The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 27, 1913, Image 7

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    THREE WOMEN
TESTIFY
To die Merit of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Com
pound during Change
'of Life. ,
Streator, HI.—"I shall always praise
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound wherever I
go. It has done me
so much good at
Change of Life, and
it has also helped my
daughter. It is one
of the grandest
medicines for wo
men that can bo
bought. I shall try
to induce others to
try it "-Mrs. J. H.
Campbell, 206 N.
Second St, W. S., Streator, Illinois.
Philadelphia, Pa. — "It was at the
* Change of Life’ that I turned to Lydia
E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound,
using it as a tonic to build up my sys
tem, with beneficial results.’’ — Mrs.
Sara. Hayward, 1825 W. Venango St,
(Tioga) Phi la., Pa.
San Francisco, Cal.—" I have takes
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound for many years whenever I
would feel bad. I have gone through
the Change of Life without any troubles
and thank the Compound for it I rec
ommend it to young girls and to women
of ail ages.”—Mrs. C- Barrie, 3052
25th St, San Francisco, CaL
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalelled.
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential; Lyaa, Mass. Tear letter wiO
be opened, read sad answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
The Army of
Constipation
1* Growing Smaller Every Day.
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PILLS are ^
responsible — they
_<_1 »* r
UVA.VI11JI ICUU
— they perma- A
nennycure vm-j
tiipxtioa. M3^
lions use
them for
Carter's
■ITTLE
flVER
| PILLS.
iDdifotiea! Sick Headache, SeBaw Skin.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PUCE.
Genuine must bear Signature
A poor man makes a good philan
thropist—in his mind.
MtaWimIow’s Soothinp Syrup for Cfaildrea
ipethinp, softens tbe crums, reduces inft&mma*
t*«uuu i& vs pam,cures wind college a hottlr kh
He's a stingy man who won't even
give you a pleasant look.
By handling 9,617,559,000 pounds of
fish last year the Scotch fishing indus
try established a new high record.
Correct Point of View.
Jack—Did you tell her that she was
necessary to your happiness?
Tom—No; I tried to persuade her
that I was necessary to hers.
Beneath His Dignity.
Mr. Job Lott—Why isn't the store
opened? What are you waiting for?
His Most Recent and Junior Em
ploye—For the boy 1 have engaged to
take- down the shutters.—Puck.
Hard Lines.
“My old barber has left the city."
“You seem to be very regretful.”
“Yes; he had been trying to sell me
a bottle of hair tonic for the past 15
years, and so far I had succeeded in
standing him off: Now I shall have to
start the battle all over with a new
man.”
His Proposition.
He was not very sober and had rid
den for an hour or two in the taxicab
when the chauffeur stopped.
"How much do I owe you, driver?”
asked the passenger.
“Ter. dollars and eighty cents, sir."
“Well, say. driver.” was the reply,
“just back up and keep going back
ward until you ,cotue to 30 cents, will
you" It’s all Tve got.”
What are
Post.
Toasties?
Thin wafery bits of choice
Indian Corn — perfectly
cooked; delicately flavoured;
then toasted to an appetizing
!j golden brown, and packed in
tightly sealed packages with
out being touched by hand.
“Toasties” are for break
fast or any other meal—served
direct from package with
cream or milk, and a sprink
ling of sugar.
Post Toasties are conven
ient, save a lot of time and
please die pala^ immensely!
But after all, a trial is die
I best answer.
Grocers everywhere sell
/
Post Toasties
BRIEF NEWS OF NEBRASKA
Tobias has voted bonds to build a
new modern school building.
The Kimball county high school i>
building a $2,000 gymnasium.
The Nebraska Manufacturers’ asso
ciation was in session at Lincoln last
week.
The corn crops at Bennington yield
ed an average of from thirty-five to
forty bushels an acre.
Lester Vandeventer of Stella sus
tained a broken nose while playing in
a school football game.
St. Mary's convent at Dawson was
dedicated last week, many out-of
town people being present.
Surgeons of Falls City have fitted
up a hospital in that place for the
treatment of sur&ical cases.
F. W, Hayes, 94 years old, said to
be the oldest Mason in the state, is
dead at his home in Norfolk.
To secure a merit badge in forestry
boy scouts are required, among other
things, to identify 25 kinds of trees.
There is a movement afoot to re
organize the militia company which
Columbus once sent to the Philippines.
Miss Anna Rogers is dead at a Lin
coln hospital, as a result of injuries
received in a runaway some weeks ■
ago.
The new electrolier lighting system
for the business section of Grand
Island is now installed and in opera
tion.
Joshua A. Wood, aged 80, dropped
dead from a chair in an Omaha barber
shop. Heart failure was the cause of
death.
Michael Kroeger. an old resident of
Gage county, was so badly injured by
a fall from a wagon that death re
sulted.
Preparations are being made at Lin
coln to take part in the 100th anniver
sary of the signing of the peace treaty
at Ghent.
A contract has been awarded for the
placing of 250 telephones in the new
$175,000 hotel to be opened at Hast
ings January 1.
William Flege. who has twice been
on trial for murder, will face the third
at the January term of the district
court at Pender.
Over $0© converts were claimed by
the management of the recent revival
at Grand Island, the most successful
ever held in the city.
Chris Larsen, a farmer residing
1 near Wolbach. was Asphyxiated by gas
; at the home of a Lincoln relative with
whom he was visiting.
It is said that active work on the
[ Commonwealth water power project,
1 on the Loup river, will begin in eam
! est early in the spring.
I Fire, supposed to have been caused
; by- the explosion of a cook stove, de
1 stroyed the home of Mart Ford at
j Beatrice, with all its contents,
i L. P. Hansen, an Omaha saloon
keeper. has received a "blackhand”
letter demanding $1,000, and he is
afraid it is not a practical joke.
According to a statement »by Presi
dent McGinnis o? the state dairy
men’s association, butter will be con
siderably cheaper before spring.
Beet harvest in the North Platte val
ley is at an end. and is said to be
the finest crop of the sugar producing
vegetable ever grown in that section.
George A. Wilmeth. a Lincoln man.
was killed when a negro knocked him
down with such force that the fall on
the concrete walk fractured his skull.
A. H. Jackson committed suicide by
severing his jugular vein with a
poeketknife and shooting himself
through the head at his home at Lin
j coin.
Richard Lopeska of Ohiowa was
| rendered unconscious and possibly
i seriously injured when his coat got
caught in the flywheel of a gasoline
engine.
Members of the Truman family, rep
resenting four generations, attended
the golden wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Truman at Lincoln
last week.
In connection with the annual com
show, which will be held in Central
City the second week of December, a
short course in agriculture and do
mestic science will be given.
The buildings on the Custer county
fair grounds, which were wrecked by
the recent tornado, will be recon
structed along more modem lines.
The public school building at Beem
er has been pronounced unsafe and
condemned, and it is thought a bond
election will be held at once for its
reconstruction.
Every pupil and member of the fac
ulty of the Beatrice high school were
out of the building within two minutes
after the alarm was sounded, when a
fire drill was held recently. Pupils
were in every part of the building
when the alarm was given.
Juan Martinez, a native of Argen
tine, South America, was held up and
shot in the Burlington yards at Lin
coln by footpads, whom he claims re
lieved him of $84.
Seventy-five per cent of the resi
dents of Wes* Beatrice profess Chris
tianity, according to the ministerial
association, which is taking a religious
census of the city.
The explosion of a can of stot*
polish which she was using to blacken
a cook stove set fire to the clothing
of Mrs. John Henen of Nemaha, and
she was severely burned before the
flames could be extinguished.
Game in Jefferson county is unusu
ally plentiful this fall and over 500
hunting licenses have been issued.
Alleged theft and sale of national
guard property from the Lincoln com
pany resulted in a suddenly called
court martial at that place, the first
in thirty years in this state, it is said.
William Sears Poppleton, one of the
best "known men in Omaha, was found
sitting at his desk in his office dead,
with a bullet hole in the corner of his
right eye and a pistol on the floor be
tween his feet. Saturday night. The
coroner returned a verdict of acci
dental death.
Lester Boggs, the 9-year-old spn pf
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Boggs, of Tecum
seh. may lose the sight of his left eye
as the result of being shot with an air
rifle that he was handling. x
The Louisville board of education
has intimated to the teachers that it is
not good form or for the best interests
of their .pupils to attend the moving
picture show every night in the wyek.
John McNeil of Fremont was ran
over by. a street car and instantly
killed near Krug park at Omaha.
Omaha alumni of the state univer
sity will banquet the Comhusker foot
ball team December 8.
DAIRYMEN OF THE STATE PLAN
NING NEW DEPARTURE.
GOSSIP FROM STATt CAPTAL
Items of Interest Gathered from Re
liable Sources and Presented in
Condensed Form to Our
Readers.
Deposits of state banks have in
creased $13,269,812.64 in the past year,
and loans in the same period have
reached a mark $9,533,425.28 higher
than they were in October, 1912, ac
cording to the state banking board re
port just issued. The number of banks
reporting is 714, with deposits of $91
794,086.44, and an average reserve of
25 per cent. Since August 26. 1913,
loans have increased $3,199,122.06, de
posits have decreased $2,400,140.39 and
there are four new banks reporting.
Notes and bills rediscounted and bills
payable have increased $307,049.44,
and the reserve has increased 5 per
cent. The number of banks has in
creased forty in the year. Depositors
numbered in the last report are 296.
505.
Dairymen Planning Campaign.
Dairymen of the state are planning
to inaugurate a campaign at the state
meeting of organized agriculture look
ing to the separation of the dairy com
mission from the administrative side
of the state government and placing
it with the state farm dairy interests,
there to come under the charge of the
regents of the state university. Other
dairymen are preparing to fight the ac
tion on the ground that the practical
and theoretical work cannot be com
bined from a business standpoint and
that the board of regents, which is
given no power to enforce laws, would
be continually hampered in perform
ing the duties now outlined for the
state dairy commission. The point is
also to be made that the commission,
even if it were possible to operate it
under the university management,
would not be able to get the money
that it does under present conditions.
Imitation Butter Signs Missing.
While the big state law book has an
anti-oleomargarine statute between its
pages, state institutions are breaking
the law and using thousands of pounds
of the product without posting the re
quired sign, “Imitation Butter Used
Here." The discovery has just been
made by Food Comraisioner Harman
and his deputies, who have started a
campaign in an effort to enforce the
statutory provision. The first provi
sion relative to obtainment of a license
to sell imitation butter is half-heart
edly complied with by some mer
chants, while the law governing the
use of the product is rarely obeyed.
In substance, the law says that no
keeper or proprietor of any bakery,
hotel, public institution, dining car,
restaurant, saloon, lunch counter or
place of public entertainment shall al
low the use of imitation butter without
first displaying a sign. 10x14 inches in
size, on which are the required words.
Opinions on Selling Schemes.
Raffling of houses and lots under
the old scheme of selling hundreds
and hundreds of numbers at low
prices, or at any price for that mat
ter, is not permitted under the state
lottery law. according to an informal
opinion given a citizen by the state
legal department. Neither can the
right of a storekeeper to sell a cer
tain amount of specially priced goods
to each customer be denied. The lat
ter question arose when some Ne
braskan objected to a merchant re
stricted him to the purchase of six
bars of soap for a quarter. The soap,
which originally sells at three bars for
a quarter, was a bargain at the special
sale price and the complainant want
ed to Ify in a supply at the reduced
price. The merchant's advertising
set out that only six bars would be
sold to a single customer, which is
within the rights of the storekeeper,
according to the state legal lights.
Farmers of Nebraska are steadily
■ and consistently buying silos for the
improvement of their farms. In April.
1913. there were 2.076 silos in Ne
braska. In 1912 therp were 1,683.
Hand separators to the number of
47.444 were in use in 1913, as against
43,006 in 1912 and 42,782 in 1911.
While neighborhood contests have
been held in the past over claims to
the title of “the oldest inhabitant,”
Nebraskans of the future are likely
to tilt over the right to possession of
the appellation, “the oldest chauffeur.”
The affair appears to be settled for a
time by claims set up by Beers John
stone, who, inta letter from his home
at Henderson, Minn., informs Secre
tary Paine of the Nebraska Historical
society that it was he who operated
“Joe Brown's old steam wagon,
scheduled to make the Nebraska City
Jo Denver run in 1861.” In the letter
Mr. Johnstone informs the historical
society men that the government ap
propriated $14,000 for the construction
of the ancient chug-wagon and for
preparing a portion of the road over
Vhich it was designed to pass. Thus
both the buzz-buggy and the good
roads movements may be said to have
had their birth in this • state some
fifty-two years ago.
W. H. Harrison, prominent lumber
dealer of Grand Island and for years
4 leading republican of the state, died
Sunday at Clarkson Memorial hospital
at Omaha, following a paralytic stroke.
Records of cream smpments from
all towns of the state are being col
lected by the state railway commis
sion and will be gathered monthly
hereafter. Not only railroad com
panies, but express companies as well
will make reports showing the num
ber of five, eight and ten gallons of
milk and cream shipped from each
jetation and the stations to which they
were consigned. Amount of charges
where one road carries the cream to
market will be designated and propor
tionate amount of charges where more
than one carrier assists
rlWillmr
WMM
CO-OPERATE FOR GOOD ROADS
State and Federal Government* Should
Work Together for Highway Im
provement, Say* Mr. Houston.
Secretary Houston of the depart
ment of agriculture say* that the state
and federal governments Bhould work
together for highway improvement, in
order that a large proportion of the
money annually spent for road con
struction may not be wasted.
In his own department, the office of
public roads has been demonstrating
the value of proper road building by
the construction of certain object-les
son roads, and the foreBt service is
carrying out his idea of national and
state co-operation in road building.
The law requires that ten per cent, of
the gross receipts from the national
forestB shall be spent in the Btates in
which the forests are situated. This
money 1b expended for road improve
ment, under direct control of the see
retary of agriculture.
The amount appropriated under this
act, based on the receipts of the na
tional forests for the fiscal year ending
June 30. 1913, is $234,638.68. From
the 1912 receipts for this ten per cent,
road item, there is an additional $134,
831.10 which is still available.
In administering the ten per cent,
road fund, forest officers charged with
the actual plans and expenditures in
the neighborhood of their forests have,
in almost all cases, secured an equal
or a larger co-operative fund from
state authorities for the building of
certain pieces of road.
With the money thus expended,
many important roads are being built
or put in repair. One on the Wyom
ing national forest, six miles long,
makes accessible to farmers a large
body of timber and opens up a region
of great scenic beauty. In northwest
! ern Arizona, part of the fund will be
i used in connection with the LeFevre
i Bright Angel road. Important because
! it makes accessible to tourists the
I Grand Canyon of the Colorado. In one
place, the ocean to ocean highway
crosses the Apache national forest
Arizona, and on this project the forest
i reserve service and the local authori
ties co-operated enthusiastically. On
' the Florida national forest in western
, Florida, steel bridges and graded roads
j have, under the stimulus of this fund,
taken the place of corduroy, bog and
sand.
This federal road fund is now avail
able in all national forest states of the
west. Just as fast as returns come in,
'the forestry officials say, a similar
| fund will become available in states in
| which eastern national forests are be
' ing secured.
CASH VALUE OF GOOD ROADS
One Fact Alone le Sufficient to Jus0Fy
Expense of Construction Under
„ Efficient System.
No one questions the statement that
good roads have a high money value to
the farmers of the nation, and it may
be said that this alone is sufficient to
justify the cost of their construction
as rapidly as practicable under an effi
cient, economical and equitable sys
tem of highway improvement.
The big point In favor of this ex
penditure is the economy of time and
force in transportation between farm
and market, enabling the growers tc
take advantage of fluctuations in buy
ing and selling, as well as enhancing
the value of real estate. It is esti
mated that the average annual loss
from poor roads is 76 cents an acre,
while the estimated average increase
resulting from improving all the public
roads is $9.
The losses in five years would ag
gregate $2,432 for every section oi
land, or more than enough to Improve
two miles of public highway. The ne
cessity of good roads is obvious, as il
would enhance the value of each sec
tion of land about $5,760, or more than
double the estimated cost of two miles
of improved highway, which const!
tutes the quota for 640 acres of land.
VITRIFIED BRICK FOR ROADS
Department of Agriculture Issues Bul
letin on Advantages Obtained in
Using This Material.
The United State? departfent of
agriculture has recently" issued as Bul
letin 23 of the new departmental se
ries a contribution from the officg of
the public roads and vitrified brack as
a paving material for country roads.
Brick roads have four distinct ad
vantages: Durability, easy traction,
ease of maintenance, and good appear
ance. The high first cost is a disad
vantage. The materials used and the
process of manufacture are described
as well as methods of testing the
bricks. The construction of brick
roads is et forth in detail and the
various steps In the process are illus
trate. Especial attention Is di
rected to the importance of proper en
gineering supervision.
An appendix gives the method for
inspecting and testing paving brick
as recommended by the American So
ciety for Testing Materials.
Bring Market Nearer.
Good roads not only bring the mar
ket nearer to you, but they improve
the social condition of your commun
ity because they bind neighbors and
friends more closely.
a 1
Good Ewes, More Lambs.
It is generally conceded that if the
ewes are in good condition at mating
time, a larger proportion of twip
lambs can be secured.
« — — —
Inter-County System.
An intercounty system of reads will
care for four-fifths of the travel of a
state.
Increases Land Values.
The improvement of your road will
enable you to seH your land at a hand
some profit. /
What is Woman’s
Beauty but Health ?
And the Basis of Her Health and
Vigor Lies in the Careful Reg
ulation of die Bowels.
If woman’s beauty depended upon
cosmetics, eve.. woman would be a
picture of loveliness. But beauty lies
deeper than that. It lies in health. In
the majority of cases the basis of
health, and the cause of sickness, can
be traced to the action of the bowels.
The headaches, the lassitude the
sallow skin and the lu6terless eyi»B are
usually due to constipation. So many
things that women do habitually con
duce to this trouble. They do not eat
carefully, they eat indigestible foods
because the foods are served daintily
and they do not exercise enough. But
whatever the particular cause may be
it is Important that the condition
should be corrected.
An ideal remedy for women, and one
especially suited to their delicate re
quirements, is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin, which thousands of women en
dorse highly, among them Mrs. C. S.
Vance, of 511 S. Ray St., New Castfe,
Pa. At times she bad spells of Indi
gestion 6o severe that she thought she
would die. Syrup Pepsin regulated her
stomach and bowels, and she attrib
utes her excellent health today to this
remedy.
All the family can use Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin, for thousands of moth
ers give it to babies and children. It
is also admirably suited to the require
ments of elderly people, in fact to all
who by reason of age or infirmity can
not stand harsh salts, cathartics, pills
or purgatives. These should always be
MRS. C. S. VANCE
avoided, for at best their effect is only
for that day, while a genuine remedy
like Syrup Pepsin acts mildly but per
manently.
It can be conveniently obtained at
any drug store at fifty cents or one
dollar a bottle. Results are always
guaranteed or money will be refunded
You will find It gentle in action, pleas
ant in taste, and free from griping,
and its tonic properties have a distinct
value to women. It is the most widely
used laxative-tonic in America today
and thousands of families are now nev
er without it
Families wishing to try a tree sam
ple bottle can obtain it postpaid by
addressing Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203
Washington St., Monticello, 111. A
'postal card with your name and ad
dress on it will do.
WORMS.
"Wormy”, that's what’s the matter of ’em. Stomach .and In
testinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. Cost you too much
to feed ’em. Look bad—are bad. Don’t physic ’em to death.
Spohn's Core will remove the worms, improve the appetite, and
tone 'em up all round, and don't "physic.” Acts on glands and blood.
Full directions with each bottle, and sold by all druggists.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. Goshen, Ind.. U. S. A.
The Best Workmen
use onlv the best tools, even though they may cost more Theysave time and there
iore moaey. The tools that bear our Doable Guarantee Quality Taf are this kind.
■ Anchor Brand
Hatchets and Hammers /
A rtoml notcaet IS not only the ■world's
most finished tool; as a hatchet it is the
world's mast beautiful tool of its kind—
a combination of utility and beauty.
Plumb Hatchets represent the distilled
experience of years in hatchet making,
Ireitrs pregnant with changes, elimina
tions and additions to the idea of what
a «ead hatchet should be The Ptumb has
a keen and daralle catting edge. It is
hung right on a best quality handle
Made by FAYETTE R. PLUMB,
Inc., PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Bears the Doable Goanntee Tag
I The Nicholson file I
I A reputation for over 49 years of time tested dependability has
made the Nicholson trade mark on a file the accepted Standard If
for highest quality. In “cut,” tempering, keen teeth, uniformity
and long wearing qualities, Nicholson Files excel.
The teeth are of special shape designed to with
stand pressure and enable the user to work rapidly
and cut smoothly. Nicholson Files work easier K
and make the finished product of higher quality.
Made by the NicholsouFlle Co., Providence, R. I. If
We attach our Double Ouormtee Tag I
Our Double Guarantee Quality Tag
is attached only to hardware of Mgh reputltiou - the Best
Factory Brands. AH Doable Guaranteed Quality Hardware
bears the tri-colored Gaarantee Tag, which is absolute
hardware Insurance.
^B^^^^(^^^BiWright^WIIhelmyCo^DDaaha^cb
TACKER WANTED
name on sign* in big letters. Particulars ■
of ▲. H. J.. Box IBS, Philadelphia, Pa. j
BITEIITO WiiMiE.ctieui.wui>
r AI tf| 1 §
i mi itatfrnoro. jiMi rcaolta.
You Pon t Hate to Live in the
AiL, to suroeMfully conduct a Mail Order
||W Business. Let me tell you of oyer twenty
mI good plans that ran be pat in operation on
the farm or in the small town. They are money
makers. Ton will be surprised at year result*.
S. K. FBIZELLE, Box 1, Kay mood, Calif.
GO NOW TO
WESTERN CANADA
The opportunity of securing free
homesteads of 100 acne each,
and the low priced
lands of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and
Alberta, will Boon
have passed.
Canada offers, a
hearty welcome to the
Settler, to the man
with a family looking
for a home, to the
farmer's sou, to th$
Kenter. to alt who wise to
lire under better conditions.
Canada's Grain T ield in
1913 Is the talk of the world.
Luxuriant Grasses give
cheap fodder for large herds,
cost of raising and fattening
for market is a trifle.
The sum realised for Beef.
Butter, Milk and Cheese will
pa; fifty per cent on the
investment.
Write for literature and
particulars as to reduced
railway rates to Superintend- 4
ent Immigration, Ottawa,
Canada, or to
W. V. BENNETT,
Baa Building, Omaha, Neb.
DE A EDC of p»p«r desire
KcADcnS
columns shou.d Insist upon having what they
ask (or. refusing all substitutes or Imitations
FOR - RED RnPR
_SORE_EYES BflPM
Nebraska Directory
BOILERS
WILSON STEAM BOILER CO.. Omaha
DIIDTIIDE CUSEDin t few days
fllUr I Unt without pain or a bot
gical operation. Ho pay until cured. Writ*
DEL WKAI, 506 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Nets.
TENTS AND COVERS
SCOTT-RAWITZER RRFG. CO., «MHa
Successors to Omaha T ant A Awning Company
and 8cott Tent Jk Awning Company
Lindsay
30 Yean a Omaha Send gs year Watch
aad me wiB rapsir it for yoa b pood order.
AH wart —aranlsrd ad yrtnpdy doae
Try Us—It Will Pay Yon
Consign your stock to ns for food prices, good fills
and prompt remittance Write or wire us for &ay
desired information regarding the market. AJleos*
mumcations answered promptly. We are work in*
for yotir interest and appreciate your business.
FARRIS PURINTON A MARCY
!»■«■■■« kLl. Ukm * O.
f Live Stock Commission
tan nut! fjctane Me. *ta» Tfc Statin. S. IM«
30,500
Bell Telephones
in Omaha
I '
Bell Lines Reach
668
Nebraska Towns
Talk to Omaha Over
Ihe Bell Telephone
\
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 48-1913. T~
\ L-.W SODA )
CRACKERS
are economical because they come in this big family-size pack
age. They’re always dean and fresh because the package s
triple sealed and air-tight. They’re nourishing and digestible
because they are light, crisp and flaky. They’re appetizing
because their delicious flavor and delicate toasty brown appeal
to the eye and taste.
Joose-Wles Biscuit (ommnt Bakers of Sunshine