■ r lcan Agriculturist, January 26, 1924 
89 
spirm 
Beware of Imitations! 
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on 
ekage or on tablets you are not get- 
■the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved 
| by millions and prescribed by 
[cians over twenty-three years for 
Colds 
■ Toothache 
P Neuritis 
V Neuralgia 
Headache 
Lumbago 
Rheumatism 
Pain, Pain 
Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” 
iJy. Each unbroken package contains 
r0 ven directions. Handy boxes of 
ygjve tablets cost few cents. Drug- 
sts also sell bottles of 24 and 100. 
spirin is the trade mark of Bayer 
amifacture of Monoaceticacidester of 
Bplicacid. 
Q CZ Sent On 
Sp^fd trial 
CREAM 
JPARATOR 
I SOLID PROPOSITION 
well made, perfect 
ping separator for $24.95. 
j warm or cold milk. Makes 
f or light cream. Different 
^picture, which Bhows large 
City, easy running New L. S. 
el. See our easy 
Bthly Payment Plan 
{sanitarymarvel, easily cleaned, 
letter dairy is large or small, write 
■ free catalog and monthly payment 
p. Western orders from Western 
HERICAN SEPARATOR CO. 
*3052 Bainbridge, N. Y. 
ft 10,00 0,0*00 
S Schoolchildren 
need 
T NATURE’S 
v RARE GIFT 
From Norway’s Seas 
COTT'S EMULSION 
The Strength-maker. 
fcott St. Bowne. Bloomfield, N. J. 23-50 
Very 3 Hours 
BREAKS THAT COLD 
Sill s Cascara Bromide Quinine will 
break your cold in one day. Taken 
promptly it prevents colds, la grippe 
3hd pneumonia. Demand red box 
fearing Mr. Hill’s portrait, 
ffhggists. 
SCARA QUININE 
All 
Price30c. 
DETROIT, MICH. 
(B-201) 
A M ^ ‘ 1 ^'I Jnillwtf^OSTPAIO 
. juar'anteed Ten Years 
h jjvi,. ZT" Ladies* wrist watch,small thin model, 
bracelet, fancy clasp. Jeweled movement guaranteed 
nffB©FDci??. r £ Postpaid for selling only 35 bottles high grade 
iv.r k j a t lb cents. Nothing more to do. Wonderful 
lcL y ^? y buys. Send No Money , just name and address. 
P«et 9 k-10 CiWlCAPP 
Looking Towards Spring 
J\ J0 mother need, hesitate 
to attempt the little 
play suit, No. 1707, for it 
is the simplest possible 
style for a boy and besides, 
there are full directions for 
making given on all our 
pattern envelopes. No. 
1707 cuts in sizes 2, 4, and 
6 years; the 4 year size 
taking Iff yard of 36-inch 
material. Price, 12c. 
You feel so much better 
when you look right, that 
it is worth having pretty 
frocks even for housework. 
No. 1866 is an easy-to- 
slip-on morning dress, 
with big pockets. It cuts 
in sizes 3k, 36, 38, 40, 
42, 44, 46 and 43 inches 
bust measure, so there is a 
size to please everybody. 
Size 36 requires 3fi yards 
36-inch material with ff 
yard contrasting. Price, 
12c. 
Little daughter needs so 
many clean school frocks that 
mother should choose only 
easily laundered styles. No. 
1781 is a bloomer dress of the 
utmost simplicity and we 
advise cutting several from 
the same pattern. No. 1781 
comes in sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, and 
10 years. Size requires 
Sfi yards 36, with fi yard 
for collar. Price, 12c. 
It, will be seen on 
Fifth Avenue, this 
smart coat dress. No. 
1924, and our pattern 
makes it equally pos¬ 
sible for the woman 
who does her own 
sewing. No. 1924 
is shown in the Spring 
and Summer Fashion 
Magazine, in black 
cloth handsomely em¬ 
broidered. It cuts in 
sizes 16 years, 36, 
38, 40, 42 and 44 
bust measure. Pat¬ 
tern, 12c. 
To get the catalogue, all you have to do is to 
add 10c to your order. The catalogue is rich 
in suggestions for the coming spring and not 
one would overstrain the family purse. Send 
for it at once, while it is in stock. 
TO ORDER: Write your name and address, 
pattern numbers and sizes clearly, and enclose 
12c for each pattern order and 10c for spring 
catalogue. Send to the Pattern Department, 
American Agriculturist, 461 4th Avenue, 
New York City.-- 
lit Last 
Ws Can Afford Itf 
For We Now Have an 
Additional Income 
From My Spare 
Time Work at 
Home.” 
u 
T HAT was the happiest 
day of my life — when 
the question of buying a 
home was solved by those few 
simple, wonderful words — ‘at 
last we can afford it.’ And 
because I know the joy of being 
able to solve the problem of 
‘not enough money’ I’ll tell you 
how I did it so that you can do 
the same. 
“When John and I were married 
he was earning a very small salary, 
but he was learning a business in 
which there were fine opportunities 
and I was willing to start housekeep¬ 
ing in a small way and help work 
out our future together. 
“We took a small apartment and 
for a while we were able to live com¬ 
fortably. But as the months went 
by, our expenses increased and even 
though John’s salary was raised twice 
during the first year, we could never seem 
to catch up with the bills. 
“I wanted to take a position, but John 
would not hear of it. He was proud, and 
I knew it would hurt him to have it said 
he couldn’t support a wife. But John re¬ 
alized as well as I did that we were facing 
a difficult problem and we looked around 
for a way to solve it. 
“When our rent was raised for the 
second time John was desperate. For not 
only was it a hardship to pay the increase, 
but we felt that we were getting very lit¬ 
tle for our money. ‘If we only had $500 
to put down on a house,’ John would say, 
‘I kn ow I could meet the monthly pay¬ 
ments just as we do our rent. And before 
long we’d own a place of our own. Think 
of it!’ 
“I did think. And I made up my mind 
that I’d try to find a way to help John. I 
could at least utilize my spare hours at 
home. One day I saw an advertisement 
—‘YOU CAN EARN SPARE MONEY 
AT HOME ’ it said—‘THE FREE BOOK 
WILL TELL YOU HOW.’ Here was 
the chance I’d been longing for. But I 
mustn’t tell John, I thought, for he’d be 
angry and perhaps ridicule my plan. 
“ I sent for the free book. What a reve¬ 
lation! It told how hundreds of women 
everywhere were making money in spare 
time by knitting socks and other articles 
of wearing apparel on a wonderful little 
machine. This little device, called the 
Auto Knitter, literally turned spare hours 
into extra dollars. For these women were 
merely utilizing the spare hours and half 
hours that might otherwise be wasted— 
and were getting well paid for it. 
“The next day I sent for the Auto 
Knitter and a supply of the soft pure 
wool. Each day, after my work was done, 
I got out the little machine and turned out 
pair after pair, of beautiful, warm, well- 
made socks. As soon as I had a shipment 
ready I sent it to Buffalo and back came 
the welcome pay check. And with each 
check that came, another entry appeared 
in my bank book—the first bank book I 
ever had. 
“It was real fun! And the thought of 
the pleasant surprise I would have for 
John made the work seem a joy. I de¬ 
voted a few spare hours each day to the 
work and was amazed to see how my little 
fund of money grew. 
“At last my chance came. John received 
another small raise and it made him even 
I more independent and determined. He 
was going to have a house of his own. 
But while his salary was now up to a 
point where he could make a substantial 
monthly payment on a house, he still had 
nothing with which to make a cash pay¬ 
ment down. 
“One day I well remember it was bis 
birthday—he asked me to take a walk. 
Someone had told him of a little house 
that could be bought for a small cash pay¬ 
ment. We walked over and looked all 
through it. ‘ Oh! what I would give to be 
able to buy it,’ said John. ‘If I only had 
a few hundred dollars the rest would be 
easy. I saw the look of sadness and dis¬ 
appointment as he turned away. ‘Let’s 
buy it,’ I said. ‘At last we can afford it, 
for now we have an additional income 
from my spare work at home.’ 
I 
“The look on his face was wonderful. 
He couldn’t believe me. ‘But I don’t un¬ 
derstand,’ he said. ‘How—what do you 
mean?’ Then I told him what I had done 
—how I had answered the advertisement, 
got the free book and ordered the little 
machine. And I told him how I had been 
knitting socks in my spare time, sending 
them to the company in Buffalo and get¬ 
ting a regular pay check for my work. It 
was a happy story, and it had a happy 
ending for we now have our own home at 
last. 
“And now that I’ve told you what I did 
in my spare time at home—how I turned 
my spare hours into dollars with the aid 
of the little Auto Knitter—why don’t you 
do the same? The Auto Knitter Company 
now has a new plan which turns spare 
hours into double dollars. That means 
that every dollar earned by knitting socks 
on this machine has a purchase value of 
two. The free book will tell you all about 
it—without any obligation whatever. If 
I were you, I’d send for it without dealy. 
The coupon will bring it by return mail 
and then you can judge for yourself. Why 
not send for it today?” The Auto Knitter 
Hosiery Co., Inc., Dept. 871, 630-638 
Genesee St., Buffalo, N. Y. 
Auto Knitter Hosiery Co., Inc. 
Dept. 871, 630-638 Genesee St., Buffalo, N. Y. 
I am interested. Without obligation you may send 
me full particulars about the Auto_ Knitter Spare 
Time Plan that turns spare hours into double dol¬ 
lars. I am enclosing 2c to cover cost of mailing. 
Name. 
Street 
City. 
State. 
