Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 24, 1912, HOME, Page 3, Image 3

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.ILIN SUED ay WIFE; cm 15 CHARGED Deciares She Was Forced to Live in Box Car and Cook for Laborers. Jolm T. Anglin, who recently insti tuted a $50,000 damage suit against W. r Jester, a local contractor, for alien .Ulon <>l his wife's affection, was in turn made defendant in a court action uday, when Mrs. Mamie Anglin brought I divorce proceedings against him. drs. Anglin said that she left her] msband when he forfeited her affec tions by making her live in a box car at Corrona, N. M„ and cook meals for Mexican laborers. She described her married existence .with Anglin as a “harrowing expe rience'' and said that she came back to her father, Ira Bradshaw, 61 Bed ford place, because her husband had mistreated her and not because af fection for Jester, as alleged by Anglin in his suit. Chase Leads Across U. S. Mrs. Anglin's divorce bill grew out ] >f a sensational transcontinental chase, I participated in by Mrs. Anglin, Jester] mtl Ira Bradshaw, father of the young | wife. Anglin followed his wife, Jester and Bradshaw from El Paso to San Francisco, to Los Angeles, and back to Georgia. He caught up with them at Macon, and there is said to have engaged in several street altercations, in which a pistol or two figured. Later he filed a damage suit against Jester, asserting that the latter was responsible wholly for the collapse of his romance, maintaining that Jester, who, he said, had shown Mrs. Anglin attention before her marriage, corre sponded with her and won her affec tions completely. Mrs. Anglin, in her divorce bill, lays the disastrous marriage to her hus band’s indifferent and reprehensible treatment. She said that he wooed her as a railroad conductor with a lucra tive position in Texas. After the cere mony. the pair went to El Paso, where her husband, she told the court, pro ceeded to live in indolence, with no thought of the morrow. Finally, when she reproached him for his negligent habits, she asserted, he got a commissary job at Corrona, N. M.. and pictured a delightful life in hills not unlike a scene from a motion pic ture. Forced to Live in Box Car. At Corrona, she said, he led her into a box car, which proved to be the home ae dilated upon glowingly in El Paso She found then, she alleged, that her occupation was to be one of the cooks for a gang of construction laborers, the i majority of whom were Mexicans. She ; said she bore this humiliation a month or more. During her stay in New Mexico, she said, her husband was indifferent and ■ven cruel, failing to provide her with ■iothing or the comforts of life. Mrs. Anglin asked the court for a oral divorce, temporary and permanent alimony. counsel fees and the restora tion of her maiden name, Mamie Brad shaw. She is at present living with her father at 61 Bedford place. LIFESAVERS BATTLE HIGH SEAS TO REACH STRANDED STEAMER ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Dec. 24.—1 n he mldrt of a furious snow storm life -avers from the station here put out in ‘ motor lifeboat today to the rescue of he steamer Turrlalba, which went ‘shore at Barnegat, near dangerous i-gg Harbor, during the night. A terrific sea was breaking when the ifesavers started from this station for the fifteen-mile run to the stranded i-inier and the waves tossed the high powered boat around like cork, but as ■me passed from sight it was seen she 'ae making fait - headway. I he wireless dispatch was as fol lows: Ashore off Barnegat. Heavy snow •*nd wind. Ship afloat aft. In distress. '<-ed assistance. Wind increases. >Signed) LINDSAY, Captain.” I he Turrlalba, which is a fruit trnmer, is said to have from 50 to 60 Passengers aboard! A wireless- received by agents of the which owns the steamer reported ■ >t she needed assistance at once. ihe Turrlalba left Colon. Panama, on L-ursday and Was due in New York J day. She carried a heavy cargo of '■pleal fruit. Most of her passengers said to be Americans who are re lining from work on the canal. BOY SEES HIS FATHER KILL MOTHER AND SELF GALVESTON. TEXAS, Dec. 24.—M. '>nk, of Cleveland, shot and killed his , ,r '' at a hotel here today and then per !,aps fatally wounded himself with the •ame weapon. A 10-year-old son wlt “ssed the shooting. The woman was Miot in the head. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured w ’ll LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can * r A ac h of the disease. Catarrh ? blood or constitutional disease, and In - T To ,fure It you must take Internal rem , 11 s. Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken inter *'*y. and acts directly on the blood and Jous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is “ quack medicine. It was prescribed one of the best physicians in this coun f . ror years and Is a regular prescription. • c °tnposed of the best tonics known. th* best blood purifiers, act- directly on the mucous surfaces. The <’ nation of the two Ingredients . produces such wonderful results In ' WHI L'atnrrh. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. t2i druggists, price 75r. *ake Hull’s Family Pills for constipation. [WSOKr'CAUGHrWITH BRYAN I '' V /A y k /.M k f/Mr JIK ; IF r • r f L i i . • ■* ’fw T ‘W r '■ ' . -.1 ; - \ \ ' x t ®r 'X V v '’'■MMgWlMf I’irst photograph ever taken “■ s^‘,Will i- r I’residenl-eleet Wood \'L Wilson and William J. \ \ - ■’ . | camera. The picture was taken / jl at Trenton last week on the oc- // casion of Mr. Bryan’s confer- .s' / ence w Grovcmor Wilson. Mental Suggestion Made Inspector Sick SAUSAGE OFFERS ALIBI — In giving expert testimony today be- 1 fore Recorder Broyles, Dr. H. F. Har ris, secretary of the state board of i health, said that it was the power of 1 mental suggestion and not spoiled sau- i sage that made City Health Inspector i Wasser deathly sick a few days ago : when he ate a sample of sausage from ! the local branch of Armour & Co. Dr. : Harris was put up by the defense as an I expert on ptomaine poisoning and sau- i sages in the case made by Inspector ; ' Wasser against D. J. Callahan, man- i 1 ager of the Armour company, charged ■ I with selling bad sausage. 1 Despite this expert diagnosis of his ■ I illness, the inspector insisted to the re corder that he was really ill; that he became deathly sick within 25 minutes i after eating a small link of the Ar- , mour sausage; that he experienced pe culiar sensations in his stomach, and < ’ had to seek medical aid for relief. He said that after freeing his stomach of , the sausage he began to feel better and was soon normal again. Blames Inspector's Mind. Dr. Harris said the inspector firmly believed in his own mind that the sau- . sage was spoiled, and that, when he ate one small link, the mental suggestion was sufficient to upset his stomach and produce real poisonlike pains. Manager Callahan, who ate one of the ; links at the same time as did Inspector Wasser, was offered by the defense as , a living example that the sausages were all right and that the inspector's mind had overinflueneed his stomach. The manager said he was not made sick and felt no bad effects whatever. He ate lunch with a relish, he said, shortly after partaking of the sausage. MRS. WILSON PICKS MISS HAGNER TO BE SOCIAL SECRETARY X TRENTON, N. J.» Dec. 24. An an nouneement was made by President-elect Wilson that Mrs. Wilson had chosen Miss Isabella D. Hagner. of Washington, D. C.. to be her social secretary at the white house. Miss Hagner was social secretary to Mrs. Roosevelt for seven years and be came famous for her successful manage ment of the Roosevelt social affairs. Governor Wilson was driven through the snow In his automobile from Princeton to the state house here today. He was the earliest arrival at the state house, dozens of others who had been expected being late. __ GIRL’S BROTHER KILLS SENDER OF POST CARD —— QUITMAN GA., Dec. 24—Bryant Folsom, living about three miles from Quitman, has surrendered to the sheriff of Brooks county to answer for the death of David Waldron, whom he killed while at the Fulton home. The slaying. Folsom claims, was caused by an objectionable picture postcard sent to Folsom’s sister by Waldron. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1912. In addition to the inspector, however, Mrs. J. H. Dresbach,*bf 52 West Wood street, West End, testified that she and her children all became deathly sick shortly after partaking of sausages sold . b\ the Armour company. Dr, Harris said he had analyzed sausages from the sartie lot and had found no trace of ptomaine poison. He said the Dreabach family may have suffered from an at- , tack of- indigestion, and that there was a possibility that the sausage was not as fresh as it might have been. He de clared that ptomaine poison developed not less than 36 or 48 hours after the eating of poisoned food. Recorder Taxes Fine. A number of other witnesses, among them Dr. Claude Smith, city bacteriol ogist, testified. Manager Callahan made a statement, explaining that the utmost care is used by his concern in the handling of all of its meats, and that whenever bad meat is found it is promptly barred. He put up the steward of a leading hotel, to which had been furnished some of the same lot of sausage as sold the complaining witnesses, and he testified that no one about the hotel who par took of the sausage diet was made ill. Summing up the evidence. Judge Broyles said he was convinced the sau sage had not produced ptomaine poi soning. but that it had caused illness of some description and. therefore,-was unlit for use. He fined Callahan $25.75. Attorneys Thomas B. Felder and Carl Hutcheson, counsel for the packing house, announced they would appeal the case. Assistant City Attorney W. D. Ellis, Jr., appeared for the prosecu tion. PATRONS HORSEWHIP TEACHER WHO PLANS CHRISTMAS PROGRAM READING, PA., Dec. 24.—Mrs. George Dash and her daughter, Clara, were arrested today on the charge that they horsewhipped' Miss Helen Ruth, a school teacher, because she had ar ranged a Christmas program for her pupils, despite Mrs. Dash s protest that any entertainment would increase, the school tax. Miss Ruth, who is a graduate of Wesleyan, is in a serious condition. The school directors declare they will press the case against the woman, EX-MESSENGER BOY’S ESTATE 514.600.000 ALB A NY, N. Y Dec. 24. - Th® estate of Louis A. Heinsheimer, of New York, who died three years ago. has'been appraised by the state controller's office at $14,000,- 000. An unusual feature of the appraisal is that it shows that Mr. Heinsheimer had a bank balance of $3,500,000 in cash. Mr. Heinsheimer spent all his life in Wall Street, rising from messenger boy to membership in the firm of Kuhn, Loeb 6c Co CHAMBER MOVES FOR CAR SAFETY Committee Asserts Many Trol leys Are Without Fenders. Seeks to Enforce Law. Despite the declaration of trolley company officials that all the cars in Atlanta are equipped with fenders, the Chamber of Commerce committee on public safety is working today on a plan to force the company to provide really adequate protection for pedes trians. The committee declares that many of the cars are without fenders or so poorly equipped that no real safe ty is provided, and the chamber will try to have the city ordinance enforced. The death last week of five-year-old Theo. Hoffman, mangled under a car in Grant street, was the specific case which stirred the committee to action. The boy was not struck by the wheels of the car. His little body was rolled by the trucks until his life was crushed out. A proper fender would have lifted the child from the rails and tossed him aside with perhaps only a few bruises. Chairman W. J. Dowenstein, of the public safety committee, made an in vestigation and discovered, lie reported to the chamber, that many cars have no fenders and many fenders in use are wholly inefficient. He addressed a let ter to President 'Wilmer D. Moore, of the chamber, urging the board of di rectors to start action which would force the company into providing effi cient fenders. W. H. Glenn, superintendent of the trolley company, declared that good fenders, so far as there are any good fenders, were in use on all cars. ‘Exactly what is a good fender is a question,’ he said. "Each manufac turer claims his is the best. We have a new improved mechanism on the Whitehall-Peachtree line, but even this has failed to work at a critical moment. We are complying with the law the best we can It is not true that some cars are fenderless. Those where the fend ers do not appear from the street have them far under the car, just in front of the wheels.” ANNA HELD TO REWED DIVORCED HUSBAND NEW YORK, Dec. 24.—F10 Ziegfeld, Jr., whose wife, Anna Held, the actress, secured an interlocutory decree of di vorce six months ago, says that there has been no reconciliation. Although the divorce probably will be made ab solute on Thursday, he said, it was likely that he would be remarried to Miss Held early next year. . "Miss Held Is in France," said Mr. Ziegfeld. "I cabled to her suggesting that we make up and remarry. Today I received a reply that she was willing. She will be here early In the new year.” POISON IN BOMB FEARED:VICEROY IN BAD STATE Lord Hardinge Develops Fever, Causing Alarm—2oo Plot ters Arrested. DELHI, INDIA. Dee. 24.—1 n the fear that the bomb thrown at Lord Hard Inge may have contained a subtle poison, the authorities today ordered its frag ments submitted to a chemical exami nation. The wounded viceroy suffered from a high fever during the night and his physicians declared that they were unable to explain this unless It was due to poison, as the wounds caused by the bursting infernal machine were clean. Even the shoulder blade muscles were torn. The fever abated somewhat ear ly today, but the physicians decided that If it rose again an operation might be necessary to avert further danger. It was found necessary to inject morphine to induce sleep. Lady Hartllnge, who, with her hus band. narrowly escaped death, has not yet recovered from the shock of her ex perience. She is under the care of three physicians and two nurses. They do not leave her alone a moment. 200 A'rested; Thrower Still Free. More than 200 arrests have been made as a result of the attempted as sassination of the viceroy, but the offi cials of the ' Indian secret service are not yet confident that they have the man who threw the bomb. The ar rests continued today, the prisoners taken including members of the Indian Nationalist party and fanatical Mo hammedans who have been exhorting their followers to violence as a protest against making Delhi the capital of In dia. This city was the ancient Mohamme dan capital and as such is regarded with the deepest reverence by' the dis ciples of Islam. Mohammedan priests have declared it a profanation of the British to make Delhi the seat of their government. It is well established that the bomb outrage was the result of a plot. The man who threw the bomb was in the center of a group of persons. As he tossed the infernal machine toward the howdah in which Lord and Lady Har dinge were seated his companions were seen to dash in various directions in the crowd that filled the house top from which the bomb was thrown. Many Innocent Among Arretted. In the confusion that resulted it was impossible to learn the identity of the assassin or gain a good description of him. Many Innocent persons were among those arrested when the house was surrounded. These were released today, but all who could not give a sat isfactory account of themselves were held. A remarkable scene was enacted at the vice regal palace today when the Punjab chiefs and leading Indian mem bers of the viceroy’s legislative council called to express their regret over the attempt to kill the viceroy and extend their wishes for his speedy recovery. Two of the Punjab chiefs burst into tears when they were told that, they could not see Lord Hard Inge. From the palace the Punjab chiefs went to the office of Sir Louis Dane, lieutenant governor of the Punjab, and there took a solemn vow to avenge the viceroy and punish the would-be assassin. 150 EXTRA WORKERS AT POSTOFFICE TO HANDLE XMAS RUSH An army of extra clerks and carriers was enlisted today in the job of han dling Atlanta’s Christmas mail. Seven ty-flve extra carriers or carriers’ help ers Are on the job. During the after noon, when the shoppers put in their best work, and rushed to the postoffice to dispatch their gifts. 60 helpers in the mail room were necessary. Under the system in vogue during the holiday rush, each carrier in the residential sections of the city is given a helper, whose duty it is to bear half the mail; and bearing mail In Atlanta at Christmas time is considerable feat. The extra men were needed most in the northern portion of Atlanta. The Peachtree sub-station’s force was aug mented by fourteen carriers. The holiday employees of the post office number probably 150. They will work through Christmas day, and prob ably the day after, if any signs of con gestion are evident. BAR ASSOCIATION SEEKS TO DISBAR TWO LAWYERS CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Dec. 24. The grievance committee of the Chat tanooga Bar association, composed of S. Bartow Strang, Frank M. Thompson and Frank Spurlock, is engaged in the preparation of a new petition which will be filed in the circuit court, praying for an order disbarring Robert T. Cameron and A. T. Roark from further practice of law before the courts of Tennessee. Cameron and Roark were recently ac quitted in Federal court here upon "white slave" charges. SAVANTS TRAVEL 12,000 MILES, MISS AN ECLIPSE LONDON. Dec. 24. —The official re port of the British scientific expedition's fruitless journey to the mountains of Brazil to observe the total eclipse of the sun on October 10—it rained all day —is thus summarized: Duration of eclipse, 113 seconds; preparation of charts and instruments at ■ Greenwich observatory, three months; length of journey out and back. 12,000 miles; absence from England, ten weeks; equipment carried, three tons; net results, nil. THOUSANDS OF POUNDS OF XMAS MAIL HANDLED SPEEDIL Y AT POS TOFF ICE With Christmas dawn less than fif teen hours away, there is in sight—the amount of mail handled in Atlanta in the two days preceding—l,2so,ooo pack ages, letters and cards. The amount in cludes both that mall received for dis tribution in Atlanta and the Christmas bounty of Atlantans, dispatched to friends elsewhere. While they speak in hundreds of thousands at the postoffice, they talk of tons at the express stations, the other places for the distribution of Christmas gifts. The rush of work there has pre vented a compilation of figures; the breathless task of receiving, tagging and weighing packages and taking the signatures of consignees, has not given the express operators the opportunity to calculate totals. However, it is considered a safe bet that So,ooo parcels, approximating 250,- 000 or 300.000 pounds—which, if you re member your tables, is a few tons — have been received for shipment from Atlanta, and something like that amount for delivery to residents of the city. Preparations Were Complete. Preparation for the Christmas sea son in Atlanta began last Christmas, when the needs of the extra traffic were determined. Hence no fever or fret marks the rush season. Everybody is busy in the postoffice and the branch postal stations and In the express of fice and Its sub-stations, but the work is organized. Fervent rejoicings are heard from the two distributing agencies that the one big factor in the Christmas system, the railroad service, is good enough to brag on. Schedules are smooth and trains are running on time. No con gestion ensues on this score, and be cause the preparation in other quarters began months ago, there is no conges tion. Such organization has been effected that from both the postoffice and the express stations Christmas packages re ceived this morning were delivered al most as soon as received—at least, be fore this afternoon. Packages and let ters reaching Atlanta Tuesday after noon will be delivered before night, if possible. There will be, too, a Christ mas day delivery by both agencies, winding up the greatest part of Santa Claus’ visitation to Atlanta.s 400 Workers at Postoffice. To make the work of Christmas sea son possible, a corps of extra workers has been pressed into service. The ex press agencies have employed 100 men for the rush season, in addition to the regular force of about that number. Ex tra wagons, probably fifty in number, have been put on the Job. H. C. WORTHEN NEW GENERAL MANAGER OF W. U. IN SOUTH H. C. Worthen, general superintend ent of the Western Union Telegraph Company in Atlanta, has been pro moted to general manager of the Southern department, a newly created office, according to the announcement issued from the New York offices of the Western Union. Traffic Supervisor B. P. Hancock has been elevated to the position of division traffic superintendent and Special Agent J. P. Edward, another Atlanta official, has been raised to the position of traffic superintendent of the South ern section. The promotion of these three officials will be received with gratification by the Atlanta public, with whom they have come in contact for the last sev eral years. The rise of Mr. Worthen to one of the most important executive offices in the Western Union service has been re markable. The new general manager of the Southern department is but 36 years old. He entered the employ of the Western Union at the age of thir teen at Shelby, N. C. He served as tel egraph operator and rapidly moved through the various grades of the Western Union service. His experience covered a wide field. Three years ago he was made general inspetor for the general manager at New York. He came to Atlanta as Southern superintendent two years ago, with jurisdiction over the Western Union lines from West Virginia to Louisiana. Mr. Worthen is a member of several of Atlanta’s leading clubs and enjoys a wide acquaintance. PATIENT AT HOSPITAL INSISTS HE’S NOT DEAD ST. LOUIS, Dee. 24. —Wace Jean, a Hungarian laborer, sat up in bed at the city hospital and denied he was dead. "The report ts greatly exaggerated,” said he, paraphrasing Mark Twain, in flawless Hungarian. "I’m only badly hurt.” Wace, according to a report that came from the hospital, died yesterday even ing from a fractured skull, suffered three days ago, when he fainted in the kitchen of his home at 4352 Clayton avenue, and fell over backward. Hospital authorities are unable to ex plain how the false report got out. SAVANNAHANS ADVOCATE INLAND WATERWAY PLAN SAVANNAH. GA.. Dec. 24 —Judge A. B. Moore, of the Chatham county' board of commissioners; Joseph F. Gray, state railroad commissioner and executive officer of the Chamber of Commerce, and Pleasant A. Stovall have returned from Washington, where they were in conference with General Bixby, chief of the board of engineers of the National Rivers and Harbors congress, relative to the proposed opening of the inland waterway from Beaufort, N. C., to Flor ida. Congressman Charles G. Edwards met the delegation in Washington and help ed lay the matter before the engineers. In the postoffice and Rs sub-stations, 400 persons are working toward a dis tribution of the Christmas mail. Os these, 150 are employed for the holiday occasion. What do these workers do? Monday, the machine at the Atlanta postoffice cancelled the stamps on 246,- 000 letters and cards. That is, At lanta people posted that many for de livery and that many were sorted and arranged for shipment. In One Day’s Mail. Through the office there passed Mon day approximately 150,000 Christmas packages, many of them poorly wrap ped, no two of them the same size, and every one of a shape to itself. A job for 400 men, don’t you think? That was just the outgoing mail Mon day. The incoming mail, consigned from the four corners of the earth to Atlanta men, women and children, amounted to 200,000 letters, cards and 'lockages. Today, it is estimated, there may be half that number again—maybe twice that number. And Atlanta will send away as much of a mass of gifts as it did Monday. Particularly will they send cards. "Drat the cards!” said a postofflee man. "They are the last stab to re member everybody—the thing that everybody puts off until the very end. And most of them don’t mean a darn thing.” But with all the cards and letters, it is announced by Postmaster H. L. Mc- Kee, the number of them is no greater than the number which are placed in the postofflee for delivery about the first of each month, when duns go out with their doleful summons. Packages the Big Task. The amount of first-class Christmas mall, he says, will not nearly equal the amount to go out January 1, or there abouts, when all the Christmas presents must be paid for. But It’s the packages which furnish the big task. To assemble them, as sort them, post them, is the hardest Job of Christmas for Mall Superintend ent Hart. It is there that his most strenuous brain work was necessary. It is in this that every man has his task. One old fellow rolls a basket, laden with Christinas packages, from the slots where the public placed them, to the bench where the mail clerks work. That is all he does, hour after hour. He gets 30 cents an hour for doing it. And his singleness of purpose is dis tinctive of the system which has made possible the delivery' «f Atlanta’s great est number of Christinas shipments without congestion, without delay and without feverish haste. SUFFRAGE HIKERS BRAVE BLIZZARD ON ALBANY MARCH RED HOOK. N. Y., Dec. 24.—One of the worst blizzards In many years failed to halt today the "On To Albany” march of the four stout-hearted suffra gists who alone remain of the twenty eight pilgrims who started out from New York a week ago to deliver a plea for suffrage to Governor-elect Sulzer. Garbed in woolen stockings and can vas leggings and with the storm coats wrapped securely around them, the quartet left here today, resolved to cov er the ten miles to the town of Blue Stores before nightfall, despite the snow which in some places had drifted from eight to eighteen inches. Miss Lillian Rockefeller, a grand niece of John D., joined the pilgrims when they set out from here today and announced that she would walk the rest of the way to Albany. MATCHES BOY CARRIES IGNITED BY SPANKING CHICAGO, Dec. 24.—An irate parent put Johnny Miller across her knees to spank him The first smack brought a burst of flame from the seat of pun ishment. Johnny had matches in his "revolver” pocket. SCALES ON SHIP PAINFUL ITCHING Scratching Caused Sores. Hair Came Out in Large Quantities. Used CuticuraSoap and Ointment. Scalp Sound and Well. Muskogee, Okla.—"For more than a year I was afflicted with scalp disease. There were large white flakes or scales which caused the painful itching and my scratching would bring blood and cause sores. My hair came out, in large quantities and what remained was thin, dry and lifeless. My temples were completely bare. During this time I tried everything that, I thought would help me but nothing seemed to do any good. A friend advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent and got a sample of each which I tried as directed, and I truly say that the first application did me good. I afterwards purchased a full-sized cake ot Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint ment. I bathed with Cuticura Soap and applied Cuticura Ointment. At the end of about four weeks my scalp was sound and well and my hair bad thickened up and grown wonderfully in such a short time. I am proud to say that 1 am entirely cured of my scalp troubles and my bare temples have a full growth of hair again.” (Signed) Mrs. D. W. McClellan. Dec. 16. 1911. For red. rough, chapped and bleeding hands, itching, bujaffng palms, and painful finger-ends with shapeless nails, a one-night Cuticura treatment works wonders. Soak hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura Soap. Dry. anoint, with Cuticura Ointment, and wear soft bandages or old, loose gloves during the night. Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston.” Tender-faced men should use Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free. 3