The Western Outlook. (San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, Calif.), Vol. 22, No. 2, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 2, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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L*
I
n
Q
i
WHAT WE SAW AT
Madame World's fair
Bv ELIZABETH GORDCH
AUTHOC of •WHO OflLDBEur FIXWEBCMUXIIMTC.
WCTUWES 4y BERTHA COHBETT jm/FROM PHCTOC.'PWS
FOR ALL CHILDREN
EVERYWHERE
and GROWN-
UPS TOO ^
The Popular New Gift Book,
Telling All About the Exposition
Handsomely Illustrated in Color
Price $1.25, Postpaid
Order From Your Bookseller or
SAMUEL LEVINSON, Publisher
Hobart Building
San Francisco
WHAT IT COSTS TO
FILL ORDINARY SILO
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Once a year the farmer haa to fill
his silo. The operation is outside of
the regular routine of farm life, and
unless considerable thought is given
the matter beforehand, it is likely to
prove unnecessarily expensive. Infor-
mation collected by investigators in
the United States Department of Agri-
culture will, therefore, prove useful to
farmers who have not worked out for
themselves the most economical system.
Because the silo has been in use for
some years in these states, ^he inves-
tigators selected Wisconsin and Mich-
igan for their work. Cost records on
31 farms were carefully kept, reveal-
ing a wide divergence in the cost of
labor per ton of filling the silo. It was
found, for, example, that one farmer
did this for 46 cents, while another
had to spend 86 cents. The average
cost was 64 cents.
The cost of labor varies considera-
bly, and in order to ascertain the most
satisfactory method, the investigators
adopted for their comparisons a uni-
form rate of 15 cents an hour for men
and the same rate for a team of two
horses. Engine hire, including the
engineer, was placed at $4.50 per day,
coal at $5 per ton and gasoline at 13
cents a gallon. Ten hours were con-
sidered a dav'e work. While these
figures cannot, of course, be consid-
ered as absolute, they afford a conven-
ient basis for the individual farmer's
calculation of the expense of filling
his silo. The various methods em-
ployed on the farms that were investi-
gated were classified in three groups.
(1) The most common practice was
to have one man with three horses on
a corn harvester cutting corn in the
field; two men to load the wagons in
the field; three or four men with
teams, depending on the distance from
the field to the silo, to haul the corn
to the cutter; one man to run the en-
gine when steam was used for power,
and, occasionally, when gasoline en-
gines were used, one man to feed the
cutter and one man in the silo to spread
and tramp the silage. Each teamster
pitched off his own load. This makes a
crew of eight or nine men, exclusive of
the man who tends the engine.
(2) In cases where there is a short-
age of teams the following method is
generally practiced: One man, with
three horses, cuts the corn; two men
load the wagons in the field; two men,
or boys, with teams, haul the corn to
the cutter; one man unloads the
wagons; one man feeds and one man
works in the silo. As soon as a load
arrives at the cutter the teamster
changes his team for an empty wagon
and goes back to the field after another
load. When a wagon is unloaded it is
run out of the way by hand. With
this method, boys who are not strong
enough to handle the green corn, can
be utilized to drive the teams. This
method requires a crew of six men
and two boys, exclusive of the engine
tender.
(3) When enough horses are avail-
able and help is scarce, the following
arrangement of men and teams is a
good one: One man, with three
horses, runs the harvester in the field;
four men with teams haul the corn to
the silo; one man feeds and one
spreads the corn in the silo. Low
trucks or wagons with racks suspended
below the axles should be used, so that
teamsters can put on their own loads.
This requires a crew of seven men,
besides the engineer.
Number and arrangements of men em-
ployed in filling silos by various
methods:
Method Method Method
Kind of Work.
1
2
3
Operating binder
1
1
1
Loading wagons
2
2
0
Driving teams
3 or 4
*2
4
Unloading wagons
T
1
T
Feeding cutter
1
1
1
In silo
1
1
1
Total No. of men....
8 or 9
8
7
No. of teams hauling..
3 or 4
2
4
CAP
TO
!NJ0Y
WINTER
Prof. Franktand demon-
strates that CX>D LIVER OIL
generates more body-heat
than anything else.
In SCOTT'S EMULSION the
pure oil is so prepared that the
blood profits from every drop,
while it fortifies throat and lungs.
If you are subject to cold hands
or feets if you shiver and catch cold
easily! take SCOTT'S EMULSION
for one month and watch its good
effects. NO ALCOHOL
14-40 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
PLENTY OF BREAD LEFT OVER
SUCCESS THROUGH FAILURE
One's Miscalculations Should Be So
Fixed In the Mind That They Will
Not Be Repeated.
Mr, Smith, In the Amen Corner, Of-
fered Suggestion to Help Out Cer-
tain Young Minister.
DO YOU NEED
FOR THE APPETITE
FOR THE DIGESTION
FOR THE LAZY LIVER
FOR CLOGGED BOWELS
= TRY =
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH
BITTERS
It is a tonic, appetizer and stom-
ach remedy of well known merit
- GET THE GENUINE -
*Boys.
T—Teamsters.
The relative merits of these methods
depend upon the conditions prevailing
on each farm. The best method is
that in which the working force is most
evenly balanced, that is, where all are
working continuously. In the majority
of cases in which the cost rose to an
unduly high figure, a poor .arrangement
of the help was found to be chiefly re-
sponsible for the extra expense. It is
not necessary to rush men and teams to
their fullest extent in order to get the
work done cheaply. If all are working
continuously and no one hindered by
the others, economy will result. Two
or three men and teams waiting to un-
load at the cutter or to load in the
field represent loss of valuable time.
The factor that should control the
size of the crew is the capacity of the
silage cutter. On one farm, for exam-
ple, on which the cost of filling the silo
was found to be 80 cents a ton, 14 men
were employed. The work could have
been done just as well with ten, for as
much silage would have been cut in the
same time if there had been only two
men instead of four, pitching on the
field; three men instead of four hauling
with teams, and one man instead of two
in the silo. Deducting the wages of the
four men and one team that were not
needed, would lower the cost of filling
at this place from 80 to 64 cents a ton.
In this case the cutter was of medium
size. With the proper arrangement of
help, such a cutter may be used almost
as economically as a larger one, but
most farmers wish to push the filling
through as fast as possible and prefer
therefore whenever possible to use a
large-sized cutter.
The five men who filled their silos
with the greatest economy used blow-
ers to elevate the silage instead of the
slat carrier. The chief objection to the
blower is that it takes so much power
to run it, but as a matter of fact, it was
found that the power used on these
farms would have been, in most cases,
quite sufficient to handle the largest ma
chines; and in only one case was there
too little power to run a medium-sized
blower. Where a blower is used care
should be taken to have the pipe stand
as nearly perpendicular as possible. In
one case where the cutter was set too
far from the silo and the pipe at an
angle of 30 degrees from the perpen
dicular, a 12 horse-pewer engine could
not handle the cutter satisfactorily
when it was operated to anything like
its full capacity. After the owner
changed the position of the cutter, put
ting it close to the silo and thus mak
ing the pipe more nearly perpendicular
no more difficulty was experienced with
clogging. _
One Sunday morning a certain
young pastor in his first charge an-
nounced nervously:
"I will take for my text the words,
"And they fed five men with 5,000
loaves of bread and 2,000 fishes.' "
At this misquotation an old par-
ishioner from his seat in the amen
corner said audibly:
"That's no miracle—I could do it
myself."
The young preacher said nothing
at the time, but the next Sunday he
announced the same text again. This
time he got it right:
"And they fed 5,000 men on five
loaves of bread and two fishes."
He waited a moment and then, lean-
ing over the pulpit and looking at the
amen corner he said:
"And could you do that too, Mr.
Smith?"
"Of course I could," Mr. Smith re-
plied.
"And how would you do it?" said
Unavoidable.
"I believe you are the same man
who was here about a year ago," said
the housewife.
Maybe so, mum," replied thp
tramp. "I was in these parts."
"And you haven't found any work
to do yet?"
Only what was wished on me,
Just What He Wanted.
"Will you let me off this afternoon
sir?" asked the clerk in a dry goods
store; "my wife wants me to beat
some carpets.''
"Couldn't possibly do it," said the
boss.
The clerk turned joyfully to his work
saying, "Thank you, sir; thank you
thousand times.''—Ladies' Home Jour
nal.
Some people learn by observation,
remarks the Milwaukee Journal. Their
eyes are open and their minds alert
to what goes on around them. They
see how other people do things and
the results they gain. When failure
comes they try to find out the cause
of. it. They examine success with care
to learn on what particular thing it
depended. They apply the principles
thus learned to their own business and
reap the benefit of knowledge gained.
There are others who never learn save
through their own experience. Obser
vation is a great aid, but experience
gives unforgettable lessons. One's
own history should be the most in-
structive. Once having come to grief,
the reasons are fixed in the mind,
Foolish Indeed is he who twice
stumbles over the same stone. Pope
says, "Make each day the critic on the
past." It is by considering our fail
ures that we know how to turn out
perfect work. It is by our mistakes
that we learn how wisely to adjust
ourselves to circumstances and people.
It is by experience that we gain con-
fidence to meet adversity with cour-
age. WThat has been done may be
LITTLE BOY'S GOOD EXCUSE
Couldn't Comb His Hair Before Going
to 8chool Because Family Comb
Had Been Loaned.
Here is a story that was told at a
recent dinner by Miss Sybil Baker,
who was chosen queen of Rose Fes-
tival, at Portland, when reference was
made to the wonderful excuses in-
vented by the rising generation.
One morning the teacher of a pub-
lic school in a western village was
glancing over her pupils, when her
eye suddenly fastened on little Wil-
lie Brown.
"Willie," said she in a stern voice,
didn't I tell you not to come to
school without having had your hair
combed ?"
"Yes, ma'am," was the rather meek-
ful rejoinder of the youngster.
"Well, then," demanded the teach-
er, a little more severely, "why didn't
you do it?"
"Because I couldn't comb it, Miss
Mary," was the startling rejoinder of
Willie. "We lent our comb to the
Smiths last night and they didn't
bring It back."—Philadelphia Tele-
graph.
Limits of Delsarte.
Friend—Does the Delsarte system
teach you haw to act when proposed
to?"
Bride—"Yes! I studied that part
carefully."
"Did you use it?"
"I used It with three or four whom
I rejected, and I did it beautifully, I
know; but when dear Tom proposed I
forgot all about it."—New York Week-
ly.
HELPFUL ARTICLE.
the preacher
With what was left over from last I again accomplished. It is only the fool
Sunday," said Mr. Smith.—Advance. | who does not better his life by his
own experience. He is wise who learns
by observation what he should strive
for and what he should avoid.
Yes, Resinol Certainly
Does Stop Eczema
Are you an eczema sufferer? Do
those ugly patches of eruption start
up and itch as though they would
mum, "by " one or ~ two" hard-hearted' I <*rivf 5™ fra£tic? And have you tried
. „ treatment after treatment, with, at
uages. | only temporary relief? Then
you are only going through the ex-
Sizing Up Father. i perience of thousands of others who
'Mother, is my father the greatest at last found that Resinol healed their
than
man In the world?"
No, Indeed, my dear."
"But he's a greater man
George Washington, isn't he?"
Certainly not. Why are you ask
ing such foolish questions this morn
ing?"
I was Just wondering why you ever I for twenty years,
married him." | gists.—Adv.
sick skins for good!
With the first use of Resinol Oint-
ment and Resinol Soap the itching
and burning usually stop, and soon
all trace of eczema or similar tortur-
ng skin-trouble disappears, even in
severe and stubborn cases. Doctors
have prescribed the Resinol treatment
Sold by all drug-
Fresh Air Is Essential.
In building poultry houses do not neg-
Please Remember.
Mrs. Meeks—This paper says no
parental care ever falls to the lot of . .
a single member of the insect tribe. lect to provide for fresh air. Be sure
In general, the eggs of an insect are to avoid draughts. Fresh air and
destined to be hatched long after the | draughts do not mean the same thing,
parents are dead.
Mr. Meeks—Now, dear, you know
why you have no right to call me an
Insect, I hope.
Discard Boarder Cow.
Swat the boarder cow and save the
high-priced feed.
HE SHOWED HIM.
"Modern Inventions are great."
"Yes; before long it will be the cor-
rect thing for a child to take a
pocket adding machine to school to
help in the solution of mathematical
problems."
Interurban Prejudice.
"Is this a through train?" asked
the impatient man from New York.
"Yes," replied the conductor. "It
makes only one stop between here
and Philadelphia."
"That's a good idea. It gives a man
who has started for Philadelphia a
chance to think it over."
The Query Discourteous.
"So glad to see you again, dear. And
I've got such a lot of news for you. Did
you know I was interested in business
now?" said the first sweet young
thing.
"Whose?" asked the second, and
then the conversation lagged per-
ceptibly.
WAS MISERABLE
COULDN'T STAND
Testifies She Was Restored
to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Lackawanna, N. Y. — "After my first
child was born I felt very miserable and
could not stand on
my feet. My sister-
in-law wished me to
try Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Yegetab1e
Compound and my
nerves became firm,
appetite good, step
elastic, and I lost
that weak, tired
feeling. That was
six years ago and I
have had three fine
healthy children since. For female trou-
bles I always take Lydia E. Pinkham's
His Courage Failed. I Veptable Compound and it works like
"Did you speak to father about me, I do all my own work -Mrs.
rthni-V" ' I A. F. Kreamer, 1574 Electric Avenue,
Lackawanna, N. Y.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
"You didn't know that girl was mar'
ried?"
"Not until I was printing a kiss on
her lips and her husband showed me
that I was making a typographical
error."
L 'V-'-'
W *
Discouraged.
"How did you happen to leave your
last boarding place?"
"The landlady had Buch mournful
eyes."
"I don't understand you."
"She always bent them upon me
when I asked for a second helping."
Engineering Triumph.
"Why are you studying that dachs-
hund so intently?"
"I consider him an architectural tri-
umph of Mother Nature's," explained
the bridge builder. "See how nicely
the stress is calculated to the span."
—Judge.
No Help Then.
"Hints on courtship abound. Every
magazine will tell you how to win a
wife. Anybody will gladly post you
on the etitquette of love making."
"What's on your mind?"
"But after a man's marries he has
to shift completely for himself."
Refmater"
SMOKELESS POWDER SHELLS
Carefully inspected shells, the best com-
binations of powder, shot and wadding,
loaded by machines which give invariable
results are responsible for the superiority
of Winchester "Repeater" Factory Loaded
Smokeless Powder Shotgun Shells. There
is no guesswork in loading them. Reliability,
velocity, pattern and penetration are de-
termined by scientific apparatus and practical
experiments. Do you shoot them? They are
SATISFACTORY SHELLS TO SHOOT
MIGHT BE "SPOTLESS TOWN"
Arthur?
Yes, I did, dear, and he agreed witi,
me heartily.
Then he said I might marry you?'
thp^nnfnt * <*uIte j used with perfect confidence by women
s mgc im. Just said j wjj0 sufrer from displacements, inflam-
mation, ulceration,tumors,irregular! ties,
periodic pains, backache, bearing-down
feeling.fiatulency, indigestion, dizziness,
His Gait.
"That old sea dog at the banquet
last night seemed to be continually
steering for the wine on the side-
board."
"Yes, I noticed he had quite a list
to port."
you were a fine girl."
A Work of Art.
"How'd you happen to buy so much ] or ner^ou37rost^ation&" Tydia E. pfnkl
stock in that fake gold mine, Hiram?" u—<_ tr ^> i j =_ .l _
"Th' feller who was sellin' it said it
The Allan-Darling team of racing
dogs, twice winners of the famous
412-mile All-Alaska sweepstakes race,
was sold recently to Lieutenant Haas
of the French army, who will take
the dogs to France for use in Alpine
service. A. A. (Scotty) Allan, the
noted racing dog driver, will accom-
pany the dogs to France.
was gilt-edged."
"Pshaw! They all say that."
"But, by cracky, he showed it to me
an' it did have a gilt edge."
Matter of Color.
Parson Snowball—Dat youngest boy
ob yourn do seem to be one ob dt
pestiferous kind, deacon.
Deacon Flatfoot—Dat's what ht
am, parson. He shore am de whit«
sheep ob mah flock.
Force of Habit.
"What's the matter with this ho-
tel? I can't get any answer tc my
ring."
"Sorry, sir, but you see all the
bellboys have made a rush to the
front."
Uninformed.
"What were the Seven Wonders o{
the World?"
"I dunno," answered Mr. Rufnek.
"I never could remember much about
what I saw in a dime museum or a
sideshow."
SAN FRANCISCO HOTELS
Wlllemstad, Port of Dutch Island of
Curacao, One of the World's Most
Delightful Spots.
Wlllemstad, the port of the Dutch is-
land of Curacao, is a quaint little
town, and with its rows of brightly
colored tiled houses of Dutch construc-
tion reminds one very forcibly of the
pictures of "Spotless Town." The
Dutch government maintains a gar-
rison of home troops there and the
island is under the management of
a governor sent from Holland.
The natives speak hardly a word of
Dutch, but employ a patois composed
of nearly all languages, with Spanish
predominating. This patois is called
"papiamento."
The harbor of Willemstad is very
beautiful, with a depth of Mater suffi-
cient to accommodate the largest
ships. Steamers enter the harbor
through a picturesque pontoon bridge
constructed by an American consul
who was stationed there for some
years.
The water in the harbor is a clear
bottle green color and the masts of
a vessel that was sunk at the dock
years ago can be plainly seen. A
quaint tramway line with almost toy
car drawn by one mule serves as a
carrier for the population.
From Curacao the American steam-
ers with transshipped cargoes run
across the very important town of
Maracaibo, in the Gulf of Maracaibo.
Maracaibo is one of the most impor-
tant commercial ports of Venezuela, I
serving as an outlet for all the coffee j
and other valuable products of eastern j
Colombia
YOU CAN CURE THAT BACKACHE.
Pain along the back, dizziness, head- 1
ache and general langour. Get a pack- |
age of MOTHER ORAT'S AROMATIC- !
LEAF, the pleasant root and herb cure j
for all Kidney, Bladder and Urinary
troubles. MOTHER GRAY'S AROMATIC-
LEAF is sold by all th-uggis-ts or sent by
mail for 50c. Sample sent FREE. Ad- }
dress. The Mother Gray Co.. Le Roy. N. Y.—Adv. I
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
Lankersnim
Hotel
55 FIFTH ST. Opposite U. S. Mint
New Fireproof Hotel. 359 Rooms
Every Modern Up-to-Date Convenience
Large Ground Floor Lobby
Rates EUROPEAN PLAN
Single rooms $ 1.00 per day, I person without bath
Double " $ 1.50 " " 2 persons " "
Single " $1.50 " " I person with "
Double " $2.50 " " 2 persons "
You don't need a map to find the Lankershim
Hotel. It is In the very center of San Francisco.
Take the Universal Bus to the Hotel at our ex-
pense. F. KLEIN. Manager.
ham's Vegetable Compound is the stan
dard remedy for female ills.
Women who suffer from those dis-
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
be convinced of the ability of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to re-
store their health by the many genuine
and truthful testimonials we are con-
stantly publishing in the newspapers.
If yon want special advice write to , .
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl- shad.
dential) Lynn, Mass. Yoar letter will "Huh! Ill bet there are New York-
be opened, read and answered by a ers who could do it without the shad?
woman and held In strict confidence, j knowing it"
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
Acme Hotel
819 Mission St. Near Fourth St
NEW HOTEL * 250 ROOMS
Large Ground Floor Lobby. Every
Modern Convenience
RATES—EUROPEAN PLAN
Single rooms 75c, one person, without
bath, per day.
Double rooms $1.00, two persons, with-
out bath, per day.
Single rooms $1.50. one person, with
bath, per day.
Double rooms $2.00, two persons, with
bath, per day.
Take the Big Blue Auto Universal Bus at
our expense to the Hotel. The Acme Hotel
is a comfortable place t® stop at a moderate
price in the very heart of San Francisco.
JOSEPH JOHNSTONE, Resident Manager.
Stone Interests Scientists.
A great deal of Interest has been ;
recently directed to samples of itacol- |
umite, a stone which is found in Bra- j
zil. When flexible, itacolumite is
cut into thin plates and, when ex-
amined with a microscope, it is found j
to be composed almost entirely of I
fine grains of sand of peculiar shape, j
with indented edges, which interlock
like the fingers of clasped hands. The j
flexibility of the material results from i
this interlocking of the grains of sand, j
of which it is chiefly composed. Al- j
though few persons know that stone i
can be anything but hard, the flexible [
stone is not so much of a curiosity as
it seems, for it is found In North Caro-
lina, and thare are specimens of it in j
the cases of a Philadelphia collection, j
The sensation of handling a piece of
stone which bends like a piece of j
rubber is a strange experience. If j
handled too roughly the stone breaks
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-
coated, easy to take as candy, regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and
bowels. Do not gripe.—Adv.
The Connoisseurs.
Two farmers, attired in corduroys and
gaiters, were strolling through a pic-
ture gallery, where they looked, and
apparently, felt, decidedly out of place.
But at last they brought up before a
picture which really seemed to please
them—a portrait of a lovely girl with
a particularly ugly bulldog
"This is something nice, Dick," said
one.
"What is it calledf"
Dick referred to the catalogue.
"Beauty and the Beast," he said.
The other man looked closer at the
bulldog.
"Ah!" he sighed, appreciatively,
"he is a beautv, too!"—Philadelphia
Ledger.
Astoria Hotel
514 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal.
SUNNY CORNER 150 ROOMS
All Outside Rooms
Elegantly Furnished
RATES—EUROPEAN PLAN
Single rooms, per day $1.00, one
person without bath.
Double rooms, per day, $1.50 and
$2.50, two persons without bath.
This New Hotel has every modern convenience
known te the latest architecture, and is within
ten minutes trolley ride to Exposition Grounds.
In the very center of the City, adjoining the
retail dry Roods district.
Take the Universal Bus from the wharf or
depot at Hotel's expense.
G. F. WALKER. Manager.
When Writing
Advertisers Please
This Paper.
Mention
40. 1915
TYPHOID
fs no more necessary
than Smallpox.* Army
experience has demonstrated
the almost miraculous effi-
cacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination.
Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you anfi
your family. It is more vital than house Insurance.
>> Ask your physician, druggist, or send for "Have
you had Typhoid?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine*
results from use, and danger from Typhoid Carrier*.
THE CUTTER LABORATORY, BERKELEY ,• CAL
raoouciKa vaccines • scrums umdep u. s. gov. licchsv
Better for All.
"Cheer up, old boy," advised the
married man. "You know 'tis better
to have loved and lost than never to
have loved at all."
"Yes," agreed the rejected suitor,
jingling a bunch of keys in his pocket,
"better for the florist, the confec-
tioner, the messenger boy, the restau-
rant waiter, the taxicab, the theatrical
magnate and the jeweler."—New York
American.
Had Been to New York.
"A Washingtcnian Has discovered a
way to remove the bones from a
Are¥wa Suffering From^w
Auto-Intoxication ; it
lntox'cation
"poisoning, or
the state of being poisoned, from toxic, substances produced within the
body." This is a condition due lo the stomach, bowels, kidneys, liver, or
pores of the body failing to throw off the poisons. More than 50 % of adults
are suffering from this trouble. This is probably why you are suffering from
nervousness, headaches, loss of appetite, lack of ambition, and many other
symptoms produced by Auto-Intoxication. Your whole system needs stirring up.
DR. PIERCE'S GOLDEN
MEDICAL DISCOVERY
(In Tablet or Liquid Form}
■will remedy the trouble. It first aids the system to
expel accumulated poisons. It acts as a tonic and finally
enables the body to eliminate its own poisons without
any outside aid. Obey Nature's warnings. Your dealer
in medicines will supply you, or you may send 50c for a sample
package of tablets by mail. Address Dr.V.AL Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
The latest edition of Dr.
Pierce's Common Senea
Medical Adviser should
be in every family. No
reason why you should
be without it when it will
be sent free to you if you
will remit cost of wrap-
ping and mailing—31 one-
cent stamps—to Dr. Y.M.
Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y.
_
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Francis, Joseph S. & Derrick, J. Lincoln. The Western Outlook. (San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles, Calif.), Vol. 22, No. 2, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 2, 1915, newspaper, October 2, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth596376/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .