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The Eveni Robert Edeson Earns His Commission In “Classmates.” FRE loved ttm, but his futher drank, This wick in the side-arm, the puddle In the pirude « the-Hadson Theatre stage Inst nikht. If Old Man @ drink, his manly son “Dunc wouldn't vo sirushed Bert Bert wouldn't hav9 got loxt tn a Forty-fourtn street jungle, Seve got lost trying to find him, and Robert Edezon ow Bm njce new play to make him forget “Strongheart,”’ Londen experiences bits In the cocktall, tho Lot West Potnt-on- Irving hadn't taken afford in the eye “Dune* wouldn't | dn't have had and other wet: s the play was oné of those “young” William C, De Mille and Miss Turnbull, and Mr, Edeson w uffering, self-raorificing hero that might have been expected. Thay wheeled him on in a barraw and he was Upiding a mand and the tents had vino leaves Int hair aud Japanese janterns on the dlink. od all was as bright As the boys’ new wBplfprms until Old Man Irving happened slong and fell head over heels into temptation, Bert Stafford furnlshed the tempte- airs by tion without. walting ‘for “Dunc's" father to gay “when,” Just to put the eld man to the bad and “Duno” to shame in the eyes of Sylvia. All's fair in love and Wert Point! Bert morely wished to show Sylvia that there was « “common streak’ in the Irving family fn order to ‘queer’ good, straicht unc’ and win Sylvia for himself. when Old Man Irving finally came through the Tikps-he made that tent Jook like an all-night saloon with side- and despite the fact that ‘o W. Barnum acted the old outherner appealingly. It was an un- and betrayed a la- y on thea part took a dis- Robert Edeson as Duncan Irving; Frank Mcintyre as Bubby Dumble trouble. Their « fing hazed by the piles fo the fnsul when Stafford rebelled against be- hing-or-other, and Duncan Irving re- > a blow in the eyes that blinded estionable end wea r of 4 drunken s giving the wretched c by From this polut the cadet play moved.to the home qf the Staffords tn Gramercy Park where tt did Uttle more than mark time. He appeared, had of his “career” by Se ea irving had gived him, Point to go on an jon to South Atner- “Yea, where the Indians had done a food Job dy losing him tn the jungle. AL ‘@ comedy love scene between Phyllis afford and Bubby Dumble, to which j@he authors called particular attention, **Dunc” arrived to offer himself as a volunteer I!fe-saver. “Mir. Edeson pulled sthe act out of thé commonplace by making a fighting declaration of love ,€0 Bylvia, who, Delleving = le that {Btattord haq told her, sent the young “@outherner away with the message to Bert that sho loved him and was wait- fag for him. After a little jungle music by the om leghestra, the curtain rose on « thick \growth of soenery. with dawn break- feng through the palm trees. There was {@tatford; worn to « frazzle, fever-crazed land sobbing. But there was a decided ehange for the better in Mr. Wallace \Madingers acting. The moment he ‘Beet his mind he began acting splendid. lly und’ appealingly. It was impossible {mot to feei pity for the poor devil. |" Of course, Irving and tis trusty class- ) THERE WONT 8 UNICER Boys AT 7 $ScnooL THAW MAMIIA'S PIARIIAO: tale! ng World’s Daily Magaz Aug By F. G. Long wt The Adventures of Marmaduke. UKE, | Fy \ THERE GoES MAMPIAS PETS [ [FRAIDy> CATS “5S OH, A NEW j ( BOY IN SCHOO’ { WHAT. 15 TOUR. NAME LITTLE —— LITTLE} ; 7} Boy $j Sx AES I WONT YOU TELL ME YOUR NAME, LLITTLE Bore s ere) \ | a | {cowARoy! CowARoy/|~ {(come || STRAIG. 17)| I F-F-FORGoT } (MY N-N-NAMNE I CE ALTA | wonder he gave lor not; al | | Rentle kick In the face every night, and half the time her poor little heart was playihé ping-pong with her mouth for fear she Was next on the Bt. IVs Just as | natural for her to wear swell clothes am’ It is for the warbler to let loose a few | of the day ust 30, 1907. 5 GESHSL EBS GELBS - Boarding-House Fables By Joseph A, Flynn x é Pete Cos ry; L, what's good tn the paper to-day?” Tess aaked news after breakfant : that ‘T don't know scanning the headl there's anything good.” 1 replied, “bat here's something on the front Page that nerms highly tmprobable," and I directed ler ention, to an {tem headed "Sues Husband for Divorce, Wedded TwWenty-elght Years, Has tad Only Three Gowns.” “Hur “alie exclalined, closely scrutinizing the article ‘I'm not rurprised. This is only one of the only this dear was married twenty-seven yeara | hundred and sisty faye tuo many. When — she ought to have How in the namo ¢ umbers « woman i bout and be amat as long as that xéte me. t have given her same Jéllydsh dope the day thay were married, for it's Kel her actone ume to. sit uy and rub her eyes. She was sich « mark {thw '. er anything to tear atall.: 1 suppome they'll both ‘support some cee hungry lawyers now trying to get the rope cut, keep up m general scrap over the dren and shake hands again when {t's all over The trouble with somé@ wifes ts they're too easy with hubby. If they only drapped one of ‘their ittle pedals very gently down on hie collar button when the: barrier Kose up everything would: be gumdrops afterward. Never lat him ateal-a— triek on you, and @ tnmed flea doing handsprings won't be in it with him. Ki@. him up to the ears, tell Lim there's nothing likp him undor the stars, hand out » bunch of wonders at every meal why you never met him before, always serve ¥ tho coffee the candy boosts your frienda say about him, whether they say ft! vaya remember a happy stomach never .stops to count money, and if! A slice of the moon he'll bréak his rreck-to get it for you. Took at that Uttle doll next door, She wak born to live in a glass casa, bus\ changed hername for the Ughtest wad you ever saw, Many‘s the night she told her troxtiles in a waterfall on the plilow, because he never loosened up at hema, Wut spent most of his time and change at the club. He greeted her Fido with @. worry-chasers in the tree tops, but it wax only by hanging up the butcher and baker for a couple of weeks that she managed to get a plain black Marked-Down. One @ay, however, the water ran over, and she decided to turn*her head to mother; but I nailed her on the gato, took her inside, sat her right down where you are now dreaming, made her dry her well, powder her nose, paralyze her tongue for a tinkle of the clock, and then I locked the door and uncovered a faw und wherefores for hia benefit that mada her do the rainbow ect for the reat “When he landed home that night with a double grouch he thought at first he landed in the wrong-house, for a Mower garden with-a-breath lke a awell drag — store suid ‘Hello!’ to him from the middie of a happy meal, his smokerinoa were waiting right under his hand to do their turn, and after the last plate had sald) good-by he ran {nto such @ bunch of hot air violets and daisies that he forgot — what day of the weekMt was—forgot that there was something in the way of a full shoe coming to Fido, and his face alipped into the first amile he let go for a| ‘Well. how did the schemo work after that?’ I inquired, marvelling at her tact and ingenulty, “How did it work? she replied, removing her critica! gaze for a moment from a new flannel blouse on a pretty matd opposite. “Why, he haan‘t spoken to the club in atx months, and yesterday he bought her an automobile.” or 1 A “Silk’’? Army. HE anctent city of Lyons, the third city in France, with a population of 500,000, vies with Milan in {mportance tn the ‘world’s silk industry, No fewer than 4,00 people—men, women and children--are employed in | the factories. 3 ARETHUSA © A By F. Marion Crawford, Princes thing that tf not affect my hon I truly belfeve.”’ Gifferent ways, and you are alive?” Zeno smiled. "Yes; amd you understand, now, why Author of ‘'Mr. Isaacs,”’ "*Dr. Claudius,’’ Etc. mates, Ife G'Artagnan and the three Clears Sots beable) ee ana priee ba ooops pson aera > pricks Mke a big thorn, and pricks (musketeers, came when they were need- Marjorie Wood as Phylils Stafford cnaprers.| “#80 when the point comes ait on ed to keep the play from going stark, Flora Jullet Bowley as Sylvia Ran- HAMS sre. {the other wide. One feels very little, \gtaring mad. Dut they, too, were [3st, dolph. Zoe, a Gresk princess, whose parents, 3 or nothing at all, {f one Is badly Send the agony was long dravn out with Atide her infancy. sells ave 1 Osa | Wounded in the hend, for one 1a atunned fall grass heroics before the stgnuls of « rescuing party were flashed upon a|{? PAYS smn RIKEN? cabieman wo browgnt | at once; tt ts the headache afterward Stiree_which Mr. Edevon had climbed with more difficulty than dramatic effect |ner up aa his adopted daughter that really hurts. If one 1s wounded ‘Tne grim, ghastly effect of this scene, excellently acted by the ten wad | Qunshi "an armenian slave tealer), tn the lungs, one fecls nothing, but one (Mgured in it, was lightened by the unfailing humor of Bubby, whieh Mr, Frank McIntyre brought out quietly and naturally. One very good touch was the find- tag of a Thirty-fourth «ireet transfer tn Rubby’s pocket when they were look- ng for matches. Th: urth street was a long way from there! a ‘Mr. E4cson held the whole scene in a strong. alire gtasp. THis wee a straignt- “@orward, manly performance throughout, and he earned the commission that f@ame to him wit Sylvia in the somewhat conventional fourth act. Quite Aes creditable was the Sylyia of Mise Flora J. Bowley, who acted with adnir fable restraint and not at all like a stage heroino. Miss Marjorie Woot played lPhyllis with“a great deal of natural charm, and Miss Maude Granger secried‘1o find Mrs. Stafford a woman after her own heart. 2 Classmates" has youthful vigor, sweet-sixteeen sentiment; -loxto that dosen't @lwayn stand the test—and a very 00d part for Mr. Eqleson, CHARLES DARNTON. Attentions Without Intentions. HE giri who accepts attentions from a young man x I merely to gratify her vanity should be locked up for ale-keeping.’ She whose only obfaet in life tx to feed on admiration at the expense of any youth ia a’ de- spicable though not Infrequent cheracter- Admiration In the miKder ferms is a healthy and oane thing to destre, but Gefen that admiration demands expensive presents and extensive entertaining it qe to be deplored. Any’ girl who accepte quantities of attention from a man leads ‘him to think his suit 1s progressing rapidly; and {f her intentions are not serious he should cease to encourage jim. ‘Giris, be considerate and do not Jot your friends spend thelr hard-earned sav- sings on your frivolities! Be cordial and friendly, but {f you merely LIKE the dman and have no serious regami for him, do not allow an outlay of maiiey, for ‘the wyerage young man {a not too abundantly auppiled with this world's goods, ‘Pnorefore be thoughtful, and 1f admiration you must have, at least give in re: rn the certainty of regard. . but I fee] whe is all right. What whall I Why Not Wait?- 40? G. Wy ‘Dear Betty! Stick to your firet love; she ts mi AM twenty-two and have been S0lNK +31 A yoice 1s often misleading, with @ young man of twenty-one fory ; 4 @ year, He has no had habits, is| 4 Negligent Loven | Dear petty: ooking and makes n fine salary, cannot say I love him, although he ‘he loves me and does everything HOLE at an outing with a lady friend lin his power to please me. Could I pos- I paid some attention to another very pretty girl, My friend's com. panion informed me that I was not act- \gibly be happy in marrying a man |prhom I anly lke? I feel I'd be happy ing in the right way and that my lady friend was angry. My friend still ia if 1 4!4 marry him, for I would have ya I wanted, yet I'm undecided, haa proposed and I have asked alangry. Is {t my duty to els _ hereek’s time. HENRIETTA A, Le i If yon wish to regain the friondaitp ; Btaten Island. .” gome marriages based on friendship| of the young lady, ak her pardon for » your neglect,, fhave proved ssocereruk Dut eee thing to do, y not watt for ie 2 A Slighted Lover. Dear Betty: igbe man you can love? iy : oA Telephone Romance. AM acquainted with a young lady ii whom I often take out. The other T was talking to some friends she an Betty: day T took this girl out and whil Yady. About two months ego I re-|rrionds of hers disappeared. After /a at }-avked for her address, which she} company, with a girl Ike this? B,J. ons A iare peer to give up the other | Seek en expianation of her conduct be- —, company with a very nice young jeaned with the other operator's volce| notice them," ‘Shall I continue to keep ioe, and shor letters are ¢o nice | were neglecting ber for other. friends. "AM ® telephone operator and keep ved a call from Buffalo and was.s0] while ahe passed us and said ‘Don't gave ine. We haye corresponded |: Perhaps thé young lady thought you down as @ m Mant Venetian soldier of aoe “and whe are irresatibly to ach other. An .astrojone fites ie during penesy Rbaence tome “Rho has been dep (Gulladh ive to. res Ynperor, Johannes, who bas Imprisoned and muperseded Dy drapioan | The conan Arethusa . Shr other by _h peries of Sitaaoa in talking with Zeng, fim on. the subject oF rariike sounds nit taunta, him with paying settled | merchant | (Continued) The Astrologer. ‘ow old do you think Iam?" | OG H Zoe looked at him quietly, | “J have no experience of n,"" she sald, with perfect gravity. but from. your manner, slr, I should | © you to te—ebout fifty.” i Ganon jaw dropped, for she spoke 90 | naturally and quietly that he could} not believe she was laughing at him. | “] shall be twenty-nine in August, | swered, Only twenty-nine?” Zoo affected ar aurptine.-"F should have thought | You were much,/tnucht plaert Aras you | quite suret..“ ‘Ses, Carto taushed, "Tam quite | gure. But I suppose I seem very old to abet yeron, yer! Very!” She nodded gravely as_sho spoke. “you are seventeen, are ¥ Zeno asked. “0% Cut Froma Sword “How in the world should I know?" | she inquired, ‘Is not my age set down | in the recetpt Guilab! gaye you with | me? How should a slave know her own | age, 5! And if we knew it, do think that any of us could speak the truth, except under torture? It would | fot be worth while to dislocate my arms | and burn my feet with hot Irons, just) to know how old I am, would it?) But} I am sure I could never bear pain. I} aball tell everything at once! 1 should never make a good conspirator, I sup- | pose you must have been wounded once | or twice, when you were young. ‘Toll me, did f€ hurt very-much?" ‘A cut with @ sharp sword feels like ‘a atream of icy-cold water,” be an- Ar and | CHAPTER VIII. | not?" | 8 Spanish Fruit Pudding. INE a baking dish with Nght puft parte, add a layer of sliced peaches, one of mweet Oranges and one of bananas, S&rew with mgar be- tween each layer, Cover with a light puft pamte and bake to @ delionte brown. Pienio Veal. UY a brenat of veal and have the Dutcher cut m pocket into It. Make a dressing as for turkey and fit the pocket ead ew It up. Balt and vel 6nd lay vome slices of palt is choked by the blood, and one must turn on one’s face at once in omer not to suffocate, Broken bones hurt after- ward, as a rule, more than at first, but It ts & “CUTTOUE Sensation to txve one’s collar-bone amashed by a blow from a two-handed sword"— “Great heavens!" cried Zoo. ‘What How do you know how each thing feelat “I oan “remember,” «imply. "You have been wounded in all these Zeno answered ‘agine that’ my opinion of your axe 3 would not do it for a woman's sake?’ She turned to him, to watch his face, but its expression did not change **Wine, Women and Dice!’’. “Three things can drive a wise man madé—wine, women and dice. “I dare say. Your lordship reckons us in good company. But that ts no an- swer to my question.” . it is," sald Zeno, with « laugh “Why _should-I do for «woman what I T look #0 “T was not in earnest.” Zoe said. “You knew that I waa not. You need oniy look at yourself in a mirror to eee that T was laughing.” “L was not very deeply hurt by being taken for a man of fifty," Zeno answer- ed, not quite truthfully. & Girl's Question. “Oh, no!’ Inughed Zoe, “I cannot im- could make any difference to you. It| Would not do for dice or wine” was silly of me—only, tor a man who| “But dice and wine never tempted haz had so many adventures, you do | YoU." Zoe objected. Zeno laughed louder. ‘Never? When J was a student at Padua I sold. everything, even my books, to get money for both. It was only when the hooks were gone that I turned soldier and learned the greatest game of hazard in the world. Compared with that dice are an opiate and wine to @ sleoping draught." He only smiled now, after laughing, but there wan a look In iis face aa he look absurdity young!” “So much the (> yaince my fehting: days are over,” “And since you are a sober, peace- loving merchant," sald Zoe, contintlng the sentence for him. “But are you #0 very sure, my lord? Would nothing make you draw your sword again and risk your Ilfe on your fencing? Noth- IGELHEIM, the of] and vinegar merchant, spoke which she saw then for the first time and did not forget, and recognized when ahe saw it again. It was subtle and might have passed unnoticed among men, but It spoke to the sex in the girl and'made her young blood thrill, For worlds she would not have had him it juat then. tenting —for-tia-owi sake would| tempt you, f nothing else could,” she answered quietly | Gleam of Hope. “Ab-—perhans, perhaps,” he answered musing. jut you would need a cause, though | ever so slight, and you have none here, have you?’ 4 None, {hat1-oarn-to-txire—tp: sou may find ng to fact tor | over the water,’ Zoe iggested, em-~ phasing the worda a lite and waten- | Ing Tila face. ‘The phrate meant nothing to him Over the water?’ he repeated. oare- leasiy. “At home, in Venice, you mean. Yes, if Venice needed me, I should not} walt to be called twice!"’ | Tt was quite clear that he attached no “Frreaning to the words sho had used, and thla fact {allied with what the astrol- oger had told her tn the morning as to his having been deaf to all rice | made to him by the Imprisoned | | |e sin Slavery © to escape, Why? What difference oan it make to ma mhether he or his eon Moy in the Amena tower? ‘They are poor things, both of them, and for all i care Join may atarve tn hia chains before I will lift a finger!" Zoa aighed and bit her Up to cheok hersolf, for nis voluntary declaration had dashed the palace of her hopes to Pleces in an instant Then sho was ashamed of having even dreamed that he might love her, since ha despised the Very cause for which she had wished ¢o win his cove. Bat this state of mind did not last jong, either. She was too bnave to let such a apeeoh pass, aa if sho agreed with {t “You are wrong,’ ahe eald, quity for. getting whe had-set thersett to play the Part of the slave, ‘You ouwht to help him, 1€ you can—and you can, if you Zeno looked at her in surpriee, There [Tass in the morning and dined wity Sebastian Polo twice a week, but gen- ‘tally at-home on the remaining days. Even his own scryants and slaves hard- ty notiord any change in his habité and only observed that he often looked pre- occupied and sometimes sat on his bal- cony for an hour without moving, his ©: fixed on the towers of the Blachernae Palace. They did not know how much time ay spent with bis begutiful Greek slave Omobono probably knew a good dea, Dut be kept it to himself and stored the fruits of his ively curlosity te enjoy, alone the delicious sensation of the mieer gloating cver bis useless gold, Oa the whole, therefore, life iff the Vene- was romething Nike authority in her/ Man merghant’s house had gen 6m BEC, and the two Iitte malas, whom | much aa usual for a» whole month after y had forgotten in “hetr corner betiind 759 had fired a Ualis Which mus deb day Not, arqrord of the couvercation | Weed fo, podiog, momentour remit . 2 rd of the conversation | when {t reached the mine at 4 bad e¢ecaped them. zene eww hi Rant ifere new, ' ; often pwies, and she become a & Woman in Politics. of his life and necessary “I mean," continued Zoe, defore he| Mouxh he did not believe that gould find an answer to ber ‘plain state- |in love with her, any more than ment, “if you are a true Venetian you | Would have. admit that she should wish to put down the man whom | him. the Genosse and the Turke have sat on : fhe, throne Johannes, ts, your. friend # Soldier's Love. your oountry’s lend, - dom fag "Wwoaks man and alwni ft var | FOr each wae possemsed. by one ; Andronious i an onemy to Vente and'® | R&a¢ thought; and it chan ra friend to her enemies. He Is even now | farely chances in real ite Feady to give tho inland of Tenedos to | deed, if it gould be performed | them—the key to the Dardanelles"—— | satisfy the hopes of What? aaked_Zeno in a loud and ry tone. “Tenedos?” was at stake in the matter of Michael Hhangade, her adop’ and the idol of her ohtldhoo iuig'be del ered from the Argan t be deliv could oe ea His manner had changed, and he al- RSS Foss Tram hin weet ae tectent tore ward and sized her wrist in his excite- ment, She wes gid, and smiled at him z she answered, “the Genoese Gomand tt as the price of thelr proteo- tion, and they will foroe him to atve {t to them. But it may not be easy, for the governor of the Island !s loyal to Johannes,’ atriot and leader, axw that the whold influence of his country tn the es er, both would certainly they most d . Johann! give Tenedos to Venice, In gratitude his iberty, and the people of Constant ‘ople woula probably tear Andronicus nople woula_ p: Receeseenarenevs How do you \now these things?! ‘ade_ta 1 satced Zerm _atitt hotding her wrist und | ‘2)c° see oe ere are ae Tg (0 Hook into her even. 1) fered = now them, Zoe.answered. ‘If rally round théir is Jam not felting vou the truth, mel mein | gel n he could only bogotout ee the market to-morrow. “By the Evaneeltat.” ‘you will deserve ft.” the precincts of the palace whers the ysurper was strongly, guanted by he forelgn mercenarios, he people would not rise of themselvea to storm Blach- emae, nor would the Greek troops re- volt of their own accord, but an they all feared the soldiers of tho foreign sjegion. they hated them and hi swora Zeno, CHAPTER Ix, A Slave’s Advice. almost closing and she saw |that le watched h an uns} mistakadle lool of admt ole inte his face. She was wondering whether {t would ever turn into something more, and whether she mhould ever, soo gleam of fight tn hla eyes, for her sa that had flashed {u them @ moment ago at the mere thougat of battle, pall The Conspiracy. th has just discovered a curtoua \ } Zeno broke the long allence with G littlo problem concealed In his pyramid of barrels. tea fas oe ENTE tt Gh Saya Gugelhelm: "You can soo plainly marked the quantity of Itquor In| Unext DRE AMIK CR arieerectOn j each barr Now, If I should empty a certain ono of those vinegar barrels £/°\g for thy Hmperor John whom | would liave lett twice as many gallons of vinegar as of off, Who fé clever| his son has locked wp.” he wid, “his enough to tell which of those barrels 1 contain oll?" PRESS eL anoaupere Ha haaleventaantd ‘The solution wi be published in to-morrow’s Fyening World. HINTS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPE your pan hot with a large plece of but- ter, Put in the meat and cover with another pan for the first hour, ‘This ts nfeed allced cold for a plenio basket. « ‘Baked Tomatoes. BLPCT firm, medium-sized ripe to- S matoos and cut a thin alice from the bottom of each, With a spoon remove the pulp, belng careful to leave the skin intact, Chop the pulp fine and mix with one-third the quantity of Bread erumba and one-third chopped onion to kante. Fill the tomato cups with this imixture and arrange in @ baking dish. De tam ak eaeds | place a ermal lun r= nuttin peateboard between the “! a becging me to ho! me messages, R. Jayers. The meringue {sa hot syrup made of one-half cup of sugar cooked | with one-half cup of water until Jt |threade and slowly poured Into the |deaten whites of two exif’, beating well | all the time, | Beef Loaf. etm | butter, then replace the slice cht off. Pour hot water around tomatoes 4nd bake unt! done, Pomegranate Sherbet. RBESS the juice from a dozen bleed P (there should be a full oranges pint). Make a syrup of one cup of WO pounds best round steak, ene- sugar and two cups of water, When hut pound fresh pork, two eKK™ cool add the orange Juice and freeze to one-half cup bread crumbs; chop| meat fine, mix with eggs, bread crumbs} and season to taste. MOlsten with plenty of water; form in‘loaf and put-in buttered iin, Sprinile bread crumbs on ‘a soft mush. Adda meringue, mix thor- oughly and continue freezing.’ Line pa- per cups with the sherbet, fll with cream, then put strawberrlos on top. of MONTH had passed, and to | master Andronicus, and the presence of utes > Zeno'n |Jobannes amongst’ thom woul f A all outward appearance, Zeno's |iiatccurnge and mak the jskue cer ner of living had undergone He attended to his bus: m change. Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. Pumice Stone. Ig S.—T..2 pumice at | tain, no (To Be Continued.) A Dark Complexion. iL toni, 4 should de used the hair with deom It necessary, her bleach, men) fs a dry, ~ Remove w Ape: the you which N ever you The hair will grow back,-of.course, b: not necessarily thicker, It should be strong one, nor ad onty on the arm. ever on the any other dleaoch | cy ae even stronger.) Burns-from Electricity. * will Hghten 6 &kin el Ae Epes ea oription, gut {t does not help you, you will Ia conatitu- a have to conault a dermatologist ly dark, If) And have the soars treated: Lanollne, you removed the .* dfama; ointment of Diniodide of mer skinon your face, | 1 dram. neck, hands and Shape of the Nose. anms, you would find the new al in sea Sar eainiys Neca yaC a CHikes a short time would be Just a» dark, pS Sale oe A mare : believe I wrote personal letter : pus 4 Do not. be- * to eriticisa the te: thin éubsect ja e morbid over a dark complexion. | * Jape f There are many worse things In the | ton, He sonia at wortd, Keep your skin fresh and fre ? ee From your desertp- judge, that it ts not The vhape of the ang plenty of putter, FUL tin halt of water and beke one and one-Nait cream and bury in ice and nat for threa! pit; i ci at Ae: Loner. Tae, Hosa can da changed by a ih ei fuhen ard don't worry about lation, bul I do ot recommend dt pArsgaiannet achiial Ap tormbtton