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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1928-12-13, Page 10'Farm m Notes I of manure and fertilizers, states that fresh manure , is „Vetter suited for heavy soils while rotted manure is FINISHING BEEF CATTLE best f d 1 os or sae y oams. It is impossible to market the best POULTRY. BREEDING RECORDS and of beef- rrodticin cattle unless ' Y 4 t '1'1e 'live o et ck breeder knows the &yr fJ.;iv•f lrc prober typo of steer is given the 1 t t veryfar in his busr• - he i11 no go ON MTH LAUGHTER) lght kind of feed an dfinish. Many ness unless he,breeds well bred stock, In anti a_ther in 1 bleeding tario' feeders raise a Yew steers � .uclt stock, he There is a new game in town called' mil stlpplenient these by purchasing mustknow e- ti ly what he is doing. "lemons." When there is a !party I. few` others. Then there: are some If he wishes to correct some defect a young man` catches the prettiest vho concentrate upon fflnish, purchas, in individuals he selects'sires that are girl and squeezes 'her. That makes ng, stockers for this purpose. The liable to give him progeny that does the' other girls look sour. ;heap or common feeder, one that is not have the particular defects he is nferior in breed and typo, ais nearly trying. to avoid.,. Tho whole matter .An llnmodest girl is one who is ciWays a loser. Steers of good breed-! of breeding is on a very definite plane, aware that you are aware that she's ng and type should always he bought and there is 'now no groping in the aware of her legs, and does not care,: n preference to the.inferior. They dant, Farmers no longer believe that viii cost a few cents more, but they, the color of their barns influences a11eIt isn't difficult to teach the hea- vili make full use of their feed and color of their calves. (lthen to wear clothes. They don't see iroduce results. . The poultry man has of lato years any news photographs. Fattening cattle' thrive better run- been gradually applying the rules of sing loose in a pen than when tied breeding to his stock. Thin refers to I The slogan,: "No :metal can touch n stalls. Steers to be fed loose the breeder whose chief- concern is yon'," probably originated with the in- nust. be'dehorned'.. .eggs•: .,The fancier has,' of course, al- stalilnent houses, who are now getting • The advantage and process of de- ways been a seientific. breeder. The most of the contents of the pay enve- torning are ;fully discussed in Pham- `introduction of, Registration ,and Re-, lope direct. • flet No. 21 of the Department of Agri- culture at Ottawa.' The words aren't synonymous. r'Po- In deciding upon =feeds for steers M logua" IS' pork; "boloney" is bull. .t should be kept•in mind` that the suc- cord of Performance for 'Poultry has p tit the industry on a- very definite pedigree breeding footing. ati cess of the ration depends uppn its ' nes cannot be made to reproduce with any degree of certainty the desirable char- acteristicsrequi red unless essthere s a9ailabie very _accurate- information regarding the performance of the par- ents and their ancestors.. Complete history is necessary to in- telligent mating. ette for a penny. Naturally he ex - The poultryman who is anxious to pacts many puffs from the newspa-' commence pedigree breeding will get Pers. many helpful suggestions from Bul- letin 103' of the Dominion Department of -Agriculture, new series, entitled "Poultry Breeding Records," prepared by Mr.George. Robertson, and now available. for distribution. • USING SCALES ON COWS Cow -testing is a simple of find- ing out just what return each cow makes for the teed and labor expend- ed on her. It is a common-sense, logical' system, for every dairyman needs 'to know definitely, judging by actual weights, not by ordinary ex- ternal appearances, which are his best cows, and also what profit each one makes. The principle at the base of building up a good dairy herd must always be, make each cow in the herd pay a good Profit. The monthly yield of any cow can easily be calculated by weighing and recording the milk efrl at least three days per month, at intervals of ten days, as the 1st, llth and 21st, both morning and evening. Samples should be taken of. each of the six hilkings and kept in a numbered bottle, With suitable preservative, for testing once a month to learn the percentage of fat in the mill:. Each cow should be numbered and. have her own sample bottle. The total of ,the weightla on the three days wheu multiplied by ten gives very closely the yield of , milk for the month. The yield of fat can be found 'by multiplying the total weight of milk by the test and divid- ing by one hundred. Thus, if the six weights on the three days are 16 and 14, 15 and 14, the total 36, multiplied by ten, gives 800, which is the calcu- lated •yields of milk for the month. If 960 be multiplied by 3.5' (supposing that to be the test of the composite l six samples) the result divided by Treaty May Affect • For having the greatest pull of any - palatability, variety, digestibility, sac- is of its 'size we nominate the eulence,and nutritive quality. In 'con- safety razor. ' sideration of these points dry rough- - tges, succulent roughages, and graind, chine that hands out a lighted cigarThe, legume hays are the most lire portant in the .dry roughage. class: Feeds balanced with legume hays give good yesults.. Clever, alfalfa and ,Sweet clover hay are the most corn - on in Ontario. I Of the sUcculent onpages corn ensilage is the most atisfactoey. Corn. is the best pain °Cowed by barley. Oats are a batter main for 'growing- than for fattening. rho economy of or profite to be °b- abied from beef feeding depende upon amtnint o_f home-grown feeds e•giown, wlacli leaves only the high. - ado rich ,protein concentrates to be UTTERMAKING ON THE FARM There is still a great many fanners vho are •not within reach of .a well - alleged creamery, -and as a result ay make thelr own butter. This °suit° in a variable product that ends -to lower' Cie. -quality of the hole outptit. The. main detects in -ry butter are. bad flavor, staleness, cm many -shades of color, and unsuit, ble packages. To get the best results in faihn [airy work it is necessary la the first lace to haVe"good cows, liberally and woperly fed, anti their quarters clean ed should be about 80 per cent. a and kept cool. The churning tem- eeature • should be • such that the hiirnin.g will be completed- in from 5 tO 30 minides. Clean, pure water essential 'for the washing of the tter, the temperature of the water ing not more than three degrees lder or Wanner than the buttermilk. ull information on the speed of the arm washing and salting the but - r, and other necessary points are /end laRtilletin No. 57 of the De- rtnreet of Agriculture at Ottawa, Quito eften a package sells an cle, and butter Wile exception, A eat, clean, attractive package will ttract the consumer, and result in les. A clean and attractive dairy ,etsentiael. Excellent butter is ade on many farms, Ina the general nality of.this butter could be raised Atha exerchse of more care, which mild result in a greater consureption d greater returns for the farmer on butter marketed. ATER AND THE FARM WELL Residents in rural districts as a rule ave reason to ' congratulate them- ves that 'they have their own ells. Without any particular prod they think the Water from thole ells is pure. In the majority of cartes is, but it le better to be sure than rry. It the water has never been sited, It might to be, and the Do- nlon DepartMent• of 'Agriculture, ough its Division of Chemistry °f- a' a serviee Which is free. Instrue- Ms on collecting and shipping- will supplied on application to the Ex- rimental Feral. Ottawa. The waters of Maeda's lakes earns and springs are of the purest, e danger lies local sourcee of ntaminatiorl. The fernier vrlid es his wall beyond the pOssibility 11)68,1 centamination and puts down 'deep -drilled or hored ,well, lai•gely Yea, WS own problemY4' The eource of greatest danger le,the alloy, well, froin fiN. to thirty-five et doep, which imerely collects round water,' the ietkage from "the A.pplying all the manure- made On 0 farm at the right dine and in the easee 'yields per acre; and lowers enure sliould be' heeled. to the fields the sitow is nqt too deep disturbed oadeast; if -the snovr is' too deep put In email piles through the fields.. Handling in this "meaner is an ecom my in manure; labor and time. Ma- ure piled in the barnyard results in loss of plant food and hunms 'form - material, which will go into the - oil if the manure. is hiendled as sug- The chief losses in piled manure ound the hUildings.nre soluble nitro - en and,pottliii compounds. Organic atter, with its nitrogen, is aharde; troyed through fermentation, or heat - ng, as the action is, usually celled. It has been, found that manuee arge heaps or piles, in the course of February and IVIarch,, lost, chiefly through excessive heating, 60 per cent. af Its organic. matter'. and nearly 30 per cent. of its nitrogen, It has been. proved by Mach expert - ental work -tarried on by the. De- ,partnient of Agriculture at Ottawa that tmleSs there le Special reasori for ash* rotted manure the sooner - A young chap has invented a nia ere.the.three, classes of feeds to use. Nobody is ever pleased .with the weather and the neighbor's new house. The marriage ceremony needs one more question: Will' you love her when she's fat? MAKES NO DIFF It makes no diff if it is made of voile, georgette or thin pongee, For when it's finished and Blit on There's just as, little dress_to see. Accidents will happen. And that is why there are so many kinds of spi ads. "You lovely creature!"' the - sheik raved. "What would you do if I should steal justone Iittle kiss?" "I'd say- you were mighty "dumb " returned the world-weary slieba. In a small town a garage man hung out this sign: "Use Genuine Parts. No Substitutes Are as Good. Ask the Man With a Wooden Leg. He Knows." Did you -ever' notice that the less people know the more anxious they are to make 'it known. .A chicken fancier is a town man 'who buys eggs and chicken feed from the same grocer. The work of a large number of peo- ple is like the slow moving pictures. Life `would be a 'lot nicer if they'd only put those "Post No Bills signs on letter boxes. • onehundred is 30,1, which would be the calculated pounds of fat for• the month. - According" -to Circular No. 20, "Cow Testing", of the Department of Agri- culture' at Ottawa, it. is better for many reasons to weight the milk es,11i,- horning and evening. Profit in dairying depends upon each cow in the herd. It is not fair to charge the .lose from one or two poor cows against the profit from live or six good cows. Issued by .the Director of Publicity, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. Cheap Money Lord Beaverbrook in the London 'T. VriUS DANCE- , "Saving Subs" Test to be Made A Trotlitie That UsuAlta-aka Alt - ka Young Children St. Vitus dance is the niirne goner ally given to a disease described by !� medical men as chorea. This trouble usually attacks young children, though older people May be afflicted with it. Themost :common :symptoms`. are a twitching of the face' and. limbs. As the disease: progresses tho twitching tares the form of spasms, in which the jerking motion may be confined 'to the face or all the limbs may be affected. 'Frequently the patient is unable to hold anything 1n the hawks or walk steadily. ;In severe eases the speech Is often. affected. The disease is due to debility of -the nerves and. relief comes through an enriched blood suliply. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been most successful }n reaching this trouble 'through their specific action -on the blood; which it enriches and ,purifies. The following instance proves the: value of Dr. Williams!. Pink Pills in this trouble. Mrs. Thomas Bowen, Bath, Ont,, says:—"Dr. Williams' Pink Pillp have been in usein my family for. years and always with good results. T believe they saved the life of my 'only son, At ten years of age he. grew very nervous and the trouble developed into' St.' Vitus dance, His legs and. arms Would jerk and twitch, then his speech.- was affected,' and his condition was pitiable... Just then there 04111Q -to me a little book tell- ing of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I decided to give them to him, By the time two boxes were used there was an improvement in hiscondition and by the time six loxes more were taken all traces of the trouble had disappeared, and lie was well' and strong. .I have also given the 51110 to my growing girls, and,. I know of ; no better strengthening medicine. I may add' that the same applies to grown- ups as well." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by ',mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Southern Rhodesia Acting -Premier Doubtful .. of South 'Africa's : Pact with Germany Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia, Dee. 2.—A, determination to "buy British" was expressed by Acting Premier Hon. ,P, D. rlynn, treasurer in the Government of Southern Rhodesia, in a speech here yesterday. He declared the recently-negotiatedtrade treaty between the Union of South Africa. and Germany was giving Germany most favored nation treatment and was causing concern because under a Sunday Express (Ind.) : The .Chan- customs agreement between the Un- ceilor of the Exchequer shoui insist ion and Southern Rhodesia- goods en - at once on cheap money. Cheap! tering the Union' might enter Rhod- enone ymeans cheaper production and esia free of duty. If the position were. a cheaper seiling pride for our ex- that foreign goods could enter the ported goods. It therefpre means Union' on specially favorable terms, bigger sales aboard and more em- they would be free to enter Southern ployment at home. This boon to in Rhodesia under the same conditions. dustry and ,employment is within the gift of the Chancellor any day. Just as he has been a party to the policy of clear money ever since he came into office,- with consequences'`writ- ten in red ink in the unemployment figures, so he can be a party to a policy of cheap money and manu- facturing prosperity to -morrow. , Mr. Churchillhas only got to unturn a screw to flood the industrial areas with employment., Minard's L'inlinent for. Chapped Hands. It would be the business of the Gov ornment to find out whether the new treaty would affect Southern Rhode esia as regards British trade and whether it, would be prejudicial' to the, Rhodesia clause 5n- Southern Rhod- esia's constitution which the present Government intended to maintain, he declared. The Rhode a clause hereferred to stipulates that British goods are not to receive a lese. favorable treatment than the pods of any. other ;nation. New Jobs For Girls ane gets stable- manure while still FIRST RACE FOR. WOMEN JOCKEYS AT TANFORAN fresh into or on to the soil the bet- it eves the 'Llillsbcro Town Plato.: From loft: Jockey Donna Gown, fir.; Bulletin No. 02; available at the .::� Den it;; who ;sent, which covers the whole pubject presented' the trophies;, Lorena Trickey, 'Winner of the Publications Draftee. of the Depart- 1a lo, and Paris Williams, tv}10 •rode third. - Monkey Shines • Civiliir, et -id Naval, Board Will \little,,,, - Exiie'rifllenta. 'With New Boats Devices Washington. , Submarine rescue and escapotcsts will bo conducted' off New London and orf Key West dur- ing. the Winter months by the sub- rali 11 a S-4' and the new ilubmerging submarine rescue ship Defender,, which has been -built by tire.Dennen hewer & tante Company of Bridge- port, Conn., and assigned to the Con- trol Force al the fleet for exhaustive tests. Tiro S-4 since It was refloated off Provincetown has been equippedfor experiments with submarine safety devices and is now at submarine Ports- mouth Navy Yard. It will be 'avail- able not avail-able'not only for general escape and rescue experiments.' but foit`such spe- cial purposes as the board of civilian. experts and retired naval officers wish to utilize it in their surveyy of the entire field of submarine safety devices. , The Defender was recently launch- ed and has . undergone submergence tests satisfactorily to a depth of 137 feet:- Unique in many respects, it is equipped with devices which, it is be- •lieved ,represent .a marked:' advance in rescue operations. The vessel displaces 225 tons,. is 92 feet 7 inches long and has a beam of 11 feet 8 inches. It is equipped with a diving compartment from which rescue wont can be carried` out beneath the sur- face. , The S-4 will be towed by the ten- der Falcon from Portsmouth to New London, where the escape and rescue tests will be conducted until Jan. 5. The submarine will then be towed to 'Kew. West -by the tender Mallard for similar operations which will occupy until March L The 2.4 will then be returned to Portsmouth. .- "In general," the Navy Depart- ment- announced, "the tests in the vicinity of New London will consist of the ability of the Defender to em- ploy divers in simulating rescue from a submerged pontoon in smooth and rough .weather conditions, as wellies in locating and attaching pontoons to the S-4 submerged. The tests'in the vicinity of.Key West will. be made with escape appartns; rescue work and diving bells." IGEITNING i'j-l' Yitil 'fn14xable/6r HT. COUGHS FAMILY SIZE 75a. � ,..�.. 1, TaIAt SIZE 354 , i®;I,: C _...H f PER s Otr15 Children LoveSTH � P WINO'S Y Safe At"1astMari'as Critic r London Morning Past: Men have Singapore's 'Huge C Floatinggrown accustomed to see ' women g looking nice. They like to have Dock Tries Facilities of neat,, trim; pieaeant' maid -servants Suez Canal Y W employees, wife, daughters, friends.°- The iike'•the omen they take about, The first port of the new floating with them tobe well .dressed. 'Yet dock for the new British naval base they wear an air of some disdain at Singapore, which left England in when women talk "chiffons". They June and reached its destination, ac- are completely ingrain" of what cording to a brief cable dispatch, on means in taste, skill and good man. Oct. 12, had not been expected to ar- agement for a 'woman to be always rive until. Oct. 31.' It had reached -suitably and .becomingly dressedyet Port Said n Jul 29 and there waited they criticize sharply such mistake4 for the second part of the dock, which as the wrong 'shoes, hair not very arrived a fortnight later. The two yiell dressed, a frock -that does not parts then entered the Suez Canal, all look fresh. traffic being stopped. a, The passage of the whole dock l through the canal, where there was Naval Programs only fifteen feet to spare on each side London Daily Telegraph- (Cons.): and where the dock was so high out .America's program of capitalships of the water -as to be liable to catch will, when complete, give her the de - the windy was acbomplished. hi four finite superiority in large craft which days, The parts, each towed by four she already possesses in respectm of. Dutch tugs, then proceeded separate- in eparate destroyers, submarines,; aircraft, wild inthe second pert reaching Singapore naval personnel. These facts, which on ' Oct. 15. Into the entire doek, which is capable of holding the largest battleship, went 20,000 toes of steel with 8,500,000 rivets. The net tonnage of the dock is. 50,000; its cost, includ- ing transportation, $60,000,000.. Advices from Port Said ccnsider the transit of the dock the greatest feat ever accomplished by that waterway,, although usually ships pass through the caal in fifteen hoarse In 1870, the year after the canal was opened, the average time of passage was 48 hours, and thelargest ship accommo with the spirit of the Pact that we dated was one of 4,414 tons. Today have signed qr, in time, we go down ships of 27,000 tons pass through the a steep place altogether like. (ladarino canal. Last year 5,545 ships with a . swine and perish etc::ra:.y Premier total net -tonnage of 28,962,048 passed Stanley Baldwin. 9 THOUSANDS Or MOTHERS USE 11O OTHEH MEDICINE Baby's Own Tablets Are the Ideal Remedy for Babies and Young Children 'Canadian' mothers are noted for the care they give their little ones— the health of the baby is most jeal— ously guarded' and the mother- is always on the lookout for a remedy which' is ediolant and at the same time absolutely safe. 'Thousands of mothers have found such a remedy. 'in Baby's Own Tablets and many of them use nothing else for the ail- ments of their little ones. Among them is Mrs. Howard King, of Truro, N.S., who says :—"I can strongly re- commend Baby's Own Tablets to mothers -of young children.' as I know of nothing to equal them for little ones." . Baby's Own Tablets.; are sold by mediclne dealers or by mail at 25 cents 'a box ,from The. Dr. Williams. Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. A SIMIAN SEMAPHORE Many' monkeys,"perched on a wire, ladder attached to a dead tree form a sort of semaphore railway signal tower at the Milwaukee Zoo. on't Like Mt,1vies Man -Eating Tigers Are •Scared by Motion 'Pic- ture Carnera-Man San Francisco. -Man-eating tigers. of Siam have been subdued by Amer-. ican motion picture -cameramen and the death' toll from, the animals has decreased 95 .per cent, in the last three years, Dr. Douglas R. Collier, medical missionary, said when he ar- rived here from the Siamese jungles. Dr. Collier, who has spent the last seven years in the "land of; the ever - hungry tiger,'° returned on the liner President Taft to spend Thanksgiving Day with relatives here. "Three years ago there were 109 deaths a year in my district of 20 square miles due to taiae by tigeis," Dr. Collier said, "The natives believe man-eating tigers are 'imbued with some holy spirit And that anyone who kills them will be visited by evil, "Then the motion picture cani'era- men came into the jengle,and trapped some of tile beasts to photograph them. The animals immediately "be- canie fearful and went, into seclusion. There are' Only five persons killed by them a:year In my territory now;'. " Dr. Collier had to travel five days on horseback to the nearest railroad .when he started his journey here, Minard's Liniment for Asthma, Spurns. 'Bribe London "Bobby" ; is Com- mended, His Would -Be Corrupter Fined For offering a bribe to. a London "bobby'.' named Johnson, W. E. Mur - den was •fined .$125 with $25 costs at Bow Street Police - Court en Nov. 12. The prosecutor described the case as one of • great gravity "in these very censorious and -critical -days as far as the police are concerned.. And I think that the magistrate will agree that the constable involved is to $,e very mach commended for resisting the temptation which was undoubtedly thrown in his "way.". In passing sentence on the delin- quent elinquent til; magistrate, dryly obserlfed: "I should like tosay that I entirely concur in the observations which have. been made as to tie extreme propriety with .which Police Constable Johnson acted. He actedin a way in which one would expect a constable to act, and in which' I am quite sure nearly every constable, o;, the force would act. in similar circumstances." G - These,circumstnnces as brought out in the evidence were as follows: The defendant blocked traffic in Coventry Street by selling'cheap jewelry from a motor cat Johnson threatened to re- port hint foi: cobstructien and was walking away when'Murden followed him and said: "Won't thit square it?" and slipped two half-crowns ($1) into his hand. Thereupon Johnson said he would further report him for trying to "bribe justice." The defence was that the money was merely a•tip which was quite customary in such cases. - are well known to our naval experts, and, doubtless, to the Navy Office at Washington also, make it difficult to understand. how Ole President cat' suppose that Great Britain is seek- ing eeking tocompete' with, and even to run. aheadof, 'America in naval 'arm- •aments. • Check C.Ids with Minard's Liniment. The alternlitive before us in Europe is very simple: we either keep faith through with transit receipts amount- ing to $42,000,000. In 1870 the num- ber of vessels was 486 with a tonnage of 486,600, while the receipts amount- ed to $5,58090. Do Speed Limits , Insure Safety ? "It is yet to be proved that restric- tions on ,speed limit have inpured safety," says an editorial in the De- cember issue of "Successful Farming." "The smaller the town, the slower must autos run on its streets, with seldom a car or pedestrian to bo hurt by a passing ar. The larger the city, the greater the demand that cars speed up and get out of the way, with pedestrians safeguarded:. by ,.traffic signals. A jay -walker is a menace in this age of swift travel. "Instead of speed limits there should be, drivers' licenses issued only to those who can prove their skill at the, wheel, and licenses should 'be revoked for careless driving at any speed, any- where, anytime. Put the responsibil- ity Where it belongs, 'on the driver and car, not upon some speed law. More attention needs to be given to brakes_ ,and headlights. They are the key- stone of safety." Minard's Liniment for Grippe. Ignorance, plus willingness to learn, plus ability to learn, is a far better basis on which to establish appropri- ate and satisfactory human relation- ships than- is knowing a lot of things, even if all of them are so.—President Harvey N. Davis of Stevens Institute of Technology. For aching"'feet, foe chilblains and bunions, rub with terve "aid's. ' A sure relief. ISSUE,. Noa 5Q—'2:8,:. WHEN IIS' TORONTO Eat and Sleep at SCHOLES HOTEL Cafeteria and Short Order Service YONGE' ST., Opposite Eaton's -., Hotel Rate's: 41 Per Day and lip. Classified Advortiscme^i3 STOQt5ING1 70.8111 I 1'121: POUND UP.•rR•LN 4) TY - 81! uor r,ln,i.las free, Stocking ,L . \,,..4, 11.11. 1. Orillla. 0111. Ala dd 3- l} i list of "Wanted and Full lnfor:aattua. en, , :a'a en Request, THE ZEAMSA1E 00.. Wept. W..' 575 Snnlr. 01., et"'aV'a, inn:, Their teeth are of a tough- 4" nese which malccstbcm hold their keen cutting edge un. ,c der every usage. SIMONDS CANADA CAW CO, LTD. - MONTRSAL VANCOUVER, ST. JOHN, 5.0 • TORONTO C Cold Relieved or Mosley nck Everywhere men, women and children are finding instant relief from Coughs, and Colds of all.ldnds by taking Bodr- Ieys Mixture. 1eEveiywhere druggists arc selling "Buckley's" under positive guar- antee. The first dose proves how dif- ferent 1t is—and there are 40 doses In a 76 -cent bottle 1 Never be without this proven conquerorof colds. W. R. Buckley, Limited,' 142 Mutual St., Toronto 8 RucKLaygole Actsdupiius pl a flesh a leealp prove It ,'•`.urs 41: 75c and 'Inc Ciitici.1.ra ti ''1' a is niers thaai a fine sunny • Ill. seumtlro,. alm7 ptla and not eelyy eleanoce hat heals h-rltnll,ms fid ranteess 1ho eurmJ indica of Ile pores Tor 50 yearn the standard of eaee/lanoa AVOID WINTER ILLS AND DISCOMFORTS SPEND THE WIpNTtER IN THE p�`�WA1U I CLIMATE H Ni The Coess' Elaara4 ' Rich in"legend and history. ;Lux- Splendid through trainr,}rvice urious hotcils, apartments and from Detroit, Cleveland,: Indian- cottages. The P, n-vrmerrcan, all- apolis, Ltacinnati an4 Louisville • Pullman train, leaves Cincinnati daily of The Pleolimijre and The -< 10:20 A. M. daily and arrives at +' South/rrnc%. Diverseree fte includes . • Gulf Coast points next morning. Gull' Coast one way.. Same cost. €77r0aas M: ieataas Cali imam Every, day is "liolidsy"-=every The most fascinating way to go night is "carnival" in New'Otieans. "abroad at home" is tofollow the All sports. Historic'shrines. Ex- sun to the Pacific Coast. The Pmt cellent- hole a World famous eAtnerjca,t connects with finest restaurants.".Reached in less than ` western trains et New Orleans. 24 hours from •Cincinnati on ?be Liberal stop -overs allowed..No •Purr-vianePrcar. extra fares. PREP. INPORMATION AND SLAVIC$' p: Power, ]. P..tf , L. ee N. R.R., ' e' - 00'28.254 201 Transportation Buis., Detroit, Michigan. Send me illustrated literature about:11 iatosida; .0 Gulf Cerst; 0 New Orleans; d California, Also quote winter fares. OE Mail This' Coupon.. 1101 Name ., ,Address LOUIS V ILLE & NASHVILLE R o .-Ro .sassaasaarmasscassesamrssanamersonnassasravanannaarramassasassrasmas,