348 
American Agriculturist, November 17,11123 
Aspirin 
Say “Bayer” and Insistl 
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 Headache 
Toothache Lumbago 
Earache Rheumatism 
Neuralgia 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. 
INDOW SHADE Q 
holesale Priced 
The ever increasing 
volume of our sales is brought 
about by our ability to make 
better offers than anybody 
else. Here is one specially 
reduced for this week only. 
There are a number of other 
values not advertised that are 
just as good. 
HOLLAND LINEN—All colors, sides and 
bottoms hemmed; mounted on guaranteed 
spring rollers. Retail value w 
$1.25. Our price for this week / /** 
only. 
Our catalogue consisting of instructions How to measure 
and hang shades, together with samples of Imported and 
Domestic Hollands, opaques and Cambrics, also useful 
information regarding the purchase and care of shades, 
mailed free. 
STANDARD WINDOW SHADE CO. 
429 Gold Street, Brooklyn. N. Y. 
48 * QualiiyHiich Flatfonj 
Fresh from Roaster Baih$ 
/S' BLEND of the best high' 
0>/i! grown mountain coffee 
v/ JR, r *** .- 
c 
...— 0 1 
with a tantalizingly fra- £$ 5 -. 38 ®, 
grant aroma and a highly appe- . y* 
tizing and satisfyingfiavor that WfeAt' 
will delight the most particular 
s person. Roasted daily and ship- DELIVERED 
) ped to you at the wholesale price FREE 
of 38c a pound.in5 pound lots. 
Eja*K - B* Send lOcentstocoverpost- 
gn pr ■■ ■» age and packing, on large 
■ Eg n mm Sna free sample— enough to 
make 12 cups—and ex¬ 
perience for yourself its delicious 1 
V flavor and incomparable aroma. State 
if wholeor ground bean is desired. 
'GILLIES COFFEE CO., »cpt. a 11 
235 Washington St., a t Park Place, N ewY^-k 
The 
“Pride” 
Send for 
Catalog 40 
To Stuff That Turkey 
Hints For Cooking, Sewing and Housekeeping 
A Modern Bathroom, $60 
Just one of our wonderful bargains. Set com¬ 
prises a 4, 4J4 or 5 foot iron enameled roll rim 
bath tub, one 19 inch roil rim enameled flat- 
back lavatory, and a syphon action, wash¬ 
down water closet with porcelain tank and 
oak post hinge seat; all china index faucets, 
nickel-plated traps,and all nickel-platedheavy 
fittings. j.M.SEIDENBEEGr CO.,Inc. 
254 W. 34 St. Bel. 'lh a’d Sth Aves. N. Y. C. 
A FTER fifteen years of experiment¬ 
ing, I’ve concluded that the two 
best recipes for turkey stuffing are those 
using oysters and chestnuts. 
Turkey with Oyster Stuffiing- 
The Stuffing: Chop twenty small 
oysters very fine. Add a cupful of 
crumbs and a few sprigs of parsley 
for seasoning. Moisten with melted 
butter. 
The Garnishing: For the garnishing 
about eight large oysters are required. 
These should be dried thoroughly and 
each one dipped into a dishful of 
powdered crackers. After they are 
well coated, place in a frying pan and 
cover with hot butter. When they are 
thoroughly browned they may be taken 
out and arranged around the turkey. 
This makes a delicious as well as an 
attractive garnish. 
Turkey with Chestnut Dressing 
Wash the turkey out with cold water 
to which has been added a pinch of soda. 
Prepare the dressing by sh®Jling a 
quart of French chestnuts and boiling 
them for fifteen minutes. After they 
have boiled this length of time, they 
must be mashed with the potato masher 
until they are perfectly smooth. Add 
a pinch of salt and pepper and two 
tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Stuff 
the turkey with this mixture. After 
stuffing, sew up the bird with basting 
thread and needle so that none of the 
dressing can leak out. Put it into 
double roaster, pour one cup and a half 
of boiling water around it and proceed 
to roast according to weight. (Fifteen 
minutes to the pound.) When the 
turkey is roasted, remove from pan. 
Place pan over flame letting the re¬ 
maining liquid come to a boil and add 
two tablespoonfuls of browned flour. 
Boil until it thickens, add water and 
season according to taste. Pour into 
gravy dish or over the turkey as de¬ 
sired.— I. R. Hegel. 
bacon and add a little sugar to soup. 
Very delicious prepared this way. 
* * * 
Salt put in before cooking will be 
ruinous to the flavor of meats. They 
should be partly cooked before seasoning. 
* * * 
When peeling onions, hold them 
under water or over the fire and there 
will be no smarting eyes. 
DO YOU KNOW THAT— 
Peroxide will remove stains from 
white kid gloves and shoes.—Mrs. W. 
H. H., Va. * * * 
Use coffee in stove polish and it will 
not burn off so quickly. 
4= * * 
Vegetable soup is a favorite. Season 
it with a piece of salt pork or smoked 
The Broad Highway 
(Continued from page 346) 
there, that he was standing outside, in 
the moonlight, staring up at my case¬ 
ment with his horrible, dead face. 
Here I very mercifully awoke, and 
lay, for a while, blinking in the ghostly 
radiance of the moon, flooding in at the 
window directly upon me. Now as I 
lay, there leapt up within me a suiiden 
conviction that somebody was indeed 
standing outside in the dane, staring 
up at y my window. Moved by a sudden 
impulse, I rose, and, cautiously ap¬ 
proaching the window, peered out. And 
there, sure enough, his feet planted wide 
apart, his hands behind his back, stood 
a man staring up. His head was 
thrown back so that I could see his 
face distinctly—a fleshy face with small, 
close-set eyes and thick lips, behind 
which I caught the gleam of big, white 
teeth. As I looked, I recognized him as 
the slenderer of the two “Corinthians’* 
with whom I had fallen out at “The 
Chequers.” Hereupon I got me back to 
bed, drowsily wondering what should 
bring the fellow hanging about a di¬ 
lapidated hedge-tavern at such an hour. 
But gradually my thoughts grew less 
coherent, my eyes closed, and in another 
moment I should have been asleep, 
when I suddenly came broad awake 
and listening, for I had heard two 
sounds, the soft creak of a window 
opened cautiously near by, and a 
stealthy footstep outside my door. 
CHAPTER XIX 
IN WHICH I BECOME A SQUIRE OF DAMES 
T HUS, for a space, I lay, with ears 
on the stretch, and every nerve ting¬ 
ling, waiting for—I knew not what. 
In a little, I became t conscious of 
yet another sound, indescribably deso¬ 
late: the low, repressed sound of a 
woman’s sobbing. 
(To be continued) 
WANT MORE MONEY ? 
>ur agents make big profits on soap and toilet articles. 
Get free sample case offer. 
10-RQ-CQ MANUFACTURING CO., 2729 DodierSt.,Sr.Louis, Mo. 
SIMPLE PATTERNS MAKE SEWING PROBLEMS EASY 
j38>fT 
Ec-t to. 
No. 8859 is a simple, service¬ 
able blouse for a boy. It can be 
made with long or short sleeves. 
The ^pattern cuts in sizes 6, 8, 10, 
12 and 14 years. Size 8 takes 1% 
yards 36-inch material. Price 12c. 
No. 1885 is the “one-piccc, one-hour dress.” There are only the sides to sew up, 
the neck to finish and the skirt to hem, and presto ! Your dress is finished. The pat¬ 
tern comes in 3 sizes, small, medium and large. The medium size takes 3 yards 36-inch 
material. Price 12c. , 
The embroidery, which adds considerably to its attractiveness and'which can be done 
very quickly, is included in Pattern 661, also 12c. 
No. 1799 is a one-piece house dress made to close on the left shoulder. The short 
sleeves arc seamed on the shoulders and they are cut in one with the side body. No. 
1799 comes in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 2% 
yards 36-inch material with % yards contrasting. Price 12c. * 
To Order: Be sure your name and address, pattern numbers and sizes 
are clearly written. Send to Pattern Department, American Agriculturist, 
461 Fourth Avenue, New York City, with correct remittance. Add 10c. if 
you want our big Fall and Winter Style Book, packed full of smart designs. 
^ = EF — 
complete d -rzr- 
A HOT BREAKFAST,QUICK! 
Just the thing for cooking breakfast 
before lighting the kitchen range, 
for heating water at night, for sick 
room emergencies, ^warming stock and 
poultry food—thousands of uses. Stove 
folds flat, weighs 8 ounces. Burns Sterno 
Canned Heat. The clean and conven¬ 
ient fuel. 
Send this Ad and‘25c to the Sterno Corp., 
9 East 37th St., N. Y. C., Dept. 75, and 
we will send complete stove prepaid. 
Satisfaction guaranteed or money back. 
Sterno 
Canned Heat 
Most Popular 
Dance,Songf Ballads 
6 FOX TROTS ** 
6 FOX TROTS 
1 Love You—Annabelle—Oh! Min 
No, No, Nora—Hot Roasted Peanuts 
What Do You Do, Sunday. Marv 
6 POPULAR SONGS 
Last Night On The Old Back Porch 
Just A Girl That Men Forget (Love 
Oh Gee Oh Gosh, Oh Golly, I’m In 
When V<H11 The Sun Shine For Me 
My Sweetie Went Away 
Oh, You Little Son-Uv-Er-Gun 
2 WALTZES 
Dreamy Melody Good Night 
2 MARCHES 
Tenth Regiment March 
National Emblem March 
For 
All 
Fight Double-Disc 
Full SizelOinchRecords 
The choicest pick of the Broadway hits—songs and dances, 
and the most popular old favorites — ballads you will .al¬ 
ways love. All brand-new records, guaranteed highest 
quality, only $2.98. Can be played on any phonograph. 
SEND NO MONEY—Enjoy these records at our risk, 
for ten days. Trial costs you'nothing. Money back in J 
stantly on request. Pay postman only $2.98, plus post¬ 
age. Write now while offer lasts. 
MUSICAL LEAGUE OF AMERICA 
407A BROADWAY NEW YORK, N. Y. 
Thrice Daily 
SCOTTS 
EMULSION 
is of Great Value 
. -'>/;■ v • * 
To a nursing Mother 
kJ«M 
» 
Depend upon it, noth¬ 
ing is “just as good” as 
SCOTT’S EMULSION 1 
Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 23-51 
LaGrippe 
Influenza 
Pneumonia 
Keep strong. Be — 
healthy and free from winter complaints. 
Hill’s Cascara Bromide Quinine is the 
quickest acting, most dependable cold 
remedy. What Hill’s does for milliono it 
will do for you. Get red box bearing Mr. 
Hill’s portrait. <k 4Vf* pri “ 30cents ‘ 
CASCARA J, QUININE 
*401*1^' 
W.H.HILL CO. 
(B-2G3) 
DETROIT. MICH. 
MACHINE GH/FN 
f r '■ y m it . TTTwmmm w/ r fcff 
working: machine, for oil or electricity. com¬ 
plete with long real, show tickets, posters, 
directions, etc. All yours for selling only 20 
pkgrs. fancy post cards at 15c. They sell easy. 
Special Prize for promptness. Write Today. 
SUHMFG.CQ.OEPT. 46* CHICAGO 
