The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 January 1928 — Page 3
1 est Dairy Herd Every Two Months
Owners May Obtain Many Benefits of Association Work at Lower Cost (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Dairymen owning small herds may obtain many of the benefits of association testing at a lower cost per cow than would be obtained by the regular dairy herd improvement association method. This fact is brought out in Circular 1-0 entitled “Testing Cows for Production Every Other Month,” by Dr. J. C. McDowell, dairy husbandman of the United States Department of Agriculture. As the title suggests, the method involves testing every other month, or six times a year, instead of every month or 12 times a year, as in the regular association. In other respects the two methods are alike. Figures Used in Study. The figures used in the study on which the circular is based, were those from a herd ot 70 cows at the Minnesota agricultural experiment station, and included the day-to-day milking records for the year. With "these figures as a basis, the feed, production and income records were calculated for six test days, and the errors were computed by comparison with the actual figures for the -year. The average error due to testing one day in two monttis was 3.8 per cent as compared with an average error of 2.91 per cent in monthly tests. In 24 cases out of 70 the error was 5 per cent or more, as compared with 16 cases out of 70 in the monthly f method. The greatest error was 12.5 per cent, as against 8.3 per cent on the monthly basis. . Where Herds Are Small. The circular concludes: “It is not expected that the method of testing every other month will take the place of the regular dairy herd improvement association method, but that it may find its wn place in those districts where the dairy herds are small.” The circular may be obtained by writing to the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington. D. C. , Rats Annually Destroy Big Amount of Property Rats destroy $200,000,000 worth of property in the United States every year. In ofrder to cut down this waste, it is necessary to build out these destructive iftiimals. New build ings are constructed with continuous concrete foundations two feet below the ground level. In order to prevent the pests from gnawing, the founda tions are extended one foot above the ground. When posts and piers are nsed for supports, they are made high enough to raise the building at,least 18 Inches above the earth, if the building is not more than 30 feet wide. The height is increased six inches for each additional ten feet tn width. This prac tice discourages the rats from using the place below buildings for shelter When the space between the piers is walled up, windows or screened openings as large as practicable are provided to admit light from at least
GARDENER MUST PREPARE EARLY TO HAVE SPRING VEGETABLES
First Thing Is to Secure the Necessary Amount of Seed. • Those who plan to have a garden next spring should begin to think of it now. First, a decision must be made as to whether a garden is wanted sufficiently to give it attention. Next, the garden plans need to be made, for when the spring weather comes, the gardener who is prepared to plant is the one who will get the early vegetables “To make plans for the garden, look first to the seed supply,” says Robert Schmidt, vegetable specialist for the department of horticulture at the North Carolina Stale college. ‘‘Seedsmen are now getting out their spring seed catalogues, which may be had for t"he asking. Place an order so thafc sufficient seeds of the right varieties will be on hand when they are needed for planting. If any seeds are left over from last year, they should be tested for germination to see. if they are still viable. This can be done by placing a few seeds between moist blotting paper or cloths and keeping them in a warm place for a few days. “For an early garden pick out a light, sandy piece of ground. A 'clay Give Extra Protection t to 4 Bees During Winter Bees should get extra protection during the winter be applied as. soon as frost destroys the food supply. It is well to make sure that the bees have plenty of. honey to carry them until the next sea f son. /. Excepting where winters are severe no particularly elaborate precautions need be taken, writes C. W. Rapp of Arkansas in Capper’s Farmer. lii an extra super, set on top of the stores, a sack full of leaves or straw should be placed. €>re should be tajken to leave plenty or room for the bees to pass from comb to comb from above. Reducing’the size of the front en trance also will tend to make the hive ■warmer. * 4 Protection for the hive prober may be obtained by fencing around all but the front of the hive with lows chicken wire. The space between the hive and the wire should be filled with leaves, straw or hay. Protection from the ’« desirable, and tihe hive F i g sortie »" ■ /way. 1 V i
three sides. The space between the floor joists is completely closed at the wall with two-inch plank wide enough to lap over the .lower edge o/ the sill. The boxed space thus built is filled with concrete. Concrete floors are used whenever possible. These are laid directly upon well drained, well packed soil, or upon a base. of well packed cinders, gravel or stone. * All necessary openings are protected with %-inch mesh, 12-gaUge wire screen. Doors are provided with spring hinges to insure their automatic closing. Mounting Com Shelters on Automobile Trucks Custom corn-sheller owners are mounting their shelters on automobile trucks. The sheller is operated by a power take-off arrangement from the transmission of the truck. With this combination of equipment, the sheller owner Increases his radius of operation by ten or fifteen miles, if he so desires. Traveling from job to job at a rate of eight or ten miles per hour, the wait between shelling jobs when a ndmber of farmers wish to shell at the same time is greatly reduced, a great advantage when the price of corn takes a sudden jump or seems in danger of declining. The outfit is easily set at the crib and requires much less space than a tractor or steam engine and a 40 or 50-foot belt. The days of work of custom shellers can thus be increased materially each year, as they can shell before and after harvest and again following silo filling. /. Creosote Is Practical Preservative for Wood Since many farmers do not have an implement shed, and will continue to get along without one, it may be- well to suggest other methods of protecting the machinery. On many implements the tongue, neckyoke and eveners are the only wooden parts. These parts may be taken off and stored in the barn or in other sheltered places; of they may be protected by paint. Paint protects wood only by keeping moisture and insects out, so it is necessary that the wood be kept thoroughly covered with paint. Coal tar creosote is the most practical wood preservative. It must penetrate the pores of the wood to protect IL Ordinary paint cannot be used over creosote, however. Way of Building FrostProof Wall of Masonry One of the newer and probably best ways of building a frost-proof masonry wall is a double wall with a continuous air space. Forms are now available for building two reinforced concrete walls each four inches thick and with a two-inch air space between. This requires a little more labor but no more material than a single eightinch wall, and is very effective in keeping cold from striking through. Also concrete blocks are available with a continuous air space, and these can by careful work be laid" up into a wall which also has very good insulating properties.
loam soil will be best for summer and fall. It is not to be supposed that good vegetables cun be raised on a poor soil. Well-rotted stable manure is the best fertilizer for a vegetable garden. If the soil is in good condition and contains plenty of humus, high-grade commercial fertilizers may be substituted for the manure. Get the manure or fertilizer at once; be prepared.” • ' a j Agricultural Squibs Concrete should be placed in the forms 1 as soon as possible after it has been mixed. By the use of septic tank, a farmer can have the benefits of modern plumbing in his home. A small farm smokehouse can be built of concrete staves which" are used in silo construction. • • • Put away all machinery not in use, i after oiling and greasing to prevent ! rust. Make note of all needed repairs. • • • Portland cement plaster, applied on metal lath, will prevent fire from penetrating the walls of a farmhouse. • • • Many farmers build small ■ feeding floors for their hogs, with a view to adding to them as the herd increases • • * Much as the wheat } is mixed—hard soft, bald and often considerable rye. Pure varieties command higher prices at the elevator. ♦ • • Aside from plenty ami efficient use of the machine Itself is the matter of its proper care. These requirements are neither expensive nor complicated. • • • Farm management surveys Indicate that cutting the cost of farm machinery is one of the important factors in efficient farm management. It is getting the most out of the machine at the lest expense. • • •. Portland cement is 1 sold in sacks containing one cubic foot. By counting the number of sacks in his store- l room, the farmer can tell exactly I what volume of cement h< has on I hand 1
Cowboys Round Up Big Fortune
Owed $1,000,000 Three Years Ago, Now Own Four Skyscrapers. Chicago.—Three years ago two excowboys arrived in Chicago from the open spaces of South Dakota. In the pocket of one were papers showing that they had traded what was left of their Mule Head ranch for a’ building in Chicago’s loop. In the pock ets of the- other were documents showing that the partners were in debt for something like $1,000,900. Today, after only three years of business in the city, these two ex-ranchers own four Chicago skyscrapers, the smallest 16 floors high, the tallest 42. ‘‘Financial wizardy? Not at all,” they say.- “Just an example of the opportunities ip Chicago.” Adolph Stamer, born and reared in 'South Dakota, until ten years ago never knew what it was to be hemmed in by . roads, but always traveled directly across the open plains. Ernest A. Jackson is the son of a former governor 6t lowa. A liking for outdoor life prompted him to leave his Lome in Des Moines, lowa," for cow punching. That presently threw him into contact with young Stain Together they rode the range, aeq <1 a ranch, increased their herds -and holdings only to see them go slipping in the post-war depression. Then they quit to try Chicago—where obstacles gradually yielded to their Western grit. Stamer’s father was one of those who entered Dakota shortly after Custer’s last fight. With his bride he had been traveling overland from Hastings, Neb., to Wyoming, looking for a likely spot in which to settle. They neared the Sioux reservation at about the time it was to be opened to settlers. Changing their plans they entered the reservation and built a homestead on the plains, somewhere between the Missouri river and the Black hills. Among the Indians. Here Adolph Stamer was born and grew up, 45 miles from the nearest' town. A squaw man about ten miles distant was the nearest neighbor. Three more boys arrived in the family. When they were old enough for schooling, the father bought lumber and erected the first school house in the Sioux reservation. During this period the family lived under the protection of the soldiers at Fort Randall, many miles away. And once 5 - Stamer recalled recently, sitting in his Chicago offices —the soldiers came galloping up to the little homestead to carry the family to the safety of the fort because the Indians had once more gone upon the warpath. At last, law came into the reservation, counties were laid out, the eider Stamer found himself elected to the office of sheriff. “We were countyseat folks > then,” said the son reminiscently. “Regular folks.” But town life palled upon him and he soon went back -to punching cows, a job at which he had become efficient on his father’s ranch. Gradually he acquired a few cows of his own, took care of them, added more and started a ranch of his own. About this time Ernest Jackson arrived in the Sioux country. Hearing that Stamer was making a success in a small way, Jackson, having a little money of his own, suggested that they go double on the ranch. Thus began the partnership that still continues. Had 110,000 Acres of Land. Their combined efforts prospered. They began to expand their holdings. Money was being made in the cattle business and the two partners bought another ranch. At one time their lands comprised 110,000 acres and included seven town sites. Twenty-five thousand head of cattle nearing their brands roamed the plains. Then after the war Caine the depression. As rapidly as they had piled up their money they began to lose it. “Our bookkeeper was using three bottles of red ink to every one of black,” said Stamer. “I got so sick of seeing those red marks that 1 never wanted to go near the office. We had to do something and do it quickly. And we realized that that something would have to be outside of the cattle business. “So we began looking around. We had shipped cattle .Chicago, to Minneapolis and St. .Paul, to Des Moines, St. Louis and Kansas City. We had ridden on those, cattle trains and had seen those cities. And we realized that the place in which to make money was in a rapidly growing city. The question we wanted answered was which of those cities was growing the fastest, because that was the city we would head for. “We began writing for figures that would give us the information. We found that people f.OOO miles south
MONKEYS IN CANAL ZONE ARE PEEVED AT AIRPLANES
Show Deep Resentment When Rival Noise-Maker Appears, Says Scientist. New York.—The howling monkeys of the Canal zone cherish deep resentment against airplanes. It is time they have ever encountered a serious rival in the production of noise, Dr. Frank Chapman of the American Museum of Natural History,, declared recently in reporting the activities of the station for the study of wild life at Barro Colorado island in Gatun lake. “If a coat of arms is ever devised for Barro Colorado,” said Doctor Chap man, “it would show several howling monkeys shouting furiously at an air plane.” k. This tropical laboratory offers unique opportunities for the study of ’mats under urdisturbed the only place with
THISYIACCBE JOURNAL
and 1,500 miles west, northwest and north were traveling into Chicago. We found that railroads running out of Des Moines into Chicago a few years ago were handling two or three pullmans a day, but now were sending whole trains of them We found that where one train was running between Chicago and the Northwest a few years ago, a half dozen or more were running now and those in several sections. “Then we received figure indicating that Chicago was growing at the rate of 125,1)00 a year. Chicago was the key city of the Mississippi valley. No city that we knew of seemed to have the manufacturing possibilities of Chicago or was its equal as an agricultural market. Trade in Ranch. “So we opened negotiations to trade our Mule Head ranch for some Chicago property. That took some time, and in the meantime we were losing money so fast that it made us dizzy. Finally, we traded what was left of the place for the Transportation building at Dearborn and Harrison streets. And then we cut loose from our old life and started for Chicago.” The two ex-ranchers applied the principle in handling their new property that they bad used in running their ranch. “You can't run a ranch without being there and we figured that you couldn’t run a city building without being on the Job,” said Stamer. “And we were there every day, from early in the morning until late at night." The principles of ranch management as applied to operating a Chicago skyscraper proved so successful that it was not long before the exranchers began looking around for a second building. "Out on the ranch 1 heard a lot about a building known as the Montgomery Ward tower,” said Stamer “People who had been to Chicago nsed to tell us it was the tallest building in the world; And when you went up in that tower, if you didn’t get dizzy looking around, you could see all of Chicago and a whole lot farther. I guess it was just natural for us to feel similar about that building and have a hankering to have something to say about it. So when we heard that it was for sale we made a try for it and got it” Success Continues. More successful financing and management followed. Then the partners opened negotiations with the Woolworth company in New\York, suggesting a Woolworth building in Chicago. The terms were agreed upon, the financial end attended tb by the two former cow punchers and the building started upward at Monroe street and Wabash avenue. stories had been built when Carson,' Ririe, Scott & Co., whose retail store adjoins the new structure, decided they needed more space for their store. They spoke, to Stamer and Jackson on the subject, offering to lease the space for fifty years if they could get it. After further negotiations with the Woolworths, workmen began tearing down the three floors that had been built for a different kind of steel frame was required for the department store. The building went up to the sixteen stories originally planned for it The next venture was the construction of what is now known as the Bankers’ building at Clark arid Ad-
Calles’ Son a Military Student in U. S. Commandant David B. MacCready of the Peekskill Military academy (left), and Alfredo E. Calles, son of the President of Mexico, who is a stucjeni of the school.
in the jurisdiction of the United States where the continental flora and fauna characteristic of the American con tinent tn the tropics can be studied within the jurisdiction of she United States. The island, which is really a head land of the mainland cut off by the backing up of waters reserved for the locks of the canal, is teeming with birds and animals of the most diverse forms. “On a single morning,’ said Doctor Chapman, “I observed passing before my door any number of coati (a small animal about the size of a raccoon), a tittle flock of peccaries, a procession of howling monkeys and the duke and duchess of York.” As a result of his observations on the island. Doctor Chapman has reached the conclusion that the turkey buzzard’s tr ot ring instinct'for local rm tine t«> • -iqmenally
| “Culture Battles” to . $ $ Take Place of Sports * * New Haven, Conn.—A Har- * * vard proposal for a “battle of * * culture" between student teams * * which should compete in schol- * * arship instead of athletics has * been received at Yale, it Is * J learned. The winners would re * * ceive individual gold medals * * and money with which to buy X * books for the university library ♦ * The plan, which has for its * * object the stimulation of inter * * est in studies as an offset to * * the emphasis now placed on un- * * dergraduate athletics is said to * J have been proposed to the Har- * * vard student council by Dean * J Alfred (1 Hanford. * * Teams of ten men would be * * selected by the respective uni * * versifies to represent them tn a * * series of competitive examina * * tions. The team members would * * take identical examinations * * which would cover each depart- * ment of study in*the two insti- * turions. * ams street, directly across from the Federal building and half a block from tlie financial center of the city, The two westerners carried through a financing scheme and the building, 42 stories high, was constructed at a cost of $8,000,000. Pineapple Fiber Now Used in Papermaking Washington.—Man’s increasing need for paper long since led him from the ragbag to the forests. The forests have furnished him wood pulp paper for books, for newsprint, and for the cheaper writing materials, but he has had to go back to the ragbag for the stronger stuff needed for ledgers, bonds and currency. For bag or wrapping paper old rope and waste tow were also utilized, but rag and rope stock fall short, and man has bad to fare forth anew in search of materials for durable paper. A promising material, reported from the tropical jungle, is caroa, a member of the pineapple family. Natives ot Brazil from time Immemorial have gone into the wilds to cut the long narrow leaves. They beat them between stones to separate the fiber and after retting and washing, weave the fiber into twine for nets, fishing lines and ropes. Caroa. it has been found, can be made into paper. In the laboratory, caroa was evolved from rope into paper. The rope was cut into inch lengths, then thrashed, cooked in a solution of caustic soda, bleached and beaten, until no lumps or knots werejeft. The stock was poured into a, mold, where the sheet of pulp was formed immediately on wire. The sheet was then pressed and rolled and air dried. Laboratory tests were followed by others in the experimental paper mill of the bureau of standards. The product was found to have a bursting strength the same qs that specified for the best papers made from rag or rope. Old Auto Used by Taft Is in Harvard Museum Cambridge, Mass. —An automobile of horseless carriage days, which once chuff-chuffed along Washington boulevard with President William Howard Taft as a passenger, now reposes in the mechanical museum at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The machine, a seven-passenger White steamer built in 1909, was presented the department of mechanical engineering at the institute by Henry Parker Merriam of Brooklyn, N. Y., an alumnus.
keen sense of smell as much as to the sense of sight. The famous ornithologist is particularly interested in the study of the habits of the tropical relative of the Baltimore oriole. Careful observation of a colony in the treetops revealed the fact that the females build the long pendulous nests quite .unas>sisted and vie with each other for the favors of the polygamous males. Only seven of the latter were counted in a colony of 42 females. , Scrambled Eggs Bowling Green, Ohio.—One thousand eggs scrambled along the tracks of the Toledo, Bowling Green and Southern Interurban line near Portage marked'the spot where a traction car came into unexpected contact with a truck. You Can’t Be Right If you have a reputation for understatement never call a woman plump. She’ll know what you mean and you’ll only have a row on your hands.— barm and Fireside
N«w York Short of Equestrian Statues A Gothamite who has been on tour : with a number of summer visitors finds New York to be exceedingly short on equestrian statues. Having ; dwelt for many years in Washington, ! where the horse plays such a conspic- • nous part in memorials, he has noted the death of bronze chargers in the home town. Evidently the sculptors who designed the statues that adorn ; New York’s parks and streets were ! not as horse-minded as their fellows at the capital. Some humorist once remarked that every one who owned : horse had a statue erected to his memory in Washington. The equesi trian statues in Manhattan are few and far between. There Is one of Washington tn Union square, one of General Sherman at Fifth avenue and Fifty-ninth street, and two on Riverside drive. The drive statues commemorate Gen. Franz Sigel and Joan of Arc.—Philadelphia Ledger. California SUNSHINE RAISINS. Eat them regularly. Give them to the children. Build up their bodies and yours. All grocers.—Adv. Simply Had to Wear a Number Ten Shoe The kind lady noticed an old man, whose right leg was gone, standing on a street corner with a perplexed look on his face. “My #oor man,” she said, “are you lost?” ♦ “No ma’am,”; he replied. “I’m looking fer a feller that got his left leg shot off in the Battle of Bull Run.” “What is his name?"' “I don’t know that," was the reply, “but he wears * number ten shoe.” “For heaven’s sake, if you don’t ! know who be is, how do you know he wears a number ten shoe?” “I ain’t sure he does, but it standi t’ reason thet if he -don’t, one or t’other os ns is goin’ to havje trouble with his bunions. Lady, I’m looking for a right-legged feller t’ go partners with on a new pair of shoes."—New York World. Men and Homemade Bread It is frequently said men “run their homes. How about homemade bread, then, asks Ed Howe, who doesn’t believe they a do. “I scarcely know a man who does not want homemade bread,” he adds, “and cannot get it; the bakers have persuaded the women that bakery bread is better, as barbers persuaded them about bobbed *hair. And look at the clothes the men milliners have persuaded the women to wear. . . . “Well, look at them. They are more comfortable and sanl--1 tary than men’s wear. Women don’t run around in warm weather wearing 1 enough woolen goods to cook a goose.— Capper’s Weekly.Not According to Hoyle While telling a long story of falling out of a boat in the middle of the lake and his struggles in the water, Jenkins stopped abruptly. * "And how did you finally get out?” asked a listener. “Well,” the narrator replied, “after I had come up the second time and was preparing to go down for the ' third and last time, I happened to ■■ think all my past hadn’t risen before me like a dream, as it was supposed to do, and so I gave up the whole business and swam ashore.”
To Cure a Cold in one Day Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. The Safe and Proven Remedy. Look for signature of E. W. Grove on the box. 30c.—Adv. Room for Doubt Mandy was applying for divorce, and Zeke, alarmed at the prospect of losing his meal ticket, was contesting the suit “Isn’t it true,” Zeke’s lawyer asked in cross-examination, “that your husband is a deacon in the church and is generally regarded, as a pious man?” “He’s .a deacon of de church, sho’ ’nuff." admitted the aggrieved wife, “but since he’s been ’rested three times already for crap-shootin’ an’ bootleggin’, an’ has been ketched repeated while runnin”eroun’ wid funnylookin’ yaller girls, Ah, has cdnsidduble doubts erbout his piosity.” Eagle Ends Long Flight The eagle found recently at Klzil Youri. on the southern shores of Asia Minor, after a flight from Riga, has been returned to Riga. The bird bore on one of its legs a ring bearing a notice in Russian saying that it had been released in the Russian city during the Zoological congress six years ago Eat SUNSHINE RAISINS. Feed them to the children. They are rich in Iron and create real energy. All grocers.—Adv. Taking No Chances Doctor—Sambo, I can think of but one thing that will cure you, and that is an electric bath. Sambo—Naw, suh, doctah, 1 yo' ain’t takin’ to dis here nigger. I had a frein’ what took one of them things down in Sing Sing and it drowned < Miner’s Painting Accepted For the first time in many years a coal miner has had a picture accepted for exhibition by the Doncaster Art society of Doncaster, England. He is Robert Holloway of Rainworth, a colliery village. Holloway has made painting a hobby since he was a baby.
tWhy Bald So Young? Mana will help You To prevent loss of hair. Dandruff, usually the cause of premature baldness, may be easily removed by regular shampoos with Cuticura Soap, preceded by touches of Cuticura Ointment. This treatment keeps the scalp clean and healthy and promotes hair growth. Z Soap Sc, Ointment 25 and He. Talcum 25e Sold ereirwhere. Sample each free. AJdreee: '•Cnticar* LahoretotiM, »» Mml" MT Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c.
.st* | v-Jf g \ wer» yloorj. IBU Remodel with OAK floors Make every room like new at alight expense. Oak Floors are permanent, beautiful, easyto keep dean. Write for complete free literature. OAK FLOORING BUREAU ’ UM BuUders’ Building CHICAGO more Gas Sourness, Dizziness Heaijburn or Distress after eating or drinking Not a laxative but a tested sure relief for digestive disorders of the stomach and bowels. Perfectly harmless and pleasant to take. * Normalizes Digestion and Sweeten* the Breath (\\ f IHDIGSSTKM Bell-an s Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans FOR INDIGESTION 25<t AND 75t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE For Wounds and Sores Try HANFORD’S 8 Balsam of Myrrh AO dealer* ar* aatkorixcd to refold year Boaiy far th* firat battie if nat suited. Coughs and Colds are not only annoying, but dangerous. If not attended to at once they may develop into serious ailment Boschee’s Syrau is soothing and healing in such case® and has been used for sixty-one 30c and 90c bottles. Buy it at your store. G. G. Green, Inc., N. J. ter Kina 3 Pains. Powerful, Penetrating. ■■■ * ' * A Family Man and Bea£M| f To relieve Coughs, Colds, * Pain in Stomach and Bowel * Also for Burns, Scalds, * Bruises, Cuts, Boils, Felons, J Feet and Chilblains. To relieve Pain in the Face, J Inflammatory Rheumatism and iMBH * Sold by dealers everywhere. F and guaranteed since 1871 by J The Geo. I. Rundle Co., Piqua, irheumatisM For 35 Years TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS 1 HAVE GIVEN RELIEF AU Druggist*. Two Sizes. 50c and SI.OO, I Tnisler Remedy Co. Cincinnati, O. HOXSIE’S GROUP REMEDY THE LIFE-SAVER OF CHILDREN No opium, no nausea. 50 cents at druggiyta, Or KELLS CO., NEWBURGH, N. X. POULTRY FARMS IN CO-OPERATIVE colony now ready for occupancy, stocked with number of laying hens, pigeons, ducks, desired Bi? money makers. Easy terms. Lakemont Poultry Farms. Avon Park, Fla. KWIK FOR BOILS NOT A SALVE Stops them instantly. Rid yourself from these’ painful, agonizing outbreaks. Only one treatment necessary. $1.25. KWIK REMEDY CO. 14124 Archdale - - Detroit, Mich. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandru ff-S tops Hair Falling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hail 60c. and SI.OO at Druggrists. Hlsrox Chem. Wks. Patchogue. N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO— IdeaI for nse in connection with Parker’s Hair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and flnffy. 50 cents by mail or at druggists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y. ■a a ap■■ HTfl Booklet free. Highest references 11 ■ ILRI I V Best results. Promptness asrfl I r HI I ■! snred. WATBOS X COl.ifaL-1 I n I hall I Vlawyw, 7M Mk St, WviMncloa. D.C. None live so easily, so pleasantly, as those who live by faith.—Matthew Henry. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy For every stomach and Intestinal ill. v This good old-sash-Viff loned herb home remedy for constipation. stomach ills and otner deraugex meats of the system so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 53-1927.
