32 THIRTY CENT BREAD 



its feats of endurance were sensational in the 

 extreme. 



The theory that a food which can nourish a race 

 horse can also nourish a man has been, through the 

 career of Azot, elevated to the dignity of a demon- 

 strated fact. The milk-fed horse of France now asks 

 America to heed the lesson which it teaches for the 

 benefit of all humanity. 



Mammala is a dry, white powder which keeps for 

 several months at a low temperature. It can be re- 

 constructed to the consistency of milk by adding the 

 water that has been taken away in its preparation, 

 or it can be used as a powder in the production of 

 bread, cakes, puddings, soups, sauces, custards, ice 

 cream and vegetable dishes. 



As it does not spoil on the way and requires no 

 ice or refrigerator cars it can be shipped in large 

 quantities by freight instead of by express, with the 

 further advantage that as it contains no water there 

 is only one-eighth as much weight on which to pay 

 transportation charges as there would be were it 

 shipped as fluid milk. Furthermore, there are no 

 cans or containers to be shipped back to the dairy 

 and no souring on the way. 



It does not have to be consumed within twenty- 

 four hours, but can be held twenty- four weeks or 

 until needed. ' 



If the United States government interested itself 

 in multiplying the unique station at Knoxville, Pa., 

 a thousand times through the butter producing sec- 

 tions of Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois, we 

 could have at the end of one year nearly 5,000,000,- 

 000 pounds of a perfect food now wasted. 



Tlais enormous quantity of dry, solid milk would 



