The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 05, 1911, Page 46, Image 46

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ' r " t
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND,'. SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 5, 1911.
,
nnnnnnr
u mm
7"--- " -'' F i
STUDIES Of-WHAOT
TO SET IIP A IB
SETS FORTH HIS
DEAL OF COLLEGE
ALDSKAtt
5 CBMO. '
REED INSTITUTE IS
WILLIAM T. FOSTER
SCHODLSTANDARQ
' , "' :c .
W-WW U 'At
Head of Reed Institute, in Spe
cial Article, Says Institu
tion Will Be Able to Meet
Severest Tests of Critics.
' (The following attempt to characterize
an ideal college, headed Some Charac
teristic of a Good College,'' and written
by Professor William T, Foster before
-he waennade president 0 Reed Tnstl
' Mute, la retarded as a masterpiece of its
kind.) "
By President William T. Foster.
''With sweeping condemnation' of the
American , college on every hand. the
question is urgent whether a college is
possible which can satisfy the severest
7 ( tests of Ae critics and justify "the full
est confidence and highest hopes of the
- American people. ' We, have faith to be
lieve that such a college la possible.
. Si "It i a college free , to pursue its
mission; as the maker of men and wo
, men and enlightener of mankind, with
unobscured vision of the truth and
- power to proclaim the truth without
fear or tavor-Of, politicians, or religious
" sects or benefactors, or public cries,
or its own administrative machinery.
mould Bar Idlers.
"It is a college that mistakes notblg
' .. fnr o-rontnPR: that having fixed
' minimum qualifications for entrance,
makes no catalogue professions that are
" exaggerations of Its actual demands, and
offers no special opening ir "c
It is a college open only to minds capa
ble of good scholarship and ready. If not
' eager, to make the, sacrifices it Involves.
It is a college that ehuta Its doors
; promptly on Idlers, by -mean of a dis
cipline from which there la no escape;
v ...mi... in ahnrt. that refuses to grow
in numbers and tuition fees at the ex
pense of intellectual and moral vigor.
"It is college, therefore, that never
MrmiM orowth bevond the ooaslbillty
of dally vital contact between- each
student ,and i inspiring leacnero wnr
... .h rk flrat1 men. who-know how
to teach, and who are devoted to their
work1 In the professional spirit Ac
cordingly, it Is !a college that resists
' the temptation to shift any consider
able part of Its teaching to temporary.
Inexperienced and underpaid Instructors
whoso chief interests do not center In
their students. It is a college that sees
the folly of putting large sums into fine
buildings and small sums into strong
men; that pays its professors enough
' to leave them free to put their life-blood
Into the daily work, and thus protects
Its most vigorous teachers from the
temptations of wealthier universities.
It i a college that will not Buffer its
sympathy for Inefficient teachers to pre-
. vent their speedy retirement whether
they are young or old. It Is a college
that resists both the temptation to dla-
slpate its energies by rambling and un
warranted ventures Into university do
mains, and as well, the university temp
tation to substitute mechanism for per-
" sonallty in administration.
Olves Pew Courses.
Thus It becomes a college that gives
comparatively few courses, but gives
them honestly and thoroughly; that pre
sents no unhappy contrasts between the
promise of a catalogue and the perform-
anee of the college: that tolerates not a
single . course i whose demands can be
fiatlsfied by superficial work, or by
two or three short periods of overstrain ;
that will never sacrifice its chief ends
by allowing groups of students, on any
pretense, to neglect college work for
- college advertising,
"Rather than this. It Is a college that
Insists at any cost, on daily application,
genuine intellectual effort, exactness,
thoroughness and promptness in the per
formance of duty, and the other req
uisites of moral manhood that alone can
satisfy the .growing demands of Amer-
. lean cltlsenship.
"It Is a college that rigidly holds to
the only Safeguard of the elective sys
temthat what a boy-chotwes to tJo,
that he must do creditably; a college
that knows history too well to attempt
to prescribe the essentials of a liberal
education, but does Insist that every stu
dent shall do a considerable amount of
good work In the - department - of - his
choice; It is a college that distributes
Its credits on a scientific rether than a
personal basis, and then puts a further
premium on sound scholarship by mak
ing quality as well as quantity of work
count toward graduation In a definite
way. Thus It combats laziness, super
ficiality, dissipation, excessive Indul
gence In what we are pleased to call
college life, by making the moral and
Intellectual requirements before and
after entrance, an honest, sustained, and
adequate challenge to the best powers of
the best American youth.
Becomes Broad School.
"Finally, It la a college imbued with
that kind of democratic spirit that co
oeerates for the common good with ell
' n" HKPnciFs oi Hociai progreHSi a cni-
lege
- 1 " i - T 'l I LiT) I -3'JIIDIUI III
that 1 not shut off by campus walls;
wirn a view nr its rosponslUimv
a couple mat is religious without being
sertarlan: a college that, with all Its
idealism, makes dally, practical contact
with the fnany-sidod life of city and
state, here and now; a college that Is
(hanging because it Is living: that looks
, forward oftener than backward, yet
seeks the wisdom of organized experl-
ence to light the path ahead, thus sup
planting the blind guidance of tradition
by the safer guidance of scientific in
sight." v
Paint Without Oil
Remarkable Discovery That Cuts
v Down the Cost Of Paint Seventy.
Five Per Cent
... . . . ,
A'- Tree Trial racks Is KaUed to
. - Evaryon Who Writes.
A. I Rice, a prominent manufacturer
Of Adams.- N, Y" has discovered a proc
ess of making new kind of paint with.
ut th use of oU- ' He calls It Powder
paint It comes In the form pf a dry
vowder an) all that U required Is cold
we trke-Tatntweat!ief--proof;
Tinpronr ';ina :.wm ounou ou paint.
It adherea to any surface, wood, stone
or brick, sprads and looks like oil paint
and onts ahout one-fourth as much.
Writ to Mr. A, K Rice, Manuf'r., 608
Nmtti Bt... Adam. N Y., and he will
n-rrt yon a free trinl pukags also color
mi Mil full informMttoti showing you
i ymi tun save a good many dollars,
cnMinnwiiiimiiiiii.'ilMiiniii ii i mi- n mhikiWii i mm mint I txmt'VmmK,imMi m-mvmimmmmmtoimmtum'
, III -Ii " '"'i v V jt'' :
W y- N yA
S'-.Tlui' cut of -woman's college gives ati kdelleat Idea of one itf the styles of college architecture which Is being given favorable consideration. This building is the Women's Dwell
ing Hail at , Washington university, St. Louis, Mo. It is in the Tudor-Gothic style of architecture and is built of native stone with Indiana stone trimmings. If a similar style
of architecture should prove feasible for Portland, and if it should be adopted by the trustees of the Reed institute, there would probably bo erected as a part of "the Women's
college a quadrangle similar to the one in the illustration. It would occupy in the group plan, herewith presented, the position indicated by the buildings marked G,.. border-.
I" . Jng on Woodstock: avenue. The Question of the group plan and of the style of architecture, however, awaits further consideration. ,vAt the right is shown the proposed
J ground plan. The lake In front of the-campus, the shores of which will be developed and beautified, and President W. T. Foster are also shown.
OF
REED IN DETAIL
First Edition of Booklet of In
stitution Tells What Presi
dent and Trustees Hope to
Accomplish Here.
In the first edition of thet Reed, In
stitute Record, which goes off the
presses today, President William T.
Foster and the trustees of the college
of arts and sciences divulge their plans
In detail: -J -.tf
Much: information regarding the Plans
of the officers, that has not before been
given otit. Is considered ' In detail.
'Some Characteristics of a Good Col
lege," a special article by President
Foster, glees' the nubile a gonerai idea
of what the educator hopes to make of
Reed Institute. . ' , .
"The First Class," "Faculty," "Alma
of the College," "Provision for the First
Class," "Buildings,"' "Endowment,"
Tuition and Scholarships," "Require
ments for Admission," "Certificates and
Examination" and "Courses of Instruc
tion" are some of the most important
subjects discussed In the official pub
lication of the college.
Alms of College,
One of the most interesting articles
In the Record is headed "Alms of the
College." It reads:
"Reed college purposes to take full
advantage of Its splendid freedom from
harassing traditions. While endeavor
ing to profit by the rich experience of
other institutional It plans to study
exhaustively the peculiar needs of Port
land and of the northwest, and so to
develop each department 'that It will
serve the community more effectively
than could any merely t transplanted In
stitution. What this Involves In the
way of original, constructive work, will
be explained from time to time, as pre
sent plans mature.' Detailed discussion
of the courses of etudy and the alms
of the several departments will be re
served for future numbers of the. Rec
ord, to be prepared by the 'heads of
departments,
rormsd Century Agb.
"Although the college expects to look
to the future oftener than to the past.
Its general alms were fairly well form
ulated nearly a century ago, by Thomas
Jefferson. In stating the purposes of
the University of Virginia;
"(1) To form the statesmen, legisla
tors, and Judges, on whom public pros-
Iperlty and Individual happiness are so
iuucii i uepena;
"(2) To 'expound the principles and
trttoiHie-of governtr-the"4awiiwttch
regulate tne Intercourse f ' nations,
those formed municipally for our own
government, and a sound spirit of leg
islation, Which, banishing 'all unneces
sary restraint on Individual action, shall
leave jjh '-free-to do whatever does 'not
violate the equal rights of another;
"(J) To 'harmonise and promote the
Mr .f"-nirhiittTrer ffmnwfnptnTWt.
PLANS
and commerce, and by well-informed
views of. political economy to give a
free scope to the public Industry;
"(4) To develop the reasoning facul
ties of our youth, enlarge their minds,
cultivate their morals, and Instil Into
them the precepts of virtue and order;
"(6) To enlighten them with mathe
matical and physical sciences, which
advance the arts, and administer to the
health, the subsistence, and comforts
of human life;
"() And, generally, to form them to
habits of reflection, and correct action,
rendering them examples of virtue to
others, and of happiness wtthln themselves."
ALLEGE PAYMENTS ARE
F
(Special Plipatcb to Til Journal.)
Eugene, Or., March 4.wThe cltixens
of Cottage Grove, carrying out a threat
made at a recent mass meeting In that
city, have begun Injunction proceedings
In the circuit court to restrain the Lane
county commissioners' court from pay
ing for road and bridge repairs and
salaries of road supervisors from the
general fund instead of from a road
fund which does not exist but which
the Cottage Grove people claim that
should exist, claiming that the court in
fixing the levy should have specified
certain number of mills for road
purposes and confined tho road and
bridge expenditures to the sum derived
therefrom. Instead, the complaint says,
many hundreds of thousands of dollars
have been paid out In the last three
years for such work from the general
fund. The 'action was brought' for the
reason that Cottage Grove wants a cer
tain, amount of road money that tfw
plaintiffs allege Is due the road district
that was created by the legislature sev
eral .yars ago within the corporate
limits of the city. .
This Is a parallel cae to one brought
by the city of Extgene against the coun
ty "several years ago and won wdeclHlon,
recovering from the county over $5000
for road purposes, which had been col
lected but not turned over to the city as
a separate'road district.
MAY BEGIN WORK ON
ROADJHJT OF VALE
(Sfieclal 'bhpsteb to Th Jouraal.l
Vale, Or,, March 4. That Vale will be
the scene of much railroad building
within the next month is now assured
through, the trip t6 New York of Con
struction Engineer D. II. Ashton, of the
Oregon Short Line who has been sta
tioned In this city for the past two years
during which time be has been building
the new railroad to Brogan from this
city, as well as securing the-rlght-of-way
and other preliminary, work for the
Oregon ft Eastern Into the Harney val
ley from this city. i
Engineer Ashton received Orders a few
days ago, to go to New York for a con
ference with the railroad officials of the
Harrlman system. ; Op the last day of
last December Mr. Ashton put in an ap
plication for the construction of. 27
milcaof .joadout.of-VaJ..oi-ho-su-4
vey of the Eastern ft Oregon railway
route, and' now u is belteved that his
trip will result in the announcement of
actual work within a few weeks.
fnder a new rulingn Ceylon opium
may be Imported onl$; by; the govern
ment and dispensed under 'the supervl-stow-nf
the rtvIT rneitlrsl "stores.
FROM
WRONG
COST OF TUITION
ONLY $1 GO IN REED
Students Will Bear One Sev
enth of Expense; No Fra
ternities or Sororities.
The cost of tuition In Reed Institute
will be only 1100 a year.' This amount
Is expected to cover about-one seventh
on the amount spent by the college on
tuition, for each student, the generous
endowment permitting the trustees o
charge such a small amount for instruction-
--7-4- rf , '
On the Subject of scholarships the
Record says:
"The endowment is such that, with a
student body of 300. a tuition fee of
$100 Is expected to cover about one sev
enth of the expense to the college for
the Instruction of each student
"Scholarships of from 50 to $300 will
be awarded to students of extraordinary
ability and promise, regardless of sex,
who cannot well meet, the moderate tu
ition fee without such aid."
Neither fraternities noi sororities nor
intercollegiate Athletics will be permit
ted at Reed Institute for the first few
years. More atentlon will be paid to
work. ' ;
"Boys or fit Is whose chief Interests
In college Ufa are social and athletic
will not find In Reed college a con
genial atmosphere,". President Foster
has written In the Record. "There will
be a healthful - interest in clean sport
and every boy and every girl will be
expected to take part regularly In some
of the outdoor games." '
40 STUDENTS MAY BE
DROPPED FROM 0. A. C.
Srelal Ilnateh to Thi Journal
' Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallls,
members of all of the classes have
dropped below 'the -required scholastic
standing for continuances for the work
of this Institution, according , to . the
grades which have Just been complied
by th registrar for the first semester
oft the present college 'year. This may
mean that these students will have to
leave the Institution .for the present
year." ., -, .- :,: v-
The rule of the survival of the fittest
applies to college as well as to any
other line or activity. The college coun
cil, has passed a rule that is designed
to cull out from tho student body those
of Its members who are unable to hold
up their work or who show no dispo
sition to do so. Last year 35 students
were dropped from the. rolls of this In
stitution and unless some. of those now
below the required grade aretelnstated
toy-WrresiaenrwQ
many more will probably have to leave
the college at this time. . ,; , . v
A North Dakota man' has patented a
fire escape consisting of- a number of
inclined planes, slanting in opposite dl
rectlons, , so that a person can slide
from one to another, and thence to the
J yC lLfp ( riEUMiNAJxsnra
j LiAlilJv nT lff"-l oV cowiian
pwnitj l,,""'' ' ; I I I " 1 1V SaaaARDdBMOg 1 r
REH) FACULTY
But President Has in View
Greatest instructors of
Country.
Great care will be used In the selec
tion of a faculty for Reed college. As
yet, in spite of the numerous applica
tions reoelved, no appointments' have
been made. .Only Instructors who ex
pect to realize their Ideal In instruct
ing in Reed Institute, wlllbe accepted.
The school will open in the fall of 1911
On the subject of "Faculty," the Rec
ord says: ' ;
"A large number of applications
have been received for positions on , the
faculty of the college. These ; have
been carefully considered and many of
them will be given further considera
tion at the proper time. Most of the
appointments, however, will be made
from a small list which Is the outcome
of a study, during the past 12 months,
of the qualifications of several hundred
teachers who have not made applica
tion directly, or indirectly. In the
search for an ideal faculty, the presi
dent has visited nearly all of the lead
ing colleges and universities in the
United States.
'The chief compensation that Reed
colege offers such teachers Is the free
dom to pursue their Ideals, as members
of a faculty thus selected, In an in
stitution with such avowed purposes,
having before it an absolutely clear
field, and the splendid opportunities for
service that such a faculty is sure (o
find in what the, general education,
board regards as 'the best unoccupied
spot In the United States for a college
of liberal arts and sciences.'
"The first appointments will not be
made, before nett summer and most of
the men appointed at that time will not
take up their work at Portland before
the fall of. m" . , - -
SOON START WORK ON
VALE'S BIG NEW DEPOT
(6petUl Dispatch to The Journal. " '
Vale', Or., Marclj 4. That work will
start on the construction of the proposed
$20,000 brick passenger depot in this
city ; within a few days (, was the an
nouncement made by Superintendent A.
B. Stevenson of the Oregon Short Line
with headquarters In Pocatello. Mate
rial for the big building is already being
loaded on the cars at Pocatello.
Tot some time the railroad- company
had' been awaiting the action; of the
city council IW the matter of straighten
ing Main street, so following the suitable
arrangement, taken by the council on
last Mondayjiamejhe annpuQCemeBtJPf,
tre rauroaa cniei. i ne newv oepot will
be located on the new track of the. Ore
gon ft Eastern built through the yards
here fast summer, at the; north end of
Main street thus giving a splendid view
of the "Last Frontier- city's busy.'thor
oughfare, ?, With this new Improvement
will also be taken up the putting In of
two miles and a half of new tracks
within the local yards. -
Ml
tremsvaaxso-
V rtT.rryUffAflTiU.
G CBUTDOCAinCCES '
UEOnDCEUTJOOUU
I ADWMXIXATBS -
'J. CtfciMENClMUTIOt.
-l&ieQmKCBiBIs
HIGH STANDARD
Entrance Requirements Will
Be More Difficult Than in
Other Institutions.
Some study of, the requirements for
admission In ReAil collem. in Interest
ing. TO provide. Si high a standard.
ir not a higher standard than any other
college in the Country, the institute will
demand higher entrance requirements.
This Is, injract,lwhat JPresident FoSj.
ter In the Record,' has to say oh "Re
quirements for Admission:" '
"The first requirement for admission
Is the creditable completion of a four
year hi rh SChOOl - mil ran nf UnJ..
grade.' or its equivalent. In the lan-
guageAoi; current college catalogues,
this means 15 vunlts of work. a . unit
being a study pursued for five periods
per ween throughout one school year.
This is the lndlspensible minimum, but
Is not a guarantee of admission. In
general any -substantial subject which
is well -taught, and which Is well adapt
ed. to the needs , of the school, will
count toward admission, said no ilb
Ject or, ' subjects will be. MtlficiaHy,
weighted according to the traditional
methods. The college assumes . that ' the
eohoolB know the needs of their pupils
more intimately than' does any college
faculty; " It ; isthe purpose "of Reed
college not to hamper the work of the
high school, either by attempting i to1
dictate their programs of study In the
supposed Interests of the few who may
go to college, or by accepting for admission-
less than the creditable and com.
plete accomplishment of the four-year
high school course. , .
"The college docs not bind Itself,
however-, to admit all students who pre
sent the neoessary scholarship credits
and the ordinary ccrtllfcates' of good
character. . -
"In , any event, the college reserves
Jthe right to limit' the number of rtu
dents.'at inv Hmn
efficiency. As the instruction of each.
biuubiii win cosi several times as much
as his tuition fee, and as the primary
interest of the College Is In the quality
of the, work done, and the character of
Its graduates, nothing whatever win-be
sacrificed in I the, interests of mere
numbers-. " - " - ,
KENNEWICK1 BUSINESS '
, ' - FIRMS ARE ACTIVE
(Special Dlitnatrh t Tne Journal. " '''
Kennewlck, WashH March f.Aa An
Indication of the rapid development of
the Kennewlck valley the following fig
Siven out,byj,he;cpnmJasjottJjoue
of the town are interesting. The busi
ness of the Kennewlck Fruit ft Produce
company, the Charlea H. Collins com
pany and. the Hamilton Supply company
for'.190J amounted to over 1136,000 and
for 1910 tSSO.OOQ, an Increase of about
30 per cent. This does not ; represent
the total Amount of business for the
valley, however, for many of the ranch
A M OF COLLEGE
ers ship Independently . . ,
No Students May Enter , oh
i Condition; . "All Eyes .Will
Be on Reed," Said David
StarrJordan, sL
Most radical in Its departure from
usual college styles Is the olan of th
Reed Instituted to refuse to; take atu-
Centa on condition. The argument for
this plan is .that-, when students are
taken on condition, the college la ham
pered by the extra burden placed on the
unfit.' No other college in the United
States requireimo high a" standard. , '
"When I told President Jordan of
Stanford -university, j of our plan, ha
considered- It: with- enthtiaiaam u
President Foster. " 'Reed Instltut.' ha
said, 'will be the first college to adopt
such" a plan and the eyes of the col
lege world will be turned upon it
The Record explains the plan in de
tail, saying., .
"Xo students will be admitted '
condition. As this Is a departure from
the prevailing practice among Ameri
can colleges. It beeds ' some mlmi.
tion. To: a. majority of candidates our
colleges virtually say: 'According to
our- prof essed standards, you are not
preparea xo undertake college work.
Although the secondary school oppor
tunities are rreater than v Wak
although the wider range of admission
suDjecis mages lauure ovary year leas j
excusable, yet you have failed to pre- j
bciii vuniiiimrnum requirements. Never
theless, we admit you with conditions.
allOW yOU to try to do rnlW unrV In
the same classes with tho h'
prepared, and, In addition, we require
you to maice up your deficiencies In
secondary school work.' Th ff. nt
this poHcy is to hamper the work. of
those secondary school teachers who
re stnvmg to promote substained, in
telleotual effort; for the prospective
college student lnternreta this
as a guarantee of admission despite
supernciauy or deficiency of prepare I
ation. He is thus prepared for further
evasion of work after ha gains easy
admission to couege.
"When students r AmttmA
dltlon, the . college is hampered by the
extra burdens ntncwi nn th .,nn
Unless the devices for determining
pioynrnuun jor couege are useless,
those students most hMviiv wnii.
tloned' must be, as a class, .least fit for
couege wor. .. yet on, precisely thl
class la laid the heaviest load. ' At tha
same time scarcely anv nrnviatnna.
made for aaslsting these students to
curry ira extra ouraens which, with
all the secondary school aids, they have
hitherto failed to earrv. Th. Inavtt..
ble result Is a lowering of the stand
aros or worn ror the whole colleae.
"The Colleae of Arta and fb.i,itu
contemplates courses In ths fniinwinv
branches: Argumentation, astronomv.
blolOKV. botanv. huRlnnaa
ana aaministration, cnemistry, econom
ics, education. kticmum thna fu.
rts. finance. French. aeoBTanhfr- nr.
man, geoiogy, government, Greek, his
tory, hygiene, Italian. Latin, mathe
matics, mecnanical drawlnff. minaralj
ogy. oratory, philosophy, physiology,
pnyBicai culture, pnysics, psychology,
rhetoric. Spanish, soclolorv and stir.
veylna.
"With the present endowment . theJ
Reed Institute does not expect to offer
Courses in agriculture, dotneatln
engineering, forestry, law. mditn
military science, mining, music, phar;
macy or theology."
1 1 . - i
WIFE IN PARIS SLAVE .
TO HUSBANDS AFFINITY
ttJnlted Prets LeiMd Wire.)
Paris. March 4. Llaht waa thrown
on a curiosity of French life today
when the pUce investigated . charges
maue oy me wire oi M. Pianchon, a
wealthy ; bakery proprietor, that she
lived in terror of her tiuihunH
forced her to play servant to h'ia af-
imity.
The police sav Plannhan'a vrffa am
the drurintrv. whlla Mm eeinU i
carriages, wore the fimily Jewels and
ate her breakfast in bed brought to her
oy wine, nancnon. f
Folk to Visit Walla Wall.
- Spcil Dispatch to Tee JourMl.)
Walla Walla. Wash. Miki, 4T.(
Democrats held the first meeting of tho
newly formed Jefferson liiS ! -i-.
to prepare for the reception and enter-
tamment or josepn Folk of Missouri
who is to visit, the city March 81. ;
$3.50 Recipe Fr
For Weak Men.
Send Name and Address To
day You Can Have It,
Free and Be Strong
and Vigorous.
I have In my possession a prescription
for nervous debility, lack of vigor, weak
ened manhood, falling memory and lame
back, brought ton by excesses, unnatural
drains, nr thai Trillion of vnntl, ik.i
cured so many worn and nervous men
rigni in meir own nomas Wunout anv
additional help or medicine that I
think every man who wishes to regain
his manly pewer and virility,; quioklv
and qutetly, should have a copy, so i
have determined to send a copy of the
prescription free of charge, in a plain
ordinary sealed envelope, to any man
who will write me for It .,"
This preseription comes from a physi
cian who has made a special study of
men and I am convinced it la the aureat-
Antlncp nitiKltia tIAn m
flcient manhood and vigor failure ever
v I think I owe it to my fellow' men to
send them a copy in confidence so that
any man anywhere who Is weak and dis
couraged with repeated failures may
top- dinggrng himself with" hai mrOT pat
ent TnArl!ftlnM. aMuiraxvfca t i-
the o.uIokest-acting restorative, upbuild-
in& orui-ivuuuijiii remeay ever de.
vittcd and so cure himself at linma nnl.l.
ly and quickly. Just drop me a line ilke
this: Dr. A.tE. Robinson, 38 At Luck
Building. Detroit. Mich., and t will sen!
you a copy of this splendid recipe 1n a
plain ordinary envelope free of charge.
A great many doctors would charge I
to 15 for merely writing out a prescript