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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jul 1925, p. 11

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Then I took Lyifia EL Pinkham's Blood medu&e for poor blood. ImseoldijS tiw tone. I wocld be m cold I could sit still in tha lira. AwtTwhi E.Pfa*w.V ryti ;r***V M, i*\~ \\•' . ... „ RS £1 .--"Iwaaao A»«y t HOTM not of thebear-i lag-down paina in my bade «h*wm« I sat down most of the time amldid what 1 eooki do in that way--as washing dishes, etc. One day a book daarriftfag Lydia K. Hnkfaam? > was put in my maO-hoac. I the V Compoond bad helped others ao 2 itatriaL I bad&t( bottiee before I W»f T wnailaiula fiPtt&M ftlkltt SSS K . % W>rM /asLJfeifcf/e yXB&ny hardly sttstul and tntaa paho* of aw bands there wpoH bo dropa of MWI I also oaed w ftortiia WMh ud 1 recommend it also. Yoo nqr pabBfli ! tins letter and I wffl riadly mmmee letten from \ ! bora about j HABIT Banish Pimples Bf Uda| Cuticura Soap to Qiuti--it to Heal Adequate Admiration 1 Tbe late Julius Fleischmann, the yeast king, was a lover of moaic, and at a dinner at the Lotus dob In New York he said one night: "Few people are able to appreciate .music. It would take a Wagner tc appreciate Wagner adequately. Most of as are a little like the tailor. "A tailor had a great desire to bear one of his patrons, a famous tenor, nsing. So the tenor gave him ticket! ' for a performance of Tosca,' and asked him the next day bow he liked the 'show. ? " 'Well, how did yon Ilka It. Mr. ;8nipsT* " *011, tt was awful, simply awfBL* "'Awful? How sot* * Tour coat,' tbe tailor groaned, - *was too tight under the arms.' * Exploit Banks in India Special efforts to induce people of ; India to use banks Instead of hiding ' their money la meeting with some success. Say Bayer Aspirin INSIST! Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. °-h£ i e B a y e r p a c k a g e which contains proven directions Bandy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggist* Aspirin is tbe trad* mark «f Barer Manafactore of HMomttommw vt BalWjIlcscId ; '-v- ECZEMA After Others Fafl PETERSON'S OINTMENT Big fax 60 Cwrti the wlehtv healing power of Petersons Ointment when eczema or terribli Itching of skin and scalp tortures you is known to tens of thousands of people the country over. Often the itching goes overnight For pimples, acne, rough and red skin, old sores, ulcers, piles, chafing, sunburn, burning feet and all blemishes and eruptions it is supremely efficient, as any broad-minded druggist will tell you. Peterson Ointment Oo, Buffalo, N. T. fh- TO-MIGHT Chips off rat Ml j u m o t s - Uttle Ms OM-ttdM the lu loss. Hide sf lin« b*redi*uta. llian «ulr sostad. G.F. WC. Makes NationWide Investigation in Campaign tfe Rase American Standard my JOHN DICKINSON SHHMAN HH General Federation of Women'a Club* Is making a surrey of tha American home. This la one of theaa now things under tbe sun which the • • old saw says there Isn't. A surrey U/JL has never been made by the federal iW/ census bureau or by any public or \V/ pilyate agency. The Genefal Federation la making It as a necessary part of Its determined effort to raise the standard of the American hooa For to work with understanding and efficiency tt amat know what are the existing conditions Hence the surrey, instituted by the Federation's president, Mrs. John D. Sherman, and well under way In all parts of the country. The fllled-ln questionnaires will be tabulated at the Federation's headquarters in Washington. The findings will be published. Eventually the findings will be presented to congress, with the request that it authorize a similar survey aa a part of the regular work of the census bureau. Amnio*, with all that It repraaenta of hope In the world. Is now and will be what jroa make U. Its Institution* of r«ll(io«i liberty, of edasa* tlon and •cooomlo opportunity, of oonstltutloaal rights, of integrity of th« law, art tha most pracious possessions of the human race. These do not emanate from the government. Their abiding place Is with the people. They come from the con- ••oration of the fatliar, the love of the mother sad the devotion of ths children. They are the prodaot of that honest, earnest and tireless effort that aeeo into the rearing; of the family altar and the mak» In* of the home of our country. This tribute to the American home by President Coolidge in a recent public address emphasiisa the fact that notwithstanding disquieting conditions In the home home-making continues to bo a passion with good Americans. To the honaat, hard-working men and women who carry the burdens of the world the chance to own a home and rear a family is a blessing from heaven. Here la concrete proof. No class of financial Institution has developed faster in the last decade than the building and loan associations. There are now In this country 11,844 local associations, with a total membership of 8,554352 and assets totaling 94.705,887,197. Last year they built over 400,000 homes. ' The General Federation declares that tMs American home la in danger. It should know, for federated dob women are home-makers. Ninetytwo per cent of American housewives do their own work. This means that a large percentage of tbe women in federated clubs perform practically all of the domestic duties which their homes require. To these members home is what it has been for generations--woman's first Interest. A creed for club women, written twenty-five years ago by Mrs. Robert J. Burdette, sets forth that no dab should Introduce Into its program any activity which does not spring from the home and lead back to the home. Today the federated dob woman demands that her dub life and her bone life be correlated. Mrs. Sherman was elected president at the 1924 biennial conventftm at Los Angeles. She Immediately established the Department of the Ainer- Ican Home. Mrs. Maggie W. Barry of Texas la chairman. Mrs. Sherman has this to say about the new department, tbe home and the survey: The home has always been tha oaater of the club woman's Interest, no matter how many and how farflung her other activities. 80 tha establishment of the new Department of tha Bone did not activity amoag dub women. But tt did constitute a deolaratlon by tha federated elub women of their continued belief that hcme-makinc la the most Important Industry of tha -- »w that the home la tta preeent hour of need la a national oonoera, * For the American homo la ta real daaaer We can no lonaar shut our eyes to tha fact. Tha situation Is Increasingly bad. ^ Beoauee of the manifold blessings enjoyed by the American people tha American home should be world's standard. It ahould be the outward and visible sin of tha Inward and spiritual grace of family Ufa. That gTaee we seem largely to have lost. Tha eanaaaT Probably many In combination. Prosperity triaa souls that withstand adversity. Social m.fW aZZ not kept up with the natural sciences, One outstanding cause seems to be an undeniable lenorance on the part of both men and women of tha art of home-making. The older generation makes charges against tha younger generation. K ona generation la at fault, ao Inevitably is the ; COOLIDGE AND HOOVER API - THE WHITE HOUSH^ Washington* April 7, IMS. My Dear Mrs. Shot man: What yon Wave said abowt the plena of the General Federation for a nation-wide snrroy of homo-making methods and facilities, has improesod ma as having possibilities of largo usefulness. I am snro that soma of tho Government agancias will be ablo to givo soma substantial assistance, and assume that you will afford them the opportunity. From what you have said I gather that the program is of a practical character, and I hope may be productive of much good to the women who have to conduct the affairs of American homes. Very truly yours, CALVIN COOLIDGE. Mrs. John D. Sherman. President General Federation of Women's Clubs, 1734 N Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE of the Secretary Washington, May S, 1925. Dear Mrs. Sherman: 1 am much interested to hear of your proposed national survey of home equipment. The home is tha family workshop Its equipment and organization are an laden of its efficiency. As our most important conservation problem is the conservation of human energiee, a general study of the equipment of the home for reduction of needless effort should have much usefulness. It should also lead to aa increase ia tha naaonnt of time which the women of tho uountiy may devote to the development of the finest type of family life and to civic improvement. Your project, therefore, is highly commendable and should bring results. «| far-reaching importance. • -i 5 Yours faithfully, HERBERT HOOVER. And There ft No Doabt That Jwdias Is Dead "When yob step on your starter think of your motor," is the suggestion urged upon our autocrazy by a firm of advertisers. It seems to me the advertisers give a lot of unwarranted credit to those whom they address. The admonition to think presupposes possession of wherewithal. Granting, however, for the sake of argument,' that the United States of A-mania is not entirely bereft of inherent ability to reason I should imagine an advertiser with an eye to preserving a few customers for the future might suggest: "When you step on your atarter think of Caesar!" There may have been no motor In Caesar's chariot, but--he refused to believe in signs. You guessed It--Julius is dead.-- Stuart N. Lake, In the Saturday Evening Port. A Lady of Distinction JB recognized by the delicate, fascinating Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores follow^ by a dusting with Cuticura Talcum powder usually means a dear, tweet, healthy skin.--Advertisement. Scientist* Plan to Study Whales "Are whales polygamous?" an? "What Is their birth rate?" are among the questions a British scentlflc expedition to the whaling districts of the Falkland islands and southern Argentina and Chile will seek to answer. The expedition is under the auspices of the British colonial office. It will make an exhaustive study of whales, their habits, their food and. If possible, will locate their breeding grounds. The British government has regulations controlling the whaling industry In the South sea waters about South Georgia and the Falkland islands and this expedition was sent out in the interest of preserving the Industry. More than 10,000 whaJes were captured in the vicinity of the Falkland Islands and South Georgia last year. If the expedition can establish the theory that the whales of the Antarctic regions migrate to African waters during the breeding season, it Is expected the British government will enact legislation considered necessary for the protection of whales in both regions, during the breeding season. Reid, CMlVfxa bm hsoh «od cAnS fl & OMCAOO-BOSTON - KTTSEUAO* Gathered Facts pleading is seeing by proxy. 111 I I I 1 1 1 I I I I 1 1 111111111 I 11111 I 11 • other. And where does the fault lie but In the' hornet It looka aa If both generations must learn all over again the real meaning of home life. So we are focusing our many Federation activities upon the new Home Department. Its program covers a wide range of subjecta: from the physical wellbelng of the family to Its moral and spiritual development; from the material structure and equipment to the atmosphere Inside of the house, whloh I call the soul of the home; from the financial business of running the house to the education In fundamental religion, character-building and the artistic values of art, music and literature. Also we are going to show the vital relation of the thing called "politics" to the health, safety and education of the ohlldren In the home. The olub for woman, once frankly cultural, haa developed with the times and has adjusted Itself to the home and community Interests of Its members. It must help her to meet ISIS responsibilities and to solve IMS problems. And this the new Department of the American Home is designed' to~do. Our survey of home equipment should give valuable results. Modern equipment means Increased efficiency In housekeeping and that. In turn, means the saving of time and strength for home-making and other activities. Home-making is, of course, more than hosuekeeplng, yet successful housekeeping is a vital factor in It. Are our housekeeping equipment and methods the best that are available to usT Or are ws waetlng time and labor and exhausting nervous and mental ener- **Ellen Richards has coined a word--"euthenics." She defines It as "the betterment of living conditions through conscious endeavor, for the purpose of aeeurtng more efficient human beings. We must have due regard for euthenics if tomorrow a America la to be a nation of better homes. The General Federation does not expect, of course, to make a complete survey of tbe mora than 25,000,000 homes. But It expects to get data which the census bureau does not obtain. Tbe bureau asks about the Implements In the farmer's barn, but has no Interest in whether the farmer's wife has water and drainage In her home. The business of being a housewife and bringing up a family Is not a "gainful occupation," yon see, ao why should the federal government be concerned about the equipment of a person of "no occupation" T Mrs. Sherman In planning tha aorrey outlined Its purpose and scope to President Coolidge. He gave It his official approval, as is shown by his letter. The President is strong for the home. He Is the chairman of the advisory council of Better Homes In America, of which Secretary Herbert Hoover Is president of tbe board of directors. " • Secretary Hoover also gave his unqualified apfWoval. as his letter shows. This approval Is "algntflcant, inasmuch as the census bureau of the Department of Commerce Is under his direction. In planning Us survey the General Federation Invited the National Electric Light association to co-operate. This noncommercial association welcomed the opportunity. President Franklin T. Griffith saying, "In this servnntless age our lndnatry is particularly Interested because electricity la revolutionizing home life and social activity through electric laltor-saving conveniences and better lighting." At the forty-eighth convention of the association in San Francisco last month Mrs. Sherman was one of the speakers, with Secretary Hoover, Secretary . of Agriculture Jardlne and other nationally prominent men and women. The co-operation of the association assures the aid of •lectrlc power and light companies and of public service corporations handling gaa, water, .etc* la the making of the survey. Outline and questionnaire for the survey were drawn by the Industrial Survey and Research Service of Washington, D. C., Miss Marie L. Obenauer, director. The cost of the campaign Inaugurated by the Service will be borne by the Woman's Home Companion, which will publish tbe findings of the survey. The questionnaire Is soflldently comprehensive to secure the Information wanted by the General federation. Here are the general dasslficatlona. Equipment of homes with water and sewer connections; garbage, trash and ash disposal; heating a>stems; equipment with gas; equipment with . electricity; available household labor; equipment with telephone and educational and entertainment facilities; club study given to home equipment. Completely filled In, the first classification, for example, will give the following Information: Number of family dwellings In community; number of family dwellings having Inside flush toilets and stationary wash basins, bath tubs, kitchen alnks and laundry tubs; payment for water on meter or flat rate; water aupply <*nd,jewage disposal, If no public systems; protectMmoiNlrinklag water. ' The General Federation of Women's Clubs had Its beginning In 1888, when Sorosls, a pioneer woman's club of New York city, celebrated Its twenty-first birthday. Ninety clubs responded to the invitation of its president, Mrs. Jennie C. Croly ("Jennie June"). Julia Ward Howe headed a committee to prepare constitution and organisation. Tbe first biennial convention was held la Chicago In 1892. In 1883 the forty-five clubs of Iowa federated and Joined. Other states followed and the Federation became a federation of federations. In 1001 congress granted the Federation a national charter. The Federation now has approximately 3,000,000 members. It is nonpartisan and ponsectarian. It is undoubtedly tbe most powerful nonpolitical organization In tbe country. No woman is really as handsome aa she thinks that some man thlnka aba la. Nothing spreads so fast by example as laziness. A little bird on . a bat ta worth two that tell tales. your car was it a hard job? Poor greasa clogfe.;. the passages. It oxidizes, hardens, anff fails to lubricate. Grease that does not oxidize an# * harden--Grease that does not cake aa#r:. dog the passage Grease that cates properly--is MaaiHrtw GreaaCk Stop at tbe IfaadfatSE aign and HaneMsttia Grease for Aa It'll pay you! Woaaiefc Council Bluff)* Iowa MonaMotor Oils & Greases What Young Man Will We** The Cutter--How did you manage tO sell that suit which turned out to b# such a terrible misfit? The Clerk--A young chap tho was "collegiate.**--Y oungatown gram. m ..efcK -« « --» «• •*;' AUVCFiiiuig ww eiHuiey Advertising of Wembley exposition at London last year cost $600,000 anil more than 200.000 press clippings regarding the event were collected. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Even a perfect dull moments. companion haa his A wise word to the foolish la times sufficient. * A fable Is a stem-winding lie with a moral attachment. J SCLbAMS Hot water Sure ReHef ELL-ANS £54 AND 75* MCKAGES EVERVWHBIE An empty purse Is responsible for some matrimonial failures. When each player gets four of a kind it's certainly a great deal. Matrimonial history often begins where romantic courtshjp ends. Women are strongest when Incased In the armor of their weakness. When the eugenlsts get through maybe It will be aafe to give everybody liberty. Much jewelry must be stolen for the fun of it. Such a large quantity Is worthless. The Invalid realizes that he Is on the high road to recovery when he sees the doctor's bill. We wont accept anything aa "Art" merely because we can't understand It--poetry or painting. •*Cl: RESINOL' Sooth 1 nq &ndHe*linq Aids Poor Complexions #• Btsckee's Synf .miff Trc Successful far M yess% 90c and 90c bsHlss AM DRUGGISTS PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ^ WE* HINDERCORN8 lonsss. »te-, stops til |(Ib. «mns sosrtlmt t feat, uskas walking easy. Htkr stflattOMi » "•--J Chsalssl Worts. Auacps. «• a »i.«! Any but a weak character resents being forcibly reformed; and usually tbe weak ones do, too. Irritating "As a great musician, what was your handicap?" "Listening to gossip while pifljing sonatas." fists. Hlseoz < Are Your Mies Botberisc iMt for tub* of PILR CBRATK. RecommMidsd by physician*. May save an operation. Atnswortfc Spec. Co.. fill Ridge Bids.. Kansas Cltjr, Mfc MKN AND WOMKN OF ALL VOCATIONS wanted for position* In the West. Writ# tp what you want. WESTERN VOCATIONAL BUREAU. 10$ Central Block. Pueblo. Colli Hie Measure of Time "What did the minister preach about?" "About ten or twelve hoars It seemed to me." Tuff *un, Thatt Dick--A man shouldn't ever deceive his wife. Tom--Well, If he didn't, how would he ever get her In the first placef-- I Dartmouth Jack o' Lantern. ' ru Farms Near Lovely Golf C«ast--Small monthly payments. We furnish and care f<* trass. Orowers report yield 1500 acre. Writs ua. Smlth-Wrisht Farms. Elcampo, TesaSi. CASH FOB DENTAL GOLD Platinum. Sliver. Diamonds. Magneto PolBtA Falsa Teeth, Jewelry. Cash by return majfc •OKI a a a. Co., OTSBCO. MJCH. $50 Weekly Telegraphers In demand for positions »<>• open with railroads. comraeroUi and Privals wire concerns. It csn come 'o Chicago WJ will help you set a Job payin* 111 to Wfc weekly while qualifying In evening for tlon as telegrapher. Write CHIEF OnaATOS _ INS IMS, tt» 8. 8*a*a S*> CMsasi> Ok W. N. U« CHICAGO* NO. 31- The secret of good breads %ast loam. Thrill in Catching Amazon- River Fish The largest freah-water fish In the world is found only In the Amason river and Its long tributaries, and Is called the plrarucu and commonly the "tlvfer cow." The boats used for hunting it are native craft, half canoe, half rowboat Tbe fisherman floats Quietly In his boat until one of the mammoth Qah rises and begins playing on the surface of the water. Then he pad- Ml j^aV-Ni tOLSITTMm when ha raaehea a good position, har- P®00® -It Tho apear shaft breaks from the point when It strikes tbe Ash, which Is held by a cord attached to the point. From the moment It is harpooned It Imperils the life of the fisherman. It runs and rushes toward the canoe, threatening to overturn It. Only constant attention and extreme agility on the part of tho native keepa tha boat right aide np en tha soilage The fish churns through the water, pulling the canoe after It. From shore to shore and many miles up and down tbe river tbe angered mammal thrashes. After It has become exhausted the Indian pulls It alongside the canoe and kills it w|th his machete. Early Adventurers In the summer of 1793, Alexander Mackenzie, Montreal fur trader and explorer, crossed the Rocky mountains and what Is now British Columbia, and the PaefAc coast an June 22. Ha was the Drat white man to cross this continent by a route north of Mexico. At that very time Captain Vancouver was exploring and charting the coast of British Columbia. Art your children sturdy? If your child is delicate, tr» ^ Jitable,backward in school, ' took carefully to the food eaten. Have plenty of good liome-made bread. It's - wholesome and children love its flavor. His Life Regulated Japan always has been tbe claaale land of sumptuary legislation. In old Japan there were regulations for every detail of a man's life, from the wearlng of a beard and the manner of dressing the hair to tbe price his wife -*^"'4 per fef frar hsirptns. , '•Tr - •" mc £ ;• ; .. • - - *" 4 ' ' a '"%V 4vv rr - * JOT JNCC *n?te Art o/BoJdng Bread" MUX

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