Newspaper Page Text
4 A
LOSES HER BET
WITH DlokaTEß
10 FAT FRIEND
o .
On Wager, Woman Weighing 130
Tries to Hoist 300-Pound
Neighbor by Pulley.
But the Noise Is Only the Stout
Lady Crashing to the Floor.
Ankle Broken.
NEW YORK, July 18.—As the re
sult of a small wager vesterday aft
ernoon, Mrs. Elizabeth Weir, 42 years
old, of No. 12 Vine street, Brooklyn,
who tips the scales at 300 pounds, is
in the Long Island College Hospital
suffering from compound fracture of
the ankle and probable internal inju
ries |
From what the police of the Poplar
street station could learn, Mrs, Welir
and Mrs. Mary Ilynn, 30 vears old, of
No. 5 Vine street, had a discussion
over thelr relative strength. (Mrs.
Flynn weighs 130 pounds) They de
cided to hoist each other in turns up
a rope attached to a pulley.
Mrs. Flynn and Mrs. Weir entered
a stable near their homes, formerly
oocupled by the police of the old jow
er Fulton street station as a garage
for thelr auto patrol wagon. Mrs.
Welr was the first and last of the
disputants to be holsted. She had
3isen ten feet above the ground when
Mrs. Fiynn lost her grip.
When Patrolman Conway, of the
Poplar street station, entered tha
gtation in response to what he
thought was a full-sized riot, he
found Mrs. Weir in a heap on the
floor and Mrs. Flynn bewsailing the
kour that ahe aver made a bet. Mrs,
Flynn accompanied her injured com
panion to the hosplital and promised
to visit her every blessed day.
.
Savannah Pythians
In Prize Competition
TERRE HAUTE, IND, Juy 18—
The *“army of the lily,” as the uni
form rank of the Knights of Pythlas
is known, was in camp to-day 4,000
strong in 1,000 tents ready for next
week's encampment. The tented city
lies along Wabash avenue at the east
ern limits of the town, wheh s the
smallest that ever had the biennial
encampment; but Major General Ar
thur J. Stobbart says in all his ex
perience in the uniform rank he never
saw hetter arrangements, The camp
will be informally opened Sunday
with a review of the First Regiment
of the Indiana Brigade.
The military ball, open ony to Sir
Knights, in uniform, wliil be held
Thursday night, occupying 600 feet
of Ohio street. The entries for class
A drill prizes, $l,OOO, $750 and $5OO,
are as follows
Linton Company No. 97 Linton,
Ind.; Evergreen Company No, 27,
Hopkinsville, Kyv.; New Albany Com
pany No. 26, New Albany, Ind.; Geor
gia Company No. 1, Savannah, Ga.;
Washington Company No. 1, Wash
ington, D. '.; Yellow Cross Company
No. 8, Alllance, Ohlo; Island City
Company Nec. 17, KEaton Rapids,
Mich.; Pittsburg Company No. 38,
Pittsburg, Kas.; Clinton Company No
105, Cinton, Ind.; Phillips Company
No; 24, Hamlilton, Ohlo
. .
Police Captain Lends
. r .
Girl Bather $5 Fine
: S |
NEW YORK, July 18.--Miss Rosa |
Ressler Stainer, 19, of No, 50 I‘o'vnn»!
bia street, Manhuttan, who was ar [
rested on Thursday by Mounted Po |
llceman Herting for walking !hrn.x:;hi
the Coney Island thoroughfares wear. |
ing only her hathing suit, was so fa
vored a prisoner in the Coney Island
police court vesterday morning that
Captain McAvoyv lent her brother $5
to pay the fine that Magistrate Mc-.
Guire imposed
Miss Stainer was the first \\\-mun‘
in years to be so punished. It de
veloped that she was taking instruge
tion at an ethical culture schoo! in
Manhattan
.
Two Dead, 1 Hurt in
Tennessee Wrecks
NASHVILLE, July 18.—~Two wrecks
on the Tennessee Central Rallreoad to
day resulted in the ss of two !ves
and injuries to three persons
One of the wrecks occurred at Kil
yer P where the engine turned
Wer Clyde Kirkpatrick, a flagman,
was scalded to death; A. 8 Robinson, |
fireman, also scalded and may die;
and W. M Lusk, the engineer, sus
tained internal injurles
The other wreck occurred at Dadyv's
‘resk, Tenn The engine and thiee
box cars overturned, Killing R. A
West of Nashville . S. Bowers, the
fireman, was scalded
‘H 'for Animal
eaven Ilor Animais,
'
Is Kansas' Latest
KANSAS CITY, MO., July 18.—A rest.
ing piace for dogs, horses and cats when
the economic pressure of the world be
comes too great for them, has been
cpened by the Wyandotte County Hu
mane Society in Kansas City, Kan
Homeless and mistreated animals will
be received and homes will be found for
An hour each day will be de
virterd by an officer of the soclety to
teaching childdren kindness to animals
The kenneis for the dogs, ‘‘runs’” for the
its and stalls for the horses were buiit
by the Boy Scouts of the oty
TRIPOD PAINT CO.
87 and 38 North Pryor Street.
Manufacturers.
Wholesaie and Retall
Paints, Stains,
Varnishes, Etc.
Bel!l Phone 4740, Atlanta 400
Mr_s. nr W_'_hitnne‘y Helps ljair
Lends .Beaut-if‘ul New NfiounQin
To Be Only Marble On Grounds
Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney’s fonntain, seulptured by herself
and lent to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
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@ 2232 b PANATIA=I2AL IND EXFORITION 10
New York Society Woman’s Splendid Work to
Girace California Building Patio.
NEW YORK, July 18-—The volun
tary contribution of a sculptured
fountain has been made to the Pana
ma-Pacific International Exposition
by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, the
New York social leader who turned
sculptress,
The fountain, which wil rank with
the most beautiful of the artistic
works that decorate the buildings and
courts of the exposition, is also to
be the only bit of marble to be
placed on the grounds at San Fran
claco,
All of the other sculptures are in
the imitation travertine marble,
which obtains throughout the con
struction of the exposition.
Mrs. Whitney's fountain is com
posed of three upright nude figures
Debs Catches Train
By Using Aeroplane
SANDUSKY. July 18.~-When late this
evening, he concluded an address at
Cedar Yoint, where 1,000 Northern Ohlo
Socialists assembled for a rally to-day,
Fugene V. Debs, sevaral times a candi
date for President of the United States,
had 11 minutes in which to catch a train
for his home at Terre Haute, Ind
Nearly four mlles of water and a mile
of land laid between him and the rail
wav station, Accepting an invitation
axtended by aviator Toby Jannus, who
had just pulled ashore after a flight
trom Put-in-Bay, Debs got into Jan
nus' aeroplane, and five minutes later
was in Sandusky
An automobile conveved him to the
railroad station. |
Candidates to Bar
Treating inC i 1
MARYVILLE, CAL, July 18.—The fa- |
mous election cigar and the stimulating
campalgn drinks are a matter of his
tory in Sutter County as at a joint
meating of the Sutter County and Dem
ocratic and Republican Central Commit.
tees the candidates were urged to re
frain from treating their constituents
As & result, a campaign which in the
past years cost a candidate anvwhere
from $l.OOO to $2,000 wil be made for
less than $lOO
WANT THE DEPOT SOLD.
FORT WORTH, July 18§.—Two add
tional suits were flled to-day against
the receivers of the Wabarh Railroad
by firms which furnished material or
did work on the new Wabash depot
in this city Tha complaints ask for
an order of siale to be granted the
plaintiffs, and this has led to an in
teresting question 1f the plaintiffs
are given judgment, will the depot be
sold? A majority of the firms that
did work on the depot or who fur
nished material for it have not vet re
ceived payvment
T —————————————
SUMMER RESORTS.
WHITE PATH HOTEL, WHITE
PATH, GA.
IN Blue Rilge Mountains; pure, cold
springs and mineral waters, charming
sceriery, country fare. rates, §7.00 t¢
$10.50 par week. FPostal brings descrip
tion. T. H. Tabor, Proprietor
BONTA-NARRAGANSETT
BROADWAY AT 94TH STREET
NEW YORK
Makes its appeal to those seek
ing comfort and entertainment at
moderate cost. The only hotel in
the metropolis operated sucoess
fully without a ber. .
The Sunday evening conoerts,
with sacred music and speeches on
current topics by the guests, in
augurated June 28, have reosived
A. K. BONTA
T ARST SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1914 °
supporting an ornate bowl-—the pool
of the fountain.
The plece is to be placed in the
patio of the California building,
where it will have a most advanta
geous setting, the patio being sur
rounded with the high cypress hedges
that once were a feature of the gar
deng of Harbor View.
The sculpture has been on exhibi
tion in Knoedler's gallery here, where
it attracted the attention of many
sculptors of note, among them Karl
Eitter, chief of scuipture for the ex
position
l.earning that the California bulld
ing was to be the center of women's
activities during the exposition, Mrs.
Whitney offered, through Mr. Bitter,
to lend the fountain to the exposition.
Grandfather, Lately |
.
.
Wed, Seeks Divorce
TOLEDOQO, July 18--Dr. Franklin
Sickles, 72, one of the best-known
vhysicians in Toledo, filed suit in
Common Pleas Court for divorce. The
aged physician in his bill of com
plaint charges since his marriage last
September his wife has constantly
found fauit with him, often threaten
ng him with bedlly harm.
The elimax was reached, he avers,
when his wife had him arrested on
the charge of assault and battery
Dr. Sickles had been a widower of
many vears when he married last
September in Monroe, Mich. He has
1 number of grandchildren
ForE Famili
"y
or Bach 8 Families
- TOPER A KANS.» July 18--There
I\\!\! be a motor car for every family in
this State by June 1, 1918, if Kansans
continne to buy automobhiles at the rate
they beught them last year according
to Charles H. Sessions, Secretary of
State
In a raport just {ssued he shows that
there are now 39 888 cars and 7.430 mo
toreveles carrying State licenses {n
Kansas
“This means approximately one car to
every eight families,” Mr. Sessions said
A veur ago there was one far every
ten familtes At the present rate of
buyving, in 1318 there will be an average
of one motor car to every family.”
SUMMER RESORTS.
AA A A A AR A AAA A A A
MUHRIS HDTEL Birmingham, Ala,
Fireproof. Euro
gean plan l.ocated irn the heart of the
usiness section. Headquarters for com
mercial travelers Large well-lighted
sample rooms: hot and cold water in
all rooms. When in Birmingham, make
the Morris your home
L. W. & G. W, SCOVILLE, Pmßfletorl.
Formertly of the Old and New Kimball,
Atlanta Also owners angd preprietors
of the Wigwam, Indian Springs
columne of favorable mention In
| The New York Times, Herald. Sun,
: Mail, etec.
Seventy per cent of the rooms
overiaok the Hudson River, and
the restaurant, ssating four hun
| dred (400) persons, is a source of
| never-ending interest to persons
| from out of town. Write for res
lervations and illustrated booklet.
|
1
{
| e
Strange Find in a Louisiana Town
Has a Possible Connection
With Missing Women,
!
| Continued From Page 1.
{ S
| the town, and Chief Beavers wired for
| further information.
! Post Card Investigated.
A letter from George Baker, a resli
|dent of the Louisiana city, also re
lated the finding of the hand. The
fact that Eloise in her death letter
said that she had got rid of Beatrice
in New Orleans gave this discovery
its significance.
| A post card recelved by Willlam F
Upshaw, assistant manager of the
Aetna Life Insurance Company. also
furnished a matter for investigation,
The card was from San Antonio and
was signed by “Dr. H. W. German,”
P. O. Box 424, and inquired of Mr.
Upshaw as to his present address
Mr. Upshaw told The Sunday Ameri
can that he did not know German and
that he did not even know anyone in
San Antonio. However, he was well
acquainted with Beatrice Nelms and
she had two policies in his com
pany, which she had permitted to
lapse.
Inquiry was made in San Antonlo
to determine if there is a man there
of that name or i{f someone, possibly
one of the sisters, ig seeking to learn
something of the imsurance policies.
Wired Woman to Come.
Eloise, The American learned Sat
urday, implored the instant aid of the
mysterious ‘“Margaret Mims,” then
going under the name of Mrs. Mary
Hardman, ony a few days before she
went on the trip that swallowed both
her and her sister Beatrice.
Mrs. J. W. Nelms, mother of the
missing sisters, Saturday showed the
telegram calling for the immediate
presence of the Mims woman. It
read:
Symrna, Ga., May 28,
Mrs. Mary Hardman, Birming
ham, Aa., Care General Of
flces:
Come at once. Trouble Take
first train. YOUR NIECE.
J. L. Bennett, who was supposed to
have made application for telegraph
money order to Innes In benalf of
Mrs. Dennis, Saturday was climi
nated from the mystery by Detective
W. K. Harper. Harper found a man
who had accompanied Mrs. Dennis to
the telegraph offices and who saw her
write the name of Bennett instead of
her own name on the application for
the money order.
Planned India Trip.
Dispatches Saturday to The Sun
day American revealed that Eloise, as
long ago as 1912, when she was a resi
dent of Salt Lake, City, Utah, by the
supposed arrangement of Victor In
nes, was planning the trip to India
which now appears to figure so large
lv in the mystery of the missing
Nelms sisters. .
J. D. Skeen, a lawyer in Salt Lake
City and the man who procured
rooms for Mrs. Dennis in Salt Lake
at the request of Innes, is the infor
mant of The American. He also is
authorlty for the statement that Mrs
Dennis was a devotee of the Hindu
religion and a firm believer In rein
carnation, subjects to which Innes is
said to have given a great deal of at
téntion,
‘Pistols'Call Out
Glass ‘Pistols’Call Out
Autos Full of Police
utos Full of Police
— |
NEW YORK, July 18.—" A highway- 1
man with two pistols at Jayne ave
nue has held up twenty women. Hur- 1
Iy 1
An excited woman telephoned this
to the Patchogue (L. 1) police station
ast evening. The pollce and con
stables tumbled into the street and
commandeered automobiles. Consta
ble Howard B. Rowland got the best
car and was first to arrive at Jayne
avenue.
“Throw the guns down!” velled
Rowland, drawing his revolver.
Robert Bishop, Yaphank, L
grinned and threw down two glass
pistols filled with red candies,
Then Rowland guffawed at Deputy
Sheriff Frank Morton and Justice of
the Peace Greean when they made the
same discovery.
LEAD IN PRIZE-WINNING.
BAYFIELD, WIS, July 18—A. H. Wil.
kinson. of the Wisconsin Board of Agri
culture, has been investigating the per
santage of State falr premiums won by
Wisconsin peopls in this and other
States He finds that in 1813, at the
Wisconsin Fair, the exhibitors from the
home State took $35,000 in premiums,
against $1.500 by the exhibitors from
lall other States. ‘
Chd A high, cool, healthful resort
ik W in the heart of the Cumberland
< . i Mountains of East Tennessee,
S\ . :m unexcelled climate.
4 ~ | Modern hotel—one thousand acre
-~ N 7 ~"§~ ~ark and grounds—eighteen hole golf
AS f./ ~3J:ourse—saddle horses—fine five-piece
¥ = Rl . orchestra for concerts and dancing
"/ /\ Z L and fhat most famous of all American
% N )) ' Mineral Waters,
L ¢y TATE SPRING NATURAL
VB ¢4 MINERAL WATER
FOLY ?é always a belp, nearly always a cure in indiges-
A./ - tion, nervousneas and all 'ailments attributable
NN . to improper functions of the bowels, liver and
kidneys.
Rev. Dr. E. B. Hoes, Bishop Methodist Church, Naghville, Tenn., seyn
“It gives me the groatest pleasure to say that | regard Tete Spring water
88 the best remedy for all disorders of the stomach, bowels, liver, and kid
neys of which I have knowiedge.”
Enjoy the healthful water at the spring or have it shipped to
your home. For sale by all druggists, in sterilized bottles, filled
and sealed at the spring.
Rates $l5 to 842 per week, according to location and num.-
ber of persons oecnpfm room. Write for booklet: j
TATE SPRING HOTEL
ON THE LINE OF THE SOUTHERN RAILWAY |
S. B. ALLEN, MANAGING DIRECTOR |
TATE SPRING, TENNESSEE 1
Adtignto Minare | IWaten. O . Dhatwibntase. Bete Wiotnm
1
Ettor and Others of 1. W. W, Are
in Textile District Organiz
ing the Operatives.
SPARTANBURG, 8. C., July 18—
Cotton manufacturers here expressed
deep concern to-day over the coming
into South Carolina of organizers of
the Industrial Workers of the World.
Their advent has resulted in a strike
'AI Monaghan Mill at Greenville, and
it is feared there may be other strikes.
Strikes in Southern cotton mills
have been rare heretofore because the
workers were not unionized. There
never has bheen a general strike of
textile workers in the South.
Joseph J. Ettor, one of the leaders
of the I. W, W. movement, has come
to South Carolina from New England
to survey the situation. He deliv
ered an address to the strikers at
Monaghan Mill Thursday and they
seemed to be impressed by him:
Refuses to Negotiate,
Lewis W. Parker, head of the Par
ker Cotton Mills Company, a $12,-
000,000 « corporation, of which the
Monaghan Mill is a unit, held a con
ference with a committee of the strik
ers. They came to him as represen
tatives of the Industrial Workers of
the World. Mr. Parker tod them un
.quivocally that he would have no
dealings of any kind with that or
ganization
Mr. Parker formerly was president
of the American Cotton Manufactur
ers’ Association,
It is feared that if the cotton mill
workers of South Carolina should be
organized into a strong union and
they should at any time engage in a
general strike, it would be marked by
great vielence.
Workers Are Mountaineers,
There are 60,000 cotton mill workers
in the State, many of whom have been
recruited from the remote mountain
districts of Tennessee and North
Carolina. They are rough, untutored
men, easily swayved by demagogues,
and dangerous when aroused.
The textile indusiry has only been
firmly established in South Carolina
twenty-flve years and has only been
one of the leading industries of the
State for about fifteen years.
Spartanburg is the textile center,
not only of South Carolina, but of the
entire South. There are thirty mills
in this county, employing approxi
mately 10,000 hands. No other county
in the South has so many spindles as
Spartanburg County, and the number
is exceeded in only four New Eng
land counties.
If there should be extensive labor
trouble, therefore, this city would be
the storm center.
. .
Blind Judge Aids
A Blind Prisoner
CINCINNATI, July 18.—Blind
thking pity on the blind was in evi
dence in the Municipal Court when
Judge Bell was called upen to judge
the case of Fred Meyers, accused of
professional begging. Both Judge
and prisoner were totally blind, but
this was not brought out to either un
til Meyers said that he was blind and
had but two cents and was trying to
beg enough to get te Richmond, Ind,
The Judge then informed the pris
oner that he, too, was blind, and with
the help of court officials, the men
shook hands. Judge Bell arranged
for the transportation of Meyers to
where he had relatives.
SUMMER RESORTS.
e T
Connelly Springs, N. C.
In Western North Carolina, right
on main line S. R. R., midway be
tween Salisbury and Asheville, N. C,,
mean elevation Fine mineral wa
ter. Good fare Modern conven
fences low rate May, June, Sep
tember and October, $§ to $8 Qar
week July and August $7 to 310
per week Lower by month, Write
{for booklet to
WILLIAM JEFF DAVIS,
Owner and Proprietor,
-
b-Year Battle Puts
All Tennessee Dry
‘Nuisance’ Law Finally Effects What
Previous Prohibition Statutes Nev
er Could Accomplish,
NASHVILLE, July 18.—It took five
yvears almost to the day to enforce
State-wide prohbition in Tennessee.
The general prohibition law that was
to have been effective in July of
1909 did not finally have the effect
of closing the saloons of the State
until July of this year, and only af
ter a bitter fight.
In the cities the law of 1902
was ignored as to the sale and the
question became more and more a
political issue, and twice the fusion
Legislators filibustered and left the
State in their effort to maintain the
prohibition law when there was any
real or imagined fear that it would
be tampered with, At the last ses
sion of ‘the General Assembly, bills
were urged by Governor Hooper for
more cerain prohibition and were
called, on account of their drastle
features, the “Hooper force bills.”
The law closing saloons by de
claring them a nuyisance was passed
and became effective March 1. This
law has just run the gantlet of the
courts and having been passed on
favorably by the Supreme Court, it
is now invoked to wipe out the last
of the saloons in Tennessee
After closing nearly seventy liquor
shops in Nashville in one day and
permanently enjoining the operators
from reopening it is not thought that
there remains a single open saloon in
all Tennessee, and thus the dream of
the members of the W. C. T. U, whe
five years ago made the State Capitol
ring with “Tennessee is Going Dry,”
is at last realized. g
For the past month—the month of brides—we have been busy furnishing
homes for the Newlyweds.
Young married folks have learned that this is truly their store.
A store handling only dependable Furniture, Rugs, Curtains, Draperies
and complete house furnishings—all sold at the lowest prices consistent
with a safe business policy and sold on terms to suit the convenience of each
customer.
We extend vou a cordial invitation to become one of our pleased cus
tomers—and remember
.
Your Own Terms Will Do
BRASS BED (Like Cut)
AT 38",
e =TT 11
9‘--"'[ R !
A IWM lfi[fl["‘ m.i.s'r,.@fi;wfl .
kl 4 |J fi fij‘!'!.—: pEnaißs
Sninor Polished
$7 50 Felt Mattress
’ | ,*3“& Welght
, 4 o 50 Lbs.
Bulit /0 0 ‘;,._-: i
Hand ‘Zé ,- ;
== Ve
so.ooValue . . . . $7.50
DUO-FOLD $
DAVENPORT . 38.50
T
e Y /Y,
R e
. NS
. Mahogany;)?g_l‘(l.mla?lrly English E’é’:"-
Buffei ] Furnished
vy @= = E——t Golden Oak
ension B e SN olden
Table gm—mm—emg (R <HTY y 3&3 Early
Serving i‘{ N‘\\F’%fi English
Table and 6 Wel r——eze == A =t or
U;h;l:lzred g ‘ ’1“ j fl'm’!mfm Fumed Oak
Chairs e RESSSS I 1
$B2 Ul | g <A $B2
Dining Room Suits in all finishes $69.00 up
YOUR OWN TERMS WILL DO :
Mail s . . Pay Us
Orders » a Visit—
w American Fur mshmg bO, %
Prompt Well
Attention 62 PEACHTREE 61 N. BROAD Spent
PHUF[SSUH;HH!
Introduced by Letter, He Courted
Sweetheart of 74 12 Months,
Met First at Ceremony.
DENVER, COLO., July 18.—Fred
erick J. Stanton, 88, has just married
here Mrs. Eliza Johnson, 74. They
had never seen each other until the
day of the ceremony. They carried
on a courtship for twelve months by
mall. They were introduced to each
other by letter, and never even ex
cnanged photographs.
Stanton has been a constant resi
dent of this city for 54 years. He isa
sprofessor of chemistry in the Denver
School of Mines and holds land and
real estate throughout Colorado and
Wyoming. He has been prominent in
politics, and is actively engaged in
the lodge work of the Independent
Order of Odd Fellows.
His 74-year-old bride was a resi
dent of Ames, lowa,
A year ago Professor Stanton was
corresponding with Mrs. Lucile Tay
lor, a widow living in Casper, Wyo.
It was at her suggestion and through
an introduction by letter that ne
started to write to his present wife
Soon, however, his letters began to
go more frequently to lowa than to
Wyoming. His letters to Jowa in
creased in volume and length, and he
received as many as he sent.
Then the professor proposed mar
riage to the “Widow of Ames.” She
answered with a desirable monosyl
lable, and agreed to come to Denver
for the marriage.
MEDICINE g
CABINET 19C =
2 ”,_ o Two
A
v i
1] RO | Mirror
1 fa
,fi,/ l@&‘*fh’? a Door
T o
et R
e TR R 75c
Monday Only
Buy Your
Refrigerator 1 Per Week
Here Monday
Solid t! ;!f:f’:" . : 12; il l:‘f/;
o SRR 8
caes (IRI U
Lk
Perfect [N ;:. l |
Insulation Y @—’\\.
- M ok
Priced $7.50 to $45
iogiani
Came in White Blisters, Hard and
~Scaly, All of Hair Came Out,
Used Cuticura Soap and Cuti
cura Ointment, Head Well.!
e M
Carthage, Texas.—''My little girl had
some kind of breaking out on her head that
came in white blisters and when the blisters
< burst they formed something
| -,@ like scales. If I washed her
R ! head and combed the scales
et off they would come again
Lo o poa @\ in just a few days. The
4, ’; I‘\\\\" 3 trouble looked something
i iut ] like dandruff but was hard
and scaly and when the
N, ' scales would come off all of
R&ws;¢flv the hair came also and
AL would leave the head raw.
‘1 had tried salves which
7 ; only softened the scales so
11 I decided to use Cuticura
Soap and Ofintment. I washed her head
with warm water and Cuticura Soap and
then applied the Cuticura Ointment and
let it remain over night. I did not do this
butiabout four times before her head was
perfectly cured. I used only one box of
Cuticura Ointment and one bar of Cuticura
Soap and her head was well.” (Signed)
Mrs. Luella Biggs, Jan. 28, 1914.
Samples Free by Mall
For face and hands Cuticura Soap and
Ointment are world favorites because so
effective in restoring the natural purity and
beauty of the skin, scalp, hair and hands
when marred by unsightly conditions. Al
though Cuticura Bcap (25c.) and Cuticura
Ointment 1(50c.) are sold everywhere, a
sample of each with 32-p. Skin Book will
be sent free upon request. Address poste
card: ‘' Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."