The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 11, 1920, Image 3

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cease = ANCASTER COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.

Farmers Can Increase Their
tion of Suitable Method
Soil erosion, which usually
in enormous losses to the
the United States,
prevented or
results
farmers of
is most effectively
controlled by terracing.
There are two distinct types of ter-
races. For use on modern slopes the
ridge terrace is best adapted, while fo;
step slopes the bench terrace
the best results.
The ridge
the narrow-base and the
types.
gives
terraces are divided into |
broad-base
The broad-base terrace can he |
cultivated and can be crossed readily
by modern farm machinery without in-
jury to the terrace;
terrace does not
these advantages and under
circumstances is desirable
the broad-base type.
The broad-base, level ridge terrace
is laid out absolutely level.
the narrow-base
possess either of |
ordinary
less than
removed from the field.
| ularly
| with tile drains on any type of soil it
{method employed to stop erosion. Fhe
|
{It may be
[but is recommended for use only on |
|soils where the broad-base,
This more [be used successfully.
Losses From Soil Erosion Can Be | |
Prevented By Careful Terracing.
Proper Applica-
|
Income By |
nearly
ideal terrace
Its distinct advantage
with fall is that practically none
of the fertila pats of the
meets the requirements of an
than any other type
over the ter- |
race
soil are
It is partic- |
suitable for use on open, pev-
meable soils. When used in connection
effective
unquestionably is the most
broad-base, graded-ridge terrace, gen-
erally known as the Mangum terrace, |
possesses all the advantages of the
broad-base, level-ridge terrace with |
the exception of the one stated above.
used on any type of soil, |
level-ridze
terrace without tile drainage can not


THE CALIFORNIA R
will average twelve kittens a year,
net profit of over $10,000.
breed twelve times faster
feed each day to each cat.
We feed the rats to the
skins for nothing.
will go up soon.
INVEST WHILE
Shares are sell
The Guardian Savings & Trust
against “wildcat” schemes.
note:
promoted today.
In spite of this, however, all
”
“Investigate before investing.
) GLORIOUS OPPORTUNITY TO GET RICH QUICK
Invest in
ANCHING COMPANY
Now being organized to start a cat ranch in California.
We are starting a cat ranch in California with 100,000 cats.
each. One hundred men can skin 5,000 cats a day.
NOW WHAT SHALL WE FEED THE CATS .
Ve shall start a rat ranch next door with 1,000,000 rats.
than the cats. So,
Now what shall we
feed the rats the carcasses of the cats after they have been skinned.
NOW GET THIS
cats, and the cats to the
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS AT YOUR DOOR
CALIFORNIA RANCHING COMPANY

Albert Sidney Gregg in the American Magazine,
advertisement in its windows during a campaign to educate investors
Jeneath the poster appeared the following
“Some gullible people will try to buy this stock.
of course, but no more foolish than many
Investigate before investing.
over to any unknown glib-tongued salesman.”
bank in an endeavor to purchase stock .
men rushed into the bank, becoming enthused with the project before
ever taking the pains to read the poster to the end.
Each cal
The cat skins will sell for 30 cents
We figure a daily
The rats wiil
we'll have four rats to
feed the rats? We will
rats, and get the cut
but the price
9
ing at 5 cents each,
Company, of Cleveland, Ohio, says
placed the above
It is a foolish fake,
“wildcat” schemes being
Don’t hand your money
sorts of people have besieged the
Sedate, conservative business



California’s Yellow Peril
Governor Asks for Negotiations With Japan



While California harbors no ani-
mosity against the Japanese people
says Governor William D. Stephens, of
State
California, the does not wish
them to settle within her borders and
devitop-cndggse_ population of her
midst. In 3 letter yg cretary of
State Colby, he asks that immediate
negotiations be entered into with the
Empire of Japan to make impossible
further ‘“‘evasions” of immigration
agreements.
“Twenty years ago our
population was nominal” the letter
ago the census Te-
Japanese
said. “Ten years
ports of the United States Government
showed a Japanese population in Cali-
fornia of 41,356. A computation and
survey recently made by the Board of
Control of the State of California indi-
cates that this Japanese population
has been more than doubled—amount.
ing to 87,279.”
Governor Stephens said he feared
that the initiative measure, if passed,
might fall short of its purpose through
the Japanese retaining possessin of
through personal
and that
action was
lands
contracts,
government
agricultural
employment
thereafter
necessary.
Although Japanese eul
ture and advancement and the right
of Japan to true development, Gover-
nor Stephens held that “the people of
California are determined to repress
a developing Japanese community in
respecting
exhaust every power in their keeping
to maintain this State for its own peo-
ple.”
After stating that “the blood fusion
of the Occident and the Orient has no-
where ever successfully taken place,”
Governor Stephens said that “Califor-
nia views with alarm the rapid growth
of these people within the last decade
in population as well as in land con-
trol and foresees in the not distant
future the gravest menace of serious
conflict if this developement is not
{around the
| transforming it
{fixture at the top of
{ pull-chain
| lowered to suit
| lampshade.
| €
If you happen to have a useless vase
house you can make it a
thing of
utility as well as beauty by |
into a lamp. An ad-
which
sockets, can be
are two
raised or
As an advantage of the new device |
it is pointed out not only
that
and quickly
{to another,
sary , but
 
asily changed from onc
thus lending variety to a
|room’s decoration.
Looking Summer-
ward Through
| Voguish_ Eyes [ranting below the level of the per-
“Life to me looks like a gay and
cheerful field of flowers,”
milliner the other day,
said a smart
“because I've
Make Your Lamp
|
|
I!
the required size of |
|the plant pokes its way through the {the third
{justable device has been lately de-
signed by which they can be readily
done.
It has a canopied triangular body
with three adjustable rubber-cover ed |
clamps, which are designed to grip |
| securely either the outside or inside |
{A tawny yellow straw hat was]
|
|

‘The Furrow
News and Views About the Farm



Strange as it may sound, deep corn, because it requires considerable
planting of seed, such as does
not make the
corn, space, If, however, the garden con
root system deeper ex [tains 1000
Most
stems;
square feet or
found for
root
etable for
the most
more,
cept in rare instances. plants should be this veg
ally have two root sy those | sugar corn is, without doubt,
which sprout first from the seed ket: highly prized product.
inel, the depth of which is controlled, The first planting should have been
of course, by the depth of the plant- made about the first week in may:
ling. the second planting toward the end of
|
|
|
|
|
|
that the |
drilling of holes in a vase is unneces- |
the fixtures can be lakes
| permanent system of roots has start-

|
|
{out at virtually
|
| plant,
[trimmed so many hats with posies this |
| season.”
And
millinery, this
land bldssom in
land shape
flowers aplenty there are, in|
they bad |
known shade
(and some never before
known!) on the fashionable chapeaux
| of the summer.
So becoming and so useful have
| women found the large hats, wreathed
| with flowers, it is quite easy to under-
| stand their vogue. Whether one is a
| debutante or the mother of a debu-
tante, the flower-trimmed hat
suitable.
|are of the popular coarse-weave straws
| and they are rather broad and floppy
of brim. Sometimes the
[ribbon bound,
| not.
season, for
every
seenis
brims ara
but more often they are
| As for the flowers which adorn
these hats, one may have wide choice. > ig ht,
A tawny yellow
| wreathed with the
nasturtiums
straw hat we
realest
imaginable,
| was charming.
[of field
| garden
full blown or
tooking
But there are wreaths
flowers, or one may have
pink and
flowers,
colorful.
hats than the
ones, and the
woman likes to include in her
robe at least one taffeta hat. Usually
{it is of dak blue; usually it is rather
| simple and trimmed with a band or
|a bow, and usually it is of medium
[size and in a sailor shape with mush-
room or roll brim. These taffeta hats
daisies, or roses,
other
| popular and equally
| There are other
| flower-trimmed
just as
smait
ward-
and they are quite practical, for they
{are more durable
fragile straws.
Organdie Hats, Too.
These are ready to wear with thin
frocks and summer gowns. They are
in the most enchanting colors—orchid
and shell pink and canary and deli-
than some of the
cate blues. They are youthful and
drooping of brim, with tam-like
immediately and effectively checked.” | crowns and organdie bows for the final
y ) cked.
The spirit of existing anti-alien land
laws and immigration agreements has
been evaded through the employment
of legal and other subterfuges to such
an extent that the purpose of the meas-
urers have been frustrated, Governor
Stephens chirged. He referred to
the suspension of anti-Asiatic legisla-
tion in the State during the
Conference at the request of Secretary
of State Lansing, but held that de-
cisive action was not necessary now.
“The Japanese are not of a serville
or docile stock.” the letter continued.
“Proud of their tradition and history,
they brook no suggestion of any domi-
nant or superior race. And it is just
because they possess these attributes
and feel more keenly the social and
race barriers which our people raise
Peace
| touch.
As for Her Summer Gowns
One certainly has no lack of
this summer, for
lovely
these
there are so many
cotton and so many novelty
The fabrics themselves are
an invitation for one to have
dresses!
The dotted Swiss
blue and black with
crisp and snowy
sheer organdie are
weaves.
more
dresses in dark
white dots and
quite smart this |
summer for many daytime occasions.
Women find them cool, comfortabie |
{and durable.
than
ever, and now that the gingham prices
have so
gingham
respect!
Gingham dresses are prettier
soared, looks upon =a
frock with quite a bit of
The dark checks are so at-
one

against them that they are driven to
race isolation and, I fear, ultimately |
will reach that race resentment which
portends danger to the peace of our |

our midst. They are determined to
Less Maple Sugar |
and Syrup. Produced
Production of t male sugar and |
syrup has declined this year accord- |
ing to the Bureau of Crop Estimates, |
Unik States Department of Agricul- |
ture™ The sugar production was 7,529,-
000 pounds, which compares with 10,
169,000 pounds in 1919, 13,271, 000
pounds in 1918, and 10,839,000 pounds |
in 1917.
Syrup production has fallen off in
the same degree, and yet the esti-|
mate of 3,606,000 gallons for 1920 is |
much below the3,854,000 gallons of’
1919, the 4,905,000 gallons of 1918, and
the 4,286,000 gallons of 1917.
With syrup converted to terms of!
sugar, the maple sugar production of
1920 amounted to 36, 373,000 pounds,
and this compares with the estimate
of 41,005,000 pounds in 1919, 52,513,000
pounds in 1918, and 45,127, on pounds
in 1917. an
The productive season of 1920 Yas
a short one and the average number !
of pounds of sugar per tree; with
syrup expressed as sugar, was only
1.91, while in the preceding three
years the averages are from 2.16 to
| cubator
[ing the chickens in the brooder
stormy weather,
State in the future.”
9 mo
2.72 pounds per tree.
Artificial Brooding |
Should Be Studied
Chickens are usually left in the in-
from 24 to 35 after
| hatching, without feeding, before they
are removed to the brooder, which
should have been in operation for a
day or two at the proper temperature
for receiving the chickens, say spec-
ialists of the United States Depart:
ment of Agriculture. A beginner
should try his brooding system care
fully before he uses it. After plac-
they
can be given feed and water. Subse:
quent loss in chickens is frequently
due to chilling received while taking
them from the incubator to the brood-
er. They should be moved in a cov-
ered basket or receptacle in cecol or
hours
There are ten times as many Jews
‘in the United States as there are in
ireat Britain.
Nearly 15,000,000 acres in Canada
are devoted to wheat growing.

tractive—and so, too, are the laven-|
ders, blues and pinks, and one may
|have tiny checks or large plaids,
whichever she prefers and finds most
becoming.
American Y. W. C. A.
India, looking for
their Girl
at the
chase about their
“Instead of
dulge in
of them.
secretaries in
amuser
monkeys that
Guides have been
hundreds of
bird-hunts we
“monkey-hunts,”
Indian girls, like the
writes
Anier-
one
ican school girls, are fond of week-
end tramps. with swimming, boating
and loafing thrown in.
“You advocate the distribu-
tion of wealth?”
“Yes,” replied the Socialist.
“If all the wealth distribu
ted, don’t you know that in a short
while it would be back in the hands
of a few?”
“Sure. Dut I don’t underestimate
my intelligence. 1 might be one of
the few.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
equal
were

Talented Tenderfoot—I can pick up
a cent with my toes.
First Class Scout—That's nothing
My dog can do that with his nose.—
Boy’s Life.

“But what will you do when the
demand for your product falls off.”
“Yell for government ownership
and sell out to Uncle Sam.”
Usually the hats themselves |

[heavier loamy soil,
and the hat]
are quite as useful as they are smart, |
collars and cuffs of |


a camp ground to]
week-end bungalow |
can in-|
|
|

ied, about an
| the permanent roots are going to come | the
| manent
weather.
| moisture and food.
These primary roots come out asi May. The is right for
showing and the first
middle of June
weel:
soil, but they seldom last more than {in July for the final planting. Sow
a couple of weeks; usually they rot|in rows rather than hills to get ths
{with the seed kernel. Before this|most ears from a given era. Bu
place, however, the second or [don’t sow in single rows, as you ar»
likely to have
perfect fertilization—pollination.
Pollen Is Carried By Winds
The tassels at the
a poor crop, due to im-
the surface
in the case of
inch below
of the ground, loam or
clay soils.
In other words,
plant


top of the stalks
how deep
plants
no matter which carries the pollen, must deposit
you the seeds of most this powdery substance on the silk of
fertilization. The
usually blows this pollen away
original stalk to
Consequently, if
ears to effect
the same depth. The
this fact is thax
wind
important point to from its adjoining
stalks. the corn is
root system contributes vir-|grown in single rows little of the pol-
to the sturdiness of the {len is likely to reach the silk,
adds to the length of
tually nothing hence
and only poor To overcome this risk sow
the corn in a number of short rows.
ears
[time required for the seedlings to poke
| their heads through the soil. Poultry manure is an excellent fer-
Shallow Planting Big Aid tilizer for corn.
opportunity | hut be careful to
from direct contact with the seed, a
the tender root are likely to be burned
you plant | hy it
Make the feet
sow the seed about three inches
later thin the strongest plants
There is none better,
Corn offers a splendid keep the
|tc study the development of
relation to the depth of planting. Ali
things being equal, if
inches deep the
than if
manure
roots in
other
the seeds six main about three
roots will not be any
you started the seed one
rows
deeper apart;
inch deep. | apart;
But the seeds planted one inch deep |p about eight inches. When thr
will sprout way ahead of the six- plants are about a foot high hill them
inch deep seed. This means a much up a little to prevent blowing over in |
earlier crop. | The disadvantage of
deep planting is that it takes so long
for the seeds to get started. The
warmth of the does mot
them as it does with shallow planting. | excellent
This is particulariy true in cold, wet|7p days.
heavy storms,
Bantam is highly recom-
garden
small, of
Golden
home corn
rather
mended for the
patch. It is hardy,
flavor and
Corn is ready
when fully filled out
and when the skin on the grain breaks
deep enough for the kernels to receive | 4¢ the
sun reach
the kernels are
Corn seed should be planted just
least pressure,
moisture to sprout. On
this condition
(sufficient
sandy
milky juice.
soil
three
may
Salosiion Who
Will Not Sell|
fall business
inches
with average rain
be two or deep. On
fall, one inch planting is correct.
Another important consideration in
the development of roots is that few
rlants can compete with weeds. The
must be kept in subjection by
Otherwise the
A new way of ing
latter has been tried this season by a local
means of cultivation.
will rob the
concern which manufactures women’s |
roots of . 3
8 Instead of having
plant
Avoid deep cultl
you are
weeds novelty sweaters.
its road men book advance orders, as
done at this
concern sent them out without sam-
ples. In place of trying to g
they were instructed to try to get buy-
ers to hold off until they come to
this market on their annual Fall buy
ing trips. The were
instructed to get
the plants;
Stirring the
provided it
vation close to
likely to injure the roots.
surface soil is sufficient,
is done at the right time.
Alfalfa Needs Fertility to Start
| It is true that alfalfa will do much
| better on poor soils than most crop,
and that alfalfa will gradually enrich
the soils with nitrogen, but a £00.
stand of alfalfa cannot be expectel
without some manuring of first season.
The young plants require an abund-
ance of food for their growth, which
they must obtain from the soil until
they are big enough to secure it from
the air, as in the case of older plants,
whose roots are inoculated with nitro
was formerly
get orders,
salesmen
conditions in the various cities and
towns in which their
located. In short,
back with a quantity of
might be canceled later, they
ing back with data which will ¢
heads of the business definite
instead of coming
give the
ideas
as to how best
rormal situation now prevailing. —New
York Times.
gzen-fixing bacteria.
The lesson to be drawn
that while alfalfa is a panacea for im
requires a certain
here i:
poverished land, it
amount of fertility to start the crop.
As with alfalfa, soy beans and cow-
peas will yield bigger crops if the soi!
And the crop:
beans
Hubby—“Now there's Mrs.
she always looks as neat as a pin.”
Wifey—“Yes, and do you know why?
or seed is inoculated.
which follow the inoculated
or peas will be much improved, also. ; ;
i * fair The ermine fur,
Unless the home garden is of fai The err
it will not pay to sweet | all familiar, oe
a, small animal of the we asel tribe.
Jecause her husband always gives her

plenty of pin money to do it with.”
size raise


AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
Consult the Old Reliable
DR. LOBB
Forty Years’ Continuous Practice
1209 Race St., Phila., Pa.
Guarantees te Cure Special Diseases
Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Write or call for free book

SL LK Stockings !
Excellent Quality Guaranteed.
Sent by mail C. O. D.
$1.50 per pair
Money back if not satisfied
ADELPHIA MANFG. CO.
2306 S. 23rd St. Philadelphia, Pa.


Millions in Fertilizer
FINE COOPERATIVE PLAN
FOR DEALERS
Write Today
DuBois Fertilizer Works
411 Perry Bld., Philadelphia
MORE?
$1.
New Model Shoe Repairing Co.
Sent by parcel post 8 South Fifth St. |
PRILADELPHIA, PA. y
WHY PAY
For Full Neolin Soles
and Rubber Heels





APR TRAN

WE ARE
PREPARED
to assist you in every way in making the most of your trading acc ount.
The Present Market offers so many profit-making opportunities it 1s
difficult to choose unless you are in close touch with a reliable source
of information as to the respective merits of securities, and able to se-
cure prompt quotations on stocks under consideration.
or carry a large trading
care of your business,
Whether you wish to invest a small amount,
account, we have every facility required to take c
and offer, without charge, the privilege of consulting our Statistical
Department for information on any security.
Jia)
which
Write for our Free Booklet giving Curb and Mining
will permit you to make intelligent comparison and select the
security that is most attractive.
PRICE, GUARD & CO.
BROKERS
430-32 Widener Bldg. PHILADELPHA,
Walnut 2173-4 Race 5117-8
New York Office: 32 Broadway, Broad 2805
quo tations,
PA.
Prompt Deliveries
N.Y.
Phone:



vields in about |
to be eaten |
excluding the |
« | ber what its
time the |
also |
in the way of information concerning |
orders that |
are com- |

to cope with the ab- | I'T
Gettitt,
with which we are |
is furnished by the stoat, |
Community Canning Kitchen Saves
Products and Lessens Home Work
adapted to the needs of the local
Usually much more is canned in
kitchens than the families
It is custo-
Community canning kitchens are no, be
but | ity.
lene of these
longer in the experimental stage,
are established and highly regarded To
interested in it can use,
institutions in the many localities
mary to sell this surplus and use the
which have had the wisdom and fore: | proceeds toward paying expenses.
sight to erect them. Financing the Enterprise
Fruit and vegetables
habit of
bearing right
is hottest and the
Some working capital is needed at
purchase of ade-
Expenses for rent,
materials, and
have the un-|
their | the
when the season
fortunate
fullest
coming into outset for the
quate equpipment.
housewife busiest. fuel, salaries, raw

The added task of putting up the |miscellaneous items, too, must be me"
winter's supply of friuts and vege-|for some time before returns can be
tables seems often “the last straw” to |realized from the products canned. It
the already overburdened
Yet there is much more fruit ripening
than can
woman. |is therefore necessary to make definite
plans for financing the kitchen, based
on a careful estimate of probable ex
penses. Community kitchens have
been financed in various ways—for ex:
school boards, by boards of
n’s associations,
yy loans from banks or from individ-
nals, and by membership fees. Direc"
gifts from individuals or a small group
perhaps in the end, the
method. The mem-
bership fee idea is the best, in the
the United States Depart.
ment of Agriculture, which is advo
cating community canning kitchens.
The selection of a building and its
should be considered joint-
type of equipment fre-
upon the sort of
to be used. Since a primary
community canning
those who are [kitchen is to secure the best returns
themselves, [for the time, effort, and capital in-
work in |vested, the use of modern labor-saving
equipment, thoroughly adequate for
the kind and volume of work to be
in the garden possibly be
used while it is fresh. So she gets out
her cans
Help Difficult to Obtain
It is
to obtain help in the home; so,
ample, by
almost impossible nowadays |[trade, by business me
espe-
homes where there ar:
cially in those
small children, as much work as pos
sible must be sent out to relieve the |of persons is,
burdens of the housewife and mother. [least satisfactory
A community
of the
either
members
canning kitchen,
type to which may
their
opinion of
products to be canned
per can or that in which
members work in
bring
ou fixed price
groups on
the help of
scale equipment,
special
aays with modern large- |equipment
saves garden pro-|ly, for the
ducts which would otherwise waste be-| quently depends
building
object of the
cause the housewives of the locality
have not time or strength to can them
It conserves food for
unable to conserve for
and relieves the pressure of
the home at a busy season.
canning kitchens
Various types of


are in use today in different parts of done, will prove economical in the
the country. The successful one mus: | end.
M It d VY d M solely bodies susceptible of being
[ e e 00 I ay evaporated or dissolved after having
| co-operated by chemical affinity in the
Prove {to be Useful formation of determinate substances.
Starting data Messrs.
em | Bizouard and in 1891, studied
the problem of the fusion of wood.
They operated in a closed vessel at a
relatively low temperature—that is
from these
| 3
Lenoir,
| It is possible to melt wood by heat-
ing it in a vacuum, producing a hard,
homogeneous substance. Melted wood
| was for a long time only a laboratory [spout all one can gather from the
| curiosity, but it may be that industry jecords of the period.
| shall presently discover practical ap- Their work was taken up by others,
| plications of the greatest interest. Jana now here is a full operative tech-
Now although wood is eminently in- | pic that enables us easily to obtain

flammable it melts at a relatively low
| temperature, but in very
excellent results. A metal receiver, ¢
precise con- | sort of boiler having a double bottom
ditions, and only when it is absolutely | through which the superheated steam
removed from contact with oxygen sn | passes, is filled with bits of wood. It
that its combustion is impossible. This li is closed by a lid similar to that used
may be understood when we remem- | in autoclaves and provided with a
When | {he and stopcock communicating with
constituents |, pn apparatus for exhausting the air.
| he we been removed, by means of alco- |
composition is.
lits immediate soluable

hol, for instance, it gives on analysis
|
organic
Britain

. The breweries of Great
acids, essences, |
| have a combined annual output of be-
20,000,000 stan-
water, oily
sulphates, phosphates, chlor-
car- | tween 15,000,000 and
I dard barrels of beer.
| silicates,
|ide gs and hydrocarbonates of lime,
| bonated hydrogen, ete.—that is to say,

everything they coula | m— —

Money
Is not a Science----1t is not altogether Luck
IS the use of your average intelligence mixed
with the oldest thing known to man--Common Sense
| BUT no one ever made money who dared not
take some risk.
MANY high class securities are selling at ridicuously
low prices now.
[| LET US help you to select a few good ones to Buy.
WRITE US!
WINSLOW TAYLOR & CO.
Main Office
130 SOUTH 15TH STREET,
| PHILADELPHIA, PA.
| Locust 5182-3-4-5-6.
Dept. “A”
Race 5196-7-8.
Hy





fit From a Personal
Service
We solicit your brokerage business.
Bene
Our long ex-
perience and efficient organization enable us to render
flawless service.
and
Shares placed with
and
buying orders will receive prompt filling at the lowest
We give personal attention to every account
protect our clients at every angle.
us for sale will secure the highest possible price,
market figure.
We take the satisfactory
service to our clients. No account 1s too small for our
time and trouble to give
personal attention and none too large for our organized
| ability.
| bonds, and general invest-
| ments. We will give them prompt, efhicient attention.
| Buy your investments through us, for we know the
market thoroughly and can render ra service.
Send for Circular “R-1"°
OONTZ &
0ONTZ & (0)
Members Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York
723-26-28 WIDENER BUILDING, PHILADELPHIA, PA.
TELEPHONES—Walnut 4763-4-5 Race 3381-2
| 55 Broadway, New York Direct Private Wires Connecting Offices
Send us your stocks,