The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 May 1910 — Page 3
Products Never Vary in Quality or Taste Because the utmost care ! is taken by Libby’s Chefs ' to select only the choicest materials and prepare them in the same careful | manner every time. You are thus assured of uni- | form goodness, and this • is the reason that the use of Libby’s gives such • general satisfaction to] every Housewife. , Try |ibby Dried Beef Mexican Tamales Ham Loaf Chili con Carne i Vienna Sausage Etaporated Milk For luncheon, spreads of everyday meals they are jusjt the thing. Keep a supply in the house. You never can • r tell when they will come in handy. Ask B for Libby’s ands be sure- you get Libby’tt I Libby, McNeffl & Libby Chicago - WESTERN CANADA What I. J. Hill, the Great Railroad Magnate. Say* About it* Wheat-Producing Power! Ist need of this country States] in another generaon or two will be the providing of homes for its people and producing sufficient for them. The days of our prominence as a wheat exporting country are gone. Canada is to be the great wheat country.” This great railroadmagnate is taking advantage of the situation by extensive railway building to the wheat fields ot, Western Canada. -ds of 125 Million ihels of Wheat -vested In 1909. Average tree provinces. of Alberta, awnn and Manitoba will be >f 23 bushels per aere. omesteads of 160 acres, lining pre-emptions of s(ats3 per acre), are to n the choicest districts, s convenient, climate t, soil the very best, i close at hand, buildber cheap, fuel easy to reasonable in price, aslly procured; mixed a success. Write as to s for settlement, settlers ay rates, descriptive illusLast Best West” (sent free ation), and other informaSup’t of Immigration, . Ottawa, Canada, or to the following Canadian Gov’t Agents: W. H. Rogers, 3d.Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., and 11. M. Williams, Room 30. Law Building. Toledo, Ohio. (Use address nearest you). Please say where you saw this advertisement. ' (® = Fort Wayne List W? L. DOUGLAS SHOES <5,<4, <3.50, *3, <2.50 & *2
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THE STANDARD FOR 30 YEARS. Millions of men wear W. L. Douglas shoes because they are the lowest prices, quality considered, in the world. Made upon honor,of the best leathers, by the most skilled workmen, in all the latest fashions. W<- L. Douglas $5.00 and $4.00 shoes equal Custom Bench Work costing $6.00 to SB.OO. Boys'Shoes, $3.52.50&52
W. L. Douglas guarantees JJielr value by stamping his name and price on tHgj bottom. Look for It. Take Substitute. Fait Color Eyelets. Askyour dealer {or W. L. Douglas shoes. If not forsaletnyour town writefor lug how to order by mail. Shoes ordered direct from factory delivered free. W.L.Dpuglas, Brockton, Mass. A million boxes now used every month. No other laxative won such favor as have icandy Cascarets. Natural, gentle, prompt. A single tablet. takeh When one needs it, alters everything that’s wrong. Think of the good they do. Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug-stores. 860 Each tablet of the genuine is marked C C C. DAISYFLY KILLER^X" 7 HJU:cntal . c. i.veniWRy* ent ’ choa p- Lasts •» season. Made of metWASSiESa al> Cann °t spill or 11 l ‘P over - will n,t or in i uro a»y;hing. Guaranteed effective. Os all dealers or bent P re! a ' 1 f< r 20 cents>lA HOLD SOM EKS, n ° i>e Ka I b 1.1 e. , Brooklyn, Rew York IM4MTCn_ Everybody suffering from Piles Hnn ICD or any form of Rectal Ailments, to write me for Free Trial of my Positive Painless Pile Cure. S. U. TARNEY, Auburn; Ind. PAST PIRDS o{ Ocean, Seashore, Board Walk ruoi vanuo and BathinK Scenes at At i antic City., Printed in natural colors. All new. Ten for io’cents, stamps or silver. The Calvert Co., 123 So. Virginia Ave.. Atlantic City, N.J. LADY TO REPRESENTUS IN EVERY TOWN. Best selling housshold necessities. Large demand for goods. Success guarantowl. Write at race. BRENNAN 4 VO., New Orleans. La L I
s Unsightly Complexion*. The constant use of Ciiticura Soap,* assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for toilet, bath and nursery purposes not only preserves, purifies, and beautifies the skin, scalp, hair and hands, but - prevents inflammation, irritation and clogging of the pores, the common cause of pimples, W&ckheads, redness and oily, mothy and other unwffoTesome conditions of the complexion and skin. All who delight in a clear skin, soft, white hands, a clean, wholesome scalp and live, glossy hair, will find Cuticura Soap most'successful in realizing every expectation. Cuticura Soap and Ointment .are. admirably , adapted to preserve the health of the skin and scalp of infants 'and children, and to prevent minor blemishes or inherited skin humors becoming chronic, and may be used from the hour of birth. Cuticura Remedies are sold throughout the civilized world. -Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass., for their free Cuticura Book, 32 pages of invaluable advice on care and treatment of the skin, scalp and hair. Took Him at His Word. Nell—What caused the coolness between you and Jack? Belle —He told me he was unworthy of me. Nell—Oh, they all say that. Belle —Yes, but I believed him.— Philadelphia Record. To Make Clothes Last. .Table linen is expensive. It costs more today than it did five years ago. When it begins to wear in holes, to come from the wash with worn spots that tell how soon it will be no good, no wonder the housewife despairs. Cheap„ common soap full of caustic that eat the linen are greatly to blame. Easy Task laundry soap is an enemy to dirt and stains and a friend to the--table linen. Get two five cent cakes; try it, and if it does not surprise and satisfy you the makers will return your money. Literal Visuality. “Did you see the great actress in repertoire?” “Nope.- Saw her in New York.”— Baltimore American. , All Old Folks. That take NATURE’S REMEDY (NR tablets) tonight will feel better in the morning. It sweetens the stomach, corrects the liver, bowels and kidneys, prevents biliousnes and eliminates the rheumatism. Better than Pills for° Liver Ills, because it’s different —it’s, thorough, easy—sure to apt. Get a 25c box. All druggists. The A. H. Lewis Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo. He Had. The Doctor —That’S* a curious doctrine. is it philosophy or is it religion? Have you any ecclesiastical authority. for it? » The Professor —Yes —Periclesiastical. ‘ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. When a young woman* hears a disagreeable thing about a man of her acquaintance she usually passes it along With a little more added to it. • Russ bleaching blue should be in every home. Ask your grocer for it and take no substitute. 10c a package. And if some men didn’t boast' they would be unable to keep up faith in PEBKT DAVIS’ PAINKILLER For a sudden chill or cold (instead of whiskey) use Painkiller. For col io/il iarrhea and summeryomplaint this medicine neyer fails. 25c, 35e and aOe bottles. that mean* It means that the men that Id a past generation would have been independent merchants gre now the employes of these stores, and never can be anything else; employes on wages with time checks; fines, and their dally work dependent upon a manager’s caprice. That is their prospect in life. It is hard (in some of its aspects), and we dislike to admit it, but it is the truth. The gigantic department stores and mail, order houses are built of the ruins of independent stores, just as the Christian churches of Rome were built of the fragments of the old temples, and each independent store destroyed is an independent merchant turned into a salaried employe,— Charles Edward Russell in Success Magazine. _ Just a Chance. ► “Yes, you offer* the property low enough, Mr. Yipsley,” said the real estate agent, “but it .will be best for you to give some satisfactory reason for. wanting to sell.” “The reason why I want to sell is that the property is all run down. It doesn’t bring me 2 per cent on the money invested ip it. I'm not offering ■ it at a sacrifice. I don’t need the money. I want to get rid of it, but I am asking all it’s worth.” “Um-A-well, I’ll list it for you, Mr. Yipsley,” said the real estate agent. “It’s barely possible that the novelty of the thing may attract some equally cranky purchaser.”
There is a reason Why Grape-Nuts does correct A weak, physical, or a Sluggish mental condition. The food is highly nutritious And is partially pre-digested, So that it helps the organs of the stomach To digest other food. It is also rich in the Vital phosphates that go Directly to make up The delicate gray matter Os brain and nerve centres. _ Read “The Road to Wellville” In pkgs. “There’s a Reason.” POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY, Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.
• i/ b XUMjT >—’-M* Economical Cistern Filter. A practical filter is necessary for the cistern. One may be constructed of any good, sound oak barrel, _• as shown in the illustration herewith. One head is removed and several holes bored in it. It is then dropped inside and forms a false bottom, as shown, leaving a clear space between it and the bottom or head proper. Six or seven inches of hoarse gravel or broken stone are next placed on the false bottom, and on this stone a layer of charcoal six or seven inches thick is placed, and on the charcoal a sec-, ond laye’r of stone or gravel. In all . it should be about eighteen or twenty inches thick. The water enters the/ —1 1 Is r FILTER MADE OF A BARREL. barrel at the bottom between the head and the false bottom through the regdown spout, which is clearly illustrated. It passed up through the gravel and charcoal and out at the top through a second pipe which leads to the cistern. The top layer of stone may be improved on by filling the voids between the stone with sand. TJtb sand is covered with cheesecloth stfetched on a wire and the cloth and wire held* in place with one or two stones. A small wooden plug or faucet is placed at the lower end bf the barrel to drain same after a rain or when washing out the filter.. Give the barrel two or three coats of paint, provide a close fitting cover and y6ur filter will do the work just as well as any twenty-five dollar filter in the land. Unique Door for the Pigpen. A very convenient way of feeding pigs was observed in the swinehouse of a prominent breeder, an arrangement that made the tridaily feedings a matter of so little difficulty that a child could place the feed before . a pen of unruly noses. The front of each pen was hinged at the top, swinging downward against the -farther sides of the uprights, as here shown, the weight of the door being sufficient to hold it in place. On the front of the door is a vertical bar with a pin through top, as here shown. This is held in place by two wooden blocks notched out to admit of the bars Sliding up and down, the blocks being bolted to the door. If desired the home blacksmith could easily shape a piece of iron to perform the same duty. At feeding time the bar is lifted and the door swung in past, the trough, directly beneath. Thfen the bar is dropped, thus holding the door back of the trough. This keeps the hungry mob on the other side of the door while the feeder takes his time to clean the trough, if need be, and to pour in the feed., A few transverse ~ 5 ~ ' /Z/7 i ITTr 7 ’ PIGPEN DOOR. bars across the top of the trough prevent any unusually 4 piggish pig from crowding down the length of the trough to the exclusion of others. When ready to admit the pigs to the feed the bar is lifted g.nd the door drops to its usual position. Any farmer can. make such a. device, all that is required, besides the lumber that would have to be used in any case, being the hinges. Age of Usefulness. a The period of a hen’s usefulness depends on the hen. While the first year is usually the best for egg production, it is not always the case, some hens laying better the second year. But, as a rule, one will get the greatest number of eggs from a giyen number of fowls by having the pullets hatched early. March and April are the best months, so as to get them laying early in the. fall, and change them each year, disposing of the fowls when they cease laying to go through the molting process. Use* for the Corncobs. Save all the corncobs. They are good for smoking meat in absence of hickory wood, and they are splendid for burning to a charred condition for hogs. The surplus cobs should go into the manure. They are good absorbers of liquids and .improvers of soil texture, besides supplying some fertilizing. elements and adding humus to the soil. * Easily Made Fire Kindler. Put about a gallon measure full of sawdust that has been well saturated with kerosene into a deep tray. Add enough melted rosin to stiffen the entire amount when it is cold. When cold, says t Popular Mechanics, this
mixture can be cut into squares and put away until ready for use. Put one square of the kindler into the fireplace of a stove and place the fuel on top. A hot fire will be produced in a short ■time after the lighting. Farmed Lands. An exhaustive census investigation of farm interests throughout the United States showed that in the last ten years the total number of farms has increased 18 per cent. In the older States, from Ohio eastward, there has been going on for twenty years a tendency toward the amalgamation of farms distant from market into larger holdings, There are'now almost three times as many farms as in 1870, and an unprecedented increase in the value of farm lands and live stock is the even more momentous fact revealed by this inquiry. The land in farms, with their buildings, improvements and live stock, is to-day almost $30,000,000,000, a gain of 44 per cent in ten years. Pres-j ent values are two and one-half times the farm values of thirty years ago. In the North Central States the increase in the value of farms is 43 per cent; in the South Central States, 58 ,per cent; in the North Atlantic, 13 per cent, and in the South Atlantic, 34 percent. ' Keeping; Milk Utensils Clean. Discard the dishcloth and the dishtowel when the milk utensils are being w : ashed. Wash them in warm water first, with plenty of some washing compound, and use q. brush to do the work, but never a rag. Get into every part bf them, after-which rinse off with dean warm water,] I and then either put them in boiling water or pour boiling water over tnhRL Stand the parts up so they will drahi and use no cloth to wipe them. TheXhot surface will dry them quickly, and they will be clean. Leave the parts in a sunshiny place if possible. i Testing Poultry for tlie Table. Some experts in choosing poultry for the table depend upon testing the breastbone, but sometimes dealers break this on purpose, then you are out. In a young chicken or goose the cartilage in the breastbone will ben'd easily. If the bird is a year old it will be brittle, and in an old fowl will break before it will bend to any amount. To make this test, take* the end of the breastbone farthest from the head and make ’ the attempt to bend it to one side. . If it is young it will bend easily to either side. Substitute lor a Wrench. If in heed of a wrench and, one is not at hand, take a large bolt and run on two nuts, allowing a space between them’ to sis dVSr the nut to be turned. This will make a serviceable wrench, a’ substitute that toll prove very beneficial in case of an emergency.—Thos,. Li. Parker, in Popular Mechanics. Beef and Dairy Cattle. When a dairyman has faced the actual practice of selling co-ws from his herd for beef he will not feel encouraged over the outlook of combining beef and dairy qualities in the same herd. There is a popular prejudice against eating beef from an old, played out dairy cow, and there is no advantage in trying to combine the two qualities in one animal. Dynamiting; Holes for Planting., Tree planters advocate dynamiting holes for the planting of fruit trees. When there is an impervious hardpan they advise the digging of the hole deep enough for the tree, then* placing a small stick of dynamite in the hardpan and the explosion will loosen up the ground so that the roots of the trees may take deeper hold in the soil. Coal Tar Remedy for Mange. For itch or mange, rubbing of tail or mane, wash thoroughly with warm soft water and soap, then rub in with brush a proper strength of coal tar dip used on sheep and dogs. Scrub every, three or four days until cured. Disinfect stalls and harness also or you never will get rid of the pest. Useful Little Suggestions. A dirty collar often makes a sore shoulder. X 7 Are skinning your young trees? ’ Cheap harness often proves an expensive instrument. The most perfect milk can be quickly and easily spoiled. It will cost no more per pound to grow a colt than ( a calf. A little axle grease applied it belongs saves horseflesh. X Unthrashed cow pea hay, well cured, ranks among the best of dairy feed. Successful “ hog raisers will always have clover alfalfa pastures for their animals. A cheap paint can be made from a solution of borax and water mixed with linseed oil. Every farmer in the country has a place for sheep, some perhaps only for fifty, others for 1,000. Let the young pigs learn to eat with their dams and as soon as possible pu| them all on pasture. Make your head save your heels by careful planning, and you can do twice the work with fewer Steps. Hornless cattle are preferred by feeders and shippers, and they will usually pay a premium for them. We do not need manure nor commercial fertilizer on our orchards as much as light cultivation and perfect care.
sjjM Asparagus Salad. Cut off the tough ends of asparagus, then cut in inch tender in boiling salted water. Let cool in the liquid in which it has been cooked. For a pound of asparagus boil hard two eggs and dice one cupful of celery. Cut fine enougfi English walnut kernels to make half a cupful. To s these ingredients add the asparagus drained from the liquid. Serve in nests made of fresh watercress and put a generous spoonful of mayonnaise ■ on top of each serving. The egg should be thinly sliced. • Potato Soup. "Wash, peel and cut four mediumsized potatoes into small pieces, cover with cold water, salted, and cook, until done. Have ready a pint of milk scalded in a double boiler, together with a tablespoonful of minced onion and a little celery or celery seed to flavor. Take the potatoes from the fire, turn off the water and mash. Thicken the milk with a tablespoonful of melted butter with a tablespoonful of flour, then add to the potato and mix. Add a tablespoonful of fine minced parsley and serve with crackers or croutons. Rice' Waffles. These rice waffles, which are specially popular served as a course at a luncheon with \brown sugar or maple syrup, are not at all difficult to achieve. Add to ofie cupful of freshly boiled rice, still hot, an" ounce of butter ahd three eggs beaten to a froth. Add to two cupfuls of sour milk or cream a teaspoonful of salt and soda, then combine the two. mixtures. Lastly, add flour to make a rather thick batter, turn into the well-greased irons and bake. Best Indian Pudding. Put one pint milk in double boiler on stove. Then take two tablespoonfuls corn meaj, one-half cup molasses, a little salt, one-half teaspoonful cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful ginger. Mix these and add to milk; stir until it thickens; when cool add one beaten egg, one cup cold milk and one Put into buttered dish and bake slowly one and one-half or two hours. Cover until last half hour. Sort Cornbread. Put one pint of milk over the fire. When ready to boil add a little salt , ‘and one-half cupful of sifted corn meal stirred in slowly. Let this boil up once. Take from the fire and add the yolks of three eggs, one at a time, afid ' without beating them. Stir the eggs well into the meal and milk. Beat the whites to a stiff froth and add last. ' Pour into an ungreased pan and'bake in a moderate oven. This is really likeya,corn meal omelet. I J Cheese Sonfflle. I/Two tablespoons of butter in a double boiler. Add one heaping tablespoonful of flour. When smooth add one-half cup of milk, one-half teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper. Cook two minutes. Add the yolks of three eggs, well beaten, one cup of good grated cheese. Set away till cool. Then add the whites of three eggs, well beaten. Turn into a buttered and bake twenty-five to thirty minutes. Chicken Patties. Remove the skin from a chicken, pick all the .meat from the bones and pound to a pulp; soften half a pound of bread crumbs in milk, take out and press dry, then rub three ounces of warmed butter into it, add a teaspoonful of summer savory, put in the meat, a little grated nutmeg and sal>; moisten with the yolks of four eggs and bake in patty shells. Banana Rolls. Peel some bananas and cut them in halves lengthwise. Squeeze some lemon juice on to a deep plate, and roll the banana slices with castor sugar. Have ready some short pastry. Roll the banana halves in this and close up the ends by moistening >with lemon juice. Brush the rolls over with beaten egg, prick- lightly with a fork and place on a greased baking tin. Bake in a good oven till brown. Fig Pudding. Take a cupful of stale bits of bread, moisten with two tablespoonfuls of melted better, a cupful of milk, two well-beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, a pinch of salt, and add to this mixture one-half pint of chopped figs. After stirring, steam an hour in a buttered double boiler. Serve with lemon saueb. Cement lor Tinware. An excellent cement for mending tinware is made by mixing litharge and glycerin to the consistency of thick cream.or putty. The mended article must not be used until the cement has had time to dry, which may be a week or more. The litharge can be secured at drug stores. • — Rhubarb Pie. One cup chopped rhubarb (all solid, no juice), one cup of sugar, yolks of two eggs, one dessertspoonful of flour; mix well and flavor with lemon extract. Beat two whites and brown. If you do not care for the meringife on top, use only one egg. Tastes lik« lemon pie.
When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain g . remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn’t any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble ? Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia ‘ E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Fitchville, Ohio.—■** My daughter was all fun down, suffered from pains in her side, head and limbs, and could walk but a short distance at a '- j time. Sho came very near having nervous prostration, had begun to cough a good .deal, and seemed melancholy by spells. She tried two doctors but got little help. Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifier antj. Liver Pills she has improved so much that she feels and looks like another girl.”— Mrs. C. Cole, Eitchv.ille, Ohio. Irasburg, Vermont. —“I feel it my duty to
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say a few words in praise of your medicine. When I taking it I had been very sick with kidney and bladder troubles and nervous prostration. lam now taking the sixth bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and find myself greatly improved. My friends who call to see me have” noticed a great change.”—Mrs. A. H. Sanborn, Irasburg, Vermont. We will pay a handsome reward to any person who will 1 prove to us that these letters are not genuine and truthful —or .that either of these women-were paid in any . way for their testimonials, or that the letters are published without their permission, or that the original letter from each did not come to us entirely unsolicited. /■. What more proof can any one ask ?
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands or cures to its credit.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn, Mass.
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The Dishonest Marriage Service. Sir Charles McLeran is championing in the English Commons a series of bills to reorganize the marriage service with a view to making it honest. The High Church ’ service enjoins: “Wives, submit yourselves’ unto ydtlr husbands as unto the Lord,” -whi Sir Charles says, ladies never have any intention of doing, and which, Sir Charles’ wife says, involves an arrogation to the men of Godlike quality which she regards as a characteristic bit of masculine buncombe. Further on the service contains the man's vow: “Vith ail my worldly goods I thee endow,”' which Sir Charles and Mrs. Sir Charles declare is just a plain lie. He never means it for fifteen minutes after the knot is tied. —Success Magazine. DR. MARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years tlie Standard. Prescribed and recommended for women’s ailments —a scientifically prepared ■ remedy of proven worth. The result fro- 11 their use is quick and permanent. Fof.| sale at all drus stores. The Obliging Grandmother. '“You will have to let me off for a day or two in April, ma'am.” “Why, Nora, what for?” < “I must be sick a bit, ma’am.’-’ “Sick, Nora?” “Sure, ma'am. I’m th’ grandmother of an office boy who wants to git off an’ see th’ openin' ball game, ma'am.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mrs. Winslow’s Scothfng Syrup for Children teething: softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays-pain, cures . wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. The Matter Explained. “Why do they say 'as smart as a steel trap?”’ asked the talkative boarder. “I never could s'ee anything particularly intellectual about a steel trap.” “A steel trap is called smart,” ex* plained the elderly person , in his sweetest voice, “because it knows. exactly the right time to, shut up.”. More might have been said, but in the circumstances it would have seemed unfitting.—London Tit-Bits. , For Red, ItShiag Eyelid*, Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve. I Aseptic Tubes- —Trial Size- —25c. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. |
Silence! The instinct of modesty natural to every woman is often a great hindrance to the cure of womanly diseases. Women shrink from the personal questions of the local physician which seem indelicate. The thought of examination is abhorrent to them, and so they endure in silence a condition of disease which surely progresses from bad to worse. ft has been Dr. Pierce's privilete to care a treat many women who have found a refute for modesty in his offer of FREE consults* tion by letter. 2111 correspondence is held ’ as sacredly confidential, address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription restores and regulates the womanly functions, abolishes pain and builds up and puts the finishing touch of health on every weak wontsn who giv,es it a fair trial. It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Welk You can’t afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alßoholic medicine of known composition.
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Unnecessary. “Mamma, did • you ever notice how Uncle Jasper eats?” “No, dear; it is impolite to watch your uncle while he is eating.” “But you don’t have to. watch him, mamma. You can hear hirn eat,.”. _ - " " ■ / •
ALLEN’S FOOTEASE
Shake Into Your Shoes Alien’s Foot/ 3 Ease, the antiseptic powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, nervous feet, and instantly takes the sting' out Os corns and bunicms. It’s the ffreateat comfort discovery of the Alien’s makes fitting or new shoes* feej easy. It i«.a» certam cure for ingrowing nails, sweat-, ing, callous and tired, aching feet. We have over TRY IT TO-DAY. I Sold everywhere, 25c Do not nrcept any substitute. > Sent by mail for 25c. in stamps. fOrr TRIAL PACKAGE " swEbEb sent by mail. *. r . MOTHER GRAY’S POWDERS, the bes.t medicine for Feverish, sickly Sold by Druggists everywhere. Trial Packuce FREE. Address, ALLEN S. OLMSTED, L® Roy, N. Y.
"In a pinch, use Allen’s Foot-Ease”
The Army of Constipation \ - . Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PIKLS are responsible—they __S only givo rebel—they permanently VKJ • cure Constipa-W’JTsJB tren. | IVER Eons use H PILLSthem for bImmBI Bilious- ‘ ■ess, ladigestiaa, Sick Headache, Sallow Ska. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PUCI GomuiUSaaut bear Signature FOR DESSERT TO-DAY. Deliciously Flavored JELLYCON The Perfect Jelly Dessert. VDVVV BEAUTIFUL ALUMINUM r KLEJ JELLY MOLDS. The offer is-fully explained on 10t. Package, the circular in every package. Sold By Ail Grocers. F. W. N. U. - - No. 22—1910 When writing; to Advertisers please say you saw the Adv. in this paper*
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