2 A Genuine Rupture Cure Sent On Trial To Prove It DON'T WEAR A TRUSS ANY LONGER. After Thirty Years' Experience I Have Produced An Appliance for Men, Women and Children That Actually Cures Rupture. If you have tried most everything nnd hi it are embodied the principles else, como to nie. Where others fail ip \ that inventors iiave sought after for / ' ~ ri^pt^M^caw^ l^^ e tl^wn*'wt ,l of*poai* names of many people' who have tried / ' "■ a " a ' r enahien of soft rub it and were cured. It is instant relief / / > p ber it clings closely to the body, yet when all others faii. Remember, I Wl never blisters or causes irritation, use no salves, no harness, no lies. j ' / 4. Unlike the ordinary so-called pads, I semi »n trial to prmr what iSKk* tifred in other trusses, it is not cumber havwi" seen in. illustrated book nnd JF ' ' *1 8 -*,f " ' ~ . ~, , read it v„„ will be as enthusiast kas . UMkU, ... It ,s small soft and pliable, and my hundreds „f ~at.e«ls wl,«,■.;■ \-ttei- . pon below and mail to-day. It'- well fa. '■'flf? ""■"*? The soft, pliable bands holding worth vni ■ time whether vou tn inv !».,• . ,-0-A - ;!l Appliance do not give one the un- Appliance or not. , • pleasant sensation of wearing a harness. Pennsylvania Man Thankful f** w " h^°®" ri "« ""j" and to?ttSilf'Uth'H V ' V ' 1/ Appliances arc made is of the very till I got your Appliance. It is very \ .#»P,4 f best that money can buy, making it a easy to wear, tits neat and snug, and \ M.' ' / durab,e and sate Applimnce to wear. ih not in the way at any timte, da\ or > S '0- My reputation for honesty and night. In fact, at times I did not know >- » p, i a j r dealing is so thoroughly estab- T had it on: it .just adapted itself to lished by an experience of over thirty the shape of the body and seemed to — •*- years of dealing with the public, and be a part of the body, as it clung | The above is C. E. Brooks, inventor of the Appliance, who cured himself and jmy prices are so reasonable, my terms to the spot, no matter what position I who is now giving others the benefit of his experience. !so fair, that there certainly should be • 1 was in. If ruptured, write him to-day, at Marshall, Mich. no hesitancy in sending free coupon to- It would be a veritable God-send to . ... x „ .. , ~, . , idav. the unfortunate who suffer-from rup ln »- r a ";' be . tter - " ll hadu 1 boen , for Remember ture if all could procure the Brooks £ our Apriianee I would never have Child Cured in FOUT Months Rupture Appliance and wear it. They : bp(, » eurod - J. a '" sixty-eight years old ] wnd my Appliance on trial to prove | 1U X OUr IttUUUIS would certainlv never rcjrret it. '".'l, 9er X Cl , t,lreo years in Eckle s Ar- j what I say is true. \ou are to bo j 21 Janscn St., Dubuque, lowa. Mv rupture'is now all"healed up and til,er . v ; Oglethorpe Co. I hope tiod will | the judge. Fill out free coupon below Mr. C. B. Brooks, Marshall, Mich, nothing ever did it but vour Appliance, inward you tor the good you are doing |liw i „ la j] to-day. J Dear Sir:—The baby's rupture is al- Wbenever the opportunity presents it- for suffer,D 8 humanity. together cured, thanks to your Appli eelf I will say a good word for your j ours sincerely, j Ton Baaenvii! Tin.,, ance, and we rye so thankful to you. If Appliance, an<i also the honorable way ' BANKS. could only have known of it sooner, in which vou deal with ruptured people. • 1 v n „ x,„ our little boy would not have had to It is a pleasure to recommend a good j Others Failed But should Send for Brooks Rupture suffer near as much as he did. He wore thing among your friends or strangers. I Appliance your brace a little over four months. ] am, the Appliance Cured 1. It is absolutely the only Appli- I Yours very truly, Yours very sincerely, ance of the kind on the market to-day, ! ANDREW EGGENBERGER JAMES A. BRITTON. Mr. C. E. Brooks. ' SO Spring St., Bethlehem, Pa. Marshall, Mich. FBXPP X £ Dear sir: — FREE Information Counon ~ , Your Appliance did all vou claim for lUIUHHttUWH V/UUpUII Loniederate veteran Uured the little boy and more, for it cured Mr. C. E. BROOKS, |him sound and well. We let him wear __ Commerce. Ga., R. P. D. No. 11. it for about a year in all, although i SOJOA State St., Marshall, Mich. Mr. C. E. Brooks, it cured him 3 months after he had ' Please send me by inaii in plain wrapper your illustrated book and full Dear Sir:—l am glad to tell you that Ibegun to wear it. We had tried several I information about your Appliance for the cure of rupture. I am now sound and well and can I other remedies and got no relief, and j plough or do any heavy work. I can 'I shall certainly recommend it ro i -*ame say your Appliance has effected a per- ; friends, for we surely owe it to you. j \ddres manent cure. Before getting your Ap- j Yours respectfully, * pliance 1 was in a terrible eonditiou j WM. PATTERSON. R. F. D City State and had given up all hope of ever be- 'No. 717 S. Main St., Akron, O. ' ' ...'*. 2 LECAL TRESPASS NOTICE EXPLAINED BY SURFACE Advice, Through Following Which Hunters May Avoid a GTeat Deal of Trouble, Is Offered by the State Economic Zoologist Thqre are such remarkable differ ences of opinion as to what constitutes a legal trespass notice that .State Zo ologist H. A. Surface has looked into this matter carefully, and has issued the following statement in regard to this important subject: "The law provides that when prem ises are posted with signs against tres passing it is illegal to enter thcreou under penalty of' arrest for trespass, ■which may result in a line of $lO. There is no definite wording of the no tice fixed by law, but it is necessary to state that the property so posted is 'Private Premises,' and all persons must Vie warned against entering there on. The law does not require tnat the notice shall be of auy definite stated form or material, nor is any' require ment made as to the size of the letters, nor the number of notices to be posted, the way they are to be put up or dis played, nor the distance apart at which ihey are to be fixed, nor the time when they are to be posted. '•This means that a notice printed by hand or type, stating that the prem ises arc 'private' anil warning against trespass, is legal and must be respected. It is not necessary for the owner to show that the trespasser has damaged property, in order to arrest and prose cute him for trespass, and the payment of a gun license fee does not permit the gunner to enter on posted premises, whether cultivated or not. Gunners have no more right to enter posted •woods than cultivated property. ''lt is to be inferred that the notices will be sufficiently large to be seen at HOW TO PREVENT ACID STOMACHS AND FOODFERINTATION By :i Stomach .Specialist As « specialist who lias spent many years in the study and treatment of stomach troubles. I have been forced to the conclusion that most people who complain of stomach trouble possess stomachs that are absolutely healthy and normal. The real trouble, that which causes all the-pain and difficulty, is excessive acid in the stomach, ag gravated by food fermentation. Hyper acidity irritates the delicate lining of the stomach and food fermentation causes wind which distends the stomach abnormally, causing that full bloated feeling. Thus both acid and fermenta tion Interfere with and retard the proc ess of digestion. The stomach is usu ally healthy and normal, but irritated almost past endurance by these foreign elements—acid and wind. In all such cases—and they comprise over 90 per cent, of all stomach difficulties—the first and only step necessary Is to neutral ize the acid and stop the fermentation by taking in a little warm or cold water immediately after eating, from one to two teaspoonfuls of b!»urated magnesia, which is doubtless the best arid only really effective antacid and food corrective known. The acid will be neutralized and the fermentation stopped almost instantly, and your stomach will at or.-e proceed to digest I lie food In a healthy, normal manner. Be sui'e to ask your druggist for the jlsuratcd magnesia, as I have found other forms utterly lacking in its pe culiarly valuable properties.—!•'. J. G. adv. a reasonable distance and placed close enough together that gunners can have opportunity to see them before entering the premises. However, the faet that a gunner has not seen the notice does not excuse hiin from the responsibility of entering upon posted premises and the liability of arrest, without warrant, subject to a penalty of SIOO for resist ing arrest for violation of any provi sions of the act. "It must further he remembered that the persons made responsible bv the State for enforcing the laws are not the ones who made such laws, and can not annul or modify them, but must enforce them as they are, or fail in the performance of their duty,and thus be liable to dismissal from their official po sitions. '' 1,200 FARM EXHIBITS Blair County Holding Corn and Fruit Show in Altoona Altoona, Nov. 12. —Every town ship in Blair county sent an exhibit to the Altoona corn and fruit show, which opened here yesterday under the auspices of the Blair county farm bureau. More than 1,200 exhibits of fruit, vegetables and grain are display ed on the long tables, with apples and corn predominating. Mayor Walker formally opened the show and County Superintendent of .Schools Davis welcomed the people. E«ch day addresses on farm subjects will be delivered. Farm Agent R. H. Bell, of Lyeoming county, will judge the exhibits. To Curr a Cold la One Day Take LAXATIVE BKOMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money if It fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signa* tur'e Is on each box. 25c. M'GOVERN GAINS IN RECOUNT Republican Candidate for Senator in Wisconsin Only 90S Votes Behind Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 12.—With more figures in from official canvassing boards and from recounts of last Tuesr day's ballots, the lead of Paul O. Hust iug, Democrat, over Governor F. E. Mc- Govern, Republican, for United States •Senator, was reduced to 903 votes. The Governor's heaviest gain was in four of the five precincts recounted in Superior, where he gained 60 votes. He lost 9 in Milwaukee county, 1 in Iron county and gained 1 in Calumet county. Mr. Husting has lost 38 votes in Polk county, gained 11 in Calumet and 7 in Fon du l^ac. The latest totals give Husting 134.- 811 and McGovern 133,908. DIES AFTER A PARADE Huntingdon Druggist Succumbs to An Attack of Acute Indigestion Huntingdon, Nov. 12.—The wel comc(ionip demonstration given to Governor-elect Martin O. Brumbaugh, Tuesday night by the citizens of Hunt ingdon county, was saddened by the death of Harry E. Steel, a well-known druggist, who died suddenly of acute indigestion a few minutes after leav ing the parade, in which he had par ticipated. His father, Samuel A. Steel, was Prothonotary of Huntingdon county. His grandfather and great-grandfather were postmasters of Huntingdon. Reading Aids Belgians Heading, Nov. 12. —A carload' o,° flour, valued at $l,lOO, was forwarded to Philadelphia yesterday to be ship ped to the Belgian sufferers. The local committee reported that a prominent Reading manufacturer had contributed $250 to the fund. HARRISRURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 12. 1914. SHOOTS TO SAVE HER DOG American Woman Arrested for At tempted Murder at Ssa Havre, Nov. 12. —Mrs. Setclle, an American woman residing in Paris, who was a passenger on the steamship Chicago from New York, was arrested here yesterday on the charge, preferred by the police, of attempted murder. After a quarrel with several passen gers, wlio teased her dog, and becoming furious at the alleged mistreatment of her pet, Mrs. Setelle is accused of fir ing twice, from an automatic pistol, at a man whom she believed to be the ring-leader of the group. Both bullets flew wild and the woman was immedi ately disarmed. In Court Mrs. Setclle said: "I fired in the air merely to frighten the man." Two witnesses testified with regard to the incident and both declared that the woman shot to kill. CONVICT WHITE SLAVER Former Religious Paper Editor Found Guilty by Cleveland Jury Cleveland, Nov. 12.—An/.el 'Mlyuar czyk, 09, former editor of a religious paper, yesterday was found guilty of wliita slavery by a jury in Federal Court. He was charged with having /brought Lydia Seinar. 20, from her home at Coal Centre, Pa., to this city and having kept her a prisoner in his home. Sentence lias not been pro nounced. Letters read at the trial toy Miss Seinar said that Mlvnarc.zyk had prom ised to 'make a great lady of her,'' that he would buy her pretty clothes and perhaps take her abroad. Mlvnarczyk served a sentence in the workhouse for holding the girl a pris oner in his home ibefore Federal au thorities took up the case. HAVE DARK HAIR AND LOOK YOUNG Dou't Stay Gray! Nobody Can Tell Whon You Darken Gray, Faded Hair With Sage Tea and Sulphur Grandmother kept her hair beautiful ly darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. When ever her hair fell out or tool; on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, tbis simple, mixture was applied with won derful effort. l*v asking at any drug store for "Wveth's Sage aud Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, ready to use, for about DO cents. This simple mixture can de depended upon to restore nat ural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, dry, itchy scalp and falling hair. A well-known downtown druggist ■<ays everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied—it's so easy to use, too. Ydu simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one strand at a time.' By morn ing the gray huir disappears; after an other application or two, it iB restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. Adv. : SLAVS BRIDK AS SHE ALTOS Murder From Ambush Sequel to Nu merous Mysterious Attacks lola, Kan., Nov. 12.—Mrs. Roy Ard, bride of a wealthy young farmer, was | shot from ambush and killed early yes | terday while driving home in a motor j car with her husband and sister. The ! shooting took place on a louelv road five miles from Elsmore, 20 miles south | east of here, and the scene was within I a mile ol' the home Ard recently had | erected for his brido. A shotgun was i used by the assassin, who lay hidden I in trees bordering the road. The Ards had been married six I months. | The tragedy followed numerous (threats against the young couple. Three j weeks ago poison was placed in the . water of the Ard farm. Later, upon | opening a can of fruit, a peculiar taste I was noticed and an analysis disclosed a | deadly poison. Two weeks ago Mr. and I Mrs. Ard were fired upon as they were I returning from church. Last Sunday j night as Ard entered his hay mow to , throw down hay for his horses he was ; struck upon the head with a club. His j assailant escaped. j Mr. Ard, his wife and her sister, j Miss Latimer, had been visiting a t a j neighbor's and were returning home, j Mrs. Ard was driving the motor '.>ar ; when the shooting occurred. Neither • Ard nor his wife's sister would discuss | the shooting. The Ard family is one of | the oldest in the county and founded | the of Elsmore. Mrs. Ard was 26 years old. JOHN BONNER SENT TO JAIL ! Coal Region Pugilist Found Guilty of Running a Liquor Club ! Maucii Chunk, Nov. 12.—John V. j Bonner, of Summit Hill, who in his i prime was one of the greatest middle ' weight pugilists in the anthracite reg , ion, was yesterday sentenced by Judge | Barber to pay a fine of SSOO, costs and i to imprisonment in the county jail for six months on the charge of conduct ing an illegal club at Summit Hill, in which he sold intoxicating drinks. When Bonner appeared in court yes terday he was without counsel, and said lie did not have the meaus of en | gaging -an attorney. He said he owned j real estate, but that he was without | ready funds. A verdict of guilty was found in two hours. FOX FIGHTS LIKE A WOLF Man Finally Crushes Skull of Feasting Brute With an Ax Pottsville, Pa., Nov. 12.—A huge ; gray fox caught in\ a chicken pen at Mt. ! Carbon, with a fowl in its mouth, i sprang with a snarl at the throat of Howard Cavilier yesterday, when (How j ard interrupted the feast. For three ! minutes the man was in great danger, i as the huge animal, with great leaps at his throat, almost rushed him off his feet. Cavilier filially succeeded in picking up an ax and crushing in the skull of the fox. It proved to ibe one of the finest specimens ever seen here, and Alderman P. J. Martin granted the State bounty to Gavilier. Veterans Among the Teachers ILancaster. Pa., Nov. 12.—C. 8. Ja *oby, one of th« teachers attending the county institute, has beon a teacher for 45 years. J. B. Douglass has taught 43 .years and B. K. Habecker anil Theo dore Harfb, 41 years. AIDINC SHRUBS AND ROSES ID COLD WINTER'S WEATHER Fourth Article in Series on Winter Care of the Garden—Treatment of Lilacs, Snowballs, Etc., Not Keces sary During the Frosty Season Waehinjjton, D. C., Nov. 12.—While lilacs, snowballs and certain other shrubs should be let alone during the winter, being neither trimmed nor cov ered with straw and manure, othor bushes need special attention. Hydrangeas (scmi-focrbaceous) in the South will last out the winteir if prop erly cared for out-of-doors. The tops should Ibe protected with straw or brush. This may toe held in place albout the bushes with a littlo manure or stones. The flower buds of the hy drangea form in the fall, and this cover will keep them from winterkilling while shielding the bush from winds and sun. In the Nort'h hydrangeas must be taken up, planted in tubs and placed in the cellar. This is generally true of latitudes north of Philadelphia. The shrub known as brugmansia should be treated as is the hydrangea. The brugmansia (known botanically as datura) is also called thorn apple. It is a cultivated form of jimson weed and has long, bell-shaped wikitc flowers and rather coarse foliage. As a rule, shrubs should not be trimmed in the fall. This process is timely immediately after t'he blooming period, if this is in the spring, as in the case of the snowball. If the shrubs bloom in the fall, as do some hydran geas, the rose of Sharon and some li lacs, they sihould not 'be cut directly after .blooming, tout in the spring of "the following year. The mock orange, which is also knowti as '"gyringa," needs no special treatment to help it winter the severe weather. The name "syringa," al though popularly applied to the mock orange, is really mwc appropriate for the lilac, which is known botanically by that designation, while the mock orange is botanically " Philadelphus." Roses: Almost all kinds of roses are hardy in the vicinities of Wash ington and <St. Louis and to the south of a line driawn between these points. From Washington northward local con ditions influence the successful cultiva tion of certain varieties. Some roses, as the briar and rugosa, need no pro tection, but other varieties, sueh as the hybrid-perpetuals, teas and hyibrid teas, need special care, particularly north of the fortieth parallel. Teas and hybrid-teas hardly succeed in Chi cago, although the hybrid-perpetuals grow as far north as Canada. All tlese classes do well on Long Island and in Boston near the sea when proper care is given them. These varieties in the vicinity of Washington need mere ly a little manure on the ground to prevent alternate freezing and thawing. Farther north, however, they should be treated as follows: Cut the taps to within 30 inches of the grourftl. Cover the roots with coarse manure or leaves or similar lit ter. Hold t'his in place by brush, which also acts as a protection. Ever green boughs may be substituted for the coarser litter, except in the most northern regions. It is best to draw mounds of earth about six or eight inches in height about the base of the rose bushes to Keep them from mice. In some locali ties the loose brush around the roots will attract mice, who will make t'heir winter quarters there and destroy the rose bushes. As an added protection against mice, permit the ground to freeze slightly before winter protection is supplied. In fact, roses should not be protected until after the first light freeze, which may be expected in Washington about the first of Decem ber, 'but earlier farther north. In the latitude of Philadelphia and farther south climbing roses usually need no protection during the winter unless they are a particularly tender variety. Farther north these roses need protection similar to that given to the tea and hybrid-tea roses. Clim'bing roses may be best cared for by facing removed from their sup ports. The branches should then be covered over with a little dirt and treated as hybrid-perpetual roses would 'be treated. A little fall trimming might ibe desiraible to lessen the space occupied by the branches on the ground. Such side branches as are not to be needed for next season's bloom ing may be cut off. Such cutting off and shortening of th'c ends as would otherwise be done in the sipriug may be done in the fall before covering, merely for convenience. The above method is much more sat isfactory than attempting to put straw about the roses as they remain on their posts or trellises. (No. 5 of this series, "The Indoor Window Box," will follow shortly.) MINE SAFETY NEGLECTED Coroner's Jury Obtains Startling Ad missions in Car Tragedy Hazleiton, (Pa., Nov. 12.—'Startling evidence of negligence on the part of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company was allegod at the Coroner's probe into the deaths of 'Manus O'Donnell, Andrew Mc.Kelvey and John Douglas, kilted when five men were struck by a run away car at the Hazleton shaft col liery. District Attorney John H. Bigelow seoured admissions from Inside Fore man Thomas Young and Shaftman Au- LADIES, HAIRDRESSING IN LONDON AND PARIS A returned traveler says. "When I was in Europe this year I found both cities so thickly dotted with hairdress ing parlors and hair goods stores that- I wondered if the women ever had time for anything but care of the hair. Personally I was interested in finding a really good shampoo and was hap pily surprised when several inquiries each brought the suggestion that our own American made cantbrox sham poo is best. I tried it and have de cided that it is not advisable to use • makeshift but always use a prepara tion made for shampooing only. You can enjoy the best that is known for about three cents a shampoo by get ting a package of canthrox from your druggist; dissolve a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water and your shampoo is read}'.* After its use the hair dries rapidly with uniform color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth." Adv. I .WMGLEYS. CHEWING GUM V J And, with each 5c package m get a United Profit ring Coupon, good the we!l known f»vorif. HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel Make Biscuits This Way For twelve small biscuits measure three cups of flour, three teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of salt. Sift together three times. Add two tablespoons of shortening. This may be pure lard but. the best shortening is meat dripping that has been well clari fied. I always use this when baking lor a public class and when it is not to be had I substitute one tablespoon of but ter and one tablespoon of laid. Mix this into the dry, sifted ingredients aud add one-half pint of milk or water. The milk makes a richer biscuit with a softer erust; the water makes the bis cuit white and crisp. They should be very soft when mixed and patted out on a pastry board until about an iuch thick. The palm ot the hand is better for this than a rolling pin, in fact, except for cookies and pastry, there is little use in this world for rolling pins. Bake in a quick oven eight minutes. !The full time for mixing, cutting and baking biscuits should never exceed twelve minutes and in contests it is often done in eight. Twin biscuits are made just as ex plained above but are patted out thin ner. Cut iu rounds as usual and lightly butter the lower half. Place a round on top of this and bake. They come apart when served'and are richer than the ordinary biscuit. Drop Biscuit —These are not, so smooth looking as the cut ones but are quicker to make. Always use milk for them. The proportions arc almost ident ical with the recipe above except that the sugar is used to help with the browning: Three cups of flour sifted, three teaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon of sugar, one teaspoon of salt, two tablespoons of shortening. Enough gust Pollock that the pins holding tho ropes to the ear had not 'been inspected for two days prior to the fatality, and that no blocks or safety catches existed on the slo<pc to stop runaways. POURED DEATH WITH OIL Woman Turns to Human Torch and Dies, House in Ashes Dußoistown, Nov. 12. —'Pouring oil to encourage a kitchen fire, Mrs. Ells worth Young, aged was fatally burned by the explosion that, followed, and the house was destroyed. Her mother-in-law, Mrs. Sheridan Young, ran to her rescue and was bad ly burned about the hands. The young woman rushed through the bouse, scattering tho flames ami out the front door to the home of a neighbor, falling unconscious on the door step. All of her clothinjj was burned from her body and she died in a Williaaiaport hospital. Farmer Kills Himself Bloonisburg, Nov. 12. —Fred Hosier, a Civil war veteran and a well-known farmer, blew off the entire front of his head yesterday with a shot gun. The body was found by « farm employe. Fatally Shot in Cousin's Fall Altooua, Pa., Nov. 12. Ralph Fiekcs, aged 22, of Wyandt, Bedford sweet milk to make a very soft dough. Drop by spoonfuls onto a buttered pan and bake in a quick oven. Cream Biscuits—English recipe: Sift one pint of flour with two teaspoons of baking powder and half a teaspoon of salt. Warm a pint of cream until it will melt a teaspoon of butter. Add the butter to the. warm cream and when it is melted and cool beat in two eggs. Add to the flour and beat briskly. Pour the batter into hot buttered gem pans and bake in a moderate oven. Sour Milk and Soda Biscuit—These will never be yellow unless you use too much soda. Like all material soda dif fers in strength. A fresh box, newly opened and not exposed to the varying temperature of the Uihen will possess much greater power than soda, that has stood open 011 the shelf for days. The proper quantity is one level teaspoon jof soda to.a full pint of sour milk or jcreain. Pour the soda, milk and salt I into a deep bowl and gift in flour to make the dough a trifle heavier than for baking powder biscuit. Shortening is not always added. If you use it in soda biscuit melt it and mix it into the sour milk. Never use it with soda if you use sour cream. These biscuits needs a slower oven than baking powder ones and should bake about twenty minutes. They may be shaped with the hand or with a cutter. Beaten biscuits arc relics of befor' de war days when time was plenty and every kitchen was furnished with a stroug negro who was able to "beat de biskits until dey blistered." Women who do their own baking put the , bis cuit through the chopping machine, some twelve or more times and the re sults are good but not like the real Southern article. county, was shot in the right thigh bv tho accidental discharge of a gun in the hands of Boss .Motto, aged 20, his cousin, with whom he was hunting ves terday, and died from loss of blood while being brought to the hospital. iXlotto tripped and fell. How to Peel Off a Weatherbea'en Face It's really a simple matter to reno vate a face soiled by flirt, wind or cold. Ordinary mereolized wax, used like cold cream, will transform the worst old complexion into one of snowy whiteness and velvety softness. It literally peels off the outer veil of surface skin, but so gently, gradually, there's no dis comfort. The wornout skin comes off, not in patches, but evenly, in tlnv par ticles, leaving no evidence of the treat ment. The younger, healthier under skln forming the new complexion is one of captivating loveliness. One ounce of mercolized wax. to he had at anv drug store, in enough to remove an'v coarse, chapped, pimpled, freckled, fad ed or sallow .skin. Apply before re tiring, washing it. off mornings. Many nklns wrinkle easily with every wind that blows. An excellent wrinkle remover, because it /tightens the skin and strengthens relaxed muscles, is a wash lotion made as follows: Powdered saxollte. 1 oz., dissolved In witch hazel, one-half pint. This gives immediate re sults, adv.
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