The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 31, 1920, Image 2

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NEWS FLASHES
Nation Wide Happenings Briefly Told


i LONGER LASTING LEATHERS—

of individuals by the


Thieves broke into the cellar of the
Windsor hotel at Philadelphia
stole $15,000 worth of whisky.
and
A forty thousand dollar fire de-
stroyed a portion of the Rainey-Wood
Coke Company, at
making ‘thirty-five
and scores of chickens
were burned to death in a fire
destroyed the stable of Jacob
Swedevilie Pa.
workers homeless.
Five horses
which
Kienel
at Philadelphia.
Mrs. Anna Conway, 60 vears old
proprietriess of a grocery store at
Philadelphia, had 61-year-old John Gaff-
ney, a contemporary hauled
before the Magistrate on a charge of
flirting with her.
grocer,

The outflow of
foreign capitals exceeds one million
dollars a day, according to a report
issued by the treasury department.
American gold to

Italians who returned to their mo-
ther country on account of the high
cost of living and prohibition in Amer-
ica, are returning. They say that the
cost of living in Italy is so much high-
er as to be unbearable,

According to a recent experiment,
the weight of the earth is something
like 6,000,000,000,000,000.( 100,000 tons
(six billion-million-million tons).
The rear wall of a three story
house on North Bodine street, Phila-
delphia, collapsed last week, throw-
third floor to the ground.
A new steamship service from Phila-
delphia to San may be es-
tabished soon.
Francisco
Ministers at Crisfield,
ing for the deliverance
from increased
Md., are pray-
of their people
taxes on the crab and
oyster business.
At Allentown, Pa.,
cold
in a raid,
finger of a
bandits,
tcok a ring off the
baby.
bar silver
received recently by
Approximately 0,000

various
country
has been
banking institutions in this
from London.


Thieves broke
dow of
the plate glass win-
the optical store of Fred G.
1425 Chestnut Philadel-
vhia, with a brick, but were frightened
Sutor, street,
away before obtaining valuables.
Nelson Hale, six years old, of 308
North 32nd street, Philadelphia, died
from the effects of poison pills which
Lie found in an ash barrel.
Kauffman, of Lancaster, Pa.,
match in the search for a
zus leak and the resulting explosion
blew out the walls of his home, totally
wrecking it.
John
lighted a


L. M. Whiteman, a farmtr
ferd, Pa., shot and killed Gust
in a shotgun and pistol duel
of Brad-
Kipgen
Kipgen

firebug and is said to
the family of
was an alleged
have threatened white-

ing two men from their beds on the | man.
BROWN TAILED MOTH ( thing except shoe blacking and tooth-
FOUND IN TREE SHIPMENTS | picks,” is that they are harmless. But
TO THIS COUNTRY | they are involved in stock jobbing
te erie | propositions which without question
Rigid Inspection of All Imported Fruit
Trees Ordered
Following the discovery of larvae of
the brown toiled moth in
this country from France of tree stock,
a rigid inspection has been ordered on
all imported trees. The larvae were
discovered in a consignment of 5,000
voung French apple trees, all of which
were destroyed.
The brown tailed moth is a very 1le-
structive pest which for
been found in New England and Can-
ada, and sometimes in States adjoining
Pennsylvania,
shipmnts to
years has
OPERATING TABLE FOR HOGS
INVENTED BY KANSAS MAN
The chief difficulty encountered in
administering anti-cholera
hogs—that is holding the animal wile
serum to
the fluid is injected—has been over-
come, it is asserted, by an operating
table recently invented by a Kansas
veterinary surgeon and described with
iliustration in the October Popular
Mechanics Magazine. Besides holding
a porker in the proper position for in-
oculation, the the contrivance weighs
the hog. It consists of a Y-shaped
trough, held in an inclined position
by a collapsible steel frame: weig
forty pounds, and can be folded and
carried on the runningboard of an au-
tomobile,

WORTH KNOWING
The first labor law passed by the
New York State Legislature provides
for the creation of a bureau of women
in industry in the State Department
of Labor.
The Parliament of South Africa has
passed by a majority of two votes a
motion in favor of woman suffrage.
such an effort had failed on four pre-
vious occasions.
Often the paint
grows shabby while the
house still looks in fairly good
dition. This is due in part to the fre-
quent brushing and cleaning piazza
woodwork must have. The appear-
ance of the whole house will be greatly
improved many times if the piazza
and window ledge outside are all given
a freshening coat of paint. The task
is not a long one for either a profes-
sional painter or an amateur.
the piazza
rest of the
con-
about
NO DRINK LIKE WATER

A plentiful supply of clean, fresh

will
dividuals
result in loss of money to in-
who succumb to these get-
rich-quick schemes. The United
States Department of Agriculture has
a high regard for Alfalfa as a for
 
but the department specialists brands
and fakes the medicines and
human which
are supposed to be made from them.
as fads
so-called food articles
EARTHEN JARS, EGG BANKS
Resurrect
tlie cellar.
the old earthen jar from
Filled with waterglass it
possesses magic akin to Aladdin's
wonderful lamp. Eggs put in now can
be taken out next fall and winter
when high prices return, and it is not
unlikely they will double in price in
that time. Farmers and poultrymen,
especially city dwellers who
being
keep
poultry are urged by poultry

specialists of the United States De-

of A
eggs in waterglass solution this spring
and early when they are reia-
cheap, for use during the fall
are scarce and
partment riculture to preserve

summer
tively
and winter
high in
with ready
has
when
price. This plan is meeting
and widespread response,
shown by
they
been demands for in-
formation as to how
and by
gists

to preserve eggs,
from drug-
marked in-
received
noted a
sales of
reports
who have
crease in their waterglass
Poultry specialists say that there wili
be a great in the number of
com-
increase
eggs preserved this season as
pared to former years. This is of
benefit to the producer and to the con-
sumer It benefits the producer
it stimulates the consumption
of eggs which usually falls off during
alike
because
the period of highest price, and it
benefits the consumer by making it
possible for him to have good, whole-
some eggs for liberal use during the
season of high prices. One effective
means employed by the poultry
specialists to encourage the preserving
has been to demonstrate the
the specialists and home
demonstrations in homes and depart-
ment stores in many States.
of eggs
process,
WHY WE HAVE FIVE FINGERS
All animals, it seems, from a study
of nature, were started with ten fin-
and ten toes, the fingers origi
rally having been the toes of the fore-
In a good many the en-
vironment in which aniamls have lived
has caused a change in the fol: ation
of the ends of the limbs as well ‘as in
the limbg The horse,
gers
legs. cases

 
hemselyes.












water must always be available to the
bens. The fowls drink freely, espe
cially when laying heavily, and sho
not be stinted to such a necessary ¢
cheap material as water. The wa
pan or dish should be kept clean
it is not washed out frequently a gre
slime will gather on its inner surfa
This should not be allowed to happ
It is well to keep the water pan out-
side the house and in the shade in the
summer, but in the winter, when the
water may freeze, it is best that. the
pan be left in the house, and it should
Le raised about a foot above the floor
so that the hens won't kick it full of
litter when scratching for their feed.
FAKE AND FAD
ALFALFA PRODUCTS

Alfalfa has been advertised so ex-
tensively that-“make-money-easy” con-
cerns are trying to capitalize on this
crop by selling fake and fad products
as well as worthless stock in compan-
ies reported to produce them. As a
rule, the best which can be said
about many of these alfalfa products
such as alfalfa flour, alfalfa syrup,
alfalfa candy, alfalfa breakfast food,

‘and, as one circular states it “every-




the rule of five
and five toes on the end of each
limb been universal. If you ex
amine a chicken in a shell just before
to come out, you can dis-
tinctly count five toes on each foot and
at the ends of the wings you will see
five little points, which under other
conditions would develop into fingers,
perhaps. Some of these toes of the
rew-born chicken do not develop... It
can be acepted as a rule that creatures
are intended in the original plan io
Lkave five fingers on each hand and five
toes on each foot, making our count
of tens, which is the world’s basis for
counting, and has always been.
cause theychange, for
fingers
has
it is ready

The hen-pecked husband has more
than a peck of trouble.

simple measures for prolonging
the Bureau of
S. Department of Agriculture,
and harness properly treated will last
ists of
Shoes
twice as long
neglected.
applied to
leather be-
should be
whenever the
hard or dry. The
thoroughly and ali
remains washed off
warm the
being taken off with a dry cloth
On dre polished
castor oil lightly at
the
Grease or oil
the shoes
Zins to get shoes
should be brushed
dirt and mud that
water, water
with eXCess
shoes

shoes or
apply
night to the dried shoes, rubbing
oil into the leather well, especiall along
where the
Polish the
0

and
use
sewed
meoern-
slight-
the welt or sole is
to the upper,
ing. Tan shoes are, of course,
ly darkened by and even by
Do not apply any oil or grease
heels or composition soles,
next
grease
polish.
on rubber
since such application is unnecessary
and injurious.
Work
polished may be
foot oil, fish oil and
or grease should be
as the hand can comfortable bear, and
should be rubbed well into the leather
along the welt.
secure
the
a heavy
which are not to be
greased with
tallow.
about as
shoes
neat’s-
The oil
warm
especially
MH it is
water resistance
desired to greater
than
and greases will insure,
ing or greasing with either of the fol-
lowing mixtures been found ex-
cellent for this purpose:
above oils
dress-
has
One-half pound of neutral wool
grease (get from drug store.)
One quarter pound of (heavy) dark
petrolatum (get from drug store).
One quarter pound of (light) vellow
parafin wax; or 9-10 of a pound of
petrolatum, 1-10 of a pound of bees-
wax.
Very good water resistance ean be
secured by adding beef tallow to any
one of the oils or greases mentioned
above for greasing work shoes. In
all cases each mixture should be melt-
and
ed together by warming carefully
stirring thoroughly. Jetter penetra-
tion is secured if the grease is applied
warm, but it should never be hotter
than the hand can bear. The greased
should be left
warm place,
and the welt
tnoroughly, as
over night
edge of the
greased
to dry
The
should be
shoes
in a
sole
too much gre
be applied to

Any
mixtures should be
not these parts.
one of the above
applied warm to the sole of the shoe,
increasing its il-
ity, and water resistance.
Harness leather should be

thus durability, plia
washed

and oiled frequently. Tepid water,
reutral soap, and a sponge or stiff
brush should be used, After rinsin
in clean tepid water the harness is
hung up to drain a little while before
oiling.
best
there may be
castor oil is
but
some tallow mixed with either of these
Neat’s-foot oil or
for driving harness,

oils—a mixture of tallow and fish oils
about equal parts of each—for heavy
harness. The application should be
light for driving harness. The «
 
is rubbed thorough-
lv into the leather while it is still wet
from the washing. A clean, dry
remove
leather is unable to
kept soft and
while and made
very much more attractive in appear-
ance by application of oil
warm to the hand,
cloth
should be used to
the
up. Harness
excess oil
which take
can be
flexible for a long
the proper
WHERE WOOD IS MONEY
Who ever heard of wooden money?
The only known currency of this kind
1s issued by the Hudson Bay Company.
and circulates all over the vast tervi-
tory controlled by that powerful trad-
ing concern,
It is a coinage consisting of pieces
of wood known as whicn
are stamped with a die. Tese are
accepted everywhere in that territory
as cash, and are exchangeable for all
“castors,”
sorts of supplies and commodities at
the widely scattered stations of
corporation.
The area governed by the company
is vast. In one straight line it ex-
tends as far as from London to Mecea:
fiom King Posts to the Pelly Banks
is further than from Paris to Sarmac-
and. Over all of this region the cor-
poration exercises a complete domin
ion, employing the native. Indians,
chiefly Ojibways and Creels, to col-
lect the furs which furnished its reve-
nue,
Hudson Bay is about two-thirds the
the Gulf of Mexico. It is an
almost landlocked sea, with
of coast line. More
the
size of
3000 miles
than 300 years
ago Hendrick Hudson, trying to find
the northwest passage, wintered there.
His crew mutined and set him afloat
‘n an open boat with his son and seven
others. He and his companions were
never seen again.
The unit of value in that part of
the world is the beaver skin. Two
martens are equal to one beaver, and
twenty muskrats are equivalent to the
marten. The trapping is done in win-
ter, and in spring the Indians bring
the pelts to the stations, receiving in
payment for them wooden money.
With the latter they buy what sup-
plies they need a tthe store main-
tained by the company at the stations.


Arbitration is the method employed
to convince both the contending par-
ties that they are in the wrong.
Every time a man calls hig wife an
angel she thinks he is hatciling some

A woman is really in a hurry if she
says good-by that way.
scheme to avoid buying ther a new
PROPER CARE EXTENDS LIFE
adoption of
the
life of leather, say the leather special-
Chemistry, 1.
as when reasonable pre-
1
: People love to
cautions for preserving the leather are |
| ~—0—0-—0—0~0—0=0—0=0—0—0—
THE AEROKOLUM
The rapidly increasing cost of shoes, | | *
harness, and other articles made of | By Reno
leather may be checked and consider-: 5-20
able savings effected in the expenses | 0mm Qe Ome 0 =e 0 ee O ee O meee Ome Ome Qe Om
Editor of “Aerokolum”
You don’t know me,
I'm the guy
but
Meet on the street
On a
lainy day.
I always carry an
Umbrella
And,
As I'm always in a
Hurry
I can’t bother to
Raise it
To allow others to pass,
They have to
Dodge it or get
Poked
In the eye or have their
Hat knocked off
It’s not my fault.
They can keep out of
My way or take the
Consequences
And it’s not for
Me to worry about.
I just thought
I'd write and let
You know just how
I feel about it,

DOGS AS BEASTS OF BURDEN
By Edwin Tarrisse

In the United States many hundreds
of thousands of dogs are maintained
from birth to old without
rendering any material equivalent for
their maintenance.
raratively
age ever
Outside of a coin-
small number of sheep and
cattle dogs, and the somewhat larger
number of watch
frighten away
dogs who actually
American
said to “pay for their
except in sentimental ways.
This is not the case in all countries
In Be 1m ,in the North of France, in
Austria and Sa
certain other places, dc
They
wagons,
thieves, no
dogs can be
keep,”

parts of xony, and in


are used as
heasts of burden.
vegetable
conveyvances
draw milk
carts, and other
the
their part to-
belonging to poor,
and cheerfully contribute
ward the welfare and
Luman beings.
Serious study in certain quarters
of late years has been directed to the
question whether the services of dogs
could not be made of greater econo-
mic value to human beings than is
now the case. The objection is that
“dogs were not made to draw loads,”
Prof. Heim, of Zurich, has answered
that no animal was made for man
but for itself, and that man has sim-
ply adapted some animals to his own
uses, them in
of breeding
transforming
the
selection in the
draught
Why asked, adapt the
tc the purposes of draught?
many
cases by Process and
shape
purposes.
best suited for
not, it is dog
On many
accounts the dog is better suited to
the purpose than any other animan.
He may be fed on what is left from
his master’s table, his ordinary food
being the same as that of a human
being, whereas a special bill of fare is
required for the horse and the ox.
Moreover, his and intelii
lodge him
majority of
those of the rich,
with
the draught
wanted in the
nearness
gence
in the
dc gs,
make it possible to
house. The vast
even sleep in
And
not
hardiness
rakes a rude kennel or shed suitable
for his lodging. In
recessities of a
the house their masters.
even if dog were

hous his
either case the
stable is obviated.
If one dog is not as strong as a
horse, a team of two or three can be
employed; and breeds of dogs can no
Goubt be developed from the mastiff
or the St. Bernard which
almost as strong as horses.
The Eskimos have shown the world
might be
how to use dogs suc cessfully in teams;
and there is no reason to suppose they
might not be driven as well in wagons
as in However, if
should be used for draught purposes,
it would probably be for what might
be called light “teaming,” or freight-
ing rather than for traveling long dis-
tances,
But teams
sledges. dogs
is not the
which dogs might pe put.
only use to
They were
formerly much used in England for
turning spits; and though spits ave
Lo longer used in roasting meats
there are various machines on farms
and in connection with small manu-
facturing establishments, the motive
power of which might be supplied
ftom a dog tread mill.
The housewife’s sewing machine
might go by
being
dog power instead of
propelled by her own foot: and
So might the farmer's grindstone, hay-
cutter, root-cutter and fanning mill.
It certainly should not be a hard
matter to adapt dogs to draught pur-
peses and, for that matter, other pur-
poses equally as valuable to their
owner. A sturdy pair of dogs will
pull nearly as much of a load as an
ordinary horse. Consider the fisher-
man, for instance, who makes his liv
ing with a dog team, ordinary dogs
at that. In many cases the animals
used for
they are
this work are mongrels, but
trained in the requirements
of their masters and make very ac-
ceptable helpers. These dogs will
pull their owners and a heavy sleigh
cver miles and miles of ice without
tiring perceptibly. Of course it is a
hard matter to adapt these dog teams
to the streets of the city. The freedom
with which housedogs are allowed to
roam makes this rather an impossi-
bility. Two strange dogs meeting on
a public thoroughfare invariably spelis
fight and if one is harnessed and con-
sequently helpless, it would mean dis-

gown. {
happiness of
WILL RECEIVE AN A
URED WAR
Pennsylvania lost the second largest
number of men in battle and her per-
centage of also was exceeded
by only one other state.
New York State's loss was 6,621,
with Pennsylvania second with a loss
of 5,517.
The percentage of
from this State was 17.
with a percentage of 17.02
losses
deaths in troops
Montana,
was the
only other state with as high a per
centage of loss.
Pennsylvania gave 324,299 men and
New York 400,475. New York's death
percentage was 16.5.
Distribution of captured war mater-
1al is about to be made under direction

of the House Military Affairs Com-
mittee. They will be awarded to States
in proportion to the number of men
given to the army. Pennsylvani will
receive 113 big guns, including 31 of
the famous 75's; three 88-millimeter
guns; thirty-five 105’s; eleven 210s;
57 trench mortars; one 4.2 field rifle.
URGES KISSING FOR HUSBANDS

Minister Recommends They Re-Learn
Art Atfer Marriage—He
Classifies Men
Boston—Husbans, the “stubborn
donkey” and “snapping cur speci-
niens,” were violently denounced by
the Rev. Cortland Myers in his Tre-
mont Temple sermon here. Contin
ing his “In the Matrimonial Wreckage
3ap-
and

series of sermons the
Nabal
cf Boston”
t;st clergyman
Abigain.”
He pleaded with the men to learn
and to practice their
spoke on
the art of kissing
art atfer marriage.
“You
married
wife before
her until it
vou are married.
easier for
kissed you
her,
her sick. Do it after
your
kissed made

Iemember a black eve 1s
most women and will heal much
quicker than a bruised heart.”
“A good man cannot be a bad hus-
band,” declared Dr. Myers, “and a
possibly be a bad
different
good woman cannot
There is an
code of virtue in the
outside. A man
among his
wife. entirely
home than on the
and
may be honest
respected business associ-
ates yet be as mean as the devil as
soon as he crossed the threshold of his
home.”
the trembling wife
vho approaches her husband the first
month with itemized accounts
He spoke of
of every
of the money she had spent during the
inonth. “Why,” he shouted,
wives never have a cent of their
until spend their husband's
insurance, vet the wife earned it
husband.”
“som
own
they life
has
‘ust as much as the
Some men are “paralyzed morally
think
to the preacher,
yet they they are athletes,” ac-
cording while others


«re three-cornered, yet thi they
are round.” Another . classification
brought certain husbands in the class
where they can “stand in front of a
mis all day without seeing any-

thing.”
Nabal was characterized as a
bad and he got
while
“miser
disposition,
was
with a
drunk,
as being a sweet,
 
3 his wife deseribed


royal, queenly speci-
men,” whom the preacher likened to
canary locked in
He advised young girls to *
a cage.
‘set traps’
for the men they are betrothed to
and “if he fails, and shows a mean dis-
position, throw him over.”. Bad dis-
positions he classed as “home wreck-
the found=
”»
ers, dynamite under
tions of a happy home.
A man and wife can never be
same after they have quarreled and
fought, was another opinion of Dr.
Myers.
“You quarrels are always tak-
ing place,” he said, “yes, and all hel!
has rejoiced at them. Then the young
very
the
say
”
couples kiss and make up and say
everything will be just the same as
before. Poor fools.”
OPTIMISTIC AS TO
FINANCIAL OUTLOOK
Winslow Taylor & Company, 130
South 15th street, Philadelphia, a
well-known Stock Brokerage house, in
a recent interview with the editor of
a more or prominent financiai
publication, expressed themselves as
being extremely optimistic as to the
industrial and financial outlook for our
country.
They especially refer in their dis-
cussion to the unprecedented demand
for Crude Oil and its by-products.
They were quoted as saying that the
scarcity of gasoline alone was so pro-
nounced that it would not surprise
them to see additional legislation
framed by the Federal Government
to encourage a greater production of
Crude Oil. The leasing Bill, which
was recently put through, has some
advantages and would no doubt, they
thought, prove a great boon to certain
sections of this country. However,
the cost of developing oil properties is
very high, and while the lucky seeker
1s well rewarded there should be some
niethod devised whereby there would
be a minimum amount of risk for the
funds involved.
Messrs. Winslow Taylor & Company,
in the early part of 1918, were among
the first financial houses to forecast
the great boom in oil stocks, which
started that year. They have now cet
their eyes toward the Motor industry
and have recently called the attention
of their customers and the public at
large to the great possibilities in whai
is now the greatest capitalized indus-
less


aster in his case.
try on the western hemisphere, and
PENNSYLVANIA'S LOSS IN
BATTLE WAS 17

PERCENT
LLOTMENT OF CAPT-|
MATERIALS
they

are unreservedly in favor of in-
vestors making judicious commitments
in the Motor shares.
A SAMPLE OF
FRANKLIN'S SHREWDNESS

Early in his career Franklin ran for
the office of clerk of the Pennsylvania
Assembly. There was danger in his
being defeated, because of the indiffer- |
ence of one man. Here is Franklin’s
wn account of how he overcame this
man’s indifference to him:
Having heard that he had in his li-
brary a certain very scarce and curi-
ous book, I note to him ex-
pressing my of perusing that
book,
favor of
|
|
|
wrote a

desire
and requesting he would do the
lending it to me for a few
TAFFETA
TRICOTINE
We Sell Direct to Consumer
All Goods
Let Us Show You How to Save 20 to
At the Present High Cost of Material
Her Money Will Purchase the
3306 South 23d St.,
days. He sent it fnmediatein, and 1
| returned it in about a week with an-
expressing strongly my
sense of the favor. When he next met
me in the House, he me
{which he had never done before), and
with great civility; and he ever after
manifested a readiness to serve me on
ali occasions, so that we became great
friends, and our friendship continued
to his death. This is another instance
of the truth of an old axiom I had
learned, which says, “He that has once
done you a kindness will be more
ready to do you another, than he whoin
vcu yourself have obliged.””—American
Magazine,
| other note,
spoke to
It is easier to get well on in years
than it is to get well off in cash.

Common sense is more or less un-
common.
The closer a man is the harder it
is to touch him.
born just the
other unfortunates.
Poets are
same as
SATIN
ORGANDIE
VOILE
Why Pay Middlemans Profit?
ruaranteed as Represented or Money Refunded
25 Percent on Each Purchase
Every Woman Should Buy Where
Best to be Had at a Great Saving.
For Samples and Full Information
Address, Dept. “A”
ADELPHIA MANUFACTURING CO.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY
Rea asm ny 20 A CAR SEE APTOS A egaiaton


Outlook for
it a commercial 0}
Review.
industries:
General
Hughes


N the general rehabilit:
portation facilities,the motor industry has befor
pportunity that is the subject of]
a leading aeticle | In a current number
In this connection there is specific reference
to conditions surrounding
Willys-Overland
Bethlehem Motors
A copy containing this article will be sent to
one interested on request for X-502.
the Motors |
tion of nation-wide trans-

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of our Mar ket
three important motor!
Motors
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MEMBER
Philadelphia Stock Exchange I nn irg Stock Excl e |
Chicago Board of Trade i
1435 Walnut Street
PHILADELPHIA, PA. J.
50 Broad Street New York |
ais cn | |

ODD
LOTS The

Jo you who live in
towns and are
We do a
It will be worth your w
Locust 5182-3-4-5-6.

Investment or Speculative Securities
we are prepared to offer the advantages of a
that wili meet; your requirements and conditions,
general commission business in both
listed and unlisted stocks and bonds.
Write to our department “A.”
A postal card is sufficient.
WINSLOW TAYLOR & (0.
Main Office
130 SOUTH 15TH STREET,
PHILADELPHIA,
Stock Market
the small cities and
interested
service
C
hile.
Dept. “A”
PA.
Race 5196-7-8.


cent in dividends,
We offer you what we firm iy
stock at $10 per share of the
Manufacturers of a high quality
parilla and other soft drinks.
55 Broadway, New York


ity to participate in the initial offering of

Millions Made in Soft Drinks
$100 invested in Chero-Cola a few years ago paid 3000 per
sold as high as $1000 a share.
$100 invested in Coca-Cola paid dividends of $4200 in 1914.
Stock valued at $25,000 per share.
$100 invested in Red Rock Ginger Ale, stock reputed
worth $2500 per share.
believe to be a like opportun-
a limited amount of
REX SEAL'PRODUCTS COMPANY
Singer ale, root beer, sars:
Market for products reads
assured. Modern plant located at Brown’ Ss Mills-in-the-Pine 8S. N. J.
Prospectus and further information on request.
Kets Co.
Members Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York
728 WIDENER BUILD ING, PHILADELPHIA, PA
TELEPHONES—Walnut 47634-5
Race 3381.2
Direct Private Wires Connecting Offices