Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 203, 20 August 1906 — Page 5
Page F'ivel Social and Personal Mention
The Richmond Palladium, Monday, August 20, 1906.
A few Suggestions
ICVirS nr. (his ttmo r,f Ovl yar aro especially enr Joyable, and never more bo than when. If the day be hot, you have along some cool delicious fruit such as musk melons or water melons. Home Grown Tomatoes, 40c bu We will cheerfully deliver any of the foregoing or following upon receiving your order prompt de livery too. Potato chips, Fine Rockeyf .... . . i muskmelons, Maiden Blush Appies, Bananas, Plenm Sweeuujorn with tender grains, attffsnake water Melons, sweet, $ and cold as Ice can make them. 0. A. Harmeier Phone 1 1 1 I. 1030 Main 914 Main Street ua.i.'t? th" past eight month vra uiuiea nr. it tn woauiugs me worn prominent Rriacs of Rr You know tbntn. Ask tb work. If yon want the ruu of yuur cdaluK artistic Call up Tel. No. I Tet-rauq Concert Quartet ..GEO. M. CUYER Western & Southern Life Irt Co. Rooms 33-34, Colonial dg. HOMI PHONB It We earnestly solicit your p&troaag L J. A A sti if i iti -- -- -- -- XTTTTTTTTT W 4 I' ' HARRY W WIRING CHANDELIER ELECTRICAL SUI i Home Phona 13-43. Bell 263 W2 ARLINGTON HOT earner oAixrt . First claM work by first Vbar ' ar there, under strictly saniUvjroni-" t turns. Your patronage soacited. JEFF MEYERS, PROP.:: a Headquarters for fine per il fumes. In addition to all the popular odors we have the. exclusive sale for t Tholma, Dorot I Vernon, Lady t Roso of Sharon ! QUIGLEY & BABYL Prescription Druggists. t 415 N. 8th. Phone 145 J Open all day Sunday. -- xien 4is-w IMIONKM Home is Richmond Auto Statioi Automobiles, MotorcVlesf and Bicycles. Supplies stsfage 10-J4 MAIN 8TREE1 C. R. Carter, Proprietor. IMMMMIMMM n CM ICHtaTI A'S CNQLISM 4 PEruiYRoyL PIU r CIIICHKSTKIfS vim kin. rlbtwa. l .k D.U.F.U i.kaUlai !), B.f .f Mar 1i 4 'Keller for I.adlM," lm Ml. mniial.i KaUMUkKr.p. MadlMa IU1LA, PjC Why wait for your friend's friend to come and look at your house week after next? You can sell it with a To Let ad in The Palladium.
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MISS RUTH MASHMEYER WILL ENTERTAIN FOR HER GUEST MISS LATTIMER, TOMORROW AFTERNOON I NVITATIONS HAVE BEEN ISSUED FOR THE LEEDS-SMITH WEDDING, WHICH TAKES PLACE SEPTEMBER 4.
Miss Ruth Mashmeyer has issued invitations for a whist party to be Kiven at her home Tuesday afternoon in honor of her guebt, Miss Lattimer of Troy, Ohio. e- vJ -r The following invitations have been issued: Mr. and Mrs. Phillip V. Smith req.ue.st the honour of rc-fiivco at the nian i;itro of their daughter Florence to Mr. Rudolnh flnar Leeds on the evening of Tuesday, the fourth of September One thousand nine hundred and six . at half after seven o'clock id Memorial United Presbyterian Church. Richmond, Indiana. , Reception at eight o'clock 20."y Main .Street. - - Among the dinner guests at the Country Club Saturday evening were Misses T-na ('offin, Marie Campbell, June Klnier. Josephine Cates, K'izabeth Newman, Messrs Tom Kaufman, Krville hockw(M)d, Roscoe Cook and Willmrllibberd. Jf- -xMessrs Karle Pridgeman, Wilfrel Jessup and J. Y. Poundstone formed a dinner party at the Country Club Saturday evening. Mrs. Miehie and Miss Michio of Ft. Thomas, Ky., and Mr. Louis M. Emmons were among the dinner guests at ihe Wescott last evening. ir springs was again crowaeu to its s utmost capacity yesterday. Tiere were over ones hundred guests at the Hotel both Saturday and Sunday. The guests at dinner last evening were C. 1 1. Ware, Will C. Kette and wife, Will C. Cute and wife of Dayton; II. V. Wilson, Springfield; Leal Levy, Dora Levy, Addie Sellers, Jes.sie (lleasou, Springlield, O., Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Koellsch, Mr. and Mrs. Rownian, Mr. and Mrs. Burkhart and family, 12. L. Leader, J. 12. Lane, A. M. Hurman, Mr.- and Mrs. V. W. Horrell and L. K. Uownian, Dayton; Mrs. A. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. (Jeo. Kennedy. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Rogue Jr. Mr. ant? Mrs. II. L, Manss and Stewart Manss, Cincinnati and J. H. Snyder, Summerset, Pa. a - Saturday evening Mrs. Charlie Kolp gave a dance at Cedar Springs. Some fifty young people from Richmond were in attendance, also many from CmiGINAL LITTLE DORRIT. rm. Cooper, Playmate of Dickens, Still Alive In Unsland. The original of Little Dorrit, the character with which readers of Dickens are familiar, is still living at South gate, England, which has been her liouie for more than half a century. Her name is Mrs. Cooper, and as Mary mbs. cooriu:. Ann Hilton t-lie was a playmate of Dickens when tke two were children and sister of a boy who was then Dickens' chum. Little did she or her brother imagine that their pl.nymatt would oue day become a great writer and Immortalize the little girl In n ' book. CLEANING AGENTS Hot viuegur will remove paint from cottou fabrics. Spirits of hartshorn applied to acid spots iu cotton or wool will remove them. Use vaseline to clean and preserve the shoes, applying with a soft woolen cloth. Rub magnesia well into an ordiuary stala and allow it to remain for two days if possible. Brush away and the stain will have disappeared. A solution of equal part of ammonia and spirits of turpentine will prove effectual in loosening dry or .hardened paint iu any fabric. One part alcohol and three parts water Is a good solution for use in freshening black poods. Sponge the material on the right side and press on Jhe wrong sale while damp. JEWELRY JOTTINGS. A necklace of uncut stones is one of the latest ideas. A gold hunting horn, winding once around an opal ball, is a peculiar and original design in scarfpins. A fancy ring top shows an open design outlined in diamond scrollwork and Inclosing a fine, round pearl. Pendant brooches are a pleasing variation on the usr,al styles, some being estremely ornate, with pendants varying in size. Diamond tiaras and diamond topped back combs are sometimes pointed with clusters alone or in alternation with the single diamond points. Jeweler's Circular-weekly.
Hamilton, Dayton and Middletown. White and Wilson furnished the music. Mr. Louis Emmons entertained Mrs. Michie and Miss Miehie of Ft. Thomas Ky., at dinner Saturday evening at Cedar Springs. - Mr. and Mrs. Will Jay, Dr. and Mrs. Sexton and Will McColgan of Rushville left yesterday morning for an automobile trip to Detroit and other Northern points. On their return Mr. and Mrs. Jay will visit for a few days in this city. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Walker entertained the members of the family at dinner yesterday at their country home south east of the city.
PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. and Mrs. John Elliott returned from Waynesville last evening where they were called on account of the death of James Shute. Miss Hazel Phelps has returned from Atlantic City and other Eastern points. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Carmen were the guests of J. C. .Walker and family east of the city yestterday. Paul liarnard of New Castle was in the city yesterday. Miss Wissner of Indianapolis is the guest of Miss Maude Thistlcthwaite. Fred Johnson returned to Indianapolis last, evening after spending Sunday with his parents, H. H. Johnson and wife of East Main street. Miss Rae Chandlee of Indianapolis spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Emily Chandlee. Miss Ida Hawekotte returned to Muncie last evening. Miss Edna Pane of Logansport will arrive this morning to visit friends and relatives in the city. Mark Thistlcthwaite returned to Indianapois last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pritchard have returned to Knightstown. Mr. and Mrs. Leland J. Toms returned to St. Louis last evening. Miss Margaret Smith of Eaton was the guest of friends in the city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cook and Miss Edna Cook spent yesterday In Cincinnati... Miss Ola Cummins of Middletown, Ind., was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Foster Hoefler of South ISth street. SIRES AND SONS. Jamc3 J. XT ill, president of the Great Northern railway, has bought a New York residence. Professor Loinbroso, the Italian scientist, is extremely -willful. He asks advice of his family and always acts contrary to it. Dr. Joseph li. Bryant, who has been elected president of the American Medical association, is an eminent surgeon and was recently president of ihe New York State Medical society. A. W. Benson, the new senator from Kansas, has joined the class of senators known as the "short leggers." It includes all the seuators whose bodies are long and whose legs are short. General O. O. Howard, retired, and Lieutenant General Stephen I). Lee, C. S. A., are the surviving army commanders of the north and south respectively. They graduated from West Point in 1354. Hon. William Pinckney Whyte, the new Maryland senator, i the only man living who was a member of that body and voted against negro suffrage when the fifteenth amendment to the constitution was passed by It. Mayor James N. Adam of Buffalo Is addressed by nearly every one as "J. N." Newsboys and politicians and even many city employees say "Good morning, J. N.," when they meet bis honor about the city hall. J. R. Booih, the Canadian railway masmate and lumber king, began life as a mill band. Now he possesses O.ucO square miles of timber land and is the largest owner in his own right of railways in British North America. William T. Vernon of Kansas, the new register of the treasury, is an accomplished scholar and a line orator, lie has been engaged in educational work and has leca at the head of an institution of learning for some time. The late Harry N. Pillsbury once accomplished the remarkable feat of winning twenty-two games of chess simultaneously while blindfolded. At various other times he met from sixteen to twenty players, all champions, and won from tbem under the same circumstances. CHURCH AND CLERGY. The third natrir.-il Catholic congre-s of Mexico will aso:nMc next October. The new Chrisiiaa fcvieuce cathean:! in Boj-uki cost S-0Waj0, and ever cent of the money has been raised aa l paid. Rev. David K. Love of Frankfort. Ind., who ha.? ju-t ce'.e'orated his seventy-fifth birthday. Las road the Bi" !' through annually for half a century He was absent fr.Mn his pulpit !::: once in the first thirty years of hiministry. A preacher in Leaver. worth, Kan., is evidently a believer in advertising. On the score board of a recent Sunday baseball game appeared this notice: "If you are a fan go t) the Presbyterian church tonight and hear the Rev. Dr. Elwood line out a few hot ones." The Rev. Hugh Black, who is to leave St. George's United Free church, in Edinburgh, to become a professor In the Union Theolo-jical seminary, was born at Rothesay and Is under forty years of age. He was ordained when he was twenty-thrc. after taklziT his degre In Glasgow unlTersity,
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THE MARCHIONESS OF TOWNSHEND, ENGLISH BEAUTY. The marriage of Marquis Townshend to the daughter of a London lawyer created a scandal, for it was alleged that the union was the result of a mercenary bargain arranged by a matrimonial broker. Six months after the wedding the marquis, who is a dwarf, was adjudged of unsound mind, and his person and estates were placed in the keeping of his young wife. She is not only a beauty, but writes poetry for the Ixnidon papers, one of her efforts bearing the novel title of "Spring."
REACH WINTER OP LIFE BOTH ARE OVER EIGHTY Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Were Guests of Honor at Dinner Party Yesterday, it Being Mrs. Medearis' Eighty First Birthday. Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Medearis. C20 South Eleventh, street, entertained a company at dinner yesterday in honor of Mr. Medearis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Medearis, of Indianapolis. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Medearis and children Miss Melissa Ogborn, Mrs. Ellen Kerry, Mr. and Mrs. Al Foster and son and Mr. Frank Conner. Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Medearis are among the best known of former Richmond and Wayne county people. Mr. Medearis is 84 years of age and yesterday was his w ife's eighty first birthday anniversary. Both are in good health. Mr. Medearis was born in Guilford county, X. C, and came to Wayne county in his boyhood days, settling in Conterville, where he was married sixty-one years ago. His wife is a native of Centerville. Following a long residence there the couple came to Richmonnd, living here for many years. For a considerate time they have been residents of Indianapolis. They will be present at the annual reunion of the Medearis family at Jackson Park on Wednesday. THE HALL OF FAME. The Duke of Wellington is, by inheritance, a grandee of Spain. Winston Churchill, the young English statesman, is said to be one of the inont eccentric of persons. Mayor Ekers of Montreal is addressed personally as "your worship," and In the third person as "his worship." Dr. Walter Volz, lecturer on zoology in the University of Ilerne, will head an exploring party that is to be sent into the practically unknown hinterland of Liberia. Senator Benson, the successor to Senator Burton of Kansas, was oue of the three lawyers in the state serate in lssl who framed the first prohibition law the state ever had. The queen of Spain is to have a doctor of her own. He will have a salary of $4,000 a year, an allowance for rent, $5 for each visit to ilie queen and the right to a private practice. Ex-Senator Chandler was asked by a young wornnn, "Don't you enjoy going into the country in your automobile?" "Yes." answered Mr. Chandler, "but the pleasure is nothiug compared with the satisfaction of getting home safely." Miss Alice de Rothschild, a sifter of the late Baron Ferdinand d? Rothschild, has a col'-ertion of Hindoo bulls and zebras and Har. :ir.. She is also interested in cattle breeding and owns a large number of exceptionally fine carriage horses. Patti. of all the vocalists in the world, stands r.Lne iu earning ability. Her marvelous voice, aidtnl by histrionic ability of h:h orJer, has frequently brought her ?r.0- O a night. Next to her stocd and nro'wblr still stands i Jean de RoF"l:e. Viscount Ao'.ci, the new Japanese ambassador at Washington, has as his constant con:prnion in his home a great ma'tese cat. Mr. Acki never receives a truest without pre'.eutinjj him to Peter, who sit on a settee near the diplomat' chair. Brunswick, Me., loses a landmark iu the retirement from business of Charles L. York, who has run a barber shop in the town for forty-four years and who in thnt Irg period hns shaved most of the famous men of the town and of Bowdoln college. In After Vra, Mrs. Naggsl-y How well I remember the n!j.ht you prosc.-.e;l t3 me, Henry. You looked like a f joi. NogTsby Appearances are not always deceitfuL mi dear. Detroit Tribune.
WEDDING AT NEW PARIS
THE MURRAY-TYLER EVENT The Nuptials Were Performed at the Beautiful Country Home of Mrs. James Murray The Rev. Wyant of Eaton Officiated. New Paris, O., Aug. 10, (Spl.) A very pretty home wedding took place at the beautiful country home of Mrs. James Murray east of town when Miss Olive Murray and Mr. William Tyler were married Thursday at 12 o'clock. Mrs. Cora Swisher played the wedding march and the bridaf party entered exactly at twelve. The Rev. Wyantt of Eaton performed the ceremony. Following the ceremony an elegant wedding breakfast was served to a large number of guests. The bride and groom left that afternoon for a short trip to the lakes and will be at home after Wednesday, 22 at Mr. Tylers home near New Hope. Those present were: Mr. Isaac Tyler and family, Dr. and Mrs. Swisher of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Murray of Eaton, Mr. John Murray and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hagernian of New Madison, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nulls, Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Jones, Mrs. Agnes Hawloy, Mrs. James Murray, Miss Ethel Murray, Miss Edith Miller, Miss Ada Young, Mrs. Wyantt of Eaton and Messrs Edwin Murray, Elwood Murray and Albert Murray MISS ANNA b t KUNSKV. Tons Gpnl Who Collcboratrd With Novelist Jack London. The author of "The Call of the Wild." Jack London, became acquainted about five years ago with a brilliant young girl of Russian birth named Anna Stniusky, and they soon produced In collaboration the now famous book entitled "The Kempton-Wace Letters." The views on marriage expressed in this book excited Mrs. London's disapproval. Nor did she like her husband's friendship with Miss Strunsky, though 1CT5 STBr"SKY. It was shown that their relations were purely i-latonic. Mrs. London obtained a divorce from her h us baud, and he afterward married, not Miss Strunsky, but another California girl. Miss Charruion Kittredge. Miss Stranky went to Russia fctady the revolutionary movement, and there the met a young physicia:-, Dr. Wihoaghby Walling, a grandson of the late William 11. English, who inn for vice president on the Democratic ticket La 1W. He ha. been a settlement worker and, though a man of lur;;e fortune, has socialistic views. He and Miss Strunsky fell In love and will eoa be married. PITH AND POINT. It Is foolish for a man to kick him self when he's f'own. Gossips nii.?ht 1 -e appropriately termed misfortune tellers. The school of experience is open twenty-four ho-.rr? e.-.ch day. Some iecp!? ;v:;.- ,!S i o-Ay thought the Lord ueeJed their advice. Don't expect to tower above your ei?hbors by standing on your dignity.
Giving Wedding Presents The Tendency Now is to Give Presents Whose Quantity Far Exceeds Their Quality A Plea for Old Custom of Suitable, Commonplace Gifts that Are Appreciated.
In the days when it was customary j he would take the wrong fork or to publish lists of wedding gifts oneNlHHinwas sure to read of at least five "pick-! Thero arc elderly women In every (town who can bring out tine linens, le castes." enough hanging lamps jsoUj snver, well bound books, fine to light every room in the house, andjehnta and other cherished gifts from no end of silver butter dishes. If the;tfuil' weddings years ago, but they are
silver had been solid the young peo- j pie might have waited a reasonable number of years and had it melted or exchanged for something useful; but unfortunately it was cheap plated ware that Hooded the country from one end to the other. J In some communities it is still the : style to display the wedding gifts to! all the guests, but many people do j
not. However., the anguish in theith.-m . nt;it,,i nf sixums though
heart of the bride is the same whether the array of useless stuff is hidden , , .,
iiifiids ur liiiti nui ill i nil siskin : .!.. ..... . . ; lever after by the fortunate woman to proclaim the need of common sense jwho possesses them, but still the carowhen buying presents. While pickle j less buyer goes on. The very woman ! casters and hanging lamps and impos- hav0 :l store of "seless wedding ! ., , , , . . i gifts hidden out of sight are the ones sible water sets no longer charm our . , ... . . i who recklessly buv trash to send to money out of our purses .it is possible j thvir frk.nds. " Perhaps this is promptI to purchase cold meat forks and use- ed by the spirit of "getting even,"
' less vases and impossible pictures ;and we do. We may drag out the old cake basket from its hiding place in the atic or the tall casters with its two hands clasped stiffly over an array of mustard, vinegar and salt bottles, and laugh over the horrible things that our mothers hid as soon as they decently could after their wedding days; but is it worse to own a revolving assortment of bottles than to harbor the small silver instruments that none of us knows what to call till we sneak them to the jeweler? A gentelman said recently that it was impossible for him to dine at fashionable houses because the assortment of silver laid by each plate kept him from enjoying the meal for fear
Make Perfumery From Your Garden; Any Richmond Housewife Can Do It.
Few women know that it quite practicable for them to make perfumes at home from any flower, wild or cultivated, which they may fancy. Our grandmothers and greatgrandmothers well knew the secret of making perfumes and in their day it was a regular part of the summer work, as common as canning fruit, making jelly or putting up pickles. The apparatus required to make perfumes at home is neither complex nor expensive and no woman need hesitate to under take it. You must first secure the vo
TO READERS OF THE,
LADIES' HOME JOURNAL:
Did you read the article published by The indies' Home Journal T.iv mm nttackincr Dr. Pierce's FavorhV Prescription ? Have
in
you seen the statement more recently made bwMr. Hok, the Kditor of
that magazine that his company "lias not paip a single penny w ux. R. V. Pierce's concern in settlenJtnt of any suit " ? We wish you to know the truth. The facts are jfiese : Four davs after the article in May 104, appeared, Dr. Pierce's company sued The Ladies' Home Journalfpublishers for libel. The trial was had in April last. Dr. Pierce profed that the attack made by The Ladies' Home Journal was false. Helroved that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription does not, and never didmmtain either alcohol or any of the injurious drugs which The Ladies! Home Journal falsely stated it did contain. This was so conclusively Jiown that the attorneys for The Ladies' Home Tournal were forced toVdmit it. The jury rendered
a verdict against The Ladies' Home Joif nal in favor of Dr. Pierce's
company for $16,000.00. This was
Pierce and his " favorite 1'rescnptton." the libel was wholly false, and without ard Dr. Pierce, however, believed that 1
to a verdict for a much larger sum. 11
therefore, applied to the court for a ne reason, and for this reason alone, has 1 vet naid "a. single tiennv to Dr. R. V.
has simply chosen not to collect the judgment until the motion for a new trial has been decided. I In the light of these facts does not iis boastful statement that it
"has not paid a single penny to Dr. K. Pierce s concern" 100 a cheap and common bluff, a half truth intended to mislead you ?
During the trial of the libel suit against the abovf mentioned publisher, Tr. Lee II. Smith, Vice-President of the World's Dispensary Medical Association, stated uwlcr oath that the ingredients of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription were wholly extracted from the following nativevroots; Golden Seal, Bhie Cohosh, Ladv's Slipper Black CVhsh and UnicorTy means of pure elvxefine of proper sSenath. He was askeV haw he knew, as aphysician and experienced medical manTViat the"Fa vonte Jres Option " was a for the diseases pecs har to won such as " female wea slvie catarrhal draiisL niiV6us, rersion, irregiilar anopainful peric other diseases of the womanly and he stated that he knew such the fact oecause ot hit professional experience and the many thousands of women whose ills, his personal knowledge, had been ured bv this " Prescription." This experience or Pr Mniwa rorroD-
orat-d by th standard M-hc-a4uiwritipand that the ingredients of which it is ?l7ZZ:i?w&r uiTSten composed are the very best known to
wrms. i.T. rrniTn uvif.g asm-ti 10 name some of tht'!e autlioritieb a to the curative value of the a!'V? roots r-a1 from the standard work, swh as th United ."'tatf risjM-na-Xf-ry; The American Ili-iJnatory ; Organic Medicine, hy drov-r Cop. M. 1).; Materia Mi-i:ra. by Prof-jr l"lnl?y EHing-wood of the Bunnell Mediral College. Chicago: "New Kcmi'di's." by Prof. Fxiwin M. Hale. M. I.. of Chiraifo; Txt-Bok of Thprreutir, by Ir. Hobart A. Hare. Prof. In I'niy. of Pcnn'a: Laurn" Juhiwwi. M. D.. Prof. In University of New York; Prof. John King. Author of "Woman and Hr Disease": lrofror John W. S-udder. M. I.. Author of a treatise on "The LMSPasf-i of Women Horatio C. Wood. M. IX. Author of "Therrutic"; Roberts Hartholow. A. M-. M. !., Professor of Materia Med if a. .leiTerMm Medieal College of 11 ill a. A'l these recognized and standard authorities praise, in the strongest possible terms, each and every ingredient which enters into the " Favorite Prescription" of Dr. Pierce for the cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses and ail-
exceptions to the general rule. Tha old joke about the lady asking tha clerk to help her select something nice and appropriate for a wedding
gift, and his ready answer, "Madam the ninety-nine cent counter is in tha "basement." has only too much foundation. There are some people who cannot afford to spend more than ninety-nine cents for some gifts, but they rarely use good judgment in making, the small purchase. A solid teaspoon is much better 'the latter exceeds in quantity. The ! rt,all' appropriate gifts are eajoyed n the great day and hoarded forbut it is hardly possible. Before starting out to purchase tha' next wedding gift take down your bible and read over the Golden Rulo. If you love fine linens, pretty china and lots of ;eed' work why not send your rieuds gifts like those when they set up homes of their own? Do you enjoy tiny candle sticks with paper petticoats, or silver hon bon dishes of tipsy vases? If not why do you cumber the bride with such things when she would be so pleased with tine towels, solid teaspoons or something to make the new nest cozy and attractive? Your atic may bq stacked with all sorts of things that never were useful or ornamental, but don't take your disappointment out on same other bride. latile or essential oils of the flower whose perfumes you desiro to extract and this may ba done in several ways. The simplest method requires that the flowers, with as little stalk as possible shall be placed in a wide mouthed jar or bottle three quarters full of tha finest olive oil or oil of beu. Stretch a bladder over the mouth of the bottle and tie it securely. After the flowers have been in the oil for 24 hours take them out, place them In a coarse linen cloth and squeeze the oil from them, pouriug the oil thus obtained back in the bottle. Repeat this process with fresh flowers until the perfume is of the desired strength. a oliiplete vindication of Doctor It judicially established that lustihcation. s company is justly entitled irough his attorneys he f has, trial of the case. Por this ie Ladies' Home Journal not ierce's concern." Dr. Pierce mcnt? In fact the "ravorite rresenption" alone as being the only medicAe for woman's special ailments w hich las any such professional endorsement m its several ingredients which fact is lenerally recognized as entitled to muci more weight than any amount of lay, ' non-professional testimonial. The Favorite Prescription" ttands alone a the only non-secret, medicine for woi an's ailments. Its manufacturer ai not afraid to publish its ingredien i, as they do, broadcast thm cotirtin; the fullest scrutiny. The avorite Prescription" has been on tria in court and came out fully vindicated as containing no harmful 01 hahit- rming drugs. WYtiM other medicine for women could stand ich a test? Noinvalid women can afford to &ccem a secret nostrum of unknown comfHition for this tried and proven rerXdv of kxowx composition'. LeadhjM physicians often prescribe it because ev know exactly what it ia made of medical science for the care of woman's peculiar weaknesses and delicate ailments. Ir. Pierre's Favorite Prescription is nof advertised as a "Cure All " but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a superior and most positive remedy for one cla. of di.eases only those easily recognized weaknesses, derangements, Irregularities and painful disorders peculiar to ' women. It i a powerful, yet gently acting. Invigorating, tonic and strengthening nervine. For weak, worn-out. over-worked women no matter what has caused the break-down. whether it be from toe frequent bearing of children or from muck worry, care, or over exertion of any kind. "Favorite Prescription" will be found most efficient in building up the strength, regulating all the womanly functions, banishing pain and bringing about a regular ana healthy, vigorous condition of the whole female system
