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The Brussels Post, 1926-3-10, Page 6WEDNESDAY, MA CH 10th, 1920 THE BRUSSELS POST SOY BEANS IN ONTARIO NEW LF,GISIBle CROP GROWN IN LAKE COUNTIES. Velno as illeal,,011 Cake and Silage and Sonic Points boat ettifilculties told Advantages. •, (Pontributed by Ontario _Peet/lament of nariculture. Toronto.) Profitable live stack farming de - wilds in part on economical feed production. The soybean has proven to be a very useful crop in the lake counties, as a source or hay, silage and grain feed. The chlei value of the soy bean in Ontario will be as a bay crop. Feed- ing trials have demoestrated that well made soy bean hay has a feed- ing value that is slightly less than good alfalfa. Ia seasons of probable fe...d shortage the soy bean can be used as an emergency hay crop to greater , advantage than any other plant used. for the purpose. Dairy cattle, sheep and beef cattle do well on the hay, eating it up clean with the exception of the coaree parts of the stalk. • Soy bean meal as a stock food has a value comparable to linseed meal or cotton seed meal. It is fully as rich la digestible, crude protein as lingeed meal and even higher in this Property than cotton seed meal. For dairy cows soy bean meal can be used instead of either linseed or cot- ton seed meals, where the concen- trate is not required in excess of two pounds per day. Soy bean meal makes a good pro- tein rich addition in fattening beef cattle and sheep, having for this pur- pose a value equal to linseed meal. Soy bean meal can be used in grow- ing young pigs, but it should not be fed In excess: If fed in conjunction with tankage or skim milk to Pigs that have free access to a mineral mixture it gives best results. Soft pork may result from excessive soy bean feeding, Soy bean meal should be freshly ground. Old meal be- comes rancid due to the high oil content. It is good practice to mix other grains with the soy beans at time of grinding. Dry, starchy grains like corn, oats or barley will take up the excess oil, thereby aid- ing in the grinding process and keep- ing qualities of the meal. le Soy Bean Oil Cake. About 300 pounds of oil may be pressed out of a ton of soy beans The hard, dry cake that is left after pressing Is ground up leaving a pro- duct kuown as soy bean oil meal or oil cake. As a feed for dairy cows this mill product has a value equal to the best grades of linseed meal. As a feed for Swine, soy bean meal fur- nishes one of the best protein rich concentrates available. One hundred pounds of soy bean oil meal replaced 83 pounds of tankage and 22 pounds or corn, in feeding experiments. From this its high value as 8, pig feed San be appreciated. Soy Beans for Silage. • Soy beans in eombinatioa with corn in the proportion of one ton to three tons of green corn makes an excellent silage. Ensiled alone the soy bean does not make a very palat- able silage, and should therefore al- -ways be mixed with corn or other starchy plant, as sorghum, sunflower, or clover. harvesting Soy Beans. The soy bean is a crop compara- tively new to Ontario. It has its peculiarities and is not the easiest crop to cure as hay. Late seeded and late ripening, it Is ready to har- vest from August 10th no. Weather conditions in late August mid Sep- tember are not as a rule favorable to good hay making. The nights are cooler, days shorter and moisture more abundant than in July, when the clovers are harvested, For Hay. Good hay curing weather "- the first requisite far good soy bean hay. The pods should be partially filled, and the leaves tight, to make the best colored, nutritious and palat- able hay. A hay that is green in color and has a sweet and pleasant aroma and is free from mould can only be made during favorable wea- ther. The cutting should be done not later than Attgust 15th regard- less of the stage of plant develop- ment. Every day after August 15th leads the haymaker nearer to the Production ot mouldy and undesir- able hay. The soy bean crop for hay should be handled in such a way as to save all the leaf possible and give a bright green hay. The best ma- chine for this work is the sweep rake reaper, it having the advantage or delivering the bean stalks into email piles which will cure 'without further labor. The ordinary mower may be tised for cutting the crop and the side -delivery rake to roll the bean stalks into windrows, where they can cure after being put up into very small cocks. All handling while cur- ing retest be done while the leaves are still green or damp. The grain binder has been used to harvest the crop for hay with good success when the weather was favorable. In damp 'weather the bundles will mould if not opened and the centres exposed to the air and sem Soy beans will shed considerable rah if put up in cooler while still a little green, Cur- ing in the swath and the use of the hay tedder 15 hot to be recommended because of the great loss of leaves and poor color prociteed. After mak- ing, it ift best before drawing In to barn or stack to turn the cocks over and expose to the sun hen a few hours. Threshing Soy Beans. The best machine for threshing is the regitlar pea and bean thresher. 'The ordinary grain thresher can he need guecessfully providing the cylinder speed is reduced to 400 or 500 revehrtions per minute; and all concaves and some of the cYlintlar teeth removed if the beans are dry and brittle, A torn shredder Ilas been used for bean threshing sue - easefully. After threeheng the seed ehould be stored in ehallow bine and ebovelled over frequently lentil all iutples moistare has been removed, dare, In storage is neceseary or betenpfiy beans will res0lt.-1, Steve's - Sou, O. A. 00111age, Otreds.k. BACK IN ENGLAND WIT Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, who, after an absence of eight years, has returned to England at the age of 71 to take part in the campaign to extend the franchise so that English women may vote at twenty-one in- stead of waiting until they are thirty. Here Are 39 Reasons Out of 39 Conservative "Dry" Rid- ings Only Three Had Larger Tory Mat -gin Than the O. T. A. Major- ity -Political Circles Believe Pre. mier to Be Worried Over Wet Issue (Toronto Star) Premier Ferguson's usually ur- bane smile has been noticeably wan- I ing since the opening of the present session of the legislature. Since the Conservative caucus early this week it has been in almost total ec- lipse, cbrelng oat of retirement for- mally .onle for tlie premier's recep- tion yesterday. Poiticeelecles of all. stripes, Tory Liberal, Teeltor, Progressive, wet ar.d dry, belne the premier to be ser- iously we: oyer the future of his party, vee:eli is split on the liquor question. What success would the Conserva- tive party have going to the country flatly behind the government sale of liquor? The list of 39 Conservative dry ridings below shows how easny In a great many cases the Tory mire- s orities might be engulfed by the dry' h vote in such a case. They are 29 t reasons for the worry of the prem. a ler and the wets who would domin- e ate his party. Majority for Conservative. lit THE VICI OF INDUSTRY AWARDED TO WORKERS FOR CONSPICL_IGUS BRAVERY. . 1Plerolo Titles of How Men Sisk Lives for tho Sake of 0' '"-The Greater Love -One Ai,'' e tether Three Make Attempt at len.eue. Henry Dobinson was employed at the explosive works of Curtis Se Harvey, Ltd., near Cliffe, in Kent, England. One May morning, in 1911, Just after Dobinson left the ultro-glyce- rine filtering house, the air was rent by a shattering report, and what a moment before had been the scene of well -ordered workshops and yards be- came a raging inferno. Dobinson had been hurled to tho ground. As he rose he saw a sight that might well have made the brav- est man quail and flee for his life. Within a few yards of him ran the gun -cotton track worked on the endless chain principle. It had coins to a standstill and had caught flre, and tongues of flame were dancing down it. Gun -cotton might cause an explosion that would wipe out of existence any person near the track. Dobinson was about to flee for Iris life when he heard a cry. The cry came from a man beneath the track. Without an instant's hesitation Dob- inson went down underneath the track to attempt to rescue a co- worker, in face of the most appalling danger. The man beneath the track was held down by a plank. For five min- utes Dobinson toiled at the plank until he managed to pull it off the injured man, By this time help was at band. Six months later Dobinson duly received the V.C. of Industry from the hands of the King. The engineer to the Tilehurst, Pangbourne, and District Water Com- pany arrived one morning at ttle works, and, accompanied by Edward Aitken, a foreman, went to inspect a pair of pumps situate about midway down a well shaft eiglety feet in depth. .. Just below the pumps was a stag- ing consisting of a ten -inch plank running across the shaft. As the engineer was crossing it the plank snapped hi two, and he fell thirty- four feet on to an old staging. As he fell he managed to grasp an iron bar. As long as he could hold on to this he was safe, but it was obvious that in his exhausted and injured state he could not hold on Lor long. Aitken at once proceeded to the engineer's assistance. To get to the ineured man he had to make his way down an old iron ladder covered with slithering zeud and with several rungs missing. This ladder ended about eight feet above the old staging, to reach which Aitken had to crawl down the sheer ides of the shaft his only foot or and hold being odd old bolts. A lip meant a terrible death for him; ut he reached the' staging in safety, nd in a few seconds stood by the agineer. He was ,just 1 time. The engi- eer's strength was exhausted. Aitken telped him on to a ledge, where he as safe for the moment. Aitken hen made his way up to the top of he shaft, where he quickly got a escuing party, and in less than half n hour the engineer was safely ended at the top of the shaft. The records of the Edward Medal ontain no greater tragedy than the tory of how three men peelsned in gallant attempt to save the lives their comrades. On a warm summer day in August, 917, salvage operations were being arried out on the steamship Great ity, a grain boat that had been amagsed by a German torpedo. The eater in the hold was being pumped rom the ship when a stevedore on eck noted that some pieces of wood 'ere drifting towards the pumps. In pite of the fact that the workers ad been expressly warned against oing down into the hold because of he poisonous fumes, he went down e ladder to take out the pieces of ood. His action was well intentioned, ut it led quickly to a terrible trag- dy. lie reached the bottom of the dder, stooped down, and picked the eces of wood out of the water. Then e suddenly collapsed and fell into e water and sank. A man named Anderson same on eck lust as his mate disappeared, d, instantly guessing what had aPPened, went to his help. Anderson reached the water la fety, made one desperate effort to scue his unconscious mate, when 3 also was overcome by the poison- s fumes and sank in three feet of ater, Two men named Tierney and ale had witnessed the collapse of Anderson. They at once fetched a rope, and Gale, looping one end of It round his Waist, went down to the holcl li.opTei.erney held the other end of tie Gale perished even quicker than his two mates. He had barely reach- ed the last rung of the ladder w,hen, with a cry, he threw tip his arms and fell insensible into the water, the rope slipped over hie head as he did ece And then Tierney, without a mo- ment's hesitation, went down to the hold to meet what he must have known meant certain death. So ended this heroic tale of how three men lost their own lives in a heroic effort to Save the life of an- other, The V.C. of Industry was awarded to them in due couree and beetowed on their nearest relatives, The Edward Medal is also bestow- ed cen workere In the Dominions, Constituency 0.T.Amajority w Prince Etward 5,083 19 t South Perth 2,76046 t 1. South Essex 2,374 60 a Dufferin 4,770 223 1 East Peterboro ...... 2,604 229 South Grey 3,886 312 : North Middlesex .... 3,438 256 a East Northumberland . ',686 356 o North Victoria 2,859 North Huron 4,644 North Perth 1,099 South Huron 3,790 South Victoria 2,817 Centre Simeoe 2,043 North Lanark 2,587 Dundas 3,454 West Wellington 3,073 Lennox 2,957 South Norfolk 1,388 Haldimancl 2,834 Halton 2,928 Addington 1,286 South Oxford 4,385 Centre Huron 3,591 North York 5,501 West Poterboro 942 Frontenac 1,402 Leeds 1,892 North Lanark 1,084 East Simcoe 3,437 East Durham 1,641 East Elgin 3,961 West Simcoe 3,473 Peel 3,981 West Elgin 8,627 Carleton 1,323 West Lambton ...... 2,004 North Hastings e,122 Grenv2le 2„296 358 1 398 c 410 c 437 d 526 589 d .531 n 581 576 681 642 th 641 lv 716 b 717 766 la 811 Pi 811 904. th 927 d 968 1an 983 1,498 sa 1,034 -T7 1,050 , n- 1,580 eeatl 1,369 G 1,709 1,704 2,119 2,643 20.76 Riches From the Sky. Mining operations uow in progrese at Coon Butte, Arizona, have as their object the reeovery of what is prob- ably the biggest meteor tho. from the skies. This meteor is be- lieved to be buried under Coon Suite, and an enormous mass of meteoric Iran has been loe.ated. Samples of the meteor have al- ready been eaemined and have yield- ed some smell diamonds, and, in addition, erne ounce of platinum to every five tons. This is about three times as meth platinum as is usually recovered trona the ores ecnitaining the metal. It is estimated that the hurled me- teor1s abont the eke of a minor planet, and weighs about 1,000,000,- 000 tons, 00 this bade, asauming that the yield et platinern ie main - Mined, 'the meteor contales around 525,000,000,000 worth ot this pre- cious metal. Been if platinum bee eornee as chette as gold, the meteor would still yield over $4,000,000,000 to the syndleate undertaking the mining operatierre London's Traffie. Thirteen years ago 125,000 tote of traffic passed by the "Elephant and Castle," Leedom eevry year. To day the amount has eveollen to 155,000 tons, Traffic at Hyde Park Corner has grOWn from 00,000 tons 10 1912 to 140,000 tons; at 'Prafalgar Square trete 85,000 to 127,000; and at Pie- eedilly Climes frim 92,000 to 117,000, World'e Eighth Richest Man eel; A04,l1,10' .14 7 ,e ' ' ----eerteeee.m.ae Maharajah of Baroda, who cele splendor, with rich and poor taking brated last week the golden jubilee I part. The maharajah; well known in of his reign. The ceremonies are England, is a Very modern poten- said to have been marked by great tate. BRUCE COUNTY ed down for repairs aud alterations. lime plant at Teestvatea. is cies- Walter Buck by, Port Albert, had he left hand badly mangled at the beeves Hepner sawmill. Nearly all the municipal reeves in Grime Country are attending Lite Gond Roads Association Convention at Toronto, last week. Thos E. and Mrs, Pollock, Ripley, 01, t arm, announce the engagenieut thei eldeet daughter, Gert rude to James Robert, son ;John S. and the late Mrs. Walden, of Kin- cercline, One., the marriage to take plane in March, A quiet, but interesting wedding took place ab the home of Albert Mc- Pherson, 2ni1, Huron,' on Wednesday, February 1710, when his sistet, Miss Charlotte 114. itloPheison, was united in marriage to Clarence B. HooeY, 410, Huron, Rev, A. D. Camp- bell official i ng. Donald McFarlan, an old resident es? Kinloss Township, East of Kinlough, died on Tuesday last, following au ill- ness of several weeke. Mr. McRae lan, whn wieein his 861h year, is amyl ved by his aged pantile.in life and a grown up family, He was Inc many years a member of Orange. Lodge No, 1139, which had chaege of the funeral. Alfred Foetney, a Midway young man, yeas rue sated by Constable Schmidt, at Mildmay, The arrest: was made following a communication received from tbe chief of police, ae Kitchener, who held a wee rant: foe the apprehenion of Fortney, who ie alleged to have given a cheque for $5 tr. a photograherin that °ley in pay- ment of an account. The Boundaey Commission of the United Church 01Huron has, clecided to close the church at Sheppardton, on the Lake Shore Road. A three - appointment charge consisting 01' Nile, Port Albert and Leelmen church- es will be formed, and those who wor- shipped at Shepparclton will attend 0.1 0111 of theee places. The change took place on March 31st, Will Hein), of near Zion, Ashfield Twp., wus very seriouely injured while at work in leeriest, Gardner'', bush. Be and Sam Gibson were cut- ting wood, and the first tree they cut doe n in falling swung about in in such a way as to pit Helm a severe.) blow on the shoulder and neck. Be suffered e. bloken collet' hone, and his neck and face were badly bruised and 001. An explepion occurred at the home of Farnk Jenkins, Clinton. about eight o'clock last Sunday morning, when the water front blew out of lithe kit. cher) range. It was fortunate that it happened when there was no one in the kitchen, as the stove was blown almost to pieces, lide, teakettle, eta, coal, ashes end water flew e.11 over the kitchen, George Lippert, a Greenock famine had a narrow escape from death by by deownieg, when, as he wart ems - sing the Teeswater river ivieh a team of horses and a load of wood, the ice broke and the whole outfit sank out of sight. After struggling in the wet- er for several minutes, Lippett was returned with much difficulty by Louis T. Chenkle, who happened along • at, 'the tinre. Ohe of ehe horses wee droweect having disappeared undet. the ice, The accident ooeurred at the ar of the Lippe t 1 r two and a half miles West of Chepstowe where the water is very deep. One of Southampton's oldest res- idents passed away in the perrionof Malcom McIver, at theage of 76 years Ile was born at Uiglewis. Scotland, and (ratite to Canada when he was 14 years of age and settled with his ('1140 it. Bruce 'Pownship, In 1871, he moved to Southamptoe where he re- mained usttil 040 leath, Be WAR 11111, •IOCI ill 1876, hot his wife predeceaeecl hirn in 1914, He wee very prominein, in the fishing industry until 1907 when he became lighthouse keeper of the Chan try lel and lighthouse, w ich position be held mail' be retired ten years later.i=si 8 A quiet wedding WWI solemnized at the Presbyterian unwise, Fecetee, no Wedneed y afteenoon, li'ebruist.y 24th, by 'Rev J. A ffeole when MIOP leen 11 Pfirff. daughter of Jobe H. nald Mrs. Plait of Honsall, Ont.. wee Unit, eti le marriage to John E,NriI, sen nf _MbeitE and Mrs. Neil, Of USborrie Totvioship. Here and Tliere Ike Mills, driving Brewster's fam- ous Russian wolf hounds, won the Strongheart Trophy in the 96 -mile Dog Derby race. at the Banff Win- ter Carnival and soon after left to enter the American Dog Derby races which were held at Ashton, Idaho. Five thousand settlers are in sight for Canada this year under the Land Settlement scheme, according to Major John Barnett, Chairman of the Soldier Settlement Board at Winnipeg. "The majority will come from Great Britain and will be pre- pared to take root'in Canadian sool," Major Barlett said. Word has been received at Cana- dian Pacific headquarters of the death of James McCown, Superin- tendent Engineer of British Colum- bia coast services. Mr. McGown was born in 1863 and entered the service of the Canadian. Pacific steamships in 1891 as fourth engineer. He brought over the Canadian Pacific steamer "Princess Marguerite" from Glasgow to Vancouver last year. An indication that big fish are migrating from the water i around Florida and Mexico to New Zealand is forecast in a special cable received recently. Zane Grey, the famous American writer, who is in New Zea- land at presenh caught the world's record swordfish recently.' The mon- ster weights six hundred and eighty- five pounds and is large in propor- tion. Stricken sick suddenly, Mrs. Charles Burns, wife of the president of the Carling Brewing and Malting Company, London, Ont., telephoned to Mrs. Leon, her sister-in-law, wife of the vice-president of the company, who was in Montreal with her hus- band. Mr. and Mrs. Leon left Mont- real in a special Canadian Pacific train, which made the run to Toronto in six hours and forty-three minutes, just in time to make the connection with the regular train which leaves Toronto for London at 6.45 a.m. Tom, Dick, Jerry and Harry, four born fighters from the fighting county of Yorkshire, England, ar- rived in Montreal recently on their way to W. W. Graves, United States, Supreme Court justice at Jefferson City, Mo. They are not going to the judge to be sentenced for in- fractions of the peace, but simply because His Honor, being from and in Missouri, wants to be shown whether it is true, as alleged, that the best Indian game cocks cem only be got from Yorkshire. Dogs, pigeons, canaries, rabbits, pedigree fowl, wild birds, gold fish, linnets, ducks, monkeys, enviers bet- ter known -as guinea pigs, and parrots were among the livestoek carried from Europe and the British Isles tO this country and the United States by the foreign department of the Dominion Express Company dur- ing 1925, according to the yearly statement recently issued by the company. In the statement was in- cluded a total of about 1,000 raorrel pigeons, Under the auspices of the St. Jean Baptiste Society, Montreal branch, St special train has been chartered from Ow 'Canadian Pacific Railway to same* :lariat of Mare ii. iillfldra Wante ereeeineme--, We pay Highest Cash Price for Cream. 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat extra paid for.all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction Guaranteed russeis Creamery Phone 22 eleeee ' tetiY.'Le members of the society to Chicago to take part in the Eucharistic Con- gress to be held in that city in June. During congress*week will be cele.. brated St. Jean Baptiste Day, on June 23, under the auspices of the Patriotic Association of French- Canadians of Illinois, which will con- clude with a banquet at which 1,60.01 guests will be present. PERTH COUNTY Stratford receive 4 a car of Scranton coal just 11 clays atter the strike end- , ed. 10 new members have been initiated into Dile Atwood I. 0. 0. F. Lodge. ; Mitchel Junior Hockey team won ; the Junior championship in the North- i ern League. Logan Twp. has 522.14 in uncollect. able taxes and other taxes not collect -1 ed total 5206 22, Paekview *United church, Stratford, will hi...ye elaborate opening services from March 14 to 18t0. S, S. No. 2, Blum, svou the silver cup foe the greatese improvemen es to to school geounds in 1925. Rev. 3, M. Lisiowel, was el- . ected Mocleratoe of ebe Stratford ; Presbytery foe the next six months. ; Cornelius K. lio,gurty, 0 former resident of Stratford, died at his home I in Brooklyn, N. Y., in his 81st vent.. ! Miss. Helen Moyer, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. IL D. Moyer, of Mitchell, has entered Wellesley Hospital, Tor- , onto, as a tame, Rev. '1'. V. Howard, of Listowel, has been appointed Sunday SC11001 kind Anglican Young Associations' super- intendent Inc the Deanery of Perth, Hugh A. Davideon, of the 1114 hp, in! Morilington, has disposed of his 100. • acre farm to James Hawthorne, of Newton, who gets possession Murch, The 2-yeav-old son of Frank ar.d 7 es .• a leg when he rolled off a imbrgru ebraell with which he was playing on the floor. 0.1 March 1710, 30130 Bryclone, of the 510 line, of Mornington, who has been in the pine -bred Shorthorn breed- ing business toe about 80 years, will, nit account 01 111 health, offer his en - ties herd for. sale, Petery Hurlbut, of Preston, who with his son, have been attempt- ing to re -organize a shoe So.Oosy factory at St, Marys during the past trionth, gave up the endeavor when they returned to their home in' Pres- ki'1')...";ni Lure Co., Lirnitecl. N. R. Head - The H. E. Furni ture Com pauy, 1111- vetton, have registered a change in the name or theit firm which will here. aftee be known as The Elonderice CO. - Limited , ()rich is president and general :nal - ages', W. C. Honderich secretary. The Listowel Memorial Hospital, on I Saturday attained its sixth year with 1 n eecord of creditable aervice. Due - ing thee time, 1,052 patients have I been admitted, 700 of whom were I surgical cases, Only 46 deaths have occurred in the hospital and only six I of these were patiente who had under- . gone operations, Of the 40 deaths, over 82i- per cent were coneidered hopeless when admitted. There have been 02 births. WHAT min SIMONS SAX. Mariners Talk to One Another By Means of a Code.• Even if a person lives by the sea, he may not understand the myster- ious messages !shouted by ships sirens on foggy nights. The blasts may be long or short, but One -cannot decipher them unless he knows the secret. Mariners of ell nationalities talk to one another by means of an inter- national code, but a siree doe's not always convey a detailed message_ Often only a general warning lo gbeen. Dangor of eettielon ir reduc- ed if .the captain of ship enows lee intentions of a nearby verse]. 'When two ;Allies loom out of the ng 11y usually carry on a cony:m:11..0 vela setting or ene, tem, or three 0101,te on the horn. Otte lem: IMO) "1 am heading to viareeeird." Wb 'n a captain Imam two blasts he knowe that the seeend ehip is heaeing lo port, while three xinr1: 141 leite. "Me 51111)11 es ere set rue ee..ern." Have you ever heard, on e trq.my night, two lore waillue bee le an Interval ef about two mn,tie., 'ee tween 7 Steamers that bele, Leek e down and are inielee out the 1007 of other *.eere-^ie uee tide signal Sometimes the boots are fele-well by the ringing, of rt bell. Tete le learning signel of a shin uh• r, such as a fisnine vveren with 11e pets out. Whon a eentel 11 113 ..11.;: lee -e sounds he knew', thei the rseteseit- lenity of avoiding coin:non reset en him Von can eaelle Inge telt rne hoots of a eteamer from there et a asiling ship, Inc tire three blee the steam SirOtt 18 0044. dOti710, frOnt the wailing note of the old foehere used on sailing ehips Formell0. en the comtnon messy 7. PS ' 11 number, and •by signelline them end referring to a key hook Iregthy een- versations .took piece tiering roK. Radio has now (Rept:reed most other methods of connnunication at sea. Love and sausages are full sef mystery. Elo ent hite S ace s the ADVERTISING space enterpris ing merchants use in THE POST to tell the good folks of this community about their stores and their goods, Good ADVERTISING is moving eloquenc, too. It brings new customers to your store. It builds good will. it creates new business, moves goods and makes bigger profits possible. ADVERTISING is a hard-working ally that should be co-operating with every merchant, Why not investigate its merits, Ask us about it. PROGRESSIVE MERCHANTS ARM& Iseued by Cenaditin Weekly Newepapers Association