The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 18, 1915, Page 53, Image 53

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    0
EVERY WOMAN WANTS TO KNOW H
Design for a .Laundry Bag
New Hands for
Old, Milady
I our child
Needs Car;
By Mme. Qui Vive.
By Mary Lee.
THE ; OREGON ! SUNDAY JOURNAL, 1 PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 18; 1915.
I -It-".
. Fear of old age, with its wrinkle
and other .unlovely evidence of
youth's departure. Is the busy imp that
trail at the heel of Beauty, spurring
her to fresh endeavor. Every woman
know that eventually the year will
. descend upon her head, but just how
heavily they strike, the blow depend
upon, her effort to resist them. If
not how you look today, O charmer,
but how you are going to look 10 or
' 20 years from now. With that thought
In mind you can scarcely fail to do
your best.
After the age of 40 the soft tissues
under the skin dissolve more rapidly
than nature can renew them. Some
times thfs process begins earlier: it
depends upon the woman constitu
tion and the good care he ha given
herself. ,The first tearful sign is a
tiny fold in front of the lobe of the
ear. After that the throat is likely
' to crinkle. Then the hands and arm
begin to look wan and worn. Oh! that
we might always stay young!
The average time fighter seldom
cpnuiders the beauty of her arms. 8he
will care for her hair, massage her
Complexion, manicure her shell - pink
llncer nails, and hunger herself to a
state of starvation for the sake of her
. figure. Her arms are forgotten, which
is a pity indeed, since these good memi
bers serve her well and are deserving
- of the best consideration. They re
spond more quickly to attention than
any other part of the body. The fol
lowing direction for hand and arm
massage are an exploitation of the ex-
act, process given In the most up to
date beauty shops of Paris. . The
treatment is wonderfully effective" and
will positively prevent scrawnlness
and ugliness, coarse texture of skin
and the heavy surface of epidermis
that often forms on the elbows.
Brew of Xagio X.otloa.
The first need is a cold cream. This
.formula is unexcelled:
Spermaceti, two ounces.
; White wax. two ounces.
Sweet almond oil, t.en ounces.
Melt in a porcelain vessel which h
been placed in a hot water bath.
When the '. Ingredients are thoroughly
Incorporated remove from the fire,
adding: .'
Stronger 'rose water, three ounces.
Powdet-ed borax, 40 grains.
Fluff to a foam with an egg beater,
pouring into small jars just iefore
the mixture is solid.
Bathe the hands and -arms in warm
: water and pure white unscented
"soap, drying thoroughly and frletion
lng with a Turkish towel. Anoint
with the cream; massaging briskly and
firmly into the skin. Stroke up and
down the arms and then with the
fingers braceleted about the arm go
round and routO from wrist to elbow.
Massage the elbow itself with a cir
cular movement of the finger tips.
Beginning with the thumb, . treat
each digit separately, taking great
care to rub the cream well Into every
joint and knuckle. Smooth upward
"and downward, also round and round.
Give particular attention to the cuticle
-about the finger nails. Finish up by,
rubbing the palms of the hands to-!
- gether. This massage treatment
should be continued for 10 or 15 min-j
Utep. it is no trick at all, and the
special. Important purpose is to force"
the skin to accept as much as possible
of the. emolient. At the finish of the
frictioning the flesh should be pink
and glowing,-and the arms warm. The
heavier and firmer the treatment the
wore effective the results will be.
' When the cream is pretty well ab
sorbed sprinkle the hands and arms
with powdered almond meat. Pat it
on the flesh, so that all the surface
is covered. Have some member of
your family wring a large Turkish
towel out of very hot water and cover
hands and arms closely, so no air can
penetrate. As the towel cool apply
fresh ones, steaming hot: the hotter,
the better. The effect of the com
bination of cream and meal will be
really wonderful. Imparting to the
surface of the skin a soft, velvety
'feel"' that is positively luxurious. The
compresses should b continued for 10
minutes. .
Beware Soap and Water.
w Remove the meal and cream with
absorbent cotton which has been
dipped In warm water to which a tea-
spoonful of tincture of benzoin has
been added. Never remove an emol
lent with soap and water, else your
good work will be lost.
Dry the hands and arms with a bit
of old, soft linen, sprinkle with tal
.cum powder and give a final dry mas
sage for three or four minutes. A
touch of violet water in the palms of
the hand and your treatment is com
pleted.
Since the massage softens the cuticle
about the nail, a manicure should fol
low. -The nails are then in perfect
condition for attention. If you are in
the habit 6f taking care of your nails
yourself, file them before the treat
ment: otherwise they will be too soft
. for filing. Treat the cuticle afterward,
' loosening it with an orangewoOd stick
which has been dipped first in perox
ide. of hydrogen and then In powdered
pumice stone. Snip off the raggedy
shreds with, the pointed scissors,
cleanse the nails with the orange stick,
polish with your little nail polisher of
chamois, and the deed is "did." Tour
hands and arms will be like velvet,
free of all roughness and soft .to the
touch of other hands. One hand-and-arm
massage a week will keep those
members young. Women who are par
tial Invalid will find it a happy way
of -spending their time. Toung girls
should be made to follow these in
struction. It will mean a great deal
to them when they are older. It's the
woman who gets an early start in the
riKht kind of pulchritude habits who
stays young the longest.
If the arms are sallow or brown,
apnly this bleaching cream the night
before the treatment: '
lanolin, two and one half ounces.
Almond oil. two and one half ounce.
Sulphur precipitate, two and one
half ounces.
Oxide of sine, one and one fourth
ounce.
Violet extract, two drams.
- Rub the oil gradually into the sul
phur and zinc until a paste is formed,
then add the lanolin and perfume.
. Muskrai Pelt Sale Stopped.
Fremont, Ohio, April 17.- Low price
prevented the annnal muskrat hide
sale at Vlckery. The European war
is blamed for the poor price, a it is
aid to. interfere with the famou Lon
don fur sale,' scheduled for June.
Hirem Roberts hall was converted
into a fur warehouse with 5000 pelts
on display. Three thousand mora
"were held n reserve by trappers, who
called the sale off when 20 cents was
the best price offered, which is 17
cents lower than last year.
Designs for Woman Wko
I Sews--Sarah Hale Hunter
DESIGN FOR LAUNDRY BAG.
A laundry bag in blue or brown linen with this motif embroidered
in a deeper shade than the linen, or in white, will make a useful frfft.
The letters should be heavily padded and worked over and over in
close even stitches. The dots are solidly worked. Use mercerized cot
ton Ho. 18 in white or colors. " t
CROSS STITCH ALPHABET.
The cross stitch letters are much used in marking towels and bu
reau scarfs. They are more effective if worked in different shades of
delft blue or old rose. Use mercerized cotton No. 16 and cross all
stitches in the same direction.
DIRECTIONS FOR TRANSFERRING.
: Lay a piece of impression paper, face down, upon the material.
Place the newspaper pattern in position over this, and with a hard,
sharp pencil, firmly trace each line.
If the material is sheer, this may be laid over the pattern, and the
design drawn direct on the goods, as it will show through. When
handled in this way, impression paper, qi course, will not be required.
CRAFTY LITTLE CHAPEAU
IS CALLED THE SUBMARINE
By Margaret Mason.
(Written for the United Press.)
A new hat Is the submarine,
A shipshape hat it is. 1 ween.
Yet inconsistent it behaves
It always rests above the waves.
London, April 13. (By Mail to New
Yosk.) Ye ho! there, my hearties.'
There's a crafty little new chapeau in
the port of Fashion. Though it's
dubbed the submarine, it refused to be
submerged and proudly rides the crests
of sleek colffed head and nestles
snugly atop the Marcel waves of all
the smartest dressers.
In Its original form it Is a close fit
ting, elongated turban, of tube straw
In a Bordeaux color, with an astonish
ingly long cross aigrette jutting up al
most perpendicularly. As the sub
marine hat, like all the others of the
moment, is worn rakishly tilted well
down over the right eye, it brings the
aigrette to a most distressing angle
for unfortunate adjacent fellow be
ings. Mayhap this is where it gets
one of its reasons for being christened
In honor of an undersea destroyer.
Another new hat fancy is the pansy
bonnet. Shakespeare's Ophelia said
pansies were for thought, so the mod
ern maid whose only and every
thought is for Fashion says pansies
are for hats, and there they are.
Wonderfully realistic replicas they
are of nature' most piquant flower and
they bloom in purple profusion around
tho tiny toques and turban of purple
lsh taupe and tete de nigre straw,
which have superceded the all black
straws; for wear with street and In
formal! costume.
One adorable model of mauve-toned
taupe Is of the tiny and elongated
shape similar to the submarine. It
has a soft crown of Ihe same toned
satin, find banding its brimless out
line are exquisite pansies shading
from deepest velvety purple and wine
to light lavender with an occasional
little sunny yellow faced one peering
out coquettlshly.
Aigrettes flourish with undiminished
popularity on this side of the water.
What can the lives of a few birds
more or less matter in countries where
human; life Is at present being sacri
ficed so ruthlessly.
Every hat that does not bloom with
pansies, sprouts aigrettes in some form
or orther. No wonder the aigrettes are
usually "cross." ;
The extremenly inadequate evening
gowns have been appropriately christ
ened "spy" gown. After all, there ia
something in a name. In this case
much more than Is in the dress. The
three tiered skirts that are also the
whim of the moment are called "The
Allies,";' and some even go so far as
to show a tiny embroidered flag of the
three nations on each embroidered on
a tier. There is really a touch of em
broidery on .almost everything and
designs of colored bead work are also
having their ornate effect on many of
the newest model frocks. Beaded bags
are playing a return date, but this sea
son they re made of larger wooden
beads in neutral tint of gray, taupe
or black and white.
Perhaps ander the : head of head?
would come the earrings how dangling
from some of our very best ears. They
are simply a sphere of clouded amber
swinging: from the aural appendage by
slender golden chain. Of course.
other semi-precious stones are used to
form the spheres, and different color
schemes are obtained with balls of
jade, lapis lazuli and jet or crystal.
It is the yellow touch of the amber,
however, that holds the most ears in
its fetching sway.
To show your heels is a sign of bra
vado these days, since to be well heeled
is to be heeled in brightest hues. Red
heels, green heels, white heels and sil
ver heels add bright flashes of color
under the full abbreviate skirts." It
would seem as if an ordinary plain
black heel wer thlno- tn i
-' ' uaoiBcu.
bilver sandals with a strap across the
insipp, zasiening with a glistening
buckle of precious stones to match the
costume, are mnttt ulluriio
wear. They are especially fascinating
wnen ine more conventional buckle is
replaced by a scintillating dragon fly
or flower poised airily on a hidden
spring, gleams and trembles enchant
ingly with the least tripping of the
iigut iantasiie.
Indeed, It would take a colorsmith.
not a blacksmith, to show all the racy
little fillies on the track of fashion
this spring and summer season of
1915.
COTTON SEED FLOUR
Dallas. Texas, April 17. Wouldn't 'it
make you feel good to read that they
have Invented a substitute for flour?
A "better than flour"- substitute? And
wouldn't you think at ence of the high
cost of living getting a severe Jolt In
these days when, the price of bread is
increasing?
Well, a substitute for flour has been
invented. It is cotton seed flour. But
it's no cheaper than flour; In fact,
just now it twice as expensive. You I
may now hav rnttnn m.j v.i-.. i,
cotton seed bread, and cotton seed
rolls. There's no limit to the use of
the new flour that doesn't apply as
well to ordinary flour. But the cotton
seed kind is most expensive. A dozen
rolls made 'from the new flour costs
20 cents her tods v.
The manufacturers of the . cotton
seed stuff predict that when the proc
ess is better developed the new flour
may be cheaper than ordinary flour.
Not so many years back the cotton
seed was considered of little or no
value. It was left In great stacks In
the fields and used as fertiliser. Then
a series of remarkable discoveries
added millions to the value of eaca
cotton crop, by developing new uses
for the cotton seed. It is now made
into meal and hulls for livestock, oi
for cooking and flour for baking, as
well as leaving something for fertili
ser. The oil has numerous uses, even
appearing in adulteration of Ice
cream.
Amusirg Place C.ids.
If you have photograph of friends
whom you wish to entertain at lunch
eon' or dinner, cut out' the photo
graphed . heads and paste j them on
bodies, cut -from magazines or other
pictures. Very amusing results can
be obtained in this way. Mount these
composite people, with your friends'
heads, .on little cards, i and label each
with the name of the person to whom
the head belongs. ' Small snap shot
photographs are the best for this
purpose. . - - (
SUGGESTIONS
By Mme. Qui Vive. i
Cold erelms and skin foods will not
make an oily skin oilier. They supply
a different kind of oil' than that which
is secreted by the sweat glands. They
will cut and clear away these secre
tions. Enlarged pores is the most
stubborn of all beauty ills. 1fo cor
rect such a condition Is to change the
texture of- the skin, Fhlch cannot be
accomplished quickly or easily. Never
use warm water on the face except at
bedtime. Bathe the ; face with cold
water every morning1' followed with
applications of astringent wash. Be
fore breakfast every morning take the
j? ice of half a lemon In half 'a glass
or water, with a pinch Of salt added.
False hair wear out like everything
else hats or shoes or bonnets. Why
not? The life of. a switch is from two
to three years. Without the natural
-nutriment the hair has no supply of
coloring pigment, therefore It' fades.
One will find it a difficult matter to
dye the switch. The :cleverest people
in the trade cannot guarantee the
work. It is not easy to match hair
even'when one has quantities of shade
from which to chose. iAs for throwing
a switch into a pot of dye Eureka!
the best one can do is to hope?
At the age of 20 a girl who meas
ures 5 feet 4 inches should weigh. ISO
pounds. There is nearly always a
little gain a a woman grows older.
The average weight of a woman is
said to be 13S pounds and the average
height S feet 4 inches. The average
male height is three inches more than
Cross Stitck Alphabet
i
FOR HEALTH
that of the female. To reduce flesh
one must live on a selected diet, omit
ting bread, butter, potatoes, cream and
sweets, and must burn up fat cells by
vigorous exercise out of door. The
woman who wear very tight stays
causes the muscles of the abdomen and
hips to become lasy and flaccid, and
fat accumulates there a a matter of
course.
I Savages who go bareheaded do not
suffer from baldness, and the tamo
immunity to early falling of the hair
is said to be the good fortune of the
lads of the ''Blue Coat School" in Lon
don. These boys never wear any hats,
no matter how severe the weather, nor
how low In its mind the thermometer
may be. Don't wear a hat all day; the
hbit will prevent venttllatlon of the
hair and will restrict circulation.
Nothing but a rlp-roarlng, rousing old
bath spray will remove soapsuds frem
very fine, silky hair.
Almond paste is not as desirable as
almond meal, followed by applications
f cold cream or skin food. There I
no reason why you should be afraid to
nse powder. A good powder is a pro
tection to the skin. Certainly a shiny,
oily complexion is anything but at
tractive, and one really feels cleaner
and fresher for a fluff of power on the
face and neck. Purchase any good
brand; proprietary powder are better
than those which may be made at
home, for the very good reason that
certain professional appliances are
necessary to reduce the ingredients to
delicacy of; texture. v -
1A simple witch hazel cream which
can be used a a cleansing cream
AND BEAUTY
while traveling is made by melting
together nine ounces of white petrola
tum, one and one half ounces of white
wax and one and one half ounce of
white spermacettl. Allow to cool
somewhat, add : three ounces of dis
tilled witch hazel and fluff to a froth
with an egg breater, pouring Into small
jars just before the mixture become
very firm. Any prefume may be added
with the witch base.. The woman
who never use creams and the one
who never uses soap and water are
both making mistakes. The best
method 1 warm water and pure soap
at bedtime, followed by a gentle mas
sage with a skin food or cream. This
should be permitted to remain on the
surface of the skin over night.
San Diego Fair to
Get Noted Educator
Sr. Karl sSoatorl Will Explain Rer
Work Among : Children ta Tarloas
rarts of World.
Ban Diego, Cat. April 17. Dr. Maria
Montessori, world, famous a an edu
cator, I to spend a good part of July
at the San Ditgo exposition, teaching
the visitors to the exposition of her
work among- the children, now in
vogue in many countries. This is a
feature of the educational work being
carried on by one division of the ex
position. The last week has witnessed
the holding of teachers' institute at
the exposition grounds, and similar
educational conference are scheduled
for later periods of the year. .v
Women in tne
ArVeeks News
What They Have Been Doing
Tokio, Japan i-A long and bitter
fight by an American society woman to
regain possession - of her beautiful
daughter, who had : been kidnapped
from Boston and taken to Japan by
the child' father, will end in the
court of Japan. On Saturday a hear
ing was given the petition of Mrs.
John Ellis, of Boston, for possession
of her 7-year-old daughter,' Olga, now
in custody of her fathe John Ellis.
Some years ago the EM family
came into the American limelight.
Ellis, who had been a telegraph operator,-
a stock broker and a minister,
was sued by hi wife for possession of
their little daughter. The court
awarded the girl i to the mother. Sud
denly leaving his ' parish and his
friends, Kill seised the little girl and
brought her to 1 Japan. The mother
traced them to Tokio, and when she
tried to get possession of her daughter
the police Interfered. Mrs. Ellis in her
court petition bases her allegation on
the decision of the Massachusetts
courts, which gave her the child.
Washington i Whether the United
States law of 1907 which expatriates
American women who marry foreign
ers spplle in her Case, is being tested
by Mrs. Ethel C Mackensle, of Ban
Francisco, In the; supreme court. ' She
was denied the right, to. vote on the
the ground that she had lost her Amer
ican cltisenshlp by marrying the sub
ject of Great Britain living In Cali
fornia. Her argument 1 that congress
cannot, merely because she has entered-into
marriage, take away her clt
isenshlp a long a she remains in the
United States. She argues that hus
band and wife ran no -longer be con
sidered as politically one, with their
Identity merged into one, and that the
husband's. .j .
San Franclacc "Teddy" is not the
only one who change the .atlas with
hi discoveries. Mrs. Julia W. Hen
shaw, of Vancouver, now lecturing
here, hadj added a range of mountain,'
a lake, a couple j of canyon and a
stream which she declares i not a
'river of doubt," j to the map of Can
ada. Incidentally she is said to be the
only feminine Fellow of the Royal
Geographical Society. Her ' love of
flowers, forest and stream and the
out-of-door generally ha led her into
strange region. I
Washington The congress of the
Daughters of the American Revolution,
which convene her Monday, will lack
none of the traditional thrill. For the
contest for the presidency ha It usual
keenness, two separate factions back
ing Mrs. 'William Cummlng Story, of
New York' the incumbent, and Mrs.
George T. Guernsey, of Kansas. Mrs.
Story' campaign! for reelection i
based on the courtesy of a second term,
while Mrs. Guernsey's friends point out
that Mrs. Story I herself entered the
lists against a first ; term president
general some years ago.
London That j the English and
French women will ignore the Women'
Peace Congress which assembles at
The Hague on April 28. under the lea
dership" of Jane Addams of Chic&go,
is indicated by the , attitude of Mrs.
Emmeline Pankhurst and other euff
frage leaders. "Mrs. Pankhurst make
the claim that the congress was in
spired by, pro-German interest.
Whether thv French and German
women wilF recede from this view and
join the congress, at the request of the
American women, is still in doubt. '
Seattle, Wash. Called to the pulpit
which her son recently vacated, to ac
cept charge, of a church. in California,
Mrs. W. T. D.McCuI lough, Seattle's
first feminine member of the minis
terial federation, j has been officially
installed as pastor of the Second Bap
tist church. At her opening service she
baptised six candidates. Mrs. McCul
jough formerly lived In New York.
Ann Arbor, Mich. Mi's Frances
Hickok of Plalnwell. Mich., will repre
sent the University of Michigan In the
Northern Oratorical league contest at
Iowa City, on May 7. She Is the first
woman chosen to ! represent the Uni
versity of Michigan in a .contest of
this sort. The oration that won this
honor was entitled "The Mission of
the New Womanhood."
;; Boston, Mass. Countess de Pier
refeu of , France, formerly Mis Else
Tudor of Boston, who has been resting
in New Hampshire, sailed from New
York on Saturday to take up her work
again a a war nurse. Last 'August
when the ; war broke out, the count
gave up a position with the United
States Steel corporation, and with his
wife, went to the front. The countess
was assigned to aj hospital at Dinard.
" . v. i .
' Children's diseases especially tho -
which are contagious flourish pecu
liarly during the early spring months
and It behooves every motfier I '
watch her children carefully, for V'.a
first symptoms of measles, whooph: '
cough, chlckenpox, etc. - ;
It Is not easy to guard gainst th
afflictions, for they are moat-'cat f il
ing" in their early stage even befot
the physician is able to diagnose them
with certainty.
If greater care were exercised ty
mothers and teachers, however, murft
could be done to curtail the spread of
such diseases. Watch the children
carefully for signs of a cold or any
slight Ulnes. and at the first sc:
plcion keep them from school, IsoUtj
them from other children,, and sni
for a doctor. Measles begins with a.
running at the nose like an ordinary
cold in the head, and whooping couj '
begin with a cough that often 1 mis
taken for a mere cold a the whof
may not develop for several day. It
la wise, therefore, to be auspicious of
the slightest appearance of a aprtr.
cold.
An old fashioned ideev how practi
cally obsolete was that a child should
be allowed to tike the -minor chil
dren's disease and "have them over
with, the argument being that they
were "lighter" with children than wlti
adults or near adults. This, of course,
was based on the assumption that
everyone, sooner or laterj must have
chlckenpox, measles, etc.. and that,
having had them, the victim became
Immune. Both theories are fallacious.
None of these diseases Is Inevitable,
and It.has been demonstrated also that
It Is possible to have all of them twice
If a person be twice exposed.
But the vanity "of allowing children
to contract these diseases when It Is
possible to avoid contagion Is not tlis
.hlef argument against that absurd
old notion. The advance of science
has shown that children's diseases are
really serious. They should receive
prompt attention and careful nurslns.
and the quarantine should be rigidly
enforced to guard against an epi
demic, i
. With Infant especially the utmost
preventive caution should, be observed,
as whooping cough and measles are
very dangerous to babies.
The bulletin Issued by the New York
state health department notes that
there are more deaths In the Empire
state from measles than from typhoid.
So keep these facts In mind, and
watch your children during the spring
months, i -
After a few weeks, she was :iade head
nurse of the hospital. Her brief stay
at Hancock, N. II.. with her children,
has greatly revived her, and h 1
eager to be once more at the: front.
Boston, Mass. Miss Alda Miner of
Maiden, Mass., who is now Mrs.. Walk
er, is traveling by dog sled to her new
home in Russia. She Journeyed lm
to Liverpool, where she was married
to Walker, who was a childhood friend
In this city. Walker Is a geologist In
Russia, and the home he built is in tne
Ural mountains. Their trip took them
through Norway and Sweden, and aftr
leaving the train at the end of the rail
road, they took to the dog sleds.
Washington, V. C. One of the early
spring engagement of Interest Is that
of Miss Alexandra Ewlng. daughter of '
Commissioner of rnrents and Mr.
Thomas Ewlng. to Newbold Neye. a
prominent newspaper man of this city.
It is expected that the wedding will
take place during the summer.
New Orleans. Ia. Mrs. Paul
Breaux, of Thlbodaulx, La., is ther old
est mother In the south. She has
reached 110, and her descendant
number over 1000. She married when
she was 13 and hopes to celebrate Jrfi
centenary of tbs wedding. ; On of
her children is over S0, years of age.
Washington Mrs. Ernest V. Biok
nell, wife of the. national director of
the American Red Cross, hs satled
for Genoa from New York. Her hus
band, who Is Investigating conditions
in the war sons for the Rockefeller
Foundation, will meet Mrs. ; Hieknell
and their two daughters at Genoa,
Mrs. Blcknell was Identified with Mrs.
Woodrow Wilson and Mrs. Archibald
Hpklns In the campaign WVonver
the alleys' of Washington Into minor
afreets. . j '
-New York Miss Minnie B. Peck 1 In -training
for' another mountain-climb
Ing trip to South America. Her train
ing consists of living , on - 25 ctnt x
day. She cooks her own meals. Pea
nut butter, rye bread, chocolate, om.
lets and spinach are her regular fare.
She Is one of the greatest mountain
climbers of the world.
SALTS IF KIDNEYS
OR BLADDER HURTS
Harmlets to flush Kidneys and neu
- 1 i !,-? .fiAm CntM
uiu i or system.
j:j m m.
Kidney and Bladder weakness e-esult
from uric acid, say a noted authority.
The kidney filter this acid from the
blood and pas It on to the bladder,
where It often remains to Irritate and
Inflame, causing- a burning, : scalding
sensation, or setting up an Irritation
at the neck of the bladder. ; obliging
you to seek relief two or three times
during the night. The sufferer Is in
constant dread, the water passe some
time' with a scalding sensation and Is
very profuse; again, there Is difficulty
In avoiding It.
Bladder weakness, most folk call It,
because they can't control urination.
While it I extremely annoying and
sometimes very painful, thi 1 really
one of the most simple 'ailment to
overcome. Get about four ounce of
Jad 8a h from your pharmacist an l
take a tablespoonful In a glass of wa
ter before breakfast, continue this for
two or three days. This will neutral
ise the acids in the urine so It no
longer a source of irritation to the
bladder and urinary organs which then
act normally again. -
Jad Salt is inexpensive, harmless
and is made from the acid of grape
and lemon Juice, combined with ilthia,
and used by thousand of folk who
are subject to urinary disorder cause!
by uric acid Irritation. Jad i Salts la
splendid for kidney and reuses no baa
effects whatever. 1 ,
Here you have a pleasant, efTerve
cent lithla-water drink, which quickl
relieves bladder trouble. - (Adv.)