The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, January 06, 1909, Image 7

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    BAGLIAOZZZ,
fieafoche,
cs3 a
Wcrn-cEt
Kay a!I come
from
ConsRatlon.
(called also lane's Tea)
Is a herb Tonic-Laxative and
will cure constipation and the
ills fiat come from it.
It is a sreat blood medicine
mid one of fhe best for all
stomach, fcidHey and bowel ?
complaints.
ATI J :.. r. .... J Ki
Talking Postal Cards.
The talking postal card Is the lnven
tlon of a French engineer, and has be
come so popular In that country that
the American rights have been se
cured and the device will be placed
In the cities of the United States. The
person wishing to send a talking pos
tal card to a friend, enters the booth
end talks Into a machine that records
the words on the specially prepared
postal card. When the recipient re
ceives the card a hundred or a thou
sand miles away, he, or perhaps She,
takes the card to the nearest pestal
booth and Inserts It in a machine'
The record on the postal card Is In
destructible and the exact vole of
the sender Is heard. Popular Me
chanics. Only Ono "firomo tilnlno"
fhat ii Lnxtrfrce Brwie QWtuftre. Look
for the mpnirtBrra l E. V. Curve. L?red tbe
World over re Our a Cold fn One Day. 25o.
Hlgh-Prlced Lawyer.
Mr. Balfour Browne, K. C, the
Unionist candidate for East Bradford,
during the last 15 or 20 years made
the most consistently good Income of
any man at the bar. More or less
accurate estimates have been made,
and it is said that 50,000 rather
than 20,000 has been his average In
come for the past 15 years. Tit-bits.
The Ingenuity of Inventors.
The Ingenuity of inventors and
manufacturers is ever at work In the
endeavor to reduce the expense of
production, and at the same time to
Improve the quality of articles having
a large sale. Ttls Is not only benefi
cial to the purchasing public, but It
Inures to the benefit of the producer
In increasing sales and preventing
competition. This has been so lh the
case of farm machinery, clothing,
shoes, bicycles, etc., and now It Is ap
parent la the safety razor field. Thou
sands of this style of razor have been
old at from 1.C0 to i eaeh and giv
en satisfaction. Recently mannfac
turers hare applied more scientific
principles and Improved methods In
their manufacture, and the result Is
rfeen In the "Stirs Shavr" razor, which
Is Bent postpaid for twenty-five cents
in Btampn by the Boo Publishing
JTouse, 134 Leonard street, New
YBrk. It Is superior to any razor
Sold, being bonght largely by those
already owning the highest priced
razors. Not every one knows that
the best results are obtained by hav
ing two or three razors and alternat
ing them In use. This practice of al
ternating possibly aceonnts for the
very large sale of this low prleed Im
plement. Posed as Anti-Fat Model.
A starving man, picked up on the
street in Paris, who looked like the
proverbial skeleton man of a dime
museum, astonished the magistrate
before whom ho was taken, by the as
sertion that he was a professional
model for an anti-fat compound war
ranted to reduce heavyweights to a
normal state of avoirdupois.
Statute of Limitations.
We venture humbly to expostulate
with the distinguished feminine pub
licist of Evanston, 111., who insists
that Adam "was a loafer." De don't
mean to defend Adam. As the cause
of work In his somewhat numerous
posterity he never can be popular. He
may have been a malingerer, but
surely he Is protected by the statute
of limitations. New York Sun.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sjmp for Children
teething, softens thegnnis, reduces inflamma
tion, ullaj'8 pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bot He.
Church All of One Piece.
The only temple in the world
whose walls, floor and roof are of one
single piece was opened yesterday at
Lake street and Forest avenue, Oak
Park. It Is built of re-enforced con
crete, on the Edison plan, of continu
ous material with no seams. The
temple belongs to Unity congregation.
Its completion was celebrated with
music, speeches and an address by
the pastor. Chicago Tribune.
Itch cored m 30 mfnntM by Wealfod's
Banitiry Lotion. Never fails. At sViigeirte.
1
Panama Canal's Cost.
Another point not referred to in the
isthmian canal commission's annual
report was the probable cost of the
complete work. The latest unofficial
estimate based on expendltude for a
canal one-third done, is .$100,000,000.
-Springfield Republican "
Si!
p. Tmm 0
. ,., , ... ,
x,4 pt rffut'
Medicine
SCALLOPED APPLES.
Select one-half dozen apples, wash
and core. Slice across apple So that
ench piece will be encircled by skin
of apple. Plac9 In a stewing or fry
ing pan, pouring over them about
one-quarter of a copful of water,
three-quarters of a cupful of sugar,
though amount of sugar Is best de
termlnea by acidity o't apples, and a
tablespoonful of butter. Cofer and
allow to simmer; when soft, remove,
cover and fry; when eufilelently
brown place In a rather deep dtsh. al
ternate layers of the appl'es and
grated cheese. Place in the oven for
five or ten minutes and serve In the
same dish in which they were scal
loped. Eoston Post,
SALMON WITH GREEN PEAS.
One can of salmon plated over and
broken Into small pieces, one can of
green pens, two cupfnls of thin, white
sauce, and bread or cracker crufnbs
bnttOT a pudding dish, SpYlhkle with
bread or cracker crnmbs; put In a
layer of salmon and peas, cover with
white sauce, repeat nntll all Is used,
cover well with buttered cracker
crnmbs and bake In a hot oven until
crumbs are brffwn. SeTVe hot.
White Sauce Two level table.
spoons of flour, two level tablespoons
of butter, one cup o-f. hot milk, one
quarter teaspoon of rait, pinch of
pepper; melt butter in saucepan until
it bubbles, add the flour, salt and
pepper, mix until smooth, then ponr
the hot milk In gradually, stirring
erch time. Cook until It thickens.
Boston Post.
MACARONI B-TSHES.
Macaroni and spaghetti dishes are
almost ideal from the dietetic point. of
view, says the Washington Star.
Americans do not half'appreciate the
possibilities of . macaroni When
Italians of comfortable means and
good family can make some form of
macaroni their standard dinner dish
every day and thrive on It, its food pos
sibilities would seem to bear Investi
gation and adoption. The true maca
roni wheat is not yet grown in Amer
ica to any great extent. What is
needed for this purpose is a good hard
wheat rich in gloten. Color dcss.not
matter; in fact, a grayish white flour
contains the largest per cent, of
gluten. If It is pure white that means
too much starch, and the housewlfa
In buying should bear that point In
mind and look for a creamy macaroni.
It it is pure white it becomes pasty
and mucilaginous in cooking and
burns readily.
The taste for macaroni grows by
what It feeds on. The butter, cheese
or Oil with which It is served supplies
the lacking fats and oils. The Ital
ians In cooking macaroni never break
it up. To cook It plain, plunge in a
generous kettle of belling water
lightly salted and boil rapidly for
fifteen or twenty minutes until ten
der. Serve hot with a bowl of grated
cheese. A pound of macaroni fur
nishes a good plateful apiece for four
persons.
Cold rather than hot fish, boned,
shredded and served in apple Jelly.
Use a pointed brush to clean tufted
furniture. It will keep out the moths.
Novelties in fruit salad, such as
ripe gages stoned and stuffed with
cream cheese and covered with may
onnaise, Pats of butter freshly made for a
meal In tiny glass churns, molded and
served on a lettuce heart to look in
viting. To remove tea and coffee stains,
wet spot with cold water, cover with
gylcerlne, and let stand two or three
hours, .then wash with cold water and
hard soap. Repeat if necessary.
Vaseline prevents blisters. A little
vaseline applied to the skin before
putting on a mustard plaster will pre
vent blistering. The same holds good
if iodine is used instead of mustard.
As a matter of fact, the coffee that
Is least injurious is made by allowing
a tablespoonful (heaping)' to a cup
of cold water, and letting it just boll
up well no more. The coffee may
be mixed with an egg before it is put
in, and Is even more palatable. '
If cans of fruit are wrapped after
they have cooled from the canning
process In old newspapers and placed
in a cool, dry spot the asw printer's
Ink and paper will prevent their
molding, for canned fruit only too
often does this.
- Hot corn meal is said to be effective
in dealing window Shades that are
maraly Stmt sotted. Place shades on
a flat surface, aad rub in meal with
clrtnlar motion of the palm. Then
rub gently with a soft dry cloth, and
both meal and dust will be removed.
Now that all shades of brown shoes
are worn more than any other kind,
it is wise for a woman to know how
to clean them. She is not always
near a bootblack, who makes them
look like new for a nickel. Banana
skins are excellent. Rub .the inside
on the leather; let it dry, then polish
it with a piece of chamois or cheese
cloth.
ROOSEVELT'S TABLE TALK.
Its Indiscretion "Makes One's Head
Swim With Astonishment." .
"One can imagine a book which
would be well worth half a million
dollars to any publisher who could
get hold of the necessary material for
it," writes Harry Thurston Peck In
the Forum. "This would be a volume
containing Mr. Roosevelt's table talk
or some of it since he first came
to the Presidency.
"For frank indiscretion, absolute
bluntness and the most Irreverent
pungency of phrasing, this table talk
of Mr. Roosevelt's 'is extraordinarily
interesting. No matter who happens
to be his -guest, tho President always
speaks without the slightest reserve,
giving his actual opinions of Sena
tors, Representatives, public men in
general, Ambassadors and even for
eign potentates, in a way that makes
one's head swim with astonishment.
"One might name at least half a
dozen persons who are by no means
the especial intimates of the Presi
dent, but to whom, nevertheless, be
has blurted out enough of this ex
tremely piquant talk to fill a volume.
The extraordinary part of it all is
that very few indeed of those to who
ho talks have yet betrayed his confi
dence. Of course they tell oilier peo
ple; but only those, who like them
selves, can keep these blazing indis
cretions from getting into the pages
of the newspapers.
"In a few instances, to bo sure,
table gueBts of President Roosevelt
have In perfect Innocence revealed
some of his careless words; but then
he has promptly, enrolled tfiem in tho
Ananias Cltih, and everything has
gone on as though nothing at all had
happened. Where in Europe theTe
would be Issued in some gnzette an
official dementi our President gives
out a statement to the press that the
story-teller has uttered what he knew
to be 'outrageously and absolutely
false.'
"It Is odd that none of the White
House servants have carried their
master's interesting mots to the
newspapers; for the President often
talks quite as freely in their pres
ence as when he, is alone with his in
vited guests. Some day or other in
tho distant future many of these in
teresting and very pungent bits of
phrase and characterization will be
carefully collected and published; but
probably not until many man now
living shall have died."
Yankee Snmonns.
Captain C. V. T. Moore, IT. S. N.,
retired, of Tutuila, Samoan Islands,
recently retired as Governor of the
American part of the islands, says:
"We get along finely together, the
Germans and the Americans. There
is a stretch of water thirty miles wide
between us, serving as the boundary
line between the American and the
German islands. The natives of both
the German and American possessions
realize that the supreme powers of
their respective Island homes are in
Washington and Berlin. Alttfonga
their history and customs and kingly
traditions are still kept up, they know
that Kaiser Wilhelm and the Presi
dent of the United States are the real
powers;
"The natives of the American
group call themselves Yankees and
are proud to be Americans. They
sing 'The Star-Spangled Banner' and
other patriotic songs. The natives of
the German islands are proud of be
ing subjects of the German Kaiser,
and they give vent to their patriotism
by singing 'Die Wacht am Rhetn.'
"The total expense of the islands
Is about 14000 a year to the United
States, which is for clerks, the Gov
ernor being an officer of the navy and
drawing his- pay from the Govern
ment." Washington Herald.
A Popnlnr Czar.
Czar Ferdinand of Bulgaria- again
demonstrates that the Prince Hal
type of prince is not impossible. Ha
cared for nothing but sports, hunting,
and shooting. His own people he
disliked extremely, and at one time
refused to go among them, vowing
that they were the most unwashed
race in Europe. But now ha Is doing
everything in his power to court pop
ular favor. He is leading a life of
ideal temperance, and lately ho pre
sented a botanical garden to the mu
nicipality of Sofia. He who was so
tactless and impatient is now a model
of patience, and people now speak
of h!3 "good heart." Harper's Week
ly. Spider Wise to Advertising.
When Mark Twain was editing the
Virginia City Enterprise, writing copy
one day and mining the next, a su
perstitious subscriber wrote and said
he had found a spider In bis paper.
Was this good or bad luck?
Twain replied to him in the "An
swers to Correspondents" column as
follows: "Old Subscriber The find
ing of a spider in your copy of the
Enterprise was neither good or bad
luck. The spider was merely looking
over our pages to find out what mer
chant was not advertising, to that it
could spin its web across his door, in
anticipation of leading a free and un
disturbed existence forever after."
Trees Like the Hainan Family.
Trees, like animals, eat, sleep,
grow and die. Every one knows this.
yet not every one is aware that trees
tear their clothes and have to mend
them, that they jostlo ono another
like rude boys In a crowd, the strong
overpowering the weak.
Toll That is Pleasure.
It takes twenty-seven dollar bills
to weigh as much as a $20 gold piece.
But nobody was ever known to com
plain of the weariness of earning I
such extra weight around with him. '
CnANCE FOR EDUCATED GOATS.
If the billy-goat could only learn
To draw spike, how much he could earn!
Tho railroad would pay
A dollar a day .
And he would have money to burn.
A STRANGE THING.
Gossips are the greatest liars ws
know, but did you ever hear a story
about yourself that wasn't party true?
Atchison Globe.
SOMETHING SIMILAR.
Customer (In book store) "Have
you Dante's 'Inferno?' "
Clerk "No, but I can give you
Who's Who in Chicago.' "Life.
FIRESIDE CHAT.
Mrs. Jawback "Do you know I
came very near not marrying you?"
Mr. Jawback "Sure, but who told
you about It?" Cleveland Leader.
CORRECT.
Robbie (at the opera) "Mamma,
what, does papa keep going out be
tween the act for?"
Mother "Sh! He goes out for
opera glasses." Judge.
FOR THIS RELIEF, MUCH THANKS
Knlcker "Roosevelt will deliver
several lectures abroad."
Bocker "Abroad? Thank good
ness." New York Sun.
QUITE RIGHT.
Mother "Alice, it is beillme. All
the little chickens have gone to bed."
Alice "Yes, mamma, and so has
the hen." Harper's Bazar.
A SCOTTISH BULL.
"Out of a Scottish population of
6,000,000," said the Lord Advocate
on the Housing bill yesterday, "there
are 2,000,000 living in one room."
A voice amid langhter: "Not in
the same room?" London Daily
Mail.
WHICH?
"What have they named tho
baby?"
"EM.
"Bill?"
"Yes." -
"Cautious parents, aren't they?"
Nashville American.
THE USE OF LUCK.
"Do you believe in such a thing as
luck?"
"Of course," answered Miss Cay
enne. "Otherwise It would be im
possible to explain the success of peo
ple we don't like." Washington Star.
MISSING OPPORTUNITIES.
"I have no patience with a man
who makes the same mistake twice,"
said Armes, rather severely, in speak
ing of an unfortunate friend.
"Neither have I," agreed his wife,
"when there are so many other mis
takes' to make." Youth's Compan
ion. THE OFFICE AND THE MAN.
"The office should seek the man,"
remarked the idealist.
"Perhaps," answered Senator Sor
ghum; "but an office doesn't get much
encouragement in prowling around
seeking anybody. In fact, it has to
roost high to keep from being
grabbed off the perch." Washington
Star.
PRIDEFUL.
"Trimble is what you micht call
supersensitive."
"How so?"
"He Wrote a letter tn the r'lltnp
protesting becauss the paper said
that he was arrested' for snaedine
'an' automobile instead of 'his' auto
mobile." Buffalo Express.
TWO TO CONSIDER.
Husband "Prav. do nnt mUi.n.
derstand me.-Jeannette. All I ask is
mat you -should kill me before and
not after you have kissed the dog."
Wife "But. Leonard, don't vnn
think that the dog may have his pref
erence, too?" Philadelphia In
quirer.
OCCASIONAL CONFUSION.
"A public official must belinflinch-
ing about laying down the law."
Yes. answered Senator Sordinm
"One of the greatest difficulties is
that an official occasionally gets con-
iusea. instead of laying down tho
law he starts in throwing down the
law." Washington Star.
AMONG THE AMATEURS.
"We ain't a-goln' to let you play
agin us."
"Why not?"
"Yer a professional."
- "How do you make that out?"
"Didn't you get half a apple for
playln' centre on Mick Baker's team
las' week?" Denver Post.
MOSES, CASTIGATOR.
"Now, Mabel," said the Sunday
school teacher to a small student,
"can you tell me why the Lord gave
Moses a rod?"
"Yes, ma'am," replied Mabel, with
evident satisfaction at being able to
furnish the deBlred information; "so
he could make the children of Israel
mind him." Chicago News,
LEPROSY DUE TO DIET
Theory of Hawaiian Doctor, Who De
nies It Is Contagious
Dr. ' John Ateherley of the Royal
College of Surgecns, London, who has
practiced 151 years in the Hawaiian
islands, now makes public a new theo
ry as to the cause of leprosy. He at
tributes the disease to diet and says
it is analogous to scurvy.
He ascribes the disease to restricted
diet in which Some necessary element
is lacking, with the injection of an un
due amount of poisonous bacteria,
ptomaines and toxin. He says all the
symptoms resemble scurvy. He says
his study has shows leprosy is not
contagious.
An Engineering Test.
The civil engineer who has excited
moro or less flippant comment by
stang that the roosting of birds on a
bridge is a good test of the security
of the structure ventures to repeat
his proposition, and he quotes such
distinguished naturalists as Darwin
and Audubon In Bupport of his con
tention. Elephants cannot be driven
over a weak viaduct, burros refuse to
take a dangerous trail and rats are the
first to desert a leaking Ship. "Call
it all an absurd superstition if you
will," says the engineer, "the fact re
mains that some things have their In
fluence oil poor, frail humanity that
cannot be supported by logarithmic
computation." Boston Herald.
INTOLERABLE ITCHING.
Fearful Eczema All Over Baby's Face
Professional Treatment Foiled
A Perfect Cure by Cuticura.
"When my little girl was six months old
I noticed small red spots on her right
cheek. They grew so large that I sent for
the doetor but, instead of helping the erup
tion, his ointment seemed to make it worse.
Then I went to a second doctor who said
it was eczema. He also gave me an oint
ment which did not help either. The dis
ease spread all over the face and the eyes
began to swell. The itching grew intoler
able and it was a terrible sight to see. I
consulted doctors for months, but they
were unable to cure the baby. I paid out
from $20 to $30 without relief. One evening
I began to use the Cuticura Remedies. The
next morning the baby's face was all white
instead of red. I continued until the
eczema entirely disappeared. Mrs. P. E.
Gumbin, Sheldon, la., July 13, 1908."
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Traps,
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass.
European Hospitals.
J. B. Boucher of Hartford, Conn.,
describes the hospitals and the medi
cal work done in them In Sweden,
Norway and Denmark. These are
entirely up to dnte, and the courtesy
of the physicians to strangers is of
the best sort. The author describes
at length the hospitals In Stockholm,
Christiania and Copenhagen, one of
the most Interesting of which is the
one founded by Finsen for the treat
ment of diseases by the Finsen light.
Lupus seems to be of extremely fre
quent occurrence in these countries
and marked disfigurement is caused
in many cases. These cases are treat
ed for months and years with the
light, the technique of the use of
which Is given, with the result of a
cure of the disease process. The X
rays are not used now for cancers.
Medical Record.
riles Cnrrd In O to 14 Days.
l'oro Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caneof Itching, Blind, Uleedingor Protruding
Piles in S to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
Our Sugar Supply.
A statistical bulletin on sugar con
sumption In the United States and the
sources of its supply contains Inter
esting information, some of which has
a strong bearing on issues of the day.
It Is shown that the total consumption
of sugar In this country aggregated
last year slightly over, seven billion
pounds. That Is more than one-fifth
the supply of the entire world. At the
average retail price of E4 cents this
makes its sugar annually, an average
of $4.30 for each,, man, woman and
child in this country.
This supply was furnished. In the
following proportions: 21.3 per cent
from domestic productions 17.7 per
cent from the insular possessions and
61 per cent from foreign countries.
Trimmed with 15 ostrich feathers,
each measuring two yards, the hat to
be worn by Miss Madge Temple at the
London Coliseum, Is valued at $G0O.
POSITIVELY
BEST
EXTRA
BLADES
Blades
by mall
. In
:r.......ft
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
134
METALLIC
HEELS &
COUNTER.
Made of
Steel.
For Miners,
Aimrrvnwn.
Farmland all Men J Jt
Who Do Rough Hot.
Your shoe dealer has
shoes fitted with them j
or any cobbler can put
them on; pay for themselves three
times over. One-third the weight
of leather 5 they will never wear
out They are easy to attach.
They will make your old shoes
good as new. bend tor
booklet that tells all
about them.
United Shoe MacMnarj Co.
BOSTON,
MASS.
A College President's Revolt.
Now that President Taylor of Vas
sar has kicked over the traces his ex
ample ought to be followed by fellow
educators. Dr. Taylor says he haa
got through with begging money for
his institution, "the most disagreeable
job" In the business, and suggests that
other college presidents say to their
trustees: "I am through; I will do no
more of that. If I can see an oppor
tunity of asking a man to contribute)
$100,000, I will do it, but I will not
beg for $15 and $20 and $50." In Dr.
Taylor's opinion, the raising of funds
for colleges is rf" . .ter for buslnes
men and not teachers. The head
of a great' , . ucational Institution la
supposed to be a scholar, and more
than that, to be skilled In imparting
his knowledge to others. He Is ex
pected to surpervise the duties of hi
professors, to enforce the college dis
cipline, and by his personal example
to be an Inspiration to the student.
To do all this he must be on the)
ground and not traveling about the
country like a drummer.- There are
students In American colleges who see
their presidents on nn average of
twice a year: In October and June.
The rest of the time "Prexy" is on the
road with a subscription paper.
Pittsburg Gazette Times.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
nylocal applications as thpycannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. Therein onlyone
way to cure deafness, nn J that is by consti
tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byaa
Inflamed condition of tho raucous lining at
the Eustachian Tubn. When this tubeis In
flamed you have a rnmbliug scmid or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be tuken out and this tubo re
ttored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of tee
ave caused bycatarrfc, which is nothingbutae
Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused bycata rrh)thatca
not be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars froo. F.J. Cheney & Co.,Toledo,Ol
Bold by Druggists, 75c.
Sake Hall's Family Pills for constioatlok
Protest Against Pistol-Totlng.
Every good citizen should help t
crush out the pistol-toting habit.
There should be the most stringent
laws and the penalties for their viola
tion should be demanded of onr
courts. The merchant who sells or
aids in the buying of a pistol should
bo fined heavily and, If necessary,
sent to the rock pile. The pistol
carrier should be made to pay as
dearly for his Infraction of the law.
Memphis News-Sciinltar.
CASHiYOURFUR
no matter where you are. It you trap or bur
fur write to-day foi our new plnn to make ex
PVbq? w7 court hice a flb co.,cor:BT,rL
ucip Insist on Having
"or Br. MAK ILL'S Preparatlci
iiiaia p..! 1'lie feinniliirit Heueily
WOIVIE.N ATUBUuumn.
Kcnil lor book, "Koliot lor Women.1 '
FRENCH DRUG CO, 30 W. 321 St., N. V. Cjt
P. iN. IJ. 1. 10 9.
DROPSY SSV2S?IHS!
wit Mir. Beak f InllmenUU and IO Dmrm IrMtaMe
Vrs. Or 11. U. GUBKVft bO.IS, Box B AtlatU. ttfc
ABSOLUTELY
CHEAPEST
Save Shaving Money
Here's a revolution In Safety
Rasora, ths marvelous
v
f 1
1 . vs
"Shrp-Shavr" 25c Safety Razor
which gives you batter BLADE VALUE than
razors costing 20 times the price. The practical
value Is In the BLADE. It Is the best because
mads of ths finest steel tempered by a special
process and scientifically ground and honed
down to the keenest possible edge. You
pay 15 stnts for the best practical Rasor aver In
troduced, and you save nlneteen-twentleths of the
fancy prices asked for fancy frames and hold
ers. Ths "8HRP SHAVR" RAZOR Is so set
m ths frame as to be correctly ''angled" to
soft any face. We sell you the whole Kasor at
?Se. as to create a market for our blade.
Extra "SHRP SHAVR" Blades, ft for 2 Sc. And
satin finish silver-plated stoppers at 10a each
Wo aend the Rasor complete, extra
er the Strapper, prepaid
on receipt of price
stamps or cash.
LIONARO STRUT,
N. T. CITY.
THI RAZOR to
marvel kmi'
NsrvrJraV'-
-unm in.
7