Newspaper Page Text
AFTER BABY WAS BORN Back Weak and Painful Mrs. Miller Benefited by Taking Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Rotan, Texas.—“I am writing to let von know how I have been benefited by taking vour medi cine. After my sec ond baby was born my back was weak and hurt me contin ually, so I thought!’d try Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound as I had read so much about where it had helped so many women. I had been bothered with mv back for over & year, and it would hurt me until I could not do my work, which is keep ing house for three and cooking and washing dishes. I tell all my friends if they have any kind of female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial. You may use this testimonial if it will help anyone.”— Mrs. C. R. Miller, R. P. D. No. 1, Box 76, Rotan, Texas. In a recent country-wide canvass of purchasers of Lydia E Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound over 121,000 replies were received, and 98 out of every 100 reported they were benerited by its use. For sale by druggists everywhere. Don’t go on suffering! “Munyon’s Guide to Health” will be sent to you free. Write today. Get these famous remedies i At any good drug store: Munyon’s Piw P»w Tonic Munyon’s Disrrhoet Remedy Munyon’s Constipation Ointment Munyon’s Grip Remedy Munyon’s Psw Paw Lixiths PUIa V _ or any othor Munyoo Remedy g •# There’s a Munyon Pill For Every 111” Doctor’• Advice FREE iv_ If.*3 |®i The I II Household Necessity ■ V !j For cuu, burns, blister#, rashes, tilliltlll wounds, orskin troubles of any I kind. Soothing and healing. I! Keep it always in the house. In liji M tubes or bottles. Look for the HI HI trademark “Vaseline" on every I I package. It i« your protection. I Chesebrough Mfg. Co. (Cons'd) State Street New York |j Vasejine I PETROLEUM JELLY ■■■■■■■I PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Bemoyes D&narti ff-S tops Bair Fall log Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hau 60c. and $1.00 at Drujrchits. Bibcoi CticiiL Wkaratclu>gue,W. T. HINDERCORNS Coma, Cal louses. etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the feet, manes walking easy. 16c. by mail or at l>rug» fists. HIsoox Chemical Works, Patehogue, N. Y. Poor Man’s Pride So many men to whom the East Aide missionary had given money had expressed a preference for a certain lodging house that he wondered what constituted Its particular attraction. “It makes us feel self-respecting,” said the men, when questioned. So far ns the mission worker could see, It was the typical cheap lodgng house, whose Inducements to self-re spect were not discernible to the or dinary eye. So he interviewed the manager. "That's easy,” replied the latter, and pointed to n sign above the desk: “Gentlemen Are Requested to Leave Their Valuables with the Clerk.”— American Legion Weekly. The Cuticura Toilet Trio. Having cleared your skin keep It clear by making Cuticura your everyday toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per fume. No toilet table Is complete without them.—Advertisement. In His Official Capacity “I hear your friend Jack addressed fi.000 people yesterday. Orator or broadcaster?” “Neither. Envelopes." — American Legion Weekly. The Difference “I knew my wife three months be fore I married her!” “I knew mine i. week after!” STOMACH GAS Probably nothing embarrasses one more than to belch gas in the presence of others. It is so ill-bred. And to say “Pardon me” isn’t enough, for the trouble should be corrected at its source. The normal stomach, during digestion, generates some gas, but not enough to be eructed through the mouth. Bitter or foul-tasting gases often indicate gastrio trouble, bile on stomach or other diges tive derangement. Belching gas is a symptom of stomach trouble and should be heeded at once, for even slight digestive ailments may develop into serious disease. Doctors now prescribe Jaques’ Digestive Capsules for belching gas, biliousness, dyspepsia, indigestion and constipation. Jaques’ Capsules act quickly and pleasant ly. Taken regularly, they correct chronic cases. 60 cents at all druggists, or direct from Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, N. Y. ■a Age, there was an all-night debate In the house of com mons, provoked by the Progressives. Tn winding up the de bate Minister Gra ham reminded the house that he him self signed the first contract and turned the first sod. And he said, in part: “As to the project itself, someone will build the Hudson Bay railway—and I am not going to argue the question of navigation and all that sort of thing. I have said time and time again that the construction of the railway ns a coloni zation road will be valuable in that re spect, even if the transportation end were left out alto gether. But I think every member will agree with me that parliament as now constituted Is not WB Canada finish BerJM Between Wheat Fieldf and fait Water.9 * ---———~ ^or^r Oarjry^, t By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN a HALL Canada materialize its dream of a generation and complete the Hudson Bay railway — a road planned to connect its great western grain fields with salt water at Port Nelson and open a new grain export route to Liv erpool ? That is a question that Is stirring all Canada, setting the West against the East and provoking all-night de bates in parliament. There is seemingly no doubt at this writing that the road will be com pleted—in time. But whether It will be completed as a grain export route or as a colonization and general car rier road is apparently an open ques tion. The Hudson Bay railway starts at The Ptis, Manitoba, on the Saskatche wan river, at the end of a branch line of the former Canadian Northern rail way, and rtins to Hudson bay, north east, almost as the crow files, along the Nelson river, to Port Nelson, near the mouth of that stream. The length of the line is 425 miles; 325 have been constructed to Kettle ltapids at a cost of $20,500,000. The estimated cost of the remaining 100 miles is $5,000,000. Take u look at the map of North America. Note that Port Nelson, on the west shore of Hudson hay, is nl most due nortli of Chicago, and that The Pas Is almost due nortli of Omaha. Now note the distnnce from The Pas (or Winnipeg) to Montreal, either by nil rail or via Lake Superior and Georgian bay. In round figures the saving in mileage by the Hudson Bay road in respect to certain points is as follows: Begins, 1,050 miles; Calgary, 1,150; Saskatoon, 1,175; Prince Albert and Melfort, 1,300. Then figure that Port Nelson and Montreal are prac tically the same distance by sea from Liverpool—3,000 miles. And finally bear in mind that the Hudson Buy roud Is a government project. It is a part of the Canadian National rail ways—a system of 22,000 miles which llie World war left on the hands of the Canadian people. It was rustled dun ing the early years of the war, but work was discontinued In 1917. Why, then, should there be any question about the completion of the new export route project? That there is n question is shown by two facts: The Engineering Insti tute of Canada is Investigating whether or not the project cun be made worth while as a measure of na tional economy. Moreover, the house of commons has refused to make ap propriation for its completion. The terminal for transshipment to vessels will have to lie built 20 miles up the Nelson river, say the engineers. That Is because of ice troubles and shoal water. The most optimistic esti mates of terminal costs of construction are: about $4,500,000 for harbor and channel dredging; nearly $0,000,000 for storage facilities; about $7,000,000 for lighthouses and other marine equipment along the channel and in Hudson strait connecting the bay with the ocean; total, including the 100 miles of road, $22,500,000. The longest open season that can be expected is fifteen weeks, begin ning about the middle of August; in some years it has been no more thnn ten weeks. This short season, suggest the engineers, will so place limitations on the capacity of the railway that large elevator capacity will have to be provided at the port. They also Suggest that It will so affect the avail ability of tramp vessels that freight rates must remain largely conjectural. W. Nelson Smith, in a discussion be fore the Winnipeg branch of the in stitute, said that a liberal estimate of the grain that would move by this outlet Is from 16,(XXI,000 to 24,000,000 bushels. He put the most favorable conjectural transportation suving at about ten cents u bushel, disregarding insurance. * Incidentally, it may be stated that in 1022 Canada’s exports of wheat (including flour) were 170,606,(XX) bush els and the total exports of wheat, outs, barley and rye were 232,808,000 bushels. According to 'the Itnllway Age, a hitherto unpublished report on the feasibility of completing the Hudson Hay road project by David W. Mac Lachlnn, engineer in charge of dredg ing operations at Port Nelson, was tabled in the house of commons at Ottawa in .Tune. This report was sub mitted to the department of railways and canals in September, 1017. Mac Lachlan estimated the average season of navigation at two months; the rate on grain from Saskatoon to Liverpool via Fort William and Montreal at 26.4 cents a bushel and the rate from Sas katoon to Port Nelson, including han dling charges, at 10.0 cents, thus leav ing a margin of 6.5 cents for the ocean rnte, extra insurance and the Inter est on the cost of the works. He said the average rate paid tramp steamers from Montreal to Liverpool was 7 cents and that they would Inevitably choose the Montreal route unless there was a higher margin at Port Nelson. W. D. Euler, Liberal member for North Waterloo, asked if there were reporls subsequent to that of Mue Lachlan. Mr. Graham, minister of railways and canals, replied that there were and that they would be submit ted when asked for. Loud applause from the Progressives greeted this statement. In July, according to the Railway prepared to vote money for the com pletion of the Hudson Buy railway. The vote was 78 to 20 against. The government treated it virtually as a want of confidence vote, so it was probably not n test vote, as some of the Progressives voted with the Lib erals and Conservatives. This is, however, far from being the end of the matter. Western Pro gressive members are strong for the early completion of the project. It has been the dream of Western Can adn ever since it found It could raise grain. It should be noted that another road to Hudson bay is being built. It is nn extension from Cochrane north to James bay of the Temiskamlng & Northern Ontario railway, owned by tlie province of Ontario. Its purposes have to do with colonization, fisheries and coal from the northwest shore of Hudson bay. To the student of American history this Hudson Bay grain export route project is of intense interest. Port Nelson and the Nelson river were the hendquarters and trade highway of the Hudson's Bay company—chartered in 1C70 by King Charles II of England and the biggest and most efficient monopoly the world has ever seen. With power of life and death and monopoly of trade over all of British North America to the Rockies it suc cessfully barred the way to civilization for 150 years. H. B. C.—translated by its enemies, "Here Before Christ”— was on its tlag and the missionary and teacher were annthema. Pro pelle cutem—"skin for skin”—was the motto on its great seal and it took the fur from the Indian and skinned him in the trade, reducing him to slavery. Not even a post factor was allowed to make a garden, lest he give the lie to the "inhospitable wilderness.” The "free-trader” in furs was killed off. It ignored the exploring obligations of its charter, set up trading posts and made the Indian come to them. It piled up enormous profits in secret and successfully withstood investiga tion. Forced to let go Its grip sifter 200 years by the British government, it is now selling its "fertile funds” and running a chain of department stores in thriving cities—and making more money than ever. Had the II. B. C. explored "Rupert's Land” and opened It to colonization and settlement, the history of the North American continent would have been far different. For ohe thing, Alnska would not be ours. The Eng lish instead of the Russians would have found it—and kept it. For an other, the settlement of the Missis sippi valley would have been British instead of French—with possibilities and conjectural consequences beyond our imagining. Another Universe Harvard observatory reports not only the discovery but also the meas urement of the most distant object yet seen by man. It Is another uni verse, but smaller than ours. This faint and nameless collection of worlds Is In the constellation of the Archer and Is six qutntllllon miles distant from our globe. It takes a million years for light to travel from there to the earth. The new universe ap pears ns a pin-head of light In the largest telescopes. It was first dis covered by the late I’rof. E. E. Bar hard but was photographed Just re cently. Heretofore the most distant stars were supposed to be only 250, 000 light years away. China Losing Antiques Real antiques and curios will be nl most unknown In China In a few years, according to collectors and dealers who have returned from the Orient recent ly. China, they declare, Is being rapid ly stripped bore of antiques by tourists and collectors. So few real curios ore left In the country now, comparatively speaking, that the Chinese are endeavoring to emulate the Japanese in turning out Imitations, but so far they have not been able to equal the work of their neighbors. Old-fashioned bronzeware and Inlaid porcelain are particularly scarce now, and one well known col lector declared that practically the only Japanese prints available are imi tations. Betrayed by Mercury Guilty secrets are said to be bnred unerringly by an apparatus Invented by Dr. Albert Schneider, of the Uni versity of California. The suspect pluces the forefinger of each hand on contacts from which run minute wires to a capillary electrometer and an arrangement of gluss tubing. Through one tube runs a fine thread of mercury, fluctuations of which are said to betray the suspect.—London Answers Dad Knew The family was considering the plans for the new home while dad con sidered finances and wondered where he could reduce expenses in the new home plans. Finally he spied the nook Just off the kitchen. “What’s that?’’ he demanded. “A breakfast room,” his daughters explained. Dad viewed It a minute and, despite Ids daughters' objections, had It cut off the pinna, for, ns he said, “nobody but him and mother got up In time for breakfast and they could eat It at the kitchen tuble as they always had done.’’ Discovery of Brazil Pedro Alvures Cabral, a Portuguese navigator, Is credited with having dis covered Brazil on April 22, 1500. With the revision of the calendar the date became May 3, 1500, and this has been adopted as the official date of discovery. 1 — ———II. HJ Connected With “Long Distance” By ANNA ROBESON BURR ((£) by Doubleday. Page & Co.) /T'HE children had kept me up. Billy was fretful—poor little chapl—as he had been every night since that day when the house was filled with white flowers and people In black. The older ones, too, were restless and hard to satisfy. Their world had been upset. Somehow they couldn’t seem to under stand the absence of that person who had never before willingly left them, and who. If she did, always came run ning up the nursery stair, her voice calling eagerly ahead of her to ask If all were well there. No wonder they were troublesome, and I was long In soothing them, and longer still after wards quieting myself, till I fell Into a grief-stricken sleep. It was the telephone, struggling to ring, that roused me. I sat up in bed with an awful dread of some fresh mis fortune catching at my heart. The bell couldn’t seem to ring, and the thing just stood there, fighting to tell me something, but horribly unable— inarticulate, clicking and buzzing. I pushed the hair out of my sticky eyes and seized it, called Into It. . . . The night was unusually still; no wind moved the trees. On the floor lay bars of bright moonlight. I looked at them as I wnggled the hook up and down and tried to win soma answer out of the clicking and buzzing. For a few minutes there was a hopeless chaos of sounds and then the disturb ance seemed to clear up and die away, giving place all at once to that tense, vibrating hum singing over the wires, which always means a long-distance call. Who could be calling me in the middle of the night from such a long dlstunce? Now feverishly awake and fright ened, I called again, but only that soft song of the wires answered me. My Imagination, as always, seemed to fol low those wires where they hummed In the night wind or shone In the moon light—across towns and fields and prairie, over mountains and rivers, from far, so far nway—beyond( the world, beyond space and from the stars. . . . Hello — wno s caning — wno is there?” I begged. Then, thin and faint and far—far as the stars themselves— came the Voice. A Voice I knew, and, oh, marvel of Heaven 1 a Voice I ex pected to hear. "Nan—oh, Nan, is it you? Oh, Nan, are you there?" So faint, so far, so living, that Voice . . . the horrible, heavy beating of my heart leaped to recognize it “Yes—I am here—It is I. Speak to me! Oh, God, what miracle is this?” “My children—how are ray children? Nan, can you hear? Tell me about my children!” So anguished, so faint, so far that Voice! "My children—tell me about them! 3uick, quick; how are my children?” I pulled myself together. I wasted no more time. Somehow I seemed to know that only a moment would be vouchsafed to us and that I must make haste. So I spoke Into the telephone as steadily as I could: "The children are nil well, dear. I am doing the best I can. Billy has been a little fretful with his teeth, but Flora’s cold is better. Helen went back to school todny; she wore her sweater and warm cap. I talk to them about you—every bed-time, I think. I hope they will get used to it soon— they are so young! I shall not let them forget. ... I am doing the best I can and all is well with them. Be comfort ed, dear! ... Do you hear me? Are you comforted?” No sound save that thrilling of the wires, far, far beyond—beyond what? I hungered to hear, and I culled again and agnin: “The children are well—well, dear est ! Tell me you hear—can’t you speak to me?" No answer save the soft, humming song from infinite space . • . And then— "What number, please?” That sharp voice recalled me to the madness of my waiting and to my tears. , . . For awhile they kept me from speech. Then I looked out upon the bars of clear moonlight and I was suddenly quiete$ and awed. . . . “Hello! Are you still connected with Long Distance—hello?" The operator was persistently trying to speak to me. So, before I hung up, I answered the telephone., “Thank you,” I said. "I was connected with Long Distance, I believe; but it's ended.” Bullsnake Good “Mouser” If you don’t care to keep a Kansas bullsnake upon the premises to keep rats and mice away, get a bullfrog. The mousing proclivities of a bull frog are vouched for by Wade Father bee, local sportsman, who captured a giant hopper on a fishing trip, says a Chickasha (Okla.) dispatch to the In dianapolis Star. Instantly, the frog secured a safe and steady future at a time when he was headed for the frying pan. Fatherbee tied the “critter” in the house awaiting execution. During the night the frog broke loose. "I could hear him hopping about the house and then hear his jaws pop and a mouse squeal. He kept that up throughout the night. The next morning he had the appearance of a swelled-up frog. Now he has a home with me," Fatherbee declares. Fatherbee says he wouldn’t trade the frog for a flock of tomcats. Caviar in Hamburg The world’s largest storehouse of caviar—supplying the New York. Lon don and Paris markets—Is in Ham burg. Outside of Russia, caviar is one of the most expensive luxuries of European tables. But in Petrograd or Moscow it is a common dish of the workingman. Wants Acknowledgment A real fisherman is one who looks disappointed if you don’t call him a liar after hearing one of his exploits. DADDY’S m EVENING 1 FAIRY TALE |M ^Mary Graham Bonner o»w%tt»T erwfjwm/mumft/t unrar SODAS AND SUNDAES "I’m the favorite of all," said the chocolate ice cream soda. “Well, I'm pret ty popular,” said the vanilla Ice cream soda. “They like me, too,” said the cof fee ice cream soda. “Don't forget to men.tion me,” said the strawberry ice cream soda. “I’m nice and refreshing,” said the orangeade. “No more so ■ than I am,” said the lemon phos- j A Kind Friend. phate‘ ‘Ah, but what about us,” said several of the ice . cream cones. ‘‘And you’d better mention us,” said the sundaes. “You might speak of me,” said the banana split. Some one was giving a big party that afternoon and the order had just been giv&i for many ice cream sodas and sundaes and ice cream cones. The one who was giving the party had just given the order and the chil dren for whom the party was being i given were expected to arrive in just another moment. They had been on a long hike and they were to end up with this party. “Well,” said the chocolate ice cream soda, “I have heard that once a little girl wrote a composition in school about her favorite friend. “She wrote ubout a kind friend who used to treat her to chocolate ice cream sodas almost every time she met this friend. “The teacher wrote upon the com position afterward: “ ‘Do you like your friend better than the ice cream sodas, or do you li£e the ice cream sodas better than your friend? From this composition it is hard to tell.’ “Now that was a great compliment to our family—to the whole, delicious family of chocolate ice cream sodas.” “Maybe you are the most popular," said the vanilla ice cream soda. “Yet,” the vanilla Ice cream soda continued, “if any one wants to have me X seem quite as delicious as you fo.” ,“And that is just. the way it is with me,” said the strawberry ice cream soda. “I am pretty in color, too.” “I think I’m nice to look at,” said the orangeade. “Well, we’re not so handsome but we’re awfully good,” said the Ice cream cones. “They’re coming now,” said the chocolate ice cream soda. “I can hear their voices. “Oh, how exciting this is! I get so excited myself thnt I can hardly wait to be eaten and enjoyed. “You know they say that we are all eaten so quickly but It is because we ! help, too, in our eagerness and excite ment.” “Here they come,” the vanilla ice ' cream soda said. “Yes, here they come," said the coffee ice cream soda. “How exciting,” said the strawber- ! ry ice cream soda. “Isn’t It?” said the orangeade. “Just delightful,” said the lemon phosphate. i “Splendid,” said the banana split. And the sundaes, looking very gay with their handsome sauces spread all over them, said: ___________ j "ine ones wno ordered us are looking at us.” “H ere, we’re being taken,” said the Ice cream cones. Every Ice cream , soda, every sun dae and ice crenm cone and phos phate n n d all, soon had com pletely disap peared. But there were sun me Doys ana « ^ Kiris here and „WeYe Not Sc their faces looked Handsome, but really quite WeYe AwfuMy pleased, for they Good” had just eaten such delicious refreshments, and after the long walk and the warmth they felt this was delightful. Had the chocolate ice cream soda not been eaten so fast it would have heard many more orders given for members of its family from others who came into the store, for the chocolate ice cream soda was pretty nearly right. It was pretty nearly right to call it the favorite of all. Dorothy Was Stingy "What are you crying about, Ed win?” asked a mother of her four-year old son. “ 'Cause Dorothy’s mean to me,” he sobbed. "What has she been doing?” asked his mother. “I ate all my candy and now she won’t give me half of hers,” was the reply. A Logical Question Little Girl—This story says they went into the ark two by two, doesn't It, auntie? Auntie—Yes, dear. “Well, who went in with you?”— London Answers. When He Found Out “What’s the matter?" “Willie Green and me had a fight.” "I thought Willie was a nice llttie boy.” "So did I, till I hit him 1" i bay Dayer Aspirin INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by* millions and prescribed by phy sicians for 24 years. Accept only a Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mann* facture of Monoacetlcacldester of Salicjlicacid The Subject of Petting Girl—I can’t agree with you on the subject of petting. Guy—How I wish we could get to gether on that subject!—Everybody's Magazine. Ain’t It True? “All things come to him who waits.” “Yes—including poverty and old age.”" Hall’s Catarrh Medicine XLd,Zh“ ~ rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. Sold by druggists for over 40 years F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio PILES Colac Brings Relief Within 24 Hours. The remedy for piles Is not in exter nal applications or operations but in treatment from within. COLAC PILE PILLS rkl the system of piles by cor recting the cause. Taken internally like any pill, they pass through the stomach unchanged, carrying their effi cient medicines into the lower bowel,, where the trouble lies. Their direct action at the seat of trouble brings quick relief. COLAC Is only 60 cents at druggists or 65 cents postpaid in plain wrapper from Colac Chemical Co., Inc., Glens Falls, NT. Y. Mind on Important Things He—Doily, dear, don’t you think, you could learn to love me? She—Why, Johnny, I haven’t time! Really! There are my mah-jonng and motor lessons.—London Answers. A FEELING OF SECURITY WHEN YOU USE SWAMP-ROOT You naturally feel secure when yon know that the medicine you are about to take is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or habit-producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Root, kidney, liver and bladder medicine. The same standard of purity, strength end excellence is maintained in every bottle of Swamp-Root. It is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken in, teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. It is nature’s great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. A sworn statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Root. If you need a medicine, you should have the best. On sale at all drug stores in. bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation, send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a .sample bottle. When writing, be sure and mention this paper.—Advertisement. Reason for Speech Speech is power; speech is to per suade. to convert, to compel. It is to bring another out of his had sense into your good sense.—Emerson. His Main Attraction “So Helen’s affair with the count i» off Did she doubt ids love?” “No. his title.”—Boston Transcript. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief UELl-AMB £5<t AND 75t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE . ^ After A Bath ^ With Cuticura Soap Duit With CuticuraTalcum Delicately Medicated Of Pleasintf Fragrance BATHE TIRED EYES with Dr. Thompson’s Eyewater. But at your drupgtSt’s or U«» HSver, *Troy. N. Y. Booklet. PAXTINE IS FOR WOMEN who have feminine ills that need local treat ment—Douches of Paxtine Antiseptic de stroys disease germs, heals Inflammation* ulceration and stops the discharge. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. recom mended Paxtine for years in their adver tising. A pure white powder to be dissolved in water as needed—one box makes gallons of strong antiseptic solution that gives posi tive satisfaction—60c at druggists or post paid by mall. THE COMFORT POWDER COMPANY. BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS. MEND YOUR OWN TIRES WITH RUBBER. No vulcanizing, no heating, no delay. Agents wanted. Exclusive territory. Write New York. Marvel Co.. 6802 Ridge Blvd., Brooklyn. N. Y. Bobbed Hair Kept In Heat Condition Witlx Scientol Hair Tonic. Keeps hair fluffy. Eradi cates dandruff. Send $1.00 for 8-oz. bottle. Scientol Co., 693 Irving Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. i* t Send your name, we will mall you rree (O women! free, a 10c bottle Liquid Vknekel Wonderful for dusting, polishing jpianos. furniture and woodwork. Liquid Vknbbk Co., Buffalo N. Y. W. N. U., NEW YORK, NO. 37-19241