The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 17, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 August 1912 — Page 2
nil ir~ Advertising I n Talks gj I |c OOOOCXXXXXXXXD zTj fcns=ad r itht mi ——a bmmJ .Jimw SUMMER ADVERTISING PAYS Helps Merchants Dispose of Seasonable Goods and Keep Fresh Stock on His Shelves. August is a month in,which newspaper advertisements ase eagerly watched for and read very closely. Many people have deferred buying articles of wearing'apparel until the present times and they are watching the columns of the newspaper carefully for the merchants’ invitation to them to come to their store and inspect their stocks and prices. There are many others who purchase nearly all of their summer’s clothing and wearing apparel of all kinds during July from the simple fact that they know the modern, live and up-to-date merchant will during this month inaugurate special bargain sales of sea- ; eonable merchandise in order to iinake room for his fall and winter stock. August newspaper advertising is eagerly looked for and carefully read. The merchant who advertises reaps a rich reward and gets rid of summer stock at a time when there Is a demand for the merchandise. The merchant who advertises in August is not the man who fails to sell his seasonable merchandise and who is compelled -to» box it up and store.it away to be displayed on his shelves and counters next season, when styles have changed and there is little or no demand for the goods he carried over and which he is then forced to dispose of for a trifle. # Newspaper readers realize that the live merchant is the one who always has a nice, new, clean, fresh stock of goods to show customers each season during the year. The value that newspaper advertising is to any merchant depends on the kind of a newspaper he uses as' well as the circulation the newspaper has. A newspaper that is read by the most people not only in its home city but in the cities and towns surrounding, is» the best medium through ' which to reach the people. The paid circulation that a paper has is what the live merchant buys. lie wants to reach the people and he uses the paper that the people read- The live merchant knows that the people read the newspaper they have confidence in and respect for, and they also know that an advertisement in a newspaper of that character is Worth more thain it is in a newspaper that has scarcely any circulation in surrounding territory. People have confidence in the paper they read and no, one understands this better than the really live merchant. CANDID ADVERTISING NEEDED Deliberate Misstatement Regarding Goods Means Business Suicide In the End. Time was when even reputable merchants lacked full candof in their ad. vertising. It was argued—by people with ridiculous ideas of the aims' and purposes of advertising—that the people would only believe a small part of what an advertiser claimed, anyhow; hence it behooved him to exaggerate accordingly, so that after the reader’s deductions for exaggerations had been liberally made, a basis of truth would remain. As this was always a false argument it has been exploded—to stay exploded I Self-respecting, thinking people are ’he people who. read ads nowadays. And to deliberately misstate a fact in advertising now is simply a species of attempted business suicide. v A store which would, thus forfeit the confidence or respect of all honest people would soon find out that there were not enough dishonest people—or people who would condone dishonest advertising—ip this town to support the smallest store in it. You may read the ads with the satisfying knowledge that advertisers- realize that falsehood is business suicide—unfailingly! Candid advertising is necessary nowadays. g k « « X alga Some men try advertising as § the Indian tried feathers; he X M took one feather and slept on It § (gl all night; in the morning he rem marked: “White man say feathkj ers heap soft; white may big I fool.” w! ® _ • '!§! Advertising Creates Wants. One of the proper functions of advertising is the creation of new desires and new needs among the people. This makes for a higher standard of living. 7lt pushes civilization along. Twenty years ago no one felt any need for a snapshot camerh. Today it is almost as necessary as a guidebook to a tourist. If you have a commodity or even an idea of a commodity which would be a good thing for the people, you need not wait for them to ask for it. You can by advertising make them want it and then reap the rewards that come to the pioneer, and in the hardness world pioneering pays.— Curtis Publishing Company. Rotation In Office. “I believe in rotation in office,” said the dissatisfied citizen. "Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum. "But so frequently an impression exists that rotation merely means turning things upside down."—Washington Star. An Ancient Protest. “All Baba,” said the grand vizier in great excitement, “says he has discovered forty thieves.” "All Baba?” echoed the caliph. "What party’s candidate is he?” i— - - ...
ODD ADS IN GERMAN PAPER Those Matrimonially Inclined Frankly State Their Desires In Big Display Type. Recent arrests and prosecutions of German "cupids” in the form of ‘‘marriage brokers” for matrimonial frauds, have again called attention to the lucrative business on the continent of joining hearts, hands and pocketbooks and a dip into the latter by ’ the “cupid.” Few days go bjl daily papers do not chronicle arrest of some man or woman foil misrepresentation or obtaining money} by fraud in trying to bring two hearts and their worldly possessions together, or leading some one to believe that. The ’’marriage broker” is a fixed institution in Germany and Austria, in fact in most continental countries. There is the "square” kind and the kind that is not. The former usually will tell you that they have a “reputation” to uphold and the other kind generally have none to lose. It is the business of a broker or a “brokeress,” for the most successful “cupids” are women, to find two hearts that willing to attempt to beat in unisoiij under the magnetic Influence of tw<i pocketbooks united being larger and more imposing than each by itself and of being able to accomplish what one alone cannot. One has but to look into the adverUsing columns of one of the big dailies on Sunday to note that in marriage, as' in all other. things, the average German is decidedly “practb cal.”, It would be going too far to say, as some have said, that love cuts no figure in marriages in Gei\ many. There are many love marriages and the basis of such are often tnore lasting because of a sound financial foundation to start with. An American is impressed, however, with the idea that all things “practical,” 1 such as income, estate and of course birth and social standing, come first, and are the grounds in | which love is to sprout and grow ■ stronger. If he or she is inclined to close their eyes to that,, his or her parents are sure to open them. Under conditions that obtain on the continent it may be well that this isn’t lost sight of. American newspapers ha*Ve their matrimonial advertising columns also, but they are modest in size and reading as compared to many advertisements in the German papers. It is not unusual to see a display “ad” two or three columns wide with a heavy black border, as is used id America around death notices. The qualifications for life companions sometimes are a bit queer. In a recent issue of a newspaper a man who advertised himself frankly as being "physically defective" says: /*As only like and like can be enduringly happy, I desire a wife who has a similar physical affliction. Young woman who has one leg shorter than the other preferred. Artificial leg not excluded. Give age, description and a history of defect.” Another advertiser, a mechanic, twentynine years of age, wants “a wife with artificial leg and some means.” What strikes an American as a little too practical is the advertising of wanting to “marry into business.” Here is an advertisement out of one of the largest Berlin papers: “Widower, Israelite, 39, large, handsome, with son 14, seeks life companion with means. Would marry into some large undertaking as brewery, mill, grain or cattle business. Widows and guiltless divorcees not excluded.” Another “ad” in display type reads: “Cultured gentleman is offered opportunity to marry into lucrative Berlin machine factory.” . A priest advertises that he is ol fine appearance, is dissatisfied with his calling and would like to marry a woman of some means that would enable him to take some other vocation in life. A Jewess advertises: “I seek for my daughter, who is musical and domestic, a proper husband. She has a dowry of $10,000.” A chief clerk in a hotel who is about to’ start a/^ large wine restaurant would like to find a young woman with $6,000 to become his wife and business partner. A “relative,” evidently desirous of getting rid of a burden, wants to find a husband for a widow. A merchant, twenty-nine, of large elegant appearance, would like to “marry into a factory or large industrial. enterprise.” He doesn’t mind if it’s a widow that brings him the factory. In it large display “ad,” two col umns wide, a young Jewess asks:* “Are there still men whose circum stances permit them to follow the inclination of their hearts in the choosing of a wife?” She is twenty, wants a husband in “good circumstances,” and she will add $5,000 to the family fund. So run the advertisements which cover two pages of a large Sunday issue. After every two or three "ads" is the notice of some detective or detective bureau, with which Berlin la flooded, offering to look up the various matrimonial candidates, applicants, etc. It should not be assumed from thia that every German, or even a large percentage of Germans, marry through advertising. That the material and practical phase of marriage, which gives opportunity for fraud through marriage brokers, Is emphasized in continental marriages from working classes up to the highest society circles, none will dispute. Americans often express astonishment that, as a rule, such marriages are happy, both feeling that they are partners in things more material and substantial as well as in love. Clever. "Mrs. Newrltch has put a beautifully carved sundial in her Italian garden.” t f "Yes?” “And she has arranged to have I| electrically lighted at night so she can tell the time at all hours." Some call it sunshine, and others call it God’s love; anyhow, it is the light and heat and attraction that .make things move and grow and love and give birth to desire, hope and pleasure
DENVER’S DISASTROUS CLOUDBURST ~' ■ — _._ UrT- ■ ■ . . _ - • -r-iff.- * *** n.r.- l ll II l — " THE photograph shows part of the Denver Country club’s golf links, one of the best in the United States, transformed into a miniature Niagara, Falls by the cloudburst that made nearly 1,000 people homeless and caused a property damage of nearly five million dollars.
OLD HERMIT IS ILL
Last of Schooleys Found Near Death on Farm. Aged Man Is Last Member of an Old Family in New Jersey4-Has Lived Alone Since Death of His Brother. New Lisbon, Nl J. —In the tumblelown farmhouse where Asa Schooley, in aged farmer and a descendant of me of Burlington county’s oldest famlies, lived for years as a hermit amid lurroundings that seemed to indicate (irect poverty, a commissioner appointed by the court has unearthed a imall fortune in old coins, antique jlate and chinaware. That considerable money is hidden about the old lome is the belief of neighbors, who recall that -Schooley and his brother nade a good ytcome from their farm nd to their knowledge for years spent lot a cent outside the taxes. Asa Schooley was found nearly dead n a field on his farm recently, whexi liter days of suffering without mediral attendance he was dragging himlelf- toward the public highway to •eek aid. He is now a ward of the rounty in the asylum. at New Lisbon, ind the county court has ordered that his estate be converted into cash. Since his brother Joseph died many rears ago Asa Schooley has been the lole occupant of the homestead farm, ibout three miles from Burlington, on die Columbus road. The brother was Blissing for sevefal days before neighbors learned from Asa that he was lead. Then Asa Schooley tried to present the men from committing the body to a grave. “I fear the living more than the lead,” fie shouted as they lifted the jorpse from the bed where Joseph bad died. “He can do me no harm, but jthers who are living can and will.” Following his brother’s death Asa Schooley shut himself away from the world, and some glimpses of how this man, apparently driven mad by bitterless of mind, existed during the intervening years are being uncovered by Attorney Reginald Branch of Burlington, who was appointed by Judge Horner to settle up the estate. From a man of pleasing appearance
TO JAIL TO SHIELD FATHER Boy Thief Wouldn't Even Reveal Name to Escape Penalty on Theft Charge. Atlantic City, N. J.—Harry Stein, gixteen years old. of No. 807 Greenwood avenue, Jenkintown, Pa., was before Judge E. A. Higbee in the Juvenile court on the charge o* having stolen $7 from William Shayne of No. 1612 - Parrish street, Philadelphia. Shayne told how he had befriended the boy here three weeks ago, giving him food and shelter after finding him penniless and half-starved on the street, only to wake up one morning and find him missing and the money gone. The court was inclined toward leniency. “Write to your father, get $7, return It to Shayne, and I’ll let you go on parole,” Judge Higbee said. The boy refused to do this or even reveal his father’s name, so the judge sentenced him to six years in the Jamestown reformatory. The boy took the sentence stoically. Slain With Wheelbarrow. Milan, Italy.—A live man was bound to a wheelbarrow with a sailor’s scarf and belt and both were then hurled from the pier head into the sea at Savona. This new and barbarous form tis murder was discovered by a party 9f bathers who chanced to see the body and the barrow at the bottom of the sea in twenty feet of water. The police were promptly Informed, but so far they have found no clew to the identity either of the victim or of his murderers.
SOME OF CUPID’S BREAKS
Pastor Dalton of Kansas City, Mo, Discusses Developments of His School of Matrimony. Kansas City, Mo. —Money, comfort, Iresh air, good things to eat —such things are not sufficient to tempt marriageable American women away from the cities. That conclusion has been reached by the Rev. William J. Dalton, pastor
Schooley changed so that the youngsters who saw nim come to town once I a year to pay his taxes knew him as I “the wild map of Borneo.” The old farmhouse, built in colonial days, fell into decay under his neglect. Dust that has been years in collecting covers everything. Judging from appearances, Asa Schooley moved the furnishings following his brother’s death. He apparently slept for years on the same ’ feathered bed. When the ticking wore away, he did not change it for one of nearly a dozen mattresses in good condition found stored in an upper room. Nor did he change the bed coverings, although mahogany chests and bureaus were found to be packed full of fine bed linens, quilts and spreads. For illumination at night the old man went back to tallow dips, which he made for himself in an antique mold. He is believed by neighbors to have subsisted almost entirely upon honey from his big colony of bees, fruit and what poultry and the few vegetables he could' raise on his farm. How he managed to exist through severe winters they cannot understand. The bees alone of the creatures on the farm show signs of care and the hives apparently contain several hundred pounds of honey. Thus the old man’s illness was unknown to neighbors until a woman walking along the road heard sobs and groans and found , Schooley lying in a field. Schooley is said to have a niece residing in a nearby town and one or two distant relatives, Whom attorneys are trying to find. BEHEADING IS LONG AFFAIR Victim Is First Fed—Not Until He Voluntarily Bows His Head Does the Axe Fall. Paris. —An execution in Siam is an extraordinary business, according to a correspondent of the Chronique Medleale. The doomed man, awakened at dawn, is led in chains to the temple, where candles are lit around him. He is exhorted to think of nothing, to disassociate his mind from mundane affairs and is given the best meal of t h!s life, the menu being carefully
Heredity Shown At School
Deductions From the Study of the Records of Three Generations Published. Berlin. —Do childien inherit their mental gifts or shortcomings from parents or grandparents? The question is discussed in an article published in the German Umschau by Dr. W. Peters. With characteristic German thoroughness the author has visited most of the state primary schools in Germany and Austria with the object of gaining information on this potix by comparing the school reports of parents and grandparents, where availble, with those of the present day school child. He has complete sets of records of three generations, with the following results: When botn parents had good to average school records to their credit, 76 per cent, of their offspring produced the same, while the rest, 24 per cent., fell in various degrees below the average. When one parent had a good ana the other a poor record, 59 per cent, of their children furnished good reports and 41 per cent. Inferior ones. When both parents were distinctly below the average, only 38 per cent, of their progeny turned out well and 62 per cent, badly. The dependence of children on their parents in this respect seems, therefore, to be fairly well proved. Dr. Peters, however, also found that when parents were equal those children whose grandparents were above the
of the Annunciation Catholic church here after reading the letters of 6,542 persons who desire to marry and have written to him for help. Father Dalton attracted attention a few months ago through a “school of matrimony he established in connection with his church to encourage marriage among the young people of his parish. "The only women who express a willingness to become wives o< farm-
chosen according to the social statui of the criminal. There are two executioners. One -s h’dden in some brushwood, while the other, dressed in vivid red, Conducts the criminal to the place of sacrifice, bicding him be seated on banana leaves, "in order to be entirely separated from earth.” The condemned man is then put into position, awaiting the axe. Earth is put in his ears. For two hours or more nothing happens. Siamese law demands that the criminal shall bow hsi bead voluntarily to the axe. This he does finally from sheer exhaustion, and immediately headsman No. 2 rushes from his hiding place and does the rest. The executioners are then sprayed with holy water and otherwise purified from contact with the victim’s soul. WILD DEER DINES IN GARDEN Enjoys a Meal of Physician’s Lettuce, Then Dashes Back Into the Forest. Lenox, Mass. —While on the lawn at Halidon hall, in Stockbridge, Dr. William Gilman Thompson saw a wild deer stalk down the mountainside nearby, enter his garden, nibble at the lettuce for a few moments and make off to the forest again. All last sea son there were three or four deer about Halidon hall, and several times this month Dr. Thompson’s employee had to drive them off the estate. Dr. Thompson has forbidden any one to shoot the animals, although they have a right to do so under the law of this state. The physician said he wished the deer would keep out ol his garden. Halidon hall is about a mile and a half from Stockbridge Center. A part of the estate is a beautl ful mountain forest That two moose, supposed to have escaped from the Harry Payne Whitney game preserve on October mountain, are at large in the wilds of the town of Washington was proved by Fred Schultz, who says he saw them just west of his house. As be approached they ran into the woods. Dog Keeps Watch for Master. Philadelphia.—Thinning tnat Oswald Saeber, the young master, was still in the Northwest General hospital, Gypsy, a French poodle, kept constant vigil outside the Institution for fout weeks.
average were the best scholars, and vice versa. Generally speaking, the children's records followed those of the mother more closely than thpse of the father. Wherever the father, however, possessed distinctly better abilities than the mother the children without exception tended to favor the male parent. From this Dr. Peters concludes that the greater intellectual faculties exercise a stronger hereditary influence on the offspring than the lesser ones. A curious point lh the statistical tables prepared by Dr. Peters from his material is that for reading and writing the marks gained by children corresponded closely to those of the parents; for arithmetic, less so; for grammar, again less, and least of all for “Scripture.” DYING MAN IS MARRIED German, Suddenly Stricken, Sends for Girl—Ceremony Is Performed in Hospital. Berlin. —A pathetic marriage ceremony took place in a Budapest hospital. A German singer named Erdes, who was appearing in the Hungarian capital, was suddenly taken ill a few days ago. He telegraphed to his sweetheart in Frankfort to come to him. The girl started at once and arrived in Budapest. They were married immediately in the hospital ward, and Erdos died an hour after the ceremony.
ers are elderly women who find themselves alone in the world," Fathei Dalton said. “But the farmers who ask for wives are younger men and they do not marry such women. One man who wrote to me owns three big farms; another has 650 acres of fine farm land and a third farmer showed me that he had $75,000 in the bank. Can you tell me why it is that a woman will not give a proposition like that a minute’s consideration, but will choose Instead some struggling bank clerk in the city who lives from hand to moutht* ...- - - x.
JffIPNAIONAL SUNMStIOOI Lesson 4 I (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of EV nlnf . j Department, The Moody Bible I Chicago.) ’ I LESSON FOR AUG. 25. THE VISIT TO NAZARETH. LESSON TEXT—Luke 4:16-30. GOLDEN TEXT—“He came unto his own, and they that w ere his own received him not.”—John 1:1L Cannon Farrar aas said that this visit of Jesus to his home in Nazareth is “a most striking commentary upon” the words of John, which form our Golden Text. Those words are the epitome of this lesson in a very real sense. Tbe young prophet had been proclaimed by his counsin John I the Baptist as he who was to come, j He had performed his early Judean ; ministry, which includes the visit of i Nicodemus, and the meeting of the woman of Samaria. John had beep shut up in prison and Jesus was about entering upon that wonderful Galilean ministry. In this lesson we cap see him as- he , returns to his boyhood home, to those i old and most familiar scenes of his | youth. Day of Vengeance. "As his custom was” (v. 16) he en- ; tered the old familiar synagogue to | take part in th? worship, praise and i discussion, as had long been his cus- • tom in this his home town. Here it was he had learned of the law and the ' prophets, here he had heard the prophecies discussed, he~e he had undoubtedly participated In. the discussions in the days gone by, for after the is asked to conduct the reading of the second part of the i service, a selection from one of the ■ prophets, undoubtedly that portion for i the regular reading of the day. His ! method of reading was very significant. 1 Finding a portion from the prophecy ! of Isaiah, chapter 61, he reads that l portion as we now have it recorded, comprising verse one and in verse two to the first p inctuation mark, a comma. This, st.id he, is being fulfilled before your eyes, implying that the concluding portion, that which refers to “the day of vengeance of our God, Is yet to be fulfilled or performed. Just what Us exposition may have been Luke does not tell us. although he leads us to believe that he made a definite claim of being the Messiah —“this Scripture hath been fulfilled.” They wondered at his gracious words, but such an assumption from the tongue of this son of the village carpenter was more than a challenge; it sounded of ’olasphemy. It is one thing to listen to beautiful platitudes, but for one to assume authority such as this at once arouses antagonism. To make this still more plain, he makes a specific application. To paraphrase his words, he said, “doubtless you are saying, young man perform here in Nazareth some of those miracles you performed over in Capernaum. but I say you would not accept me even then, for no prophet is acceptable to his own countrymen.” Then he goes on to illustrate by an Incident from the wife of Elijah, also one from the life of Elisha. This was too much As they listened the tide of their wrath had been rising. The plainly implied truth of their need of that ministry which he alone could give and of tbelr leprous condition was too much and it broke all bounds. Rushing him forth from the city they took him to the brow of the precipice upon which the village was situated were for casting him headlong to his death. They did not, however, know who it was that had submitted thus far. His time was not yet. hence he manifested the truth of his calling and of ils miraculous power by passing through their midst and went on his way, leaving them to their chagrin, auger and amazement. Graphic Lesson Story. In teaching this lesson we can emphasize the need and the importance of pub'ic worship, the observance of a day set apart for that purpose and the public reading and exposition of God’s work. We can also lay stress upon Jesus’s knowledge and use of the Scriptures;- also his emphatic approva of inspired prophecy as applied to, and fulfilled in his own life. In teaching the young scholars these truths, the graphic lesson story will be a'l and probably more than can well be covered during the lesson hour. Fo‘" the older scholars, one question for discussion would be, why does the Son of God speak of or claim the "spirit of the Lord upon me?” Os course he was anointed after John’s baptism as an example to all his followers, but here we take It as meaning that the Spirit is upon him in a real manner for service and for power in service. He is to witness and to minister. He is to teach and to heal. He is to preach the Gospel to the poor and deliverance to those bound with the chains of ceremonialism and of eln He is to heal broken hearts and dlasaaed bodies, to set the captives fre? and heal the bruised ones. Verse 18 is a sad picture of the state of a msn without outside help. But Jesus cane into the world for this express purpose. John .8:1.2, 18; Matt. 1:21. ft has been pointed out that this arcint’p.g was five fold. (1) to proclaim good tidings to the poor, for the poor are always special objects of Gid’s i-pving care. (2) to proclaim releaas to the captives, those in the captivity of the evil one. (3) “recov-e-lng sight to the blind,” physically, but sii’.l uk*« spiritually. (4) to set st liberty them ’hat are bruised, 1. e., t y Satar,, ’hough he cannot bruise this t noinieu One; az>d (5) to proclaim the accepts!** ; oar of God, the time cf rodcm;ttton, the time of bts coming igain. “This prophecy means ma." “Come unto me," wa* Indeed a bold proclamaticr. Did they belter*®? Are you making such bold clsiMe for your Master and Lord? Some wfll reject, of course, hut iei us remymber that “God gtveth the increase," cure truly to witness. to aow the saed. I. Got. 3:6. . BOur La*illUjri - XXI T
s X > .j I i j7l That’s the kind —LibI by’s — There isn’t anI other sliced dried beef | like it Good? It’s the \ inside cut of the finest Br thinned Beef tie tasty g i with it terless. ireamed just try w I \ Always Insist tn Libby’s Don’t accept “a just as good. ” From relish to roast, from edniiment to conserve, the quality of Libby's 0 Ready-to-Serva Foods is always superior. And they don’t cost one whit more than the ordinary i Pat ap in sterilized glass or tin containers At Every Grocers Lbby, McNeill & Libby Chicago
Expect Big Sale of Red Ctosf Seals. The campaign for selling Red Cros» seals this year will be carried on in practically every state and territory tn the United States, and even ?n Port< Rico, the Canal Zone, Hawaii and Philippine islands. No less ti an 100.000 volunteer agents, including de partment, drug and other kAnds of stores, motion picture theaters, individuals, and others, will be engaged in the work. Before the sale »s completed, it is expected that at least 100,000,000 seals will have been printed and distributed, besides several million posters, display cards and other forms of advertising Ktera ture. Badly Frightened Fish. “It was never so known before,'* says Rankin Dunfre, a local angler, who wasn’t angling on the occasion in point. “I was crossing the bridge neat home swinging thy lantern, for the night was dark. I heard a great splash, got down on the bank with my lantern to see the cause, and lo and behold a 16-inch fish lay flounder ing in the weeds. The lantern must rave scared him out of the water — don’t you think?" —Philadelphia Reo ord. Sure of Himself. “Aren’t you afraid you may become a slave to the smoking habit?" “No. I can quit whenever I want to.” “How do you know that? Have yon ever tried it?” “No; but I’ve cured myself of the habit of voting for every candidate who is nominated by the political party to which I belong, and a man must have a strong will to do that.” Pa’s Rather Indefinite. “Pa, what is an anachronism?” “Oh, that’s something or other smart people are always finding in Shakespeare’s works. Now, run along and Play.” Why? “George, don’t you think, now that your salary has been raised, we can have an automobile?” “Oh, I suppose we can have one, If we wish, but why be so common?” Their Place. “Where are marital rods. in pickle kept?*’ “I should suggest in family jars.” The average man makes the mis take of overestimating his greatness.
z > A Triumph Os Cookery— Post Toasties Many delicious dishes have Been made from Indian Com by the skill i and ingenuity of the expert cook. But none of these creations excels Post Toast' ies in tempting the ‘palatei “Toasties” are a lux< ury that make a delightful hot - weather economy. The first package tells i its own story. ; “The Memory Lingers” Sold by Grocer*.
