50 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
WHAT IS ICE CREAM ? 
Dr. Wiley Tells You 
In July Good Housekeeping 
And, of course, he tells you what constitutes good ice 
cream and that which may produce harmful effects. Seven- 
teen years ago we started to manufacture good ice creaam— 
pure ice cream—the kind that is rich and wholesome, 
made from the purest ingredients we could obtain. 
We 
maintained this high quality standard year after year and 
added to our experience, so that today 
Jersey Ice Cream 
is the best ice cream you can buy. 
We have our own standard of pure food laws that is 
more stringent than any National or State Pure Food Laws 
that have been passed. Our cream comes from Vermont 
creameries, is pasteurized to keep it pure, and contains 
more butter fat than is required by law. Our flavors 
and extracts are the best and purest obtainable and the 
highest grade cane sugar is used. 
Our factory is of sanitary construction. 
The ice cream 
is packed and shipped in cans absolutely clean in every 
respect. 
Is itany wonder Jersey Ice Cream is deliciously smooth 
and wholesome? Look for the Jersey sign and you are 
sure of getting ice cream that is pure. 
JERSEY ICE CREAM CO., 
B. F. Keith’s Theatre. 
The name of John Tiller is recog- 
nized the world over as a guarantee 
of terpsichorean perfection. Tiller 
was the originator of the Pony Bal- 
let, and has produced more dancing 
novelties than any other living pro- 
ducer. It was a stroke of positive 
genius on Mr. Keith’s part, when he 
entered into a contract for the fam- 
ous English dancing master to 
bring to America the great John Til- 
ler company, direct from a long and 
highly successful engagement at the 
Palace theatre in London. This com- 
pany includes the famous Twelve 
Sunshine Girls, the Six Eton Boys, 
and four principal dancers, selected 
from the 370 graduates of John Til- 
ler’s famous school now appearing 
in thirty-odd ballets in various parts 
of the world. They will present two 
distinct acts in different portions of 
the bill at B. F. Keith’s Theatre next 
week, entitled ‘‘Over The Wall,’’ 
and ‘‘The Sunshine Girlies.’’ Both 
are contributed chiefly for fun mak- 
ing purposes and the introduction of 
expert and novel dances. Complete 
scenic and costume productions have 
been brought from London for each 
of these productions. 
Insects in Relation to the Dying of 
The Chestnut Trees 
The importance of having the best 
information that can be secured on 
the subject of insects in their relaxa- 
tion to the chestnut led the Secre- 
tary of Agriculture to project an ex- 
Lawrence, Mass. 
tensive investigation through the 
Branch of Forest Insects of the Bu- 
reau of Entomology. 
General investigations since 1893 
have shown that more than 450 spe- 
cies of insects inhabit the chestnut. 
While all of these are not destruc- 
tive, some are especially so. One, 
the so-called two-lined chestnut bor- 
er, is directly responsible for the 
death of more timber, perhaps, than 
all the others combined. This is a 
small, elongate ‘beetle, which flies 
in May and June and deposits eggs 
on the bark of living and dying 
chestnuts, oak, beech, and ironwood 
in the Southern, Middle, and East- 
ern States. The elongate, slender 
larvae mine in the inner bark and 
outer wood in such a manner as to 
girdle the trees. When they at- 
tained their full growth they trans- 
form to the adult stage in the outer 
wood, or bark, to emerge the follow- 
ing spring and repeat the process. 
Investigations have shown that it 
can be conta by disposing of 
the infested trees in such a man- 
ner as to destroy the bark on the 
main trunks during the fall and 
winter months. 
The extensive dying of the chest- 
nut in the Southern States during 
the last century, where the chestnut 
blight disease was not. known to oec- 
cur, together with extensive investi- 
gations in this region, indicate that 
there are a number of agencies of 
destruction which must be investi- 
gated before the problem of pro- 
tecting the chestnut can be solved. 
In some sections of the South 
where more than fifty years ago the 
chestnut trees were abundant, very 
few are present today. Observations 
by Dr. A. D. Hopkins, in charge of 
Forest Insect Investigations, during 
tke past twenty years in the appala- 
chians show a widespread death of 
both chestnut and chinquapin during 
tle period. 
In order that investigations may 
be extended in all sections where the 
cl! estnut grows, owners of timber 
sl ould report to the Bureau of En- 
Railway Business for May 
For the month of May the net op- 
erating revenue of the railways de- 
clined five and five-tenths per cent 
per mile of line as compared with 
May 1911, and that for May 1911 
was four and eight-tenths per cent 
liss than for May 1910. This is the 
salient fact of the monthly summary 
of the Bureau of Railway Econo- 
mics, compiled from the reports of 
the railways to the Interstate Com- 
merce Commission, and embracing 
ninety per cent of the steam railway 
mileage of the country. 
The total operating revenues were 
$226,109,262, an increase of $7 per 
mile of line over May 1911. The. 
operating expenses were $161,368,- 
677, an increase of $24.29 per mile of 
line, while the net operating revenue 
was $64,740,585, a decrease of $17.23 
per mile of line. Taxes amounted for 
the month to $9,897,301, or $45 per 
mile, an increase of nine and two- 
tenths per cent. 
The decrease in net operating 
revenue was most severe for the 
Eastern group of railways, amount- 
ing to eleven and nine-tenths per 
cent. For the Southern group it in- 
creased four-tenths of one per cent, 
and for the Western group less than 
one-tenth of one per cent. The ag- 
gregate of the net operating revenue 
for the eleven months of the fiseal 
year, and also for the five months 
of the calendar year, when measured 
per mile of line, shows a decrease 
in comparison with the correspond- 
ing periods of the previous year. 
JUST OUT 
THE NEW ENGLAND 
RESORTER 
Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. 
“The Intimate Monthly Magazine with a 
National Reach” 
WEAR (BIC 0D RUBBERS 
