Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Feb 1919, p. 7

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narturel Presiaeiit Mcst lHtSfnolis Example of What World Calls the Self-Made |* -A., Ml v" -Zm'**'j L „.L II. OT ORE than half a century altar - his death Abraham Lincoln •till is the most influential name and his personality is the most magical in American history. There is no mystery about this. The i xplanation Is simple. Lincoln- was a president who Vas human. Human in his genius for ifrfmaniftlp In his frailties. Human in his * K*r# for story telling ayd relaxation, and Intense- , ly filled with the humanity that will not knowingly do an unkind or unjiist act . It is not that he was perfection in any of the - Walks of life in which fate turned his steps, for ghere were better lawyers in his time; there were •veil better story tellers than Lincoln; surely it .: <irould not be dlfilcult to name better military offl- "'Sers than Lincoln was, or more learned men ind ' greater orators than he. But Lincoln was a man \<ff the people and Americans like that kind of man, Ptes Joseph Jacksen in the Philadelphia Public Iger. They hoard every scrap of writing that the jinn ever wrote. His walking sticks, his dilapidated old law books, his broken-down book-case, everything that once belonged to him or in which -/' ||e had set his name, is treasured. Not long ago In New York they sold at auction it slip of paper on which he" showed that, good politician as he was thought to be, be was a 'poor hand at guessing results of a presidential election. Yet this slip of paper brought f1,025, and J^incoln had not even signed it, but It was known to have been written by him. it might be mentioned here that Lincoln proved i||imself to be a very poor prophet, and overesti- 4 Abated the strength of General McClellan, his political opponent in the election of 1804. Accordv log to Lincoln's estimate he felt sure of the New • •• jEngland states and a few others, totaling 120 • «otes in the electoral college,, and he set down as "the supposed Copperhead vote" the states of "~'|[ew York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware. ' Jtfaryland, Missouri, Kentucky and Illinois, and - {heir 114 votes lie ueiicveu would uc cast for General McClellan. As a matter of fact, however, only ~f. Ifew Jersey, Delaware and Kentucky went against $im, and he carried the election by a vote of ' 122 to 2SL ' # • -: There were reasons for Lincoln's belief that states he had set down as "Copperhead" raid go against him. The drafts of men had en resisted in more or less energetic form In ~#iany of these commonwealths, notably New York Oxford a printed copy of a letter Lincoln wrota to a mother who' had given Ave sons that the- Union might be preserved. A label beneath this copy of the letter bears the simple comment that this Is "one of the finest specimens of pure English extant" , And that comment by one of the greatest unflr versitles in the world is on the work of a mai who never had a year's schooling in his life. It is small wonder that Lincoln's life Is upheld to the poor boy as a shining example of what determination to learn and succeed will do. Lincoln's grandfather, like many others, followed the magnetic Daniel Boone into the wilder* Bess of Kentucky. The Lincolns at that time were not poor folks, as many have believed, for the grandfather, whose name also was Abraham, sold his property for $17,000 before he set out for the unclaimed lands where some say the maqa> moths still existed. But when later he died, Thomas, the father of the future president, did not inherit much, if anything, and had to start out for himself at an early age. He married Nancy Hanks, the nieCe of tba man he worked for, and she became the mother of Abraham Lincoln, the president .. < Little Chance for Education. Kentucky then (1809) had been a state for sevens teen years, but It was a wild wilderness of a land. There were few books, no schools In the modem sense, and little hope for anything but hard work. It was exactly the kind of country for a great man to make a start in, for unlets he had son* elements of greatness he never would achieve Id* goal. It was a country of hard knocks, acr well as hard work, and it all made for economy of time and study. Lincoln'* mother, who was a bright, delicate woman, taught her son as much as she could* A visiting schoolmaster gave him some lessons tn the ordinary "Three R's." The country was so sparsely settled and so distant from civilisation that at the little church the services that were held were conducted by itinerant clergymen. The boy Lincoln grew up here in a small lof 1b forsook farming and sought a poeltloa aa a "Iperk In a cbuntry store. V" Whether Lincoln ever would have been heard v.Sf had not the Black Hawk war occurred about a •year after he went to work at New Salem, Sangamon county, remains a question. It need not * bother any one, however, because the war did '^ccur and Lincoln did go into It M l captain of .Volunteers. ' :vv This might |>e said to have been the turning point in his career. Up to this time he ha^not Jtound himself. He was studying, but drifting. He • does not appear to have had any aim in life beyond the ambition7 to educate himself and to succeed. Lincoln afterward said that his experience tn , f|ie Black Hawk war gave him greater pleasure ®ian anything that had occurred to him up to tfr.at time. He had no opportunity to distinguish klmaelf in that little conflict, but he returned to ^ JCew Salem a man of more public Importance than %ben he left It. He started a stove, but It failed, |nd the debts fell upon him. He was appointed .. postmaster, the first federal office he ever held. -, 3pe ran for the legislature, but was defeated. But --fhe next election he ran again, and was- elected - ,'ind later returned for another term. ;Hrr Law and Politic* ,fi, . "• While he was keeping a general stori* Ho 'began .sthe study of law. lie once said that one of his *#rst books was a copy of the laws of Indiana, ,'gnd that was about all the law he knew up to that time. / It was while serving as a legislator In Illinois ' that Lincoln first turned his attention to the blot slavery, which he began to oppose with all his blight and Influence. After he decided to retire af from the legislature he started to pructlce law, > paving been licensed to practice in 183T. He removed to Springfield, where the remainder of hit days, until he Vent to Washington as president, were mainly spent. , ' In 1846 he wa& elected to a seat in congress, bnt he declined re-election and settled down to the practice of his profession in Springfield. Lincoln spent his spare time In the «tore of his friend, Joshua Speed, which was the rendezvous . of many prominent men in that section. He was famed for his stories and for his keenness ID debate. It was in this little general store that Lincoln first met Douglas in debute. Douglas was egarded far and wide as a little giant In debate. aTtff he remarked that the store waa no place for him to debate any question with Lincoln. By this time Lincoln had become something Of • politician. His party was the Whig. He took tt lively interest in political affairs, and finally .ttatk part on the Whig side in a Joint debute with the Democrats. Lincoln was the last speaker In (hit debate, but his words took the deepest hold of the spectators and ndded greutly to ids reputation. It was in Springfield that Lincoln married Mary Todd, who, it is interesting to note, waa also sought In marriage by Douglas, who thus became Lincoln's opponent in love as well as In politics, but was beaten by him in both. ^ As a lawyer Lincoln might "have appeared lasy fo those who did not understand his methods. He disliked office work and the drawing of legal papers, but when a case had to be brought to the attention of a jury or a court Lincoln was in his element. He was a born debater and story-teller. He knew how to get the jury in good humor and how to make his point to them reach home. He liad the genius for putting the human touch to all he did, and his homely similes and good stories often went further than bis opponent's knowledge of the law. Apostle «f Abolition. But It should not be Imagined that Lincoln knew no law, for that would be a mistake. He often would sit up to the small hours of the night reading law and studying a case, while his opponents probably would be soundly sleeping. When he went into court he was^master of his case, and that goes a long way toward winning a verdict "fefcbln that was without windows, and whose The practice of law was l>eginnlng to take a #nd Illinois, and the large number of sympathlz- ; frs there might easily lead to his conclusion. But 3rhat he had not taken into the fullest account <Sras that the majority of men in the North were V l°yal to the Union, regardless of politics or their *Natural sympathies, and they stood by Lincoln to < $be end." Was Real Self-Mad#.Man. t If anyone were asked to name the most lllus-i Various example of what we have called the self- ' Hgaade man in America, there would Instantly occur ^pie name of Lincoln. In a country of self-made ten he stands In high relief. There Is no one to ke a place beside him, for not only did he over- .> 4ome every natural difficulty placed in his way, In \ Ills determination to achieve an education, and they were numerous, but alone with lt always •/Went that equally strong determination not to achieve success by any unfair moans. He admitted that his education was "defective," nd that was a Weak word for it Many men th a great deal more have been failures. And ncoln had every opportunity of becoming a failure, but he realized his educational weaknesses "and strove to remove them. That hf did remove ' "fhem seemsTto be testified to by many writers. ?^ At one time--probably it is to be seen there yet ' 7 i--there was exhibited in one of the colleges at : | BRIEF INFORMATION f ^ General Pershing la an Episcopalian. vf "• It is calculated that the earth's :f!»pulation is doubled in 1S9 years. f There are salt mines In Poland that ; jiave been worked for more than alx * < .centuries. " Every day 860 persons arrive In •^. jiew York to make the city their per- X fnanent home. ^ To prevent «H»rsiB4.-fe®ttle8 breaking, a. soft rubber s^rd^lg^bagp invested v- to inclose then). " * chimney was built on the outside of the cabin. At night a log In the fireplace gave all the llluiBInation the place afforded. By this firelight, to the music of the crackling burning logs, young Lincoln, extended flat on the floor, studied and worked out little problems in arithmetic, which in that section was regarded as of greater importance than a deep knowledge of English literature. k Lincoln's mother died when he was nine yeaqf age, or about a year after his father moved tn fi^llana, and the following year his father married Mrs. Sally Bush JolAlston. ^Contrary to the impression, mainly created by the old fairy tales, th* second Mrs. Llhcoln was a model stepmother. 8tudied While Working. At the same time young Lincoln was working as n farm hand. He borrowed books from neighbors and greedily devoured them. The one book that impressed him most was Weems* "Life of Washington." He recelvt d his exalted idea of the Father of His Country froip that book, which deified the first president rather than told Ida life. But Lincoln believed in it and it influenced his life. He read "Robinson Crusoe" and Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress" and a history of the United States, and it iSras on these that he founded all his knowledge of biography, history and literature. But he kne* those books by heart, for he had to* memorize them, as they all were borrowed. Ha walked miles to a stpre where a St. Louis new* pa^er was taken to borrow 4t, and thus be P»> celved his news of current events. And all the while he was working, and working hud. Now ferrying, now plowing, but 'always In this backwoods country, for he was quite a young man when his father removed to Illinois. Lincoln was about twenty-two at the time firm hold on Lincoln to the exclusion of politics when the Missouri Compromise was enacted. That roused him, and from that time onward he was strongly for the abolition of slavery. His position was known throughout the country, for he had stumped the East for Taylor years before, and the stories of his quiet humor and fund of anecdote had penetrated the East, consequently, when it was evident to the country that it stood on the eve of a conflict between slavery and abolition, Lincoln was made the nominee of the party that was firmly intrenched on the principle of no compromise with slaveholders. He . was nominated, and was enthusiastically elected the national election In 1860. -s He had scarcely taken his seat when the war r tmrst upon the country. It was a trying time, and no one suffered under It more than did Lincoln himself. But he meant to do his duty, and, as always had been his habit, he did it then, although it was most unpleasant and most difficult When the war made its inroads into many homes, Lincoln had an unpleasant duty to perform. He sympathized with the mothers left at home and did what he could for their boys at the % front. He received the mothers at the White House, talked things over with them, and nearly every one of them left feeling that her boy had a --friend who looked after him although he was far away In an army corps doing his duty. It was this gentle character who was coldly ARMY BURDENS WWson's Strongest Speech Made -Before Noted Group in jfrenoh Chamfajtfv \ TALKS FROM THE TRIBUNE ffrat Outsider in Seventy Years to Ooeapy the Platfornt -- Powers •each Agreement Between f%- . land and Slovaks--Nai * tionfa Clatme "Shown. ? » : - » • W b . 4 . -- -President "WIliK * an address In the chamber of deputies on the society of nations, said France Is still the frontier of freedom, because eastern Europe Is full of menacing, questions from the Rhine across Siberia to the Pacific. He said the sacrifices of Independent action which nations must make to establish a society are Incomparable to the sacrifices necessary If a league Is not 'established. President Wilson spoke from the tribune, the first outsider to do so in 70 years. On the platform were Premier Clemenceau and President Polncare and the chamber was fiiled with the best minds of France. The great powers struck an agreement between Poland and Czechoslovakia, bringing an end to the conferences over the principality of Teschnn in Silesia, Austria. The pact which was signed by the Polish and Czech delegates and Wilson, Clemenceau and Orlando for the big fouv, repeats the warning given to tlu smaller nations against grabbing territory, reiterating they must leave boundary disputes to the congress. The Czechs have agreed to release Polish prisoner*}- taken in the fighting over Teschen. A commission of control was sent to prevent further hostiltties and to make a survey of the frontiers, which will be set later by the conference. The representatives of the five great powers may now be said to be in a position to compare clearly their own aspirations and those of all their allied friends and to see the differences that must be reconciled. The desires of the several countries may be compressed thus: FRENCH CLAIMS. France wants, first of all, Alsace-Lorraine unconditionally, and the right to discuss and ultimately to fix the French frontiers in their relation to the Rhine, which may require the creation of buffer states. One of these would be the Palatinate and another Rhenish Prussia. France desires also to annex the basin of the Sarre river, which might be called a reannexatlon. France will Insist that so far as the left bank of the Rhine farther to the north is concerned, the conference should forbid military works of any kind--barracks, bridgeheads, forts and fortresses--in that zone. The feeling Is that the people Inhabiting that zone should be free to decide for themselves whether they wish to Jot* France, form an independent state, or return to Germany. The French bill for reparation is not complete, but ft has been announced In the chamber of deputies that it will be about 66,000,000,000 francs ($13,- 200,000,000). The French government does not ask for a protectorate in Syria In the ordinary sense because tt Considers that the population there is too advanced to make a protectorate necessary, but, France, on account of her traditional interests in that country, feels that she should be called upon to exercise some sort of guardianship or guidance until Syria should be folly able to govern' herself. BRITISH CLAIMS. Oreat Britain's delegation believes that a society of nations is desirable and attainable and that It must be established by the present peace conference. She advocates no continental purposes other than those of a permanent and just peace under the principle of self-determination and that there shall be International freedom of transit by railroads and waterways, which is Great Britain's general definition of freedom of commerce in times of peace. Great Britain will take mandatory power over the German islands south of the equator for Australia and over German Southwest Africa for the Union of South Africa. She will also have the mandate over German East Africa and some parts of Arabia, and she has particular claims In this respect over Mesopotamia. Great Britain will enter a pool with the other allies In the matter of Indemnities, especially reparation for air raid damages and shipping losses. ITALY'S CLAIM8. Italy asks for the Trentlno aa far struck down just when the war was At an end and the country was getting rtady to'rejoice at the glorious news. The whole country. South as well as North, mourned the loss, for even in the South, where the war tiad been most disastrous, the name of Lincoln was joined In memory with a grand, human, just character, who was even more tlian man. Detachable uppefs enable a new shoe to be worn aa a slipper when desired. Earthquakes are more frequent in California during the night than during daylight hours. It costs-some of the big retail stores In New York city $5,000 to $10,000 a year to" clean, windows and metal signs. England, France and Belgium have more than 3,000 soldiers who have been totally blinded in the war and nearly 20,000 blinded in one eye. ,Vv " ' - • . '[if* * \ Six per cent, of the line of a Swiss iiallroad Is over bridges anu ISA per cent through tunnels. London's 22,000 po^cemen guard more than 4,000 miles of streets and at least 1.250,000 houses and shops." The earthworm swallows an enormous quantity of earth, from which it extracts aay digestible matter It may contain.. The Asiatic town of Matwatchi. on the borders, of Russia, is, peopled by men only. Wom'etl are .forbidden -entrance there. TAKEN FROM EXCHANGES Spain supplies the world with more than three-fourths of its olive OIL Ball bearings lessen the labor of using large shears that have been invented. The production of copper, In the United States has increased more than twenty-five-folo' slnc«? 1880. $ Prominent busii/ess men of Sydney have subscribed <£ap*tal to britig Australia within 150 flying, hours of Loftdon by an aerial mall .service. as the Brenner pass. Including th# whole of the southern Tyrol; Trieste, Istria, Fiume, Zara, Sebenieo, the larger part of the Palnaatisn islands, Avlona und its hluterlafedf a protectorate over, Albania, poeaetfrton W the Islands in the Agesn Which weretaken from"Turkey, during the Tripoli-, tan war, and the province of Adalia If France and England should take territory In Asia Minor. ROUMAN» A. ratatrti wants that ©f Russian Bessarabia given her'hy the central powers under the canceled treaty of Bucharest; southern Dobrudja as ceded to her by Bulgaria after the second war, thus commanding the Danube; the Hapsburg provinces of Bukowina and Transylvania and part of Banat which Serbia claims. Both Houmanla and Seifrta have moved troops into Banat and French troops have established a neutral tone to prevent hostilities. 86RBIA Serbia's claims to take fwla/ the Hapsbzurg monarchy the' provinces of Bosnia and Hetxegozlna are opposed by no one in tbe entente group. The plans tor the incorporation into Jugo-SIavta of the Hapsburg province of Croatia, except as to the coastal region of Flume, are also considered as, subject to the Internal decision of the southern Slavs. Jugo-Slav and Italian aims are in sharp conflict lrf the settlement of the Adciatlc problem, involving Flume, the Croatian seaboard, Dalmatla and Albania. The union of Montenegro and Serbia In-a greater Jugo-Slav state has been voted by the Montenegrin Parliament King Nicholas and his adherents protest against a union which shall not leave Montenegro self-government. There Is also a conflict between the Jugo-Slav statesmen and those of Czecho-Slovakla, who desire a Wide corridor from Bohemia to the Adriatic. GREECE ^ Greece wishes northern Eptrus and Thrace with Constantinople, Che Bosporus and Dardanelles under International control. Greece asks for the vilayet of Smyrna In Asia Minor and the former Turkish Islands In theastern Mediterranean, Including th< Dodecanesus, claimed by Italy. BULGARIA* * Although Bulgaria capitulated without conditions, her government hopes to receive extensions of the Bulgarian frontiers in southern Macedonia along the Aegean coast and in 111 race. -CZECHOSLOVAKIA The new state of Caecho-SlovabU la carving out its territories almost entirely at the expense of the old Austria-Hungary. Bohemia, Moravia and the Slovak regions of northern Hungary have been Incorporated Into the proposed state, but there are conflicts with the Poles, Ruthenlans, Roumanians, Germans, Auatrians and Magyars, because the Czechs claim parts of Saxony and German Silesia belong ethnographlcally to the new state. The Czecbo-Slovaks and Poles dash in claims In Silesia and Gallda. The new state desires expansion southward on the Danube and to the Adriatic."'- • POLAND. Tti'Mes are endeavoring to aalao disputed regions on' three sides of Russian Poland and Gallcla, Including Lemberg, which Is In the Ukraine; Cholm, In Little Russia, and Vilna. Both the Lithuanians and bolshevlki daim Vllna. The <Poles« are contending against the Germans not only for German Silesia and Posen and West Prussia, but also for the port of'Danzig. 8hould the Poles have Danzig, HJaat Prussia would be cut off frdm the raat of Germany. . BELGIUM. Belgium wants her reparation claim to be the first lien upon German assets to the extent of at least $3,000.- 000.000 and have Germany return her stolen machinery .and materials, JAPAN. Japan offers to return Tslng-Tau to China, retaining certain former German concessions - on ' the Shantung peninsula. She desires to retain Germany's Par clfic islands north of the equator. CHINA. China wants a guarantee against foreign Imperialism or aggression, alrtlltlon of "consular rights' the return of Klau-Chau. SWITZERLAND. Switzerland desires an outlet to the sea by making the Rhine a neutral stream. This Is in accord wlt^ jFrgnch desires: SCANDINAVIA. v Denmark wishes to annex tfiat part of northern Schleswig inhabited predominantly by Danes. Norway has certain aspirations to .Spltzbergen or a part of it but is not pressing these claims. Sweden wants the union with Sweden of the Aland Islands held by Finland since the fa^ Qf the Russian lm pcrlal government. Weekly Health The Many Mysterie* "A1 of-NahW^ Vt L. W. BOWER, M. D. -V Ton can take an onion aced and a pass# •Mel, and pknt them aide by ode in the same «pot of ground. In one cam, yon get an onion, with its peculiarly strong odor, end in the other yon get s (lower ef rare beauty. You can plant a poppy seed and get opium (a dangerous, ha bit-forming drag), or yor. can plant a rhubarb seed and get something that help* constipation. No scientist, living or dead, can explain thtee mysteries of Nature. Behind the inviaftle life germ in each aeed is hidden tbe deep secret that nobody understands. Every* thing growing out of the mad see ma tended for seine use in establishing natarsi conditions. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y, long since found out what is natarafiy b«A for women's diseases. He learned it all through treating thousands of caaes. The result of his studies was a medicine called Dr. Pierce's Fa*orite Prescription. This medicine is made of vegetable growths that nature surely intended lor backache, headache, weakening drains, bearing-down pains, periodical irregularities, pelvic in» flasunationa, and for the many disorders common to women in all agea cf life. Ihr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is made of lady's slipper root, bkek cohosh root, ank com root, blue *oho«h wet anol Oregm grape root. Women who take this etandard remedy know that in Dr. PiereecS Favorite Prescription they are getting a safe woman's tonic so good that druggist* everywhere sell it. Favorite Prescription should have the full confidence of every woman in Aserin because it contains no alcohol and no narcotic. Dr. Pierce knew, when he first made this standard medicine, that whisky and morphine are injurious, and so he has always kept them out of hia remedies) Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg.of tablets. kidney COME TO THE SHORTHORN CONGRESS at CHICAGO. tn ., res. is, is. as is, oss n cui rum to sSjtTsifl&hlin ThaSboftkamtatM* •r's brass. BMfsaSi Mow li UMUBM to] both, conn i " Breeders' MANDATORY PRINCIPLE NOT ACCEPTABLE TO FRANCC? Indications That That Country ans! Australia Are Dissatisfied With Proposed Colonial Arrangement. . > Although France, in corimon cause with the other big powers, accepts prorlslonalty the Wilson mandatory principle as to colonies, she does not like It. The conditions und*v which she indorses It are such that a door is left j gives and requires, open to her to repudiate it if she does | as &aylng. noe approve the concrete application. Le Mrtln this nfornlng has a long hrtlcle by Stephen Lausanne on the fight made by Premier Hughes of Australia against the Wllsonlan Idea, the printing of which Is regarded as significant as s protest against the Amerlean attitude in this phase of peacemaking. "We have no objection In Australia io the mandate principle, bat let the mandate define Immediately what It Hughes Is quoted TURKI8H PARTY PROTESTS AGAINST LOSS OF CAPITAL. .-Vw Claims That to Take Constantinople From the Sultan Would Mean Destruction of the Empire. Official Turkey has Just let out a noise like the day before Thanksgiving. It shrieks that to pot Constantinople under an international regime not on:.* would slice the white meat of Turkey's breast, but carve out her tieurt. It would not leave even enough or a dish of glbiet stew theday after. J On the heels of President WllsOn's triumph In swinging the allies to a government of the German colonies by a mandatory system under the league of natious, liberal Turks now have put In a plea to save Constantinople for the Ottoman empire under the doctrine of self determination of peoples. The Qttoinnn liberal party, which has remained pro-ally and nnti-Ger- UIRO throughout the war, has sent a memorial to President Wilson asking that Constantinople be glycn a enduml • It ill depends <>» the frame of mind whether or not the picture of InrglsS tlon la good, bad or indifferent. '4 LOOKiT CHU'J - IMfiK F 8H," CROSS, R HURRY, MOTHER I REMOVS PQt* •ON8 FROM LITTLE STOMAGHt LIVER, BOWELS. WVI CALIFORNIA SYRUP OP iff* AT ONCE IF BILIOUS Oft CON8TIPATED. ' Look at the tongue, mother! If coated. It Is a sure sign that your lit* tie one's stomach, liver and bowels seeds a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pala, iloesn't sleep, doesnt eat or act nata* rally, or Is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a ttaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and In a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little bowels without griping, and yos have a well, playful child again. You needn't coax sick children to this harmless "fruit laxative;" they love its delicious taste, and II always mskes them feel splendid^ Ask your druggist for a bottle at ••California Syrup of Figs." which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. To be sure you get the genuine, ask to see that it Is made by the "California Fig syrup Company." Heiuao any other kind with contempt.--Adv. When a man lends his Influent* lis seldom gets it back. A Lady of Distinction. |s recognised by the delicate fasclsafr lng influence of the perfume she uvea. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the porea, followed by a dusting with Cutlcum Talcum Powder usually meana a dear,' aweet, healthy skin.--Adv. No matter how positive a "woman may be of anything she Is seldom will* lng to bet mon*\v on it. Your2<^^-~ * Lstkts--Murine for Redness, Soreneea Granulatuui Itching ami Burning t ves or Eveiids: *1 Drops'* After th« Movies. Motoring or Goo will win your coufldeocc. Ask Y«ur Otmsut M 2ts'. • U\ •*

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