Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, February 15, 1906, Image 8

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    •FTTiDtJTT A ritr
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TILLAMC j OK tm A DT .TA WT
Revolutionary Russia.
I could nut help thinking to myself the timber and the land and the young
whether it might not be possible some growth and everything for >2.50 an
Like the Stuarts of Great Britain
day or other to awaken the people of acre. Taking the value or that timber
the Mississippi valley to a realization at what the stumpage actually sold for
and the Bourbons of France, the
of the fact that forestry is a problem upon some of the government land in
reigning dynasty of Russia goes from
extending from New Orleans to the con­ Minnesota, >15.06 an acre, the govern­ AT THIRTY-FOUR YEARS OF AGE
blunder to blunder. Such a revolution
tinental divide of the Rocky mountains ment has lost >40,000,000 by that pro­
UE
HEADS
TUE
JUG
G
EST
PRINT
as is in progress throughout Euro­
on the west, to Canada on the north ceeding. But the stumpage on the 3,-
and to the crest of the Alleghanles on 000,000 acres located during the last
SUOR IN TUE WORLD.
pean Russia cannot be suppressed by
the east, where the Ohio river has its two years was much more valuable
the sword. The thing to have done
source; and that failure and destruc­ than that. And if the government had
----------- ammmb .
AAAA
——«3—i———a—-
tion are inevitable if it shall be ex­ managed its timber land business as , His Office Pays Out Annually Over was to make concessions to the spirit
pected in the years to come to control any business man or any man of
fa
f our and a Half Million Dollars in of liberty when the agitation began.
that great flood
by
increasing the sense would have managed it we
Wages—Is One of the President’s Grants
that would have been
When you buy a Win? Piano, you buy at whole­
levees to protect the sugarbowl of the might just as well as not have realized
hailed as liberal a year ago would be sale. You pay the actual cost of making It with
Youngest.
nation. The time will come when they >70,000,000
from that stumpage and
our wholesale profit added. When you buy
cannot bjjlld them higher
and
the have had our young forest trees plant­
rejected with scorn to-day as wholly only
a piano, as many still do—at retail—you pay the
At the head of the biggest printing
country will revert to a swamp condi­ ed in southern California and the sur­
insufficient.
retail
dealer’s store rent and other expenses.
tion and be as desolate as it is today plus left over.
office in the world at the age of 34.
(Applause.)
revolution is strikingly like that You pay his profit and the commission or sa:ary
where the St. Francis basin is covered
That is the position in which Charles of The
of the agents or salesmen he employs—all these
A Few Suppositions.
with water through which you may
France, and there will be no stop­ on top of what the dealer himself has to pay to
A. Stillings finds himself to-day. When
look down and see the tops of trees
The proletariat has fought the manufacturer. The retail profit on a piano
are told that there is going to be the Hon. Frank W. Palmer resigned ping it.
that once grew on dry land. How are a W©
deficit
this
year
in
the
treasury
of
and
blood. Suppose they sup­ is from $75 to $200* Isn’t this worth saving?
you going to prevent that?
from the ofdce of Public Printer last press tasted
the
United
St
ites
of
>22,000,000.
If
the revolt in Moscow? It will
This great problem of forestry, is we had not thrown away that >70,000,-
summer.
President
Roosevelt
found
not alone a matter of sentiment. It 000 we could have covered that deficit
himself facing the necessity of making break out at some other point—in Po­
is just as much a cold blooded ques­
least twice over and still have had
land, or Lithuania, or Finland, or
tion of business. Tiie speakers who al
WE PAY FREIGHT. . • •
money left in the treasury.
In other one of the most important appoint­ elsewhere between the Baltic and the
preceded me have spoken upon the im­ words the public lands committee of ments that had ever fallen to his lot
NO MONEY IN ADVANCE
portance
of
forestry
to
mining.
I
Black seas. The army will be kept on
the
house
has
thrown
away
over
We
will place a Wing Piano in any home in the
to
consider.
The
printing
required
for
have listen» <1 With mu' h fntSFMrt» to >70,000,000 of the people’s money <n
the jump, and its loyalty put to the su- United States cn trial, without asking for any ad­
their masterly discussion on the rela­ the last two years. If we should put the United States Government Is so
vance
payment or deposit. We pay the freight
premest
test.
Then,
when
order
has
tion of forestry to
mining,
and
it tills total loss at only >50,000,000 for voluminous and of such diversified de­
all other charges In advance. There is
brought more forcibly than ever to my the two years it has amounted to over
been shot into the nation, and reigns and
tail
that
it
is
necessary
to
operate
the
nothing
to be paid either before the piano is sent
mind the conviction that the whole >2,000,000 a month or about >70,000 a
or when it is received. If the piano is not satis­
enormous plant in which the printing everywhere as it once did at Warsaw, factory
country and those engaged in all its day.
after 20 days’ trial In your home, we taka
the
revolution
will
break
out
afresh
in
industries arc fast coming to recog-
Now suppose some enterprising and is produced, in the most perfect way.
It back entirely at our expense. You pay us noth­
Tn 38 years over 42,000 Wing Pianoe
n.ize the importance of forestry. I 1 ingenious
*
------
person ■ had ■ succeeded in At the head of this great prlntery the Moscow or somewhere else, and it will
ing, and are under no more obligation to keep have been manufactured and sold. They are recon-
regret that we
cannot
include
the tunneling under the United States
all
have
to
be
done
over,
again.
the piano than if you were examining it at our mended by seven governors of States, bymusci
President
knew
he
must
place
a
man
lower house of congress. They do not treasury and cut a hole____
inlo the vaults
> Before the thing is finished, Russia factory. There can bo aosoluteiy no ruk or ex­ collegosand schools, by promlnentorchestra leaden
seem to have yet waked up to it.
and carried off >70,000 a day.
Don _ ’t . who would be manly among men, will be a republic; not a free republic,
pense to you.
music teachers and musicians. Thousan is o( theee
Do not imagine that It is impossible for us to do rlanosare In your own State, some of them undoubt,
you suppose we could get the people strong of character, quick of decision
* How to Get Things Done.
as we say. Our system Is so perfect that we can edly in your very neighborhood. Our catalogue coo-
of the United States to wake up the and with a thorough grasp of every but a revolutionary republic guided by
without any trouble deliver a piano In the smallest ulus names and addresses.
I am not going to take up your time public lands committee if it required detail ol the printing business in a Cromwell or a Napoleon. And if such
In any part of the United States just as
Ith any further dissertations upon some action by it to stop that steal­
should be her destiny, she will be a town
Mandolin, Guitar, Harp, Zither,Banjo
easily as we can in New York City, and with ab­
That is exactly what is going everyone of its many branches. Many mighty ugly customer in a quarrel with
the importance of forestry. But I want ing?
solutely
no trouble or annoyance to you, and —The tones of any or all of these instruments oigy
for if the house public lands com­ men backed by strong political influ­
to offer some practical suggestions as on;
'
be
reproduced perfectly by any ordinary player on th«
without anything being paid in advance or on
does nothing in this session of ence were presented to the President a neighbor, just as England was in the
to what we should do to get what we mittee
1
either for freight or any other expense. piano by means of our Instrumental Attachment
want done. I listened with the great- < congress (and it has already voted to
middle of the seventeenth century, just arrival
This Improvement Is patented by us and cannot be
for
his
consideration
in
making
the
We
take
old
pianos
and
organs
in
exchange.
est interest and pleasure to the uresl- < do nothing) the loss to this country
A guarantee for 12 years against any defect in had In any other piano. WING ORGANS are made l
appointment for Public Printer, but as France was at the close of the eight­
tone, action, workmanship or material Is given with the same care and sold in the same way m W im
none seemed to be possessed of all of eenth century.
Pianos. Separate organ catalogue sent oa request.
For a full 100 years republicanism wKh every Wing Piano.
Are Sold Direct From Factory and in No Other Wa> J
YOU SAVE FROM $75 to $200
SENT ON TRIAL ANYWHERE
Payments
the necessary qualifications, until his
YOU NEED THIS BOOK
attention was directed to a progres­ has been driving autocracy to the wall
sive young man whose knowledge of in Europe. France is a pretty good re­
If You lat.te to Bu, a Plaoo-Mo Matta, What Mate
the printing business covered the en­ public and getting better every day.
A book—not a oaUlogufr-that gives y
tire Held and who bad had practical The Kaiser of the great German Em­
Uon poa*sned by experts. It tells abou
erialfl used in tlifferent parts of a piano
experience in Boston, Philadelphia and pire has in the Reichstag a partner in
(erect parts are put together; what ca.
out of orderand in fact is a complete «
Washington—one Charles A. Stillings. the government, ofttlmes a very med-
ntakes the -election of a piano —y
[dlesome
and
a
very
obstinate
partner
And so, after a thorough examination
fulij.lt will make; you a judge of
Workmanship aadflaM» It
you .
into Mr. Stillings’ commercial career, at that. The Cortez holds the purse of
a
piano and how to tell good from bad. It 1 b aba
the President, finding that Mr. Stil­ Spain, and Italy is a constitutional
lutely the only book of its amd ever pebUabed.
It contain«, 1M large pages and huadrm
lings’ ability was just what he had monarchy. Austria-Hungary has a leg­
HluNtrations, all devoted to plane oonatroeti
Its name is "The Book of Complete Infarsw
been looking for, appointed him as the islature, and the Scandinavian peo­
tion
About Pianos. ” We send it free to
executive head of the Government ples have enjoyed liberty for ages.
anyone wUhing to buy a ptano. All you
> hare to do is to send us your name and
Russia is rousing from the si umber of
Printing Office. The Senate promptly
^liaTa Ps«t*lTe-4ay while you
confirmed the President’s appointment centuries and she cannot be put to
Sir“'
think of It juM Slrinc jour name
and so Mr. Stillings has become the sleep again. There will be battle and
and addrew, or send the attached
address written
Pianos
1 coupon, and the valuable book c
blood and terror, but it will end in a
active head of the establishment
information.al»o full partlculara
about the W1NQ PI A WO, with
A brief idea of the volume of busi­ republic—at least, in a legislature—
pric«, terms of payment, cto.
ness conducted by the Government and then Russia will begin the new
will be seat to you promptly
by mail.
Printing Office may be obtained from lesson of learning what liberty is and
WING & SON
the foilowing figures. Last year they what to do with it.
paid In wages to its various employees
358-369 W. 13th 8t„ New York
the sum of $4,610,781.70 and nearly
1868-38th Year-1906
Don
’
t
Ask
Again.
three millions more were spent for
various supplies, including paper, new
An amusing incident is related of
machinery and maintenance of the Nat Goodwin, the actor. Not long ago
Couldn’t Milk the Bicycle.
plant Every dollar of this great sum Goodwin was standing on the corner
Some years ago, soon after bicycles
is expended under the check of the of Broadway and Thirty-fourth street.
Public Printer and it is evident that New York City, where three car lines | began to be freely used throughout the
much wisdom is needed in handling converge, when a seedy-looking indi­ United States, an agent for a New York
money where so large an amount is in­ vidual. apparently from the country, house turned tip at a village in Central
New York. He expatiated to an old
volved.
approached him questioningly.
Mr. Stillings is especially fitted by
"I want to go to the Brooklyn farmer upon the virtues of the new ma­
training, inclination, and ability for Bridge," he said, looking in perplexity chine, dwelling upon what a time-saver
the position. He forms an attractive at the cars rushing in six different di­ it was, and withal how fashionable it
would be for the old farmer to be able
addition to the ranks of the young men rections.
with whom President Roosevelt has
"Very well,” said Goodwin, severely, to ride down to the village on one of
the new-fangled machines whenever he
wanted to.
“Why,” said the salesman, “whenever
you go to the postoffice, bank, or store,
everybody will stop and stare at Fanner
Wilson, and pretty soon you’ll be the
most-talked-of man in the whole coun­
AMERICAN CROWN
ty”
“That may be so,” replied the farmer,
but I tell you I’m a-needin’ a good
new cow mo’n I am one o’ them things
you’re a-talkin’ about”
Nevertheless, the agent extracted a
promise that the old man would save
a green soap, consistency of paste, a perta
up his money and purchase a bicycle cleanser for automobile machinery and il1
when the agent came around in the fall vehicles; will not injure the meet highly
According to promise, the agent was polished surface. Made from pure vegeUbb
on hand in the fall with the wheel. The oils. If your dealer does not carry Americas
farmer took him in charge and carried Crown Soap in stock, send us his name and
him out to the lot and showed him a address and *re will see that your wants are
fine Jersey cow.
supplied. Put up in 12)$ 25 and 50 lb pails,
“That’s what I bought with the money
I saved up for you,” said the farmer.
And without waiting
agent IO
to
------------- o for the
w «RVUI.
recover from his surprise he went on:
CHICAGO ILL.
“1 ‘lowed that I needed the cow mo’n I
did the bicycle, an’ there she is. Ain’t
she a beaut?”
When the agent recovered his breath
he said: “You’ll look funny riding that
Pine, Pir, Cypress and Yellow Pine.
cow to town, won’t you?”
Write for Catalogue.
“Ya’as,” drawled out the old farmer,
“but I’d look a darned sight funnier i Eagle Tank Co., 211 N. Creen St,
tryin’ to milk a bicycle.”
j
SCENE IN MINNESOTA.
Timber Devastation After Lumbering and Fire.
dent's address yesterday and one of of >70,000 a day—>2,000,000 a month—
his sentences struck me very forcibly, >25,000,000 a year, and it is much more
lie suid:
"We want to change the than that—will ffo right along and
hope of accomplishment to the knowl­ continue until all the timber land of
edge of things done.’’
If we are go­ the government has been stolen. That
ing to do that we must have u clear will be a little over a year, according
cut idea of what we are going to do to the report of the senate public
and of what we want Congress to do lands committee.
And after the land
—so plain and clear that there is no Is al! gone—after the horse has been
possibility of any man being so stupid stolen—the house public lands com­
that he cannot understand it.
mittee will awaken from its Rip Van
We have listened to these gentlemen Winkle slumbers and cluse the stable
here today telling of the necessities of door with a bang.
the mining industries and of the injus­
Some Things to Do.
tice
brought about
by
insufficient
laws. There is u most simple way to
Before 1 cluse 1 wish to specify
get all the things done that they have some definite and specilio things which
recommended, and more, too. The first should be done;
is to come to a perfect understanding
First—Repeal the timber and stone
with a business bureau of the govern­ act.
ment, if we can create such a bureau,
Hecund—l'ass the consolidation bill
and the way to do that is to pass the putting the government forests under
bill consolidating the forest reserves i tiie management of the bureuu of for­
under the control of Gifford I’inchot. estry.
(Applause.) And after you have done
Third—Provide by national legisla­
that and he has consulted with the tion that every acre of agricultural
lumberman and the miner and the far­ land that can be reclaimed under the
mer iiiid understands what tin J want, national irrigation system must be
then back him up ami make your con­ saved for the homemaker who will go
gressman help to get it done.
there and make a home upon IL
In that way you cun breuk up the
A Case of Masterly Inactivity.
timber combinations, and in that way
only; because the land thieves of
Det us look at the _____________
business end of
that proposition.
Othur
-I- - tilinga
-1.1-
be- North Dukolu, under tiie couimutation
■ides bees have business ends.
___
For ___
a clause; the land thieves of Montana,
number yf years tile president of the under the desert land act; tiie land
'•United States, the secretary of the in- thieves under the timber und stone act
tsrioi .ind tile commissioner of the in—well, perhaps 1 might be permitted
(laughter)
are
general land office have been trying to to mention Oregon
You will have to
imprt ss upon congress, without suc­ working together.
cess, the necessity of repealing the explode some of those Japanese shells
timber and stone act. I want to give among them to break up the combi-
tiie exact facts. The president, in De­ nution.
To show you why we cannot depend
cember, 1902, more than two years
congressmen from the limber
ago, called the attention of congress in upon
states
of tiie west to correct this enor­
tiie strongest possible language to the
necessity of doing something to stop mous evil, a year ago both Oregon
and
both
representatives
the frauds ami depredations upon tiie senators
public duinMln
under tiie ilmbi-r ami from Oregon were bitterly opposed to
■
Repre­
stone act.
Tiie secretary suid ill his any ciiange in the land laws.
annual report mure than two years sentatives Hermann and Williamson
both went before the committee and
ago:
Mr.
“The timber and stone net will, If protested aguinst any change.
not repealed or radically amended, re­ Hermann was before the committee.
At
that
exact
moment
the
Oregon
sult ultiinulely in the complete de­
struction of the timber on the unap­ grand Jury was in session in the city
propriated
and
unreserved
public of Portland, composed of men drawn
by lot from all over the state, and that
lands.'*
I find these words In the report of K i i nd jury urged the repeal of all
the senate committee on the public those luws—the timber and stone act,
lands, und the dute is February 19,1 the desert land act and the commuta­
tion clause—and sent a memorial to
1903:
The Government Printing office
•'It can be plainly seen that all the the public lands committee to that ef­
fect.
Now the grand Jury has had
valuable timber lands of the United
—The Largest Print Shop in
that cs will be owned by ■peculators some business with Mr. Hermann since
(Daughter and applause.)
within three years if the opportunity th.it time.
the World.
In all those western states the state
to acquire them at >2.50 an ucre ia
has tiie power to form districts for
continued."
That was February 19, 1903.
It io local public improvements, such as ir­
Charles A. Stillings, the New
districts,
now prsttj ■ loss to 1 sbiuary 19, 1905, rigation districts, sanitary
and one year from that dute the three drainage districts or levee districts
Public Printer.
years will ba axh ustad ■ nd all 1 bs und 1 lor one do not believe that that
timber lund will be gone according to is the right policy that the national
government should assume the burden
¿his official stutement.
of protecting from fire forSsts now
Has tiie bill been repealed? No!
owned by men who have gotten them
Has
ths house oi repn
done anything to stop this shameful from the government for one-tenth of
The state and nation
waste of the public property under the their value.
should co-operate to form forestry snrrouQded hîmsêlf In the administra­
I
you can go this time, but never ask
They have done nothing whatever to districts und have assessments levied
■top th«
I fraud.......... istantl> on all private lands in tiie district, and tion of the Government affairs. He re­ me again."
every ucre should contribute its pro­ ceived his education in the Phillips
being committed under that act.
portion to the cost of preserving it Grammar School and the English High
from fire.
(Applause.)
President Secs the Necessity.
An Improvised Excuse. *
There is one more thing that I was School at Boston. After leaving school
Again the following year the presi­ going to urge as a mere matter of per­ he entered his father’s printing office,
Tommy was absent from school for ;
dent in his measuge to congress made sonal opinion. In making lite sugg« s- where he received a varied and thor­
substantially the same recommenda­ tion I do not speak for California or
i one entire day. But he brought a note
tions.
They were reiterated by tiie for the National Irrigation Associa­ ough experience in all branches of the of excuse the next morning, which |
secretary of the interior.
The senate tion, but for myself alone.
1 have trade, finally working up to the posi­
»■onl mittce on
public
lands
recoin« been nil my life a republican and in tion of general manager and later be­ would prove that he had been detained
m< nded a bill to repeal the timber and my earlier years advocated tiie repub­
at home legitimately. The writing was |
• tone act and the senate passed the lican doctrine of a tariff tor protection coming sales manager of the Griffith- hardly that of a feminine hand, and tiie I
bill In the lust session of congress. It In many political campaigns in my na­ St tilings Press, an organization which
went to the public lands committee of tive state of California from the Or­ took over the business formerly con­ note appeared to have been written la­
the house or representatives.
T. B. egon line to Mexico; but because I be­ ducted by Mr. Stillings, Sr.
boriously. Furthermore, the penman­
Walker uppeared before that commit« lieve in preserving our Industries and
In all of Mr. Stillings' transactions ship seemed to be strangely familiar to
te«* and waved his magic wand and not in destroying them 1 bsllsvo that
they guve two votes for the repeal of In order to preserve the forest indus­ he has shown an unusual aptitude for his teacher. The note read as follows:
“Dear Teacher: Please excuse Tom­
the bill out of eighteen members of tries of this nation we should repeal organization, and. possessing a marked
the committee.
Two votes!
And the every tariff law imposing a tariff upon
my for not coming to stool ylstidy, he
bill is lying there in that committee the products of the forest, whether degree of personal magnetism has
couldn't come I tore my pants. Yours
yet. .
timber or wood or wood pulp, at any drawn into a close friendship with
In this session of congress without t il«» tor a limited number of years and himself many men of dignity and posi­ truly, Mrs. Mulligan.”
waiting for anything, or for anybody until we shall have planted forests
to do anything, they passed a resolu­ enough to harvest annually from our tion. Mr. Stillings is a Mason, having
tion in the public lands committee of own forests all the wood and timber attained the honors of the thirty-sec­
Here lies th. body of Mary Ann.
the house continuing this whole sub­ we may use In any one year.
ond degree of the Scottish Rite, and is
Her head on the bosom of Abraham.
ject over until the next session of
It’s pleasant and sweet for Mary Ann,
Tlwre are a number of other things also a Mystic Shriner.
congress.
Bat mighty tough for Abraham.
that 1 have in my mind to suggest
The next session of congress will that ought to be done;
convene at a time within two months
that would make him feel the full
of the expiration of the three years
P ass the Appalachian Bill.
weight of an outraged national public new forests by the national <overn-
within
which the senate committee
One is to pass the Appalachian for­ sentiment.
(Applause.) They are not nient on the wide level prairies and
told congress that all the timber land
bare, rollinx foothills which are now
would be gone unless they got action. estry bill, which 1« ready to be passed liable to punishment criminally, but
Another
Is
to
stop
now
and
for
all
they are morally responsible for every supposed to be among the waste places I
In the two years that nave expired
of the land and nt only tor Krasin* >
•Ince the president baa called tha at­ time all exchange of lands in forest fraud committed under the timber and ground for a few stray cattle and
If the gov­ stone act since they shelved tha bill to
tention of congress tn that timber and reserves for other lands.
sheep.
stone law then» have been located under ernment needs any su< h I »nd let it buy repeal it passed by the senate in the
It Is the vast possibilities of forest
and pay for them their fair value last session of congress.
the timber and stone act over 3.000.- them
Planting and timber*
le® of In
forest
this
and no more.
All lieu land scrip
But It Is not enough merely to re­ planting and timber production
000 acres of timber land, the greater should be called In and canceled and
region that make It almost a crime ■
peal
the
timber
and
stone
act.
Every
part of It the magnificent timber of no more ever Issued under any circum­
against
future
generations
to
part
acre o( public forest lands or brush
the northwest, which, according to the stances.
The forest lieu land ex­ or woodlands which conserves a water with the land In its present condition:
report of the secretary of the Interior
law should be rvpea.cd.
should be at once embraced In to stockmen under such a scheme as!
and the commissioner of the ge.ierai change
The bill providing for the consolida­
reserves, the *$•$«
title to the Klnkald bill for the creation of
land office, is worth anywhere from tion of the government forestry inter­ permanent forest reserve«
be
always
retained by the national large graslng estates in private own-1
>30 tn >100 an acre for tha mere value ests Is ready- to bo passed by the
government and the itumpan of ma­ ershlp.
of the stumpage, to say nothing of the senate
and should be passed In this tured timber r only
1 The mining Interests more Immedt-I
onl- to be sold.
•• ’
young timber or the land Itself.
session of congress
It has already M oatlerful Ponalhllltles of the Arid ately than any other ought to oppose!
passed the house; ard If this session
this 440-acre homestead Id. a anywhere
Hrclnn.
Four Million Dollar Loss.
of congress adjourns without the bill
The whole great
plains
rceinn In the great plains or Rocky mountain
Tn other words, as a result of the being passed by the house which has should be studied and developed is a states and help to Inaugurate a great
tra^formed national policy of planting new for- |
deliberate delay of the public lands passed the senate, repealing the tim­ from araa..m'i‘«Iian
committee of the house. Instead of ber and stone act. every member of
rirtfnrJ'f 'J r*«lon »0 one of ests. not only to furnish wood and i
bavins the value of the stumpage from the public lands committee ought to be
d m.ore hu®*<> Climate timber for the mines but to c nserv1
up
to
popular obloquy and k
that 1 000.000 acres of timber In the held
planting of immense nreas. and Increase the rainfall, regulate the
national treasury we have parted with whipped at the cart's tail with a lash hundreds ot thousands of acres, of flow of the river« .top flood, and fur-'
nlsh water tor Irrigation.
1
Kirk’s
t
SOAP
James S. Kirk & Company
SILOS
Chicago, Ill.
OAT F ONE LIFE TO LIVE
That’s the Reason Why
EVERYBODY
should get the most out of life that they can. The place to
get it is in the Home, and
I
comes every month in the year and tells you
How to Build a Home
How to Make a Garden Around It
How to Live In It
How to Entertain In It
How to Enjoy Life In It
Some of the regular departments of the magazine art
The Home Garden Music in the Home
Hints to Homemakers
The Home Study
Health in the Home
U-----
Home Etiquette
Little Folks in the Home Home Cheer
Home Cooking
Entertaining in the Home
■------- AMD REMEMRER
goes into ev^jZeVit"
“"h * P“‘' P”1’ There’s K0«1
~
ma,tef
originality and genumc good
empathy in every line of it. There»
take to tell you how to h. i, hardcommon sense all through it Itdon’t under-
to be happy on the mLi .
°n a railli°n « year, but it does tell you how
have a X” a “X”, 'T8?“' “
year to spend. And the
magazine cost
co«
cxiv magazine
■ fl-
—Bk
-
—
10c. for One Whole Year—That’s All
And it’s worth ten dollars for its good suggestions about life and health a
aemakinrr
homemaking.
Send your dime or five two-cent stamps to
MAXWELL’S HOMEMAKER MAGAZINE-»
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