Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 101, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1922 — Page 2

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TAX LEVY SET IT 23 CENTS IN IiIICOUNTY Road Contingent Fund Brings Total for 1923 Up to 27 Cents. APPROPRIATIONS ARE CUT Council Slashes $200,000 From Budget of $1,485,000 —Protests Heard. The county tax rate for 1923 was fixed at twenty-three cents by the county council today. With the road contingent fund, the total county levy will be twenty-seven cents, the same as 1922. The council cut $200,000 from the budget of $1,845,000. Cuts and slashes in practically all appropriations, protests by county officers and petitions by various citizens marked today’s session of the council. Among the protests was that of Dr. H. S. Hatch on behalf of the appropriation for Sunnyside Tuberculosis Hospital. Leo K. Fesler, county auditor, had recommended the institution be allowed $167,000 for the year 1923. Appropriation Questions The office of the Marion County agricultural agent came into the limelight when the council questioned the advisability of appropriating $1,500 for its use next year. Politics Not Present Appropriation was asked for county school nurses on the provision that the Parent-Teacher Club pick the nurses. The commissioners assured the ladies that politics had not en- j tered into the selection of nurses in the past. Citizens from along Delaware St. petitioned the county commissioners for an appropriation for a bridge on i that street across Fall Creek. FLIER OF JITNEY TYPE Curtiss Experiments With Small Glider Which Cost About 51,000. By United yeses PORT WASHINGTON, L. 1.. Sept. 6.—Glenn M. Curtiss,' veteran aviator, j today tested anew type of glider, weighing but 140 pounds, and depending on air currents for motive power, in a flight over the sound Wednesdaya. Curtiss' glider, towed over the water by a fast motor-boat, the air current thus generated forcing it into the air. i The plane carried 150 pounds. It spreads thirty-two feet, is twenty-four feet long and was built at the Curtiss plant at a cost of about SI,OOO. It remained aloft about five feet, for thirty seconds.

ROBBED TWICE Thieve® Make Return Visit—Add to Spoils. A burglar visited the grocery store cf J. J. Robbins, 803 Virginia Ave., Sunday night, and again last night. On Sunday’s visit the thief took $7, four pies, seven quarts of milk and failed to close the door of the ice box, which caused sls worth of meat to spoil. On the second visit the thief took $2, and cigars and cigarettes worth $lO. LAUDS SCHOOLS National Commissioner Says Indiana Has Profound Effect on Education. "There is no State in the United States which has had a more profound effect on education in the United States than Indiana.” said J. J. Tigert, U. 8. commissioner of education, upon his visit to Benjamin J. Burris, State superintendent of public instruction. Mr. Tigert has Just completed a lecture tour of the State. ESTABLISH QUARTERS Indiana G. A. R. Pick Randolph Hotel at Des Moines. Headquarters of the Indiana delegation at the fifty-sixth national encampment of the G. A. R., in Des Moines, la., beginning Sept. 24 will be in the Randolph Hotel, Fourth St., and Court Ave., Albert J Ball, assistant adjutant general announced today. Many Hoosier veterans p' xn to make the journey, slightly reduced railroad rates being in effect. PRISONERS LOCATED Indiana Men Captured by Germany Accounted For. According to official information from the War Department at Washington sent to Adjt. Gen. Harry B. Smith, fifty-four Indiana veterans who were held prisoners of war by Germany, have been accounted for. Five officers and forty-eight enlisted men have been repatriated. The for-ty-ninth enlisted man is reported dead. CASHIER IS RECEIVER •loint Bank Account of Estrayed Couple in Court. Cheter A. Jones, cashier of the National City Bank, was named receiver for the joint bank account of Stella May Bassett and Alexander B. Bassett, who are seeking seperation, by Judge T. J. Moll of Superior Court today. Mrs. Bassett is to receive thirty dollars a week for the support of herself and two children. The account totals $1,600. Woman Is Collector Mrs. Grace S. Schmidt of Richmond has been appointed deputy collector for the sales tax division of the United States Department of Internal Revenue, to succeed Miss Edna Bond of Indianapolis. Truck In Collision Fred Hagerson. 40 S. Oriental St., driving a truck, collided with t machine driven by Mrs. N. C. Hurbert. 35 N. Gladstone Ave., today. The Hurbert machine was badly damaged.

Hoosier College Professor and Students Complete New Building at Rose Institute

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By Times Special TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Sept. 6.—A Hoosier college president laid aside his cap and gown for a while, donned overalls, went out to the building site of his college and helped to build his school. And of forty students who enrolled in what the president created as "a summer school course," took up hammers, saws, and spades and gave the best that was in them to assure opening of the school on Sept. 13. The building, which is* to be the most modern and best equipped of its kind in the United States, is at the Rose Polytechnic Institute at Terre Haute. The foundation of the new Rose buildings, east of Terre Haute, had just been started when the building superintendent resigned. For a while there was consternation among the trustees and faculty. The new building had to be ready for occupancy by the last of September. The old Rose building was then being remodeled by the city school board as a vocational school for boys.

Broadway's Spirit Sadly Changed Beneath Glare of Bright Lights

By United Press NEW!.YORK, Sept. 6.—Lights still burn as brightly as ever along the “Great Way.” Theater crowds Jam the sidewalks nightly in the “Roaring Forties.” The wall of Jazz floats from the lobster palaces and tinselled cabarets, j and multi-colored lights flare forth I their invitations from the places of amusement. Broadway, on the surface, is just ! as Jt was In days of yore, when it 1 was glorious and glittering and wicked, when its name was synonymous with Babylonian gayety, and it was the nieecft of Rotary Club members from Keokuk, and real spenders from everywhere. But beneath its courageous attempt to live up to its reputation, Broadway is sadly changed. The gayety is makebelieve and not genuine. There is no more of the spontaneous revelry and joyousness. Millionaires don’t chase fashionably clad beauties over tabletops, like the movies led a credulous public to believe. Fortunes aren’t spent in a night for pleasure. Silver champagne buckets are relics. All that is gone. The reason? Prohibition, of course. Prohibition has become a sad reality along the Great White Way. At first, Broadway didn’t take Mr. Volstead’s law very seriously. Drinks could be had with little difficulty, for a price. Pleasure-seekers, at the worst, could always “bring their own.” And the fun went on, dampened only a little from the old days. But the crowning blow is the edict that hip flasks may no longer be carried. The neck of a bottle displayed above the edge of a table Is an invitation to a ride in a patrol wagon. Federal agents are everywhere. And who coujd enjoy drinking so furtively as that? The merry-makers simply are deserting their old haunts. The joy is gone out of night life. That’s not all. either Raid after raid has been made on the cellars of the amusement places, and liquor worth thousands confiscated. Armed with crowbars, hammers, jimmies, and what not, enforcement officers break and smash their way to the hidden supplies, and carry them off. Drinks may stijl be had. of course, to those In the know. Conviction of those arrested are difficult to obtain. But the old spirit is gone. Broadway is dazed and subdued, and is forgetting how to play. Money is not spent freely any more. Patrons of the “de luxe" pleasure places actually add up thefr checks? Their tips are the orthodox 10 per cent! Money, which was once no object to the true spender out to make a reputation for himself, has become almost as Important as in the trick restaurants where one

Wearied English Husbands Get Even With Wives Through Wills

3u United Prets LONDON, Sept, 6.—Parting- gibes at “friend wife,’’ directed in their wills by wearied Englishmen who finally escaped their domestic woes only by death, are recalled by a recent example of bitter farewell. In this case, a Welsh tradesman provided that his wife should he paid in sums of five or ten shillings, as his trustee saw fit “I have alwayß found.” he remarked in his will, “that my wife has no sense of the value of money nor can she keep it when she getr it.” Another testator, who complained that his wife had called him an “old pig,” among other expressions, left her the sum of one farthing (half an cent) to be mailed her in

Above—Students at work hastening construction for fall term use. ■ Below—A view of building before completed entirely. Insert—Dr. Phillip Woodworth, Rose Poly head, who spent most of the summer garbed in overalls. Then Dr. Philip Woodworth, who has been president of Rose for one year, offered his services as building superintendent. They were accepted. He moved out of his extremely up-to-date office and Into a little tar paper building on the campus. Most of the faculty members moved out to the new building with him, to help get their departments ready for the opening of school. The forty students, enrolled in the new summer course, began working on the building. This is what they have been doing: Cutting out a solid concrete wall, digging back into the hillside and enlarging the heavy machine shops. Building shelves and doors in the chemistry laboratory. Installing machinery in the light ma-

drops a nickel in the slot to obtain his food. Cover charges bring complaint. So Broadway mourns, and check girls, cigarette vendors, waiters and hackers talk of the “old days." Broadway hopes there may be a change, hopes that boooze will come j back, and bring with it vanished gloI ries. Goodrich at White House WASHINGTON. Sept. 6 —Secretary of Commerce lloover and former Governor Goodrich of Indiana conferred

Valiant Efforts to Dispel Gloom That Weighs Heavily Over Europe

By HUDBOS UA WLF.Y United Xews Staff Correspondent PARIS. .Sept. 6.—With most Parisians of Importance now l>eginning to return from their vacations or from j taking their “cures," the atmosphere ! in the capital is now full of seaside and mountain gossip of sorts. From j among this flood of anecdotage, let us I pick out Just a few specimens: Vichy: Party of motorists going along the road. They pass an old geni tleman with bushy eyebrows, a heavy | . white mustache, and the walk of a lad ! of 20. plodding along for exercise. The i members of the party stare and stare. ! Finally Father says, right out loud: j "What do you know about that? There’s an old bird who's gotten hlm- ! self up like Clemeneeau!” 1 The remark Is not lost on the elder!ly pedestrian. With a grin he shouts j back at the occupants of the car: "Yes, I and damn well imitated, eh!” That night the “Tiger” himself for- | mer premier, 80 years young, tells I the story on himself to all and sundry at the Casino. Deauville: King of Spain exiting from his friend's chateau. Bunch of little girls along the road recognize | him; one of them shouts: “Hurrah for the King! Alfonso, pleased, offers the little girl a bank note. Whereupon another youngster of the party shouts out: “Why, you’re not the King after all!” “How’s that?” asked the still smiling monarch. ’’Because." replies the young phi- | losopher, “if you really were the king you wouldn’t be pleased enough to be called that to want to give Loulou those fifty francs. And besides, where’s your crown?” That noon, at the Potinioro the king tells the story with gusto to a crowd of his titled friends. En route for Aix-les-Baine; American tourist seated at table with two French ladies and their escort, in the dining car. When the roast comes

an unstamped envelope, thereby forcing her to pay postage in excess of the bequest. But these parting shots were mild in comparison that of the man who left all hiß property to his daughter on condition that she paid his son three pence for the purchase of a “hempen cord or halter for my dear wife, which I trust shes will use without further delay.” A prominent British railway official remarked in his will that his estate would have been larger if it had not been for his marriage "with the cleverest daylight robber alive.” He added that “associations with this perambulating human vinegar crust cost me considerably more than 400 pounds." •

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

chine shops, building a concrete base for every machine. Helping roof the building. Building every table, every desk and every piece of furniture for the classrooms. Soon they will lay tile to carry the water from the acre and a half of roof to the little lake down the hillside of the campus . “Here aro some things I want you to remember about this building,” Dr. Woodworth tells Inquirers, “Our campus contains 122 acres. The building itself measures 400 by 135 feet. There Is not one inch of waste space in the whole building. We have a shooting gallery with a 150-foot rifle range under the building, tvhich the military students planned. They did the excavation work for it, will wall up the room and furnish It. And we re going to have a cafeteria, which will feed our students and faculty. “This building will not be entirely completed when school opens. But It will be reaily for the studentA to begin their work.” with President Harding at the White House today regarding continuance of American relief In Russia. PICKPOCKETS ACTIVE Detectives Doftble Efforts to Nab Thieves at '*ale Fair. Detect Ives doubled r.heir efforts today to catch pickpockets operating at the Indiana State fairground. John W. Drake, 1421 S. Illinois St., was robbed while near the grand stand. His purse contained $1 and a passbook for the fair. James Sample, 502 N. Meridian St„ Lebanon, Ind., said his purse was lost or stolen while at the automobile show. The purse contained S6O.

on the American. Ignorant of the customs of the country, takes out a pipe and starts to smoke, without asking permission of the others. One of the French ladies, knowing the American’s language, puts this to him: “I beg your pardon, sir. but will it disturb you if 1 eat while you smoke?” . Hasty apologies, and a put out pipe! Rambouillet, the French “Summer White House"; President Mlllerand talking with some friends. "Yes." he pursues, sadly. “I’m very much worried about my son Jean's future career!” “Why so?” puts in an astounded visitor. "Because," replies the stern parent, "he doesn’t like to play billiards! No, lie’ll never be President!” And the genial M. Mlllerand, who Is a billiard fan of the flrst water, lias a good laugh at the expense of his eldest.

Thousands Os Women Are Now Taking This Newer Form Os Iron Worn-out Housewife Tells How She Quickly Regained Her Health and Strength. “Only a short two weeks ago I was so tired, nervous and | worn - out from the mgf .Jaß drain on my nerves and strength of house- N— tCTV _ hold drudgery, that I 17 ! thought I could not keep up another day. j-jT A short two weeks' treatment of tho now- 1 WtSBM er form of Iron has / Jra WlflH given me a marvelous / S sHwf Increase In health* / J[ I'USk strength and energy. j Jr jT Now l can do II whole house without I help, and do not have , atoglQipSlla to sit at home in the I MjgSSqKm&Bj} evening “all-in” sick jj “The alx>ve Is a I typical hypothetical [ I case.” says Dr. James 11 Francis Sullivan, I formerly physlcan or Bellevue Hospital (Out-Door Dept.) New York, and the Westchester County Hospital. “You cannot be well and strong and full of vigor force and power unless your blood is rich in iron. It is your red blood that enables you to resist and overcome disease and that nourishes every organ in your body Without iron your blood becomes thin, Sale and watery. Poor blood cannot nour;h your vital organs and as a result you may have pains In your heart or k dneys. Indigestion, headaches, and fool al. “rundown" and tired out." When your blood lacks iron do not waste your time taking stimulating medicines or narcotic drugs, bftt directly enrich your blood with the newer form of iron sold by •11 druggists under the name of Nuxated Iron, which is like tho iron in spinach, lentils, and apples, and is in a form easily assimilated into your blood Get a bottlo or Nuxated Iron today. Take it for two weeks and if you have not, like thousands of others obtained most surprising health, strength and energy, the manufacturers will promptly refund' your money. The following local druggists will sell you Nuxated Iron with this “satisfaction or money bark” guarantee. The Hook Drug Cos, Haag Drug Cos., Henry Huder.

IMPROVEMENT SHOWN Labor Conditions Over State Bettered Except at Hammond. The weekly report of Federal labor bureaus of the State made to Director Thomas Riley shows a decided improvement in conditions. Hammond, where the steel industry is only operating to 65 per cent of its capacity, is the only exception. Business conditions in Lafayette, Terre Haute, East Chicago, Kokomo and Ft. Wayne are reported improved. Retail coal is selling at $10.50 to $12.75 per ton at Hammond, the report shows. FORBIDS SALE Lesh Says State Institutions Cannot Dispose of Gravel. Attorney General Lesh has given Dr. Sam Dodds, superintendent of the Northern Hospital for the Insane at Logansport, the opinion that no State institutions may either give away or sell gravel for county road building purposes. Dr. Dodds asked for the opinion when it was found that transportation of several miles could be saved by the State institution furnishing the material. ENTIRE CITY DARKENED Photographer’s Flashlight Shorts Electric Current in Des Moines. DES MOINES, Sept. 6. —An amateur photographer’s flashlight powder, coming in contact with the main feed coils at the Des Moines Electric Company, caused a short circuit which resulted in a shutdown of electric light and power in the city. The photographer had been given permission to visit the plant. He paused to take a picture near the feeding lines which supply the downtown district, and allowed his flash to touch the colls. There was a crash, he was thrown to the floor, and a short circuit was created which put out every light and stopped every elevator ir. the business section. Passengers caught in ejevators stopped between floors were taken out by means of ladders. The photographer was uninjured. Charter is Approved The State charter board today approved a charter for the Yorktown State Bank, capitalized for $25,000, to take over the property and business of the Yorktown Private Bank, with capital stock of SIO,OOO Thieva Get Auto Police today were searching for an automob.le owned by George B. Sawyer, 249 N. Pennsylvania St. The car was stolen from St. Clair and Meridian , Sts. Policeman Wounded JASONVILLE. Ind.. Sept. 6.—-Guy Lumkins is under arrest hero charged with shooting Allen Rogers, policeman. In th% leg.

Doolittle Establishes Record in Transcontinental Flight

By United Press SAN DIEGO. Cal.. Sept. 6.--Lleut. J. H. Doolittle, U. 8 A., was enjoying a days' rest in San Diego today after completion of his record-break-ing one-stop trans-continental flight last night. Doolittle, in a big De Haviland airplane, landed at Rockwell Held here at 5:34 p. m. yesterday. He had left

COCKROACHES EASILY KILLED BY USING STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE It also kills rats and mice. It forces ! these pests to run from building for water and fresh air. A 35c box contains enough to kill 50 to 100 i rats or mice. Get It from your drug or general store dealer today. Ready for Use—Better Than Traps

BITCHES bl&kßeads are Embarrassing I Oh I how can I get rid of them and enjoy the glory of a clear •kin? Don’t despair! S. S. S. will lead you into a world you probably have never known before, —a world of joy, where strong light and love are welcome, where spottedfaced embarrassment is no more! S. S. S. makes the Mood rich and pure, and when your blood is freed of impurities, your stubborn blotches, pimples, blackheads, acne, rash, tetter and skin eruptions are bound to disappear. Miss Ethel Rose, (22 E. Water St., Painted Post, N. Y., writes: “I was troubled with pimples on my face, heck and chest. I was advised to take S. S. S. I found it as claimed, as it certainly purified my system and my complexion is now clear.” Any good drug store ean supply you with S. S. S. SSiS. makes foujeei tike yourself again Blackburn’s PlnwnW* CascaßWfiliL ZT I | I IS SOSES . ISe Li— ■ I fllll ■—wiii tu Dreg Kane

COX SEES HIM FEDERAUNTEBEST Economic Affairs of Central Europe Will Be Aided by Administration. By United Press LONDON, Sept. 6.—“ Let us hope our services to central Europe will be that of a physician and not an undertaker,” James M. Cox said In a statement. “There is some measure of reassurance in the statement from Washington,” he continued, “that the Administration has interested itself in the economic affairs of Central Europe, even though Herbert Hoover will not be sent here.” Cox, who has studied in Europe, is to sail for America Saturday. WHISTLES AT NINE MONTHS Baby Warbles Like Canary, Is Claim of Proud Father. YOUNGSTOWN, 0., Sept. 6.—Claim Is made that Mervin, 9-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Herman of this city, “can whistle like a canary.” “He's been whistling since he was 6 months old,” declared the proud father. “I’m sure he is the champion baby whistler of the world. Why, when that boy grows up he ought to be in great demand. Think what Mr. Sousa would give to have such a whistler in his band!” MARKS GOES TO LEAGUE Negro Leader to Ask for African Colonies for His Race. NEW YORK. Sept. 6.—George O. Marks, representative of the United Negro Improvement League, sailed for The Hague, where he will ask the League of Nations, in behalf of his race, for the former German colonies In Africa. Twelve negro guards garbed In elaborate uniforms saluted Marks with bright sabres when the boat pulled out. .Jumped From Street Car J. S. Moss. 53. of 648 Arch St., suffered an injured hip when he alighted from a moving Columbia Ave. street ear at Delaware and Market Sts. today. Find "Mule” in Weeds Mrs. Nora Meir, 27 S. Davidson St., today found nine quarts of “white mule” whisky in a vacant lot near her home. The police ohtained a de scription of the bootlegger who hid the whisky In the weeds. Burglar Steals S4O Lee Vibeit, 403 W. South St., told the police today a thief entered his room and took S4O from his pocket. Vibeit said he was not sure when the robberv was committed.

Jacksonville. Fla . at 10:36 p. m. the day before. Kelly field, Ran Antonio Texas, was his only stop eu route. The distance was approximately 2,100 miles and the elapsed time 2 hours 20 minutes.

Little Children x Brighten Homes EVERY young couple starting out in life has visions of joyful hours spent before the fireside with healthy, happy children; but; alas, how often young women who long for children are denied that happiness because of some functional derangement which may be corrected by proper treatment. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is just the medicine for these conditions, as the following letters show:

Chicago, 111.—‘‘You surely gave women one good medicine when you put Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound on- the market. After I had my baby I was all run down and so nervous it kept me from gaining. My doctor did everything he could to build me up, then he ordered me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound with his medicine and I am now anew woman. I have had thiee children and they are all Lydia E. Pinkham babies. I have recommended your medicine to several friends and they speak highly of it. You are certainly doing good work In this world.”—Mrs. Adrith Tomsheck, 10557 Wabash Ave., Chicago/ 111.

Many such letters prove the reliability of Lydia E* Pinkham’s detable Compound E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS.

AD CLUB SPEAKER

Thomas E. Basham, of the Basham Advertising Company, Louisville, Ky., will address the Thursday meeting of the Advertising Club of Indianapolis at the Chamber of Commerce. His subject will be “Getting at the Customer.” KLAN AROUSES FEUD Three Reported Killed, Two Seriously Injured in Southern Clash. By United Press HOUSTON. Texas, Sept. 6.—Three men were killed and two seriously Injured in a family feud inspired by interest of the Ku-Klux Klan in political affairs at Sealy, Texas, according to advices here today. F. C. Shaffner, real estate man and his son, Robert, and Luther Bell were killed in the shooting fray. Ernest Shaffner. stabbed in the back, was in a serious condition, and Turner Bell was believed fatally wounded by a shot in the head. POiSON WHISKY FATAL Five Men and Two Women Die From Grocery Store Booze. By United Press NEW YORK. Sept. 6.—Five men and two women are dead today from drinking poison whisky in Brooklyn. The deadly liquor is alleged to have come from a grocery store owned by Mrs.’ Irmelinda Vatala, 3S. Bond Issue Refused The State board of tax commissioners has refused a petition for bond issue of $41,500 for the construction of a paved road in Albany. Delaware County, the refusal having been based on present high taxes. RRUISES J Alternate application* of hot WSO and cold cloths—then apply VICKS ¥ Vapoßub Oct ir Million Jan Used Yoarb-

Churubusco, N. Y.—"l was under the doctor’s care for over five years for backache and had no relief from hia medicine. One day a neighbor told me about your Vegetable Compound and I took it. It helped me so much that I wish to advise all women to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for female troubles and backache. It is a great help in carrying a child, as I have noticed a difference when I didn’t take it. I thank you for this medicine and if I ever come to this point again I do not want to be without this Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. Feed Mixer, Box 102, Churubusco, N. Y.

SEPT. 6, 1922

EDUCATED AUTO ATTBACTSCBOWD Unique Car Does Everything but Talk to Admirers Who Surround It. Passersby near 313 N. Pennsylvania St., now stop and step inside to see the alleged “unique automobile of the age.” It “talks, sings, answers questions, winks and blinks its lights,” on the slightest provocation. Wireless, is the explanation offered by the knowing. Others say some one is concealed beneath the floor and watches through an aperture those who approach the machine. At any rate, if you approach the hood of the automobile, which is jacked up off the floor, any question which you may ask will be answered. E. McGreer, who is in charge of the automobile, a Studebaker, said Government experts had puzzled to solve the mystery of the car’s talents. FATTY COMING BACK Film Comedian Cancels His Proposed Tour Through Orient. By United Press TOKIO, Sept. 6.—Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle has recovered from the infection in his which caused him to go to a Yokohama hospital. He has abandoned his plans for a tour of the Orient and a trip around the world. Arbuckle will remain In Japan until Sept. 16, then return to Los Angeles. dgareUej^|||j^ They are GOOD! 14/ SHAVE, BATHE and SHAMPOO with the same cake of SUN RIVER SOAP made with the famous Sun River Mineral that exudes from a rocky iedge near the Sun River, Montana —renowned for centuries for its healing qualities. Contains rare organic sulphur. Makes a rich creamy lather. Invigorates and rejuvenates the skin, leaving ft as soft as a baby's. Use ' it every day. At tht drug store, 25c the cake On sals at Hook's Dependable Drug stores. 3un River Cos., B-23, 1914 Broadway, N. Y. C.