The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 April 1936 — Page 3

THURSDAY, APRIL 2. 1936.

Keeping Up Afflwcience ffifcffiwitijerw « © Science Service. —WNU Service. Childbirth’s Pains Safely Banned by Savants’ Discovery New Chemical Formula Puts Mother to Sleep WASHINGTON.—A safe way of taking tlfe suffering out of childbirth has long been a goal of medical scientists as well as the prayer of countless mothers the world over. One by one, various anesthetics and pain-killing agents have be«X tried —chloroform, ether, nitrous oxide or "laughing gas." twilight sleep, to name a few familiar ones. Some have been rejected because of danger to mother and child. Others' were of limited use because complicated apparatus and skilled anesthetists were needed to give them. Others have brought only partial relief of suffering, or have relieved the pain in some cases and not tn others. Yea hi of Research. The long quest seems now to have been ended by a giscovery of two Washington, D. C., physicians, Dr*. Howard F. Kane and George B. Roth of George Washington University Medical school. After years of careful research they have hit on what may prove to be the ideal childbirth anesthetic. The agent they use is a mixture of paraldehyde and bensyl alcohol. The mixture is injected when the first labor v pains are reported and the patient falls asleep within half an hour or an hour. She sleeps soundly and awakens actually refreshed some six or eight hours after delivery. Is Easily Administered. The chief advantage of the new method. Doctor Kane said, Is that there is no danger to-either mother or child. Another advantage is the fact that the anesthetic can be easily given and requires no complicated apparatus. It has been tried in several hundred cases during the last three and a half years at the George Washington University hospital, and no 111 effects have been noticed In either, mother or child. The paraldehyde of the mixture is the substance that does the trick. This chemical has long been used In medical practice as a hypnotic to quiet victims of delirium tremens and nervous disorders snd as an antidote to morphine. It brings about just the degree of light unconsciousness desired In childbirth and is relatively a very safe drug. Benxyl alcohol. In itself a mild local anesthetic, was added to overcome the fact that paraldehyde by Itself was not easily retained after injection. Gold Output Value Exceeds Billion for First Time NEW YORK.—GoId mining, among the oldest industries of man, entered the billion dollar business stage for the first time In 1935. the meeting here of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Englnewrdearned. ‘■Preliminary estimates for 1935," declared John J. Crouton. Boston mining engineer, "indicate that more than 30,000.000 ounces of gold were produced. 10 per cent more than the 1934 reconi. "Banking In order as gold producers were the Union of South Africa, Rus . aia, the United State* and Canada with Russia Showing the greatest percentage of Increase. In view of the large number of new mines being prepared for production in Canada. Australia, the Gold Coast and the United State*, further Increase* in production are expected in 1936 and 1937." Depression Boomed Mine*. The start of the depression In 1929. Mr. Croston pointed out, marked the turning point for gold mining from a declining to an Increased Industry. Up till 1929 there was a gradual depletion of known gold deposit* and the operating costa increased while the price of gold we* pegged—a* It had been since 1717—at >20.67 an ounce. Following 1929 the first aid to the Industry was the decline of wage* and supplies which, enabled some marginal operators to get a foothold. Biggest spur, of course, was when Great Britain and finally the United State* went off the gold standard and almost doubled, overnight, the income from gold mining, - 1_ Lipstick Scent Causes Occasional Skin Trouble CHICAGO.—Change the scent of your lipstick, girls, if the kind you are using brings on a skin trouble. The doctor* hare traced some case* of lipstick dermatitis—the skin disorder that occasionally develop* among user* of a lip rouge—to the perfume it contain*. A particular offender l* a perfume containing methyl heptine carbonate. The Journal of the American Medical Association states. A young woman came to her doctor < with a breaking out on the akin, which he traced to her as* of lipstick. She had been using a certain brand for I years with no ill effects until site changed shades. By patch testa on the girl’* arm. the physician found that she was sensitive not to the oil or dye* in the rouge but only to th* perfume used In two she ilea

Punch and Judy Shows Solve Kids’ Behavior Problems “Problem Child” Analyzed by Puppet Dramas CLEVELAND. — Punch and Judy and other puppet show characters beloved of children are helping psychiatrists untangle serious behavior difficulties and ward off mental and personality disorders. Details of this new use for puppet shows were given by Dr. Lauretta Bender and Adolph Woltmann of Bellevue hospital. New York city, at a meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric association. The method has met with striking success, the New York psychiatrists said. It was developed in the children's observation ward of the hospital where hundreds of children suffering from all kinds of behavior problems are sent In each year from children's courts, mental hygiene clinics, < schools and other institutions. The greatest need among this group of children Is. first, an adequate understanding of their emotional problems and, second, a form of treatment that will deal with the emotional problems Involved. Because of the small staff, It I* Impossible to give individual attention to each group of children. The puppet shows, however, can be used to detect the difficulties of the children tn a group and also to help the children work out the solution of their problems. How th* Plot* Develop. The shows are written and produced to deal directly with such problems of children as rivalry between brothers and sisters, the unloved child, aggression, and over-devotion to one or the other parent. The hero, Caspar, can In the shows face all klnda of problem* and the children In the audience can help him decide what to do. The children are also taught to make the puppets and write and produce their own plays. In the course of these classes, the children discuss freely the various problems In the impersonal terms of the’puppets. The puppets have In this way helped the psychiatrists enormously In gaining insight Into the various complexes of the children. Electric “Prospector” Finds Coal Veins in Pennsylvania NEW YORK.—The same technique of using electrical prospecting methods—often likened to electrical divining rods—which has worked so successfully in discovering oil, gold and other minerals, is now being used to find deposits of coal tn Pennsylvania. Scientists told the meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers here that the new electrical methods, based on how well a seam of coal conducts electricity, were successful in the Mahanoy coal fields which already have been worked for TO years. Locating Anthracite Pit*. Most of the coal seams. Dr. Maurice Ewing. A. P. Crary. J. W. Peoples and J. A. Peoples, Jr, describe in their report, were worked near the surface In the past but since the working* were never completely or accurately mapped complete extraction of the coal from older pit* was not obtained. In consequence, they point out, virgin bodies of coal, not heretofore known, are yet to be found. The electrical prospecting consists of passing a known electric current between metal stake* driven into th* ground at considerable distance apart. How much current will flow between the stake* depends on bow well th* underlying mineral* conduct the current How It Work*. Anthracite coal, for example, passes electric current from 10,000 to 2,000,000 times easier than shales and sandstone*. Said another way, the resistance of the coal to the passage of th* electric current is much less by factor* of from 10,000 to 2.000,000 times. "The presence of outcrop* of an anthracite seam 1* indicated at point* where electrical resistivity rest* show relatively low readings," U the way th* technical report read*. Test drilling and strip mining confirmed th* finding*. Now It's All Right to Mow Your Dandelions ANN ARBOR. MlCH.—Dandelions have almost ceased from troubling lawn-anxious householders; but Prof. Carl D. Laßue of th* University of Michigan 1* offering, for future reference, the result* of bl* study of seed behavior in the bead* of dandelions mowed before the seed* were ripe. He imdertoook bis Investigation because be had received many Inquiries whether dandelion beads cut down by the lawnmower would go on and ripen seeds that would sprout later. He cut off a large number of the head* at vario'tt* stages of development and Ist them lie on moist mo«* until they hat' fully dried. Then be examined and placed the seed* under conditions for germination. He found that In all head* ent at any stage. before the white down ("pappus" to botanist*} began to aba* above the closed green sheath after the petals had wilted, the seeds looked quite unpromising and that their germination performance did oct belie their look*. They all failed to sprout; in fact, after ten day* they bad all; decayed. Professor Laßue concludes: “Apparently then, until the whit* of the dandelion pappus begins to extend beyond the green Involucre tip*, the head* may be cut and allowed to dry on the lawn without any danger of cmMMhfllnfF rho» ** spiuauiug imu

McGoofey’s first Reader and Eclectic Primer zx by H. I. PHILUPS-=aß=J IhH m

Who is this? This is Chldsey. Who I* Chldsey? Chldsey is just an average American family man. What is Chldsey doing? Chldsey is packing the flivver preparatory to quitting the summer cottage and going back to the city. Why does Chldsey look so fierce? If you were in Chldsey’s shoe* you would look fierce, too. He is all hot and bothered. What make* Chldsey hot and bothered? Trying to get the family and it* belongings back to town tn one load with the minimum amount of cramping. Isn’t the car nearly packed? Yes, the car is nearly packed. Everything is Id except a barrel of dishes and the bird dog. Then why is Chldsey still peevish? Because he knows he will have to unpack and reload the car again to make room for the dog and the barrel. How many times has he done this?Six or seven. Why doesn’t Chldsey pack the things In right in the first place? Because Mother keeps digging up another crate of kitchen utensils or something. Will Chldsey get the car packed ulti mately? Ultimately Is right. • • • MAXIMS FOR CHILDREN Be shy and quiet And you’ll be put on a diet If you’re rough and informal They’ll say that you’re normal. * • • If you Uke spinach Your parents.will grin (ach), But If you reject it They’ll sort of expect It • ♦ • Milk will make you healthy If your folks are so wealthy That they can buy Grade A And be able to pay. • • • Never speak unless spoken to— And doctor will come to Never talk back to your daddy or mummy— And folks they will think you a terrible dummy. • • • THE STORY OF ALFRED » B&SEpSESE3 i. — Alfred was pretty dull. 2— He didn’t grasp I fl thln ® B - 3— He was a pretty swift talker and cou,d bore yon on any subject 4— There was no subject on which he was not thoroughly misinformed. 5— He inherited a talent for improvidence and wa* always short of money. 6— If be ever found himself with 1100 in the bank be thought he wa* doing splendidly and violating *ll family tradition*. 7— He wa* pretty much of a flat tire, even id* best friend* admitted. 8— He tried hl* hand at all things with equally dismal result*. 9— He started In business for himself eleven time* but never could make a go of it. 10— He couldn’t figure very well and even showed a loss a* an apple vendor. 11— But he finally hit something which provided Mm with a big field. j 12— He became a magnsine writer on business affair*. He wrote stories beaded: "The Way Ont of the Borines* Slump" and "Incompetence Rampant in in American Industry." 13— He even ran a department called “Borine** Problems Made Simple for All." MORAL.: It’s all done by bologna slicer*. • • • CURIOUS FACTS FOR CURIOUS PEOPLE There are no bathing beauties in the Swiss Alp*. The Laplanders do Dot care for ice cream cones. Labor day always falls on Monday In New York. Grasshopper* do not like shad roe. The life of a cucumber is about twelve weeks. The natives of the Canary Island* do not go In much for ski jumping.

EGGS LAID BY FISH The maximum number of eggs laid by fish varies greatly, but in all cases the number Increases with the weight and age of the fish. Thus It has been calculated that the number laid by the salmon is roughly About U.QUO to every pound weight ot the fish. The sturgeon lays about 7,000.000; the herring. 50.000; the turbot, 14,311.000; the sole, 1344)00; the perch. 280.000. Briefly. the number to greatest where the h«w of destruction are greatest.

S > .RA.C tJSIS JOXTyC-WAT/

The average golfer takes 2,356*fc strokes In sand traps every summer. Not one man in 56,768 can change a typewriter ribbon without becoming a nervous wreck. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s last name 1* Roosevelt Salt can be kept dry in a shaker at the seaside In the muggy season by keeping the shaker over a hot flame but It will ruin the shaker and salt Moths throughout the country starved to death last summer trying to find room to bore holes in presentday bathing suits. ... GENERAL INFORMATION TEST Check the word which properly com pletes the following sentences: 1— Millard Fillmore was a Civil war heroinventor of the steamboat..a noted golfer In the ninetiesa pole vaulter the thirteenth President of the United Statesa tree surgeon. 2— “Give me liberty or give me death" was spoken byGreta Garboßernarr Macfadden Roger* Hornsby Bishop Cannon... Patrick Hurley Patrick Henry. 3— Albie Booth became well known becausehe was a great actor. he shot Lincoln He was a great Yale football player.he owned the Booth theater. 4— Paraffin isa city In Portugal....a noted Russian violinista kind of sailboat a race horse.....a kind of wax. 5— “Don’t Give Up the Ship!” was spoken by...Owney Madden Paul Revere the U. S. shipping, board•Captain Lawrence... John Paul Jone*. 6— Addison Simms isa noted lawyer.an international financierthe author of "It Simms to Me”chairman of the Reconstruction corporation. THE RABBIT The rabbit Is an animal That very quickly grieves Unless you feed it turnip tops And lot* of cabbage leaves. It seems to eat the whole day long; Despite what else It’s doing, The rabbit, so It seems to me. Is always, always chewing. It lives tn burrows In the ground And build* • subway grand In which, unlike the subs we know, It never has to stand. It sometime* goes upon the stage And presently appear* A* some magician yanks it from A silk hat by the ear*. • • • THE RIGHT WORD Check the words which properly complete these sentences: 1— A faux pas i5....a street In Francea kind of deer something embarrassing and tactlessa unit of Italian currency. 2— “If that be treason, make the most of it" wa* spoken by Rogers HornsbyPatrick Henry... Franklin D. RooseveltHarpj Marx George Washington. 3— The steamboat was invented by C Rembrandt Lord Tennyson.....Shoeless Joe Jackson James Watt Schnosxle Durante John N. Garner. 4— The Serapls was.* famous statue by Saint Gaudens a restaurant in Paris a famous battleship.......... * Bronx apartment bousea cocktail. 5— Daniel Boone was famous a5.... a Civil war cavalry leader.... the proprietor of a chain of grocery stores pioneer railroad builder.an early frontiersman.......the Inventor of the telephone. 6— Jules Verne wasa flagpole sitterthe composer of "Home Sweet Home" * member of the 1917 Brooklyn baseball outfield.....a celebrated author the commander of the Union army at Vicksburg.

CAIRO'S PROMINENT LANDMARK One of the landmarks at Cairo, Egypt, to the Mohammed AH mosque which surmounts the citadel. The citadel was bunt in 1178, chiefly of stones taken from the smaller pyramids of Gtoeh. The mosque was started in 1824 by Mohammed All, great grandfather of King Fuad of Egypt, and completed about 20 years later. Its slender minarets and graceful design form one of the most beautiful works of Arabian art extant.

Op CLUB **Fate Rings the Bell n By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter. ( YOU know, boys and girls, there’s no use denying it, a lot of yous i adventure stories almost turn a man into a fatalist. A fatalist, as 1 you know, is a person who believes he will live “until his time comes,” * that is to say, nothing he does can change the “stars” which have ( already arranged for his particular fate in advance. I can’t believe that theory of life myself. I’m inclined to believe ’ that if you keep running in front of automobiles you are bound—by ' the law of averages—to get run over, sooner or later. But you can’t argue with a dyed-ln-the-wool fatalist along those lines. He’ll tell you that when you ' escape It’* just not your time and when you get hit it IS your time. All of which bring* u* to our «tory of Frederick Hoyt of Clearfield, Pa. Fred had *uch a narrow escape under such strange circumstance* that about the only way you can explain It I* by believing that hl* time had not come. If you're a fatalist that’s the explanation you will like. If you’re not a fatalist you will probably put it down to plain every day luck. I’d say it wa* a combination of both. Fred’s first job—at the age of fourteen—was to sit In a hallway before th* door of a certain office. Beyond that door was Fred’s first boss—a busy man who hired Fred to keep caller* from disturbing him. Fred Is Buffer for Boss. Fred was the buffer and he says he turned away at least 99 per cent of the callers. He had a nice comfortable chair beside a big steam radiator and could read or play checkers with himself or do anything he wanted to do providing he didn’t let anybody slip by his watchful eye. There was on* restriction, Fred say*, upon which hl* job depended. He couldn’t leav* hi* post at any moment of the day. No pretext could excuse hi* absence for one second. H* didn’t mind that, he say*. ,He had the only window in the spacious hall, where he sat, and could look out when he got tired reading. Except for a small telephone table at the other end of the hall, there was no furniture. Fred could put his feet up on the hot radiator when It was cold and make himself at home as much as he wished. Following out his orders to the letter he paid no attention to anything else that might be going on around him. Ignores Telephone, but It’s Agent of Fate. The telephone, at the far end of the hall, he Ignored. No one seemed ever to use the thing anyway, and yet that telephone was destined to be the instrument of Fate—the Instrument that would snatch him from a particularly dreadful and untimely end. Fred had been on the Job two month* when the fateful day arrived. He had never moved out of that dutiful chair of hi*. No matter what happened around him, Fred had been true to hl* trust, and like a faithful watchdog had stayed put before the door of hl* employer. Radiator Good Company on Cold Day. This day was particularly cold and his side partner—the steam radiator—was sizzling hot. The steam hissing through its pipes in front of him was sweet music to his chilly ears. He had a good book and there were few caller* so what more could a fellow ask?. As he glanced out of his frosty window, he could see less fortunate persons fighting their way against a wintry blast and he congratulated himself on the sense of duty that had kept him at his post *nd held his nice warm Job for him. Suddenly an annoying sound grated on Fred’s sensitive ear*. It wa* that blame telephone at the other end of th* halt. He let it ring. He should worry. He wasn’t going to get up and an*wer it and then have some salesman slip in and annoy the boss. No sir-ree. He smiled, cocked hi* feet higher on the radiator, and went on reading. Ringing Telephone Annoys Fred. But that doggoned phone kept on ringing. It wouldn’t stop. You’d think when a fellow didn’t answer they’d stop ringing. But they didn’t “Dlng-a llng-a ling,” went the telephone! “Bang!" went Fred’s warm feet off.the sizzling radiator and he made for the other end of the halt He figured be could answer the darn thing and be back before anyone noticed his absence. He made the ball in 10 Jumps and grabbed the receiver. And as he did, Fred says, the bottom fell out of the world 1 The Bottom Falls Out of the World. Wham! A rush of air slammed him violently against th* walll Boom! A detonation like thunder shook the building under hl* feetl He fell, like a log, to the floor! Cries came from the front office—cries and dense clouds of live steam I Windows crashed open 1 The agonized voice of his boss came to him crying his name. Suddenly the air cleared. Fred’s boss appeared and hugged him joyously. Fred was amazed. Here he was getting hugged instead of getting fired! He looked around and bls eyes nearly popped out of his head. The Radiator Had Been Blown to Pieces. Hi* easy chair wa* a ma** of wreckage! Th* radiator wa* gon*! Blown to bit*! It had exploded and jagged fragment* of iron protruded from the place on th* wall WHERE FRED’S HEAD HAD BEEN FOR THE LAST TWO MONTHS! If that phone hadn’t rung the boy would have been blown to pioceft Well, I’m not advising disobedience by any means, but, by golly, disobedience saved Fred’s life that day. Or was It just “not his timer ©—WNU Servlet

Feminine Hands Guided Ireland Long, Long Ago The queens of ancient Ireland and especially of Ulster figure prominently In the history and folklore of the land. “This fact Is one of the reasons why Ireland Is always represented as a beautiful woman," states a writer in the New York World-Telegram, who tell* how one need only enter the ports of Belfast, Londonderry or Dublin to feel the shadowy presence of these queenly Cinderella* 'of the past "There is hardly a district but what an ancient castle, some relic, or local *ong*~or folklore do not contain reference to a fairy queen of Ireland. History records that through feminine rivalry, queendoms vied with one an other in primitive arts.” When the Milesians, or Gaels, first landed In Ireland they were ruled bJ a queen named Scots, and they found here a poeple called the Danaans. And the Danaans were ruled by three kings, who were not only brother*, but mar- . tied to three sisters. The name* of these three sister queens were Eire, Banba and Fiola and their three names are often taken to signify Ireland. In fact, Ireland is wdd to derive its name from the first sister, Eire. In far distant times, the queens of Ireland, wore clothes of seven different color* and none but royalty might wear dotlie* of the same colors. A wise counsellor of the queen wore a dres* of six colors, a nobleman of the court was garmented in five colors, and so on, according to rank down to one color. It Is from these queenly col-

“Hail Columbia” The words of the song •‘Hall Columbia" were written during a period of great political excitement in 1798 by Judge Joseph Hopklnson and were set to the melody of the “President’s March,” composed the same year, in honor of President Washington, by Pfyles, orchestral leader at the John Street theater. New York. Tlie composition. first sung at a theatrical benefit. attained great popularity, and on account of its patriotic sentiment has become a representative national song.

ors that early Irish peasants took their costume colors of dress. At Belfast, one sees evidence of the reign of thegreat Irish Empress Macha, "Queen of the Golden Hair.” While the capital of northern Ireland is only three centuries old. Queen Macha wa* born In Ulster and ruled all Ireland for seven years. Th. Garibaldi Many ladles must remember wearing, In the 70’s of last century, an article of dress known as a “garibaldi,” write* George Eyre-Tood in the Glasgow Herald. As a mere man can remember it, this was a sort of shirt blouse, buttoned down the front, and ending with a belt at the waist It was not a garment merely named after the famous Italian guerilla chief, bat was a reproduction of the garment actually worn by him, as shown in his portraits. The vogue of the wearing of the garibaldi was a result of the furore of enthusiasm for the Italian patriot which swept over Scotland when he paid it a visit in 1863. Following a wildly romantic career as sailor, filibuster, drover, shipbroker, teacher of mathematics and naval commander, be bad freed Sicily from the tyranny of the Bourbons. Um Only Chines. Sign* A regulation announced by the Nanking municipal government orders that all signboards before Chinese shops in the capital may bear only Chinese characters. No English or other language may be employed.

Romance of Richard First Scarcely a stone of the edifice in which Richard the Lion Hearted was married to Princess Berengarifi in Limasol, Cyprus, in the Twelfth century is still standing, but the story of the wedding is still common gossip. A Fifteenth century building in the neighborhood is the little ruined monastery of SL Nicholas of the Cats. Nicholas was a monk who kept innumerable cats in order to destroy the small snakes with which the place was once infested.

Spirited Pup Is Easy to Do in Cross Stitcli PATTERN *4*3 Isn’t he versatile—this pup that can wash, iron, sew and even play a violin? Just having him around—on tea towels or scarf ends, will bright* en your day. Brighten, too, the hours you spend embroidering hl* amusing antics In cross stitch. They’re ever so easy to do—wltl( crosses 8 to the inch, and before you know it you’ve one for each day of the week. Use a variety of colors, or two shades of any color that you like. Id pattern 5493 you will find a transfer pattern of seven motifs averaging 5 by 8 inches; color suggestions; material requirements; illustrations of all the stitches that are needed. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Department, 259 West Fourteenth Street, New York, N. Y. AFTER ALL, WHAT DOES THE TERM PROPERTY MEAN? Property is a house with a few feet of ground around it, minus the mortgage and the difference between what you paid for it before 1929 and what you could get for It today. It is a motor car with a dubious trade-in value and household goods with great sentimental value but which would not bring much at a forced sale. It is a very valuable stamp collection if you could find exactly the right person to buy it It is a number of books which you imagined were first editions but that somehow, Just miss out It Is a portrait that family tradition has always held to be the work of an old master but that leaves the art experts unmoved. It is a Chinese vase, that may go back to the Ming dynasty if you could only make out what the Chinese characters on the bottom mean. It Is children that, according to law, will belong to you only a few years more, but who. In the meantime, are rather expensive to maintain in that manner of living to which they somehow seem to Imagine they are entitled. It is accident insurance policies on which you can realize respectable sums by the simple process of losing an eye or an arm or a leg. It is sickness insurance policies that you can cash in upon by becoming an invalid, and life insurance policies that will become worthwhile in the event of your death. It is, ostensibly, your soft But, in view of all the considerations mentioned above, there is some doubt as to whether you can really call that your own. —Christopher Blllopp in the Baltimore Evening Sun. ————— i Science Is After Those Other Vampires, the Bats Science has been investigating the vampire bat recently, in an effort to cope with tropical disease* which are transmitted by its bite. Captiv* specimens have been kept under observation, and it has been found that they do not suck their victims’ blood, as was supposed, but lap It up with their tongues as It come* from the tiny wound made by their long, sharp teeth. The bat* are *o skilled In attack that you don’t know you’ve been bitten. Men will go on sleeping peacefully while the vampire bat drinks their blood, though, as ha* been proved by experiment, they will start up awake at the lightest touch of the finlest hypodermic needle.— Answers Magazine. HEW KITCHEN STOVE MAKES ITS OWN CAS Homewiv** Marvel at Colcmaa Ruf* That Light* Inriaatiy Lik* City Gw—Cook* * Meal with 2c Worth *f F««l A new kitchen range that often every cooking convenience of the finest city gas range is now avail* able to housewives, wherever they live. W. C. Coleman, |y »| pioneer inventor ML of gas-pressure ap- ' fl pliances. brings to & a lifetime of in- I ventive genius his crowning achievement in this amaz- [■■■■*:# wBJ Ing new Coleman w.c. coleman Safety Range. This new stove make* Its own gas from ordinary, leadfree gasoline. A patented method of carburization converts liquid fuel into gas, much the same as in present day automobile engines. The Coleman Range lights instantly, like city gas. Its fuel-sav-ing Band-A-Blu Burner*, another of Mr. Coleman’s outstanding de- • velopments, produce a clean, dearblue flame, so hot that a low flame does all ordinary cooking. Testa ’ show an average family meal for fixe takes about 2c worth of fueL Coleman Ranges are finished tn gleaming porcelain enamel. Their pleasing colors combine outstanding beauty with unequalled performance. Readers of this paper wishing full information about these wonderful new Coleman Range* will receive beautifully illustrated literature and a valuable stove check chart by simply addressing a post* card to Mr. W. C. Coleman, Dept, WU-286, Wichita, Kansas.-Adv.