Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 6 October 1904 — Page 9
WHAT ROME THUS
TEE POPE'S PHYSIOIA1T ETTD0E3ES AN AMEEIOAH PEMEDY. Jr. Lapponl Uaaa Dr.TTiniam rink rill In 111 Practice ItecAaae ReaulU Meet Iii Expectations. Dr. Lapponi, the famous physician to tho Vatican, whose na-ne has recently come so greatly to the trout on account of his unremitting attention to His Holiness, the late Pope Leo XIII, and the high esteem and confidence vrith which he is regarded by the present Pope, His Holiness Pius X, is a man of commanding genius. He is more than h. mr man nf srJeneti : ha is & man of original and independent mind. TJntrammeled by the " etiquette " of the medical profession and hariug used Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People in his practice with good results, he freely . btows the facts and endorses the value -of this remedy with an authority which no one will venture to question. Dr. Lapponl's Letter. 'I certify that I have used Dr. "Williams' Piuk Pills in four cases of the simple anaemia of development. After a few weeks of treatment, the result came fully up to my expectations. For that reason I shall not fail in the future to extend the use of this laudable preparation not only in the treatment of other forms of the category of anaemia or chlorosis, but also in cases of neurasthenia and the like." (Signed) Giuseppe Lafponi. Via dei Gracchi 332, Rome. The "simple anaemia of development referred to by Dr. Lapponi, is of course, that tired, languid condition of young girls, whose development to womanhood is tardy and whose health, at that period, is so often imperiled. His opinion of 'the value of Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Palo People at that time is of the highest scientific authority, and it confirms the many published cases in which anaemia and other diseases of the blood as well as nervous diseases such as nervous prostration, neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, paralysis and locomotor ataxia hae been cured by these pills. They ere commended to the public for their efficiency in making new blood and etrengthening weak nerves. After such an endorsement they will be accepted by the medical and scientific World at their full value. . 7 Day Coach Tickets to St. Lonls Via Nickel Plate Road On sale Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of each week until Nov. 24th inolusire. Stop-over at Chicago. Season, 60 day and 15 day tickets cn sale every day. Very low rates. Call on ocal agent or address C. A. Asterlin. T. P. A., Fort Wayne. Ind. it s Congressman Burton L. French ol Idaho, aged 29. youngest member of the Hons?, is known as "Uncle Joe's baby." Piso's Cure for Consumption always rives immediate relief in all throat troubles. F. E. Bierman, Leipsic, Ohio, Aug. 81.1901. The Sandwich Islanders estimate the beauty of women by their weigth. Do yu want a Self taking Datin? Stamp far 75 cents? Addrea. Lock Box 219, Fjrt Wayna, Indiana. In idleness there is perpetual despair. Carlyle. Sir. WlnsloWa Boonrnro Bncr for CMldraa teethinc; oofcana tha gumt, ml ace inf ammauoa, aJ'aj pain, can wind colic 2j oont a bottJ. 9 $ 1 It Core Cold, Coughs, Sere Throat, Croop, Xnfla. oza, Waoopinf Cough, Bronchia- and Asthma, A certain cur for Coosnmptioa la first stages, and a tore relief in sdraneed stages. Tse at occa, Ton will see the excellent effect after taking the first doae. Sold by des' era Terywhara. Lain bot: i cenu aad SO centa y - CmCAGO, FT. WAYNE, FOSTORIA, FINDLAY, CLEVELAND, BUFFALO, NEW YORK, BOSTON UKD ALL POINTS: EAST and WEST Reached Most Quickly and Comfortably via tha Nickel Plate Road. Three Express Trains erery day in the year. Ibra Pullman Sleeping Cars to CMeajo, Jfew York and Boston. Comfortable high back seat coaches and modern Dining Car serving meals en Icdtrldual Club Plan ranging la prices from 3So to $1X0. Also a la Cart serrlce. Colored Porters in uniform to look to tha comfort of first and second class passengers and keep ears scrupulously cln. Direct Connections with FastTrt'astt Chicago rrd Buffalo. AO Agent Sell Tickets via this Popular Rouia, Write to C. A. ASTERLIN, Trav. Pass. Agent. Ft. Wayna, Ind. Around the World " I hctw nsed your Fish Brand Slicker for year la tha Hawaiian Island and found them the only article that suited. I am now la this country (Africa) and think a great deal of your coats." (mami on apuoatkmi) The world-wide reputation of Tower's Waterproof Oiled Clothing aaaures tha buyer of tha positiv worth of all ferments bet ring til Sign of the Flsa. A. J. TOWIiR CO. Cotton, U Si. Ae f CANADIAN CO.. LfcllTED Toronto, Canada sis MEXICAN cures Cuts, Barns, Bruircc. C!n?scn'sEy3Uc:r
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THE MOLE BEAN. This bean is planted by eastern people to ward off moles. Plant it around your garden or fleld3 and the mole will never bother your corn, beans, potatoes, etc.; or it at least eradicates the moles' habitations in your neighborhood to some extent This bean is a great laxative and if put up as a medicine would be a cheap and valuable vegetable pill. One-half a piU is sufficient for a dose. HOW TO OIL HARNESS. Wash the leather witfi castlle soap and! hang up to dry. Before entirely dry the harness is ready to be oiled. Take a tub and fill two or three inches deep with machine oil, using the be-st oil that is Tecommended for binders and mowers. Dip all the parts of the harness so as to cover well with oil. giving tbe leather time to get saturated with oil. Tten hang the pieces over the tub io drip. After which rub all parts with a flannel cloth. By using machine . oil there will be no danger of rats or mice gnawing the harness. E. L. Bates, in The Economist. FEEDING WHEAT TO STOCK. When wheat sells at low prices considerable of It is fed on the farm, but when it approaches the dollar-a-bushel mark it is considered an expensive feed. In many case3 this is a mistake, for wheat will be found very useful In making a variety in the ration. Indeed, it is, with us. essential in the ration fed to laying hens, and we have fed it profitably and paid a dollar a bushel for it Then, too, we consider it profitable as a ration for young pigs mixed with equal parts of ground' corn and skim milk, the wheat also being ground. This Tation gives them a start that nothing else will. THERE IS ROOM FOR MORE. The increasing demand l for eggs and poultry makes room for still more breeders of poultry who can supply the best, in any quantity, at all times. The high prices which have ruled for the past two years aTe not the result of chance; they are the inevitable result of a prosperous country's growth a growth in number, a growth In education. As we advance we become more choice In the food we eat, and naturally, torn from beef and pork to eggs and poultry; so that today the supply of both is far short of the actual demand. There is room for more poultrymen, and success will be their portion. Begin now andi begin right, and you will have no cause to regret the step you have taken. Returns will be greater than can be had from any other branch of farm life. Home and Farm. THE CLEANLY HOG. 'Dirty as a hog" is a common saying, yet the hog is maligned in it The hog Is much cleaner than some other of our farm animals In many respects. He will not willingly sleep in his own filth. When he does so it is when he has been placed in confined quarters where he can exercise no choice In the matter, says the Farmer's Review. Every person that has had the handling of swine knows how carefully the hog will carry the straw into one part of his pen for hi3 bed, and will keep it- clean a3 long as It Is possible to do so. Some swine raisers follow the practice of having a raised platform in one part of the pen, and on this the straw for the bed of the hog is placed. The hog will always deposit the excrement In the unbedded portion of the pen, and will keep his platform and bed clean. This cannot be said of the cow or horse. The hog Is accustomed to root In the ground, for that is where he geta a large part of his feed when he is in his wild state. But this Is not n uncleanly habit He wallows In the mud when he takes his bath, but that is because he is a thick-skinned animal, and the ordinary ablution is Insufficient for . his needs. FERTILIZING POTATOES. For potatoes to grow successfully, pCant food must be supplied to them, and the more properly It Is done, the better the crop will be. The object is to secure the best results' at the least expenditure possible. In a general way clover accomplishes this admirably well, It being of all fertilizers the one the most adapted for a potato crop. Take it on a nice fresh clover sod in sandy or gravelly loam or on a fertile field devoted to clover ttie year before or on which a crop of corn and grain of some kind was grown on the clover sod for the purpose of getting the land In good shape for the following potato crop, and the yield is not only likely to be first class, but the tubers clean. Provided there is aiready a liberal supply of mineral plant-foods in the ground, a crop of clover will bring up near the surface potash and phosphoric acid in the best forms for immediate use by the potato roots, and also nitrogen, both from the soil and air. Oa land a little thin, however, it is expedient to encourage the clover with sotne fertilizer, or else reinforce the seil fertility the year that the potatoes are planted This may be done, w) ere yard fertilizers are not obtainable, by commercial fertilizers, and a good way to apuly them Is withua planter or otherwise at the time of putting la seed, fron11. 800 to 1,000 pounds per. acre being sufficient, if it Is a kind adaptable to the soil. The only objection the former Is, it often hts a tendency to Induce scab. Happily, however, this can be 'obtained by spreadiis. It broadcast; on the land and plowing it under In the fall; It will thus become thorougily decayed by spring and m consequence grow potatoes as cleaa and free frbm tcab as If commercial fertilizers had been used exclusively. Fred O. Sibley, ia the EpitonLst
WINTER OATS. Last fall was so dry that It seemed almost useless to sow either wheat or winter oats with the expectation of their growing. I hesitated to sow any oats as they have always been an uncertain crop unless sown early. There came a little ' rain about the first of October and I decided to cow about one acre. A part of the land was corn stubble, a part cow pea stubble and a part buckwheat stubble. I put the oats In without plowing, using the grain drill. A light dressing of superphosphate was used on the buckwheat stubble; the other had no fertilizer. The slight ain did not sprout the grain and so the oats did not come up for about a month. Winter set in before they had made much growth and such a winter is not often experienced here almost a continual freezing with an occasional thaw for a Jew hours and with very little snow from the middle of Nov ember until March. Almost every part of a field of medium red clover, second year's growth, froze out befora spring. This fiold was adjoining the oats. When siTing opened- up there did not appear to be any oats left but I decided not to plow the field. On the side of the field facing the northwest there were no oats, but on that toward the south a half stand of very tall heavy oats wa3 secured. Some bunches were nearly six feet tall and I measured some head3 fourteen inches long. The buckwheat stubble and the corn stubble showed better results than the cowpea stubble. The crop did aot pay expenses, but if the winter had not been so unfavorable the crop would have most likely been a good one. Winter oats sown last February were an excellent crop this year. Winter oats fill much better than the spring varieties, the only trouble with the fall sowing being to get the oats in early enough to make sufficient growth to stand the winter. Sometimes the very dry falls make against the crop, as was the case last year- A. J. Legs, in the Epitomlst
DAIRY AND STOCK. Sheep should never be driven. They should always follow th.j master, and they will always do it if properly handled. No one can raise colts with so little expense and actual outlay of time and attention, as the farmer on & small place. If everybody who milks would keep his finger nails short, there wouldi be less hollering and kicking in the bars at milking time. If you do not believe this, try It Abolish that old swül barrel from the back door. Use the barrel on wheels and insist that it be emptied every day and rinsed out Scald it once a week, at least. If the mare has become heated, draw some of her milk by hand, and do not let the colt nurse until she has become cooled. It is best to avoid heating her for there Is always danger in it Light work will not Injure her nor the. colt, but great Judgment must be used. FARM NOTES. Too little light, air and exercise are bad for the dairy cow. It will do horses good to hame appetite enough to relish a meal when It is given them. On account of their lying so close together the shelter for hogs need not be as light a3 for other stock. A low knee Is desirable In a horse, enabling the animal to make a long stride more quickly than when the knee is set high up. Other things being equal, a nice eyen lot of watber3 will thrive more satisfactorily and bring greater returns for feed than fattening Socks made up regardless of size, uniformity and condition. The crowning excellence of improved breeds of cattle, sheep and swine Is not so much that they will produce carcasses far beyond the normal at full maturity, but that they will yield a medium product of choice meat at an age considerably below that of maturity. ARTIFICIAL COTTON. Experiments In Europe That Promise Practical Results. The French Chamber of Commerce of Milan says that an artificial cotton is now made from the cellulose of the fir tree freed from bark and knots. The fibres, after being pulverized by a special machine, are placed in a horizontal brass lead lined cylinder of seme 3,500 cubic feet capacity and steamed for ten hours, after which 2,000 cubic feet of a bisulphate of soda wash Is added, and the whole is heated for thirty-six focmrs under a pressure of tbre1 atmospheres. Then the wood or fibre, which has become very white, is washed and ground by a series of strong metallic meshes, after which It Is again washed and given an electro-chemical bleaching by. means of chloride of lime. Passage between two powerful rollers then dries the matter, producing a jure cellulose, vhich, when reheated in a tight metal boiler containing a mixture of chloride of zinc and hydrochloric and nitric acids, to which Js added a little castor oil, casein and gelatin to give resistance to the fibre, gives a very consistent paste. Threads are then produced by passing this paste .through a kind of draw plate. These threads, after being passed over a gummed cloth, are Immersed in a weak solution of carbonate of soda and passed between two slowly turning drying cylinders. Finally, to give the necessary solidity, the thread Is treated to an ammcnlacal bath and rinsed In cold water, after which the product is pliable and works well. In Bavaria experiments have recently been made to produce cotton from pine wood, ar.d it 13 äaid that the trials have been very euccccifdL
HOUSEHOLD TALK.
Small Cucumber Pickles. Pack very small cucumbers in glass jars. Mix one cup of salt one cup of sugar, aad four quarts of vinegar, and pour Into the jars until full. Put a piece of horseradish root and a little red pepper on top and seal tight. Tomato Soup Put Into a saucepan three-quarters of a pound of tomatoes, and boil till tender, or use a tin of tomato pulp. Add tbe onions as for onion soup, and proceed in the same way, omitting, however, the potatoes, and adding a bouquet of herbs and a teaspoonful of sugar. Lentil Soup. Wash one and a half pints of lentils and soak them In water all night. Put one and one-half ounces of dripping Into a saucepan, add the lentils, let them cook twenty minutes in the dripping (keeping the saucepan lid on), then add three or four pints of water, ar. onion, a stick of celery (sliced), and simmer gently for three or four hours. Rub the lentils, etc., through a sieve with the liquid and serve very hot Green Tomato Pickle. Slice half a peck of green tomatoes, spread on platters, strew with fine salt and leave over night. In the morning wash off the sa't and chop them. Put into a preserving kettle and add half a pint of whole mustard seed Two large onions, three green peppers fine, seeds and all; one tablespoonful of cinnamon, one scant tablespoonful of cloves, one cup of sugar and vinegar. Cook slowly two or three hours at the side of the fire, stirring often. Spiced Grapes. This is seasonable. Take ten pounds of Concord grapes. Pop them from the skin3 and cook the pulps in a preserving kettle till the seeds can be pressed out in a colander. Return tfte sifted pulp to the kettte with the skins; add four pounds of sugar, half a pint of good vinegar, one level tablespoonful of ground cloves and one large one of cinnamon. Cook gently about an hour, till it is thick. The grapes must be stirred constantly to prevent sticking or burning. This will keep well, and may be sealed or not String Bean Compote. New string beans make a good compote to serve as a relish with meat where a ßweet Is demanded. Green ones onlr are to be used, ttie cream or wax beans not being suitable. Boil till soft in slightly salted water, then drain, add brown sugar, a little race ginger and diluted maple syrup to the Deans. Give them a "dusiting" of corn starch and let them simmer till almost jelly-like in consistency. Serve hot or cold. Potato Puffs. Warm cold mashed potatoes for a second or two in the oven to overcome clamminess. Then beat up with a fork or eggbeater. Into this 6tir one or two eggs, using flour sparingly to "bind" if the mixture 13 found too moist. It must, however, be of such a consistency that It can be dropped from a spoon into "deep" boiling fat as a frying medium. Sprinkle with minced parsley and serve tomato ketchup. HINTS TO THE HOUSEWIFE. The little soft cotton dish mops make excellent dusters. The wax from dripping candles can be removed from table linen by a generous application of alcohol. A little soap mixed with stove blacking will produce better avid more Casting luster than without. Cold rain water and soap will re move machine grease. To remove peach stains soak fabric in spirits of camphor before wetting . The smart woman saves time and patience by keeping a shoe horn with the children's rubbers to make their donning easy. If stovepipes are well rubbed with lard and tied in several thickness of newspapers, they can be safely stored without fear of rust Alum, the size of a hickory nut, dissolved in a pint of staTch, wüll brighten the color In muslins, ginghams and calicoes after washing. Grass stains on linen should be soaked for a few moments in kerosene, then washed In very hot water with a generous supply of soap. . If non-rust hairpins are used to fa ten them down, curtains can be as nicely dried on a good thick grass plot as in regular stretchers. Several thickness of newspapers laid between the bed springs and mattress are equal in warmth to another mattress. Laid between the blanket and quilt tliey. equal an extra blanket Clean enameled shoes with sweet milk after all dust and dirt have been rennved, allowing the milk to remain on for a minute, then wiping with a soft dry cloth. Medicine can easily be administered to a cat by mixing it with lard and rubbing it on the forelegs near the shoulders, where it can be licked off, but not rolled on. A fair substitute for maple syrup is made with equal parts of granulated white aad very dafk brown sugar boiled with one-half the quantity of water until - of the desired thickness. When cold two or three drops of vanilla extract is added. There i3 now made a "frying shield an appliance which fits; onto a frying pan, preventing all possibility of the fat running over on the Tange and causing the disagreeable odor of burning fat It may take a very f. w i.ore minutes In the preparation, "out the'elfect Is sufficiently attractive to be worth the effort If escalloped codfish la cooked in Individual baking .dishes having buttered bread crumbs on top. In fact all creamed dishes aTe attractive if served In ramiklns. In frying cToquettes In deep fat be sure to plunge the wire basket In tbe hot fat before the croquettes are placed In the basket otherwise they may adhere to the wire and fall apart when lifted. If food to be cooked in deep fat is warmed before put Into the fat, Hie latter will not be cooked. General Stakelberg slipped' into a trap and then slipped cut agsin. Ha Cot cut before tis trap wt3 eprun.
APPLES WORTH SIO A BITE.
Fruit from Zanzibar Ia Perkap the Rarest on Earth. Of all fruits Zanzibar tpples are per- ' baps the rarest Dozens of trees to- ' gether will only bear a few of these apples, and the time of picking them has to be carefully selected. They must be gathered just a month before they would ripen, otherwise they would quickly spoil. ' These Zanzibar apples have reached the enormous price of $100 each. They are not large, probably containing ten bites at $10 a bite. The apples have to be specially ordered, for no caterer would ever dream of keeping them In stock. Custard apples are another expensive luxury. They can be purchased at prices ranging from 75 cents to $25 each, according to quality, and, according to those whose judgment In such matters Is considered to be absolutely correct, must be eaten with pepper and salt Two of the most fashionable fruits in the winter months are muscat grapes and strawberries, and until the end of January the latter are beyond the reach of people of moderate means. A member of Mrs. Astor's "COO" not long since went into a well-known fruiterer's in New York and offered $250 to the manager if he could provide enough strawberries for five people " that evening. The manager undertook to deliver the fruit within seven hours and then promptly proceeded to wire forty different fruit gardens within thirty miles of the metropolis for strawberries. Seventeen gardens provided the required amount of strawberries, the remaining twenty-three not being able to produce a single one, and by 6:30 o'clock that evening the fruit was delivered at a cost of nearly $2.50 for each strawberry. There are several persons In New York whose weekly bill for grapes in the winter season runs to never less than $100., They pay $5 a pound for the best muscat grapes and receive at least three pounds a day. The manager of a well-known fruiterer's establishment recently declared that many people who see high-priced fruit in the window will buy it just to see "what It tastes like," and In this way these "samplers," as they are called by the trade, are a considerable source cf profit to many of the highclass fmiterers. These samplers will cheerfully spend a dollar on an apple or a pear to enjoy the experience of eating such a luxury. Baltimore Sun. Very Low Homeaeekers Rate Tia the Nickel Plate Boad to the West, Northwest, South and Southwest, first and third Tuesdays in each month. Long return limit and stop over privileges. One Way Colonist Rates to the West and Northwest, Sept. 15th to Oct. 15th Inclusive. Splendid opportunity for parties wishing to locate in the West. For full Information address local agent or Mr. C. A. Asterlin, T. P. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. Made Fatal Error. Tess So their engagement is broken off. Jess Yes, they quarreled and she was in the wrong. Tessi And she wouldn't admit it? Jess No, that was the whole trouble. She did admit it and after that he simply became unbearable. Philadelphia Press. For something good, try Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake Flour, ready in a jiffy. Tour grocer has it on hand. A Little Too Good. Husband Why do you shop at Slogo & Co.'s, instead of at Fastime's? Wife Fastime's has some new sort of electrical contrivance which brings your change so quick you don't have time Jo change your mind. Insist upon your printer using Eagle Linen Paper for your Letter Paper. This Is tbe proper thing. Take no other. FIBROID TUMORS CURED. Sirs. Hayes First Letter Appealing to Mrs. Pinkham for Help : Deab Mes. Pctkham : I have been under Boston doctors' treatment for a long time without any relief. They tell me I have a fibroid tumor. I cannot sit down without great pain, and the soreness extends up my ßpine. I have bearing-down pains both back and front My abdomen is swollen, and I have had flowing spells for three years. My appetite is not good. Icannot walk or be on my feet for any length of time. " The symptoms of Fibroid Tumor given in your little book accurately describe my case, so I write to you for advice," (Signed) Mes. E. P. Hates, 252 Dudley St. (Roxbury), Boston, Mass. Mrs, Hayes' Second Letter: " Deab Mrs. Pctxhaji: Sometime ago I wrote to you describing mysymptoms and asked your advice. You replied, and I followed all your directions carefully, and to-day I am a well woman. The use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound entirely expelled the tumor and strengthened my whole sy item. I can walk miles now. Lyda E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is worth fire dollars a drop. I advise all women who sre afflicted with tumors or female trouble of any kind to give it a faithful trial." (Signed) Mes. E. F. Hayes, 252 Dudley St (Roxbury), Boston, Mass. 95000 forfeit If original of abooo letttrt proving gtnulntnesa cannot to productd. - f AriTirr TOT-SO WOMAX la .wry W i4l J I LIU town to Mil Utert Novtltle. (a Draa eo4. Silk and WtUtinn to trtendj ri4 natfhbon. Kxelnt et.portnB- for L.AKGE INCOME. Aidr SCO XT JiOVEI.fr CO.. 99 FrmMkllm feU. 2w Yf RE-SILVEK MIRKOKS. We teach you 20 Woney-makini iSethodi 52 pege rrv tpwtns Btamp. Beuden! for Reference; LADrh.S; GENTLEMEN; THERE'S MONEY IN IT. Uullin? er'a School, 23, FranceaYEle, Ind. P. T7. IT. U. - I7o. 411004 Wbea Writing to Advertisers please say ja taw tt Advertisement la this ptper. r i i
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$83,500 in Gold Coin Will be paid in prizes to those coming nearest at estimating the paid attendance at the St Louis World's Fair. The above amount is deposited with the Missouri Trust Company, as' per the official receipt of the treasurer of that financial Institution and published In tho schedule of prizes announced elsewhere in this pap'er. The World's Fair Contrst Company, Delmar and Adelaide fivenues, St. Louis, Mo., are offering these prizes and there i no doubt of the cash being in bank to pay the lucky winners. The contest closes October 15th. In a Quandary. Mr. De Style Well, are all your arrangements for a summer at the fashionable resorts completed? Mrs. De Style Nearly, but I'm in such a quandary. I have arranged to
send our house plants to a florist, our cat to a cat home, and our do; to a canine boarding house, so that all will be well cared for until fall; but what ia the world shall I do with the baby? Landed. II (contritely) Are you angry? She (firmly) Yes, I am. "Because I kissed you?" "He because you stopped." (No cards.) 'A '..mm M,. , l',;L'"i.l.lUl!3 tllini'tUl? -Iiju...l, .i.ni.4).flh ; ; i ,.-! . ,y- iiK.w.f.s i f. . - : j : - V . t , . - , I Ägetable Preparalionfor Assimilating uicFoodandBeguIating the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Digestion.CheerPurness andltest.Contains neither Opima.Mofphine norfineraL OTNAIICOTIC. Jmptun SeeJ I, rim norm Apcrfecl Remedy for Constipation , Sour Stomach.Diarrhcea Worms .Convulsions , Feverishness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPT QF WBACßEB.
CONTEST CLOSES OCTOBER 15th W will pay $S5,500.00 In prlzet to thorn who can MtimaK kmtmI to th total paid attendant at ttia Omt Ft Loula World's Fair. Th. Fair opaned April 30,1904. and will c!om Dembr 1, 14. Tha paid attandase on opening dar a 123,754 pooplo. during Hay tha paid atUndanro waa 542. 02S, during Juno 1,S82,83, daring July l.JU.Ti. Cu yon oalimato ta number of pooplo wh will pay admission daring tbe ontiro Fair?
00 111 FIRST PRIZE $25,000.00 Our prize ar the largest ever offered To the nearest ottimat , To tha second nearest estimate .I25.0no.00 . lu.u.m.oo To the third nearest estimate., To the fourth nearest estimate 6."U.W) 2..ryt.oo l,.Yl0.t) 1.0 MC. To tbe fifth nearest estimate... To the sixth nearest estimate.. To the next 10 nearest estimate, I'JÜO each 2.UÜ.O0
ToU1 8E5D IX TOTE. ESTIMATES AT ONCE. Kot an estimate will be considered that ft receded tn our efioo after October 15, 1904. For each estimate we send you a aeparate encraved and numbered certificate with your estimate tbereoev The corresponding coupon, of these certificates are deposited at the time your estimates arc made, and can b bandied only ty tho Committee en Awards, after tho contest closes 1 Certificate will cost 25 WT)t,. t will cos. ) 1.00 Certificates will CMt.astaaacatatvt(aa(ca(a((,,(t(,(t,taaitttac,a( eeeao Ä 00 20 Certificate will cost 3 of) 40 Certificate will cost .". 6 (K) 100 Certificate will cost 72 60 lOuO Certificate will cost ; li&.UQ Each certificate entitles yen to an estimate. Ton can estimate as often as yea wish. END IÜ YOUR ESTIMATES WITIT TOI 11 REMITTANCES. A soon m receiTcd w will immediate! Baak ont your certificate, and send tnem to you to bo reUineJ by yva until tbe Fair i orer.
MISSOURI TRUST COMPANY, Capital ti.ooo.ooe, sc Looi. xio.. n 20. isoi Thi certifie that Tha World' Fair Contest Com. pany, incorporated, ha thi dar deposited witb thi company $75.000.00 in tTOlde tor Uo Myr&cfi i too wara in it contest oa tbo total Bald attend ance) ftt th LooUiana rurchaae Exposition, 1804, and that Bald denoali. la hM in tmrt by thi company to bo M TaiAJTOI. öl wu fc?7 iv iota inccwnai m contestant a the eommiue f 1 Mlaconri Tmrt Co. a ward may direct. of St. Loaii.
OCTOBER 1RTH positiyely LAST DAT. Kot a penny will bo accepted or an estimate counted after that data. ON LT A FEW lAV8 K EM A IN. Don't subject yourself to a life-long regret by feilrng to enter this remarkable) ontcst. Only a small amount invested in our estimating certificates to ay mean that an independent fortune Uyova. Writ Today. Eemit by express ordsr, postal Dote or rejixtered letter. Don t send personal checks. THE WORLD'S FAIR WHITEST CO., Maar .id Adelaide Jus.. ST. LOUIS, MO. OCTOBEK IftTTf T. a t w a v twn't fnrret that ro must enter the rnntr-t !fr.r. tHt date nr ct at alL
TAKE THE
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For Cuploard Corner St Jacobs Oil I Stralrht. stronr. sure. Is the best household remedy for Rheumatism Neuralgia Sprains Lumbago Bruises BacKache Soreness Sciatica Stiffness Price, 25c a Ad Oc. i IS) 111 For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have . Always Bought Bears the Signature of Use For Over Thirty Years 15) uuu thi etwTMMi mpkmr. mwm vonc err?.
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nS n TO THOSE WHO ULBJ COME NEAREST
SECGND PRIZE $10,000.00 THIRD PRIZE $5,000.03 In tuij contest, and tvr dilded m follows:
To tho next 20 nearest estimate, $100 oaf h To the next 40 nearest estimates $50 each............ To tho next 10 nearest estimates, J5 each.. ......... Tothenext:Onearetestiinsts, f 10 each TothenextS'iO nearest estimates. 15 each To the next 1,000 nearatt estimate, 11 each J.Ono.O? 20.00 2j.CO 1.0X1(0 2C0U0.C4 buriptemenwry prizes.. ........... ........... Kemember yen are to estimate the ntimber of pooplo wfce) will pay admission to the grounds during the entire Fair. Thut does not Include any free passe whatever. In order to kelp yon estimate, wo state that the total paid attendance a Chicago World's Fair was SI, IMi.ltl, at the Pan-Amerlraa Ea poeition 5,Su,M, and at the Omaha Lx position l,77g,2&0. MONEY Ü01V DEPOSITED We ran not touch this prize money. It is held by the) Klssoorl Trust Co. for no other purpose than to pay tt-eee prises) as soon a the eommitte on awards declare tho suocejsf ul eon. testanta. Thi eommitte ha no Interest whatever In tbe contest, and I mads op of prominent business men who kavsj agreed to award the nrizee. and yonr estimates are turned eee to this committee before the Fair cluees, insuring absolute falsa ties to vary on Interested. Follow Tun Flag." WABASH TO TO ENTRANCS. T. A., GT. LOUIS, M0. pavc - itc czc:c:3 a A3 THE DOV7ELG
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