Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service MR J1445-ARE YOU t'O &X JOVE - YOU NEVE* ORiHK.) ( THAfTS A, MEDAL " _ . INFAVOftOFCLUBb &t/f**\DTO * MUST LIKE TEA- VH*T-> • -• FOR WHO OOE*> IT I FORVADMENO HIT MAie. J£ REPARTEE.' THAT fcAOCE 1 / BELONG TO? V Roman of them all. Most everybody knows || I o! this "Old Roman." | -1 One package generally makes a Helmar j<| g Z smoker—and there's a reason for it. |l g ■ 11 Helmar is a better cigarette than most J 11 men smoke, regardless of price because * j it is made of Pure Turkish Tobaccos, I 11 ~ I Put together right. |f n \ .>J!\ © • 1 Nr? The Mildest tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish v The Best tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish Friend, if you will once, you will many times. FRIDAY EVENING. HAKRIBBCTtG TEI.EGRAPH APRIL 13 1917. STATE TO RAISE BIG FOOD SUPPLY Oats, Corn, Barley, Potatoes and Beans Will Be Planted in Great Quantities Pennsylvania's part in the great emergency call for greater produc tion of farm crops Is to be to raise oats, corn, barley, buckwheat, pota toes and navy beans, according to the outlines of plans made by the con* ference of the agricultural chiefs of the country in conference at St. Louis this week. Secretary of Agriculture Charles E. Patton returned from St. Louis to day and with Professor M. S. Mac- Dowell, of State College, held a con ference with Governor Brumbaugh this morning relative to the food sit uation in Pennsylvania. The work of increasing the food supply and forming effective organi zations to handle it will be only a minor part of the Mg task which the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture has before it to help the government in the present war crisis. Great Emergency Secretary Patton said to-day: "The sitpatlon that confronts our country is a great emergency. Upon the farmer rests in large measure the final responsibility on winning the war in which we are now involved. The importance to the nation of an adequate food supply, especially for the present year, cannot be over emphasized. The world's food re serve is very low. Not only our own consumers, but much of the world at large, must rely more completely than ever before upon the American farmer. Therefore, the man who tills the soil and supports the soldier in the field, and the family at home, is rendering as noble and patriotic a service as is the man who bears the brunt of battle. "The American farmer has long shown his ability to produce more food per man and at lower cost per unit than any other farmer in the world, but he has never had to do his best. He needs to do his best now. This is not the time in which to ex periment with new and untried crops and processes. It is very important that the farmer devote his principal efforts to the production of such crops and the employment, of such methods as are well established in his community and as are likely to yield the maximum return In food and clothing material. For this rea son I urge the co-operation of the press the commercial organizations, the religious and the social societies, that all may heartily join with the farmer in performing the patriotic duty of providing and conserving food. "At the conference of the agricul tural chiefs of '.the county at St. Louis the cllmatlcal conditions of ! each section of the country was carefully studied, and Pennsylvania I has been called upon by the nation I to concentrate its efforts by increas j ing the corn area for a greater out- I put of human food and animal pro duction: to plant fields where winter wheat has been killed to oats and corn, to plant oats and barley where they are reliable crops, to increase the acreage and production of buck wheat in which Pennsylvania leads all other States of the Union, to in crease the acreage in potatoes and to make extensive increases in the production of navy beans. Must Mobilize Labor "We must be careful not to en croach too much on the pasturage and hay lands required for livestock production as tills branch of agri culture must be increased to its ut most by better methods of feeding and complete control of contagious diseases. I most respectfully urge farmers to keep all breeding ewes and to bring about the greatest wool production the State has ever known. Our men In the field will need to be clothed and the wool production of the country does not begin to meet our home consumption. There should be a considerable increase in the milk production and every possible effort should be made to double poultry products. Contagious dis eases of farm animals take a toll of over one-quarter of a billion dollars annually ,in our country, and more thanhalf of this loss is due to con trollable diseases such as hog cholera. I am calling upon our Livestock San itary Hoard to bend every effort to keep down spread of animal diseases this year, but close co-operation must come from the farmers and the pub lic. "Our plan for public defense must include provisions for mobilizing farm lamor and as definite a provision for enlistment for food supply as Tor service at the front must be con sidered. There are hundreds of thousands of boys in the cities and towns between the ages of 15 and 19 years not now engaged in productive work that should be available in this emergency and can be enrolled for agricultural purposes. One of the plans worked out At the St. Louis conference was for the enlistment for agricultural purposes of three dis tinct classes of labor: Men beyond the military age. Men of military age, but not ac cepted for active mtlitary duty. Hoys under age for enlistment. "All communities -should take im mediate steps for district self-support and no community should be without an ample simply of canned and pre j served perishable products. In this manner alone the commercial food I supply will be available for our aMP" and navy and those abroad whom we will be called upon to help teed. Advises Gretna Farmers "It Is very likely that the great Pennsylvania mobilization and train ing camp will be at Mt. Gretna and I would urge all farmers in surround ing counties to bend their utmost ef forts to the greatest possible increase in all food supplies. We must have our greatest food production near these State training camps so that food will be available in case our railroad facilities are hampered in any way. "Every organization in the State of Pennsylvania should take up the call that is now being put out by our country for greater agricultural activity. Local warehouses, local drying and canning establishments can help in this hour of need and immediate action is imperative. Penn sylvania in an industrial way will be a big factor in the war and Penn sylvania in an agricultural way can be just as big a factor." Mother Why Don't You Take Nuxated Iron And Be Strong and Well and Have Nice Rosy Cheeks Instead of Being Nervous and Irritable All Thi Time and Looking So Haggard and Old? The Doctor Gave Some to Susie Smith's Mother and She Was Worse Off Than You are and Now She Looks Just Fine. NUXATED IRON WILL INCREASE THE STRENGTH AND ENDURANCE OF WEAK, NERVOUS, CAREWORN, HAGGARD LOOKING WOMEN 100 PER CENT. IN TWO WEEKS' TIME IN MANY INSTANCES. THE CHILD'S APPEAL "There can be no Beautiful*. Healthy Rosy Cheeked women without Iron." F. KING, M. D. "There can be no health}-, bountiful, rosy rhrrkrd womrn without Iron," says Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York Phy sician and Medical Author. "In my re cent talks to physicians on the grave and serious consequences of iron de ficiency in the blood of American wom rn, I have strongly emphasized the fact that doctors should prescribe more or ganic iron—nuxated iron—for their nervous, run-down, weak, haggard looking women patients. Pallor means anaemia. The skin of the anaemic wom an is pale, the tlesh ilabby. The mus cles lack tone, the brain fags and the memory falls, and often they become weak, nervous, irritable, despondent and melancholy. When the iron goes from the blood of women, the roses go from their cheecks. In the most common foods of Ameri ca, the starches, sugars, table syrups, .... 1. ,j; ~1, ~ candies, polished rice, white bread, soda crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spag hetti, tapioca, sago, farina, degerminat ed cornmeal, no longer is iron to bo found. Itctining processes have removed the iron or jviouier Karth from these im poverished foods, and silly methods of home cookery, by throwing down the waste pipe the water in which our vegetables are cooked, are responsible for an other grave iron loss. "Therefore, if you wish to preserve your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe old age, you must supply the iron deficiency in your food by using some form of organic iron, just as you would use salt when your food has not enough salt. "As I have said a hundred !-. - m-o-onln irnn is tllP times over, 01 ganron s TT - 1 in Europe and America. Unlike the * reat . ° w * ul( * tako Nux- Ferdinand King, New York Physician older inorganic iron products it it Ited iron when they feel weak or and Medical Author, tells physicians that they caslly d "° B not lnJur ' rundown, instead of dosing them- , ~ . . .. * the teeth, make them black, nor upsel selves with habit forming drugs, StIOUUL J)T6SCTXO6 UIOT6 OTQQTIIC %TOn~-~~l\ tlXQtcd the stomach; on the contrary, it IF Iges U } a am convinced h that irfthu Iron—for their patients—Says anaemia—iron a nioßt potent remedy ,n np ariy an way they could ward off disease. • . , , . . , forms of Indigestion as well as for preventing it becoming organic in deficiency is the greatest CUTSe to the health, nervous, run down conditions. Tlie the "Ave s 8 of't huusan d a might 6 be strength, vitality and beauty of the modern manufacturers have such great con saved who now die every year A tjt O J • • , fldence In nuxated Iron, that they of from pneumonia, grippe, kidney. American Woman.—Sounds warning against fpr to forfelt tioo.oo to *nv oL*. liver, heart trouble ana other - . • , . • , • dangerous maladies. The real and true Use Of metallic iron which table Institution if they cannot take any man cause which started their disease was jL. 1. or woman under 60 who lacks iron, and ln nothing more nor less than a weakened injure the teeth, corrode their strcrl eth 100 per cent or over in condition brought on by lack of Iron in the # L„ f „ m crease their strengm iuw per ceni. or over in l>lood. Stomactl and do far more four weeks time, provided they have no serious "On account of the peculiar nature of harm than oood: advises or f*anic trouble. They also offer to refund your woman, nnd the great drain placed upon " money if it does not at least double your her system at certain periods, she requires use of only nuxated iron, strength and endurance in ten days time. It is iron much more than man to help make upl dispensed In this city by Croll Kellar, G. A. for the loss. Gorgas, J. Nelson Clark, all good druggists. CDm A I T A DUVCir 1 ! AWG Doctor, when you wish to prescribe a true tonic and JltllAL 1 U I ill OILIANO I Wood builder, one that puts the real '"stay there strength and youthful vigor Into the blood and nerves, try Nuxated Iron. If you have been using the old forms of metallic irons, without success; if you have had patients complain of discolored teeth, upset Btomachs, hardened, tied-up secretions, etc, from the use of metallic iron, again we suggest, try Ntixated Iron. Nuxated Iron will be furnished by any druggist on an absolute guarantee of success or money refunded. It is highly endorsed by such physicians as Dr. Schuyler C. Jacques, Visiting Surgeon of St. Elizabeth's Hospital. New York City; Dr Howard James, formerly Resident Physician of New York City Hospital and Assistant Physician of New York State Institutions; Dr. A. J. Newman, Police Surgeon of the City of Chicago, formerly House Surgeon of the Jefferson Park Hospital, Chicago; Dr. Ferdinand King, New York Physician and Medical Author, and others. In most cases physicians direct the use of two five grain tablets three times per day after meals. England's Big Ship Building Program London, April 13.—Speaking in the House of Commons on the government's shipbuilding; program, the parliamen tary secretary' of the shipping control ler said the program of construction was a very big one and could be car ried out best by standardization. Tramp steamers were wanted most at the present time but they must be some thing more than the ordinary tramp and exceed in speed tlie underwater speed of the submarine. About one half of all the merchant ships of the United Kingdom of over 2.600 tons gross were engaged for the army and navy, the colonies and the entente al lies In connection with the war. The shipping controller, the secre tary said, was rapidly extending the requisitioning to include all steamers in the possession of the country. Re garding the restrictions of imports and "Iron is absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food into living tissue. Without it, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you without doing you any good. You don't get the strength out of it, and as a consequence you be come weak, pale and sickly looking, just like a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient in iron. If you are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five grain tablets of Ordinary Nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while double their strength 'and endurance and entirely rid themselves of all symptoms of dyspep sia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time simply by taking iron in the proper form. And this after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any bene fit. But don't take the old forms of re duced iron, iron acetate, or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents. The iron demanded by Mother Nature for the red coloring matter in the blood of her children is. alas! not that kind of iron. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. I have used Nuxated Iron widely in my own practice in most severe aggra vated conditions with unfailing results, I have induced many other physicians to give it a trial, all of whom have Kiven me most surprising reports in re gard to its great power as a health and strength builder. "Many an athlete and prizefighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and en durance and filled his blood with iron before he went into the affray; while the question of conserving: shipping he said the government was mapping* out the future not only for this year but for next. They were measuring the greatest possible losses they thought would occur and putting against them month by month what they expected to build and to buy— and, by dealing with the matter in that way, could make arangements to defeat the enemy in the campaign to destroy shipping. PHILIP A. imtTGH BURIED Mechanicsburg, Pa., April 13.—This morning the body of Philip A. Brugli was brought to this place from his late home in Hagerstown, Md., for burial in Chestnut Hill Cemetery. Mr. Brugh died on Tuesday at the age of 76 years. Ho lived here many years, where he conducted a dry goods store. He is survived by his wife who was Miss Ana Irvin and three children, Mrs. William Singer, of Pittsburgh, and Irvin and Lynn, of Hagerstown. You can tell the women with plenty of iron in their blood beautiful healthy rosy cheeked women full of Life, Vim and Vitality Dr. Schuyler C. Jacques, Visiting Sur geon of St. Elizabeth's Hospital, New York City, said, "I have never before given out any medical information or advice for publication as I ordinarily do not believe in it. But so many American women suffer from iron de ficiency with its attendant ills—physical weakness, nervous irritability, melan choly, indigestion, flabby, sagging muscles, etc., etc., and in consequence of their weakened run-down condition they are so liable to contract serious and even fatal diseases that X deem il my duty to advise such to take Nuxated Iron. I have taken it myself and given it to my patients with most surprising and satisfactory results. And those who wish quickly to increase theli strength, power and endurance will find it a most remarkable and wonderfullj effective remedy." many an other has gone down In inglori ous de feat simp ly for the lack of iron." NOTE—Nuxated Iron, which It prescribed and recommended abov by physicians in such a great variet> of cases. Is not a patent medicini nor secret remedy, but one which Is well known to druggists and whost iron constituents are widely pre scribed by eminent physicians both 19
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