166 
The Andes Pipe Warm Air Furnace has 
a four bar four shaker grate that cleans 
the sides of the fire pot without losing 
good coal in the center. This increases 
furnace capacity and saves fuel. 
Stove, Range or Furnace Catalogs on Request 
Phillips 8c Clark Stove Co., Inc., Geneva, N. Y. 
Manufacturers since 1868 of the famous Andes line of Coal, Gas 
and Combination Ranges and 1-Pipe, 3-Pipe and Pipe Furnaces. 
for Better Heating* 
NDES FURNAC 
This Great Outfit Complete 
Linens Voiles'f 
Percales Muslins N , 
, Ginghams Chambray - . 
[ A s J? rge manufacturer* of ladies’ wear. 
I ThJlt V Z many >ove,y remnants leftover. j 
I are now offering at rare bar-1 
i freah I>r J.° e r,' are a11 new . clean, ] 
' kigh-grade goods, from 8 to ei 
[ yards each; none less than 8 yards. 
Large New Remnants of , 
> . ® eaiJ tlful Designs , 
/ * " r a limited time we are giving a dress 
^Pattern of a beautiful new model houee / 
r,«re a a free with every order. These 17< 
j ysidfl of uQ8, rich material with fra& 
a - dr s«iS a N 8 m' ° nly fr -98 - Send bust measure, i 
. with DMbn» Sk Simply deposit this amount ‘ 
wicn postman when you receive the package 
^ *1*98 with f ° r coa tf* e - Or if you send . 
1 SaS aB-yjy. w « W ‘>1 prepay the same, t 
cbeer - 
y ’ A DE HOL DRESS CO. \ 
rDapt. 168 *. 26 Quincy Street, Chicago 
95 American, 
Upward CREAM, 
SEPARATOR 
On trial. Easy to run and clean. 
Skims warm or cold milk. Differ¬ 
ent .from picture which shows lar K , 
size easy running New L. S. Mode] 
Western shipments from Western points 
MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN 
Write today for free catalog 
AMERICAN SEPARATOR CO. 
Box 7052 Balnbridge, N. V. 
h 
M Send 10 cents for 288-page book on Stammering and 
J Stuttering, “Its Cause and Cure.’’ It tells how £ 
W ?“£ eci myself after stammering 20 yrs. B. N. Bogus. 
V 5125 Bosue Bldg., 1147 N. 111. St., Indianapolis. * 
| You can be quickly cured, if yoif 
'STAMMER 
PARKER’S 
HAIR BALSAM 
Removes Dandruff—Stops Hair Falling 
Restores Color and 
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 
60c. and Si .00 at druggists 
Hiscox Chem. Works, Patchogue, N. V. 
II 
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Be Sure to Mention the 
American Agriculturist 
COOKING STOVE Z LY 
FUEL and EXTINGUISHER COC 
By Mail—Satisfaction Guaranteed 
This handy stove cooks regular meals, 
with instant Sterno Canned Heat—does any¬ 
thing a kitehen stove can do—but you can 
take it anywhere, folds flat, weighs only 8 oz. 
Use it in bedroom, sick room, dining room, 
home, office, camping. Frys, broils, boils 
moats, eggs, soup, spaghetti, heats water for 
shaving, flat and curling irons, baby’s milk. 
, Sold by dealers or direct. Send this Ad 
and 25c to STERNO CORP., 9 E. 37th St 
New York City, Dept. 202. We will send, 
prepaid, stove, can of Sterno and extinguisher. 
Satisfaction guaranteed or money back. Send 
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STERNO Teat d 
“Get a Portable Kitchenette” 
3O03££uHP 
VEW 
A Introduce this wonder lamp in your 
„ ... Reality. Make $72 a Week. 
Brilliant, whitelight—soft,restful toeyes c_ 
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EREE Outfit to w ork .era. New plan starts you with- 
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IRIS AND PEONIES 
Write for -prices 
WM. H. TOPPIN, Merchantville, N. J. 
American Agriculturist, September 6, 1924 
What’s New In Fashion 
A Review of Styles for This Fall 
/^OLORS, materials, trimmings, lines— 
^ they all change from year to year, 
even though certain styles, like the one- 
piece dress remain in favor many succes¬ 
sive seasons. So we are all interested in 
“what’s new” 
for the coming 
year, and the 
Household Edit¬ 
or has been doing 
a little advance 
investigating to 
find out. 
I spoke of the 
one-piece dress 
as still being in 
the style. I 
wonder if they crepe, with 
will ever go out? g a y - c o 1 - 
Surely not if the ored trim- 
women who wear mingbands. 
them have any It comes 
say! These com- in sizes 36, 
fortable frocks 38, 40, 42 
have changed and 44 
very little in inchesbust 
style this season. 
They are still 
loose fitting, gen¬ 
erally slip-over 
models, with a 
tie belt and perhaps a touch of lace at the 
neck. Sleeves are short, many of them 
kimono. The 
favorite materi¬ 
als are the soft, 
rather clinging 
ones—jersey 
cloths, knitted 
fabrics, soft sat¬ 
ins and crepes. 
There are a few 
new weaves, 
given fancy 
names by the 
manufacturers, 
but they really 
are verv little 
different from 
fabrics of last 
winter and 
spring. 
Our patterns 
this week show 
three variations 
of the one-piece 
dress. No. 2120, 
which comes in 
sizes 16 years. 
would make up well in challis, poplin, 
twill ©r a figured cloth. Stripes, inciden¬ 
tally, are very good this year. 
No. 2145, a slightly more dressy model, 
shows the new flounces at the side and 
the use of 
passemen- 
terie or 
embroid¬ 
ered trim- 
m i n g in 
panel style. 
It would 
be charm¬ 
ing in black 
satin or 
navy blue 
No. 1973—The smart hat for fall wear 
■—high crown, narrow, slightly drooping 
brim, simple, trimming on one side only. 
Cuts in ladies’, misses’ and girls’ sizes. 
Price 13c. 
36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure, 
shows the “shirt front” which is a new 
feature of the somewhat tailored dress. 
This pattern takes only 3yards of 36- 
inch material for the smaller sizes. It 
measure 
and you will need 3^i yards for size 36, 
with 5 3^2 yards banding. 
No. 2182 proves that the surplice 
closing has not gone out of fashion and 
also that the coat-dress is still good. 
It has possibilities for a make-over, 
too, in case a 
last year’s frock 
is worn in places, 
or outgrown. 
The pattern 
comes in sizes 16 
years, 36, 38, 40, 
42 and 44 inches 
bust measure. 
Size 36 takes 2 yi 
yards 40 inch 
with 1 yi yard 
36-inch contrast¬ 
ing material. 
All our pat¬ 
terns are 12c. 
They are seam- 
allowing and fit 
perfectly. You 
will want our big 
new Fall and 
Winter Catalog 
too. It is only 
10c. and is inval¬ 
uable for the 
home-sewer. To 
order, send correct amount for patterns 
and catalogue to Pattern Department. 
American Agriculturist, 461 Fourth 
Avenue. Be sure name, address, numbers 
and sizes are written clearly. 
Some Fall Garden Suggestions 
Late Fall Salads 
ETTUCE may be sown in the fall 
and be excellent for salads, for it 
grows well in the cool fall weather. 
Another good fall salad is the Chinese 
cabbage, which has a sprightly flavor 
that is much relished. Mustard grows 
very quickly if the Southern curled is 
sown and it is good used with lettuce 
to give it a spicy flavor. These plants 
are not strong or bitter at this time unless 
the fall is very hot and dry, and may be 
sown as late as September, as they grow 
much more rapidly in the fall, due to the 
greater supply of nitrogen in the soil at 
this season. The Chinese cabbage may 
be used as leaf salads, or it may be 
allowed to head and blanch.— Bertha 
Alzada 
Ridding the Garden of Grubs 
W HITE grubs are very destructive 
of plant roots where ground that 
has been very grassy the year before is 
planted and cultivated, leaving only the 
crop to furnish grub food. One year I 
planted my garden where potatoes had 
I been planted and not kept clean and the 
grass had taken them. The ground was 
full of grubs, and many of my plants were 
practically killed, for their roots were 
kept eaten off until they made no growth. 
I found grubs in almost every hill. 
Keeping ground free from grass and then 
plowing the garden late in the fall to 
expose the grubs to frost will get rid of 
many. —L. H. Cobb 
Saving Horseradish Sets 
r PHE new method of growing horse- 
f radish calls for as many sets for 
spring planting as we want mature roots 
for marketing in the fall, or for digging 
for home use. These sets are pieces of 
root averaging the size of a lead pencil 
and from six to eight inches long. The} 
should be cut to the right length when 
you dig the horseradish and tied in 
bundles, twenty-five is a good size, and 
then packed in boxes of sand if but a 
few are to be kept. If many, then you 
can bury them outside, for freezing does 
not hurt them. If kept inside, store in 
a cool cellar and pack them with the 
large end down, just opposite to the 
way they are to be planted.—L. H. Cobb 
