Aerothrust Farmer's Binder Engm9 Ll9hte»t Mctor Jn World, 22' :b3. Making Farrr.inq a Raat Plaasura. ] Also 3 db & h.D. t'oricbte Eiiifiii^ id Centrlfueai Putnpta* Cr.lL :-.oi>« alter All on »how In tb« iJfiiiid 8tan'. livi.i- iag. Toronto Bih!bH!&r. fc"r»«' llt-r:*- turo at our ExhiO.-. !" t : roil to ..«.! OAV. >OAT k aVGOrs BXCS. Z.T13. 43 ToB2t St. - - Toro3:o e; Keep An Account of Yo'ir Crop. I No farmer is in a position to exer-, cise justice t.»ard his business unless ar.vi "feeiera," whch have come through stockyardi. .Anthrax no: only attacks cattle of all a^es but Do You Brand Your Butter? "A pound of good dairy butter, please." sai-'. the customer. "Dow's !3 fifty cents, Denman's sixty," the storekeeper explained briskly. "T^'Tiirhni you haveâ€" Den- man's?" "No," the customer's tone wa< con- clusive. "W? had a pound of Dt-n- man's the oth'sr night. Wor.-it b'jtter I ever tasted!" "How did vcu know- he keeps a rc-cord of its details. He rapidly spreads to sheep and swine. Horses may acquire it from t.he bite of an iniecrt. People take it in the, fcrm of maligrnant pustule fram in-' fection of a wound, or the bite of an insect, and the attack tends to prove fatal. In anthrax of cattle the spleen is muit kesp account of each crop that he raises, and with his various fie'ds as well. The latter is even of more importance than the former, for an account with certain Seids for two or three consecutive years will reveal that land's deficienJT'and suggest its^ FROM THIS TOWN TORONTO EXKIBiTlON BY MOTOa Thfi .V B C Automobile Road Guide of 96 pages. 75 Sectional Maps. Key Map. Legend and cocplete Index. Ail Hoads Clearly shown. Improved County Roads In Heavy Red Lines. If your dealer can't supplj you w« will mail one direct (or II M. AUTO GUIDE COMPANY 82 King St. East - Toronto YOUR PROBLEMS Mothers and daughter* of all agea are cordially inwited to write to **»i' department. Intials cnly will be pi.6ii»hea vxitn each nuest:n and its an»-(v«r aa a meana at idantiftcaton, but full name and address mast be givsn in each letter. Write or ane tide :f paper cnly. Answer* witl be mailed direct If •tamped and add'etsed envs:cpe la eneljsed. Addreaa all correapcndence for tn.a aepart.ment to Mrs. Helen Law, 2y Woodbine Ave., Torsnlo. man's? Mrs. Denman it was Den- doesn't print Her butter is i.Tiprovement. .\ great deal of money can be wast- ed by growing crops on soil not adapt- ed to them. Where one crop is erown upon a field having several dilTerent St.; Is. the tract should be roughly plot- ted 33 to soil, or a just estimate can- not be made. i greatly engorged with black tar-l;"ke b'ood and the blood does not coagrulate. In blackleg the blood coagulates, the spleen is practically normal after death and blood does not flow frorn the natural orifices of the body, but it does so in anthrax. Pests T'liat Arc WelcOT.,.". When I hear farmers r-xg^-.r.^ aboa: the hawks, owls, weasels, ani minks they have klllei. my "'dander" begins to rise. Here in this Eastern In anthrav t..e Ontario community such wholesa!>! j Luc. lie: â€" Then? does seem to he, it her way. Friends must learn this : much mystery i';oat making Intro- tremendous leaso.i: Each individual t dnctions. dots there not? When a must live out and work out her own . giri introduces you to a girl friend, problem.s for herself. Friendabip does ; just say, -I am very giad to meet cot mean and cannot mean an identi- I ycu. ' Say the sac - thing to a boy cal life path. swellings show a gelatinous fluid when {5.^1;; „g ^j rodents,' owls, and hawks Xo busy farmer has time for any OP*''-^'^' '*'fa-'« '*'<'«« '^^.''^^'-''''''^ â- '^*'^^'^ '^'-s 'he common att'tu.le when th» elaborate system of account-keeping, lf.1t anyone can use an ordinary jour- nal and keep it in this way: Xt the top of the page write the lame of the crop, the year, and its when handled, as gas is present under country w»s newer. But the skin, asd there is a strong smell ^een a radical change. from the lajter swellings when opened. In hemorrhagic septicemia bloody froth may run from the r..- 9 ils and location. .\s each exnen'se ite.-n. such mouth, a.id blood may be present in the pj^sages before death. .\itcr death, red or bloody spots are found her name on her butter, always extra nice." "You told me yourself the stuff was Denman's. Give me Dow's." Which floored the storekeeper. He handed out a pound of 50-cont butter.^ as s^jej_ s^:; prgr^aration, ferti'izer The explanati-n of this was simple, ^j,^ jts application, plaiiting. cultiva- The storekeeoer had overreached him- tlon. harvest'ng. etc.. occurs, it is self, as stor-kcfj^ers sometimes will, j ^{.(en in the journal page opposite He had soli for Penman's, butter jhs date upon which the operation -which was really the product of a less 1 occurs. The hours spen: in working ering of t'ae heart and kidneys. Sim- eomnetent butiermaker. He liad done^ j^e crop are charged according to the i'ar spots (small) may be seen upon the same thing before. He will doubt-' rate the farmer is paying for labor, ti'-? membranes lining the nostrils and less do it many times a-rain. .A.nd .=n- Package, packing and "selling expense eyelids, while lar-.re and small bloody there After .las the upon the serous membranes lining the chest and abdoni nal cavities, the cav- ities of the heart and under the cov- killing and trapping of these so-called â- 'pests" had continued for several years, a plague of rats and mice assaile<i us. With the rodents" natur al enemies killed off the?" multiplied until corn and grain nalds. meadows, orchard-, and buildings swarmed w/th rodents, big and little. Half, and even mora, of our grain crops were some- times destroyed in .(ields and^storige. We got cur lesson, and now we make our poultry houses pest-proof. and give a kind welcome to weasels, owls, hawks, snakes, and toad- â€" all friends of the farmer â€" and song and â„¢e"*- ! from the sales and'^ an estimate of Absolute certai.nty in diagnosis .:s game birds as well. What is the Toss But there is another angle to the fertility value of the root and crop only possible by Klctoscopic examina- ,,^. ^„ occa-:-ional chicken, a few cher- incident. It revealed the ugly thing remains. The last-mentioned item is, tion and testing with laboratory am- .jg^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ compared with that was happening to the Denman difficult to estimate, because it -^nnot inals. but the experienced veterinarian ,^^ damaze done bv hordes cf des- reputaVon. innocently entrusted to a b^ ^ygighed or measured in most cases, usually can differentiate fairly well ^jucTve rodents and insect nests" Gertrude: â€" Y'ou should not accept presents of jewellery from this man unless you are engaged to iiim. L. C. K.: â€" I would like to name my farm. Can you help me find an ap- propriate name? I keep about fifteen head of cattle â- j.r.d sell milk. The land is lavel and a brook flows through one end of farm. More than one person besides L. C. K. has been puzzled by this same- evitably he wi" pay heavily in iniured ^^st also be entered against spots or patches are seen upon tne good-will for his poor business judg- j Credited to the crop are the returns carcass after removal of the hide* ' from the sales and an estimate of Absolute certainty in diagnosis .is grasping merchant What thi: good There mav vet exist much of the farm woman gamed at the sepa.-a tor applied fertilizers or manures which the season's crop has not used. Th-s is and chum she was losine because sh^ overlooked a s'imple old th^nsr â€" the branding of her butter. Old-fashioned housewives still make butter with sheaves, cows, initials, and the like, molded in the butter itself, a distinc- between the three diseases in question, p jj When hemorrhagic septicemia is de-j finitely diagnosed the preventive bio-j logical agent should be hypodermatic- ally applied at once by the veterinar- ian, and each animal separated and kept separate on a differeat pasture than the one where the disease oc- also difficult to estimate. These fer- tilizing va"jes cannot be credited in terms of doILtrs and cents, but since the full cost is charged against the crop this may be mentioned as an tive farm brand which no dealer s , unknown variable credit value in the curred. or in clean, well-ventilated chicancery can remove. Many butter- (.355 of ^11 crops known not to be ex-j stables. Each unimal should be given makers in district where the brick is hausting. ' drinking water from its ow« marked the universal butter form do not use- On the ether hand, every crop' pai'. By such isolation and treatment printed butter wrappers. Some others grown removes seme of the original, the spread of the disease may be stop- do not t'se either stamr) or printed soil fertility which has been made' jwd; otherwise, it would be likely to wrapper, but rlmply write the name j available during its life by its own qu/ckly 'iill every e.xposed animal. on a piece of paper and place 't be-; action upon the scil. Again we are â- neath the wrapper. Such slips, of dealing with ^•atues v,e cannot aseer- course. can be c.isily lost or removed, i tain, an^ we have to mention it on the When a stamp and pa4 are used the| debit side as an unknown variable imprint is often smutted out and un-, debit value. decipherable when it reaches the con-i Now as to the account with sol! sumer. i plots: Inancther part of the same The farm making poor dairy butter: icun>al. or in another journal, if the has no particular ground for adver- book is small and the farm, large and tising it. There are a good many in crops numerous, choose a page for the I The Farm Tractor. The tractor on the farm trcse Before the dawn at foar; It m..l-:ad the cows and washed ! clcthes. .\nd finiiihed every chore. ' Then forth it went into the field Just at the break of day; I It reaped and threshed the golden yi-eld. .\nd hauled it all away. j It plowed the field that afternoon, i And when the job was througii, j â- I It hummed a pleasant little tune. ] Pure glycerine will help to dissolve; j^^^ churned the butter too. fruit stains from linen. , p(,r while the farmer, peaceful-eyed. Remove stains from tho fingers; Read by the tungsten's glow; whom you are meet:n„- the firs; time. ~Your friend who diid r.jt inrro<i;:cs you to the young man v;ao cane l? to talk to her while you were stand- ing by, was either mde or kne*- no better. Even if she did not know you very well and knew the young man much better, it was her place to ! introduce you. There are many peo- ple in the wcrld. who neglect the op-' cortuntty to make people known to ,. ^ each other, whether because they ai-e question â€" what name shall I g.ve my ° cot sure of th* jircpriety of the thing, farm? Of course, it is purely a per- or whether they are not naturally socal matter, cm for the owner him- gracious and kindly. I do not know, self to decide, yet ;t may be o.f some It is far better to srr on the side of assistance to sUte in a' general way ntroducing peoplo too ^'reely than on wh.it has influenced some people to the side of withholding t.he few words select the name which they did for tnat may be the ieed of 3 very happy, their farm. Many times some natur- frienash'p^. ^ , al object or distinguishing feature of -^- °- C. :â€" \ou w-rite me that yoa the farm suggests the name. For in- vrant to go to the city to train as a sWnce, a nice spring brook that can nurse and that your very best girl be seen by passers-by suggests the friend wishes to go to the city 'dke- name of Spring Brook Farm, or a wise, but does not care about a nurse's grove of oak trees suggests the name career. Also that her parents do not of Oak Grove Farm or Oak Lawn, or approve of her going to the city ^and Maple Crest because of a grove of m-ght not let her go. anyway. * maples which are on a rise of gpound. Just be<cause ycu are close friends, or Orchari Grove. Hillside Farm. etc. you do not both have to become nurses In fact, any individual characteristic do you? I grant it would be nice of the farm can well be used. Again, to be in the same work bu' in your any characteristic of the buildings case, if you insi -:.-'. you might force can be used. For instance. Green her to do something she did not like Gables when the gable of the house and really ought net to do, and then are paiinted green, and especially if if some day she was not happy in her the house is so built that the gaMes work, you would regret having in- are a prominent feature, fluenced hur. .\s to her famly, there You can probably make a choice is nothing yoa can do to make them from change their minds. The giri herself Green must talk sensibly sent her if she is the following: Meadowbr?ok Meadows. Running Brook to them and pre- Hearts* Delight. Maplerow. Dairy- case fairly and trist that land. Sunlit Lanu^. Golden Harvest i •- the right, thjy will sse Dalrv Farm. Faliingbrook. )^£d/^M'S\ fc ^^^-^ ^^ ^ -^^ ^ JJ y\ \ U3es all the colors th Review. this class, so mnny. 'n fact, that e.\- ccllent buttern-.akers in self-protec- tion must branl their butter unless they deliver it to consomers in person. by washing them w'th a nail bruib • The patient tractor stood outside \vet with tea. and then in warm' -\nd ran the dynamo. '.vater. | -The O.A .C For v.ashing windows, v,-hi."h should i * be done when the sun is not shining | Black lead mixed with turpentine first saw .lu-n each plot. Write the name or descrip- on them, use warm water with al instead of water gives a brilliant and hobbled up the church steps and sat ticn of the plot at the top of the page, tablespoonful cf ker?s?n; added toj lasting polish and prevents the stove in the last pew to see the flowers and A Real Little Neithbor. Michael was poor and old. Edith one Sundav when he In the date column write the year, eacn pail ci water then on a line by itself the crops for- 1 irom rustmg. The printed wraoner is ordinarily the that year and each item of cost fori best Protection. The cost of the print- the year, such as tillage, fertilizing, ' ing is neglig'ble; the protection is, jeed, etc.. placing the amounts in the complete: the advertisement of great , debit column. Then should follow the value. The home buttermakcr whose \ items cf sale, prices being entered in market product sells at a premium on the credit column clear of all selling the local market has something to 'â- e.xpense. The balance cf loss or gain point to with pride. Such a reputa- : should be stated below th's. The plot The Best of the Pereiinkils tion. attained only with great pains,! records of each s can be destroyed in a month by a dis- honest dealer unless t^e producer safeguards it. To Drain Your Land. Money spent now in properly drain- cessive year should This is the best season of the year to plan the spring garden. It is much easier to think out alterations now with the garden in plain view than it will be later on when it is deep in snow. The mistakes and successes of the 1919 season are fresh in one's GracoiiLts; piti'<. Her Mrs. H. Darwin; lilac, blue. Blue Belle. De- follow. In this wav the farmer can know . , . , . , at a glance "whefner a certain soil """^J. ""'^ P'""^ ">*>â- ^•-" '"^^^'^ ''^â- ••â- >'''-'- section is making him sufficient re- '"^^" . , a â- 1 c ^- jj' â- »« Peones. a -Iiine flowering perennial, fection and dispiays a variety of .â- \.urea. Darius, Majesty; white Queen of May; light. The Larkspur is one cf the hand- somest and most satisfactory of all haniy plants. Do not omit the stately and old-fashicned hollyhock, which has been brought to a high state of per- baaker heard the story, and gave the brightest gold ccins he cculd find. •> me. dscape the artist there aire. You Jo not quite believe that. Then notice ne.\t time you see a fine view or a really natufol painting. The laiKlscape. even though it seems at the first glance all one gnreen. will show tones of yellow and red. ail fitted into a harmony of complement- ing colors in the light that envelops the whole. .\ good paint ng of out- doors has its mixturtji of red, yellow and blue, the three primary julors, I , ... no matter what amount cf liglT man that was long ago; now the rich man determine the color values. ^ was uead. t.ie garden was gone, and; xhat bit of color theor>- does .not sound as if it had much to Jo with doing over the living pjom. But it has. -As a matter cf fact, the nearer one approaches to a natural outdoor arrang..-mcr: of colors in decorat'na a room the better the effect. U ii I the children on Children's Day. Then she saw him when father hired him to mow the grass in front of her home. Michsal loved flowers and trees and grass. Once he had taken care of the flowers in a rich man's garden. But time and labor. , ^ , , » 11 .1 u » 1 crop succesf ons and the teno.ency ne wet farm lands will serve the best .â- , â- v _ .- _ • r \ s i. 1-11 ' toward a richer or poorer '.arm. interest of our country, and will payj a high rate of interest, often as high j as 100 per cent. There is scarcely a' farm in Canada where some drainage is not needed to make the soil pro- duce the maximum crops po3s>i]t>le with ordinary tillage. There are millions of acres where jtood drainage would double the annual food production. There are other mil- lions of acres which lie w^holly useless for the want of proper drainage. In many sections the early Autumn frosts last year ruined the corn crop an poorly drained fiekis, but only slightly damaged that on property drained fields. There are thousands of niiiles of ditches that need to be made now by dredging machines. Laterals should spread out from these further to carry off the excess water. In many sections ditches are blast- ed out by the use of dynamite alone. Ditches from 3 to I feet wide are quickly loaded and fired under favor- able condi.ions. turns or is losing him money for his , , , i â- • 1 It a!*o *howi him h^s »'* beloved by every one. easi;y cc.ors. grown, very har-iy and have large Phlo.x ,s another flower which should showv flowers which are fine for find a place in every perennial garden. A map of the fa'rra plan should be >â- â- "«'"?; There is a great variety of During late summer and fall months drawn and pasted in the front of such a book for ready reference. colors from which to choose. It has they are a rich mass of bloom. The varieties are especially Africa, a royal iiurple: .\sia, rich shade of mauve; Doreen. salmon-rose; Etna, orange- "^-i; Jeanne d'Arc. white: Lord Kelvin, red; Rynstrom. bright pink. The Oriental Poppy makes a gor- i practically no insect enemies. The following flowers will not 'oe as perfect the first beautiful: : two years but by the third year the Hemorrhagic Septicemia. finest kind of blooms should be pro- Hemorrhagic septicemia (blood duced. poisoning), anthrax and blackleg £.»e; The most popular white peony is terrible scourges and used to kill live without doubt, Festiva Maxima, fol- stock without man being able in any lowed in popularity by Duchess de geeus display, whether planted singly way to stav the'r ravages. Now they Memours and Marie Lemoi-.e as mid- ^ or in masses. Golden Glow has flow- are' well understood by traine<.l veter- , season bloomers, followed again by ; ers of the brightes-t golden-yellow and inarians. aa,i fairly successful meth- Gloria Mundi. a late bloomer. ! attains a height of six feet. It is otte of control have been discovered and put into practice: but no remedy has E been discovered. • beau'les. Monsieur Jules Elie and ^ a beautiful, old-fashioned border Within the pas: ten or twelve years Madam Coste are e.xcellent mid-season , plant. Columbine -s a favorite for hemorrhagic septicemia of cattle has bloomers. \ early summer blooming. Canterbury been rightly recognized and properly j For these who like red. the follow- Bells should find a place in every attributed to its actual cause. Swin.; ing peonies are goctt. .\dolphe Ros- garden. Chrysanthemums give life and sheep have been found to suffer seau. one of the darkest, is the early and beauty to the garden from Sep- I'rom the same disease caused by the blooming variety; Felix Crousse, a similar baccillus of each of those ani- rich shade of retl: Berloiz, currant re\l. mals. while a like disease has been which bloom next; Rubra Super'oa. a Michael was old and peer. He told Edith many stories about his happy days of long ago. "Miss Edith, I wish I could see my daffodils once more. They Icoked like a river of gold." and Michael rub'oed his old coat sleeve over his eyes. When winter caste, there was no more grass to mow. Michael's place in the chjrch was empty: he was ill. How sorry Edith was! But just be- ing sorry wasn't enough to give to Michael: Edith knew that. She said to herself: "I'll tell other people. _^ and thev'U 'oe sorry, too. I'm going x-.vs- tins should be set over th« to shake all the money out of my t-r^ with boiling water -n them befor« 'â- ''^^â- " food is put uito them. Some other people shook monev out t, i. , .„ • . â- „ r„ ,...,, "^ .â- , -r.-- C M ^'^ ''-^'P i-irawstrings from puiung ot their banks a.so. when Emth told ^,.. „,- .... ^, „ ,7 _ ,, , ,,- V !• i. TV 1 (Jut ot garments se.v a small brass Michaels story. The grown-up people „_,k,.^; jI-,. w„™ t-, =.,,1, ..„ 1 _»j u » , ,.•,.", ri-r^ embrowery r>:ng to each end and but- opened their pocketoooss. â- , „v^t„ ;, â- a-- T^' u ^ » w • . â- tonhole it. \\ neu Ml:th counted her own oank ,„ , , . i lour «tust be kept m a perfectly J.ry place. If it is allowed to become ' one step in 'he right direction to use a single or two harmonizing colorsâ€" a blue bedroom, a green living room, and so forth. The next step toward a perfect room is to adju«; sev-jn-.l coloi values so that people will ssy: "Why anything looks right in tha; rooml" money and the gifts that others had given, her face shone with surpris? Of th^ pink varieties. La Tulipe and excellent to plant along a fence that and gladness. Then a happy thought ^^â„¢P- '^"vy cakes and bread are the ugene Verdier are early light pink you wish to hide. Sweet WilKam is cgnie to her. because happy thoughts "-''-'•"â- tember to Novemoer. They covering of leaves during happy thoughts are apt to come to t'nose wh,) are busy â€" ~ â€" ^-â€" « about doing good things. i-l# av IV)-rr^r^I-«<r"T' •Mother, may I buy a, pot of flow-| 5» 'a % I IM I C K » ^ 1^ I ers? .\nd father, may I change the: PAYABLE HALF YEARLY money into two gold pieces and hide : .Allowed on money tett with us for them in the leaves?" I from three to t*u years. Mother and father helped, for it! found to kill poultry. Swine plague deep red. 's known i^ the best late- has been the popular term for hemor- blooming crimson pewy. rhagic septicemia of 'nogs, and chicken The Ir's is the easiest possible cholera is the name of the like diseass flower to grow of poultry. I To have an Iris garden in bloom ly growth. Coi-eopsis have golden-yellow flowers, borne on long stems, and are a mass of bloom from'June until frost. The Bleeding Heart is an old favorite. The Foxglove is a handsome plsnt of state- winter, was such a splendid plan. The flow- ers were bought at the florist's, and the j money was changed at t'ne bank. The ; florist heanl the story, and gave the i prettiest blossoms in his store. The 1 Write tor l'.o,-\iet. The Great West Permanent Loaa Company. ircnto 0«ce 20 King St. West Rami advance is being made in the fiom tuiip time till .\ugust, get some improvement of i r^^'^ntive agents for Dwarf Iris, which are the first to each animal, and that for cattle now bloom in the --aring. Tbey are exeel- is being widely and usefully applied lent for borders. by veterinarians. "Pasteurella vac- \ Follow these with internievvate cine," serum, and a bacterln are be- Irises, which are next in heig'nt and ing successfully employed In staying next in time of blooming. These can the ravage.i of the hemorrhagic sep- ^ be had in various colors, ticemia of cattle and our readers ^ To continue your Iris garden's s'lm- should understand that such treatment raer bloom, select seme of the white, instantly should be given by the at- blue and purple Siberian Beardless tending veterinarian inhe disease Irises and the Tsll Border Irises, such suddenly aprears in a district. Let as .-Vurea. Monspur and Spuria. Mrs. lastly, the Of the flowering vines the £aibw"ng are desirable: Put". man's Pipe. Trumpet Vine, Clemjitis. Hon?ysuckle. Wisiaiia. Cinnamon Vine. Hardly Flowering Shrubs will give a variety of bloom from early spring until frost. The ear', est is Forsythia (yellow) then Flowering .Xlmond (pink, re'd. whit.') 'olconis in May.i followe.l by the Spirea (white), j DentiiHS (pink, white). Weigelia (pink, white), l^Iyclrangea (white), and At the Exhibition this Year Be Sure You Hear THESE TWO us see. then, by wh.'it symptoms the A. W. Tait. disease is characterized. j The last of the series is this won- Hemorrhagic septicemia of t.i'.tle derful pageant are the Japanese Ii-ise?, takes several forms and is much which are rot nearly well enough similar to anthrax und also to black- kntwn. Many people confuse them leg. The last-named disease, however, with the Siberian Ins, j»nd think them is confined practically to young cattle small and, therefore, uninteresting. under two years of age. whereas On the contrary, they aro huge, um- hemorrh.igic seutieemia aitavks cattle brella-likc flowers, of all ages, but principalljr "stockera" ' Excellent varieties art: Yellow. August to R.^se 01 October. Sharon, having from I lovely ' doable rose-shaped fiovrers cf blue.; r'r.k red and white. â- Ferenni:ils, -whether in plant, vln: cr shrub form, are most satisfactor; t'rom every standpoint, and arc; especially the sort to be chosen by j the bu<y aersMi. as one* planted th*\ ' retjulre year. WONSERFUU NEW INVENTIONS: •;. T>« .VLL-WOOP OV.\l, TON3 CK.-VMBER -bum Uk» a viulinâ€" which •ltsi:na:«« n\»ta]Uc harsh- SEE 1 T'K? l"!:c.ift' that pia.s .\l.!. r»cor<J« witli tho fxa^t WSIOHT vn?per Pl.\''HK.VC.M and ccrr«ct N!J>;i>LK. Nothlnx \0 tak» off - ncthlii* to nut on. A simp:* twist i>f th? wrl»t adjusts u Instantly to . : . r»o<'r<i». 1-0 Brtfti»ick Eihlblt Is at the South West entrance Process Baildi-if. Free Recit3ds Daily. THE iML'SICAU MERCHANDISE SALES COMPANY 819 YONG" STPE'^T ness. LET YOVK E.\n> BE TKE Ot th* T05 JNTQ little attention from year to ; I