American Agriculturist, January 20,1&23 
61 
Tine 
Suits 
Made to 
Measure 
^I^PrePaia 
Most stupendous values ever 
offered. Same quality costs $30.00 
elsewhere. All sizes and all styles 
cost the same—No extra charges. 
We pay delivery. Money back if 
we fail to please you. 
SAMPLES FREE-^ postcard or letter 
OnifirLil.0 I ntt brings you free a big 
assortment of cloth samples, self measuring 
charts and style book. Fine all wool serges and 
worsteds, all latest colors and patterns included. 
Your Suit Won't Cost You a Cent 
If you have a few spare hours to show and adver¬ 
tise our amazing bargains, your own suit won’t 
cost a cent. This is a wonderful chance for agents 
to make $10.00 to $50.00 a week for all or spare 
time. Everybody buy^. Our low prices are irresist¬ 
ible. A postcard todaywithyournanxe and address 
brings our Samples without delay — Address 
CHICAGO TAILORS ASS’N, Dept. 231 Chicago 
Send for FREE story 
Interesting, illustrated folder “How to get. 
Greater Desk Efficiency” shows how to keep' 
your 4esk cleared for action. Thousands of 
kleradesks are giving entire satisfaction. Saves 
time locating, distributing or sorting papers. 
Takes less space than a. tray. Sent FREE trial. 
Kleradeiffi 
Steel Sections 
BOSS-Gould Co 
i7i N. 10th 
ST. LOUIS 
This 
model 
$6.25 
Mailing Lists 
Will belp you increase sales 
Send for FREE cataloflr showing 
details covering names of your 
best prospective customers. 
Counts ant^ricea are Riven on 
thoasanda of diSerent Mailing Lists. 
Ross 
Guaranteed 
by refund 
each 
371 N 
Gould Co Street 
St. Louis 
Color Your Butter 
“Dandelion Butter Color” Gives That 
Golden June Shade and Costs 
Really Nothing. Read! 
Before churning add one-half tea¬ 
spoonful to each gallon of cream and 
out of your churn comes butter of 
Golden June shade to bring you top 
prices. “Dandelion Butter Color” costs 
nothing because each ounce used adds 
ounce of weight to butter. Large bot¬ 
tles cost only 35 cents at drug or 
grocery stores. Purely vegetable, harm¬ 
less, meets all State and National food 
laws. Used for 50 years by all large 
creameries. Doesn’t color buttermilk. 
Absolutely tasteless. 
Wells Richardson Co., Burlington, Vt. 
5 
—Good —$1 
Magazines J. 
Woman's World, (Monthly) \ Qur Price, 
Good Stories, (Monthly)/ fkt\' 
American Woman, (Monthly) I IJH 
The Household, (Monthly) _ 
The Farm Journal, (Monthly)/ poR i yeISi 
ORDER BY CLUB NUMBER 234 
A Dollar Bill will do—We take the risk 
Send all orders to 
Whitlock & Summerhays 
25 North Dearborn Street, CHICAGO 
THUJiANDSOME 
Perfect tone, handsome appearance, rose¬ 
wood finish, bow included. Given yree for sell¬ 
ing only 30 packets Garden Spot Seeds at 10 cts. I 
a pkt. Send no money—Tve trust you. “Write for seeds today. I 
LANCASTER CO. SEED CO.,Sta.36, PARADISE,PA. 
fil RRFFn^l Profitable pure-bred 
y * Northern raised chickens, 
ducks, geese, turkeys. Fowls, eg^s, incubators 
at reduced prices. 80th year. Largest plant. 
Large valuable poultry book and catalog free. 
R. F.NEUBERT CO., Box 822, Mankato, Minn. 
Using a Fireless Cooker 
Ada Carroll Wortman Tells Best Methods 
r JE fireless cooker has a firm place 
in the affections of the farm woman 
who aims to be not only a good house¬ 
keeper, but to plan her work so effi¬ 
ciently that she also has leisure for 
other things. This invention has done 
much to banish the “all-worn-out” 
woman who is a slave to the kitchen 
stove. While the necessity for saving 
fuel is not so urgent as in the city, 
economy of,time and labor means much 
/m the farm. 
Bread sponge, mixed at night and set 
in the cooker, will hold the temperature 
at which it is placed in the box, and in 
the morning will be light as can be, 
thereby making the mixing of the bread 
a task which can be done the first thing 
after rising. 
The cereal for the morning meal may 
be boiled on the stove for five minutes 
in the evening, then set in the cooker. 
In the morning it will be just hot- 
main frozen for many hours. Whether 
hot or cold, anything placed in the 
cooker maintains the same temperature 
for from three to six hours. 
Although a fireless cooker can be 
made at home, you must have the right 
disks to use. These can be obtained 
from mail order houses, and two are 
needed for each well. 
A USEFUL LACE MOTIF 
As soon as Christmas is over, the 
prudent housewife turns to the busi¬ 
ness of replenishing her own stock and 
getting her linen into good condition. 
The lace motif shown in the picture has 
a dozen uses. It is smart for pillow¬ 
slips, towels, centerpieces, curtains and 
for clothing; it may be worked in fine 
linen thread or in a coarse material for 
large articles. The whirls may be made 
A Pretty Lace Motif for Insertion or Edging 
enough to taste good. If the cooker has 
two wells, or if the family is small, the 
coffee also may be madfe at night, 
drained from the dregs, and put into 
the cooker. It makes a quick break¬ 
fast to have coffee and cereal all ready 
before the fire is built in the range. 
All that will be needed in addition will 
be to cook eggs, or bacon, or toast, or 
griddle cakes, and breakfast is ready. 
Spareribs, a roast of beef, a meat 
loaf, or a chicken will be done to a turn 
in the cooker in three hours, with no 
danger of scorching, or need of bast¬ 
ing. The cooker must have disks of 
iron or soapstone in order to do roast¬ 
ing or baking, but all the modern cook¬ 
ers have. Brown bi’ead, baked in pound 
coffee cans, bakes better in the cooker 
than in the oven. Heat the disks until 
they snap when a wet finger is applied, 
put one in the bottom of the cooker, 
and the cans of bread above, then lay 
the other disk over the cans, and in 
two hours your bread will be well done. 
Stews of all kinds and legumes are 
better cooked in the fireless cooker than 
in any other way. If you have a rack 
which will protect pies, they also may 
be baked in the cooker. Set the pie on 
the heated lower stone, place the rack 
above the hot upper stone, and you will 
be surprised to see how delicately fine 
the texture of the crust will be, while 
the filling will be done, without boil¬ 
ing over. 
Anything that can be cooked in the 
oven or boiled on the top of the range 
may be cooked in the cooker. Frying 
is not so successfully done, although it 
may be done with proper care. The 
good cook uses fried foods sparingly, 
and it is better to fry on the top of the 
stove if at all. 
As you use the cooker, you will find 
more ways to utilize the principle on 
which it operates. Ice cream may be 
placed in the cold well, and it will re- 
individually and used as inserts, or 
connected to form an edging. 
A centerpiece and the end of a long 
table runner are shown in the picture. 
Directions for making this lace will 
be sent upon receipt of 10 cents in 
stamps. Address your order to Handi¬ 
craft Department and ask for E 6. 
To Banish Onion Odor 
An experienced cook says that if you 
put vinegar in a pan at the same time 
onions are cooked the odov will not be 
noticed in the kitchen while the onions 
are cooking. This might be worth 
trying with cabbage, too, as either of 
these odors prevent many onions and 
cabbage being cooked that otherwise 
would be added to regular meals. 
When Driving' a Nail into a plaster¬ 
ed wall, first place the nail in hot 
whter until thoroughly heated. You 
can then drive it in without breaking 
or chipping any of the surrounding 
plaster.— (Mrs. J. T., Massachusetts. 
AspiriR 
Say “Bayer” and InsistI 
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on 
package or on tablets you are not get¬ 
ting the genuine Bayer product pre¬ 
scribed by physicians over twenty-two 
years and proved safe by millions for 
Colds 
Toothache 
Earache 
Neuralgia 
Headache 
Lumbago 
Rheumatism 
Pain, Pain 
Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” 
only. Each unbroken package con¬ 
tains proper directions. Handy boxes 
of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug¬ 
gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. 
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer 
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of 
Salicylicacid.__ 
10 Cents 
worth of common kero-^ 
sene or coal oil will keep 
this San ray lamp in 
operation for 30 hours. 
Produces 300 candle 
power of the purest, whitest and 
best light known to science. Nothing 
towear;Bimpie; safe; 15 Days’ Trial 
Free Lantern 
As a speciai introductory offer, we wiil 
give yon a 300 Candie Power S unray 
Lantern FREE with the first purchase 
' a Sunray Lamp. Lights up the yard 
barn iike a search iight. Writs 
today for fuli information and 
agency proposition. 
KNIGHT LIGHT CO. 
Dspt. 3061 ChicaKO, III. 
No 
Wicks 
to Trim 
No 
Smoke 
The 
“Pride” 
Send for 
Catalog 40 
A ModerR Bathroom, $5^5 
Jn8t one of our wonderful barffain?. Set com- 
prlnea a 4, or 6 foot iron ensiueled roll rlni 
bath tub) one 19 inch roll rini enameled tlat- 
back lavatory, and a nyphon •action, waah- 
down water closet with porcelain tank and 
oak poet binge seat; all china index faucets, 
nickel-plated traps,and all nlckel-platedheavy 
fittinss. j.M.SEIDENBERGOO.,Inc. 
252 W. 34 St. Bet. ?th and 8th Aves. N, Y. C. 
4 LACE CURTAINS CUBE 
for selling only 80 packs I ImKos 
vegetable or flower seeds (mention 
which) at 10c large pack. Handsome 31- 
piece Blue BirdDinnerSet given accord¬ 
ing to plan in catalog. Send no money. 
American Seed Co., Lancaster, Pa. 
BozM-19, 
SECURED. Send sketch of 
model of your invention for 
examination. Write for 
FREE, book and advice. 
J. L. Jackson fit Co., 378 Ouray Bldg., Wash., D. C. 
PATENTS 
A Stove for a Dime 
REAL OPPORTUNITY! — A stove you can use for getting an 
early breakfast instead of lighting the big kitchen range. Ideal 
for cooking, heating water, warming baby’s milk and in emer¬ 
gencies. Hundreds of uses indoors and out for this 
STERNO 
Canned Heat Folding Stove 
Send lOc and this ad to Sterna Corp., 9 East 37th St, New York City, Dept F-1, and stove will be sent prepaid 
