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OMAN’S PAGE. Chair Cushions for Little Folks BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. These Cushioned Seats Make Chairs Comfortable for Wee Tots. Cushion chair seats are in high favor for grown-ups, and it is time that they became a fashion also for chairs for little folk. It is true that these seats bave been used more or less in America ever since the Colonials settled here, but, since their revival, the vogue has been pronounced for large chairs. To- day attention will be focused on the cushioned seats for wee tots. It is important that these seats should be fastened to chairs when for little folk, for they are constantly wriggling about. The chair seats, there- fore, should be made to fit the chairs for which they are intended. They should not be separated and free, as the larger sort which can be used in any chair at will. A pattern for a chair seat can be made easily by laying & piece of news- paper in the seat of the chair, creasing it and then cutting so that a smooth and symmetrical edge results. To in- sure absolute symmetry, fold the pat- tern through the lengthwise center and shape. Lay the fold of the pattern on a fold of goods from which the seat is to be made. Pin in place and cut. Both sides of the seat can be alike or the top can be of finer material than the under side. Whatever the material, it should be washable, Unbleached cotton cloth is excellent. Use a grade. Put several layers of cotton batting between the seamed under and upper portions and quilt together in white or colored cotton. This is preferable to tufting the pieces together. The quilting need not be fine or very close together, but just sufficient to keep the wadding in place when the chair seats are washed. When seaming the two portions to- gether, leave the straight side open un- til after the wadding has been care- fully slipped in. It should be cut ex- actly the right size and shape first. Turn in the raw edges of the covers and blind-stitch them together. An attractive seat is made by using a colored thread for the running stitches of the quilting and binding edges of the seat with tape to match. Fasten short lengths of the tape to the corners of the cushion and two &t regular spaced distances at the back. Tie these about the legs of the chair so_that the seat will not slip. The top of the cushion may be or- namented with applique in color. A border of modernistic flowers and green leaves is effective. Run all outlines with thread to match, allowing the stitches to go all the way through to the under side, and no other quilting will be needed except cross-lines forming dia- monds in the center plain portion. There are various ways of quilting and trimming these chair cushions that will suggest themselves to the maker. For a high chalr, a set of two or three of these cushioned seats is a good idea to allow for laundering frequently. (Copyright, 1929.) KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH The Personal Equation. What is the sonal equation literally d ll‘“ll ter:n Yl";:rflnnlly used. and why ggflll::“gg”, o‘”'t"l::n\‘?“‘"hfl‘:“ us and e know. —_— "NOKMAL SCHOOL. Reply. The term goes back a hundred years and arose in the astronomical observe- tory. Before electrical connections were in use, the astronomer observed a trans- it—that is, the crossing of a star or planet across the wire stretched across the objective of the telescope—by lis- tening to the tick of a clock and esti- mating at what fraction of a second two ticks the actual transit occurred. ‘This was called the eye-and-ear method. The astronomer Bessell noted that no two_persons recorded the time at pre- cisely the same time. The difference was allowed for in the calculation, and thus, since astronomers deal in mathe- matical equations, the individual varia- tion was called the “personal equation.” It means that we differ in quickness of observation and movement, as we do in everything else. But in this the dif- ferences are so small that only in exact calculations would it be of moment. It is reported that before this was known, an astronomer dismissed his as- sistant’ because the latter recorded & transit half a second later than his own record. With that as a start, “personal equa- tion” was used to refer to all these dif- farences in individual makeup about which an entire book has been written —Ellis, “The Psychology of Individual Differences.” 1928, 500 pages. For when we can measure accurately enough. we find that we are not equally quick or equally bright or equally skillful. or equally strong or clever or mersistent or equall” good at all sorts of aptitudes; not_equally expert in tasting, smelling, feeling. hearing, seeing, nor in memory, association, imagination, and so on all JASTROW. much greater would be the personal equation if women were to be judged is not determined. spect, he er apt judged too high in others. This has been called the “halo” effect. Once you surround a person with a favorable “halo,” you rate him too highly in all good traits, The same holds still more disastrously in rating too low those whom we dislike. I8 1s well to be aware of all this, for we can't help judging our fellow beings in all sorts of relations. The personal equation enters to raise or lower, to make or mar. Our ideals of mental fit- ness is to keep down the effect of the personal equation, but it will persist, for that is the way of behavior of hu- man beings. o (Copyright, 1920.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST: Stewed Prunes. Dry Cereal with Cream, Poached Eggs. Bquash Muffins, Coffee. LUNCHEON. Salmon_Balls. Crisp Rolls. ‘Tapioca Cream. Lemon Cookies, Tes. DINNER. Cream of Potato Soup. Fried Liver and Bacon. Baked Potatoes, Carrots and Peas. ‘Waldorf Sal Bread Pudding, Lemon Sauce. Coffee. SQUASH MUFFINS. One and one-half cups warm milk, one cup squash, one-quarter the way through our mental repertory. The personal equation extends still more characteristically into our differ- ences of interest and judgment, for we observe what we are interested in and become expert along the line of our cul- tivated interests. Then there enters the matter of emotion, and that plays havoc with judgment. It accounts for the difficulty of obtaining impartial judges. It is difficult for teachers to distribute their marks or grades quite fairly; the teacher’s pet comes out higher and the teacher’s pest comes out lower than should be. ‘There again psychology steps in and shows this up by measurement. When there is such a tendency to depart from a fair judgment, it is called a “constant error,” which is another variety of per= sonal equation. One psychologist had the relative in- telligence of 15 men judged by their photographs, and then actually tested their intelligence. The results didn't agree, and the clue was found in the confusion of the judges between “good looking” and intelligent. There was & prejudice in favor of regarding the bet- ter lookl more intelligent. How yeast cake, two tablespoons sugar, little salt, flour 2nough to make stiff batter. Raise overnight, put into muffin pans in morning and bake in quick oven. SALMON BALLS. One can salmon, one cup cracker crumbs, two well-beaten eggs, salt and pepper to taste. Mix. well, make into cakes and fry brown in butter. Serve hot. 1 sometimes use part pork fat and part butter, and when Iam short of butter I use all pork fat. BREAD PUDDING. Heat, not scald, 3 cups milk and pour_over one pint bread crumbs. Cream one-quarter cup butter and one-half cup sugar; add three slightly beaten eggs, one-half teaspoon salt and cne teaspoon vanilla. When milk is cold, combine mixtures, and_add one cup chopped -itron. Pour into buttered pudding dish. Bake 40 minutes. Serve with a sauce. ‘Will serve six persons. Air-Tight Exposure; quickly ruins;any tea. SALADA is sealed in metal foil containers for your protection. lSALAAn L) “Fresh from the Gardens” Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. H. C. D, writes: “My baby will soon be one year old and I am having a great deal of difficulty taking the bottle away from her. For three weeks she has had no milk by bottle in the daytime. She gets what she will take on cereals and puddings, but at night when she goes to bed she will take about five or six ounces by bottle and again in the morning. During the day- time I have tried the cup, but she won't take it. Would it be advisable to put something nasty tasting on the nipple to sicken her of it? “I wish you could suggest something, as I seem to be making no headwa: Answer—This isn't a matter that can always be accomplished over night, for breaking & habit of such long standing is always difficult. That is the chief reason for advocating cup feeding very early in the child's life. Mothers who begin this when the babies are less than six months old have no dif- ficulty changing from bottle to cup. But of course that doesn't help you. I should continue exactly as you are doing now for the daytime feedings. Use as much milk as possible in the food. Three meals a day are in order after one year, so that would eliminate the early bottle. Baby can be given orange juice and water when she wak- ens and then her breakfast at 7 o'clock. A few days may be somewhat | unpleasant until she gets used to this change, but if you can keep her oc- cupied happily in her crib until break- fast, the habit of waiting will be form- | ed. Then at breakfast you can give| at least half of what she would take in her bottle, in and over the cereal. Cook the cereal in milk and use two | to three ounces of milk over it. Offer | the rest from a small cup. Continue to offer the cup, or glass, | at each regular meal, at 12 o'clock, a | feeding of milk at 3:30 o'clock, and then at night offer her the cereal again, using as much milk in and on it as you can, thus leaving very little to be fed by bottle. You may give this bottle when the child goes to bed. Then I would gradually reduce the amount giv- en by bottle, using one ounce less each day. At the end of the fifth or sixth day there will be no milk and by this time the baby will have become some- what accustomed to going to sleep without a bottle of milk and won’t raise such a howl when deprived of it. You will just have to be patient about offering the milk by cup, not forcing it, or attaching anything disagreeable to it until baby accepts it willingly. I think putting on nasty-tasting liquids would no doubt spoil the bottle for the baby and more than likely all future feedings of milk in any form whatever. Don't do it. Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. A chair which has many uses and which never loses its attraction is shown in the accompanying illustra- tion. Made of wicker, it lends itself very easily to stain and varnish, paint or enamel, and it is also good looking in its natural state. Young people just starting out to keep house would do well to include a couple of these chairs in their living room. Thei;!uve considerable money at a time when thrift is necessary, and yet in no way detract from the charm of the room. Later on, if they should move into a larger home, where there is a sun- room, these chairs could be refinished to harmonize with a different color scheme, and more luxurious ones pro- cured to take their places in the living room. For any easy chair in a bedroom this type can scarcely be surpassed, for it is roomy and comfortable and very easily finished and upholstered to har- monize with any color combination. (Copyright, 1929.) Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beel ir Washington. D. C. for week ending Saturday. March 10, 1976, on shipments sold out, rangsd frum 19.00 ASHINGTON, D. €, MOND DorothyDix Prosperity, Realization or Failure of Ambitions All in Little Bag on Wife’s Wrist. What She Spends Counts. Why Some Men Are Dependent in Age, Looks for the Extravagant wife. “THE most pathetic figures on earth,” said a man to me the other day, “are the poor old men who have worked hard all of their lives and who, at the end of them, have nothing to show for their work. Haven't even saved up mn\lxxh money to enable them to slow down and take the last lap of the journey easily. “You see them everywhere. Poor, old, haggard-eved clerks showing their goods with fumbling hands, living in mortal dread of losing their jobs. Gray- headed old bookkeepers working overtime because they cannot keep the pace the youngsters set. Weary, spent, bent-shouldered old men flogging themselves on to their daily grind like a wornout old dray horse. And all with death in their hearts, because they know the inevitable hour is bound to strike soon when young men will be put in their places and they will be forced to become dependent on their children or some grudging relative. “All of my life the fate that I e most dreaded was to become a member of this company of the old down-and-outers, but now as I near the 70s I see it looming before me, I have worked hard. I have been efficlent in business. I have spent very little on myself, and with the money I have made I should be sitting pretty on Easy street with no fear for the future. Instead of that I have practically nothing saved out of all of the many thousands of dollars that I have earned and I am racked with anxiety over not only what will befall me, but my wife, when my earning capacity is gone. “It is all my wife’s fault. She is a good woman, but one of those who believe in enjoying today and letting tomorrow take care of itself. She has never been able to deny herself anything she wanted or to see the wisdom of providing against some possible catastrophe. In vain I have preached thrift to her and pitcured to her the horrors of a dependent old age. She has laughed at me and mocked me and gone her way, living up to the last dollar of our income and often beyond it. “I have never been niggardly with her, because I wanted her to have everything we could possibly afford. Even my desire to safeguard our old age was more for her than for myself, for a poor old woman is even more helpless and pitiful than a poor old man. But she absolutely refused to co-operate with me in saving, and I was helpless to do it without her. “Queer, isn't it, that a man's prosperity, the realization or the failure of his ambitions, are all in the little bag on his wife's wrist. It doesn't make any difference how much money he makes, it is what she spends that counts. It is useless for him to try to be economical if she is a waster.” oo THIS man is right in saying that a husband and wife must do team work if they get along in the world and save up any money. No man, no matter how thrifty he is nor how much he personally denies himself, can make any headway in rm\n*n.whm¥1 a_ savings bank account if he has a wife who is extravagant. For, as the old proverb truly says, “A woman can throw more out of‘ lt]hr b:ck ldoor with a teaspoon than a man can put in at the front door with a shovel.” No men in the world are more entitled to our sympathy than those who are cursed with wives who are spenders. For no experience can be more heart- breaking, none more discouraging, none more exasperating than for a man to spend his life toiling just to keep ahead of the bill collector, and to see other men of no more ability than he has forging ahead of him because he is tied down with the ball and chain of his wife’s debts. ‘The door of opportunity opens only to a golden key, and if & man has a few thousand dollars saved up he can often pass through the portals that lead to fortune; he cannot do this if his wife has spent everything he made as they went along. The man without a dollar in the bank is a bond slave who is owned body and soul by his employer, because, no matter how badly he is treated, he dares not throw up his job if he has no money to live on for even a week. The man who has no money laid by that would see him through sickness or loss of position lives in a sort of panic that turns his blood to water and his bones to chalk when he thinks of what would become of his wife and his children and himself if any catastrophe should befall him. ‘We talk about evil women, about women who are vamps, who are gold- diggers, but the worst of them cannot ruin a man’s life more completely than do these good, kindly, affectionate wives through whose fingers money slips away like water. These wives who literally sell their husbands’ lifeblood for silk stockings and Paris hats and bridge prizes and automobiles. < Eae ) Il-‘ these extravagant wives only had sense enough to look at the matter straight they would see that it was even more important for themselves that the future should be safeguarded than it is for their husbands. For a man can practically always get something to do up to the very end of his life that will make him some sort of living, but under heaven there is no other creature so helpless and piteous as the middle-aged woman who is penniless. She knows no way of making a dollar and she is too old to learn how. She cannot compete with girls, Nobody wants her around a business office. Nobody will even give her a show at any work but the most menial, and there is nothing left for her but to find out how bitter is the bread of dependence. Every woman knows a dozen other women who used to live on cakes and ale, but who have not even bread to eat in their old age. How much misery it would save if they could only realize that that fate is bound to be their own unless they save up a competence against their old age. If they did, if the extravagant wives would only look into the future, they would clutch every dollar so tightly that they would make the eagle scream upon it, and they would back their husbands up in saving for that rainy day that comes to us all and in which we get so very wet if we have not provided ourselves with a competent umbr;!h. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyr NANCY PAGE Black Is Always Good for Coats and Hats learned that a black coat was the smart- est of all coats. It went with any frock of any color and gave a dignified and well-bred air to its wearer. Her coat had three tiny close-fitting capes over around the neck to form a collar. hat was black, small and turban-like in shape. It gave her head a close-fitted look which was just the thing with the coat she had chosen. That had sleek lines and was complemented by the hat. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois wanted to be all dressed up to the shoulders and a straight collar of | ermine which tied after it had stood up | Her | cents to 23.50 cents per pound and av 20.88 cents per pound.—Advertisemen! quie—E conomy can be sold. quality. Everything far the Table “From soup to nuts” Guaranteed in'Quality greet Nancy when she returned. Roger had just had a raise in salary because of a successful sale he had engineered and celebrated by giving Lois a check. She said she could use it to good advan- tage, but she did think the next check representing an advance had better go into savings fund. “We managed on your salary before and we ought to be able to do it now.” That's an easy thing to say, but difficult to live up to, as they found to their surprise. But the check bought Lois a new coat and two new hats. Her first one was of Babbibuntl straw, close-fitting with wing effect at sides. This is the new Spring note. The trimming was of heavy grosgrain ribbon, which has come in as a new and effective trimming for Spring hats. Lois had Her was of black. Al ‘The whole effect was good. Lois no- ticed that many of the Spring coats were using collars and collar ties of velvet in place of fur. And all the furs she saw were sleek and closely trimmed. Perhaps you need to reduce to wear new Spring clothes. Write y P care of this paper, inclosin mped, self - addressed envelope, asking her leaflet on “Reducing.” (Copyright. 1929.) A NEW, AMAZING ROUGE BE FIRST to discover Zan uge. It will blend into more than any other rouge rom dahlia pink to be used m‘.a.yu.m Cleanliness—Quality It Costs No More Here When you are counting cost and comparing prices you must take quality into account. Arcade Market dealers sell quality goods—and sell them as low as they When the price is lower somewhere else—it won't be for, Arcade Market All through the Market you'll find our dealers earnestly striving to cater to your wants. There’s more back of the service here than merely making a sale. It's building a business—creating a center—where everybody from all over town, and the surrounding suburbs will want to come to buy for the table because they can choose from BETTER VARIETY, INSURED QUALITY and with ASSURED ECONOMY. Your dealers will soon get to know your individual taste and preferences—and then marketing at the Arcade will become merely a matter of ordering—over the phone if you choose—sure that you'll always get personal attention. day every day 7'AM. to 6 PM. Saturdays Until 9 P.M. Entrances From . Fourteenth Street and From: Park Road MARCH 18, 1929. FEATURES.’ WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U, S. Patent Office. TR [ i il ‘When the United States Weather Bureau was known as the signal service and embryo forecasters wore blue “monkey coats” with yellow cords and trimmings, and helmets with horsehair plumes, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I was sitting on Puds Simkinses frunt steps helping him eat a muffin his mother had gave him, and I smelt thr! smell of other muffins coming out of the kitchin, and I sed, G, your mother | certeny makes swell muffins. She makes swell everything, Puds Proving how conceeted he is, and I s Well hay, I tell you what, sippose we go around and get orders for muffins and diffrent things, holey smokes everybody wunts homemade muffins, and we'l divide half the money between us and | your mother can have the other half | just for ony making them. Like heck, do you think Im going to give you as much of the profits as I get, whose mother is it? Puds sed. Well who made up the ideer? I sed and he sed, Well whats a ideer about muffins compared to a mother that axually makes them? and I sed, O is that so, its branes that count in this werld, thats what counts, and if you | think they dont why go ahed and get | the orders by yourself, I was going to get the ferst order rite in my own house, but go ahed, what do I care? Well all rite then, come on, Puds sed. | And me and him went to my house and ma was in her room sewing on the sew- ing machine, me saying, Hay ma, Pudses mother is going to make homemade | muffins and things if peeple wunt to | order them, aint she Puds? and Puds | sed, Sure, and I sed, Why dont you order some ma, before she changes her mind? ‘Well I bleeve I will, Ive herd what a marvelliss baker she is but I had no ideer she was going to tern it into pro- fessional life, how much does she sell | them for? ma sed, and I sed, 15 cents a duzzen, and ma sed, O my_goodness that seems ridiculissly cheep, Ill be ony to glad to have 2 duzzen. Me and Puds looking at each other happy on account of being the quickest money we ever made, and we started to go out to get more orders, and Mrs. Jones next door ordered 2 duzzen, and we was just going down off her frunt steps and ma called out the window. Benny you crazy thing, I just called up Mrs. Simkins to verify my sispicions and she is perfeckly furious, dont you dare ask another person. Me and Puds looking at each other sad on account of being the quickest money we ever lost, and Puds went home exter late to give his mother plenty of , |a taxi at night. time to forget, wich she preberly dident if she is anything like mine. The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. One of the men could play the piaro and with a little coaxing sat before the keyboard. He was an American ex-doughboy. “Yeh,” he said, “if I'm going to tickle these ivories who is going to sing?” “Shoot!” was the reply, as a lanky lad arose. “Give me the key of C and I will.” The pianist’s repertoire was re- stricted, but what he knew he played well. A second later the room was filled with the strains ¢f “Tipperary.” one of the most popular of war songs. The singer stood at his side and in a rich tenor sang: “C'est un chemin long ‘to Tep- araree.’ C'est un chemin long, c'est vrai; C'est un chemin long ‘to Tep- araree,’ Et Ia belle fille qu'je ccnnais. Bonjour, Pecka- deely! Au revoir, Lestaire Squaire! C'2st un chemin [# B long ‘to Tep- [l araree,’ = Mais mon coeur ‘eez zaire!'"” In case you do not recognize it, it is “Tipperary” in more or less French. Then foliowed “Beautiful K-K-Kat and “What Became of Hinky, Dinky Parley Voo?” ‘War songs? We'll tell the world, and | no one can sing them quite like the lads who also sang “Where do we go | from here, boys, where do we go from here.” They seldom knew. For many of them the path of glory led but to the grave. SR Things were stirring on the battle- front 11 years ago today. Ask any| veteran. He knows. A host of boys, driving trucks in this city, clerking in offices and stores and professional fel- lows, are among those who recall the Spring of 1918. One of them is driving He is the possessor of the Distingiushed Service Cross. x K KX X In Virginia, within a few miles of the city, a tall, rangy farmhand follows the plow. Oceasionally he operates a trac- tor. He traveled abroad quite exten- sively from 1917 to 1919. It was his first trip. Without doubt it was lik | wise his last. He is fairly familiar with | the French capital and a section of Germany. He is far more familiar with | the Argonne. He traveled at the ex- pense of Uncle Sam. Before the war Europe was simply something printed in the geographies. | His farm wages are so meager today that the only traveling he does is be- tween the tenant house he occuples and this city. Save for the war, foreign soil would never have clung to his boots. A Another was a city boy named| Walter. Walter shook a mean foot on | the dance floor and captivated the young women of his particular social | set. Walter heard the drums of war but preferred, HITING Lo Team | temporarily at ‘was Walter. He had been over there and the large toe of his right foot had been shot off. You would'nt know it | if you saw him dancing today. ki “Buddy,” said a stranger to us the | other night. “how can I get to Walter | Reed Hospital the quickest way?" It was 11:30. “I'm supposed to report there before midnight and I don't want ’w get into any trouble. You see, they are going to operate on me in a couple |of days”” He was another who had | done his bit. * ok ok One runs across ex-service men in | all parts of the world. They speak every language. It seems to us that there is more human war wreckage visible in London than in any other city we have ever visited. Charing Cross station in the evening, | when the commuters are hastening to | catch trains, affords an unusual van- tage point, if one is curious. Here may be seen stalwart young Britons, many of whom are stiff-legged, and an occasional one armless. Any bright | day will find three or four ex-soldiers in the streets off the Strand, enter~ taining the public with songs and dances. Their make-up is ludicrous. Frequently they will dress in female ballet costume in which they cavort about while one of their number plays a diminutive organ or piano. Passe; by contribute to these boys, who, through lack of profitable employment are compelled to engage in street singing. BRAIN TESTS Two minutes for this test. Here are a lot of numbers, each rep- resented by a. letter. Go through them one by one. In Space I place each letter that rep- resents a number containing the figure 7; but not the figure 3 In Space II place those that contain 3 but not 7. In Space III, all numbers (or their representative letters) that have 3 and 7 equally. In Space 1V, all numbers which have mare 3s than 7s. or more 7s than 3s, but which contain both 3 and 7. A. 656 J. 9873 S. 24265 . 793 2331 T. 89070 . 7033 U. 77332 . 8816 V. 37373 . 75537 W. 98631 . 89014 X. 547569 . 85371 Y. 243137 . 96541 Z. 907030 . 22674 &. 3377377 E F. 994 G. 750 H. 1234 1. 5689 SPACE 1 (78 only) SPACE I1 (3s only) SPACE II1 &7 equal) SPACE IV (3 or 7 pre- dominating) = Answer, TRAIL TO TRAINING 'S, least, the drums of a jazz band. Other | American youths were hitting the long trail to train- ing camps and learning to salute | “shave-tails.” Wal- ter, however, did not consider it a| public war and his | uniform consisted | of the latest fash-| fon in dinner| clothes. Then, one | day, folks began | casually to inquire about the boy. They had not seen him around for a few weeks. Some one suggested that he was in the service. | but most of the neighbors refused to believe it. | A little more than six months later, a | pale-faced youth in uniform limped up the street on a pair of crutches. He | smiled a greeting to old friends. It No space—A. F. I. M, O, Q. S. Space I—G. R, T, X; Space II-C, D, E, H, K, W: Space III-B, J, P, U, Z; Space I N. V. Y & FREE CORN RECIPK BOOK #00 AT YOUR GROCER'S VAPEX ... the modern, simple, and pleasant way to treat a COLD Bacteriological Tests Silk threads were impregnated with the two most common kinds of cold germs found in the nose and throat (streptococcus hem- olyticus, micrococcus aureus). The threads were then suspended in jars in which Vapex had been placed at the bottom. The jars were sealed and kept at body heat. Examination of the jars revealed that the vapor arising from the Vapex had killed the most common germ of colds in 10 minates. VAPEX is a complete departure from old- faehioned remedies and cures. on a handkerchief—breathe the vapor— your cold is relieved instantly, It is ple and pleasant to use.’ No bother. Vapex was discovered in England during the war. While influenza raged as never before, a few laboratory workers remained immune to the disease. Tests immunity to materials with which they were working at that time. The chemicals responsible were soon isolated. As Vapex, a concentrate of these materials, a new product was offered for sale and met with an immediate and general acceptance. No dosing. Use Putadrop wish. The strength im- you sleep. pleasant treatments, Vapex is distributed by E. Fou- gera & Co., Inc., New York City. traced this A drop on your handkerchief 'VAPEX Breathe your cold away Insist on the genuine Vapex in the little square bottle and the package with the green triangle. « o o« It may be expensive to experiment with an imitation! 845 U. 8. Put. 08, Vapex as often as you of one application lasts for an entire day or night. A drop on both ends of your pillow will fight the cold as Buy Vapex from your druggist—one dollar the bottle. Each bottle contains fifty, of your pillow at night will fight the cold as you sleep.