The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 21, 1906, Image 7

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    “Be Pleasant Every Horning Until
Ten O’clock; the Best of the Day
Will Take Care of Itself.”
This is one of the best little ser
mons we know. Have you ever
stopped to think that the morning
is the time when your temper is usu
ally ruffled, and have you ever
stopped to think that the cause of
bad temper in the morning is nearly
always because your stomach has not
been working properly during the
night? It has contained a lot of indi
gestible substances that form gas
and makes you have dreams. It
breaks up your rest and you wake up
in the morning tired, instead of re
freshed, as nature intended you
should.
Our grand sires required no ad
monition to “Be pleasant every morn
ing until 10 o’clock; the rest of the
day will take care of itself,” for they
digested their food and woke up full
of life and energy ready for the day’s
duties, and this was because they
lived on simple foods instead of high
ly seasoned palatable concoctions,
which contain no nourishment. Na
ture gave us milk, wheat and eggs,
and on these foods a person can
live indefinitely, but if the milk is
skimmed, and if the outside of the
wheat is taken off the kernel, and if
the lime, the salt, and the iron, which
is in the outer pan of the wheat
berry, if these are all removed, you
have simply starch alone; the starch
goes into the stomach and becomes
•sugar.
Do you know that a person would
starve to death on plain white bread
and water? Do you know that he
could live indefinitely on whole wheat
bread or on whole wheat food ana
water? These interesting facts are
all set fonh in a book called "Back
to Nature,” which tells about proper
living and gives recipes for meals of
the simple kind—the kind that makes
you strong and well; the kind that
makes you “Pleasant every morning
until 10 o'clock.” This book is pub
lished at a great expense, but it is
given free to every reader of this
paper. It is an advertisement of
“EGG-O-SEE,” the great food—which
is made from whole wheat, which is
baked and predigested and is all
ready to serve from the package you
buy at your grocers. You get more
life and energy from a 10-cent pack
age of EGG-O-SEE than you will get
from a thousand dollars’ worth of
white bread. This is no idle claim.
It is a scientific fact. We want to
tell about this simple food question,
so write us and say "Please send me
a copy of your book 'Back to Na
ture,’ ” and the book will be sent you
at once without charge. Address
EGG-O-SEE CO., Ho. 10 First Street,
Quincy, 111.
Different Kinds.
“A man in politics should have lots
of friends, shouldn’t he?”
"It depends,” answered Senator Sorg
hum. ‘ on whether they are friend?
who want to do something for you oi
who want you to do something for
them.”—Washington Star.
Care of Oilcloth.
Oilcloth should never be scrubbed with
a stifi brush or washed with strong soap.
Remove all dirt by carefully sweeping with
a soft hair brush. Then wash until clean
with tepid water and ivory Soap. Rinse
with clear water to which has been added
s tea^poonful of kerosene. Polish with a
dry cloth. ELEANOR R. PARKER.
Physical Impossibility.
The House Cat—You're getting fat
and apoplectic. I can see your finish.
The Pug Dog (making an effort to
turn his head, but giving up)—That's
more than I can do, anyhow.—Chicago
Tribune.
“.As near as I kin make de difference
out.” said fncle Eben. “it’s dis way.
De speculations dat wins is invest
ments, an’ dem dat loses is gamblin'.”
—Washington Star.
Lewis’ Single Binder costs more than
other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Your
dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria! 111.
Civilization consists largely in court
ing by mail and contracting debts. The
happy savages do neither.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces !n
asmnisuon. sllsye psin. cures wind colic 2Scs bottle
The seat of conscience often seems
to be in the liver.
INTERESTING LETTER
WRITTEN BYANOTABLEWOMAN
Mrs. Sarah Kellogg of Denver, Color
Bearer of the Woman's Belief Corps,
Sends Thanks to Mrs. Plnkham.
The following
letter was written
by Mrs. Kellogg,
I of 1628 Lincoln
lAve., Denver,
I Col.,to Mrs. Pink
r ham.Lynn.Mass.:
Dear Mrs. Finkham:
“ For five years I
was troubled'with a
lumur, wcjt'B Kepi
/Mrs Sarahheltogo growing.causingme
intense agony and
great mental depression. 1 was unable to at
tend to my house work, and life became a bur
den to me. I was confined far days to my bed,
lost my appetite, my courage and all hope.
“ I could not bear to think of an operation,
and in my distress I tried every remedy which
I thought would be of any use to me, and
reading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham'5
Vegetable Compound to sick women decided
to give it a trial I felt so discouraged that I
had little hope of recovery, and when I began
to feel better, after the second week, thought
it only meant temporary relief: but to my
grant 'surprise I found that I kept gaining,
while the tumor lessened in size.
“ The Compound continued to build up my
general health and the tumor seemed to be
absorbed, until, in seven months, the tumor
was entirely gone and I a well woman. 1 am
so thankful for my recovery that 1 ask you
to publish mv letter in newspapers, so other
women may know of the -"onderful curative
powers of'Lydia E. Pink hams Vegetable
Compound.'*
When women are troubled with irreg
ular or painful periods, weakness, dis
placement or ulceration of the female
organs, that bearing-down feeling, in
flammation, backache, flatulence, gen
eral debility, indigestion or nervous
prostration, they should remember
there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound at once removes such troubles.
No other medicine in the world has
received such widespread and unquali
fied endorsement. No other medicine
has such a record of cores of female
ills.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women
to write her for advice. She is daughter
in-law of Lydia Eh Pinkham and for
twenty-five years under her direction
and since 'her decease has been
advising sick women free of charge.
8he has guided thousands to health.
Address, Lynn, Mass.
Remember that it is Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound that is cur
ing women, and don’tallow any druggist
to sell you anything else in its place.
UNTHINKING CRUELTY.
Attention Called to the Responsi
bility of Women for the De
struction of Birds.
This is an age in which as never id
iny other, women are coming before
-he world as workers for reform. Thej
exhibit in an ever-increasing degree
‘the divine unrest,” dissatisfaction
with wrong, desire to right it But
-here is one form of wrong—cruelty
which women are not consistently try
ing to remedy, I say not consistently.
The same woman who will interfere iD
behalf of an over-loaded or ill-treated
horse, and who would perhaps rescue
i starving cat or dog, is often to be
seen with a flayed-alive seal's skin on
her back, and on her head the plum
ige of slaughtered birds. To all ap
pearance unconscious of her eulpabil
tv, she advertises the fact that she
efther will not read or does not regard
die statements so well authenticated,
and in the case of bird plumage sc
widely and repeatedly published, con
cerning the barbarities perpetrated in
obtaining these things.
Last October, Mr. William Dutcher
of New York city, president of the
National Association of Audubon so
cieties, made an address in Philadel
phia at the annual meeting of the
American Humane association, in
which after mentioning what has been
often repeated—the fact that to ub
-ain the white aigrette so largely worn
involves not only the destruction of
parent birds, for these plumes grow
only at the time of nesting, but the
death of their young from starvation
—he spoke also of the brutal murder
of one of the wardens in the employ
of the association by a plume huntei
at Oyster Key, Fla. This law' breaker,
for whose nefarious trade feather
wearing women are responsible, re
sented the interference of the warden,
and killed him. Such women may now
reflect if they will, on the fact that the
thoughtlessness and vanity of their
kind have incidentally been the mean.:
of murdering a man, and leaving his
wife a widow, and his children or
phans. They are also responsible for
encouraging a trade of the most bru
talizir" tendencies. No man can
spend his time killing, with all the
haste and recklessness possible, inno
cent birds at the nesting period, leav
ing the young to starve, without him
self losing the last remnant of feeling.
Such a man is getting the education
of a criminal. Women who wear the
products of his evil work are before
God responsible, whether they think
about it or not.
Mucn ol tne capital ;n the millmerj
trade is invested year by year in bird
plumage because it is i. very profitable
part of the business. So the sale of
feathers is industriously pushed in the
retail stores, and everything is said
which will flatter the vanity of the
woman buyer, and soothe her con
science, should it show signs of awak
ening. The birds and plumes are
“manufactured,” “imitations,” “very
clever copies of the genuine, but never
theless only copies.” It is a pity that
women are not better ornithologists,
or else gifted with better judgment.
Audubon societies in every state and
wardens to protect, birds would not
be needed if milliners did not use
them, nor would it be necessary to
enact more and stricter laws for their
preservation. Many varieties of birds
are slaughtered every year by thou
sands and millions, and the feathers
in the shops are the feathers of these
same birds, as the ornithologists in
the Audubon societies will testify. No
woman has a shadow of excuse for
wearing as much as one quill, for the
Audubon societies have discovered
that these are obtained by trapping
the birds, the quills being then ruth
lessly torn from their wings and the
disabled creatures turned loose; un
able in most cases to fly, and present
ing a piteous spectacle. When it is
wings that are sought, the brutal hunt
ers, grown callous through habit, tear
them off without in the least caring
whether or not the bird is dead.
One of the most incomprehensible
things connected with the senseless
and cruel bird plumage fashion, is the
silence of ministers of tne Gospel.
Why can they not see that for a wom
an to deck herself with the results of
cruelty and brutality is inconsistent
with Christian profession? There is a
crying need that people in all the
churches should be told definitely and
specifically what applied Christianity
is. Participation in cruelty is a sin
from which professing Christians are
far from being exempt, and it consti
tutes a serious and well-grounded
cause for criticism among outsiders
who are humane. They laugh at a
Christianity which harps continually
on God’s mercy to us, but says little
or nothing about the mercy which we
in consequence should show to every
living creature. Can the justice of
this criticism be denied?
MART F. LOVELL,
Secretary of American Humane Associa
tion.
DON'TS FOB THE OTJBSEBY.
Don't try to make your children
walk too early, otherwise you will
have all the difficulties of bow legs to
contend with later on. Babies that are
allowed to stand much on their feet in
early life invariably suSer for it after
wards.
Don’t forget that one cannot begin
too early to teach a child to be honest
in all things. Show your children that
you never doubt their honor, and you
may take it for granted that they will
not disappoint you.
Don’t, under any provocation, ever
box a child's ears. A great deal of tho
deafness so common to-day is direct
ly traced to the sharp boxing on the
ears, which parents, nurses and school
masters of the past used to indulge in;
Don’t experiment with the food and
care of children. Study the subject
carefully.—Cassell’s Saturday Journal
Worth Studying.
Rubbe—Why in the world did that
entomologist take so much interest in
the wedding?
Dubbe—No wonder. A beetle
browed man married a wasp-waisted
girl.—Chicago Daily News.
Clean the Drains.
You ought to clean all the drain
pipes connected with the house at
least once a week, by flushing them
with hot sal soda water, or a lye so
lution.
AMERICANS ARE PAINT USERS
It has been remarked that the
American people consume more paint,
both in the aggregate and per capita,
than any other people in the world.
In a recently published article on the
subject it was figured that our yearly
consumption is over 100,000.000 gal
lons of paints of all kinds, of which
over one-half is used in the paintings
of houses.
The reason for this great consump
tion is twofold: a large proportion
of our buildings, especially in small
towns and rural districts, are con
structed of wood, and we, as a people,
are given to neatness and cleanliness.
For, take it all in all, there is noth
ing so cleanly or so sanitary as paint.
Travel where we will throughout
the country, everywhere we find the
neat, cheerful painted dwelling, pro
claiming at once the prosperity and
the self-respect of our population.
Fifty years ago this was not so;
painted dwellings, while common in
the larger cities and towns, were the
exception in the rural districts; be
cause, on the one hand, a large pro
portion of those buildings were tem
porary makeshifts, and, on the other
hand, because paint was then a lux
ury, expensive and difficult to obtain
in the out-of-the-way places, and re
quiring special knowledge and much
preparation to fit it for use.
The introduction of ready mixed or
prepared paints, about 1860, changed
the entire aspect of affairs. As the
Jack-of-all-trades told the Walking
Delegate in one of Octave Thanet’s
stories, “Anyone can slather paint."
The insurmountable difficulty with
our predecessors was to get the paint
ready for “slathering.” That the
country was ready for paint in a con
venient, popular form is shown by
the immediate success of the indus
try and its phenomenal growth in
50 years from nothing to 60.000,000
gallons—the estimated output for
1900.
Dome pretty severe tilings nave
been written about and said against
this class of paints, especially by
painters and manufacturers of cer
tain kinds of paste paints. Doubtless
in many instances these strictures
have been justified and some fearful
ly and wonderfully constructed mix
tures have in the past been worked
off on the guileless consumer in the
shape of prepared paint. But such
products have had their short day
and quickly disappeared, and the too
enterprising manufacturers that pro
duced them have come to grief in
the bankruptcy courts or have
learned by costly experience that
honesty is the best policy and have
reformed their ways.
The chief exceptions to this rule
are some mail order houses who sell
direct to the country trade, at a very
low price—frequently below the
wholesale price of linseed oil. The
buyer of such goods, like the buyer
of a "gold brick,” has only himself to
blame if he finds his purchase worth
less. With gold selling at any bank
or mint at a fixed price, owners of
gold do not sell it at a discount; and
with linseed oil quoted everywhere
at 50 to 70 £ents a gallon, manufac
turers do not sell a pure linseed oil
paint at 30 or 40 cents a gallon.
The composition of prepared paints
differs because paint experts have
not yet agreed as to the best pig
ments and because the daily results
of tests on a large scale are constant
ly improving the formulas of manu
facturers; but all have come to the
conclusion that the essentials of good
paint are pure linseed oil, fine grind
ing and thorough incorporation, and
in these particulars all the products
of reputable manufacturers corre
spond; all first-class prepared paints
are thoroughly mi^ed and ground and
the liquid base is vlmost exclusively
pure linseed oil, the uecessary vola
tile "thinners” and Japan dryers.
The painter s opposition to such
products is based largely on self-in
terest. He tv: ’its to mix the paint
himself and to re paid for doing it,
and to a certain class of painters it
Is no recommendation for a paint to
say that it will last five or ten years.
The longer a paint iasts the longer
he will have to wait for the job of
repaint ing. The latter consideration
has no weight with the consumer,
and the former is a false idea of
economy. Hand labor can never be
as cheap or as efficient as machine
work, and every time the painter
mixes paint, did he but know it, he
is losing money, because he can buy
a better paint than he can mix at
less than it costs him to mix it.
Prepared paints have won. not only
on their actual merits, but on their
convenience and economy. They are
comparatively cheap and they are in
comparably handy. Brt when all is
said, the experienced painter is the
proper person to apply even a ready
mixed paint. He knows better than
anyone else the “when” and “how”
and the difference between painting
and “slathering” is much greater
than it appears to a novice. Every
one to his trade, and after all paint
ing is the painter's trade and not the
householder’s.
ORACULAR OBSERVATIONS.
Many a good resolution quickly runa
down at the heel.
A pretty girl can teach a man most
anything but good common sense.
It pays to look a mule in the face
when you have anything to Bay to
him.
About half of the things bought on
credit would not be bought if cash
were demanded.
Have you noticed that the bottom
of a cup of joy that runs over is sel
dom far from the top?
It’a a good deal better to think
poetry than to write it. and better to
write it than to print it.
Bad Effect of Athletics.
"This man,” explained the hospital
doctor, “is the victim of athletics.”
"Ah, overtrained, I suppose.”
"No, he never trained a bit The
fellow who hit him had, though.”—
Philadelphia Ledger.
Only Rich in Embryo Yet.
The Bud—How did you get your
start in life, senator?
The Senator—Why—er—I haven’t
really got started yet. you know. I
am only worth $10,000,000 as yet—
Judge.
WHEN HOUSECLEANING.
Do Not Work All Day—Provide a
Good Luncheon—Suggestions for
Various Departments.
M ■ —
Never work all day at housecleaning,
unless you want to be entirely worn
out After doing a certain amount of
work take a resting spell. Don’t for
get to take a good lnncheon to keep
you in good physical condition during
this trying time.
To remove pencil marks from paint
use a piece of lemon dipped in whit
ing.
To remove finger marks from door
knobs and locks use pure soap and old
cheese cloth.
Stains on marble can be removed
with salt and lemon juice.
All paint should be scrubbed with
soap and brush, if actually dirty, but
it should not be allowed to get in
any such condition.
When the furniture looks sticky or
smeary too much furniture polish has
been used.
Wash all white paint with warm wa
ter and soap. ,
When cleaning the refrigerator do
not forget the waste pipe. It can be
cleaned with a cloth tied round a
stick or with a brush which oomes for
the purpose. In washing out the re
frigerator use warm water with a little
soda. If there is a musty smell ia the
refrigerator open the doors wide, and,
if possible, give it a sun bath.
If you have a wooden lattice piece
on which the ice rests the musty odor
tomes from this, and can only be got
rid of by getting a corrugated tin ice
rest.
To keep the coal bln clean, line it
with several thicknesses of paper.
When tea stains come on fine linen
they can be taken out even after a
long time by the application of gly
cerine. Take a little of the best qual
ity glycerine and with It tub the
stained parts. Afterward vash as
usual.
When cleaning brass use the regular
metal polish, but put a little paraffine
oil on the cloth. This will give a tine
polish and will not tarnish.
When the cane chair seats are out
of shape turn up the seats and with
hot water and soap wash the cane
work until thoroughly soaked, and
leave the chairs to dry upside down
in the air when the seats will become
firm and tight again.
Matting may be cleaned with salt
water, applied with a small brush.
Rinse and dry thoroughly.
A little borax put in tne water in
which table linen or towels are to be
washed will prevent them from fad
ing.
When washing pink muslins or
linens, instead of using blueing, take
a piece of turkey red. soak it thorough
ly in the rinsing water until this be
comes pink. Then rinse the goods
out in the pink water.
Raw potato juice will remove stain;
from the hands and also from woolen
materials.
To remove soot from the carpet;
spread the spots with table salt and
let it remain on a few minutes. Brust
off the loose salt lightly into a dust
pan and then brush carefully with a
wide, clean, dry nail brush, following
the grain of the carpet.—N. T. World
LADY’S MAID ADVISES.
How to Hang Dress Skirts, Some Not
Hung, and About Right Care
of Bodices.
"There are dress skirts that should
be hung upside down. Yes; I admit it
is a nuisance, but to hang them so will
keep the frills and flounces fresh and
make them stand out as they should,
and it is not hard to hang a skirt so
if one has the room.
“And there are, also, skirts that
should not be hung at all. One of the
very long dress boxes which the dress
makers now use to send frocks home
in will hold such a skirt, or a box
couch will be convenient for it.
"Chiffon and gauze and mousseline
and other stuffs of that sort will sag
if they are hung, and the skirt folds
will become stretched and dragged and
lose their floating cloudy look. I have
seen frocks of net or chiffon look old
and out of shape after being worn
once or twice, just because they were
hung up carelessly.
a o«x coucn wun trays is a splen
did thing. One can arrange it easily;
and many skirts can be put in it with
out laying one on another. Even the
very sheer silks that are being used
now sag if hung.
“The bodices must sometimes be
laid away, one on top of another. It
is a pity; but one has so many blouses
and frock waists that there cannot al
ways be a separate drawer or shelf or
box for each one. It will always pay
to put tissue paper in the sleeves and
the bust of every waist that is to be
put away.
“A bother, of course. That goes
without saying; but it keeps the bod
ice or blouse in shape and keeps it
fresh. There are such charming
blouse boxes to be bought now—cre
tonne covered and one above another
In a wooden frame.—N. Y. Sun.
Sorrier Every Tear.
“Since my wife died," said the sad
syed man, “my grief has increased
rather than diminished with the years.
I believe I feel worse about it now
than I did when it occurred, five years
ago.”
“Yes,” assented the man with the
subdued voice. “There was a death
that affected me in just the same
way.”
“And that was—?”
“That of my wife’s first husband.”
—Cleveland Leader.
Seaside Bathing.
The best plan is to walk or run rap
idly into the water, wading out at once
far enough either to dip the whole per
son, head and all, or to allow a wave
to break over the bather. Once in
the water and thoroughly wet, one
need only keep moving, occasionally
going under a wave, as long as the
water is agreeable and there is no
sense of chilliness.
Hot Chocolate Sauce.
Boil one cupful of water and one
naif cupful sugar three minutes. Mix
three teaspoonfnls grated chocolate
and one teaspoonful cornstarch with
two-thirds cupful of milk. Stir In
with sugar and a lter. Boil until It
thickens a little.
CHILD'S AWFUL SKIN HUMOR
Screamed with Pain—Suffering Near
ly Broke Parent’s Heart—Speed
ily Cured by Cuticura,
“1 wish to inform you that the
Cuticura Remedies have put a stop to
twelve years of misery I passed with
my son. As an infant I noticed on his
body a red spot, and treated same
with different remedies for about five
years, but when the spot began to
get larger I put him under the care of 1
doctors. Under their treatment the i
disease spread to four different parts
pf his body. The longer the doctors
treated him the worse it grew. Dur
ing the day it would get rough and
form like scales. At night it would
be cracked, inflamed and badly swol
len, with terrible burning and itching.
When I think of his suffering it near- I
ly breaks my heart. His screams
could be heard down stairs. The suf
fering of my son made me full of
misery. I had no ambition to work,
to eat, nor could I sleep. One doctor
told me that my sons eczema was
incurable, and gave it up for a bad
job. One evening I saw an article in
the paper about the wonderful Cuti
cura and decided to give it a trial.
I tell you that Cuticura Ointment is
worth its weight in gold; and when I
had used the first box of Ointment
there was a great improvement, and
by the time I had used the second set
of Cuticura Soap. Ointment and Resol
vent. my child was cured. He is now
twelve years old, and his skin is as
fine and smooth as silk. Michael
Steinman. 7 Sumner Avenue, Brook
lyn, N. Y., April 16. 1905."
“HE RAN FOR LAWYER.”_
But There Was a Douht as to Whether .
He Had Ever Caught
the Office.
A man from Pennsylvania went to
Vineland on a business errand. The
town was strange to him, and he was
unacquainted with the man (a lawyer)
he had gone to see. The directions he
received were so indefinite that he
found himself on the elge of the town
without having come to the house he
sought. Then he met an old negro
and asked the way of him and learned
that the house lay about a quarter of
a mile farther down the road.
"The man I want to see is a law
yer," he said to the old man. "Is this
Mr. Dash down the road a lawyer?”
v “He ain't no lawyer that I ever
heard tell of.” answered the negro.
"You’re sure?”
The old negro scratched his head in
deep thought. Then a gleam of re
membrance lighted his eye.
“Now I think of it, boss," he said,
“ 'pears like I do recollect he ran for
lawyer one time.”
The mind is a storehouse, but it
needn't necessarily be a junk shop.
$100 Reward. $100.
The renders of this paper will be pleased to lean
that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science
has been able to care in all Its stages, and that Is
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Care Is the only positive
care now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu
tion*. treatment. Hall'a Catarrh Cure Is taken In
ternally, acting directly upon tbe blood as.d mucous
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strenjfth by building up the constitution and assist
ing nature In doing It* work. The proprietors have
so much faith in Us curative powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for any case that It fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, O.
Bolt! by all Druggists. 750.
Take Hall's Family Fills tor constipation.
sail Spiteful.
Her—Ye*, she married him to spite
another girl.
Him—But why did she divorce him?
"So he could marry the other girl,
and thus spite her some more.”—Chi
cago Daily News.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOBIA,
a sale and acre remedy for infanta and children,
and see that it
Bear* tbe
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind Yon Bare Always Bought.
Hard to Shut Up.
“Ihitting a parrot in a strong cage,”
remarked the Observer of Events and
Things, “doesn’t shut the bird up alto
gether.”—Yonkers Statesman,
Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c. You
pay 10c for cigars not so good. Your dealer
or Lewis' Factory-, Peoria, 111.
Idleness is the incubator of a lot of
industrious iniquity.—Chicago Tribune.
ETTTXXXTIXXTTTXUmgHTTlI
; George Washington i
jj won his way into the hearts of the !
a American people by rare diplomacy, «
* unflinching bravery and superior J
J generalship. H
1 On Time [
Yeast l
" c
< is winning its way into the Bread J
J Making Homes of the West because M
a it is the best yeast ever made, sells a
" 10 Cakes for 5 Cents, and is not jj
J controlled by a Trust N
a Why pay S Cents for seven cakes a
" of yeast wnen you can get 10 Cakes J
J at the same price and better yeast? H
2 Ask Your Grocer for Oo Tine Yeast !
a «
kTTTTXTXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXxM
PATENTS for PROFIT
must fully protect an invention. Booklet and
Desk Calendar FRtiE. Highest references.
Communications Confidential. Established I#51.
Mason. Fenwick A Lawrence, Washington, l C.
PIT fit PfTLESS SCALES. For Steel
and Wood Frames, $25 and up. Writer
us t>efore you buy. We save you
money. Also Pumps and Wind
Mills. BECKMAN BROS.. Des Moines. Iowa.
DEFIANCE STARCH—
“Other starches only 12 ©un* es—same price and
••DEFIANCE” IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
I Wheat, BO bushels per acre.
Catalogue and samples pkke.
k Ul rwKt.Vtit.
ZDereaim_
Make your boy’s food tasty—Mother—for it has to do some big things.
It has to make flesh, blood, bone and muscle and supply boundless
Energy. Remember, the boy of today is the man of tomorrow.
> Don’t injure him physically and mentally with
indigestible meats, pastries, rich puddings, etc., that
act as a drain on his nervous
energy.
But feed him plenty of
KH
•11 there b In wheat--and he’ll be yeur heart’s Joy—strung, healthy, bright, smart and quick at his stadia.
You won’t have to coax him to eat it either. Mother, for its oeucious neb havoc when eaten with cream
and sugar is Just what he craves most for.
Egg-O-See keeps the blood coed and is the ideal summer food.
Give him some tomorrow - “there won’t be no leavin'*.” i
Prepared under conditions of scrupulous cleanliness.
Every grocer in the country sells EGG-O-SEE—the whole wheat cereal. If your grocer has not received
his supply, mail us 10 cents and his name (15 cents west of the Rocky Mountains; and wc will send you
a package of EGG-O-SEE and a copy of the book, “-back to nature.**
FREE “-back to nature” book
Our 32-page book, “-back to nature,** outlines a plan of right living, includ
ing menus for 7 days and recipes for preparing the necessary dishes, based on a
whole wheat diet, with suggestions for bathing, eating and exercise, illustrated
from life, exceedingly simple and attractive. By following the precepts,
abounding and vigorous health is sure to result.
Published to sell at 25 cents a copy, this handsomely illustrated book will
he mailed FREE to anyone who writes, as long as tms edition lass. Address
EGG-O-SEE CEREAL COMPANY
No. 10 First Street Quincy,
--
■■■ 1 — ... — ■ — - .- ■——^
f This Is What
I Catches Me!
I >6oi.-One-Third -Vlor-o Starch..
A
FULL
POUND
lOc
No premiums, but oneoihird
more starch than you get of
other brands. Try it now, lor
hot or cold starching it has no
equal and will not stick to the iron,
■ —i
CARTRIDGES
For Rifles, Revolvers and Pistols.
Winchester cartridges in all
calibers from .aa to .50, shoot
where you aim when the trigger
is pulled. They are always
accurate, reliable and uniform.
Shoot Them and Toe’ll Shoot WelL
Always Buy Winchester Maks.
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
A Cartaia Cara tar Thai, Hat, AcMag FaaL
DO HOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE.
a
Girls’ Help
I At a certain age, all V
girls need the help of a M
pure, reliable, tonic H
medicine, to establish a ■
regular habit, thatitmay M
remain' with them U
through life. Much ter- K
rible suffering, in after I
years, is prevented, and ■
sturdy health assured, ■
by taking ■
7 CARTUI
I WOMAN’S RELIEF I
« at this critical time of ■
■ life. “I gave Cardui to ■
■ my young daughter." jj
■ writes Geo. Maston, of ■
I Greenwood, Neb., “and ■
■ now she is a rosy- ■
W cheeked girl, happy, I
■ light-hearted and gay." I
■ Strongly recommended ■
I for all female troubles. I
1 At all Drug Stores I
M C16_M
You Cannot
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE K. PAXTON CO. Boaton. r
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 25, lBOfiL