L'"'.r. ilfc-Si MAM. T' ; ''1 ' " L- - L ' "'- -, . F : - , ' . . 4 ' . 1 . We ark CELEBRATING H ' ji; -V-?, ' - . 1 X . ' i -II A t .'- ' I ft ' - -, - - - ( t : ; i , , ft i . i 1 . i . 1 i 1 1 i . 'u 1 r - 1 ' . 1 ' 1 i -r. , i1! i ii ii i ir mi i i ' r t : a . aw in bbk a aaar i . bt ittruii iiij.iuurn ill. i nfn-mm t i i I ha -a-r a an w arelVe a Nation of Homicides?' 1 Bel-eyes the Strennous. DriTlngi Nervc- (. I, ; I - f:. -- ' f .- '.- DlHerderinff IJf That We pjead U .) s. - the Dominant Cause But, mjs Mr. f niafcna!i; 1I Believe ; it Is a'; Matter or jptosrahy, of or tp Iie.Exat-t, of Meteorology To the Editor: 1 Because otir laws against - non-kilng" are bo ,lacly en forced I the common explanation. But experience?. and history does not seem iw luiuuninit rtraauii. jrtct-uru' ing to the best-Information that we havfs, the sharp sbraeon inn laufi of the past against crime did not seem to I i of Homicides?'! 11 MRinttfriiii Ullli UUIU1UII1LL I1IIUIILIIU there? - k i . ; M' 1. --'f. r.-& SLargelyi Climate, - . lessen It. .- Tw1 centuries f ago i the Y English Jaw punished -with death more I " than one hundred and fifty olTensesi a$S- If my memory serves, fallows Vi freea stood thlefc In the j la&dj and k ; there' were : brasdlnga an ..wllpplngi without numbec. (pleasure parties of IT Tit tins merely goes exhaustible mine; Tfie Piano anyone WMmmmm I course, no one wants to plaf all the avail able music! No single individual WoSld'be j interested in every composition. Musical tastes are to varied, even in the differenlt members of the sane househld. Th!e poiniis,lthat with this tremendous repertoire-classic, popular, oper ; atict lahce,V sacred-yry conceivable taste, ; .'every changing anboa even, caii be amply satisfied through' the Angelas Piano. - I The fascinating (act it of this music yoanelf, I exactly the way you feel This is;made possible by the wonderful Phrasing Lever, the Melodly Buttqns, the Melodant, the Diaphragm Pneuiriatics; Tjee vital features nTee2f elusive with the Agelus and to be hadl in no other instruments. ;H-Tli remarkahli, new "Artistyle" Music-Rolls make it possible; to repder, at firsi, sight, any music with all those pelicate shjidings-of time and tonelhat go to make .truly artistic playirlg 1 f -r--f -. -fe -. , v-h :- - i - ; pfou can now Ivcv this wonderful instrument on yery ' ?y terms or We will make lyoa liberal allowance on . yof pretent pisno and take it in exchange... But whether . Or not you are ready to purchase you should make it ipointtohesr this inatrument at vodr firat onrurtnniMr. , 1 jComt In todaytaad play, furnish music for the occasion and nothing be rltje ladies andgentlemen! used to be made up on flogging days to go to Bridewell to see the j women prisoners wh)pped. Nevertheless,' to repeat, crime was mores. rampant then than nw;v-;:i'-.'-"..r $ ,. .".. t' . !'.! Therefore, we shall have f to seek some other cause to account largely, if hot mainly, for the vastly greater number of homicides in this country than in Europe.- The strenuous, driv ing; nerve-disordering (livs tljiat wjs lead is given as another (cause. This Is, I believe, Uie , dominant cause. But whenever Owr excessive strenuost ItyJ our excitability asi compared with thf derirzens of the Old World A liv ing is easier to make and less precari ous "here, than there. A man ttan earn more with , less strain! on mind and body here 'than he can; there. Then why so much' greater hurry and worry; here? ,; .. 1 am fully convinced "that It is lamely a ; matters of geography of cli mate, or to be exacJ.iof meteorology. I Am 'aware that what I shall say sounds a little cranky now. but sounds much less so than it would haVel-sounded a few years ago. s and much more so, I venture, than It will a few .years hense, for recent discov eries in science in biology. In tele pathy. In radio-activity and kindred occult things (as hitherto regarded), will consign our; present conception of nuniberless things to the Junk heap assurely as the -Coperican theory of the universe consigned to limbo the ol4 Ptolemaic theory, land with proba bly an Immeasurably greater influence ort human life and human affairs. But to return to the question on hand: There Is one great and unique feature In North American. meteorolo gyj which,! although $Uhas never, as fair as I have seen, been much discuss ed, must have, Is In fact .already ex ertlnfjf a tremendous) effect upon, the life of this section and every soul within lu border, an -ffect that must If sou should filaj ten, different ' ttiecex jrtpy dafy it would take Jive years to, run through the composition? aU , reajy available for : The ANGELUS PIANO. In the meantime, thousands of new pieces would have been added from year to year. So thdtf practically, you couia never reach the to show the in of pleasure in can Play Artistically that you canjlay any whenever you wish, in it ought to be played. V it yourself. No obligation. our. M(MMf WIGHT our FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY not only color hut shape our destinies for. ages to coma.. That feature of meteorology so momentous in - my opinion, is the rythmic changes in temperature which coming so near can tell vmther now eastwarn or more south eastward, across the con tinent at ' Intervals of , about every three -days' and a half. The old weath- er prophets who predicted the recur-i rence ofcertaln -kinds of weather,? especially j of rain, every seven days. were often right owing to the fact that weather revolution . does frequently restore similar metereorological con ditions at each alternate turn. That Is -approximately every seven - days.! Hbwever,jthe weather bureau denies that these recurrences are near enough identical, as a rule, to found exact weather prophecies upon. But that is all by the way. The mysterl-' ous flow of rythmic waves f alternat ing heat and cold or of. warmth ana coolness, and of dryness and dampness across pur continent is nJ fact wel known to and attested by ne weather bureau people,- .r . , This weather,, as -1 . have stated. does not flow In over the Pacific or oyer the Canadian border from pojar regions, but. as a rule, literally drops down out of the blue up among the northern; reaches of the Rocky Mount tains and following with minor devla tions, its! regular channel, spreads eastward and southward. .No other continent In the world has at present any such meteorological pulsations, though itlls possible that some, if pot all. of them did have In the more or less remote past. 1 I Now! the- effect of temperature changes and of the usually attending lightness and heaviness of the atmos phere on human spirits and, , human temper and through them en human life in general is well known, tnougn the proper deductions seem never to have heeii drawn.' The sharper and more frequent these changes the more pronounced the effect on the people subject to them. V ' I Even the limited attention which hat ben paid to the effect of-elimate upon temperament shows that In a climate like ours we should expert to find more or less rapidly developed a nervous, highly energized people; : a people all of whose faculties were stimulated to the, fulU a people who would burn r the - candle; at both ends and who iwere Impetuous and' excita ble withal., The Indian who preceded the. white man here was in large meas lire thus constituted as compared wun the more Inert i-aces to th north and the south of him. The American peo ple have certainly developed that temperament. The discovery of j resemblance In: physiognomy, facial appearance, between r the typical American and. the typical Indian Is doubtless "fanciful. . Climate, environ, ment rapidly modifies . changes temperament, but only the un- hurrying hand of Time ,can recast the featres. No one who ever so casually studied the vast living ethnological exhibit of the St. 1ku1s Exposition could fall to see in our In dian, the Eskimo, the Filipino and the Japanese a common Asiatic origin: a klndshlp so profond that not the an tipodal separation of centuries, per haps mlllenlums had been able to eradicate from cheek, from hair. fttm ovo frnm form, or even from volce or complexion. Perchance in tha4 prohenesa of the later American to, draw and smite his enemy we might find a less fanciful resemblance to the earlier one th 4ndlan. . ' However, it Is not, my aim to draw my parallel out Into any such fine spun lines as that. I seek only to call attention, to what, seems to be mani fest that roughly speaking climate molds temperament and that the qualities, good and bad, which have so quickly differentiated us from our Old World forbears and their home-staying progeny are apparently the logical outcome of our environment in which our unique meteorology Is probably the dormant factor. - Of course. I am not suggesting that any legal, social and moral pressure against homleldes should be relaxed. I seek1 simply to elucidate what strike me as .broad, underlying causes of this :ouf national sin, the full appre hension of which may enable us In some measure, at least, to counteract. If my surmises are rights this "Dementia Americana" will frievlta blytend to intensify, not necessarily always in the same line of non-kllllng. but in outbursts of temper, spleen, ex citability, Impetuosity. Some of these outbursts may be even mere deplor able than the homicidal one in quw tion.: I;yticb!ns; whlte-cappings, Iran aled financiering, reckless speculations, defalcations, grafting, etc., are but dif ferent guises of .the same mania.' But we' also are many. of the qualities on which we as a people do most plume .qurvAives, -.our litrlc energy,; our Inrl eenuity. our unventureness which is fast making -nature once ; the. master of man, his slave: our tremedous ad vance along all lines of action and Of thought, except the prime one Of hap piness, lacking which all the rest must in the eye Of true wisdqrri appedr but as an orgy. Be IhaKaa It ma', all these traits,: good ana bad, which o sharply distinguish us from the! old world peoples, are but manifestations )t that restless spirit, a spirit too energetic, too eager, too impetuous to abide the old pace of the world, but most needs.' Quicken, hurry It. wheth er it be along the lines of action deem ed legitimate or whether law and order have to be brushed aside, or trampled down. - 'M. ' -. : I t fc . .Perchance less fanciful, perchance more so, than f the .Indian analogy Is the suggestion that Texas. Tennessee, Kentucky, the regions where .finger and trigger are reputed to be closest companions are also the regions sub- FIFTY- YEARS GRAND) BOMB A Y Opening ': :.. - - ; 1 HOURS 5 TO 10 Pj ject'to.the extremes of these frequent meteorological influences, j : I. would not be understood to say that the other ..continents besides America are not subject to sharp and sudden weather changes.! What ;I mean is that they are not So frequent or rather periodic: that no great al ternating changes of thermometfcf and baronieter flow rythmically in vast weather- waves across them. That is not now. verv llkelv thev once did. and jtheir cessation may have changed tno history anajine qestiny 01 tnose continents. Asia may have been once subject to them in a- degree propor tioned to heTgreat area, i Perchance It: was. their energizing intensity tha manifested itself in ithat i mysterious process of evolution which developed and dlfferentuated not only the divers races of mankind, but also the divers species of animals and plants.' For It seems almost certafnl that all of them had their beginning the same region in in approximately southern - Asia, from whence they have radiated, the white race ever westward: the yellow or brown race ever ( 'eastward; the black and less energetic . race .being pushed off to the southward and un like the other coming to k stand-still. The Vast majority of: plants were scat tered abroad by wind, wave and the myriad hands of chance.i The . com paratively ; few useful to man . . were mostly 'carried by him in his migra tions. iAH but a -few some half a dozen, perhaps came. to us by way of the east, through.,Europe. This way came , all of the grains but one corn, which the lndlansrought Ithe other way and which became extinct in its original home. (Al this, of course, supposing my theory of jits origin to be true.) By way of the east came civilization and , nearly I ' all of. the things on which it is founded. But the comer by way, of the west, the Indian, with vast ocean to cross at hap-hazard, had necessarily to travel in light rnarchlng brder. There fore he brought with; him only 1 the three essentials f . human existence, for a Gusinoss inen yoa want some thing that will be remuner ative and will brinrj qaicR returns.- ' You cannot by studying compass this one of the learned professions. Nor, if youJacli experience, can you fill a position requiring expert Knowledge. You can compass it by so- liciting life insurance for THE Life Assurance OF THEUNITED STATES ':'? ,:-'---;,-.fi'-.'f:'-W':--! 1 20 Broadway, New YorK. Whose reputation for strength, liberality, and promptness is world-wide. If this interssts you, send for our boolilet entitled "'. f: -V,'7r.1-4' -r---'- -v "A Permanently Profitable v Profession.! Address. : J. D. BOUSHALL, General Agent Tucller Dldg., Raleigh, N. Are You Looltins Opening v . - . - - , Society and you are invited to attend. A leftjundqne to make the evening a pleasant one M oft corn, cojlton and tobacco- food, cloth ing and ji dope. -: .; J Such fan energizing metereoiogy probably also called into existence the great civilization of Babylon, Nineveh. Egypt and Carthage, to vanish when this mysterious 'energy was withheld or shifted to vother parts of the globe. Later Europe may have been favored (or cursed) with It. Thence may have come that strange urtrest which about the beginning of our era covered the whole continent and ' contiguous ? Asia With surging hordes that jostled and finally trampled into the dust the splendid but out-worn civilization of Iome. . " :. - - Even the smitherlng, the Inkling oi exact scientific knowledge which we have yet attained enables us dimly to comprehend some of the causes ' by means Of which these metereoloelcni changes and shirtings: came about. There aire almost surely others not yet even approached which may. be , even more potent. -v Thus the slowly recur ring changes In the path of th.trth' in" its swing across the sun bringing it many millions of miles nearer at nnm periods! than at others and the s'.ow (h:ftingf of the time of the -er in which the hemispheres are n.iret to and furthest from the sun have ieen proven to exerjt vast Influence on the climate: and metereoiogy of the re gions thus effected. Perhaps concur rent with them, perhaps not. thorn Seem to be still more subtle man;tli! changes all pregnant with Changs ;nd moomcation of conditions on th3 cl,ri we inhabit.' "- r " --. - ;;t - The above speculations '". will seem ess visionary If It is! rememhered that there are strong reasons to believe that at! life. aU energy is profoundly afTected'by electricity or that they are probably simply electricity itself, and that , the sun. U the ' great electric reservoir, exerts an influence on its Puppet the earth, not uniform or stable Jbut varying In, Intensity 1 and Shifting as to locality. It has Ion been a pet theory of mine that under what we apprehend as electricity mas querades divers, possibly Immesurable. forces,! which our slight and shallow advance in knowledge has not yet en abled jus to discern separately. Just as light has been found to be a blend of many jjcolors; .how many we do , not know,) but more than the seven that the human eye. In Its present develop ment cart vet distinguish. I -A , r.m .b ... . ': -I. yi inese suDiie iorces emoraced un- der are the general term electricity,1 there probably' some which control, or rather which are, human life, other Hiumai iuc; omere plant iue;some lMM.ITl : . . . . ... Hiiiriuus men ana nations to: stnie and. some to peace and so on. This mayt strike Some readers as gross materialism as the substitution of a mechanical for a spiritual con ception of life and -Its setting. But as I conceive it. It is such a sublimated materialism that I can not see where it In Suppleness, falls one whit short of thf conventional, conception. But mat is all by the way. j O. W. BLACKNAL.U KUtrell, ;N.' C. 'ELll LM.VIIGUANTS DOING W Atlantic Coast Line Officers Visit Helena Colony of C. T. Ilurgaw Yesterday.); - -y ". (Wilmington! Star Messrs. Henrv Walters. Michael Jen kins, Waldo Newcomer; and 1 T. M. Emerson, a party of Coast Line offi cials, who reached Jere late Thursday nignt rarter an Inspection trip over the system, went oh a special train yes terday morning to inspect1 the St He lent colony 4f the Carolina Trucking Development Company near Burgaw. They, were taken for a drive over the calonyy4ccompanled by ; Mr. i Hugh MacRae, Major Lucas and Mr. C, Van Leuven, of the Trucking Development Company, and had a splendid oppor tunity to Judge .ie people and agri cultural conditions. f 'I AH I these gentlemen expressed themselwB- as being much pleased with the North Italian people - and with jthe progress thev were making on the farms! All were particularly Impressed with the air of: permanency of the.colonv due to the energy with which the people are -working, to-establish their homes, j , The St. Helena colony Is one of the five colonies operated by the Carolina Trucking Development Cpmpany. In each of the colonies large numbers of desirable families are being1 established and tnese lamines -win nrove val- uable ..Tlie j assets to this section. ' . Rocky Mount Tobarco Market. j(Speclal to News and-Observer.) Rocky Mount, N. C, Dec. 5. Thej receipts for the -past week have been j very jgooa, ana mucn neavier tnan many expected. About 500.000 pounds have been sold at an average of around $10.50 per hundred. . The offerings consists 1 largely j ofn common, greenish types of leaf and a great many low grade lugs. Affair propor tion jtf;good tobacco have appeared, with now and; then, ari, occasional pile of good . wrappery Stock. Prices on the lower grades are easier than they have .been, but igood. ripe tobacco of 'good quality and texture sells well when It appears and the farmers, as a rule,, aresatisfied with prices ' ob tained. : 'sl- -'' ' - .Salesto date, 8.000.000 pounds, at an average of about $1 0.50 'for the cropy , isignty . per cent, or tne crop is sold Getting Friendly, Harry How1 Is your suit with' Miss Distant prospering? George Well, when I call daw her dog wags his tail. Puck. ea m. DCo at 1908 DA. ' POTEAT'S 1EP0I1T To Be Presented to Baptist State Convention : Three Hundred s and Sixty-Four Students Enrolled "The , South In tlie Bollding or the Nation Meet- lng of Literary Circle Other News Front ( Wake Forest ,CXHeir4The Clirtstmas Student. ' ;' Wake Forest.', N. C. Dec. 5. Presi dent Poteat is preparing the report of the college for $he Baptist State Convention, which meets in Wilson next week. It will show that 314 students are enrolled, compared kith 351 last year at this time.: There are 72 ministerial students, r B7 of whom are aided by the Board of Education... The Baptist Board of Education will meet here Monday to prepare the re port for the convention. Dr. Cullom is Corresponding secretary. I A visitor to the hill yesterday was a representative of a largepublishlng house, for "The south in the Building of the Nation." Dr. Chandler, of Rich mond. Is editor-ln-chlef. i The sec tion ot that work on North Carolina as a royal province was written by Dr. E. W. Fykes, of the chair ot political economy, ' . - ' J t There will be a meeting of theMit erary Circle Monday night, at which the chief subject will be Milton. In recognition of the 300th annlversarj of his birth. Tha chief Item of the meeting will be a paper .on Milton, by ur. S'-edd. of the chair of English. Messrs. D. E. B!and. of Teachey, and Carl Bell, of Wakefield, who I have been-in the college hospital for borne How Syracuse Took Her Out After Massage . . ! . : ' r.,:V- -ki-J --" f..; v'i ... ' . ; J . ;", J .' .. i.' 4-:" : . ' " 1 v ; Li ! .. - , . - - 1. - - and Faile 'Llade Mo Look SayS Cincinnati Lady Who Tried It - r - is smootner and uetter Than in y Wlia .Tried This Wonderful Poces8 for Tle Discoverer Offers to Give Particulars Free of Charge td AH Who Write ' i Her Within . Next Ten iDtn Ex ment Very Simple and Absolutely ; Ha used ! ithout the Know led : ' :t:V: Friend; Ever since woman s beauty held sway over man and brought her power, influence and wealth, I she has sought a - way to! stay the ' process of old age and" banish deep lines and fur rows from the brow. I Chemists, beauty doctors : and skin specialists' have - for -centuries past vainly tried to fathom the sealed se crets of nature and a way to keep the beauty of and form. youth In a woman's face Harriet Meta i was no exception to the 'general rule of women. - Trouble and worry left , their unsightly lines and marks upon, her race. She saw tne , oeauty oi ner youtn giving way to the heavy imprints, of coming &ge. (Her first resort was to ; facial, mas sage, cold cream1 andsteaming pots: then next to beauty specialists; but alt In vain. . The wrinkles seemed. If any thing, to grpw deeper and deeper. Massages evWn appeared to stretch the sklni more wrinkles came. She had spent all thV money she could affdrd to spend, and was ready i to give up in despair, when 'one day a friend made ahappy suggestion.! . . . j , , Thir gave her a brilliant idea! She set to work on the thing herself, and after several months' hard labor, and almost endless experimenting she. suc ceeded In producing a WTlnkle remov er entirely different from - anything, she had seen ' or heard of. She tried It on herself land lo, and behold! It worked a ; wonderful : transformation in a single night. She tried it a sec ond night and her wrinkles were prac tically gone: ; Av third night three treatments In all and her wrinkles had -entirely disappeared and hir skin was soft,! clear, rosy and moot i." Many others, ; also, . have used this remarkable process with wolnderf, uV results. ;.' : '.'-. ' , V - - jt Mrs. Moran Elmeir, of New York City, WTltes: "Tourtreatment remove ed all my wrinkles In one night" Mrs. Turnham. or Seattle, Wash.i says: "Mr wrinkles are all gone. Words cannot express hew grateful I am to you for what your treatment has dqne Howl. Texas, VYour treatment fis the first I ever tried that really had the desired effect In banishing face tines. I am 68 rears old and Wt mnnv mv T do not look more than . 25. vMlss Gladys Desmond, the actress, of Pitts burg, I Pa, says: . "Your treatment . V t special Or- weeks.' the former having had an op- etrattooi for appendicitis, the latterr with . tvnhnM fvr hava ratnrrmA t their . resneetlve ham onii th hftrH- s tal Is now free of patients. , ' 'I r The Christmas number of - the Wake Forest Student was - Issued to- ' day - It Is beautifully - bound ,ln . Christmas style,, being novel In every i! particular t The principal story-Is, i "On Christmas Eve J by I Mclan. . L Other stories are: "Oncan. giving his ' life awayr by C, A. Murchison; "When Greek Meets Greek," by X: ! "Longfellow The People's Choice." hv C. H. Mercer: "To Out of School." ! i "Panter Sims," by Jack Brias: . "The : Trend of Our Age," by C. J. Jackson: , -"The Night After the Circus." by Rob.1 Roy: Thej Problem of; the Pacific.'? by P. C. Stringfleld: "Letters of Malori J Downlns," by y' A f R. Gallemore;! )' "Some Opinions of Doctors.", by Henry ' f 4 : Bowman and "A Runaway," by Henry, - r Bowman, j ? -.ki'H ; i'.-diifv'4--l1;i'i;"r''-'. The Lsue- also contains several ex- . V cellent poems by H. F"PageT. These Chill jr Days. In these chilly autumn days -When you shiver so. - r Make the fire of genius blaze When the-wood is low, . When the jchimhey-f lames are dwind; ':f iln ' -Vtvr.rrcvii; Genius finds the stuff; for kindling . Genius still the gate' unlocks, :.i -V :: ;.r To the ycrystai fountains;" - i: .i'y, Still strikes fire from, the ocks, ; Moves the mighty mountains,' Still It makes the blizzard blossom- Summer -flowers on winter's bosom! (' . : , F.'!' Stanton The Professoi Heavens! I This was ;i , j the day 1 1 1 was to have been t married. , - j i What will she think of me i ;,H-x : : Assistant You were married. Don't V- l 5 t you remember? The j ceremony took; - place at noon. ; ,"";;.,:! :uuf:;':i"i'r---'k , "Ah, yes.to be sure. I recall I naw - i my annoyance .at losing - an hour," 3 Life. , f "V: '-V' Li"P-l''-' . Woman .to Three NisWs Beauty i 20 Years Younger" MNc"V Past Forty.' lint Mr Comnlexlon , Ciirihoodr jiv rites a Kemeky woman , f Removing Wrinkles i U "k arts Promise of Knrtw TrMt. u. Mr Be A- ge of Your Slost n tuna to made my wrinkles disappear irii one 4 night. . It' is certainly a Godsend to , womankind. I tried cold creams, skin ; foods and various advertised-wrinkle removers, but- they 1 all failed ,abso lutely, and I confess I was Very skep tical about your treatment, but in oner night my skepticism had entirely Van- ! lshed. When I looked at my face on ! the . following morning and saw 1 what i a Wonderful transformation iiadi taken place I was sure at last Ihad found ; the .right thing." VV; , rX ,f ; in speaking of her discovery. Miss Meta says: "Yes, I know It sounds too ; good, to be. true; but realyjfl.- do not ; ' think ' removing: wrinkles is half so wonderful as the telephone. -Before the telephone was invented.! It sound-' ed ridiculous to think-of talking from ! New York to Chicago. 1 -:. 1 1," , V Those 'who , have -used cold creams, etcL cannot understand haw: my treat- j ment i ; can act i quickly, r Yet. f( after ' all, i it is I very simple, ' and H wonder " ' that some ' ope did not discover, ttje j process long ago. ? My letter from pa tients tell the whole story.; Here r is " c one -from) a .ladywho says mjr treat ment made .her -'look.' twenty years younger,- (also letters, from many oth- i ers. , I do Jiot see how any one f can doubt in Ithe face ' of -such testimony as this. ' I t tried - cold creams.- mas- ' sages, etc., myself without results and ' I can thoroughly sympathize wth thpse who have ' tried : to get rid of wrinkles. I and ' I . am trulv Kiad - that I " wrmKies Specialists i Had? ;w r :.- - ' ".'.?,.: .:'. -?.-: -.,;.;-.. . feel that. I can now offer womankind i ' a surer .and. shorter way j ! ' tl i 1' ; I wlllf give further particulars to all those who write me within the next ' ten dcys.1 I. must exact a promise of secrecy from - every' one . for my own protection before J give i ull Infofma tion youl jcanv.use my treatment on, . yourself ' or In your own. family,' but" j'OuimustfnotteU what it la to outsld- " ers.';- : . -; .r .;v- ;.: !j .' ! . "I guarantee my treatment will in j no way injure your skin. On the con-j ! trary. it j will give it .a f aot ; velvety 1 -1 feeling, i and ; greatly - Improve j your ' , complexion as well as banish unslght- ' ly lines and wrinkles. 'It itkes only - P 'Address Harriet Meta, Suite 95SF, Syracuse, N. Y I will send every ' thing in j plain sealed envelope, ! but : our", corresponden ce ; ;u iTe rrr! Tiy Private, f 4 1 t - :.-. - Tftl -.V" '1. .1 -:f- li'-V 'ut f '