New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 15, 1927, Page 4

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e spoiled foods is much less because | none are so readily affected by | | warmth and contamination and, too, | because milk forms so great a part ! of the young child's diet. : Whoever is responsible for the {ehild’s food should always taste | everything that is offel In this | way unfit food may often be de- tecte melon which resists wilt is a round one, and the public wants its wa- termelons elongated. The wilt-proof variety is being crossed again with other varieties. REINDEER FORAGE , Lichens. principal winter ‘orage for Alaska's reindeer heards, may suffer tremerndous damage from fire. Tke United States Biological Survey says that even under fa- vorable conditions 4t muy take 25 years or more for a rencwal of lichen growth following fire. Alaskan reindeer herde 400,000 head. Biologists warn ¢hat increased herds depend upon con- tinued , maintenarce of present for- age crops. ils of airplaning. Willlam Von Arsd.li, of Harrods- burg, Ky., made an - nergency land- ing in his bright red plane in the | pasture of a farm near here. While |he went for help, a bull grazing In the pasture sighted the machine and charged it. Whe : Von Arsdall returned he found wing coverings and struts ripped and cracked. Strips of red cloth covered the ground and the |fuselage and elevators of the plane |were badly damaged. ranch and summer hotel or colony. “Dude pasture”—Rows of cabins in which “dud«s” are quartered. “Duc¢e wrangler"—Cowboy who es herds on the “dndes.” “Savage'—"Duce” ranch owner, wrangler or other ranch hands. total Roving Barbers Are Avoiding Capital City | Washington (P—Like other trades, the tonsorial ranks include practi- tioners who are rolling stones. But few of them are encountered in Washington. One visit to the capital is usually sufficient for their rolling col- |leagues, resident barbers assert. | The rolling stone, often a capable worker, _ ot only itches to be gone, they explain, but likes his rest, and |the Capital has no Sunday closing | Jepartmént of agriculture. law. As a result, v hen he learns that | The paragon of watermelons jobs here require at least a half-day | jnust have deliclous flavor, be of |of work fundays, he decides to stay | marketable size, 8hape and con- lonly long enough to limber up his with a rind which will Newloundland Hunismen Sight Possible Wreckage Bt. Johns, N. F. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Long hours of sleep are essential ‘m health. The child who is allowed to stay late usually suffers from or nervousness, or good effect of a summer may be spoiled by | July 1 th. The hope for definite knowlc country fate of the missing Frey X of proper nd sleep. lantic flyers rested n t 1 e of illncss, probability t 11 food. Water may be two huntor ameunts at frequent White o disease germs Charles v in infants, do Coli. ng symptoms be- T family phy- ?Experimenters Seek Perfect Watermelon | Springtield, IIl, July 15. (P— A | quest for the perfect watermelon is | nearing its conclusion in the divi- | sion of plant industry of the Illinois SEASHN IS flN[bootees. riding habits and hiking |hiking, camping trips, horse-back the wild who add the touch of color Wyoming and easterners by the hun- | 5 |for the benefit of its guests and at Eighty ranches are listed the other in advertising its charms. E clothes. I The chief amusements of the | Easterners in Afl]]llfll Pllg]‘]fl]-}rimng. hunting, fishing, swimming, W | boating and mountain-climbing. Per- Ito each “dudg” ranch, and also to (P—The ¢ 3 The | ine more lucky of the guests, is the are drinking in the west syn- doses. virtually all of then. horses are as- signed as soon as the guests have ar- in the state guide and cach takes Major F. from eight to 200 guests. pecially attractive and alluring to the heim exy tenderest of the tenderfeet is the ad- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1927. “cowboy” guests are stage-managed |haps the foremost amusement from Jackson Hole, Wvyo. horseback riding of the visitors. ming has a lead on other rived. There at these synthetic flare ¢ ‘] & self-respecting cowboy, broad ' brimmed hats, blue and red bandan- nas, leather breeches, boots and roundups, calf brandings, rodeos, |the viewpoint . ' the few denizens of “dude” ranching season is open in Each ranch has a string of horses sta s In the “dude” rapch Each ranch, tries to outdo backs of another tenderfeet HONEYMOONERS been s men in the believed he would ¢ to the M 20! his obsery at any special t the woods a miles inland t trict is encoun reac friends ha The W fidently e reached New con- y many to have nd and to h Imost im- ve e0 ed by stories er rt they heard the hum the morn- the flyers should have nd. ing of the da reached this isl FO0D FOR BABY VERY IMPORTANT Extra Care Must Be Exercised During Summer By Edward Sherrard Rimer, M. D, Member Gorgas Memarial Institute | (Written for United Pr Summer should be the ideal sea- son for the child. He tend the hot weather. A st of hot days, especially accom by humidity, lowers the vitali the resistance of di The baby's digestion is impz he i much more easily u by change | in his regime. The hot weather not only, affects the baby, but it may #poil his focd. The most common disea children in summer are thos volving the dysentery and other disturban the stomach and bowels. common derangeméents of the diges- tive tract are, first those due to over-eating, next improper food. Many parents carefully give the baby the formula ordered by the doctor throughout the first year. Then when it comes time to add golld food, they are guilty of all sorts of foolish indulgence, and the baby suffers. The’ baby’s dict should be just as wigorously observed in the second year as in the first. Bits from the table, over-rich food, deserts, in- ‘cluding ice-cream soda, ca excess fruits, particularly u partly decayed fruit, all m pponsible for baby's ilin Most dangerous of all i or spoiled or contaminted Milk, for example, n spoiled throvgh Milk is a natmral cuiture for germs. Certain bacteria ways present in cow milk. Cow's food. become ATTRACTS day, 1 t from all sections anl walks of life, and of all ages, ished by each small boy—that of a cowboy. sphere, and preser- | Dress at these ranches is inform- ‘s aristocracy are al but there always is a display of principal drawing |vari-colored shirts that probably would shock the esthetic sense of () —"This historic ng live the life cher- | | |on his way. ke other iudustries of the coun- try, that of the “dude” ranch has a ‘lingo all its own. A few of the more prominent designations are: “Dude”—Any visitor from the out- side, 1 ut the easterner in particular. | “Dude ranch"—Combined cattle As It Stands Shelbyville, Ky, ‘Come again!’ in every pu THERE’S a warm invitation in every cool puff on a pipe packed with P.A,, if you get what I mean. You sort of look forward to each intake, the way you watch the mails for a letter from your best girl. Good old Prince Albert! Never wears out its welcome. Why, the instant you open the tidy red tin and get a whiff of that wonderful P.A. fragrance, your mouth waters for a taste of such tobacco. Did I say “fragrant”? I hope to tell you! The flowers that bloom in the spring have nothing cn Prince Albert. RINGE —the nation © 1927, R. J. Reynolds Tobacca Cowpany, Winston-Salem, N. C. G TEN SALE ENDS SATURDAY ff And when youload-up the old jimmy- pipe and open the drafts—say, Mister! Cool as the blast of a traffic-cop’s whistle. Sweet as his words: *T didn’t mean you.” Mild as the Gulf Stream, yet with that full, rich tobacco body that satisfies to the very limit. D’m getting mine with a pipe and P.A. every day. I want you to get yours. All you have to do is step around the corner and tell the man-behind-the-counter you want a tin of Prince Albert. He hears that hundreds of times a day from men like yourself. Try P.A. ALBERT al joy smoke! fingers and ~et enough money to be Red Airplane Wrecked bull is the latest addiion to the per- tormation, withstand the strain of shipping, and it must have stamina to resist the disease known as watermelon wilt. > | After several seasons of experi- Near Bull ments experts have produced mel- (A—DBluegrass | ons sweet enough, sound enough and of the right shape, but the only P. A. is sold everywhere in idy red tins, pound end half-pound tin humi- dors, end pound crystel-gless humidors with sponge-moi And of bite end perch removed by the Prince Albert process, RINC LR BESSE-LELAND’S TOMORROW POSITIVELY THE LAST DAY For SALE PRICES No other car has so much quality, performance and style for its size and price: =~ 60 miles per hour =~ 5 to 25 miles per hour in 81/, seconds ~ four-fifths of wheelbase cradled by springs =~ turns in an 18-foot radius ~ full-vision steel body ~ 4-wheel brakes =~ bumpers, front and rear ~ hydrostatic gasoline gauge Drive this Little Aristocrat today. Learn what comfort and performance are pos- sible at a low price. ALBRO MOTOR SALES CO. 225 Arch St. Tel. 260

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