Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 77, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 April 1919 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Look out for Spanish Influenza. At the first sign of a cold take CASCARAK pUININB farw —fc, eon, no opUu. favlra up ■ eoM 74 hour. rriievc. grip in 3 d«y». Mcocp baekiritfaila. The genuine baxhaaattadtop with Mr. HiU'a picture. At AU Drug Steres. 4 ' '■ *“ Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headaches, relieve bilious attacks, tone ana regulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. “Better Asa PIBs Fsr Liver Hb M ■ Get [26c. Box. —J SMOKING TOBACCO FACTS FROM THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA The Use of Flavorings Determines Difference In Brands
The Encyclopaedia Britannica says about the manufacture of smoking tobacco: “. . .on the Continent and in America, certain ‘sauces’ are employed ... the use of the ‘sauces’ is to improve the flavour and burning qualities of the leaves.” Which indicates that a smoker’s enjoyment depends as much upon the flavoring used as upon the tobacco. Your nose is a sure guide in the matter of flavorings. Try this simple test with several tobacco brands: pour some tobacco into your palm, rub briskly, and smell. You will notice a distinct difference in the fragrance of every brand. The tobacco that smells best to you will smoke best in your pipe, you can rest assured. Carefully aged, old Burley tobacco, plus a dash of pure chocolate, gives TUXEDO Tobacco a pure fragrance your nose can quickly distinguish from any other tobacco. Try" it and see. SI.OO AN ACRE
A TREMENDOUS JOB TO INCREABB OUR PRODUCTION , In this emergency we tried to do our part. We scoured the" country for raw materials —our Traffic Manager spent pls days riding freight cars in—we shipped raw materials in carload lots by express and pleaded with manufacturers to Increase their deliveries to us. But It AVas a slow process. Some of our raw materials are produced only in ' Japan—supplies in this country were low and shipments required three months to come from the Far East. Then we had to recruit and train skilled labor. We brought our salesmen into the"factory and trained them as foremen. We invented new machinery, and managed to install it on Christmas Day, so as not to interfere with our daily production.143 JARS OF VAPORUB EVERY MINUTE DAY AND NIGHT By January Ist we had everything ready to put on our night shift, and since then our laboratory has been running day A and nlglVt. To feed our automatic machines, which drop out one hundred and forty-three jars of Vapoßub a minute or one million and eighty thousand weekly, has required a force of 500 people. Our Case Department, cheated for the benefit of these workers, served 7,000 meals dur* ( ing the month of January alone. 13 MILLION JARS OF VAPORUB DISTRIBUTED SINCE OCTOBER. An idea of the work we have accomplished this fall may be given by our production figures—l3,o2B,976 jars of Vapoßub manufactured and distributed since last October—one jar for every two families in the entire United States. During the influenza epidemic Vick’s Vapoßub was used as an external application in connection with the physician’s treatment, and thousands of people, unable to obtain a doctor, relied on Vick’s almost exclusively. Literally millions of fandUtf all over • the country, from Cali- * fornla to Maine, and - from the Great Lakes to’the Gulf, have found Vick’s Vapoßub the ideal home remedy for croup and cold trouhies. »*Jllßwhr)
