17 MOOSEHEART MAGAZINE A Very Limited Edition of SENIOR ANNUALS this year. Order today. $2.00. . . Mooseheart Governors, Mooseheart, Illinois What is Home Making Worth Ford Sedan ^ Touring Car Given As Prizes At No Cost To You On October 81st, 1921, I am going to give away a new Ford Sedan, fully equipped, with electric lights and starter, to some one who answers my ad. and is the most successful in carrying out my simple instructions. Iu this contest I will also give away a new Model Ford Touring Car, fully equipped and thousands of dollars in Cash Rewards, Bicycles, Gold Watches, Diamond Rings, Phonographs, etc., etc., and in case of a tie I will duplicate the prize tied for. WRITE ME QUICK-GET 1000 VOTES In the picture are a number of hidden faces. See how many you can find. Some are looking right at you, some turned sidewise. You will find them upside down and every way. Mark each face you find with a pencil and mail to me with your name and address. If you find a3 many as five of the hidden faces I will enter you in this contest with 1.000 votes to your credit and send you full particulars. The two leaders will get these cars. Why not you? Write today SURE. C£iQ * D. W. BEACH, Contest Mgr., Dent, «*bo -Spencer, Indiana MULTPC0RD TIRES Built for 6000 Miles Service—Standard adjustment to govern Our dependable process of reconstruction doubles the life of the tire and represents a saving, which you cannot afford to miss. A New Standard Tube Free With Each Tire Ordered 28x3 ----- ~ 30x3 ,$ 5.80 31x4.. ..$10.10 37x4... .$14.50 31x4y. .$14.60 . 6.80 32x4.. .. 10.45 32x4 y. . 12.00 35x5 . . 14.35 . 7.90 33x4.. .. 10.90 33x4 y. . 12.40 36x5 . . 14.65 . 8.35 , 8.85 . 11.50 34x4. .. 35x4.. 36x4.. .. 11.25 .. 12.00 .. 13.75 34x4 y. 35x4 y. 36x4 y. . 12.90 . 13.15 . 14.00 37x5 . . 14.80 32x3^. 34x3¿4. Orders shipped same day received. Send $2.00 deposit: with each tire ordered, balanced. O. D. Tires shipped subject to your examination. State whether SS or CL, plain or Non-Skid is desired. All same price. By sending: full amount with the order you can save 5 per cent—our special cash with order discount. RACINE TIRE SALES CO., Dept. 1029, 2108 So. Racine Aye., Chicago The effect of long factory hours on home life is something which every workman’s wife knows by hard experience. But it is not only shorter hours in the factory which will relieve the situation. Men and women must co-operate in shortening the hours of work in the home itself. This can be done. Intelligent organization of work, labor saving devices and a curtailment of the demands for so many different services from the house wife have already done much. But the men of the country must fact the fact that if a working day of reasonable length is a necessity for themselves it is equally a necessity for their wives and mothers. Only through such a realization and through such co-operation will the age old drudgery of women be lightened and modern progressive standards be made applicable to the home. MILLER TREADS “Geared To The Road” WRITTEN 5000 MILE GUARANTEE Most modern and lasting of reconstructed tires. These semi-cords are heavily reinforced with Genuine New Miller ’,geared to the road” treads as illustrated in , ad and will give wonderful service. Do not confuse them with sewed or half soled tires. A remarkable lew factor, purchase «sables es is offer these guaranteed tires al smaued prices. !8x3 $ 7.00 31x4 $10.50 32x4% $12.75 36x4% $14.50 30x332 7.25 ״x4 11.25 33x4% 13.25 33x5 1S.OO 30x3% 8.60 33x4 11.75 34x4% 14.00 35x5 15.50 32x3% 9.50 34x4 12.00 35x4% 14.15 37x5 15.75 STANDARD-MAKE TUBE FREE WITH EACH TIRE >nv Pay only after examination at express office. Unwrapped wasu tvyx i.vi'U’ii'c-¿' section for inspection. If cash with order, deduct 5%. Cost you nothing to send for tire. Write today. Return if not nice new. HUDSON TIRE CORF 217-A Harrison & Peoria Sts.. CHICAGO. ILI.. MISSING Brother Glenn Ward of Rensselaer, Ind., Lodge No. 664, a farmer living on Starr Route out of Parr, Ind., writes us that his son aged fourteen (14) left home on February 14th of this year with another boy by the name of George Kresse, .and has not been seen or heard of since. The boy has dark eyes, is fair complected, is of medium build and weighs about 115 pounds. Brother Ward would like to have the members of the Order cooperate with him in locating his son. If the boy is located by any of the members they may communicate with Brother Ward at the above given address. Buffalo, N. Y., Lodge No. 8 had a mammoth old-time field day outing and sport carnival on July 16. Among the many features were an afternoon’s program of harness horse races and running races. The Method and Machine that has revolutionized tire repairing Fill Out Coupon Now! I have ready to mail you, the day I get your request, a fascinating book which tells all about tires. How to repair them by the Haywood method of Tire Surgery. How to start in business. How to build up trade. What to charge. You needn’t write a letter. Just tear out the coupon right now. Fill it in and mail. Within 48 to 72 hours you can have the whole proposition before you. It’s a case of walking right into $6,000 a year and upwards. Use the coupon below. Send for Free Book M, Haywood, Pres. HAYWOOD TIRE & EQUIPMENT CO., 621 Capitol Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Dear Sir:—Please send me by return mail your free book on the new Haywood Tire Surgery method and the details of this profitable business. TUCKER of Illinois, operating single-handed, averages $127.00 weekly. Ramsay of South Dakota made $441.56 clear profit in one month. Others with helpers reached high as $5,000.00 in one month. Haywood’s new machine and Tire Surgery method marvelous. You can learn in two weeks. I’ll teach you. I’ll furnish you with one of my compact Tire Surgery outfits. Will place you on direct road to fortune. Very little capital needed. Experience not necessary. To start is the thing! Hargan of 111., did $20,000.00 last year. Fetzer Bros , Pa., made clear net profit of $3,500.00 very first year. Spring City Tire Co., Wis., did about $26,000.00 to date. Wendt, Ind., approximates $500.00 month, and so on. Opportunity Never Better $6000.00 Year Easy Haywood’s Tire Surgery is so successful—so profitable—because it is thoroughly efficient. Look at the machine. See how compact and complete it is. Whole plant can be placed in space eight feet square. Observe its convenience—how one man can easily watch every detail from steam plant to vulcanizing without turning head. Look at its capacity—think of the dollars it will pour into your pockets in one single day. Its operation is so simple any man can do perfect work without long experience or apprenticeship. Get My Big Proposition Begin like others have done. Write for my proposition. Get the facts. Men from all walks of life — all ages —of various trades — have been unusually successful. There’s nothing to stop you. I’ll help you to the limit. My proposition is highly interesting. My machine is wonderful. It3 wide range—its great capacity — its exceptional scope — rill every need. Its compact design and size make small, handy shop possible. Send this coupon or postal to me, personally. Write me tonight. Seven million car owners in country. Most of them must economize. Can’t buy new tires. Must make old tires do. They can tinker with their auto, but can’t mend tires. This work will swamp present Tire Surgery stations. Many more are needed in every section of United States. I Can Place 500 Men in Good Locations Right Now! It’s a proposition you can handle. Cash in on this great economic wave that is sweeping old tires into repair shops instead of junk piles. Etzrodt of Pennsylvania averages $30,000 in this business. Blair of Ohio does more than $100 daily with small Tire Surgery shop. Oldham of Illinois reports recent earnings of $2,200 in four months. And so on. These men acted. They had no experience. Possessed very little capital. Enjoyed no advantages you haven’t got. Name ״ HAYWOOD TIRE & EQUIPMENT COMPANY Capitol Avenue Indianapolis, Indiana Address. (Continued from page 12) and yet she is classified as “gainfully employed” while the home keeper is supposed fo be unoccupied. Of course, many a woman working in industry has the double duty of wage-earner and home keeper, and spends many extra hours each day on the domestic occupations of the wife and mother. It is not, however, as a home maker that she is recognized as a productive factor in the community. Rather it is her more limited service in the factory which brings her into prominence and wins her more adequate consideration. If a value of $40 a month were put on the services in the home of the 18,000,000 married women who, according to the census of 1910, are not “gainfully” employed, their worth to the community would amount to $720,000,000 a month or $8,640,000,000 a year, and this does not include the inestimable value of the children which these women are bearing and bringing up to be the country’s greatest asset. Surely a value such as this should raise the work of women in the home to a plane where their working conditions might receive greater consideration. Is there any husband who can say $40 a month is too liberal an estimate for the value of the average married woman to her family? Let any one who thinks so try to hire some one to do the work of the average wife. They will find that the $40 a month hired person will leave many a gap in the domestic economies-of the household, which are filled as a matter of course by the average wife and mother. With this great economic value to the nation what is the woman in the home getting in the way of good working conditions? One of the first principles in industry at the present time is that eight hours should be the standard for the working day. In 1914 of over 7,036,337 wage earners in industry 833,330 were working 48 hours or less during each week. That means eight hours’ work on each week day and no work on Sundays. There are many more people than that who work the 48 hour week now, for the proportion increases each year. In 1909, 79 of every thousand workers worked 48 hours or less but in 1914 the group of 48 hour workers had increased to 118 in every thousand. This increase has gone on steadily until now the eight-hour day is generally recognized as a standard and eight States have limited to eight the daily hours and five States have limited to 48 the weekly hours of work for women in one or more occupations. Even with this legal regulation of women’s hours, however, many more men than women are working an eight hour day. For the Federal Government, and many states have laws limiting hours for men as well as women on public works to eight a day, and many large trade unions have succeeded in establishing the eight-hour day for their industries. These are the conditions in the industries of the country, hut who can say that they apply also to the homes ? The working hours of the home keeper of course are affected directly by the hours of the factory. The wife of a factory worker must start her day’s work some time before her husband, cooking his breakfast for him before he goes to work, and her! hours for laying off come far later| than his. The man who works in a factory is through work when the¡ whistle blows. But his wife is not¡ through till after he has gotten home, had his supper, and the supper dishes are washed and the children put to! bed. Then often the family mending is waiting for attention, so that the whistle blows very late for her, if it blows at all. On 621