McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 May 1913, p. 7

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GRACEFUL IN DESIGN COtTUMEOF GREY CHARMEU8E 4\J : '/PARTICULARLY appealing >vV . Cmbedles All the Best 8tyle Features \?4j If the 8wi«on--Hit and Pirasol to I K v Match Add Brightneeato the Toilette. i&'i A coetome shown here of grey char- mease most appeal to everyone of refined taste. The style features of the season are embodied in it, and it u fli/jng very ^rscsfu! lluss, following those of the figure cleverly. Tk® draped skirts are bunglesome and uncneefal except when managed care- folly. Bach good management Is pMy... , ' '. %Jkl\ J* 4 * *•> J'0 C0MF0RTERj0R_B«Bys COT PLAN ACTIVE CAMPAIGN AGAINST r ^ . 4 v ' ' • shown in this case. The round neck with turn-back collar admits a guimpe of lace if deslfed. The drop shoulder joins a small puffed sleeve terminating in a turn-back cuff. The collar and cuffs are made of brocade matching " the gown in color. The modest split or curved seam at the left is about ankle high. Grey silk stockings and satin slippers are worn with the gown. A finishing touch is shown in the hat and parasol made to match. They brighten the toilette delightfully. The hat Is of leghorn with a drapery of checked silk and trimming of broad * velvet ribbon with a big cluster of roses at the back. For this particu­ lar gown the combination could not be better. The silk is in black and white check with cerise border and the roses are la shades of cerise mounted with broad velvet ribbon in black. MA CLE TO SUIT ALL COSTUMES Waists of Various Materials Intended to Complement the Skirt With Which They Are Worn. : I T&e waists now being featured (or wear with tailored suits are, accoad* ing to the Dry Goods Economist, made of matching chiffon, crepe de chine, satin or messallne. White net and lace waists are also good style for supplementing the more dressy tail­ ored suite. In many departments the models designed for special wear are grouped together on one table, or in the part of the counter. Waists for traveling, for athletic ' wear or for general utility purposes , arc made along the lines of the man­ nish shirt. In New York stores, such waists in dark-colored crepe de chine, meesaline, brocade and fancy silks are strongly featured. In the washable varieties of crepe $9 chine, Jap silks and corded silk* the ground is usually white, marked off with stripes in bright colors. Middy blouses, finished with a broad band over the hips, are strongly feat­ ured for slender young women and girls. They are advertised by retail­ ers as Balkan middy blouses. Pretty Adornment Expensive to •«y» but May Easily Be Made in th* Leisure -Momenta. .4p exclusive shop is displaying a ldvety comforter for baby which can easily be duplicated at home. It is •of white china silk trimmed with small pink roses. The materials re­ quired for this fascinating article are two yards of silk, three, and one-half yards of pink ribbon and one pound of cotton batting. Take one yard of the silk and mark the position of the roses. Arrange these in seven rows across the tvidth and BKven across the length, alternat­ ing four and three roses. _ Start the rows four inches from the edge. Baste one piece of the silk to a layer of cotton before joining the other piece. Sew through the two pieces of silk and the cotton at the places marked for the roses, and neatly whipstitch the four sides of the comforter toget.hr er. To fashion the ribbon roses take one-eighth of a yard of ribbon a half inch In width. Turn under the edges and crease the ribbon at the center. Roll the ribbon around until a center is formed and sew firmly in position. Swirl the remainder of the ribbon loosely around the heart of the rose vatll it is completed. Fasten a rose securely to each place marked on the comforter. This is a lovely gift for the layette, for .it is extremely dainty and not diffi­ cult to make. Crepe de chine or satin may be substituted for the silk if de- Sired.--Boston Globe. THE CHINCH BUG IN ILLINOIS AFFECT THE MIND STRANGELY Important Part That Various Colors SffUny In Life Has Not Bet&TV Sufficiently Recognized* Have you ever stopped to think of the Important part that color plays in your life? Possibly not, but psycho­ logists and some medical specialists-- and they are paying more and more attention to the subject--say that some colors have all sorts of curious effects to aaswer for. After a revolutionary outbreak some years ago in Russia, the fact came out that the punishment meted out to sev­ eral of the leaders of the rising was confinement in cells whose walls were painted violet. A few weeks spent in these cells turned keen-witted restless men into dull, stupid fellows, who moved and spoke as dying men do after they have lost the power over brain and body. The effect of red is even more strik­ ing, red is said to produce restless­ ness and excitability, and no special­ ist will allow a highly nervous patient to remain long in a room that is either papered or furnished in that shade. And dressmakers complain that to work for any length of time upon a garment that is tinted red will cause the seamstress to become tired, have a headache, and feel nauseated. Perhaps that is why blue, brown and white have their turns as the "most popular color," while red is always a matter of individual taste, except in the matter of occasional trimming. PRETTY HAT Delicate Pet-fume. Some of the richest and most expen­ sive perfumes can be made in the fol­ lowing way: 8elect your blossoms, whatever essence you desire, pluck from the stems and drop into a jar half filled with almond or olive oil. Al­ low these flowers or leaves to lie for 24 hours in the oil, then squeeze through a cheesecloth bag into a per­ fectly clean glass dish. Repeat this operation until you have procured the strength you desire. Pour this es­ sence into a new jar and thoroughly mix with an equal quantity of pure rectified spirits. Let this mixture stand for three weeks, shaking and mixing it thoroughly every day. After this process it must be again strained, and then it is ready to be bottled for use. Trimming for 8mall Hats. Soft and airy are the crowns of hats covered with maline or crepe. Some­ times the material extends over the entire shape. It may be placed in folds •V or gathers, over both the crown and upper brim. Sometimes a portion of the side crown and upper brim are .covered with maline or crepe, and the top of the crown and under brim are -"Jgof milan or hemp. * % Printed crepes in oriental colors are ' .^effectively used in the latter form. ^'V Pipings of a contrasting color usually : -v^head the top of the side crown cover- \^f|ing. Maline or crepe in a contrasting j^jj^color is fitted over the upper portion t mary small shapes of milan, hemp, £ ^f^hair or leghorn, and sometimes this jeoft material is made in a loose puff- v<*Jed effect, giving the appearance of SOft tam-o'-shanter. Black straw, forms this wide brimmed hat. The trimming Is com­ posed of blue velvet ribbon, which is pleated round the crown. A velvet rose at the front completes the trim- m*i^| Neckwear Styles. The fact that a large distribution of low oollars is expected during the coming season is resulting in the presentation of a host of new styles, according to the Dry Goods Econo­ mist Deep shouldempointed numbers continue In the lead* Cream batiste of the sheerest quality beautifully embroidered, with fine hemstitching and dainty headings and laces, are used in the development of the fore­ most models. Cream batiste is also used in some of the handsomest flat collars 'with jabots. The collar por­ tions follow largely the deep shoul­ der point idea and the jabots are' of conservative slse and style. Flat pleated jabots are especially liked. Net, figured and dotted crepes, plain and fancy voiles and crepe de chine are among the other prominent mate­ rials employed. New Embroidery Birniflngs. The new embroidery bandings »re / ^distinguished. Motife of what seem at ? g^flrst glance to be rich lace are incor- - .^jtiorated in grounds of velvet embroid- jered linen and batiste; but by-and-by yjmtm realises that tk« whole fabric. A few plaited skirts are seen & the tailored suits. ground material, beautifully wrought embroidery and airy lace, is a product of the loom and woven In one continu­ ous design. Most of these handsome dtnbroideries corns from Switzerland, where the handlooms of St. Gall turn out work as exquisite and aB rich as any embroidery done In Madeira or Appenzelle. Some of these bandings and the flouncings to match are creamy in tone; some are a derided ecru, others have patterns in ecru on ^tjj^te grqund or vice yeraa. PteM Devastate* by Chinch Buga. Chiffon Veils. ft you have a particularly pretty chiffon veil that has become soiled from use and has lost Its pristine freshness, don't throw it away or spoil it by trying to waeh it in ordinary soap ' and water. Let it soak for half an hour tu an alcohol bath and then rinse It np and dowp for a few'minutes, being careful not to stretch it. Pat out as much of the liquid as you can without wringing "it and let i| dry slowly. All soil will be removed this way and even deiicate colors will not be Mar*. , By PROP. S. A. FORBES; State Entomologist, University of Ittt* nois. Beginning in several counties of southwestern Illinois In 1910 a de­ structive outbreak of chinch bugs be­ came general over about twenty coun­ ties in 1911, badly injuring hundreds of fields of wheat and oats, and kill­ ing more or less completely many thousands of acres of corn. The area dangerously infested in the following spring (of 1912) included some thirty southern counties; but the weather of the season proving much more fa- yorable to the infested crops than that of 1911, serious injury in 1912 was virtually limited to about ten counties within a semi-circular dis­ trict bounded by a curved line run­ ning, at a distance of some sixty miles from East St. Louis, from Green county on the north to Randolph County on the south. Preliminary Work and Publication. Measures were taken to organize the farmers of endangered counties for co-operative defense against the chinch bug in the spring and summer of 1912. At the district conferences of farmers' institute officers held in April, the situation was described,- and county officers were urged to or­ ganize their counties for a general attack on the chinch bug at the time of the wheat harvest. Following upon these conferences, mass meetings of farmers and business men were ad­ dressed in several counties and early in May a seven-page circular was is­ sued in an edition of 30,000 copies. Instruction as to Method. The chinch bug's escape from in­ fested fields to feed and breed in other crops can best be prevented by surrounding each field with a line of thick, viscid, road oil, with postholes beside it some thirty feet apart. Such a line can be made and kept effective long enough to catch virtually all the bugs in a field at a minimum expense of 35 cents a mile per day. A barrel of this oil. costing approximately $3.50, will serve the purpose of most farmers for this work. Coal tar may be used for the purpose where road oil cannot possibly be obtained, but It must be much more frequently re­ newed to keep it effective, and It is thus more costly of labor and time, i A well-made dusty furrow, with post- holes in the bottom* may serve a tepa- THE ECONOMICS OF FARM MANAGEMENT . ?' By DAVID KIN LEY, r' • Dean of the Graduate 8chool, AJ.nl- versity of Illinois. ( There are two aspects to farm man­ agement. One comprises the applica­ tion of the natural sciences, chemis­ try, physics and biology, to farming together with technical skill in hand­ ling the implements. The other as­ pect of farming has to do with the economics and financial, side. Two men may be equally well educated in scientific farming; they may havo equally good farms; they may even plant or sow the same crops; yet the profits of the two on equal capital may be different. The reason is that one may know better how to handle men than the other does. He may be able to read the signs of the market, follow the course of prices, get better facilities for getting his produce to market, and perhaps get better prices for it after it gets there. Moreover, he may know just where the leakages are in his expense. He will know what each thing costs him and what the net profit on it Is. In this aspect, farm management is an economic and financial question. The farmer is obliged nowadays to ask himself not only what his soil is best adapted for, but such questions as these: What are the products for which the market next Reason is likely to be best? What are the cheapest routes and ways of transportation? How shall I divide my capital among the various farming operations to get the largest net profit? Shall I put all my capital into one crop or shall I di­ versify my operations? Here is a man with, for example, |100,000 which he wants to Invest in OUR FUTURE HORSE MARKET Greatest Demand Will B« for Draft Animals on Farm for Use In Thorough Plowing. I bellev* that the greatest market for the draft horses of the future will be found on the farms, said Wayne Dinsmore, before Ohio Percheron Breeders' association. As the prices of farm products continue to advance, land values will inevitably advance and we must so till the soil as to se­ cure more abundant crops than be­ fore. High production on our farms come only with thorough tilling of the soil. Plowing must be thoroughly done and every furrow turned to as great a depth as the condition of the soil and the crop to be grown render advisa­ ble. The plowed land must be disked and must be well and frequently done, especially during the spring months, when land not so handled tends to lose a large*- share of its stored up moisture. The most fertile fields an those which reoeive moat liberal dressings porary purpose in very dry weather, but is made useless by rain. Chinch bugs may be killed on corn, without injury to the plant, by a tobacco preparation (black leaf 40) greatly di­ luted with weak soapsups. Before the season was over, It was found that the tobacco extract was unnecessary; chinch bugs were killed by the soap solution alone, with no injury to the corn, if cheap rosin soaps were used at the rate of a pound to six gallons of water. Substantial Progress Made. Important and very* encouraging progress has been made during the last two years towards a solution of the problem of chinch-bug control in this state. Never until last year have the farmers of any considerable district of Illinois really undertaken to defend their crops against the chinch bug, but when these insects have appeared in their fields they have simply waited as patiently as they could until the weather over­ came their enemies* The experience of 1911-12 has shoWn beyond question that it Is possible to fight tlfe chinch bug successfully and economically, and that crops endangered may be saved, even under very unfavorable conditions--much the more easily and certainly, however, if owners com­ bine and co-operate by neighbor­ hoods. The field assistants have reported chinch bugs present in their winter quarters in sufficient numbers to theraten a severe infestation of farm crops in sixteen southwestern Illinois counties during the coining year. The area dangerously Infested at the pres­ ent time extends as far north as San­ gamon, Morgan and Adams counties, south to Washington county, and east to include the western half of Marion county. The bugs will spread to un­ certain distances when they come out of their winter quarters, and scatter on the wing in search of food plants and places in which to lay their eggs. A considerable extension of this area in various directions is thus quite possible. Measures are being taken to organ- ize the counties threatened, for co­ operative work against the chinch bug and to supply materials at cost, according to the plan found highly successful in several counties last year. agriculture. Seme of it he will put in the purchase of land., Where Bhall he buy? If he Is wise, he will study not only the kind of soil in the differ­ ent neighborhoods that he has in mind, but the nearness of a farm to railroads, means of communication, the distance to market for the particu­ lar kind of product that his soil la best fitted for, the supply of labor, and so on. Having determined his location, he now asks himself, How shall I distri­ bute my investment? Shall I put all my working capital In one kind of farming and raise one crop, shall I vary my Industries, devoting part of my capital to dairying, part to truck gardening, and the rest to wheat or corn or oats, or all three? The answer to these questions will depend not only upon the character of the soil, but upon the other conditions that have already been mentioned. But there is more to be said. After he has determined how to apportion his cap­ ital, he must so conduct his operations as to know which is the most profit­ able. It is necessary for him to keep accounts. This does not involve a deep knowledge of bookkeeping, but he should keep statements of the cost of all operations, all expenses and oth­ er matters, so that at the end of a year or two he can tell which divi­ sion of his farm is most profitable. He may be able then to decide that he will make more by diminishing some farm operations and enlarging others, or, perhaps, by taking on something entirely new. For some years, v< have been studying this general subject In an elementary way at the university. We have prepared a simple form of farm accounts which is now being applied In certain districts of the state with the hope that those who are kin'dly using it and furnishing us some data will give us material out of which we may learn something useful. of barnyard manure and our modern machinery which renders this work so easy requires an*1 abundance of power in the way of horseflesh. Cul­ tivation, It is true, does not require such extremely heavy horses as the other work of the farm, yet animals must be of good weight and possess abundant strength to handle a riding cultivator for ten hours' steady work In the field, particularly where the work is well done. Haying with 6-foot mowers, 12- foot rakes and elevating hay loaders requires horses of more than usual strength, and the modern self-binder was never built for animals of light weight. In fact, throughout all the farm op­ erations we find urgent need for draft animals of the best conforma­ tion and with weight exceeding 1,600 pounds, even in working condition. In many of the farm operations animals weighing in excess of 1,800 pounds can be more efficiently used than thoM of the lighter weight. WERE RELATIVE Observance of Colored Mam , Really Offered 8ome Good ideas for : Worthy Reflection. official of one of the department# at Washington says that while going to his luncheon one afternoon he saw a military funeral passing down Penn­ sylvania avenue. As thq pageant passed the official was standing on the curb, hat in hand, and noting with interest the reversed arms, the flag- draped coffin, and the riderless horab behind some one touched him On the elbow and said: *"I hope you'll ex­ cuse me. boss, but would you mlrf tellin* me whether the dead so!4l4tt was anythin' to you?" "Why, no," answered the official, smiling in spite of himself, as ha turned and beheld a solemn-looking darky, of perhaps Bixty years Of age. "Excuse me again, boss," continued the negro, "but you kinder looked that sorry I thought mebbe he was some- thin' to you." "He was a bravo soldier," answer­ ed the official. The darky said nothing for a. mo­ ment. Finally, with a sigh; he added: "Wouldn't It be gran', boss, mournin' fer a man like that, s'posin' he was somethin" to you ?" p Helping the Little Fedovfc , The United Shoe Machinery Coui» pany is the only real obstacle to the formation of a shoe trust. We help the small manufacturer to start In business and keep going. He could not afford to buy and care for his ma- chines, but he can afford to lease them on the terms we give him based on the number of shoeB he makes--an average of less than 2 2-3 cents a pair --and let us keep them up to date. That is a fair arrangement. Some of the big fellows don't like our system, because they think we ought to give them special rates. 'But the little fel­ lows stand with us because they know we treat all manufacturers alike no matter how many machines they use. If it were not for our methods of doing business there would bo no small fac­ tories anywhere and no prosperous factories In small towns. The United Shoe Machinery Co* Boston, Mass.--Adv. Lor Exquisite Agony. fit was, to say the least of It," a ntion letter remarks, "just a little bit awkward that the electric light went out the other evening at the town house of "it presumably wealthy widow who had been doing a good deal of political entertaining. Th4 guests, to the number of a dozen, had just finished their soup when the un­ fortunate Incident occurred. The scramble to find a sufficient number of candles so that the dinner might proceed was attended with a great deal of difficulty and no little amuse­ ment. The butler, who is described as being a bit new to his job, was im­ mediately told to telephone to thd electric oompany, report the catas­ trophe imd demand attention to the matter. It was a trying moment for the guests when he returned to the dining room and announced in real Cockney accent: 'Please, my lady, the gentleman what's on the telephone says they Bent several warning letters unless the account was paid active steps would have to be taken."* Cuinng the heitf Jft Sitfft lam of upbuilding, - DANDRUFF COVERED SCALP 3002 Cass SL, St Louis, Mo.--"For five years I suffered with Itching of my body and scalp. My trouble began with a rash on my lower limbs which was very annoying, and my scalp was lit­ erally covered with dandruff. My hair used to come out by the handfuls and the itching of my body and Bcalp was terrible. I had used almost all the skin remedies on the market with no results, when I wrote for a little Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment and it gave me instant relief. Within one month's use of the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment parting, gently rubbing Cutlcura Oint> one strand of my hair coming out and I have not lost a minute of sleep since using the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment, which entirely cured me of itching of my body and scalp In its worst form. I also find the Cutlcura Soap a benefit in shaving." (Signed) CbaFles Judlln, Dec. 8, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Addresa post-card "Cutlcura, Dspt 1* Boston." Adv. Autocratic Englishman. One of the reason why English is expected to become a world wide lan­ guage is that English people refuse to team another. For Instance, at Mus­ cat, at the entrance to the Persian gulf, there lived for many years an English­ man, supposed to be the only, or al­ most the only, British resident on the 1,500 miles of Arabian coast line from Aden to Koweit. It would seem that he could hardly have escaped knowing Arabic. Yet he confessed that he could not speak a dozen words of that language. "But how do you carry on your trade?" some one asked. "Ob," he replied, "the beggars have'got to learn English." Important to Mothers Bxamine carefully every bottle qf CASTORIA^ a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and seo that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Church on Historic Site. St Alban's church, London, which occupies the site in Brook street of the thieves' kitchen described in "Oli­ ver Twist" is to celebrate its fiftieth year, of existence on June 22. From the date of its foundation it has had the faithful "Father" Stanton watch­ ing over its destinies. ladiks can weak shoes on* «U* smaller «fter uilnj Allen'* FOOt- Kaae the Antlaeptlc powder to be shaken la- to the shoe* It makes ttfbt or new ahoe« feel easy Gives rest and comfort. Refuta substitute.. For FREE trial package, ad- dre*» Allen S. Olinsted. I.e Roy, N. Y. Adv. -1 - practical. certainly touched me with his story of hard luck„r„ .0 "For how much?" 4 „ RHEUMATISM B A C K A C H E If ycra have Rheumatism, Backache or Piles or know of a wound on man or beast that will not heal, write for a FREE BOTTLE of Z-M-O---which will be sent postpaid by PARCEL POST Write today to M. R „ Zaegel & Co., 903 Main St., Sheboygan, Wis., for the free bottle of Z-MO. _ ' fZ'M >1 •; | 'I Make It Meaty. The author had just received a note from the editor saying he was in need of an article, "short snappy and meaty." "Great governor, man! Do you rea­ lize what you are asking?" Cried the Irate scribe. "It is easy enough to write something short--and snappy, too, as I feel Just now; but meaty-- meaty! Man alive! And meat at 25 cents the pound and soaring higher every day?- You don't suppose Til waste much of that edible radium on an article for which I'll probably re­ ceive a measly $5, do your' KHI the Plies Now and Prevent disease. A DA1ST FLY KILLER will do it. Kills thousands. Lasts all season. All dealera or six sent express paid for $1. H. SOMER3L 150 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Adv. Even a lasy man never gets tired running for office. < Vra. Whuslow'a Soothing Syr«|| for Children teething, softens the gums, redufcea lnflamma- lion.sllajra pain^urau wind colic Jfcc m botttaJUr It's far easier to form a good char­ acter thsn it is to reform a bad one. FOLEY KIDNEY PIUS A Soluble Aatkeptic Powrfer rich in cubativr Atui mva i si t remedy for mucous membran Make die Liver Do its Duty _ Nine times in ten when die BvCr fe right the stomach and bowels are lids. CARTER'S LITTLE OVER PILLS gently butfirmlyt pel a lazy liver toj do its duty. Cures Con- atipation, Lb-^ digestion, Sick Headache,' . . and Distress After Eatiaf. SHALL FILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL POOL' Genuine must bear Signature CARTERS ITTLE SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realise the fact that thousaa*| of women are now using RICH IN CURATIVE QUALITIES COR BAOKAOHK, NHKUMATISM. KIDNEYS AMD BLAODCK «• Ask Your Dealer For the W. B. Corset Best Adapted For t < Your Figure* , 1 W. B. Elastine-Redoso Cora els for Stout figures. $3.00 W. B. Nuform Corsets for average figures, $1.00 up. If your dealer la oaable to supply you, write to us. We will wend you our Illus­ trated catalogue containing complete line of W. B. Corsets, and send your seleeUon, postpaid, Ou receipt Ol yrlod aud twlud* our beautiful art calendar Fraa. WEINGARTEN BROS* CHICAGO. ILL. i aa a remedy for mucou^ membrane af» fections, such as sore throat, nasal OS pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulcer*, tlon, caused by female ills? Women who have been cured say "it Is worth its weight in gold." Dissolve in water an0 apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine in their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it luul no equal. Only 60c a large box at Drag* gists or sent postpaid on receipt oC price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Bottata. Mass; ' i ' ^ 'Vl*, " " 'SrW.' -SiS; < /spV^ SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITERS $3 rental for I monih $15 rental for 6 months SOLD ON EA8V PAYMENT PLAN Send for U ten to re and addresa of our noaraat offloe. Smith Premier Department. Remington Typewriter Company, Incorporated, S25-S3I Brosdaay, Near York EM AtoiM nayaiaMua at turn-isitaESirgjfea watytaGiw«rFaMH Wo. xxl tL»» a* DraprlefrL , •Wil WORK: FOR US In your town or county. Eiclnslvo right free. M* experience required. Uae<l by every body. Senas* eight. Commwaton over 100 per ccnt. FarUculaiai fraa. J. W. P1TCBB * CO.. Agents Wanted--Every man. womaa aai child uses our wonderful naw leader. Good repeater. 40o for complete outat or write for particulars. Ideal Novelty Ca., Ltees, U> W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 19-1913. ¥ • ?iir' •:P! Make Trucks Pay--Usd • '•A " ft ':-if: ,r i - t fQs Keep item busy and properly LUBRICATED. "* Polarine is aiade in ONE GRADE that lubrwcatM tNly tJ^Stv" ol motor in every kind of car or truck., It maintains the correct fabricating body el mmy aaelar ipssd er beat, and flows perfectly in zero weather. It keeps every friction point protected with a durable^ aBppeiy film. Millions of parts have ran for yeare oe Palatine pmcdcaQy without wear. The World's Oil Specialists make it after 50 yearn* ' with every kind of Ktbricids| problem and a study and types of cars. Polarine is worth to you many times its eost, becaosr it slope the largest part of motor truck liepiwistion Try it tor thrae months and note the saving in repairs. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (AS SSVIAXA COBPO££T!CX) o/ Smmial Lmbricating OiU for LmaJinm mmd Industrial Works of th* World am MtN3 TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE . O O W. L.tDOU.GLAS .oo s4 AND *&.oo SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BEST BOYS SHOES in the WOULD Strop, $2.50 and S3.00- The largest makers of Men's $3.50 and $4.00 shoes in the world. t|k rcur ds-aler to show J< V. i. Douglas S3.M, SI.OO and •4.0O Jostasfoodtpatrle, at and wear aa other makes costing •fi.OO to f|, --the only dlffareaee is the price. Shoes tm al Imiberi, styles and shapes to t«lt everybody; If you could visit W. I_ Doa|)as large facto- He* at Brockton, Mass., and see fer yourself bow oarefnlljf W. L. Douglas shoes, are made, trttuld thin understand wny tbej are-garrantea fit better, look better, hold their thaiu* and longer than any other make for the pnre. Oirrct from the factory n\trfntaaro( the fsaoUy, at all iMteaa. by rr.c! rpi si ise free. WrilearllltnlrMH It .*i;l *how joo haw to order b; and why you can tare moaay On year W. L. IMH U1.AS . . Brwktaa, M W. L. ora*c tirrct from the factory ftMl M tbf It li'l pcotT 8bo?# for rrtty inemosrof f •r by fowrcir. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES i vfei|2. '"O ^

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