rw r It. JP Rl.f.'l,-. 'L 1 J4 b si ... , v . v I'wrn j K.;trf.kr 5.? r, :?- ; . - ""3' T EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1917 MILLIONS OF POUNDS OF SUGAR WASTED IN BOTTOMS OF CUPS OTHER ECONOMY HINTS iO.V r' 3STIR YOUR COFFEE AND TEA" OUGHT TO 'BE NATIONAL SLOGAN Only One Pound of Sugar in Country for Every Five Needed, and Yet Billions of Grains Are ' Being Wasted in Bottoms of Cups MR. IIOQVKIl naked us to save wheat and we did; he nnked uh to nave beef and we did; he nsked us to fcavo sugar and we didn't. And so today, because of this and the failure of supply and demand to mako connections at a critical moment nbroitd. America Is facing her first hour of self denial. She has actually pone through a day or two of rcnl food shortage. Relief may come, they Ray, but In the meantime for every five pounds of BUgnr needed In this country there Is Just onel Think what this means! All over America somehow, somewheie men, women and chtldten must scheme and connive to make the tlfth pound last. If some one cats more than his or her share some one else Is going to go perhaps with no share at all. And If some one wastes the precious grains WK NEED to eat some sugar every day sugar lestores energy. But there's no reason why sugar should be restoring energy to the bottom of a coffee cup! Did you ever stop to calculate how much, how appallingly much rugar goes to waste each day In bottoms of cup.n There are 100,000,000 persons in the United States. If half of these are hot-beveiago drinkers, u-;lng average portions of weetenlng each day, a conservative esti mate of their weekly waste Is 5,000,000 pqunds. OUIt new national motto should be STIH. Stir your coffee, stir your tea, your hot lemonade and when sum mer comes back again stir your Iced tea. Stir because It is a pioved fact that this simple manipulation of your right arm can do the work of an extra lump or fa spoonful of sugar. The next time yiu take your coffee try it arl see, and It Vyvettes m A shiny black hut blnck patent leather crown and black cock feathers. you forget, try to it-member to look in the bottom of your cup beforo It goes out In the kitchen to be washed. What you see thei I will teach you to remember. IT IS a queer, but not-to-be-denlrd fart that seemingly patriotic women are trying to hoard sugar. Women will sit up far Into the night working for their country, but when the cry of food short age comes they become regular flnan' clers at devising ways and means to corner some of the market In their own pantries. They send Mary to one gro cery store for two pounds, Johnnie to another store for two more pounds and then go down town and Invest In a little sugar for safe measure. The majority of us can't seem to get away from the Idea that circumstances Justify hoarding In our own particular household case. It should be boine In mind that the nation Is made up of "par ticular households" and that the woman who hoards sugar at a time like this Is as mean as the soldier who does his fight ing behind a tice! PATSY KILDARE THE OUTLAW By JUDD MORTIMER LEWIS t THE WOMAN'S EXCHANGE h" urittrn on oc tide at nucrle tike those given Letter and Question' submitted to this department must 6 the paper only and atoned with the name at the tnrtter. Xt,reini ZV.2X.iJi '"Vi'i"1, " '""' " ' ""'" " ,"( nrccssarllu indorse the sentiment !fT'''d. All communications lor this department should be a.l.lre....i . ih,.. inT' WUMA'S KXCIIANUi:, Kveutng t.idarr. Philadelphia. I'a. 1, How ran a mirror e iiwed to ntnLr Mn.ill rooms look more epaelous? t. What Is one of the chief chit-, of molding f preserves? 8. In It nrurtknl to rntrr ii kitchen tiihle with eilelelh TODAY'S INQUIRIES 1. Mhut mnkes n orient unu-nnl eolur rnm Mn.itloii for tin. hlch school elrl't eierjilij frock? 2. What American rhrMmni. ireelit nonlil f Krrnll umirrclotcil by the wound! ...idlers In the hospital,, Kroner? 3. Him N M .iii., ,,,(lr0,7 ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S INQUIRIES j. mo muii wnir, n mums . narrow hump Whtfh U iilarrd alone th at ha matin IN fcbpearatu-e In the umartty furnUltrd home. itvPlen and pears should lie pneked lth r items 'on, apples In n tempemtiire of iibout 33 drees pud peuri In a sUshll) warmer tem perature. 3. Different kind of Rrnln enn lie cround nt borne with the nld of n err smnll, slmplr ppermted "mill," whlrli W now helne Inexpen tTlr sold for home use. Piccalilli and Canning Plums To the Editor at Woman's Paoe: Dear Madam Plenre print In jour column a way to can plums In the now wit a'so how to make piccalilli I think It la called by that name. It haa green tomatoes and corn In It. out I don't know what else coe In It. Please tell me how to clean a white linen shade, I con't want to wash it, as It Isn't tv dirty. (Mrs ) J This is the cold-pack method of canning. Which is what the Government advocates Plums are, as a rule, canned with their kins on They should be pricked with a coarse needle, however, to prcxent them from bursting In the process. If you wish to remove tho skins plunge the fruit in boiling water for a few minutes and slip the skins off Hiwc ready a syrup made by boiling sugar and water together until the sugar has dissolved I'se three cupfuls of sugar to two cupfuls of water. Do not cook the plums, rack them In payers In your preserving Jars without crowding them. Fill each Jar with boiling hot Byrup and adjust the clamp, tho rub ber, the cover and the upper clamp, thus almost sealing the Jar The fruit Is now ready for what Is called Its hot-water bath. To prepare this you can use a washboller, In the bottom of which has been placed a wooden rack, or false bottom, on which the Jars can stand. You can mako this rack yourself by nailing pieces of wood cross wise to fit the bottom of the boiler and by raising the rack from the bottom by means of little blocks of wood nailed at the corners. Put the Jars on the rack Knough water should be In the boiler to come at least one Inch above the top of the Jars. Hrlng the water to the boiling point and boll pint jars for sixteen minutes and uuart Jars for twenty minutes. Itemove. seal tightly and Invert to cool. The jars should be heated beforo the fruit is put In them Piccalilli has not any corn In It, but has the green tomatoes. Here is a tested recipe given In "Better Meals for Less Money": The ingredients aro three quarts of green tomatoes and three of ripe ones, two red peppers, three onions, one half cupful of salt, two quarts of vinegar, one quart of sugar, one teaspoonful of cin namon, one half teaspoonful of cloves and 'four tablespoonfuls of white mustard seed. Put the vegetables through the coarse part of a food chopper or chop them up coarsely by hand. Sprinkle with salt, let stand over night and drain Add all the other Ingredients and cook for about forty Bye minutes. Seal In air-tight Jars. A "shade .man" tells me that the best way to clean a white linen shade that is just partly soiled Is to rub It with a brand pew white eraser or with a piece of art gum, which can be purchased In any stationery store. A damp cloth wrung out in thin White soapsuds and ammonia and rubbed ver the shade will remove an accumulation f dust ' American Chop Suey fo iht Editor at Woman' Paoe: 1. A win hnf friiii, .nl,.u ,. i . . tion for the minora knitted nol hat. 2. Tim itrcnt dressmakers In Paris nre show Inr partial!!, thin ..e.-on to -ultlnc mnlrr'nla of rough texture nnd weine nml of neutral color. 3. An assemhler Is n factory worker who P"t together the mrlons piece-, that ko to make ,, the finished prmlnrt helmr mannfne work ' B'rl'' "r' fm"lo,e1 ,n ,hl ne of gear lladant- I have- heard there ta a dish d American chop suey that can be mada at ftomt. If you know of a, recipe for this will you pwte print ItT CURIOUS. Her is one recipe for American chop suey feat has met with approval In many house Mil - Cook one finely chopped onion and three-atM-ters of & pound of flanked beef finely ssrea in rat until Drown, men add one til oi (vosra Bpnguciw. ono can m uted tomato soup, one-half teaspoon- f mC salt and one-eighth of a teaspoonful pepper. Jet the whole simmer tor ten tes. Then Mrv Twa Little Dog. to Give Away f 1M tHHor o Woman's Page ur.MMBH,! have a Mrs mil dor I id aw. ry muca piaaawi to nnd a coo4 i for (Mrs.) If. V. n "V .,mr Wtmim't Pew! UlUa 4 acwouM Data About Old Violin I'a the Kditor of H'otnnii' Page: addr".1", 'f ''.llSr WouW i'ou, 1,,'', ! me the old Mollra r,h!: who H,nnw". ""nethln of the iniwe ' r?i...i,,T.cPno ,lhrh n'1" Printed on ITOJ J It h """ "uarnerlus. fecit Cremona. Pl let me'krfow lhron5BK?,x?"i!Sr-,rV r. a v There are only about half a dozen genu Ino Guarnerius violins in the world only two In America nnd they have nil been accounted for. The fact that Ouarnerlus ap pears In tho violin docs not Indicate that the violin Is very old or of special value. Vp until a few years ago vlolinmakers fre quently placed the names of Guarnerius and Stradlvarlus on the Inside of the Instru ments they made. In late years a law was passed compelling them to add tho word "fac simile" to such a signature. Indicating that tho violin was only an imitation of a Guarnerius or Stradlvarlus An expert In UoIIns would be able to tell at a glance, however, the value of your Instrument Addresses of such experts will be mailed to you. Care of Lilies and Hyacinths To the Kditor 0 H'oninn's Page. .I,"ir.M"2lm;rvul lou kindly ndilse how to take rare of bulli flowers. Kan 1111.. h.,..i.i. and daffodils' I planted them three eek aiin Please adllse hnw to take care of them con cernlns tho waterlr, and what Hunt and heat to hate them In Please adWse m ! by hatlne answer In Monday paper M. B. M. If the lilies, hyacinths and other bulbs have been planted In the open, cover the planting places with a few Inches of litter, such as well-rotted stable manure, dead leaves or dried grass cuttings If they hae been planted indoors in earth, keep them In a dark place. Bay the cellar closet, but away from the heater. They should have a temperature of ahout 60 degrees for three or four weeks to form a good root growth When the spears push up through the earth they can be given a subdued light and kept In a somewhat warmer place, a temperature of 60 degrees, approximately. Vhen the foliage is well formed bring the pots desired for blooming to the full light of a sunny window In a warm room Water only lightly at first, but when the pots are brought to the room water liber ally once a day, but do not let the earth become soggy The best plan with house plants Is to water from beneath by keep ing the pots on saucers, on which the water is renewed dally. I am sorry your Inquiry did not arrive in time to be answered In Monday's Evb nino Ledger. Table Decoration for Golden Wedding To the Editor 0 Womon'a Page: Dear Madam Would you be so kind aa to auiiest a JmPle bl decoration for a (olden weddlns which will be celebrated In about a fortnight's time? (Mrs.) o, F? B. Nothing could be prettier than the golden dahlias which are In season now. However, in a fortnight's time they may not be so plentiful. Should this be the case, golden yellow chrysanthemums may be used, for decorations. Place a glass or pottery bowl In the center of the table and Mil it artistically with a few golden dahlias or chrysanthe mums. At the four corners of the table place vases of glass or pottery, whichever you use for your, centerpiece, and fill them with ferns and smaller dahlias or chrysan themums. If you have any gold-trimmed small glass dishes arrange these on the table, filled with salted nuts and yellow candles, You can buy cream mints and various, bonbons (n yellow and gold lace paper. Or U you prefer cot to have a. flower ,ofi-Trpio, mra the four1 vases at it mm a twice in that Mitts Mft itUte oA yellw n htvVbur Ghost Story AKTKK I woke this morning I lay still ll -awhile, but as soon as I remembered that I had to do a big day's work cutting whiskers I hopped out of bed The cook was washing, so Ilowdy and I had to poach some eggs for our breakfast, for tho cook says she will get meals for nobody on wash day. Kven the nurse had to get breakfast for herself and my burglar After break fast 1 went and found Levy and told him to get busy and show me how to uso the safety. He showed me bow to make lather and how to use the safety on whiskers and then he wiped it dry nnd put It into the box and gave It to mo and some soap nnd a brush Just as Rowdy and I were going up to tho burglar's room we met the nurse and Bhe said, "I was looking for you " "Well," I said, "you have found me " "Yes," she said. "I wanted to nsk you to sit with my patient while 1 take a walk. It Is such a beautiful morning" I said, 'I do not know any one who needs a walk more than you do. so go to It and I will go upstairs He may be your patient, but he Is my burglar " So she wont outdoors and 1 wont up to tho bur glar's room and said. "How do you find yourself this morning'" He said, ".Vol very well " I said, "You should be glad you are living. I nm going to shave your whiskers off " "Still you think t should be glad I am living?" ho said, Hy that time I was htny with tho brush nnd the soap Making lather Is fun, and I lathered him good and plentv till everv time he bieathed he blew bubble) Then I started In to shave him tho wnv Jim hoes his gar den, but 1 did not get any whiskers All t got was the lather After a while my bur glar paid, ' How are you getting on?" I said, "Fine, only 'our whiskers nre fastened on too tight I think I need more lnther " He said. "Let me M'O your razor" After be looked nt It he said. "It prnbablv would work better with a blade In It" That was the trouble, for I had not put In a blade After he showed me how to put In a blade 1 tried again and the razor worked fine, though his whiskers were so tough that they seemed to pull a lot At last I got him shaved and he looked cleaner and kind of red I put the razor away In my room nnd felt so good that when the nurse came I slid down the banlater backward Sliding would be great fun if It was not for the post at the bottom of the stairs which stopped me so sudden that It made my teeth snap together and my eyes pop out. Just then the foam rang nnd It was Mr,. Itock rudder. Ho said. "How are things today and hnw Is your burglar?" I said, "Pretty good How are you nnd Alice'" He said, "Fine Po they do everything you want?" I said. "If they did not they would not be here" He mi, "Dully:" I said. "You have got a good banister on the stairs here, but the post at the bottom stops me too sudden and If I cannot eto anything about that I will have to stop coming down that way " He said, "Tell I.e v to come to the foam and I will give him dlrectlors." Ievy came and talked to Mr Itockrudder and then went to town and came back with two carpenters and saws and things, and they worked on the banister all day and now I can slide down line as soon as the paint is dry, but not before, for I tried and I nm all arnlsh from one end to the other Howdy nnd I went over to tho sha'k where the colored men and women live, who were scared at my slim sally The man's name Is George Washington They told me that they had seen a ghost, which had chased them away from home, but that It would neer come back, for they had seen a conjure doctor, who had given them a conjure bag, which they had burled under the doorstep. I said, "For cat's sake, you do not believe In that, do you'" The woman said, "N'o, Indeed, we don't " I said. "Then what do you use the conjure bag for If you do not believe In It'" She said, "Because It works whether you believe In It or not. ' So Rowdy nnd I sat and talked with them for quite a while They said the ghost was taller than any house and had fiery eyes and arms a mile long and that It flew like a bird and chased them about twenty miles. "llelnlnit Rowdy," the next I'.-ltsy Klldnre ndtcnture, nppeart In Wednesday's Klcnlnc IN THE MOMENT'S MODES Gold Embroidery Trims This Navy Serge Frock Make up your mind to tight skirts, for tho smart silhouette will not permit much leeway at tho hem. You can drapo nnd pleat nil you want at the hips, but you have to come to time nround the ankles, so trnin your walking accordingly. Tho invaluable navy serge is hero shown in another of its infinite possibilities. The new high collar, tho box-plaited tunic, the tight underskirt and tho fashionable button trimming are all present, and a dash of color is added by tho gold belt, brightly embroid ered in wool, which shows under tho blouse. The collar can bo unbut toned nnd worn low when desired. This feature doubles the usefulness of such a dress. Try r m Tl 1 1 V :, ; v . 9 18& i I.cdKcr. Tomorrow's War Menu BREAKFAST Stewed Pears Oatmeal with Milk Corn Crispets Coffee LUNCHEON Cottage Cheese and Water Cress Sand wiches (made with Graham Bread) Boiled Rice with Raisins DINNER Hamburg Steak Baked Potatoes Creamed Onions Grapefruit CORN CRISPETS Pour one cupful of boiling water over seven-eighths of a cupful of cornmeal, two and a half tablespoonfuls of butter and a half teaspoonful of salt Mix and spread on a buttered pan an eighth of an inch thick: bake and cut Into three-Inch squares. Servo at once. American Indian Corn, 150 Ways to Prepare and Cook It. THE CHEERFUL CHITO I'm off to find a. desert island now. Until I find it I stall ro. return A pta.ee. vhere. tnosc who study violin Will have to go until they lern. L & vV TWO YOUNG WOMEN ENLISTED IN PLACE OF BROKER GONE TO WAR Real Estate Insurance Man Doing His Bit at watervner Arsenai ms oisier ana a jy Friend Take Up His Business GOOD HEALTH QUESTION BOX By JOHN HARVEY KELLOGG, M. D., LL. D. mentj rfjulrlHB su.plcal Irralmriie or ilriios. ''''"'' " 'f' ?J ", "'",! ,' 1 ' ""liV steered hi personal Ictlrrs to Inquirer'! who lclo stnmjied emeloim lor lepiv. THE great value of the orange as a food adapted to certatn grave conditions of dlseaso is little appreciated. As a. food in fever cases, nothing could be more perfectly suited to requirements of the patient's condition The fever pa tient needs water to carry off poisons which ore burning him up and against which his cells and organs nre struggling l-'our to six quart if water are needed dally to quench the fever's fires ind aid the elimi nation through the skin and kidneys. Orange Julco supplies the finest sort or pure, distilled water, absolutely freo from germs or foreign matters of any sort. The grateful acids furnish aid In satisfying thirst, nnd tho agrceablo flavor makes it possible for tho patient to swallow the amount needed. The Intense toxemia from which the fever patient suffers coats his tongue and often destroys his tlrtrst for water as well as his deslro for food. The agreeable flaor of orange Juice aids greatly In overcoming this obstacle. Another special and valuable property of orange juice Is the small amount of pro tein or albuminous matter which it contains Fever patients ha little gastric juice and very small digestive power, ana so need to take food which Is ready for absorption nnd Immediate use. Foods poor In albumen are also needful In feers, because they do not leave residues to undergo putrefac tion In the colon as do me it, egg' and numerous other foods. Orange Juice contains less than 1 per cent of protein or albumen, so that a patlint may take three or four quarts of the Juice without getting an excess of material which may easily become a source of great in- Two quarts of orange Juice combined with nn equal amount of barley, oatmeal or corn gruel makes an Ideal food for a patient battling with typhoid fever. Acid of the Tomato Is Wholesome 1. ih acid of the tomato injurious? noes It contain oxalic acid' CJ. C. Tomatoes contain less than onc-twe-hun- rfredths of 1 ner cent of oxalic acid. The Oranges in Fever Cases acid of tomatoes is citric acia ano is wnoie somc. Tomatoes may beised freely. They combine welt with other foods. Poisoninf? From Tea Drinking AVh.it are seme nf the symptoms of poisoning from tea drlnklnn? MAIllv S. To a greater or less degree tea drinkers are subject to headache, noises In tho ear, black spots before the eyes and ertlgo, also sleeplessness and dreams. Dyspepsia Is always present In old cases, with gas belching, sour taste, numbness or prickling j of various parts and twitching of the mus cles or tno race anu cyeuos. unronic ten drinkers are always very nervous. Irritable nnd subject to llts of depression. Theso conditions are due to the alkaloid In tea called theln (Cojiyrlsht By M ON ONE day Albert F. Brown, real estate and Insurance broker 310 Lincoln Building, went to Wnteivllet, N. T. to do his bit In Uncle Sam's rrdnanco service The next day the koy was Inserted In tho office door by a trim girl, blue-serged and determined The books were taken down by fingers none tho less competent because of tho rosy polish of the nails. Miss Anna M Brown, sister of the erstwhile monitor cf the office, was ready for business. At an adjoining desk, also trim, blue-serged and determined, sat SIlss Helen Wilson, friend and partner. There you have the woman story of the war. Russian Amazons fare forth to battle, their shaved heads morn plcaresquo than picturesque their exploits blazoned to all the world as the quintessence of feminine courage and Initiative, but to my way of thinking the girl who's left behind, tho one who Jumps Into the unfamiliar trenches of the business battla front nnd fills the breach left by some man fighter. It the plrl who does the bigger part. Miss Brnwn ind Ming Wllion nre such girls "Hut we are not wholly untrained frvr this contingency," tho former said, acting ns spokesman. "We knew main- months ago that my brother would enlist. Wo saw this coming and we prepared I've been studying under my brother hero for many months, and I am going to do my beit to run the place here In a manner satisfactory to him. "Bridge parties nnd teas, of course, will have to be .given up" this with a fixity of expression which indicated tho sacrifice "that Is, of course, thoso afternoon nffalrs mat we nave neen nceustomed tw going to "From D to S will bo our regular hours, with an hour each for lunch," she continued. "When Miss Wilson Is not here I shall be "Yesterday my brother went awav. To day wo assume our duties We think we're going to make a success of the undertaking, but wo're, not behaving uppish nbnut it Two of my brother's business friends nre going to give us advice In the matters of real estato whenever we need It, and be lieve me wo shall take It, for we don't think wo know it nil by a long, long way" Her hands played familiarly with a mort gage ledger that dealt with the intricacies of firsts and seconds at fi and R per cent, or something like that. Her eyes shone earnestly, nnd while she spoke the brown haired, carefully colffed head of the young woman friend and partner bent low over a similar ledger. When I entered the ofTlco there was an air of quietude over it that we are ac customed to associate, or were accustomed to associate before this war. with those places of business with a masculine personnel. 'LISS i-jo airy gossip of what "he !,..,. night greeted .hy cars; no tebU ' M chatting was in progress. Eachn.8(11 separate desk the girls worked-doln, th "No. we're not college girls," MS1 n," . told me, "Just good plain PhlladelnM. ? lla school educations, but we expect ,WJ there Just tho same." P ct ,0 l The brother is a graduate of tha n 1 versify of Pennsylvania and In adaiH. .'" his real estate nnd brokerage business0,? V the secijtary of several building tin 1 U associations. This work will also h. iM by the young women who hae ucceS5S A Diamond Look how It sparkles, see It greet With laughing light the ambient sirs One little drop of sunshine sweet Held In eternal bondage there. Robert Loveman. MODEft INEXr-ENBITELT (rrTtBH HEMSTITCHING Done Wilt.!-' You Walt Skirt Pleating In Sunrar. Pot, Side nnd Accordion Buttons corered In all stales. Ilet Work. Parisian Plaiting & Novelty Co. 108 So. 13lh Street i-Mone llpl Phone Walnut IV) I I 1306 111 WALNUT A STREET Approved I Suits The suits of this new shop merge llllj an artistic combi nation of "youthful-like" lines, undeniably smart style and service- A diversified col- jllll lection in all the forecasted colors. I Tomorrow Inm mm' $492 fiM Trade Mark IfflMIMMli mgea i: Walkin & JDOOIE $9o00 Russia Dark Brown The one-and-hnlf inch Cuban heel makes it a practical walking boot, and it is very good-looking men. CLAFLIM, 1107 Chestnut tniniiiiiM i Exclutlvenen Our Specialty Special Prices Tomorrow $35 $59 to $225 Our wonderful assortment of self or fur trimmed coats for women and misses are without a doubt the most attractive in town. All tho newest fabrics and shades. Qsst SUITS $39.50 $59 to $250 After shoppintr the town thor oughly every woman or miss of particular style always finds In our immense variety of suits the one she had in mind. The very latest materials and colorings. Gowns Frocks Coats Suits twes J0Mty Ifrsf 1 Qm PH0 J n i ' I1!1 COCOA Ki.own by its un tailing purity and delicious taste. H. 0. WILBUR & SONS, Inc. Philadelphia Luxurious Hair Mattresses and Box Springs Luxuriousness in bedding is a mark of proper regard for your body. It assures refreshing rest, promises sound slumber "that knits up the ravelled sleeve of care." "Fault less" Bedding is the most luxurious of all, and we are its sole makers. Dougherty's Faultless Bedding Hair Mattresses. Box Springs. Bedsteads 1632 CHESTNUT STREET Buy Your Victrola Outfit at Heppe's For the convenience of our patrons we have, arranged a series of "Heppe Outfits" each with a Victrola and some Records. Settlement may be made either through the Heppe Rental Payment Plan, a charge account or by cash payment. For Record buyers we have a number of large, comfortable booths and trained sales- 'SSSSSSSgSaSSSHSfflffiSSKgffiHSSSffiS.; SBp9UBBBsBBFjlUVNVrld& I 1 "1 s - In addition, we have a stock of over 100,000 Victor Records, and we guarantee that every Record we sell is absolutely new. Records used for demonstrating are not sold. HEPPE OUTFITS VICTROLA 1V-A $20.00 4 10-in. Double-face Records 3.00 Shrm I3G2 WWSt Total cost ....' $23.00 Pay $3 down, $2.50 monthly VICTROLA VI-A $30.00 S 10-in. Double-face Records 3.75 Total cost $33.75 Pay $4 down, $3.50 monthly VICTROLA VIII-A $45.00 Records your selection 4.00 Total cost $49.00 Pay $4 down, $3.50 monthly VICTROLA IX-A $57.50 Records your selection 5.00 Total cost $62.50 Pay 55 down, 54 monthly VICTROLA X-A $85.00 Records your selection 5.00 Total cost . $90.00 Pay $5 down, $5 monthly VICTROLA XI-A $110.00 Records your selection 8-00 Total cost -.....$118.00 Pay $8 down, $6 monthly VICTROLA XIV $165.00 Records your selection 10.00 Total cost $175.00 Pay $10 down, $8 monthly VICTROLA XVI ..,$215.00 Records your selection 10.00 Total dost $225.00 Pay $10 down, $10 monthly Call, phone or write for illustrated catalogue and full particulars C. J. Heppe & Sop e-iWfH1? .gV-.a. .& I .1 tky MM Mki groom Id UaS (Mitr.