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Care for Crippled Soldiers Government Plans to Give All Vocational Training and to Find Employment for Them It is intended by the government that there shall be no crippled soldiers selling pencils and shoe strings on the street corners, and small necessity for “homes” where crippled men may be cared for. The government has made plans to re-educate every disabled soldier and sailor, to secure employment for him, and to watch over his welfare thereafter that he may be independent and self-respecting. The actual steps which the government will take are five: 1— Election by the disabled men of a course of training. 2 Preliminary training to fit him for a definite occupation. 3 A probationary period of employment in that occupation. 4 Placement in suitable position. 5 Follow-up work to safeguard his interests. The government will support the man while training, will pay his tuition, traveling expenses and any other expenses incident to his training, and will give his family the same support which it has given during his military service. % < The disabled man may elect the line of work he wants to take up. He may be retrained for the work he did before the war, or turn to something entirely different. He may take further training in his old occupation. And in addition to his support and the support of his family he-will be given all the medical care he needs, and will be supplied with any artificial contrivances necessary because of the loss of limbs or faculties. The machinery through which this work of rehabilitation will be handled consists of a federal board of vocational re-education with branches in the principal cities of the country. David F. Houston, secretary of agriculture, is chairman of the board; William C. Redfield, secretary of commerce, and William B. Wilson, secretary of labor, are also on the board, and an executive staff of experts in vocational education have been employed. Mother’s Cook Book VI/ Ah. what would the world be to us If the children were no more? We would dread the desert behind us. Worse than the dark before. What to Feed the Child. For a normal baby, with a normal mother, the first few months or a year there is nothing better to do than feed it with nature’s food, mother’s milk. Orange juice asd water for re freshment will cool the swollen gums and give great relief when teething. If the child has taken prune juice, unsweetened, and orange juice occa sionally the digestive tract will be in good working order. Then in the sec ond year scraped apple or other fruits like pears and peaches if well ripened, may be safely given in very small quantities. A drink of cool water should be given frequently. How many worrying babies, who cannot tell what they want would be made comfortable by frequent drinks of pure cool water. All changes in a child’s diet should be made very carefully and when any new food is introduced give it in small quantities, a teaspoonful or tw r o being sufficient. Baked potato is a food particularly adapted for a young child’s food. Use a little milk with a grain or two of salt, then cream and butter may be added. After a child has become ac customed to potato a teaspoonful of finely mashed peas may be given, as well as carrot, spinach and any vege table not too woody. A child’s digestion is so much more rapid than an adult’s tfcr.t they need to be fed oftener and in small quan tities. A child fifteen months old will need some such diet as to food and time as the following: At seven or eight a breakfast cereal, bread or toast and a cupful of milk; at noon an egg, po tato, one other vegetable, bread and fruit, either juice or scraped fruit. Five or six, milk and rice or bread, and at ten a cupful or bottle of milk. The cereals should be varied so that they may become accustomed to like a variety. The chief thing to remember in cooking cereals for children is to cook them long enough. Serve with good top milk and no sugar. In early youth the child gets all the sugar he needs from , the fruit he eats. One good rea son for having little people eat alone is that foods that must be denied them are not put temptingly before them. HOUSEHOLD HINTS To prevent mustard from dry ing in the mustard pot, add a little salt when making it. Tan shoes which have become discolored can be dyed black and have their usefulness pro longed. Cold boiled rice added to grid dle cakes makes them lighter. Persian ladies ornament their faces by painting on them fig ures of insects and small ani mals. It takes three men six months to make a cashmere shawl, which requires ten goats’ fleeces. Explorer Says North Pole Weather Not as Pictured Another cherished illusion is dis pelled and relegated to the junk heap of vivid misconceptions that have sud denly faded. Explorer Vilhjalmur Stef ansson, who has just returned from a five years’ cruise in the regions around the North pole, tells us that the weath er up there is by no means the frigid terror we have pictured in our minds. It is much cooler in central Siberia than at Herschel island. Even near the geographical pole the climate ne\ er gets really bad, although the mercury occasionally runs down to 60 below zero. Indeed, it was so mild and com patible with physical comfort that he usually disrobed on the porch of his igloo and passed the evening in his underwear, resting at night in his sleeping bag. His underwear, by the way, was of reindeer’s skin with the fur inside. He has explored about 250,000 square miles amid all kinds of weather, and claims to have suffered no hardships, until his return to civi lization. —Christian Herald. If He Came Back Now If he came now! My heart would be like a once quiet street, Hung with gay lanterns on a fete night, wild With singing! And my heart would be ? child Sleepily waking to a kiss, then flinging Sleep from it, springing With all too ready feet. Out of the night, into the world again. And finding that its toys were all once more There where it left them, waiting on the floor. To be played with again. My heart would be An opened book filled full with witchery, Filled, too, with pain. An opened book that had been left too long Upon a dusty shelf. It would be a song In a young mouth. And it would be buds, too, Opening under th& moon, and shivering at the dew, But liking it. And It would be a flame, Red In the night. I used to be glad when he came, But not so very glad—because I /thought That I would always have him. Then war caught Him up from me, and bore him out To be where danger Is; and killed my doubt, My hesitation and half fears. Ah, now I would run to welcome him, if he came now! —Mary Coralyn Davis, in Good House keeping. League of Nations Advocated To Obviate Future Conflicts This great world war has taught us that the most urgent, the most neces sary, the most fundamentally religious duty now before us, is the devising and adopting of some method other than war for settling of disputes that are bound to arise between nations. Un less this can be done, says Chris tian Herald, we can never be sure that at any moment the results of gen erations of preaching and teaching may not be consumed in the fires of war. The idea of a league of nations is no longer the mere vision of seers, the dream of prophets and the intellec tual plaything of theorists. It is to day one of the most concrete and un avoidable issues in the field of prac tical statesmanship. Memorial Planned to Dogs Sacrificed in Gas Tests Prompted by girls of the chorus at Hippodrome ancL indorsed by other women, and, it is laid, by the New York club and the Toy Dog club, a movement is under way to set up a memorial to the dogs whose lives were sacrificed in experimental work for the army. It is stated that the chemical warfare division of the war depart ment used on an average of 80 dogs a month in testing gases and protection devices. It was suggested that a fund be raised for the erection of a dog’s drinking fountain in a park to bear a, tablet explaining the service done for humanity by the dogs. Men, Women and Children Helped Bring Big Victory Just what name posterity will give to th war nobody of the immediate present can say; but if it is fairly de scriptive it will perhaps somehow in clude or suggest the part taken by the women, who, in 17 months, for one thing, have turned out something over 14,000,000 knitted articles. The women, in fact, have knit themselves into history in a way that the future historian will have to take into con sideration. Literally it has been a war of men, women and children against an impending tyranny. Latest Vending Machine Is of Spurious Coin One of the interesting developments in the vending machine field is a large apparatus that dispenses bottled bev erages, sandwiches and chewing gum. In order to encourage patrons to re turn empty bottles machine, a , ick of gum is discharged when a bottle is placed in the receiver provid ed for it. A counterfeit detector re jects spurious coins. A complete rec ord of all transactions is kept by a sales registering mechanism. The only attention the machine requires is that involved in stocking and icing it daily. Lung Disease Statistics. According to the census bureau’s mortality strtistics for 1916, the states having the lowest death rate to the thousand from all forms of tubercu losis were Kansas 54.4, and Utah, 49.3; from tuberculosis of the lungs, Kan sas, 47.4, and Utah, 40.1; from all forms of pneumonia, Washington, 53.4, and Kansas, 82.7. Why Wisconsin Is Known as “Badger” State and Origin of “Sucker” for Illinois Wisconsin is called the Badger state, not, as most people seem to think, because the badger formerly abounded there, for in the past Wis consin was never a favorite home of this little quadruped, writes a corre spondent. The faipiliar nickname originated rather with the early settlement of southwestern Wisconsin, whose lead mines attracted the first considerable migration to Wisconsin. The hardy lead miners who pushed into the por tion of the northwestern wilderness Intent on digging fortunes from the earth with their picks were composed in the main of two groups. One, made up of men from southern Illinois and further south, went down the Mis sissippi to their homes every win ter and returned in the spring to la bor for another season; the other, com posed of miners from the Eastern states, could not thus easily go home, and so they “burrowed in” for the winter in rude shacks or huts, which frequently were built after the fash ion of dugouts. The men who went south for the winter and returned in the spring were given the name of “suckers” from the similarity of this practice with that of the well-known fish of the Mississippi, Rock and other Western streams. The men who wintered in the lead mines were # called “badgers.” They were the first permanent settlers in the lead mines noyth of the Wiscon sin line, and thus the name became associated with the state. Thus did the people of Wisconsin and Illinois gain the popular nick names of “Badger” and “Sucker” by which they have ever since been knewn. \ Small eggs, dirty eggs, old eggs oi eggs which have been kept at a high temperature for any length of time art the kinds not to select for incubation, according to a circular prepared by the poultry husbandry department ol the Kansas State Agricultural college. Not all eggs from the best breeding stock are good for hatching purposes. Often the eggs are small, uneven in shape or poor in shell textilre. Small eggs should never be incubated, as they do not hatch well', and pullets from them often lay undersized eggs. The small egg is not wanted upon the market. The two ounce egg is the standard in weight. Since the egg begins to incubate when it reaches a temperature of 6S degrees it should be kept below that point. From 45 to 65 degrees is the range of temperature permissible for eggs that are being kept for hatching. Eggs should not be kept any longer than is absolutely necessary. If they are turned frequently and are kept at the correct temperature they may be kept for two weeks before being placed in the incubator, but it is not advisable to try to keep them for that long a time. Hogs Contract Colds and Pneumonia-Caution Uryed Trouble often develops among Jiogs at this season of the year In the form of cold and pneumonia, according to Dr. Robert Graham, professor of ani mal pathology at the University of Illinois. Doctor Graham gives warn ing that when pigk of all ages and sizes are allowed to pile up at night in a warm shed some are likely to come out steaming in the morning and that the cold winds and frosty atmos phere will have a bad effect on them. He recommends the following precau tions : Hog houses and feeding places, runways, fences and sheds, should be thoroughly cleaned and sprayed with a 3 per cent water solution of com "pound of cresol (U. S. P.) or its rec ognized equivalent. Quicklime should be scattered freely about the lots, af ter they have been raked clean of cobs and manure. Wallows should be drained and fenced off, all-small holes filled and large fields where the infec tion prevails should be cultivated. Arizona Is Cleaning Out Beasts Which Kill Stock One Of the efforts of the state gov ernment of Arizona and the federal government In their campaign for the eradication of predatory animals, which cause large losses in range stock, is the employment of skilled hunters. Thirteen are now in the employ of the state and federal governments. Other men are exterminating rodents t(*hich destroy ranges. One of the hunters within two months killed 11 mountain lions. Another killed 55 coyotes with in a month. Field for Treasure Seekers. With the evacuation of French and Belgian territory by the Huns a won derful new field is opened up for the treasure seeker. When the invading hordes first overran the country in 1915 many of the residents buried their valuables before seeking safety in flight. During the four years and more of war many of these families have become separated and numerous members have died. In many instances the secret of the buried property has been lost. In London companies al ready are being promoted to seek the hidden gold. Sheep Shearers Well Paid. Sheep shearers in Australia can do about as well as munition workers. The rate of pay is two pounds, ten shillings for 100 sheep. As high as 250 sheep have been sheared in a day by one man, which would give a day’s earnings of about S3O, and 100 sheep is or ordinary day’s work. THE WASHBURN TIMES, WASHBURN. WIS. Fir Seeds to Help Reforest France Bag in Hands of Secretary of American Forestry Asso ciation Estimated to Contain 50,000 Trees V> fl > w * s '\' •W&^j.'v <§ w \ ~; ! ..y-!/..- . ...: ::iw:-:-A. < : : i •*•••*•*•*•■••• y-v>>^x^:vv4c<vC'#!H&si£^>oc&£ l ßsw* P. S. Ridsdale, secretary of the American Forestry association, on his way to France with all the Douglas fir seeds the association could find in the American market. Mr. Ridsdale figures there are 50,000 trees in the bag he carries, and he will ask French officials to tell him what other kinds of seed they want with which to reforest France. As soon as he returns the associa tion will start a campaign to procure the needed seeds. Douglas fir was the first variety asked for, and a scarcity of this kind was immediately discovered. UKRAINIAN YEAR BOOKS Publications Have Wider Circulation Than Newspapers The yearbooks published by the Ukrainians in the United and Canada are highly important fea tures of their household libraries, ac cording to the committee on public information. The 'Ukrainians do not publish any illustrated magazines in tills country hut issue a number of paper-covered annuals dealing with an enormous number of subjects and filled .with pictures. Thus one of the most Vecent Ukrain ian almanacs, which is just off the press, contains articles on airplanes, agriculture, politics, international re lations, music, wifeless telegraphy, and travel. .\nd this is only the beginning. There is one article about Woodrow Wilson, accompanied by a picture of the president and quotations from some of his memorable speeches. These yearbooks, of which there are about ten, have a wider circulation than the Ukrainian newspapers and one or more of them is pretty sure to be found even in the humblest Ukrain ian household. English Writer Tells About Films That Actually Talk- Latest Edison Invention Thomas Alva Edison, in his wonder ful new invention, has given us pic tures that not only move but talk, re lates a Loudon correspondent. The kinetoplione and the phonograph, and its effects are weirdly realistic. The machine is so constructed that the sounds of the voices of the actors in the picture drama are reproduced in the most natural way.' When figures appear to be walking toward the front of the stage their voices get louder as they get nearer- to the audience, and softer as they retreat. When a plate Is smashed the noise of broken crock ery is distinctly heard. The notes of the piano or violin are reproduced when the actor plays on one of these instruments, the expression and time being clearly marked. Whistling, sing ing, opening and shutting doors, etc., are all heard. > Talking pictures are also to be seen in a similar invention, the klinoplasti kon. The effects here are most won derful. Dancers come from the wings, perform and sing, and retire to the wings again, and after applause come and bow their acknowledgments tq the audience in the most natural manner. What is more, the stage is not in dark ness, as in the case of ordinary bio scope pictures, but is perfectly light, and there is no screen. The illusion of living people singing and dancing as in a real theater is thus almost complete, for the figures do almost everything that a living artist can do. Man’s Work Should Provide Happiness and Peace of Mind A man’s work should always mean more to him than a mere means of live lihood. He should draw from it happi ness, contentment, peace of mind. 1 This he can do only if he looks upon his work as contributing something worth while to the lives of his fellow men. For men are so built that the con sciousness of rendering service is an instinctive need of their being. Those who have not this consciousness are certain to be unhappy, whether they do not work at all or up to the limit of their powers and whether the monetary return from their work is small or great. Belgium's Damages 6,000,560,000 Francs The central industrial committee of Belgium, after an investigation esti mates that Belgium’s damage through German military occupation and seiz ure of machinery and raw material at Q. 000,560,000 francs. Steel Making Very Similar To* Making of Pie, Says an American Chemical Expert The making of steel is very similar to the making of a pie, says J. W. Beckman, a member of the American Chemical society. In a pie a number of various ingredients are mixed to gether, and produce the desired re sults ; and such is also the case in making steel. Among the most im portant ingredients which enter into steel manufacture, aside from the iron itself, are the metals manganese and silicon. These two metals added to the iron in various proportion give the necessary quality to the steel. With out them modern steel manufacture would be a failure. Prior to the war metallic manganese used in steel making was obtained from ores imported from Russia and smelted in the United States into an alloy known as ferro-manganese. Prior to the war, as is now the case, silicon was smelted in the United States In electric furnaces from quartz rock into an alloy know as ferro-silicon. These were the two sources from which the silicon and manganese necessary in steel were obtained. The war has made enormous changes in the field of steel making. Germany has been de prived completely from obtaining man ganese from outside sources. The United States has also been deprived, due to many circumstances, from ob taining the requisite amount of man ganese ores from outside sources. Ger many has hunted through its mineral deposits and has found ores contain ing manganese and silicon together That's All. “A Hottentot gives a girl’s father blankets, cattle and much fine ivory.” “Well?” “But all a civilian father gets is a bum cigar occasionally.” Thrown Down. g&L New Drummer xisJs. —Hello, Cutey; is /Vvjj the buyer in? # Ribbon Counter _-===s== Mary—No, f resliy; but the-cellar is % Ignorance. “What ere you reading?” “An old tome. It Is full of quaint and surprising stuff.” “What surprises you?” “I see constant references to hand maidens.” “Well?” “I didn’t know they had manicures In those days.” Texas Making Wonderful Strides in Oil Industry Under the spur of war, Texas in the last year, has effected a tremendous development of her oil industry. To day there are in operation in that state 42 refineries with a capacity of 278,500 barrels daily. They are ca pable of refining double the amount of oil produced in the Texas field last year. Fields of unsuspected volume have been opened and made to aid in keeping ships and>army motors at top speed. In the coastal region where ten refineries are in operation, the first unit is nearly completed of a big oil plant on the Houston ship canal. It is intended to have a capacity of 20,000 barrels a day and represents an invest ment from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000. * • Scarcity of Scythes. Before the war Russia’s need of scythes was estimated at 6,000,000 an nually, of which about half were re quired in Siberia. To fill these require ments about 4,000,000 scythes were im- Each Must Learn His Own Best Way of Living, Then Get the Most Out of Life There is only one best conduct of life for you, and that Is the one that is best for you. Those who wander aimlessly In quest of the single right formula for existence grope in a mazq through which they must tread their way endlessly in searc** of the center which does not exist, observes a writer in Collier’s Weekly. There is no one recipe which will serve for all mankind. Each must learn not his neighbor’s but his owq best way of living. To one it may bq the routine task, the daily round, td curb the wnndering will and bring content. To another it may be the fortitude to escape the sheltering care of habit or the lassitude of sloth. To one it should be the abandonment of philosophy and introspection to rub elbows with his fellow-men; to an other, the willingness to let the soul awaken and breathe amid the sky rimmed prairie and under the death less stars; to one, hearthstone and slippers; to another the seven seaS, the aurora borealis and the southern cross; to one, society; to another, solitude; to one, the quiet which stills the passions; to another, the eter nal restlessness which brings achieve ment. The best rounded life contains some thing of each and all. There are but two attitudes to avoid —the level line of least resistance and the rigidity of self-distrust, which denies every im pulse simply because it is impulse. Somewhere between the two lies your course. Many are the thickets to be hewed down, many the crags to be scaled. But beyond stands the inn in the clearing, where faithful travelers may find the refreshment, the rest and the kindly words of welcome which form the goal and the reward of life well lived. and has smelted these ores and pro duced silico-manganese, an alloy con taining in itself two of the essential metals necessary in successful steel manufacture. The United States has been scoured all over for the purpose.of finding valuable manganese ores. Ores have been found, especially in the West, in very large amounts similar to those ores which have been the salvation of the German steel industries. Ferro manganese can be produced from these ores and in doing that part of the valuable metal manganese is wasted. Silico-manganese is produced today from these ores on the Pacific coast, with no waste of the metal manganese. The manufacture of this silico-man ganese alloy opens up unlimited ore reserves in the United States, which have had no value. Silico-manganese can do the same for the American steel industries as it has already done for the German. SHORT AND SNAPPY The keen edged, proverb Is a crosscut saw. It’s a wise man who shapes his plans to fit the inevitable. The rule of love is usually more effective than the rule of might. Second thoughts are best, un less they happen to be second hand thoughts. Hope makes a man believe that something will happen which he knows will not. The man who thinks he knows it all usually marries a woman who can teach him a lot more. Considerate Man. Friend Husband tells here about a man who, when he found the family cat sleeping in the coal bin, immediately ordered a ton of soft coal. Friend Wife —Oh, whaddy think of that. I’ll bet you thatte just a news* paper story. A Long Record. “How long have you had your cook?” asked the abrupt woman. svlir •‘More than two years,” replied the patient hostess. 4 “My! One of y 'I you must be easy Coloring Matter. Fred —Don’t/you think that dancing heightens g. girl’s color? Miary—No'; It is what is said be tween danceg.—Judge. ported annually on<| the remainder manufactured in Russia. According to latest information there are hardly any scythes to be found. Curtiss Is Credited With Originating Hydroplane The idea of the hydroplane was sug gested in patent specifications by Gugo Matullath of New York, 1899, but it had its practical origin in Glenn Curtiss, who added floats to the air plane with which he was experiment ing over Lake Keuka in 1908. These were placed under each wing, so that in case of accident the machine would not sink. Langein and others had made their experimental flights over bodies of water for the same reasons. Probably the first to make the floats an integral part of the machine was Fabre, who on March 28,' 1910, made the first flight wltto a practical hydro plane at Martlgnes, on the Seine. Cur tiss soon abandoned floats and buili boat bodies, and for this accomplish raent he received the Aero Club o; America trophy In 1911. Don’t wait until your cold develops Spanish Influenza or pneumonia. Kill it quick. CASCARAE? QUININE Standard cold remedy for 20 year*— ln tablet form —*afe, sure, no opiate*—breaaa up a cold in 24 hours —relieve* grip in 3 days. _Money back if it fail*. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. Hill’s picture. At All Drug Stores. Clear Your Skin Save Your Hair With Cuticura Hoap. Oint.. Talcum FISH Tulibee Whitefish 11c a pound; caught through the ice. Codfish and Haddock, 11c a pound—sweet as a nut IK lb. to 3 lb. each. Write for complete pricelist; all varieties of fresh, frozen, salt ed and smoked fish; ocean, lake and river. CONSUMERS FISH CO. Unitei State* Admisistratioa Licenta No. 6-13122 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Reference: First and Security National Bank His First Retreat. “Has your boy Josh gone back to work?" “Yep,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “He got so tired o’ havin’ everbody persuading him to sit around an’ tell all about the war that he gets away off yonder where nobody kin find him aD’ chops wood all day.* END INDIGESraN. EAT ONE TABIET PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN INSTANTLY RELIEVES ANY DISTRESSED, UPSET STOMACH. Lumps of undigested food causing pain. When your stomach is acid, gas sy, sour, or you have flatulence, heart burn, here Is instant relief —No wait ing 1 A Just as soon as you eat a tablet of fwo of Pape’s Diapepsin all that dys pepsia, indigestion and stomach dis tress ends. These pleasant, harmless tablets of Pape’s Diapepsin never fall to make sick, upset stomachs feel fine at once, and they cost very little at drug stores. Adv. A Mistake. “I'll bet the crown prince never was on the firing line.” “Oh, yes, he was. He’s just flre<K three cooks.” Restaurant Humor. “This fish is very rich.” “Yes, it is well supplied with bones.” —Boston Transcript. SIOO Reward, SIOO Catarrh ir a local disease greatly Influ enced by constitutional condition*. It therefore requires constitutional treat ment. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE Is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys tem. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, give! the patient strength by Improving the general health and assists nature in doing Its work. SIOO.OO for any case of Catarrh that HALL S CATARRH MEDICINE falls to cure. Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio. The Way of It. “The poor woman had to pinch her self to get along.” “I’ll bet her lazy, drinking husband didn’t pinch himself.” “No; the cops did it for him.” important to all Women Readers of this Papet Thousands upon thousands of womea have kidney or bladder trouble and nevei suspect it. Womens’ complaints often prove to b nothing else but kidney trouble, or th result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy con dition, they may cause the other organ* to become diseased. You mar suffer pain in the back, head ache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritm ble and maybe despondent; it makes anyone so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by' restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. A good kidney medicine, possessing real healing and curative value, should be a blessing to thousands of over-worked women. Many send for a sample bottle t<' k< what Swamp-Root, the great kidney liver and bladder medicine will do for them. Every reader of this paper, who has not already tried it, by enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A Cos., Binghamton, N. Y., may receive sample size bottle by Parcel Post. You can purchase the medium and large size bottles at all drug •tores. Adv. Favoritism. “Have the food restrictions been lifted in your home?” “Not as far as I’m concerned,” re plied . Mr. Meekton. “But Fido now gets two dog biscuits instead of one.” Make the best of the present—lf you •ire unable to exchange it for anything better. It is a wise old saw that cuts with ts wisdom teeth. A Wholesome, Cleansing, ■ AIIF Refreshing and Healing ® * Lolien —Murine for Red- _ ness, Soreness, Granula r w tk>n,ltchingandßurning of the Eyes or Eyelids; Drops” After the Movies. Motoring or Colt ill win your confidence. Ask Your Drug gift -r Murine when your Eyes Need Care. M-tt .vfurine Eye Riawdy Co*, Chicege