregon. Charles Hall, a telephone owner, of Hood River, is at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Courtney, of Boise, are registered at the Cornelius. N. A. Desilet and Mrs. Desilet. of La Grande, are at the Washington. L. H, Boddy and Mrs. Boddy, of Rockaway, Or., are registered at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cunningham, of Santa Barbara, Cal., are at the Benson. C. G. Sanford and Mrs. Sanford are registered at the Washington from Dayton, Or. E. L. Shipherd, owner of a hotel at Shipherd Springs, Wash., is registered at the Seward. R. R. Ritchie, general agent of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad, is at the Multnomah. Professor J. A. Larson, of the Ore gon Agricultural College, is reglsteerd at the Seward from Corvallls. Herbert Fleishackker and William Pierce Johnson, San Francisco capital ists, are registered at the Benson. Louis Bloch, president of the Crown Columbia Paper Company, of Portland and San Francisco, is at the Benson. W. Dorres has left for New York, where he will be far a month visiting friends and relatives and on business. Jesse E. Flanders, special agent for the Department of the Interior, is reg istered at the Imperial with his wife, Lillian Netscharj Flanders. FIRST "FAN" DISCOVERED Former Oregonian Writes From Bel glan Congo for Baseball Averages. The world's most persistent baseball fan is an Oregonian. He is Hayes Perkins, formerly of Bandon, Or., who does not seem to be greatly interested in the European war. From Niangara District du Hautbele, in the Belgian Congo, entirely shut off from all news of world events, though near the firing line in Africa, of skir miohna hotwn the TlelEians and Ger mans, he has written The Oregonian for information regarding me stanuiiiB of the Pacific Coast, American and Na tional baseball leagues. In his letter Mr. Perkins says he is far away from any place he can get information about Oregon or any news 'of the outside world. He is engaged in contract work, which will keep him busy for at least a year more, and yearns once more to "smell the firs and drink the famous Bull Run water." The only request he makes is for someone to send him "the averages for the Coast League, also the American and National." "I wonder." he writes. R U MFO R D Portland, Oregon, March 25, 1914 "We have made a complete analysis of the contents of a can of Rumford Baking Powder purchased of a Portland grocer, . and found it to be worthy of the highest commendation as a healthful, efficient and economical leavening agent." Gilbert-Hall Co., Chemists By. THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER WORRELL'S "if Portland is winning In baseball this year." MARKET SALES RUN HIGH Albina Producers Take in $1000 on Wednesdays. $1500 on Saturdays. It is estimated that thofcles of prod uce at the Knott-street market in Al bina amounts to $1000 on Wednesdays and $1500 on Saturdays. On Wednesday 35 producers came to the market. One farmer came nine miles east of Van couver, Wash., with a load of Golden Bannon sweet corn, a delicious yellow corn, which he sold out as fast as he could handle it at 15 cents a dozen and 25 cents for two dozen. The regular market price for this corn, which is scarce, is 25 cents a dozen ears. Two wagonloads of peaches were sold for 30 and 45 cents a box. Every scrap of produce was disposed of Wednesday by 12 o'clock. With water at the market the street Is kept sprinkled and clean and the place where the horses stand is "kept wet down." Also the vegetables are washed clean. Several new farmers came to the market Wednesday. Many of the Clarke County farmers have not missed a day since the Albina market opened. NEW CLUB MEETS TONIGHT Irvlngton Park Body May Erect Clubhouse Soon. The new Irvlngton Park Club, as in corporated, will meet tonight at the club quarters. East Thirtieth and Hol man streets, to adopt new by-laws and elect officers under the new rules. Under the articles of incorporation the new organization takes the place of the Irvlngton Park Club, but the name is retained. The articles of Incorporation have been filed with the Secretary of State, placing the capital stock at $2000 and the shares at $5 each. The by-laws will define the eligibility of membership, although It Is expected that all mem bers of the old club will become mem bers of the new club by taking a share of the stock. It is expected to take steps for erecting a clubhouse as soon as possible. Present officers are: President, O. E. Rauh; vice-president. Mrs. Maude ft. Bushnell; secretary, Jo seph R. Gerber; treasurer. Mrs. Louis Heft. Logging Railroad Nearly Hone. ASTORIA. Or.. Sept. S. (Special.) The construction of the 34 miles ex tension to the Big Creek Logging Company's railroad, for which C. L Houston has the contract, will be com pleted in about 10 days. If the weather continues favorable. This extension .pres. Sixth and Alder Sts. taps the tract of approximately 1,000. 000.000 foet of limber which the com pany owns in .lint district. In order to facilitate logging operations sev eral spurs to connect with the main line will be constructed later. Astoria Bulkhead Contract Let. ASTORIA. Or., Sept. J. (Special.) The sanitary and reclamation eotnmls sion has closed a contract with J. A. McKarchon at Co. to construct a built -head ot seawall In the third district of the city This contract will com plete the building of the bulkhead along the city front between Ninth and Thirty-third streets. China Imports wood pulp from Britain, Sweden, Norway and Germany. FIRST OF ALL ON CLAUDIA'S SHOPPING LIST "FRIDAY MY SUIT CHERRY'S" She wrote it in her shopping book yesterday evening after Elinor had gone home Elinor had on such a ravishing Fall suit and she said she bought it at CHERRY'S and Is trying their famous "CREDIT WAY" of pay ing for it. It was fortunate that Claudia heard about Cherry's Just then, for she had decided to have a suit made to order, and was dolefully thinking of the things she would have to do without for her extravagance. Cherry's Fall suits simply cannot be excelled for elegance. They're lovely In every way. The materials are principally serge, poplin, garbardlne and broadcloth the shades are Inde scribably beautiful. It's foolish to -wait for the suit you want NOW. Cherry'e Installment pay ments will delight you. They have a charming; place and a welcome awaits you in the Plttock block, at 389-391 Washington street. For Sallow, Blotchy, Rough or Greasy Skins Some skins require constant grooming to keep them from becoming, oll. muddy, blotchy or rough, or If such condition haa developed, to overcome It. In such chronic caaes It Is particularly Inadvisable to keep piling on cosmetic which clog the pores, collect duat and dirt, making the complexion worse than ever. It's a lot more sensible to use ordinary mercollxed wax, which liter ally absorbs a bad complexion. Apply the wax. like cold cream, before retir ing: next morning. In washing It off. you'll wash awav fine, flour-Mke par ticles of the unsightly cuticle. Hrpeat for a week or two and you'll have an entirely new skin -soft, satiny, spot less and beautiful as a child. On ounce of mercollxed wax. procurable at any druggist's, Is all you'll need. If the skin be wrinkled or flabby, here's the best possible remedy: Mix W pint witch haxel and 1 ounce pow dered saxollte and use aa a face hath. It worka like a miracle, yet Is entirely harmless. Adv. II SKIN OF BaUTT IS A JOT TOUXlt Dr. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER 2 2 Rrnom Tee , pi m- 1"'-XTV pi' Freckle. ir.m saMaaaal Moth Patches. eh St ?- - M and Skin llacses. Zi It T WSl "'I r"ry blemih 35" Q V7 I7 on beauty, and d lira delrctioo. It huatood thrteitof 66 yrars, and la aa harmless w taste it to be sure It i properly made. Ac cept no counterfeit of similar name. Dr. I. A. Bar re aaid to a lady of the hanlton (a ptienl); "A you U.lies will use theta. I re commend '(wrsad't Crasal' s. the least harmful ofall the kiu preparation ' At dr.isgist and : - ' mcnt btores. f Ml I. ieM 4 In, fr, 17 Icmi Jmm BJUX. SW5