‘Jbe RURAL NEW-YORKER 
381 
! Wall Paper 
at Factory Prices 
Finest quality, large double rolls, 
very latest patterns, lowest prices. 
Factory Representatives, as ive are, 
enable us to sell the best Wall Paper at 
lowest prices obtainable, eliminating 
many in-between profits and giving 
them to you. 
Sample Book Free. A post card brings 
our sample book and catalog of latest 
patterns, showing borders actual size. 
Don’t buy without seeing this book; 
it will save you money. Full instruc¬ 
tions formeasuring, hanging, etc. The 
quality of our Goods and our Prices 
will jeonvince you that we can 
and will save you money. 
Write to the nearest office 
Smorton Wall Paper Co. 
Depl. H. Utica, N. Y. or P. O. 
Box 1672 H, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
So S 
Natural Yarn Cotton Socks 
For Tender Feet 
If your feet are tender and you want 
to enjoy real foot comfort, try these 
Natural Yarn Cotton Socks, 
not dyed or bleached. Just 
as they come from the mill. 
Give twice the wear of dyed - 
stockings. Send 20 cents 
for a sample pair, 95 cents 
for half dozen, or $1.80 for 
dozen. Prices west of Missis¬ 
sippi, $1.90 per dozen. State 
size of shoe. 
Natural Yarn Hosiery 
FLEETWOOD, PA. 
RADIO- 
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MONEY SAVING CATALOG 
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NEW YORK, NY. 
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Our New Handy Binder 
Sides are heavy Book Board, Imita¬ 
tion Leather Back and Corners, 
Cloth Sides, Two Tongues Inside. 
Inside of Cover Neat Lining Paper, 
Stamped in Gold— “Rural New- 
Yorker”— on outside. 
Will hold 52 issues, or more. 
Sent prepaid upon receipt of 
price, 65c. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
333 West 30th St. New York City 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
The Business Farmer’s Paper 
; NEW YORK CITY 
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with the toothache tonight, and will have 
to pay a long-deferred visit to the dentist, 
12 miles away. Our neighborhood is go¬ 
ing through an epidemic of measles and 
sore eyes. We fear not the former, and 
have escaped the latter, so far. We have 
been very fortunate this Winter ; not one 
seriously ill, and how very grateful we 
are. 
IIow glad I shall be to see the buds 
begin to swell and grass begin to peep 
up. Then we women folks will begin to 
swap garden seed, talk garden, chickens 
and turkeys. The men will begin to talk 
tobacco, corn and maybe an Irish potato 
patch, meanwhile the birds will come back 
to the trees and begin to chatter of the 
new home. And Mother Nature will 
deck these bare hills with a new mantle 
of varied hues, just as she has done 
for countless ages, while we, with our 
puny might, struggle and fail, always 
hoping, and* looking beyond, but never 
quite catching up. At last we fall—we 
are no more—but the gap closes up, the 
world goes on, soon we are forgotten; but 
such is life—or the beginning? 
MRS. D. B. P. 
More About the Radio 
The new radio set just sits in the cor¬ 
ner and sulks and refuses to play for any¬ 
one tonight, so it is a good chance to jot 
down a few impressions concerning it. 
At first I was completely fascinated by 
it, and I still think it is the greatest won¬ 
der ever invented. We get music, 
speeches, plays, fashion talks, and the 
markets usually as plain as if the ruusi- 
Embroidery Designs 
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11024. Designs for infants’ wear and 
lingerie. Pattern includes 23 designs, as 
follows: One of A, four of B, one of C, 
two of D, one of E, one pair of P, two of 
G, one pair of H, one of J, one pair of K, 
one of L, one pair of M, one pair of 1 N, 
one of O, one pair of P, one pair of K, 
one of S, 35 in. of T, 65 in. each of U, V 
and Y, two of W, and two of X. 20 cents. 
cians, actors, etc. were right in the room, 
but sometimes when the speech or drama 
is at the most interesting point the sound 
fades away so that the point of the sen¬ 
tence is lost. 
We get the market reports in the day 
time; they are sent from a very powerful 
station, also we get four short afternoon 
programs a week from the same station, 
otherwise we hardly ever get anything on 
the radio in the daytime. 
Another drawback is that early in the 
evening so many stations are sending all 
at once, sometimes several on nearly the 
same wave length, and they get mixed up 
more or less. Some stations have such 
powerful sending apparatus, and they 
seem to use all the wave lengths at once, 
so that they drown out all the other sta¬ 
tions, and sometimes we are more inter¬ 
ested in some other program. Still in all 
everybody has their faults, so we cannot 
expect radios to be perfect, and when they 
are good they are very good. 
Every farmer should have one. No 
greater boon could be given to a lonely 
woman on a farm, unless possibly it would 
be a hired girl of the sort that was 
abroad in the land 30 years ago but are 
now no more. 
Our radio outfit is a two-tube set which 
cost less than $100, and on clear nights 
we have been able to hear stations 1.000 
miles away, every word and every'note of 
music as clear as if the performers were 
only a few feet away. Just think of sit¬ 
ting down with your mending basket and 
being entertained by the best talent of the 
day while your work goes onf 
Think of what it means where there 
are young people inclined to rebel at the 
loneliness of the farm. 
We have always been a family of read¬ 
ers, happy and contented to be together, 
so time has never hung heavy on our 
hands and my boys have always seemed 
to think home was the best place of any. 
Movies and kindred attractions have held 
slight enticements for them ; still they en¬ 
joy the radio, and while none of them 
play on any musical instrument they love 
melody, and now have a chance to hear 
first-class music. c. T. 
Favorite Salads 
Usually salads are used more freely in 
warm weather than cold, but they are a 
most valuable addition at this time of 
year when it is the tendency to serve too 
— for neighborhood parties 
You can make your tea parties, lunch parties, 
and supper parties always a sparkling suc¬ 
cess if you top off your menu with Jell-O. 
There is a smartly festive look about a Jell-0 
dish, and it tastes just as nice. It is pre¬ 
pared in a few minutes and set away several 
hours before your company arrives. You can 
make all sorts of fancy salads and desserts 
with Jell-O. Ask for a Jell-0 Recipe Book. 
Americas most famous dessert” 
THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY, Le Roy, New York 
RECIPES 
Imperial Salad 
Drain juice from half a can 
of pineapple, add one table¬ 
spoonful of vinegar and 
enough water to make a 
pint. Heat to boiling point 
and add one package of 
Lemon Jell-O. Just as 
Jell-O begins to set, add 
three slices of canned pine¬ 
apple, cubed, one-half can 
Spanish pimentos, shredded, 
and one medium size cucum¬ 
ber, salted and cut fine. 
Mould in individual moulds 
or in one large mould and 
slice. Serve with cream 
salad dressing. 
New Manhattan 
Salad 
Dissolve a package of 
Lemon Jell-O in a pint of 
boiling water and one tea¬ 
spoonful vinegar. While it 
is cooling, chop one cup 
tart apples, one cup English 
walnuts, one cup of celery. 
Mix these ingredients, sea¬ 
son with salt, and pour over 
them the Jell-O. Cool in 
individual moulds. Serve 
with mayonnaise or French 
dressing. 
Send for this 
FREE Book 
Indispensable to every 
householder and motor¬ 
ist. Tells how to re¬ 
pair boiler and furnace 
1 eaks, cracked fire pots, 
motor radiators, etc., 
with 
SMOOTH-ON NO. 1 
Lasting repairs made easily 
and economically. A postal 
brings the book. Sold by 
Hardware and Genera 1 Stores In 
6-oz. tins, 30c (by mail, add Cc.) : 
also in 1-lb., 5-lb. and larger sizes. 
SMOOTH-ON MFG. CO. 
Dept. 39 Jersey City, N. J. U. S. A. 4 
Cash Prizes/ 
/ N*° 
Clip coupon and send to- / .J* 
day f or particulars about x A' 
great knitting contest. J? 
Winoneof cash prizesfor 6 
best woman’s sweat- y tF 
e 5>.,JP an ’ s neater, 
child’s sweater, / ./a? 
scarf, stockings. 
An easy way A 0 
to win a big y 
cash prize. /J , V e ' # 
/* V * 
You, too, may as well save from one- 
third to one-half on YOUR wall paper. 
Ward’s paper is not cheap paper. It is all standard quality, 
made lower in price by manufacturing in immense quantities. 
Think of papering an entire room 10x12 feet, side walls, 
border and ceiling, for only 82 cents. 
Choose your paper from actual free samples of all the newest, 
best patterns tapestries, fabrics, “allovers” and stripes. Prices 
from 3 cents to 35 cents per single roll. 
Sample Book Free—Over 100 Actual Sample* 
This sample book will go into over one million homes. Why 
not into your home, too? Why not see the best new patterns 
and save one-third to one-half? Why pay almost double for your 
paper . Write today for your copy of this free book of wall paper 
samples. 
Address Our House Nearest You. 
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. Write today for 
Chicago Kansas City St. Paul p r e e Q W a ! * 
Portland, Ore. Ft. Worth Oakland. Cal! Book No?64-W 
Sample 
BookFR 
