“MASTERS OF MEN?” by MORGAN ROBERTSON The greatest story of the sea ever screened! A thrilling film story of he-men whose veins run hot with red fighting blood! A blunt, vigorous yarn of a boy's fight upward against overwhelming odds, where fight means a hard fist and prime muscle, high courage and a roady wallop! Shanghaied! Drugged by crimps and flung insensible into the hell hole forward, where sweating, brow-beaten men live like beasts scourged to their tasks with curses and belaying pin. The sea! The flavor of salt in the nostrils; the odor of pitch in the air, the snapping of wind-swept canvas crackling like a machine gun; the creaking, singing wood straining as she rides the high waves! All magic and lure of adventure, the Spanish Main and sailormen! Love! A timid boy's anspoken old-fashioned to offer love unbidden; a lad’s sacrifice of youth's dearest pos- the shame of another's crime; Uncle Sam's bluejackets! and youth, eternal, youth! “gob,” incorrigible, loyal; and loveable! Red sunsets turn green waves crashing mountains of blood; noon rainbows’ ends. And, the sea gives no riches; only character and manhood, bitterly squeezed out of its cold, hard business. Wholesome, <lean, boy's life of adventure, free from tawdry conflicts and sex illusions, based on fact gathered by one who served among men, who loved men, who admired men and who wished young America to so live that he might become a man! The trash of silly, social temptations has no place in this screen story of a boy who be. came the master of the man. Here is a story of the making of men; men who acted and argued later. Shifty-footed men, with a right and left punch and a keen eye and a high sense of honor and guts to go the limit! Dick Halpin is the lad you wanted to be; and | wanted to be! He's the fellow we dreamed of, whose fighting courage we envied. He's the boy that assumed another's petty crime and ran away to sea to live it down, that the girl he loved might not be shamed end humiliated by the revelation of her brother's weakness. He's the fel- low you and | used to talk about; that lad of strength and honor we built with boyish imaginations up in the haymow, or while idling with a home-made fishing rod down by the creek. He's your kind and my kind and because we had fathers and mothers to ‘make our way easier we never managed to be him; but we wanted to and we'll live our dreams again with Dick Halpin in this vivid liv. ing motion picture, “Masters of Men.” healthy! A sea tale. A man whose life was as hard as the diamonds he cut and who never wrote a line until he had lived beyond an average man's age; a man who took a beating at the hands of a brutal second mate with smile, and who administered a the sea and a s«ilorman’s life; whe criticized Kipling rightfully and who wrote his first sea tale to prove that a man who knew the sea could write a better story of the sea; a man who earned little by his pen and who starved while he wrote; the greatest writer of sea stories in all literature, Morgan Robertson, a master of men, wrote the last word in thrilling sea stories when he wrote “Masters of Men.” YiZag RAP California’s "Lemon Crop. of California with one exception, will be the largest ever shipped out of that state, sist of 10878 carloads of 400 boxes each. The crop of 1920-21 was slightly larger. AE — giri—not old enough to show much re flection, Application makes a scholar; genius is an accident, DAISY FLY KILLER Zee. ens Y, ih ALL FLIES. Neat, prepaid, BARGLiS SEES, V9 Deal) Aviv Hacky, MN. X. Pimples Blackheads, ples and other skin on whenyouwse (3lenn’s Sulphur Soap Contains 33)4% Pure Sulphur, At Droggists, ALONG THE RIO GRANDE In Texas exploredion for oll is under way Leases that may ame immensely valu. abie can be had for small amounts. Free map P.N, MhCULLOUGH, LAREDO, TEXAS (Prepared New Here I= Department of Agriculture, and appetizing ways 8 cupfuls tomato pulp and julce (put through a sieve) 2 tabléspoonfuls butter. Mnke a sauce of the Ingredients, dish, break six eggs, one at a time, sauce, sprinkle 3 bake until the eggs are set, icliture. ) variety to the msenu. ted States 8 tablespoonfuls flour. i teaspoonful celery i teaspoonful pepper. 1% teaspoonfuls salt. the and slide ith the salt sauce in a haking into the of each egg remalning sauce and Put in the oven and ted bread or with bolled rice. Cover uw SELECTING FLY BAIT OF BIG IMPORTANCE | Largely Fermantation Which | Renders Material Attractive to Household Pests. ited Blates Department {Prepared by the Un cf uityre.) Agric of files Is an hair bait it ting the best important one. In shotild be remem- United States Depart- | Agriculture, that it Is largely | ntation which renders the ma- | terdal attractive, and that baits are most attractive during their most | active period of fermentation. The | kind of bait used should be governed by the species of of which use fly, ‘he problem bait for WMSINE & says the selec chi bered, the ferme flies the destruction is desived This is most often mixture of cheap cane mm strap”) and water is one of the and effective baits » fly. One part molasses (s | ¢ The th three paris wate one ' RT lissolving Sugar our parts ing the mixture iermen- n is almost equal to molasses and | as a fly bait. If it Is desirable | to use the sirup immediately after mak- ing it, a small amount of vinegar | should be added. Honeybees are | sometimes caught in large numbers by this bait. When this happens some of the other baits recommended should be | On dalry farms probably milk | is next cholce as a balt to cane-molas- | ses solution, considering its conven | fence, The curd from milk with about one-half pound of brown sugar added | to each pound, and water to make it | thoroughly moist, I8 a very good bait | and continues to be attractive for ten days or longer If kept moist. A mash of bran made quite thin with a mix- ture of equal parts of water and milk end with a few tablespoonfuls of | cornstarch and a yeast cake added makes an attractive and lasting bait. The foregoing baits | are rendered more attractive by stir in i ¢ of allow wo to Induce and gtand a day or t tati water water used Certain other mixtures may also be packing-house product and water, Is a good bait to use where both blowflies and house flies are | The size of the bait container In rela- | tion to the size of the trap is a very | important consideration. It has been | of bait set in the center under a trap will catch only a small fraction of the number of flies secured by using larger, ghallow containers. The best and most convenient pan for bait Is a shallow circular tin, such as the cover of a lard bucket. For liguid baits the catch ean be increased slightly by placing a plece of sponge or a few chips in the center of the bait pan to provide addi. tional surface upon which the flles may alight, HOW TO CLEAN TIN UTENSILS Vessels Should Be Washed Thoroughly in’ Hot, Soapy Water and Then Dried Thoroughly. For ordinary care, tin utensils should be washed in hot soapy water, rinsed in wot clear water, and dried thorough- ly, according to the United States De partment of Agriculture. A tin uten- sil that has food dried on it should be covered with a weak soda solution, heated for a few minutes, and then washed, Scraping scratches tin and may expose the Iron or steel surface underneath, which may rust. Tin darkens with use, and this tarnish pro. tects the tin; therefore tin utensils should not be scoured simply for they sake of making them bright. Mouscieepar Must Eve Evolve Her Own ystem for Storage of Wearing Apparel of Family, boxes are year to put in, my be kept In or near each one roll of mending pleces belong ing to the person whose clothes are In If the scraps left over when a dress is cut out are in the right place at the time of cutting, patching remodeling may be found in a ify. Millinery If Individual clothes away there no stored or pleces (feathers, rib +5) should be in good condition, In a box where they can be If a hat must be unex- Lac wound on cards or other #0 that a glance will right plece accessible and old which have further by trimmings bons, flowers, velvet ple stored, if by themselves, found pectedly freshened. Kinds can easily Dé ing materials dress founda- tions uses then ti best collected nselves, housekeeper must eve but if she alms clothing and ht » it e her own sys to arrange the iterials in stor found the double h time and keep room in good I States Department o tem family everything Is readily when wanted she ser ves ora Meited Butter, Chopped Onions, To matoes and Green Peppers Are Among Ingredients. The United Agriculture gives tions for making “credle eggs” from six hard-bolled eggs, previously ready. Cook one-half cupful of washed rice in two quarts of bolling water con partment of follo wing direc States Deg the “ Make a sauce In the follewing way: Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a skillet, and add four tablespoonfuls of chopped onions. Cook until the onion is soft, but not brown. Add one and of canned tomatoes ane one-half teaspoonful of salt for fifteen minutes. Place a layer of boiled rice In a baking dish, cover the sliced eggs with creole Repeat until baking dish is Grate cheese over the top and Howehold ® ® Questions Soft-bolled eggs are more easily di. gested than fried. «. * » A soiled leather pockethook may be cleaned with a sponge dipped in gaso- line, . * » Stuff pitted prunes with grated cheese, peanuts or walnuts and roll in powdered sugar, . & » Mince cold chicken, cook with lemon Juice, eayenne, salt and chopped olives, Use as a sandwich paste, LE A bolt of cheap lace will not be one- half as effective as a yard or two of really good lace on a frock, . 0» Malted milk should be served in tall glasses, never In cups. It is not suit- able to serve for the afternoon tes. ose If canned fruit is to be used for a ghorteake it should be earefully drained and cut in pleces. Use the sirup as a foundation for the sauce. . oe To clean silver knives, forks of spoons place the silver in a basin and then cover with milk. Boll for three minutes, rinse In hot water and dry. Certified Seed Increases Yield Favorable Results Obtained by Potato Growers Should Encourage General Use. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) While there hus been an Increasing tendency on the part of potato produc use certified seed during the few years, the favorable resulls have been obtained from the use a much ers to lust that of such seeds should encourage more general of certified says the United States Department of Agriculture. A number of states are producing certified seed and se seed, the New fields while fields with state, In ordinary nore, certified vield of the vields for 103 bushels uge York state nn the yield In seed, over that wus 00 bushels Minnesota certified ary fields, and in Pennsylvania fields yielded 3066 bushels while flelds produced only an acre Reports from show similar increase In certified flelds In comparison erage of the state, Decided Improvement, Certified sent from Michigan stutes for experi- demonstrational tests In decided improvement In Iowa secured from this acre, In of the ordin un favor from t se indd «© orn! and to several belt mental 19 od a in yield over the increase in yield 01 show the local seed. els, In an in- Illinois 61 increase, great is planted Indiana 21 flelds showed of 63 bushels, in flelds yielded 44 bushels while In where the of the acreage of the state orense Ohio, part with certified seed, the Increase due the Michigan In t the Michigan certified 28 in goed weed as only els wo tests conducted ware aver aged 68835 bushels home-grown seed Good Season for Both. qpscn was a good one for both and buyers of certified seed large prod roug he brought the HY ers The has +h ction price show that a that premium being 80 low ough reports 150 for certified least getting work, while it of U0 to per cent is stock a little the grower profit out of his the buyer Is able to seed] reasonable at a cost. Little to Be Gained by f tiie is of this Where irr of silt crop may be worth gation wi leave on the fields the arrow to break it up Also wl irrigated al ured It Is s« mes a to ters Rf crust of the h advisable falfa Is Use ROCINA ere pas “tl etl good practice harrow up the heavy-textured use a soil, When gt threaten to ch falfa the life of profitably prolonged for a year or two hy harrowing. ionsen weeds out riss the ole the Ear Tag System Is Practical for Flocks Especially Used for Identi- fying Each Individual. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) An Ingenious and marking farm breeding been used successfully elgl it ¥ animals with curs by Cooper Curtice sheep ture at the farm of the bureau of mal Industry neur Vienna, Va. system is especially adapted for identi fying quickly the extent of pure of Individuals in herds and flocks improved with purebred animal is labeled with tag bearing a number, labeled on the Fig left. ‘The are number pre cede od by 1 dam's number digital number) if it is the first young born; preceded by 2 If the second born, This sy blood i being sires, Kach “an Fen males on Zi the dam's {or by 10 if les are ear; the ven the is a and so on. stem is wks of and for quite practical of les If a to grade farm f« head, gire is sheep £ than cuttie, purebn being used flock of ne 1iffords a record of or system em obtained. For exa: born young of female marked 125, Animal half grade, The pas. mdescript very grade nple : No, No. young of 12 come and will be a three-quarters 1125 will be and No. Nh fifteen-gixteenths fllustrate rurther: No, 3125 is the third young of the first young of 25 and a three-quarters grade, When there additional sixth or marked with | ber of the original dam. female No, 20, the young generation ; may be m and so on If desi number may be of the label grade, seven-eighths, longer space on the label, generatlo letters foll OW] is no figures seventl the sire placed on This may ear-nd method of used in conjunction tehing o animals with an further identifying he which good owner to system them A the ear-notc repla ident! be lost, enables plan ASSUMEnNce ag to correct any ear tags that may by Preventing Growth There {0 eradics is only one inl pls or pea kind way ious perens nts orning Ig Riories whatever they any len of sumn Whates venier is the difalfa fication of The on the lighter soils, on is very harrow, which the springtooth harrow. spike-tooth harrow may be but is of little use The disk harrow liable to prove injurious. the heavy =olls. Orchard Intercropping Secondard Proposition the year that an out, intercropping proposition and should be treated ss such-—the trees come first been considered desir From sot Fur cultivated insures crop Crop for Poultry Flock One of the most satisfactory crops to grow on the ground where poultry ranges is the legume. Clover or al faifa are ideal crops for this purpose. A half acre of ground seeded to either one of these legumes will furnish enough green feed for a hundred or more chickens, Will Cut Many of Roots When the stalks of corn are 18 inches high, the roots have met across a three-and-one-half-foot row. Deep cultivation at this time will cut many of the roots and check the growth of the plants, A good rule to follow is to cultivate deep early In the season and shallow later when the plants are larger, Broadcast Condition of Highways on Saturday The condition of highways in Massa. chusetts and bordering states is broad: enst by radio every Saturday evening at 6:30 o'clock by the Automobile Le gal association. ‘This service gives motorists up-to-the-minute informa- tion on the condition of trunk line highways, : itivar k¢ “Th in in when tivated crop, method Is straw or bs to ther wing some rank is to keen 1 PTY gr another ocTop land mowed close to the ground quently Lack of Cleanliness Is Cause of Calf Disorders diseases of part used either lack of clean- in feed, ng. or pails and utensils, is to the health of the calf be on the safe clean milk (sweet or sour), scald the pails or sterilize them with steam, remove old feed from the boxes and clean them dally. Filth and dirt are the natural breeding places of many bacteria that will cause disturbances Free. dom from filth usually means freedom from disorders or snys the United States De of Agriculture or indirectly by Filth, whether it Is hedding Nearly all are ca directly liness dangerous side use disease, Best to Dehorn Calves When but Few Days Old Dehorning young calves is best done when the calf Is a few days old. Clip the horn will appear. with caustic potash until the dead and the stick not to burn the hand. been delayed for several weeks the knife and the caustic potash applied to kill it. This will kill the horn, but it 1s better to do it hefore the calf ie a few weeks old, Pigs Are re Benefited by Allowance of Charcoal Pigs are always benefited by hav. Ing frequent access to charcoal. The following method of preparing char conl Is very satisfactory: A mass of cobs are raked together and set on fire. When the cobs are burning briskly oats are poured over the fire until it is all but smothered. In a ghort time the oats will be well black- ened. The fire should then be put out hy scattering the burning coba, The cobs may continue burning but the fire in the oats will quickly die out. When cold the pige should be allowed free access to the burned oats. They will greedly sehrch out every particle, Direct from the Mill. Save mid. diemen's Profit. All material comes in one complete shipment-—cut to fit ~teady to erect, all on the ground when you start building. No waste. No guesswork, Send 20 cents for beautiful book de luxe describing this snd many other attractive designs. INTERNATIONAL MILL & TIMBER C0. 1920 South Wenons Avenve, Boy City, Mich $1.00, $1.50 und $2.00 Per Night MERCHANTS HOTELS and LUNCHROOM 230 Light S1.—10 and 12 N. Liberty St. BTEVENS BROS, Baltimore, Maryland Dizzy Spellsk Are Usually Due te Constipation When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lu- bricating liquid is produced inthe bowel to keep the food waste soft and m« tor's prescribe Nu it acts like this natural lu cant and thus secures regular bowel y Nature's own method- wing. Doc- i x € vecause bri- movements! ] cation. Nujol is a lubricant—not a medicine or laxative—s0 cannot gripe. Try it today. Bemovesianore® 7 LopeiiairPallis Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Haid Sie. and $100 a1 | 77 4 Damen Chem, Wis Patch uy ti nN ¥ OUR, ole. Flops all pain, eseures comfort Go (he fork Shakes Baie To Io by mel or at Drugs eels. Eisoox Chemionl Works, Padcbogus, XK. ¥ ELIXIR BABEK A GOOD TONIC And Drives Malaria Out of the System. “Your ‘Rabek’ acts ike magi have given it to numerous people in my parish wt were ® ring wit} ¥ r aris and fever ominend it to t w need of a weki, BL Bteg rch Elixir Babek,” re aii am Vanes EYEWATER HELPFUL EVE WASH HAY FEVER or : ROSE COLD Stereotyp ved Quest on Younghrid Mrs Cuticura for Pimply Faces. To ren pimples and ! smear them with Wash off In five cura Soap and hot water, keep your skin clear by usi daily tollet purposes. Don't fail clude Cuticura Talc n Adve HERE'S HEIGHT OF SOMETHING Matter of Worry Stems to Have Been Principal Subject in This Little Discussion, nove An old man with gray whiske sat on the steps of the village post fice, sunning himself. Hg idly on a cigar box lid and to himself. Another man whittied whistled softly came up the first “What you Ed? the comer asked, “Ain't doin’ formed him, The questioner was silent ute, as though considering mation deeply. “What you waitin’ later. “Ain't waitin' for nothin’, replied. “Just waitin’, Jim pondered this statement, too “Say, Ed,” he ventured after a while. “If I was waitin’ and wasn’t waitin’ for nothin’ it would worry me so 1 couldn't wait nohow "Kansas City Star, Ho doin’, nothin® much,” Ed in- for a min- this infor. for? he asked Jim,” BEd that's all.” — ron MER 1} ThA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers