Newspaper Page Text
UHE QEOBGIAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE
“The Case of Oscar Slater”
By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
ißlicr'ock Holmes in Real Life
E| TODAY'S INSTALLMENT.
- a priori the more probable:
a-n unheard-of million-to-one
■H, , have occurred, or that
■■ Diving committed themselves
|U . 'l.at he was the murderer,
admit that they were wrong
., bottom fell out of the original
■■ persevered in the hope that
BM„ ,nt uieaimns of a queer-looking
■ML. old Justify their original ac-
K® .'Aide these identifications, 1 must
; e again, there is nothing to
BM' . , with the murder, or to show
< v> r knew, or could have known
BH -e a person as Miss Gilchrist ex
it " the reprieve. ‘
EK ■ Table memorial for a reprieve
■M..... signed by 20.000 members of
BM. and had the effect of chang
...th sentence to one of penal
for
■E ■ - .-n.was passed on May 6. For
the man was left in doubt,
BH ritten reprieve only arrived on
■K .... Ithin twenty-four hours of the
■K . ■ . execution. On July 8 Slater
BH ; , . .d t„ the Peterhead convict
KH’ . There he lias now been for three
there he still remains.
■■ . help in my own mind compar-
f (.’scar Slater with another.
>.ad .’evasion to examine—that of
..
MH : . admit that they are not of the
George Edalji was a youth
......arj character. Oscar Slater
M* blackguard. George Edalji was
incapable of the crime for
.'-offered three years’ imprison
..ars for which he has not re
. shilling of compensation from
Oscar Slater might con
committed the murder, but
:■! against it.
■I : can not feel the same burn-
B^B g ~. 1,-.- of injustice over the matter.
I trust for the sake of our char-
.. only for justice, but for intel
■eve. hat the judgment may in some.
B^K,. h. reconsidered and the man's
iijsliment allowed to atone for
Ml ■ ■ -regularities of life which helped
E® leaving the case, it is interest-
- ... I ow far this curious crime may
■M- ■ d and whether any possl-
iigin can be thrown upon it. Using
■M re tluui Indicate cartain posslbil-
-
■M.and tested by the police.
In THE POLICE WAY.
■Sil ’rouble, however, with all police
|M ■ ■ . is 'bat. having once got what
■M' Imagine to be their man, they are
■' (’i' "pen to any line of investlga-
I c I, might lead to other conchi
- I ’.vert tiring which will not fit into
M- official theory is liable to be ex
tided.
Kj • ighc make a few isolated com-
■ T:< case which may at least give
|M. interesting trains of thought.
KI ' n which has to be asked was
the assassin was after the
|Mj uels at ail. It might be urged that
■M' '■ r.'pe "f num described by the spee-
r- was by no means that of the or-
thief.
MB W' ■ n I e reached the bed room and lit
Ml'c gas. he did not at once seize the
|My.and rings which were lying open-
M’ exposed upon the dressing table. He
not pick up a half sovereign which
lying on the dining room table. Mis
tention was given to a wooden box,
lid of which he wrenched open.
.s, I think, was “the breaking of
heard by Adams.) The papers
HMn It were strewed on the ground. Were
t papers his object, and the final ab-
BMs-" ’.’."t: of one diamond brooch a mere
BB 1 ' ’ Personally, I can only point out
possibility of such a solution.
■'|l ' ' he other r hand, it might be urged
kK^ 1 ’ •" thief's action seems Inconsequen-
BH’ ’ !lat 'dams had rung, and that, he
I Mme. D’Mille’s Beauty Hints
Bm (From The Journal of Fashion.)
keep the skin clear, smooth, fair
IM;" 1 .’ 1 . v lte ', use a complexion beautifier
by dissolving a package of maya
■M -i”' in a half-pint of witchhazel. Gently
■■,i' lssaßf ' face, neck and arms with this in
morning and it will hold ail day. It
BK;'st’' en 2 8 the growth of hair and will not
or show like powder, while it
■M*. I ,;** a ovely ’ Koft an<l youthful com-
EH, ,''\ r . co ld in the head or chest, there
E * "thing better than Mother’s Salve. It
■HE L J'D to use and quick to act. Catarrh
'’eauty destroyer, and Mother's Salve
I B .'in e n eve cata *rh if anything will.
|B I ' ll ‘, an d lifeless hair makes a woman
older than she should. Dry sliani
■K, T ; ‘kes the hair bright, lluffj' and
■H 1 four ounces of orris rout in a
J v Jur ' an<l lnlx w 'ell with an original
EKIiA , of therox. Sprinkle a little on
ETl'hrr, °* ce a week and brush out
''Uglily. This treatment cleanses the
an<J lna kes the hair lustrous and
s .'''crfluous hairs are humiliating, and
w,l ° desire a hair remover,
fy#L '‘.‘.T" '? suggested. Make a paste with
Eli..'.A ’’ , <lelatone and water, cover the
eB. af ,ter a minute or two wash the
11 ;, an< the hairs will be gone. This
i'S C'dment is sure, safe and speedy."
■ (Advt.)
WILTON JELLICO
COAL
$5.00 Per Ton
The Jellico Coal Co.
82 Peachtree Street
Eoth Phones 365!
already found himself in a desperate sit
uation. It might be said also that save
a will, it would be difficult to imagine
any paper which would account for such
an enterprise, while jewels, on the other
hand, were an obvious mark for whoever
knew of their existence.
Presuming that the assassin was indeed
after the jewels, it is very instructive so
note his knowledge of their location, and
also its limitations. Why did he go
straight into the spare bed room where
the jewels were actually kept?
The same question may be asked with
equal force if we consider that he was
after the papers. Why the spare bed
room?
THE CRIMINAL.
Any knowledge gathered from outside
(by a watcher in the backyard, for ex
ample) would go to the length of ascer
taining which was the old lady’s room.
One would expect a robber who had
gained his information thus to go straight
to that chamber. But this man did not
do so. He went straight to the unlikely
room in which both jewels and papers
actually were. Is not this remarkably
suggestive? Does it not pre-suppose a
previous acquaintance with the inside of
the flat and the ways of its owner?
But note the limitations of the knowl
edge. If it were the jewels he was after,
he knew what rq.om they were In, but
not in what part of the room A fuller
knowledge would have told him they were
kept in the wardrobe. . And yet he
searched a box.
If he was after papers, his information
was complete; but if he was Indeed after
the jewels, then we can say that he had
the knowledge of one who is conversant,
but not intimately conversant, with the
household arrangement.
To this we may add that he would seem
to have shown ignorance of the habits of
the inmates, or he would have surely
chosen Lambie's afternoon or evening out
for his attempt, and not have done it at
a time when the girl was bound to be
back within a very few minutes.
What men had ever visited the house?
The number must have been very limited,
what friends? what tradesmen? what
plumbers? Who brought back the jewels
after they had been stored with the jew
elers when the old lady went every year
to the. country?
Lines of Inquiry.
One Is averse to throw out vague sus
picions which may give pain to Innocent
people, and yet it is clear that there are
lines of inquiry here that should be fol
lowed up, however negative the results.
How did the murderer get in if Gam
ble is correct in the thinking that she
shut the doors?
I cannot get away from the conclusion
that he had duplicate keys. In that case
all becomes comprehensible, for the old
lady—whose faculties were quite normal—
would hear the lock go and would not be
alarmed, thinking that Lambie had re
turned before her time? Thus she woud
only know her danger when the murderer
rushed into the room and would hardly
have time to to rise, receive the first
blow, and fall, as she was found, beside
the chair, upon which she had been sit
ting. That is intelligible.
But if he had not the keys, consider the
difficultle.s. If_ the old lady had opened
the flat door her body would have been
found in the passage. Therefore, the po
lice were driven to the hypothesis that
the old lady heard the ring, opened the
lower stair door from Above tas can be
done in all Scotch flats), opened the flat
door, never looked over the lighted stair
to see who was coming up, but returned
to her chair and her magazine, leaving
the door open, and a free entrance to the
murderer.
This is possible, but Is it not in the
highest degree Improbable?
Miss Gilchrist was nervous of robbery
and would not neglect obvious precau
tions.
The ring came immediately after the
maid’s departure. She could hardly have
thought that it was her returning, the
less so as the girl had the keys and would
not need to ring If she went as far as
the hall door to open it, she only had to
take another step to see who was ascend
ing the stair. Would she not have taken
it if it were only to say:
“What, have you forgotten your keys?’’
That a nervous old lady should throw
open both doors, never look to see who
her visitor was. and'return to her din
ing room is very hard to believe.
AN ANALYSIS.
And look at it from the murderer’s
point of view. He had planned out his
proceedings. It ft notorious that it is
the easiest thing in the world to open
the lower door of a Scotch flat. The
blade of a pen knife will do that.
If he was to depend upon ringing to
get at his victim, it was evidently bet
ter for him to ring at the upper door,
as otherwise the chance would seem very
grefit that she would look down, see him
coming up the stair, and shut herself in.
On the other hand, if he were at the
upper door, and she answered it, he had
only to push his way in. Therefore, the
latter would be his course if he rang at
all.
And yet the police theory is that though
he rang, he rang from below.
It is not what Jie would do, and if he
did do it, it would be most unlikely that
he would get in. How could he suppose
that the old lady would do so incredible
a thing as leave her door open and return
to her calling? If she waited, she might
even up to the last instant have shut
the door in his face.
If one weighs all these reasons, one
can hardly fail, I think, to come to the
conclusion that the murderer had keys,
and that the old lady never rose from
her chair until the last instant, because,
hearing ihe keys in the door, she took it
for granted that the maid had come back.
But if he had keys, how did he get
the mold, and how did he get them made?
There is a line of Inquiry there.
The only conceivable alternatives are,
that the murderer was actually concealed
in the flat when came out, and
of that there is no evidence whatever,
or that the visitor was some one whom
the old lady knew, in which case he
would naturally have been admitted.
Continued In Next Issue.
ECZEMA SUFFERERS
Read what I. 8. Glidden, Tampa, Fla.,
says it proves that
Tetterine Cures Eczema
For seven years I had eczema on my
ankle I tried many remedies and nu
merous doctors. I tried Tetterine and
after elqht weeks am entirely free
from the terrible eczema.
Tetterine will do as much for others.
It ( iiits eczema, ‘elter, erysipelas and
other skin troubles. erics to stay
.med Get it i'«lay Tetterine
50c at druggists or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH, GA.
I Advt j
“No S. P. U. G. For Her,” Says Irene Franklin
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer.
MISS IRENE FRANKLIN, her
"orange phosphate." hair piled
high on her head, her hands
full of paper patterns for doll’s clothes,
stood In the fitting room of a big the
atrical costumer, and cajoled the weary
maker of gay stage frocks into dressing
dolls for Christmas. After she had suc
ceeded, she turned and answered some
of the questions that were put to her,
“Am I a spug? Well, what's that?
'The Society for the Prevention of Use
less Giving?’ I guess not! Do you
think I'd give up the pleasure of buying
Christinas presents to join that socie
ty? No, indeed! Why, there’s nothing
like Christmas. Somebody said that
up at our house we keep the original
Dickens Christmas spirit stored; any
how, I know we bought the house be
cause the hall was big enough to hold a
great big Christmas tree.
No Time Like Christmas.
“That tree goes right up to the sec
ond story, so when you’re on the land
ing up there you’re right in among the
upper branches of the tree.
“Spug, indeed! Why. there's no time
like Christmas; nothing in the wiyrld
that can take the place of the Christ
mas spirit, and it seems dreadful to
even think of expurgating it, or bring
ing It down to the men giving of sen
sible gifts.
“The pleasure you get out of Christ
mas is the joy of buying things that
I
i
i iIR
* Ai - A. . I
you want for yourself and giving them
to other people.
“Would I give up the pleasure of
sending Susie a pink negligee with
panier effect trimmed in swansdown?
No, indeed. Os course, Susie lives on a
cattle ranch and has no use for the
negligee, but she’ll get it just the same.
And I get the statisfaction of buying it
for her.
“Do you know how to cut out those
Christmas tree chains —the ones out of
colored paper? Oh, don’t you? Every
body does at my house. We spend our
evenings at it: even the baby was up
till 10 o'clock last night making, things
for the tree. Oh, didn’t you know about
the baby?
“Oh, I’m every kind of a mother.
Ordinarily mother, stepmother and
mother-in-law. You see my little sis
ter is only twelve, so I’m a sort oi
mother-in-law to her, but the children
are all on to me. Little sister has dis
covered that it really Isn’t proper for
me to be on the stage, and the baby’s
beginning to find out that I can’t spell.
Loves Character Work.
“Will I do ‘Redhead?’ Oh, I never
will get away from that song, and I
never really did it well, anyhow. The
music was good, but I didn’t write
that. But, oh, the words! ‘Redhead’
was one of my first efforts, and some
of the verses had so many feet they
were regular centipedes, while a rhyme
only happened now and then when it
came real handy.
“I love to do character work. My!
how hard I worked on the ‘Waitress.’
But the dreadful thing is that after
you’ve spent oceans of time and care on
a character make-up, half the time the
people would rather see you come up
with your own face and a long-tailed
dress sprinkled over with looking
glass. Did you see me tn that silver
gown? I call it the sardine can dress
—Queen of Sardina effect. But you
should have seen the one with the dia
mond crown, and the blue passemente
rie. I looked just like the brewer’s
daughter coming in on the third float
at the carnival. You know the brewer’s
daughter is always the queen of the
carnival, because of papa’s beer.
"Yes, I’m glad to be back in vaude
ville again. The great thing about
vaudeville is that it gives a chance for
a progressive person who wants to work
and is willing to work until she finds
the thing that pleases her public. Every
town is different, and every audience is
different. There are places where the
audience wants the children's songs,
especially the matinee girls In the aft
ernoon. In the evening, a more sophis
ticated audience wants different songs,
I have written about 40 songs In the
last couple of years, and the mono
logue-' to go with them, of course. I
like to do comedy work with another
comedienne, and I never enjoyed any
thing more than working with Miss Ada
Lewis.
"My, but she’s a dra ! I‘ln,-st thing
you ever knew, and so clever. W o used
EF=yBBHBK~ g ”8
'JbL .
r's
MOLaHMF ‘ / f
£ „ I
j AC/
. \ rxorcuf •
/ ) -* JsAri’o"
Miss Irene Franklin at Proctor’s Fifth
Avenue Theater, New York.
; '
Cut down
the cost of living
T ADIES, it is in your power to reduce
-* the outlay for food in your households
and feed your families better. Serve less
meat on your tables. Let a nut-brown
dish of delicious
FAUST
BRAND
SPAGHETTI
take its place. It has all the nourishing
elements of meat at about one-tenth its
cost, and is ever so much easier digested.
Faust Spaghetti is made from Durum
wheat, so rich in body-building gluten.
And there are so many delicious ways in
which it can be served. Write for free
book of recipes.
At all grocers—sc and 10c packages.
Maull Bros., St. Louis, Mo.
t
J
to do a scene 'ad lib’ every evening, and
even the orchestra stayed in to see
what we’d do next. First time I ever
knew of an orchestra listening to com
edy work right through the season
when they didn’t have to. _
No “Spugging” for Her.
“In vaudeville you’ve always got to
offer something new. The vaudeville
audiences are pretty regular theater
goers, and they listen with attention;
they came to be interested, and not
only*to spend a few hours after an all
too hearty dinner. To the latter class
of theatergoers dancing makes the
greatest appeal, because it doesn’t re
quire any intelligent or concentrated
attention —unless it is exceptional
dancing, of course. Weil, I have io
hurry home and have dinner, so' that
I’ll have time to work on the Christmas
tree. No spugging for jne, remember.
Good-bye, and Merry Christmas.”
(Note by the interviewer—Me for
Irene Franklin.)
The Hysterics of Youth
By Beatrice Fairfax
THOSE who have traveled the trou
bled path of youth, when one
doesn’t know what one wants
and is prodigal with emotions in trying
to find out, will smile indulgently over
the following letter:
There is so much in it of the human
nature that the years have taught,those
who are older to guide and control. It
is like Youth!
“I am a young girl of sixteen and
until a few weeks ago had been going
with a young man one year my senior.
Some childish misunderstanding had
broken our sincere friendship, and since
then we Just greet each other when we
meet and pass on.
“Today as I was walking', along the
street I chanced to meet him. He was
with another girl. He tipped his hat. I
looked at him,and at,the girl, and much
to my horror I burst out laughing. 1
can not comprehend whatever pos
sessed me to do so. 1 am sure it was
not jealousy (for I pity the girl), and
every time I think of It I just laugh
and laugh. Can you tell what it is that
makes me laugh?”
It is the hysterics of youth. Y'ou
laughed because you are young. You
wanted to show by an Indifferent smile
that you didn’t care. And that smile
became a laugh! Being very young,
you laugh Immoderately, and you cry
to excess.
You are like a swing that flies back
and forth as far as the rope permits.
When you get older, and it is "time to
let the cat die,” as they say when the
swinging nears an end, there will be
less of the extremes in all your emo
tions. You will never be so miserable
you can’t see a ray of hope.
I am sorry you laughed, but you
couldn’t help it. lam sure it meant no
unkind feeling ami that It was not the
laugh of resentment. But it is sure to
be misunderstood. A pleasant little
sinlle, such as you would give to a mere
acquaintance, would have won for you
the admiration and respect of both your
former lover and your rival.
They will not Interpret that laugh to
your credit. You were not Jealous, you
-ay, yet a hysterical l*iugh would indi
cate that you are. it showed that you
Up-to-Date Jokes
Patience—Hasn't Miss Oldum good
searching eyes?
Patrice—Well, I don’t wonder at it.
She’s been looking fur a husband for
twenty years.
Her Mother—And how do you and
John get on?
Her Daughter—-Beautifully! He tells
me what to do, <<nd then I please my
self.
Wk
BBhyf
"Gertrude” writes: "Can you prescribe
a remedy for catarrh. I suffer constantly
with headache and pain across my eyes.
My breath is very bad, which annoys me
greatly.”
Answer: For catarrh and bad breath I
always recommend the use of antiseptic
Vilane powder. Ask your druggist tor an
original 2-ounce package of antiseptic Vi
lane powder. Make a catarrh balm by
mixing a level teaspoonful of the powder
with 1 ounce of vaseline, or lard will do
just as well, and use as far up as possi
ble in the nostrils several times a day.
Then take a pint of warm water and one
half teaspoonful of the powder and use as
a snuff from the palm of the hand. If
these directions are followed you will soon
be cured of this dreadful disease.
• * •
"Maud" writes: "Can anything be don*
for an itching scalp. My scalp is also
covered with dandruff and I am in great
distress.”
Answer: You can very' easily’ be cured
of an itching scalp, also dandruff, if you
will get a 4-ounce jar of plain yellow min
.vol and use according to the directions
given on the Jar. Two or three applica
tions have been known to cure. Try It
fairly’ and you will advocate Its use to
your friends.
» • •
"Ellen K.” writes: “1 am not fleshy
enough. I should weigh 20 pounds more.
I am ashamed of my thinness and wish to
become plump and attractive. Can you
help me?”
Answer: Y’es, I can help you "Ellen
K.," and many others In the same plight.
A thorough course of treatment with 3-
grain hypo-nuclane tablets will gradually
give you more red and white blood cor
puscles, adding to your weight, health and
color, giving you pink cheeks, red Hits
and sparkling eyes. These tablets are
packed In sealed cartons with directions.
Do not expect results too quickly. It
takes time to change the cells and tis
sues of the body, but you can depend on
gaining weight If you are persistent.
• • •
"D. E. F.” writes: "If you know of
anything that 1 could take to cure my
rheumatism, please tell me, as I suffer
all the time. Am getting worse all the
time."
Answer: Take the following and you
will soon be cured of your rheumatism.
This Is the best remedy that 1 have ever
known for this trouble: lodide of potas
sium 2 drams, sodium salicylate 4 drams,
wine of colchioum ounce, comp, essence
cardlol 1 .ounce, comp, fluid bulmwort 1
ounce and Hvrup sarsaparilla comp., f,
ounces. Mix by shaking well and take on*
tetwpounful at meal times and again at
bed time
• • •
“Helen” writes "Can you give me a
lack self-control. You haven't the hold
on yourself that you should have.
You say that you pity tile girl. How
that sounds like sixteen! My dear girl,
this man was your sincere friend, and
a “childish misunderstanding’' disrupt
ed that friendship. Don’t let that word
“childish" describe your future conduct.
If you respect him, and I do not read
in your letter that he has done anything
to lose your respect, you must rise
above such a sentiment as you express
for the other girl.
Don’t pity a girl who has won what
you lost. Rather, be glad that they are
friends, and learn to rise above the pet
ty Jealousy that prompts the word
“pity."
Acquire self-control. You need it.
Your admission that you laughed leads
me to believe that you lacked self-con
trol when your “childish misunder
standing” arose. Just go off by your
self. my dear, and take a good look at
the childish, emotional creature that
you are.
Then make up your mind to do bet
ter. Remember that a repetition oi
that laugh'will cause you to be laugh
ed at.
J»! i-LllM LI __UJU.I'!!-!'!(!■«, ,„!
Household Economy
How to Have the Beat Cough
Syrup and Save *2, by
Making It at Home.
Cough medicines, as a rule, contain a
.arge quantity of plain syrup. If yot
take one pint of granulated sugar, add
’i pint of warm water and stir about
2 minutes, you have as good syrup at
money could buy.
If you will then put ounces oi
Pinex (50 cents’ worth) in a pint bottle,
ind fill it up with the Sugar Syrup, you
will have as much cough syrup a-; you
jould buy ready made for $2.5(r. It
xeeps perfectly.
And you will find it the best cough
jyrup you ever used—even in whooping
lough. You can feel it take hold—usu
illy stops the most severe cough in 24
uoiirs. It is just laxative enough, has a
zood tonic effect, and taste is pleasant,
lake a teaspoouful every oue, two or
three hours.
It is a splendid remedy, too, for
whooping cough, croup, hoarseness, asth
ma, chest pains, etc.
Pinex is the most valuable concentra
ted compound of Norway white pine ex
tract, rich in guaiacol and all the heal
ing pine elements. No other prepara
tion will work in this formula.
This recipe for making cough remedy
with Pinex and Sugar .Syrup is now
used and prized in thousands of homes
in the United States and Canada. The
plan has often been imitated but never
successfully.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or
money promptly refunded, goes with this
recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will
get it for you. If not, send to The
Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Ti’cDoctor'x
7k>{dVlCeJ
The questions answered below are gen
eral in character, the symptoms or dis
eases are given and the answers will apply
to any case of similar nature. Those
wishing further advice free, may addrest;
I »r. Lewis Baker. College building, Col
lege-Elwood streets, Dayton, Ohio, inclos
ing self-addressed stamped envelope for
reply. Full name and address must be
given, but only initials or fictitious name
will be -ised in mj answers. The prescrip
tions can be filled at any well-stocked drug
store. Any druggist can order of whole
saler.
reliable remedy for coughs and colds’.
My cough is so tight that 1 am afraid
of pneumonia?”
Answer: The tightest cough can he
loosened in one hour by using the follow
ing: Get from your druggist a 2*,i-oune<
package of essence mentho-laxene and
make according to directions on bottle.
This will break up any cold and loosen
the tightest cough and soon cure by its
laxative tonic action.
• « •
"Henry” writes: "If you can pre
scribe anything that will cure my stomach
trouble and constipation, please do so.
My breath is bad and I am irritable and
can not sleep ”
Answer: You can be very easily cured
of your troubles by taking tablets trio
peptine. This is the most scientific and
satisfactory treatment for the stomach,
and if taken according to directions you
will soon be able to eat a hearty meal
and not have any distress afterwards
Your constipation will be cured and your
whole system will be put in a fine condi
tion.
• • •
"John” says: "What can I do to gain
an appetite? Ido not eat and am getting
thin and weak. Please advise a remedy. ’’
Answer: The best tonic that I know of
is made by mixing 5 ounces of syrup of
by i>ophospnltes comp, and 1 ounce tincture
cadomene comp. Mix by shaking well in
a bottle and take a teaspoonful before
each meal. You will soon gain flesh and
your appetite will return.
• • •
“A. I* T.” writes: "I am constantly
embarrassed by my excessive weight. I
have tried exercise and diet, but thev do
not help. If you know of some harmless
and effective medicine please publish."
Answer: To reduce your weight gel
5 ounces of aromatic elixir and 1 ounce of
glycol arbolene. Get these two ingre
dients separately, to avoid any substitu
tion. Mix and take a teuspoonful for three
days after ecah meal, then take two
teaspoonfuls. This is a perfectly harm
less and sure remedy for obesity. Many
women have written that they reduced
their weight a pound a day after the
first week.
• • •
"Geraldine" writes: "I am troubled a
great deal with headache, dizzy spells,
dark spots before my eyes, twinges of
rheumatism. Can I be helped at all?”
Answer: You can not only be "helper."
but you can be cured of all the troi-oies
you mention. You need 3-graln sulpherb
tablets (not sulphur) which are packed
In sealed tubes and contain full direc
tions for use. They are made of sulphur,
cream of tartar and herb medicines If
these are taken regularly they purify tho
blood, stimulate the liver and bowels into
healthy action and will gradually effect u,
cure.
• • •
"Mother”—Bedwetting in children Is
usually u disease which can be cured by
the use of the following Tincture cu
baba 1 drum, tincture Thus aromatic ;
drams, comp, fluid Miniwort 1 ounce
Mix and give the child ten to fifteen drop
In water one hour before each meal.
• • •
Mend for Dr. Baker's book an 'TUsalt*
and Beauty ” <Advt |