8 MOTHER KILLS CHILD AS SHE PLANS SUICIDE Revolver t* Discharged Acci dentally WhiU She Stoop* tu Kis Her Daughter by Associated Press. Atlantic City.. N. J„ July S.—The accidental discharge of a revolver In the hands of Mrs. Hannah Ootthal sent a bullet through the brain of her IS-yenr-old daughter Mildred, at a hotel here last night as the moth er. who according to the police. w as planning suicide, knelt beside the bed and leaned over to kiss her good bye. The girl died Instantly Mrs. Ootthal gave herself ui> and is in a critical condition at the county san atorium. After an examination the police announced she was suffering from chronic melancholia. In a letter addressed to her daught er and found beside the girl's bed. lira Ootthal! said she had "tried hard to keep up the flght alone, but it Is too dreary *nd I am too 111. 1 have not slept for weeks. No one knows or cares. I am literally dying on my feet." The police said Mrs. Gotthal. who Is the widow of George Gotthal. man ager of a large Philadelphia furniture concern, told ihem she had been con templating taking her life for six ■ weeks. I TORK COUNTY HAS ON E REAIi DRY TOWN York, Pa.. July 3.—Dover has ' gone dry. not figuratively, but actu ally. The Dover Hotel closed at midnight before last, and Charles i Motter. dairyman, of Conewago township, who has been supplying the town with milk, quit his route yesterday morning. He notified his customers yester- | day that this was his last delivery ; of milk. He will devote his time to farming. 1 The doors and windows of the old hostelry are shut up tight. PRISONER KILLS TURNKEY By Associated Press. Baltimore, July 3.—Turnkey John J. Lanahan. of the Central police : station, was shot and killed as he i was about to search a prisoner in ; front of the desk to-day. A second i shot narrowly missed Police Lieu- \ tenant Klinefelter. Lanahan's slay er, Frank Wozniak, a resident of East Baltimore, was beaten into j unconsciousness by other police- j men. At present ash collections are be ing made in the city by a force of men hired by the municipal bureau, but using wagons and horses which are secured by the day. This is too costly, according to Dr. Hassler, and j by the city owning its equipment j much money could be saved, he said. Don't Spoil a Good Meal With a Bad Stomach If a physician, a specialist in stom ach diseases, came to you and said: "I will fix up that miserable, worn out stomach for you or money back "I will make it as good as new so you will not suffer from any distress ! and can eat what you want without f-ar or suffering, or money back would you turn down his offer?" And when you are offered Mi-o-na stomach tablets, made from a pre scription better than many of the stomach specialists know how to write, are you going to be narrow minded and continue to suffer from i indigestion, or are you going to be fair to yourself and try Mi-o-na on I the money back agreement. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are offered ' to you on this basis, that if they do not put your stomach into such good I shape that there is no dizziness, sour ! stomach, biliousness, sick headache. I and stomach distress, your money i will he returned. For sale by H. C. ! Kennedy and all leading druggists. mmmm keeps MY HAIR HEALTIfI "By using Wild root regularly, I keep mv scalp entirely free from the itching crust of dandruff, the cause of most hair trouble. I owe my luxuriant hair-the enw of my friends—to this guaranteed dandruff remedy," piSmgQT THE GUARANTEED HAIR TONIC SFor Sale here under a money-back guarantee H, C. Kennedy Shampoo B°ap, urr ] j n connection with wildroot, will hasten tlio treatment. I i POSSESSING REMARKABLE BEAUTimNG Pf^ER I ffKZf Vjfl \A TIES YET ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS ALL SHADES. > L njJ' £/CBtX \\ ''\ CLFILS DETECTION. WHY NOT RETAIN YOUR YOUTHFUL y ■ fcJPIT APPEARANCE 7 ASK YOUR FAVORITE DEALER FOR * r 6w Af• J "DARLING" HOLD-TICHT ROUGE, 35c a box k I V = A S P H KLAR , Safe HUlk. for INFAHTSand INVALIDS Forlnfante,lnvtHdiuidGrowtnjCl lldren I R!:h tnilk, malted rratn extract in Powder The Original Food-Drink for Alt Ages'No Cooking Nourishing Digestible HAVE YOUR LAWN MOWER PUT IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE Hedge Clippers—Grass Shears—Sides and Edge Tools Sharpened All Kinds of Machinery Repaired FEDERAL MACHINE SHOP Court and Cranberry Streets THURSDAY EVENING, Field Forces of State Health Department Getting Instructions at Mont Alto Convention - mil- ...IL - ' 1 —Photo by Roshon. Cripple Paints Wilson's Picture; Teeth Holdßrush S ineteen-Y ear-Old Girl Spends Hours Daily Developing Art; Writes Letter to President, Presenting Portrait Philadelphia, July 3.—Long years of illness have left her tongue twist ed so she has difficulty in articulat ing; her limbs have been afTected by rheumatism, so that walking is not an easy matter; the long, slender fingers have been knotted and mis shapen and within the last year they have become utterly useless. But the years of suffering have not dauted the spirit of Kosalie Freed man nor dimmed her ambition to become an artist. In a dingy corner of an upstairs cafe that forms the most spacious part of the Freedman home, at 132'1 Race street, nineteen-year-old Itosie has worked for more than two months painting a portrait of Presi dent Wilson, holding the paint brush in her teeth. Members of the family each after noon placed the paint box, the cup of water, brushes and the water color pad on the table before the girl, and she has done the rest. With the material flat on the table before her she sketched the face of the President, mixed her water col ors and painted a remarkable por trait. without touching her hands to the material. Tediously, labori ously, but altogether joyously, the girl "worked with the pencil or brush between her teeth, her head bent close above the paper. Send Portrait to President The portrait now is completed. It has been framed and will be sent this week to President Wilson with a letter which the girl herself has written as she held the pencil in her teeth. PINE STREET TO ENLARGE CHURCH [Continued from First Cage.] other meeting to be held in the near future. Proposed plans reported by a com mittee last night call for an im proved church auditorium, improved Sunday school facilities and im proved equipment for women and girls' work. An enlarged auditorium will be one of the improvements to be planned by the building committee together with architects. At present about 25 per cent, of the attendance at the Pine Street Sunday School meets in the Boyd Memorial build ing in South street. A number of men's Bible classes having large at tendances cannot be accopimodated in the main room now. With the approval of plans for this part of the development all the classes can meet together. Better facilities are necessary also for the women and girls' work and it is proposed to provide gymnasium equipment for them, also to arrange for teaching sewing, cooking and other household arts on an enlarged scale. Committees of five members each are to be appointed soon to make a preliminary report on the building program and method of financing it. The committee announced to-day no estimate could be given of the cost of the proposed improvements. FEAR RED VIENNA By Associated Press. Berlin, July 3.—Emil Von Slauss, director of the Deutsche Bank and one of the German financial dele gates at Versailles, declared to-day that financial circles in Berlin were gravely apprehensive that Vienna might soon fall into the hands of the Bolsheviki, reports from there in dicating that the city is politically in imminent danger. SCHOOL BOARD TO MEET Xcw Cumberland, Pa., July 3.—A meeting of the school board will be held next Monday evening, July 7, when they will reorganize. "Dear President Wilson," reads the letter, "It gives me great pleas ure to present this portrait of you as an expression of my appreciation of the wonderful things you have done for this country and your work as a great educator. "#t has given me happiness and strength to paint your strong face. 1 am teaching myself to be an ar ist in the near future. I have great ambition and hope to make some thing of my work. lam not a nor mal girl. That is my handicap in life. 1 am nervous and paralyzed. I paint and write with my teeth. My fingers lire useless. Before 1 start ed to paint I was melancholy and wanted to end my useless rife. But now I have an aim in life, and I am happy to live. • "I went to school five years, then had to stop on account of illness. Artist friends say 1 paint very well with my teeth. I am so helpless I need a maid to help me dress and eat, and I want to earn my own living to pay my expenses and save my family. "I hope you will like this portrait. It took me about two months, work ing only two hofirs a day, to paint it. Your sincere friend and ad mirer. "ROSALIE FREEDMAN." Nerve Keeps Iler Going Louis Freedman, father of the girl, says only her sheer nerve and determination have kept her going through all these years when parents and friends thought she could not live. BIG WAREHOUSE FOR MARKET STREET i [Continued from First Page.] O i . now own a large three-story build ing adjoining the' lot are the new owners and the building to be erect ed will be used for their business. Facing in Market street, there will be three storerooms and a large I center archway and drive as an en trance to the garage that will be in I the rear. The lot on this side has i a width of sixty-five feet. Front j ing in Cameron street will be two I more storerooms and an archway ! and drive from the Cameron street I side. The storeroom will be rented | and, no doubt, will be used as ac j cessory stores and automobile sales i rooms. The upper floors will be large storage rooms and it is the inten tion of the owners to fit these two floors in such a manner that they can be used for conventions, auto mobile shows, etc. Instead of ele vators there will be a twelve-foot concrete driveway with an eight-per cent grade going to the upper ffoors I This driveway will be wide enough for two cars to pass. , The frontage in Cameron street ! will be fifty feet six inches and the I depth of the lot from Market street lis 136 feet. The depth from Cara j eron street to the building line is j 108 feet. The small building di- I rectly on the corner of Cameron ! and Market streets will remain as they are now. This piece of ground, I it seems, cannot be bought. Materials are now being hauled | and work will start at once. Mark j ely & Starr are the architects and , Harold Hippie is the contractor. Personal and Social Items of Towns on West Shore Mrs. Renz and granddaughter, Clara Snyder, of Middletown, spent yesterday with Mrs. George Wat kins, at New Cumberland. Leonard Rosenberger, of New Cumberland, has returned from Mif flin, where he spent the past two weeks. Miss Grayce, who is in the em ployment of the government at Washington, D. C., is spending sev eral days at her home at New Cum berland. Miss Elizabeth Hobart, of New Cumberland, went to Williamsport to spend the Fourth. Miss Mildred Keester, of Lake Helen, Florida, is visiting friends at New Cumberland. Vera Lenhart, of New Cumber land, is visiting relatives at York and Emigsville. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Bowers, of New Cumberland, who were married i on Tuesday evening, were givdn a | lively serenade by the calithumpian band. ;Boys Have Battle in Real Trenches Last week workmen in the lot of j the Fothergill school building dug ; two deep trenches about twenty feet | apart for the laying of pipes. Un able to complete the Job imme ) diatel.v, the trenches were left open j several days. Tuesday evening the trenches came to the notice of a crowd of boys who saw in it an ex cellent place to reproduce part of the World War. There was a pitch jed battle on Tuesday evening. None of the participants was severely ■ wounded, although a number bore ' marks caused by missiles of stone, i mud, and wood. No Man's Land I between the trenches was littered i with stones and mud. The armistice was signed after a number of school directors came to the scene of bat tle. CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS Now Cumberland, Pa.. July 3.—A campaign for funds for a home coming celebration for returned sol diers will be held from July 10 to the 16th. The reception will be hairt here September 6. tnmiiiifuim HIIMTPW WILSON IS DUE IN U. S. TUESDAY By Assoc'jted Press. Washington, July 3.—President Wilson is expected to land at Hoboken at 3.30 o'clock next Tuesday afternoon. Under present plans, he will cross to Manhattan on the Twenty-third street ferry and lotor up Fifth avenue to Car egic Hall, where a reception ill be held. After delivering a brief ad rcss, he will leave for Washing-, on. . i THOUSAND TAKE PART IN JUBILEE [Continued from First Page.] feature. Last evening the activities opened with a service for the de mobilization of the service flags held on the Dickinson College campus. To-morrow the great historical pa geant will be staged in the special arena on Biddle Field. The service last evening was unique. There was a preliminary procession with the service flags of some 35 churches, lodges and in dustries in line each escorted by a guard of honor of 10 men. They marched formally to the Dickinson Campus which was specially decor ated for the occasion. The services were held in front of the Old West Building, from which Carlisle and Cumberland County men have gone out to wars for a century. Rev. E. L. Coblentz presided. The address to the men was delivered by -Dr. Leon Gushing Prince, of Dickinson College, Cumberland County \v*r historian. His address paid a tribute to the men and ex pressed the sentiment of the affair. "We are proud of you collectively and proud of you individually; proud of the high repute you gained in the performance of difficult and danger ous duty, proud of the splendid pa triotism you so consistently dis played. Mother Cumberland who sent you forth with her benediction and her prayers, hails your safe and honorable return with glad thanks giving and welcome back again to the fold of her citizenship, you who have never been absent from her heart." It was singularly fitting that Dr. Prince should make this ad dress as he delivered the farewell to Carlisle men when they left for service on the border in the present war. Lieutenant Rippey T. Shear er presided. The service for the demobiliza tion of the service flags was then carried out. the rolls of the various flags being called while one repre sentative flag was formally demob ilized in its entirety. Following the service there was a band concert on the public square and formally illumination of the decorations. To-day was the great parade which assembled shortly after noon. Major E. R. Plank was commandant. There was a detachment of commissioned county officers, followed by the men of Company G, 112 th, Co. F, 103 rd Ammunition Train, 28th and 79th Divisions and other soldiers by units with men who served in various commands in one group. In all about 1,000 of the 1,800 men whom Carlisle sent into service were in line. In addition to this division of honor was a division composed of Carlisle Fire companies with visitors from Enola, Mechanicsburg, Ship pensburg and Newvllle. The final division was made up of Liberty Loan, Red Cross, Navy League, War Savings Committee, various war work and other organizations. To-morrow is Pageant Day. Great interest centers in this event. A monster stage has been erected on Biddle Field with whole pine trees as a background. In addition 5.000 seats have been provided with spe cial, old wagons, and settings of various kinds. DEXEKINE I\ TZ.VRITZIX London, July 3.—The forces of General Denekine, the anti-Bolshe vik leader in Southern Russia have occupied th 5 city of Tzarltzin, on the % olga river, south of Saratov, ac cording to a Russian wireless report to-day. The city previously had been abandoned by the Bolsheviki. STF.ETON" PERSONALS John S. Miller, 162 South Second street, has as his guest his brother Harry Miller, of Middle Ridge Ohio' Miss Martha Boyd, York is spending the week at the home of her aunt, Mrs. William Bossier of Highspirc. Miss Rebecca Miller, 126 Lincoln street, attended the commencement exercises of the Crane Normal school at Potsdam, New York. She is now visiting friends in Rochester FLU MADE BIG INROADS ON ESKIMO SETTLEMENTS In Colony of a Hundred, Eighty-Six Died in a Week; Dogs 1 hen Ate Some of the Bodies St. John*. N. F., July 3.—Details of the Inroads itiade by influenza among inhabitants of Eskimo settlements in Labrador last winter and the difficult ly of disposing of the dead are fur nished in reports from northern mis sions] ies received by the colonial secretary. Bishop Martin, of the Moravian missions, writing from Heb-on, said that all of the 100 Hskirtios In that settlement became ill and in a week SB died, leaving only eight children, five women and one man. "At the beginning of the epidemic the bodies were put into our small dead house," lie wrote, "but that was soon fljed up and as there was nobody strong enough to remove the dead GENERAL RELIEF PROGRAM ENDING Last Shipments of Supplies From America to Europe Are Now Being Made; Child-Feeding Bureaus Continued New York, July 3.—The general relief program of the American Re lief Administration which began last November the great work of caring for starving Europe, is approaching its end. Last shipments of supplies from America are being made and food at present in transit and that provided for in connection with the terminating of the work is believed to be sufficient to carry Europe through until the next harvest. Despite this approaching official termination of its activities the American Relief Administration will continue to remain in Europe for some time to continue the supervis ion of the child-feeding bureaus now furnishing daily supplementary meals to 4,000,000 children until in dividual nations are themselves able ta take over active charge. The total number of supplies dis tributed by the administration from December tirst to May thirtieth was 2,480,230 tons, comprising 512 ship loads worth $635,175,000. Much of the success of the Amer ican Relief Administration in Eu rope is attributed to the strict code to which its field workers were pledged and which demanded that each and every member of the ad ministration "should abstain abso lutely and entirely from any com mercial business in his territory and sh'ould in no way represent private commercial houses." The American representatives were not permitted to engage in any local political dis putes and were in honor bound to refrain from public criticism of In dividuals in the pountry where they PREDICTS MUCH AERIAL TRAFFIC ACROSS ATLANTIC Commander Read Declares Regular Traffic Will . Become Reality By Associated Press. New York, July 3.—Regular trans- Atlantic aerial travel would become a reality within three years, if in terest in jfviation evident in time of war were continued in time of peace, declared Lieutenant Command er Albert C. Read, "skipper" of the NC-4, at a dinner given here lust night by the American Flying Club in honor of the airmen who won for the American Navy the honor of being first to fly across the Atlan tic. "Any one who sa:.'3 that we will never attain an altitude of 60,000 feet, that we will never be able to cross to Europe in the forenoon and return in the afternoon, that we will never be able to accomplish the things that appear impossible now, is a most outrageous person, with a courage simila- to those in the olden days who said that iron ships would never work," asserted Com mander Read. Describing his experiences on his flight from Newfoundland to Lisbon, Commander Read predicted that in the future long distance planes would be much larger than the NC boats. Answering his own question as to "whether the results obtained from the flight were worth the expense." by asserting that "an immense amount of information concerning seaplanes and operating over the sea for a long distance," had been se cured. Commander Read added that he would not "try to estimate the more intangible results of the in creasing prestige to the Navy and to the country." Entertains in Honor of Guest From Reading Miss Sarah Kades entertained at her home. 433 Pine street. Tuesday evening in honor of her guest. Miss Julia Levine, of Reading. Among the guests were Miss Heien Rosen berg, Miss Ooldic Rosenberg, Miss Anna Wagenheim, Miss Minnie Le vine. Miss Lillian Marcus, Louis Sharofsky, Samuel Kline, Harry Kline, Samuel Sherman, George Co han Abraliamson. Walter Wagen heim, and Jack Reuben. from the houses, most of the Eskimo huts were filled with bodies. "After all the Inhabitants of some houses died, the dogs broke Into the huts and ate some of the bodies. When they had done so they got very vicious and dangerous We killed the dogs at the station (about 100) but could not destroy them all. Therefore the dogs and the graves had to be watched day and night. "After much deliberation we decid ed to bury the bodies in the sea." Deporting that 70 of the 320 inhab itants of the district of Sandwich Bay were vieitims of the plague, the Rev. Henry Gordon gave a similar account of sufferings He said the orphans had been distributed among the different settlements. 1 were working or surrounding coun tries. Independent telegraph and wire less service between all of the prin cipal capitals under direct control of the operators employed by the Relief Administration recently ar ranged for involved the exclusive use of over 5,000 miles of telegraph wires in Europe. This was necessi tated by the tomplete disintegra tion of communications of all de scriptions throughout Europe dur ing the war. • Courier service is now running regularly all over Europe necessitat ed by the breakdown of postal ser vice abroad. Added to these relief measures, America during the months between December tlrst and June thirtieth has had the burden of supplying food to the Allies. Supplies admin istered for this purpose about equal ed In volume the direct relief meas ures to other parts of Europe. Kn emv shipping to the amount of a million and a half tons obtained irt exchange for food was used for this purpose as well as American ships Only one example of the magni tude of the work of the American Relief Administration in Europe is contained in a review of its communication systems. Yi lien the American relief pioneers went into Europe they found transportation and all forms of communication completely demoralized. A recent administration bulletin just made public describes the great communication system which they worked out in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles. ( BOLSHEVIK REIGN LIKE A SCOURGE UPON BIELEBEI Wholesale Murders Occur During Occupation of Few Months By Associated Press. Bielebei, European Russia, July 3. —The reign of the Bolsheviki passed over the people of Bielebei like a scourge. The Bolsheviki oc cupied Bielebei for several months. The correspondent of The Asso ciated Press visited the town within a fortnight after their evacuation. The people were just beginning to readjust their domestic and govern mental affairs. Refugees were re turning to view the wreck of their homes. They were veritable wrecks for the Bolsheviki had occupied all vacated houses and had carried away or destroyed most of their contents. An elderly judge of the district court. Professor Paul Blumenthal, long a resident of the United States, who left upon approach of the Bol sheviki, was so overcome with grief over the fate of his native town that he wept. Many persons had disappeared and it was well known that many had been murdered. The corpses of vic tims are being discovered. The cor respondent followed a stream of men, women and children which flowed out across the fields toward the edge of a scraggly wood. There under the overhanging bank on the edge of a gravel pit they were ly ing. a tangled heap of bodies, ap parently as they fell or had been thrown, with no attempt at. burial. Do,ml Are Robbed The bodies were mostly those of young or middle-aged workmen. From each the boots and most of the outer clothing had been removed. Of some the skulls were crushed, of others the faces were disfigured as though by gunshot at close range. The crowd on the bank above the grewsome pile appeared fascinated. They silently made way for a group of Americans, including Consul Em bry, from Omsk, and two correspon dents, and watched with Interest while they photographed the victims. A nicely dressed woman and little girl walked into the pit to get a better look at the figure of a blond young girl which lav partly un covered c'ose under the bank. The body was perfectly preserved by the cold and lay with arms bare and crossed as though the girl might have been sleeping. The face, which was not disfigured, was that of an intelligent, pretty girl. Toward dusk the body was removed by relatives who had come from Ufa. She was a high school girl from that town who had been abducted by the Bolshevik commissar when Ufa was evacuated. Close by was the body of another woman. When the Bolshvlki entered Bie lebei the government of the town was taken over by a "Revolutionary Committee, of Communists." There was formed a "Committee of Inves tigation" under the presidency of one Velt, a Lett. One of the first, acts of this committee was to shoot the president of the former local county zemstvo as a counter-revo lutionary. The latter was ill at the time and had to be' carried out to his death in a chair. Twenty men were shot and in addition many Mohammedan priests. A member of the Investigating Committee boasted that he shot one priest be cause he was too long over his prayers, while the committeemen waited to take him. J* * T Y 3. 1919. Councilmen Confer on Purchase of Wagons For Collection of City Ashes City Commissioners conferred yes terday afternoon on the proposed plan to purchase equipment to be used by employes of the Bureau of Ash and Garbage Inspection for mu nicipal ash collections. Commissioner S. F. Hassler at the last few regular meetings of Coun cil has been submitting .figures on the cost of wagons, horsefe and har ness, and stables, and yesterday these weVe discussed. It was said that about $4,000 would be needed for part of the equipment. A suffl ! dent number of wagons and horses 1 could be purchased with that amount I Dr. Hassler said, to do the work I during the remainder of the sum - j mer and early fall. More teams I would be needed, however, probably j by November. I To-day the councilmen inspected I some second-hand wagons and | stables which may be used. Action I will likely be taken at the meeting i of Council next Tuesday. Missouri Legislature Has Passed Suffrage Jefferson City, Mo., July 3. The Missouri Legislature to-day ratified i the Federal suffrage amendment j when the Senate, concurring in the i action of the House yesterday, passed ! the adopting resolution by a vote of j 28 to 3. (iBXHHtI, OUSTER DIES 11 u Associatt <! Press. Bethlehem, Pa., July 3. General William E. Doster, a prominent bank er, soldier and corporation lawyer, died at St. Luke's Hospital here "to day. aged 82 years. He was graduat ed from Harvard University, class of 1857, Harvard Law School and the University of Heidelberg in Germany. Carried in Stock By COWDEN & CO. Builders' Modern Materials 9th St. Cumberland St. P. R. R. Tracks Alpha Portland Cement Plaster Paris Drain Tile u . Flue Lining Hydr t te s ? Wall Coping Plaster Boards Hollow Block * Wall Boards Pyrobar Partitions Roofing and Ivory 'Piaster Sheathing Papers u.s. o. Twin Shingles For Fords i Roof 16-Valve Head For Fords Has Arrived ' * SEE IT . 50% More Horsepower^ "LET US PROVE IT." Live Agents Wanted W. R. Mohney & Son] . Exclusive"Rights 810 N. Third St. <! Harrisburg, Pa. (Distributors For Central and Eastern Pennsylvania 1 * Hair Made Beautifully Wavy While You Sleep! j Just think, girls! Tou apply a little liquid silmerine at bedtime and in the morning your hair has a piettier wave und curl than probably it has ever had. The wuviness looks per fectly natural and the hair is sleek and glossy like plush. It will re main in curl the longest time, regard less of heat, wind or moisture, and you won't have to be continually fussing with loose strands or flying ends. Liquid silmerine is of course en tirely harmless. It leaves no stickv, greasy or streaky trace. It has the peculiar quality of drying in beauti ful waves, creases and swirls. It is also an excellent dressing for the hair, keeping it delightfully soft and silky. ,\ few ounces from your druß gist will last for weeks. It is best applied with a clean tooth brush, 111 awing this down the full length of j the hair. I To Have Perfect Skin ! Throughout the Summer This is the season when she who would have a lily-white complexion should turn her thoughts to mercol , ized wax, the lirm friend of the sun j mer grl. Nothing so effectually ov- I ercomcs the soiling effects of sun, : wind, dust and dirt. The wax lit ! orally absorbs the scorched, diseol | ored, withered or coarsened scarf skin, bringing forth a brand new skin, clear, soft and girlishly beau | tiful. It also unclogs the pores, re l moving blackheads and increasing i the skin's breathing capacity. An ounce of mercolized wax, ob- I tainable at any drug store, applied I nightly like cold cream, and washed ! off mornings, will gradually lm j prove even the worst complexion j There is nothing better for the re l niovul of tan, freckles or blotches.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers