South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 186, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1917 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sun Jay. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. (i, R. SUilMEKS. President J. II. TEPIIENSON. Maaiftr. JOHN HLNRV ZUVEIt. Editor.

Onlr AicoriatM Vrr Mtrnlir Paper I Nartbef Indian ort Only rpP Kmpluylnc tba International Newa fcertla la feoulh Bend Two Wirr: limy ! Mftl.

Horn rbon 1191

Office: 210 W. Colfax Ar.

Call at the offV r teler-ha; abov numbffi ani ror dparfmnt wanted EditorUl. I t erti tlo a". Circulation, or Acrounticg. For -want al." if or: ram Is In the teleantot dire-.tory. bill win be mail.! after in-rt!oa Report Inattention to t'Udnat. bai ei-utin. por dllery nf ppra. baa teipfcon aervi.. etc., to fcea.l of lprtrnent with wak-a joa are ! iin. Tt,, Ne. i-Tlmea baa thirteen trunk lit.-, all of LicL riicnd to Hon. Thon lll und Bell 2100. IBSCniPTlON HATKS: Morning and Etenlnff Hditlonf. eine' Cor. 2; Sunday, V; Morning fr KTeulng Edition, rfallj. inrudinjr Sunday. hy mill. S3 pr year In adranc I'ellrerel .,y rarrler la S vth He ml and Mtshawaka. 5 00 pr ar tu adranre. or 12 1 j tle week. Kotermi at the Sputa eni poftoffl. aa (mho:,J dm mill.

ADVERTISING RTK: Ask the a-lvertlalnsr et'rtmuL j

Foreirn AdertUIng lleprra-otatvr : CONE, LORKNZKN 'OOrUAN. 2J5 tiTtb At. New York Citj, and AdT. Bld. Cblcaao. Tfce Newa-1 lines ei.deiTora t keep Ita advertlalug rol-itnji free frora fraudulent m!B:epreentati"n. Any per' defrauded thr ough putrot.jtfe of any advertisement In thia laper will roafer a jtot io the mafiage.m-nt bj reporting-" tba facta comp'etel.

JULY 5, 1917.

SAD UP OR CHEER UP! HEER MUST BE TO SAVE BREAD AND BUTTER. We have Uto all wron?, folks; all n-rons! We can understand now why ,'ens. J.imes K!i WaUon and Harry New have m n.xmrdetely fallen riff the wattr-waKon built for them l y ui't. Shurnaker "f the Indiana AntiSaloon league, when tlu-y wt re runnini last fall, and why they hae been votmp "nrV', or not voting at all, on prohibition legislation before the s-t-nste. They have ten listening to the wonderful loic of thit wonderful statesman, i-'f-n. Henry Cabot I.rlKe, of Ala .sä thu setts. Fact of the matter 1., us it is brought home to u now, we were headed MiaiKht for a smash-up on tha rocks of becrh ssne-?.--, and have escaped by a hairbreadth. It in i:cn l-orU-e who grabbed the helm jus. In time to stter ua into tafe water once more, and think of it: As you lift the foaming gla's.s of lager and let its cool contents trit kje. .Ible or plunge down the ht, luutv channel to your internal reRhm.s, do you realize that you are saving the broad that is joiner upon the table for wife and children at home? As you sit at that same table and see the kiddies contentedly imbibing their milk und wife smilingly pouring the rich, rich cream on her strawberries, do you realize that all thU lacteal enjoyment, with butter and cheese added, is due to your having consumed a glass, or a half-barrel, more or les:-?, of beer on your way home from oftice or factory? Of course, you don't. Now, sit up and take notice! You shall be informed that when you load up on beer, you ate doing your part for home, country and world-wide democracy. A wen m your l ead. a squint in one eye, age, conscientious scruples, a dependent family, or a floating kidney may keep you out of the battle ranks. You may not have a dollar for the Hed Cross, or $50 for the Liberty loan. Despair not! You can drink beer. Your inalienable but jeopardized rishts to liberty. 'inilit3 justics and happiness, fhall not appeal to ou i vain, though crippled, diseased, hoary with tirtu, jru may be; this, while you can crook an elbow. You drink beer, und, by the same token, the more beer ru drink the greater your patriot'sm and the quicker lu world is made safe for democracy. tfan. Lodge, Jn debating that nice little issue. Whisky vf. Heer, now raging in the V. .S. fenate and, incidentally holding up our war. has taken the brewery side and declares that stopping the brewing would send cattle fed on brewery produces to the slaughter house. No beer no milk, no cream, no butter, no cheese. Also. stoppage of brenving would cut off by forty per cent, yeast for bread, made largely from brewery products. No beer no bread. Yoxi can see. oan't you? that our administration and our blamed congress have rajfsed the correct war rolicy by a million miles, .hips. winter wheat, armies, navies, aeroplanes, submarines, money? Huh! this war has got to be fought with breweries. Cheer up! Hcer up! This war is only a matter of drinking the kaiser under the table, and we've got him daggering at the very start. Seriously speaking, we have to confess that we've feen a whole lot of wonderful war and economy policies sprung in Washington but the proposition that our salvation depends. In any important degree, cn beer, hits us Jn a bare spot when wa weren't looking. To aim a fatal bbuv at both our cow products and bread isn't fair. What would this country crme to. if it hadn't statesmen like Lodge of Massachusetts? Ditto, such susceptible gentlemen as Mfvro, Wat-on and New?

GERMANY WAKING UP. Thr'i no doubt of it (Jermany is waking up to SCr.Se Cf rur autocratic isolation and an appreciation of the new order of things manifesting itself in the outside

world

exemplars of this awakening;. tic

MUNICIFAL HOUSEKEEPING. Poesibly our American municipalities in general are not to extravagant as they are reputed to he. Kxtrav

i agance depends not on tri amount of money spent, but ( on the way it is apent. The only question is, whether

the citizens get the worth of the money they pay In local taxes. City government has broadened wonderfully in recent vears. Th- community aa a whole has assumed various functions uhirh formerly were left to private enterprise and idiidual Initiative, or were left undone. Paving, sewers, water supply, street cleaning, hygienic work, parks, education and recreation of various sorts, all these things are being attended to with a thoroughness and efficiency unl own in the "good old das"' of our fathers. W.- have rr any excellent Innovations in municipal ownership. All these things are expensive yet they may n t be extravagant. Hut whatever we may think of all this outburst of municipal enterprise, we can hardly maintain that the cities are businesslike in their financial methods. A statement given out by the federal department of commerce shows that one hundred and forty-nine of the two hundred and thirteen cities having a population over thirty thousand spent, last year, an average of $."!.8 per capita more than their income. A sound business policy would dictate that our cities pay more as they yo. Better hae heavier taken today than a dangerously mounting debt. Doubtless, too. the indebtedne could be kept down much better tr.an it is by a more careful system of expenditure.

'The EUra Iodine, bat do Bt compel"

HOROSCOPE

FARM LORE FROM THE CLASSICS. What are th obligations of a farmer'; Here's one answer: 'The ability to make a full and comfortable living from the land; to rear a family comfortably and well; to be of good service to the community; to leave the farm more productive than when he took it." It's a sane and modem answer, but it wasn't sent out by the department of agriculture. That answer was gien by Varro, v Latin writer of the first century H. C. The only chang-j we could make if it is really a change would b to extend the meaning ,if "community" to include the whole world. Another Latin writer of about the same period named the true purpose of agriculture a securing the greatest efficiency per ucre and per man. Tnat, too, is u modern slogan. The Komans had to secure this efficiency with thoioughness and patience. We can add to these virtues our modern machinery anil improved methods '.' farming. Hut we haven't had to improve the idea! et. It was modern enough when it was first written. And there is much more equally good left us by the writers of ancient Greece and Home. It's interesting to note today, when we are turning so much attention to small gardening and intensive farming, to loo back through the centuries and fin J how the peoples who preceded us did it all. In th licht of our own problems ue can better appreciate their difficulties. And we can be humbly grateful to them for some of the progress in which we take so much price.

"SAMMIES." Our friends across the water have found a ne name for the American soldier. There's a slang term, as everybody knows, for everything and everybody connected with the war. The French soldiers are know n as Toilus," or "hairy ones." The Germans are called "Boches." The British soldiers are "Tommies." What is more natural, then, than that the American soldiers should be called "Sammies?" "Sammies" is derived, of course, from "Fncle am." It's a perfectly obvious and felicitous name, which we might have adopted ourselves long ago if we'd thought of it. Whether we owe it to the French or the Knglish we are not informed. It sounds as if it came from Tommy Atkins. Hut however that may be, it sesms destined to stick. It's peculiarly appropriate that our soldier boys should be known by the name of our "national saint," especially when that saint is in such good standing abroad as he Is now. It sounds far more friendly than 0 "Yankees" which many of our people dislike and resent and it's incomparably better than "Yanks." What yountf American wouldn't fpel flattered by a name which implies that he's a khaki edition of Uncle Sam?

CHANGING ROLES. One of the oddest paradoxes of the war is found In a recent exchange of arguments between Houston Chamberlain, an Englishman, and a German professor named Herr Faerester. Imagine an Englishman arguing that there is more freedom in Prussia than in England, and a Prussian coming forward In champion British democracy! Chamberlain is a "renegade Englishman, " who has taken up his abode in Germany. He declared In a public statement that Englishmen know nothing of liberty, and that true freedom is th sole possession of the Germans. What sort of evidence he adduced to support his declaration does not appear. At any rate, the German professor proceeded to put the Englishman to shame by replying, in the Neue Hundschau, that liberty is the foundation of the British empire; that the landam-ntal fact, of Pritish history is the endless rieht for liberty, ar.d that England today surpasses all other countries in civil liberty. The Kreat, free British empire, he added, would have been

Prof Ott" Wild? i a -.o U .;!.: I

has been known; thi t. Pnslnnd md Germ.lnv -iiiiv Pt coma to

nnnerto as nopeiessiy reactionary. His "History

of

the Hohenrollerns ' is crerflite1 with havin? contributed greatly to tlffenir.K the Kabcr's rcsitame a:ainst the demands of democracy. Ami htre vie rind Prof. Himza writing in the Berlin Tageblatt; "We must accustom ourselves to the thought that a derisive step in the democratization f our state a-.d national life has become, an inevitable necessity. We are on the threshold of a r.e.v epoch in our history. Prussians Cannot alone offer resistance to the great tide of the times Mowing toward democracy in the midst of the German empire, yes. of the F.uro pean continent and of the whole world. We should thereby get into a dangerous isolation among the nation of the earth. "Fundamental reform is imperative, and in alreadv taking plate. Keform not only of our instltuttors. hut abm? all. Ur thmking. A de ii f i h.incf m the soul rm.t take pl.o e een in th who. with e-r übte of their te:r.K. br.g to the ord-r." With that spirit at "r arnn.g the intellectual leaders of Gorni.ii; , theje is hpe f r (he nation; alto for nxaaklad. and prucf that Amern a is right.

Tilt IISDAY, JULY .". 1917. This is an uncertain day. accord- ' ing to astrology Venus. Franus and I Jupiter are in iienefic aspect, while) Saturn and Neptune are adverse.

There is a rule of the stars that seems to indicate a period of public perplexity marked by sudden changes in public sentiment. Danger from agitation that may gain ominous power is presaged by the stars. Hiots ir many places, long fore told, may mark the coming months, when labor troubles will be a serious menace. Insubordinatio'n will show itself in many ways in the nest few months, it is prognosticated. Growth o kindliness and a general recognition of the ideal of universale brotherhood will be marked through the remainder of the year, if the stars are read aright. There is a sln read as presaging the opening of piison door. through a reform movement brought about by the war. Children come much to the front in public interest in the next fewmonths. Keforms in methods of rearing them, as well as nesv forms of amusement are prognosticated and a worldwide effort to counteract the effects of the war upon the youthful mind is foreshadowed. Amusements of every sort are likely to prosper after a period of not more than two months, the seers declare. The wise use of money will occupy attention more than ever before, i! thft stars are read aright. The death of a famous woman is presaged by the planets and this will lie followed by the passing of seeral of her associates. Persons whose bitthdate it is may meet grief or disappointment In the coming year. Children born on this day are likely to be very affectionate, but these subjects of Cancer usually have lives marked by many changes.

THE MELTING POT

COME! TAKE.POTLUCK WITH US.

21

I

Who's Who Behind the Scenes in the War Army BY GFXJRGE GARVIN.

Tin: FPLiiTiNG impli:mi:.t. The club's a great invention of the human intellect, an argument which people universally respect; for though th. brain itself may be impenetrably dull, whn logic is persistently applied upon the skull, the scintillating scientists unanimously rind that its effects are ultimately felt upon the mind. Two simple, sordid savages who could not quite agree took each a handy fraction of a well selected tree and supplemented every warm belligerent remark by bringing dow n the club upe n the other fellow's bark; for with persistent, careful perforation of tht skin, ideas from the outside world contrive to filter in. A lOO.Oflrt years have passed and crude, old-fashioned clubs are not employed today except by Hottentots and scrubs, but still the sacred principle remains in full control, that only by contusions on his unenlightened poll can man be brought to see the lire between the wrong and right; thus only can his darkened soul be filled with truth and light. Ar'hur Brooks Baker.

bout the Mongolian race."

T.

found that pulse. Apnot sober, certainly!"

'keep hun-

in a

were

understand each other.

BANTAM SOLDIERS. A citizen long in patriotism but short in stature, rejected by the army examiners for his lack of inches, appealed to the war department to be allowed to form a "bantam regiment." The department refused. As i result there's a large number of disappointed 'bantam" in the Fnited States. It's unfortunate that the government has thought it necessary to turn down such a proposal. Bantams are

notoriously good fightersfrankly lecosnues in hi

M A.I OK IIAKKY X. COOTICS, Grnoral Staff Corps. Born in Virginia April 2. 1S74. He is a graduate from the Virginia military institute and at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war enlisted a a private in the Fnited .States army and was assigned to the fourth Infantry. During the same year he was promoted to a second lieuten ancy and the following year was made a first lieutenant of volunteers, and in 1901 was mustered out of the service as a captain of volunteers. During the same year he was commissioned a first lieutenant in the regular establishment and assigned to the cavalry, in which arm of the service he has continued. WASHINGTON. July .".Major Cootes' rise from the ranks to be a major has been accomplished through hard work and merit. He participated in various engagements In the Philippine islands and dis tinguished himself there, gaining his promotion through bravery in action while serving in Gen. Lawton'j northern expedition in 139-1900. He also served under the late generals. Fulton and Fred D. Grant, in their Philippine campaigns. After his return to the states he was detailed as military aide from the army to St. George Tucker, president of the Jamestown exposition, where he also served as special aide to MaJ. (Jen. Grant and the governor of Virginia. He was aide-de-camp to W. Cameron Forbes, governor-general of the Philippine islands, and to Sec retary of War Dickinson, accompanying the latter on a special mission to Kussia. In 191") he was provost marshal in the El Paso district during the border disturbances. He is now aide-de camp to Maj. Gen. Hugh L. Scott, chief of staff, and special aide with Maj. Douglas MacArthur to the secretary of war. Maj. Cootes Is one of the most ( xpert horsemen in the United States army. He was a member of the cavalry division team which visited the Panama-Pacific exposition and carried off eery prize for which It com: eted. He has ridden in the horse shows at Madison Square garden and is breeder of Arabian ponies.

TH I'M SOCKS. I've heen slammed quite enuff 'Bout them darn socks I knit, And the shape of the pair And the way that they fit! For they never was made For a Pachyderm's club. And your's being such Guess that's where they rub. But I suie done my bit f rom daylight till late. And I ain't to blame If your old feet don't mate. Where I learn't to knit 'em I don't have, to tell; You can gamble your hard-tack

That is wasn't in 11. F. JA

o Doriuj: DIAGNOSIS. Doctor Fordyce one evening drank too ,mueh wine for dinner and on being called to visit a great lady.

who had been taken sickhe could not count her predating that he was he said aloud: "Drink,

The next morning, as the doctor was wondering how he could explain his behavior, he received a not? from

the lady entreating him to her secret" and enclosing a dred pound bank note. Tili: l'KOZKX MITTEN. "I once proposed to a girl conservatory." "With what result?" "A lot of expensive plants

nipt by frost." BILLY GUILTY. "Who signed Magna Charta?" asked the school inspector. "P-please. sir." wailed little Billy Smith, "it worn't me". The Inspector snorted. The class was the most Ignorant It had ever been his lot to examine. He strode from the room and outside met the schoolmistress. Angrily he narrated the last Incident. "Who d'ye fay said that. sir?" queried the mistress. "William Smith!" snorted the inspector. "Bill Smith", replied the teacher. "Then don't yer believe Mm. sir. 'H's the biirgest liar here! Yer may take my word for it. 'e done it." Housekeeper. HKR CORDIAL WISH. "I'm quite a near neighbor of yours now," said Mr. Bore. "I'm living just across th river." "Indeed." replied Miss Smart. "I hope you'll drop In snm? day." Ladies' Home Journal. o ITS COMPENSATION. "Money is nothing but trouble." "That may be. but it is the onlykind of trouble that its hard to borrow." NOT THAT KIND OF RACE. "Ernest." said the teacher of geography, "tell whit you know

"I wasn't th;re," explained Ernest hastily. "I went to the ball game." Indies' Hon e Journal.

IT PUZZLED HER. Along the M exican border soldiers are searching vehicles which pass close to crossings into Mexico. One evening a car full of young people was stopped anl the usual procedure of examining the bottom of the car was in ptocress when one young lady asked: "Wh;U are you looking for?" "Arms", the sergeant replied. "Why." she remarked innocently, "it's all legs down there." Indies' Home Journal. "OCT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES." A young mother was about to hear her small girl's prayers when a neighbor called and said she must see the mother right away. They had been talking at the front dor several minutes when a reproachful little voice came from the top of the stairway: "Mama, aren't you 'shamed to keep God waiting so long?" Ladies' Home Journal. o SORROW MISPLACED. A Jersey man of a benevolent turn of mind encountered a small boy in his neighborhood, who gave evidence of having emerged but lately from a severe battle. "I am sorry," said the man. "to see that you have a black eye. Sammy." AVhereupon Sammy retorted: "You po hone and be sorry for your own little boy he's got two!" Ladies' Homo Journal. NO WONDER Iff? WAS STUMPED. A red haired, freckle faced boy of 14 years old. weighted down with the responsibility of his first essay, walked into a city library the other day. He approached the reference librarian rather timidly, standing first on one foot, then on the other, and finally said: "Say, boss. I've jjotta write an essay on 'Woman. Where'll I begin?" Ladies' Home Journal. A SMV ROAD. Railroad president Another farmer is suing us on account of his cows. Lawyer Killed by our trains? No; he complains that our passengers are leaning out of the windows and milking them as the trains go by. Puck. o WM. NO DESERTER. The Subject: Sire. 1 grieve to announce that your abdication is demanded ! The Kaiser: Vat! Cud leaf Gott all alone? Puck.

Concerning Some Substitutes

By Cliri-tino Tcrhune Herri k of th Yigilantos.

BITS OF INFORMATION Since the outbreak of the war South African mine have yielded i loft, 00U, 000 worth of gold. When cookini: apples add a pinch of salt. This makes them tender and improves the flavor. When beating e-rg-; be careful to

a fact the secretarv of war , see that theie is no urease of ai.y message of refusal. The kind on the vv hisk or it v ill prev ent I the e-rss from frothing.

ground on which the proposal was rejected is that the! Watson an airman, has been department doesn't want to form any regiments of killed after a fli-iht over Melbourne, "special character." jThis is the first fatal fiisht accident But the British army administration, which thought ! ln uslrj'iaI Three thousand anu nfty-s:x shir?. the same way at r.rst. hanged its mind and allow ed j tntaj jrfr 1 .-.i i 1 ,t .T tons have pas-"--the organization of under-sized units. cJAnd the re- I ed through the Panama canal sin e suits hav e surpassed all expectations. The "bantams" the opening in August. , . , . , ,. . , T clean the inside of a watet

nave proved ineniseivrs nrave to a lauu. anu in sum nghtinc ability the equals of the bissest and strongest men in the army. They hae a certain advantage, too, which should not be disregarded. Because of their mall si they are poorer targets for bullets, and are Mnl to suffer feer wounds than the biz fellows.

"The reason I hate food economy is because the substitutes to'ivtn you are not good to eat!" I heard a woman say the other day. when the ever-present topic of food saving was under way. And as 1 heard her remark I wondered what sorts of fool she was familiar with if she condemned so unresc. vedly the many comparatively inexpensive articles of diet we can put on our tables now. I grant that we must be either millionaires or unpatriotic or both to live upon choke cuts of meat, rich desserts and unlimited h"t bread at this period. But that person must have a very restricted field of dietary' who does not nnd a variety even when thee arc- banished from her board. Let us- look at the ordina-y dinner bill-of-fare for a moment. Suppose we rein with soup, The expensive clear soups are taboo on mot tables, unless they are made like the French bcuillion and the bouilli or meat used to make the soup also ntil'ved and even then thev' are rr.ther beyond the purse o: the Inclination of most of us Put is their departure a real loss to our palate? Aie we not as w til fed with purees of different Kind, with the boundless number of vegetable soups, either clear or cream, with soups that have a fish or milk foundation as with th consomme of anv order?

Softie or any glass that i-- too srnail to inert the hand Into, put into the boitie a vmall quantity of tea leive, pour in about one-thin! of a tacupful of vinezar. shake well, err.pt', and rine with co'd vater. A perfrctlv Hear glass will result.

nf course the meat course is ti e crux of tht situation for most per-

jfuns. I srant that there are a fec I persons wb' decline any cuts of

meat save .ho-e, tnat are lancier enough to be toasted or broiled, bu. ev-n hfore the late stringency I

i fancv tnere were not many who could indu'.ce this preference Most : of us have bad to depend upon tbft !(. expensive portions and tried to make up I care in cookery and

f 'O'nnln . lOI tue irn-vi- in !"' and iuicej. If nutriment is any object it is well to recollect that

some of the pieces of meat richest in nourishing qualities come fron the less costly sections of the animal. As a matter of course all mrit is äear now, but I venture to believe that those v.hc think no meal is complete without it lack a certain kind of education in gastronomy. If meat substitutes are despised i' is usually because thos who have cooked them have not understood how to torn pound and season them. Fish of all .kirds should have an honored post on the table meat has evacuated; vegetables, especially in this, season, should be plentifully employed and i nml ined with a "little meat, to rive savoriness, or with cheese, or with egsis or served in salads. We have not be-gun to comprehc-nd whit can be done with vegetables or to learn how easily we ran become a -customed to a dish of these rr of cheese fondu or ihee.?

souffle or theeso puddin?. or eheese Mtr.iiv.'iihos r any one of half a I dozen preparations in which heee

is served r.s a rid' orm and a nutriment, instead of the inevitabiroast, boiled, stewed, broiled or fried animal food.

1 wish all of. us could lav xside our prejudices and make an esay ia this unfamiliar rield before wo utter a decisive judgment as to th shortooniin-s of such meat substitutes. When we arnv at the sweet there is another station at which we can orfer a plfü as to.'.he ecellenee of the !ess- costly kinds V.'ith ripe fruit either fush or stewed, in abundance, as it should be for months to come, the question e.f desesrts seems one of minor importance. Vet even here we can oMVr trifles. custards. "floats." Manc-manues. allies delicate puddinss and puff:- which are no whii inferior in taste to heavy. rich sweets, such as pies and trts ard are far more wrolerome. Their ool qualities o.ight to offset, even with critics, the fact that thy cost less than the su .ista uial e on pound1 deprecate. I incline to farcy that those who include :.ll inexpensive sweets along with meat Substitute in one sleeping condemn t If n latk experience of what can be don with good v ill. good appetit. -..od j-kill and simnle maienals. It wo,. d be inteie-tin: to k'ive the experiment u fair trial.

A Mother Made This Chart

She had two babies Margery and Joan. When Margery had to be weaned she put her on modified milk, then on one baby food after another. Margery's weight kept going down, and she was pulled through the weaning time by a nar

row margin. So when Joan had to be weaned, she put her t once on Nest'.e's Food and you can see by the chart what happened to Joan's weight. Weaning time was an easy time for Joan and for Joan's mother. We have made a large chart like this (a blank chart of course), ar.d you can have it for your baby's story, week by week, if you'll send the coupon below. Mesiles Fool (A CompIaU Milk Food-Not ft Milk Modifier

!. II , i ! M. 1 , , Iii M I i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

There's nothtnc (Hystericus in Nestle.' Food. It just the nearest thing to your own milk that doctors and scientists have been able to make. When your bsby can't have your own miik any longer, he must have milk in some form. Nestle's Food is pure milk from healthy cows, to which is added malt-wheaten biscuit -and cane sugar, scientifically b!ended so as to be just right for your baby. It carries to you, a clean, dry powder, packed in air-tight tins. To prepare, you simply add cold water and boil a minute. It it easy tor you. Itisabsolutelysafeforyourbaty.

rpi ttiay for tt JF St' Fo4, mryfk fo fw t f. t Spet'nU' Pk en tkt tart mmd m4 n,'(.'v.k.r ut iu.'a 9tr n l yew (tr, km amr

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