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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1914)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1914. 10 MB. AND SIRS. ROBERT M. C. WHITTAKER have announced the engagement of their daugh ter. Miss Geraldine Crofton. to Burton ( Charles Haines. Mr. Haines is the son of Mrs. J. C. Haines, of Seattle. He Is a graduate or Chicago University, a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and of the Portland Golf Club. Miss Whittaker is well known among the younger set In Irvlngton. The wed ding will be an event of midwinter. m 9 m Mrs. Francis J. Bailey, a former popular Portland matron, is again in Portland for a short time, at Hotel Multnomah. Mrs. Bailey has been re siding in Washington. D. C. and visit ing in other Eastern cities for the past 18 months, and many of her old friends are extending their hospitality to her. Miss Harriet Keim, a popular Army rirl of Washington D. C. will arrive to day to be the guest of Mrs. Bailey for a few days, en route to San rancisco to meet the transport Logan. Miss Keim recently returned from a visit with her uncle. Major EuU, in the Philippines, and is an attractive and popular belle. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Goodman and Miss T. Rose Goodman left Tuesday for a fortnight's visit at Sol Due Springs, in the Olympic Mountains. Mrs. R. Ackerman, Roger Daniel Levy and Albert Ackerman returned early this week from Seaside, where they have been visiting relatives. ' s Miss Dora L. Patterson, instructor in Buckman School for the Deaf, has passed three months in the East. She returns to Portland this week to re sume her work. Mrs. Julia C. LaBarre, a prominent member of the Shakespeare Study Club, has just returned from a delight ful Summer passed in the Cascade Mountains. Miss Lillian Leffert. of Des Moines, la., who recently returned from Hono lulu, has been the house guest of Miss Jessie Hammond for several weeks en route to her home. She has been extensively entertained during her visit here. She will leave tomorrow for Des Moines. Mrs. Frank Branch Riley, who re turned Saturday from the beach, where she had been the house guest of Mrs. C. Edward Grelle. was called to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brand, in San Francisco, owing to the serious illness of Mr. Brand, who is a well-known resident of California. IOWA GIRL WHO HAS BEEN VISITING IN PORTLAND EN HOME AFTER A HONOLULU OUTING. ROUTE o Mrs. William'C. Alvord left yesterday for a short visit wun ner sister, una. Frederick G. Wheeler, at Seaview, wasn riAn,-(rA w T wrunof Sr.. and his daughter. Miss Sophia Lawrence, left Monday evening tor a rortnignt s ho journ at their cottage in Gearhart Mrs. A. Tilzer and family return home today from a tnree monms au eence at their Summer home at Gear hart. The Lincoln-Garfield Sewing Club will meet in tneir nan n me v.wmi house, September 11. a rPD TP.lnt T WoHlunrl and little son have returned from a two weeks' visit to Newport, where they remained over after a motoring trip with Dr. Hedlund and party An affair anticipated with consid erable pleasure by Sorority girls is the deuce to be given tomorrow evening by the Delta Delta Deltas at the home of Miss Ethel Risley at KIsley station. Mrs. Raymond McCarthy (Irene Flynn), who has been Summering here with her .parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Flynn, returned Tuesday to her home In Pueblo, Colo. During her visit in Portland Mrs. McCarthy, who left here right after her wedding a year ago, has been extensively entertained. Thomas Greer, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Greer, of Laurelhurst, left Monday for San Francisco to enter on his first year at Stanford Uni versity. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rosenblatt, son and daughter, Millard and Flora, have returned home after spending the Sum mer at their beach cottage in Gear hart, x & Mrs. J. H. Cochran and daughter. Miss Opal Cochran, arrived Monday evening from their home in lone, Or., for a week's visit at the home of Mrs. D. Redford and her daughter. Miss Dalles Perkins. Miss Cochran has visited here several times and her many friends are planning to make her visit a pleasant one. Miss Perkins returned last week from a live weeks' stay at the Cochran home in lone. Mr. and Mrs. Hans Hirschberger have received a letter from their daughter. Miss Clara Hirschberger, telling of her safety with relatives in Aernsberg, Germany. With her aunt, Mrs. Schapler, she had just returned from Berlin, and they planned a trip to Leipzig and Dresden. William D. Wheelwright, who has re cently returned fro,m the European war zone, will deliver an address before the Aid Society of the First Congrega tional Church in the church parlors this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. All organizations of the church and their friends are invited. The programme follows: Two o'clock, business meeting; 2:25, vocal solo, by Mrs. Sarah Grant Bowman, (a) "Happy Song" (.Teresa Del Rugo): (b) "Since You Went Away" (Rasamond Johnson); 2:30, an address by William Wheelwright; 3:10. a violin solo, (a) "At the Brink" (Boysdessre), b) "Melody" (Gluck), by Cornelia Barker Carse; accompanist. Mrs. Samuel Pierce; an address. "The Women of the Bible and the Woman of the First Con gregational Church," by Luther R. Dyott r -WHAT uAnne TgprmmousE Blonses With Sleeves, Long or Short, aod Open Nr.k. With Ora-nndy Col lars. PARIS, Aug. IB. At some of the openings elbow sleeved chiffon blouses have been shown, to wear with the street suit. This Is not a very thrilling state ment, but it goes to show that just at this stage of fashions it would be al most impossible to make full length sleeves obligatory. Elbow sleeves are comfortable, whether it be Summer or whether it be Winter and whatever the trend of the styles. Moreover, elbow sleeves are generally becoming. The women with a good arm revels in the sleeve that leaves it bare above the wrist. As for the woman with the scrawny arm she can always have re course to long sleeves when It is im possible to wear long gloves. Another point in favor of the elbow sleeve, especially in Winter, is that el bow gloves are certainly more attrac tive than those that end at the wrist. The short white glove and the Ions, dark sleeve are very difficult to com bine with good results. And although women may discard gloves at dances and dinners and the opera, they must face the problem of gloves worn every moment when they are out of doors. The Cape on the Blouse. Whatever may be the fate of the cape as an outer wrap, it is an accepted part of the one-piece frock and of the blouse that is worn with a suit skirt. Sometimes it is made of lace, sometimes of the fabric of the blouse. A striking white satin blouse worn with a white gabardine suit shows a deep cape at the back, bound with a haif-inch ban! cf black taffeta. The cuffs and the fronts of the blouse are also bound with the black taffeta. The cape answers an admirable pur pose on the House. For it covers what otherwise is sometimes a rather bare expanse. The front closing, the open neck and the fullness of the usual blouse, the waistcoat front or the wrinkled basque buttoned down the front all break the surface of the front of the blouse. The back is a problem. The accepted collar rises straight away from the blouse at the back. There Is fullness, sometimes, about the waist, and sometimes there is even a yoke, with fullness below it on a cord, in the back. But there are seldom tucks, there are no buttons, and there is often a very plain and unadorned surface be tween the shoulder, blades. The cape fills this in most gracefully. A few of the new blouses of chiffon fasten in the back. These are made with an overblouse with unbroken front of satin or taffeta over a lace foundation, with long lace sleeves. Organdy Neckwear. The new blouses here are still adorned with organdy neckwear, and the throat is left exposed by a low neck line, and for this every woman must be glad. For it Is a long, long time since a fashion so dainty, so be coming and so convenient has been in vogue. One has but to remember the days of glove-fitting lace collars, held in position under the ears and under the chin by small wire fasteners that made life a torment, or the still more uncomfortable days when women will ingly shackled their necks with three Inch velvet collars mounted on heavy buckram, to be duly thankful for the comfortable and attractive neckwear that fashion grants us today. TEMPTING PIES. Rhubarb Pie. Select two bunches of fine rhubarb, pare off all the leaves and peel the stalks; cut them into pieces about three-quarters of an inch long, put them Into a basin with three ounces of sugar and stir them up thor oughly. Put the mixture into a pie dish and cover with pie paste, brush the surface with beaten white of egg and bake in a quick oven for about 20 minutes. Apple Custard Pie. Chop up enough peeled and cored apples to make the number of pies you want, and put them in as little water as they will stand without sticking to the pan or burning. When they are done, mash them thor oughly and add to each quart of the apples one pint of milk, four well beaten eggs, four ounces of melted butter, some nutmeg, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and a half a pound of sugar, preferably powdered. Do not add this mixture until the apples are cool, and then stir all together and bake within a pastry crust. Cranberry Pie. Let a quart of care fully selected cranberries stand in a pan of cold water, salted, for 10 hours. Then wash them thoroughly to remove the salt, take them out and drain and let them dry. Put the cranberries into a basin with four ounces of sugar and the juice of half a lemon and stir them well, adding a wineglassful of a light white wine for flavoring. Put the fruit Blouse of Chiffon. With Satin Girdle and Cape of Cream-Colored Lace, Which Anne Rlttenhoose Says Is Popular This Fall. into a pie dish and cover over with a pie paste, place in the oven to bake until done. This is more palatable served hot, but it is frequently eaten cold. A sprinkling of sugar after it is taken from the oven makes the pie more inviting. Custard Pie. Beat six eggs until they are quite light, then add to them two ounces of finely powdered sugar and a pint and a half of milk. Mix all well. Line a pie dish with crust and place the eggs in it and bake In a rather slow oven for half an hour. Grate a little nutmeg over the top, if desired, and If It Is to be eaten cold, set it in a cool place immediately to keep the crust from becoming soggy from absorbing the Warm filling. Peach Pie. This pie Is good served either hot or cold. Peel the peaches, slice them and put them into a pan. Crack the stones and put in the kernels, carefully peeled, using for every pound of peaches four ounces of granulated sugar and a cupful of water. Let this soak slowly. Mash the peaches in a colander, line some buttered pie tins with pie paste and put in the mixture and bake. (Copyright, 1914, by the McClure News paper Syndicate.) JDvoreecflife JlelenffessanpFuessIe. Copyright The Adams Newspaper Service. The Siren Song of Feminism. AFTER wondering nearly all night what answer to give Charles Chal loner, Marian's most salient objection to yielding and marrying him finally simmered down to a stern unwilling ness to allow him to attempt to di vorce his wife in order to make possi ble this marriage. Yet she knew that she loved Chal loner, and knew that his love for her was deep and genuine. And, although she was confident that their rare tem peramental correspondence would in all probability render marriage a success, if she allowed it to take place, she was nevertheless confronted by a stone wall. She was Incapable of taking ad vantage of this other woman and of betraying her in her absence abroad. Marian was one of those whomen who feel that unseen and subtle sister hood with other women. Experience had hammered this feeling into a tem pered moral coat-of-arms, so that in this crisis it swayed her. Early next morning Maricn packed her things and wrote and posted a brief note to Challoner, who she dared not see again lest he might persuade her out of her path and rule her, de spite herself. She conveyed to him briefly her decision, bade him fare well and expressed the very real re gret that they had reached the parting of their ways. She boarded a morning train for New Ycrk. Seated in te hot chair car and gazing idly out of the window at the spinning fences, barns, truck farms, abodes and villages on the landscape, she felt like a bewildered Bedouin on the face of the earth wandering hither and yon without adequate plan or re liable compass. An utter weariness of the world and all its forces oppressed and sickened her. She envied women who were safely settled. She blamed the deceitful siren sons of feminism for having led her ruthlessly into the misery of this roving, groping exist ence. She rued the day that her sex had had its unseeing eyes opened and had undertaken to solve for itself the tangles of existence. Caught up in the turmoil of the beginnings of wo man's decision to be done with that ignorance which had at least been bliss, and to live lis own iiie, juanau Wlnthron. like hosts of her disillu sioned sisters, would, in her present despairing and reactionary mooos. v,ova s-iadlv exchanged the blows of the new freedom for the blind, serenity of the old pacific order. Pioneers in every line have their weakening hours of regrets for the bold ventures they have undertaken. Tn such hours the warm, familiar fire side calls. And, gazing backward. thev feel the agonies or nomeiess. wretched, forlorn waifs of life. Tomorrow "After All " DrFrederckM.RQssiter. Electricity for Dandru ES. WRITES : "I would like to have you tell me what you think of electricity as a treatment? Is it of any real benefit in curing people of their Ills? "There is a vibratory mechanism on the market that gives vibration and massage. I am especially interested in the massage and treatment of the hair. (2) Does electricity really do what is claimed for it destroy dandruff?" Reply. 1. Electricity is a very valuable agent in the treatment of various diseases IX properly used. It is a rational thera peutic measure that has been very much abused and misused in the hands of inexperienced persons, and, on the other, hand, it has been very much neglected by the rank and file of physi cians in general. There are a number of forms of the electric current used in the treatment of various physical conditions, and each has its special indications. For in stance, the neutral galvanic tub-bath is one of the best measures we have to relieve nervousness of an excessive type, as that following the giving up of morphine or alcohol, for example. The high-frequency current, the violet-ray current, the Flnsen light and many other special forms of electricity have their place and In many instances give excellent results. Massage administered by the skillful hand is a most valuable measure, but the benefits from the small vibrator are more psychological than real, and especially so when used for the hair. 2. No. What Ointment f Mrs. K. writes: "I read a recipe for ulcers, and It is said that there was a cure in some kind of wax. I lost the recipe. Will you tell me what the ointment Is and where it can be bought and tell me how to use it?" Reply. T An rinf Vnnw whnt thin particular r.i v., .... t fa thiif vnn rtxfetr tn. hut will state that most of the ointments sold over the counter contain some wax to give them a certain hardness. The writer would suggest that lr tne uloiini vnn wl.h tn trfiflt are of long standing that you get a little scarlet ntntmant- at nnv ill-IJjr store and. after cleansing the ulcer with kero- , u ..... v, l ntifA a HV ftTinlT some of the ointment and cover with clean cloths, renewing every cay. Oregon Federation OFT JrWTPXfo. Ci t m c 'BySaeahAEvmsJs: 0 UT of the smallest beginning the Dublic health department of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs has grown to a place of the greatest importance in the philanthropic activ ities of the state. Several years ago an arrangement was effected with the National Asso ciation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis whereby the Visiting Nurse Association of Portland was to sell the Red Cross Christmas seals in Multnomah County, and the Oregon Federation to have the sale through out the state. This was a very satis factory arrangement and both organ izations derived a substantial benefit from the sales. This year the board of the Visiting Nurse Association decided not to han dle the seals, and at the request of the National board the public health com mittee of the Oregon Federation has just signed a contract to assume all re sponsibility for the entire sale of the seals in Oregon. Mrs. Saidie Dunbar, chairman of the public health committee, will super Intend the work, and is already plan ning to get the seals on the market early and with as little confusion and delay as possible. Mrs. S. S. Crockett, of Nashville, Tenn., who for four years has been the efficient chairman of the public health rinnartmAiit nf thp General Federation. retires by virtue of limitation and an nounced that her successor will De jvirs. Elmer Blair, of Albany, N. Y. Af.o TtiolT- .n nf the best-known workers in the club world and will bring to her new position a weaitn oi valuable experience and unlimited en thusiasm. At present Bhe is a member of the public health council of the New York state department of public health. She has "passed the chairs" in club wnr-v hdvinir heen president of the large Albany, N. Y., Woman's Club; president of the New York State Fed eration and a director of the General Federation. She took an active part m via health nnnnrilo at the Chicago con- wahMax a-nA Wn rml V SdVOCated the passage of the following resolutions. which are now sent. lor maonnsMH the various state federations: "Resolved, That the 12th biennial of the General Federation of Women's Clubs recommend to the various state tarBtinnD nnri local clubs that they adopt active measures towards secur ing increased appropriations lor mtai state and city boards of health. That this convention recommends' state federations to urge their respective universities id odi ously consider the establishment of i r it! ss fni- avtpnsinn work for the education of the public in the pre vention of disease as a part of the educational work of the State Uni versity, such as Is already being done in Missouri, Wisconsin and Nebraska. "Resolved, That the General Feder ation of Women's Clubs co-operate with the children's bureau in the promotion of health education Dy aavocaung m employment of nurses for rural com munities; and, be it further "Resolved, That the children's bureau be requested to issue a leaflet contain ing simplified information for the use nf mnthors in the instruction of chil dren in sex hygiene. "Resolved, That tne tienerai .r chela tion puts itself on record as approv- !..i.tif.n in the various states and municipalties which requires the reporting or venereal aB"a u" of health, as are other contagious and infectious diseases. "Resolved, That the General reuera tlon of Women's Clubs goes on record n.n.nHnr thA abatement and in- O-O 0.,1 ... Junction law, which makes it possible without complicated, process to nu -it- t hnnoan nf ill fame, such as is successful in Iowa and ten other states." These resolutions wllr 06 onereo. ioi adoption at the Oregon state conven tion, which convenes at Eugene in Oc tober. . Much attention will be given to the public health section at the convention, and several eminent speakers have already accepted places on the pro gramme. Among them will be Miss B. . , tw-a urTtn.rv for the l. ueaia, cci-un-s - - Washington State Association for tne Relief and Prevention oi uucim.w- Snapshots .Barbara. Boyd Idle WItm. A BOOK under the title of "Idle wiv.B" hfls lately been brought out by popula writer. I have not read the booK ana i am uu. uij.udoiu6 4. v,,,crrt t nnriprRtAnd it Is a very ' j ntti.-.a nrt . verv true and pointed criticism of the wives who live idly and extravagantly in apan ment houses and hotels, who take much from life and give nothing. That there is such a class no one doubts. That they are not to be ad mired few will gainsay. But that some are being forced into this position, and that not all idle wives are at heart of this class, may be a bit of news to surprise some. To be sure, many will say that no energetic, purposeful wom an need live such a life if she does not want to. Perhaps she needn't live it in the extreme. But juat as eco nomic conditions have forced women in some directions, prejudice and con vention and tradition have forced them in others. And some of the idle wives of today are the result of such pres sure. A group of teachers were discussing the question of marriage the other day. They were young, bright, up-to-date women of ability and education, or they couldn't have been teachers. They were all between 25 and 30, four of them high school teachers. And one and all, they Insisted they wouldn't get married because they wouldn't have enough to do. Their days now were full of interesting, helpful work. If they married, they averred, time would hang on their hands. The role of Idle Wives did not appeal. And so they preferred to remain single. It will be argued that no married woman need be idle while the care of a home and children deevolves upon her. But these women knew little or nothing of housekeeping. They did not care for It. And as must huBbands do not want their wives "to work," as husbands phrase it, there was noth ing ahead of these women but house keeping or the Idle life of the apart ment or boarding-house. Prejudice, convention, tradition call it what you will as embodied as yet In the most of mankind, will not permit a wife to work at her chosen vocation, whatever It may ba, after the marriage cere mony. She can settle down to house keeping, which evidently, according to masculine logic, is not work, or she can do nothing. But to take a posi tion, professionally or commercially, after she has taken his honored name Is not to be thought of. It would re flect on him, upon his ability to pro vide for her. So if - she has no in clination, no ability or no knowledge of housekeeping, Bhe must perforce abide in an apartment-house, twiddle her thumbs, play bridge or shop and come under the classification of idle wives. Some women, I admit, enjoy this programme. Some prefer it. But not all. Some drift into It, because the life has been thrust upon them. But not all idle wives are idle from preference, unless It be the preference not to do something for which they consider themselves unfit. If we do not want Idle wives or an Increasing number of happily busy single women, must we not remove some of the obstructions that hedge the married woman about and which makes her sphere rather restricted for the girl of today growing up with manifold activities and trained abilities? 2 WOMEN SHYLOCKS FINED Gailt Acknowledged in First of "Loan Shark" Cases. The first of the so-called "loan shark" cases came up in Judge Mor row's department of Circuit Court yes terday when M. C. Couillard and T. B. Donahue, women managers of the lo cal office of the Mercantile Credit As sociation, were arraigned. They pleaded guilty to violation of the 1913 law pro hibiting acceptance of an illegal rate of interest on loans and were lined 25 each and discharged. H. H. Drake, William T. Beck and D. A. Griffiths, also are named in the Indictment, but all live outside the state and it Is considered doubtful If they will ever be brought to trial. The authorities realized that the two young women arrested here were being used by the proprietors of the concern and were not sharing in the illegal profits, but were paid merely a small salary. On this account leniency was shown. A result of the plea of guilty yester day will be that the District Attorney will report the case to the State Su perintendent of Banks, who will de clare the license forfeited, thereby preventing the concern from doing business further in this state. The 1913 law provides that upon conviction, any company holding a license of this sort will forfeit it. An active fight against conviction will be made by the State Security Company, another alleged loan shark concern which was the first to be raid ed. B. E. -Ware is local manager and J. Weisen proprietor. PAVING CONTRACTS ARE UP Awards to Be Recommended to Oity Council Today by Commissioner. Commissioner Dieck will recommend to the City Council today the awarding of contracts for paving of streets as follows: East Caruthers street, from the east line of East Thirty-fourth street to the east line of Stratford Addition, to the Oregon Independent Paving Company for asphaltic concrete, amounting to hU & r?t sate, HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK GILL'S Can Supply Your Copy THE J. K. GILL CO. Booksellers, Stationers, Complete Office Outfitters 3d and Alder Sts. GRAY HAIR RESTORE! m NATURAL MEANS Don't Use Dyes. They May Harm. Let This Marvelous Method Bring Back Natural Color by Action of Air. Removes Dandruff. Those gray strands that streak your hair and all too convincingly remind your friends of your advancing years, will positively and surely yield to the gentle, harmless, restoring Influence of ay's Hair Health. You simply moisten the hair with this wonderfully effective preparation and the NATURAL color begins AT ONCE to come back. Hay's Hair Health is not a dye it restores color by natural forces. It contains good old-fashioned remedies which strengthen, up-build and revital ize the hair, and with them Is a won derful element which so prepares the hair that when it Is exposed to AIK It comes back to color nature Intended. You don't have to use deleterious and destroying drugs you can let so harm less and wholesome a thins; as the AIR you breathe help you tn get rid of gray hairs you now have and keep others from coming In. No matter how itray you may now be: begin at once using the natural re storative Hay's Hair Health. It routs dandruff. It freshens dull, lifeless hair. It makes the hair YOUNG looking, brings hack Its lustre, softness. If It falls, druggists will refund price. 26c, 60c. and 11.00 at Drug Stores or direct upon receipt of price and dealer's name. Phllo Hay Spec. Co.. Newsrk. N. J. Adv. S2281.69; Nevada street, from Macadam road to Virginia street, to Oregon Has sam "avlng Company for class B Has sam, to cost S2677.01; Summit avenue, from the southwesterly extension of the northwest line of lot 11, block 2, West over Terraces to Westover road, to the Warren Construction Company for bltu Uthlc paving, at $835.85, and East Twenty-seventh street, from Halsey to Tillamook street, to Oskar Huber for $5140.35. Salem Prisoner Returned. ASTORIA. Or, Sept. 8. (Special.) Otto Hill, arrested a few days ago as an escaped prisoner from the Salem i m-m wa nont back to Salem IJLIULCIIliai J , " today. This is the second time he has been sent back to oaiem iram He was sent originally on a charge of larceny. As a. trusty, he made his es cape last December. Austria's population la 51.340.000. BRIDGE-BEACH & CO. HEATING STOVES "BEST BY TEST." SINCE 1837 ATT STYLES AND SIZES IK WOOD AND COAL BURNING PATTERNS. ANDIRONS- FLBE SETS- SPARK GUARDS HONEYMAN HARDWARE CO FOURTH AT ALDER TheReasonfor Light Cakes Is dependent upon- tfie quality c( the fiaking pow ' der. CRESCENT BAKING POWDER approaches the ideal, not only because it produces light, moist foods, but be cause, of its 'wholesome- ness and ecc , i.'ic pound jtu us lor JSaBMl Hull, 1,,, IU WkMtmWLW Agriculture. aloiii H.ikintr PpwtteTs. KESCENT MfC. CO Seattle. Wn; After Vacation Peel Your Discolored Skin Women returning from the seaside with browned, reddened or freckled complexions will be wise In Immediate ly taking up the mercollsed wax treat ment, weather-beaten skin had best come off, for no amount of "beautify ing" will ever make such skin pretty to look at. The surest, safest, easiest way to shed the dt-'spolled cutlcla Is with the treatment suggested. Put the wax on before retiring, as you would cold cream, and rinse It off next morn ing with warm water. Minute psrtlclea of scarf skin will peel off day by day, gradually showing the healthy, youth ful skin beneath. One ounce of mer colfzed wax, obtainable ' at any drug store. Is enough to make any discolored or spotted complexion clear, white and satiny soft. Its action Is so gentle no injury Is caused and the face shows no trace of its use. Burning heat, irritating winds and dirt are such wrlnkle-mskers that the dally use of the following astringent tonic lotion at this season la highly advisable: Powdered saxolite. 1 ox., dissolved tn witch hasel. Vfc pt. Used as a face bath this Is a splendid wrin kle remover and preventive. Adv. y A SKIN OF BEAUTY IS JOT FOREVER Dr. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ORIENTAL CREAM OR MAGICAL BEAUTIHER Rrmowi Tn. 1m pic. Prcck lea. Moth )'tchr KMh i ftnd Skin Imnwi. ad every blrraifth on beauty, nd de fies detection. It has ttood the test of 66 rrar. and U hmrnilms we Ute it to be lure It I properly made. Ac cept no counterfeit Of Mini. -it UnlDC. Dr. I A. Scyre said to lady of the hautton (a patient): "A you Indies will use them. 1 re commend 'tswaaal'iCraaai'aa the leasl : harmful of all the akin preparation." At drugrwU aod Department Store. Ftrt T. Htpktni k Su, Pup, 3 ; 8ml Jmm J t,R.r J. ! 4 .' : , ' , ' - . t