Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, April 17, 1903, Image 3

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    THE
AIR
RINGS AND THINGS.
- Among fine rings, writes Elsie Bee in
the Jewelers' Weekly, the new a jour
inarquise, consisting of fine gold open-
Work with fanciful and unconven
tional placing of the gems, represents
ft fascinating innovation.
A spur and a fox's head in gold
tnakes a neat sporting searf-pin.
A belt of cameo plaques caters to the
liking for the antique and odd.
East Indian turbaned heads seem to
be one of the favorite designs in scarf
pins.
The peacock, vanity's emblem, but
jalso the symbol of perfection in color,
furnishes appropriate decorations on
Jjpmbs and coiffure ornaments, the gold
fend enamel showing to great advan
tage on the tortoise shell.
THE REIGN OF RIBBON.
' This is a ribbon winter. Ribbons of
all shades, width and styles are much
vogue. A white satin sash strewn
toMth great pink roses is extremely
Rich and showy. Equally so is one
Where red poppies are thrown upon
a white satiu ground, with black velvet
qtrlpes. An odd effect is obtained In
a white and pink silk sash, which has
.Velvet daisies strewn over it.
Very rich in effect is a broad ribbon
Of this kind, having a black ground
striped with bright colors. New nnd
Stylish are the zibeline ribbons, with
Jong, hairy pile. Then there are the
Silver tissues strewn with colored
powers and bordered with a white
gatin stripe and the flowered gold bor
dered with black and white and gold
> mixtures.
QPATTI'S SMALLEST AUDIENCE.
( Mme. Patti, whose one appearance
ftn the concert platform during a Lou
don season does not nearly sntisfy the
Wishes of her many admirers, tells a
Btory of the occasion when her audl
lence was the smallest on record, con
sisting as it did of only one person.
m>e lucky individual was a child.
Curing a tour some years ago in
[America Mme. Patti was unable to
Bing at one of the concerts; the bad
[Weather kept her indoors.
While she was quietly resting in her
hotel, she heard a child crying, nnd go
ing into a room where the child was,
Mme. Patti found that the little one
[was in trouble because her mother
had gone to hear Mme. Patti sing.
She had wanted to go, but was not well
Aenough to be allowed out of doors.
I s Mme. Patti tried to console the child,
And at last said she would sing to
her. The child did not accept the offer
very readily; she said she wanted to
hear Mme. Patti sing. However, be
fore the first song was finished the
child had recognized the great singer,
and when the little impromptu concert
[was over, the audience was supremely
happy.—Golden Penny.
THE SPRING NECKWEAR.
The stole-front neckpiece has just
one piece pendant from its centre, and
Is much newer than the bishop's tabs.
i• • ♦
Tiny silk crocheted rings in black
(are used to finish the crds and tabs of
Bome of the new neckpieces In both
White and colors.
* • *
Small, neat effects, rather than very
heavy ones, are predicted for spring
f neckwear, as more in keeping with
the season.
I •
White is far in the lead for any and
all neckwear pieces. If a touch of
color is given, black and sometimes
light blue arc used.
Some of the huckaback collars, that
i are so very swagger now, when done
In cross-stitch in silk of several tints
resemble beautiful pieces of Oriental
embroidery.
• ♦ V
The stiff, high-baud collars of white
linen that are de rigueur now are quite
low and made of the very finest of
linen, ornamented with rows of hem
stitching and French needlework of
various kinds.
* * *
Another one of Dame Fashion's pro
phetic whispers for spring is that very
few boas will be worn, and those will
I J>e exclusively white.—Philadelphia
Record.
"NEW WOMAN" AND ANCIENT.
One of the pet reproaches made
against the new woman is that In her
bnseemly longing to stand upon the
same footing as lior'aforetime lord and
master she Invented the fashion of
.wearing garments of a mannish cut.
Tliis is most unjust, and she may
readily be proved guiltless of the
charge by a trifling investigation of
the fashions of ancient times nnd of
conservative countries, where Gie poor
things are as unemancipated as pos
sible, and still wear the same style of
garments as their foremothers of a
i thousand years ago.
[ The Chinese lady, as every traveler
' testified, is one of the most modest,
retiring and conventional of creatures,
yet she wears clothes almost exactly
like those of her husband and brothers.
Indeed, in Cliina trousers are consid
ered much more proper as feminine
garments than skirts.
The Turkish woman's dress is identi
cal with that of the husband who
keeps ber so carefully shut away from
all new-fangled notions, and the Eski
mo woman clothes her little fat legs
in tigli sealskin hreeclies, Unished off
with smart fur-topped boots.
The happy woman of Slam, who baa
never been obliged to go in for wom
an's rights, having always been as free
as air and the equal of any man of her
acquaintance, wears, like every man in
the kingdom, a square of cotton or silk
curiously adjusted about the legs and
fastened by tucking two of the ends
through at the waist in what travelers
describe as a perilously insecure man
ner.
Looking back at the good old times
to which those who disapprove of the
new woman are so fond of referring,
very early In the world's history can
be found instances of women adopting
mannish clothes when they were suit
able and convenient.
The Greeks, with their hunting god
dess, their Amazons and their swift
Atalantas in the athletic games, have
shown us how beautiful woman can
be in the short tunic worn by the
youths. But no doubt even then old
folks mentioned a prehistoric time
when girls were not so bold.—Chicago
Chronicle.
PINDOVDOIV
CHAT
Mrs. Elizabeth Blackwell, who waa
the first woman minister ordained in
America, is still living in New York
State.
Dr. Mary E. Tucker is the first
woman appointed as a sanitary in
spector by the Health Commissioner of
St. Louis.
Miss Anna Ilovesief, the editor of
the largest newspaper in Norway, has
been in this country studying American
methods of editing.
Mrs. Ida Belmer Camp, botanist and
horticulturist, does a profitable busi
ness in cactus growing. She has at her
greenhouses in Caro, Mich., the largest
collection of cacti in the country.
Miss Florence Haywood, of St. Louis,
has been commissioned to select tal
ented women of England and the con
tinent of Europe to represent their
countries at the St. Louis Exposition.
Mrs. Eugenia "Wheeler Golf is the
one woman in America who makes
maps for historical books and also
wall charts for schools and offices.
She is a Minneapolis woman and spares
neither time nor effort in her work.
One of the latest accessions to the
roll of wdman's clubs is the Victoria
Guild of India. The members are
native and Anglo-Indian women, and
the object is to promote intercourse
between the two races, a work for
which there is great need.
Former Empress Eugenie's photo
graphs taken within the last twenty
years are very few, but in all she pre
sents a prolific View. The reason for
this? The droop iu her oblique eyes
has accentuated with time and grief,
and the Empress is still mindful of her
once great beauty.
Queen Alexandra is so fond of clocks
that she has 300 of them—small, large,
fancy and plain—at Snudringham.
Curiously enough, these have always
been kept balf an hour fast to humor
the King. The finest collection in the
world is supposed to be at Buckingham
Palace, the number of clocks there
being considerably over 300, while
Marlborough- House is believed to
boast a collection of some 400.
- J§-YXPS\
A touch of purple is seen on many
hats.
Some of the smartest muffs are
shown in melon and heart shape.
A rather pretty hair ornament is of
white oak leaves set with brilliants.
A small blue beetle trying to crawl
along a gold branch forms an attract
ive brooch.
The old-time "jersey" has returned
again in a much trimmed and much
improved style.
Tlie popular combination now seemß
to be blue velvet and chinchilla and
brown zibeline and sable.
The soft girdle, wide in the back and
drawn down to almost nothingness in
front, is preferred above all others.
An enamelled brooch is in the shape
of an autumn leaf, and shows all the
exquisite tints of the autumnal color
ings.
Dresden buttons close picturesquely
any of the white blouses except those
of sheer white lawn, now so much
worn.
Collar and cuff sets of huckaback,
done in cross stitch are the latest to
lie adopted by the most stylishly
gowned women.
A shirt, composed of three deep
flounces to the waist is to be much
used for the coming summer frocks of
diaphanous stuffs.
The mode of sowing heavy lace on
fur and combing the fur through the
meshes is one of the season's fancies,
and gives the effect of embroidery on
fur.
The hip yoke steadily grows in favor
nnd will be a distinguishing fenture of
many of the spring and summer skirts,
as it offers so many pleasing combina
tions of fabrics.
Embroidered buttons in silk, cloth
nnd velvet are revived again, and these
with many of the other fanciful dec
orations are not impossible for the
home dressmaker.
Silk bnnds arc quite as much em
ployed on cloth as ever, and they may
be of moire or taffeta and finished on
the edges with a fine silk braid sewn
on in some little pattern which gives
a pretty, indescribable effect.
FOLDING A TABLECLOTH.
When not in use a tablecloth should
be kept in folded creases, and when
brought out to he sprend should be laid
on the table and unfolded its entire
length (the width being doubled), with
tlie centre ereuse along the centre of
the table. Then the half breadth that
is folded should be turned back and
the cloth will hang evenly. Careless
servants often gather up a cloth "any
how," without taking the trouble to
fold it up again in its own creases, and
thus fresh ones are made, A table
cloth will last fresh-looking as long
again if it is always folded up after
Its own folds and put away until the
nest meal.
USES FOR BLUE PRINTS.
Camera devotees have discovered
some charming little ways of handling
their blue prints. A particularly good
effect is gained by framing the prints
with black or gray nnd using a dull
red mat. Pond or woodlaud scenes
handled in this way make delightful
color touches for the dining-room or
smoking-room walls. Again, the blue
tints can be transferred to linen by a
process which the photographic supply
people reveal to their patrons and
used for faneywork. These cloth
prints make dainty medallions for the
lid or panels of bureau boxes. They
can be employed for glove sachets,
photograph frames and in a variety
of other articles. Pasted upon a white
card the thumbnail blue prints make
the daintiest place cards imaginable
for luncheons. One bright woman, the
possessor of a beautiful baby, blue
printed a snap-shot of the youngster
taken in a smiling mood and trans
ferred it to the sheets of notepaper
used in inviting a mothers' club to
converse at her home. This charming
Idea is capable of wide variation. In
vitations for different small functions
could be decorated with appropriate
subjects printed In blue.—Good House
keeping.
A HOUSEHOLD COMFORT.
One of the necessities of a household
Is a hot-water bag. For many aches
and pains it gives relief and where
there is a baby this bag is ever a com
fort in the crib and carriage.
In preparing the bag for use boiling
water should not be put in it, nnd
neither should it be more than half
filled. After the water is in it place
the bag on your lap before putting in
the stopper, and carefully press out
the steam. This makes the bag softer,
as it is relieved of the pressure the
steam makes.
When not using the bag drain out
the water, let it hang bottom side up
for a little while, then take it down
and with the mouth blow a little air
into It, Just enough to keep the inside
from coming together, as it will often
do if there Is no air in it, in which case
the bag is quite sure to be ruined in
pulling it apart.
If you have a bag that is stuck to
gether put it into some hot water with
a few drops of ammonia, let it remain
a few minutes, then with a thin, dull
edged piece of wood, try to separate
th'e s inside very carefully. Never fold
a rubber bag after it has once been
used. A flannel bag for covering the
rubber bag is very useful.—New York
American.
RECfP EST £
Scotch Cakes—Put into a bowl two
eupfuls of sifted flour; rub in it three
fourths cup of butter; add one cupful
of sugar and two eggs beaten, one
teaspoonful of cinnamon; mix thor
oughly; roll out on a floured board
quite thin, and cut with a round cut
ter; place on a greased pan nnd bake
in a moderate oven flfteen minutes.
Cheese Omelet —Beat three eggs; add
to them three tablespoonfuls of milk,
a pinch of salt and a little pepper;
put ono teaspoon of butter in the try
ing pan; when melted turn in the
omelet mixture; let cook slowly; when
a crust has formed oil the under side
sprinkle thickly with grated cheese,
then fold in half and turn on a hot
platter; sprinkle with chopped parsley
or with grated cheese, and put in a hot
oven until the cheese is melted.
Chocolate Pudding—Soak one table
spoon of gelatine in half a cup of milk;
put four squnres of chocolate In a pan
over hot water; when the chocolate has
melted pour over it one cup of boiling
water and two eupfuls of milk; stir
this until scalding hoi; beat the yolks
of two eggs, add to them half a cup
ful of sugar; stir this into the chocolate
and milk, then add the soaked gelatine
and stir until dissolved; remove and
when quite cool add the beaten whites
of the eggs; turn into a mould; serve
with vanilla sauce.
Sweet Rice Croquettes—Steam three
fourths of a cup of rice in one pint
of boiling water or half milk and water
until very tender; add while hot one
tablespoon of butter, two tablespoon
fuls of sugar and the beaten yolk of
one egg; If too stiff add hot milk and
season with salt; spread on a platter;
when cold form into small hollow
cakes, put in the centre of each a
soft raisin or a piece of stewed prune,
Jelly or marmalade; fold in half; roll
in crumbs, then in egg, then in crumbs
again; fry in deep, hot fat a deep
brown; drain on puper; arrange on a
folded napkin and sprinkle over pow
dered sugar.
A VENERABLE PASTOR
CURED BY PE-RU-NA.
Pe-ru-na is a Catarrhal Tonic
Especially Adapted to the
Declining Powers of Old Age.
The Oldest Man in America At
tributes His Long Life and Good
Health to Pe-ru-na.
Mr. Isaac Brock, of McLennan County,
Texas, has attained the great aae of 114 ,
years. He is an ardent friend of Peruna,
and speaks of it in the following terms.
Mr. Brock says:
"After a man has lived in the world as
long as 1 have he ought to have found outj'
a ereat many things by experience. I think!,
I nave done so.
"One of the things I have found out to."
——mmmmm my entire satisfac
tion is the proper
4< l RELY UPON remedy for ailments
PE-RU-NA FOR due directly to the
*** effects of the cli-
ALL CATARRHAL mate.
DISEASES." "For 114 years I
have withstood the
changeable climate
of the United States. During my long life
I have known a great many remedies for
coughs, colds, catarrh and diarrhoea. I
had always supposed these affections to be
different diseases. For the last ten or
flfteen years I have been reading Dr. Hart
man's books, and have learned from them
one thing in particular. That these af
fections arc the same, and that they are
properly called catarrh.
"As for Dr. Ilartman's remedy, Peruna,
I have found it to be the best, if not the
only, reliable remedy for these affections.
7t has been my stand-by for many
years and 1 attribute my good health
and my extreme old age to thts rem
edy.
"It exactly meets all my requirements.
I have come to rely upon it almost entire
ly for the many little things for which I
need medicine. I believe it to be espe
cially valuable to old people, although I
have no doubt it is just as good for the
young."—lsaac Brock.
A New Iffan nt 79.
Major Frank O'Mahoney, West Side,
Hannibal, Mo., writes:
"I am professionally a newspaper corre
spondent, now 79 years old. I have watched
tne growing power of the Peruna plant
from its incipiency in the little log cabin,
through its gradations of success up to its
present establishment in Columbus, Ohio,
and I conclude that merit brings its full
reward.
"Up to a few years ago T felt no need to
test its medicinal potency, but lately when
my system needed it. your Peruna re
lieved me of many catarrhal troubles. Some
two years ago I weighed 210 pounds, hut
fell away down to 108 pounds, and besides
loss of flesh I was subject to stomach
troubles, indigestion, loss of appetite, in
somnia, night sweats, and a foreboding of
getting my entire system out of order.
During some months I gave Peruna a fair
trial, and it rejuvenated my whole system.
I feel thankful, therefore, for, although 79
years old. 1 feel like a young man."—Major
Frank O'Mahoney.
In old age the mucous membrane be
come thickened and partly lose their func
tion.
This leads to partial loss of hearing,
smell and taste, as well as digestive dis
turbances.
Peruna corrects all this by its specific >
FOUND AND RETURNED.
Much Lost Money Recovered by Em
ployes on> Railways.
Thousands of dollars lost In the
cars of Chicago passenger trains are
returned to their owners every year.
The big warehouses in Chicago th
are filled with lost articles have none
of these precious findis or any record
of them, because they are safely re
turned without having reached head
quarters. Much of it Is returned by
trainmen who are able positively to
identify the owners. Not long ago
a conductor on a Michigan Central
passenger train found a pocketbook
containing SI,GOO in currency and SBOO
in negotiable paper. With little in
quiry, cleverly prosecuted, he was able
to find the owner, and returned the
money. The latter rewarded the faith
ful trainman by offering htm a cheap
cigar. During the heigiht of the last
excursion season, the station agent of
the Indiana, Illinois and lowa railway,
at Hamlet, Mich., was one of the pas
sengers on an excursion train bound
for Benton Harbor. He had in his
pocketbook nearly S4OO in cash and
checks. While en route the pocket
book disappeared, and he returned to
his station without the money. On
the following Monday the entire
amount Inside the pocketbook wais re
turned to him. The pocketbook lay
in the baggage car over Sunday and
Sunday night, and the car inspector
at Laporte found it Monday and re
turned it to the owner, the property
being easily identified by the nature
of the papers inside the pocketbook.
Color In the Arctics.
My first experience of color in the
arctics, says Frank Wilbert Stokes, led
me to believe that from the most regal
purples, golds and crimsons of sun
light to the black-purples, grays and
gray-greens of storms there existed no
Intermediate effects. But a sojourn
of a year in the northland proved that
great Nature's palette was here set
with more varied riches than else
where. Especially was this true of
the color effects of the long twilight of
approaching winter, the returning light
of day, and even in the heart of the
polar night.
Evening Service.
He had been telling her of that Lon
don clergyman's scheme of holding
evening services in the dark. "I don't
see how it can be done," said she.
"Let me niustrate." Ho turned tho
parlor gas all but out. In ten ticks of
the clock a profound religious feeling
pervaded the cozy corner, and sipping
sounds told of devotional exercises be
gun. Then, with a sigh of ecstasy,
she softly murmured: "Ah! This is
heaven!" So, you see, the London
clergyman may actually have discov
ered a short cut to the good of all pious
endeavor.
Several Boer women living near
Johannesburg who married again after
hearing that their hsubands had died
on commando have learned since the
declaration of peace that the men are
still alive.
i T ATChjl I "In June, 1001, J lostmy sense ef
' * tSI&V. (y. 17, t/£ g| hearing entirely . My hearing had
been somewhat impaired for several
years, but not so much effected but that I could hold oonverse with my
friends; but itt June, 1001, my sense of hearing left me so that I could
hear no sound whatever . J ioa.B also troubled with severe rheumatic path*
in my Hmbs. 1 commenced taking Peruna and now my hearing is re
stored an good an it was prior to June, 1901. My rheumatic pains are all
gone. 1 cannot speak too highly of Peruna and now, when 88 years old,
can say that it has invigorated my whole system. I cannot but think,
dear Doctor, that you must feel very thankful to the all loving Father that
you have been permitted to live, and by your skill be such a blessing as
you have been to suffering humanity. "—Rev. J. N. Parker,
Mrs. F. E. Little. Tolona, 111., writes:
"I can recommend Peruna as a good medi
— cine for chronic ca-
A TDAUW ED turrh of the sto TO -
A TRAVELER ach and bowels j
AT SEVENTY-ONE have teen troubled
severely with it for
YEAHB OF AGE. over a year, and
' 1 * 1 a also a cough. Now
my cough ib ml cone, and all the distress
ing symptoms of catarrh of the stomach
and bowels have disappeared. I will rec
ommend it to all as a rare remedy. I am
so well I am contemplating a trip to Yel
low Stone Park this coming season. How
is that for one 71 years old?
Mastodon Remains.
The finding of mastodon remains
near Newburgh, N. Y., has already
been noted. With these remains there
were found large numbers of tree
trunks both in the muck and la tho
marl beneath It, and in many cases the
mastodon hones were found resting
on the treos. Most of the trees were
so rotten that It was impossible to ob
tain only small fragments. One spec
imen possesses curious Interest. The
tree was lying three fet below the sur
face, in muck, and was very soft and
spongy; and not only on the surface,
but clear through, was of a dark brown
color, almost that of the muck, and per
haps colored by the muck. Its scien
tific interest rests upon the fact that In
sections it is polygonal, while the flat
laces of the trunk that make up the
polygon vary in number from fourteen
to sixteen, some of the faces merging
into one another at various points
along the trunk. This piece of the
tree is about three feot long, and when
first dug out, about two months ago,
was nearly nine inches thick at one
end and six at the other; but It has
shrunk on drying out, until now It
measures five and three Inches, respec
tively. No other pieces of this tree
were found, although the adjoining lay
ers of muck were carefully dug over
and examined, in hope of obtaining
more of it. Several of the other trees
showed while still wet tho marks of tho
teeth of animals, and it has been sur
mised that this was the work of beav
ers. When dried, however, tho tooth
marks became less distinct, and their
study was, therefore, made difficult.
Chrysanthemums served as a salad
are a favorite article of diet among
the Japanese.
Many School Children Are Sfchly,
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a nurso in Children's
Home, New York, break up colds in 24 hours,
cure Fovcrishn-ss, Constipation, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
Worms. At all druggists, 250. Sample mailed
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmstod, Lo Roy, N.Y.
No man is too old to learn, and no man
is too young to think he's too old to learn.
H. H. GMIEN'S SONS, ot Atlanta, Gb., are
tho only sueoossful Dropsy Specialists In the
world. See their liberal offer In advertise
ment In another column of this paper.
Tho things that some people worry most
about are the things that never happen.
FITS permanently oured.No fits or nervous
ness. aftor first day's use of Dr. Kllno's Groat
Noiveliostoror.Sa trial bottleand treatise froe
Dr. 11. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 1)31 ArchSt.,Phlla.,l'a.
Some women dress to please their hus
bands, and some to bankrupt them.
Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for ohildren
teething,soften tho gums, reduoes lufiamma
tlon,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25e. abottlo
Remarks may bo blunt and still be very
pointed.
riso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken ot
as a sough cure.—J W. O'DHIEN, 822 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, I'JOO.
When a man is making his will he may
be excused for putting on heirs.
Perfectly simple and simply perfect is
dyeing with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES.
Lots of people love their neighbors* for
whaA they can ge(i out of theta.
In a later letter she says: "I am only too
thankful to you for your kind advice and
for the good health that I am enjoying
wholly from the use of your Peruna, nail
been out to the Yellow Stone National
Park and many other places in the West,
and shall always thank you for your gener
osity."—Mrs. P. E. Little.
If you do not derire prompt and satisfac
tory results from the use ot Peruna. write
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state
ment of your case, and he will be pleased
to give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
CHICAGO'S QUEER TWINS.
Between Them They Have Twenty
four Fingers and Toes.
Oil tho West Side there are two ba
bies with 24 fingers and toes. They
are twins, and were born only a few
days ago. Their mother i 3 Mrs. D. W.
Hartney, who lives 353 West Harrison
street. The twins have six fingers on
each hand and six toes on each. foot.
They are bright, healthy little girls.
Their fingers and toes are perfectly
formed and are growing in proportion.
In fact at first glance one would nol
notice tho extra digits so symmetric"
ally are they formed. The twins have
proved a fascinating attraction in the
neighborhood. The Hartney homo la
never without a visitor. Considerable
interest ie being manifested in the
twins by the medical professors. Phy
sicians have called to see the babies
and have tried to induce Mr. Hartney
to have the children taken before the
students at some of the local colleges.
One doctor told the father that if he
wished he would remove the extra
fingers and toes, but others advised
him not to consent to any such opera,
tion, as the little ones might be crip
pled for life. The twins look so much
alike the mother has to tie a ribbon
around one of their arms to distin
guish them.
American Missionaries Safe.
In a report to the State Department
in regard to the tribal war In Moroc
co, S. R. Gummere, United States Con
sul General at Tangier, says that Sir
Arthur Nicolson, tho British Minister,
has Informed him that tho American
missionaries left Fez with a large car
avan on January 12, Sir Arthur having
advanced money for their expenses.
A horse cannot do much work after
he Is 12 or 14 years old.
My Hair
"I had a very severe sickness
that took off all my hair. I pur
chased a bottle of Ayer's Hair
Vigor and it brought all my hair
back again."
W. D. Quinn, Marseilles, 111.
One thing is certain, —
Ayer's Hair Vigor makes [
the hair grow. This is
because it is a hair food.
It feeds the hair and the
hair grows, that's all there
is to it. It stops falling
of the hair, too, and al
ways restores color to
gray hair. j'
SI.CO a bottle. At! drugflsts.
If your druggist cannot supply you,
send us one dollar -I we will express
you a bottle. Be euro andjpivo tlie name
of your nearest express office. Address,
J. C. AVER CO., Lowell, Mass.