Newspaper Page Text
Low-cost Transportation
Star ^ Cars
The Car for the Millions
With the Million Dollar Motor
More than a million dollars has been in¬
vested in special machinery, tools and
equipment devoted exclusively Motor, to which the
production of the new Star
of quality found and includes various features
usually only in motors of high
in it and and learn value. for yourself its quality,
power
Pricci, {. o. b, tensing, Mich.
Touring $54° Roadsttr $540 Coupe $715
Two-door Sedan $750 Four-door Sedan $820 Commercial Chassis $445
DURANT MOTORS - INC -
Broadway at 57th Street, New York
Dtaltrt and Smite Stations Throughout the United Stales and Canada
PUnts; Eliubeth, N. J. • Lansing, Mich. • Oakland, Cal. • Toronto, Ont.
Figures Show Retail
Business of Country
Sixty million dollars a day is the
average amount expended in retttll
itoren by the American people, accord¬
ing to a study of the population’s pur¬
chasing power made by the department
af domestic distribution of the Cham¬
ber of Commerce of the United States.
Retail business in the United States
reached an estimated total of $21,947,
*18,023 last year, a per capita expendi¬
ture of $207.02 for food, clothing, fur¬
Cottage pudding 1
H H 1 1 cup tKg cup cup milk butter sugar 0. 1 ^ dreamed you never such
2 H cup* self-rising flour j good dessert
Cream butter add sugar, then
J egg. Beat vigorously, then could he made
D add flour and milk alternately.
^ Bake in greased muffin tins, or a
j shallow cake pan in a moderate with so
oven. Serve with lemon sauce.
ed A hook below; of delightful send for your recipes fret is offer• copy ■ little effort
X X THEN the clock points to the hour of meal time
\A/ V V why and you’re don’t you wondering try cottage what pudding to serve for made dessert, with
self-rising fussing flour ? It’s so easily—-so quickly—made. No
about ingredients. Just a minute or two to mix
the batter, a moderately hot oven—and there’s a dessert
that’s not only delicious but healthful as well.
But cottage pudding is only one of the many good things
you can cook with self-rising flour. Every meal, in a
score of ways you’ll find self-rising flour a handy all-pur¬
pose flour that saves time and produces light, perfectly
raised, bakings.
Self-rising has been flour is merely plain soft wheat flour to which
added the proper amount of pure phosphate bak
ing powder to make the dough rise just right every time.
You can buy it in a variety of grades just as you do plain
flour. Naturally the higher grades command a higher
price. Whatever the grade, if you find the Blue Shield
of the Soft Wheat Millers’ Association on the bag, you
are assured of a healthful, wholesome self-rising flour.
SOFT WHEAT MILLERS’ ASSN., Inc., NASHVILLE, TENN.
US SELFRISING
Healthful Dependable HOW
Economical *
_
MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE
of self-rising flour bearing this Blue
M purity is fully guaranteed by the Soft Wheat
Millers »« ii * Association, Inc. The contents absolutely
are
ly** *"<1 *’hoh»«tne and comply with oil Pure Food Laws*
It you are not satisfied witn your baking result*, the
Association will cheerfully refund your money.
m m\ Gel this Free Book of Recipes
Home Economics Dept.
Soft Wheat Millers’ Assn., Inc., Nashville, Term.
Send your FREE book "Fifty Ways to Use
You will prize this Self-Rising Flour ” to;
attractive collection
ef tested recipes. N«m_.
Addreu.
O UK Mil (ti me or print name and addnrn ftaiaiyj
niture, fuel and light and miscellane¬
ous commodities. More than a third
of this amount, over $9,000,000, was
spent In the Middle Atlantic and East
North Central states.
On the basis of the department’s es¬
timates retail expenditures were great¬
er for 1923 than for 1922 but consider¬
ably below the peak year of 1920. In
that year, for example, the average ex¬
penditure for clothing was $74.70. Lust
year It was $48,03. The largest retail
bill of the country Is for food—$97.58
per capita.
CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
eR©ss-iw
rozzL
(fg) by Western Newspaper Union.)
Horizontal.
1— Where Easter •*<£?:* are nlltged
to come from
7—Myrilcal In t erprof at lox» of »&•
Script urea among; Jewish gab
bia
13— Dig
14— .Make happy
10 —Conjunction
18—Midday
10—Absence of anytHIng
20 — Note of moxlcttl «*.*«)«
21 — Deface
23—Had fnith la
28 —Father (Coll.)
20—-Ship’s prison
2H— Belonging; to yot
20—Fart of the ear
30— Fabulist of note
32— One (French)
33— ( ou r a ice
84— Lattice work
30 —-Wood lice
38—Exceedingly small part of mat¬
ter
30— Native mctnl
44)—Mar
44—Bravery
48—Whistles
40— Same as 39 horizontal
31— Sword
52— Overhasty in action
53— Sacred song or poem
35—Shakespearean kins
5(1—Beverage
57 —Clattered
50—One of the words yon nse when
singing a song of which you
don’t know all the words
00 — Addition to it letter
01 — Throw
62—News article one paragraph long
(VI—Hoad way (nbbr.)
05—-I*« in ting dealing with everyday
life
C0—Feel
68 —One who makes a sacrifice to a
principle
09— Meeting place
Vertical.
2 — Commercilal notice (nbbr.)
3— Nickname* of famous printer
4— Stain
5— Dentine composing elephant's
tusks
0 —Thin, slender
7 — PlncfU in the middle (vat. apd
8 — Wood of the agnlloch
9— Fetter
10 — < 'onsumed
HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
iVhfR the correct letter* are placed In the white »p*ce* this pttxcle
will spell word* both vertically and horlxontally. The first letter la each
word 1 h Indicated by a nnmber, which refers to the definition Hated
below the pnxxle. Thu* No. 1 under the column headed “horlxontal”
define* a word which will fill the white spaces up to the first black
square to the rljtrht, and a number under ‘‘vertical” defines a word which
will fill the white squares to the next black one below. No letters jpo in
the black spaces. All words used are dictionary words, except proper
names. Abbreviations, slang. Initials, technical terms and obsolete forms
are Indicated In the definitions.
URSERY RHYME
UZZLE—= 4 ^
IT UBBLE! bubble! see my bubblel
I can make it without treuble.
Jusi a bowl of suds you see
And a pipe and there they'll be,
Pino two Othu bottle .torn Loww art. down. .Ion, town of trees, appm laft <
irro. se Mr ha*.
11 — French article
12— Fight
15—Frolics
17—Scarcer
20—Work
2 a~cio up
24— Source of heat
25— hong stick
27r**Ulbiical giant
20.—or pertaining to the slJo
31—Schemes
83—Deformity «a which foot Is
grown Inward
85— Legal combination (abbr.)
87—Card game
40— Namvr pieces of flexible mate¬
rial
41— Pieces of hot fael
42— Flo war
43— <• room
44 — one who plays a stringed In¬
strument
45— Encourage
46— Cog wheels
47 — Mistakes in printing
50—Rodent •
53 — Ward off a blow
54— Automatic registering instru¬
ment
57— Person of small stature
58- *~Contrndict
01 —ObJ. of she
03—Writings fabbr.) §
65—Southern state (abbr.)
67—And (French)
Solution will appear In next issue.
Solution of Last Week's Puzzle,
Worn Out Since the Grip ?
IV TEAK, nervous—just tired and miserable most of
the time ? Back lame and achy, too? Rheu¬
matic pains torture you at every step ?
Then pou should look to pour kidneps l Colds and chills
are apt to weaken the kidneys and allow toxic poisons
to upset blood and nerves. Then may come daily back¬
ache, stabbing pains, headaches, dizziness, and irregular
or painful passage of the kidney secretions.
Don’t risk neglect. Help your weakened kidneys
with Doan’s Pills. Doan’s have brought new health to
thousands. They should help you. Ask pour neighbor l
A Georgia Case
J. D, McIntosh, 317 First Ave., Rome, Ga.. says:
“Colds frequently settled on my kidneys, causing them
to act too freely. I had to get up often at night to
pass the secretions. When I stooped I could hardly
straighten on account of the sharp pains across my
back. I felt weak and run down and lacked ambition.
I used Doan's Pills and they benefited me.”
Doan’s Pills
Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys
At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.
School Ferried Far
Taking a schoolhouse off dry land,
floating it through canal locks and
towing it seven miles across Puget
sound to a new location on an island,
was the unusual feat accomplished re¬
cently by a Arm of contractors in
Seattle, Wash., says Popular Science
Monthly. The schoolhouse originally
was situated on the shores of Lake
Washington, adjoining Seattle. With
powerful winches and screw jacks op¬
erated simultaneously, thebulldiqg was
Child ren
0 m *
ustoria
_
MOTHER Fletcher’s
Castoria is a pleasant, harm¬
less Substitute for Castor Oil,
Paregoric, Teething Drops,
and Soothing Syrups, espe¬
cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it.
Of course, you have a real griev
anee; but so has everybody.
What Is the.rarest thing? A letter
full of joy to a “people's column.”
___a-
site
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago
Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
x /L ^a+u. Accept only “Bayer” package
1 J which contains proven directions.
f X- § Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100— Druggists.
t,ptrin is tb* trade mirk ot Boxer Uosotoctore of Monoeceticeeideetor ef SeiicxUcseU
Piles Can Be Cured
(Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding)
Many sufferers have been made very happy
over the results obtained from the use of
PAZ0 OINTMENT—60c at any Drug Store.
(Follow the Directions Carefully.)
L_
raised off the ground and skidded on
rollers onto a large barge. Two tugs
then towed, the school through Lake
Washington canal to Puget sound. The
school arrived undamaged.
His Vocation
Mrs. Good sole—What induced you
to adopt the life of a tramp?
Everett Wrest—Why, ma’am, it’s my
calling. It's the one tiling I do best.
Mankind is everywhere the same.
Truth, can always be heard if you
know how to listen.
Happy are those who don’t realize
that it is a crisis until It is over.