The evening world. Newspaper, December 29, 1915, Page 3

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a MITCHEL MOVES TO TRAIN SCHOOL + PUPS FOR WAR Mayor Would Make Military’ Instruction Compulsory in All Public Schools. > get Practice, but Ideas Will Meet Hot Opposition. ry ‘The question of military training In the public schools of the city is one of the most important matters to be taken up by the Board of Education soon as the elght new members ap- pointed by Mayor Mitchel take thelr seats, The question is likely to cause @ vast amount of heated discussion, according to those who are opposed td the military ide: Mayor Mitchel said to-day that he had talked over the subject of mill- tary training with his new ap- pointees, adding: . “I talked it over with them in order that the matter might be sure of re- ceiving adequate attention and dls- cussion in the Board of Education, and not be treated as tt has been in the past. Personally I am very much in favor of such training, but just how far it could be carried in the elementary schools of the city I can- not say. “The extent of training is depend- ent upon what might be called the neighborhood of the school itself. In some cases, where there was open sountry about the school, the pupils might even be taught open air drill and target practice. But that would not be possible in other schools in the heart of the city. “It is my opinion that military training should bo a part of the cur- riculum of every school in the coun- try. While I have talked of this with the new appointees to the Board of Education, it must be remembered that I have asked no pledges what- ever of these members. It is not for me to say what the Board shall do; all that I want is the proper consid- eration of so important a subject. The Board itself has the decision as to what shall be done.” William G, Willcox of Staten Island, who is almost certain to be the new President of the Board of Education, ealled on Mayor Mitchel to-day, When asked his views of military training im the public schools he said: “I don't like the word ‘military.’ What I do favor ts some sort of drill in the schools.” President Churchill of the Board of Education, who goes out of the chair in February but remains a member of the Board for several years to come, is keenly opposed to military training in the schools, He said to-day: “Military training has been @ rock on which the Mayor and I haye split. “The Mayor is firmly in favor of it, T_know, but no political official has the right to dictate what a Board of Baduation shall di — ‘Women Chief Buyers of Bad Booka? BOSTON, | Dec, 29-—""That, wome were the principal customers for these jotures is no proof that they were not "said Judge Burke in the Court to-day in the case of ‘mi f a Tremont for sale ————— “MY BOY’S COLD WAS GROWING WORSE = Then | Gave Him Father John's Medicine and Now He ‘The father of these little pore writes: “I have a son five years old who had a bad cold and it left him with a cough, and the doctor told me that the cold left him with lung trouble, A friend told me to try Father John’s, and I did, and that is seven weeks ago and the cough has left him and he is getting fat. I write this Ictter to help some other little one that is sick like my son (Signed) Edward Sipe, 8085 Weikel street, Philadelphia, Pa. Father John's Medicine fe for all the family, because it does not contain aleohol or dangerous drugs, but is all pure ead Wholesome uourishisent,—Advt TELLS OF HIS PLANS.| Would Even Give Boys Tar-| “EDUCATION SHOULD DEVELOP IN GACH SEX THe QUALITIES OF THE OTHER“ That’s the Opinion of Prof. Joseph French Johnson, Who Says She Is Bound to Come and Is Almost Here. But It’s Too Bad She Hasn’t More Initiative —And Why, Oh, Why, Doesn’t She Invent a Patent Dishwasher? By Nixola Greleey-Smith. “The superwoman will be a business genius. She will be a great exec All Hail, the Superwoman “TH6 STARLIGHT FROM NER Fs QYES NEVER COMES AGAIN” ut've—pernaps @ railroad President or a world banker. Perhaps she will be President of the United States.” Presidential suite the other end. I tried to be th though, as a matter of fact, business does not thrill me a bit. And I did not even know, when I went to the Biltmore, what the Alex- ander Hamilton Institute ts, I was actually silly enough to think that it might be a political organization dedicated to the ideals of the great Federalist and the most fascinating figure in American history except the man who shot him. Why do all women like the man with @ past. We don't. But we all like the same men and so, poor dears, their pasts just neturally happen to them. SAD, BUT THE “1,000-POINTERS" | 2) WERE ALL MEN. But, to be serious, the Alexander Hamilton Institute is a school of effi- ofent salesmanship and business eth- {fes—a correspondence school in which thousands of employees of big busi- ness interests throughout the coun- try are enrolled. Yesterday was its commencement day, when all the blushing young men who had won what looked like very unco1 greatness. r ‘There were no “1,000-point” young women in the lot so far a# I could see. But cheer up. Prof. Johnson | says there will be, Perhaps you have | remembered by this time that Prof. Johnson is the man who told the Mills Committee on Taxation @ short time ago that married men should be taxed more than bachel6rs and that it is ‘ool to worship mere) rease in numbers.” msThere are a few women executives of high degree of efficiency in New York to-d: the professor told me. | “The future will develop many more. ‘What the business woman lacks is in- {tiative, daring, the power and the will to think for herself. What do wé mean by business Initiative? Simply the power to think for yourself. Nietzsche divided mankind into three classes’—Prof. Johnson's blue eyes twinkled humorously behind his spec- tacles—"the first class, thinkers, like you and me; the second class, persons with no originality of their own, but with the ability to understand and ap- preciate what we are thinking about, and the third class, the mass which hover acts from its own initiative, but {s propelled from above. To-day the majority of business women till be- Jong to this third class, It is not their " T agreed with him, "Al For Constipation EC LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate. Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes digestion, Good for young and old, 10c, 25e and 50c, at al druggists, Prof. Joseph French Johnson, Dean of the School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance of New York Unt- versity, beamed at me from one end of a sofa in the The fifth annual convention of the Alexander Ham- iiton Institute was about to be opened by Dean John- son, its President, and as there were two hundred young women of the institute's office staff in the waiting audience, I wanted to know about their business pros- pects and the general future of the business woman. of the Hotel Biltmore. I occupied rilled by Prof. Johnson’s prophecy, few hundred years ago it was as much as any woman's life was worth to think for herself, Even to-day it is very dangerous. In one generation @ business woman has had to over- come the non-resistant apathy of cen- turies.” WHEN A MAN MAY BECOME A FUDDY-DUDDy, “That apathy 1s #till present in the home woman,” Prof. Johnson said, “and I don’t blame her either. If a man had to do a woman's work he'd become an old fuddy-duddy in ten rears. I'm eure I should.” (Maybe that 1s not the way to spell the pro- fessor’a very graphic word, for I con- fess I had never heard it before.) “Still if I were a woman and had to do housework,” he continued, “I feel certain I should have invented a pat- ent dishwasher before this. They have such things in hotels of course, but mean an invention for washing dishes in the home. Do you know, I believe| ae men will have to invent it for| ff course he will,” I replied, “and every labor saving device as well, That'’a because he ig naturally #0) jazy, He would rather invent than work, I don't blame him, of course, Women were the first workers, They are the mothers of industry, A man’s natural business is just to hunt and fight and go fishing.” “Men are better cooks than wom- en,” Prof. Johnson declared, pursuing his advantage. “I can cook better than almost any woman I know; I can sew on buttona; I can knit and crochet. I was ill, laid up once in a while when I was a child, and I on d all those things, and I'm glad ° f course you are, You had an intelligent education,” I replied, “You know I have @ theory that education should tend to develop in each se the qualities it lacks. Consequently boys should be encouraged to play with dolls and be given sets of dishes for Christmas—they need to have the | home instincts developed—and girls, should receive bows and arrows and | © puzzle games, since what they lack 1s | daring and inventiveness.” Prof. Johnson was good enough to say amilingly that there might be something in this idea, “Everybody should be taught to cook and sew,” he said, And from that we fell to talking of what is the matter with the home, (The experts all seem to agreed that something is the . ter with it.) dei es “THE HOME, AS A PLACE, i8 DOOMED.” “The home, considered as a set o: relations, will last forever,” pad Johnson said. “As a place—merely i @ place—it is doomed. Woman in th, home i# diasatistied, She ought to be. | She is denied the great adventure of work, of economic independence, | believe that romance lasts niuch longer in ‘those homes where husband and wife follow separate vocations and meet on a common ground of intelligent comrad@ship,” he added. To this I expressed the common objection that childbirth must inter- tere with this dream of matrimonial utopia (not because I believe K, par- ticularly, but just to give the other eide a chance), “Childbirth need not incapacitate @ healthy woman more than a month, Even I can take a month off from iny RE EVENING | the 4," Prot Johnsen answered, “The ; She'll Be President Some Day "Tre =SUPER-WOMAN Wie Ge A GUSINESS GENIUS © LIGENSE CLERK WORLD, WEDN: NESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1978. (MITCHEL SHOWS $10,000 PAYMENT ECONOMIES OF HIS ON SPEED CONTROL’ | Emphas | ADMINISTRATION eS Budget Decrease of Million and Half in 1916 | Over 1915. |1916 CUTS 2.2 PER CENT. Only Mandatory Pay Laws Prevent Further Savings. The budget was the subject Mayor Mitchel took up to-day when he was recalled to the stand before the Leg- islative Committee, headed by Sen tor Elon R. Brown, which is investi- gating city finances at the City Hall. “The budget for 191 the Mayor maid, after he had explained how budgets are made up, “was $78,314,- 940.04, representing an increase over 1910 of $7,171,198.60, or 2.7 per cent, Tho average annual increase from 1910 to 1914, inclusive, was §$1,- ‘792,798.37, in the 1915 budget we effected a decrease of $1,538,658.02, which was 2.1 per cent. below 1914, the last bud- get compiled under Mayor Gaynor and the ‘closest’ Gaynor budget. “For 1916 we have reduced the 1916 budget by $1,592,346.27, or 2.2 per cent. “The administration of the city de- Board of Estimate has decreased about $3,000,000 since this adminis- tration took office. “Taking the Department of Bridges into consideration, the expenses in the 1916 budget have been reduced $181,- HELD ON CHARGE OF STEALING FES W. R. Woelfle Accused by Commissioner Wallstein With $1,020 Fraud Against City. William R. Woelfle, former Repub- Mean leader and financial clerk of the License Department in Borough Hall, Staten Island, was arrested last night on complaint of Philip A. Johann, an examiner for Commis- sioner of Accounts Wallstein,charged witb having failed to turn In 61,020 collected as license money for the city, He was to-day arraigned be- fore Magistrate Handy tn the First District Court, Richmond, on a charge of grand larceny and bailed in $2,000 for a hearing Jan. 5. George Eghert, a prominent Staten Isan ter, 639 since 1900. This takes into ac- count the maintenance of an in- creased number of structures built with funds raised from corporate stock. In the 1916 budget we have reduced, since the 1909 budget, the expenses of the City Record by $566, $42.12; the Law Department by $48,000; the Tenement Houso Commission by $152,800; the Department of Docks and Ferries, $1,320,382 (from 1910), and the Park Department by $291,000, “In making the budget we have to throw up our hands when we come to the mandatory legislation charges. The Mayor disagreed with the statement made in the forenoon by Secretary Travis H. Whitney of the Public Service Commision that the commission was able to effect econo- mies because it had no “locked budget” system. “What we want,” Senator Brown sald, “is statement from the Mayor and other city offlolals as to the mandatory legislation they deem improper.” The Mayor—I deem improper the legislation classified as “rates of com- pensation,” “salaries mandatory dur- ing incumbent's term,’ easonable expenses mandatory,” “positions mandatory,” “bureaus required by law" and “branoh offices required by law.” ———>_—. CLEVELAND CLUB MUST went Woelfle's bond. License Commissioner Geo. H, Bell explained to-day how Woelfie carried on his alleged defalcations, He said: “The book from which the licenses were issued, each page of which bears a serial number and has attached to it a counterfoll and triplicate of the licenses issued, furnished the evi- dence on which the charge is based, “Wo always relied upon the Fi- nance Department routine to see to it that no new volume of licenses was given to the clerk until {ts predeces- sor had been fully accounted for, The omission of that check in this in- stance made defaloation possible. Woelfic is under a bond for $2,000. ‘The city, therefore, will not suffer BE SOLD, BANKERS SA Gwinner of Pittsburgh Feds and Sinclair of Newark May Buy American League Ball Team, CLEVELAND, 0, Dec. 29.—The principal matter before the special meeting of baseball magnates of the American League here to-day was the settlement of the Cleveland club's fate, Prior to the meeting, which wi wet for 12 o'clock, George P. Steele, any loss,” YONKERS WOMAN, 93, DIES. Was Mra, Peene, Resident, Mother of Former Mayor, Mrs. years old, p Caroline A, Peene, ninety-three bably the oldest woman last night at 50 Warburton Avenue. her home, Born in 1822, the daughter of John Gar- rison and Sarah Fowler, Mrs. Peene was married at the age of elghteen to joseph Peene sr. She ts survive yi t . Jose times al w ck on Wriday > Yonk as alno a iL be held from her A vol unta to 15 per cent. ef 1 Rranted to ing from has | ot] Barbour Plax mpany’s mills in Paterson and Newark rearing of children should be left in the hands of specialists, “It is the business woman who will save tho home,” the professor re. | ite “The ideal relation of man and woman,” he added, “is the mon. ogamous relation, After all we love but once in the real sense, There ta only one time tn life when a man be. lieves that the stars are lighted from her eyes”— “and the whole trouble {# that he tries to take the starlight home," 1 answered, “He linprisons It and seta it to utilitarian shining in the factory of his life. You know, when you put lightning to every day uses it be- comes merely electric light, an in. dispensable commercial article, but not the master of the cloud, the standard bearer of the storm Prof, Johnson said he did not want to talk about the domestication of starlight or lightning, cither, He ad- mitted practically that the subject friehtened him, “But,” he concluded smilingly, “T've done a lot of thinking on the subject ome day—if my wife will let me representing the bankers’ committee which is handling the affairs of C, W, Somers, owner of the local club, an- nouhced that the Cleveland holdings must be sold. He said no proposition for continuing Somers in charge would be considered by the bankers. President B. B, Johnson and club owners appeared to face the neceasity of finding a buyer for the club, Johnson said to-day that if the club Is sold, as seems certain, tt will go to outside capitalists, as no one has been found in Cleveland who !s willing to bid for it. Prominently mentioned as possible buyers among baseball men here are iwinner, owner of the Pittsburgh ‘ederals, and Harry Sine Haquidat- ing agent for the deral League. Those present at noon for to-day's meeting were: President Johnson, Owners Ruppert and Huston of New York; Navin, of Detroit; Comiskey, of Chicago, and Lannin of Boston OLD FIREMAN DROPS DEAD IN HARNESS McManus, Stricken by Heart Fail- ure, Had Joined Department in 1883, After thirty-two years of contin- uous servica in the New York Fire Department, James McManus, at- tached One to Truck at No, 62 Hundred and Fourteenth Stree died in harness last night. He hi just returned to the fire house after answering @ call when he dropped dead from heart disease. He was fifty-ning years old. His history on the records of the Department is long in years and brief In words, It consists of the date of his appointment, Dec. 1, 1883, his assignment to Engino Company 29, and his transfers at different pe- riods to Engine Company 89, to Hook and Ladder Companies 16 and 14, MoManus leaves a widow and two daughters, Grace and Sadie, and a on, William, He lived at No. 73 going to put my conclustons East Ono Hundred and Twentieth trees, Mayor Tells Brown Inquisitors partments under the control of the P. S. Inquisitors Dig Up a Check Drawn by General Railway Signal Company. WOOD CHARGES READY. May Be Forwarded to Albany To-Day With Demand for Removal, The Thompson Investigating Com- mottee has issued a subpoena for Arthur J. Baldwin, who will be asked to throw @ome light on the history of a $10,000 check drawn by the Gen- eral Ratlway Signal Company on Deo. 24 Jast to the order of Edwards, Sager & Wooster, They in turn tn- dorsed the check to Arthur J. Bald- ‘win, who deposited it with the Basex County Trust Company of New Jer- sey. Thore is nothing to indloate the nature of the business of Edwards, Sager & Wooster or the address of the firm. Thie check was found among the accounts of the Genoral Rallway Sig- nal Company at Rochester by Perley Morse, expert accountant for the Thompson Committee, It was en- tered as an item charged to “speed control.” The General Company got the contract for equinning the Brook- lyn Fourth Avenue subway after the Federal Company, with the lowest bid, was supposed to have it secured. On a rehearing the Public Service Commission awarded the contract to the General Company chiefly because it had acquired the Simmen “speed control” patent. Mr. Baldwin was not served with the subpoena because he is in Al- bany on business, His brother Leonard told an Evening World re- porter that he knew nothing about the matter. It is a matter of record in the Thompson investigation that the General Railway Signal Company bought the Simmen “speed control” device a short while before it proved so potent in swinging tho $1,500,000 Fourth Avenue subway contract. Tes- timony by an expert from the Pub- le Service Commission shows that although work has been under way for @ year under the contract the Simmen “speed control” has not been installed. One car has been “par- tially equipped” with it. The whole incident ts to be explained by Presi- dent Salmon of the General Company when he goes on the witness stand, Arthur J. Baldwin is well known as a lawyer in this city. He as promi- nent in the late constitutional con- vention. He has an office with his brother at No. 27 Pine Street and lives at No. 87 Fifth Avenue. He has long boon of counsel to Charles F, Mur- phy, the leader of Tammany, and he has a wide practice in matters re- lating to public service corporations. The Thompson Legislative Investi- gating Committee expects to forward to-day or to-morrow charges to Gov. Whitman looking to the removal of Public Service Commissioner Robert Colgate Wood, The charges, Chair- man Thompson said, would be pre- pared to-day as soon as Deputy At- torney General Lewis, counsel to the committee, returns to the city, The Thompson Committee will con- tinue its investigation as long as pos- sible, The Legislature ts next Wednesday and the Committee will it until Tuesday evening. The bank accounts of Mra, John D. Wood are to be examined in an effort to dis- cover the reason for the loan of $10,- 000 she made to her son, Commis- sioner Wood, Just before he was ap- pointed Public Service Commissioner; also the bank books of P, Erskine Wood, the Commissioner's brother, guaranteed another loan at the same time, in conjunction with their brother-in-law, Beekman Winthro Senator George F. Thompson is eager to get home for a little while to investig the action of the Lockport Light, Heat and Power Company, tn increasing its rates $41,000 for the coming year In a town of 20,000 in. habitants “T know thi pany t# making about 100 per fit now on its n » investment,” said the Sen- ator, “and I'm astonished that they are trying to put this thing over at this time, We have sent for their accounts for the last three years, and the Gattle collection. ee [TWO VETERAN POLICE | | CAPTAINS ARE RETIRED | (Patrick McGirr and John Buchanan PUZZLEATINQUEY Out of Service—Three Pre- cincts Consolidated. Police Commissioner Woods an- nounced to-day the retirement under the rules, to take effect next Friday, | of Capt. Patrick MoGirr of the West- who made him a loan of $1,500 and | ehester Avenue Station and Capt. John Buchanan of the Lee Avenue Station in Brooklyn. Capt. McGirr entered the Police Department in 1887, and Capt. Buchanan in 1878, Capt. Thomas F, Maude will be transferred from Whitestone to Weet- chester Avenue to succeed Capt. MoGirr and Lieut. Jobn Noble will be transferred as acting captain from Elizabeth Street Precinet to Les Ave- nue Precinct, Capt, John Wiegand will go from the Central Office squad to command at Rockaway Beach, suc- ceeding Lieut. Lewis Houpt, who will be transferred as acting captain to Elizabeth Street. ‘The police precincts of Flushing, College Point and Whitestone have been combined. College Point and Whitestone will be made sub-stations of the Flushing station, under com- mand of Capt. Patrick O'Neill, ———— NEW YORK IS BIGGEST OF WORLD'S CITIES Passed London in Population Four Years Ago, but British Hid Fact. LONDON, Dec. 29.—New York 1s the largest city in the world. London by reason of losses occasioned by the war and because of a mistake of 890,- 000 in estimating the population, is now about 250,000 behind. are matters improved by com~- paring the Greater London with Greater New York, for there again the American metropolis beats the older city by 132,000, It is four years now since the lant census of London was taken, but the official figures have only just been made public. They show the popula. tion of the County of London tn 1911 to have been 4,621,368, whereas New York City in 1910 numbered 4,766,483, Counting in “extra London," e is termed (that is, London outside the County), the population 1s 7,261, whereas in 1914 that of Greater No York, including the Westchen and Now Jersey suburbs, was 7,383,871. ee CHILDREN PLAY WHERE MILITIAMEN DRILL Playground in Bronx Armory Keeps Boys and Girls Off Streets in Holiday Vacation. Several hundred children romped in- to the Second Field Artillery Armory One Hundred and Sixty-aixth at Street and Franklin Avenue, the Bronx, to-day, after It bad been opened for the first time as a public indoor playground, It will be open until Sunday for school children to Commissioner Thomas W. Whittle of | the Bronx. Mrs, Steven B. Ayres in| in charge. ‘The request for tho use of the Armory a4 @ playground this week to keep the children off the streets was made by the Bronx Advisory Com- mittee of the Association for the Im- provement of the Condition of the Poor. Major Joseph I. Berry and Col George W. Wingate approved the plan, On the floor on which Guards- men drill swings, see-saw and sand piles are arranged, and a penny lunch is served at noon, Several bands music have volunteered their services, ae JERSEY CENTRAL MUST PAY.| PHILADELPHIA, Dec vietion of t Jersey and the penalty of $2 posed upon it for granting the Lohigh Coal and Navign Com pany in ‘violation the Bikins ac Was sustained to-day by Judge Mc Pherson in an opinion filed in the United States Circuit rt of Appeals. I expect we'll straighten things out pretty soon.” William of the Ne . Menden, chief engineer York Municipal Railway Corporation (4 part of the B, R, 1 testified before the Committe afternoon, He had char stallation of the electr devices in. the Fourth Avenue subway. The General Railway Signal temporary sig in the Centre « Federal Signal Company took this out and put in its signal apparatus, Refore the Fourth Avenue contri A NEW YEAR'S SUGGESTION Invest your Money Gift in some jewel from It will possess enduring value, and serve daily as a graceful reminder of the occasion. Opposite St. Patrick's Cathedral was let, he sald, the Public Serv Commission reques the Install tion of speed control on the de from the Willlamabyre Bridge to the Centre Street loop. ls was after the loop had been built. He notified the Hall, the General and th eral Railway Signal Companies, enjoy recreation provided by Park | ai FORD REPORTS BY WRELESS HS HEALTH BETTER First Message From Pacifist Since He Sailed for Home Says He Is Enjoying Trip. DETROIT, Mich. Dec, 29—Henry Ford is “feeling better and enjoying the trip," according to a wireless message received to-day from the homebound peace leader, by R. OG, Lieboid, his private secretary. Tho message was the first recetved from the Detroit millionaire for nearly a week. It was filed from the steamer Bergenfjord, on which Ford is @ passenger. STOCKHOLM, Dec, 29—United States Minister Morris to-day refused to cable to Washington requesting that the passports of the Ford peace delegates be extended to include Germany on the ground that Seere- tary Lansing had already refused a similar request from the American Legation at Copenhagen, The Ford lieutenants were indig- nant over the refusal. Originally they had planned to leave for Copenhagen to-day, but they delayed their de- parture until Thursday, hoping to receive word that their request for extensions would be granted, Business Manager Plantiff said that arrangements will be made at once to charter a ship to carry the party from Copenhagen to The Hague since they will be unable to cross Germany, Many of the delegates still believe the expedition will disintegrate at Copenhagen. An unconfirmed rumor that Mme, Rowika Schwimmer, the Hungarian peace advocate, who first suggested the peace cruise to Henry Ford, has abandoned the expedition was’ cir. culated among the delegates to-day, but the report was discounted by re- coipt of a telegram from Copenhagen saying Mme. Schwimmer had arrived there and was making arrangements for the care of the peace party, Mme, Schwimmer, with Ellis Jones of New York and Miss Florence Hol- brook of Chicago, left the party Inst nicht. It was stated to-day that they had gone to Copenhagen to arrange for the delegation’s reception, Bor several days Mmo, Schwimmer hag been in constant conference with various unidentified agents, It hae been rumored that ee quarrelled with Ford when he latter announced his it," said Gaston Plantiff, Ford's bual~ ness representative. apaeematpiaiisaorey NORTHEAST STORM COMING, Heavy Rat Are Predictea by We ‘" Man To-Night. There ix a northeast storm on the way, according to the Weather Bureaw, which will lash New York and the near- by Atlantic with an easterly gale by night. The storm is now backing its way up from Tennessee, Heavy rains predicted for this afternoon and te- nicht. The gale in likely to shift through the south to the nosthweat to- morrow, with clearing anow flurries and der weather, ECZEMA'S ITCHING STOPPED DISEASE QUICKLY HEALED, If ever any remedy may be said to “triumph” over a disease, certainly Poslam does 60 in the healing of Eczema. ‘The aggravation attending this malady is torturous and nerve-racking. It is persistently stubborn, but the healing powers of Poslam prevail over it, subdue it and eradicate it thoroughly and per- _|manently. Sold by all druggists.—Advt, peceletal AMM issih, Mes cae RANDRETH "i PILL An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, «a QO OR @ Oar nigne until reteved Chocotate-Coated or BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists,

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