Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1913 — Page 2

A CASE OF SUSPICION

By ELLIOT WALKER.

When the serpent of suspicion (struck ita poisonous fangs deep in the ingenuous heart of William Darley, (be lost no time. Few men were better known or ‘more thoroughly respected in HardShaven, than William Darley. He was jg>leasast, appreciable, simple of , ispeech and manner, despite his large (means. His placid, light blue eyes held a (contented twinkle; his fair beard and Jhair set oft the rosiness of his round (face; his comfortable figure invited a teat on the arm or back from his inti(tnates. Strangers smiled at him, involuntarily. j He liked a joke; even an outragejous pun made him laugh. No one envied his money, his position in society, or the lovely goldenhaired wife whose cheeks and eyes outshone his own in sparkle and love lot fun. It was Lucy Darley who introduced tteginald Wand to Hardhaven. “The brother of an old schoolmate,” •he explained. That was sufficient for Hardhaven, Including William Darley. His wife might have introduced the devil himeelf without a question from her doting husband. ' However, there was nothing Mephisjtophelian in the appearance of Regfinal Wand, unless it was his extrema glarkness of complexion, hair and eye, and the blackness of his beauty , only (heightened his attractiveness. Wand was a handsome youth, full .of high spirits, gallant to perfection, arith a low, thrilling voice, and a form of remarkable shapeliness, albeit he jwas barply of medium height. William Darley, who dealt in real •estate and securities welcomed the fcoy cordially, and forgot him. He was a (little too yoqthful for William. His wife, with a motherly air, apparently much amused over the anxiety of this arrival to meet the most charming young women of her set, led blm about as though he were a prize dog to be admired and petted, which be presently was. > Reginald W T and took the best Ibachelor apartments at the best hotel. His habits were excellent. An oc4asional cigarette, a glass of wine cautiously sipped, were his only deg>artures from strict propriety. He mingled little with the men, but treat ©d them all most courteously. The women raved over him. He ■was full of engagements, flirting harmlessly, and having a new admiration every week. Yet he called dutifully at the Darleys almost every day, in the early afternoons. He had much to recount to Lucia Darley of his doings. She laughingly retailed the most amusing Of them to William. Lucia Darley alone showed some relief at his going. Of late she had been very quiet, and more than ever devoted to her husband. A month later she a secret to William, at which he was overjoyed, for the atork had so far passed them by. It proved to he a boy. When the gratified man saw the Child, he glanced at the weak form on the b°d, and went softly out of the chamber. In his agonized ears the remark of the nurse rang mockingly. “Such a bead of hair, and so black.” With awful deliberation William Darley set to work. He had but one thought. His brain with lightning clearness traced back the months. The address of Reginald Ward? Yes —it was the city of B —in the state of Hew York. He remembered even the etreet number. In his library he unlocked a desk drawer, took out a revolver, and put It in his pocket. It was made for work, this heavy weapon; not play. He gnawed down the impulse to laugh loudly, and touched a button on his desk. “One of the nurses, Abe," he said, steadily, as the butler stood smiling. “Yes, sahj Congratulations, sah.” "Thanks!" Th idy professional nurse came promptly. “How is she, Miss Laird?” “Very weak, sir.” “Any danger?” “No, that is, she must be carefully tended, see no one at present, hear nothing exciting for a few days. Her heart isn’t as strong as it should be.” “Then I can go away on business?” “As well as not, Mr. Darley,” returned the woman, cheerily. Darley pressed a hahd over his working mouth as the woman left the room. “Lucia, too,” he gloated. “I shall confront them at the eternal bar of justice. We three! Ha! The shock will surely kill her." He felt curiously strong and settled now. It would be a mysterious murder, a suicide, and a sudden death, go he chuckled, deep in his throat, this simple, gentje natured man, transformed by the despair into another being. A quiet departure, a mechanical Journey, the arrival at his destination, all accomplished stolidly, even as a convict Is transferred to his place of execution, with no hope in mind save to meet without filAphing a horrible, but inexorable issue. Darley ate, smoked, read the papers with slight comprehension of their contents, even took a hand at whist with three strangers, and played accurately. A dull, numb sleep came to him at midnight. He awoke, less weary In body, with his resolution teW* dearly determined.

And when, at last, he stood before the house of his seeking, an uncanny calmness entered into the man. He felt sure of himself and his victim. A dazzled glance at the door plate, half readable in the morning sunshine, assured him further. It was the house. Darley rang waiting patiently in the intervals, his card in his hand. 4 Arranging his revolver handily; the moment Reginald JWaud appeared that moment should be his last. Darley waited. A Window on the floor above flew open. A head and part cf a body craned over the sill. - William Darley looked up and saw He saw the face of Reginald Wand and —something else. Half disclosed by the careless drapery showed a smooth, rounded neck, and below a glimpse- of that which no man has ever displayed. Be heard, dimly, a low shriek, half frightened, half laughter. “Oh, Mr. Darley. Don’t look! I thought it was a telegraph messenger.” The shutters slartmed, but the familiar voice kept on. “Tell me, quick! Is -it about dear Lucia? Has she—EZ “Yes,” uttered Darley, In a thick, vacant grunt, like a drunken person trying to find words. “A little boy.” “Do wait until I’m dressed. Where are the servants?” “Don’t know! Can’t wait!” ejaculated Darley in the same tone. “Business trip. Train. Gotter run.” He staggered down the steps, jamming at his hat. “Run!” Violet Rand, the madcap gfrl, who had won her expensive bet that she could masquerade for two months as a man, without detection, peered after him. “Run! Why! he is scarcely able to walk. I suppose William had to celebrate. Bless him! To think of his coming to tell me at this hour in that condition. Well, I’m glad it’s over..” -And she went back to bed. Darley’s mother-in-law embraced him vigorously as he entered his domicile. He seemed very nervous and impatient, although he hugged the old lady and laughed, almost dancing. . “I came as soon as I could,” she said. “My dear, he is the image of his grandfather. He was a very dark man, you remember.” “I don’t recollect much of anything,” quoth William Darley. “I want to see my wife.” “You can’t." “My baby, then.” “Of course. Come along!” “Such a tender-hearted man,” whispered Miss Laird to the other nurses, as Darley moved away from the bassonette. “He simply couldn’t keep from coming right home. Why, he shook like a leaf when he kissed the baby, and, I declare, foolish creature was considerably over the verge of tears." “Considerably,” agreed her assistant. “That man wouldn’t harm a kitten.” /Copyright, by Daily Story Pub. Co.)

Served ’Em Right.

Norman Hapgood, the editor-reform-er of New York, was talking about a political mutineer. ™" “SUch fellows,” said Mr. Hapgood, “ought to be served as Dr. Steenthly served his congregation. “Dr. Steenthly, on a sultry September morning, preached with sincerity and vigor a sermon that he had prepared with great pains. “But, for all the force of his argument #nd delivery, the good doctor was much vexed to see that a large part of his congregation slept. Several of his leading parishioners even snored. “Dr. Steenthly, at the end of his discourse, pounded on the lectern, and, when all were at last awake, he said, very frankly and mildly: “ 'My friends, this sermon cost me a great deal of trouble, and I don’t think you have paid it the attention it deserves I shall therefore repeat it. My text I take from —’ “And for a second time Dr. Steenthly preached his sermon from beginning to end.”

The Way We Live.

Mrs. Hannah Green sides, who on her ninety-dinth birthday calculated that she had slept 365.000 hours of her life away, indulged in a higher proportion of sleep than was allowed by Sydney Smith when he made a similar calculation. His son-in-law, Sir Henry Holland, notes in hls Recollections that “Sydney Smith, addressing a young lady, said: ‘Do you ever reflect how you pass your life? If you live to seventy-two, which I hope you may, your life Is passed in the following manner: An hour a day Is three years. This makes twentyseven years sleeping, nine yearn dressing, nine years at table, six years plavlng with children, nine years walking, drawing and visiting, six years shopping and three years quarreling. I have heard him similarly estimate for himself the portion of life he had spent in shaving, always a long occupation him.” — London Chronicle.

Joked With Christian Names.

Some parents seem unable to resist I (he temptation to make a Joke with , the Christian names of their childreh. The Somerset House (London) registers testify’ to the existeuce of a Mineral Waters, a Frosty Winter and an Alfred Day Weeks. There Is something to be said In favor of naming chlldreri In the order of their arrival -♦-Primus, Secundus, etc. —but it is unfortunate for a well-known Canadian named Cumber that It should have fallen to his lot to be Quintus. His name Ir, always appearing in the papers as Mr. Q. Cumber.

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

NOW THAT AUTUMN IS HERE

Bome Good Ways of Taking Advantag* of the Season’s Fruits and Vegetables. Instead of the cool greens of summer, bo refreshing and grateful during the extreme heat and dryness, in the markets we now find the late peach and pear, the pumpkin and sweet potato, the luscious tomato and all the other vegetables and fruitß so abundant in autumn. Baked Beets. —Take well-grown new beets and bake instead of boiling them. Take off the hard outside and you will be agreeably surprised with the sweetness of the beet. Slice into a heated vegetable dish and pour over them two tablespoonfuls of melted butter (not oily), mixed with the juice of ha*f & lemon and half a teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. Sugar Beet Pudding. —Here is a favorite Carolina dish; 801 l the beets antil just tender; peel and cut in small dices. Allow a pint of milk to a pint as beets, two or three-,wnll-beaten eggs, salt and pepper to taste and a light gating of nutmeg. Put all into an eartheq or heavy baking dish that can be sent to the table, and bake until the custard is set in £he middle. Serve hot, as a vegetable. , Holland Cabbage. —A Dutch housewife contributes this good, substantial dish: Take a small head of white cabbage; cut it in fine shreds; four tart apples, peeled and sliced; one large tablespoonful of butter or drippings; a tablespoonful of salt, half a teaspoonful of pepper, a sprinkling of cheese or nutmeg. Stir over a slow fire for at least three hours.. Mix together one tablespoonful of vinegar, a little flour (not more than a level teaspoomul) and q tablespoonful of jelly. Just before taking from the Are add this mixture to the cabbage; let It boil up once or twice, and serve.

MEASURING POTS AND PANS

Knowledge of Just How Much Each Holds Will Be Found to Make for Ec.onomy. It seems that only in catalogues do we know or learn how large our pans are. But the housewife . who really measures the quantity held by her pots and pans will be a better cook and more efficient housewife. What do you wish this pot for? Merely to warm a can of tomatoes', or to cook two quarts of spinach? How much should this pot hold to be just the right size for, your purpose? Do you know how much, for instance, your yeliow mixing bowls hold? Have you ever been deceived, and prepared to use a bowl for a certain purpose and find you had to take a, larger one? Are you sure that your frying pan is the best depth for your special purpose? Is it nine, or ten, or eleven inches across? If you knew just how big it was, perhaps you wouldn’t need two pans, or three or five, if you could estimate just the best depth and diameter for your needs.

Hindu Curried Potatoes.

Cut two large potatoes in cubes about an inch square, place in saucepan with one tablespoon melted butter. Season to taste with salt, cayenne pepper and one teaspoon curry powder. Stir thoroughly, then add one pint hot water. Let cook till potatoes are well done, but y>t mushy. Leave enough liquid to form a gravy when they are served. If you like a milk sauce an East Indian would put one-eighth cup of milk in a bowl, add one-half cup of cold water and with his fingers he would blend in two tablespoons o,f flour. Pour this over the potatoes and cook till quantity of liquid is reduced about one-half.

Clean Flatirons.

I always keep my flatirons clean and smooth by a very simple method, writes a contributor to the New York Times. When I finish on washday, before emptying the water out of the tubs, 1 put the irons in for some minutes* Then take them out and scrub wtth a soft, dry cloth. I find that done in this way each week keeps the irons in very good order.

Lemon Biscuit.

One cUp lard, three cups white sugar, one pint sweet -milk, two eggs, pinch of salt, five cents’ worth of car bonate of ammonia, five cents 1 worth oil of lemon. Dissolve ammonia in milk, mix stiff enough to handle eas ily, roll one-fourth inch thick. Pick with fork and have oven hot. Get the ammonia and lemon at the druggist’s.

Shrimp Wiggle.

Three tablespoons of melted butter two tablespoons of flour stirred In, IV4 cups of milk; cook until it thickens then add two cans of shrimp and one can of peas; drain the liquid off of each and hdd thgm to the mixture then stir all together; salt to taste; 6erve on toasted bread. But we have ours with mashed potato.

To Flatten Rug.

Rugs often become turned up at thf edges. To improve the appearance fold an old towel or piece of cloth and ring out of water and lay alont edge of rug and then take a flatlroi (not hot) and press until cloth is dry when the edge will be straight anc flat ae when new.

To Make Carpets Wear Longer.

Go over your carpetß once a wee with a broom dipped in hot water t< which a little turpentine has bee> added. ' ”t

Bureau Drawers.

To make bureau drawers slide ea> Ily rub the parts that catch with con. toon yellow soap.

An optimist is A man who lays up a little sunshine for a rainy day. j. i..... Dr. Prrry’B Vermifuge “Dead Shot” kWa and expel* Worms in a very few houra. AUt. V In a year Turkey produces approximately 100,000 bales 6w*wool of 280 pounds each. • Be sure that you ask for Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills, and look for the signature of Wm. Wright on wrapper and box. For Constipation, Biliousness and indigestion. Adv. The Reason. "Pop, why do secret society candidates have to ride the goat?” “That’s thq way they have to butt In.”

A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY. The . Rev, Edmund Heslop of Wig* ton. Pa., suffered from Dropsy for a year. His limbs and feet were swollen and puffed. He had heart fluttertlng, was dixey and exhausted *t the least exertion. Hands and feet were cold and he had such a dragging sensation across the loins that It was difficult to move. _ _ TT , After using 5 Rev. E. Heslop. boxeß Qf Dodd , Kidney Pills the swelling disappeared and he felt himself again. He says he has been benefited and blessed by the use of Dodds Kidney Pills. Several months later he wrote: I have not changed my faith In your remedy since the above statement was authorized. Correspond with Rev. E. Heslop about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dea’er or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and recipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. Adv.

Life’s Winnings.

At the age of twenty-one a man goes out hunting for a fortune. Along about the time he is sixty he comes back bringing a house and let, upon which there is a $1,200 mortgage, and a lifq insurance policy for $2,000. — Philadelphia Ledger.

Oil From Trees.

The Chinese wood-oil tree Is the subject of a circular by David Fairchild, recently published by the U. S. bureau of plant industry, the purpose of the publication being to advocate an extensive cultivation of the tree in this country, where it has been grown in a small way since 1906. The importance of this recommendation Is shown by the fact that five million gallons of wood oil (also known as tung oil), made from the seeds of this plant, was imported from China last year, and the product Is said to have had a revolutionary effect on the varnish industry of the United States.

How to Work While You Play.

A French collaborator of Thomas Edison has just invented a sewing machine which is aldo a piano. Its mechanism is so arranged that every time the operator strikes a note on the keyboard, she completes one stitch. A single waltz will hem three handkerchiefs —Beethoven symphony will sew an entire trousseau. Thus, the dressmaker can work and play at one and the same time, and the more they play, the more they work. To bring the invention into the vogue it so> fully merits, schools will be established in many parts of France for the training of young women for the degree of M. P.-M. —“master piano machinists." Music with its charms will thus be given an undoubted utilitarian 1 value, and all the roundabout societies “for the furtherance of musical appreciation” will be left in the shade by a simple mechanical contrivance.

Breakfast Sunshine Post Toasties and Cream There’s a delicious smack in these crisp, appetizing bits of toasted com that brings brightness and good cheer to many and many a breakfast table. Toasties are untouched by hand in making; and come in tightly sealed packages —clean and sweet —ready to eat with cream and sugar. Wholesome Nourishing Easy to Serve Sold by grocers everywhere.

ALL WORTHY A TRIAL

PISHES POPULAR IN MEXICO MAY BE APPRECIATED HERE. Highly Flavored But Tasty Are All The»fc» Recipes—Delicious Chile Sauce—Turkey Dressing Our Southern Like. Chile Sause.—Take a half peck of" ripe tomatoes, three green peppers, three large onions, five cups of brown sugar, one teaspoonful each of ground allspice, cloves and cinnamon. Chop the onions and peppers together, put in a preserving kettle with two and a half cups of vinegar and boil for an hour and a half; salt to taste. .Bottle. * Red Chile Sauce (Chile Colorado). — Take six large ripe tomatoes* three tablespoonfula of brown sugar, one spoon each of ground ginger and cinnamon ; half a spoon of ground cloves; one cup of vinegar; half a spoon of ground mustard; one pod of dry red. pepper; two large white onions, a bit of clove or garlic. Cook until It thickens. Bottle and it will keep indefinitely. Chicken With Almond Sauce. —Boil t chicken, either whole or cut in pieces; an onion, a carrot, a bit of garde, a piece of ham, some thyme, sweet marjoram and a half cup of vinegar, .he chicken when cooked to be served with the following sauce: Grind four ounces of almonds, heat a little lard with a clove of garlic well mashed, :hen dissolve a little flour in some of ,:he stock and stir, to prevent browning :oo much. Add a piece of butter and a ladle full of stock. Incorporate the ilmonds, the ham and parsley, chopped one; add salt, pepper and a dash of outmeg. Chop two hard boiled eggs, sne chopped, put in chicken and boil. This is a dish fit for a king. It is said that it was the one Spanish dish to which the Aztecs took kindly. ’ Turkey Dressing.—Until within the last few years, after the introduction of the American cooking stove, Mexi3ans rarely baked fowls, as they prefer their fowls and meats boiled. The following recipe for cooking and dressing turkeys is followed by the housekeepers on all the haciendas (plantations) and not a few city cboks. It is a variation the baked turkey of the United States. Clean the turkey or fowl, spread with lard and pepper, put on In a large pot and boil. When nearly done Take out and stuff*with this dressing: Five small green onions, five apples that have been boiled and mashed through a colander, four ounces of ham cut into small bits, pepper and salt Fry this all together until done, stuff the turkey, put back in pot and boil until done. Remove from pot; have ready a large, deep vessel In which there is boiling lard. Put in the turkey, and tufrn frequently so that it may be browned on all sides.

Date Biscuits.

Mix and sift twq cups of pastry flour, four teaspoons baking powder, and one-half teaspoon salt. Work in two tablespoons butter, then add gradually three-fourth cup of milk. Toss onto floured board, roll to one-third Inch thickness and Bhape with small, round cutter, first dipped in flour. On half the pieces place a date from which the stone has been removed, brush round edges with melted butter, cover with remaining pieces, press edges firmly together, place in buttered pan and bake in a hot oven froqi 12 to 15 minutes.

Escalloped Oysters.

Thiß amount is for two. Use one pint of oysters. Roll Into fine crumbs a dozen and a half of crackers. Take a quart (enameled or crockery) dish, butter It well, then put in a layer of the cracker crumbs to cover the bottom, then cover with a layer of oysters and bits of butter and a little shake of pepper and salt, and so on alternately, until oysters gre used, having last layer of oysters. Then pour over the top the oyster liquor and a cup of milk with an egg beaten up in it. Put in oven and bake about three-quarterß of an hour. Delicious

Parsley Jelly.

This is a very economical Jelly and delicious. Take any quantity of pars ley, cover with water and boil about half an hour. Then run through the jelly bag, measure and allow one cup of sugar to one cup of juice, add two or three rose geranium leaves, which give a fine flavor. Now boil all together until It becomes as thick as honey.

Jam Roll.

Tyo eggs, their weight In flour and butter and not quite in powdered sugar, two teaspoons of baking pow der. Rub butter, mix ingredients, lastly eggs. Bake ten minutes. Spread on buttered paper, then spread jam and roll.

Maple Candy.

One cup powdered sugar, one-half cup maple sirup, one-fourth cup cream. 801 l until a soft ball is formed in cold water. Take from the stove and stir In one-fialf cup nut meats, stir until creamy, drop by spoonfuls on buttered paper.

About Tea Pots.

To keep tea pots that are seldon used from smelling musty, wipe them out very dry after using and put s lump of loaf sugar inside, leaving the .Id open.

When Beating Eggs.

When beating the whites of eggs asways add a pinch of cream of tartai when they are about half beaten This is excellent, as It keeps the eggi from falling before being used.

HRS. HINGES ESCAPES OPERATION How She Was Saved From Surgeon’s Knife by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta* ble Compound. Mogadore, Ohio.—“ The first two years - Z was married I .suffered so much from mm female troubles and I bearing down pains HfIQEV at * cou ld not ' 6tand on my feet mW Tjfli§ long enough todo my Hj*'® work. The doctor |f:|j 4* said I would have to . ||;|: undergo an operaip I tion, but my husband ji wanted me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComfrfnlVTTra \J po Un( j first I took three bottles and it made me well and strong and I avoided a dreadful opera* tion. I now have two fine healthy children, and I cannot say too much about whatLydiaE.Pinkham’sVegetableComSiund has done for me.'? Mrs. Leb anges, R. F. D. 10, Mogadore, Ohio. Why will women take chances with an operation or drag out a sickly, halfhearted existence, missing three-fourths of tiie joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ? 7 For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has restored the health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special adviee write to Lydia E. Pinkh.am Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Yonr letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence*

Defending the Dog. “Why doesn’t that dachshund come when I call him? The idea of sulking on me!” “He’s, coming as fast as he can,” said the man’s wife. “He’s got his front legs started.” RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE SOFT AND WHITE , • For red, rough, chapped and bleeding hands, dry, fissured, itching, burning palms, and ppinful finger-ends, with shapeless nails, a one-nighs Outicura treatment works wonders. Directions: Soak the hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura Soap. Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment, and wear soft bandages or old, loos* gloves during the night. TJjese pure, sweet and gentle emollients preserve the hands, prevent redness, roughness and chapping, and impart in a single night that veiveir softness and whiteness so much desired by women. For thoee whose occupations tend to Injure the hands, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are wonderful % Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of eaeft free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.” —Adv. New York 1b to have several new bus lines on which women will act as conductors. Bronchial troubles weaken the system. Pneumonia sometimes follows: Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops prevent trouble. The cost of the navies of the world last year aggregated $725,000,000. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation,allays pain,cures wlud college a botUeUßr And a woman Is known by the acquaintances she cuts.

TORTURING TWINGES Much so-called rheumatism is caused by weakened kidneys. When the kid-neys-fail to clear the blood of uric acid, the acid forms into crystals like bits of broken glass in the muscles, joints and on the nerve casings. Torturing pains dart through the affected part whenever it is moved. By curing the kidneys, Doan’s Kidney Pills have eased thousands of rheumatic cases, lumbago, sciatica, gravel, neuralgia and urinary disorders.. AN ILLINOIS CASE _ _ Kvrrn Ptctmrt Charles Easter, E. a story" 1 Walnut Bt., Watseka, 111., aaya: "I had »cl- '--V atlc rheumatism and VhBK Mv kidney trouble for sßKa.fffA years. I was laid up for months and spent \ hundreds of dollars ■ === Ji unsuccessfully for doctors’ treatment. I V M After hope had fled, I r W Doan's Kidney Pills I 1 came to my aid. They I | cured the awful misery and I have nsvsr edKl suffered since.” Get Dean’s at Any Stars. BOe a Ban DOAN’S V, D JIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO-, BUFFALO, N. Y. ADVERTISING Ilf AM T P MANAGER If AWI L U Nn expeWsncs rrquirtd. Make ODD to MX) monthly. Place a complete Bath Bqnlpment In every boms possible for nest So days without oof. New plan. Write today—send postal for particulars, Koulproent /rrs ls you contract for*terrltory. Address Bano-Kleen Math Mo., *•» U, Alexandria, 1 udL WANTED ■mMP” to start In business for themselves selling If struct*. Hssences, Home Remedies etc. No capital needed, lanre profits, business permanent. For particulars address TU HU HSUICIII ruxrslT, hnUo, r«a*. We WiFi Pay You $120.00 to dlstrlbnte religions iTteratnreln yonr community. » days 'work. Bxpertencs not required Man or woman. Opportunity for promotion. Spare time may be Med. IatMMUMaI HIM# tnm, lit* let St, rhllsSslphts W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 43-IRI3.