lalilffiif :w; tiiubtiijs. Tak* it loat «g fl» kids. Im a packet ii fwr paekat for aa WwtBMJ DPMIS Km and aa aM la Iks teeth, appaSlfc fifestioR. Cuticura Talcum is Fra grant and Very Healthful Sea, 2Sc, OitfM •t 25 aai 50c, Takae 25c. .,JL ;^r-£ni ater WAITS 60 TEARS /FOR SWEETHEART Winsome Tints Take Prec©- dance Over White Summer Wear. S - A medley of fabrics and color* Is Men la rammer's clothes. Many designers predicted early In the spring that white would take precedence over color in mid-summer, but the tide of brilliant color that has been sweeping over the whole world of fashions has found its high-water mark in the newest summer clothes, observes a fashion authority in the New York Times. The white dress was very popular last summer, and since it is always charming and may be worn with any number of colored hats and jackets it Is also in evidence this year. But side by side with It, wherever smart women are assembled, one sees the white frock offset by bright colors. An attractive Idea for summer costumes lies in the crepe de chine frock Electricity ^ids Fishermen Are yon an electrical fisherman? I if not, all yon need In- order to class yourself in this category is the new artificial minnow, which Is made tnminous by electricty and resembles a wriggling worm when cast lntb the water. It Is reputed to attract fish day or night. Fine wires protect the bait from breakage and an electric battery supplies the current. •w- V • Is Your Work Hard? Is your work wearing you out? Are you tortured with throbbing backache-- feel tired, weak and discouraged? Then look to your kidneys! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains are the natural result. You suffer annoying bladder irregularities; feel nervoues, irritable nnd worn out. Don't wait! Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Workers everywhere recommend Doan's. Thev should help you, too. Ask your neighbor/ An Illinois ,n. J- M. Herford, b 1 a c k s m 1th, 108 Weber St., Eldorad o , 1 1 1 . , s a y s : "Dull, aching pains troubled me constantly through my kidneys and when I stooped to pick up anything I had sharp, knife-like pains in my back. Th© kidney secretions were Irregular in passage and at times too free, then again scanty. I bought a supply4 of Doan's Kidney Pills and three* boxes cured me." Oat Doaa'a at Any Shin, «Oc • Baa DOAN'S VSS.V POSTER-M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. PAfetftk'S HAIR BALSAM B-- tnnDnar«a-«top»H»lrr»mn» R--tor-- Color and Baaulr *° Grmy MKI FxfaJ Hah ' We. aad |L00 at ProcrUta. Btscox Chem. W In. PXchotror. K. T. HIN•D(«.E, «RtopC« aOll RpaNin, 8en sure* comfort to ath** gMbki make* walking ea*y. 16a. bjr nail or at Dflf* fi isoox Chemical Works, Patohug-M* K. T Caftdi tfca Fly--UN TANGLEFOOT Sticky Fly Paper 9Mllri««.i efSoooltd lab cyh egarpo, oMtrfya aaandd jfciifr • tores everywhere. TN6RIAON.DA RWAM TONS, UMCO. mtCH. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 33 -1923. UyTTON BEFORE CONAN DOYLE , farly-Vlctorlan Novelist a 8tudent el ' * the Oeeult Something Like a Century AgOb . Bnl#pr-Lytton, the (cflSBft pr#- ceded Sir Conan Doyle by more than half a century in the field of letters to the regions of the occult. Says an old copy of Blackwood's magazine, quoted In the Detroit News: "Occult studies, comprising the magic of ancient times as well a? the spiritualism of the present, had a great charm for him, and he entered on them with the earnestness which marked the pursuit of less mysterious knowledge. He dived Into wizard lore, equipped himself with magical instruments, rods for transmitting Influence, and crystal balls In which to discern coming scenes and persons, and communed with mediums and spiritualists. There can be little doubt whatever fnlth he might have in par tlcuiar manifestations, he believed in certain occult powers of nature, to deal with which Is the object of these mysterious arts. On more than one occasion we have known blm to dilate os such themes with great copiousness o! knowledge and apparent truthfulness fei the reality of marvels. Wont Change Woman's Puss. Scientist--Some day the earth will become so cold that man will not be able to live upon It. Fozzleton--Yes, but I suppose the women will go on dressing just abont the same as they do now.--New Bedford Evening Standard. Restless ~ Mights/ When Coffee disagrees Drink Postum Jheres a Reason' Model of Natural Colored Tussati 8triped In Black and White; Collar in Form of Scarf. < In pastel, shades to be worn with the bright-colored jacket which is so steadily and surely taking the place of the old-time sweater. . A likeable model of this sort Is, of plaited crepe de chine with a contrasting sifr sash, the monogram or embroidered motif appearing on the bottom, a variation from the usual method of placing the monogram on the blouse, an idea which has been entirely overdone. These crepe de chine frocks may be worn even with the bright-coloreu cotton jackets which are so widely featured this summer. Among the interesting frocks are tbose of white and pastel-colored silks with Persian and Russian embroideries in high colors. Considerable wool embroidery is seen on frocks of cotton fabrics, or even such -heer materials as batiste and organdie. Frequently It is done in very close patterns, In primitive colors such as yellows and reds, so that one f*lmosi loses sight of the original fabric Is what is practically the creation of a new material by means of these en* broideries. Light Wool Crepes Used. Even for midsummer dresses DM light wool crepes, which are almost as sheer as crepe de chine, are ex* tentively Used. They are well salted to sports wear. Very interesting new models are appearing in whit* wool crepe with bright-colored embroideries and old-fashioned drawnwork trimming. The popularity predicted for Rodier*> fabric, rezocrepe,. a cotton material in honeycomb effect, has not been realized. It remains where It started Its career--In the novelty class. It has gained some headway as a trimming or as a material from which to evolve the short cotton coats to wear over dresses of sheer materials such as voile. \ A cotton material, to "go over," as It were--that Is, to become really a big feature In dressmaking--must be very attractive indeed, for the competition In the field of cottons is great. What have been known as the staple patterns have been completely routed by the beautiful and artistic creations In cottons. Wonderful cotton materials are being constantly brought out, cottons which have the appearance of chiffons and silks and that have evidently been inspired by the ancient and modern arts of many countries. Old-time makers of cottons have been surprised at the modern methods of dyeing and embroidering. With so many beautiful cottons on the jnarket it is reasonable that this summer should see a large use of colton dresses. Even if one resorts to staple materials such as voiles, there Is an Infinite variety in the choice of shades such as orange, various greens, reds, all of the brown shades seen in the most fashionable silks, as well as navy blue and black. India Prints a Craxe. Dresses of India prints are becoming a veritable craze. Quantities new models are being show every day and every dressmaker is featuring these types. Even printed bedspreads are being cut op Into dresses, and matching sets of dress, parasol and hat. *' Hand-drawn styles are still in evidence, much more so than embroidery, and one wonders how the workera can pull so many threads and put in so many intricate stitches. This work is done on crepe de chine, crape georgette, on cottons and on linen. In cottons one finds valle. batiste and organdie made up In this style^^j/ The drawn organdies are exquisite and both the voiles and monsselaines are extremely practical. Linens tn both handkerchiet and dress weights are being used in the same way. Many organdie frocks are embroidered In yarns as wen as in very beautiful openwork pattern embroidery In the style known as broderie Anglalse. Other lovely models are appllqued In color such as a deep navy blue. Jade green or coral pink on white. This applique is always outlined with an openwork design and as a further embellishment with hand-drawn work, organdie ruffles and flutlngs. These appear on both mousselalnes and voiles. White organdie Is often used in contrast with other cottons in color. Colored Lace. Colored laces for afternoon and evening dresses, come in every shade of blue, from sapphire to the most delicate tint, aad ifl tbe poyular bejge .tjyfid gray tones. But Aunt IHtira Beach, Nuw80 Years of Age, Says Uncle j.wjohn Is Worth It* *' ARE DEVOTED COUPLE Hanover, N. J.--Uncle Jim Beach and his bride of one year, Aunt Mlra, had everything cleaned up as neat as a new pin at the old Green homestead, in Madison road, a few hundred yards south of the old Presbyterian church here, at an early hour on the anniversary of their wedding. On June 12, 1922, Uncle Jim, then confessing to the age of eighty years, and Aunt Mira a trifle younger, had walked hand in hand to the home of the Rev. Edward R. Bernard, pastor of Hanover Presbyterian church, a quarter mile away, and had there been married. There was much to talk^abont. Both agreed that those months which had speeded on Bwift wings were the happiest twelve months they ever had lived. One of, the pleasantest things recalled was that about a week after the marriage they had been surprised by a regular old-fashioned Jersey skimmerton, with the shooting of guns and blowing of tin horps followed by the usual feasting. Would Neighbors Rememberf Then their thoughts ran to the future. What would happen? For Instance, would those neighbprs who had been so kind remember the date and call to give congratulations, or had their little romance of one short year been entirely forgotten by Hanover folk? "I wonder!" It was Aunt Mlra who made the ejaculation, for there, com- HEW JERSEY YBUN6 NUN JkOWTS HE IS FIREBUG Confesses to Newark Detectives That He Burned Six Housee for Excitement ^ ---- y. V, .fcj4) tfe# York. -- Seventeen-y^ar-draT George Chamberlain of Newark confessed to setting a series of six fires which have had the Newark police and residents of the north end of the city, near the Passaic river, on a hunt for a firebug since April. Chamberlain, who lives on a house* boat at the foot of Chester street, and works in a cigar factory for $17 a week, told the police he set the fires In a search for excitement. The first fire burned the Triton boathouse at 125 Riverside avenae, April 12. He admitted starting a fire at 136 Sylvan avenue. On June 9, he told the police, he rowed to a launch owned by Edward Ashford of 10 Sear bury street, threw a cigarette into the engine and watched the boat burp. He set fire, June 15, at 11:30 p. m. to a tenement house at 1 Riverside avenue endangering the lives of several women and children asleep in the building, according to his alleged confession. Monday night the Riverside Box and Lumber company building at 130 Riverside avenue was burned with a loss of $20,000. Chamberlain says he set that fire with a cigarette. The police say he must have used matches when he set the fires he describes. Chamberlain was arrested by Detectives Kinney , and Manning after predicting a fire which occurred, the police say. Cuticura for Sore Hands. 8oak bands on retiring in the hot sad* of Cuticura Soap, dry and nib in Coticura Ointment. Remove surplus •Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cuticura will do If Soap. Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes.--Advertisement. Curious Cause of Mine 8trike. One of the most curious causes for a strike of ^workmen was that reported from the Ohio coal fields. The men employed in a certain mine were much attached to a mule called Jim. The mine boss decided to transfer Jim to another mine. Next morning 400 men were on strike, and in the end Jim stayed where he was. WOMEN FROM FORTY TO FIFTY Will Be Interested in MnJIookerfp Recovery by Use of Lydia L K4M ham's Vegetable WHY DRU66ISTS RECOMMEND % SWAMP-ROOT for many years druggists have watched with much interest 'he remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladd&i medicine. It is a physician'* prescription. * Swamp-Root is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, livel and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold b.v all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Re sure to get Swamp-Root and Mart treatment at once. However, if you wish first to teat this great preparartion send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Ringhamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure aad mention this paper.--Advertisement. •They're Coming Here.* Novelty Cotton Fabric* Mint's r W^re the novelty cotton fabrics Llngrege, brought out last spring, is becoming better known in dresses for this season!. It is an organdie-llke material woven of linen and cotton which looks like pineapple gauze. This material Is without artificial finish and, therefore, will detain Its stiffness. It costs about the same as organdie Changeable or shot organdie called organdine irise Is also used. It Is s sheer material woven with warp and woof In contrasting color. Interesting sets consisting of a dress with hat to match are being developed from organdie. One particularly attractive Is In yellow and white. The bodice of the dress has a yoke of white and turned-back cuffs, and flaring s'de panels on the skirt of white organdie. Both ruffs and collar are embroidered In yellow. Shown with this dress is a hat having a crown of yellow organdie and a brim of white organdie embroidered la yellow. The ruffled skirt Is gaining cobsiderable headway. One sees a surprising •member of them shown In the exelusive shpps. An Interesting model of this type is developed tn pale yellow georgette crepe embroidered In white and yellow. The skirt Is formed by rather scant but wide flounces which are alternately embroidered in yellow and white. The bodice is loosefitting and iow-waisted. It also Is embroidered In the same colors. A great deal of yellow is seen. The topcoats for sports wear for the summer are remarkably attractive. Designers have obviously endeavored to make them as becoming as possible In order that they .may rival the frock Itself. , Typical of these Is a mddel developed In white serge with embroideries in red and black. A marked feature of this coat Is Its dog-collar belt, which is of raspberry red and black enameled leather bordered with monkey fur. Another Interesting1 topcoat fbr country wear Is developed in a soft yellow worsted embroidered in dark blue, the embroidery appearing down the sides of the coat, on the roll C9Ilar, and forming a deep border and caffs for the sleeves. Make Your Own Scent Fragrant Posies 9a aake year ewn'acent get a giasf jam-jar, and from a sheet of cottonwool cut a number of disks big enough to slip into it. The edges of the disks should touch the jar all round. You will also- require a supply of tbe beat Lucca oil. Take a good-sized pie-dish, and put Into it some of these disks of cottonwool. Pour oil over tfiem. It will be best to soak thoroughly eight or nine pieces. See that your jam-jar is clean Inside. At the bottom sprinkle a thin layer of salt, and on this drop a handful of petals of sweet scented Sowers such as roses, picked when quite dry. Then put into the jar one of the oilsoaked disks of cotton-wool, pressing it onto tbe petals with a spoon. Now put In another layer of petals, and then a further disk of cotton-wool on mouth. Put in a warm place--In the sun, if possible--and leave for a forttop. In order to keep the contents ol tbe jar air-tight, tie a double thickness of grease-proof paper over tbe night. At the Mid «f that tfan* remove- the cover and empty the oil into small bottles. It will be surprisingly fragrant. Cork tightly. To get the oil, press the layers of cotton-wool and fiower petals with a stick or spoon. The oil will run to the bottom, and if yoo tip the jar you will be able to pour it out. ^ Shoe Buckles Are Enamel. Enamel shoe buckles have their appearance on the latest models of shoes. Tbey are of the rectangular type, slightly curved, made of colored Limoges enamel with a miniature subj^ ct in the crater framed with plain enamel work. • Large Hats Help. * LHTge Ti«ts of black horsehair iriaW an excellent background for the average type of loveliness, besides giving an illusion of coolness which may be furthered by* trimmings of summer flowers. Ing down the highway from tlM church, was a crowd headed by "the dominie," as most folks In Hanover call their pastor. "Oh, Jim I I wonder, If they are coming here?" There was a quaver in Aunt "Mira's voice and a close observer would have seen a tear in her eyes, but her face was wreathed tn smiles as she answered her own question. "Folks haven't forgotten, Jim. They're coming here." "We're the happiest couple In the ftate of New Jersey," was Aunt assertion to her guests as they about to leave. "And having such kind neighbors adds much to our happiness," Uncle Jim added. 8weethearts In Youth. In the days before the Civil war people said that Jim, without any pledge to Mlra, started out to carve s fortune. Mlra saw him start trudging down the Madison road with a small carpet bag for that unknown world of which both then knew so little. Sixty long years passed after Jim's departure from Hanover, and at the end of that time Mlra was alone on the thirty-acre farm, which had been left to her. She could get no one to run the place; Then one day in April of last year Jim Beach caine walking Into the house. During his long absence Jim had lived part of tbe time in Newark and part of the time in Connecticut; he had been married but was a widower. He would be glad to get a job and work the little farm, Jim said. 80 Mira gave her first and only lover a job on the old farm and in two months tbey were married. Boys Drown With Dog Here.7 Muskegon, Mich. -- Two boys and their heroic shepherd dog lost their lives In Muskegon lake near the municipal bathing beach. George Jones, aged thirteen, colored, went into a deep hole and Sbep, tbe dog, sensing the danger, rushed £0 his rescue. As the boy clung to the dog, Averill Hamel, aged twelve, owner of the dog, went to the rescue of both. AH went down. Nearby bathers thought the boys were playing. Deputies recovered the boys' bodies in fifteen feet of water. Later they recovered the body of the big dog. «£ ! Aged Woman With $10,000 Starves Herself to Death New York.--Fleeing from a specter ol want which, to a mind as emaciated as her body, seemed about to grasp her, Mrs. Katherine V. Pindar, seventy-five, widow of Dr. John Pindar, for many years city physician of Hoboken. died from starvation in St. Mary's hospital at Hoboken. It was learned later, according to United States Commissioner Samuel A. Besson, that she had $7,000 to $10,000 in a bank. She boarded with Mrs. Oelger at 400 Hudson street, Hoboken, and died after refusing to eat Mrs. Pindar accepted meals furnished her, but had refused to open her door. Mrs. Mary Ellis, in charge of the house, set out to find Mrs. Pindar's attorney, but was delayed in her search. When she got into communication with him he ordered Mrs. Pindar sent to a hospital, but it was too late. At the hospital she refused food and died. Mrs. Pindar's husband died In 1893 and she then moved to Brooklyn, later returning to Hoboken. Mr. Besson looked after her Investments and other affairs. She moved several times recently, and Mr. Besson did not know where she lived. That she was worried about money was evidenced by her custom of plac-> Ing little wads of paper behind mir* rors, pictures and furniture. It Is said she believed this to be money. "The fear she would not have enough fmoney for the remainder of her life," said Mr. Besson, "is undoubtedly her reason for wishing to lock herself In her room with the purpose of starring to death." • • f "• - > _ -, < Fugitive Convict Slain in His Swamff4tfJ Marquette, Mich.--George Natchoff, an escaped convict, died a few minutes after a posse riddled his body with bullets and captured him, four days after he had shot and killed Frank Curran, a deputy sheriff, and eight days after he had escaped from the Marquette branch prison. He was located a few miles from Maple Ridge, where he had been hiding in a swamp. His death ended one of the most thrilling man hunts ever recorded in Michigan. Natchoff was armed with an automatic pistol and had 40 rounds of ammunition. George Bloocha8, who escaped with him, said that Natchoff told him he would kill every person who came within range of his weapon. Bloochas, captured a few days ago after he and Natchoff had gone into a big sWamp, told the officers that Natchoff even wanted to shoot three young boys who saw them walking along the road. Oversight by Christopher. T con't get any appropriation for my voyages," complained Christopher Columbus. "You're going about It In the wrong way," confided the accomplished courtier. "Intimate that you will start with a trial trip and a pleasant time Will be had by alL" • inn Say "Bayer" and Insistl 8t.Paul.Minn.--"I was going through the Change of Life and suffered from A run-down condition and the troubles % woman has to p through at that time, hot flashes, nerve--« ness and beadacbea. At times I was not able to do my work, bat since takinr Lydia E. Pinkhanra Vegetable Compound I amjraining every day s my work with mote ease than I have for five or six years. I owe it all to your great medicine."-- MARTHA HOOKER, 114 College Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. When women who are between th* ages of forty-five and fifty-five arebeeet with such annoving symptoms as ner» vousr.ess, irritability, melancholia ul heat Hashes, which produce headaches^ dizziness, or a sense of suffocation,thejr should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is especially I to help women through this is prepared from roots and herbs contains no harmful drugs or narcotiei. Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts, for a free copy of Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Peculiar fee Women." aif It More Likely. "Newspapers make use . of very strange expressions," remarked Mrs. Snaggs. & "Do they?" replied her husband. "For instance, here Is sn article which speaks of speculators pocketing their losses, when I should suppeM that they really unpocketed them." Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION M! not water.; , SureReW ELL-ANS 25$ AND 75i PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Uitleaa sxw 4we the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache . lAimbago ;J r Earache Kheunintisnf^ ' v. Neuralgia Ptiln, Paln^ Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin* only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Draggists also sell bottles of 24 and 1001 Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Sallcylicacid.--Advertisement. 8afet> First. *1 find that I am In no danger of being run over on tbe streets, as long as I--" J. Fuller Gloom spoke with his usual pessiml8tiacridlty. "I--stay etft iof fhem."--Kansas City Star. " * Alright mien-- And iMD tM i®" tVTftlh Ottps off HfOU j u n t o i t s - Uttie Me I Oo-thlrd th* l*r do**. Mad* of nmt Incradiant*. than caadjr coatad. for ebUdrrn and adult*. SOLO BY YOUR PRU Movie of Dog Ripping Pants is Held Moral New York.--The Supreme court d#H elded that a bomb may be tied to a dog's tail, that the dog may be thrown from an airplane, that he may land comfortably in a flivver and remove an Important portion from a gentleman's trousers, and that be may do all this without Inciting to crime or be<Jjme a public nuisance--In tbe raovlep. o Tbe decision was rendered in the &tse of a picture banned by the state motion picture commission. BABIES CRY FOR "CASTORIA" Prepared Especially for Infants and Children of All Ages Mother! Fletcher's Castorla has been in use for over 30 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcotics. Proven directions are on each package. Physicians recommend It. " The genuine bears signature of Lightning Kills Man; Child on Lap Unhurt Wythevllle, Va.--Sidney Cook of Poplar Camp, Wythe county, was instantly killed by lightning while sitting on a bed In bis home. A small child, who was on his lap at tta time, was uninjured. Grandpa and Grandma. "When I was a young man," said grandma, "we used to be reproved for reading dime no\els." ."Yes." rejoined grandpa, "and now you pay a dollar and a half for worse." It takes a very clever man to pick np an umbrella and walk off with It just as If it belonged to blm. KILLS ESKY BED ;: P. D. Q. JhTBt Wftok. a 36c box ot i Devils Quietus) makes a quart, enough to kill a million Bed Bugs, Roacbae, Fleas or Cooties, and stops future generations by killing- their eKgs, and does not Injure the clothing. Liquid Are to the Bad Bum la what P. D. Q. is like; Bed BU(B stand as good a chance as a snowball in a Jaatly famed heat resort. Patent spout free In every package of P. D. Q., to enable you to kill them and their neat eggs In the araaka. #Look for the devil's head on every box. Special Hospital rtee. 12.60, makes five gallons; contain* three spouts. Either siM at your druggist, or sent prepaid on receipt of price by Owl CheBklcal Works, Terre Haute, Ind. EASV TO USB SHOE POLISHES liquids or Pastes All Pppalaa'Stales Boy Drowns Fieldina Ball. Pittsburgh, Pa.--Stephen Gerboc, nine years old, drowned in the Ohio river while trying ^o field a fly ball. The ball ground for youngsters was located near the river, and the boy rati into the water unawares, having bis eyes on tbe ball. Parachute Jumper Lands on Cow. Kansas City.--From an airplane hovering over Kansas City, Mo., R. D. Newton, parachute jumper, descended 2,500 feet and landed on tbe back of a cow. Falls Into Coal Uninjured. Chicago.--Two-year-old Robert Ray, fell from the third-story window of His home into a wagonlood of soft coal and was uninjured. The child's frantic nurse found him-smlling and playing with the lumps of coal on vUdt be landed. > . * :3M J: C&ji.. •v f Jfc Stubbed Toe Fatal to Lad. Hopkinsville, Ky.--A week after be had stubbed his great toe, Leonard Oliver, eleven years old, died. The toenail came of?, and blood poisoning aat In. later causing death. f,-: TNANDRUFF and itching ^ are caused, as a idfl^ ,»• .3 bacterial infection. I y. |* Zonite acts with extraordinary > ; promptness in controlling the^-% germ causes of this condition. ^ A one-to-five dilution of the^, " antiseptic applied to the scalp ' will destroy germs without 1 harm to skin or hair. Zonite is non-poisono-- andl / - non-irritating. It has greater germ killing power than pure carbolic acid and has more than , •eventy-five times the gwim Jiaib ing power of peroxide. 1 if .11 % *