13 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN. TIIURSDAT, FEBRUARY 17, 191C. 0000ooooooooooooaaooaoooorooooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooooooo Delicious Chicken Cutlets a la Maryland in Tea Room4th Floor, Today 7 i -t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n r i r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n r 1 1 1 1 ' ". : ; ! : ; ! 1 1 ; : 1 1 1 t i ; i r 1 1 1 1 n M 1 1 1 1 T I I Is directing- the jooooooooooooo FIFTY years have elapsed since the founding of the T. W. C. A. For half a century, girls have passed through its doors and under Its pro tection. So now for the great JUDiiee, which Portland, like all the other big cities In the country, will celebrate. The magnificent pageant will Include 170 e-irla -nnrtravlncr the maidens of each decade since the birth of the or ganizatlon In 1866. Many prominent women are arransinu the affair for Tuesday night. Mrs. William B Osborne. Jr. is chairman and Miss Frank Towslee The two soeaklnir parts are in the hands of Miss Henrietta Honey and Jlrs. W. D. Whitcomb, who will portray the "186S Maiden" and tne "cm or. .isifi." . The caceant will begin with the romantic days of "66, and the nnr little maid of that day will be seen in a stage set with furniture of her time and around her will be gins costumed to represent the band of women who gathered and organized the Y. W. C. A. From that time on wn: Tiass on the statre a gradually increas ing number of girls characteristic of every decade. The needs or the earnest hiiKinasn women will be told by the "itnirt nf 1866" and the dressmakers the clerical workers and teachers of her time will be there. The raoid development and the chancres of the 50 years will be shown and told of by Miss Honey and Mrs. Whitcomb. Mrs. Pauline Miller Chap man will sing. An exceptional feature of the event is the especially arranged music by a stringed orchestra that will play music appropriate to each period of time. The popular songs that have characterized each decade will be sung and Dlayed. The Y. W. C. A. is active in 44 coun tries and 23 of them will be repre sented by girls many of whom will be in Genuine native costume. In every way it is planned to make the pageant the most notable that has so far been held in Portland. Miss Ethelwyn Wing, in charge of Delphian clubs in the West, gave an address yesterday at the Library. Miss Wing took as her subject the art or. the Panama-Pacitic Exposition. On Monday the Delphian Matrons' Club enjoyed an imaginary trip through Egypt, down the Nile, to the ruins of Karnak, the Pyramids, the Sphinx and other points of interest, with Miss Wing as the personal con ductor. The Portland Grade Teachers' Asso ciation will hold its regular business meetinsr February 23 in the Library at 4:30o'clock. The monthly dinner of the organization will follow the bust ness session. Arleta Parent-Teacher Association will give an entertainment Saturday night for the benefit of the social serv ice work. Booths will be arranged for the sale of home-made candies. The social service work has been under the able leadership of Mrs. Hobson. Miss Harriet Wood, librarian, will address the Ainsworth Parent-Teacher Association at its meeting this after noon. Many prominent matrons are members of this association. Mrs. Frank Kelsey is president. Members of Sumner Woman's Relief Corps at their' meeting on Saturday night will dress up in old-fashioned costumes. Gowns of the belles of long ago will be in evidence. Mrs. Harriet Hickox Heller, of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, will give an address on Friday at 2:30 o'clock in room 320 Courthouse. She will speak on "The Adolescent Girl." This is one of a series of free lectures given under th ausDices of the parents' eauca tional bureau of the Oregon Congress of Mothers. A baby test was made yesterday at the bureau and about zu Drigni oauics were examined and scored. oooooodooooooooooooooooo ooooooooo ooooooooooo ooooo CHAIRMAN OP EDUCATIONAL COMMITTER "Y. W. C. A., WHO '111 IS s ORGANIZING THE PAGEANT "GIRLS OF YESTERDAY AND TODAY.' ? t s K - P - 1 - f x i v ff i " - V : km : s - : The Daughters of the Confederacy will meet today with Mrs. V. M. C. Silva. 402 East Forty-ninth street North. Mount Tabor Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation will meet at 2:30 o'clock today in the schoolhouse. The committee iu charge of the hot lunch service will report. In Prineville Mrs. Belknap took $15 wortli of flags and sent returns to Mrs. Aristene Felts, former president of the Oregon Congress of Mothers, who has charge of the sale for the state outside of Portland. Other towns are show ins the same interest. One of the first presidents to call at the Parents' Educational Bureau for flags for the child welfare benefit was Mrs. E. L. Patterson, of Shaver School, who took 500. She is one of the en thusiastic workers. Highland Parent-Teacher Associa tion will hold its monthly meeting Friday at 3 o'clock. Mrs. F. S. Myers will talk on "Cul tivating Im agination in Children." All parents of the district are urged to at tend, as matters of importance to the school will be discussed. Stephens Parent-Teacher Association will meet in the school auditorum to day. Mrs. J. B. Crabtrea, president, will occupy the chair and Mrs. F. S. Myers, former president of the Port land Parent-Teacher Association, will give an address. . All mothers are in vitcd. Mrs. Fanny Perry's class In applied psychology will meet today with Mrs, W. E. Totter, 187 East Forty-ninth street, at 10 o'clock. The George Wright Kelief Corps will hold their first all-day sewing on Fri day at the home of Mrs. Henderson, 431 East Thirty-eighth street. Mem bers arc urged to attend. Take Kich- mond car. Mrs. Alice Welster entertained Mrs. BEAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple Recipe to Darken Gray Hair and Promote Its Growth. Miss Alice Whitney, a well-known beauty doctor of Detroit. Mich, re cently gave out the following state ment: "Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, promote its growth and make it soft and glossy. To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum. a small box of Barbo Com pound and U oz. of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twoce a week until the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It is also fine to promote the growth of the hair, relieve itching and scalp disease, and is excellent for dandruff and falling hair. Adv. T. W. Johnson's circle of the Psychol ogy Club on Monday, when the circle met with the art class. Clubwomen are anticipating the Fed eration luncheon which will be held in the Hotel Imperial on Saturday at 12:30 o'clock. The feasibility of form ing a city federation will be discussed. Reservations may be made by tele phoning Mrs. S. F. Ball. Mrs. Mabel Holmes Parsons, of the department of rhetoric and American literature. State University, will give the address on Friday for the depart ment of literature of the Portland Woman's Club, of which Mrs. J. D. Spencer is chairman. "The Sorrows of Belgium." a new dramatic literary achievement, will be given. The Monday Musical Club has ar ranged to give the regular monthly concert programme at the Meier & Frank auditorium next Monday after noon at 2:30. A trio composed of Miss Elizabeth Johnson, Airs. Ella lloberg Tripp and Miss Vernie Flanders will sing several numbers. string trio, members of which are Miss Marie Chapman, leader: Miss Josephine Wag ner and Miss Katherine Kern, will be heard, and two soloists. Miss Claire Oakes, pianist, and Mrs. R. F. Feem ster, soprano, will appear. Deputy District Attorney Dempsey will address a meeting of the Lents Parent-Teacher Circle tomorrow after noon at 2:30 on "Needed Legislation for Women and Children." The State Woman's Press Club will not hold its regular mid-month social Friday evening, but instead has ac cepted the invitation of Mrs. Julia C. LaBarre to attend the performance of "Twelfth Night," to be given by the Portland Shakespeare Study Club next Monday evening at Arcanum HalL The Indian plays, which were to nave ueeu nresented bv Mrs. L. B. Bartlett's dramatic students, have also been post poned. A valentine tea and musical will be given at the home of Mrs. uaroiyn Strieb, of Milwaukee, for the Oak r.mvf-Milwaukee Social Service Club Saturdav afternoon. A trio Mrs. B. F. Alexander. Mrs. Florence F. Hammond and Mrs. B. G. Skulason will sing. Their accomDanist will be Miss Claire Oakes. Piano solos by Mrs. Spencer Mrs. Richard Webb and Miss Davton will be heard. Mrs. Hammond and Mrs. W. W. , Thompson will sing. At the meetincr of the Wichita Par ent-Teacher Association Friday after noon plans were laid to assist the com mittee in charge of the sale of tags for the child welfare bureau Saturday. nrr rhnriM stout is in charge of a delegation of school children who will sell. A Colonial entertainment win given by the circle soon. The Fulton Park Parent-Teacher As sociation met yesterday and adopted resolutions to further the work of pure literature and to meet with the men of the Fulton Park Improvement Club and work wiHi them for the good of the community. A musical evening for the near future is being planned. Miss Ethelwyn Wing, director of DelDhian clubs in the West, gave a talk yesterday at the Central Library on the art of the exposition. Fountains and groups of statuary were illustrated bv slides and the symDOiism was in ternreted. Members of the evening Delphian clubs who could not attend the afternoon session have askea to have the talk repeated. The regular monthly institute of the Multnomah County woman's jnnstian Temperance Union will take place .at the Laurelwood Methodist Episcopal Church today. Members of the Woodlawn Parent- Teacher Circle will celebrate their an nual indoor Winter picnic February 23 at the schoolhouse. The mothers will bring their luncheon at noon and will be joined by the teachers. The Wood- lawn Parent-Teacher Circle has taken 300 tas to sell for the child welfare bureau Saturday. The women who will sell are: Mrs. Henry Morse, Mrs. Floyd Janes, Mrs. William Yoe, Mrs. C. W. DeGraff. Mrs. L. E. Joy, Mrs. Charles Liner. Mrs. C. Strand, Mrs. H. Kubik, Mrs. Henry Lawrence, Mrs. G. L. Thorn ton. Mrs. Harry Coleman, airs. W. E. Smith, Mrs. F. A. Shoemaker, Mrs. C. R. Hellyer. Mrs. C. F. Hendrickson, Mrs. W. W. Williams, Mrs. John Huff and Mrs. M. L. Mellinger. Elaborately decorated booths will be provided for women who will sell child welfare flags Saturday for the Oregon Congress of Mothers. In the large de partment stores, in hotel lobbies and other public buildings women will be stationed, offering the little flags for sale. The proceeds of the sale will go toward the maintenance of the par. ents' educational bureau in the Court house and for other child-welfare work of the congress. Similar sales will be held all over the state on Saturday. Mrs. A. F. Flegel and Mrs. George Mo Math have charge of the sale in Port land. The Rose City Park Parent-Teacher Association will be entertained at the meeting tomorrow afternoon by the children, who will give a programme after the business meeting at 2:45. Miss Lilian Tingle will address the Sunnyside Parent-Teacher Association at 2:45 today at the school. A new fea ture of these meetings provides that the mothers may visit all the rooms and inspect the school building. M. nlDEnWJ LAUDED AD CLUB HEARS BISHOP SUMNER PRAISE SCHOOL SYSTEM. Sources of "Fads aad Frills" Charges Are Arraigned as Insignificant Compared to Efficiency. "I believe that Portland has as good a school system as any city of its size and many that are much larger in the United States," said Bishop Sumner yesterday in his address on "Efficient Citizenship" before the Ad Club at its luncheon at the Benson Hotel. "I have no patience with those who attack the schools of Portland on the basis of 'fads and frills.' I am not holding a brief for Superintendent A1--derman; I am not very intimately ac quainted with him; but I do want to say that I think it is shameful to elect a superintendent and urge upon him to make the schools modern and efficient in every way possible and when he has made a system which is practical and efficient and modern in every re spect, for some little-minded persons to cry that there are too many 'fads and frills in the schools. "Aside from the effectiveness of his work right here in Portland, I have had the opportunity to talk with prominent school men in all parts of the United States, and I find that, among them, Mr. Alderman stands high indeed, as a school man, as an educator and as a progressive and lead ing character in the school develop ment of the United States." Bishop Sumner's address yesterday was the first that he has delivered for mally before any of the lunch clubs of the city and it was very largely at tended. In his plea for efficiency of citizenship he. took an emphatic posi tion in favor of the concentration of attention toward the betterment of conditions for the children in society. He urged the necessity of stricter mar riage laws, in most states and praised highly the work of the social hygiene societies in the country. Judge W. N. Gatcns was chairman of the day. An Innovation . at the Imperial Hotel Breakfast In the Pompeian Room No. 1 Oat Meal and Cream Waffle and Comb Honey Cup Coffee No. 2 Baked Apple and Cream Hot Cakes -with Maple Syrup Cup Coffee No. 3 Bacon or Ham and Eggs ' German Fried Potatoes Rolls or Hot Cakes Cup Coffee No. 4 Stewed Prunes Calves' Liver with Onions German Fried Potatoes Rolls or Toast Cup Coffee No. 5 Stewed Figs Two Boiled or Fried Eggs Hot Cakes or Toast Cup Coffee No. 6 Plain Steak German Fried Potatoes Rolls or Toast Cup Coffee No. 7 Cereal or Stewed Prune's Hot Cakes and Rasher Bacon Cup Coffee Phil Metschan, Jr., Mgr. um-"" OO members of the Commission concurred in the opinion of Mr. Stone. Providing Federal legislation Is fa vorable, game sanctuaries will be es tablished throughout the state and the propagation of game on a food supply basis will be possible. "Such a move, declares Mr. Shoemaker, "will divide the state into four or five districts, supervised by wardens from the state game ' warden's office, who will have as a special office not the apprehen sion of the game law violators, but the spreading of the education of the best methods of game protection and propa- gation, and the supervision of that work as done by the state in the Fed eral sanctuaries." BIDS ON AUDITORIUM DUE Score of Contractors Are Expected to Compete. About 20 contracting companies are expected to submit bids tomorrow to the City Council for the general con tract for the Auditorium superstruc ture. The bids will be opened at 10 A. M. by City Auditor Barbur. While no bids have been sent in as yet, they are expected from all over the Pacific Coast ana possibly from some parts of the East As soon as they are opened they will be referred to Whitehouse & Fouilhoux, architects. for compilation. It is the hope of Com missioner Baker to get the contract awarded within a short time, for the commencement of construction when the excavation is finished. This will be in about six weeks. THIEF SUSPECTS ARE HELD Four Are Arrested on Charges of Stealing Copper Lines. Four copper wire-thief suspects were taken m custody Dy uetectives Royle and Vaughn yesterday. . D. Farmer and L. O'Brien are charged with the theft of 3750 feet of wire, while Mike Adams and Arthur Straub are said to have stolen at least 20 pounds of wire. Within the past monti officers have arrested at least a score of thieve who specialized in the theft of copper wire, lured by the preseut high prices. Many of the suspect, it is said, havo had experience as linemen. POACHERS' EXIT SEEN EVES VIOLATORS WILL TlUS GAME PROPAGATORS, IS PREDICTION. Mr. Shoemaker Thinks That in 10 Years Doty Will not Be to Arrest, But to Protect. ' 'Inside of 10 years game wardens will exist not for the police power that they may exercise, but for the direc tion of the propagation and protection of game birds and . animals. And in the same amount of time the educa tion of the public will have been such that deer and other gam animals will be propagated for commercial use, as game birds and fish are at the pres ent time." This is the statement of State Game Warden Carl D. Shoemaker and the members of the State Fish and Game Commission bear out his remarks. At recent meeting of the Commission, F. Stone, the member of the Com mission from Klamath Falls, declared that "the attitude of the public toward game protection at least has changed marvelously during the last decade," and it was also his declaration that 10 years more would see citizens of the state, perhaps many of them former violators of the state game laws, con verted to the necessity of game pro tection and propagation. He asserted that the work of the present game of ficials had made possible the change in the attitude of the public. Other QUARTERS TO BE UNIQUE Xew Fisli and Game Commission Offices to Include Exhibits. The State Fish and Game Commis sion' will be in its new quarters in the Commercial Club building by Feb ruary 27. The Commission is to occupy the corner on the ground floor now taken by the Edlefsen Fuel Company. Not only the offices of the Commis sion but the game and bird exhibit owned by the Commission will be placed there, and an aquarium will be acquired in which live fish will be kept. Later a miniature hatchery will be installed. . We Give zC Green Trading Stamps Always Ask for Them! Olds, Wortman .& King Reliable Merchandise Reliable Methods Pacific Phone Marshall 4800 Home Phone A 6231 New Shipments of Spring Goods Are Being Opened Up Daily Every department of the store is rapidly assuming a. Springtime freshness with new goods coming in by every express, and being unpacked and made ready for the inspection of our customers. See them today. Thursday We Shall Display New Models in Women's and Misses' Spring Suits at $25 Exceptional Garments at the Price Fashion Salons, Second Floor One very smart model at the price is made from excellent quality wool poplin combined with taffeta silk. The coat is of medium length with belt and full flare below belt, trimmed with novelty bone buttons, fancy cuffs and deep revers. Other models have corded and belted waistline and are effectively trimmed with embroidered silks, fancy buttons, braids, etc. Skirts are decidedly fuller and are perfectly plain or in plaited effects some trimmed with folds and bands. Don't miss seeing these attractive new Spring Suits we feature for Thursday. Latest 2JOZ? f&fh Spring colors and patterns. Good range of sizes. Now P&J sJ Dresses for Maids and Nurses Prices Range $1.95 Up to $6.98 HAVE YOU SEEN "THE PIT" and the Wonderful Bargains We Offer There Daily? Near Alder-stroet Entrance in Basement Store. MAIDS' DRESSES of mohair, al paca and satin. High and V neck, long and short sleeves. Full-flare skirts some with white collars and cuffs. Shown in gray, black and white. Prices $2.50 to $6.98. NURSES' DRESSES in white, gray and stripes. Styled with long and short sleeves and convertible collar which can be worn high or low. New full skirts. The prices range from $1.95 up to $5.00. Spring Fancies Tub Silks for Spring dresses and waists are shown in a wide range of beautiful stripe patterns. $1 to $2 yard. Main Floor. Veils that fasten to narrow band of ruching at the neck are one of the new novelties to be seen at the Veiling Counter, Main Floor. Dainty silk-and-cotton wash material similar in weave to gran ite cloth is on disyplay in Aisle of Cottons, Main Floor. Garden and Flower Seeds of tested varieties now ready in the Grocery Department, Fourth Fir. Embroidery Flouncings 98c Yard Main Floor Crisp new Spring stock. 43 inches wide and dainty new patterns on fine sheer quality Swisses and organdies. Desirable for Waists, QQf Dresses, etc, now yd.'0' 'Coffee Day Grocery Dept. On 4th Floor No deliveries of the following spe cials except with other purchases made in the Grocery Department, 4QcOWK COFFEE 29c lb. Fourth Floor A trial order will convince you that our famous OWK Imperial Roast Coffee is the equal of any 40c Coffee on the O market. Special the lb.''' 5Qc OWK Tea 39c Fourth Floor Uncolored Japan, English Breakfast or Ceylon Teas of choice flavors. Splendid O &f 50c quality on sale at, lb. J3r Hershey's Cocoa at 16c Fourth Floor Hershey's Cocoa, put up in -lb. cans, selling in the usual way at 25c. Priced t f2g for Thursday at, the can v Sale of Spring Draperies Fancy Cretonnes of 25c and 35c Grades, Special, a Yard 17c Bargain Circle, Main Floor 2000 yards beautiful New Art Cretonnes in a special underprice offering for Thursday. Light and dark colors and great assortment of patterns suitable for all purposes. B 7g The usual 25c and 35c grades on special sale at, the yard X t Sunfast Draperies at HALF PRICE $2.50 Table Runners at 98c Bargain Circle, First Floor Beautiful, rich Sunfast materials in great variety of patterns and colors for Spring hangings. Tap estries, damasks, etc. Buy these at Thursday'sJ- prSr sale at j u s t ' Bargain Circle, First Floor Wo have a special lino of high-grade Tapestry Table Runners which we will dispose of at less than half price. Choice assortment of pat terns. Worth up to $2.50 QP specially priced today ZOl CRETONNE COVERED PILLOWS in choice line of designs QGf. and serviceable colors. Pillows worth up to $2.00. Special at' 0 Wear-Ever Aluminum Demonstra tion WEAOfVEH Third Floor Thursday thedem- aiumimTit onstrator will cook hot cakes in Wear -Ever Utensils without -rsADtftuwJ grease, thus do ing away with the disagreeable odor of burnt grease. $4.15 Set $2.75 Third Floor Wear-Ever Double Boiler (2-qt. size), selling regularly at $2.35, and Wear-Ever Windsor Kettle (4-qt. size), worth $1.80; total value both pieces tj? O "7 C $1.15 both for only - W t l Stamps. ATBIOTIC STUDY URGED INSTRUCTOR IX SCHOOLS WANTED BY UNITED VETERANS. sistant cashier in the Treasurer's office, lie leaves a widow and a son 2 years of age. He Is succeeded also by sev eral brothers and sisters who reside with their parents at Hillsdale. PUPILS HAVE ROMP IN JAIL Spirit Aroused, but Not Kind Aimed At in Visit, Admits Chaperone. Forty-two pupils of the 6 A and 6 B grades, Albina Homestead School, were properly awed by their visit to the po lice station yesterday afternoon maybe. From the Jail quarters, the Bertll- lon-room, which especially interested the boys and girls, through every de partment of the station they clattered, merry with the adventure. Wnic'n wasn't the spirit, exactly, that the trip was planned to arouse, regretfully said their chaperone. CITY TO SELL LOTS TODAY Slore Than 100 Pieces of Property to Be Auctioned. One hundred and eight pieces of prop erty in various parts of the city will be sold at public auction at the City Hall this morning to obtain for the city a total of about o400 in delin quent street and sewer assessments. The delinquency oates dbck eight years and ranges from $4.25 to $450 on each parcel of land.. The average is about $50 on each piece to be sold. Association Also Asks Enforcement of Law Favoring Ex-Soldiers In Public Employment. At a meeting of the directors of the United Veterans' Association, composed of veterans of the Indian, Civil and Snanish wars and the auxiliary t tranizations. yesterday in their head quarters in the Courthouse, a sub committee was aDDointed to do all in its power to have a supervisor of patriotic instruction made a member of the school-teaching rorce. Attendinc the meeting were: M. I Pratt, chairman: Mrs. Margaret Hendee, Mrs. Valerie Benvin, A. I Clark and O. H. Staron, secretary-treasurer. The committee was directed to inter view Superintendent Alderman and the Board of Education about the matter. A general plan will be submitted at the next meeting of the association, Feb ruary 26. Another sub-committee, consisting of O. H. Staron and Mrs. Benvin, with J. D. Stevens and B. W. Butler as lay members, was created to help enforce the law enacted by the Legislature of 1913, giving the veterans of the Civil and Spanish wars the preference when possible in public employment. C. CADANAU BURIED TODAY Treasurer's Office to Close for Em ployes to Attend Funeral. To enable employes in the City Treasurer's office to attend the funeral of Charles C. Cadanau, assistant cashier. who died Tuesday morning at the Onen-Air Sanitarium of pneumonia, the Treasurer's office will be closed today between 1 and 2 o'clock. The fu neral services will be held at Finley's Undertaking parlors under the direc tion of the Woodmen of the World. Mr. Cadanau had been sick for four weeks. He had been in the city serv ice four years originally as a clerk in the Auditor's office and later as as- ROUTE VIOLATION CHARGE Jitney Driver Haled Into Court for Failure to Go to Terminus. A. Truss, known to tho police as "Barney Oldfield," appeared in Munic ipal Court yesterday, charged with failure to drive his Jitney to its ter minus. He was arrested by Deputy Sheriff A. A. Thielke. who is also presi dent of the Chauffeurs' Union. The defense contended that Truss was the object of persecution because ho did not belong to the union, to which Mr. Thielke retorted that tho accused hud been expelled from tho union for reckless driving. "Barney" wus in court last wrcl, when ho was assessed a $1' fine. Jiidn-i Langguth ordered that this fino bo paid at once, and dismissed tho case. Cannery Kinployos Sue for AVugri, MARSHFIKLD. Or., Feb. 16. (.Spe cial.) The Seaborg ("iinnery Cmnpiinv is defendant iu a suit broufcht in Cur ry County by a number of employe for payment of wanes earned during 1915. It is reported the employes, numbering 11, were not paid in full ami some of them received only a Hmsll portion of tho money they earned. Those who are named In the complaint are for tho most part, residents of the district about the mouth of I'.osuo River. Since ltoq ther liHve hocn taken from th National forest 5.lMVOon.o0 hoard feet of wood and timber product?. Against Substitutes Get the Well-Known Round Package T Caution gAvol j Subttltutetffg y'fiS MALTED Mil CO' KACIMC,WIS.,U.S. U Ask For LACKS THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made In th largest, bast equipped and sanitary Malted Milk plant In the world Wo do not make "milk products"' Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc. AskForllORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. Best Food-Drink for All Ages. Used for over a Quarter Century Unless you say "HORLlOfCS" you may get a Substitute. Tako a Package Homo