The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 15, 1906, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    loop City Northwestern
J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher.
LOUP CITY, - - - NEBRASKA.
An Up-to-Date Navy.
United States naval officers do not
admit that the monster battleships
planned by Great Britain and Italy
are necessarily more effective than
■warships of the Connecticut-Louisiana
and the Michigan-South Carolina types.
Now that fuller details have reached
here regarding the Cuniberti battle
ship, with which Italy expects to out
class the Dreadnaught, there is less
disposition than ever to overesti
mate the importance of Italy’s
move. The assumption that the
biggest battleship can whip one
e few hundred tons smaller leaves out
of account the matter of seamanship,
brains, courage, marksmanship, and
relative efficiency, says Harper’s
Weekly. American warships may not
be as big as the biggest, but in per
sonnel and equipment they equal any
thing afloat. Our newest warships
have a steaming radius of 5,000 miles,
much greater than that of any other
battleships afloat. This is a very im
jportant element in the lighting effi
ciency of all war vessels, and one in
which the large English and Italian
battleships are likely to fail.
The Indifferent Citizen.
Indifference is the blight that af
fects all efforts for better things. The
prosperous citizen is optimistically
(Confident that things are going right
iand that any side-stepping must be
only temporary. So he lets them go
and is content to think that he, at
(least, has nothing to worry about.
iComfortabiy fixed in the first cabin
[with all the luxuries of modern life
about him, he cares nothing what
other people in the same ship are do
ing—whether they are scuttling it, set
ting it afire or preparing a mutiny;
all he knows or cares about is that it’s
mighty pleasant right where he is and
that’s enought. This negligence and
Indifference clear the way for those
who do care and who have selfish ends
to serve. All the deals and machina
tions that make modern politics dis
reputable are due, fundamentally, to
the neglect of the great majority to lx?
alert, says the Hartford. Conn., Cour
ant. It is nonsense to say that society
itself is rotten. It holds together just
because of its sweet and wholesome
Strength. The piratical element that
lives on it is tolerated, not dominant.
Our Coal Supply.
Occasionally fears are expressed
that the coal supply of the 'United
States will give out. This apprehen
sion is entertained because this coun
try, while surpassing all others in pro
duction, is also the greatest coal con
sumer in the world. But every now
and then comes the announcement of
p new discovery which shows that the
limit has not yet been reached. A
vein in Pennsylvania has just been
found which the experts say contains
millions on millions of tons of coal,
and they roughly estimate its value at
$50,000,000 to $75,000,000. It is about
as difficult to convince people of the
danger of a complete exhaustion of the
coal supply as it is to make them be
lieve in the reality of an ice famine.
Spelling reform has been receiving
the attention of Chinese officials. The
director of the imperial telegraphs has
announced that a committee has been
appointed to recommend a uniform
Bystem of spelling the names of Chi
nese cities in the Roman alphabet.
When the report is adopted telegraph
ic messages will be delivered more
promptly than is now possible wrhen
the English, the French and the
Germans each spell the name of the
,same city differently.
Fredrick Peterson, M. D., President
cf the New York Neurological Society
and member of the New York Lunacy
Commission, says that in the life in
iNew York City the friction is greater
than in any other known existence en
dured for long periods of time by large
numbers of people. Each day finds
jpresented the proof that more and
Imore we are verging on the limits of
ihuman endurance.
The kaiser was an honored guest at
the Krupp wedding breakfast and
made a speech on wifely duties. No
tooubt he placed the proper mixing and
finishing of good round cannon balls
like father used to make near the top
.of the list.
That California professor was judi
cious in timing the announcement of a
new language which contains no cuss
words. This is the season when the
householder takes in the fly screens
and puts up the stoves.
The site of a spacious Roman villa
in the Castle Park, Colchester, Eng
land, has been discovered in a re
markable way. The intense heat, act
ing upon the grass above the ruined
foundations revealed an entire ground
plan of the various rooms and pass
ages.
When a girl under 14 gets a mania
to become an actress it’t up to her
mother to get down the old slipper
and try to produce a counter irrita
tion.
There is a man in Wyoming who
declined a political office because he
.thought he could not be a Christian
and a politician at the same time. He
has an erroneous idea. A man may
be a Christian and a politician at the
same time. It merely depends on the
Jcind of politician he is.
The Santo Domingan rebels agreed
to surrender and be good, and then
{went back on their word and took
to the warpath. The habit seems to
be chronic and incurable.
FOUNDER AND HEAD
OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
CHURCH A RECLUSE
GATES OF HOME CLOSED TO THE WOF.LD
Following Published Story That Mrs. Mary Baker G.
Eddy Was at the Point of Death, Reporters Have
Interview with Her at Her Home—Sensational Alle
gations of Fraud and Deception Denied—Aged
Woman in Comparatively Good Health.
New York.—The World, of this city,
recently published a sensational story
to the effect that Mrs. Mary Baker G.
Eddy, the revered founder and head
of the Christian Science church, was
extremely feeble, physically and men
tally, and seemingly in the shadow of
death. - .
The allegation was made that the
daily drive seemingly taken by Mrs.
Eddy through the streets of Concord,
N. H., her home, was a fraud. The
World stated that ostensibly Mrs.
Eddy makes this daily public appear
ance, dressed in velvets and ermine,
to show her followers that she is in
perfect health. It is not Mrs. Eddy,
but an impersonator, trained and cos
tumed for the part, who appears in the
exhibition drive.
The article continued:
“This impersonator is now known
to be Mrs. Parmelia J. Leonard, of
Brooklyn, head of the Christian Sci
ence church in that borough.
“Mrs. Leonard has been an inmate
at Mrs. Eddy's heme at Concord for
the last three years.
“There she has perfected herself as
understudy to Mrs. Eddy, and has
impersonated the head of the Chris
tian Science church in the daily ex
hibition drives when to nn^ve the real
Has Only One Apparent Asset.
“But none of the charities aided by
Mrs. Eddy could be designated by Mr.
Ladd or found by searchers. Mrs.
Eddy’s only visible asset is the Con
cord house and the 40 acres of park
land that surround it — valued at
$40,000.
“Christian Scientists the world over
doubtless will be anxious to know
what has become of the great fortune
of the helpless old lady, confined to
an upper story of her isolated home.
“They will only have to consult the
real estate transfers of Concord, N. H.(
for a clew to its whereabouts.
“These records show that Mrs.
Eddy's estate, Pleasant View, was orig
inally purchased in great part by Jo
seph T. Mann, her former butler and
brother of her present coachman. They
also show that Mrs. Eddy's home, its
furnishings and all her jewelry, were
transferred a few years ago to Calvin
A. Frye, the present footman, secre
tary and supreme power at Pleasant
View.
“When an action for damages
against Mrs. Eddy threatened to re
veal to the public this transaction, the
property was quickly transferred back
] to its aged owner.
Mrs ■ y
M.B.C.
EDDY '
o
ff'm&iY
' AT 45
--L
Mrs. Eddy from her bed would have
meant almost certain death to the en
feebled woman.
Powerless in Strong Hands.
"Mrs. Eddy is powerless in the
hands of designing persons. They ab
solutely control her, and their em
ployment of Mrs. Leonard's services
is for a deep purpose. Just what that
purpose is may be easily imagined.
"The World has collected a mass of
facts bearing directly upon the sur- i
prising conditions that surround the
hidden life of Mrs Eddy.
"These facts are quite apart from
the tenets of Christian Science, so
called, and will appeal as forcibly to
fair-minded members of the cult as
to the general public.
"Many millions of dollars—just how
many the records fail to show—have
passed into Mrs. Eddy's personal pos- j
session since the founding of the I
Christian Science cult. Millions of
her books have been sold, and each
book has yielded her a royalty of one
dollar.
"From the mother church in Boston
elie yearly receives a great sum, con
tributed by devolees iu all parts of
the world in the form of annual dues.
One of her closest friends and follow
ers estimates Mrs. Eddy’s fortune at
$15,000,000, and her annual Income at
$1,000,000.
"Of this vast sum there is practi
cally no trace. There is no public rec
ord of its investment, no clew to its
distribution.
"Her financial agent and cousin,
Frederick N. Ladd, secretary of the
Loan and Trust Savings bank, of Con
cord, while refusing details, has said
that Mrs. Eddy's estate is surprisingly
small, she having ‘expended the bulk
pf her fortune in charities.’
— .— ■ .... ry^/
Frye the Power in Household.
"Calvin A. Frye is a great name In
Concord. He is a footman in livery
on the box of Mrs. Eddy's carriage
during the daily drives of the real Mrs.
Leonard and fictitious Mrs. Eddy. He
is secretary at Pleasant View for the
rest of the time, the one in absolute
authority, who for three years has
guarded Mrs. Eddy with a vigilance
knowpn only in prisons. ,
“Devotees, rich, socially prominent
and loyal to the cult, have been
turned away from the door of Pleasant
View by Frye. They have been as
sured that Mrs. Eddy, although in per
fect health, was “overwhelmed with
work, and could not be disturbed.”
They were told that she could only be
seen in her daily drives, and w£re
cautioned not to peer through the win
dows of the carriage under penalty of
Mrs. Eddy's displeasure.
Her Last Public Appearance.
“Mrs. Eddy's last genuine public ap
pearance was three years ago, when
for a moment she posed on the bal
cony at Pleasant View in sight of the
assembled faithful. Since then Mrs.
Eddy has been invisible 3ave to Frye
and the members of his inner circle.”
Continuing its charges of fraud and
deceit, the World stated that there
was ample ground for the widespread
belief that Mrs. Eddy is slowly dying
from cancer. It has been discovered,
says the World, that this dread dis
ease has afflicted others of the Baker
family; that two brothers and two sis
ters of Mrs. Eddy died from it; and
that an operation for the same malady
alone saved her father's life.
“There is positive evidence that
Mrs. Eddy has secretly employed reg
ular medical practitioners for herself
and for certain favorite members of
‘WTZCW ■TOT’Zr'rtV vr V TWTVT-jTVI
DOUBT FACTS OF HISTORY.
Persons So Fond of the Miraculous
That Questions Are Easily Raised.
The love of the miraculous is
enough to keep alive the belief that i
the accepted facts of history concern
ing a person who has greatly inter
ested the world either by his life or
his death are all wrong. Within 20
years a big book has been published
In this country to demonstrate that
Marshal Ney was not shot in the gar
den of the Luxembourg December 7,
1815, but escaped to America and
dwelt in North Carolina.
For some years there flourished in
Germany a man who declared himself
to be the son of the duke of Reich
stadt by a secret marriage and there
fore the grandson and direct heir of
Napoleon. This imposter was a clumsy
fellow who did not know his book, for
the date he assigned as that of his
birth was fully a year subsequent to
the death of the duke.
But we need not travel so far as
Europe to find the credulous of the
Incredible. Only a few years ago
there died in Kansas a man who was
believed by many of fche vicinage to
be Wilkes Booth. A marked physical
resemblance to the assassin caused
so much annoyance to a well-known
southern clergyman that he took pains
to demonstrate by proofs of his birth
and education that he was not Wilkes
Booth.
The fact that Mrs. Fitzherbert made
a solemn declaration that she never
was a mother does not deter the “Fitz
herbert heirs” in this country from
bothering King Edward with letters
applying for permission to examine
certain papers which they believe con
tain & secret of vast money value to
them. The people who believe these
incredible legends in the face of proof
positive to the contrary are not all of
one kind, not of the class of the Eng
lishman who said of the Tichborne
claimant “just because he was the
son of a Wapping butcher they
wouldn’t give him the estate.”
Cheap Living in Spain.
Traveling in Spain is not expensive,
the charges in comfortable hotels be
ing only |1.35 a day^
THE MAN THAT WHISTLES.
Merry Tune on the Lips Me?'?* a
Cheerful Heart.
Did you ever meet a man who was
an habitual whistler and yet a thor
ough scamp? No! The whistler usu
ally is a cheerful fellow, and lawless
ness and smiles seldom travel hand
In hand.
The old song says, “Whistle and
I’ll come to you, my lad,” and it Is
true. The man whose inner spirit
sings as it goes he Sv attracted the
maid from time immemorial.
In summing up a man’s most de
sirable qualities, women usually men
tion strength, which is a physical
characteristic, and truth, which is
spiritual. But cheerfulness is the
mental attribute most in demand.
And if he is a cheerful man, it usu
ally follows he is an honest man.
The cheat, the coward, the blackleg,
are not addicted to the open heart
and the cheery whistle.
The man who will get up in the
morning and make a fire, keeping
warm with a merry strain of “Yankee
Doodle Boy,” hasn’t a sour heart over
his task. The man who makes the
coffee and flings out the front door
for the bakery with “El Capitan"
thrilling forth in one big whistle is
never the Q'jf. of mean promensitiea
who is keeping tally on his service,
to say later to the wife: "I make the
fires while you lie abed.”
Have you ever seen a man whistle
a restless babe to sleep? If not you
have something, to look forward to.
And then, when the babe becomes
the small son, have you ever observed
this cheerful father teaching his
craft to little Johnnie? Through hie
fingers and through his teeth, and
then the intricacies of the liquid
“double trill.”
Thus when Johnnie gets at the
kindling-chopping age, he has ac
quired one of the first principles of a
good and desirable man—he is a
whistler like his dad, and the envy
and emulation of every neighboring
boy.—Milwaukee Journal.
Holland’s Many Colonies.
Holland’s colonies in area are 64
times as big as the mother country.
! her family. It is practically certain
a Boston cancer specialist, whose
name is known to the world, is now in
constant attendance at Pleasant View ”
Reporters See Mrs. Eddy.
Following these charges the New
York Sun printed the following ac
count of an interview granted by Mrs.
Mary Baker G. Eddy to a party of
newspaper representatives at her
home October 30.
“Mary Baker Eddy is alive, but .old
and feeble, and suffering from some
complaint like palsy which makes her
head and hands shake. She gave prob
ablv the last interview of her life this
afternoon to 11 reporters from Bos
ton and New York, and now, in the
words of one of her household, ‘the
gates of Pleasant View are closed
forever.’
“Since the publication of the story
to the effect that Mrs. Eddy was un
der the control of her household and
that Mrs. Pamelia Leonard, a healer
of Brooklyn, was impersonating the
leader of Christian Science on her
velvet and ermine cloak. She was
grasping the curtains with one hand;
Calvin Frye, her secretary, stood at
the other elbow. Both hands ' were
shaking, her head and lower lip con
stantly trembled a little, as with a
slight palsy. The spokeswoman be
gan at once on the first question.
“ ‘Are you in perfect health, Mrs.
Eddy?’ she asked.
“Mrs. Eddy bent toward her with a
slight movement of inquiry. The
spokeswoman repeated the question a
little louder.
“ ‘Indeed I am,’ replied Mrs. Eddy.
“The effect of her voice was start
ling. It had a slight senile quiver, but
it was deep and level. The combina
tion gave it an unearthly quality. It
intensified a feeling which all the re
porters confessed to each other aft
erward—that this was not a woman,
but an apparition.
! “ ‘Have you any other physician than
God?’ asked the spokeswoman.
No Physician But God.
; " ‘No physician but God. His ever
gjfefo Tf/£ H'Gi/SF \
"GOD MOPP /6 Sty PPyp/C/PU *'
daily drive, the city (Concord, N. H.)
has been full of reporters.
H. Cornell Wilson, Christian Science
press agent for New York and vicin
ity, arrived Monday morning and stood
between the reporters and the house
hold at Pleasant View. Archibald
McLellan, editor of the official Chris
tian Science publications, came tip
to help, and L. C. Strang, the local
man, also was on the job.
“ ‘We didn’t like the tone of your
story yesterday,' said Mr. Wilson to
one man. However, they fought it out
until all but two were let iD on the
interview. The reporter for the paper
which published the original story
and a magazine man were not for
given. *
“A woman reporter went up to
Pleasant View and had herself ap
pointed spokesman. She came back
with three questions, which she
had agreed with the Scientists,
were to be asked of Mrs. Eddy.
In their conclave the reporters added
a fourth. There were 11 reporters al
together. Wilson lined them up in
the big reception room of Pleasant
View. This opens from a main hall
by folding doors hung over with cur
tains. Members of Mrs. Eddy's house
hold, including Mrs. Pamelia Leonard,
lasting arms are about me. That is
enough.’
“As she said this Mrs. Eddy made
a sweeping gesture with her disen
gaged hand and let go her held on
! the curtain.
“‘Do you drive daily?’
“ ‘Yes.’
“At that instant Frye caught her el
bow and turned her toward the front
door, before which her carriage waited
to take her on her drive. Strang fell
in on the other side, and Mrs. Eddy
walked between them.
“ ‘Have you the management of your
own affairs?’ asked the spokeswoman.
“The question never was answered.
At the door Frye and Strang fell back.
Mrs. Eddy walked the width of the
piazza alone. Her gait had a stately,
languid grace, hardly suggestive of
old age, but her hand shook badly as
Strang helped her to a seat in the
carriage.
House Now Closed to World.
“When the reporters returned to the
parlor a woman of the household came
forward.
“ ‘Christian Scientists are allowed
many privileges,’ she said, ‘so I hope
you won’t mind if I ask you to go
away.’
Sftfsiooys mow v^£/rs/f/srww
were fringed about the wall. There
came a tap on the folding door.
“ ‘She Is here,’ announced one of
the healers, dramatically.
Shows Evidences of Age.
“The folding doors slid back, the
curtains lifted—a stately figure in
white stood bowing at the door, stately
at first sight, but a feeble old woman
at second. Her skin was dead white,
her cheeks sunken, every oupce of
spare fat gone from her face. The
long, pointed chin, characteristic of
Mrs. Eddy's face in youth, was as
beautiful as ever. So, indeed, were
the large eyes, and the long, finely-cut
nose. Over the face rose a mass of
perfectly white hair, crowned by a
white bonnet.
“She was enfolded in a huge black
•Must before one o’clock there came
to Pleasant View a belated newspaper
photographer. He wanted little. He
only wished Mrs. Leonard and Mrs.
Eddy to come out into the sunlight and
pose for him, so the world might see
how little they resembled each other.
Strang refused him. He added:
‘‘‘At one o’clock to-day the gates of
Pleasant View will close to the outer
world forever.’ ”
As Durable as Stone.
Sycamore is one of the most dur
able of woods. A statue made from
it, now in the museum of Ghizeh, at
Cairo, is known to be thousands of
years old. Notwithstanding this
great age, it is asserted that the wood
itself is entirely sound and natural
in appearance.
Marion Harland.
The celebrated authoress, so highly
esteemed by the women of America,
says on pages 103 and 445 of her
book, “Eve's Daughters; or, Common
Sense for Maid, Wife and Mother”:
“For the aching back—should it be
slow in recovering its normal strength
—an Allcock’s Plaster is an excellent
comforter, combining the sensation of
the sustained pressure of a strong
warm hand with certain tonic quali
ties developed in the wearing. It
should be kept over the seat of un
easiness for several days—in ob
stinate cases, for perhaps a fortnight.”
“For pain in the back wear an All
cock’s Plaster constantly, renewing
as it wears off. This is an invaluable
support when the weight on the small
of the back becomes heavy and the
aching incessant.”
Year’s Tea Production.
The total exports of tea from India
during the year ended April 26, 1906,
amounted to 214,198,943 pounds, val- |
ued at $29,294,936. The shipments to
the United Kingdom were 166,604,000
pounds; Canada, 15,019,000 pounds;
Russia, 9,991,000 pounds; Australia,
7,746 pounds; Turkey and Asia, 3,464
pounds; the United States, 2,1S5,000
pounds; Persia, 1,091,000 pounds, and
to all other countries, 8,084,000 pounds.
All these countries, except the United
States and Persia, increased their pur
chases over 1905. The trade with the
United States decreased 9.7 per cent,
and that with Persia 65.5 per cent.
There Is more Catarrh In this section of the country
than all otherdlseases put together, arid uutil the lust
few years was supposed tube Incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and
prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing
to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable.
Science has proven Cat-.rrh to be a constitutional dis
ease and therefore requires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Curr, manufactured by F. J. Cheney
& Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Constitutional cure on
the market. It is taken Internally In doses from 10
drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one
bur d.ed dollars fur any oa-e It falls to cure. Send
for circulars and testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Fills for constipation.
Makes Son Private Secretary.
'in appointing his son, Lord Bruce,
as his private secretary the earl of
Elgin only followed the example of
the late William E. Gladstone, who,
when he became prime minister in
18.89, appointed Herbert Gladstone,
then a young man of 20, to a similar
position.
Starch, like everything else, is be
ing constantly improved, the patent
Starches put. on the market 25 years
ago are very different and inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat
ast discovery—Defiance Starch—all in
jurious chemicals are omitted, while ]
the addition of another ingredient, in- j
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap
proached by other brands.
Herding of New York’s Poor.
Paul D. Cravath, chairman of the
tenement-house committee of the
Charity Organization society, declares
that a close canvas shows that there
jre in New York tenements 357,000
rooms that have no windows.
Give Defiance Starch a fair trial—
try it for both hot and cold starching,
and if you don’t think you do better
work, in less time and at smaller cost,
return it and your grocer will give
you back your money.
“Now, I am ready, how do I look,
dear?” "You remind me of a Sioux
in his war paint.” “Oh, you nasty j
thing, you—” "Don't cry, darling: I
only meant you were dressed to kill.”
—Baltimore American.
William Pinckney Whyte, United |
States senator from Maryland, who re
cently celebrated his 82d birthday,
aas never been inside a saloon, never I
smoked, and never rode in a cab.
Women who kiss each other are
often guilty of counterfeiting.
Lewis' Single Hinder straight 5c. Many
smokers prefer them to 10c cigf rs. \ our
dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, ill.
He is a wise man who either speaks
the truth or says nothing.
- Defiance Starch—Sixteen ounces for
ten cents, all other brands contain
only 12 ounces for same money.
Brief is the agony of an instant;
the indulgence of grief, the blunder of
a life.—Beaconsfield.
I
-- -.- -
Dyspepsia jtf Women
Caused by Female Disorders and Cured by
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
A great many women suffer with a
form of indigestion or dyspepsia which
does not seem to yield to ordinary treat
ment. While the symptoms seem to be
similar to those of ordinary indiges
tion, yet the medicines universally pre
scribed do not seem to restore the pa
tient's normal condition.
/Mrs. /A. Wri gh t_
Mrs. Pinkhain claims that there is a
kind of dyspepsia that is caused by a
derangement of the female organism,
and which, while it causes a disturb
ance similar to ordinary indigestion,
cannot be relieved without a medicine
which not only acts as a stomach tonic,
buthasapeeuliartonic effect on the fe
male organism.
As proof of this theory we call at
tention to the case of Mrs. Maggie
Wright, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was
completely cured by Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound after every
thing else had failed. She writes :
“ For two years I suffered with dyspepsia
which so degenerated the entire systeu that 1
was unable to attend to my daily duties. 1
felt weak and nervous, and nothing that I ate
tasted good and it caused a disturbance in my
stomact I tried different dyspepsia cures,
but nothing seemed to help hie. I was ad
v'sed to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound a trial, and was happily surpri.-.
to find that it acted like a fine tonic, and in a
few days I began to enjoy and prop riy digest,
my food. My recovery was rapid, and in
five weeks I was a well woman. I have rec
ommended it to many suffering women.”
No other medicine in the world has
received such widespread and unquali
fied endorsement or has such a record
of cures of female troubles, as has Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compounu.
* THE BEST COUGH CURE |
I Many a lonesome and expensive S
trip to Florida, California or the 4
Adirondacks has been saved by A
the use of f
Kemp’s Balsam l
the best cough cure. If this great i
remedy will not cure the cough, no j
medicine will, and then all hope 0
rests in a change of climate—but W
try Kemp's Balsam first.
Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c j
Quaker Qats
fYou will always welcome breakfast-time when Quaker
Oats is served, because it is so delicious and satisfying.
You will quickly detect the superior flavor of Quaker
Oats, once you eat it. Freer from hulls, daintier to the H
taste, easier to digest, Quaker Oats is unquestionably the H
best rolled oats made.
The new, large.sized Family Package, now contains
a piece of handsome, decorated, semi-porcelain, that will
delight any housewife.
Large Sized Family Package OC^,
With Dainty China Dishes
—either plate, vegetable dish or cup and saucer.
Should anyone tell you that some other brand of rolled
oats is “just as good” as Quaker Oats, or that some other
china is as pretty and serviceable as Quaker Semi-Porce
lain—remember that you can find out for yourself.
You will never believe such a statement after you have
purchased a large sized Family Package of Quaker Oats.
Jhe Quaker Oats Qmparvy
iTiy the new Quaker product—Quaker Best Cornmeal. Sold only in sealed ||
packages, three pounds 10c. Ask your grocer.