Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 July 1920 — Page 2

Tap* Two

THE GREENCASTLE HERALD

WEDNESDAY, JI M 2'8, 192«

HERALD

H-X-K-S-r-H-f-K (

«,aitrai. as second Cla»r niail icatttr

at tha Greencastlfe, Ind, poatoflRce. j “ / r\‘ 1 1 * or Uisnwastung c-narlea J. Arnold Proprietor ! °

PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON Except Sundae at 17 and 19 S. Jack-

ton Street, Greencaatle, Ind.

TELEPHONE 65

1

Obitnariea.

All obituarea are chargeable at the rate of $1 let each obit-,.ary. Additional charge of 6c a bn* i* made for

■ I) Doetre

Fruit Soup*

Fruit aoupt are somewhat of a novelty, ar.O ar i-not pt-nerally aeen on our Aiii<-rican r.er.tt-. but they are extenaively used abroad. W lien one becomes accustomed to their use they will be found not only appetizing but healthful and economical as well, la the spring when one is apt to lie feverish and with little appetite fruit soups are more relishable, more in vigoratfr.g than those that are prepared from meat or vegetables. Fruit eoups are aso a corrective for consti-

pation.

The materials are or may be available at any and all seasons of the year, and they are equally good served hot i r cold, and are easily atm quickly made ready to serve. As with ineaand vegetablee tnere are two kinds, thin and ti-ick. Thin soups are made from fresh or canned fruit, canned juice, shrubs, etc. Juice left from canmug may he used, one or more ■ au he combined, making a variety. Thick soup is prepared from the pulp. Fruit soups may be served with croutons, crisp crackers, salt wafers, toasted bread or slices of bread, thickly sprinkled with pulverized or granulated sugar, then glared in Die oven. Appie Soup— Pare and slice tart apples (not too sour), stew in plenty of water. When soft press through a sieve, and if necessary add hot water to make it the consistency of wream. Sweeten to taste, season with a dasli of white pepper, a few whole cloves, a stick of cinnamon, or two or three tlirrs of lemon. Let simmer very slowly a few minutes. Kemove the

seasoning before serving.

Dried Apple Into three quarts of water put a teacupful of prunes or of raisins or half and half of each. Cook one hour, add a teacupful of dried apple ti bopped), w hic h has stood in cold water over night, a stick of cinnamon and n little fresh orange peel. When the apple is cooked soft remove the stones from the prunes, take out the cinnamon and orange peel, rub same through a fine-meshed cc lander, sweeten and serve cold in summer and licit

in winter.

Spring Soup Cook pieplant in considerable water until very soft, strain through cheesecloth, sweeten, then add hot water until pleasantly ac id. Serve in bouillon < ups with a generous spoonful of whipped cream on the tup of eac h c up. Soups from all the small fruits are prepared in the same way, flavoring to suit Individual tas'e. For thick soup from fresh lierries heat the herrl-s through In a little water to soften the texture, but do not took then:. Rub through a a . aiider, pouring c >>r them the vv: , m in which they were boiled during the proi ess icr obetain all the pulp pos-i-lic, add hot water tu make the pulp tlie consistency of c ream. From rani) ci truit pour oti the- juice and use

Up pulp.

H-;-; i I I ♦ H ♦ M »H H M IM *H < 1 wonder why 1 do so love to cook rnd yet i.a-e the Uuiught of washing

dishes?"

Card* of Thanks * believe 1 can answer that question

for l.tlle .Mrs Woman and the great

Garda of Track* are chargeable at ...

army of her sisters who tmd them-

• rat* of 60c each. | similarly inclined. The love for

j cooking is the creative force within [ you, while the haired for dishwashing I is generated by tile difficulty of finding in that humble art any outlet for

I the force.

Everyone Is born with more or lera creative force. It may lie perfectly dormant for years, or It may be evident in every act. Circumstances and environment have much to do with bringing out this latent ability, but if it be there in sufficient quantity it will make itself known, no matter wiiat the surroundings. We will hate to admit there isn't much in the act of clearing away a stack of messy dishes to stir up any latent creative ability in anyone, but it is possible to lessen the drudgery of this act. It isn't nn essary to put. on ones thinking cap as aeriously lor tills operation as if one were about to solve a problem in calc ulus, but a little gray matter judiciously applied never did anything any harm, not even the humble art of dishwashing. The creative mind will not be content to plod away, attending strictly to routine in any proceeding. This is the mind which will see a better way. a newer idea, or a shorter cut. This mind will first see to it that all the necessary conveniences are at hand. It will realize that two of the greatest essentials for successful dishwashing si'.the right kind of dish cloths and oceans of hot water. The cheapest and best washing Cloths on the market, for the better dishes, are those common, knitted atfairs, sold for bathroom use for five cents each. They wear a long time, keep clean and white, and can be boiled up with the other clothes every wash day. Drown linen crasii, made into cloths a trifle larger than the knitted ones, are best for pots and kettles, and for drying towels the barred linen is most universally liked, if Mrs. Woman is inc lined to look about her for small ways of saving pennies for her bank account she will cut up and bem all the flour sacks for drying cloths. They are splendid for the

china.

Now about, the hot water. Never start to do up a pile ol dishes with a stingy little bit of hoi water. If there is no boiler to draw from, both the dish pan and the tea kettle should be filled to start with, and an extra stewing kettle filled to tiie brim will never come amiss. Fill all baking dishes, pots and kettles with cold water and siand them aside to soak. File plates and platters in order, after scraping off ail grease and crumbs, and rinse out all glasses and c ups System will be of great value in dish washing, as in every oilier department of housekeeping. Mash the glassware first. Follow with the silver, next the cups and saucers, and then attack the Ifiut and vegetable dishes, as chese are the first really greasy things Jle new tlie dlsliwater often. Water Is thd cheapest thin gon record, and you will tec I ti, .* grease and grime les- if you throw away yotii- suns heiore it begins to feel Uie least bit thick. Take fresh, hot suds from the poth and pans always Never neglect to dry your dish pan thoroughly, and, lastly, wash your hands carefully when you have liil 1 i»hed. Tse some line white soap, keep a lemon ir tlie soap dish for removing any lingering stain, and rub in some good * cdel cream or toilet preparation to keep the skin vvicive and soft. A fc - 1 1* tuple rule-- v r lully followed will lessen tlie drudgery of dishwashing more than you can know, unless yc.ii have tried them.

(On ahr 3flnc

CoUTlfl.t. Ti,. l-icn . A. Muaaty Company

By THEODORE ROBERTS

round, then r-ased his work with the bat and ee-t quic kly to sculping ti.o srals t.e bad already killed. Hrginnin_ at the outer edge of the fle Id cf

CM Tat TVsIen watched th* approaching rVIfl in a rliecce as complete as Cctrney’s though he was ; mightily relieved a; the sight. They

his opr-ration*. he worked steadily but 1 were not the kind to about when there

slowly shoreward, dragline tbe pelts after him in his towilne Gaution told him to let the pelts and the dead seals He and run for the shore-ice: but gieed held him to the work of SKinclng and tow inc At last be ran

—tint then it was too late.

It began on the ice and it ended on The great floe was adrift again tbe ic t and it began fully twenty j end slowly separating into thousand!

. r f- ChU an In to c < and -

ith strawberry > s that have s' • two It will 1

The f readil;

y be A sn

he pmi

uup a few

i-rrioi Jt pi!

11 l will I ,

thic

Qror * \. a t nd- for Item«Kty 111 the n: n u of nutst. people. iiiiuiy «ii' us tu prom to tuink that in livid u. uu ' u . ge. 1’robaluy that age was no more honest than this is, and everyone who lived then Had just as much difln ult.y with swindle rs Mid cheaters as have we of tlie pre.-' nt day . Washington himself, at all eventt, bad to kc i p au eye open at times to gain honest treatment. Here is an • Strai t from u leter lie wrote ordering Migar: "Mt Vernon. 1st Derr., 1799. “Nir: (He ordered tlie sugar, and then added): Let the cask m which It Is packed be well secured the sugar we hitherto had from you has, •oipetimes, lalien short in weight. ”1 am, air, your very humble servant, (j. WASHINGTON.” Well, probably as long as tbe world swings in its course sugar will sotnetimea fall short iu weight. And so will other commodities. And the only way to get fair treatment is to demand It. The housekeeper who wishes to receive her money's worth of food supplies must exert herself to gain lair play. It would be an ideal thing if everyone could be trusted. In the meantime, everyone can not lie trusted, and we must all weigh our sugar when we receive the same. One way to find nut whether or not try, anu there weigh everything tiiat ;ou buy. This is a little unpleasant, of course. Nobody likes to be known as a woman who suspects all her tradesmen. But often actual ineasnrement and weight must be made >( tone ts to be treated fairly.

Take Time for Rest

rule, women vv ho lend active i too lunch ji. lined to ciisre- - subject ol their health. As l ev can gci on with their daily

1

A- a

lives ai gunl u

long a - |

round of djtie- t y do not stop to Imfuire the reason why they are fr»ququily troubled with headache, indigestion, or sleeplessness, and that they take their petty worries mere to heart than was formerly the case, fn fact they fafl to r utilize that their powers of physical endurance have a limit. and that a continual strain of mind and hotly cannot go on forever. A W'lmuu, whet her she is burdened with social duties, home duties, or rentuueiative occupation, can generally, by tlio exercise of a little thought ainl majiugement, avoid overtaxing her strtngth. Site should remember the gteati-r the tax on the mental and physical energies the more need there is for soffit lent rest, not only in the form of sleep, but In suc h recreation as will divert her thoughts into another channel, and produce a sense of In-

v igoratlon.

Health Notes A mustard plaster will not blister If the part to be plastered Is first rubbed with vaseline and a coating left on the skin. A common cause for restlessness at right Is found In cold feet, and these should be esec tally guarded against with children who are prime to suffer In this way. Hot water bottles, carefully covered with felt so that there is no risk of burning the sensitive skiu, should be resorted to when any tendency to cold feet exists, and in cares of chilly babies generally. Cold is extremely bad for little children, and much broken sleep ts due simply to

U.

years before It ended. The way the enmity between Fat Wallace and Corney Morris began need be- treated only briefly, for it is ancient history from Dipper Bay to Foxtrap. In those dsv» sailing vessels were slili used in tbe seal fishery Oorney Morris was a member of tbe sealing crew of the brig I.ttckey, and Tat Walen belonged to the topsailschooner Princess. Both vessels got among the ice and the seal? at the same hour and within a mile of each other The men went far and wide on the |reat floes of ice, killing sculping and lowing tbe loads of bludder and skin They did not drag tbe pelts all the way bac k to their ships, but pan tied them here and there on tbe ict to be collected and put aboard at s less busy time. Eac h pan of sealskins was marked with s Png for the vessel It belonged to —the flags of the Lnckv were red and tbote of the Princess

green.

Just before sunset a change of wind began to spread the iloe. and the men • tailed back for their ships. It was then iha Pointy Morris came upon Pat Walen with a red flag in hia left band and with his right setting up a gieen flag over a pap of pelts That ts * hat Corney Morris said and main talned for twenty years He swore up and down, that he had caught Fat Walen trying to rob the Lucky of s fine heap of bludder and skin. Pat Walen, of course, could explain It—which be did, and continued to do for twenty .'ears. Hia story was that be bad pb ked up one of tbe red flags from the ice, where It had been accidentally dropped by a member of Hit brig’s crew, and that be c barred to have It in bit hand—bad cess to thething! when he stopped to set up the green flag that had been toppled over by the wind At the time however, neither said very much: but they fought with hands and feet until they were separated by their comrades. That is how tbe enmity began between two well behaved, middle aged men who had been friendr for years. And. as had been said, the bad blood between them lasted for twenty years, though they lived wiihIn four miles of each other—Morris in Dip|>er Bay and Walen In Riggers Cove, to the northward. Little lads grew up Into burly men. and the wooden vessels left tbe spring sealing to great iron Steamships. These steamers all put out from St John's and Harbor Grace on the morning of the opening of 'be brief season for killing the seals from Greenland. And the lads who had grown to be burly men tramped to these ports from all the little outhstbors to get berths to the ice But the old fellows, like Corney Morris and Pst Walen, re tnaiued at home, for the new way of sealing was haider, as well as less profitable. Sometimes, however, there was a little easy sealing to be done b> the Slav st-homes. A few harbor seals would haul out and bask on the ire. perhaps, or fragments of the great floes on which the hoods and harps were breeding would touc h tbe shoic-s Of the nor eastern bays. One morning when Pat Walen opened hi? door be saw that tbe floe bud drifted in during tbe night and now lay along tbe anchored shore ice Far and wide over those thoiisr.iKi.c of acres of ice wire dotted tens of thousands of black specks and specks of a yellowish white color. The black specks were old seals and the sulfurtinted wi re young seals, or whitecoats. The eight flred Pal’s rusting energies and set the luet of easy gain sh aming in Ids blood. He hustled his I wife, his two married daughters and his four grandchildren out of their hhinkets, and drove them to get breakf.ift. He cleaned his six foot aealir;: I (.un. filled powder flask and bullet- ; pouc h, nnd hunted up hia tow line, bat and sculping knife. Tbe bat«is a heavy wooden club with which the sealers : kill their Victui.c- by a blow over the

I nose

Armed to the teeth. Pat Walen set out after the distant herds. The morning was flue, and what little wind there was blew shoreward. Three boys a< companled him for about a quarter of a mile; hut on reaching the edge of the shore-lee, where the unanchored floe ground restlessly, he told them not to come any farther, and left them stalking Uie scattered and wary barbo meals. Pat Walen got among the Green land seals at lust and set briskly to work. There were many cracks lu the floe, however, and the old seals soon look warning of tbe dangerous bat and began to hustle tbe’iiselves and their foolish babies off tbe Ire. Pat lost his temper entirely at the poor seals It seemed to him that In the old days tbe creatures had been more eonsidnrate and bad lain quiet to be decently killed. As the nsarer ones flopped Int* the water and dived beneath tbe me, Pat rushed sea ward across tbe floe, striking here and there, but always battening on In tbe greedy hope of getting Into tbe thick erf tbe herds at last. He had left his gun on tbe ahore-loe for the boys to use, and so, traveling light he was s long way from tbe caMns of Riggers Cove before be gave the matter of his position any servo us thought The thing that brought It to hit mind was a puff ol eff-ebore wind When be Bit that be glanced ewlftlc

of pans, large and small. By the

was no need of shouting Corney continued his slovv but even stroke: and Pat continued to toast the flipper, hopeful that It would be fit to take a bite out of before tbe arrival of hia

rescuer.

'ifie skiff was within ten yards of the Ice before either of the men recognized the other. Pat let the fragrant flipper drop Into the fire and

time Pat reac bed the inner edge cf j lie there unheeded, t’orney pulled

i lose to the pan. and then faced square

around on tbe thwart.

"Pat Walen. will ye tell me the trut'

now?” he asked.

•Ti bin tellin' ye the trut’ for twenty year, Corney Morris,” replied Pat. "If 1 leaves ye there on the lee. ‘twill be what ye deaerves " said Correv. Then In a gentler voice: "Pat, b'y, confess that je was trvin' to rob that pan o’ sw ilea, an’ 1 take ye aboard an’ pull ye safe to Dipper Bay.” "Away wid ye. Corney Morris!” cried Pat “Did 1 ax ye to take me often tis here pan’ i'll bide here till 1 starves to deaf wild cold and hunger afore I’ll let ye make a liar o' me \ e ve tr.-U it long enough. Corney

Moms.”

Ill

Die floe a channel of open water over fifty yards in width lay between him and the outer edge of the shore-ice. Like many another dweller on the coast. Pat Walen could not swim. Pat shouted: but the wind blew too freshly from the lend for his voice to carry against It. The lads had left the vbore-ice. having weaned quickly of tbe chase of the spoiled hac bor seals. Already tbe little village, In its c-uplike haven, was shut from the castaway’s view by a rocky cape. He was in a desperate fix. and no mistake. If he only had his gun now he'd soon let the folks know of hit trouble: but. as It was, It might well be several hours before the women and the children in tbe cabins, sitting snug over tbe little bogy stoves, would nolice that the floe had drifted awav. Then they would be s long time dragging a skiff across the shore-ice to open water. How far away from his little harbor he should be by that time he did not care to consider. As soon as Pat Walen realized his petition he commenced preparations for a lengihy stay on the Ice. He ran back for hit tow of pelts and brought it to a big pan on the inner edge of the floe. The fragments of Ice. large and small, still lay fairly close together. He brought In the pelts without much difficulty: but in getting an unsculped carcass from farther afield, he was forced to make some desperate leaps

fiom pan to pan.

n

An hour passed, bright and cold, and the floe continued to drift southward. very slowly, and always spreading and spreading its white rails abroad on the gray water. Pat Walen’s pan, guided and held by a roa'twiee current, kept to its course at a distance of about three hundred yards from the shore-ice. The casta away sat on three blubbery pelts, spread fiat, with a fourth over bis knee* and several more and the unskinned carcass at his back He smoked hia pipe and gazed reflex-lively at the steel gray sea, the gray and biown rocks and the white hills be y ond. A second hour passed as bright as the first, but a trifle colder. “I ll just be makln' a bit o’ fire, for I’ll be off Dipper Bay afore long.” rtmarked Pat to tbe needless elements. On one of the pelts he started a tiny fire, first building It with shaving xut from the handle of bis bat, and adding to these, when they were well aJignt, narrow strips of blubber. It sent a thin stream of black smoke aloft. •Bedad, they’ll fink the coasting steamer he's a puttin’ In on ’em:” remarked Pat, squinting up at his pillar of smoke Then a happy Idea c ame to him. He cut off and skinned a fat flipper and began to broil it at the fire. But the I flic- was small and the lltpper was big. and the cooking promised to be a lengthy undertaking While he was broiling the flipper out (hue on the drifting ice pan, the smoke of Ms 'blubber-fed lire was sighted by the Inhabitants of Dipper Buy. Now. Dipper Bay is not a bay at ail, but a tiny cove with a settlement of only srx houses above its landvv ash. The able- bodied men of the place, elgh* In number, were all away u iih the sealing fle-et. so it fell to the lot of old Corney Morris to put out of the cove- and rescue the man on the ice. , Corney had such rheumatism In his Ic-. s that he c ould scarc ely walk The castaway might be a relative or friend, or he might be a stranger, or even an enemy, but whoever he was, hts smoke signal had to be answered. Had Corney's rheumatism been a little more se vere or his heart a little less robust, still would a boat have gone out to the lee There was not a woman in the harbor, from old Mother M’Corney to Kate- Morris Corney’s eld cst y i atidchild, who would not have pulled out in th° bitter wind to rescue the unknown on the floe if nee-d were. But Corney was a proud old lud. in spite of his stiff legs, and was determined to take tlie. skiff out by himself, though he was glad enough of the women’s help in getting the skiff amiss tho shoreiee and Into Ihe water. Corney groaned a* he seated himself and whacked the heavy oars into their places between the Uioie pins. “Maybe 1 d best take a nip of this here afore I starts to break my back,” be remarked tentatively. “That ye had. skipper. Sure, ’twill warm the heait o’ yo ogm the desperate cold wind.” replied oue of the women. So Corney drew forth the bottle of spirits which bis wife had put In hi* pocket for the reviving of the castaway, uncorked it and tipped It high “Ye’d beat leave a laate for the poor feller on the ice, grandfather.” said Kate Morris. Wtth dignity and In silence Corney corked tbe bottle and returned tt to his pocket, grteped the oars and pulled aea-ward. Twa* all in a day’s work— * nip of rum or saving a man from the drifting ice In either rase the opportunity must be seized promptly and in a courageous manner. Old Oorney Morris palled on the heavy oara in scllenee. glancing ovei Ms abouldor every minute or so.

Corner pushed his fur cap high up on the top of his bead and scratched hi* scalp. Then, with an expression of heavy thought on hit mahogany j face, he pullexl in to tbe heavy pan. i “Step aboard.” said he in a voice dead as wood. Pat Walen lifted the scorched flipper out cf the fire. "I'll bid* where I be.” said he. “I'll not be took offen the loe by any man what lavs the name o' liar onto

me ”

He mended the Are very carefully, and then began to eat the flipper "The current sets east a mile sout'o’ here,” remarked Corner. "Let her set,” replied Pat. “Yell be a dead corpse this time tumor ry,” said Corney. Pat went on eating the scorched flipper. A minute passed in silence a slow, cold minute. Corney's rheumatism began to gnaw at bis poor leones. "Come aboard wid ye, an’ don't be a fool, Pat Walen!" he czled. “I’ll bide where 1 be till ye takes the name o’ liar offen me," replied

Pat.

Tbe other knew that he meant It, for Pat Walen's name for pig headed ness was known up and down tbe coast. "I’ll say as how I don’t he finkin’ ve a liar any more. Pat WaJen.” said Corney. "An’ may the saints forgive n.e the lie," he whispered In his •ard. Pat did not hear tbe whisper With a shout of joy, he began pitching the pelts, the dead seal, and even tbe scorched flipper into the t-klff The moment his feet were across the gunwale he caught one of Corney's hard hands in both of his "Tank 'e for that good word, b’y!" he cried. "1 knowed if ye once seed I was in the right o' the matter ye'd admit it like a man. Now my heait he’s light, b'y! Little 1 cared what some folks named me but I's bin v antin’ for ve to believe me, Corney, these twenty yesra past." Corney Morris withdrew hts hand from the other’s grasp, and, without a word, began rowing steadily for the harbor. The shadow of heavy i bought w as still on his eyes, like a mask. Once or twice glanced up at Pi t’s radiant face. Suddenly, when the skiff was w ithin a few yards of the shore-ice and the waiting women, he ceased his rowing. The shadow wus gone from t’.ve mahogany visage. ‘Tjid. I believes ye! I do. honest— so hi Ip me, Peter!" he cried. “Wfcat twenty years couldn’t 1'arti me. I's seed this very minute in a glance o’ yer eyes." lie slapped his hands heartily on Pat's km <•?. Then he drew Die bottle from his pocket. "Ye’ve bei-n adrift on the ice. b’y, an’ ye needs rt-vivin,.’’ he said. "If ye don't revive now, I'll not answer for ye gettin' a chanct to do it aabore.” Then, turning his head: “Aye. Kate. we’H be wid ye In two winks. It be’s Pat Walen Fa rescued -old, Innoien! friend, Pat Widen!"

HE WOULD REPEAT Mrs. Jordan had "ideas” on the way Children should be reared Her )ont.K hopeful, Tommy, caused her a little anxiety In this respect. Now and again, therefore, a serious ’■politeness" lecture was administered “Now, Tommy dear,” she started “supposing you accidently stepped up on a gentleman's foot, what would you say ?" “I would nay ‘Beg your pardon!’ ” •’That’s my own little son!” smiled the pleased mother. “And If tha gentleman gave you a penny for your politeness what would you say 7” The Innocent look passed from Tommy's eyes as he quickly answered “Why, 1 would stand on the other foot and say ’Beg pardon!’ again, of course."

THE PARABLE OF THE PEBBLES Once upon a time a very wlae lady saw a chicken eat a pebble Then the wise lady told what she bad seen, with additions. “A strict pebble diet la the only thing for chicken*," affirmed ahe Not until the poor birds had died by thousaoda did the people realize that because one woman saw a chicken oat apebble once, all chickens do not want their an tire diet to consist of pebbloa.

ONE MILLION Seven Hundred Lhousand Dollar Bank and Trust Company in Crwncastle’under the’ supervision of the United States Government.; and the State of Indiana. We pay you interest on all /our surplus money while you are waiting for a bargain. Hm Central National Bank And Central Trust Comp’y l» BMBMB SMi 8® aMB J

Man Power and Gasoline Prices

OiO LONG as the acute shortage of man-power in the United States continues, the demand for gasoline power will continue to increase. Every increase in the demand for gasoline power will affect the price of gasoline, because, though petroleum production is continually increasing, it is not keeping pace with the demand for gasoline. The latest figures available illustrating this point are for March, 1920.

Petroleum Consumption: Daily Average 1,417,129 bbls. Total for Month 43,930,999 bbls.

Petroleum Production: Daily Average 1,177,129 bbls. Total for Month 36,491,000 bbls. If production continues for the rest of the year at the rate established in the first quarter, the total production of petroleum for 1920 will be in excess of 410,000,000 barrels. If consumption continues for the rest of the v tar at the rate established in the first quarter, the total consumption of petroleum for the vear 1920 will be in excess of 495,000,000 D^rels. Or, for the year 1920, consumption may be expected to exceed domestic production of petroleum by b5,000,000 barrels. Because of its high-powered organization, trained through years of experience to the interpretation of conditions, the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is anticipating increased need for gasoline and is bending ever- effort to supply the people of the Middle Wes: with the gasoline they need. It m: ans much to the Middle West to be able to use freely that most important of all laborsaving devices the automotive machine. Tiie Standard Oil Company (Indiana) believes frat its greatest sendee lies in providing at all limes, everywhere, and at the lowest possible prices, the gasoline needed to operate these engines of production.

Standard Oil Company (Inti tana) 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago

*rf»

Workmen Wanted Twenty five laborers wanted for per manent, all year work. Indiana Portland Cement Co.