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''W" 10 THE WASOTNGTON TIMES,1 THURSDAY,' JANUARY 27. 1916. THE TIMES DAILY M-A G A ZI N E PA G E 5T h &r h k yt$t a Newspaper Story, But Winifred Black Sees All That9 s Behind ?She Discovers the Energy, and Determination Needed to Find It and the Bewildering Array of Factors Touching Its Every Angle Until It's Printed. fp ' By WINIFRED BLAK. , -. n. that's lust a newspaper o I 1 story." said tho roan at tho .7 .u- .... niirht i dinner tho Other ntgH. I "I wondered it It wasn't." to his desk noon. w' " " Sfeald tho woman across the table, and I And he'll hear of It from tho man- fifhev both luushcd. and dismissed tho ag jig editor, and tho managing editor ney uotn laugnca, bu w,n hcap Qf u from tJjo ownjr flf tjft pBuuJect. , T wonder ' Caper' and the owner of tho paper will fit "Just a newspaper story. I nucrhcaP of u tfQm & doien bugy frlon(Ja ilf cither of them had the faintest idea, before no's been up a half hour. J.V. ...... mi..... n nnnnnnnrr story I Just a Imwunanci' atnrvA rlav'ii sen- kr?SanDdXtnsTPaPCr "" K I wonder If any ono who has never H.nwi h nowinancr business In any T'-w.. ... . --.--- - -,,. ..--u opacity ever really oven nan b??""v 1 didn't. 1 didn't even suspect, till I j iad a chanco to learn. 1 inousni o.' Glistened "to stortes.-aTl kYndT of J 'stories, good ana oaa ana iniarcBuu And uninteresting, and when the time (came that they wanted to go home and Jhave dinner taey Just picked out a few torlea and marked them some way so who printers would understand, and that 'yus all there was to it. . ?kUard work, anxiety., enterprise, good Judgment, policy, public spirit, real .honest effort to get tho real honest truth out of tho hnpponlngs of the tv hole world In one day into one single paper? I'd never even heard of such a thing, and when I did hear of it I be gan to wonder how on earth they ever did it at al, halt as well as they do. And.I'm wondering yetl Did you ever see a newspaper get out after a story T I have, and it's an in teresting thing to witness. Getting a Story. The hint that there is a .story a big tory, something really important comes into the office, say, at 7 o'clock at night. The city editor gets hold of it, and 'picks out his three best men, one to get the local end of the atory, one to get Interviews on it -and the other to go on the quickest train to the scene of the story and get at the real facts himself. Those facts must be In tho office by midnight. The people concerned live eighty miles away. The local corre spondent in tho smal town where the story "breaks" la a good' fellow, but ou never know what his personal rela tions may be in an affair like this. What if the absconding cashier has married his sister's sister-in-law V hat If he belongs to tho same lodge? What If they both went to school together and mantcd slBtcrs A city man -that the city editor knows must do tho work. Tho woman it. tho case lives in town, or did a 'week ago. She must be found nnd made to tell what'the man djd with the money,, end why she's willing to tell about it. The man's tnntlinit HvM. In nnntti.r rltrortlnn. an hour and a half out of town the1 Bhortcst way, lie may be hiding at home- Somebody must go and And out. Tho telephone won't do. Nothing will do but a good, sharp-eyed, quick-cared, resolute, quick-witted reporter. How long would it take you to get at the truth of that story, the real tiuth, with everybody concerned In It doing their very beat to deceive you and tho whole public? Eight o'clock you're at a II very,, stable trying to find out where the man In the cage went evory Sunday when he hired ahorse and buggy and disappeared for two or three hours. At 9 o'clock youje at the garage cross-questioning a Kjumpy chauffeur nnd doing your best to get him to feel that he ought to tell what he knows about tho trip the men took when he escaped. Ten o'clock, vou'vo wakened tho president of the bank out of his first sleep and made him come down stairs in his bathrobe and ndmlt what he's been denlng stneo 4 o'clock in tho afternoon. Eleven o'clock, you've fcen tho man's greatest ch.m, his greatest enemy, his rival m the bank, tho man who got him the Job In tho banlc, and you've got your end of thp story. Now. to write it. What shall you put In' What shall you leave out? Was tho rellow a good-natured dupe nnd tool or was he a crafty schemorf Half the peoplo you saw told you one thing and half told you another. No, they wei"en't all lying. Some ot them believed what they said. But It won't do fpr you to believe it, entirely. Errorful Or Criticoroof. Half-past eleven, your story is on the wire. Every name and every initial and every address in it Is as near right as you can possibly get it. At tho offlco the man has come In with the woman's story. It controdlcta Itself In three important details. Whlcn is tho rlcht version? Tho man's mother v.outdn't talk, pool eonl Now comes the question of policy Who arc the stockholdets in the bank-1 How many depositors were thoie' What effect will that story and the publishing ot It have 911 business? Ought It to bo played up on tho first page, or played down on the third? Who's, writing the headlines ! Hurry, not n mlnuto to spare How many letters In that top-head? No, they can't get one too many or one- too few. Even tho spaces mun be counted one. two, three, four they're waiting, there at the copy desk. Don't waste another minute. Somebody'U find fault with the head In the morning. I'd like to see one of the faultfinders write anywhero near aa good a ono In twice the time. It's gone tho story's downstairs, past the copy desk, past tho city editor, past the news editor, past tho night ed tor, past the managing editor. You can't let an Important story like this slip into the paper Just by accident. Every ono of these peoplo have to see it and nas on It. It's gone, tho paper's out. und jou can't do a. thing about it. If you vo Leap Year. Beware, ve merrv bachelors, And widowers forlorn. Thin ivcar our doom is sounding, i oijr safottv'a laughed to scorn. It Is the season fateful. And small iihC tu to vail, When the female of the opccles Pons the uuestlon to tho, male. For Uireo years men are chooser. And pick the mslds to wod. And maids inuit be contented If they are left or led Unto the marrinse altar: But with the fourth the frail. Wik femalo of tho species Leads the meek and trembling male. Womnn'8 game, and man's ttw hunter." Say conventions of the race. But In lean year this reversed Is, And the man pursuit muaUface Or run for life and freedbm. While she camps upon his trail; For the.fcmajo of the species Is much filinrricr than the male. John Wink, in Baltimore Amcrl- 20. It maue a miatauq in tne rush ana we jwry ana the oxcltcment, If your Judg :'"" Tyavcreu ior an instant, you 11 ..,. , u. i, i... .n. .i. X "hofne S3 determination and desperate conccntra. t on it took to get that story Into tYtnt ,l&rn .... W .... ..1.1 .-.. l.t t" " ,:.,1";' ' ". u.u u,u uu '"'" he qualified to criticiso the way It's nunc. " "" Keeper Feature Bertie; Advice To Girls By ANNIE LAURIE. Dear Aunio Laurlo;l am a girl of fifteen years and am going to luvvo a lew girlo and boys at my house, and I want to know how to entertain them and what re freshments to servo. U. O. U. rU might have some sort of a progressive party, playing various games Jn tables of four ir your pSrlor is smalt and theio Isn't room for dancing. You don't need to "ploy cards, but jou might Instead try some of the foolish gomes' you played when you were children, like authors, old maid, Jack straws, and tiddledy-wlnks. JUBt serve' simple refreshments. t think you will And that sherbet goes, further than Ico cream and Is a little different. Small cakes to be eaten with It are about 70 cenu a (hundred. Van can fix some salted peanuts yourself instead of buying the in ferior quality sold by most shops. Baited almonds aro even better. It ou want candy you can make that ourseir, too. I should think that all your refreshment could bo bought for W, and it jou want prises for tuo games they need not cost more than Dear Annie Iaurle I am a young man twenty-one years old, and am earning &0 a month. I am in love with a girl of twenty. The more I xee this girl the more I love her. I think I am right In believing that her love for me is as great as mine tor her. Do vou think it right that we should marry un'der these circumstances? B. T. P. s UCII an amount of love ought to be able to tido you over a couple of years. By that time I am suro your earnings 1 will be more, orovldlng a large In come. It would surely have to be "love In a cottage" if you married now on $600 a year. Why don't you make it your aim to b earnlnir nt least J200 more before you marry? Tho girl will give you something to fight for, and I know you can win out if you try. (Copy't 1916, by Ncmpiper Feature Service.) Exquisite Boudoir robe of cloth of silver, with Woman, the World's Worst Failure Her Only Aim Is Man's Capture! Writer in New Republic Draws Scathfng Indict ment of Her Own Sex. Sees Only ' Pettiness of Nature, in Chief Occupa tion. .Chief Occupation Is Living On Her Emotions Thus Is ,the Sex Described In Article Ignoring Mental Achievements of Woman kind. w OMAN tho world's worst failure! Such is the in dictment of her sex re nontlv Dronounced by Ite- becca West In a lato Issue of the New Republic Ignoring all the mental achievements of. womankind, ignoring woman' efforts to Improve the world In which she lives Miss West sees only the pettiness of her nature. According to her woman's only end In life is man. Koeplng herself well groomed li masmillno favor Is her chief occupation-living on the emotions her principal Joy. Miss West cites three typical women aTarlslennc. a Chicago girl, and herself. Under all pose, culture, and edu cation In three cases she finds but tho fundamental and much-to-be-deplorcd love of dress with a de sire to employ It in capturing the mere man. First sho treats of tho Farlflenne. seen urdcr varying cir cumstances, opening with her ap pearance in a cafe. "Tho French woman," she writes, "nlth a touch of Jewish blood that had crinkled hor light brown hair and glvep Intensity to her discreet ly tinted face, was an achievement as delicate, as deliberately selective of the soft and gracious things as a Conder fan. Iter body was not the loosely articulated tiling of arrested and Involuntary movement that serves as tho fleshly vehicle of most of us, but was very straight and still with tho grace of flowers arranged by an artist, within a dress so beautiful that one imagined it hard and -permanent like a Jewel, yet so supple of texture that one could hao cruspod it Into a hand 'ful, It was tho aim of hor fragility to arouBc such thoughts of, .violence. Trained For Elegance. "As sho sat there at a cafe tea table sho made a harmony out of prudent gestures of whose restraint she was without doubt Inwardly con scious and proud; one could divine her thinking 'I hardly moved my hand an Inch that time yet I flatter myself the movement could not easily nave been bettered.' Her little shoes of soft leather which had a uieom on them likn a peach stayed Suite sflll under tho table because aey were already In tho prettiest position imaginable. She did not move in her chair because the straight stem of her bacH grew from the foliage of her skirts with a grace that could not have been surpassed by any alteration. "She had trained like nn nthleto for this elegance nnd her feats dc sorved more than a moment's atten tion. It was strange that In spite of her tremendous and successful con centration upon her person Bho Negligee of Chiffon and Cloth of Silver lBBaSBBBBBBBBHBlBBBBBBlBB&M"TOSwwT -)W$A-4BJPJJPJPJBFy&PJBJBJKPJBJBJB overdress of rose chiffon embioidcted in silver and trimmed with fur Has Modern Woman Failed in Her Life? , Do you believeXvitJi Rebecca West that woman is the "world's worst failure?" Do you think her life is obscured by the trivialities, while the big things go by the board? Do you think that woman is so concerned with the deco ration of her person that she has little time left , for the development of her personality? Do you think that she strives too much to please men? If you have ideas on the subject, the Editor of .the Magazine Page will be glad to know them. Manuscripts limited to 300 words. aroused no Intorest In her person ality. Ono found In her that asso ciation of vividness ot presence and absence of individuality Jjhleh one finds In non-Europeans. When one mocta tho llthest and, most beautiful ot Hindus one speculates not about his personality but about the sys tem of which he is manifestly a part and a product. , "And oven so ono forgets the soul that doubtless inhabited the French woman that doubelesa knew ardora and loneliness in her fitness and con splcuousness as part ot the system ot the chic. Coiled In Arm Chair. "The next night I found her colled Jn a red plush armchair In the hotel drawing room so preoccupied by her misery that her elegance aat absurd ly on her llko a smart '.at worn on one side attending only deaflshly to a sallow girl from Chicago. And sud denly she begap to talk about love. It. waa not that she was Ut-bred and without reticence, but sho was wan dering in the windy corridors that lead to madness and the cloak of re serve had been blown from her. When I love,' she was telling us aoon. 'e'est une catastrophe.' She gave us various illustrations ot her conduct when the worst for pas sion, culminating In an anecdote about a trunk impetuously abandon ed at Lyons. 'I think of nothing but the beloved. Yes. it Is a complete In terruption of my life. It was ob vious that for long she hod lived en tirely that her life might bo inter rupted. 'Women are like that,' she said with a certain pride.' " The Chicago girl dissents apd. ac cording to the writer. In launching her views on the subject shows her self to be In tho same class with the French woman. The Feminine Note. "It was her opinion," Miss, West continues, "that a woman( ought to preserve general Interests mryX take part in the world's work, though she admitted that we should retain the fragility that makes us worshipful. " 'Wo must still strike.' said he. thoughtfully, 'the feminine note.' "She and her kind tok up work not becauso they loved the world, but in order tliat they might offer an ap pearance of strength which some man would find a satisfaction in bi caking down Into weakness, an ap pearance of Independence which some man would be proud to see changed to dependence upon him. Their half-hearted work made wom en workers cheap and lir esteemed "Both of these women." Miss West points out. "were keeping them selves anart from the high purposes of life for nn emotion that, schemed nnd planned for. was no better than the made excitement of drunkenness. One ought to pass into love reluu-' tantly for life's sake, as one goes up Into the mountains because he Is very sick and to live longer on the plain means death. And once there, braced by the now air. ho turns to work. If It should befall that he lias to leave the country of love he goes forth brave with eternal health, a soundness that no later sickness can corrupt It Is Impossible that he should appear as a frustrated schemer or a broken bankrunt "It was midnight, end they had been talking about love for hours. Fatigue had given me a delirium, uo that when I looked across the room our images seemed fantastic pictures of our souls. The Frenchwoman, her pinched little face grievous above her cloth-of-silvcr gown, her plnk-palnted nails unnatural on her limn hands, appeared as a starved child be dizened for some bad purpose: and perhaps that was all she pitifully was." The Chicago Girl. "The Chicago girl held her head like a queen, but pursod her mouth peevishly and anxiously, like p. characterless school mistress try ing to enforce discipline; and in deed there was nothing mora dig nified in this woman who lived and worked that she might be wor shipful, and yet, because she did nothing disinterestedly, made noth ing within herself that a man could worship. "And I I was a black-browel thing, scowling down on the Ink ataln that I saw reflected across tho bodice of my evening dress. I was immeasurably distressed by this by-product of the literary life. It was a new evening dress it was becoming, it was expensive. Al ready I was upsetting the balance of my nerves by silent rage; I knew ( would wake up in the night and magnify It with an excited mind Hilt It stalned.tho world; that in the end I would probably write some article I did not in the least want to write in order to pay for a new one. In fact, I would com mit tho same sin that I loathed In these two women. I Would waste on personal ends vitality that I should have conserved for my work." "And I was sinning for the same reason, for what could make me drape myself In costly folds of petunia satin, and what could make mo forfeit my mental serenity at their defacement, if It were not for some deep and overlaid but sturdy Instinct for elegance? I perceived sudden ly that in every woman there is such an Instinct that urges her. Just so far as It is not resisted by her Intelligence nnd education, to ward an existence such as that of tho Frenchwoman, comically deso late as a matcless monkey. That is why woman is the world's worst failure." l'9itliilil LnOrrooJ A. I'ndtrrood. and glass grapes in natural colors Choice of One's Vocation Not a Crystallized, Fixed, Unchangeable Process By DR. LEONARD KEENE HIRSHBERG. INSTINCT Is IttUe mora or less than muscular precision handed down by past generation. Habit Is the adaptation of hereditary machinery to present needs and dltrera from in. ntlnct only with regard to the originality ot tho pattern and the sequence of cer tain SKiurui or oft-repeated acts. A man may be a fiddler by habit built upon Instinct for music, or he may bo a musician. Irrespective ot any natural musical ability, becauso his father so determined. Instinct means that the pattern and the opportune moment of any move ment of precision has been handed down loaded and ready to hit tho bull's-eye. Habit means that the pattern and tho opportunity for execution has been ac- milr1 hv virrHi. ntsA !... & LI.J PCS A? w'r out of th "hell and later -.. .sU..u. ucoi ur mound. j. cona n.rek..n e" or DU,ld nest only mv uauii, MM, romca irom rcpcaica fmiturmm an I final haaam A duck takes to water and a boy to hl fiats by Instinct but a man takes to drink and a swan to fighting only by training in these vicious habits. Habit, like Instinct Is a comblnaUon of muscular or mental movements that r.w,. aoiMM urucr. ii an instinct is present In certain races and Is not aroused somehow In somo Individuals, that Instinct may.be lost Habits also are posslblo In many living things that are woefully absent because the events -. wwjwwu. u.cuaij iv urn iiicrn into being do not present themselves aa ln centTvea or Imitative. Instinct Or Reasoning. Temptation Is one of the impulses that start habits. Bines hahlta .,,ir.i only by repeated atlprull or impulses of the same kind, one temptation Is rXff.'noU811 t0 make tt man fall. Yielding to a temptation is tho begin ning of a habit The street phrase, "to fall for something." means traveling the road of a new. habit It may be good, bad or indifferent, but a temptation was necessary to start it Isolated persons and others cloistered from the world's myriads of stimuli have few and simple habits. All organized movements of man. ani mals and plants are comprised under the names of Instinct and bablts. Sep TheDining Steward Speaks By MRS. CHRISTINE FREDERICK. AS a guide to the woman pur chaser In the home, let me tommend the prevailing system in a modern (lining cur. Ha It ever occurred to vcu. reader, just hew tho dining car which unobtrusively connects with your sleeper. Is managed so ef ficiently? Somo cars serve as many as Jt) people per meal, or the o'd type dinem servo but seventy-live or eighty. Where do they buy the supplies? Where do they carry them? And bow are they managed The bland and smiling steward wns glad to reply to my question ing. Well, jou see. madam." he ex plained, "we stock the car every three days for a three-day ?un. There's what wo call the commis sary In each c rtaln city, and there are Kept all the reapplies of every Vlnd. both fresh and staple. Before we slart on a new run. the car Is sent to the commissary, all old sup plies removed, and then shi Is slocked with enough to last for three davs. At tho end rt the three davs she Is shunted back to commisi.it y. "But. I tell ou, they've got a right line checking system, too. When my car gets into the commis sary, they check up every pound of supplies rve got on board and com pare It Yrtth tne amount T too'r out at the beginning of the run. and the amount ot orders which my slip shows. So many steaks ordered, so many steaks sold, to many steaks left They all must balance." "But In advance." he continue! By THE SHOPPER. I" you could but i-ee ihe min iature laundry sets that have been devised for bachelor girl or persons ot itinerant procliv ities, you would want to set up housekeeping in a hall room just to have a chanre to tise the wee clothespins, the doll-size wash line, and two perfectly substantial glass tacks. All this comes In a convenient case tho whele priced at II or tl.SO, or even . The new flowers for spline: hats are budding in most ot the mil linery shops and in millinery de partment ot department stores. The sad fact )h that the prettiest are the most expensive, and if one thinks that she can save pro digious amounts by constructing a flower-crowned bonnet at home she may tepent of her bar&aiu. Violets that would delight the soul of tuiher Bui bank aie an anted In a loose spray, fairly pleading to be taken apart and attached to a hat at a cost of etnt-five cents pel attachment. Stiff bouquets of June roses, likewise lift up their voices at slightly iediced cost For refurnishing a season-old frocU nolhiug is quite as useful us tulle itr malines. The Joyous feature of nil this Is that the m llne does not need to be part leu -Inilywldfi for the decollete bodice, make-believo sleeve 01 filmy scat f that is to restore daintiness to the gown. One of the depnrimnt stolen Is having a "sale" of malines in all sorts of colors The width is eighteen inches, the price fif teen cents a avd. iTclephouc Uaiu 260 fpr wiorwiri flon ntgar&ing the uninr of ie eit(ibtithrittt in trftlci tl.e articl'i mentioned above tiqy i.j jmrcltainl Ittattiiie (ONCti-HiiiD tie if of tlm 1 hop should bt aidrtaietl to J7i unvyvi .iiis ruvw, Seen In The Shops arate or disjointed, individual and acci dental responses are the only exceptions. These are Intellectual. Most men and women aro whony in stinctive and habitual in thoughts ana activities throughout life. Persons, of course, differ much In tho number and Kinas or iiapnacarti, random behavior. Vou may dumlav all aorta of trrntotuma and clumsy actions on a slack-wire bc- rore you acqulro tho habit of balanc ing yourself and walking gracefully along tho -wire. Tou may bo ono of those persons who cannot learn to do such an act If appropriate muscular motion docs not appear niter repeated awkward attempts, you may think that the work, performance or play calls for too much expenditure pf practice and tlmo for you to bother about learning Notwithstanding all this, t am tena ciously of the conviction that a nealthy person can learn anything. It may take one man throe years and another only three months to accomplish a certain thing, duo to differences or inherited misdemeanors of attention and sensa tions, yet tho slower man will have tho habit and the knowledge at the termina tion of fleeting years aa well as tho quicker man. Man Can Learn Anything. The choice of a vocation, a career or an occupation la thus shown not to be a crystallized, unchangeable, fixed thing. A child mav show a propensity, a preference which. In terms of experi mental science, means a richer d1s- play of random activity for paints Jind brushes, music, drawing, carpentering or butchering, but the habits formed more quickly under such conditions are not proof that ho is less fitted for engi neering, mathematics, industrial chem istry, marine architecture, commerce or trapping and trading. Much the same experience is to be noted in the irphore of animal training. In order to have an animal form par ticular habits, problems must be set be fore It within tho scope of its broad, haphazard activities. Gradually. In this way. if the animal's life is long, the scope of Its movements can be extended Peter and Consul, the two apes that do so many things, wero steadily and la boriously taught to repeat tho word "mamma." to write, to ride wheels, skate, and acquire many habits tar out side the fields of apeland. (Copy't 1S1, by Kswspaper Featura Serilce.) "I make out my requisition sheet so that they know at th-j commis sary what I want before the car comes in so that It tlocsn't take any time for tbe men to load her up. You see this requisition sheet is printed with the names of the articles djesired, with another column for the number of each itlnd desired and still another column for the weight "For instance, I order so many steaks, so many loins, so meny cans and bottles of this and that This must be enough to last tluee da'yi, both for passengers and the crew of waiters and cooks. Before I m.r8-J?!It.he "OuWUon sheet I talk with the cook and he tells mo his menus and what he wants to cooi5,' aPd l roako out the Eheet ac cordingly. Tlfeto's no telng 'out' of anything in this game, you know, and wo roust be prepared for nil emergencies, such as an extra cr.?w.l' or delay of tho train. .. w?.?t. yoa do about soiled linen?" I asked. "We count It nt the end of every day," he replied, "and at the end of a run It la turned over to tho commissary which many times runs a company's own laundry, or to a commercial laundry If there's a single piece -short I'm responsible. Or especially with th- wine cellar. I've got to keep most strict account Oh yes, I type thj menus the night before for the fol lowing dayand make out the spe cials which you find attached to the regular bill of fare. Yes, 1 like it. It's a great business this; takes a lot of managing and knowing how to handle. I've been a regular hotel man. worked over the counter, been in the kitchen, then I had cafe ex perience, and now I'm on a diner. You have to work yourself up. you know, and no one will make a success of It unless they've had ex perience in all lines. It's a fine joti for a man Good pay and expenses. Not nt all, not nt all. madam, you're perfectly welcome!" (Copj-ricM. 1. by Mrs. Christine Frederick) RESTORE YOUR HAIR TO YOUTHfUL COLOUR Let Me Semi Yea ny free Preef That Grey Hair Caa lie Restored to Natural Ceteur and Beauty No Dyes r Other Harmful Method. Results In Fear Day. At 17 I kit prematurely crey-and a (ail era because I looked old. Today at U I hae no trace of crcy hair and I look younger than I did eight years ato. I restored, my o n grey hair to Its natural colour and beauty of south and am a HWna example that rry lialrs need no longer exist. Xo cangerju dyes, atalna or other forma of hair paint are necessary to lueo your hair jounx. Old and Ore Young and huiip at 27. at SS. lt rue atnd jou full Information thai vul enabln you to raalora )tur own nalr to outu ful colour so that ou need never ,iae a crey hair Grain, no matter what our e or the eauie of our creyncas, or how lone ou )u. been crey or how many tninga has- fU.i. Uv free otter li open to men anJ mohhu c for a few dj longer Snd no money -Juat write me mdav tl lug our name and aitdreiH ,Ulnl, nattnc whether (Mr Mr, or Jllsi) and enclose tun teU atamp for return postage and I et 111 mil ion full artleuaa that ttltl nsble jou n realore Ihe natural colour ef ouih o vour hair miVInc It eofi natural and nilK nmn lastd Write locUy AddrtM Mr. Mary Iv Chapman, Apartment :u D Sxcbeod tu Provldtwt. . L-Aavt. aaaaSV VKBaaaeaVsJ eaaaaw ftfiSammmmmmmmw t ft