Newspaper Page Text
YOU CAN’T TRUST
CALOMEL AT ALL
It’s Quicksilver, Salivates, Causes
Rheumatism and Bone
Decay.
The next dose of calomel you take
rrtaj salivate you. It may shock your
liver or start bone necrosis. Culomel
Is dangerous. It Is mercury, qulcksll- j
ver. It crashes Into sour hUe like
dynamite, cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and should
never be put Into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti
pated and all knocked out. Just go to
your druggist and get a bottle of Dod
son's Liver Tone for a few cents which
is a harmless vegetable substitute for j
dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful .
and If It doesn't start your liver and )
straighten you up better ami quicker 1
thnn nasty calomel arid without making
you sick, you Just go hack and get your
money.
Don't take calomel! Tt can not be
trusted any more than a Jeopard or a
wild cat. Take Dodson's Liver Tone
which straightens you right up and ;
makes you feel line. No salts neces
sary. Give It to the children because
It Is perfectly harmless and cau not
salivate. —Advertisement.
She Got the Name.
"Mary," said the mistress, “did you
ask everyone for cards today, as I told
yon, when they called?”
“Yes’m. One fellah, he wouldn't give
me no card, hut I swiped his hat an*
shoved him oIT tli’ steps. Here's Ills
name on th’ sweat hand." Richmond
Times 'Dispatch.
i
Mrs. Ruth Williamson
lllrmiuglmiii, Ala. "After becoming '
k mother my health gave way. 1 suf
fered severely with a pain low down
1n my right side. My sister-in-law, !
having been cured of a had case of
feminine trouble by taking Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription, advised me to
take 11, which I dhl. l am now start
ing on my third bottle and the pain
Ims all left me. My husband said to
me the other day, 'That Favorite Pre
scription must be a Wonderful medi
cine, l don’t hear you complaining any
more.'"- Mrs. Ruth Williamson, -1010
First Avenue.
You should obtain this famous Pre
scrlptlon now at your nearest drug
store, In tablets or liquid, or write Dr.
Pierce, President Invalids’ Hotel In
lluffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice.
efigactf txihf
8
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known us
“that good kind"
'dry it—and you
will luww why
TO KILL RATS
PASTE
It foiwi thM<* peili to run from th«» buthllng for j
wnt4*r aims freib air Rath, mw'«v cockroach**, wator
bu«N am* it«*«trvy food and property and arc
carriers of dl*e*»c.
READY FOR USE BETTER THAN TRAPS
Directions in 16 languages in every box
SOA. AIM SbO. l&OX. ftltC $1 HI
MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS
Haue> you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Take K H Fl’ M At' I UK to remove tkecansa
and drive the pulton from the «y»tem
"BHKI BAIIPK OH THU t*Hlt»B
I’l TH BtUIBiTUkB OS TUB 4MTMDB’*
At All Druggist*
J»» Bailr A Son. Wkohtnle DUtribatsr*
FREE A SLOP BOX OF
These tablet* are Uicd universally for In
digestion, stoma, h and tvwel troubles.
They stimulate the livet, Vidncya, bowels
to healthy action and purity the blood.
NOTHING BETTER FOR CONSTIPATION
Clip this ad and send with 10c to the
MARVEL MEDICINE COMPANY
CI3O Forbes St. ■ Pittsburgh, Ft.
A»entt U ante* I
I COMELY HOUSE OF :
pmemm
Has Everything to Make It Cheer
ful and Healthful.
SIX ROOMS AND SUN PARLOR
Nothing Extra Fancy in Thia Daaign,
But It Makaa a Good Substan
tial Home of Comfort—Not
Expensive to Build.
By WILLIAM A. RADFORD
Mr. YVIIIIurn A. Radford will answer
questions and give advice FREE OF
COST on all subjects pertaining to the
subject of building, for the readers of this ;
i paper. On account of tils wide experience |
as ijdltor, Author and Manufacturer, he
| Is. wittiout doubt, the highest authority
{ on all these subjects. Address all Inquiries
j to William A. Radford. No. 1827 Prairie
avenue. Chicago. 111., and only Inclose
two-cent stamp for reply.
It Is quite an Interesting study to
compare the methods of building homes
of the present day with those of sev
eral centuries hack. Today everything
Is on a more frank and open basis.
Perhaps the more jierfected organiza
tion for the maintenance of law and
order Is responsible. At leust we know
that hack In the Middle Ages and
even up to the beginning of the last
century, a home with too many en
trances, too many openings In the way
of windows and doors, was far from
being considered practical or safe. In
t '’in
'M r ...r f - *
"pnoruß IWty~lP "
rOBCHu 10‘0 , Jl9 i o ,, |-' " I
E- 4 Living 2m I In>
UN DjNIN(3LM §
ft£Lo£) t<s ; oxi3 ; <s“
■O\ IV6Y I V
i"E::.»: hLma m mmJLmamm w : bhhhmJ. ,
H —- t Z>S> : o" -t
First Floor Plan.
the ensiles the windows were small,
the doors were heavy and the nates
ponderous. It was a case of protec
tion.
Today we are not so much worried
over inaruudlng bands although we
are by no means immune from the at
tacks of Individual holdup men. We
do not have to worry about bands of
Indians or an army of soldiers of for
tune from a neighboring town.
And this state of affairs has pro
foundly affected our Ideas of building
homes. Another thing we have learned
the value of plenty of fresh air which
some of our grandfutliers did not ap
preciate, especially at night. We build
our homes with plenty of window
space, each bedroom must have ample
PPf--4!
* brD dew ___ Dcd room s' r
I . DedEn. - I
. " "I 1 'l2 OVIW 1 1 ,
[Zti y_j
i i
Second Floor Plan.
ventilation and In nn>st eases a sleep
ing porch Is a necessary adjunct to
the home. Front porches are large
and inviting. The homo has become a
thing df beauty rather than one of
strength. We have come to rely upon
, Invested authority and not to our own
fortress.
And because of this the modern
| home is a real delight and pleasure.
Consider the home shown here. Not
pretentious by any means, not even
striking, but a sturdy and comely de
sign of very practical type. It has
what is necessary to make a home
healthful, cheerful and comfortable —
si7.e and light.
It has the advantages of two kinds
of porches—the open and enclosed —
the latter being known as the sun
parlor. In construction it is frame,
stoutly built and set on a brick foun
dation. The porch rails and posts
are also brick.
No vestibule is found upon opening
the front door, that space being In
corporated In the living room, which
is 12 by 23 feet. The day of the old
familiar double parlor bus passed, at
least for a good uianv years, Now
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON. GEORGIA.
I the full-sized living room Is prescribed.
If convenient, an open fireplace that
burns should be placed In this room
because It adds so much to the home
: like comfort and informality of the
place. The stairway to the upper floor
Is located In the far corner of the
living room.
An open casing is the link between
living and dining room. The latter
room Is of a good size, 10 by 13 feet
0 Inches, and has windows on two
sides, insuring plenty of natural day
light which adds immeasurably to the
atmosphere of the dining room. Along
side of the dining room Is a small
kitchen, 10 by 9 feet, with rear porch
and pantry In the rear.
Two large roof dormers afford the
space for bedrooms In the half story
above, reached by a stairway from
the living room. The bathroom Is lo
cated on thia floor also. There are
three bedrooms In all, two 11 feet fl
Inches square, the third 12 by 11 feet.
: Each bedroom has a triple window and
J ample closet space for clothes. The
steep slope of the gable room allows
fairly high ceilings in these upstairs
rooms.
This is the type of home that will
not only suit the requirements of a
vast number of families but will also
suit the limitations of their pocket
books. It is free from exposure and
freakish features that cause the bill
to mount up rapidly. It Is well built
and will last a great many years. It
Is not too large, 38 by 24 feet, und not
too small because of the excellent ar
rangement of the rooms. A large
house Is very often unsuitable be
cause much space is wasted and the
rooms poorly proportioned. I'resent
day building calls for maximum effi
ciency from each square foot of build-
ing. Inevitably this efficiency results
in immeasurable comfort for the house
wife who puts In most of her time in
the home. The smaller the house the
!esi steps she will have to take dur
ing the course of a day and conse
quently the less energy she will have
to use up.
CHILDISH “SPORT IN JAPAN
Blowing of Soap Bubbles Is One of
the Most Popular Amusements
of the Youngsters.
It Is by the merest chance that the
path of the soup-bubble vendor is
crossed in Tokyo. There may not be
more than two such vendors in the
whole of the city, their territory is
widely extended, and their little* pa
trons are on every street.
11 is stock-in-trade consists of a bat
tered tin can half full of reddish soapy
fluid, a small ladle, and a funnel to
till the bottles which he carries in a
bag—bottles of all sorts and sizes that
served in many a household for a
great variety of purposes. A big bun
dle of bamboo reeds for blowing com
pletes the outfit.
lie was kept busy filling the bot
tles and reaping a harvest of coppers,
for no small boy or girl could with
stand the allurement of soap-bubble
creation.
And, now and then to advertise his
visit to the neighborhood more effec
tively, lie dipped a very- long and
thick reed into his can, and the bub
bles swirled anil whirled In rainbow
docks.
Soon the bubble-makers were also
busy, and the air was full of bubbles
blown about by the wind, now blue
with tints of the sky, again brilliant
green against the trees, or purple, red,
or orange, fading away against the
gray of the old stone balustrade and
steps and the hoary trees of the tem
ple compound.—From the Continents
Kdltiou of the Londn Mall.
Wise Boy.
The little boy who had received his
first Jilting was eating far too many
sweets. "Way can’t you be contented
with a few, like other boys/” asked
his mother.
“Mummy,” he answered, “Daddy
told me that a nmu who smokes too
much gets smoker's heart, and a man
who rows too much gets rower's heart
and—well —I'm eating sweets too
much.”
OTke Kitchen
Cabinet
Oopyrlxhl, 1922, Western Newspaper Union
Dear to me ever is the twilight hour.
When shadows deepen and the day is
spent;
Then sorrow and care seem to lose
their power
And over my soul comes a sweet
content.
FOOD FOR THE FAMILY
For variety serve chicken in th*
following way;
Chicken a la King.—
a Take two cupfuls ol:
cooked chicken, fout
fresh mushrooms, one
tablespoonful of butter
one-fourth of a green
pepper, one cupful of
thin cream, one cupful
of chicken broth, three
tablespoonfuls of flour,
one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth
of a teaspoonful of paprika, one tea
spoonful of lemon juice. Cut the
chicken into cubes, break the mush
room caps and cut the stems; chop
the green pepper; add the cream and
chicken stock, and two egg yolks.'
Cook the mushrooms and pepper in
tlie butter; add the flour, then combine
with the other ingredients. Serve on
toast garnished with parsley.
Jelly Omelet.—Separate the whites
and yolks of two eggs; beat the
whites until stiff, the yolks until
creamy. I’ut a teaspoonful of butter
in an omelet pan; when hot pour in
the omelet after mixing the yolks with
the whites, adding two tablespoonfuls
of milk and a dash of cayenne and
salt. Cook until the omelet is set;
cover with a hot lid to dry out the top,
or place in the oven. Spread one side
with jelly and fold as usual. * Serve
hot on a hot platter.
Steamed Sliced Bread. —Butter stale
bread and steam until well heated
| through; spread again with butter
and spread with raspberry jam, or
canned berries of any kind. Serve in
dividually with cream and sugar.
A dessert which will keep and on#
that will be liked is prepared as fol
lows: Take two eggs well beaten;
add one-half cupful of sugar, four ta
blespoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonfulj
of baking powder and one cupful of!
nut meats with one cupful of finely- 1
cut dates. Bake in a sheet, cut in |
finger-sized pieces and put into a glass |
jar. Steam when wanted, sprinkle
with lemon juice and serve with
cream.
There are no more useful and easy
to handle cleaning cloths than those
made from knitted underwear or out
ing flannel garments.
The day is cold and dark and dreary,
It rains, and the wind is never weary.
The vine still clings to the mould'ring
wall
And at every gust the dead leaves
fall.
And the day is dark and dreary.
DAINTIES FOR THE FAMILY
With a few cans of choice pineap
ple in slices, crushed or grated, one
has at hand a
Jjjja®"" delicious base
“““ f° r any number
j Pineapple Pud-
Cs. V one-half cupful
sugar over a can
of crushed pine
apple and set away to become chilled.
In an hour drain the juice from the
pineapple and reserve this to pour
over layers of sponge cake; on each
layer place a layer of the pineapple;
repeat until all the juice and fruit
is used. Make a meringue of the
whites of two eggs and two table
spoonfuls of sugar, spread over the
top and brown lightly in the oven.
Serve cold with a cream or a thin cus
tard using the two egg yolks, a pint
of milk and sugar with flavoring to
taste. Cook the custard until yit coats
the spoon and chill before using.
Cream Puffs With Chocolate Sauce.
—Prepare the cream puffs by taking j
one cupful of boiling water, one-half j
cupful of butter, one teaspoonful of i
sugar, boll one minute, then add all at 1
once one and three-fourths cupfuls of I
flour. Stir until smooth and the mix
ture leaves the sides of the pan. Then
add five eggs, one at a time, heating j
between each egg. Drop from the tip 1
of a tablespoon onto a buttered sheet, !
one and one-half inches apart; bake
one-half hour In n hot oven or long j
enough to bake them, so that when
lifted they feel very light and feathery.
Fill when cool with sweetened whip
ped cream and just before serving pour
over a hot chocolate sauce.
Pineapple Marmalade.—Take one
cupful of pineapple, three oranges
sliced very thin, one lemon also thinly
sliced, two cupfuls of sugar, five cup
fuls of water. Cover the lemon and
oranges with water and let them
stand over night; cook for two hours
in the morning, then add the sugar j
and cook an hour longer, adding the
pineapple the last half hour. This j
recipe makes six jelly glasses or about i
two and one-half cupfuls.
Pineapple Sundae Line slierbet
glasses with lady lingers, put n layer
of lee cream, then two tablespoonfuls
if crushed pineapple and top with
more cream and a cherry.
To can sausage, fry the slices, pack
nto two quart cans and HU up with
he hot fat. Melt before removing
vhen used and the cakes may be taken
»ut without breaking.
TltXLu ivctfi. i
I
»
#
/Vake Every /\ed A
perfect feast
Tanlac Makes Each Bite
a New Delight
WHEN your digestive system is
working efficiently and smooth
; ly, extracting from your food abun
l dunt stores of vital energy and piling
up a reserve force of vigor to meet
any emergency, every bite Is eaten
with keen zest and appreciation.
If your meals are not a real event,
if you do not approach the table
of the body are stimulated to
■ ■ i their utmost. The whole result
Is that food Is taken care of
without distress of any sort
the utmost benefit from It.
'NdfcrW If your appetite is not keen,
your * ood seems to dis-
Bnjjjmki VX\ agree with you, if you are
underweight, nervous, irrrit
jP P fa. able and lack energy, give
JL IftjjN. Tanlac the chance to show you
\ that can work a mir aclo
m —ii
B ij
With the most lively anticipa- /Pife/s'
tion of its delights, then you ’ . djr.Wj & 1
are only half-living, because j|
you are only half getting the pjjygyM i I
Lack of appetite, or distress ’ r Jfij
from indulging the appetite, are MlMPllrr-tVESsS*?
both due to the same cause—
failure of the digestive system =S '"*V. ft &&
to properly do its Important ~
work. The undigested food 4%,
remaining in the alimentary , ■ x- -v ,
canal may merely cause a dis-
taste for more food when it cannot
take care of what it has, or it may
undergo chemical and purification
changes that cause acute disease.
Besides, these chemical changes
produce poisonous substances that
j are carried to every cell and organ
i of the body and that cause all sorts
! of distressing symptoms.
Tanlac, the famous digestive tonic
and body builder, has achieved its
wide success because it is able to in
vigorate the entire digestive tract.
It acts to cause vigorous stomach
preparation of the food, both through
the muscular churning action of that
[cARDUI]
| The Woman’s Tonic j|
Giving a Guess.
“Pa, what is this heel of Achilles?”
“Something new in rubber, I
s'pose.”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
DYED HER DRAPERIES,
SKIRT AND A SWEATER
WITH “DIAMOND DYES’*
Each package of “Diamond Dyes” con
tains directions so simple that any woman
can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts,
dresses, waists, coats, sweaters, stock
ings, hangings, draperies everything like
new. Buy "Diamond Dyes”—no other
kind—then perfect home dyeing is guaran
teed, even if you have never dyed before.
Tell your druggist whether the material
you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether
it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Dia
mond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or
run. So easy to use. —advertisement.
See Placard.
“This garage man is something of a
j wag.” “How so?” “I see he adver
tises air at cost.”
Aspirln
WARNING! Say “Bayer’' when you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians
over 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions
Bandy "Bayer” boles of 12 tablet*—Al*o bottle* of 24 and 100—Druggist*.
4fr iH„ uUe tn*e out ot Bijtr lUauTactare »t ItoooaeeUcacidesier U
organ and through ample secretion
of digestive fluids. It then promotes
energetic action of all the bowel
muscles and glands and enables the
food to pass through the digestive
canal In the normal time. Each of
the thousands of little glands whose
duty It is to pick up nourishment from
the food and send this to all parts
in your condition as it has in so many
thousands of other cases.
If you are despondent, gloomy.,
with little taste for and enjoyment
of life, try Tanlac and no doubt you
will see the clouds of gloom roll away
under the sunshine of health.
You are entitled to be healthy,
vigorous, efficient and happy. Give
yourself the chance to become so as
thousands of others have, by taking
Tanlac.
Get Tanlac from your druggist this
very day. Why wait for tomorrow
when Tanlac —and health—await you
today?
Any man who takes things as they
come lacks push.
The Cuticura Toilet Trio.
Having cleared your skin keep it clear
by making Cuticura your every-day
toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse
and purify, the Ointment ts soothe and
heal, the Talcum to powder and per
fume. No toilet table Is complete
without them. —Advertisement.
Instruction as to eggs and colts;
Break before using.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle ot
CASTORIA, that famdus old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that It
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
It is never too late to mend, marry
or get a divorce.