Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 30, 1917, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BEE: OJIATTA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1917.
f Adelaide Kenne
Ella Fl
jLSjkjr a a w fx-
ED1TOTR-
rlyi
(
By MELLIFICIANov. 29
Thanksgiving Dinners All Turkified.
I can write of nothing today but
turkey; it seems to permeate even the
mysterious recesses of a newspaper
office.
The "family only" dinners are not
so prevalent in Omaha this year as
formerly, for so many of the homes
have been opened to the soldiers. Dr.
and Mrs. C. C. Allison, who usually
entertain one of the largest family
dinner parties, have postponed the af
fair until Christmas this year. Mrs.
K. W. Nash has also changed her
usual custom and will not entertain
at a large dinner party.
The University club will belong to
the enlisted men all day today, with
a bounteous turkey dinner for the
soldiers at noon.
Sixteen of the Sammies will be en
tertained at dinner at the Dundee
school by some of the. good-hearted
people of that suburb, while innumer
able homes will have two or three of
the boys in khaki as honor guests.
There will be many family dinner
parties at the Prettiest Mile club to
day, Mr. and, Mrs. C. A. Wells en
tertaining the largest party. They
will serve their own turkey just as
they would at home. With the appro
priate .; Thanksgiving decorations
which are to be used at the pretty
club house, the parties will no doubt
be merry ones, indeed.
The huge chrysanthemums nod
their yellow heads at us from the flor
ist's windows just as they always do
every year and there seems to be as
much A good cheer and Thanksgiving
gladness as ever before.
Thanksgiving Entertaining. n
Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Clawson will
entertain a party of 12 at Thanksgiv
ing dinner at the Blackstone. Cov
ers will be laid for the following
guests:
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Ewing of Grand
island.
Mr. Martha Enslow of Lincoln.
Lorlnf Roblnaon of Grand Island.
Mr. and Mrs. William Daniels of Glen
wood. Miss Josephine Daniel.
Mr. Homer Daniels.
Other family dinner parties at the
Blackstone will be given by Dr. and
Mrs. Palmer Findley, Mr. and Mrs.
E. -M. Syfert, Mr. and Mrs. J. B.
. Shackleford, Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Bry
son; Mr. and Mrs C. R. Benedict, Mr.
and Mrs George Patterson, Mr. and
Mrs,.-E. V- Swanson and Mr. . and
Mrs. C. S. Montgomery.
Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Atkins enter
tained at dinner at the Prettiest Mile
club at noon today. Beside the fam
ily, their guests will be:
Misss Misses
Mrtrie Wllle, , Lola Atkins.
Itutli. Wllle, Harriet Atkins.
Mr. Christian Will.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Wllle.
Many large family parties will be
giyen at the Prettiest Mile club this
noon and this evening. Mr. and Mrs.
C. Fv Mullen will have a party of 14;
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Burke. 12. A
Tjarty of 12 will also be entertained
by ' Mr: and Mrs. C. C: " Howe "and
small parties of four -will 'be fciven by
Stew-art Johnson, J. C. Cunningham
' and . A. Bixby.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Reed have ar
ranged a Dutch treat box party r.t
the' Boyd this evening.
Thanksgiving-Wedding.
A pretty home wedding will take
place this evening when Miss Agnes
Undeland. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
A. L. Undeland, will become the bride
f Mr: George R. Keeline of Gillette,
Wyo. The house will be decorated with
pink roses and white chrysanthemums
combined with ferns and palms. Miss
Emily Cleve will give a violin solo
receding the ceremony and father
arrington will read the marriage
;.iies.
The bride's gown will be of white
satin combined with Chantilly lace.
She will wear a short veil and carry
a shower bouquet of sweet peas and
lilies of the valley.
Miss Jean Undeland. sister of the
bride, who will be bridesmaid, will be
gowned in blue crepe meteor. She
will carry a shower bouquet of bride's
roses.
Little Miss Mildred Abbott, the
ringbearer, will wear a white lace
dress with pink trimmings. She will
carry the ring in a basket of roses.
Mr. Rody R. Ryan of Gillette will
act as best man.
A j reception will follow the cere
mony and the young couple will leave
at midnight for the east, to be gone
about a month, when they will return
for Miss Jean Undeland's wedding to
Mr. RSedy Ryan, which will take place
Tuesday, December 11.
Mrs. Perkins Surprised.
Mrs. F. W. Perkins, president of
the Women's auxiliary to the Broth
erhood of Railroad Trainmen No. 280,
was surprised by a number of her
friends Tuesday evening at her home.
The following members of the order
were present:
Mesdamei
P. A. Auer,
O. E. Ash.
W. K. Drake.
P. H. Ebener,
C. R. Floren,
L. P. FItiwilllams, '
A. I Heine. '
O. G. Heather,
C. Hixon,
G. A. Innes,
Mies Grace Hlxen.
Mesdames
F. A. Lemmon,
F. S. Laharty,
F. H. Mayfleld,
M. J. Murphy,
T. J. Nordln.
W. H. Olmsted,
E. R. Roc h ford,
J. J. Smith,
K. W. Thomas.
Fraternity Dance.
The Phi Beta Phi fraternity of
Creighton college will give a large
dancing party this evening at the
Blackstone. The patrons and pat
ronesses will be:
Dra. and MesdsmeB
W. E. Ash.
r, B. Faltz.
Claude Seren,
J. M. Schranlc.
Edgar Barn hart,
M. E. O'Keefe.
T. T. Harris,
Joseph D. MoC
Vincent Jones,
Joseph Swoboda,
N. J. Everett,
H. B. Stapleton.
rthy.
Dancing Parties.
The Le Mars club will give a danc
ing party this evening at Keep's
academy.
The Friendship club will give a
dancing party this evening at the
Blackstone.
The Young Men and Young Wo
men's Hebrew associations will give
a dancing party Saturday evening in
Miss Cooper's academy. Lyric, build
ing. Refreshments will be served by
Deborah Literary society members, a
department of the association. Jew
ish soldiers will be admitted free, ac
fording to the plan observed at all the
organization's parties.
Thanksgiving Bride
Former Omaha Girl
MRS. PAUL W. BERRY.
Announcement is made of the mar
riage of Miss Mildred Marr of Kan
sas City, formerly of Omaha, to Mr.
Paul W. Berry, which took place in
St. Paul's Episcopal church Thursday
morning in Kansas City. Only mem
bers of the two families were present
at the ceremony, the wedding being
very quiet owing to the fact that Mr.
Berry will enter the service very soon.
Miss Marr is well known in Omaha
having spent all of her school days
here, later going to "the university
at Lincoln. She visited in Omaha
very recently, when she was exten
sively entertained. Miss Marr was
the guest of her two sisters, Mrs.
Louis Loring and Mrs. Charles Hcn
drickson, Mrs. Loring was one of
the out-of-town guests at the wedding.
PERSONAL
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Belden are
spending Thanksgiving with Mrs.
Belden's brother, M. A. Reed at
Woodbine, la.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Nicholas of
Milwaukee will be the guests of their
son, L. V. Nicholas, and his family,
Mr.. Lem H. Hei! is a guest at the
Elms hotel in Excelsior Springs.
Maccabees' Reception.
Omaha review No. 46 and Omaha
tent No. 75, Ladies and Sir Knights of
the Maccabees, held a joint reception
Monday night at their hall for the
guests of Mrs. Eva L. McNett, past
supreme commander of Port Huron,
Mich., Mrs. Agnes T. Boyer, state
commander of Nebraska; also Con
gressman Lobeck and C. (X Cunning
ham. Addresses were made. "Amer
ica" and "The Star Spangled Ban
ner" were sung by Mrs. L. Frick, all
joining in the chorus. Dancing and
refreshments furnished 1 the rest of
evening to a large delegation of sir
knights and ladies present.
Aviation in France.
Captain Louis Benezit, one of the
French officers detailed for a period
of service at the Fort Omaha balloon
school, will address members of the
Alliance Francais Saturday evening at
the home of George E. Barker, 632
South Thirty-seventh street, on avia
tion in France during ihe war.
Captain Benezit's talk will replace
the lecture to be given by Marcel
Knecht, who was to be here on his
western trip Friday, but was recalled
to New York.
Wedding Announcement.
Announcement is made of the mar
riage of Miss Faye Weller to Ralph
Eland of Lincoln, which took place
Tuesday, November 20, the Rev. O.
D. ,r'altzly performing the ceremony.
After a snort wedding trip the young
couple will make their home in Lin
coln. ,
Family Dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wadsworth of
Council Bluffs will entertain at a
family dinner at their home this
evening. Lieutenant and Mrs. Waldo
Scott of Fort Omaha and Mr. and
Mrs.; O. A. Scott of Omaha will be
among the guests.
Female Enoch Arden
Mourned for 20 years as dead and
all efforts to locate her being aban
doned more than IS years ago, Mrs.
Chester Sampson, formerly Miss Julia
Scanlon, Winsted, Conn., appeared at
the home of her sister in Thompson
ville recently, says the Hartford
"Courant."
Her brother, Patrick Scanlon,
learned a few months ago that his
sister was living and was in Detroit
and communicated with her. As
Julia Scanlon, a pretty girl of 18, Mrs.
Sampson disappeared from her home
in Winsted 20 years ago. All trace of
her was lost, despite a thorough
search.
A few months ago her brother, Pat
rick Scanlon, received a postal card
that had been sent by his sister to
Merideri, where Patrick formerly
worked. A letter explained that the
sister and her husband carelessly
asked a waiter in Detroit if he knew
any waiters in Connecticut and he
named Patrick Scanlon. The woman
asked for his address and sent a
postal card that finally reached her
brother in Hartford.
A Nourishing Drink.
A nourishing drink is barley
water. Place one quart of water in
a saucepan; wash well two ounces
of pearl barley and throw into the
water. Bring it to a boiling point,
then add lemon and sugar to suit.
Simmer gently two hours.
Raisins are capable of being used in
many ways. Pies can be made with
them as filling, and they are extreme
ly palatable stewed slowly, like
prunes, no sugar added, but a little
cinamon or ginger, and eaten as a
sauce.
Miss Marie Lohr, one of the most
popular actresses on the English
stage, has become London's first
actress-manager.
Soliloquy of Modern Eve
Side by side stood Hayakawa and Holt
East and West Never the twain shall meet?
Oh yes they shall they will. : : :
A Pioneer Woman Editor
Originated Thanksgiving
By ADELAIDE KENNERLY.
IN "The Call of the East" Sessue Hayakawa played the part of a
Japanese. He is one.
In the same play Jack Holt played the American. He is one.
Kipling said: "East is cast and west is west and never the twain
shall meet' but they shall and they will.
Side by side stood Hayawaka and Holt. The same little vein ran
prominently around the large joint of the forefinger of each man. The
same workings of body mechanism, of soul depth and revenge were God
fixed in each man. s
Hayakawa was born (probably) under a v bamboo-roofed Japanese
home. Jack Holt may have been born under a spreading chestnut tree or
near an old oaken bucket, and for this reason the "east is east and the
west is west."
Isn't it a flimsy rea'son?
"The more we know the better we forgive; whoever feels deeply feels
for all who live" and when the east and west do met it will not be on
some western border, but at "God's great judgment seat" the heart
The brotherhood of man in clasping tight the hands of those who feel
deeply and proving that the more we know the better we forgive.
"The standards of right are infinite and the scales of the gods weigh
true." By its good and its evil is each life weighed, not by its land of
birth. "By thought, motive and deed is each record made" and the STAND
ARDS or RIGHT shall wipe out race prejudices, which are worms infest
ing the minds of men.
If, as a world, we succeed we must help mankind as a whole. The Re
corder says: "All men are brothers of every soul and each soul is a
brother to all."
This great, bloody war may mean the sifting of souls and after the
struggle, if we become a world-people, our sacrifice of life will mark a
turning point a period in evolution. We will have gained more than
we lost.
To think I've lain awake at night
Deciding things to drink and eat)
And now neath shaded candle-light
The abstract has become concrete.
The food outstrips my fondest
dreams,
The service is beyond compare,
Yet not a single diner seems
To know what he consumes or
care.
And I, whose every brilliant bit
Around the board is swiftly sped,
In smirking social triumph sit
With one desire to go to bedl
Noted Writer Tells
Why Artisfs Life
Seems So Idyllic
I have come to the conclusion that
if another time on earth were alloted
me and I could choose my destiny, I
would be an artist; and when I say
artist I mean, like the Englishman in
Stevenson's story, not. a musician, but
a fellow who paints pictures. I would
choose thus because I like artists anil
envy them their lives, says E. V. Lu
cas in a New York exchange.
I should not particularly insist upon
being a great artist; it would be
enough to come within the ordinary
classification, and wear ceomfortable
clothes and an old hat, and have a
gentle, amiable nature and quick eyes
and no exacting sense of time or lia
bilities, and to be wholly concerned
with beauty, or what I thought beau
ty, and to work either out of doors
or in a spacious room large enough
to discourage petty thoughts and wor
ries, and to make shapes in the air
with my thumb as I talked of pic
tures, and to be really fond of my
fellow-artists and as ready to find
good in their work as literary men
examining brother authors are to
find bad, and to earn such living as
seemed necessary by a kind of per
petual game with pencils and brushes
and jolly colors, always by daylight,
instead of driving an eternal pen at
all hours, and to be free to listen to
tnnsic when the sun went down, and
-I leave this to the last to swap
drawings and sketches with my
painting friends.
I left that to the last because it is
very much in my mind, and to a con
siderable extent it has determined me
in my choice of employment during
the next incarnation.
This is not the sudden conversion
that the superficial person may think
it, but I will admit that a recent visit
to an artist in a very lovely part of
the country (artists having a natural
bent toward beautiful parts of the
country, and this being one of the
most eminently gifted in that way
shall I say that far from narrow
way?) may have brought the affair
to a head. For near him is the home
of another artist, 'and both house
are similar in being not only im
mensely desirable in their distin
guished free-and-easiness, but in
having on the walls scores and scores
of votive offerings from other pencils
and brushes, so that to go upstairs
is a most protracted business, since
one must pause on each step to study
the frames which its altitude brings
within immediate range.
Lightning Clouds
Lightning clouds may touch the
earth with one of their edges, or be
four or five miles up. They rarely dis
charge when more than 700 yards
above the earth. Zig-zag lightning is
caused by the flash seeking the line
of least resistance.
Tolstoy found it surprising that
people over seven years of age could
enjoy "Seigfried." Many persons find
it surprising that people over seven
years of age can enjoy anything.
Electric Cleaner
HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES J
At Thanksgiving Time
By JOHN D. WELLS.
Why, Mother-O'-MIne, and don't you know
The summer days of the Long Ago
The soft south-wind and the sweet perfume
Of the smiling- fields and the orchard
bloom T
When the oriole "swung high swung low''
In the maple trees. In the Long Ago?
Why. you remember that little boy!
He used to come with a broken toy
Or little hurt, and you used to play
At kissing the tears and the hurt away.
And caught him up, In your mother joy.
And sang to him of the gypsy boy.
Tou must recall! Why, ha used to stand
By your chair arm here In the old dream
land, Or nestle close, and he'd promise true
To never go from the side of you;
Why, once you cried on his shoulder, and
He never, never could understand?
He went with you to th chest that day
Tou put his top and Ms ball away.
And wound his spool with a pretty string.
And locked it safe like a treasured thing;
He marveled much at the saddened way
You held him close In your arms that day.
The boy of old hai returned to you;
The soft aouth-wlnd and the blossoms, too;
The orioles and the flowered ways,
Have gone the way of old, old days,
But he's kept his love and promise true,
And all these years he has walked with
you.
Glass Fruit Knife Now
The ordinary steel or plated knife,
as every housewife knows, is attacked
by the acids of many fruits, making a
stain that is removed only with con
siderable labor.
A glass knife is now on the market
which is quite impervious to the most
active fruit acid, and jt takes a good
edge, though, of course, in view of its
brittleness, a somewhat thicker one
than we are accustomed to.
With a little of the care in washing
which even now must be bestowed
upon the china gravy ladle and simi
lar objects, this knife should prove
very acceptable for cutting grape
fruit, lemons, oranges, etc. Scientific
American.
By JOSEPH JACKSON.
Thanksgiving day has become as
firmly established in the life of Amer
icans as either Christmas day or the
Fourth of July, and it was due to a
resident of Philadelphia that the fes
tival was made a general and national
one. President Lincoln has the honor
of having been the first president to
make proclamation of the last Thurs
day in November as a general day of
thanksgiving.
Like the pumpkin pie that adorns
the festive board of the Thanksgiv
ing dinner, the idea of the day itself
comes to us from New England,
where such days were observed more
than two and a half centuries ago.
It was, in fact, a New England wo
man, who afterward spent her life in
Philadelphia, who devoted more than
a quarter of a century to her propa
ganda before she was able to realize
her wish that a Thanksgiving day be
generally observed each year all over
the United States.
Pioneer Woman Editor.
This lady was Mrs, Sarah Josepha
Hale, one of the first woman editors
attached to the press in this country.
Mrs. Hale lived to a great age, and
until the last was editor of Godey's
Lady's Book, at one time the most
popular periodical for women pub
lished in this country.
Mrs. Hale, who was born in New
port October 24, 1788 was married to
David Hale, a New England lawyer,
in 1812. Nine years after her mar
riage she was left a widow with five
children, and then resorted to author
ship tor support. She was the author
of many children's verses, and wrote
for a juvenile magazine published in
Boston in the early twenties. She is
said to have been the author of that
familiar poem, "Mary'j Little Lamb"
the little lamb that followed Mary
wherever she went.
When the Ladies' Magazine was es
tablished in Boston in 1828, Mrs. Hale
was appointed its editor, and she con
ducted that journal with great success
until nine years later, when it was
absorbed by Louis A. Godey, who
brought it to Philadelphia, where he
continued it as Godey's Lady's Book,
and, incidentally, made a mint of
money on it; but with the acknowl
edged help of Mrs. Hale.
Before Mrs. Hale came to Philadel
phia, which she did not do until 1841,
in the meantime editing Godey's from
Boston, she was instrumental in gath
ering funds to finish the Bunker Hill
monument, which had been begun and
left a fragment for years. This great
work had scarcely been accomplished
until she was deep in her proposal for
a national thanksgiving, which she
insisted should occur on "the last
Thursday in November" of each year.
That accounts for the regularity of
the day falling on that part of the
month. Mrs. Hale began her agitation
before she left Boston, and the early
years of Godey's frequently alluded to
the absence in our national life of a
general Thanksgiving day once "a
year. They usually had one in New
England, but in other parts of the
country sometimes they had a
Thanksgiving day and oftentimes no
date was set aside for the purpose
of giving thanks.
After continuing an active propa
ganda for some years in this manner.
Mrs. Hale began to excite the interest j
of the governors of the various states,
and also wrote to the president fre
quently, urging the adoption of her
idea. She had rather good fortune
with the governors of the states, and
even the commissioners of the Dis
trict of Columbia followed in line, but
20 years of effort had failed to
bring about her original intention and
her greatest desire a national festi
val, either- set apart by congress or
by proclamation of the president.
No change of administration escaped
a letter from Mrs. Hale. She was writ
ing letters and printing accounts of
the partial success of her proposition,
but one thing after another appeared
to put off the main feature of her
plan. Of course, congress never has
passed an act making any day a na
tional holiday, and there does not ap
pear to be anything in the constitu
tion that would enable it to do so,
but there was nothing in that docu
ment that would prevent a president
of the United States from proclaiming
a day of thanksgiving, and Mrs. Hale
would be satisfied with either, so long
as the day was to be one nationally
observed.
By 1859 she had been so far suc
cessful that in that year 25 states,
three territories and the District of
Columbia responded by setting apart
the last Thursday in November as
a Thanksgiving day. This wa
sum of her accomplishment
the ends of her desire in 20 y.
agitation. It was good progres'
she held on tenaciously to her or
contention, and wrote again t
president.
The dawn of the civil war wa.
disclosing itself to the keen o!
ers, and little progress was
made in the adoption of the Tli
giving day plan. I hen the war
broke upon the country and
thought of a Thanksgiving da
lost to north and south alike. F
1863 the turning point in the wa
curred. Gettysburg had been f
and the tide began to slacken an
back to the southland. Pre
Lincoln probably was in a mo
receive such suggestions as that
Hale offered, for he made proc
tion that the last Thursday ir.
vembcr of that year should be
of national thanksgiving.
Thus, in 1863, the first na
Thanksgiving day was celebr
Even that was not general, for
southern states were still outsid
union, and consequently woul
ceive no suggestions from the i!
dent of the United States. Bu
die had been cast in a good rnol
before two more years turned an
the country was united, poutica
not sympathetically, and both
that had fought were in a mooi
giving thanks that the great war
at an end.
APOLL
Reproducing Piano can be seen an
heard at the Benefit Recital for the Omaha'
City Mission, Friday Evening, November
30, at 8:00 P. M., in the Ball Room oithd
Fontenelle Hotel.
The Apollo will play the solos just as
the artist plays them.
The Apollo will accompany the VoiceJ
the Harp, the Violin and the Marimba J
the same as hand playing.
A. HOSPE GO.
1513 Douglas St.
Western Representatives.
i hi wan
1 "
1
SI
Just what you need for the
children's clothes
You have always wanted something; which would wash
the baby'a little shirts and tockinga and the children'
sweaters without their shrinking or becoming harsh.
Try Lux next time.
With Lux no chipping,
no shaving it necessary
All you have to do is to throw a handful of Lux flakes
into a bowlful of hot water. These fine, transparent flakes
melt at once, making a rich, foamy lather in a moment,
which dissolves the dirt, without rubbing.
Read what Mrs. Wilkie aays:
"I dm Lu and likt It, particularly for tba baby'a flannala.
Thay had bacoroa discolored from having had to dry thsm
In the house ao much of lata. The first time they wera
washed with Lux, they returned to their former whiteness.'
Mrs. Wallace L. Wilkie, Cumberland Hill, R. L
.You, too, will he delighted with the softness and white,
ness of baby's woolens and the children's sweaters. And,
think of it, they actually will not have shrunk at all!
Soap should never be rubbed -,
directly on fine delicate fabrics
Use Lux for little sister's and the baby's finernte
dresses. Soap rubbed directly on these delicate garments
is likely to tear and coarsen the fabrics, and by not being
thoroughly rinsed out, often turns them yellow. Lux dis
solves instantly and no rubbing is necessary.
Thousands of women have adopted the
Lux way of washing these dainty little
dresses as the one absolutely safe way to
keep them soft, fresh and snowy white.
Lux will not harm anything that pure
water alone will not injure.
Lux is sold by grocers, druggists and
department stores. Gee a package today.
Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass.
mil
Won't Shrink Woolen;
M
3
ft
v
HWIII"1
... .. - ...
Low Fares to Florida !
and the Gulf Coast
Thesefaresareforroundtrip
tickets from Omaha via Chicago, on sale daily , i
with return limit of May 25, 1918, and provide (
for liberal stopovers en route. Fares from adja- y
cent points are correspondingly low.
iV ": "''
Aufwet, Gsu... ....... m. . $52.fT
Cbarleeton, S.C; ....54.56 ' , '
1 Havana, Cuba H... (Ul .
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. 54.54 '
JacksonTUla Ma WakUfUa) ...63.76
Kay Wait, FU... S7.66
Kistimmea, Fla. ................... 63.66
Miaul, Fla, 7646
Mobile, Ala, 44J1
NwOrlaane,Le. , 44.31
Ormond, Fla. 60.96
Palm Beach, FU. .....73.06
Pas Christian, MIse. .44.31
St Petersburg, Fla, ...68.16 '
St Aufmstina, FU. 86.86
Tampa, Fla, 66.16 '
. WOTE These fare da awt Include War Rsrresma Tea
As you know, the Chicago & North
Western is the line of unsurpassed service to
Chicago. Let our experienced representatives ar-,
range all the details of your trip clear through '
to destination. It will save your time. It will "
relieve you of all attention to the petty things in
cident to railway travel. '
Just phone DoafUt 2740 or call at
CITY TICKET OFFICE
140M403 Farnam St
Omaha
HV do th rttt for you
Where substitution
"doesn't go"
There Is No Necessity or Room For
Argument
with any one who comes into a store
and makes the statement that a
Charter Oak Stove or Range is wanted.
rl .rfn Dt,'a mri rfNimmmilnl In each 1UN
ceeding generation by grand-mother and
mother, and this fact creates a demand wtucn
cannot be diverted and which accounts for
their ever increasing salt. , ; .
.".UWr"A- Onlw oenuina merit can maintain, as the
iOAIuKBl Charter Oak has, for seventy years, the popu
l&JKTsxrT larity and prestige it has today.
, ..... : , ;
If yoar dialer triet to talk you into baying anothirmako, uritm torn.
CHARTER OAK STOVE & RANGE CO., Si Louis, Mo.
t I .