MARSH 41 
liot, with nine illustrations; Along the Shore, a 
poem, A. T. L.; The Coast Survey, Martha J. Lamh, 
with twenty Illustrations; the English Home of 
the Washington’s, A. T. Story, with seven illustra¬ 
tions; Old Dutch Masters—I. Rembrandt VanRyn> 
E. Mason, with lour Illustrations; The Pine-Tree, 
a poem, Han let P, Spotlord; A Ceremony upon 
Candlemas-Eve, a poem, Robert Herrick, with an 
illustration by Abbey; berg and Thai—Sketches 
Tyrol (l.>, George K. Waring, Jim., with fourteen 
Illustrations; English and American locomotives, 
Charles Barnard, with three Illustrations ; A Sum¬ 
mer Story. Alice Ferry, with one Illustration ; The 
English tn India, Thomas Knox; Young Mrs. Jar- 
dlne, a novel, Dinah Mulock-Craik; Climates lor 
invalids, Dr. T, M. Coan, with one Illustration; 
Miss Vedder, a story, C. F. Woolson; Gary’s Mag¬ 
netic Motor. E. M. Bacon, with four Illustrations; 
The “ Tom ” Side of Macaulay. D. D. Uoyd; Miss 
Merler's Nerves, a story, Miss Thackeray; Afghan¬ 
istan, Z. B. Gustafson. 
Editor’s Easy Chair: Major Andre and Nathan 
Hale; Bemt-Royalty In Canada; The late Bayard 
Taylor; The new Capitol at Albany; Painting tbe 
Lily; Dr. Holmes on Interviews. 
Editor's Literary Record: Macauley’s History ot 
England, Library Edition ; Johnson’s The Normans 
in Europe; Eggleston’s Red Eagle; Hardy’s The 
Ret,urn of the Native; Notley’a Love’s Crosses; 
Macquold’s Elinor Dryden; Bulwer’s Lust Days of 
Pompeii; Sandcuu's Madeline; Hay’s The Sorrow 
of a Secret; Besant and Klee's ’Twas In Trafalgar’s 
Bay; Linton’s our Professor; Lady Carmichael’s 
Will, and other Christmas Stories; Kip’s Hanni¬ 
bal's Man, and Other Tales; Runeberg’s Nadesch- 
da ; Gilder’s The Poet and his Master, and Other 
Poems; schall’s Popular Commentary oh the New 
Testament; Warner's Bible Narratives; O’Flana- 
gan’s The Irish Bar; Sport and Work on the Ne- 
paul Frontier; Towle’s Plzarro; Shaw’s castle 
Blair. 
Editor's Scientific Record: Astronomy; Physics; 
Chemistry; Anthropology; Zoology; Engineering 
and Mechanics. 
Editor’s Historical Record: Political Intelligence; 
Disasters; Obituary. 
Editor's Drawer: Concerning Laughter; Liquor 
Bills; Good English; A Warning; New York Men 
abroad; A Juvenile Bit from Illinois; Raising 
Money “In Meeting;” An Epitaph; Humors from 
the Irish Bar; Classic Gems; Another Epitaph; 
A slow Railroad In New Jersey; Another Arrow 
from a long Bow; St. Valentine’s Day— Hawking 
in Central Park (Illustration). 
Contents of St. Nicholas for March, 1879: 
Frontispiece—“ They Instinctively raised their 
guns and fired;’’ An Adventure on an Iceberg, Dr. 
Isaac 1. Hayes, two illustrations; A Wonderful 
Candle, Aunt Fanny, Illustrated title by it. Sayre; 
The obstinate Weather-cock, Horace E. Sendder, 
two illustrations by Alfred Kappes; Red Rldlng- 
Hood and the Wolf, picture drawn by Gustave 
Dore; The Renaissance, art-paper, Mary Lloyd; 
The Wasp and the Bee, verses. Palmer Cox, Illus¬ 
tration by tbe Author; Eyebrlght, Chapter III, 
Susan Coollclge, two Illustrations by Frederick 
Dellman; Bloom, poem, Bessie Hill, two must ra¬ 
tions by K. Rlordan; Wanted, Sarah Winter Kel¬ 
logg; oriental Bottles and Wells, and How they 
are Made, Fanny Roger Feudge, six Illustrations; 
Dick’s Supper, verses, Mrs. E. T. Corbett, three il¬ 
lustrations by L. Hopkins; Nannie’s tittle Muff. 
Mary Bolles Branch, two Illustrations; falling the 
Flowers, poem, Mary Mapes Dodge. Illustration by 
Kate Greenaway; Rumpty-Dudgefs Tower, con¬ 
cluded, Julian Hawthorne, three Illustrations by 
Alfred Fredericks; The American Mardl-Gras, 
Mary Hartwell Catherwood, ten Illustrations by J. 
Wells Champney; Waiting tor Spring, picture; 
Pets from Persia, Kate Foote, two illustrations by 
Miss E. Foote; Elizabeth’s Roses, translation of 
German Legend, printed In December munber, An¬ 
nie B. Parker; The Plaything Sky, verses,J. W. Do 
Forest, two Illustrations; A Jolly Fellowship, 
Chaps. IX. and X., Frank It. Stockton, three illus¬ 
trations, two by James E, Kelly; The Mechanical 
Pigeon, Charles Barnard, two Illustrations. 
For Very Little Folk. Pinkety-WInkety-Wee, 
verses, Mrs. E. T. Aided, two Illustrations; Joe 
and the Seal, C. M. Drake, Illustration by J. C. 
Beard; Eleven Little Pussy-Cats, Jingle, Joel Stacy; 
Slate Pictures, drawn by L. Hopkins. 
Jack-ln-the- Pulpit (Illustration). 
The Letter-Box (Illustration). 
The Riddle-Box (Two Illustrations). 
American Na rtJKAi.TST for March— Remarks on 
Fossil shells from the Colorado Desert, Robert E. 
0.Stearns; The Distribution of the North Ameri¬ 
can Flora, sir Joseph Dalton Hooker; The origin 
of the Specialized Teeth of the Carnivora, E. D. 
Cope; Grief In the chimpanzee, Arthur E. Brown; 
Experiment.-, with Fyretliraim roseUm In Killing 
Insects, W, L. carpenter; Valentine, F. K. W.; 
Recent Literature: Comstock’s outline of General 
Geology; Gegenbaur’s Elements of Comparative 
Anatomy; Schmarda’s Zoology; Congressional 
Record, Feb. 12 ; Gen. Garfield on Government 
Surveys; Recent Books and Pamphlet?-. 
Botany.— On Nomenclature.— Aspidhun hnnttii 
Ttickerinan—Botanical News. 
Zoology. —Note on the ilalry-talled Mole, Smlops 
breicerll of authors; The clover-seed Fly, a new 
Insect Pest; The English sparrow and our Native 
Song-Birds. 
Anthropology. — Hubei’s Account ot Ancient 
Guatemalan Sculptures.—Anthropological News. 
neology nod rahvoutology. —Mineral Wax In 
Utah; Merycopater and Hoplophoneus; The Na¬ 
ture of Eozoon; The Age of the Laramie; On the 
Occurrence of a solid Hydrocarbon In the Eruptive 
Rocks of New Jersey; The Hudson River Group at 
Poughkeepsie. 
Geography and Travels.— American Geographical 
Society ; President’s Annual Address.— obituary. 
Microscopy.. — New Microscopical societies.— 
American Quarterly Microscopical Journal.—Sale 
of a Microscopical Library.—Spring Clips. 
Scientific News; Proceedings of scientific Socie¬ 
ties; Selected Articles in Solent] llo serials. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 475 
Jfor Momtit. 
OONDTOTED BY MISS FAITH RIPLEY. 
THAT PARLOR OF MINE. 
A I.ICE jM. THORNTON. 
What to do with that parlor I didn’t know. It 
was the dlsmalest, dolefulest apartment I ever 
saw. You could fling open the blinds and let in a 
deluge of sun shin e, but still the room had a “ Hark! 
from the tombs ” sort ot air. You see the house, 
furniture and farm fell to Charlie from his mother, 
and he had spent all his money on tools and Im¬ 
proved stock for the farm, and there was little left 
tor house furnishing. We were married tn the 
spring, and all the summer I planned and planned 
how to brighten that room. The carpet was a 
dark brown and black Ingrain, the walls were 
whitewashed, t here were green paper blinds at the 
windows, and besides there were a badly-worn 
sofa and rocker of black hair-cloth, four cane- 
seat chairs and rocker, with the bottoms partly 
broken through, and an old-fashioned stand. On 
the walls hung an ancient sampler, a battle-piece 
and a colored print of a tall man, In a swallow¬ 
tailed coat, standing under a very weeping willow 
and gazing at a tombstone, on which was the In¬ 
scription “Sacred 10 the Memory,’’ and there had 
been added In Ink “Jolm Thornton, aged no; Mary 
Thornton, aged lo; James Thornton, age no.” 
Charlie told me I could have all the money from 
the poultry, and l decided to spend what money 1 
could make on that room. But the hens wonld set 
for a week very quietly, then a change would come 
over the. spirit of their dreams, and they “set; a 
standing,” like the Dutchman's. A stray cat waged 
persistent warfare against the chickens and de¬ 
stroyed several broods, and those that escaped tbe 
cat fell victims to the “gapes.” My ducklings 
stuffed themselves into apoplexy. When Thanks¬ 
giving came I had $25 worth of poultry to send to 
the market, instead ot $75 or $100, which my Imagi¬ 
nation had pictured as the net proceeds In the 
sprlug. Twenty-five dollars wouldu’t do much, 
hut 1 resolved to make the most of what I had. 
On turning 1 be carpet, 1 found the other side was 
lighter a nd prettier than the light side. For the 
walls 1 made a whitewash by dissolving chrome lu 
alcohol and adding enough to the wash to give it a 
yellow tint. This gave a sunshiny look to the 
room quite different from the glare of whitewash. 
A border of scarlet and gold finished the wall. 
The paint was very grimy and yellow, so I scraped 
off all i could of ll. The doors I painted over with 
black-walnut stain (made by dissolving burnt um¬ 
ber lu scalding hot vinegar). The panels of the 
doors I painted a buff-shade (made by adding 
chrome to common white-lead paint.). On t hese pan¬ 
els I arranged a wreath of autumn leaves and tiny 
pressed vines. 1 ihen gave t he whole door a com 
ot varnish. My doors were as handsome as l could 
wish and looked, with the glowing lints of the 
autumn leaves on the soft buff buck-ground, like a 
picture. For window shades 1 used common 
bleached muslin; over this I placed curtains of 
lace, to be sure they were the cheapest of Notting¬ 
ham, but the patterns were pretty fern-leaves and 
grasses, and they gave a light, airy took to the 
room. Over these i hung lambrequins of turkey- 
red. and they were beauties! The width of the 
cloth made the depth of the lambrequins; the pat¬ 
tern I cut tyom •• presume.” (as the little girl said 
when reproved for saying "guess,") a deep scallop 
on each side and a shallow one In t he middle. The 
edge was trimmed with coarse red fringe, and 
above this was a ruffle, pinked on each edge and 
gathered in the middle. The cornices were smooth 
pine sticks, painted buff, with walnut-stalred 
edges, and a tiny pressed vine was fastened onto 
the middle of the cornices. 
The hatr-cloth covers to ibc sofa and rocker I 
ripped off and used as a pattern to cut fresh cov¬ 
ers by. f bought, a quantity of red flannel and 
covered them with it. The worn cane-seat chairs 
and rocker had cloth tanked over the broken seats, 
and the scratched woodwork given a coat of wal¬ 
nut. stain, and then varnished. The rocker had 
old blankets lacked all over it, the back and seat 
padded, and over this a eover of flannel. The 
cane chairs had a cushion tacked on with scarlet 
gtmp, to the seat over the broken bottom. A keg, 
sawn tn two, furnished the foundation tor two foot¬ 
stools, which were padded and covered with flan¬ 
nel The tops were worked on canvas; the de- 
slgn being a bouquet of purple foxgloves and their 
green leaves, ou a dull red ground. My eenter- 
table was an old affair 1 found In the attic. This 
was saud papered, stained and varnished. Fora 
cover I took a coarse- brown linen table cloth, and 
ornamented It with shaded red Germantown yarn. 
A strip of brown velveteen, about four inches wide, 
was sewed In the edge, about five Inches from the 
bottom. This strip was worked with red yarn In 
ooml pattern. A friend gave me a remnant o' 
Brussels carpet—a medallion ot flowers on a pearl 
ground, the back-ground being a dull red color, of 
tiffs 1 made a handsome mat, finishing the edge 
with a fringe of red. 
The mantel was yellow and 111-shapen. This was 
covered with a scalloped lambrequin of reel flannel, 
the edge trimmed with oak-leaves, of brown vel¬ 
veteen, veined with yellow silk. On the mantel 
were a pair ot scarlet and gold vases, a Parian 
bust, a pair of photograph easels, and a dock—all 
wedding presents. 
Charlie and I had a great number of books,— 
poetry, travels, history and a quantity of bound 
magazines and periodicals. We had no bookcase; 
buying oue was out of the quest Inn. I studied for 
some time how l should make one. At last 1 
thought uf the recess, at the side of the fire-place. 
Tin* latter projected out towards the center of the 
room, leavl ng a deep recess at each side Charlie was 
called In, and lie nailed cleats t,o the sides and back 
of the recess; these being secured into the stud¬ 
ding, held the shelves firmly, the shelves them¬ 
selves being of pine, sand-papered, stainedhlack- 
waimit ami varnished. This gave rue ample room 
for my books and papers, and one shelf for some 
old china, which had been Charlie’s great-grand¬ 
mother’s. 
I next took the pictures from their frames, and 
sent the mourning pieces and battle-scene Into ex¬ 
ile. I had a lovely chromo—a wedding present 
—and the two Demorest ehromos, -“The Oaken 
Bucket” and “The Captive child,” all In gilt 
frames. One of the old frames 1 used for a chromo 
of autumn leaves and flowers, on a white ground; 
the frame I covered with black velvet, glued on 
smoot hly, then over the edge, near the picture, I 
fastened a strip of gilt paper, pinked on one edge, 
the straight side near the picture and the pinked 
side turned out. This made, a charming frame. 
The other two frames were covered with gray 
moss, and a cluster of sumac berries on each cor¬ 
ner. These frames held steel engravings. Bunches 
of leaves and vines were fastened over earh picture. 
We burn coal—Charlie exchanges wood for It at 
the coal-yard—so I have some of my prettiest 
plants here. Shelves are fitted to the windows, 
and here bloom spicy carnations, the modest prim¬ 
roses, the coral begonias, and the torch-llke gera¬ 
niums. The room Is full of the odor of the scented 
geraniums, and Pet, the canary, fairly screams 
with delight, as he swings back and forth on his 
perch, tnld the Ivies and cobea-vines. 
I made a wall-pocket from a couple of pieces of 
brlstol-hoard, these pieces were oblong, the top 
corners then rounded off, the back being a trifle 
higher than the front, an embossed picture filled the 
center of the front.. The two pieces were joined at 
the bottom, by a bias strip of red velveteen, glued on 
the edges of both pieces, the sides laced together 
with scarlet cord, being slightly spread apart, and 
then hung with red cord and tassels, and i have a 
handsome and semceaole pocket. My sofa pillow 
was a halt-yard-square, of canvas, worked with a 
shaded wreath of green leaves, and red verbenas, 
with my monogram In the center. My tidies were 
white canvas, worked with red worsted. I made a. 
letter casp out ot perforated board—both back and 
front, cut shleid-shape, the edges trimmed with 
pleated ribbon, and an embossed picture on the 
front. My work-basket was an old-fashioned 
round affair. I covered the edge with a scalloped 
cl rope, and lined the Inside with turkey red, with 
a ruffled edge. A table covered with a red-telt 
cover, held the stereoscopes and views, and the 
latest magazines. 
My room was more lovely when finished than I 
can tell you. In the darkest days, it is full of rosy 
finis and shades, and better yet, cost me less than 
$25. Charlie says—but you know what he says 
and how lie says It. Every evening, he and I 
forget we are farmers, and leave the care and 
worries of our work with our work-elothes. Char¬ 
lie brushes his yellow curls, sticks his feet into 
slippers, puts on clean collar and cuffs, with his 
blue and gray dressing gown. 1 Have a princess 
dress of gray alpaca—costing 25 cents per yard- 
trimmed with scarlet bows, with pleated Illusion 
in the sleeves and neck. It, takes us about ten 
minutes to dress, but how much better we look and 
feel! Charlie reads aloud, and I listen and sew. 
The storms may rage without, bnt our “ Eden,” as 
Charlie calls the room. Is full ot bright tints and 
aglow with happy hearts. Our unmarried friends 
are fond of dropping in of an evening, and sighing, 
“ How cosy you look. I’ve a good mind to get a 
home of my own!” I do believe our room has been 
the means of turning several old bachelor’s heads 
and hearts towards matrimony, and altogether 
our room is a great success. 
COUSIN KATE’S OPINION OF WOMEN’S 
RIGHTS. 
B. C. P. 
••How did you like the lecture. Cousin Kate?” 
said 1 to a bright-eyed relative, who had the eve¬ 
ning before heard one of the noted women’s-rlght- 
women, deliver oue of her spicy tirades, on women’s 
wages, suffrage and the like. 
“ it was very entertaining,” said Kate, ** but I 
don’t see, after all. It women get all they claim, 
that they will be any better off; married women 
at least. The rights which make women happy, 
they can never have as long as human nature re¬ 
mains coarse, selfish, exacting or Ignorant. 
“The right tobe Individuals tn their opinions, their 
tastes, and even their whims, is what seems to be 
lacking. I know a man who calls himself respect¬ 
able, who refused to get his Invalid wife a lemon, 
she asked for, because he did not think she needed 
it. And there Is Aunt, Margaret Gwen, as good 
and (itpable a woman ns the world affords, who 
weaves carpets to get what she needs to wear, and 
.Uncle Ahrnm Is good as men go, and yet he often 
gets her bill for weaving turned on account at the 
blacksmith's, without saying a word to her about 
It, or making It. up lu some other way to her, an£ 
if any one Should tell him he was a tyrant, he 
would want to flglit. He Is able to pay bis own 
bills, and hers too, but he seems to think that if 
she lias the least liberty even with the money she 
earns after keeping Wh house and children, that, 
she will commit some fearful ext ravagance with It. 
“She has an old-fashioned, tall bureau, a very 
useful article of furniture to her, and the brass 
handles of the drawers had either fallen off or be¬ 
come loose, with twenty year's constant use; and 
one day when l was there, a traveling tinker came 
along who offered to put on some wooden knobs, 
for a small sum, and she decided to have It done 
without asking leave of her “proprietor.” He 
came lu while the work was In progress, and you 
should have seen the angry look he gave her, and 
heard the lecture he treated her to afterwards, on 
the crime of squandering money. A few dozen 
eggs had paid t lie bill! 
“1 have often seen her leave her loom and fly 
around the house, almost bolding her breath, to 
fluff the last paper, which lie happened to want 
and had mislaid hlmscir, while he stood grumbling 
and wondering why “she never had a place for 
any thing.” What good would the right to vote do 
her .’ If Uncle Ahrant couldn't give her the ticket, 
he wanted to, and scratch It according to his own 
rleas, he would be a misused community.” Kate 
paused for breath. 
“ He is only one of many,” I suggested. 
“ 1 know it,” said she; “he Is better than a great 
many of them, but the same feeling of proprietor¬ 
ship In their wives crops out somewhere In nearly 
all cases. Matrimony to women seems to me like 
taking a lODg walk after a heavy shower and being 
obliged to step exactly In the footprints, of some 
other person who had gone before us. I tblnk 
suffrage would add slightly to the hardship of such 
a trip.” 
“ You've hit. the nail on the head this time.” said 
quiet grandmother, from her ann-chatr. “ if 
women were not called on so generally to sacrifice 
their rights In tne household where they ought to 
be the best Judges of affairs, we should hear less 
demand for legal rights which, although they may 
be unjustly withheld, It might not be expedient 
for us to exercise If we could.” 
ITEMS FOR CORRESPONDENTS. 
Will some of the Rural readers please give a. 
recipe for making good cologne, and oblige, 
Ceua A. Hobp.y, Stamford, Conn. 
Eau oe Cologne.— Mix essence of bergamot, 
lemon, lavender and orange flower, of each one 
drachm; essence of cinnamon, half a drachm; 
spirit of rosemary and honey-water, each two 
ounces; spirits of wine, one pint; let the mixture 
stand two weeks, then put In a glass retort; the 
body of which immerse in boiling water contained 
In a vessel placed over a lamp, while the beak of 
the retort Is Introduced Into a large resevolr (a 
decanter for example;. Keep the water boiling, 
while the mixture will distil into the receiver, 
which should be covered with cold, wet. cloths. In 
this manner the best quality of cologne-water may 
be obtained at one-fourth the price asked for it at 
drug stores. A lamp will answer best to boll the 
water. The foregoing is the most simple method 
of distilling without, the regular still. 
To Make Ear de Cologne.— Rectified spirits of 
wine, four pints; off of bergamot, one ounce; oil 
of lemon, half an ounce ; oil of rosemary, half a 
drachm; oil of Neroll, three-quarters ot a drachm; 
off of English lavender, one drachm; oil of oranges, 
one drachm. Mix well and then filter. If these 
proportions are too large, use smaller ones. 
Some of our readers may have formulas for mak¬ 
ing cologne, which they know from experience to 
be good ones; It they will send them to me. I will 
take pleasure In publishing them tor the benefit ot 
Miss Hobby or any others who may wish to experi¬ 
ment In perfume making. f. r. 
I want to “ fix up ” nicely a 12 x 12 bedroom, open¬ 
ing Into my parlor. Especially do I want, to know 
about window drapery', what kind of shades shall I 
have? what about lambrequins 7 1 have a piece of 
velvet, would that do for lambrequins ? Will some 
one give me full instructions r 
A Farmer’s Wife. 
A young, married lady, In a late number of the 
Woman’s Journal, has the following to eay of her 
prospective bedroom, and perhaps what she says 
may furnish a hint, or so to “ Farmer’s Wife.” 
“ I will have a bedroom in gray and blue, a deep 
rich blue, not navy, and a very light shade of the 
same color. The curtains wtll be of wide, all-wool 
cream-white bunting, at twenty five cents a yard, 
with stripes at top and bottom of combined shades. 
The carpet will be a very large gray rug with a 
whole width of brussels for a border. I want a 
woven wire mattress on the bed, aDd white or 
pale blue blankets, pale blue cambric under swis3 
pillow-shams, and a chamber set of old-fashtoned 
two shades of blue. I wish 1 had that, old bowl 
and pitcher ot grandmother’s. I tell my husband 
that if ever he asks me to make a toilet-table out of 
barrel beads and c-.imbtic, tied In the middle like 
an hour-glass, or to make a chair out of a barrel 
sawed out. I will get a divorce on the ground of 
violent insanity. He say's all right, and that I’m 
never to allow any lulr-ctoth stuffed furniture In 
In the house.” 
As “Farmer’s Wife" says nothing about the 
style In which her parlor Is furnished or her means, 
I cannot give explicit directions In answer to her 
question. 1 should advise that the room have a 
leading color, pink, blue, buff, or gray. The carpet 
should be light, with small figures. So small a 
room can contain only a bedstead, a chair or two, 
and a wash-stand or dressing-table, which should 
be of the new light woods. At the windows, a 
plain shade the same color as th ■ prevailing tint of 
the room, and white swlss curtains, trimmed with 
lace, will mtike a charming finish. 1 hardly think 
that velvet lambrequins would be suitable, In fact, 
I would consider a pret ty cornice a more artistic 
finish than lambrequins for a window tn a room of 
that size. 
Dear Miss Ripley t am now twenty-five 
years of age; I come of a long-lived family who 
retain their youthful looks way Into middle life 
(an unde who is forty-t hree, is always supposed 
by strangers to be about twenty-seven). There is 
really no reason why I should look old, aud In 
fact, the expression of my face Is young, but my 
skltilsfiill of fine lines, not deep wrinkles, but 
lines which cross each other at all angles. M ill 
you please recommend some Avash Which will 
smooth out my skin ? I have tiled court-plaster, 
egg, alum and rose-water, tar. and a host of other 
things, but without success. l. n. v. 
Judging rroin what you write. 1 think the trouble 
is that your skin needs to be stimulated, and that 
your general health Is poor. Are you not always 
weary ? Possibly you do not property assimilate 
your food, and your skin needs nourishment. It 
certainly Is not a nat ural coudltton for a woman of 
twenty-five to have a “lined” skin. What you 
need Is a physician and not a “ wash,” Some doe- 
tore make a specialty of skin diseases and disfigure¬ 
ments, and 1 would strongly recommend you 10 
seek good medical advice without delay, and not 
waste time and money ou cosmet ics. I can give 
you the addresses of two physicians In this city? 
who treat all dlsordeis of the skin successfully, 
