Newspaper Page Text
This Week
h Arthur Brisbane
Gold Basis, Au Revoir
Hitler’s Birthday
Life Insurance News
Light Beer and Music
Big news. For the time, Uncle Sam
Is off the gold basis. Secretary
Woodln of the treasury announces
It officially.
Much excitement In good old Wall
Street If it continues, George W.
Hill can find a permanent job there
for his young musicians that sing
“Happy Days Are Here Again.”
As stock prices went up. the price
of our dollar went dowu In foreign
countries.
That need not worry us. What our
dollar can buy here, not what foreign
ers think of It Is Important to Amer
icans.
If our money gets nearer to the
value of other nations' money, that
will help us to sell goods abroad. Our
dollar, In the language of the day, has
been too "high hat” for good business.
Many foreigners say our departure
from the gold standard will hold back
“world recovery."
It has not held back recovery of
stock prices, or farm and other prod
ucts. Wheat, cotton, hay, sliver, every
thing Is going up. Americans can
stand the dollar dropping in value, ts
everything goes up In price. A ma
jority of us haven’t many dollars
anyhow.
Adolf Hitler. Germany’s new chan
cellor, recently celebrated his forty
fourth birthday, and practically all
Germany celebrated with him. The
national celebration, that went beyond
any honor ever paid to Bismarck, Hln
or the kaiser, was close to
’adSfatloe.
The Prussian minister of Justice,
Haus Kerri, told the Prussian diet:
“Hitler is the Holy Ghost.” And all
over Germany Hitler’s political organi
sations erected shrines with his pic
tures tn public halls, held services be
fore them, thanking God for his gift
to Germany of the great Hitler. Thus
Russians, in old days, before Lenin
and Stalin, worshiped their Ikons.
Men that take out life Insurance
seriously, unselfishly, not for them
selves, but to protect their widows and
children after death, will be glad that
government authority now limits reck
less borrowing on insurance policies.
In time of foolish hysteria men bor
row on their insurance policies to the
limit, destroying the real purpose of
insurance, which Is to protect those
that depend on the insured should
anything happen to him.
Income tax payers will rejoice to
hear that innocent little 3.2 beer Is
■expected to pay to Uncle Sam more
than the $125,000,000 annually esti
mated by the secretary of the treasury.
And musicians will be delighted to
learn that in Milwaukee mild beer Is
driving out the barbarian “hot-cha,
hot-mamma” music that came In with
“bathtub gin, bootleg whisky and
needled beer." Real music is offered
In Milwaukee’s beer and palm gar
dens. It may spread and crowd out
gin and jazz.
While some have gone back to Wall
Street, forgetting all almut 1929, you
will be Interested to hear that many
others have gone to farms, safer
place In times of depression. Th^bu
reau of agricultural economics shows
that since 1930 more than 2,000,000
Americans have left the cities for the
farm. At least you can raise food
there, and rent isn't high.
Even so, only 32,070,960 people are
on the farms. More than two-thirds
still in cities and towns.
President Roosevelt, still forbidding
Hie,,®? to set on any idle day, plans
an end to our ancient “hlt-or
miss" systems in Industry and employ
ment’ He requests Miss Frances Per
kins, able secretary of labor, and Mr.
Roper, secretary of commerce, to ar
range two committees, one to control
production, the other hours and wages.
This will not suit him who says:
“I want to attend to my business in
my own way,” "rounding out,” expand
ing Indefinitely and disastrously. But
It will suit the country If it can be
done successfully.
Mussolini suggests that Uncle
Sam's foreign debt be paid In goods.
How this country could absorb ten
thousand million dollars' worth of
foreign-made goods just now with so
many of our workers idle Is not clear.
But suggestions from the able Mus
solini are always welcome.
By the way, that powerful person
is sending twenty airplanes from
Rome to Chicago to celebrate the
opening of the big fair, a most ex
tremely friendly gesture by a nation
that has recently broken, and holds,
the world's air speed record.
George Bernard Shaw Is back In
England, happy as ever, telling the
British that Americans know less
about their own country than the
Chinese do about theirs. Also he
wishes ha had never come here, and
had never gone around the earth. He
only did it “to oblige his wife, and he
knew more about the world and Its
Inhabitants before he circled the globe
than he does now."
That does happen. “He who would
bring information back from his trav
els must take Information with him."
a 1934 by Kins Features Syndicate. Ib*
' WXU Service
Farm Horses Not
to Be “Jobless”
Illinois Agriculturists to Use
Teams to Cut Cost
and Eat Grain.
By B T. Bobblne, Uvratock Kit«n«lon Sw
cloUet, Unlv*rMty of Ullnot*.
WNU Service.
There will be no such thing as un
employment for the 902,000 horses
and mules on Bllnols farms this year,
for farmers are going to use them to
the limit as a source of economical
power.
Whenever farmers gathered at meet
ings during the winter, they discussed
the savings made by working their
horses steadily last year, and they are
going to do It again this season. For
one thing, this saved expense. In ad
dition the horses and mules ate about
22,500,000 bushels of corn, or about
one-seventeenth of the 1932 crop, and
36,000,000 bushels of oats, or more
than one-fifth of the 1932 crop. Other
wise this grain would have gone on an
already overcrowded market and at
best would have sold for less than
the cost of production.
Farmers’ Interest In the Increased
use of horses was evident more than
a year ago when a survey at county
live stock schools Indicated that one
third of those enrolled used five or
more horses in one team for plowing
and other heavy field work. The
farmers had found that any Implement
can be pulled easily If enough horses
are hitched to It.
This past winter farmers expressed
a still greater determination to let the
horses do their bit to furnish an out
let for cheap grain and thus cut down
cash costs for farm work. One farmer
of McLean county, for Instance, plowed
about 200 acres last year with an
eight-horse team. He says that this
team Is going to enable him to do most
of his field work alone this year. In
this way he hopes to keep operation
costs more nearly In line with farm
Income.
Farmers are making eveners, buck
ropes and tie chains to use this
spring.
Corked Over Potatoes
Will Germinate Earlie
Cutting seed potatoes two weeks lx
fore planting and then keeping the.
under the right conditions to cork ovei
will bring about earlier germination,
more even growth, and Increased yield,
the United States Department of Ag
riculture announces.
Although many growers cut the seed
several days before planting, the seed
sometimes decays. The department
says this Is largely because the cut
seed Is not kept under the right con
ditions. The department found that
the seed gave best results when It
was kept at a temperature of 60 de
grees F. and at a relative humidity of
87 per cent. Most farmers can easily
bring the temperature of their potato
storage room to the right point by
using an oil stove or some other heat
ing method. For practical purposes, If
the air Is fairly moist, the humidity will
be about right. Putting wet burlap
bags on the floor or hanging them up
help keep the air moist. The seed
should be treated before cutting.
After the seed potatoes are cut they
may be placed in barrels or sacks until
ready for planting. They should not
be spread out, as they do not cork
over properly when spread out.
Dairy Barn Insulation
The next few years will see a rapid
advance in design of dairy bazns with
Insulation as the primary factor. Sub
stantial barns will be remodeled to
take care of live stock with far great
er profit and less care to the farmer.
Insulation is essential in hog houses,
I particularly at farrowing time. Profit
: in hog raising Is only possible when
I the greatest number of each litter Is
, brought to maturity and sold at hlgh
| est prices. A large percentage of the
■ loss of little pigs is traceable directly
: to cold farrowing houses. The little
i pigs crowd close to the mother for
warmth; she moves and crushes them.
Early farrowing is also made possible
with Insulation and this early farrow-
I Ing enables the swine raiser to get
profitable weight on animals In time
for highest prices.—Farm Journal.
Trench Silos
A herd of from six to fifteen mature
' cows Is best adapted for using the
trench silo, due to the cost of building
the vertical silo. As a usual thing the
1 Income from the larger herds will be
sufficient to take care of this overhead
expense. Silage can also be removed
from the vertical type much easier
than from the trench, and where there
Is a large herd to feed this added
labor will make some difference. There
is no difference In the silos as far as
preservation of the silage Is con
cerned, except In the nature of the
land. On low flat country, where wa
ter has a tendency to rise In the
trench, this form of sHo Is not prae
tlcah
Feeding Farm Horse
The bureau of animal Industry says
that under good corn belt conditions it
requires approximately 2t4 acres to
produce a year’s food for a farm horse
having an average weight of 1,350
pounds. The amount of food eaten by
a horse In a year and consequently the
number of acres required to produce
It Is, of course, variable, depending on
the amount of work a horse does and
the productivity of the land. The
above is, however, a good average fig
ure for fertile land.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO, GEORGIA
The Fable of
Mr. Whipple’s
Dress Suit
38
By GEORGE ADE
©. Bell Syndic*!*.—WSU Service.
ONCE there was a Kid who lived
in a tail-grass Settlement just
two miles this side of the
Jumping-Off Place. There was
a Railway through the Town but no
Fast Train ever stopped at Wimpus
vllle unless ft bad a Hot Box. Sher
man Whipple spent his early Youth
in this benighted Burg where the
Leader of the most exclusive Set
worked at the Hardware and Imple
ment Store, put Goose-Oil on his
Curls and thought he was dressed up
if he had on his White Muffler. The
most popular Belle in the place had
Cora) Ear-Rings and would sing “In
the Gloaming" at the slightest Provo
cation. unless requested not to do so.
When only three years old Sherman
sized up his Environment and knew
that he was in Dutch. After that he
wasn’t interested in anything except
Time-Tables. It may be true that the
Sharks on Sociology, who cannot un
derstand why Lads leave the Villages
and flock to the Bright Lights, never
served a Term in one of these out-of
the-way Hamlets where the only regu
lar Visitors, In the old Days, were
English Sparrows and Drummers.
Now a Picture Palace smiles where
once the Feed Store was. The Sky
Is full of Antennae and the Honk of
the Henry is heard at 2 a. m.
Not so, however, when the Earthly
Career of Sherman Whipple was still
in Its Springtime. The Town of Wim
pusville had a complicated Case of
Mopes and Chldders. It had been
stung by a Hook-Worm. It was Head
quarters for the Not-so-Muches. It
was a Dump.
It happened that when Our Hero
was about 8 years of Age he saw in
a Story Paper, which his Ma read with
great Regularity, a beautiful Wood-Cut
depicting a Scene In High Life.
It was in a Conservatory with Palms
all over the Place. There was a Lady
who was very Slender nt the Waist
and much less slender just Below, and
she was in complete Low-Neck and
wore Diamond Ear-Bobs and had two
Cubic Feet of Hair and was, accord
ing to the Standards of Pre-Golf Days,
a raving Beauty of the Statuesque
Type. Iler name was Alys. It was
Alys Montague. Up to the time that
our Producing Managers moved the
Drama one Flight up from the Draw
ing Room, It was impossible to put on
a Play without having at least one
Montague In it.
The Correct Soup and Fish.
In the Picture it seemed that Alys
was peeved over some Proposition
that had been put up to her by the
Gentleman in the Long Tail, who was
none other than Geoffrey Durante.
Whatever may have been the Private
Morals of Geoffrey, he was certainly
the Class so far as Looks and Get-Up
were concerned. He had a wavy Mop
and a spiral Moustache, and his Re
galia was the Correct Soup and Fish
Including three Studs of Bows on his
dancing Pumps. He was the Cat’s
Goatee, the Elephant’s Eye-Lashes,
the Eel’s Elbows, the Panther's Pa
jamas, or any other Words to the
same Effect so long as they don't mean
anything.
Although it showed in the Picture
that Alys was shrinking away from
Geoffrey until only a clever illustra
tor could prevent her from doing a
Flop and although the Reading Mat
ter indicated that Geoffrey hissed
•'Have a Carel” when Alys hinted that
she had learned of his Secret Marriage
to Gladys Marston —even though the
Circumstantial Evidence Indicated that
Geoffrey was a terrible Pup, his Ward
robe saved him. Evidently he was a
Villain, but still a Gentleman.
Sherman Whipple was fascinated by
the First Part Costume. It was his
first Meeting with the Soup-and
Habiliments. Never, In Real Life,
had he seen any one all diked out In
Thirteen and the Odd.
A Tall Trek From the Home-Town.
The Wood-Cut practically deter
mined his whole Career. He made a
secret Vow that some Day he would
wear the whole Smear, including Silk
Underwear and a Monogram on his
Shirt-Sleeve. You might say that a
Dress Suit was the Lode Star of his
Existence. He steered Ids whole sub
sequent Course of Life toward a Con
servatory, in which he might have a
bantering Flirtation with some Heiress
who carried a Fan and used good Per
fumery. The Fact that the Distance
from Wimpusville to Social Eminence
seemed to be at least Five Million
Miles did not dishearten little Sher
man. He had learned that any One
with plenty of Jack and a sunny Na
ture can bust into the Inner Circle of
the Upper Ten.
When he packed his Wicker Suit
Case and did a tall Trek from the
Corn Fields, it was not suspected by
the Oafs and Bumpkins of his native
Township that he nursed this Ambition
to write his Name in Letters of Fire
on the Society Page of some Daily
Paper.
We need not follow him through his
early Struggles to tell of the weary
Years during which, if he had lost one
of his two Collar Buttons, he would
have been practically Destitute.
Suffice to say that at last the Sun
of Prosperity jammed its way through
the Clouds, and Sherman found him
self with an Apartment of his own and
a sweet Balance at the Bank. The
Dream of a Life-Time was to become
a Joyous Reality. He felt that the
Time had arrived for him to break
out of the Shell and Crow three times
and let the World know that he had
arrived.
So he went to a Real Tailor and
said he wanted a Dress Suit with more
Satin Lining than ever bad been seen
on any Vaudeville Stage. He wanted
at least one Velvet Collar and he want
ed a little Dewflicker to connect the
Buttons In front and he wanted much
Braid down the Trousers. The Tailor
tried to tell Sherman that Evening
Dress, or Full Dress, or Formal Dress,
or whatever one may choose to desig
nate the fantastic Garb, should lie
characterized by an unobtrusive Ele
gance and not Complicated by those
Innovations which seem to be favored
by Song-and Dance Hicks and former
Soda Clerks who have lately begun to
Impersonate European Aristocrats on
the Screen.
No Quiet Raiment for Him.
All that Stuff about cutting out the
Decorative Effects went for Sweeney.
Mr. Whipple had waited nearly 30
years for arrival of The Day and now
that lie was about to back Into a real
Set of Nifties and carry his own Scen
ery, he didn’t want any Vestments that
were quiet and sedate. He wanted a
Dress Sult that would sound like a
Saxophone.
He had his Wish. After the Hot
Raiment was delivered he spent many
an Hour in front of the Mirror and had
a great many Imaginary Chats with
Members of the Opposite Sex who
were not unknown to the Haute
Monde, whatever that is.
He could hardly wait to flash the
proud Apparel. His first Chance came
when he was invited to attend a Smok
er given by the Members of the
Twelfth Ward Bowling Club. When
he showed up at the Function he had
on everything except Lip Rouge.
There were 400 present and 339 of
them had committed Social Errors by
appearing in Sack Sults, although It
is only fair to add that one of them
wore a Sweater also. Mr. Whipple
had to pull the Old One about going
to a Party later in the Evening. Some
one asked him if it was going to be a
Fancy Dress Party and he said It
wasn't, whereupon several of the Boys
shook their Heads and couldn't seem
to understand it.
He thought he was safe when he at
tended a Banquet given by the Alumni
of his Alma Mater, which happened
to be a Short Hand College. The La
dles were present ami the Toastmas
ter had the names of 20 tongue-tied
Morons who were to be called upon to
Speak, It was that Kind. Sherman
did not feel so lonesome at this Affair,
as all the Waiters had Spike-Tails, but
the Toastmaster wore the only dou
ble-breasted Prince Albert Frock Coat
to be found on Earth outside of the
Embalming Profession.
Bad News for the Dress-Suit.
One Day, after the beautiful Rai
ment had been In the Camphor for a
month, Mr. Whipple found something
In a Magazine which almost froze his
Blood. The Piece went on to say that
the Man of Fashion who wished to be
En Rapport with all Hie late Wrinkles,
could now be de Rigour, a la Mode and
absolutely Razmagash even if he wore
a Dinner Coat at Gatherings attended
by Ladies. It is said that the snowy
Wesklt, the expensive Pearls, the tall
Dicer and the White Mittens which
can seldom be buttoned, would con
tinue to be Au Fait at the Metropoli
tan Opera House or at Weddings, but
for Dinner Parties which were more or
less En Famine the Dinner Jacket
Combination was to the Mustard, be
cause the Prince of Wales was doing
it and what more was there to say?
It was just like sticking a Knife In
to the Heart of Sherman Whipple. He
couldn’t scoop up all of the French but
he surmised that the Money which lie
had tied up in the Swell Harness was
going to be a Total Loss. He had no
Chance to be among those present at
the Metropolitan Opera House, and
the Weddings were out because the
only Friends he had in the World had
been married for years.
Little remains to be told. Sherman
still has the Dress Suit but it binds
across the Shoulders and the Pants are
so tight in the Legs that they no longer
conform to the Rules laid down in that
sparkling Department headed “Styles
for Men.”
Often, as he sits by the Radiator,
waiting for Spring to show up, Sher
man wishes that he had saved his
Coin and bought a Radio Set with a
Loud Speaker.
MORAL: Those destined to wear
Royal Robes are born with them al
ready on.
Proper Treatment of
Plants in the House
House plants which have become
dull and lifeless can be made to perk
up and take on new beauty. Cleanse
the plants either by dipping the foli
age into a tub of soapy water and
then rinsing thoroughly In clean wa
ter, or by spraying with a small plane
spray.
After the foliage thoroughly dries,
feed the plants with a complete plant
food at the rate of one teaspoonful
for each 6-inch pot, using more or
less according to size of the pot.
Plants are accustomed to air which
Is quite humid. Most homes are dry
during winter. To overcome this dry
ness humidifiers should be used In con
nection with the heating system, but
if this Is not practical a pan of water
placed near the heating unit will be
of considerable help In adding mois
ture to the air. Humidifying the air
of your home will benefit the mem
bers of your household as well as the
plants.
Egg’s High Value on Daily Menu
Nutritionally speaking, the fact
that eggs are so low in price this
season Is most important. Eggs are
recognized as one of the foods which
contribute the most to the diet, be
cause they are so well balanced
themselves, in comparison to most
foods. They are equaled and ex
ceeded perhaps only by milk.
We would expect this to be the
case because If the egg is allowed to
develop Into a chicken, from It must
be taken all the material necessary
to form bones, muscles and blood. It
must, therefore, contain minerals and
vitamins as well ns protein for this
purpose. All these except calcium
and vitamin G wo get from the egg
white and yolks when we eat It. Cal
cium is provided by the eggshell,
which Is absorbed In the formation
of the chicken but which Is not as
eatable for human consumption.
Most of the Important constituents
of Ihe egg can ho found in tho yolk.
Here are concentrated iron, pirns
phorus, some calcium, vitamins A. B
and D, ns well ns protein. From the
egg white we get protein and sul
phur. as you have found out from the
way silver spoons are blackened by
contact with egg whites.
The protein in the egg is of excel
lent quality and in tills respect eggs
can take the place of meat or other
protein food. Tn combination with
milk egg furnishes a safeguard to
tho diet of infants and young chil
dren. The egg yolk Is more often
put Into the milk given to small
babies. This Is particularly on ac
count of the Iron and vitamin D
content. Milk Is low in Iron and
needs to be supplemented by a food
which Is an efficient source of this
Important mineral. The iron In eggs
Is In n form which Is completely
utilized. Tn n recent piece of re
search work in regard to tho diet of
children It has been found that eggs
have n distinctively favorable Influ
ence upon the physical well-being.
Vitamin D Is a safeguard against
rickets and it has hoen found that
there Is enough In one egg yolk to
protect a child from this disease In
tho winter months when little is pro
vided by the sun. Eggs provide a
higher concentrate of vitamin D than
any other food unless we admit cod
llver oil as a member of the food
category. This food-medicine Is. of
course, many times as rich In vita
min D ns egg yolk.
Eggs can lie eaten raw or cooked,
ns far ns their nutritive qualities
nre concerned. Our opinion in re
gard to them has changed materially
In the last year. Once hard-boiled
eggs wore considered difficult to di
gest nnd raw eggs were considered
high in the diet list. It has been
found that there Is merely a differ
ence In the time of digestion which
may bo In favor of the first.
Because most of tho fond value nf
the egg Is In the yolk, infants are
often given egg yolk without, the
white, which supplies the same kind
of protein as the milk which Is nl
rendy in tiie diet. Tills is an espe
cially advantageous custom when
oggs nre expensive, as the house
keeper can always find a good use
for egg whites in tho preparation of
souffles, cakes and desserts for the
family table.
Eggs find a place nt other meals
besides breakfast, with which they
are so closely associated. Omelets,
poached eggs with various savory
sauces, deviled eggs and salads nre
all popular luncheon dishes. With
dinner the egg serves often as a
garnish for canapes or vegetables
and Is one of the Ingredients often
used for sauces. An egg does Its
part tn the diet plan no matter how
It Is served.
Shirred Eggs With Cheese.
4 to 6 eggs
4 to 6 tablespoons cream
Salt
1 cup strained cheese
1 cup fine dry bread crumbs
Break the eggs into a shallow but
tered baking dish. Add the cream
PAINS, LOST WEIGHT
THE young wom
an who suffers
from monthly pains,
or the woman who
may suffer from
weakening drains,
should take Dr.
Pie r c e’s Favorite
Prescription. Miss
Elsie Marsh of 208
Peachtree St., Macon, Ga., says: “I
was In very poor health, felt all tired out
most of the time, suffered from pains in my
stomach, affecting my appetite. I lost rest at
night, had headaches and lost weight. I had
taken only three bottles of Dr. Piece’s Fa
vorite Prescription when I felt so well and
strong again I hardly knew I had been ill
and have enjoyed fine health ever since.”
Writ® to Dr. Pierre’s Clinic, Buffalo,
N. Y., for free medical advice.
HEADQUARTERS for SOUTHERNERS
folks horn below tho t^ason-Dixon Lino always make 1
th® Martinique their headquarters in New York. Within
one block—the Empire State Building, the Pennsylvania
station and the largest department stores, within our four x
walls — good rooms, good meals and good friendships, //——i
Single Rooms from *2" Double Rooms from ’3 OO f
Direction AMERICAN HOTELS CORPORATION W \
i iWJt KINCAID, GtOtGC W AMTMAN. Mo<wfe» 1/ )
BROADWAY at STREET / Z
TOTEL
mAßTimou^
4 n E W YO R K ►
and enough salt to season, then sprin
kle with a mixture of strained
cheese and bread crumbs. Set the
baking dish in a pan of hot water
and bake in a moderate oven (375
degrees Fahrenheit) until the eggs
nre set and the crumbs are brown.
Curried Eggs.
« eggs
4 tablespoons butter
>4 cup chopped celery
2 tablespoons chopped onion
1 tablespoon chopped green
pepper
S tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups milk
% cup rice
Chopped parsley
Cook eggs until they are hard, or
about twenty minutes. Make a sauce
by melting the butter and adding
celery, onion and green pepper. Let
the sauce simmer for five minutes.
Mix flour and seasonings and sprin
kle over the cooked vegetables, mil
well and mid the milk. Cook tin
sauce two minutes after it reache
the boiling point, stirring constant!' .
Cook rice and when tender dra n
well and pour on a hot plat ter. !r
--range on it the hard-cooked eggs, tut
in quarters, and pour the hot sa tce
over the eggs and rice. Sprinkle the
top with chopped parsley.
Cook spinach with melted butter
and serve in a hot dish. Garnish
with slices of lemon dipped in pap
rika. On each lemon slice arrange
a slice of hard-cooked egg.
£t, 1933, 801 l Syndicate.—WNU Service.
$
4 z H fl w |
fir- SIF
How to train BABY'S
BOWELS
Babies, bottle-fed or breast-fed,
with any tendency to be constipated,
would thrive if they received daily
half a tcaspoonful of this old family
doctor’s prescription for the bowels.
That is one sure way to train tiny
bowels to healthy regularity. To
avoid the fretfulness, vomiting,
crying, failure to gain, and other ills
of constipated babies.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is
good for any baby, for this, you have
the word of a famous doctor. Forty
seven years of practice taught him
just what babies need to keep their
little bowels active, regular; keep
little bodies plump and healthy. For
Dr. Caldwell specialized in the treat
ment of women and little ones. He
attended over 3500 births without
loss of one mother or baby.
Da. W. B. Caldwell's
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Family Laxative
Works Wonders in the
Care of Your Hair
Massage the scalp with the
Ointment to remove the dan
druff. Then shampoo with the
Soap to cleanse the hair and re
store its natural gloss and vigor.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Proprietors:
Potter Drug & Chemical Corp^
Malden* Mass.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes DandrufT-Stopa Hair Falling
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c and JI.OO at Druggists.
j^Hfecox Cbem. Wka., Patchogue,N.Y.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use in
connection with Parker’s Hair Balsam. Makes the
hair soft and Huffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.Y.
KARN SSO WEEKLY making Porch, Lawn,
and Cemetery Vases. Big demand. Easily
made. Instructions 50c. Particulars, stamp.
Mullo-Craft Co.. Box 222. Wuusaa, Wis.
Cheapest Best
t&e&iVFTWtK Ask your dealer for Dehy Fly
killer. Placed anywhere. at-
UactsondkUhall flits. N«4.
J clean, convenient. Lads all
season. Made of metal. Can't
jpjil or tip over. Can't soil, or
Injure anything. Harold Somers,lnc., Brooklyn, N.Y.
DAISY FLY MLLER