Plymouth Tribune, Volume 7, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 25 June 1908 — Page 7
YOU'RE TOO THIN. Even Slight Catarrhal Derangements cf the Stomach Produce Acid Fer mentation cf the Food. It's Stomach Catarrh Some people are thin and always remain thin, from temperamental reasons. Probably in .uch cases nothing can be done to cbai.ge this personal peculicrity. But there are a large number of people who get tnin, or remaia thin, who natnrally would be plump and fleshy but for some digestive derangement. Thin people lack In adipose tissue. Adipose tissue is chleiJy composed of fat. Fat is derived from the oily constituents of food.
The fat-making foods are called by the physiologist, hydrocarbons. Thia class of foods are net digested in the stomach at all. They are digested ia 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 pancreatio juice. This juice is of alkaline reaction, end is rendered inert by the addition of acid. A hyperacidity of tho tligestive fluids of the stomach passing down into the duodenum, destroys the pancreatic fluid for digestive purposes. Therefore, the fats are not digested or emulsified, and the system 13 deprived of ita due proportion of oily constituents, llence, the patient grows thin, i The beginning of the trouble is a catarrhal condition of the stomach which causes hyperacidity of 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 doea not begin immediately, acid fermentation will take place. This creates a hyperacidity of the stomach ' juices which in their turn prevent the pancreatic digestion cf the oils, and V emaciation results. A doso of Peruna before each :.. al hastens the stomach digestion, liy hurrying digestion, Peruna prevents fermentation of the contents of the stoma Jh, and the pancreatic Juice is thus preserved in its normal state. It then only remains for the patient to eat a cufficlent amount f fat-forming foods, am! the thinness disappears and plumpness takes its place. iruuu, Products! Lnlblby9 Veafl Loeiff is made of the best selected meat, scientific ally prepared and evenly baked by damp heat in Libby's Great lYüife Küchen. . The natural flavor is all retained. When removed, from the tin it's ready to servel It can be quickly prepared in a variety of styles and nothing makes a better summer meaL In the home; at the camp; and for the picnic Libby's Yeal Loaf is a satisfying dish; full of food value that brings contentment! Libby, McNeill fi .Libby, Chicago. ' Illustration Showing- Mixed Fumtnc 8eeo la UESTEnrj mm& Some of Cm choicest lands for grain growing, stock rait In and mixed farming la th new districts of Saskatchewan and Alberta bar rereoüy been Opened for Settlement nnder the Revised llcrnestead Begulalions Hotry may now be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by tt e father, aether, son. daughter, brother or sistex of an inteal'ne homesteader. Thonsands of homesteads c 1 1(0 acres each are thus now easily obtainable in these great grainCrowing, stock-raisinz and mixed farming sections. There yon wfll find healthful cHmate, good neighbors, chat ches for family worship, schools for your children, good laws, splendid crops, and railroads convenient to market. Entry fee In each case ts f 10.00. For pamphlet. "Last Best West." particulars as to rates. rutes. best time to go and 'where to locate, apply to W . D. Scott. Superintendent of Imroi?raion, Ottawa. Car da, or V. II. Rogers, Jd Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., and H. M. Williams. Koom ao. Law Building. Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. i'U say where yon m this adTertlaaraaai. SIGLt DEODAeHE Positively cured by these JLittle Pills. They also relievo Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Heart? Eating1. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Ba4 Taste la tho Hanta, Coated Tongue. Pain In the side. TORPID LTVEE. They rejulfcte the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear . Fac-Simfls Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. FARMERS LOOK. West Texas Farm Lands, on the famous Knox Prairie. For descrption of country, and price of landj, write V. M. Sandifer, Knox City, Texas. fS2Tmiiiipson'sEj! Water
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A well kept lawn reflects the taste and nature of the owner. good The horse is man's lest friend ; therefore he is deserving of a friend's treatment. The burning of straw and stalks, except in special cases, is a wasteful practice and has no place in judicious farming. Every farmer should have a pair of scales. It is the only way for a farmer to know exactly where he stands in his buying and selling. Farm machinery put in repair before the busy season opens means money in the pocke;. When It is put away in the fall Is a better time for repairing. The American Sunday School Association has offered a prize for the best original article on "Christian Principles in Our Rural Districts: How to Make The:na Coutrollng Influence." At Canby, Minn., the, high school has purchased a ten-acre held near the school projerty to be cultivated as a fruit and vegetable patch. It is lelieved this will help solve the problem of keeping boys on the farm. If you mind your business properly you can. with a good working herd of a dozen milk cows, abstract from the creamery till somewhere around every month. Then you have cr Ives besides. $70 the The potato growers of Long Island X. Y., have organized a trust to control the output of the island for the coming season. Growers In the trust will sell their product only through the exchange of one of Its shipping stations. Every farmer ouht to have a house for harnesses and carriages apart from the stables. There is something about the chemicals arising from horse stables that will eat the paint off the best carriage and rot leather fast. Can't afford that Where an Individual pupil In the town or country school becomes a source of more Injury to the industry and government of the school which he attends than he derives In benefit from the educational advantages which are available it is time that he was handed his walking papers and told to get out. A New York farmer reports success in the use of common stovepipe soot as a cure for scours In calves. An old method of preparing the dose was to take a tablespoonful of soot, mix It with the white and yolk of an egg, put it back In the shell and place the filled shell far back in the mouth of the afflicted calf. Another cure for the scours Is to put a small amount of formalin in the milk ration. Root crops potatoes,' turnips, rutabagas and the like do. esiec!ally well in sections where there Is an abundance of .'t'.olsture and where moderate temperatures prevail, while corn can get along with some less moisture and needs an abundance of heat to produce the larges: and best crops. It is for tr.? reason mentioned that Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Canada pro duce the best root crops, while the Siates south of these to the " Gulf of Mexico lead In the production of corn. KnemlrK of the Sqaub, To keep bugs away from the young plants cover the hills not Infested with wire netting, burying all edges under the soil, else they will get under them sure. The squash is subject to flea beetles and yellow anil black striped bugs and these do not like clean cultivation, so burn all rubbish after getting off the crop. Examine the vines twice a day. The bugs gather constantly. Bctttr plant more seed than are properly developed for emergncy cases of destruction by bugs. Kerosene emulsion will drive bugs from their cover so they can be killed, and that Is about the surest practice. Results from Cortpeaa In Corn. Tests at this station showed that the vaiue of two successive crops of corn without cowieas sown in them was $21 per acre, while the value of two successive crops of corn plus the value of a crop of eowpeas sown in the first crop was $3o.51 ier acre. In the above tests corn and peas were valued at 50 cents per bushel and cowpea hay at $10 per ton, which was the approximate local market value of these products. A severe drought lowered the average yield of corn to alout one-third of a full crop. The yield of eowpeas, however, was the highest recorded at FayetteVille, and the cowpea hay yield was above the average for the past five years. Notwithstanding the unusual deficiency of moisture the presence of the growing eowpeas did not lower tlie yield of corn. C. L. Xewman, Arkansas Station. i l'aMdine of the Cattle Itanchnicyi. Eastern New Mexico Is settling up at the rate of 10O persons a day, and this is typical of the entire Southwest, including the Texas Panhandle and the central western part of the Stale. Uut while the farmers rre coming in with their families end their capital, to develop the plains country along new lines, the old-time ranchman is gradually being shoved off the earth. lie is petting rich by selling his lands, tkthaps, but he is losing the romance of the old life. The cattlemen who have simply used the public domain free of charge ar? not taking much away with them. They go into the towns and seek public oflice, or become mining promoters or railroad conversationalists. And the price of beef steadily rises. In lf.rt, 1500O Texas range catUe were sold on the Chicago market ; last year less than half as many. Possibly five years more will see the last of the range stock. El Paso Herald. Itorn All Dead Animal. Burning Is the surest and safest way of dealing with contagious diseases of live stock. Outbreaks of disease have
frequently been traced to the careless disposal of the carcass of m infected animal. Ilurning is much more effective than burying, as the germs of some diseases, as anthrax for example, retain their virility for a considerable length of time. Then in burying carcasses, unless they are placed very deep in the ground, there is always more or less danger of their being rooted or dug up. I)os will dig open such graves and hogs will root them out. Those who have attempted to bury a hog or horse will readily appreciate the statement that.it is easier to burn than bury them. .1 little kerosene and a brush heap will soon dispute of a carcass, with the certainty that all germs are destroyed. Some recommend the construction of a specially arranged furnace for this work, but on the ordinary farm this would doubtless be an added expense. It will not be a tifficult matter on any farm to gather enough trash, such as brush, old rails, etc., to burn a dead animal and the expense Is inconsiderable. Waste In Preparing; Vegetable. In preparing1 vegetables for the table there is almost always a larger or smaller loss due to inedible matter, skins, roots, seeds, etc., and also a waste of good material, vL.h is caused by careless paring, etc., all these losses being grouped together in relating analyses under the name "refuse." The amount of refuse varies greatly in different vegetables,' as shown by a large number of analyses of American food materials. The amount may be small in such vegetaKjes as string beans, medium in such vegetables as onions, cabbage, leeks, lettuce, cucumbers, or high in such vegetables as beans, pod pumpkins and squash. With tubers, such as potatoes, the average amount of refuse is 20 per cent, and with such roots as turnips 30 per cent. In preparing vegetables for the table the careful cook will remove all inedible portions and will see to it that the total amount of refuse Is as small as is consistent with good quality. Thin paring of potatoes and other vegetables is an economy, which it is worth' while to practice, and Is an easy way of decreasing useless loss. Maria Parloa. Flffhtlnar the Potato Slug. Potato bugs are like interest oh a mortgage they work days and nights. When the broods first begin to hatch It is the time to act. The only remedy practical und effective known at present is paris green. This is mixed with water and scattered on the plants. The spraying apparatus is too well known to be described here. To each barrel of water use seven pounds of cheap flour and one pound of parls green. Mix the poison and flour In a bucket containing about two gallons of water and stir until thoroughly mixed. , When the whole mixture is thoroughly mixed pour into the barrel of water on the spraying machine and keep the contents of the barrel well stirred while the sprayer Is in motion. The only serious objection to this mixture Is that It tends to clog the screens In the pump. This .can be avoided by having the screens so they ciu be taken out and reinserted quickly. The screens can thus be taken out and cleaned in a short time and the spraying go on without further Interruption. Tte operation may seem troublesome at lirst, but one spraying kills al! the bugs and it doesn't matter if it rains within two hours after it is applied. Dew and rain will not wash It on and traces of it will remain for two weeks and continue to destroy ail new hotchiugs of Insects. The flour forms a paste that catche all the particles of paris green and ia turn adheres to the plant leaves, in a field sprayed thoroughly In this way a second oieration Is not necessary. The pump may be put away and the grower rest assured that he is through for the season. The sprayer should not be driven too fast, but each plant be allowed to get its full share of the poison. Ote b:ir rt-1 of this mixture should be enough to cover about two acres. Art In Cultivating Corn. I think not many farmers realize the value of the main roots of corn or the nature of the growth. One summer 2 discovered that the roots of some of my corn six weeks eld were as long as the stalks, and they spread out five or six Inches In all directions beneath the surface. In the first cultivation I hold the shovels as closely as possible to ths young hills of cArn and allow them to go down five Inches or more in order to loosen the dirt and permit the air to freely circulate In the soil. After the first plowing I use my surface riding cultivators with four Lladcs, two on each side of the row, about twenty inches long and three inches wide, that skim under the surface, about two inches, and liehini the blades Is a drag which is held at a proper angle 1? a stiff spring. This drag should be so set as to level the ground and at the same time It will pull to the surface and leave exiosed to the stm all weeds that have been cut off by the knives two Inches below. The cutting of the weeds below the surface will destroy the roots and the tops being left on the surface will soon dry out and die. I don't believe any general rule ran lw drawn as to how many times corn should be cultivated other than to say again good judgment should be used according to condition of season and soil. Sometimes it is only necessary to cultivate three times; at other times we must go through the fourth, and in extreme cases I put men into the field with single horse ai:d a small five fo eight toothed surface cultivator after the corn Is well In the tassel. This latter would occur during an extremely dry year. I am not in favor of ridging corn with our Central Illinois prairie soil when laying corn by. Instead prefer to have my surface plow blades set' at an angle so tney win oareiy throw a light covering into the hills, which may cover up any small weeds, but not to make what one would call a ridge. I can see no object In ridging, for at laylng-by time the corn roots form a complete network from one row to the other and the center of the row.3 needs protection as well as the hill.
PICTURES FOR THE DININ3 ROOM
Floral Snhjeet nml Hninty, Hefremh1ns Scenes Mont -Appropriate. IMning-room pictures are limited as to subject If p ie is to choose according to the accepted standards, says the New York Herald. The modern man and woman of good taste are fastidious about the company they dine vith, and they prefer no pictures at all to inappropriate ones. Floral subjects are suited to dining-room walls, and dainty, refreshing scenes are appropriate. Figures fit better Into other rooms. French prints In delicate colorings are favorite pictures for bedrooms. They are dainty In subject and tone and look well in white, gold, pale gray or any light-tinted frame. For some time now women have been buying up French prints at auctions and in the shops to be later hung in their country homes. The prints are not expensive and they are perfect for rooms belonging to the sex they usually portray. Etchings and photogravures are the next choice for bedroom walls. The list of subjects In this line Is so varied and so long that all tastes and fancies can be suited. The average hall is too small to suggest a background for pictures, yet where there is space pictures can be hung on the slanting walls with a charming effect. Colored or brown prints of. uniform size and set In a uniform molding may be arranged In an ascending line parallel with the stairway. Often pictures are hung in this way so close together that the edges almost touch. Hunting scenes and quaint old prints are suited to hall walls. The walls opposite the stairs may be decorated with a few larger pictures of the same stvle and framed In the same way as the smaller onesf A higgledy-piggledy arrangement never in good taste In any room. There must be a recognized regularity about the hanging if the result is to be at all satisfactory. Photographs are now hung only in the bedroom or the loudoir. A group of one's relatives and close friends may occupy a large space on one wall. There may be a dozen or more single pictures framed in small ovals, circles, squares and grouped together artistically. French frames, showing an elaborate festooning In gold across the top of the picture, are exquisite for photographs. These may be hung separately to give the effect of medallions again&t the delicate wall covering. THE FEAR OF SNAKES. I Deelare! to Be Greater Amonsc Men than Amona; Women. The physician who allowed himself to be bitten by a rattlesnake to demonstrate that the poison of the species of the ophidian race is a sure cure for Insanity didn't survive to complete the proof, says Julius Chambers In the Brooklyn Eagle. Recently a few pathologists succeeded In coaxing from a South American vlpe? enough of his poison to furnish fifty years supply of antitoxin. One snake in the same square mile with me is entirely too many. It is a matter of fact that men have greater fear of serpents than have women. During a visit to friends in the country I was crossing a stretch of meadow In the company of my hostess' daughter, a sprightly girl of 17, when a black snake crossed the path ten feet In front of us. I caught my companion by the sleeve, but she wrenched herself loose, gathered her skirts about her knees, gave a running jump and landed squarely upon the back of the reptile. Ills snakeshlp thrashed the grass and th girl's ankles with equal futility. As soon as she could disengage one foot she planted it upon the serpent's head. In the absence of club or stones I was compelled to stand and witness a scene that to me was terrifying, but to the girl furnished supreme enjoyment. Years afterward when I read Haggard's description of Jess fight with the kangaroo I understood the kind of entertainment that my j-oun; companion had provided for me. It is to be hoped that the pathologists have Osleilzed this "sure death" snake. If it ever gets out of Its box at the zoo I shall ask contributions uion which to put th ocean between us. One snake like that might secrete Itself In a tenement house and kill half its population before anybody identified the character of the supjosed epidemic of death. Wonderful Machtue. The sensitiveness of the human organism Is cross Indeed when one com pares It with certain marvelous machines. A photographic plate, coupled with a telescoiH?, discovers millions of stars whose light the retina of the eye does not appreciate; the microphone makes the Inaudible tread of a Ily sound like the tramp of cavalrymen. The human heat sense cannot realize a difference of temperature beyond onefifth of a degree. Hut the barometer, an Instrument 200,000 times as sensitive as the skin, notes a difference of a millionth of a degree. A galvanometer flexes its finger at a current generated by the "coherers" of Pranley of Paris, so as to press It out of a spherical shape into that of an egg. The amount of work done by the wink of an eye equals 10(.o00.0(j()lt)00 of the winks marked on the scale of a delicate Instrument ; but even this performance Is surpassed by the "coherers" of Ilranley, of Paris, by which the Hertz waves of wireless telegraphy are caught In their pulsings through space. The range of impressions which we get from lifting in object Is excmllngly small. An ordinary chemist's balance Is some million times as sensitive and weights lown the two-hundredth part of a milligram. Without such instruments as these we should know far less about the world than they place within our reach. Tradition. The traveler entered the woo-'s of Georgia with the traditions of tt.e locality strong uion him. "A close shave!" he exclaimed when wme hogs had chased him up a conrenlcnt sycamore, for he thouybt of '.hem as razor-backs. Imagine his astonishment when he aw none of the beasts stropping themselves against the trees. "We are modern safety-razor-backs" explained the swine, divining his thought, "and require no stropping or boning." It was with a saddening sense of the aiutability of things that he at length came from those regions of song and story. "Fuck. Knew the Hole Ily Heart. "Do you think you could learn to love me?" the young man Inquired. "Learn to love you?" exclaimed the rapturous maid. "Harold, I could givj lessons at it." Louisville Coi'rler-Journal.
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Pattern Department UP-TO-DATE DES1QNS FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER Over HI it axe or Jumper. Modified Mandarin sleeves, or those that are of moderate width, make a most fascinating and altogether desirable feature of present styles. This over blouse includes such, and also is made with the narrow owning at the neck, which marks the latest designs, while it Is equally desirable for the PATTF.r.N 0. rSdS. separate blouse and for the gown. In the Illustration it is made ot checked louisine with trimming of taffeta embroidered and a lace edging, while it is worn over a guimpe of figured net, but It is appropriate for almost all seasonable materials. The aliove pattern will be mailed to your address on receipt of JO cents. Send all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. lie sure to give both the number and size ot pattern wanted, and write very plainly. Fr convenieii'-e, write your order on the following coupon : Order Coupon. No. 5818. SIZE XAME ... ADDRESS Glrl'n One-Pi reo Apron. Aprons that are pretty, yet Involve very little lalor In the making, are sure to find very hearty welcome. This one Is charmingly becoming and attractive, yet Is cut all in one piece and simply finished at its edges. In the illustration a checked gingham is pijted with plain color, but chambrays as well as figured ginghams, lawns, batistes., all are used for aprons of the sort and also the pretty and inexpensive priuted wsb fabrics. The apron is made in one rATTLR-X KO. TfU. piece. The tab extensions are crossed in the back, where they are buttoned to position and are brought up over the shoulders and the ends buttoned Into place. The above pattern will be mailed to your address on reteipt of 10 ceuts. Send all orders to the Tattern Depart inent of this paper. Be sure to give hoth the number and size of pattern wanted, and write very plainly. Tor convenience, write your order on the following couion: Order Coupon. No. ol19. SIZE NAM 11 ADDRESS ITEMS OF INTEREST. The leech has three Jaws, each fitted with eighty to ninety teeth. Yate wood of Australia has the tenhile strength of good cast Iron. In 1S70 the population of Manitoba was 17,0 JO, to-day it is 400,000. Tea carriers of C'nina carry tea In bars, each weighing twenty iounds. The number .f Chinese students in Tokio 8,000 exceeds the uuaiber of Japanese students there. Owing to a shortage in small coins, seven tons of pennies were turned out in a single day by an English mint. More than one-fifth of the Jews In Itussia have within the last five years change 1 their places of residence, mostly by emigration. round shells are being used for paths in some of the Loudon parks with very satisfactory results, as they do not make dust. A sixpence of the reign of Charles I was found in the stomach of a bullock killed recently by a Yarmouth (England) butcher. Three hundred Berlin streets are planted with -M.OiX) trees, which are said to represent n value of $11H,000. Nearly l.OoO g.mlencrs and assistants are employed to take care of them. The number of ties purchased by the steam and electric roads of this country during the year IJhm) was 102.834,010. The demand of the steam roads amounted to 75 per cent of the total. Statistics of business failures in the l.'nited States in KMJ7 show that seven houses out of every 1mio in business failed last year, as against fourteen out i t every 1,000 in 1S03 and nine in 1S73.
1 1 tli tiZ,vmunm
ft. A'1 '"SS,!' 9 m 'i ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT ANcgctablcPrcparalionkrAssLuilating HicFootfanJKciia ling tltc Stoacdis aniBowcls of Promotes DlgwtionGifcrfi1 ncss and RjstontaIns neither Opkm.Morphiru! rtcrJliacraL NOT NARCOTIC. 6ml 'i. xfrafC7dlkSH4üiniTni Pa.":,'!',' Ienfila SteJm jtxxSttd J'rJBrieadtSisa tfe.it Seed I jityrcr? ttsrrzr. gToSC;.'Sij '3ie.t. 6,, Aucrfect Remedy fov Gntsflpation , Sout Storaacfc.Dlarrta WorrasjConvulsioits Jevirishness andLQSS OF SLEEP. , racSiiuk Sifjnatcre oT j NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. She Said So, Anjwnji The yuuug man who wa3 endeavorin.5 to win the favor of Bobby's prottj sister met the boy on the street one morning, and greeted him with much cordiality. "Er do you think your sister was pleased to know I had called the other day?" he was at last forced to ask, bluntly, after several efforts to guide Bobby's conversation In that direction. "Sure!" said Bobby, with gratifying promptness. "I know ßhe was. 1 heard her say so. "When she came home mother said, 'Mr. Brown called while you were out,' and she said, 'He did? Well, I'm glad of that!'" Do Yoo Eat Plef If not you are missing half the pleasure of life. J ust order from your grocer a few rackaccn of "OL'K-riE" and learn how easr vuu.u' nuu vustaiu pies that will please you. If your grocer won't uppiy you. ro to one who will. Put up by D Zerta Food Co.. Kochester. . X. Inatrainental Mntlo. That a word may convey vastly different meanings when differently . used 4 O. .n,.,nt.,l.. (11. ,1 U - is amusingly Illustrated ujf a. oiurj from the Brooklyn Life. "Have ye heard me daughter Mona sing lately?" asked Mr. Dugan. "Both lately and early" said Mr. Ilogan. M,Tls the fine Instrumental music she do make." "Ye Ignoramus ! Sure, singing ain't instrumental music!" Indignantly replied Mr. Dugan. "Keegan told me Itwas instrumental in causing him to move two blocks away from yer house." Do Tour Clothes Look Yellow f If so. use Hed Cross Call Blue. It will make them wLlte at snow. Large 2oz. package, 5 cents. Woman' "Wit. An emperor of Germany besieged a city which belonged to one of his rebellious noblemen. After the siege had lasted for a long time the emperor determined to take It by storm and to destroy all It contained by fire and sword. He did not, however, wish to injure the defenseless women: therefore, he sent a proclamation Into the town, say - ing that all the women might leave the place unhurt and carry with them whatever the'y held most precious. The nobleman's wife instantly decided to take her husband, and the other women followed her example. They soon Issued from the city gate In a long procession, each one with her husband on her shoulders. The emperor was so much struck with the noble conduct of the women that he spared all ; even the city Itself was left untouched. Only Mffht Air at 'ljfht. Speaking of Florence Nightingale and her efforts to keep tbe world healthy, it seems pertinent to make special mention of her mission in behalf of the open window at night. In the early years of her labors much unintelligent opposition to this method of ventilation because of the supposed harmfulness of the night air wj.s expressed, but Miss Nightingale had one stock argument In support of her position. It being the question, "What air shall we breathe at night but night air?" It was unanswerable from her opiKments' point of view, even If It did not always convert them, but it did lead a countless number into saner ways of living and along the way to the present methods of treating tuberculosis. Boston Transcript. FULLY NOURISHED. Grapr-n( a Perfectly Dalaaeed . Food. No chemist's analysis of Grape-Nut can begin to show tho real value of the food the practical value as shown by personal exierience. It Is a food that Is perfectly balaiued. supplies the needed elements of brain and nerves In all stages of life from tue Infant, through the strenuous tlms of active middle life, and is a comfort and support in oli age. "For two years I have used GrapeNuts with milk and a little cream, for breakfast. I am comfortably hungry
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I use little meat, plenty of vege- rcme,oruno)li an4 Uuvrjna; tables and fruit. In season, for the noon j i'V.V1 pitojorm regular meal, and If tired at tea time, take! KabilS aaUy$oihat assistance to tia- ! 11 X ft. TV ft. .
Grape-Nuts alone and feel perfectly; nourished. "Nerve and brain power, and memory are much improved since using GraiK?-Xuts. I am over sixty and weigh 103 lbs. My son and husband seeing how I had Improved, are now using Grape-Nuts. "My son, who Is a traveling man, eats nothing for breakfast but GrapeNuts and a glass of milk. An aunt, over 70, seems fully nourished on Grape-Nuts and cream." "There's a Reason." Name given by Tostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the rbove letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest.
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Tlio Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over CO years, has borne the signature cf
and has
V ßonal supervision since its infancjv l-CCCl. Allow nn nn a tn dtwira vonin this.
AU Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-soodaro bat Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Cliildren--Experience against Experiment What Is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Parogoric, Drops and Soothing Syrupsü It is PJcasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karcotic substance. Its ag is its guarantee. IC destroys Worms and allays Feverfchness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food,' regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural Elcep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CÄSTORSÄ ALWAYS
Bears tho
The Kind You Have Always BongM In Use For Over 30 Years TMK CCNTAUN eo.PtlT, TT MUMNtT TBCCT, MtW YORK CrTY.
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LIPP1NC0TTS MAGAZINE
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LIPPINCOTTS MAGAZINE Garxtntiied OI1. The following advertisement of oliv oll is the work of a Itio Janeiro firm : "Ours olives oils have garantized of fltts quality. Diligently fabricated add , ,. ... ,1 ...If K J nunueu, iue consumer m uuu im them, the cood taste and perfect presj ervat',on. or to escape to conterfeit, is necessary to requiere on any botie this contremarc deposed conformab to tbe jaw. The corks und I J ..... th hoxps hare all marked with the fire." Case and Comment. Mrs. Plnkham. of the Lydia E. Flnkham Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass., together with her son, Arthur V. Tinkham and the younger members of her family, sailed for Naples on May 20 for a three months' tour throughout Europe and a much-Deeded vacation." Smoothing It Over. Irate Individual I'm going to square matters with you right now ! You've been telling it around that I lie! The Other Man Nothing of the sort All I hare said about you is that you are habitually unveracious. Irate Individual (calming down) O, I don't mind that, if that's alL 1 acknowledge I do get that way once in awhile. But how can a fellow help it, when everybody insists on treating him? Chicago Tribune. In a Pinch, Vne Allen's Foot-Eaae. A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, i Sore. ,Ior l anom, a 1 nd Incrowin? Nails. Sore, Hot. Callous Acblnjr. Sweating feet Aliens Foot-Eaoe mase. new or iifni sno uj. oia dj ao mailed PK EM Le Koy, X. V. Address Allen S. Olmsted. The Whole Shovr. The determined suffrage leader bit off her words in verbal spikes. "You insignificant men," she hissed, "don't know how much we brave women have on our heads." And the great big loafer who had sneaked in to warm his hands stretched himself and responded : "Yes, we do, lady. De last new hat I piped looked like de main circus tent and de animal tent combined. F O St. Vitui' Dane 4 an Krnni Pluw IIO frrawnrtllf TiiMVr Dr. Klin Urea Xerva Rertnrw Pnl tor Frr $.9 trial kt and trvttM. 1K. U. U. &XL.NE. Id.. Wl Arch SUM, fkUadalpLia, Shattering an Illusion. The office was seeking the man. "Not that I care anything about him," explained the office, "but merely as i concession to the popular idea that 1 oujrht to seek him." Having thus satisfied the ethical requirements of the case, the office, wearying of the perfunctory search, reached out and grabbed a man who was seeking the oflice. Chicago Tribune. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup ror Children teething: softens the sruma. reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Monuments. Dr. Griffin I must say the world Is very ungrateful toward our profession. How seldom one sees a public memorial erected to a doctor! Mrs. GoIIghtly How seldom! Oh. doctor, think of ! our cemeteries! London Answers. Street noises are regulated to a nicet) in Ilcrlin. T Habitual' Constipation May be permanently overcome rjy proper j personal cHoris vdhine assistance t theory truly bencjiciod laxative; lure may be radualfV dispensed with j vncn ho longer needed asiKobcMoj j remedies, when required, arc to assist : tvaure and hot to supyJard the naW i or functions. vKictt must de Den d uUl ' mqtc(y upon proper nourishment, proper effovtsand rifcKt living gencraly. Togetits benejicia! effects, always buy the enuhte uy the genuine Syrupf Kg$EI mxj Senna California Fig Gyrup Co. oniy SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS ouesae oaJy. ruUr price 50f tr ßottle WIDOWS'""' N EW LAW obtain i YT?1j?Yrt!? D JOHN w- MORRIS.
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been mado under his pcrSignature cf y never sells for less than 25c a copy. But we want you to CAST WASHINGTON SQUARE PHILADELPHIA - - PENNA. Grandfather's Curefor Constipation REAT medicine, the Sawbuck. Two hours a day sawing wood wiQ keep anyone's Bowels regular. No need of pills. Cathartics, Castor Oil. nor TPhysic," if you'll only work the Sawtuck regular ry. Eierclse is Nature's Cure for Constipation and, a Ten-Mile walk will do, li you haven't got & wood-pile. Bat, if you will take your Exercise In aa Easy Chair, there's only one way to do that, because, there's only one kind of Artificial Eierclse for the Bowels and its name Is "CASCARETS." Ctscarcts are the only m ears to exercise the Bowel Muscles without werk. They don't Purge, Gripe, nor "upset your Stomach," because they don't act like PhysIcs.,, They don't flush out your Bowels and Intestines with a costly waste of Digestive Juice, as Salts, Castor Oil, Calomel, Jalap, -or Aperient Waters always do. No Cascarets r-trcngthen and stimulate the Bowel Muscles, that line the Food passages and that tighten up when food touches them, thus driving the food to its fir.Ish. A Cascaret acts on your Bowel Muscles as li you had just sawed a cord of wood, or walked ten rriles. Cascarets move the Food Naturally. digesting it without waste of tomorrow! Gastric Juice. ! Ths thin, flat, Ten-Cent Box Is made to fit your Vest pocket, or "My Lady'" Purse. Druggists 10 Cents a Box. 1 Carry it constantly with you and take a Cascaret whenever you suspect you need one. Be very careful to get the genuine made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped "CCC." rot Save The Package Tops and Soap Wrappers from , "20-MULE-TEAM" DOOAX 1 Products and Exchance them Free For Valuable Premiums 40 rE Illustrated Fre eatalofu of 1 .000 rtte!i. Address PAUtIC COASI B02AI C9, CC2U60. IL Ucl Aoal Waaled, Write Ur Mmtj Mtiiaf Pia TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean end free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting smd deodorizing toilet rsquisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and njsal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by mail postpaid. Trial SlCiplfi WITH HEALTH AND atAUTY" BOOK CNT MICC THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Bcstoa.Mass.5 Get yocr Letter Paper and Envelopes printed at this office. tu in We can give yoa the EAGLE LINEN PAPER and ENVELOPES It Im fin mntt mill mult you. Try It. Invest $5 monthly In Oklahoma farm lands. Agents wanted. Write for particulars. C. W. Demlng Inv. Co., Tulsa, Okla. F. W. N. U. No. 261903 Wbe vrrltlnic to Atlverttiter plraa ay ;o iaw the Adv. la tbla payer.
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