Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, August 02, 1912, Image 3

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From a Mere Man.
Will you kindly advise me the du
ties of the "best man" at a home wed
ding? lam to wear a dress suit. Will
you state the accessories that go with
1L? Harry.
The best man is supposed to be the
moral support and adviser of the
hridgegroom; he sees to the details,
such as having the necessary creden
tials at hand required by the state
and clergyman, pays the latter,
stands by the bridgegroom and enters
with him; he takes the maid of honor
(if there is one) under his especial
protection after the ceremony. In fact,
he is supposed to be the official think
er for the bridgegroom. Pearl studs
and cuff links, a white bow tie, white
kid gloves and white waistcoat, with
patent leather pumps, go with full
evening dress.
The Proper Thing to Do.
Being in doubt I come to your help
ful department for information. Is it
necessary to write anything upon the
card that is sent with a wedding gift?
If so, what? Must an invitation to a
wedding be acknowledged?
A. G.
It is not necessary to say anything
on the card, on the other hand, it is
perfectly proper to do so. The words
"Sincere good wishes" or "Hearty con
gratulations" seem to bring the donor
into closer touch with the recipient,
but as with all things, this is a mat
ter of personal feeling. Dame Curt
sey has said timo and again that an
invitation to a home wedding demand
ed an immediate "acceptance" or "re
gret" the same as for any social func
tion at a home. A wedding at the
church does not require a reply.
Fift for a Man.
Will you name a few articles that a
young woman may with propriety give
to a man who is about to leave for a
distant city to study law?
Sweet Sixteen.
It is supposed that the man in ques
tion will have a "den" of some de
scription and there are a number of
things to provide which are useful as
well as ornamental. For instance, a
bronze incense burner to hold cigar
ashes, a stunning metal desk set, a
brass candlestick with a bayberry can
dle, a metal letter holder, book ends
of wood or metal, a framed sentiment,
etc. In fact, there is almost no limit
to acceptable objects outside of the
ever-present pillow, of which, like tea
spoons for a girl, "there can never be
too many."
Where to Send the Present.
I have received so much help by
reading your page that I come to you
now.
My brother will marry in the fall,
as he will goto our home and I am
not able togo to the wedding shall I
send the present home or give it to
them when they come back to the
city ? Engie.
Seems to me as long as the bridal
couple are to make their home in the
same town that I would wait and give
them your gift when they arrive, as it
will save them packing it and bring
ing back with them. However, it will
be perfectly proper to send it to the
bride before the wedding if you pre
fer.
Send Self-Addressed Stamped En
velope.
I find your department very help
ful. I would like to know of a book
of nice parlor games that could be
played at house parties for boys and
girls.
A Constant Reader.
There are several books of games
and amusements intended to help
those who entertain but who have lit
tle time or thought to give to the mat
ter. Just send me a self-addressed
envelope in care of the paper (stamp
ed) and I will send you the names and
prices of three or four.
Card to Send With Flowers.
Will you please tell me what to
write on a card to send with flowers
when a death occurs?
Anxious to Know.
Your card if .lent from the florist
«vith the flowers which you order by
telephone or mail need have nothing
upon it "beside your name, but if you
wish you may send a card which has
penciled upon it "With deep sympa
thy" or "Accept our sincere sympathy
in this your great sorrow."
Reply E. L. O.
A girl only twelve y»ars old is en
tirely too young to have a beau or go
to dances. Perhaps young people
think I am too strict, but remember I
have been over the road and know
and a girl loses all her freshness and
attractiveness by going out when she
•hould be in bed by eight, o'clock.
MME. MERRI.
While not perfumes exactly, toilet
waters are always scented, and their
use Is very beneficial to the skin, par
ticularly in the summer, when it needs
all the refreshment it can get. The
scented waters are diluted with plain
water for use, for some of the vin
egars are so strongly perfumed as to
seem disagreeable when used full
strength.
From 20 drops to a teaspoonful of
the toilet water is putin a basin bath,
the water so treated being Intended
for the rinsing alter a cleaning j
sponge or tub bath. The liquid is left |
to dry 011 the skin, as one of the chief j
purposes of the toilet water is its ton-,
ic effect. After a weary day, a rub-!
down with a good toilet water, proper- j
ly diluted, makes one feel like a new |
being, and while it is very convenient
to get the vinegars ready made they ;
can be turned out at home-very easily j
and sometimes much more cheaply.
Of all the fragrant toilet waters 1
ncne is so much used as rose water,
and when this is pure it possesses the j
greatest cosmetic virtues. One for-j
mula lor this delicious toilet water j
calls for four pounds of rose petals !
and ten quarts of water. The water j
W first distilled and then poured cold |
upon the petals, which are shaken j
around in the liquid. Then the vessel |
is loosely covered and putin a cool,
dark place for several weeks, until j
the liquid becomes odorous. Then it |
is again distilled, and the drippings j
are gathered in small bottles aud j
closely corked.
Another formula calls for putting
the roso petals in an eartheru jar
and covering them with a weak brine
of common salt. The roses may be |
gathered every day, and the petals :
added as they come handy.
An improved still can be made by j
fastening an india rubber tube to the
spout of a tea kettle and passing it
through cold water to condense the '
steam. The distillate,, or drippings I
should be received in a glass or earth- i
en receptacle; for if toilet waters ;
came in contact with copper, zinc or
lead, they will exidize the metals.
Stills for home use, however, can be
bought very cheaply in the shops—
from a dollar and a half up.
Many other garden blooms with
pungent odors, or even faintly delicate
ones, can be used for exquisite and
helpful toilet waters —mignonette, 111- 1
ies of the valley, clove-pinks, valer- ;
ian, heliotrope, honeysuckle, violets,
gardenias, jasmine, etc. In New Or
leans and Charleston Creole ladies
often drop .the more richly scented
blooms into pure alcohol, allowing
them to digest or soak in the spirits,
when the odor thoroughly permeates
the alcohol.
A toilet liquid much used by the
ladies of the olden times, and often
called to this day "angel water," is
much esteemed for its beauty value,
it can be made at home in the follow
ing manner:
Rose-water 5 ounrp.i
Orange-flower water 5 ounces
Myrtle water 2(4 ounces
Essence of ambergris 1 drachm
Essence of musk Vs drachm
Mingle the various substances and
agitate the bottle for several hours,
continuing the shaking during the day
quite frequently for some weeks.
Keep th 9 bottle closely stoppered and
in a warm, dark place. Let it stand
for two weeks or longer, then decant
the liquid, and if it is not perfectly
clear, filter it. Properly made, angel
water should be almost colorless.
There are many uses for bay rum,
one being that it is admirable for mas
saging the scalp after the shampoo,
when one is likely to catch cold or
the hair needs some little dressing to
keep it in order. Hut if it is used too
often or too lavishly on the head it
will dry out the locks. Bay rum of
a very good sort is cheap enough at
the drug store, but if one is clever
at turning out beauty preparations
this formula would give about as pure
r. thing as could be had:
Oil of hay 240 grains
Oil of orange li> grains
Oil of piinenta 16 grains
Alcohol 1 quart
Water 25 fluid ounces
Dissolve the oils in the alcohol and
add the water. Then stir into the
liquid about two ounces of precipated
phosphate of lime and filter. This
will improve with age.
New Color Schemes.
Navy blue and violet are dominating
colors in millinery, and are mixed
•very artistically with light threads of
cerise, orange, green and gray straw.
Even the new flowers show the influ
ence of these contrasting mixtures,
and often some novelties in their ar
rangements.
Poppies of shot taffetas succeed the
white poppies of velvet. Each petal
rests on another large petal of green
crepe de chine, forming a border all
round, while the heart or center of the
flower is in ostrich feathers, either
*,)ack or yellow. This is an amusing
I novelty for the spring millinery.
rni in
Advertising
n Talks n
ka mmmmtmmmmammmmmmmm warn
|c ooooooooooooc dJ
CHURCH SHOULD ADVERTISE
Topeka (Kan.) Pastor Favor* Public
ity as a Means of Furthering the
Gospel.
Does it. pay to advertise a church?
That's a question which has wrinkled
many a clerical brow. There's at least
one minister of the gospel in Topeka,
Kan., who has settled the problem in
his own mind and has given the vic
tory to the side of the newspapers and
handbills. He is Rev. Robert Gordon,
pastor of the First Baptist church.
"In colonial days," says Rev. Gordon,
| "when every man who stayed away
! from church was fined a ton of tobac-
I co, it was hardly necessary to adver
! tise services. But we are glad that
| sort of pressure cannot be brought to
| bear today. Men now go to church bt
' cause they choose to go."
Speaking further on the question of
' publicity as a means of furthering the
j gospel, Doctor Gordon says:
"1 am convinced the church ought to
! advertise today. D. L. Moody was a
j great believer in publicity and the
S Moody church in Chicago spends about j
SOO a week in newspaper advertising. I
J. Wilbur Chapman spent $15,000 in
i the newspapers during a recent re
| vival campaign in Boston. Everybody
; knew what was happening. The
churches were crowded. In Binghamp- j
j ton, N. Y., the merchants offered all
I their contracted space in the papers
j to the churches on Saturday for adver
| tising. The ministers promptly ac
cepted the proposition. Next day the
! church attendance showed an increase
| of 30 per cent. Even conservative old
| Trinity Episcopal church, New York,
I has just hung out a great electric sign.
I The word "Trinity" in large letters |
stands in the center of the sign and
: the word "Parish" at one end and
"House" at the other. The sigu is
[ eight feet long by four feet high, j
! weighs a ton and is of 1,500 candle I
j power. That church has also employed j
a pt«oss agent to give out the news of :
its affairs. The trustees of a church |
in Rochester, N. Y., have erected on j
| top of the 145-foot tower a substantial,
j 12-foot cross, that is illuminated every
i night there is service. I am told it
I has made a distinct and helpful im
pression on the community and has
! given the church a civic character it
did not have before.
| "Early to bed and early to rise.
I Preach the old gospel and advertise"—
1 would be a good motto for any preach-
I er. If church attendance is a bene
| ficial thing then the church Is under
i obligation to do all it can to persuade
' people to attend. To my mind the j
| church is as essential to the best indi- j
1 vidual and social life as bread and wa
! ter are to physical life. She not only
| has a splendid ideal to exalt, but can
put men in contact with the power
! which will enable them to arrive. Hav
ing this conviction, it becomes a duty
—to me a very delightful duty—to per
suade non-churchgoers to change their
ways.
"I met a man recently who had not
been inside a church for twenty years. I
| He said he had no confidence in the j
j church and no desire to attend, and he
' swore that positively the last church
which, under any circumstances, he
ever would attend would be a Baptist
church. Now he is not a hopeless
j case. He, like a great many others,
j has a mistaken notion of what the
; church stands for and he is not at
all acquainted with what the church
is doing. All he needs is light. It is
! our business to give him the facts.
"There are many people in this city
i who do not know even where the First
Baptist church is located. A while ago
a couple got off a train here one Sun
i day morning and asked a hack driver
ito take them to the First Baptist
! church. The driver was sure he knew
! the place, but he set them down at
j the First Presbyterian church.
"In these busy days the church is in
j danger of being crowded out. There
are so many other attractions clamor
ing for attention. Almost unconscious
| ly many yield to that which most fre
! quently appeals to them. Our psycliol
j oglsts are telling us the idea held up
; permost in the mind tends to work it
j self out in action. That explains the
| success so many business men have
i won by advertising. And that is why
j we must keep the church attendance
i idea in men's minds,
i "Some claim advertising cheapens
I rehgion, but there is nothing so cheap
■ ens religion as an empty, rutty church.
| Advertising gets results and we must
do the king's business in a business
like way. The old prophets", in Bible
times, went through the streets blow
ing trumpets to get the crowd. The
apostles wrote letters and scattered
them broadcast. In your childhood
days the old village church sent out a
beautiful and effective advertisement
every time her bell broke the Sabbath
morning stillness. Today we must get
our invitations to the people and
Charles Stelzle says, 'The newspaper
is without question the best advertis
ing medium for the church.' "
1 The man who is "afraid his !>
2 competitor will find out" might !>
| profit by what the latter al- <>
£ ready knows about him. !|
PUBLICITY LIGHT THAT SAVES
The Advertiser's Pledge of Honesty
and Square Dealing Is Like a
Confession Before Men.
(Abstract of ati address delivered at the
banquet by the Fort Worth Advertising
Men's club to the Associated Advertising
Clubs of America, at Fort Worth, by
James Schermerhorn.)
Publicity can do for us what the
light that fell upon the
road did for Saul: it can save us
from ourselves. It Is the searchlight
turned back upon our own purposes
and methods. It can save nations,
states and parties by uncovering the
refuge of deceit and the hiding place
of duplicity. Some far-sighted cor
l»rations are beginning to love light
rather than darkness. They are
coming out of their secret places to
give their side of the case to the
common people.
Professional reserve Is blinking in
the sunlight of publicity. It thinks
It may be able to stand it eventually.
What a blessing to mankind if min
isters, doctors and lawyers would daily
let their credentials and records be
known of all men, so that publicity |
could point the way straight to the
right door in the urgent hour of ;
stress and need.
The medical associations have a
greater horror of getting Into print
than they have of transmitted infec
tion through the marriage of the phy- j
sically unfit —a frequent tragedy that j
might be averted if ethics did not 1m- j
pose solemn silence upon the learned
men who could save the race through
preventive publicity. Publicity can
save bodily health ♦hrough popular
I enlightenment and business through
multiplied appeal.
As a man advertises from day to
day in his own business, so is he. It
is really the old-fashioned sign of j
conversion, "taking a stand in meet- j
j ing." It is the formulation of your
business creed, your confession be
fore men.
You are putting into form your best j
promptings, your fondest hopes com- i
mercially. What you have written ;
you have written, and when it stands
out from the printed page day after :
day, it may speak to the necessities
and purses of others, but it speaks
I to your sense of consistency and in
tegrity.
If at the outset your promises are
fairer than your performances, there
! is hope; for your copy proves that
| you know what you ought to do in ,
j your dealings with the public. Give
| conscience time and it will catch up
I with your copy; for self-accusation
\ is a self-starter and is not. restricted
by the speed laws.
Advertising may be self-revelation
to begin with; but on a long contract j
It Is pretty liable to become self-re
generation. For we all aspire to be- !
come what our friends feel we are
capable of becoming. It is the dis
trusted that despair. Publicity Is the
advertiser's pledge, his covenant with
the consumer in the open.
Daily repeated and daily tested it
should come ,to be in good time —
for true worth is not gained at a
bound, but tolls upward through the [
j night—the lodestar of his better self, j
i the light that saves!
J The advertiser who will not !>
5 listen to reasons and truths is <>
# much like the man who saw a !<
i camel for the first time and !>
S walking around it said: "There
> ain't no such animal what >
i I
HOW TO REACH THE PEOPLE
Unit the Most Potent Force in Adver
tising, Says Thomas E. Dockrell—
Home Paper the Best.
Thomas E. Dockrell, the well-known
advertising expert, in a talk before
Detroit advertising men declared that
most of the world's ideas on adver- !
tising are upside down and needed j
reversal.
"The unit is what must be looked j
to," said Mr. Dockrell, "not the one
supreme directing head. It is the
unit in the store, the salesman or
the salesgirl, that must be tuned to
the sales, or all other work is nearly i
useless. A big department store is j
sometimes likened to a pyramid, with
the thousand of employes as the base |
and the big owner as the apex. But j
this is an upside down view. Bet us j
suppose the head of the business has !
a new glove manager and this man
ager has got the best goods and pat
terns and advertised In the best way, j
and the customer conies In and meets i
Allie, the $4-a-week salesgirl, and j
Allie doesn't rise to the business, j
what use has been all the other study !
and energy? We then see that Allie.
not Mr. Wanamaker, is the apex, and
that as in most cases the pyramid j
is set upside down and, all resting on
the apex, it may topple over.
"The same with advertising. A
manufacturer has a, small quantity,
say J2O worth, of goods in a store in
Peoria, 111. He desires to see the
goods sold and his trade in Peoria I
built up. How would he do It? There
are four big circulation periodicals
that are recognized as the biggest
national advertising mediums. Sup- !
pose you suggested one of these as
the advertising medium lo reach Pe
oria people. He might not call you
a fool, but he would remind you that
he was after the Peoria field. The
direct tiling to get at the Peoria
trade would be the Peoria newspaper,
wouldn't it? There Is your unit idea
again. Get right at the spot and the
medium for that spot. There is no
question that the home newspaper Is
the medium to rench the people In
any locality, and the addition of the
units covers the broad field."
MItDNKTIONAL
SwrSaiooi
LESSON
(By E. O. SELLERS, Director of Eve
ning Department, The Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago.)
LESSON FOR AUGUST 4.
THE WORTH OF THE KINGDOM.
LESSON TEXT-Matthew 13, 41-53.
GOLDEN TEXT—"Seek ye first his
kingdom, and his righteousness; and all I
these things shall be added unto you."
Matthew 6:33.
We have studied some of the prin
ciples that are to obtain in the es
tablishing and the working out of this
new kingdom Jesus came to found,
and the question naturally arises, "Is
j it of sufficient value for me to con- I
slder or seek to enter it, or to possess
it?" In our lesson today there is set j
I before us four parables (Jesus' favorite J
S way of teaching) which he gave priv- j
ately to his disciples and not to the |
multitude, that ought to answer any I
such questioning in our hearts.
The first two have to do with the
great value of the kingdom, the sec- !
ond its mixed character and final sepa
ration, and the last, the great respon
sibility of those who possess its ;
truths. In this entire group of par
ables found in the thirteenth chapter I
of Matthew are four that are for men 1
who are careful to observe the out
ward development, and four others
that are for those men of faith who
Bee beneath the surface the hidden
j things of the kingdom. Those men
who view the kingdom in each par
ticular age as God sees rather than
as man observes.
Today's lesson sets forth the pur
chase of things of great value, the ac
j quisition and disposition of things of
a mixed value, and lastly, the use of
these values after coming into the pos
session of them.
I. The hidden treasure, v. 44. Per
haps more properly this should be
termed the parable of the bought field.
We need to remember that in all of
these parables the Master himself is
the important personage. He is the
i one who sows the seed, etc. Ilence
we understand that he is the one
who discovers this great treasure hid
den in the field. He has already told
us that "the field is the world" (Matt.
13:38).
Symbolism of Pearls.
11. The pearl of great price, vs. 45,
46. This parable is very much the
same as the foregoing, yet it adds great
strength and force to this study in
values. We ought to be very clear in
our study and application. The pearl
of great price may perhaps be taken
as <i symbol of our salvation, but if
so for us to interpret the merchant
man as the commonality of man would
be for the sinner to purchase his own
I salvation, a thing as far as possible
for the New Testament teaching.
Why does Jesus speak of pearls to
the Hebrews who did not esteem them
at all? What is the symbolism of a
pearl? The pearl is the one precious
stone that is the result of a living
organism; it is the result of an injury
done to the life of the oyster. It has
always stood for purity and for in
nocence. Is it then Illogical for us to
assume that Christ is the merchant
man who gave all to redeem (e. g„
buy back) the lost souls of mankind?
111. The drag net, vs. 47-50. This
j parable is another that deals with the
! mixed character of the kingdom here
| upon the earth and of the final separa
j tion incident thereto. It is noticeable
that this is collective, not individual,
fishing. There will be many move
ments that will ostensibly be for the
gathering of men into this kingdom,
but tho principle here laid down is
that one considered in the lesson of J
j the wheat and the tares, viz., that ul
! timately there shall be cast out all
things that do offend. In the finality
of all things the kingdom shall be
without spot or blemish. Hence we
| do not read into this parable empha- ;
| sis upon any phase of evangelism.
Search the Scriptures.
IV. The householder, vs. 51-53. In
j the first of these parables we had tho :
| Word as the seed of this new kingdom, |
; in this the eighth of the kingdom par
ables we revert as it were to the mat
ter of the Word. Jesus asks his j
disciples if they understand the Word !
jhe has spoken to them. Their re- j
j sponse is, "Yes, we do." Then Jesus |
I shows them what a burden of respon- j
j sibility due to possession rests upon
| them. Jesus refers to the Scribes
j whose work under the Jewish econ
: omy was to transcribe and to interpret
! and tells tho disciples that they in a
like manner are to interpret the king- !
dom to all men. They are to "bring
forth" hidden treasures. We must re
member that Jesus taught in parables
that "hearing they might not hear,"
etc., hence we are to search the
I Scriptures and bring forth these hid- '
den treasures of truth as we go about j
doing our part.
Are we willing to pay the price for
[ the Hake of the pearl? Are we willing
to pay the price of the field that oth
ers may possess the great treasure of
eternal life in Christ? Ho paid the
price to purchase eternal life for us.
Do not forget the kingdom is not eat
ing and drinking, but righteousness
and joy and peace in the Holy Spirit
(Rom. 14:17).
The treasure w-as discovered, the
pearl sought after; both methods
have their place and significance in
our lives that are to v be hid with
Christ in God. We must reveal to the
*wld great treasures.
Effective Background.
"Do you think your audiences enjoy
the statistics you quote In your
speeches?"
"No," replied Senator Sorghum; "I
Just put 'em Into make the rest of my
remarks seem more interesting by
contrast."
Still Hoping.
"Pa, are you an optimist?"
"Yes. I am still hoping to be able
some time to attend a national conven
tion at which no band will be permit*
ted to play 'Dixie.' "
He Knew.
The owners of a certain farm had
| butter and eggs brought them daily
| by the daughter of the farm. A train
; ed nurse had a case at the owner's
home. One day the farmer's wife and
daughter were discussing this, when
! the little boy, who had been listening,
| said: "Rita, if 1 go with you tomor-
I row, will you show me the trained
I nurse?" The girl said she would, and
the next day he accompanied her. The
| nurse came into the kitchen, said a
few words to him, and went out. He
ran home at once, and arrived breath
less. "Mother," he cried, "the train
jed nurse Is nothing but a girl!"— Ha
rper's Bazar.
Charlotte J. Cipriani of the TJnlver
! slty of Paris says:"lt may prove ln
i structive to call attention to the fact
! that of the three oldest universities in
! Christian western Europe, Salerno,
Bologna and Paris, two —Salerno and
Bologna— were thrown open from
| their origin to women, both as students
i nnd professors. Nor did the women
1 fail to take advantage of this oppor
unlty."
High-Handed Justice at the Canal.
Mr. Bishop, characterizing Col. G. W.
J Goethals, emphasizes especially the
big man's many-sidedness. Besides put
ting through the biggest engineering
' job In the world, he has been, during
! his years at Panama, a stanch fighter
' for the laws of economic decency.
Colonel Goethals is a fighter and he
will fight a trust as readily as he will
fight a labor union. Whole cargoes of
tainted meat have been shipped back
by the commissary, because the beef
: trusts' goods were not up to sample,
i Thousands of square yards of screen
ing were condemned and left unpaid
for. as soon as It was discovered that
the copper trust had put In so much
Iron that they were rapidly falling to
\ pieces with rust. Colonel Goethals is
determined that no contractors shall
become rich by supplying the Panama
canal with rotten food and shoddy ma
terial. as so many did In the days of
i the De Lesseps company.
World'® Debt to Books.
How safely we lay bare the poverty
of human Ignorance to books wlthouv
feeling any shame. They are masters
] w-ho instruct us without rod or ferule,
! without angry words, without clothes
:or money. If we come to them they
are not asleep: if you ask and inquire
of them they do not withdraw them
selves; they do not chide you if you
make mistakes; they do not laugh at
you If you are Ignorant.—Richard De
Bury.
Love Element In Writer's Lives.
Alfred de Musset's love for Irrespon
sive George Sand gave his thought*
such on extraordinary elevation that
1 he wrote many brilliant poems In con
sequence. Chaucer sang the praises of
: many queens, but his one great love
i was Pliilippa Picard de Rouet, the
I to Queen Anne of Bo
i hernia. He waited nine years to marry
! her, but made It a matter of complaint
| In several poems.
The Downtrodden Farmer.
An Ottawa man heard that a farm
;er wanted to sell a motor car. He
I sympathized with the poor farmer
and his family because they were
forced to part with the machine for
; financial reasons, he believed, and
! went out to the farm to buy it. The
| farmer wajs not at home, but his daugh
ter was there. "I came out to buy
your car," he said. "Which one?"
asked the girl.—Kansaa City Star.
Sight of the Color Blind. c
A color blind person sees light as
| either white or gray and darjc colors
| appear either as dark gray or black.
J This mutual sensitiveness is due to
I the fact that the light nerves and col-
I or nerves are closely interbound, but
there is a different set of nerves for
both light and color, Just as there are
I different sets of nerves for tempera
j ture and for touch.
For Itching Skins
and Pimply Faces
Try Resinol Free
TF you suffer from eczema,
A salt rheum, ringworm,
| pimples and blackheads, or
other distressing skin or
scalp trouble, you should
send at once for a generous
free trial of Resinol Soap
and Resinol Ointment. These
will prove to you how Resi
nol stops itching instantly
and quickly clears away
eruptions.
Sold by all driiptrUts For free nam*
plen write to Dept. BK, Kealuol Chemical