The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 14, 1917, Image 6

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Manufactured by
The House of Quality
COLUMBIA, PA.
~ HOTEL MCGINNIS
East Main St. Mount Joy, Penna.
Restaurant and Lunch Bar
OYSTERS IN ANY STYLE
CLAMS IN ANY STYLE
DEVIL CRABS
TURTLE SOUPS
In fact everything In season,
Private Dining Room for Ladies.
J. W.McGINNIS
PROPRIETOR
ROBERT H. HOKE
PROFESSIONAL
DERTAKER
AND
EMBALMER
Sunday and Night Calls Responded
ren
to Immediately.
Bell Phone MOUNT JOY, PA.

Great New CASE 40°
T-Pass., 40 H. P,
1017 Model
 
ETT ve
Price $1190 Ges
. *
Our agents are making big money
Any rellable farmer, or aggressive mancan dothe same.
Case products are known asthe best in every farming
district—Case agents find it easy tosell cars because
of this. One Case agent in a neighboring county of
Pennsylvania made in a few months a
@ Cash Profit of $1904.00
Don’twalt. Don tlosethisagency. Writs forthe wone
derful Case catalog and pa-ticulars atonce, Address
J. 1. Case Representatives, P, 0. E454, Lancaster, Pa.

YO J RN EXT
/ Williams—The Barber
Agent for Manhattan Laundry
\ West /Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa.

Vv

Fad 48 ff
THE FAMOUS CHINCATEAGUE
OYSTERS
356 CENTS PER QUART
Groceries and Provisions
BRANT BROS
MT. JOY ST. MT. JOY, PA.

FOR. HAND-MADE
HARNESS

R.D.RAFFENSBERGER
_ SALUNGA, PA.
a

frm
Advertis-
ing a Sale!
OU don’t leave
Your rig in the
middle of the
road and go to a fence-
post to read a sale bill
do you? Then don’t
expect the other fel-
low to do it.
Putan ad in this paper, then,
regardless of the weather,
the fellow you want te
reachreads your announce-
ments while seated st his
fireside.
If he is a prospective buyer
you'll have him at yoursale.
One extra buyer often pays
the entire expense of the
ad. and it’s a poor ad that
won't pull that buyer.
An ad in this paper reaches
the people you are after.
Bills may be 2 necessity, but
] the ad is the thing that does
the business.
Don't think of having a
special sale without using
sdvertising space in this
paper.

SIO






OneExtraBuyer
at a sale often pays the
entire expense of the ad.
Get That Buyer




| worth nearly $8 per year,
|
|
{
TN


ARGUMENT FOR PRODUCING MORE MANURE


(By P. P. PETERSON, Professor of Soils,
Idaho University.)
During the past few years it has
been demonstrated that of the
Palouse region are “nitrogen hungry.”
The question now arises and in fact
has been repeatedly asked, “Shall we
buy and apply artificial fertilizers to
land to supply this required ni-
trogen?” Our arswer is “Not until
we have had time to gather more data
upon the matter,”
However, we do advise the con-
servation of all of the nitrogen that
comes from the soil. Ip nitrogen the
manure produced by a single horse of
average weight, vay 1,300 pounds, is
We should
pay that much for it if we had to buy
it as commercial fertilizer at ordi-
nary prices, An average cow will
give manure of nearly equal value.
Leaving out of consideration all
soils
our
other substances except the one we
| know our soil needs, is it economy to
Shall the
head of |
throw away the manure?
farmer who has a dozen

horses and cows buy commercial fer-
tilizer to a value of $100 and at the
same time throw into the country
drainage the same thing of the same
value? Better keep what you have
and learn to apply #, then when you
have learned to use that thing, begin |
to think of buying more.
Manure Argument. |
This is not alone an argument for |
conserving manure but it 1s also an |
1
|
|
argument for producing more manure,
The manure produced by a single cow
upon the Palouse farm is actually !
worth $7 or $8 per year, a value that |
is high enough to turn a “board- |
er” into a “producer” if we take
this product into consideration. Not |
arguing to get boarders but to |
get cattle upon the farm, get the best
you can, but get cattle. Hogs or sheep {
will do as well. The requirements are |
that they be the best you can get |
and that they will produce manure,
Market your farm products on foot |
rather than in the sack or bale and |
keep the fertility in the land.


SURE TO LOSE MUCH
FEEDING OATS AND
PEAS TO DAIRY COwW
For Early Green Feed and Sum-
mer Hay of Good Quality Sow
One or More Acres.
For early green feed for cows in
milk, and for a good quality of hay
for summer and early fall feed, sow
one or more acres with field peas and
oats. - Select deep, rich, mellow land,
spread about 12 two-horse loads of
rotted mahure per acre on top of the
plowed ground, and sow six pecks of
field peas to the acre and harrow the
field both ways. This will put the
peas in at their proper depth.
drill two bushels of heavy seed oats
per acre. If ground is dry, roll after
drilling.
Field peas do best on well prepared
rich land. Sown the first part of
April, the crop will be fit to cut and
feed to cows the first week in June.
This combination makes a splendid
| feed. No grain need to be given where
oat and pea forage is fed. It
should be cut and allowed to wilt a
few hours before feeding. Feed a
small quantity at first and only when
free from rain or heavy dew. The
quantity may be increased gradually.
If too much is fed at first it is liable
to produce hoven. The Canada white
field pea is a hardy and prolific vari-
ety. It will average 30 bushels of
this
| cured peas and two to three tons of
| cured hay to the acre.
| ginia
The field pea is hardy and does best
when sown early in spring when the
ground is cool and moist. The Vir-
cowpea cannot be sown until
the ground is warm and dry.
Then |
| Statement upon recent

|
|
|
OF FERTILIZING VALUE. |
INS NIPNS AINSI NII NIT INSIST INNIS NINNINS
If the peas cannot be had, drill three
bushels of heavy seed oats to the acre |
if you want a heavy yield of green
feed that will cut one forkful to the
square yard. Your land must be |
rich and mellow. A profitable crop |
cannot be grown c¢a thin, badly pre- |
pared land. |
|
i
|
|
MINERALS FOR COWS
DURING THE WINTER
Ohio Expert Advises Dairymen to
Feed More Calcium, Magne- |
sium and Phosphorus.

Dairy cows fed the usual winter ra-
ticns cannot produce large milk yields
without loss of minerals from their
skeletons, says Dr. E. B. Forbes of the
Ohio experiment station, basing his
investigations
of the department of nutrition. From
his results he advises dairymen to give
the high-producing cow feeds rich in
minerals, especially calcium, magnesi-
um and phosphorus. A gradual shrink-
age in milk yield or a failure'to breed
may be due to mineral depletion, he
continues.
In his experiments different rations
varying in mineral content were fed to
heavy-milking Holsteins. More calcium
magnesium and phosphorous were giv- |
en off in the milk and excreta than
were present in the feed, although the
cows maintained their live weight dur-
ing the experiment and stored sulphur
and nitrogen.
Doctor Forbes says that the cow
must draw upon her bones to supply |
this deficiency, because her capacity
to produce milk is much greater than |!
her ability to digest minerals.



STEAM DEVICE FOR CLEANING MILK CANS |


A young farmer boy
rather novel steam device for clean-
ing milk cans and other dairy uten-
sils, The device, which is a simple
form of steam boiler, was first con-
structed to operate a small one-fourth
power steam engine, which it
did until he installed a small steel
boiler, at which time the wooden boil-
er was installed in the dairy house
and used for cleaning milk cans, etc.
The boiler, as shown at A, is a 16-
gallon beer keg, with a return water
pipe inserted in the lower end,
shown at B. This pipe B is allowed
to enter the firebox of an old cook
stove, by which it is heated.
A drain cock is placed at I and a
safety valve is placed at G. This is
simply a cone-shaped piece of wood,
neatly fitted in the top and weighted
with the rod as shown.
horse
as
devised this |
| sand, the valve rod works on a knuckle
A small bucket, H, being filled with
as illustrated, and when it is neces- |
sary to put water in the keg it
poured in through the valve, G. One
filling will supply steam for an entire
half day. |
To utilize the steam for cleaning |
the cans, ete., a pipe, C, was run from '
the top of the keg under the table, D, |
is
{and three globe valves placed at E E E
|
for controlling same.
The pipes F F F, through which |
the live steam enters the cans was |
reduced at the point to one-eighth or |
one-quarter inch, and to clean the
cans they were simply placed over |
the ends of pipes, F F F, and the steam |
turned on by the valves, E E E. This |
not only quickly and easily rinsed and |
cleaned the cans, but the heat caused
them to dry quickly.






NOVEL ARRANGEMENT FOR WASHING UTENSILS.
Hungry Birds.
to go hungry
Fowls compelled
a)

Do Not Neglect Colds.
A slight cold is not roup, but the
large portion of the time become poor | quicker the cold is treated by a good
property in a very short space of time, { remedy the easier it will be to cure.
and will fail to pay; further, they will
lose money faster than any other kind
of live stock on short rations.
Farming Is a Business.
The man who lives in town
think that farming
may
is an outdoor ground will pucker up a cow's milk-
If a cold is allowed to continue it may |
turn to, catarrh or roup, with subse-
quent loss of birds.
Pucker Up Milk Machinery.
Just one night of lying on the cold
sport, but farmers know better. They | making machinery wonderfully. The
know that it is hard work and a se- | stable is the best place for the herd
rious business.
, after frost begins to come.
‘ tmpression he wears a silk
| creased
i four times more since coming here.
{ “California Syrup of Figs,
. On His Western Canadian Farm.

It is getting to be a long drawn oul
story, the way that Western Canadlap
farmers have made money. Many of
them a few years ago, came to the
country with little more than their
few household effects, probably a team |
of horses and a cow or two, and suffi
clent money to do them for a few
months, until they got a start. Hun:
dreds of such can be pointed out, whe
today have splendid homes, we
equipped farms, the latest machinery
and an automobile, Here is the case
of A. E. Merriam, formerly of Devil's
Lake, N. D. Ile didn't leave there be-
cause the land was poor, or farming
not a success, for all who know that
country are aware that it is an excel
lent country. He wanted to expand,
to take advantage of the cheap land
that Western Canada offers. And that
same story has appealed to hundreds
of others who have had like success
with Mr, Merriam. But his story, and
he signs it, too, is:
“I came to Alberta in the Soring of
1909 from Devil's ake, North Dakota,
locating on my farm near Dalroy.
“I arrived with six head of herses
and two head of cattle and about
$1,500. Since then, I have increased
my live stock to seven head of horseg,
four head of cattle, and about one hun-
dred head ,of hogs, a four-roomed
house, good barn with all modern im-
provements, a feed grinder, elevator,
chopper, fanning mill, ete. I have in-
my original capital at least
“From the feeding of hogs during
| the last year, I had a gross return of
| $5,000.
“I first started grain farming, but
| during the past four years I have made
{ hogs my specialty, and you may see
[ by the foregoing statement for 1916
that I have not done so badly,
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
MADE $5,000
OUT OF HOGS





{
|
|

Agriculture.)
Increases of from $10 to $15 and in
some cases much higher in the annual
profits from each dairy cow have re-
sulted from the organization of co-op-
erative cow-testing associations in the
United States, according to statistics
gathered by the dairy division of the
United States department of agricul-
ture. The expense of membership in
these associations, on the other hand,
has been only about $1.50 per cow
per year. The organizations therefore
have been very profitable.
associations dairy specialists of the
department believe that the organiza-
tions are one of the most important
factors for the upbuilding.and devel-
opment of the dairy industry in this
country. Such an organization con-
sists generally of 26 farmers, living

“Land has increased at least twenty |
per cent in value during the past few |
years, now selling for from $25 to $35
$27 a quarter section yearly.
“The climate here is better than Da-
kota in that we do not have so much
i Dakota.
“As for farming in general, the grow-
ing and feeding of live stock is more
sure than the grain farming, if con-
tinued year after year, and if every
{ farmer follows this he will be ahead
of the grain growers in the long run.
| Taking everything into consideration,
| I feel
satisfied with my success in
| Alberta.”
(Sgd.) A. E. MERRIAM.,
Dalroy, Alberta, Jan. 12th, 1917.
There will be the greatest demand
for farm labor in Western Canada dur-
ing the early spring, and, in fact, all
season until November, and the high-
est wages will be paid. There is an
absolute guarantee by the Canadian
Government that those who go to
Canada for this purpose need have no
fear of conscription.—Advertisement.
His Change.
“This is a world of change.
”
“Yes; and, by the way, have you got |
any with you?”
HOTHER! LOOK AT
CHILD'S TONGUE
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give “California Syrup
of Figs.”
| per acre, with nominal taxes of about |
| and its richness in butterfat.
| dry wind; the winters are similar «¢o |
A laxative today saves a sick child |
tomorrow.
Children simply will not |
take the time from play to empty their !
bowels, which become clogged up with
| waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
sour.
Look at the tongue, mother! If cqat-
ed, or your child is listless, cross, fev-
erish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat |
within a radius of a few miles, who
co-operate to hire an expert tester to
keep accurate accounts of the
amounts and cost of feed consumed
by each cow in the association, the
quantity of milk produced by each
These
statistics usually reveal the fact that
some cows are not producing enough
to pay for their keep, while others are
highly profitable. Acting on this in-
formation the owner of the cows dis-
poses of the least desirable of his
animals-and makes up his herd exclu-
sively of those that produce a consid-
erable profit.
The membership of the association
is placed at 26 so that the tester can
make a complete round each month,
devoting one work day to each mem-
ber, and that he may keep his records
on a monthly basis, It has been found
by careful experiments that the aver-
ages based on monthly tests do not
vary more than two per cent from the
production, as shown by daily ob-
servations. Since the tester is an ex-
pert and can make the necessary tests
and computations rapidly, and ‘since
he can be depended on to make his
YM A AAA A A A 0 Ne RN AAA A AAR AAAA AANA AAA,
|
COWS LOSE MINERAL MATTER

Ohio Experiment Station Emphasizes
Value of Leguminous Roughages
in Milk Production.

Dairy cows ordinarily cannot digest
from rations of the usual character
sufligient mineral matter to meet the
demands made by heavy milk produc- | five
tion. This conclusion has been reached | areca nut, two grains;
by nutrition experts at the Ohio ex- ( bonate, one dram.
periment station after two years in- | off feed for about 12 hours and
vestigations with cows yielding large | the dose in a slop of middlings.
quantities of milk.
These specialists also say that even
when the common practical rations are
supplemented with large amounts of | them.
calcium carbonate and bone flour, the
cows still give off more lime than they
can digest from their rations. To meet
this demand for heavy milk production,
the cows must draw upon the mineral
| substances of their skeletons.
heartily, full of cold or has sore throat |
or any other children’s ailment, give a
| teaspoonful of “California Syrup of
F »
per
then don't worry, because it is
*tly harmless, and in a few hours

| all this constipation poison, sour bile |
and fermenting waste will gently
move out of the bowels, and you have
a well, playful child again. A thor-
ough “inside cleansing” is ofttimes all
that is necessary. It should be the

| first treatment given in any sickness.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of
3,” which has
full directions for babies, children or
all ages and for grown-ups plainly
printed on the bottle. Adv.
In the Four Hundred.
Caller—Is my wife home?
Maid—Who may I say called 7—Puck,


| To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up The System
Take the Old Standard GROVE'S
TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know
what you are taking, as the formula is
printed on every label, showing it is
Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The
Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron
builds up the system. 50 cents.
When it comes to coddling imagin-
ary wrongs the average man is a
faithful nurse.
Sneer not at the imperfections of
others. It is doubly cruel to beat a
cripple with his own crutch.
Pimples, boils, carbuncles, dry up and
disappear with Doctor Pierce’s Golden |
Medical Discovery. In tablets or liquid.
—Adv.
 
The widow's mite is used too often |
as an excuse for small contributions.
The Oklahoma-Kansas field leads in |
the production of oil.
Take care of your health and wealth
will take care of you. Garfield Tea
promotes health.—Adv.
to make an
hat.
When a little man wants
Further attempt is being made, by
the use of more readily soluble lime
salts, to learn whether a cow can ab-
sorb as much lime as she gives off
during heavy milk production.
The results obtained thus far em-
phasize the value of leguminous rough-
ges in milk production. Without lib-
eral allowances of such feeds, the loss
of minerals from the bones becomes
excessive and predisposes to disorders
of nutrition.
WASTE IN FEEDING ROUGHAGE
Often Occurs Where Feed Is of
ferior Quality—Much Loss in
Feeding in Muddy Yards.

In-
Waste is caused by giving too much
at a time. This often occurs where
roughage of inferior quality is
used. A still greater waste attends
the feeding of animals in yards that
are muddy, or are covered with snow
or ice, and in which they are exposed
to cold winds and storms.
HAVE ‘REGULARITY IN DAIRY
Farmer Should Not Only Milk at
Fixed Periods, but Also Feed at
Same Time.


Regularity in a dairy always tends
to produce more milk. A man should
not only milk at fixed periods but
should also feed his herd at about the
same time every day, and should plan
his stable work so that his cows will
be undisturbed for a considerable
time each day.
KNOWLEDGE OF BEE RAISING
To Obtain Best Results Farmer Must
Know Something of Principles
of Queen Rearing.

No man can intelligently set him-
self to the work of increasing the
number of his colonies, nor can he
obtain the best results in the produec-
tion of honey and wax unless he has
some knowledge of the principles of
queer rearing
(From tne United States Department of

EXPERT TESTING COWS FOR COMMUNITY.
Because of the great and obvious |
economic advantages arising from the |
observations independently of press-
ure of work on the individual farm,
the owners of dairy cows find it cheap-

er and more satisfactory in many
cases to have their testing done
through the association than to un-
dertake to do It themselves.
There are now nearly 350 cow-test-
ing associations in the United States,
135 having been added during the last |
year. These associations have an
aggregate membership of 8800 farm-
owning approximately 150,000
The cow-testing association |
originated in Denmark in 1895 and the
first of the organizations in this coun- |
try was formed in Michigan in 1906.
Because of the value of the associa- |
tions to the dairy industry of the
country the United States department |
of agriculture is stimulating interest !
in them and is assisting farmers in
their organization.
Bull Associations. !
Another and somewhat similar line |
of co-operative work which is being
encouraged by the department for the |
improvement of dairying and cattle
raising is the formation of bull asso-
ciations. The function of these or-
ganizations is to make available, at |
slight expense, the services of pure-
bred bulls for the herds of the asso-
ciated farmers. It has been found
that often the total value of the scrub |
bulls owned by farmers is sufficient
to supply through a bull association
purebred bulls for the herds of all.
A number of “blocks” of the associa-
tion members are formed and a pure-
bred bull placed in each. The bulls |
are shifted every two years to pre-
ers

COWS,


vent interbreeding.
A considerable proportion of the
nearly 22,000,000 cows in the United
States are too inferior to produce
profitably. Where the bull associa-
tions have been formed the grade of
the stock has been raised appreciably. |
Dairy specialists of the department
believe that these associations will be |
an important factor in increasing the |
quality of dairy cattle throughout the
country.
TREATING HOGS WITH WORMS
Prescription Given for Animal Weigh- |
ing About 100 Pounds—Preven- |
tive Is Recommended.

x i
To expel worms from hogs the fol- |
lowing prescription is right for a pig

|
|


| : TET,
phate were larger last season than on
TO RELIEVE CHOKING ANIMAL
per and pour it into a bottle.
weighing about 100 pounds: Santonin,
grains; calomel, two grains;
sodium bicar- |
Keep the hogs
give
The |
evening of the same day give a mash
of wheat bran. This will flush the |
bowels. Gather all worms and burn
Worms often are the forerunner of
disease.
If a hog or pig has a big appetite
and thriftless condition, with dry
dead hair, it is a good indication of
the presence of worms.
Salt and sulphur and charcoal
should be kept in every pigpen and
pig yard so the pigs can help them-
selves.
This is a corrective and a preven-
tive of worms.
PHOSPHATE AS A FERTILIZER
Tests at Ohio Station Show That Ma-
terial Does Not Increase Acidity
in the Soil.
Contrary to common opinion that
acid phosphate increases soil acidity,
this material has not been found to |
meke the land more acid in field and
laboratory tests at the Ohio experi-
ment station. Yields of clover on
Wooster soils treated with acid phos-
soils receiving no fertilizer. |
Unlimited plots to which complete |
fertilizers were applied with phosphor-
us in bonemeal and basic slag, in a
five-year rotation, produced more clov-
er than soil similarly treated except
that acid phosphate carried the phos-
phorus. However, lime applied on the
bonemeal plot produced larger effects
than on the one receiving acid phos-
phate.
Laboratory tests at the experiment |
station have likewise indicated that
acid phosphate does not have any im-
portant influence in increasing soil
acidity.


White of an Egg, Poured Down Throat
of Beast Through Paper Funnel
Is Efficacious.

It is not generally known that many
fine animals might be saved from
choking by a very simple remedy.
Where the trouble develops take the
white of an egg, make a funnel of pa-
Then
and pour |
The relief
elevate the animal’s head
the fluid down the throat.
is instantaneous.
The egg serves to make the throat
passages and the object that is imped- |:
ing it perfectly slick and enables the |
| west
Birds Have Regular Routes, |
Migratory birds are sald to og
North sea by well-defined tracks. [The
autumn immigrants fly from east to
and northwest, their return \in
spring being conducted over the same
lines in a contrary direction, The
first flights occur regularly about the
middle of October and the
ta ———————————————"
| month later,

Daily Thought.
Good sense must in many eases fe
termine good breeding; bec the
same thing that would be civil at one
time, and to one person, may be quite

use

| otherwise at another time and to an-
| other person, but there are some gens
eral rules of good breeding that hold
| always true and in all cases. —Chester-
fleld,

Frankly Selfish.
We know one thoughtful grandmoth-
er who frankly admits that she spoils
the baby at every possible opportu
nity, explaining in her philosophical
way that she knows perfectly well
she'll get the blame for it anyway and
might as well have the fun of doing it,
—Columbus (Ohio) Journal.
Short Stories in Abundance.
An industrious reader of short stories
has selected 20 as the best by Amer-
ican authors of the 2700 tales pub-
lished in 1916 in 70. periodicals. And
these 2,700 were. probably the pick of
27,000 or more from which the editors
Many are offered, but
had to choose.
few are chosen.

 


Have wou
Ee
RHEUMATISTA
Lumbago or Gout?
Take RHEUMMACIDE toremovo the cause
and drive the poison from the system.
“RUEUMACIDE ON THE INSIRE
PUTS RHEUMATISNM ON THE OUTSIDE”
At All Druggists
Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors
Baltimore, Md.
 
 
 
ETE

ie
MICE GARRY DISEASE
STEARNS’
ELECTRIC PASTE
U. 8. Government Buys It
SOLD EVERYWHERE —25c and $1.00



a]

The manufacture of fans was estab-
lished as an industry in England dur-
fng the Stuarts’ rule.

FLIXI® BABEK A GOOD T
And Drives Malaria Out of the
“Your ‘Babek’ acts like ic; Ihave given
it to numerous people in he
suffering with chills, malaria and fever. Iree-
ommend it to those who are sufferers a i
need of a good tonic.”—Rev. S. Szymanc
St. Stephen’s Church, Perth Amboy, .
Elixir Babel, 50 cents, all druggists or by
Parcels Post, prepaid, from Klo wski & Co,
Washington, D. C.
 




GIVES A MONOLITH TC POPE
Evidence of Early Christianity in
China Presented to Benedict by
New York Woman.

After presenting to Pope Benedict a
two-ton monolith, the gift of Mrs.
George Leary of New York city, Rev.
Father George W. Waring, chaplain of
the Eleventh cavalry, U. S. A, station-
ed at Governor's island, has returned.
“The monolith,” he said, “is a repro-
duction of a monument erected at
Cian-Fu, China, in the seventh century
by Nestorian heretics of the Christian


faith. The inscriptions 6n the big
stone, in Chinese and Assyrian, prove
conclusively that Christianity had ob-
tained a foothold in China at that
early period. The monolith was
| brought here by Dr. Fritz Holin, and
for cight years it was exhibited at the
American Museum of Art. Then it
was purchased by Mrs. Leary, in
whose behalf I took it to Rome to
present it to the pope, who had it set
up in the Vatican museun.”
So well pleased was the pope with
the monolith that he conferred upon
Father Waring the cross Pro Ecclesia
et Pontifice and gave to him an auto-
graphed photograph.

High Ccst of Snowbaliing.
Six young boys standing on the main
street of a suburban city, about tc
start a snowball fig in the vicinity
of two or three stores with large win-
dows.
One of the youngsters: “Aw, wait a
minute. Let's go over to a side street.
These windows cost $100 apiece. —
ton Transcript. ‘





Bos-


0ld Fashioned
Ideas
are being supplanted daily
by newer and better things.
This is particularly true
where health and efficiency
are concerned.
In hundreds of thous-
ands of homes where cof-
fee was formerly the table
drink, you will now find
POSTUM
It promotes health and
efficiency, and the old time
nerve-frazzled coffee drink-
er soon gives place to the
alert, clear-thinker who
drinks delicious Postum
and knows
“There’s a Reason”
No change in price, quality
or size of package.



obstruction to be swallowed.

second af
 

















































 
A A
a
a a


a i RE