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Show 1 Lightei Buses New buses made of aluminum weigh from 1H to 2 tons less than previous models. Japs Like Baseball Baseball is more popular in Japan than anywhere else except in the United States and Canada. Lacks Nitrogen The firing of corn during the ex ceptionally wet weather Is principally princi-pally due to a lack of nitrogen, largest inflatable rubber units ever made (200 ft. long and 25 ft. high) were the pneumatic breakwaters used to control the wave on the beaches during Hi Normandy invasion. in-vasion. The various raw materials used in the manufacture of tires came from 35 different states. 35.7 pounds of synthetic rubber are used up in driving o car 20,000 miles at 35 m. p. h. 61 pounds are used while driving the tame number num-ber of miles at 50 m. p. h. Sponge rubber, century-eld discovery, may become a hundred-million-dollar industry. Goodrich I II 4 - I I fABLKS IN SLANG j I rubber OB Jf" T "m ' iir -v?3fc ma i .if is? ess &ur... ..:,ff i i I wish.. rCuriosa Americana4 By Elmo Scott Watson The GRAPHIC BIBLE By LEWIS BROWNE McClure Newspaper Smdicete. ..... . '"vrwwni,.iii..., , nnuaemce. i emmtnBmmmsaaeaMBmni BUY He Started to Live Up to His Reputation THE TIRED TYPICALS DOfJDG! (1) They are the safest place in all the world for your savings. (2) They are a written promise from the United States of America to pay you back every penny you put in (3) They pay you back $4 for every $3 you put in, at the end of ten years pay you interest at tne rate of ve st) You may turn them in and get your cash back at any time after wj aays. l he longer you hold them, the more they're worth. (5) They are never worth less than the money you invested in them. They von i gu uuwn in price, mat s a promise from the financially strong est institution in the world: The united states oi America. BUY VICTORY BONDS NOW! This advertisement contributed in co- aftSti?n.with the Dru& Cosmetic and Allied Industries, by the makers of 4 DR. CALDWELL'S SENNA LAXATIVE CONTAINED IN SYRUP PEPSIN If your nr m fill V?f "" -"ngesuon- vjjmi Mrt Hoe put .auto K?L Is to i wr J5n."gnt I"161,6 trouble anfMp ?"rm.m 5 W-CsiMli oftamS"recUed 'o.ibrr Blonae, .r"' " -tri Calox Too Pwr that thine. CfclOXr-WM PS QUINTS' 'neve coughing ! CHEST COLDS WITH IT H.-i'Tilltl NCE there was an unmiS' takable Reuben Glue who stood on a busy Corner in the Big Settlement, iust where he was a Hazard for all Pedestrians. He wore a linen Duster and carried a Carpet Bag with Red Flowers on it. The bristly Gosh-ding-its forked straight out from the Sub-maxillary and he sported a droopy Straw Hat with a Shoestring around it. Knowing that he was under Obser'ation by the City Folks he started in to live up to his Reputation. After rubbering rub-bering at a Tall Building, with the mouth open, he exclaimed: "Gosh all Firewood! We ain't got nothin' like that out at Rutabaga Center. Jumpin' cornstalks! I'm goin' to see all the Sights if I bust a Gal-lus! Gal-lus! Gol sizzle! Jimminy Crickets! Crick-ets! I 'low, calkerlate and swan that this hur Town is a Ding-Walloper!" He paused and wiped his freckles freck-les with a Bandana. It was a tough Assignment talking Dialect. As he stood there, impeding Traffic, who should approach him but the Traditional Policeman. "Phwat the Diwle do ye mane, blockin" the.Strate?". demanded the Copper. A 14-TUBE FARMER "This is most interesting," said the Agriculturist, forgetting his Role. "Often. I have wondered if any Officer of the Law really d.d use 'Phwat'." "I am compelled to do so by the Exigencies of Realism." said the Constable, lowering his Voice. "Even "Ev-en though I am of Polish Descent and was born In Roxbury. Mass.. I am supposed to speak Irish, even to the extent of Spalpeen, u there is such a Word." "I get you," said the Boob from the Sticks. "Any straneer walk ing up to you might be the Creative Cre-ative Artist who outs Titles into Moving pictures and it wouldn't do to ruin his illusions. But I am telling tell-ing you that it is no Burst of Laughter to chew a straw all Day or tote this awful-lookine Vanitv Case." "Then possibly I am mistaken in assuming that you have come to Town to buy a Gold Brick r trade your Farm for some nhonev Oil Stock," said the Officer. Vou sure are," was the Reolv. 'I am here to look up a new Radio Set. Our 14-tube Super Zingadino will not permit us to pick up either Honolulu or Rome and we want one with some class. This must be an Off Day with you. I have been sizing you up two Minutes and you haven't clubbed anyone yet. Now, in the two-reel Comics" "I'm a merciful Guy," said the Bobby. "I spare even the Hip-Flaskers Hip-Flaskers who are beggine for Trouble. I never, except on the screen, soak a Comic just to see him roll up the Eyes and do a Turpin Fadeaway. And yet. the only on-ly People who get me sized up right are the members of our Order. Or-der. We have an extremely gumshoe gum-shoe Organization called The Society So-ciety of Overworked Types. Per haps you would like to attend a Meeting.' LAMENT OF THE T. B. M. "Would they let me back out of this Character Costume and appear in my regular clothes?" asked the Hayseed. "That is the idea of the Club. We get together In Private and swap Troubles and sympathize with Each Other." So that is how it came about that the Conventional Yao was tak en by the Usual Policeman to meet the Flapper, the Sheik, the Devilish Old Lady and the Tired Business Man. They dined in a quiet Alcove. The Tired Business Man said he MONROE (?) DOCTRINE TE CALL it the "Monroe Doc-! ' trine" but it might more prop-, erly be called the "Adams Doc-i trine, for John Quincy Adams, Monroe's secretary of state, as the man who saw the need for it and formulated it even though it did appear in Monroe's handwriting in his message to congress in December, De-cember, 1823. But if you want to go back even farther for its origin, then a pretty pret-ty Russian baroness comes in for her share of responsibility. Her ! name was Barbara Juliane von ! Vietinghoff-Scheel and she was the! youthful wife of elderlv Baron von 1 I Krudener, Russian ambassador to Berlin. Also she became the sweetheart sweet-heart of Alexander I. czar of all the Russias, and under her spell he supported her scheme for a Holy Alliance by which, she believed, the world could be run according to the principles of Christian charity. All the sovereigns of Europe, except ex-cept the pope, the king of England Eng-land and the sultan of Turkey, joined the Holy Alliance, thereby pledging themselves to aid each omer when the need arose. When Spain lost her American colonies and called upon the Holy Alliance to help her get them back, George Canning, British foreign minister, proposed that the United States join with England in opposing the plan. John Quincy Adams, however, proposed that an independent dec laration or policy be issued. It tow A luut j would have to hurrv as a now Girls and Music Show was opening waf toe famous Monroe Doctrine ana ne naa been advertised as a ( WI"cn Drought about the collapse First Nighter for so long that now ' 01 Holy Alliance, the Piece wouldn't ring up unless ! ay Helen of Troy had "the he was in the Front Row. i face that launched a thousand "If you think you are getting a i shiPS:" B"t the pretty face of Bar- raw ueal, look at me," he said to ! ""C!,B von AJuaener has been re- i L"J 9AMAUTAnI gC?jPn Disputed I St AVv n"--i SfjQ WUDEA Jf THE REMNANT RETURNS FROM EXILE sponsible for keeping the fleets of the Umted States, for the last cen- roe Doctrine" which was formu lated by John Quincy Adams. LIGHTS OUT me visiting Turnip Grower. "Just because I toil like a Turk all Day, I am supposed to hurry out about 6:30 P. M. seeking any kind of relaxing re-laxing Entertainment so long as It is Noisy, Senseless and moderately moder-ately Indecent. What do I wish to do? Go home and play Chess. ! JF THE lights in a convention hall What must I do? Get right down j 1 hadn't gone out when they did, in the Talcum Powder Zone, next James G. Blaine might have been to the Big Fiddle, and explode with i President of the United States Laughter at all the Wheezes which It happened in Cincinnati in 1876. Happy Cal Wagner pulled in San- When the Republican national con-dusky con-dusky in 1833." vention opened, Blaine was the out- Tl HOSE who returned were daring souls indeed. To get back to the old homeland they had to journey many months across the desert. And when they got back, only shambles sham-bles greeted their gaze. Disappointments Disap-pointments and hardships followed fol-lowed close on each other's heels tury. ready to back up the "Mon-1 from very start- Jerusalem THE SHEIK SPEAKS standing candidate for the nomi- 'How about having one Foot in ! "auo"' Altnou8n was short of the Grave and being compelled to i e ne"ssarv majority on the first dance with the Other One?" asked f DaIIOts. on the seventh ballot the Devilish Old Lady. Not a Circumstance," ex claimed the Sheik. "Because I put some latent Leather Polish on my was a heap of ruins, and the fields roundabout were choked with wild growths and weeds. Houses had to be put up and cisterns dug; the fields had t be cleared and tilled. Seventeen years they struggled along in that fashion, and then almost al-most all the zeal and idealism they had brought with them from Babylonia Baby-lonia seeped out of their wearied souls. They were discouraged and miserable. Perhaps they cursed the day they had ever left the prosperous pros-perous land of their exile. And then once more the prophets proph-ets reappeared. One was an aged man named Haggai, who had played in the streets of the old Je- flcial in the Persian court, a Jew named Nehemlah. Learning of the desperate plight of his brethren in Judah, this Nehemlah asked the king of Persia for permission to go back as governor of his people's homeland. The permission was quickly granted, for the king like Cyrus long before him well knew how important it was that the bridge called Palestine be held by J t fcujjic wno rjore mm good will. So, armed with all the authority of the great Persian emperor, Nehe-miah Nehe-miah started out on the three months' journey to Jerusalem. Batcnona Imports In 1931, the first year In which this country imported ro tenons roots in commercial quantities, our Imports wert only 8.400 pounds. By 1940 they tad expanded to 6.500,000 pounds, ttotenone is used in insecticides.' Versatile Frail Pieties adapt themselves read fly to innumerable types of desserts and salads. In addition to delicious flavor, they offer fair amounts of vitamins A and C Illinois Cropland Com. soybeans, oats and hay com-prise com-prise 90 per cent of the total erop- and in Illinois ill mm with -Him Energy tonic If you catch cold MiUjp-bcoa rou lack all the natural A4D Viumina and nnrrhulMinv, natural o!l yoo need-yon may d amated how ScotU Emnbton can help build ennvv, ilmtu and rwwtoar. Try it t Set why many doctor recommend this f ood-Utine, high mercy, food ....i,,;. pig m your aromritt-a. I ' Blooming Uato It took clothes-ration points for an Australian girl to buy i hat Snoi ing this, United States soldiers often brought to their dates specially special-ly made headpieces of fresh flowers. This custom, started by our troops became the rage in hat-scarce Australia. tTogrtaMve Century The barometer and the thermometer thermom-eter were developed in the 17th cen-tury. Sandwich Making In making sandwiches have all materials fresh, crisp and well-fla. vored. Mayonnaise or cooked salad dressing should be used to combine meat, egg or vegetable sandwich ingredients, or to spread on bread to prevent absorption of any moisture mois-ture In filling material. For sweet sandwiches, spread soft butter an the bread. Rubber Gloves In many forms of houseeleanlne. rubber gloves furnish a convenient protection for the hands. After each using they should be dipped in a basin of suds, rinsed thoroughly in clear water, and patted dry with soft cloth. Dust them inside and out with talcum powder before putting away. Heating Safety One of the most notable Innovations Innova-tions in safe heating is the wet base boiler in which water circulates under un-der the ash pit. The fact that the boiler can be placed on a combustible combusti-ble floor is of interest in connection with the trend toward the basement-less basement-less house In such houses it is often desirable to instaU the boiler on a wooden floor in a utility room lor kitchen. Other safety features of modern boilers are (oot-treadle door openers, ball-shaped, air-cooled handles han-dles and side shakers, making it easier to open and close doors. Lncky Stones Emeralds were once believed to be beneficial to the eyes and amethysts ame-thysts were thought to prevent drunkenness, according to Encyclo paedia Brltannica, The belief la lucky stones still exists. Bath Banishes Blues According to etymologists, the English word "bath" comes Indirectly Indi-rectly from a Greek word meaning "to drive sadness from the mind." Which goes to prove again that the classic Greeks were a modem people peo-ple and that they knew the full value of bodily cleansing. Bathe frequently frequent-ly and thoroughly, and thus "drive sadness from the mind." naturally dark Hair and attended a few Parties they branded me a he had the votes of 351 delegates. almost enough to win the nomina tion. It was growing late and" the lights 1 rusalem in his childhood were turned on gas jets, for this j A bitter famine was sweeping "M uewre me aay or tne electric . across me land, and to hnth h,,. Lizard. I am just a young Fellow ! ght The Blaine men were hurry-; gai and Zechariah it seemed that trying to find a little Sunshine in j " lu pul lnelr man ovcr- ; 11 "uu Dec" senl as divine punish- a World overhung with the dark ' suoaeniy me lights went meni. iney believed it had come clouds of Restrictive Legislation : out .and tte busincs of the con- because the people had neglected and, naturally, it is embarrassing "a auenuea wnue uieis lempie. tor themselves the to be regarded as a Society Prob- manasemcnt oi the hall tried to lo- P"Ple had provided stout houses, lem. cate tne trouble. The blaine men but for God they had built only a "I doubt if I am any more de- 1 ffa"- FinaIy the suI)erin" i rude a,t:,r-praved a,t:,r-praved than my Grand-Dad who ' JP."1 the, f as wo.rks aounced Through all the streets o. Jeru- T c V , coumnl Bc lcat-jsalem went those two men. Hag-ed. Hag-ed. So the only thing to do was to ; gai and Zechariah. with their bit-mUr? bit-mUr? T T1 her complaints. They besceched When toe delegates reconvened. ! and cursed, they pleaded and re- h . raineo ; viied, until at last the settlers be im uiutcu uji rvumeriora o. nayes, who was nominated. In the much-disputed much-disputed election of 1876 he defeated Samuel J. Tilden, the Democratic nominee, and went to the White House. It might have j but they were spumed. uccn uiaine oi Maine who went there, if the lights in Cincinnati hadn't gone out that night. took Apple Jack and carried a Pis tol or my respectable Father who owned Trotting Horses and knew how to deal Faro. Youth has always al-ways taken its Fling but Youth never had any active Press Agents until it became fashionable to peek over Transoms, work the Key-Hole and try to regulate the affairs of Every One IJlse. "Remember, it is not very long since Collegians, who are jiow weeping over a lost Universe, had Keg Parties on the Campus. DOING THKIR STUFF If he expected any Pity from the Flupper he was fooled. She came to Bat with a Vengeance. "When all is said and done," spoke up Uttle Cream Face, "I am gan to rebuild the long-ruined sanctuary. sanc-tuary. The wretched Hebrew peasants peas-ants who had never been deported deport-ed but had remained in Palestine. oftVrod to share in the holv labor- The returned exiles looked down I on them as an inferior lot. Those (peasants, especially in the North, i in what ntui hnH l-w... u i GREATLY EXAGGERATED j )f Israel, had - Cf 01 the most famous of Mark ' the heathens who had been set-Twain's set-Twain's witty remarks result- i tied there by the Assyrians 200 ed from a case of mistaken identi-j years before: and they had become ty- j ignorant and debased. Even those In 1897 his cousin. James H. who had hoi-n lfi . .K-,l-l.. f-v . . . I U U1U Hiuij ueen OI lne j-aes and Siemens, was laKen seriously ill in , bouth, in Judah. had intermarried the Goat of the entire Outfit I've London. Samuel L. Clemens (Mark !and lost caste. The people just re gat to observe the Styles or else Twain) happened to be in the Brit-; turned from Babvlunia acted very stay in my room and yet, every ish capital at the time and some-; much like country folk who after time I give a Parade, wearing at how a report got out that the great I many years in the big city return least six Ounces of Clothing, the humorist had died. Uo the village of their birth -.ml -- V6. nil me i.iwcu,,,.. kvi-ui reporiers ,miud tne neighbors among whom Kelts and talk about calling out the from London newspapers called at 'they were reared. State Guard. the house where Twain was stav-1 u... .i .... "Do you think it . Ra ine to eet the rtetniu f h.,.k I., "K UJ4 Pt-a-many His first undertaking, once he arrived ar-rived in the ruined city, was that of rebuilding the wall. He realized that until the, city was protected from its enemies the inhabitants could never be at rest. . Accordingly According-ly he drafted all the able-bodied Jews in and around Jerusalem, and set them to work. It was a difficult undertaking, chiefly because be-cause the Samaritans would give the builders no rest Twfl divisions of Jews had to be organized: one to build and another to fight There was endless spying and conspiring and deception. Nehemiah hurried the work with all his might, for the Samaritans had carried their agitation agi-tation against him as far as the court of Persia, and he feared he might suddenly be recalled. Finally, though laboring most of the time under fire, Nehemiah's men completed the wall It extended ex-tended much farther than the one it replaced, for it enclosed not merely Jerusalem, but also several mue nearby villages. In effect it was the foundation of the restored Jewish state. The rebuilding of the city wall was, however, but the beginning of Nehemiah's work. Within the community com-munity the morale was at its low est ebb, and to this the leader had next to turn his attention. The poor, who had had to neelect their farms while working on the wall, were now being crushed in the fists of the money-lenders. The priests were lazy and dissolute; the laymen lay-men scoffed at God and his wor ship. The Sabbath, which had attained at-tained such importance in the ex ile, was now neglected and forgotten. for-gotten. The taking of heathen and half-breed women as wives was common in every family It was clear that unless a complete and drastic reform was brought about immediately, the career of the whole community would soon be ended. Wash Cement Floors Cement floors of the garage and oasement can be scrubbed with a broom or long handled brush dipped In a pail of thick apapsuds. Use a garden hose for quick rinsing. This is an economical use for partly uiiea suas rrom the wash machine or iud. WONDERFUL RELIEF From Bladder Irritations! Famous doctor's discoverv acts on t U . . . - - Kidneys to increase qrine and relievo painful bladder irritations caused bj eiceu acidity in the urine ht.AA lu.., """T ". j . .....I..., ana rTin-aown Icelinr ft! Wily in - urln. tSSi L.? SHi?J,-do,lor "caver DR b. . awAMf ROOT. For Swamp phy.jc.il. Swamp Root i w.lully blended combination ol IS herb., rooiV v.re ablr. b.,.m. and otbrr n.turll In arodient.. If. not h.r.h or Ubl".rlnV ? rou ImI world bettor le.tl t lul'X'" K'i4 m,w TODAY! Like tbou.and. of other, yoy'll be Ud th.t you did. Send auno .Widdre.! to ?'" E, Kilmer A Co., lne"B I25S. SUmford, Conn. Or,., IbXt'Sead I oac. All drufil.i. .. SwDp Boot. Plan Baths If the man of the house has been accustomed to taking his daily show er in the morning, reserve this time for hlnx The children might bathe In the evening, aliotins the tim. cording to their ages and when they go to bei The younger children might be bathed before dinner, old-er old-er children later. Plan your own bath for whichever hour will give rvu uie most relaxation. Eggs Nutritions Eggs help keep the body healthy. nk strong muscles and red blood. A child needs four to five ggs a week. An older person needs teres to Ave eggs a week. Eggs may food's! V 0t mlXei to otJie Whip Soap Flakes Whip your soap flakes in s little hot water with an egg beater and you will need fewer flakes and get better results. "r666 COLD PREPARATIONS UQUIMABUTS. 5ALVE. NOSE DROPS USt ONLYASOIBttltD sk i. if r iir-iisi JUST A " "NMtAiMliei "SUCK Uar S PSH IN FT ATHroc ! In-IUCK UirU'I WNU 4I-4S to learn to smoke tl.se rir srpttM Great was their in.rnri. h. tk. A,)U hap- made of Oakum? (,r to drive a supposed dead man opened the 11 , Car at sixty; or keep on applying door to admit them. When they ZL c to -all Th, tv 7 T, u' Fresh Paint? But what can I do? confessed to him their purpose in r , inr " ' lb' : l'f al' fa,th 1 I am a Short Sport I will lose coming, he said. "You tad a pret- Lv i,H th ' " l' b'1" my Ticket. Even the Sister who t? lively cornse. don't vo..'" L ' ? . J C'u,lAn as they "But our editors expect us to mryZi'Z bring back a story about your hafJ ,,de ,llt, p J1 4tt shaTwfL.0"6 rep(rtpr - T dr"uu' '.iir-n j , . ",e m',0-e its redemption unsoeak- Wcll. said Mark Twain, "you abv dlIIicult t,,K can just tell them that the reDort ...... . . .... . to attract Attention .or be regard- of my death has be-n greatly ex- to God and h, r 1," T'K I" ""I .j. , 1 IICJI wtl"e called tiic ' Pious." and they rn Nmi 1 ,.,,,n ,..r... j .. .. . ' . i-mru 10 jjive up lloje. The Kinkajou Thr ch"'f protr tant was a The kinkajou is a species of the !'rp0'f'"!t f,',"n .we k!",'w s i - . lachi. and thoueh nrvsi v H.:. h-.A taken fast hold on him there was still much of the old prophetic spirit ablaze in his preachment talks to the Clubs on the Decline and Fall of the Rising Generation expects me to wear Gold Slippers and pull my funny Lid over one Eye. I'm trying to look like the Pictures in the Magazines so as not ed as a Freak. At that moment a pale Person with Double-O specs c; me and sat at a nearby Table. "Be on your Guard." cautioned the Business Man. "He looks like a Writer. We had better do our Regular Stuff. " aggerated!' e w. raccoon family found in South America, and sometimes known as a honey bear, a yellow lemur, a While tho nfFtfnr i;i manaviri. and . ... M.1U,S . " But u, vain did he raise h, ,.ir. ay had almost passed up his Brogue the Sheik grabbed sel- The adult ' the of a large ,rr ,ha A . u r i i . . -i t i . . , . ., . . 1 " tne a uic ueviiisn vjia Laay and said. ,ur IS snon. micK ana i uu. iviu. iei . men me wax w.wn m tuiunni wnn ,u . , ... . on the Floor" shadines of deer. hrn- n th. w lh.e res'jecl of lne The Word The Tired Business Man began and over the back and ribs. A pe- h and ll h 1 " JU" rolling his eyes at the Flapper, who culiar feature of this covenng is the ?J S"me called the Waiter by his First flexibility of the skm. It can be jj' ' u,d carr a" Name and asked him if he couldn't fetched several inches from the g nd nww ooay with no discomfort to the ani- u-,,..,, mai and serves as a great protec NEBEAHA" COMES TO THE tion when attacked.. The lone tail is ; XV E much the same cs a monkey's and "THE net' word of authority used in the same lashion for holding came V- 1 " lirre. U was slip them a little TNT. And it was all First-Class Material Materi-al for the Author. He was observing observ-ing Life. MORAL: Be yourself even if you have to study a Book of Rules. i or grasping an object. arought from Habylon by a high of- Nehemiah and another leader, a scribe named Ezra, realized this and fell to work. They assembled the whole people in Jerusalem and then read them the law. They declared de-clared peremptorily that all who had taken heathen wives into thi'ir homes a, would have to send the women away. Outstanding debts were to be canceled; the priest- i hood had to purge itself; the Sabbath Sab-bath laws were henceforth to be strictly enforced. Thus the life of the community was swept clean from end to end by the two reformers. re-formers. From a lawless, reckless, reck-less, godless populace, the Jews were suddenly transformed into a band of puritans. And th" community com-munity was saved- anyway for a while. And now as never before the Jews who had remained in exile began to throng jack to their homeland. From Babylonia they came in a steady stream; probably probab-ly from Egypt and other lands, too. Back they came to the little hills of Judca, once more to take un life there. But it was a life far different dif-ferent from that which their ancestors an-cestors had known two centuries earlier. The newcomers were filled with a thousand new ideas gleaned from the foreign peoples among whom they had sojourned. They were no longer simple tribesmen with crude "small - town" ideas. They had traveled and seen the world. They were "civilized." sasywayto(C0( STUFFY NOSTRILS When Mttrfls are cloggad, rod your nose feels raw, membranes swollen, rr ih for tooling, tooih-ino tooih-ino Menlhohtum. Spread i . Inside nostrils . . . nd snuff well back. Ins' ntly it starts to 1) Help thin out thick muca; 2t Soothe irritated membranes; 3; Help red ice swelling-; 4) Stimulate Stimu-late local blood supply to "sick" area. Every breath brings quick, welcome relief. To open stuffy nostrils,.(et effective Mentholatum today, the Medicated Nasal-Unguent, Jars, tubes 80. Nearly a Million Now In Use! Holds 100 lbs. ef Mat Semi-automatic, Magazine feed. e Bonis any kind ef coal, coke or briquets. Heats s0 Say and eight without refutling-li olds lire several days aa doted draft Assam substantial fuel savings. Equipped wits aateniatie draft control The amazing, exclusive, patented, Interior construction of the WARM MORNING Coal Heater has won acclaim by owners throughout the Nation. It's famous for she abundance of steady, clean heat it produces. And you'll be pleased with Its remarkable fuel economy and ease of opera rioo. SEE V0UR DEAUJ-He will gladly show yow the many remarkable merits of the WARM MORNlNO.necoal heater that outsells them eJL If he to temporarily our, remember ...a Warm Morning it worth waiting for. LOCK STOVE CO, 114 West 11th St. KANSAS CITY S, MO. , ,iiiifPaalWW-sssMiil m ! ; f I V- - Mooasa LJ |