Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 July 1908 — Page 7

oy ' W 7 A AETWAEWE A aoET Dorrr L/ DY - MALRLHAGE i AT &£ A - RE L ' ivl_a VA \ f‘“_.ll 4 , i ‘ }i{]‘;‘ ‘;]{), ‘: j3' I:" A i .2‘ SN ? : : ® .» it :’ljiw[ ‘Hi”‘ i : l,u"qi{q‘ a"’“}'h’);l JR AAR ST SIS L gt N A wll e (0D @OO @ | ,M! i\ ;}M" 'i )i' & v, ,!’vl‘i \\F\\‘ r,fi)f(}!!;fltl‘l 1,. V- Ll e 85 4 AL S II Ny % : G - 7\r y ) ,7/;fl | \;!‘ il WV S T /i’l “1 ol i , .\\\’{ gl [T S ‘-’;[;l e -—— 2 .. 2 il s | (. g [T {1 P < Si / \"'"l, ‘ N ’ulw A , 3 1/ //6 A 4 "’{fif.: SO ;/ "r?’eg‘.; “i'i'!?ff'f , - ; | ) oSV RO [ §2B sIR !/1// 4 ‘:“4 i ‘-“—"’7 PN <P & %’“‘ =.N 4; ,‘;‘l‘3 -s L H ~/’ Q‘ \ o s IP~ lgy aff [“, ‘f",( “i e . ‘ 2 R . ; :.,:, {/ 0 & @' )’ 7 % / 254 L@ :’.'r‘z’."li’f;:h’ D T o L B % el 9 [ B e BN i SN = rer 54 Fo i .-"):)" “" o T A!‘;"fg;"n‘ G s = far S oy i ‘fi? \ ”H—-i-i . U\gw v @/ !fl/ Ei “.\:’! ’ -;—! . .\ // ‘I Y% ; vm}-:.—:.:‘” | Ne 1 R { i - W//}Jfllpflr .Vi s .._.// /] :‘{;L“\ » - ‘,,‘,: ’- .. :. @ ;). I < Q.—-“ ‘":.‘ g g ' HETHER ma 2YU FRY |\ & Pk / !/7/,1 @ @l X il : bso- % ” \{}\ ‘. g. 5 £ = ZAV {4/ ////"/‘ ' ! . : . /e N e riage be a @, THLS. A L Vi i , i D/7@ DU '_ e R NG T {! // //((l’ 9¢Q @ w/'g 3" &s 4 l" T or not is so = ',“.i 4‘, N ",—vv,-’.’.'.w’ —— ge\/] , AS . = . \ | S o e e (g — el VO5 2\ | WARPZY cided only _b3 ¥ '\\\%\,‘A \Y 2D M / //////'l///7 o~2¥ S\ '\\\\\)\f)) ?' A =bo bave tried it, ooy st B I/M} N/ =Se QAN 3‘ « '\( lam no feminine .0( T !: ( A yy/fl fi\ > : \\"\ ! | : [ | Quixote, tilting iy bserver, s o - O /7/’ ¢ o | '/). \f§ windmills. I a:xrris;r;epl) a":; ?mha’pp"v Y ~ /’//////57/7// G»'mm‘vm ‘I/’ ' x ing happy m S, e Ni il Wit : Yo S A e N e to ali chegth?hett?:rls:&f" n:)lslich has made its " Z’/?/I‘/s— \.\\\i'\c ‘ :;;:;!:u rxlxlx:xt:lt > set that the fact of ' 4. ~/ NE WENT ’\\‘,’/, from the girl's dream, yet she never blarlx:escgl‘fil; | It might be said at the outse: that the fact of ol {\\l,’/,/ WL D OVERTHE \./ selt for ahy part of the failure. Still, as sife. coukd: R . //dff///lfi&fll I}’! speak beforé me and her shlldrfig l;w;;hs;;in iy } 3 it h whom s ; i 7 mm“.mm' I” | \ LET, TERAMAN, /,7/}‘& ;)f co(;l(xxtle:g ]:)(; et aidm;:nor, she may not be Whollly; 1‘ [““"“m“ ' | “ ll’“ I" \ i‘m; A cj[,Vf ME ~ ng: from fault. Should you, present lovers, F?n ’ | ' ‘ ‘ ’ {l} ~ Ll ' P b&\‘ J'//,/}/-‘ the marriage in which such as :::;”m:fs el ' | o § H T nce, a success or a . \ = S UITH RS =o S s o h"' “ V’;/ S ‘lm M) ’ have often spent some tlnlllza;\tfiiisg‘:‘;sewithout ; ' 1y - | h been a r s :i 3 ‘\{ \\\'2 "H /)% ;/;;;é%:;" ;23: fr:sl‘;(:-rfind?:g by the master thereofi.f Tlll.l: \ 3 : iy |\ W ) ' \‘%fi?” is not due to ill-cooked fOOd’hf(:r tltllee cZoke dl:)es i' “‘ A f"’/’ e 1 kfi%%ffi\\‘\\/\:} Ry goo{llfdtits,zeih?&densi:sbto?led, “Why didn’t s\ | . = / Ng=e .‘.ll‘.,\‘,:' likewise. b it is fried, “Why wasn’t it %2’,s $ "l 4‘(]}%{&& g;’(‘)‘“;gv th(i)sr. I)erllliz;plst tilse gofnpla;nt w;l;t;): g;zt - W, o= K () AR b o hen he wa o @ [ 2%, TN e o always over or nder done; o« L\ (,))é N 2 ! The v g that he wanted and had nots spoken : l ' AT : ; something : red. Maybe it would be: | ”‘ | I )) %' > ¥ about had not been prepa $ I was married to \ A/ » :’) - ‘\g ¢ \\\“\W\ “I've been trying ever 'since S I 4 b |o\\ €& UAN it

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NAa_ §s not proof that it is a ‘success, nor is the excellence of an institution proved by the few cases but by the many. The few but prove the possibility of success where there is more often but slight measure of it. : No one who has considered the matter thoughtfully can doubt that marriage at its best is the perfeet life, ideal in its relations and in its development of the best type.of man and woman, but, unfortunately, that a thing may be is not the same as that it is. : ' . To an outsider, one of the strongest arguments against matrimony is the number of those who try to get out of it. Being tied is in itself a condition trying to an erratic tempérament. for you are never so eager to get away as when you know _ you cant. , , ' 1 have watched devoted lovers grow into indifferent partners, and also have seen most beau‘tiful marriages grow from rather commonplace wooings, so the advance stage seems not much ©of an indication what the future will give. . One of my girl friends said t 6 me of her fiance: “I am not one of the silly girls who cannot see faults in those they care for. I can see them all the plainer because I love, and though I have hunt‘ed very hard for them, I can’t see a fault in Joe, and so I know he hasn’t got anyi She and Joe got married and went their loving way. Some years later I 'met her, and in the course of conversation she surprised me by saving: “No, of course, I don't tell Joe everything, the way I used to. Men are so stupid they never understand, so it is fcoelish to tell them and get into a fuss.” “Do they grow stupid after marriage?” - . “Well, they may not, but they seem to. Why, " Joe nearly went wild over the most innocent lJetter that 2 man sent me, and he happened to find. I've told the maid again and again never to bring my letters to the table, but to put them in my bureau drawer, but she is so careless. One often has letters she deesn’t wish her husband to see, bills and things of that sort.” Now, it is hard for me to imagine marriage a success in which one party to the contract hassuch a feeling as that. Marriage, it seems to me, is cne of two things, either a business contract, or a union founded upon sentiment, and if deceit enters into it one party or the other is not living up to the agreement, however smoothly things may seem' to go. If it is a business concern, each partner has a right to the confidence of the other, and so long as sentiment entérs into it there will be the same interchange of interests between married couples as between the engaged. The rule holds as good whether applied to man or o woman. 5 = _Another of my friends loves hér husband devotedly, she says. She has no secrets from him—nor from anybody else—not even those she ought to have, for perfect faith does not necessitate telling & man every foolish little thing, nor pass- ~ ing on to him something some girl friend has told ° her. When of an evening her husband puts on his coat to go out this wife begins: “Why, Harry, "are vou geing out this evening? - Where are vou-

In a statement presented to the British parliament it appears that in 1906 the imports of theat and wheat -flour into the United Kingdom were %8 per cent. of the total supply. In Germany the imports in 1905 were 35 per cent.and in France in 1906 three per cent. of the total supply. : It was stated that in the United Kingdom in 1906 imported supplies were, of meat, about 47 per cent.; of butter, §7 per cent., and of cheese, 61 per cent. of the total consumption.: For France the latest returns relate to 1892, and ir that vear the imports of meat were three pe: cént. of the total supply:

IMPORTED BREAD IN ENGLAND

~AV iy K Y/ ARRY ARE @Y\ 00l U 7, 8\ HOLNNG 3 g W, go?ng? What are you going for? Who else is

TN wa e W S PRI . WY % going? What makes you go? You can think of me waiting-here alone until you get back. 1 shall sit up until you get home.” Think of a self-respecting, able-bodied and minded man being subjected to that every time he goes out of the house. Could you bear it, oh, sister woman, if he put you through like questioning? Why should-a man or a woman be required to give an account of all the moments as they fly? Speaking of human beings from my own standpoint, I should say there is nothing dearer than freedom of the individual, and nothing much harder to bear than any infringement upon it. I consider being questioned almost the unpardonable offense on the part of a friend, yet, left to myself, probably I should tell him or her all T knew: but quizzing me always results in my telling nothing, and there must be others like that. Something of this kind I said to Ella, and that to ask a man so much seemed to me like an indignity. She replied: “How funny you are! Why should he cbject to telling me if he isn’'t going where he is ashamed to have it known? Am I not his wife and entitled. to know all he does?” “He probably might tell you without your asking if you gave him a chance, but anybody with an atom of sense would object-to being forced to teR fivery time he turned around and why.” “If he loves me he ought to be willing to tell me so little a thing as that.” = v What are you going to do with a woman like that to live with every day—llove her? Yes, but you will come to the conclusion that dumbness is not without some compensations. ! Once I was visiting a friend who had been the most romantic and sentimentdl of girls. When she was first married she wept bitterly because her husband said another woman was the hand--somest one he had ever seen. P _ “No other woman ought to be so handsome to a man as his wife, however she looks,” sobbed she, as if a man lost his eyesight when he married. . Wouldan't you suppose a woman would lose confidence in her husband’'s judgment if he thought she was the most beautiful of women when her mirror told her she was not? While I was at this friend's home her husband told at dinner of something funny that had happened that day in the office, addressing his remarks directly to her. She made no pretense of listening, and evidently did not hear a word. “You don’t seem to see anything funny in that?” - “Oh, I never listened to it at all. I thought likely it was as stupid as the stories you usually tell”—ruderess in her manner as Jn her words. She often sighs because marriage is so ‘different

In Germany in 1906, under the old tariff, the imports of meat were 11 per cent. of the total consumption. The United States has a considerable exportation of all these commodities. The imports of wheat and wheat flour into the United Kingdom in 1906 were: From British possessions, 58,462,000 bushels, vajued at $60,000,000, and from foreign countries 129,320,000 bushelg, valued at $132,000,000. The quantity of wheat grown in the United Kingdom in 1906 was 54, 123,000 bushels, of which probably 85 to 90 per cent. was directly iwed for food by the people.— ansas City Star. : | ‘

s T L slO ey eo I e ST Iv D eDo o " g teach Polly to . make ; bread, but it seems im“ML l' i ” possible for her to get _ 3 Ak f | it into her head,” and ! , E;, |’l | Al A the bread is as light EHE 2I R / ‘ \,” - and sweet as bread | 11! e 1,,] m ;“ll!r i i ought to be. Heaven E'i ’ b iU | ha help the woman whose (1L ’ "||'l ‘i‘ husband thinks he can < / LAt cook, and help Ther & ? doubly if at the same =™ ¢ ‘»[{Hf', time he has the grumSBine ’s'}jf‘i'h‘ bling habit! ‘ \—§ ’/’ ; i”“"‘ii;!“l If you sat at the S \ ‘_J '1"; table three times daily i ) N to such remarks, you T [ LS, : U i“’ ) dear little bride of the = /J* { f future, what would life - / be worth to you? Yet m\ [ ? this man has been AN G much lowed of women N and has made three < h//y/qr /D YoU L 0 = § ' wives happy—or miser- ' ' 1 S able?—well, conscious (/g;?’_éfé’%%};;{/ Q-— of a few of their deLAST WEEA 2 i fects, let us say. But 5 to some women it would be bitter bread

that had that flavor; one would be as comfort able walking on tacks as living with a man whao is never suited, never praising, but always finding fault. : I have never seen an instance of a very happy marriage when the woman Wwas the bread winner, if the husband were a strong, well man. It a woman makes a home and c;%es properly for the husband and children who should be in it, she has business enough within the walls of her house. Whatever she does outside is just so much taken from the strength and thought that belong vightly to the home and its inmates. From the beginning it has been woman’s part to care for what the man provided, and this instinct is rooted back many centuries, and is a part of the human race to-day. So surely as it is violated for anything but the greatest need the woman and the man suffer for the violation. She grows to despise the man who does not provide for her—and he loses his self-respect. i The woman who works with all her might te help a man make money, makes a great mistake if she is seeking happiness, for the money is bought at the cost of the character development in tenderness and unselfishness that the man needs and gets when he looks after his wife as he wants to when he marries. It should be some very strong cause that leads her to take from him this right to an unselfish manhood. The. woman who makes a true heme does more for the man than she does by going into the labor mart, and she cannot do both, 25 It is true that the happiness of married life depends a good deal upon the weoman—more, I think, than upon the man—because her strength lies in just and proper using of the powers of heart and spirit. Of course, men sometimes are trying and dense, but I have seen most unprom-. ising material made into husbands who were delightful and the envy of women who had not known or cared how to use what was theirs to build with. One cannot be happy with an unbearably jealous man who suspects his wife at every turn, but the man with minor faults, such as asking “What did you do with the 50 cents I gave you last week?” may be cured by the right handling. It may be hard to be happy if you have black eyes and hair, when your husband takes pleasure in caliing your attention to-beauties with blue eyes and gclden hair, and tells you how he always admired that style of beauty, but think what a compliment he paid you in prefegring you in spite of his fancy for another type of come liness.; o ; ; Jealczusy, brutality and vulgarity are so strikingly offensive that all the world admits there is no chance for happiness with them, but they wreck few lives® comparatively. If marriage is a failure it.is not In any great measure because of these, but because it is allowed to become common-place. Those who keep a touch of romance in their relations do not find wedded bliss a myth. It is well to preserve one’s illusions. Beside the loss of all poetry out of the mutual life, another cause for the unhappiness in marriage that makes it seem a failure is lack of -courteLY. of the consideration that jg given in: stinctively by the sweetheart who counts it no bore to listen to her lover's stories, nor finds it difficult to laugh at them, though she bears them over and -over. (Copyright, by Joses’ M. Bowles,)

ISRAEL ASKS FOR A KING Sunday School Lesson for July 5, 1908

LESSON TEXT.—I Samuel 8:10-22. Memory Verses, 19, 20. GOLDEN TEXT.—"“By me kings reign and princes decree justice.” Prov. 8:15. TlME.—Near the close of Samuel’s administration, B. C. 1100-1094 (Ussher). COUNTRY.—SamueI was born at Ramah, a few miles northwest of Jerusalem; and there for the most of his life he made the center of his administration, from which he made a wider circuit as judge and as teacher of religion. Comment and Suggestive Thought. The country was but little larger than Wales, and, like it, “a land of mountains and hills, skirted through its whole length by the deep-lying Jordan valley on the east, and the harborless coast of the Mediterranean on the west. The lay of the land gradually developed different qualities, and mad> natural barriers- between tribes, where the means of cpmmunicatitm we_x_g\ s 0 difficult and rare.” e The twelve tribes were of one blood, one religion, one language, ‘and. one history, but there was little of the solidarity of a nation. The social unit was the tribe. Each tribe had its own political organmization. They were loosely held together, and sometimes broke out into open war. ~ The people were an agricultural people, untrained in the arts of war, lovers of home and of peace. Their wealth consisted in flocks, grain fields and vineyards. Hence they were exposed to 'the raids of their warlike neighbors, as the Lowlanders of Scotland were to the forays of the Highlanders. The people lived in walled villages for safety, while their outlying fields, vineyards and pasture’ lands were exposed. : Their enemies were warlike and on every side, always more or less hostile. The warlike commercial Philistines lined the western shore with its rich plains. The Amalekites on the south, and the desert tribes on the east of the Jordan were ever seeking whom they might devour. ; The government was a; kind of republic. “The organization was at best exceedingly primitive.” Frequent reference is made to the “men of the town” (as for example Judg. 9:2, 6, 23, 26, et seq.), suggesting that most matters of public interest were decided by a council including all the free men of a city. : The Transition Period.—The conditions that tended to unity were central‘ized in Samuel. Graetz’ History of the Jews, volume 1, furnishes an ' excellent account of which the following is a summary: :

1. Samuel himself, the most striking figure of the nation, was in himself a strong unifying forrce. 2. Samuel’s irresistible eloguence for a revival of true religion found a powerful response in many hearts. 3. He traveled the whole land, appointed public meetings, and announced to the multitudes the lessons revealed to him by the spirit of God. Year after year he called together the elders of the people. At Ramah, his residence, frequent meetings of the tribes took place. | 4. At divine services Samuel offered sacrifices, introducing the use of stringed instruments to arouse devout feelings, and added a new element, songs of praise. Samuel, the ancestor of the celebrated psalmists, the sons of Korah, was the first who composed songs of praise for divine service. : . 5. The tribe of Judah, who, during the entire period of the Judges had not taken the slightest share in public events, was now driven by the incursions of the Philistines to unite with the other tribes. They brought an accession of stremgth and religious activity. i 6. It must be noted that just at this period Israel's greatest enemies, the Philstines, were transformed into a kingdom. ~ V. 6. “But the thing displeased Samuel.” 1. It was the choosing of “the second best,” when ‘“the best” was possible to them. Hence it was a great disappointment to Samuel. His long life of teaching and training had not accomplished its purpose. They refused their high privilege of being unlike all the nations, the chosen people of God, the means of blessing all nations. So Esau bartered his birthright for a mess of pottage. 2. It was a rejection of God. V. 7. “They have-rejected me that I should not reign over them.” It is quite prob. able that they half consciously wanteda king, because they were tired of naving their prosperity depend on their good behavioy. The leaders God chose for them could succeed only when the people turned to God. But the king might not press them so hardly, but conquer by his skill and organizing power, V. 19. “The people refused to obey.” —R. V., to hearken unto—*the voice of Samuel.” They simply were not good enough to have the best government. Practical Points. Like the Israelites, we are tempted to insist on our own wills and choices. We are apt to logk too intently and see too exclusively the evils in our lot, as did the Israelites. The life of faith, which relies on an unseen arm, and hearkens to the law of an unseen king, is difficult, and sense cries out for something that it can realize and cling to. God does the best hie can for us. If we will not accept his ideals and accept the best life he has planned for us to live, he will give us the second best blessings. ’

Make Profits on Rats. Rat catchers and inventors from all parts of London are eagerly competing for a prize of ten guineag and the emblazoned diploma which the, Societv for the Destruction of Vermin offers. This society, of which Sir James Crichton-Browne is the president, seeks to exterminate the rat tribe, as well as mice, house flies and other lively nuisances. At present rat skins are not commercially profitable, and the society hopes to’ discover some good use for them. The theory is that once people find a profit may be made out of dead rats, more efforts will be made to catch them.

The Russian Thistle

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(a) Branch of mature plant; (b) tender soft seedling about two weeksl pld; (c) flower detached and held by minute hairs among a few leaves; (d).

Homeward Bound for Well-Earned Rest

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By J. J. Taylor. The most I want to dois to set the farmers to thinking, to take notice .of their own pastures and that of their neighbors. When riding through the country, notice the condition of pastures in general. Some will be low, wet and marshy, with nothing but coarse grass; others with part dry land eaten so close there seems to be nothing left, and then there is the upland pasture that is covered with weeds, so much so, that the grass will not grow to any extent. Now how long would it take a man with a pair of shears to clip enough grass for a cow a day in some of these pastures? Is it any wonder that cows do not give much milk? This is too common, right in June when there should be a surplus to help out later in the season. Did any of you ever have the cows get out some night and get in the garden, or where there was plenty of feed, and see what an increase there was in the flow of milk? Now, that is just the condition our pastures should be in all summer, baving an abundance of good feed and then you would see what a profit there would be in cows. When the pasture is not eaten close there is a great deal more feed grown on that same land. Take a pasture ‘that has more feed for a year or two than the stock could eat and we can keep more stock on that same land, and have plenty of feed, than we can when it is eaten close every year. : . : £

Eggs for Culinary Use.—Eggs for culinary use should be kept infertile, as they will keep longer than eggs that are fertile. No male is needed in a flock engaged in the production of eggs for any use except hatching. For the farm flock this is advice of importance, as it will make it easier to keep just a breeding pen congjsting of a first-class male and a number of the best females. Eggs for culinary purposes ~should be kept in a cool, dark place till ready to send to market. ‘Clean nests are necessary for the production of such eggs because an egg once dirty can never be made clean, as most of our readers know by experience. ; Feed Pullets Well.—There is not much danger of fattening pullets if they “are allowed to run on the farm.

flowers viewed from above and in front; (e) seed with -flower parts removed, enlarged; (f) coiled embryo removed from the seed coats enlarged.

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A great deal of money is being made by the breeding of Angora rabbits. The hair makes a silk which is believed to be good for rheumatism. The better the animal is nourished the finer is the silk. An important part of the culture is the careful combing of the hair. ‘Bach rabbit is said to produce a profit of 12 franes a year. . ] ; : SN , : : Grits.—Provide grit for use nex* winter. S e

m‘ : . Obeying Mother A man had just arrived at a Massadhusétts summer resort. In the afternoon he was sitting on the veranda when a handsome young womasn and her six-yearold son came out The little fellow at once made friends with the latest arrival. “What is your name?” he asked. Then, when this information had been given, he added: “Are -you married?™ “l am not married,” responded the man, with a smile.. = At this the child paused a moment, and, turning to his mother, said: “What else was it, mamma, youw , wanted me to ask him?’—Harper’s.

YOU’RETOO THIN. Eyen Slight Catarrkal Derangements of the Stomack Produce Acid Fer- " mentation of the Foeod, It's Stomach Catarrk Some people are thin and always reraain thin, from temperamental ressons. ' Probably in such cases nothing can be done to change this personal peculiarity. But there are & large number of people who get thin, or remain thin, who naturally would be plump and fleshy but for some digestive derangement. Thin people lack in adiposk tissue. Adipose tissue ig chiefly. composed of fat. Fat is derived from the oily constituents of food. : - . : The fat-making foods are called by the physiologist, hydrocarbons. This elass of- foods are not digested in the stomach at all, They are digested in the duodenum, the division of the alimentary canal just below the stomach. The digestion of fat is mainly, if not wholly, the work of the pancreatic jaice. - This juice is of alkaline reaction, and is rendered inert by the addition of acid. A hyperacidity of the digestive fluids of the stomach passing down into the duodenam, destroys the pancreatic fluid for digestive purposes. Therefore, the fats aro ‘not digested or emulsified, and the system is deprived of its dne proportion of oily eonstituents. Hence, the patient grows thin. [ s

The beginning of the trounble isa catarrhal condition of the ach which causes = hyperacidity é! the gastric juices. This hyperacidity is caused by fermentation of food in the stomach. When the food is taken into the stomach, if the process of digestion does not begin immediately, acid fermentation will take place. This creates a hyperacidity of the stomach, juices which in their tarn prevent the pan-" creatic digestion of the oils, and the emaciation results. e A dose of Peruna before each mesl hastens the stomach digestion. By hurrying digestion, Peruna prevents fermentation. of the contents of the stomach, and the pancreatic juiceis thus preserved in its normal state. It them only remains for tlre patient to eats sufficient amount of fat-forming foods, . and the thinness disappears and plump-~ ness takes its place. o

— T 2 B ' | Food -~ : % | pl'()du (1S 5 < Libby’s Yeal Loaf is made of the best selected mest; scientifically prepared and evenly baked by damp heat in Libby’s Great Whife Kifchen. The : !\Bhl!al flavor is all retained: W hen removed from the tin it’s ready to serve! It can l)e qtficklym ; pared in a _variety of stylesand nothing makes tter summer meal! In the- home, at tl‘e camp; and for the picnic Libby’s Veal Loaf is satisfying dish; full of food value that brings contentment. _ - Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicas

s | Positively cured by CARTERS) towe tuvae . ‘ They also relieve Dis- | tress from Dyspepsia, In--4 Taste in the Mouth, Coat ed Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER They regulate lhe Bowels. Purely Vegetabio SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICEt2- i > u CARTERS| Fac-Simile Signature e | nior ! PILLS, ‘ 00l __| REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. PEToRS ATrpe et Also Montana and Alberta lapds in small tracts. Agents wanted. LP.WG‘R “B.Mummwhfinfi-..hufl M e Thompson's Eye Walm