^Vv*'/-y Our Neighbor-^Trthe Oriental By LEONARD A. BARRETT •' «» '• So far as numbers are concerned rae late immigration laws have endeavored to solve the problem of the ' >riental in , our <• mntry. - Restrictions have' prohibited the Japanese and Chinese from entering. Whether this ' is a wise policy time aloiie will reveaL It is true that much of our menial labor can be 'lone more willingly and far cheaper 1 «v the Oriental than . f - by those of the • |fMte -race* ' It: is also true that merchandise made in Japan has been offered for sale in this country at a price cheaper than it can be manufactured .ourShops. It lis also true that the Oriental may "hot be the most congenial neighbor. He coines to us with the background of a different eulMi're .^apd Insists pn expressing his hereditary •&ndencyt Foar- thl's reason we find the /Chinese, in particular, developing .^lonies of their own where they have ttieir own temples, shops and asocial •privileges.' Every large city has its Chinatown. This is only one side of picture. We should not forget that J® our universities many Oriental students have won first rank in the field ®f scholarship. Many are preparing ~for a professional Career in their native tend. All of the Orientals la this Country are not of what might be called the artisan class. When we seriously ask ourselves, what are the obligations we owe these Neighbors, we face a dilemma. One thing certain : we cannot press assimilation to the extent , of ,-intermarriage If %e. want to preserve the white race. The latter invariably loses its identity Jfc the offspring of all intermarriages, •jftn the other hand, the best judgment 9f the Oriental "mind is equally opposed :'fo intermarriage. Xor can we assimilate them into citizenship, for»tlie rea fbn of their tendency to colonize. It vould be just as impossible fior ns to become Chinese or Japanese. •Perhaps our obligation is best expressed in the exercise of Christian Sgtourtesy and neighborly spirit, endeavoring to instill into them the spirit of American democracy, and leave it to TR-ork from within outward. Whatever assimilation is possible, must arise Within the personality of* the Oriental himself, and carinot be" forced uyon him frdm the outside. Western Newspaper - • Acre* of Aches ?-!•' "I hope the dispensary system can be put under the Department of Agri- Culture," said Uncle Bill Bottletop. "For what purpose?" "Maybe they can And a way to plow Bnder some of the head-acherage." Twice Told Tales Items of Interest Taken Prom t)M Files of the Plalndealar of Years Ago FIFTY YEARS AGO > R. Bishop let the water out of the Mill Race last Saturday, and putting in teams and scrapers, lowered the same about two feet-. This he clairris will be a saving of water in ru lining the mill, and also prevent the sand and dirt being washed into the water wheels. .' *• , John I. Story and E.VW. Howe have rented Riverside Hall and are now fitting it up for a skating rink. The Mcitenry Dramatic cluh have re-orjjanized and propose givinjg a; series of entertainments during the winter, the first to take place about Christmas, at which time they will present' the drama of "Moseli, the Wlir of the Sierras." " 0' • Fingerprint 2,600 Hunting Murderer Ungvar, Czechoslovakia.--The po«* lice of this Slovaklan town rank with the Canadian mountles when it comes to getting their man and have arrested a slayer, after 2.G00 persons in the neighborhood had submitted to the finger print process. •/ • . . : Christmas eve a' saloonkeeper was mysteriously slain and the sole due was a fingerprint on a window, , ' Finally the police ordered every male inhabitant between fourteen and sixty years of age to show up and have their prints made. Similar searches were made within a radius of 15 miles.*7 . After careful study, the police were able to Identify the ; corresponding:" prints and thfe slayer immediately confessed.- --" ,, CJABBY GERTIE a\ FORTY YEARS A0O - We are experiencing some old fashioned Indian summer weather in "this section now. May it continue for a month to. come. Postmaster Snow was exhibiting a cabbage on Thursday last, obtained from John B. Frisby, that weighed 22 % pounds. J Julia A. Story has been purchasing a very large stock of Christmas goods which will soon arrive and she invites all to call and examine them early. Ben Buss, Jr., never does anything by halves. The boys say he "wet" his new suit of clothes to perfection on Sunday. The hole in the pond has not frozen over since. Good boys should not go skating on Sunday. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Martin J. Stoffel, who is now employed with the Kerber Packing Co., at Elg|n, pasised- Sunday with his parents here. James Perkins of Woodstock passed the Sabbath~here with his wife and Daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Masquelet came out from Chicago last Saturday evening for a short visit at the home of the former's parents, Mr. arid Mrs. Frank Masquelet. The marriage of this «pair took place only a short time ago. Butter went up a cent and a half on the Elgin board of trade Monday and was quoted at 31% cents. """ TWENTY YEARS AGO A new ice machine is being installed in the Chas. G. Frett meat market in Centerville. Mr. Frett believes in keeping abreast of the times, therefore the improvement. The West Side has another new store. It is located in the Schneider building. We are told that the proprietor also intends opening a billiard and pool room as well as bowling alley. Butter on the Elgin board of trade Monday sold at 32 cents per pound. Unless we get raih soon, rain water will be at a premium this winter. "When a girl has memorized shorthind symbols she has a cods In her Jwad." • : -- "r -Y Mrs. Jeanette Respodee of Brussels, jgho hired her divorced husband as a gardener, has remarried him. TEN YEARS AGO > This locality is, this week, expert iencing its first siege of cold weather. The mill; pond was frozen over for the first time on Monday morning of this week. The 110 patrons of the A. J. Olson milk plant at Woodstock are up in arms because they received but $2.00 per hundred for October milk delivery. . John M. Phalin, one Of this community's beat known rural residents and who for many years has successfully operated a large farm south-©#-!, this city, has purchased a lot of HH. Fay and expects to build a modern home thereon early next 3pring. Henry Foss, 6ne of the proprietors of the Rosedale greenhouses, who so unfortunately lost the fingers of his left hand by the accidental discharge of a shot gun two weeks ago, and who was taken to the Woodstock hospital, following the accident, was able to return to his home here last Thursday. "Little Red House" Given President DEATH TAKjES PAL, AVIATRIX FLIES ON Helen Rickey Undaunted jby, v Partner's Crash. • "Pittsburgh, -"- Death rode £raBces> Marsalis down " out of the sky, but. Hc'cii IUvkey, her pretty flying partner ftiohi Mc^eosport, Pa., Is continuing her aerial career undaunted. It was Helen who won the contest during the National Women's air races at Dayton, Ohio, the day Mrs. Marsalist with whom she had broken the women's endurance flying record, crashed from a low altitpde and was killed. And- it was Helen who, though saddened by the tragedy, flew in the air cortege Across Pennsylvania to Roosevelt field, Long Island, where funeral services were held for the famous aviatrix. Not so long ago it was Helen and Frances--together In the Outdoor (ilri, the sturdy cabin plape they called home during their endurance flight. But the "powder puff" team is no more. .The only fate which could have, separated these two (lying mates for long overtook the Xew York woman as she was rounding a pylon In her racing plane* 'Caught in the backwash of five other planes and too close to the ground to recover, she crashed and died "almost instantly. Helen is no- "jinx" convert: She's going on in the flying1 game, just as she is certain Frances would have done had she been the winner, and Helen the "loser" in that fateful Bayton air race. i Soberly and not unminOfal * of her friend's skill as a pilot, she says: "Of course it will not interfere with my flying. It's like a friend being killed in an automobile. We think touch an accident will never hit us." Select Best Wheat for the 1935 Crop Chinch Bugs, Winter Killing Promise to Be Growers' Leading Enemies. By O, H. Duncan. Associate cKlef In Crop Prdductloq. University o( IUlnolt.-- . . • WNU Service* With the possibility of another chinch bug infestation In 1935 and the ever-present danger of winter killing, farmers should plant-only tliose varieties of wheat that have proved the best in their respective parts of the state. „ Where adapted varieties are planted on strong ground, observations indicate that fair wheat yields can be attained in spite of chinch bug attacks. in the central part of the state, Illinois Progeny 2 this year again demonstrated its ability to yield well, This variety is a soft wheat with considerable winter hardiness; superior grain quality and high yielding capacity on fertile soils. Wheats of the Turkey type hate long been considered best adapted to central Illinois and a fa' rlety that can compete with Ihptw has to be A good one. Illinois Progeny 2 has done (his oyer a period of eight years In tests' atthe University of IlUnofs experiment fl<4d" near -Urbana. , At the experiment field near DeKalb in northern Illinois, five wheat varieties stand out in front with better average yields during the past three or* more years. They Include Ioturk, Illinois Selection 131, Mlnturki, Purkof imd Wisconsin Pedigree 2. These are ail selections ft'oth Turkey or a hybrid in which Turkey was one of the parents. On the Alhambra experiment field.. In southwestern Illinois, the soft red winter wheats are the best adapted, and here the leading varieties fnelude Fuloaster, Nabob, Illinois Selection 131, Michigan Amber. Red Sea and Fulhlo. Of these, Illinois Selection 131 is the only variety not In the soft wheat class. ;• POULTRY • YKTS • FEEDING OF GRAIN . TO GET FALL EGGS Synthetic "Hangovers" Offered in Experiments London.--Many persons know that "morning after" feeling. Mouth like Blotting-paper. A splitting head. And a large jug of ice water the only bright spot In a dismal world. Many console themselves that the cause was usually worth the effect. Few, however, would care to have the effect without the cause. And science has now made that possible! Just a small dose~~of histamine acid phosphate and in twenty seconds you have that metallic taste in the mouth, an unnaturally flushed fac£. And forty seconds later all the makings of a No. 1 hangover. ~ " Scientists are looking for persons who will give themselves headaches In this vpay. One man, with • real hangover, wanted to know why science couldn't find a sixty-second cure instead of a sixty-second headache. . Oat Straw Best, Most Nutritious for Stock Much-straw will go into the mangers, rather than Into the stalls, on j farms this winter, because of the un- | usual scarcity of hay and the better j roughages. Feeding straw to live stock | Is pot new, however, as strtfw has long Wen used as roughage for horses, cattle, and sheep. A. I* Harvey, animal husbandry division. University farm, St. Paul, says the feeding value of straw differs widely. Oat straw is the best and most nutritious. Its stems are softer and more pliable than those of the other cereals. Oat straw has about as much total digestible nutrients as corn stover, but only about one-half as much digestible protein. Barley straw is second in feeding value, followed by wheat and rye straw. On farms where hay or corn stover Is available as roughage, It would be preferable to use the straw for bedding or to use it in limited amounts as part of the roughage for wintering stock. On farms where there is a limited amount of hay or corn stover, straw can be used successfully as the sole roughage. • ' Because stfaw lacks the protein so necessary for growing animals. It should not be fed extensively to them. It had better be fed to idle work horses, dry cows, or other live stock requiring maintenance only -dOrlBg the fall and winter. reetly, It i« believed to be partially responsible for pullets "fading" out of production In the fall and winter, because of failure to secure good physical development during the growing period. Early maturity In pullets is desirable, but maturity at the expense 'kof physical development Is likely to prove unprofitable; To help overcome erratic winter laying, it is suggested that growing pullets be fed for good physical develoi)- ment, such as may be obtained oh many farms through the liberal feeding of grain. It Is true that grain-fed birds may not come into production ap quickly, but in the opinion of a number of practical pQultrynven, they are likely to be more consistent In their winter laying. ; Boss Hoaxes Employee; ; Latter Tells Police Boston.--To impress an employee who arrived at worjt late, Joseph Balkan, proprietor of an upholstery shop here, told him he had found $20,000 in a divan uhdergoing repairs. If the assistant had arrived on time and found the money, Balkan reportedly told .him, the money would have been divided between them. Joseph Hardliner, the assistant, promptly no tified police, wtio qurtstumed Balkan. Balkan explained It was merely a story to teach the employee the value ^f promptness--then fired Karchmer. : Electric Buzzer and Rifle Menaces Peepers Seattle. Wash.--As a precaution ajrainst '."Peeping Toms," Prof. Tlieo C. Frye of the University of Washington has wired his home with a buzzer system from rooms of girl student boarders to his own bedrbom. The professor keeps a .22-caliber rifle at hand and recently fired five shots at a fleeing peeper after being sigimled by one of the co-eds. Coyotes May Be Benefit ; Instead of Doing Damage Suffering from the results of a bad reputation which he has been building up for a period of years the coyote finds that he Is a pretty badly treated animal, says Pathfinder Magazine. The average human is pretty apt to act without making a very thorough investigation and therefore the coyote Is ahot at on sight, trapped and poisoned. Scientists at the bureau of biological •urvey, however believe only what they flee and so have fiade a little Investigation into the private life of the coyote. They-have found that in many localities instead of preying on poultry, young live stock and wild game and doing tilings generally detrimental to the farmer he does him; a service. In these particular regions the anfmal lives almost exclusively On rodents which are enemies of the farmer. Jealous Husband Finds ' " Body of Rival in Ice Box iBsm-eli'iia.--A liiitihi r. warned by « friend, hurried home i*nd found nothing "T"ig« " . • To make-^nends for his suspicions he was especially nice to his wife and took her to a show after supper. Her uneasiness puzzled him somewhat. In the morning he went to the relrig erator In the yard to take out the m^at for the market and'the body of theirivai, frozen dend and stiff, fell oua Feed for Dairy Cow Peed for a dairy cow depends upon •the Individual, animal hut as a general rule each cow will require two tons of legnnie. hay, two acres of pasture, 1<\ bushels of corn, 1(5 bushels of oats; and 600 pounds of cottonseed meal. Where wheat bran is available this may be substituted fof. a -part of the oats, pound far pound. Good producing animals are necessary for profit and the., herd should average between 250 and 300 pounds of butterfat, to the row. If this average is not maintained then the animal is not paying f<)r hef feed and should be taken from the herd. Erosion Evil Here Thie evU effects of soil erosion are not a threat of the future but are already In evidence'on tens of thousands of farms in this country, the "United States Department of Agriculture says. In the Soul It, the North; andtlteM;'!- srnr Among Wonder* of Seas Seaweed which grows as tall as California's redwood trees and sea plants which attain a height of about 300 feet among the wonders of the deep research of the Scripps Institute igraphy has revealed. »eas, resea 6f Oceanog A scene in th^ executive offices of the White House after President Roose- Wit had been presented with a model of the famous "little, red house,-' which Sy mbolizes the beginning of the scientific fight afeainst tuberculosis. Dr. Francis B- Trudeau, son of the man who began the anti-tuberculosis fight, is there, as 18. Miss Mildred Showalter of Washington, In the costume typifying the spirit the dooWe barred cross. The little red bouae ^ pictured os the 1884 Christmas seals. • ' . , Japan in a Tough Spot Japan's earthquakes are largely due 10 the fact that the shores of the Fiteiflc side are alowly rising and. those bordering on the Sea of Japan are die West, many farmers are working land which has been made poor by efosion. Much of It is good forest land or land Which could be used for forestry. Although- millions of acres have been stripped of forest's, much of ttie land was not suitable for farming. Bolivian Indian Fa«hion Bolivian Indians wear underclothing only on religious holidays, and always take pains to slit the trousers leg np the back, as far as the knee, so that the undergarment may be shown to advantage. Pullets Should Be Guarded for Development. Bjr H. iH. Alp. Poultry Extension College of Agriculture. University of I 111 - - nols.--WNU Service. RINGWOOD day in the A. K. Burns home. Tuesday evening she left for Royal Qak, Mich., where she will spend a couple oJS months with her daughter, Mrs. Harvey Bumgardher- From there she will go to Cincinatti to, spend two months with iter daughter, Mrs. Ray . Schaefer. Mr. and Mrs. • George. Young and son Alfred visited relatives at Arlington Heights, Sunday. * v Miss Mary Catherine Edinger 6f Mr. and Mrs. Geo?gev Shepard entertained the 500 club at their home Thursday evening. Prizes , w e r e awarded to Mrs. Ray Peters and GeOr- \ oung and Mrs. J. C. Pearson and F. A. Kitchens. j There will be community services at the M. E. church next Sunday eve-! Woodstock spent the weekend with ning. Rev.-Burrows of Woodtsttjck Will Virginia Jepson. „ |be the speaker. ! I Mesdam<?s B. T. Butler, Rcjland Mc- I Mr. and Mrs. Lenard Carlson and ^anuon and J. C. Pearson attended a' family visited relatives at Port Wash- Par^' a*- home of Mrs". Frisbee at ington, Wis., Wednesday. Greenwood Saturday afternoon. • 'r Miss Alice Pe^t of Crystal Lake 'Mr A1?VIrs: G?°T ^UR| *** ' -- 'son, Alfred wet-e callers at Spring v Pushing pullets for extra early fall Parents'i Mr- Grove Thursday afternoon. egg production may be a tempting way Mrs. Charles Peet. , Mr. and Mrss- J. Jepson spent of trying to improve the farm's cash• Mr. and Mrs. A. K. ^urns of Oak Sunday afternoon 'with relatives it -- Income this year, but such pullets ! Parjc were callers at the home of Mrs. Wauconda. : ' • may "fade"; out as layers and as a jNellie Dodge Thursday"afternoon. ^£r an,j* Charles Schneider of steady sonr'ee of Income. Eggs have j Mrs. S- W. Smith and daughter, Woodstock spent Sunday with Mr. a^s brought Illinois farmers an average Bernice, Mrs. Roy Neal and Mi;, and Mjs. S. H. Beatty. , . ! annual income of ?20.0tX\000 d9ring Mrs, Alec Anderson, and family and Frankie Stephenson spent ' the „past four yejirs, and this source ! Mi^. Rilla Fos? attended- the basket- fr0m Thursday until Satufday with - '• of cash probably will be relied on niore social at Montekfna School Thui-sday her sister, Mrs. Robert: McLean at S evening. Wayne Fo^ was the 'teacher. -Woodstock. * ; • v Society held their Mr. and 'Mrs-;. A- E. Herbert and annual bazaar and chicken supper :*at .'fafoilv of Elgin were callers iii 'the fche M. W. A. Hall Wednesday. : H* Beatty home; Sunday , evening; School Notes--Lower Room, Those, "jfr. and Mrs. Lester Carr spent .. , . . . , neither absent nor tardy for three Saturday evening at Solon Mills. i nigner tp protein lUfliy ^-*fetiea tor rmonths: Robert Anderson, Doris Law- Miss Dorothy Carr and Dewey :J good growth - . _;rence, Audrey Merchant; B etty Beck, of Chicago spent the weekend • n w ' » 1 T ^ p 8 o n f H e l e n , R u t h B u t l e r ; : ? i » x w l t f t ' - ; t h r . f o r t o f e r ' s - ' " j prtned Quite sail.factory in I.h^ Carlson, Barbara Lawh-ence, Howard Mr« Charles Catr ' stances. However, when used • Incor-< Bruce Harrison, Grace Mary Thomp- ' ' ' - son. ' than ever this yeiiK Kgg prices are generally, at their highest in thfe fjill niontliis; a^d to take' advantage Of this markets potiltrynieri force their pultets ; into early product tion by coiuinulng then* on ; a xuash Mrs." Ed Feet of the Ringwood. Home Bureau unit attended the Mc- Henry Home Bureau meeting at the home of Mrs. Klontz at McHenry last Friday, showing the handcraft that was learned at Miss Isabelle Hitchcock's school held last September in Algonquin. The McHenry Unit chair* man was unable to attend the school. A great many useful and pretty things were learned at the school. Several pretty patterns for aprons, many different collars that when worn on the same dress will give .the idea of a rev.- dress each time. There Were also many ideas ffrr Christmas gifts, towels, crochet rugs,: and pocket books, lunch cloths and hankies with . Roy and Mae Wiedrich were visitors at McHenry Sautrday morning. A mixture of equal parts of cracked i tiny buttons on them. An engine and corn and wh&it fed in a hopper, in ; train made frofn a cheese box, tin conjunction \vlth the; regular mash, [?an and spools that any little boy has given satisfactory econWuical re j would be glad to find under his Christsuits., As 'the birds heroine older, j mas tree,: and you'd never know that wlf&le gwfln may be substituted for .the lovely shopping bag and table the crac Reg lug' used ? grifln rackpl coin rardfrss of i In the mixture, the method of feed great care should be taken to accomplish good physical development and tleshinjf ilrst.. Undoubtedly there has been too much of a tendency to see how'quickly a flock can be made to begin laying, rather than how con-, slitehttyr^ • runners with yarn stickory for decora- ' tion ever came from a lowly burlap j bag. . . . ' j . Mrs.- Lester J^elson and children land Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of lAntioch spent Sunday afternoon with jMrs. Nellie Dodge. ' Mr. and Mrs. George Young and json, Alfred, were Elgin-visitors Monday- • futpepeqsp e AArrep adoui easiest, ^ i Mrs. c. J. Jepson entertained the gcotch Brid>Je Club at h^r honH, Fri. Cheapest Fowls to Raise .day afternoon. Prizes were awarded Oeese are about the easiest and | to Mrs. Ray Peters and Mrs. Roy cheapest fowls to raise, says a writer jNeal. In the Montreal Herald. They require 1 Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Snepaxd entera little soft feed, as moistened meal, jtained the McHenry I»ive Hundred bread crumbs, potatoes or other table jd.ub at their home Sunday evening, scrap for a few days. Soon the gos- | Prizes were awarded to Mrs. George lings learn to eat grass and cracked j Young and F- A. Hitchens and Mr. peas or corn In small quantities night iSnd Mrs. E. J. Nichols. and morning. Let them have access Mrs. Nellie Dodge went to Chicago to water for drink and also to swim J Monday evening to spend over Tuesin. Protect them from rats, weasels, skunks, etc., until well feathered, and also protect them from very hot sue during the middle of the day. They will be better *hut up.during thunder storms until three months old. After that they may soon be fed whole peas and corn and require little care. They do not bring high prices and are not more profitable than chickens, as rf r a i i s . . : • . . . : • • • : • . Henry Williams and daughter, JEva, were visitors in the Fred Wiedrich home Saturday morning. Mrs. W. B. Harrison and son, Earl, Mrs. Carl Halstrom and Mrs. Charles Peet were visitors at Elgin Saturday. Mr. anH Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal La He spe nt Sunday with the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. •.!'.. Mr. and Mrs. .Joe Weber and family of McHenry spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson were visitors at Lake Geneva, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chicago spent the weekend in the home of the former's father, E. C. Hawley.' Mrs. Clyde Clark and children of Ostend visited her father, T, A. Abbott. Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Foss of Richmond and Wayne Foss were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Rilla Foss. Mrs. Malissa Gould of Elgin spent Wednesday with her mother, Mrs. Jennie Bacon. Couvacl* Oouvade is the name given by anthropologists to the custom prevalent among some'primitive races, by which the father of a newly born Infant makes a pretense of going through the same experience as the mother and lies up for a time, abstains from certain' foods etc. as though he, too, were physically affected by the birth. The custom has been observed by travelers In Guiana and other parts of South America, among some Afghan tribes. In parts of China, Borneo, etc. It was noted by the ancients as occurring in Corsica and among the Celtlberians. Couvade Is from the French, couver. to hatch. . ' ;• , •: Poultry Facts -A dozen eggs contain Bbout a plht of water. ..' ; Eggs wer* recently being sold at one-jhalf «ent each in the Irish Frea State.' " v, , • Grass range results In plenty of sun light and vitamin IV1 and produce* sturdy chickens. r • • . • • • • The most rigid culling should be done at the close of the laying season which usually continues to November; • • • The Cochins were first Introduced as .Shanghai fowls; then they were called Cochin Chinas and finally Cochins. They appeared in butli Kngland and America in 18-10. • •• "• • Eggs should be -Jitt'ced;. Jji.' .cofltainers where it is cool, fto they oiay not develop heat spots! '• (C^fornla ranks eighth in tlie nation In the -nunhber of chickens on farms, the total In the state biflng estimated at; lS.T.l.'KKi, or 111.0(H» more than^kist year. '. Possibly one of the best remedies for-lice Is the Black Leaf- 40 treatmen t, \vherejjy one puts a litlle of tlie liquid along the perehes a short time before the birds go to roost. ^ Si nee;rone one pint of water.'clean,..fresh, pure water should ,be kfpt c04^ahtly be fore the hens. . • _ * . » ^ Mites are blood suckers y*nt are fi8t found on the chickens. Tfiey hide M DODGE TRUCKS SAVE GAS...OIL... TIRES...REPAIRS! THERE'S only one way t--> truck values--ry fompans i'har.ks to i: new Dodge "Show-Down" Plan you can now find out for, yourself why un(Tef tlie roosts or; crevices of the house. TfS WiicK'S and Don't- 'wash e^jril before pnttjn;' them away In water glass. If soiled, sponge them as lightly as possible with a cloth*'dampened wi^.j^gar t<>- remove the soHed spots. •;>' "Tfc. Silvw DUh" . Cadis, Spain, is locally callad The Silver Dish," because of the cascade of sloping, tumbling roofs all brilliantly white against the sea and sky. health of their wooden idols, : ^Knowtedg* . .•»• • Knowledge is a comfortable _ and necessary retreat and shelter for us In advanced age, and if we <Jp hot plant It while young, It will give us no shade when we grow old.-rChesterfleld. • .'•'-•',"" Trucks today offer you the bicijest vatues in th« k>w -pvic«? fletd. Dodiftf provides 18 great money-saving features usually found or.lv in higher-pneed Units. Gas and oil saving features Such as valve seat inserts, oil filter, 4 piston rings and down-draft carbureter. Plus other extra-values like hydraulic^ ^brakes, full-floating rear axle, etc. But don't' take our- worj for it. Come in today and check for yourself. Compare Dodge with the three other lowestpriced trucks. Then let the comtnon^sehse facts decide! Yofttl be amjffwd bqw much more Dodge Trucks gi^ce you "for your money! - , ; I'- TON CHASSIS-- •CYU-ljt inch wb - fall - f l o a t i n g rear axlr --Vilve seat inserts-- h y d r a u l i c brakes--f u l l p r e s s u r e l u b r i c a t i o n -- m • .r fc-'. .>t I c a t u r c * $ 545 hi '"Li.-.t prices at factory, Detroit, subject to change without notice. Sp»ci*J equipment. •jJing dual wheels, on 1 'j-fon models extra. Time payment* to <f Vour /Isk for the official Ch'yler Motors Commercial Credit rlmn. Toast Wooden Idol* On the way to their shrines -Bolivian Indians, who combine Ism with Christianity, drink paganto the Blake .Motor Sales • • DODGE--PLY MOUTH - Phone 156 - :v ^ PearF Strtet