South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 45, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 February 1922 — Page 7
TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 14, 1922
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
3j
A
eu.
PIONEER., ä
JOHN FOXJr (plp
ntuck y. S a HOtt'c-r'a
o.
wyxas toiv DAVi; YANIKLL. ; ir.T in
"dara- a r.d hloody v Jvoiut'.or.ary K ?o. ou r. 1 1 r. .j j;uard
yf.rk r ? v, h n WHITi; AliliOW. a toy of flft'-n. f; o-4 tr th-- stockade for prr.t ction from Lis I r I :ar; companions. It i" ri;?:ovrf;I that White Arrow 5 a whit'.' h.- wh, uhn an infant. 'aas taken t and.v, with hi mother. H!s Indian r ;.t i v told hint that
tkr ii1!t o; .one of th',"TL -nr.- th
t! r:7pi r: rr nr, an1 th
i 1 O 4 'J
v c orr.r
(ar::;i'" n came
V' .4 .
crl.d IJarhira.
rheumatism crutch this time, ho didn't ncd it. "Ar you comin;: ca?lr. with r.i". Ur.cle Wijririly." cald Ihaly
I Hunty. the cut'? iittl rah'dt Iil. a?
An-J from his window th-j httle Kn she fat down on hr tiny Fled an. I 'iuk;an aw th rji:irar.y coming up I iookod at Mr. Lor.irc-ar.. "I'll wilt the r ath, bravo with r y clothes aud j for you if you arc," t-ho added, "and an 1 gal'.antrh . jyou ran pull mo nv. r to the hill!" All tho mn wer? dricM alilo- nr.d j "T nr, pr'ns: tail way now," rot one wa dres-. d like him. Pari j Tnc Wi'i'.y awvf.rc-l. "Hut peratiPd htm, and once mnr 1 ha?. I'll come ' over later, LVihy
more- Uncle Wifely sot on her Fled. a '.i time cvcrjthlrc ormc-t to be a!l riht, but aa Daby Uunty W3f twrninc around a corner on the hill, c.r.c? i::orc the bur.ny per.t'.fn'.ir. fell o:
ovi:mi iiA ms own cwi. Th- vm "i wl'.n ii.jT.s it; nif::;': Ir. his own car thi pprin? ci:: m money Ly buying i'r.- r,'- .--,i: t
HAT A riPi: MllWS TO TH Ii MO K "Tilt nif.ir. thit you hav a rrrr.. ; anion tl.it w.;i a:To: 1 you tnnum
and acce5jor!v at t!; Lin-A:: r !. - r -f c-.-rv nt n;n,r
motive Su ;,iy Co.. II. J.-fff-r-ca !.! d. No-I. ::V-f) :!:: -t. : : -
indfr ciket?. rp'.tomr.t ..-. that wi'.l
f-a ..-f i r;i : :i. AdeJ ;o a l;,t-n 1 ' :' : ? a - f. t u h.avr in a t.'n a
ih:st rmr.M in m:i. noriTM.. If your Y ; fr; r.d. r-r .
urt for r.r ! -
: i v r
furr. !,-, or a f? 1 . .
n ' , r-i p ; J a ; T TT. 71 ? T ? r ', 1 1 t
day In he p. a I t?: ; Um cull 'tnl i tn-.;.-j f
u pa anything ! r.rar.c of prir.s t c if.vj c.u f .r rll r; -''I V.;::.i7r.v the r
IV .IT.
too much!'
looKca at tne cioinf-o on me oea. ana f;-mty Don't coast
then without hesitation v.alkei; ..0t j-jj erv caretul.' through th" hallway, and f-topped ; the little rabbit s'.rl.
1 an 1 that ho
had
jff-n a
lopt'd b
' hief as h: sor; Tihf In liar. - are driven off. Arrow s'.-i;. ? t!, tratod 3:!r:, a? 'r.o of tl- '
mortally "? yurpri
th. tip
?l:awnc o
; n
for. but
thf battle l;lto
;:ir.
who rnalhi flight.
I
1 rnu.--d
r-'.r.iaa rf.--cuers I-
r.ur. !!. ll' trivrn a Ftart on r' f'in Wliite Arrow.
(,o ox with tiii: stohv 'Xevrr r.ilr.d f j .-. .-aid old Joel.
''".thin !y. Th-- buy's i r 1 r t h e away.
Li 1 1 : " j
"you mu.-t keep
ey bad l.;un to fthlft rutlnv and started
"Com-;- bi
comn;andrd
tho wo nr. -b- I n.an. and still s-ireh-in th 1' 1 h" ;aid ylvarply aain: "Who is that boy?" N'nr would he
nave tUi woi;n I Ire---eI or even
v.atch hr fathers fae. which
showed that the contents of the Ht-j ter v.rre atcundin? him. He ro' quickly when he liad finiched anl put out hi.i hand to the stranrer. j "I am plad to se you, my boy," he j fi M with ?reat kindncj. "Ibarbara, ' this is a little kln.man of ours from ; Kentucky. IIo was the adopted Hin ' of an Indian chief, but by blood he is your own cousin. Ili.-s name is i Krskinc Dale." i IV ! The little girl rose f-tartlcd, huti her brff lln was too fine for botrayal, and she went to him with ; hand outstretched. The boy took it j as he had taken her father's, limply! and without rif-in?. The father! frowned and smiled how could the! lad have learned manners? And!
then lie, too. -aw the hole in the moccasin through which the bleeding had started aain. "Vou are hurt you have walked a Ion;,' way?" The lad Fhrurrzed his Fhoulders carelessly. "Take him Into the kitchen. Uarbara, and tell Hannah to wash his foot and bandatrp it." The boy looked uncomfortable and shook his head, but the little qui was pmilln? and Fhe told him to
promOn .hc
went with her tiny s'.ed. and aw.-y norpt.d U.-.cie Wizily. lie looked here, there and everywhere for adventures, but he couldn't eem to find any. and he was Ju?t wishing ho might even have a chance to run awav from the Woozie Wolf when.
a t-milp of welcome. His father be- a:j of a RUdJen tho bunny pentleman
m-i inuoors ne went iorwaru witn i
i.and outstretched.
on the thrrshold of the front door. A quaint figure he made there, and for the moment the tay talk and laughter quite ceaed. Nc "on of Powhatan could have stool Uito with more dignity, and) oun;' Harry Dnlo'. fice broke into
"I am your cousin Harry." he said, ani taking him by the. arm ho b d him on the round of presenta
tion, j And the youne ladies greeted hint'
" 'in 4 4 ci. m, f-a' i nil' I i.-i, au'.i nil
youn? rentkmen suddenly repressed!
patroriizir unibs and pave him grave greeting, for if ever a rapier flashed from a human head, it flashed f.-orn th piercing black eye of that little Kentucky backwoodsman when his cousin Hu'h. with a rathei whimsical smile, bowed with a politeness that was a trifle too elaborate. Harry was quick to notico Hugh's attitude. Continued in Our Next Isuc.
n ' I Im Vtin Inf Vi!n-1
ii. a suaiii jiaia in o;- itn iiüiu
paw. "Oh, my ßoodne&5:, cried Uncle
i V. isjgi'.y. lifting the paw up out ot j the snow. "Oh, have I Ftepped in
a trap?" But there was no trap in FiSht, though even' time he moved
' hi.s paw tho least bit it hurt him
i very much, j "I know what it is!" exclaimed the
bunny at last. "It's my rheumatism it has come on me mtddenly and I can't walk! Oh, dear And I left
tike the cu; of watr handed to hlm.f5me with -uch swfrt lP'-rlousness until oPI Jo-1 brief Jv told the rtnrv.!that ho rott helplessly. Old Ilan-
when he lay bac k on the round and i r'rs Tinrl a bewildered start! I
losfd hisf yf- Swiftly the old r.egress bound his Darkness ;r-;';. Th- dvln? man waslfoct ir"1 with great respect she 1 laid on a rud- b-.1 v. ithin one cabin, i him to '1 mtlt rooni in pu of th" and old Joel bay on the floor do; tr, r' :it bou.-e n whicli was a tub of tbr. rlr.r.r Tlw, ttnt.r.,, r r. f i . c e .1 . Wa r I! Water.
to sleep indoors and huddle! hlntf""lf In a blanket on the trround in one corner of the t-tockade. Men. women, ami children fell to a deep and weary sleep. An hour biter the boy in the corner threw aside his blanket, and v h?n Lydia Noe. feverish and thirsty. ro.e from hfr bed to g:t a drink (if
"Ole marstei say you been travellin' nn' ntebbe you like to refresrt jo'solf wid a hot bath. Dar's some o' little inarster'sj clothes on do bed dar, an a pair o his shoes, an' I know fley'li just fit you snug." She closed the door. Once, winter and summer, the boy had daily plunged into the river with his Indian companions, but he had never
UNCLE WIGGLY
rxn.i: wiggii.v and 1U NTYS SLKP.
Dj Hou Aitn it. r..ni.
my red. white and blue barber pole
water outside b"r ilnor. she stonoeiit
short on th threshold. The lad. I had a Lath -n 1Ifc an(1 did not I V t . ... .
stark naked but for his hrf-Th-cIout. uw w"'lt uie Noru meani. f I no
Jiad learned f;o much at the fort that
he had no trouble making out what tho tub of water was for. For the same reason he felt no surprise when he picked up the clothes; he was only puzzled how to get into them. The boy began putting on his
and swinging his bloody scalp over Iiis head, was stamping around the fire dancing the pcalp-dance of the savage to a low, fi roe, guttural lon?. The boy saw hrr, saw her face in th blaze, stricken white with frisrht
and horror, saw her too paralvzcd ' wn clothes. to move and he stopped, staring at I Outside Colonel Dale and Ibarbara her a moment with savage rage, anil , strolled down the big path to went on again. Old Joel'.? body filled ' the urwl.ad. tho colonel telling the the next doorwav. With an oath i FtorJ' ot thß IiuIe Kentucky kinsman and a threatening gr sture Joel mo-j tho littlR irl listening and wlde-tior.-nl to the corner of the stockade, er'd. nn.1 -ith n f'nre of .lefianeo in his 'Ig h to Hvo here with US,
black eyes the lad stalked slowly and proudly away.
From behind him the voice of the
papa?" "Perhaps. You must be very nice to him. He has lived a rude, rough
wounded man called, and old
jO0jjl!fe. but I can see he Is very sensi-
turned. There was a ghastly smile, on the Virginian's pallid face. T saw it," he said painfully. "That's that's my son!" Ill From the un-d!al on the edge of the high bank, straight above the brim of the majestic yellow James, a noble rath of thick gras as broad as a modern highway ran hundreds of yards between hedges of roses
straight to the open door of the -ryat manor-house with its wide verandas and mighty pillars set deep back from the river in a grove of .anrfent oaks. The second son of the rvlgning gem-ration, one Colon 1 rale. suit in th" veranda alone. He was a royalist ouicer. thN second son, but his elder brother had the spirit of daring and adventure that should have been his. and he h.d been sitting there fcur ytars b-fere when that Mer brother am home from his first pioneering trip into the wilds.
! tive."
At the bend of the rivei- there was
"There she goes!" exclaimed Nurse Jane Fuzzy Wuzzy one day, looking frem the window of th hollowstump bungalow, whero the musk rat
lady house-keeper and the bunny iyou.
E-vnt lem.in were 1u.ct flr i?hir.rr break, most
fa;t. "Who goes?" as?ked Mr. Longears. "lbaby Uunty." answered the rnuskrat lady. "There she goes with her cute little Christmas Bled." "She's going over to tho coasting
crutch home What shall I do?" He stood there In the snow, with one paw raised. He could see no one who might help him. Uncle Wiggily was going to do his best to hop on one hind paw back to his bungalow, when, all at once, he saw Home one coming over the top of th hill. "I hope it isn't the Woozie Woll now," thought the bunny. "I can't run away from him at all!" And how glad he was- when he saw Baby Bunty with her tiny sled. The littlo rabbit girl came coasting down the hill on her way home. "Oh. Uncle Wiggily! Whatever Is the matter?" asked Baby Bunty. "Arc you trying to be a stork standing on one leg?" "So, Bahy Bunty." answered the rabbit gentleman. "I am not trying to bo a stork. But I have the rheumatism very painfully In one paw. and I don't know how to hop home." "Oh. this Is where I can help
"i in.K'Vif.fi Ti.i hv iinnrv in ner
jolly voice. "Sit on my sled
and I'll pull you home. It's down hill all the way. "You are very kind, Baby Bunty,' said Undo Wiggily. "But I am rather large and your fled is quite
small"
Pig boy, with his sled. His is about the fdze of mine, but you can ride half on mine and half on his. and we'll take you home that way." And. surely enough, by sitting on the two ßleds half of himself on each Uncle Wiggily was pulled home, for her couldn't hope. And the only thing that happened was, right in front of his bungalow. Baby Tunty pulled her fled or.e way. and Squeakle Squealer pulled his the oppesite way, and Uncle Wiggily fell off between them into the snow. Nurse Jane hurried out. picked him up and took him In where he was warm, so his rheumatism was soon better. IJut Baby Bunty and Squeakie Squealer wre great helps. Just the same. And if the rice pudding doesn't go off skating with the chocolate cake when it ought to be dusting the piano I'll tell you next about Uncle Wiggily and the big snowballs.
BTXOK ATTON P.W PLANS Vor.'t w.ii, ti'l r.e: s, . ii.g f :r th---decoration of v t:r home. Anv . a
b.-.tnr ha-? a wonderful tjc); cf them. J2-tf Choi-e c irtion cut fowrs ar.d t-- i .r ill-.;.-. S-u'.h Be.-... Floral
"Oh. Baby Bunty!" h- cried, for hi rheumatism hurt him very much, "I don't believv, niy dear. I can nde
oti your sled. You had bette.- Fkip I sonahl prices. Quality and work- ho: .st-t-co.1r.e?. sweetness. Crrr-t ir. 19
a.e r.g and get some of the animal: - h rvara:-.: boys to come with their big oray. 1 make your sejr-tion
can ride on a large sled, but not on : our., my dear!'' "Mine is quite Ftnail," said Baby Bunty. "But wait a minute here ''- Sueak;e Squealer, ;h little
S-ra;:!; Dyes Cb: thir. Mut.
Big half-pri-- a- V-i
tat; Y.-..W
NuW is the best ti.ne.
and have your rooms looking tbe'r
l'st. See L wer s d-.spl.v, ot 'a. , Papers and Wood Finishing.- U -
rs. Michigan s:.
Co . 12: N" Mirh'g-'n s!
C3-tf-2!
Dr. Carson is devoting his entire
time and attention to the practice of i
M 54?. .rt9-tf
Doing Your Own Worki
j Many women are y finding this just
VnPWfmPRIl! the extra help JJJCWi iLbS OS j they need.
Ii II
INDIVIDUALLY
I ,,
l AT Till: niiACKSTOXE This week they are playing the March releases of the O-Keh record.s, the record of quality. The General Phonograph Corporation, (manufacturers of these records, instead of spending enormous sums on advertising to get a prestige, are putting this Into quality of the record, thereby making a better record. The marvelous sweet tcne, the freedom from surface noise and .above all the wonderful harmony land distinctiveness of the instru- ' ments, have been commented on by scores of the most prejudiced record buyers who have heard them at the Blackstone. When you get an O-Keh record you are buying quality, not paying for prestige. The March records in advance of all others, are now on sale at the C. W. Kopp Music Shop. Open every eve
ning this week till S:30. iU
RENTED REPAIRED
EXCHANGED B j
S Undeiwood, Remington,
L. C. Smith, Royal, Monarch, Oliver, Corona, Fox,
I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY , U
1
ii
Swank Dyes Clothing Main 731 32-tf
CASH OR TERMS
1
Fl
i
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20
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up
VICTOR ADDING AND
IJSTINC MACHIXFS
1 VU !i
r
Many women who arc doing their ow
housework find a lift from the modern lain
dry just the extra help they need.
Thev know that their work will be J
promptly and well much better than ' vj
could do it at home, because we are esnei
. ; ' I . ' - ""I
S dj II prepared for it. They know, too, that
A vi II charges will be reasonable.
r
Are you taking advantage of this opporti nity to lighten your tasks)
THE
Q R VZTl CT'-T! H POT LJ 1 , r , i ir i t n r l
S 3 ü il 2$c3H 5 ' luesaayana weanesaay. ienverea oaiuraay.
We pick up laundry work Monday, Tuesday, Wednt'sda
H and Thursday and get every' bundle back the same vcc!
;'3 Mishawaka, Niles and Buchanan collections made on Mcr
CORPORATION I SLICE'S ö
rvianuracturing stationers g ; rj l l Phone: Main 949 r A IlfJfjRY IK DRY CLEANING CO 119 W. Washington Ave. Sjh J,J
Cid
"Oh, I guffs you can sit on!
in-
hill to ride down with the other ani
. .. , . .. ... ' 4.1 IV.i. I?iinfv "Trv It'"
mal children, l suppose," spoke Ln-jtl"U'u .w. cle Wiggily, as he drank the last! u"( Vi L'ncle Wiggily managed to of his carrot coffee and looked for Cet one rdzo of himself on the little his tall silk hat. "I hope they have; anJ hrin- his rheumatism fUn- paw out in front of him he called "Are vou going over to the coast-! to Baby Bunty to begin to pull, ing hill to ride down, also?" asked I "Hero we go!" she cried, and she Nurse Jane, as tho bunnv started . hauled on the sled rope. ?0on she from his-stump bungalow. "It would ' hegan to hop fast, and she had gone
be lust like vou to do it!" and shei'iuit a distance
laughed. Uncle Wi;
"Well, I might stop around there crying:
"Oh. Baby Bunty:
before she heard
ily's voice behind her
in the course of the morning," Uncle Wigghy aid, slowly like. "But first I am going to look for an adventure." Down off th Fteps he hopped, not taking his red. white and blue
Wait! I slip
ped off because your fled is so tiny!' "Well, get on again, and I'll .start slower." said the rabbit girl as shecame back to where the rabbit had fallen off in a snow drift. Once
tten
t.i t .11 that his wi their only son was tl-. Indians. Two word came that th met death front th
! was dead and a captive among wars later still. - father, too. had M'.iU'cs, and the
little kingdom p.ts.-. d into Colonel Dale's hands. Indentured servants n well as blocks fn.r.t Afrb a. ha I labored on that path in fron' of him: and up it had once stallet d a deputation nf th jrreat Powk.r. ir.'s rd tribes. l"p that path h.;d cvne the la-t of the early color::. ii i'.:tmc. in liue ruff p.
Mh-hrt p d .'... and hort skirts, j
litt!- girl i i 1 and pone I
M O W
OSiJ AWri
Mfö'zlMß' laiiarant
f r -
to Grow Hair
No Hair No
money
Pay Nothing Unless wc grow hair. The Van K?s treatment is absolutely guaranteed. You arc the sole judge. The warrant it signed by your czin drugrjist. You assume no ri?k making this test.
Iown the flov.
nr.-l h--r or." of tV stepped fr
:t r.o-.v ca:..-. r of all t ho--
r ." s a:
7 til" r hrou.-b tr.ari'ii . ib.. di i ! a-. ?! Iv t :: w h. . I :: In--e. pair r
1 1 i W (
a
'1 1 '! o:
a th'-: : h' r I
i : . 'v- ( : i i ? i U To : : . ,1 K tri'iTnpJ.al ! l all. At - i e a -.-- V.'t- I'1;
is our proposition
! ' V
V. . I s mad
: o a
f '.x T-
tra'h
t b
a:
:" ir.dir.r ap .'.uv 0 . i . -1 . . 4 . . 4 . . . .
-in. d f. -Wh,. ar 'A ar.:'." It was a : ; '.. to a ; '.- ar -iA-Wed it. "I am th i'U.'Zl. d, fo i ahor.t.i ' i : a a : I:awt: - : sn !. ! t . . -.
v y w .v t "II- liv "V'U v. t:. 1 . a . . k start. I ;.; cry h kir.;." "Ah." f
:ng Jar. ' .a ate d." Ills hl-1 to th" Ct:: d'.-l r.ot , l::.. '.v :.:
t
d t
. . . 7
. e v
4 ! w r ' a :i f i -.!.!' ( onn'.; m : :.a. call o ou "nan to
was b.N
r
.00
the belt, -o w orn ar. I : lir.tlly and r. iT'.i'-. Th" toward th-
Aith
ar. i . . 4 . V 4
her
w : t n
e lady
head
.- t h s o n
of
a . .1
s r ;:t
bras-
humor- ,
tO b
V havf a new method of treating the scalp. It prows hair. It stops falling hair. Under actual clinical tests it Krcw hair on 1 heads in each hundred treated. This is to offer it tn you. Results arc guaranteed. If we fail, you pay nothing. Your own druggist signs the guarantee. Hence you assume no risk in testing it. The name is the Van E.:? Liquid Scalp Mas-age. Yc make so broad a guarantee fo.this simple reason: For years the public lias been c!eccivci! with countless "hair griwer" and with treatment-". Now no-t people believe hair cannot be grown they arc skeptical. And with good reason. Ipr.orar.t men have danr.cd s'.:,-ce where men of science failed. It is hard to separate the wiieat front the cha:T. Yc don't ask you to try. We .;:.?'.:.- '.cf rcsuits. You get your money back if we don't succeed. Y"e arc men of science. We think in term of science. We have crTectcd a new method a scientific method that our own test charts prove 95' ct:cc4 . C . Wc have traced the source of most hair troubles to a simple infection infected Sebum. We remove that infection hair then grows. Hair Roots Seldom Die Dermatologists ued to believe that a bald head meant dead hair roots. We have proved this incorrect. 77.r rests seldom die. Four men in 7 are bald or partially bald at 40. Yet only 5 men in ICO need ever be bald. We have seen new hair on heads oacc bald. So-called hopeless cases of
semi-baldness, of hair fast falling, wc have checked in 2 weeks. We have
our point to world authorities.
a
proves
Now great dermatologists employ
this
th
4 TVa
new method, inch meaicol nu
dities approve it. Haldnci-. thev
av, tocn will be a raritv.
Infected Sebum 95r of all hair troubles are traced to infected cbum. Sebum is an od. It forms at th roots of hair. Its natural function is to supply the hair with oil. Hut frequently it becomes infected. It cakes on the scalp. It plugs the follicles and chokes them. It forms a breeding place for bacteria germs by the millions feed upon the hair and destroy it. It invites semi-baldness. Soon total
baldness ..... r Se-bum -
Note this New Way It Massages the Treatment Directly into the Follicles of the Hair This patent arP'drator mak hair treatment, at horn. rn,ttor tho fa-Pt thne. lUo.. 1 a:or revive Treatment m'j.t reach the laf-rtei are endrthe urfare. We accomplish in an the illustration bT shorn . with hollow nipples of a fltr.tifaally perfect rubber ran-rtte-cap which com"" -ith eviry bottle of Van K?s Itair e trover. Tiic lotion U fei dlr' t!y into the follicle of th
ha r. At the irr. tirr.e tr-
toilows. i-.ut it docs not kill -ow- of mo1 is stimulate hy
roo.'. Remove the infected - normal hair .growth is rc-
stKued. Tliis is scientific tact. We guarantee results in writing. Now Science Overcomes It
inas'ige to the hair root.
BI
In the Van Ess Treatment wc have embodied new scientific principles. You apply it a new way. (Note illustration at rieht.) It combats the infected Sebum and remove? it. It penetrates to the follicles of the hair. It revives dormant hair roots and grows new hair. Y.'e urge you to try it. Then note rcsuits in two weeks. Note the healthy condition of the scalp the freedom of dandruff, how falling hair is stopped. Obtain it at your d-uggist's. Your
are net ob-
U- V,rfi h
zj . , Hift '..0 - y
! -,'r IP IP'S Prrr, -jig
'vrtarfi Ka.r,
-l
at
Th?e tfro pictures show a cros eection of the hair root or bulb and the case which encloses each hair from the root to surface of ecalp reat!y mniSei). irm infected Return cau?e 95- of blir.e?s and falürg hair. P.emOTe It anl hair wjil grew. Illustration A Fhoj Fehum lr.fectei hair ani B hea'.tay hs'.r.
. i . s
mor.ev returned if re
tamed. Wc assume all the risk, it is folly not to make the test.
Hence
from one
i.::a
44 . .
r '
, 1
or' u
a- i hr-er.y. II- -stand. but h--- ' !-e!r.? prkf- at - ; 1 1 t n 1 y on t h e ; 1.; r d in f rnt I
The little- ' in. wert- rut:.T;. v. a a boh .-t.4l:.ti. And
it hi m eiand that
a -1M.
dp.'" l-'.i.-'-l-L( par, to
0
Liquid
Scalp Massage
VAN ESS LABORATORIES 5007 Lake Prk Ave. Chicago, 111.
n
Ik -'V,' h'-Yv-r M'-i
;-Von'll Like Tradi-jf: at Hellei-v;
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n i! ; ! d
! j r v
kiisjy,
CO
You can then ar-
puts the HOOSIER in your home it is delivered at once.
range to pay the balance in small amounts each week. We Can PRO VE It There are more HOOSIER BEAUTIES in use than any other model kitchen cabinets surely this is all the proof you need that the HOOSIER will do more to save steps and time and cut out work and worry than any other cabinet.
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10-Piece Cutlery Set FREE! Buy a HOOSIER now, and get with it, absolutely FREE the ten-piece DEXTER KITCHEN SET. The kitchen tools are endorsed by Good Housekeeping Institute and other Domestic Science experts. The set exactly fits a tool tray built into HOOSIER'S slid ng table top. Even when the worktable is extended, each tool is easy to get at. Free D. rnonscration Come in and let us show you our complete line of HOOSIER porcelain tables and cabinets. Prices rancre from $12.50 to $96.
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