The Western Outlook. (San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, Calif.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 4, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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SAN FRANCISCO HOTELS
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
Lankershim
Hotel
55 FIFTH ST. Opposite^. S. Mint
New Fireproof HoteL 350 Room*
Every Modern Up-to-Date Convenience
Larse Ground Floor Lobby
Rate* EUROPEAN PLAN
Siegle rooms $ IJOO i*er toy. I person without bath
Double " J 1.50 " " ^persons "
Single, "« $1.5© " " I person with
Doable* " $2.50 " " 2{>ersons "
You don't need a map to find the Lankershim
Hotel- It te in the very center of San Francisco
Take the Universal Bus to tne Hotel at our ex-
oer,S-*. F. KLEIN, Manager.
-CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
PATENT ATTORNEYS
PATENTS that protect are procured through
PACIFIC COAST PATENT AGENCY, Inc.
Savirnt and Loan Building, Stockton, California.
AGENTS—Fast selling automobile necessity.
Large profits; exclusive territory to right man.
Write for particulars. ALWASHOLD CO., 6251
Dorchester Avenue, Chicago,
SALESMEN everywhere represent this com-
pany. AUTO-LUSTER greatest seller of theage.
Fortune for men who qualify. Gen. Sales Agt,,
1421 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco.
AUTO OWNERS—"Pep" in gasoline has doubled
mileage. Destroys carbon. Mailed for 25c, Pep
Company. Ocean Park, Cal.
TROUBLE FOR LOCAL EDITOR
Cricketer Threatened Physical Resent-
ment of Report of His Prowess
in the Game.
At a village cricket match the field-
ing side were for a time a man short.
A farsa laborer was pressed into serv-
ice. Just before the team's own man
arrived a ball was hit in tbe substi-
tute's direction. To the surprise of the
spectators generally, and himself in
particular, he made the catch.
The local paper the following Satur-
day was anxiously scanned for the
record of this feat, and disappointedly
found it reported merely "caught sub."
"What's caught 'sub'?" ho asked a
friend.
"Dcm't thee know? That means
'twere accidental!" was the reply.
Next morning the editor of the local
paper was greatly amused by the fol-
lowing epistle:
"Deer sur—You say in yore paper
as how I cort a man out in Saturday's
match—accidental—I mite summon
you for libel, but I won't, but should
you 'appen to git a dump on the nose
one day wen we meat you will know
Bill Wiggins has done it and it won't
be no 'sub' neither."—London Tit-Bits.
For a
Galled
Horse
Keeps Him Working
HANFORDS
Balsam of Myrrh
A LI N! ME NT
For Galls, Wire
Cuts, Lameness,
Strains, Bunches,
Thrush, Old Sores,
Nail Wounds, Foot Rot,
Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc.
Made Since 1346, As5b?utbi?dy
Price 50c and $1.00
OR "WRITE
G. C. Harford Mfg. Co.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
All Dealers
LEARN WAY TO MAKE LIVING
Good Advice for All Women Was
That Tendered at Woman's Club
at Pittsburgh.
Week's Break-Up-a-Cold Tablets
A guaranteed remedy for Colds and
La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist.
It's good. Take nothing else.—Adv.
HARD WORK BRiNGS SUCCESS
Few Achieve Anything Really Worth
While Without a Struggle for
Its Possession.
Anything you may get without a
struggle is worth little.
Keep this In mind when you are en-
gaged in some difficult task and see
if It doesn't help you to stick.
Things easy to do are the things
Bought by the easy-gcing kind of man
who never climbs to any height. Per-
haps he puts up a gcod bluff at doing
hard work, but the deception hurts
himself the most, and sooner or later
he has to pay the piper.
Natural ability helps some folk to
gain prominence, but without hard
work it will not go far. It is not the
pupil who learns his lesson the easiest
or in the shortest time who amounts
to the most In after life. The quick
to learn often have to work the hard-
est to retain it.
When you think of the different
members of your class 1n school you
know now that it Is mostly the "grind"
who has made the great and real suc-
cess, not the boy who could recite on
a minute's notice and spent the rest
of his life in mischief. The real
"smart boy" you used to know is gen-
erally working under the man who
was once known as "dense" or "slow."
Stick to your job.
A woman of wealth, but who is nev-
ertheless identified with civic work
and is a practicing lawyer, lately gave
a talk before a Pittsburgh mothers'
club. Here is a part of what she
said:
There is one question to which
every woman ought to be able to an-
swer Yes. It is this: "Can you earn
a living if you should need to do?"
If there is one lesson more than an-
other that has been emphasized in re-
cent years it is that the untrained
suffer most when a pinch comes. An-
other lesson that is most sufficiently
understood is that there is practical-
ly no security in fortune.
Be prepared, is advice for a woman
as well as for a nation. Train your
daughters, you mothers, to something
that will pay a return sufficient at
least for a livelihood. It can do no
harm, and it may mean just the dif-
ference between happiness and misery
in later life.
There is nothing more pathetic than
the sight of some unfortunate woman,
brought up to a competency and ut-
terly unprepared to support herself,
who has been suddenly reduced to
poverty. We all know some such
woman. Pottering along at things
that are of no real use, at work given
by pitying friends or strangers, more
or less dazed by contact with a world
that is foreign to her, sinking little
by little to meaner surroundings and
more desperate makeshifts, she at last
disappears, sucked under in the mael-
strom she has neither the strength nor
the training to resist.
Surely you don't want to run even
the faintest chance of becoming such
derelict, you don't want your daugh-
ters to run any such risk. So be pre-
pared. Be fit for something, trained
to something, ready to take hold if
you must. Know at least one thing
so well that people will be glad to
pay you for doing it. Be able to say
Yes if the world should ask you if
you can return fair value for a living.
It is the surest of human safeguards.
NO GROUND FOR SCANDAL
Though for a Time the Domestic
Peace of the Deary Family Was
Seriously Threatened, »
A Loyal Ally
In Stomach
Ailments
A young married woman, whose hus-
band was of an exceedingly Jealous
disposition, decided to have her din-
ing room repapered, and telephoned
to the nearest paperhanger to send
one of his men with samples to her
home that afternoon.
Promptly at four o'clock the man
appeared with the usual large sample
book, and Mrs. Newlywed ushered him
into the dining room, as she thought
the paper could best be decided upon
when tried against the wall.
"No, I don't like that brown, Mr.
Paperhanger. Try the buff," she said.
Then, "No, Mr. Paperhanger, the figure
is too large in that; let me see that
dark blue! Yes, I like that, don't you,
Mr. Paperhanger?"
"Yes, madam, that looks very well,
but don't call mo Mr. Paperhanger,
that isn't my name."
"Oh, pardon me, but what' is your
name?" Mrs. Newlywed asked.
"My name is Love," the paperhang-
er answered, when Mrs. Newlywed Be-
gan to laugh.
"Yes, Love," the paperhanger re-
peated, somewhat nettled by the
lady's laughter. Then she straightened
her face and was about to speak,
when her husband strode into the
room, with fire in his eyes.
"Get out of here, you infamous ras-
cal!" he thundered, shaking his fist
in the paperhanger's face. "Get out
before I throw you out."
"What's the matter with you?" the
paperhanger snarled. "What have I
done?"
"Done? Ask me what you have
done! Here I just come home from a
hard day's work and find you making
love to my wife, and then you ask me
what you have done!"
"Why, man, you're crazy! Why
should I make love to your wife when
I have one of my own? Your wife
asked me what my name was, and I
told her. W. E. Love. Now what
have you to say?" and the paperhang-
er straightened up ready for what
might happen next, when Mrs. Newly-
wed said: "Oh, Harry, don't act so!
The man is telling the truth and I
was laughing when you came in at
the idea of having Love and Deary un-
der the same roof."
This time the paperhanger looked
mystified, when Mrs. Newlywed ex-
plained: "Our name is Deary, Mr.
Love; this is my husband, H. O.
Deary!"
Needlessly to say Mr. Deary looked
very much ashamed of himself, and
Mr. Love is now debating whether he
9hall change his name or not!
Dehydrated Olives
are Better than Nuts and cure con-
stipation, hemorrhoids, stomach and
liver troubles. An ounce a day will
keep the doctor away. Sold in 4 oz.
cartons sit 10 ceuts. Get them from
your grocer or druggist. If they haven't
got them, tell them to get them. Every-
body's eating them.
Maywood Packing Co., Coming, Cal.
NOT CONDUCIVE TO OLD AGE
RUED BY THE WAB
amous Russian Watering Place
Is Deserted.
Jalta, Known All Over the World for
Its Marvelous Climate, Has Had
Practically No Visitors
This Season.
TRUE FRIENDSHIP OF YOUTH
Engages Gamekeeper In Long Chase
That His Companion, Without
Permit, Might Escape.
As soon as you
notice the appetite
waning, the digestion
beconv><* ?r^»vMred or
the liver and bowels
refuse t o perform their
daily functions just resort to
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
* It is really Nature's "first aid"
Have Healthy, Strong, Ueautlfal Eye*
Oculists and Physicians used Murine Eye
Remedy many years before it was offered as a
Domestic Eye Medicine. Murine is Still Com-
pounded by Our Physicians and guaranteed
by them as a Reliable Relief for Eyes that Need
Care. Try it in your Eyes and In Baby's Eyes —
No smarting—Just Eye Comfort. Buy Murine
of your Druggist — accept no Substitute, and if
interested write for Book of the Eye Free.
MIKINE EYE BEMEUI CO., CHICAGO
fcor in Precious Stones.
For a land that is rich in minerals
of all kinds the United States seems to
have a very poor output of precious
or semiprecious stones. At>out the
best that we can do is to produce plen
t> of turquoise, and of this the mines
last year yielded $4,000 more than the
> ear before. Diamonds in the rough
were once picked up in Kansas and
opals and rubies In one or two of the
southern states, but the unromantie
government experts, after an investi-
gation, informed the purchasers of the
mines" that they had been "let in on
rather crudely salted properties." But
that the prospectors are busy in. this
country may be gathered from the re-
cent discovery of turquoise deposits
in Nevada, pink beryl in Maine, sun-
stone in Arizona and atnazon stone at
White Plains, just north of this city—
Xew York Sun.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regu-
late and invigorate stomach, liver and
bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules,
easy to take. Do not gripe.—Adv.
The Successful Wife.
It is becoming more or less rare to
hear of an ideally happy marriage,
and thislstate of things "gives one fu
rioualy to think," as they say in
PTance. It may bo due to the fact
that, although love is easy to gain, it
requires tact and care on a woman's
part to retain it_
So many girls think that, directly
the wedding ring is actually their owr,
they need no longer trouble then
selves to be as charming to their hus
band? as they were in courting time
The girl who wants to become a
thoroughly happy wife, loving and be
ioved, must tax her strength and pa
rience to attract and piease her hus
"and regardless of the worries c
everyday life, to show a smiling fie-
ri trouble, to be a real "pal,' and tc
f>ear and forbear. These eiforls rout?
inevitably te crowned with success
and the effort is well worth wiiiie.-
Sxcnange.
Youngster of 80 Ss Toid by Man of
92 He Will Never Be Old Man on
Account of Habits.
The late John Bigelow, the tatri-
ureh of diplomats and authors, and
the no less eminent physician and
author, Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, were to-
gether several years ago at West
Point. Doctor Bigelow was then nine-
ty-two and Doctor Mitchell eighty.
The conversation turned to the sub-
ject of age. "I attribute my many
years," said Doctor Bigelow, "to the
fact that I have been most abstemious.
I have eaten sparingly and have not
used tobacco and have taken little ex-
ercise."
"It is just the reverse in my case,'
explained Doctor Mitchell "I have
eaten just as much as I wished, if I
could get it; I have always used to-
bacco, immoderately at times, and I
have always taken a great deal of
exercise."
With that, Ninety-two Years shook
his head at Eighty Years and said:
"Well, you will never live to be an
old man!"—Pittsburgh Chronicle-
Telegraph.
Two boys, one the possessor of a
permit, were fishing on a certain es-
tate when a gamekeeper suddenly
aarted from a thicket. The lad with
the permit uttered a cry of fright,
dropped his rod and ran off at top
speed. The gamekeeper was led a
swift chase. Then, worn out, the boy
halted. The man seized him by the
arm and said between pants:
"Have you a permit to fish on this
estate?"
"Yes, to be sure,' said the boy,
quietly.
"You have? Then show it to me.'
The boy drew the permit from his
pocket. The man examined it and
frowned in perplexity and anger.
"Why did you run when you had
this permit?" he asked.
"To let the other boy get away,
was the reply. "He didn't have
none!" — Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tele-
graph.
Obliging.
The hotel keeper, hearing of the
whereabouts of a guest who had de-
camped from the hotel without going
through the formality of paying his
bill, sent him a note:
"Mr. . Dear Sir: Would you
send the amount of your bill and
oblige?" etc.
To which the delinquent replied:
"The amount la |13. Yours respect
fully."
The Relationship.
Mrs. Swiftly and -her former hus
band were still friends. Noting the
similarity of names and their familiar
manner toward each other, a lady who
was a guest with them at a week-end
party thought they must be cousins.
"Is Mr. Swiftly a connection of
yours?" she asked.
"No," laughed Mrs. Swiftly. "A dls
connection."^-Judge.
To Break In New Shoe*.
Always shake in Allen's Koot-Ease, a
powder. It cures hot, sweating, aching,
swollen feet. Cures corns. Ingrowing
nails and bunions. At all druggist* and
shoe stores, 25c. Don't accept any sub-
si itute. Sample mailed FREE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. T.—Adv.
Brown's Home Life.
Jones—I don't see yonr husband at
the "jlub of late, Mrs. Brown!
Mrs. Brown—No. He stays at home
now and enjoys life in his own way
as I want him to.
Distribution.
"The question of distribution is one
of the most serious of our time,' re-
marked the ponderous man.
"It is," - replied Miss Cayenne
"There is no telling what may happen
to the simplest statement of innocent
fact after it has been passed around
by gossips."
ON THE BORDER.
O
"Jalta, the Newport of Russia, to
which even such favored regions of
the world as the garden lands of Cali-
fornia and the Riviera must yield
when climates are compared, is today
a stronghold of society utterly
eclipsed by war, a lonely, unvisited
little village whose prestige and fame
have departed overnight, a Newport
untenanted, forgotten by the press
and by all the people who, in peace
times, eagerly read about all the so-
cial splendors there," begins a state-
ment given out by the National Geo-
graphic society.
"Jalta, normally, would just be en-
tering upon the height of its season,
its gayest, most important two months
of the year, had not a world war
closed it, together with Monte Carlo,
Karlsbad, Interlaken and scores of
other places of 'good-tone,' beauty and
amusement. The imperial court, the
statesmen, diplomats and members of
the great Russian command, now car
rying the intolerable burdens of the
war, would be gathered there in times
of quiet, and social Russia would fol-
low their course.
"Jalta Is a beautiful place built on
the shelf of a mountain whose foot
bathes in the bluest and mildest of wa-
ters to be found ail around the coast
of the Black sea. This little seaport,
in the government of Taurida, on the
southern coast of Crimea, thoroughly
deserves the distinction of being the
vacation home of celebrities.
"Behind it and between it and the
north the solid mountain greens,
which merge into deeper and deeper
shades until at the bare summits they
are greenish brown, rise to heiglits of
from 2,500 to 3,000 feet. These are
the southern fringe of the Jaila moun-
tains. The tops of these peaks are
often covered in icy mists while in
Jalta and on its bay rests the mildest
of spring weather. Snow never falls
in Jalta, which boasts an annual mean
temperature of 56 degreees Fahren-
heit. Its climate is said to be supe-
rior to that of Nice. Its summers
are not so oppressively hot, there is
less rain in autumn and winter, the
cool Is less crisp in winter and the
sunshine of autumn is said to fall
balmier than anywhere else in the
world.
"There is no industry and little
trade carried on by the people of the
village, who live almost entirely by
catering to vacationists and regular
visitors. It has a population of 14,-
000. It is an ancient city and is
thought to have been a place of great
importance in a remote past. At one
time it belonged to the patriarchs of
Constantinople."
Try this easy way to
clear your skin with
Resi not
Bathe your face for several minutes
with Resinol Soap and warm water,
working the creamy lather into the
skin gently with the finger-tips. Then
wash off with more Resinol Soap and
warm water, finishing with a dash ol
clear coid water to ciose the pores.
Do this once or twice a day and you
will be astonished how quickly the
healing,antiseptic Resinol medication
soothes and cleanses the pores, ic
moves pimples and blackheads, and
leaves the complexion ciear, irests
and velvety.
If the skin is in bad condition
through neglect or an unwise use of*
cosmetics, apply a littie Resinoi Oint-
ment* and let it remain on ten min-
utes belore the fina washing with
Resinol Soap.
Resinol Soap is cot artificially colored, its rich
brown being entirely due to tbe Resinol baisams
it contains. Sold by all druggists and dealers m
toilet goods For trte sampsc cake and trial ct
Resinol Ointment, write Dept. 3-P, ResiooU
Baltimore, Md.
*Phy'i ic tans kai-e prescribed Resinol
Ointment for over twenty years in the
treatment cf skin and scaif affections.
Figured It Out. €>
The Officer—Really, Smithers, your
figures are awful. Just look at this 3;
anyone would take it for a 5.
Smithers—It is a 5, sir.
The Officer—Good Lord! I would
have sworn it was a 3.—London
Sketch.
His Idea.
"What are your ideas of the best
form of government 1"
"Oh," replied the restless agitator,
'' it isn't a question of what kind of
government we're after. It's merely
getting rid of the one at present in
operation."—Washington Star.
SMOKELESS POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLS
There are more "Leader" and"Repeater" loaded shells used
than any other brand. Their superior shooting is the reason
why. For pattern, penetration and uniformity they are
unequalled. They hold all important records and trophies.
ask.your dealer for THE W brand.
World's Pencil Production.
According to a recent article by Mr.
H. S. Sackett of the forest service, the
world's production of lead pencils
probably amounts to 2,000,000,000 a
year, half of which are made from
American-grown cedar. The United
States makes about 760,000,000 a
year, or more than eight pencils for
each of Its inhabitants.
Owing to the growing scarcity of
red cedar and the fact that many other
trees now little used appear to be
more or less valuable substitutes for
that wood in penciimaking, the forest
service has carried out a series of
tests which show that, next to the
two species heretofore used for this
purpose, the best trees for pencils
are, in order of merit. Rocky Moun-
tain red cedar, big tree (Sequoia), Port
Orford cedar, redwood and alligator
Juniper.
Ail Lessons of Life.
The worst kind of trouble and soi
fow should only teach us the lesson
of a wider sympathy and love. We
Should never allow ourselves to be-
come immersed in our own griefs, for
that only intensifies them. Let us
shut them out of our minds as much
as possible.
By letting no day pass without do-
ing some kindness to others who are
perhaps far worse off than we are,
the trouble, which seemed so gigantic
at first, will gradually sink to Lillipu-
tian dimensions. By thinking sunny
thoughts and shutting out the intrud-
ing dark ones we can rob grief of all
its sting. By admitting only the
thoughts of love and peace we help
ourselves and many others.
WHEN WRITING ADVERTISERS
PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER.
S. F. N. U.
49. 1915
FARMERS WANTED
VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA, offers special induce-
ments. Government land, water, railways, free
schools, 31H rears to pay for farms adapted to
alfalfa, corn, suear beets, fruit, etc. Climate
like California. Ample markets. Reduced pass-
ages for approved settlers. Free particulars
from F. T. A. Fricke, Government Representa-
tive from Victoria, 6S7 Market Street, San Fran-
cisco, California. Box 81.
Not Safe.
"Safe burglars do not boast about
their work."
"Why should they?"
"Yet they are always blowing about
their business."
The Mexican—Why are you here?
The American Soldier—We're here
because we're here!
IKULSIOK
Is nasal breathing
impaired? Does
your throat get
husky or clogged ?
Modern science proves
that these symptoms re-
sult from run-down health.
Snuffs and vapors are irri-
tating and useless.
The oil-food in Scott's Emulsion
will enrich and enliven the blood,
aid nutrition and assist nature to
check the inflammation and
heal the sensitive membranes.
Shan Alcoholic mixtures
and insist upon SCOTT'S.
14-49
Preliminary Discussion.
"I offered her my _hand," said the
young man.
"Did she accept it?"
"Not exactly. She's a bridge player
and what she expects of me as a part-
ner is to lay my hand on the table and
be a dummy."
Early Indication.
"Doesn't that youngster of yours
toe-in a little when he tries to stand
up?"
"Yes," replied the fond father. "We
have great hopes of him. It looks
to me as if he were naturally built
for an expert golf player."
Presumption.
"Those new neighbors have very
presumptuous children," said he.
"Yes," replied she. "They think
they have a perfect right to get out
In the street and make as much noise
as ours do."
Seize Much Opium.
Acting on a tip that a large quan-
tity of opium had been transferred
from the S. S. Korea when it was in
Hong Kong, the federal authorities
gave the Chiyo Maru one of the most
thorough searches a liner has been
subjected to in San Francisco. Thirty
inspectors were put to work, and w ent
from stem to stern, from top to bot-
tom, and found about *2,500 worth of
the contraband drug. An inspector
found in a chest belonging to Loo
Wing a false side, which opened when
one of the screws in the lock was
pressed. In this false side f 600 worth
of opium was found. It is said that
more opium is finding its way into
the country than ever before.
The Resemblance.
"There is a great likeness between
a glad telegram and a Japanese sui-
cide."
"What might it be?"
"The telegram is also a happy dia
patch."
War Wedding Rings.
English gir's becoming engaged to
soldiers make a special point of ac-
quiring out-of-the-common engagement
rings. These have been very success-
fully and artistically made from the
bands of shells melted down and inset
with the prospective wearer's favor-
ite stone. On the Inside is inscribed
the day on which the fragment was
originally picked up, and a few par-
ticulars. , Shell bands are also made
up into brooches and bracelets. War
brides have a fancy for rather wide
wedding ring3, and for the moment
the smaller size, the popular one be
fore last August, is in the background.
—Tit-Bits.
Now Lemuel Knows.
Little Lemuel—What's an auction,
paw?
Paw—An auction, son, is a for-bid*
ding place.
Of Course Paw Knew.
Little Lemuel—Say, paw, what Is an
upstart?
Paw—An upstart., son, is a self-made
I man who Isn't your friend.
Nervous
Emotional
Dizzy
Depressed
Mrs. Addle Curtsiager, ot
Cedar St., Cairo, III., -wrote
Doctor Pierce as follows:
"I send 31 cents for your "Com-
mon Sense Medical Adviser' for
my daughter who has recently
married and I know the book will
be of much value to her. I have
read and used for 25 years the
valuable treatments contained
in the "Medical Adviser' and
have taken many bottles of Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription,
and have been restored to heal th
each time I used it. Itieairreat
remedy for women as a strength
builder, fine for the nervee and
general health."
WOMEN who are restless, with
v v constant change of position,' 'fidget-
iness," who are abnormally excitable or who
experience fainting or dizzy spells, or nervous
headache and wakefulness are usually sufferers
from the weaknesses of their sex.
DR. PIERCE'S
Favorite Prescription
is the soothing, cordial and womanly tonic that
brings about an invigorating calm to the nervous
system. Overcomes the weakness and the drag-
ging pains which resemble the pairvs of rheu-
matism. Thousands of women in the past forty
years can bear witness to its benefits.
Your dealer In medicines sells it in liquid or surrar-
coated tablet form; or you can eend 50one-cent stampa
for a trial box of Dr. pterea's Favorite Prescription
tablets. Address Dr. V. M. Pierce, Invalids* Hotel
and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiniHMiniHiiiiiimiiiSEUunuiimi
Dr. Pi»rce's Pleasant Pellet* Regulate and Invigorate
Stomach, liver and Bowels, Sugar-Coated Tiny Granules.
iUllUllIllllUlllll3UliniliHliIUIUiil«lIIIIIIii!Sl!IIlllllUI
Undernourished Children.
Statistics show that in six ox the
nation's largest cities from IX to 20
per cent of the child popu.'atlon
noticeably underfed or ill nourfehed
I
WHAT WE SAW AT
Madame World's Fair
BY ELIZABETH GOKMK
AUTKOS Of'BKiO OSL0GEN7 FL0Wtf>O«l*lCeTt-
SS
S
WCTUReS 4* BCRtHA CORBETT «*FP0M PHOTOGRAPHS
FOR ALL CHILDREN
EVERYWHERE
and GROWN-
UPS TOO *
The Popular New Gift Book,
Teiiing All About the Exposition
Handsomely Illustrated in Color
Price $1.25, Postpaid
Order From Your Bookseller or
SAMUEL LEVINSOiN, Publisher
Hobart Building
San Francisco
I—
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Francis, Joseph S. & Derrick, J. Lincoln. The Western Outlook. (San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, Calif.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 4, 1915, newspaper, December 4, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth596171/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .