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» Quc he Bisimarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) blished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- . N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck _€cond class mail matter. itge D. Mann . eet siiy President and Publisher Subscription Kates Payable in Advance ly by carrier, per year ‘ Wot by mail, per year ‘in Bismar ly by mail, per year (in state. outside Bismarck ‘ly by mail, outside of North D: $7.26 » 7.20 5.00 0 2kly by mail. in ekly by mail outs” OE! per year . . wee Member Audit Burcau of Circulation . 230 of North Dakoia, veers 150 Member of The Associated Press he Associated Press is exclusively ‘led to the use republication of al news disps otherwise credited in t U news of spontaneous or: ats of republication of all other m ap Feserved. cut Forcign Representatives inst R & LEVINGS thai 1 sect Formerly G. Logan Pi Co. teac CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ot —— oft (Official City, State and County Newspaper) she. AS Bee and a ‘ 1 ; den The Corn Show masorn is kine. Where t WE scoptre a abu nidwestern belt flung his legions t of the g He ha orthivest aimed the ders have ure has come to val of the fitt and ha ely on the fact that tlomnnex t te8y Nor MO oro seen of the sur salied : ityse corn here. 865 North Dakota has made corn one of its staples and TS), corn it has built up that rounded-out type of farm- that comb dairying and poultry with | * onee domina ction of wheat. Since then} fahas not maa that sometimes the great sah crop of wheat has fallen short. Beef and dairy lsatle, hogs, cream, butter, eggs and poultry have brought Ie€the steady flow of checks to pay expenses, mect debts | fal provide the deposits in the banks. thi? 1928 despite the comparative recency of regarding | ings one of the leading crops worth raising, corn to the t2 ount of 25,000,000 bushels was proditced in North —kota, In part it sustained other important items of | @* state’s agriculture and in the items of 640,000 hogs! sed, $51,000,000 worth of dairy products and $17,500,000 | rth of poultry marketed. the feeding element of corn snuSt be given considerable credit. WiWorth Dakota iculture is an immense gainer from 1s possible to {en production, and as the quality of the corn improves | "I the methods of growing and using it become more ontific, so does the agriculture of the state thrive more. Jorn having assumed such an important place in rth Dakota farming, the annual Siate Corn show has nine into existence. It is intended to stimulate inter- ii in more and better corn and it has been fulfilling {yat function with such effectiveness that here it is eh us again today for tho rest of the week. [iit is good to see the interest the annual show has Voused among the corn growers and the way they rally fiit with exhibits and competition for its prize awards. {Nat shows that it is serving its purpose, that corn grow- Kg must more and more advance as a farming activity 1; the state. The farmers cannot afford to let any in- Aferenee to how creep in. Mwith the realization of a community building next Nar, North Dakota should have a corn show here, bar (ihe. How to make it such has been made the study of Pe directorate of the Association of Commerce, which {is been fostering the exposition, A committee sent to Mtehell, South Dakota, brought back some excellent eas in the way of entertainment to add to the exhibl- 4.2. If the show is staged in a‘community hall and these Sew features arc added to it, North Dakota will see one si its great stimulators of agriculture flower here in 2 State Corn show. Juries Are Getting Tough Wwill it be necessary to turn to trained and professional fors as the answer to the admittedly unsatisfactory pactioning .of the present jury system? Professor een, of Yale, has suggested something of that sort t@he National Economic league has been conducting “survey on the steps to be taken to improve the ad- nistration of justice and of four reforms suggested two o them concern the jury system. One of the changes Szgested is to give fewer than 12 jurors power to deter- ne a verdict, the other voted by the members of the elgue is to confer on judges increased authority and iseretion in instructing juries. ; “But just as the opinion of publicists veers to either folishing juries or finding more accurate and scientific ¥¥8 to determine truth, the fickle jades spring a sur- se Juries suddenly show a tendency to become what aerally is term hard boiled. Something unexpected has occurred. In a number of table cases before the public, convictions have been urned. The sentiment of maudlin mercy has failed ' Trespond, even in trials where the stage was care- "diy set to animatesickly sympathy. Ht used to be that a wealthy man was almost certain have his sins looked on with tolerant complacency ‘4d he could count quite surely on being told to-go and ho more. And a Chicago gunman knew in advance his fellow citizens would do little more than repri- him slightly. this seems to have changed lately the past month we have seen the following things: B Fall, former secretary of the interior and tial pal of the Doheny millions, is convicted of ® bribe—and this by a jury in Washington, for its tenderness of heart toward the peccadil- of sinful man—and, also, in the face of impassioned about the healing air of New Mexico, and mntly arranged wheel chairs and tearful rela- irs. Alexander Pantages, wife of a multi-millionaire, ed of manslaughter, merely because she drove @uto over an unlucky Japanese. She faces a prison mee of one to ten years. husband, the extremely wealthy theatrical mag- ‘was convicted of assaulting a girl dancer, in spite ‘® much longer term in prison. youthful Chicagoan known by the pleasing name Face Willie Doody, who used a revolver rather sly on his freebooting forays, went before a Chi- Y, was convicted of first degree murder and now ¢lectrie chair—and this in Chicago, which only years ago found itself unable to convict two geters who murdered ® policeman in broad daylight — lords of the Street ring 1.00! | mosphere throughout the land. The old lure of some- | tong Ust of acquitials, Maybe the indiscriminate flood | | Of forgiveness which our jurtes used to show has palled fon us, Snobbery in Wall Street Wall Sircet siill simmers. The cyclone which struck | its stocks the last two weeks was an event which will not ; die out over night. The financial weatherwise will study the storm to determine the whys and wherefores, like a urgeon on a post mortem exploration, and much still remains to be heard from the sharps who analyze dis- j aster and bare the forces of it. ‘The hurricane was | | devastatingly pusziing as well as damaging. \ Queer conclusions may come out of the study. Com- ments be made in the circles of the financial over- with that quality already. There seems to be a feeling of relfef that the small | investor is being removed from the sgene It is being said, | almost with an air of rejoicing. that this small investor has been forced out. The little fellow, evidently, guilty of many peculiar sins. | One high commentator that the market got out of kilter in the first place because the small investor per- sted in putting in his moncy. He came in in swarms 9 the sacred precincts of Wall Strect, where only the supposed to tread; and the flood of money ra he bi that ht—for there were many of him—sent prices away up where they should not have been. Anothe: blames the small investor in another way. After bu beyond ail reason, he says, the small in- | vestor suddenly stopped buying—and at that moment, the bo began to fall out of things. It was reprehensible | for the little fellow to start, and it was reprehensible for | him to stop. He caused trouble both ways. Quite beyond all of that, however, there remains that} strange, but quite evident, fecling of relicf that the | fe has at last gone out. One gathers, listen- to these high pronouncements, that it is quite proper | for a millionaire to buy 1,000 shares of U. S. Stecl and) *) quite dreadful for a shoe salesman to buy 59. ! When the big fellow does it he is investing, he i: helping to maintain the easy flow of credit and financial | support that sustain our prosperity, he is indulging in esoteric and praiseworthy financial manipulations proper | to his : but when the small investor does it he is! gambling, and his activities hurt the market. discom- mode business and lower the moral tone of the nation, This sort cf thing is harder to understand than the! stock market crash itself, It is only typical, however, of | ~ the fuzzy way in which our mental processes (1) OO ——————————— | seem to work where Wall Street is involved. | Our Yesterdays praesent Sed Probably it is just as well, all around, that the joy- ride has ended. It was spreading an unhealthy at- thing-for-nothing was abroad, potent and irresistible People wanted to get rich, not by hard work, but by luck; and the great gamblers who took big fortunes out of Wall Street were not looked upon for what they were. | but were considered industria! and financial leaders. Probably it will be a long time before the immediate causes of the crash are agreed upon. Meanwhile, we hh that the financial world’s big-wigs would stop being so sanctimonious about the crimes of the small investor. A few months ago they were welcoming the small in- ; Vestor with brass bands. Now, with thelr eyes on heaven. | they are telling him that he should have stayed home | and practiced sober thrift. Gambling, apparently, is a sin unless you have a mil- ‘lion dollars, | Drive Them Out | There is one extremely important angle of the senate’s | investigation of Washington's lobbyists that has not re- ' ceived much attention in the papers. That concerns the | high-pressure, slick-tongued gentlemen who infest the | capital and collect huge sums from various organiza- | ons for the favors which they are supposed to be able | to wheedle from government officials. | In virtually all cases these men have no influence with | anybody, and make little or no real effort to exercise | , any. But they collect fat retainer fees and lead a lot of people to expect that they are going to accomplish | their ends in a more or less underhanded way. | To be sure, if an organization wants to hire such a | man for such & purpose, it doesn’t deserve much sym- | pathy if it gets swindled, But the activity of these } men has a distressing effect on the Washington at- | mosphere. It leads people to think that our government | Officials are much more venal than they are. The | senate will do the country a good turn if it drives them out of business. A Threat to the Dirigibles? The makers of the giant dirigibles might give a thought. | or two to the amazing new Dornier seaplane, which took | 152 people into the air in Germany the other day on a | trial flight which seemed to prove the complete practical- | ity of constructing heavier-than-air machines on large- | scale plans, The chief advantage of the dirigible has been that 1t | | can carry a much greater load than the airplane. But | | this seaplane took aloft more people than any dirigible ever carried. It has yet to be tested on long-distance | | flights, to be sure; but its carly performances indicate | | that it may be @ serious threat to the newly-begun reign | | of the monster dirigible, | | Editoria) Comment | \ Halloween and Witchcraft | (Washington Star) | | ‘Tis the night of ghosts and witches. | For several generations Halloween festivities have. taken the form of a noisy, spirited burlesque of ancient | superstitions. But recently a strange phenomenon has | been under way in the United States, described by the | late Dr. Edwin E. Slosson as “a revival of witchcraft.” | During the past year three “witches” have been mur- | | dered in widely separated parts of the United States, | This revival does not always go under the name of | witeheraft. If we could resolve the confusion of nomen- | clature, it is likely that the belief would be found far | more fundamental and widespread than is generally supposed. The violent acts of a few psychopathic in- dividuals are merely surface indications. A witch may be defined as any person believed capable of exercising a supernatural, malevolently potent control over the welfare of others. Witchcraft, to the above definition, is fundamental in most culture patterns, especially in times like the present, when the human mind is in a state of confusion. The characteristic picture of the witch changes, of | course, in accordance with the culture pattern of which at} forms a part. In one generation it is that of an old | woman riding the storm on a broomstick. In another | it may be that of a gentleman in event; clothes lectur- | ing to a gathering of pseudo-intellectuais. The belief in witchcraft, or, rather, the complication of beliefs from which witehcraft evolves, is not confined to the poor and ignorant. It is a phenomenon of crash- ing realities, a transference of confusions. Such influ- | ences sp vae Gee ESiRns of Binetein 508 Pe Bie: presuming, as they do, a reality transcending the senses, have contributed much to the confusion | of the age. The same may be said for aphy has ‘broken looes fon he mon from its in the bg ms of ee Site senses. =a result is @ great number of cults whose relation to witchcraft is dangerously close. Bellef in the ability of the individual to wield a supernatural benevolent con- trol over others—such as is of from bellef in the ability of some wield & malevolent contrat. ‘Given’ aligh mind, and this has been appointed clerk of the su- preme court. R. D. Hoskins of Pembina = Captain Gregg, Governor Miller's private secretary, settled down to his duties in the exec- utive office. Mrs. Captain Wentz, Mrs. E. M. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1929 MY LUMBAGO , wWitd \YouUR FEEBLE TRUNK uP FORTY YEARS AGO The new Western Union office in the Raymond building is now occu- pied by Manager Fletcher, and Oper- ators Carnahan and Newton. has arrived and EGAD w IF IT WERENT FoR I WoiLp> Hor HAvE fo BE ANNOVED AT HELPING Me GET “HIS IN THE ATric fue ~~] Have A FEW VERTEBRAE OUT OF PLACE ~AND A SLIGHT SHOULDER DISLocATionN , ¢ ALSO A LEG “TENDON “THAT PoTHERS ww eotHeRWise I WOULD NoT CALL os) You FOR Z ASSISTANCE ! | OUR BOARDING HOUSE \\ AN \ kttemPets AON en, left teday for Wi Y/ARS AGO ‘son, farmer cf Painied Woods who is in the city today, re- Ports good crops on his ranch this year. Mrs. William La Moure is visiting ‘iends in Fargo this week Captain Moorhouse, stor Bentley and Phil Myers went to McKenzie | this afternoon. leigh ccuaty closed with a rousing rally at the Atheneum with Gover- Culberston and Mrs. F. M. Wheeler, | nor E. ¥. Sarles, Senator H. C. Hans- WELL SAY, T AW No PicuRE oF HEALTH MYSELF uns Pu SHORT CF BREATH AN’ EVER SINCE MY ARCHES WENT FLAT, I CANT STAND “TH” EXTRA WEIGHT OF A LINED HAT Even! awe CATCH AHOLD OF ITHw : (N’ KEEP VSELF BRAceED WHEN y WERE ON “TH” STepS wee vA OL” HEART MAY BLOV! A FUSE FROM “TH? STRAIN ~~ AN” You"Le BE TH” UNDER MANE we ARE Nou READY 6 START 2 borough and Judge George D. Emery y where they will re- jot Minneapolis as speakers. | if A Thought For we are saved by hope; hope that is seen is not hope: what a man secth, why doth he y hope for?—Romans 8:24, * ee Hope will make thee young: same mother.—Shelley. some good points which can but for for Hope and Youth are children of the be Tt has af mothers die nation of the world. A mother in Italy mothers are lost. 6.7 mothers die. to 3.8. Italy's rate is 2.7. berculosis. least to that of Holland? due to blood poisoning. livery. struments are highly sterile. 2 | mother should be carefully « et Every these subjects can be given. THIS HAS MAPPENZD NELEN PAGE thtaks che Ic tn love with ber guardian, LEUN- AND BRENT, whe changes wlane tor ber fatere after meet. ing a dying man eamed RELLIN. presente the git to 2 mil- Moaatre, CYRIL CUNNINGHAM, ac ble hejress and efers root whieh the tenely e!¢ man accepts without mech question. ese be aad taken trom wreve ticles the beiress to get Connatagham eet of the way quiekiz. te slyly nd- the ecrvante Gud the old man dend tm bed. Then be = {clen’s promise (to marry him. er, ehe and Heb realize they re each ether, but che telle him she to engaged. She tres te get Brent to release ber, but be re- fuces and makes dire threate tf ahe dares te marry Bob. Eva cesente Meteme treatment NOW Go ON WiTH THE stony CHAPTER XLIIL “R08 will believe me!” her lover's trust without a mo- ment’s hesitation. « Surprisingly Brent nodded his head in agreement. “Won't you sit down now?” he said. “I've some thing more to say to you.” He slanced at bis watch. “Or perhaps you'd better send your friend Shallimar off to the station before We go on with this.” Helen sank into a chair. “She's in the breakfast room.” she said weakly. “Tell ber I'd like ner to take a tater trais; 1 can’t see her of now.” Brent teft to do her bidding, out was quickly back. fe soted, as 00m as he entered the room, a change to Helen. Given a few mo ments to think she had decide¢ be was lying to ber, tricking her. How simple tt was, of course. She felt itke taughing, only somehow there was, strangely, inexplicably, 02 odor of ‘truth about it all. She fought against it. “1 bated to tell you this, “Brent began, deceived by her manner inte thinking she was abt going to take {t so bard after all. beld ber eyes fastened levelly on oie, ig ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. | “1 don’t believe a word you nave ' Helen Cunningham's daughter—and ; sald.” she stated emphatically. “You don’t?” Brent came close, grasped her wrists with cruel strength, forced her down into the |chair and towered over her in a | menacing attitude, | “You don’t?” he repeated. “Then | lsten to me. 1 can prove that you jare Helen Page and not Cunning. | ham’s granddaughter. That will be j easy.” Helen still deficd him. “But you cannot prove what {s not true,” she cried. “You cannot prove that | “gr will not be necessary to prove it” Brent retorted. “If you persist im marrying young Ennis ! newspaper stuff inside 24 hours What then? You aren't Helen seat to the gutter—possibly you'll have @ chance te fearn what women's prisons were built for.” “But you... you,” Helen stam mered. “You would go to prison too.” “Don't be a fool.” Brent snapped at her, “I'll be safely out of it You'll be left to stand the gaff alone. Your exposure will come through Information that | shall supply in | directly to the authorities. I'll give jthe whole thing to the newspapers jat the same time. Let, your boy you went free—there'd always be @ doubt {n the public mind about your innocence. What would that mean to Ennis?” Helen saw at once that it would be trreparable injury to his career, but only the deepening pain in ber eyes answered Brent it was enough. . “Do for him, wouldn't it? Even if he believed you, and there's a Seod chance that be won't.” Helen bad ¢ ¢ tucid thought. “He will befleve me.” ahe said, “because he will koow that 1 wouldn't have dared to think of marrying bim if this were true and you held me in your power.” Brent regarded her admiringty. “Rather clever.” he praised. “But Rot weighty enough. “He's apt to imagine’ you thought you could bandle me.” “Ok, you .re fiendish!” “Merely determined, my dear, that 20 upstart like Ennis is going to spoil my eae Id little he couid believe such « thing Dossible, “For the sake of millions, and shall make your etory front page| Neilin, don’t forget that. You'll be | toppled from your high and mighty | |friend stand by you then. Suppose | Helen declared her faith in| “You will bave to prove what you have said—that | am not | it it {9 true 1 shall renounce the fortune myself!” “Oh, you will?” Brent sneered. “Well, my noble young lady, do that | trifling little thing and you'll have plenty of time to repent behind the bars.” “But you can’t prove that I—" “Are you really so dense that you fail to see your position itself will Drove it for me?” Brent cut in. “Confession on my part will throw the burden of defense on you, and what will you fight: with? You haven't a penny of your own. And you will need money, and friends. Public opinioa, public sympathy, will be against you from thi tt taking in a dying old man. ving him Judas kisses—lying to him, just _waitidg for him to—" “Ob, no, no.” Helen wailed. “A pretty picture, no?” Brent pressed on. “Daughter of once famous crook comes into her own as queen of imposters. Blindly in fatuated young law student remains loyal, turning bis back apon his chreer for the sake of a bewitching face, Not so bad, eh? ['ll make it dramatic enough, don't worry!” eee BpEten bowed her face im her bands and Brent observed her shaking young body without pity. “On the other hand,” be sald at last, “you can have everything. And fove ts nct a lasting thing, Helen. Don't be hoodwinked by that notion. It’s been exploded too many times. Astonishing that any: one continues to belicve in it. You will forget Ennis, even if it takes time. But you never could forget —the world wouldn't let you—that you had ruined bis life, robbed him of the chance to loo! ry map im the face—that seems to be the absurd ambition of any number of brainicss idiots,” he added dryly. “1... 1 don't have to marry him,” Helen gulped. “I can give the money back to Mr. Cunningham's lawyer and go away somewhere.” “Yes, if the police will let you,” Brent agreed. “You will tell, whether 1 marry Bob or not? Yop wouldn't let me restord the money and—" “Certainly not,” Brent returned firmly. “You will either marry me or face exposure. And 1 warn you, Helen, 1 won't stand for any non- sense. You'll come through all’the way or you'll take the rap—under world jargon.” hg smiled with mock apology. “It means plenty. You' fed @ sheltered life, my dear, y know nothing whatsoever of the bell that awaits you if you igt your self ip for @ stretch up the river. Better give it lot of thought be fore you decide.” “There isn’t anything to decide,” Helen sald brokenly. “I cannot marry you.” For @ moment Brent said noth: ing. Then: “You may fect differ ently about it when you've had time to think it over. In the mean. time you might go into social serv: ice and Gnd out at first band what happens to jailbirds. And- if:you cam arrange it—go take @ look at the poor devils in prison. Don't settle yo Knowing wha. you're doing. You'll n be able to undo it, You'd be fo the morgue in no time at all fate blindly, without | '*t after they tet you go with your jprison pallor and your prison. marked soul. A girl like you! God, you'd become a dope fiend!” Helen shrank down into her chair. The back of ber hand few | to her mouth to stifle a scream. “I think life with me would be Drefcrable to that,” Brent con- tinued. “As your husband | should be far more interested in your for tune than {a you, Helen. 1 am aot, fortunately, in love with you.” “You mean,” Helen looked at him hopefully, “that you wouldn't want to live with me?” eee | PARENT shrugged. Having gained &@ point he was willing to con- jcede one, as promises meant noth ing to bim. Helen's question sig- aified that a weakening wedge had entered her horror-filled mind, giv- ing him his fret tangible ad vantage. Her next question was less pleas ing. “Why?” she asked, “couldn't 1 give you half the money if... if you can prove that 1 am not Hslee Nellin, and 1 decide to keep it" “What a bright idea!” Brent ex- claimed sarcastically. “Don’t you know that the money iso’t under your contro!, and that it would di- rect suspicion upon both of us if you gave away any large amount of it?” He did not add that ft was his intention to gain possession of her entire fortune in time. The ray of hope, if she'd really entertained it, faded out of delen’s mind. Her aative honesty con- quered it. “I can't do it,” she sobbed. “Snap out of it,” Brent com manded harshly. “I'm not an ogre T'U keep out of your way. It is merely a matter of convenience.” Helen wiped her eyes. “But if Um not Helen Nellin £ can't keep the money.” she declared. “Why not? Even when you com sider it on the basis of fairness, hie bave a right to it. The right Dossession. Different even 1 will admit it—it fescue other heirs—a real Helen Nellis— Evangeline, rathe~. You see, you ever had-ner name. Helen 1s your only given name, and not line Helen as you es ad “Evangeline,” Helen repeated after him. “I can't believe you get, but if there is o real ih aed Nellin I'm going to find “Don't get excited,” Brest vised, “I' <A Helen jumped to her feet, “Ob please go," she cried; me alone. ? “In & woment,” Brent said; “but first there is one thing more.” (To fle Continued) MATERNITY MORTALITY estimated that 15,000 rom childbirth in the United States every year. In spite of the wonderful hospitals and skilled obstetrical care, probably here more mothers pay the supreme sacrifice while giving life than in any other A patient with faulty habits of eat- ing and elimination who is run down is, of course, more likely to develop a case of infection even when the in- I believe that the greatest factor in reducing the deaths from cfitid bearing is the prenatal care. The examined, measured, and her habits of living adjusted. She is the, one person above all others who needs to live wisely, to eat the right things at the right time, to get enough sleep and exercise. hamlet in America should have its center where instruction on There are some countries who lose only half as many mothers as we do. the Netherlands, Sweden or Norway stands only 50 per cent of the chance of death that the mother in America has to stand. Hol- land wins the honor by having the lowest death rate of all. since for every thousand babies born only 23 In this country, for every thousand babies born alive The rate for Scot- land is 5.8, then comes Germany with 5.3. England has lowered her rate In Scan- danavia the rate is well under 3. In_white women between the ages of 15 and 44, motherhood comes as & cause of death second only to tu- Is there any reason why We cannot lower this death rate at Sixty-five per cent of the maternity deaths are These cases occur more often to city women than to women of the country. The‘ usual cause of septicemia has been laid to the door of the doctor who is in too great a hurry, and delivers with in- struments, lacking the patience to wait until nature attends to the de- and hygienic care that I have found most advisable in this extremely im- portant period of a woman's life. Simply write to me in care of this newspaper and enclose a large self addressed stamped envelope with your request, and the article will be sent to you without charge as soon as possible. Articles on similar subjects which I have prepared for free distribution. Please send 2 cent stamp for each article you desire. This is to partial- ly pay for preparation and postage. Motherhood Series ——; Feeding and Weaning the Baby ——; Chil- dren's Diet ——; Diseases of Chil- dren ——; Chronic Disorders of Childhood ——; Fits and Convulsions of Children ——; Nervous Children —; Your Child's Eyes ——; Watch Your Child's Spine ——; Baby's Teeth ——; Positive Advice to Chil- dren ——; Your Chiid’s Habits for Dees your Child Dislike Good Milk? —; Children Copy Parents —; Well Proportioned Children ——+; Appetite and Dirt Eating ——. a QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Taller Question: Miss R. W. asks: “Could you tell me a way to grow taller? I am 19 years of age. Also how may I The young woman who is willing {to have a baby, to go through with ithe ordeal of its birth, to care for it “There is no such thing as an ugly {and cherish it, to make a home for The Republican cempaign in Eur-| woman,” says a famous continental} it where it will be cared for, and to beauty doctor. “Every woman has | lavishgon it all of the tenderness and sweetness which has made the name brought out and used to hide others.” | of Mother the grandest name in the ' is water, and not too much of that. X-ray Burns Mrs. J. writes: |