The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, August 15, 1929, Image 7

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    CHURCH
fissions Society.
degenerative diseases
quire the co-operation
1 that the problem of
rommunity changes of
1e problem of the city
who has to do with
inderstood.
thrills which the city
a tidal movement of
nds to sink into ano-
al restraints are seri-
onal and conflicting.
Stimulation has gone
als. Neither physical
s for sympathy. The
tacts; a city is where
s on the part of one
1 the part of others.
n,
the city man. Tt is
+ worldliness and the
make available spir-
ns of a scientific age.
rative diseases of the
ation of all religious
tism.
PERIOD
Secretary.
meee eee eee.
aus, had lofty ideals
» to survive the com-
and pleasures. These
at their annual con-
the dogs.” Tt indi-
es and is developing
ir parents. I recom-
TS.
boys are:
ifferent article from
fer or worse.
cial amusements but
e life of today.
opposition to Chris-
sm.
confused as to their
the past generation.
COST
WILBUR.
in science, is woe-
en adjusted to the
public of obtaining
sion has progressed
ise and prolonging
spect is concerned.
vernment emplovees
.7 per cent of their
1 burden shows the
cher brackets.
angles of the medi-
to be able to make
e public which will
n nothing by stub-
ences of physecians:
to you.”
hich are in process
rials. They should
'ACES
troit,
eee eee)
re —
1ventionalities, the
r day. There never
of our day. They
1an former genera-
of of this read the
for youth is well
nd young manhood
d to expose them-
leasure, refuse all
that even at thirty
because of wasted
d opinion of real
mon respect as a
.” No better coun-
respect of others,
real ability, Fol-
| inspiration,
THE PATTON COURIER
FOR LITTLE GIRL
Child Will Learn How to
Manage Garment.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
The fewer clothes in hot weather,
the more comfortable the child. Up
to about three or three and a half
years old a romper is often the only
garment necessary on either a boy or
a girl; but as the little girl grows
older she looks better in a costume
with a skirt of some sort, however
abbreviated.
The bureau of home economics of
the United States Department of Ag-
riculture has been werking for some
Self-Help Idea Runs Through Design
Shown in Illustration.
time on various problems connected
with dressing children of different
ages, but especially those of the pre-
school years. The self-help idea runs
through all the designs chosen. Gar-
ments that button in front with few
and easy-to-find flat buttons or other
forms of fastening are preferred. If
there must be buttons in back at the
waistline two toward the sides are
used rather than a siugle center-back
button. Every mother knows how
often that center-back button has to
be sewed on or the buttonhole mended.
Not only can the child reach side-back
buttons better, but there is less strain
and pull on the shoulders when they
are used. Easy making and easy laun-
dering are also points kept constantly
in mind in planning children’s
clothing,
Here is an all-in-one outfit for a
little girl to wear on hot days. It
eliminates theneed for undergarments,
yet has the outward appearance of a
dress. It is made in two parts, with a
detachable plaited skirt for easy laun-
dering. The self-help idea is empha-
sized, since the dress has an invisible
front opening, snapping together under
the blue front trimming. The child
can also learn very quickly to button
the skirt onto the waist before she
puts the dress on, if she is once shown
how the box plait comes in the middle
of the front. The seven buttons on
the skirt are arranged so that there
are two side-back buttons and none in
the center back. The buttonholes are
made vertical so the buttons will stay
closed.
A kimona style romper pattern was
chosen, with a seam on the shoulder,
and very short sleeves. Except where
the collar-like trimming closes at the
center front, it is stitched flat, fitting
the outline of the neck. The panty
part of the romper has an invisible
drop seat, and is made on a fold of
the goods to give ample room through
the crotch, and the very short legs
are bound with plain blue material
like the little skirt, the neck and arm-
hole trimming and the top of the
pocket.
Tomato Cheese Whoopee
Especially Delicious
A generation ago it was probably
called a “rarebit” of Welsh or other
descent, but the modern tendency to
apply the latest ecatchword to every-
thing has turned it into “whoopee,”
which happily gives one a feeling that
the dish is sure to be enjoyed. The
bureau of home economics says it
makes not only a good lunch or sup-
per dish, but an appetizing and quick-
ly made meal after a long all-day mo-
tor trip or day on the water.
2 tbs. butter 1 tsp. salt
1%, cup finely cut 1 pinttomato pulp
celery and ‘juice
1h green pepper, % 1b. cheese,
chopped fine flaked
1 cup chopped on- 2 eggs beaten
ion Few dashes ta-
2 tbs. flour basco
Melt the butter in a heavy skillet,
add the celery, pepper and the onion,
and cook for about five minutes, stir-
ring frequently. Sprinkle the flour
over these seasonings, quickly pour in
the tomato and then add the cheese
and salt. Cook over low heat until
the mixture thickens and the cheese is
melted, Pour some of this mixture, in-
to the well-beaten eggs, then pour all
back into skillet, and continue to cook
over low heat until thickened and
creamy. Add the tabasco and serve on
crisp slices of toast or heated crackers.
CAN STRING BEANS IN PRESSURE CANNER
String Beans Most Popular of All Vegetables.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
The farm garden should be planned
to supply a considerable surplus of
excellent vegetables and fruits which
may be enjoyed later on at little cost
if canned when fresh. Of course, the
practical homemaker does not waste
time canning what may be stored, like
mature beets, turnips, carrots, sweet
potatoes, parsnips, winter squash and
pumpkin, or vegetables that may be
dried, such as okra and large lima
beans,
String beans are among the most
popular and
home-canned vegetables, Only the
steam pressure canner should be used
to process them. (Processing means
heating the material to kill bacteria.)
All vegetables except tomatoes re-
quire processing at. higher tempera-
tures than boiling. This can only
be done under steam pressure. Either
glass or tin containers may be used.
String beans and all vegetables
should be packed boiling hot. That
is, they are cooked for a few minutes
and then, while still boiling, packed
into the jars, sealed, and processed
the required length of time, This is
sometimes called the “hot pack)” It
satisfactory of all the |
is recommended by the bureau of
home economics of the United States
Department of Agriculture because
the beans at the center of the con-
tainer are quickly raised to the tem-
perature required for processing, and
the bacteria that cause spoilage are
more likely to be killed. The follow-
ing directions for canning string
| beang, as well as for canning most
| other
common vegetables and fruits.
are given in Farmers’ Bulletin 1471-F,
“Canning Fruits and Vegetables at
Home.” ’
Pick the beans over carefully, string,
wash thoroughly, and cut into pieces
of the size desired for serving, Add
enough boiling water to cover, and
boil for five minutes in an uncovered
vessel. Pack in containers boiling
hot, cover with the water in which
they were boiled, and add one tea-
spoonful of salt to each quart. Proc-
ess immediately at ten pounds pres-
sure, or 240 degrees Fahrenheit—
quart glass jars for 40 minutes. pint
glass jars for 35 minutes, and No. 2
and No. 3 tin cans for 30 minutes.
Remove from the canner and invert
glass jars, placing them out of drafts.
Plunge tin cans in cold water to cool
quickly.
BLACK
ROCK
(© by D. J. Walsh.)
EFORE the storm had passed
Sarah Fenton was out of doors
looking for Old Cream, She
crossed the creek on the slip-
pery log, sure-footed, yet not daring
to look at the wild red waters that
raged underneath, Bushes drenched
her as she struggled up the hillside
to the pasture. Old Cream ought to
have been at the bars an hour ago,
mooing to be milked. In fact she
should have come down to the bars
before the storm broke. As she was
always punctual Sarah was alarmed.
A slender dark woman with graying
hair and tired lines on her sweet face
was Sarah Fenton. Two years before,
her husband, Tom Fenton, had died
of a lingering sickness leaving her
with three young children, many debts
and only the tiny place, half in the
creek valley, half on the Aillside, to
look to for support. Very brave and
determined was Sarah, skillful in mak-
ing one penny do the work of five.
She had been a teacher before her
marriage to Tom Fenton who was
something of an experimentalist in
agriculture, and her education had
bred in her splendid resourcefulness
that had not yet failed any test.
Nevertheless, her heart sank now as
she thought of what might have hap-
pened to Old Cream, who contributed
mightily to the children’s wellbeing.
The black rock! Her eyes sweeping
the confines of the pasture came to
rest upon the great boulder which
towered in grim isolation upon the
hillside. Beside it stood a tree with-
ered and dead. Lightning had struck
it last summer. Old Cream was no-
where to be seen. With horror grip-
ping her heart Sarah went to look on
the other side of the rock. There lay
the cow—dead—LXkilled by lightning.
It was indescribable misfortune.
Tonight there would be no warm milk
for little ailing Ellen, no cream to-
morrow for the morning coffee and
Richard and Julia's toast. Sarah's
lips quivered and she sank down upon
the rock, covering her face for a mo-
ment with her hands, regardless of the
moisture that was yet falling.
Old Cream was gone. She had per-
haps been wandering past the bleak
rock when the first bolt sped from the
Over”
menacing cloud overhead. It smote
her where she was.
Sitting there Sarah remembered
all the times lightning had struck in
that place. A calf had been killed
besides Old Cream, the tree blasted,
and once Tom had been stunned be-
fore he could get away from the
vicinity, Only that spring she had
stood at the window with Ellen in
her arms and had seen the flaming
lances of the lightning strike again
and again at the lightning boulder.
The old saying that lightning strikes
often in the same place, especially
where there is mineral caused her to
meditate. There must be something
there besides innocent trees and beasts
to attract the lightning. She would
put her mind to work upon the mys-
tery; it would keep her head steady
in the face of this new calamity.
She went down to the house and
got a spade and buried Old Cream and
shed some bitter tears in the process.
Then she went on quite as usual.
There was no money with which te
buy a new cow and every day she
sent Julia to a neighbor's for a pail
of precious milk.
After much thought Sarah wrote a
letter to John Mills, an old school-
mate of hers who had made some-
thing of a success in mineralogy. She
told him all about the black rock and
the lightning’s love for it.
A week passed and then Sarah was
surprised to see a car floundering up
the rough creek road. John Mills had
come himself in answer to her letter.
He was a fine looking man with stu-
dent stoop, spectacles, a gentle ab-
stractedness of expression. They vis-
ited the black rock, sat upon it, dis-
cussed it and John Mills chipped speci-
mens from the ridge. Sarah gave him
the best meal she could set forth,
thanked him for the trouble he had
taken and let him go, with only a
slight lingering regret. He had told
her nothing.
Summer was passing and Sarah
realized that her worst trial awaited
her with the coming of winter. She
decided to sell the place if she could
find anybody to buy it. It adjoined
the fine farm of Samuel Herrick and
she offered it to him for a pitifully
small sum.
‘fy good woman,” the man said
with a laugh that was little short of a
sneer, “I wouldn't give you 15 cents
for the whole premises. The buildings
are falling down and your pasture
isn't a safe place for cattle. No, I
don’t want it.”
®arah put a pitiful little advertise-
ment in the village paper, but it at-
tracted no attention, Everybody knew
that poor Tom Fenton had been woe-
fully chemted when he bought the
place and consequently prejudice
against it was great.
A winter 02 the place without Old
Cream! Sarth drew a deep breath,
chenched her smell, hard hands and
resolved that, for her children's sake,
she would not succumb to what was
so obviously the inevitable.
Then little Ellen, always frail, fell
ill and Sarah's heart was wrung as
the doctor, coming again and again,
failed to put color into the child's
cheeks or light into her blue eyes.
“I'm afraid it's the water, Mrs. Fen-
ton,” he said “and certain unsanitary
arrangements about the house. If you
could take her away-—"
Take her away! Where? Tom’s
relatives had never made themselves
known and a few cousins, all she had,
were in the far West.
She sat one hot afternoon holding
Ellen in her lap trying to soothe her
with an old song while her heart was
close to breaking when there came a
knock at the door. She arose and
with the child in her arms admitted
John Mills and another man, a Mr.
Graham,
They had come to look the place
over. Sarah could not leave Ellen, so
they went across the creek and up
the hill alone. When they came back
John was smiling.
“I wouldn't tell you until 1 was
sure, Sarah,” John said, “But I've
investigated carefully and [ find a
particularly fine quality of iron ore
here on your place. Mr. Graham
knows all about such things and he
wants to make you an offer for your
farm just as it is.”
For the next hour Sarah’s ears
buzzed with strange terms such as
contracts and royalties. She had been
offered a sum that astonished her and
it was not to end there because she
was to have a yearly income as long
as she lived. Then John Mills brought
a lawyer who explained things still
further and drew papers which Sarah
and Mr. Graham sigred.
Next morning she went to the vil-
lage and hired a house and before
night was moved into it. Constant at-
tention from the doctor, better condi-
tions and dainty food soon restored
Ellen to health. All this tended for
happiness, but a new element had en-
tered Sarah's life. She was aston-
ished at herself for caring for John
Mills when her husband's death was
still such a poignant memory.
It was spring before she saw John
again. She was working in her little
garden wher he appeared suddenly be-
fore her.
“I've tried and tried to keep away,
Sarah,” he said.
“And I've tried to forget you, John,”
she replied.
They smiled at each other awkward-
ly. Then they sat down on a near-by
bench and talked long and earnestly.
Thus love and a protection such as
she had never known was added to
Sarah’s good fortune. The wand of
the lightning like that of Moses had
struck good instead of evil from the
ugly black rock.
Gems Once Believed to
Be Endowed With Life
Theophrastus went so far as to
divide stones into categories of male
and female, but absurd as this idea
may seem, it must be remembered that
it was quite in accord with the scien-
tific theories of the times, Indeed sim-
ilar beliefs are held to the present day
by the inhabitants of the mountainous
regions of Spain and Arabia, who cred-
it gems with secret virtues, and there
are among enlightened people many
who believe in the “bad luck” brought
to the wearer of an opal. In fact, our
modern idea of “birthstones” can be
traced to the Chaldean astronomers,
who assumed a relation between the
stars and different gems, Later a spe-
cific stone was consecrated to each
sign of the zodiac, from which can be
seen its bearing on the modern cal-
endar,
Such ideas reigned supreme in the
Middle ages, being supported by the
alchemists, who exerted so great an
influence at that period, and were still
going strong at the end of the Fif-
teenth century. Jerome Cardan, a
writer of the Sixteenth century, de-
elared that precious stones were ‘en-
gendered in came manner as an
infant from maternal blood,” by juices
distilled from ierals in the crev-
ices of rocks. In his time it was ad-
mitted without question that gems
were living beings, and he remarks,
“And not only precious stones live,
but they suffer illness, old age and
death.”
The different ¥
rious stones
tues ascribed to va
that time are illum-
irating. The cinth, for instance,
(a name no nger commonly used)
was supposed to preserve the wearer
from thunderstorms and pestilence, to |
increase we magnify
strengthen
even to induce sleep.
was . supposed to
power, |
the heart, bring joy and |
The turquoise |
protect a horseman |
from injury shou/d he be so unlucky |
his horse.
n Cardan’s remarks
the same time reflect-
ve humor, He says
that he carries & large hyacinth, but
that it does not make him sleep. How-
ever, he adds conscientiously, it is not
of the true color, So that may account
for its inefficiency.—~Washington Star.
as to fall from
In this conne
are edifying, at
ing a certain n
Korean National Game
The national came of Korea, called
Nyout, is played by moving’ pieces of
wood or stones called ma or horses
around a dotted circle, according to
throws made witl
These sticks are descendants of the
gaming sticks and of the old feathered
arrows of the mystic rites. The game
itself is very like parchesi and others,
beloved o: our childhood.
But on the fifteenth day of the
first month these Nyout ks still
are used for divination, Early in the
month a little book is sold in the mar-
kets of Seoul which reveals in an elab-
orate method 1y Chinese characters
and Korean text the significance of
the throws, The names of the throws
themselves, however, are neither Chi-
nese nor Kore: but belong to the
language of the ancient mountain peo-
ples in the East, which takes us back
almost to the becinning of time itself.
—Boston Transcripts wv.
|
sticks, used as dice. |
ArwATER KENT
RADIO
Operated by BATTERIES!
Screen-Grid
Electro-Dynamic
New improvements heretofore only in
house-current sets
NEW!-HEAR IT-TOD
King George's Name
The illness of King George was be-
ing discussed, when James interrupted
to ask the last name of King George.
“Well,” said his mother, “that is a
long story,” thus shielding her igno-
rance of the fact. ‘Wait until tomor-
row,” said she, “and I will tell you
| about it.”
James did not forget the promise of
a story and on the following day re-
minded his mother of it.
“Oh, I already know his name,”
said brother William. *I read it in the
paper last night, and it's ‘George V
Rallies.”
Stamp Worth $50,000
A postage stamp worth $50,000 is
on view at Le Havre. This treasure,
said to be the only one of its kind in
the world, is the famous 1-cent Brit-
ish Guiana stamp.
It’s the Berries, Girls
One of the richest and most fash-
fonable shades for autumn will be
what the French call “light cur-
rant.,”—Woman's Home Companion,
Ground nct upon dreams, you know
they are ever contrary.—Thomas Mid-
dletown.
GREAT RESULTS
FROM GOMPOUND
Read How This Medicine
Helped This Woman
Brainerd, Minn.—“I read about
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound in a news-
paper and I have
got great results
from its tonic
action at the
Change of Life.
Before I took it
I was mervous
and at times I
was too weak to
do my house-
work. I was this
way about a year.
: But now I do all
my housework and do chores outside
also. I must say that Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done
wonders for me and no woman should
be without it. I sure can speak a
good word for it.”—MRrs. JIM SMITH,
R. R. 7, Brainerd, Minnesota.
Five Hundred for
One, Piles Ended
Each day brings incr ing orders and
inquiries, many coming a long
asking ahout Drysorb, a new, safe
better way that science has found to
end, practi 1 forms of Piles
quickly. results that Dry-
sorb gi ing.
John K of Dallas, T
®After us every own
ended a
Piles in
Drysorb.
27-year-old
with one
sider that $1
bottle of
profited
me five h Drysorb is now
established as proven a success-
ful home and
tered, U, Offi 7S
Greaseles Odorless, St and is|
mild and
s action is
i are imme-
ts effec
y free information spe-
prepared for each case.
cially Give
and age of trouble. Address
Drysorb Co. 900 DeMenil Bldg. St.
Louis, Mo. you certainly would feel
glad to be free from Piles. Drysorb
has established this record. This ien-
tific discovery is Monarch of all rem-
hat quickly ends Piles at home.
jalist, knife or operation nec
Drysorb gives a quick verdi
BERT RE EY LR
which make a horse wheeze,
roar, have thick wind or
choke-down can be reduced
with Absorbine, Also other
bunches or swellings. No
blister, nohairgone, and horse
keptat work. Itiseconomical.
Atdruggists,or$2.60 postpaid.
Howse book 3-S free.
A thankful user gays: “Completely removed
flesh growth on gland about 7 inches diameter.
Sincerely thank you for good advice and
Absorbine.”
"ABSORBINE
y TL Rd
W. F. YOUNG, Inc. 510 Lyman St., Springfield, Mass.
Alfalfa Laxative Compound
Nature's own vegetable and herb combina-
tion to regulate Is; 1
liable remedy
on request
free with first
3 n
Washington
Homeo-
pathic Pharmacy, 1007 H St. NW, Wash., D.C,
order.
Pathos in Passing of
Old-Time Family Album
The London Sunday Times notes the
wane of ancestor worship (western
type) :
“Ancestor worship is, apparently, on
the wane. A French writer has point-
ed out that the custom of keeping a
family album is no longer popular, and
draws from the fact a moral concern-
ing the decay in pride of race. There
is, indeed, a certain pathos in the de-
cline of the album of family portraits.
“There is pathos in it, and there is
danger, too. How many a man, in
years gone by, tottering on the verge
of dipsomania, has been saved by the
recollection of ‘his sisters and his
cousins, whom he reckoned up in
dozens? How many a man was res-
cued from the primrose path by the
contemplation of Aunt Susan, awful
in her shoulder-of-mutton sleeves?
Today, alas! it is unlikely that the
forger’s hand would be stayed, the
burglar’s jimmy arrested, by the sol-
emn thought that Great-Uncle Robert
would never have acted thus.”
Come to Think of It,
What Did It Matter?
When the anti-Mexican labor bill
was before the legislature in Sacra-
mento William Burnell, one of Cali-
fornia’s big contractors, said:
“I am a believer in the theory that
certain types of people are fitted for
certain types of work. This last was
forcefully brought to my mind recent-
ly when I visited a national park,
where the waitresses were college girls
making money through the vacation
period. Maybe they were great col-
lege girls but as waitresses—
“I said to one of them one day, ‘Is
this pie apple or peach?
“Tm sure I don't know, she
snapped. ‘Can’t you tell by the taste?
*“‘No, ma'am, I can’t, I politely ad-
mitted.
“Well, then, what difference does
it make? was the tart rejoinder,”’—
Los Angeles Times,
Too Humble
“We farmers are humble, but we're
not as humble as some of these poli-
ticians seem to think.”
George L Quackenbush, the million-
aire farmer of Virginia, was talking
in Richmond about the farmer's hard
luck and his demand for government
aid.
“Yes, we're humble,” he went on,
“but we're not like little Willie,
“ “Where are you going, Joe? little
Willie asked his friend.
“‘Down to the drug store,’ says Jee,
‘to get an ice cream soda.’,
“Little Willie looked up at Joe wist-
fully, and said:
“Say, Joe, can I come and watch
ye?”
Shorn
John has been attending Bible
school. Of course, one of the stories
he learned was of Samson
lah.
and Deli-
After mother brought him home
| from the barber shop the other after-
| noon he
| children on the
“flopped” on the grass and gave every | I
| Hennic Mfg. Co.,
was romping with other
lawn.
simulation of complete exhaustion. A
little girl playmate anxiously inquired
the cause of the trouble. The answer
was, “I've jist come from the barber
shop an’ I lost my stren’'th!”
Paints of Blotting Paper
At seventy-eight the venerable Arch-
deacon Malcolm Graham of
Trent, England, has
fied with his style of painting and is
adopting blotting paper as a medium.
Archdeacon Graham, one of the few
well-known artists in the Church of
England, recently held an
of his watercolors, which
praise,
won high
That’s Different
“I Tike
don’t you?”
“Yes—if he isn't too
'em.”"—Cincinnati Enquir
liberal
r.
New money for old fits better than
new girls for old.
in ————————
Like may beget like, but we also
get to have our dislikes.
In Rainy Season
Father (to son on first visit to sea-
side)—Sonny, what do you think of it?
Son—All right, dad; but is this big
field always covered with wateri—
Boston Post.
Peace at Any Price
She—So you are not going to get
married again?
He—No, dearie,
pacifist.—Pathfinder
I've become a
Magazine.
Not the Same Thing
Actress—Did he really tell
had stage fright?
Friend—No; he said you were.
you X
Try to wear out your old clothes
and feel wretched all the time you're
doing it.
that a woman
time she has a
It’s a good thing
doesn’t faint every
faint idea.
One of the brags of big cities is
how uncomfortable everything is.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
PERSONALLY GATED BY ONE
OF PERTS
GARAGE, SERVICE STATION, HOTEL, Re-
ceipts $48,000 last year. Same owner 11
years. Garage holds 20 cars. Agency
for Larabee trucks, John Deer farm im-
plements, Seiberling tires, air compres-
sor, battery charger, 28-ton press,
Weaver tire changing outfit, 2 oil pumps,
1,000 gal. storage, 7 living rooms above
store. Tile and brick building, 42x60
frontage 100 feet. Hotel, frame, 21
rooms furnished, 40x60; lot 300x150, lo-
cated on Lackawanna Trail between
Binghamton and ranton, Can be pur-
I 1 separate Stock at invoice.
s
lease available, re-
K 1 invoice
ists of 8-
Royal Grinder;
and Counter. Located in
known
55 month,
rooms; ses
owner 214
1 s 60; kitchen
equipped; serves 40 udents lunch
dinner; employs tudents, 2 wom-
en, This is a money maker for $4,750.
Terms.
TO BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Call Cleveland’s Wide Awake Business
Brokers, No Matter Where You Are Located
WE HELP FINANCE
ARLEY INVESTMENT CO.
ULMER BLDG. CLEVELAND, O.
NEW YORK CORRESPONDENT
SUITE 610 - = = TIMES BUILDING
Health Giving
Qumnshin
All Winter Long
Marvelous Climate = Good Hotels = Tourist
Camps=Splendid Roads=Gorgeous Mountaim
Views. The wonderful desert resort of the West
Write Cree & Chaffey
Pam Sprimg
CALIFORNIA
© 1929 Money Getter
Men and
women
ly
have made over $8.00 In
ou can do the same, selling
ack
like wildfire,
Here's a real number,
Atlantic City, New Jerseys
SELL “MOISTO”
The Shaving Wonder
25 50% Profit
or street
Suddenly he |
Stoke-on- |
become Aissatis- |
exhibition
a man liberal in his views, |
t Co., 961
with |
| sale send ption, best |
office
e,
iar terri
26 E. Oak St.,
tory
Buffalo, N. Y.
Boston's Newest Residence Club for Womea
The “Pioneer
410 STUART ST., BOSTON
Permanent or transient rooms with of
without bath.
Write or telephone KENmore 7940 for reservation
Dining room and cafeteria
Membership not required
money refi ¢ S
DONALDSON
Drexel Bldg. - =
loesn’t
Banish Unsightly Hair Growth; new pr
d t in] x back if
n
POPULAR
3e a la i
Write
free 1
McKinley
LAND WANTED—Owner
State wh
en
DRAWER H.
ILLINOIS
Letters That Will :
write them; prom
tails in any lar
MISS ROSE, 139 BE, 4571
W. N. U, PITTSBURGH, NO. 33-1929.
Results; 1
Bring You
ne liscre ; send de-