AxllS SUNDAY OREGONIAN PORTLAND. DECE3IBER 28, 1919. FORMAL AS WELL AS SPORT CLOTHES IN DEMAND FOR WEEK-END AT BIG HOTELS Dinner and Dance Gowns of Black Velvet Are in Vogue as Holiday Togs for Mid-Winter Affairs Angora Fur and Wool Worn Extensively. 5279-Zhmrerl 50S6- YJrSte S?7J?0-r glove, embroidery In blue and gray and a nutria collar. Gray boot tops and a grray hat with blue ostrich com pletes the color schame. Because of Its unusual style this evening wrap (5066) will command attention even at a bigr hotel where all the evening wraps are sumptuous. Fringes of white angora show up- in strong relief against the black velvet of the wrap and the long-waisted ef fect and the way It is drawn closely around the figure by thrusting the hands through slashes at the front are features of special interest. Half a dozen rich silk tassels dangle from the cord fastening. Were not the lines so close at shoulder and ankle, the very bouffant silhouette at the hip would be toq bulky for grace, but the drapery has been most cleverly managed, and this velvet dinner gown (6846) is stun- - . , I I ning. wn me DiacK velvet peacocK l'i unitize una ueon eniuruiuereu wnu sparkling cut steel beads. Two long ; feathers wind up the skirt and feath- ery emDroiaery in cut steel lorms a suspender effect on the draped bodice. The velvet is draped with apparent simplicity and the effect is very dis tinguished. The main consideration in a week end negligee is "how will one look in it if a sudden appearance en negligee should be essential?" Any number of happenings are possible, which may call a week-end negligee before the public eye and it wants to look Its very best. Surely this enchanting costume (6864) of pale pink chiffon embroidered in delicate gold threads could face any emergency and not mind being seen a bit. And the lace and chiffon cap. shaped like a smart continental chapeau, comes down well over the hair. ANKLETS SET WITH JEWELS ULTRA-FASHION FOR WOMEN Decorations Costing Small Fortune, If Purse Warrants, Available to Satisfy Most Recent Feminine Fad. I 'V rioNlVi.iiM,i- si : ft .i!!:i:'i!'i';!i!i!i!!;!ji!::(ijs .i!j.:!;i!:-: W 1 WISH players generally could be brought to realize the importance of paying strict attention to the dummy hand and basing their own play, as far as possible, upon what it discloses. There are some who seem to think the exposed hand Is for the benefit, of the declarer only, and that he alone can or should profit by its disclosures. Far from it: the dummy hand, with its strong or weak points, as the case may be, Is open to all, and all have an equal right to benefit by what It reveals. Indeed, the player, be he declarant or ad versary, who shapes his own play as far as .he can according to what he sees in the dummy hand is the player who has a correct appreciation of the game of auction and Its at times In tricate and knotty problems, and who generally makes the most of his hand. One of the very important things for the adversary to note as concern ing the dummy hand, especially at a no-trump declaration, is the likeli hood of Its bringing in a suit. Have you ever noticed at a no-trump dec laration that it is usually the dummy rather than declarant who brings in a suit? This Is;easUy understandable when it is reflected that the no-trump hand is generally made up of short high-card suits rather than of long suits. The hand, to be sure, by the very nature of things contains 'one suit of at least four cards, but four is simply average numerical strength and at best Is good for but four tricks. A suit of four, in other words, is the shortest long suit that one can hold. It Is the suits of five or more that count for most at a no-trump dec laration, and the suits that each side should endeavor to establish and bring In for its side at the same time that it tries to prevent the op posing side from accomplishing a sim ilar object. If the dummy hand reveals a long his Jack the master card. He de voutly hopes of course that It is rather than A whose hearts are es tablished that holds the queen. In this he is disappointed. A wins with queen and at Tricks 10 and 11 makes his two re maining hearts. Trick 12 goes to declarant with the ace of spades and Trick-13 with the diamond Jack. Z to be sure makes his contract, one trick, but had B played differently he would easily have made game. The hand would havo gone thus: Trick. A j Y j B j Z 1 7 5 Af 4 2 Q" 6 9 J 3 10 I 2 K 4 7a. 3 4 J 5 6 5 6 8 6 7 A 2 7 9 3 K4 8 8 10' 4 Q A 3 5 4 J 10 24 A 64 34 11 8 K 74 94 12 64 84 J4 13 Q4 10 104 K4 Denotes winner of trick. Trick 1 A. as before, would lead forth his best heart. B would win with ace. and at Trick 2, without giving a thought to dummy's hand and its possibilities, would return his partner's lead, and no doubt feel exceedingly complacent over the act. Z would pass the trick. A would win with queen, and at Trick 3 have a third heart round, Z winning with king. Z's course Is now simple. At Trick 4 he would lead Jack of clubs, which would doubtless hold the trick, and at Trick 5 follow with the club 8. which would also hold the trick. At fliijjjjjjjjjjjjWiBB Hi 5- " . .., -if -jj ' thick and well "loppered") with 1 : teaspoon soda In place of the baking powder. In using sour milk for corn meal cakes it Is generally best to soak the meal In the cold sour milk over night, adding the remaining in gredients in the morning. In any of the above mixtures mo lasses or syrup may be used (to flavor and to aid In browning the cakes) In place of the sugar mentioned in the recipes. Buckwheat Cakes With Yeast. One ; quart lukewarm water. 1 teaspoon salt, about 3 cups buckwheat flour. Vi cup white bread flour. 1 cake fresh compressed yeast. 2 tablespoons mo lasses. Boil the water, cool to luke warm, soften the yeast cake In. a lit tle of the water, then mix with the rest, adding the salt and molasses and the mixed flours to make a rather thin batter. Let rise over night. Beat In '4 teaspoon soda and than bake on the griddle in the usual way. Save 1 cup of the batter to use as "starter" instead of the yeast for next day's bath (and this time use teaspoon soda if necessary) If the cakes are made dally. Make a fresh sponge when needed. If homemade yeast is used instead of compressed yeast the amount of water should be proportionally reduced. Some makers add a few dry sifted bread crumbs to buckwheat cake batter to give a lighter consistency. Trick 6 he woulit tear! his lut club unestablished suit which it Is reason- ! 1h --a WOuld be forced nd dummv'H able to suppose the declarant will try 8ult become established while he still to establish and bring in. the adver- r,.majned with re-entry. B being now sary should closely study the hand in . (n tho lead Rn1 having no card of his combination with his own and see If partner's suit to lead him, at It is possible to circumvent tnts end. , Trick 7 would come out with king He can often do so by depriving the 0f spades the lead of the diamond ORIENT l. .Il-.W BLED SKKPKJtTfl FASHION'S MILADY. Underwood Photo. LATEST CRAKE FOR Jeweled serpents in the form of anklets are among the latest novelties that may cost a small fortune or be less expensive as the taste and pocket book of the purchaser dictates, but by all means these oriental conceits should be worn if one would be fastidiously and alluringly correct. Bracelets and headdresses, too. are the craze in things oriental, and these have many colored Jewels or Just one precious stone of rare brilliancy, according, again, to the mood and ideas of the woman who wears them. With a peacock colored chiffon and cloth of gold negligee, these oriental Jeweled luxuries are most fetching. With plain filmy white they are simply stunning, and with black they are gorgeous. dummy of re-entries before his suit becomes established, and then holding up the command of the suit (If he holds It) when the suit Is led. as long as he can, or until it is evident the declarant has no more of the suit. The chances of the suit being brought In thus become reduced to a mini mum. If. the dummy hold a number of re-entries, such policy of course can not be made effective. It applies to cases only where he holds but one or possibly two re-entries, and the ad versary's holding is such that condi tions in this respect seem favorable to the accomplishment of this end. The gist of the whole play consists an depriving the dummy of re-entries and at the same time holding up ine command of his suit until the declar ant has no longer the power to lead him the suit. The following hand beautifully illustrates this point. 6 5 K Q 10 9 i 3 4 A 5 4 3 2 V Q 10 S 7 3 7 4 Q 6 2 10 9' A 9 2 A 6 4 10 8 7 K 5 4 K J 4 ' 4 j: K J 9 3 A J 8 Z, the dealer, bids "no trumps" and holds the bid, though Y. with a long unestablished suit and but one re entry, which he will be forced to give up to the first round of the suit, would have shown better Judgment had he sounded the warning bid of "two clubs." The hand went as follows: Trick. I A j Y j B I Z 1 TV 5 A 4 2 24 At' 54 34 3 74 3a 4a J 4 6 6 6 8a 5 7a 9a Aa 2a g Q 9 J 7 109 2a 2V K 8 64 3a it K 9 Q4 4a 74" 94 10 8 6a 84 8a U s ioa 104 ja 12! a Q Qa A4- 13 10a K4 Ka J4 would be suicidal. Z, correctly, should pass the trick, and B at Trick 8 would follow king with queen. To this trick Z would play ace and at Trick 9 make the Jack of spades, putting the dummy in the lead at Trick 10 with a diamond. At Tricks 11. 12 and 13 dummy would make his three remaining clubs. Z would thus score three by cards, or 30 (game) and. as it was the rubber good score not because of Its own good play though Z undoubtedly im proved all his opportunities but be cause of bad play on the part of the .pposing side, because of the oppon ents' failure to consider the possibili ties of the dummy hand and turn the situation to their benefit. In the hand as first played Z had no -chance and could simply make the best of a 'bad situation. I wish particularly to call the atten tion of players In the hand as Just Played to Z's failure at trick 7 to put up ace of spades to the lead of king. In adopting this course be made two tricks In the suit rather than one only. He reasons thus: A Is the player who holds an established suit, and the one whom he must try to pre vent getting In the lead. B. it is evi dent, is out of the suit, or he would have led It. Whether B la essuvinr the Des Chapelles' Coup, in the hope at once to force his ace. if he holds It. and thus make the possible queen in his partner's hand good at a later stage, or Just what Is his object in so leading. Z of course cannot tell. In any event, though, he knows he will lose nothing by falling to play ace to this round and the play may give him an extra trick. In reality this proved to be the case. B was compelled to follow king with queen. Z put up the ace and his Jack became good. Had B's follow been a small spade Z would have been forced to play ace to pre vent A from securing the lead. Z's failure to play ace to king led. , i 1! PORTLAND, Or.. Please zlve directions for xnaklns hot cakes. MRS. E. H. Plain Griddle Cakes. Three cups flour. Vt level tablespoons baking powder. 1 teaspoon salt, 3 to 4 level tablespoons sugar. 2 to 3 tablespoons melted butter, 1 to 3 eggs (according to how rich cakes are wanted) and about 2 cups milk. It Is not possible to give an Invariably exact amount of milk, since this would vary with the kind of flour used, the amount of moisture in the atmosphere, the size of the egg used, etc. A little prac tice and observation, however, will quickly enable you to recognize the proper thickness of the batter. A batter made with 1 egg to 3 cups flour would need to be slightly thicker than one In which 2 eggs were used, because of the thickening as well as lightening power of the egg. A coffee pot Is an excellent thing to pour the batter when made, but the batter must first be mixed smooth In a bowl. Use a wooden spoon If possible. Sift the dry Ingredients. Beat the egg, make a well in the center of the flour, pour In the egg and a little of the milk, stirring and adding milk until a thick "sticky" consistency is reached. This is the point at which quick, hard, thorough beating should be given to entangle more air and to break smooth any possible lumps. Beat In the shorten ing at this point. When smooth and light, add gradually the rest of the milk until of the desired consistency and pour into a coffee pot or pitcher. Have the griddle heated to baking temperature, grease it lightly and quickly with a piece of unsalted fat 1 ula and finish baking on this other side. It Is a good plan to avoid burning by very quickly wiping off the grid dle with a cloth or soft paper between each set of cakes and then quickly and carefully regressing it. Many people prefer hot syrup with hot cakes. In any case, serve them on hot plates, as quickly as possible from griddle to consumer. Sour Milk Griddle Cakes. Two and one-half cups flour, teaspoon salt. 3 scant tablespoons sugar, 2 table spoons shortening, 1 teaspoon soda, about 2 cups thick, well-soured milk. 1 well-beaten egg. Mix and bake as above. For richer cakes use two eggs, the batter being slightly thinner, j Bread Griddle Cakes. -One and one- j half cups fine, dry, sifted bread : crumbs, t cups hot milk, 2 table P4MMM butter, 2 tablespoons suger. H I teaspoon salt. 1 level tablespoon bak ing powder, about hi cup flour. 1 or 2 eggs. Pour the milk on the crumbs. Mat smooth and thick, add the other I ingredients and bake as above. Use a little more flour and teaspoon I more baking powder if only 1 egg is available. Any cold cooked cereal may be used instead of the soakeii crumbs, using flour to give the proper I consistency. Rice Griddle Cakes. Two cups hot 1 boiled rice, 2 cups flour. 1 teaspoon ! salt. 2 tablesnoons suL'ar 1 tahli,innnri shortening, 3 teaspoons baking pow der, about 2 cups milk. Mix as above, but add the yolks only with the milk and fold In the stiff-beaten whites last of all. Cornmeal Cakes. One cup flour. 1 Tingle: Wi;i you Kindly give recipe for msklng commercial marahmallows such as we buy in stores; also have you a recipe for fudgo candy? 'Respectfully MRS. W. J. p. Following are standard commercial recipes for marshmallows. I have so many recipes for fudge that I hardly know which to give you. However, In a previous answer you will find direc tions for maple' and. cherry fudge and I give below a recipe for chocolate fudge. Some fudge is chewy, some creamy and some slightly granular, so if the recipe given below does not suit you I must ask you to write1 again, giving a more detailed descrip tion of what you want. If it was a commercial recipe for fudge that you wanted, please let me know and I will try to give you one. Marshmallow No. 1 (commercial recipe) 15 ounces gelatine. 2 quarts water. 15 pounds glucose. 15 pounds XXXX sugar, vanilla flavoring. Soak the gelatine and dissolve in the water. Stir and cook the glucose (without water) to hard ball or about 248 de grees Fahrenheit, then set aside and add the 15 pounds of confectioner's XXXX sugar (sifted) and the dis solved gelatine. Flavor with vanilla, place in a marshmallow beater and beat until stiff. Pour on a slab sprinkled heavily with sifted confec tioner's sugar mixed with a small amount of cornstarch; spread it even ly one inch thick; sprinkle heavily with the sugar and cornstarch: lat stand flve hours, then cut with a marshmallow cutter and roll in sugar. Commercial marshmallows No. 2 3H pounds gelatine. 2 gallons water. 40 pounds granulated sugar, 20 pounds glucose. Soak and dissolve the gela tine In the water. Cook all together about 248 degrees Fahrenheit. Place in the marshmallow beater and beat until stiff. Add flavor as desired Finish as above or drop in rounds on manilla paper, using a rubber bag. Let stand until firm. Damp the wrong side of the paper to remove it. Roll the marshmallows in confec tioner's sugar. Chocolate fudge 2 cups sugar. -4 cup corn syrup. 1 4 cups cream or water or 1 teaspoon vanilla. 2 squares unsweetened chocolate. Stir the bub. ar. syrup ar.d cream until the sugar ;s dissolved. 'Cook to the solf ball stage. Add the chocolate (grated) just before the pan Is taken from the fire. Let cool then add the vanilla (and If desired, broken nuts or chopped candied fruits In any preferred quantity) and beat until creamy. Pour into a bread pan lined with heavy paraffine paper or with oiled manilla paper. Let set. then cut in squares or cubes. Wrap in paraffine paper (If it Is not for immediate use) and keep in a cool place. Denotes winner of trick. THE winter weekend wardrobe, for country wear, presents a much less intricate problem than a consideration of wearables for the summer weekend. In winter, for in stance, you have two sureties to bank on: it will be cold outdoors, and It will be warm Indoors. Therefore, everything you take along will fit one or the other of these conditions. Packing for a midsummer weekend you have a dozen worries on your mind. It may be intolerably hot with a humidity that demands the airiest and flimsiest of wearables. And it may Blow up an east wind from the sea and be damp and shivery sort of weather indoors and out. The skies may smile serenely and sunshine bask on your parasols and ostrich feathers. There may, on the other hand, be a warm, sultry, rainy spell that takes the curl out of everything, yet de mands clothing light In weight yet not too daintily in hue. What Joy to pack for a midwinter weekend without these vexing prob lems anent costume! Tailored togs and sport togs for out of doors, riding togs perhaps, skating togs, one hopes. And for indoors pretty frocks of afternoon and evening persuasion and something irresistible in a negll staa. For afternoon and evening and for mornings too Inside the big hotels take along the very best clothes you possess. And If you do not possess clothes smart enough to pass muster among beautifully dressed people, by all means fit yourself out with such clothes or you will feel conspicuously ill-dressed. At dinner hour you will don an evening gown, as elaborate and decollete as you would' for the opera in town. And if you plan to go to some other large hotel for a visit to friends or for dinner you will need sumptuous wrap and a hat if you choose. Hats -are so bewitching this season that woman simply cannot resist adding them to dinner costumes if there is the slightest excuse for do ing so and though a hat is not ex actly correct, according to best standards, with a full dress dinner costume well, everybody is doing It this year! And some hats do add vastly to the becomingness and" pic turesqueness of some costumes. For example, a dinner costume which has been provided for a De cember trousseau includes a gown of Persian blue velvet touched with a little gold embroidery and a big, drooping hat of gold lace with a crown of swathed tulle in the Per sian blue shade, tufts of soft gray ostrich springing out from under the tulle folds of the crown. With a black velvet dinner gown goes a pic ture hat of black velvet trimmed with Jet and black paradise feathers. Velvet Popular for Evening. The wrap that accompanies this costume is most Interesting. It is made of black panne velvet and has three deep fringes of white angora fur, not put on straight around the skirt portion, but seeming to wind around diagonally, one side of the wrap being shorter than the other where the front edges meet. . The skirt portion is gathered, low on the hips, to a straight, close-clinging upper portion, which is held to the figure as closely as a jacket when the hands are passed through slashes at the front. These slashes and the front edges are bound with black cord and six big silk tassels fall gracefully at the front. Velvet evening gowns are simply the rage. li,ven the debutante has her black velvet dinner and dance frock this winter and two-thirds of the cos tumes at any evening affair are likely to be of velvet. These gowns are not too warm for comfort because there is so little of them in the bodice Sleeves are eliminated and shoulder straps of beads or ostrich will not make anybody uncomfortably warm, no matter how overheated the room. Afternoon frocks of velvet have sleeves to the elbow or sleeves of chiffon, and embroidery -In silk floss or beads relieves the somber tone of the velvet. They wear sport togs at the most popular resorts and they wear dainty, formal togs like this pretty tailored suit, too. The bride who spends part of her honeymoon at the more fa vored resorts, say in California. Is likely to have just such a little tail leur as this (5279) of blue duvetyn Trick 1 A. the leader, leads his fourth best heart, which B wins with ace. Before at once returning his nartner's lead, as many would do, B takes a hasty Inventory of the dum my's possibilities. He sees a long un established suit and but one re-entry. B hojds the command of the suit twice guarded which means that he can hold it up until the third round, by which time the declarant will likely be led out of the suit and unable In this way to put the dummy In. If. therefore, the dummy Is deprived of re-entry before his suit becomes es stabllshed, it will be impossible for the suit to make. Departing, there fore, from the usual rule to at once return your partner's suit at a no trump declaration, B at Trick 2 leads a diamond which forces dummy's ace and his one hope of re-entry. Trick 3 As the adversory who holds the club ace may be forced to give it up on the second round, de clarant sees the suit as yet is by no means hopeless, so at Trick 3 he leads a small club from the dummy hand which he wins with jack, and follows at Trick 4 with the club 8 which also holds the trick. A third round of clubs at Trick 5 forces the ace and es tablishes the suit, but, alas for the side, there is no chance that it may be brought in. Trick 6 B having accomplished all the harm to the opposing side of which his hand is capable, now re turns his partner's lead. Z passes the trick. A wins with queen and at Trick 7 takes a third round of hearts which Z wins with king. Trick 8 Z finds himself greatly handicapped. Dummy has been de prived of his re-entry, he has been led out of dummy's suit, and his spade suit is so constructed that It should be led to rather than from. His only alternative Is to come out with the king of diamonds which he does and at the following Trick 9 he leads the diamond nine In order to force the queen and make stuck on a fork. There should not I cup cornmeal. 1 tablespoon baking be enough fat to burn and give off : powder, 1 teaspoons salt. 1 or 2 acrid smoke. Pour Just enough batter , tablespoons sugar. 1 tablespoon melt fnr th nf r-a U-j, , i .. . , . . haV, nn. ed shorter.inc ftbnut 2 runs milk 1 nr Is in a sense the play of the Bath : til full of bubbles and nicely brown 2 eggs. Mix as above (in bread pan- , . .c" ' -T . 'e-iiiK. me below but not quite "set above., then ' cakes). If sour milk is more con ;''"' ouP applies to- turn with a pancake turner or spat- I venlent use two cups (which must be . ....... . . !, i ii me po sition of second player. The Bath Coup, so named because it originated in Bath, England. Is the failure by fourth player to play ace from ace. Jack, etc.. to the lead of ! King, tne lead ostensibly being from king, queen and others. The idea is that the player who leads king will assume ace to be with his partner and so follow with a small card, which card the player employing the coup will win with Jack and at the next round control the suit with ...... I Thus he will be enabled to make two tricks in the suit rather than one I only. The play is more apt to be I successful, that Is to result in gain ing the extra trick at a no-trump i.i : .ii imii rainer man at a trump, because of the fact that at a trump the third round of the suit Is liable to be trumped. This Is particularly apt to be the case when it ia the adversary who employs the play, though it may happen in the case of the declarer if he has not first taken the precaution to exhaust the ad versaries of trumps. This play should alwava h. - served with caution. There are some in fact, who regard It as unwise, and contend that the same object may be attained, that Is, the player who holds ace, Jack, etc., can equally win two tricks in the suit by playing the ace at once, provided he does not lead the suit back. iavi. s Jk r4lCV Father Time may bring on Gray Hair But we can still retain our youthful appearance by keeping our hair its original color with the use of Prof. John H. Austin's Co-Lo Hair Restorer A scientific process for developing ! the natural color of the hair In a slm- r liar manner to that of developing a f , photographic negative. It Is positive- f I tv the only satisfactory and lasting StIes and Tips About Town. Attractive tarns are of deep blue velvet with embroidery of rather coarse silver thread. Bands of the embroidery about an inch wide and in a close over-and-over stitch encircle the tarn in three broad stripes, one on the brim, another an inch higher and the third just at 'the extreme bulge of the crown. Quite as pretty to some tastes is another model which has lines of gold thread embroidery on a tarn of golden brown velvet. v Women adore the slipon georgette and velvet blouses which are so easy to don for an evening at home, or when one wants to get out of street clothes quickly and into something graceful and "house-like." Such blouses come below the waist and a knotted sash makes one trim and graceful. The neck opening may be V-shaped or rounded and usually an opening on the shoulder and a snap fastener or two makes It easier to get into the blouse quickly, without j rumpling the coiffure. t Baby Wakes Up Smiling after its food has been digested as it should be, which is best done by giving MRS. WIN SLOWS SYRUP The Infants' and Children's Regulator Thousands of wise mothers know from actual experience that there is nothing better than this remarkable remedy for overcoming constipation, diarrhoea, feverishness and other baby troubles. This purely vegetable preparation is absolutely harmless contains no opiates, narcotics, alcohol or other harmful ingredients. If your baby is fretful, cries, or gives other symptoms pf not being well, give Mrs. Winslow's Syrup and note the bounding health and happy smiles that follow. At all Drum gist, ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO., 215-217 Fdtaa Straat. Mr Imk Gnral'Scllin2 Agentm : HanM F. Ritrfc. tt C... Inc.. Ntw Tork-Tanst. Caa. treatment for restorine color to th hair in a mild, healthful manner. Co-Lo Hair Restorer is absolutely harmless and will not Injure either the hair or scalp: Is not a dye; con tains no lead or sulphur' will not wash or rub off: has no sediment, and is as clear as water pleasing and simple remedy to apply. Co-Lo Hair Restorer cames In A6 For Black and Dark Shades of Bron n. A7 Kxtra Strong, for Jet Black Hair only. AS For all Medium Brown Shade. A9 For all very Light Brown. Drab and Auburn Shades. Co-Lo Hair Restorer on sale -t all Owl Drug Stores. Adv- Complexion Powder, 65c OSTARAS: 35c 65c Have you not longed for a face powder that wilt "stick to that you may avoid that constant dabbing of fresh powdct which is frequently so irritating to many particular few .. i . r , .u.. ,.k .11 their freshness and fragrance until you bathe the face or remove with cold cream. Obtainable NOW At MMer A Lipman. Wolfe Old. Wortman Frank Co. A Co. & King. At All Good Draw Store' ' tThe C. S. Welch Co. I New York Adler-i-ka Again ! Adler-i-ka flushes BOTH upper and lower -bowel so completely it relieves ANY CASE gas on the stomach or sour stomach. Removes a surprising amount pf foul, decaying matter from the alimentary canal (which poisoned stomach for months). Often CURES constipation. Prevents appendicitis. The INSTANT pleasant action of Adler-1-ka astonishes both doctors and patients. It is a mixture of buck thorn, cascara, glycerine and nine other simple ingredients. Skidmore Drug Co. (Sold by all leading drug gists.) Adv. mm IS I