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800D -WfiffeN icp »$ SCARCE
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Refrigerator that Will Keep FoofT
From Spoiling May Be Conatructed
at Small Coot
Ae Iceless icebox that anyone may
set up in. his cellar has been perfected
‘at th^ Syracuse Kitchen ns a result
of experiments at the New York
State College of Agriculture at Ithaca.
It Is estimated that it will cost $11 If
made by a carpenter nnd about $3.75
If made at home by one handy with
tools.
A. R. Mann, director of the college,
describes the homemade refrigerator
as follows-:
“The iceless refrigerator depends
on the principle that evaporating wa
ter has a cooling effect. It is simply
ah open framework of shelves sur
rounded by wet cJoth. It should be
kept 1n a shady place where air is in
motion. The shelves, the bottom and
the four supporting posts should form
open framework covered nvlth wire
^sl’reen. The top Is solid wood and
supports an enameled pan. The whole
rests on the fonr short legs of the
homework In another similar pan. The
•ront Is hinged as a door.
“All four screenel sides are covered
rlth Canton flannel, smooth side out,
buttoned on. The buttons are sewn
oi a tape which Is tacked to the frame
sons to engage the buttonholes In the
doth. This plan of buttoning per-
hol‘.K the use of a duplicate cover nnd
allows for a weekly washing. Fas
tened around the top are four flaps of
Cloth which extend up over the top
water. They
ns to keep the
afTnir
should he white, as that refracts heat
nnd. light. The screening should he
of a non-rusting wire, such ns copper
or zinc.”
For a size of 4 feet 8 inches high and
2 feet square, with shelves 11 inches
apart, the following materials are re
quired.
Three yards of 24-inch wide screen,
one pint of white paint for first cout
and one pint of white enamel, 50 lin
ear feet of three-quarter hy three-inch
■fluff for framework. 10 feet of one-inch
FROM A CLEAR SKY
By A3NES C. BROGAN.
THE DAY OF BTEIKElJ
FLAPS OF CANTON FLANNEL
• *"“*—'l OVER INTO
J»OF WATER
SIDES
COVERED*
WITH
cant6n 4
'funnel
®l/T TONED
TO «
FRAME
| hinge
DOOR
COVERED*
£ WITH
CANTON •,
FLANNEL [
BUTTONED
TO *
FRAME
Th. IctlfK Refrigerator,
lumber one foot wide for ehelvee (un*
lean ehelvee are wade of wire), nnd
41 linear feet of molding; hinge*,
eateh, button*, tape, nulla, tacks and
18 yarde of SO-inrb Canton flannel,
which will make two eovern.
Such a refrigerator will not cool
thing* to anywhere neur freezing
taint, bat In the hatteet daya of sum
mer thoee at Hyraotreo maintained a
taaaperaturr of. (14 degree*, which t* at
Mart ralatlvely cold.
A Good Rina.
Mary la anven- yenra old and la vary
tend at plcuicn. One Snaday.ehe waa
ataa gtente ant) In wondering aronnd
S jm ereck. Mary, bnatlly Inveatl-
, feb* began to wtrdo In and
awGal hack to the crowd; "Oh, hurry
*0tH\ the’water le nlce and cnld, and
Sjn'tMa'ysa can acc tbrongh It.”
A Club Friend.
"My dear, this II my old friend, Pete
' mean yonr old friend, Jim
treat bat." corrected the gbnt he bad
•t btbrj Louievlllc Gotlrler-JoumiL
DICKIE SAYS
Rosalia walked beside the tangled
hedges of roses In her garden and look
ed wistfully up and down the road.
“Reckon,” she said, “we may as well
give up looking for some one to come
or something to happen Susan, we've
been looking a good many years.”
The black cat who was the lone little
woman’s Vinly companion, answered
by a sympathizing purr.
“Seems.” Rosalia went on. “that we
ought to get over expecting. If anything
new or pleasant had been coining out-
way. it would have come wheunhe old
house was fresh, when father tended
the rose vines nnd kept them neat,
when carriages drove past our door
with happy folks coming to town for
holiday, or stopping In to visit.”
Rosulla sank down upon a grassy
mound and drew the cat into her lap,
silent with her meiflorles.
“Carriages come no more down our
quiet lane,” she told the cat, “it’s
autos now, great whirring autos fly
ing along the great white road.”
Rosalia rose to her feet smiling whim
sically upward, “anything that will
come our way these days, puss, must
drop from out a clear sky.” And as the
woman jstood gazing absently
i a whirring sound coming not from
main road, rent the air. Then she
it—the wonder thing witli the
spread wiugs of a monster bird
ing the sky.' And before Rosalia could
catch her astonished breath, the won
der thing circled, drooped, and still cir
cling, came crashing toward her own
neglected, garden.
Like a throbbing monster it lay In
the wide space beyond the rose hedge;
and Rosalia, trembling, rushed to a
man who frantically beckoned from its
side. He was a young man and dead
ly white.
“You’d better get someone.*’ lie gasp
ed, “to help carry me inside. Nothing
hut a broken hone, I guess-—awful Jar,
bnt made lauding—in time.” Then the
man of the airplane fainted.
When she returned with the assur-
anee that help would soon come, the
young man turned upon the cushions
she propped about him.
“It’s probably nothing to worry
about,” he said slowly, “but you pev-
er can tell. Might he Internal Injury.
So 1 wondered—If you’d be kind
enough—to write a sort of—message to
• glrj. You could mall It to her from
me In case—” he smiled faintly. “Well,
In either case,” he said.
So Rosalia brought her best note-
paper. and seated herself close to the
great broken f bird, which had soured
toward the .sky.
“Yes,” she prompted.
“Begin it.” the man said steadily.
‘Dearest,* that Includes everything.”
“Dearest,” Rosalia wrote, and wait
ed. “Today only, do 1 dare to tell yon
that which ha* long been In my heart,
I love yon. Always, I think I have
loved yon— M She £tlll waited as h#
Iny with closed eyes apparently think
ing.
Rosalia was thinking also. She bad
wished for something to happen.
Something miraculous had happened,
the ‘something’ hod darted Into her
solitude from out a clear sky. Ro
mance itself, was close to her. and si
as usual, but an onlooker. She thou^t
of this dearest 'frtiT far away, w<
Bering if she had listened wearily for
a step that never came back. But tho
Deanest > girl* did ,notlive, ,ahe was
sure, in an old house set far back
from the road, where briefs and diret
grew thick, to screen and choke yoonf
We. The* dearest gtrl's lovgr liad .jaot
gone away .years Before. He wu a
yftung lover still. Neither.had heart
ies* parents seat him abroad to BaM
a medical education, killing romance-L
eonntry romance they had called It,
with one blow: A»d Of ter twenty-five
years tlTe memory of that broken ro
mance still hid power to bring a mist
to Rooftiis’s bike eye* V>\-r.,
Ho had married—her own lover of
long ego—a gay creature abroad, who
had not lived long enough to returp
with her husband to his home. And
when he had returned, taking ap in
later years his father’s practical Of
medicine, Rosalia kept resolutely nnd
proudly out of Ms way. ‘ ' *
As an auto rounded the curve, she
Jumped apprehensively to her feet and
•hurried into the house. It was the
aajpo step she remembered, which now
Crossed-the porch. As tho doctor car
ried the.aviator,..upon Ms own broad
hack. The same confident laugh
which echoed hacp from her sitting
room.
Presently the doctor sought her out.
“We shall need you,** be skid, hut
his eyes were upon her, as he talked
with his patient.
And Inter when Rosalia and her lov
er of long ago stood together beelde
the airplahe in the garden, the doctor
bent to pick up ft piece of paper.
“Denrest.” he read, “today only, do
I dare to tell you that which has long
been in niy heart, I love you. Always,
I think. I have loved yon.”
He turned, ns he was leaving, to put
ihr paper into Rosalia’s hand.
“T will come again this evening,” he
And ns she would have continued
I he young lover’s letter, she saw be
neath her own handwriting a hastily
added line:
“This is my message to you, Rosalia,
the message I, myself, would have
written.”
And when the moon shone through
the old house windows at evening, she
found herself again listening for a
step.
(Copyright, 1#19, Wentern Newapapor Union)
“Might, makes right” is the dan
gerous slogan with which some 1 u
vicealile ami justifiable doctrine
borers wish to displace the ser-
of striking only when working eon
dit ions demand it.
Radical labor leaders want pri
vate capital confiscted for the ben
efit of the laborers, but the folly of
this is apparent when we realize
that fifty years later they would
have to confiscate again to remove
the aoeumilations of thrift and
enterprise within their own ranks. I
Policemen in a large city have
thrown down their weapons, and
hundreds of thousands'of people!
have been deserted by men sworn
to defend them. Thugs and erim-i
inals have run riot and the dread
of fire without any organized' fire '
fighters'to oppose has brought;
fear into the minds of loyal citizens
Not only do these nine strike and ,
quit work but they resent the ae- j
tion of (pliers in asking the jobs
they reject. Not only do they
repudiate lawful government, buti
they advocate general strike act-j
ion to cut off supplies of food,light!
water to a city and thereby force,
either death of submission ! Might
makes right! j
But tli general public outnnm-1
tiers the radical elements of labor |
lie honest thinking -.workmen re-1
ject their unjust methods, aud j
favor resort to arbitritation and
negotation rather than idustrial
war fare. There is no more jus
tification! for economic warfare
than formilitary warfare, and an
outraged peole will not tolerate it.
18 cents a package
ickafies of20
i package* U00
glassme- paper-
*trongly xeo
fon for th*< homo
when you fra voJ.
HIS PAPER REI-rfESE..Tbu I0R FOREIGN
ADVERTISING EY THE
GENERAL OFFICES
NEW YORK AND CHICAGO
BRANCHES IN ALL THt PRINCIPAL C TIES
They Win You On Quality!
Your enjoyment of Cahnels will be very great
because their refreshing flavor and fragrance
and mellowness is so enticingly different You
never tasted such a cigarette I Bite is elimi
nated and there is a cheerful absence of any
unpleasant cigaretty after-taste or any un
pleasant cigaretty odor 1 ,
Camels are made of an expert blend of choice
Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos and are
smooth and mild, but have that desirable full-
body and certainly hand out satisfaction in
generous measure. You will prefer this Camel
blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straightl
Give Camels the stiffest tryout, then
compare them with any cigarette in
the world at any price for quality,
flavor, satisfaction. No matter
how liberdlly you smoke
Camels they will not tire
your taste!
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.
Win*ton-Salem, N. G.
§8mmmm
Said Am Owner
What One Says is Voiced by All
“You Can Have Comfort, Per
formance and Endurance All at a
Moderate Cost”
About bis Essx
Ten thousand owners, almost to a man, voice wbat
yon have heard of Essex performance and reliability.
■Iltive you considered the weight of that endorse-
»ept in connection with the car you will choose)
4 >iiet us look at it this way:
’ ITS MODERATE C08T
AND RELIABILITY
'Consider the type of car that equals Essex per
formance. Some owners affirm their Essex is the
fiisttkt ohr they encountered. '
Citiaitdy none ever'thinks of a similar priced or
like 'sine car in Connection with the speed of an BsosX.
Not does anyone compare Such a car witfa its' accele
ration or hill-climbing ability. " '
■ < SsW’t the comparison always with larger and high-
«r priced cars? '' v
•'■And'so also is Essex finish and completeness!
Thfcre is nothing skimped or cheap about it 'either Jh
appearance or in those parts that are not visible but
which account for its reliability, > >. >•< • i • • ■
IT REQUIRES LITTLE *
ATTENTION
Though a light smali car, the Essex calls for little
attention. Its motor fulfills its work without eon-
rtant attention. The car is so designed and con-
eAided that it is practically free from annoying
squeaks aud such as may develop are usually and
easily removed with a few drops of oil.
It is the car for the man who does.his own driving
and who, while he demands top notch performance,
has the time nor temperament to be constantly ad-
That is a quality all owners admire and speak of.
BIG OAK LUXURY
SMALL OAR COST
And in this sense luxury means more than mere
beauty aud detail finish. It includes coTfort 'to
drive, freedom from mechanical annoyance, Oh per
formance limitations. It means a car one esn'be
proudof- 1 -one that becanse of what it can, commande
respect from every motorist. Essex owUeM’httve fed
fear'from the' dUst of other cars. If they 1 art so
minded they can lead the procession in sidy group.
That they will tell you if you will but ask about the
Essex. 1 ■ • .
WITHOUT EXTRA
OPERATING COST
Other cars are as economical to operate as the
Essex, but ask- yourself if they are as satisfactory
i£‘ other ways as they are good to look at or ride in.
1 'Can they go as fast or as quietly? Do they appeal
to you as fhe 'EiAex does in these details of‘perform
ance and 1 reliability?
' Essex owners know the difference. “We want
you to' know it by riding with us in an Essex.
' It. is the light weight ear which thousands have
adopted in place of heavier, more costly cars.
They get in the Essex the quality they demand.
They obtain a performance akin to what they have
had from their larger ears at much less expense, and
they have no concern about reliability,
i All these reason? you must. have considered.
Can you answer the without knowing the Essex? ,
J. P. ®. L. G. CANNON
Local Agents
I+H+H*HfrHrHv I