Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 230, 22 September 1907 — Page 8

THE KICII3IOXD PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 190? PRINCESS MARIE TO BE REAL ROYALTY dous responsibilities put upon his shoulders as finance minister, maker of peace with Japan and first premier or reorganized Russia in most troublous times have wrecked him physically, and it is improbable that he will ever enter the czar's service again. It is said by those who know him. Eoiiselhiolld Goods Packed for Shipping at . FURMTUKE STORE AGAINST SMART SET

PAGE EIGHT.

PUSHING

CAMPAIGN

GEORGE SCHWING IS However, Her Ancestry May Not Be Flattering to Her New Relations. Father Bernard Vaughan Becomes Known as "The Scourge of Society." NEW BOOKS IN THE IVHOKHorse Was Frightened at Automobile. DESCENDANT OF PIERRE. TRIPS ON A GILDED BARGE. Partial List of Those that Have Been Added Since May 7. 1906.

that Count Witte Is In rather straitened circumstances and he must find something to do at which he can make a living. Already several positions of a commercial nature have been offered him. Though unlimited possibilities of wealth were in his grasp had he been unscrupulous. It is greatly to his credit that he is still a poor man. Count Witte has abandoned politics definitely. Mr. Frank Mason, the United States Consul-General to France, gives an interesting account of the management of burials from which it seems that to foreigners, Paris may prove an expensive place to die in. The undertakers. It appears, obtain from the municipal bureau coffins, bearers, transport wagons, coaches and

INJURED

RUNAWAY

W. VOGET, CHEMIST, CLAIMS TO HAVE MADE AN IMPORTANT DISCOVERY WITTE STILL IN SEARCH OF HEALTH.

(By Raoul De Saint Rene.) Paris, Sept. 21. Princess Marie Bonaparte, who will soon become a "real royalty" by marrying Prince George of Greece, has an ancestry that many of the great Kuropean dynasties with which her future husband is connect ed may not consider it an honor to be allied with. She is descended on her father's side from Prince Pierre Napo leon Bonaparte, the disreputable swash-buckling nephew of Napoleon 1, and on her mother's side from Francis Blanc, a waiter who amassed millions by establishing a gambling saloon at Monte Carlo. Prince Pierre's record of adventures is a long and lurid one.. He began his career as a soldier of fortune, fighting In Colombia and Turkey. He was in volved in the Carbonari plot in Rome and shot two gendarmes who tried to arrest him. After several visits to America he returned to Paris during the 1848 revolution and was elected a deputy. Because he assaulted another deputy he was sent away to Algeria by his cousin. Napoleon III., who soon afterward cashiered him because he returned without leave. The Emperor was induced to grant the wild Prince $20,0J a year out of the Civil List. In lfCA the Prince married a young girl of the people, Justine Ruffin, whom he subsequently married twice Bgain in order to make her entitled to the rank of Princess and to legitimatize the children. Prince Pierre's last exhibit was to ihoot dead Victor Nolt, a journalist who brought him a challenge from the republican politician Pascal Grousset. The sensation caused by this coldblooded murder precipitated the fall of the Empire, which occurred the same year, and the prince and princesses were soon in "reduced circumstances." By opening a milliner's shop in London, the Princess supported the family until their son Roland married the daughter of Francis Blan, the millionaire proprietor of a Monte Crrlo "hell." The bride bought him a Paris mansion, a palace in Italy and ?.",xm,Dx. , It is the daughter of this marriage, a pretty and charming young woman of twenty-eight, who is now to marry Prince George of Greece, the nephew of Queen Alexandra, of the King of Denmark and of the Dowager Empress of Russia. M. Voget, the famous chemist of the Sevres porcelain manufactory, claims lo have d'scovered a process which will In a way revolutionize the making of large vases and decorative objects. As all connoisseurs know, the celebrated Sevres porcelain is of two kinds, the pate dure and the pate tendre. The latter was invented by the Chinese, but owing to its delicacy was apt to break in the furnace. The plate dure is much tougher, but considerably Inferior in capacity for taking color. Large vases became the fashion during the reign of Louis XV. and XVI., but they fell gradually out of favor, because it was Impossible to use pate tendre for anything over two feet high, and the manufacturing of the preparation was discontinued in 1SNO. Since then repeated experiments have been made to find a past less susceptible to heat, while easy to take color. M. Voget claims to have discovered the lecret and has already fashioned vases of all sizes, with all the celebrated opal, emerajd, blue and rose tints. These samples are to be first shown at the Anglo-French exhibition next year in London, after which the Sevres establishment will communicate the lecret to any manufacturer who applies t for it. ' Count Witte is still touring tVt P nees in search of health. The trcrrr; I

ANN

Our 10th Annual Sale of fine j& W all Papers &r Sept. 1st to Oct. 1st. 100,000 rolls choice patterns to be sacrificed Must be

turned into cash.

Our Loss.

The Wall Paper Store 504 Main St. H. L. DICKINSONTerms during sale strictly cash.

all the material necessary for draping houses of mourning. The prices the

undertakers pay are fixed by ordi nance, but their charges to the family of the deceased or his estate include many additional items. When a death occurs. It is required by law that the fact shall at once be reported to the authorities. It gener ally happens that an undertaker, who has learned of the death through some strange channel, appears on the scene before this report can be personally made, and presents himself as the rep resentative of the municipality. Under the circumstances, foreigners are apt to place all matters unreserv edly in the hands of the undertaker, whose estimate of the expenses to ba incurred is generally of the most gen erous description. Ignorance in such. case is apt to be costly. MEXICAN QUAILS TO BE EXPERIMENTED WITH Consignment Coming About First 6f November. A MOVE BY ECONOMY MEN. Economy, Ind., Sept. 21 L. D. Fish er and the Edwards brothers will re ceive consignments of Mexican quails the first of November from a Mr. Wise ly of Koswell, New Mexico. They are to be shipped solely for experimenting and will be kept in a park made expressly for them and when spring comes the birds will be liberated that they may choose places for nesting and raising their young. If they prove a success, more will be brought by Edwards brothers and turned loose in the northern part of Wayne county. A SEAT OF MANY ILLS. Eye Strain Is Responsible For a Number of Ailments. When the specialist to whom they had taken their s'xteen-year-old daughter on account of what seemed to be a case of incipient melancholia diagnose. the ease as one of eye strain and ordered prompt treatment from an oculist, tho parents of a young New Tori; girl were astonished. Eye strain seem cd as remote from melancholia n would corns on the feet. Their astonishment was proportionately Increased when after a few treatments and acquiring glasses the child showed no ticeablo Improvement. Latter day medical science traces to eye strain many ilia which seem so remote from the eyes that formerly physicians nver thought of establishing :t connection between them. Sick headache, nervousness, melancholia, insomnia, are but a few which haro of late been laid to tho door of weak eye?, the proper treatment having been neg lected. Nervous diseases of the nature of St. Vitus' dance are now thought to originate frequently in eye trouble. Tho weak eyes blink Incessantly, and this leads to a' general contortion of the facial muscles, which grows on the subject through constant repetition. Exchange. "In China, dear friends," said the absent-minded missionary, "human life is regarded as of but slight value. Indeed, if a wealthy Chinese is con- j ''coined to death he can easily hire j : 'other to die for him: and I believe ,: ny poor fellows get their living by "thus acting as substitutes." N Your Gain.

mtml

ANTIQUE FORM OF ENTERTAIN

MENT PROVIDED BY THE EARL AND COUNTESS OF ELLESM ERE LONDON GOSSIP. (By Richard Abrcorn.) London, Sept. 21 Father Bernard Vaughan, the "Scourge of Society," continued his campaign against the Smart Set during the fashionable "Dub lin Week the week of the Horse Show and Leo Pardstown races. So ciety people in crowds went to the Mansion House, where the Mayfair priest gave an eloquent address on his favorite topic the bridge player's per dition. Father Vaughan described a vivid dream he had had, in which was a sort of Dantesque allegory on the doom of the bridge player. "I fancied I saw," said Father .Vaughan, "in one of the outer courts of Heaven a wellknown London gambler pacing to and fro in search of a 'pal,' but none such came. At last he went to St. Peter at the Golden Gate, and confessing that it was by cheating that he had passed through, he begged for a pass-out tick et to see how his old mends were doing down below. "There he found an enormous crowd of well-known betting men and women in a low and suffocating room. They were being forced to play bridge with no stakes and in dead silence. For some time he watched the faces of the players, in which rage, despair and hatred were depicted. The passion to play awoke once more in him and he lost his return ticket to Heaven. "It was secured by a noted and fashionable society woman, who was known to be a confirmed cheat. She dashed with the ticket from the gambling saloon, asking for the iron gates. "There she was met by Satan, who, after congratulating her on her luck, pointed to the words on the ticket, 'not transferable. She screamed and tore up the ticket, and the Devil led her back to the moles to resumo her everlasting play. 'See, he exclaimed, 'these letters of fire, "All hope abandon ye who enter here." Trips on a gilded, luxurious state barge, quite in the style of the Roman Emperors, are a curiosly antique form of entertainment provided for their guests by the Earl and Countess of Ellesmere, who are entertaining a large house party at Worsley Hall, Lancashire. The barge, built of solid oak and richly decorated, was built by the Earl's ancestor, tho Duke of Bridgewater, for voyages on the Bridgewater Canal, which he had constructed and which skirts Worsley Park for two miles. Unlike the classic state barges cf Rome, Lord Ellesmere s barge is not propelled by oars, but Is dragged by a team of horses, mounted by postillions which trot along the tow path. Elegantly built, with a high prow and stern, it is provided with a luxurious salon and sleeping berths, with a lounge deck protected by an awning. Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort were once the guests of the Earl's father on a barge trip and in honor of the occasion the barge was richly decorated and gilded. The favorite trip of the Earl's barge parties is from the rustic scenery of Worsley Park for three miles along the canal to the wonderful swinging aqueduct which carries the Bridgewater Canal across the Manchester Ship Canal. Here the canal merges into the industrial region of Manchester, which is not suitable for pleasure trips in a gilded barge. The court officials who are arrang ing the details of the Kaiser's visit to England in November are considerably worried by the uncertainty as to whether the Empress will accompany her husband on the trip. The Kaiserin's accident on the tennis lawn at Wilholmshohe may possibly prevent her taking the journey. If the Empress cannot come the Kaiser will probably stay with the King and Queen in a homely way at Sandringham, instead of making a ceremonious visit to Windsor. The Kaiser, however, ardent a sportsman as he is, will certainly not miss the great "Battue" in Windsor Great Park, when an enormous bag of game is expected to be made. The official visit to the City of London may also be abandoned if the Kaiserin stays at home. Altogether the absence of the German Empress will mean a very great reduction in the expense of the visit. The heir to the greatest estate in Great Britain tin point of size) is the vounsr Marquis of Stafford, a strip ling soldier, who has just celebrated nis nineieruiu un luuaj aim jo a iKiond lieutenant in the Highland Yeomanry regiment known as Loverat's Scouts. The Marquis, as eldest son of the Duke of Sutherland, will inherit the vast ducal estates in Scotland and England, which cover more than a million acres. This huge doniain, larger than many German principalities, has not the richest rent roll of English estates. That distinction belongs to the Duke of Westminster, who owns most of Mayfair and Belgravia, the fashionable quarters of London. j The trustees of the college of the city of New York are said to look with favor on the suggestion that a night college be added to the present work , of the institution, for the assistance of , those young men and women who can j not afford attendance at the regular i college.

HURTS ARE NOT SERIOUS.

Campbellstown, O., Sept. 21. Geo. Schwing met with what might have been a serious accident on last Sunday, while returning from his aunt's funeral at Eaton. A short distance from his home "his horst; became frightened at an automobile and he got out of the buggy to hold it. After the auto had passed, he attempted to step into the buggy when the horse started to run and as he had the lines around his hands the result was that he was dragged for quite a distance. He escaped with slight bruises and a strained ankle, but no damage to the horse and rig. He is improving nicely. OWNS A DEED THAT WAS ISSUED IN 1824 Is for 160 Acres of Land in Randolph County. JACKSON'S NAME SIGNED. rvntprville. Ind.. Sent. 21 John Brooks, of Greensfork, has a deed, made of parchment, for 160 acres of land in Randolph county, near Winchester, which was deeded by the U. S. government to James Clayton on April 24, 1824, and signed by Present James Monroe. Tile conveyance was made Srrm James Clayton to John Brooks at a later day and has not rhaniPfl han ds since. Mr. Brooks has Another piece of land adjoining this, which originally belonged to James Clayton and which was conveyed to him on November 15. 1S30 and signed by President Andrew Jackson. LIVED IN THE SAME HOUSE M 86 YEARS Miss Elizabeth Ridge Was Re cently Injured. SHE IS NOW RECOVERING. Robinson's Crossing, Ind., Sept. 21. Miss Elizabeth Ridge, who recently ell and injured her hip is abie to use an Invalid chair. In all her S6 years she has lived in the sime home and this is the first time she could not look after her household duties. H V. - . . ... CJL.k. Pierre Nlco:e, one of the most distinguished scholars of the Port Royal ists and one of the best writers in Europe, was noted for his unreadiness ;ii oral argument. It is said that once when an opponent, having got the letter of him in an argument, had left the room Nicole railed out to hiiu from the landing as he was near the street door: "Come back, come back! I have a reply ready for you!" The anecdote will serve to introduce one about Thackeray, who was destitute of the ability to think and speak on his legs. ITe once ciood as a candidate for tho representation of Oxford In the house of commons. On the hustings he brolie down and cou'd hardly sper.k a sentence. "If I could." he cai 1 to himself, "only go into thf rr.Tvor'a parlor for fire minuter I - " easily." Mrs. W. J. Bryan can swim a mile. She is a splendid walker. She rides a bicycle. She can drive a mettlesome horse and bake, cook and sew. She knows how to keep house and all her home expenses are recorded, so that she knows from day to day and week to week how matters stand. She is well read, not only in current literature, but in good things of the past. WONDERS OF ELECTRICITY! APPENDICITIS Now cured without an operation. Also urinary and sexual maladies of men and women cured in the privacy of their own homes by this new direct current system. Far superior to any electric belt. Filling the Lunss bv the continuou idirect current cures any curable case of throat and lung trouble. Call on, or write J. Charles. 24 S. 13th St., Richmond, Ind., for free book giving full particulate.

Description and Travel. Bard. Chinese life in town and country. 1903. Bell. Desert and the sown. 1907. Boulger. Belgian life in town and country. 1904. Burrage. Early English and French voyages. 1903. Capitals of the world. 1904. Ref.

Coryat. Coryat's crudities. 2 v. 1903. Edwards. Japanese plays and playfellows. 1901. Freer. Philippine experiences. 1906. Garnett. Turkish life in town and country. 1905. Gould. Baring. Book of the Rhine. 190G. Guerber. How to prepare for Europe. 190C. Ileidenstam. Swedish life in town and country. 1904. Hodge and Lewis. Spanish explorers in the southern United States, 152S43. 1907. Hutton. Cities of Spain. 1906. Jackson. Persia, past and present. 1906. Kipps. Narrative of the voyages round the world performed by Capt. James Cook. V. 1. 1835. Ref. Leroy Philippine lif-3 in town and country. 1906. Lucas. Wanderer in London. 1906. Mathew. Ireland, painted by Francis S. Walker. 1905. Oskakura-Kakuzo. Book of tea. 1906. Olson and Bourne, eds. Northmen, Columbus and Cabot, 9S5-1503. 1906. Pff'tiier. Austro-Hungarlan life in town and country. 1905. Pepper. Panama to Patagonia. 1906. Pinkerton. General collection of the best and most interesting voyages and travels. 17 v. 1S0S-14. Plescheef. Survey of the Russian empire. 1792. Purchas. Hakluytus posthumus; or, Purchas, his pllgrirr.es. V. 11-20. 1905-6. ' Raikes. Visit to St. Petersburg in the winter of 1S29-30. 183. Ross. Voyage of discovery for the purpose of exploring Baffin's bay and inquiring into the probability of a Northwest passage. 1S19. Scott. Voyage of the "Discovery." 2 v. 1905, Smith. Budapset; the city of the Magyars. 1903. Smith, M. B. First forty years of Washington society. 1906. Sinythe. Conquest of arid America. 1903. Tozer. History. of ancient geography. 1897. Whitney. Jungle trails and jungle people. 1903. Williams. Granada. 1906. Education. Barnard, ed. Papers on Froebcl's klnderearten. Chenery. As the tw:g Is bent. 1902. Froebel. Mother-play and nursery songs. 1906. Gilman. Launching of a university and other papers. 1906. Harrison. Kindergarten building gifts. 1903. Some silent teachers. 1901. Lindsay. More mother stories. 1906. Peabody. Lectures to kindergartners. 1906. Sargasso Published annually by the students of Earlham college. 1906. V. 1. Scholz and Hornbeck. Oxford and the Rhodes scholarrhips. 1907. Smith. Kindergarten in a nutshell. 1839. Phychology, Theology and Religion. Angell. Pss'chology. 1906. Bayly. Bayly's works. (166) Her. Court. Sermon, 1674, supposed to have been written by Gilbert P.urnet. 1868. Driver. Book of Genesis. 1906. Dubois. Psychic treatment of nervous disorders. 1906. Ewald. My little boy. 1906. Foster. Finality of the Christian religion. 1906. Harnack. Expansion of Christianity in the first three centuries. V. 2. 1903. Houghton. Hebrew life and thought. 1906. James. Principles of psychology. 2 v. 1905. Jastrow. Religion of Babylonia and Assyria. 1S98. Subconscious. 1906. Jordan. Comparative religion. 1903. Lea. History of the Inquisition of Spain. 4 v. 1906. Lodge. Substance of faith allied with science. 1907. Mitchell. World before Abraham, according to Genesis I-XI. 1901. Montgomery. Christu3 redemptor. 1906. Muir. Life of Mahomet. 1S94. Ordericus Vitalis. Ecclesiastical history of England and Normandy. 4 v. 1S53. Pfleiderer. Christian origins. 1906. Putnam. Censorship of the church of Rome. 1906. Radau. Creation-story of Genesis I. 1902. Stalker. Life of Jesus Christ. 1S91. Super. Between heathenism and Christianity. 1893. Westermarck. Origin and develop ment of the moral ideas. . 1. 1906. Science. Blake. Conversations on natural philosophy. 1S23. Ref. Chaberlain and Salisbury. Geology. V. 1-2. 1905-6. Chapman. Warblers of North Ameri ca. 1907. Clayden. Cloud studie3. 1903. Dlckerson. Frog book. -1906. .

Harwood. New creations In plant life. 1906. lies. Flame, electricity and the camera. 1904. lies. Inventors at work. 1906. Jones. Electrical nature of matter and radioactivity, 1906. Knight and Step. Living plant in leaf, flower and fruit. 1903. McCook. Nature's craftsmen. 1907. Martin (The) friendly stars. 1907. Pearless. Ferns of Great Britain. St. John. Study of elementary electricity and magnetism by experiment,. 1900. Serviss. Astronomy with an opera glass. 1901. Political and Social Science. Blanchard and Rice. Debate on slaver-. 1846. Ref. CarliJe. Evolution of modern money. 1901. Clews. Wall street point cf view. 1900 Coleman. Social ethics. 1903. Creasy. First platform of international law. 1876. Falrlie. Local government in counties, towns and villages, 1906. Ferri. Positive school of criminology. 1906. Foster Practice of diplomacy. 1906. Fox. Parliamentary usage for women's clubs. 1902. Hill. History of diplomacy in the international development of Europe. V. 1 and 2. 1905-6. Howard. German empire. 1906. Kovalevsky. Modern customs and ancient laws of Russia. 1891. Lawrence. Principles of international law. 1906. Loekwood. New Harmony movement. 1903. Marx and Engles. Manifesto of the communist party. 1SSS. Moore. Digest of international law. 7 v. 1906. Munroe. Seigniorial system in Cana.i r e m

aa. isui. National conference for good city government at Atlantic City. 1906. Parsons. Laws of business for all the states and territories. 1907. Ref. Statesman's year book. 1906. Ref. Steffins. Shame of cities, 1904. Steiner. On the trail of the Immigrant. 1906. Stickney. Organized democracy. 1906. Taft. Four aspects of civic duty. 1906. Thompson. Lectures on slavery. 1S36. Ref. .. - Webb. English local government from the revolution to the municipal corporations act. 1906. Willard. Notes of an itinerant policeman. 1900. Willoughby. Nature of the state. 1907. Folklore. Dasent. Heroes of Iceland, 1905. Guerber. Legends of Switzerland. 1899. Leland. Arcadia; or, the gospel of witches (of Italy). 1899. Lie. Weird tales from Northern Seas. 1893. Saintine. Myths of the Rhine. 1903. Snorri Sturluson. Stories of the kings of Norway, called the Round World (Heimskringla), tr. by Morris and Magnuson. 4 V. 1893-1903. Weston. Legend of Sir Lancelot du Lac. 1901. Legend of Sir Perclval. V. 1. 1906. Three days' tournament, being an app. to the author's "Legend of Sir Lancelot." 1902. Vigfusson and Powell. Origines Islandicae; a collection of the more Bad!

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Thlm Shorn Why Omrtmtn BmMng Powdmrm Cmmm Dynpmfftm.

The basis of all baking powders is the same bicarbonate of soda. Egg Baking Powder, famous for purity and wonderful leavening power, contains pure bicarbonate of soda. But instead of usingCream of Tartar or Alum in making Egg Baking Powder, we use Wheat Phosphates and Egg Albumen. Here is the "cooking test:" Take 2 heaping teaspoonfuls of ordinary baking powder, whatever you are now using, add a couple of teaspoonfuls of water and boil until the water has evaporated. If it contains Cream of Tartar and Tartaric Acid the residue will be Rochelle Salts, a stomach and bowel irritant, having no food value at all. If it contains Alum, the residue will be Glaubers Salts, equally injurious to the stomach and bowels. Now repeat the experiment, using Egg Baking Powder. The residue is

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important sagas and other native writings relating to the settlement and early history of Iceland. 2 v. 1905. Sports. Aflalo. cd. Hunting Library. 1903. 1. Hart hunting and harriers, by Dryden. 2. Fox hunting in the shires, by Dale. 3. Master of hounds, by Underbill. Austin (The) flock. 1906. Clark. Golf; a royal and ancicnl game. 1S9S. Darling. Effects of training. , 1906. Hancock. Japanese physical training. 1904.. Holder. Log of n sea angler. 1906, Life in the open; sport with rod, gun, horso and hound in southern California. 1906. Hornaday. Camp-fires In the Canadian Rockies. 190C. Kephart. Book of camping and woodcraft. 1906. Stevens. Practical rowing. 1906. White. (The) pass. 1906. Fine Arts. Adams. Modern cottage architecture. 1904. Anderson. Japanese wood engravings. 1S93. Audsley and Barnes. Keramlc art ol Japan. 1SS1. Craig. Art of 'the theatre. 1003. Crane. Art and the formation of taste, 18S2. Foord. Decorative plant and flowet studies. 1906. Germ (The); being a fac simile reprint of the literary organ of tho preRaphaelite brotherhood. 1901. Ref. Hamel. Corot and his work. 2 v. 1905. Holmes. Constable and his Influence on landscape painting. .1902. Jackson. Theory and practice of design. 1903. Lowrle. Monuments of the , early church,' 1901. MacM Ulan. Life work of George Fred, erlck Watts, R. A. 1903. Mauclalr. French Impressionists. 1860-1900. Mumford. Oriental rugs. 1903. Ref. Pennell. Lithography and lithograph ers; some chapters In the history ol the art. 1898. Price and Johnson. Home building and furnishing, 1903. Rhys. Frederic Lord Lclghton, an Illustrated record of his life and work. 1900. Rose. Cathedrals and cloisters of the south of France. 2 v. 190C. Standing. Sir Lawrence Alma-Tade-ma, O. M. R. A. 1905. Twopeny. English metal work, nine' ty-three drawings. 1904. ,

COTTAGE HOME ATTRACTS FAVORABLE COMMENT. It Is One of the Most Beautiful Homes to Be Found In Milton. Milton, Ind., Sept. 21 George Murley's cottago home Is attracting many favorable comments for the beauty ot Its floral decorations. It U embowered in vines and has great beds of decorative plants surrounding it. Some Dayton automobile tourists were so attracted by it that they requested permission to photograph it, which was granted. Mrs. Murley Is one of the most expert florists In the vicinity. By Thlo "CooMno Test" a little Sodium Phosphate and Egg Albumen, both not only harmless but of real food value. This phosphatic material is a most necessary food clement the system demands it. The residue left in biscuit or pastry by Alum or Cream of Tartar baking powders is indigestible and positively harmful. It sets up constant irrita tion in one's delicate digestive organs. If you took it in a large quantity it would be better, for then it would be thrown off. You know an overdose ol poison is better than a small dose. It doesn't pay to trifle with nature. If you take ever so small an amount of poison in the system, you must pay the penalty in injured health. - Use Egg BakingPowder composed of pure and healthful ingredients aa aid to digestion, not a hindrance. Insist on being supplied with it. There's nothing "just as good." Your Grocer Haoit Guaranteed Frao From A turn Or Grosm of T&rtiy

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