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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1914)
UMET HQ POWDER The cook is happy, the other members of the family are happj—appetites sharpen, things brighten up generally. And Calumet Baking Powder is responsible for it all. For Calumet never fails. Its wonderful leavening qualities insure perfectly shortened, faultlessly raised bakings. Cannot be compared with other baking powders, which promise without performing. Even a beginner in cooking gets delightful results with this never failing Calumet Baking Powder. Your grocer knows. Ask him. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS World's Pure Food Exposition, Chir.ro, nL Palis Exposition. France, March, 1912. y^^J7^rT»»r^rtaoT«h«TA«»orWs-«»!>WuBSpowdtr. Don'tWmuled. hrCitaitX h*r man t-T -rS-1 —pr«r hut f nlti CiirmU ■ far rnpaw t» m*r milk udmdm^ Bordeaux a Shipbuilding Center. Shipbuilding and refitting is one of the most important industries of Bor deaux. War vessels, as well as mer chant vessels, are constructed there. A large fleet of fishing vessels leaves the city each year for the cod fisher ies of Newfoundland and Iceland. Charity begins at home, whether the home needs it or not. .One Hundred i &FiftyDollars’ worth of | the Best Music for One Dollar j G. SfHIRMKR, <1 me.I the great | ! music publishers of New lorl;, 5 have just issued the most mar- l veious music collection ever/pub- 5 > lished I THE FAMILY MUSIC EOOK 1 j 800 PAGES 252 PIECES ' A NECESSITY IN EVERY MUSIC / UOVESG HO.V1E i Containh : > 11? I*;nno^o1os 9 Four-Hand ' 4 Six-Haiiti l’ieres 113 Soncs 14 Vocal Duets ! 2Z2 pieces in all, printed from ! bea utituiiy engraved plates. It is > i*x 12 inches, handsomely bound in J flexible cloth and weighs four ; ! and a quarter pounds. The list includes drawing-room pieces; operatic: Sunday music; ■ easy classics; marches; waltzes; tangoes; jigs, etc.; ballads; con vivial songs; plantation; children's ; > and sacred songs; national and sa- ; 5 cred hymns. . > The music is selected from works ; { of classic and modern composers, S and also includes many favorites ; j universally known and loved. All > T'lano Numbers are moderately dlf I ficult, all Sengs are for medium » voice, and have easy accoqtpanl- ; ! meets. > THE FAMILY MUSIC BOOK t -will be sent expregsage paid on re > ceipt of $1 45 bv the publishers, ; ! G-SOTIRtrER, Inc„DEPT. A. 3 East 43rdSt. _ _ New York J or the Bosom Jfnsic Co.. Boston, Mass.. ; or R. W. Heffeldnger, Los Angeles, CaL Descriptive Cir.-ular on Application. rr , ecvc wrg"k| I 4 pair gloves made from 251 tit I 25 T t/U automobile bi-product; outwear 12 pairs canvas g.oves: money back gnar mtee. Write I’. A. Ucac. S“4 CauBWfikfc. irusit. Slek. SHORT AND SIMPLE GOOD-BYS German Farmer’s Farewell to Onl> Son and to Hie Horse Was That of a Patriot. Going to war In the case of at least j one of the belligerents was a very simple thing. And here is the prool of it compactly presented by Fritz Muller: “Gaffer Breitenmoser had one ; son and one horse. Yesterday they came and took away his son for the j war. The good-bys were said at the gate. They were confoundedly short good-bys. Gaffer Breitenmosei wasted no words. He clapped his son on the shoulder. ‘Do your duty,’ he said—no more. And his son was even a trifle shorter about it. He said nothing at all. He simply looked at his father. But what a look! And then he swung off at a trot and was i gone. “That was yesterday. Today they came and fetched away Gaffer Brei tenmoser's horse—for the war. The parting again was at the gate. And i it was confoundedly short. Gaffei j Breitenmoser wasted no words. He ' dapped his horse on the shoulder Do your duty,’ said he—no more. 1 And the horse was a trifle shorter about it still. He merely looked al Gaffer Breitenmoser. And then he ; swung off at a trot and was gone.”— New York Evening Post —————————— The Bed Hour. It does not matter what time yon | co to bed so long as you have a regu j lar hour and stick to it. The old ! saying that an hour of sleep before | midnight is worth two after is not I true, but it has this much truth in it; That the early hours of sleep ! are worth more than the later. The man who remains healthy goes to bed about the same hour every night, ! and It makes little difference whether i the hour be nine p. m. or three a. m. Money for Christmas. Selling guaranteed wear-proof hosi ery to friends & neighbors. Big Xmas business. Wear-Proof Mills, 3200 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.—Adv. One way to dodge a breach-of-prom i ise suit is to buy a wedding ring. Many a man is satisfied to rest on | the reputation of his ancestors. -—-—•---*".. It is just plain “horse sense” to keep up the spirit and nerve of your horses during.the w inter when they spend most of their time in the stable, i Pratts, Animal Regulator t does it and enables yon to stable your horses in I dosing. Whets the appetite. Tones digestion Builds up flesh. Gives H endurance. Keeps wind good coat sleek and glossy back \ Try Pratts at our risk—satisfaction guaranteed or money back. \ 25-lb. pail only $3.00 ; also in packages from 50c. up. 40,000 Dealers sell Pratts. - pRATT FOOD COMPANY Philadelphia, Chicago, Toronto TheReason We want your trade is threefold JsP We are Jlmbitious 2nd We are Right 3rd We will Prove it Put ns to the test with your very next ship ment or Feeder Order. H. G. KIDDOO, Manat He took the "S” out of Skiddoo and wdl^do^aa^muchjoryou-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ FOB THE JUST IN NEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON BE COMPASSED. ' MANY EVENTS ABE MENTIONED Home and Foreign Intelligence Con densed Into Two and Four Line Paragraphs. WASHINGTON. No date has been fixed for the with drawal of federal troops from the Col orado strike district, according to statements maue at the War depart ment. • * * Secretary Lansing has issued a statement announcing that the State department had declined to #ict as censor for moving picture films deal ing with the European war. * * * The Bethlehem Steel company was the lowest bidder at the Navy depart ment for supplying the navy with the fourteen-inch armor-piercing shells which it may need during the next year at $421 each. • * • Clearing house certificates issued in large cities of the country after the outbreak of the European war have been greatly reduced in amount according to a statement hv Comp troller of Currency Williams. • • * The Interstate Commerce commis sion further suspended from Novem ber 12 until May 12, 1915, the opera tion of tariffs containing proposed in creased rates on live stock, carloads, between points in South Dakota and other states and St. Paul, Omaha and Kansas City. • » • The department of justice has an nounced an agreement with the Amer ican Smelting and Refining company whereby title to several thousand acres of coal lands in Colorado, al leged to have been illegally obtained years ago through dummies, will be restored to the government. • • * The worst outbreak ot foot and mouth disease ever known in the United States is the department of agriculture’s estimate of the live stock epidemic which has forced federal quarantine over six states and threatens a temporary re duction of the cation's food supply. * * * With diplomatic relations broken off between Creat Britain and France and Turkey, administration officials awaited formal notification from the triple entente powers that a state of war exists with the Ottoman em pire. It was expected that upon its receipt President Wilson would issue a proclamation of neutrality. * * * New federal meat inspection reg ulations for better conservation of the public health went into effect recent ly. The regulations against use of dis eased cattle have been strengthened all alor.g the line and certain meat heretofore wasted may be sold when labeled "second class sterilized meat,” as is done in some European coun tries. DOMESTIC. Six men were burned to death and many were saved by firemen and po lice w hen a New York lodging house was. burned. * * * A. H. Bibler of Pittsburgh was elec ted president of the American Hard ware Manufacturers’ association alt the closing session in Atlantic City, N. J. • * • The Chicago Union stockyards, the largest cattle market in the world, which has been in continuous business since 1865, has been ordered closed for several days because of the prev alence of the hoof and mouth disease dmong cattle. * • • When the steamer Lusitania recent ly left for Europe it carried among its passengers Mrs. Harry Payne Whit ney, seven sugeous, ten nurses and one attendant, all of whom will work to relieve the suffering of wounded soldiers, irrespective of nationality. * * * The Montana supreme court hand ed down a decision refusing an ap peal in the ouster case in which Sher iff Timothy Driscoll of Silver Bow county was removed from office as a result of disturbances last June, when dynamiters destroyed \the miners’ un ion hall in Butte. * • • Four hundred Irishmen from 16 to 25 years of age have landed in New York. They declined to say if they had come to America rather ^han en list in the British army, but did say they came here to look for work. • * * Indictments charging members of the city, state and national master plumbers’ associations with having operated for the last three years In restraint of trade were returned by the federal grand jury for the district court of Utah against fourteen master plumbers of Utah and Colorado. * • • Criminal indictments were returned in New York by the United States grand jury against twenty-one direc tors and fprmer directors of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Rail road company. * • • The $16,000,000 loan made by a group of New York bankers to the gobernment of France, to be used by France as a checking account against the purchase of supplies in this coun try, has opened the way, in the opin ion of New York bankers, for Ger many and Austria to negotiate loans. • • • A decrease of $1,623,551 was shown In the gross earnings of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy road for the fis cal year ending June 30, 1914, accord ing to the annual report made public at Chicago. Several officers of the Greek army arrived at Galveston, Tex., stating that they were commissioned to pur chase 3,000 head of horses for use in the Greek army. * • • Federal Judge Youman at Fort Smith, Ark., issued a venire for a fed eral grand jury to*investigate the as sault on Prairie Creek mine camp by a party of armed men. « * * One hundred and sixteen warships of all kinds have been destroyed, damaged or otherwise put out of ac tion since the war began, according to official admission ot the various countries. * * * Captain He Goodierer, jr.. United States aviation corps, was fatally in jured and Glenn Martin, another aviator, was seriously hurt in a fall of about forty feet at San Diego, California. * *• * Two German officers and two men of the crew of the German cruiser Geier, now at Honolulu, who have been held for some time at San Francisco, will be paroled, but must remain in the United States until the end of the war. * • * Mariano F. Cirat. until recently Mexican council in Philadelphia, has appeared in the municipal court and asked that his five children be com mitted to institutions in that city. Having received no salary for several months, he is in destitute circum stances. * * * The Western Union Telegraph com pany announced that the use in cable messages of codes approved by the British authorities will be limited to messages exchanged between the United States and Canada and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. FOREIGN. France, following the lead of Great Britain, has declared war on Turkey * * * Servian and Montenegrin ministers have been recalled from Constanti nople. * * • American marines are said to have landed in Beirut, Syria, to protect the Christian population. * * * General Carranza claims the sup port of twenty of the thirty-one states and territories of Mexico. * * * A Petrograd newspaper says a Turkish army of 90,000 men is on the Caucasus frontier and has occupied many villages. * * * A newspaper dispatch from Odes sa says twelve German and Turkish colliers have been sunk off the cost of Anatolia. * * * * Persia has sent a note to the pow ers announcing that it will maintain strict neutrality in the war. The Spanish premier also says that Spain will not become embroiled. * * * Reports reaching Berlin from Athens declare that 15,000 Turkish troops already are in Egypt and that the Turkish soldiers marching against Russia are alleged to number 300,000. • * * Following the resignation of Pr. Aurelio Souza, president of the Peru vian cabinet, all the other members of the cabinet have resigned. The im mediate political situation is uncer tain. • • • The raising of $1,050,000,000 by the German government in a single oper ation is commented upon by the Ger man press and by the press of a num her of neutral countries as a remark able evidence of Germany’s financial power. • • • London continues its preparations for aerial raids. The streets grow darker and accidents are more fre quent in consequence. Some say more persons will be killed by the darkened streets than by bombs from air craft. • • * * Until definite guarantees are given by Russia. England and France for the protection of Turkish subjects, the Ottoman empire will hold practi cally hostages all the subjects of the triple entente powers within its terri tory. Major General Robert George Kek wich. who defended Kimberly against the Boers from October 15, 1899. to December 16, 1900, and who had just been recalled to a high position in Earl Kitchener's new army, died at his home in Devonshire. • * * “If all the chiefs of the constitu tionalist army abandon me I will abandon my native land, but if, or. the other hand, any part of them sustain and uphold me, we will fight until death.” These are the defiant words with which General Carranza is cred ited in a statement given out at San Antonio, Tex. • * * Officials of the Panama canal zone are concerned over the opposition which has developed recently to the ratification by the Panama assembly of the new canal zone boundary con vention. signed by representatives of the United States and Panama on September 2. * * • A wireless* cry from the British cruiser Glasgow, intercepted by the German victors, was the last word re ceived from Rear Admiral Cradock's squadron following the engagement off the Chilean coast. • • * Robert Bartlett, commander of the Stefanson ship Karluk, which was lost in the Arctic, has arrived at Ottawa. He said there was little prospect that the eight missing members of the ex pedition who left the main party soon after the ship sank would be found alive. • • • Because of the spread of foot and mouth disease, Canada has extended the embargo against American cat tle to include Illinois and Pennsylva nia. Previously it applied only to cat tle from Michigan and Indiana. % PROPER USE OF WASTE FATS Saved From Any Kind of Meat They Are Valued by the Economical Housewife. Have you ever noticed how enticing sweet potatoes are when served with Maryland pork and beans? Somehow the pork greases make them seem more like a dessert than a plain vege table. Neither cream, lard, butter, nor beef can take the place of pork fat for sweet potatoes. Pork fat also gives a tang to beets, parsnips and carrots which cannot be duplicated in any other way. The waste fat from beef makes a better cake, a better pie crust and better candies than the highest priced butter. Cookies, puddings and cakes have a savoriness so enticing when made of beef drippings that not even the most delinquent appetite can say them nay. The fats, oils and greases from lamb or veal all lend themselves to the economical housewife as a great improvement over costly butters and cheap lards for frying, broiling and preparing food in all sorts of other ways. One part of these fats will give a happier flavor to fish, beans, carrots and peas than ten times as much butter. Indeed, a spoonful of it will do the work of a whole pound of butter. Then there are the “grube," so called by the Jewish cooks who re move the fat and grease from geese and fry it with the goose flesh into crisp, brittle fiat cakes. The grease from the geese and other fowl is wide ly used in Jewish homes. Some stu dents think its use has much to do with the relative absence of wasting distempers among the people of this ancient nation. IDEAS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER Seven Little Things of Moment With Which All of Them May Not Be Acquainted. When It is necessary to boil a cracked egg add a little vinegar to the water This will prevent the white from boiling out. If you have difficulty in cleaning the candle grease from metal candle sticks try setting the candlesticks in a hot oven for a few minutes. This will melt the grease. Of course, care must be taken not to leave them in too long or the candlesticks will melt as well as the grease. If you wet a spoon before using It to serve jelly you will find the jelly will not stick to 1t and the serving Is more easily accomplished. To clean fly specks from varnished wood, wipe with a soft cloth dipped in equal parts of skim milk and water. To pick up little pieces of broken glass, wet a woolen cloth; lay it on the floor where the fragments are and pat It. The little particles will ad here to the damp cloth. The skin of new potatoes is more easily removed by rubbing with a stiff little brush than by scraping with a knife. If curtain rods or poles are rubbed with hard soap before being put up. the curtains will slip on them easily Graham Fig Gems. Scald one cupful of sweet milk, then add cm e-fourth cupful of granulated sugar one-half teaspoonful of salt and one heaping tablespoonful of butter. Stir until the sugar is dissolved and the butter is melted, then set aside to cool. In another dish mix one and one-half eunfuls of graham flour, one cupful of w hite flour and two and one half rounded teaspoonfuls of baking powder together. When the milk is cold, add it to the dry ingredients with one well beaten egg. Beat hard for a couple of minutes then stir in cne-balf cupful of figs chopped fine and dredged w-ith flour. Fill hot greased gem pans half full and bake in a hot oven until golden brown These are delicious with jam or mar malade. Homemade Wall Taper Cleaner. The following mixture is more easily applied, and does the work more effee tively than any of the baked prepara tions that are sold at a good price for a small quantity—one generally paying the sum for the label and tin, to box it up for sale. Take one part sal am moniac, four parts rye flour, and watei enough to form a dough, then use or the soiled parts as if the mixture was a sponge. As the dirt is transferred from the wall to the <.‘.eaner. turn the soil in. and work out a dean part ol the mixture. A little practice will soor. show how easily this Is accomplished without waste to the mixture. Never continue rubbing the soiled surface ot the cleaner into the wall. Canning Hint. A vegetable soup is one of the best canned helps to the housekeeper. Cut into small pieces some tomatoes, onions, parsley, carrots, sweet pep pers. okra, etc. Stew together until thorougly dene. To each pint jar add half a teaspoonful of salt. Flavor with celery These soup vegetables are so delicious that just the addition of boiling water makes a very palatable soup. Two large teaspoonfuls of beef extract to a quart of boiling water and a jar of the canned vegetables make a delicious Foup. Poinsettia Salad. Scald and peel small round toma toes. With a sharp knife cut each one through from the top down to the bot tom, making the tomato to look like a poinsettia blossom. Take yolk of hard boiled egg and add to firm mayonnaise Fill center with this mixture and sprinkle top with more egg yolk, t'se shaving of cucumber rind to represent leaf or stalk. A few powdered pis tachio nuts can also be sprinkled on the center of the tomato. t Stiff Ribbons. Starch spoils ribbons, as it soon makes them look old. The best thing to use for stiffening ribbons or lace is to put several lumps of sugar in hot water and let them dissolve, then put the ribbons or lace in the water. This will make them just a nice stiffness, and will not spoil them as starch does. Prefer Indian Labor. During the salmon fishing and can ning season in British Columbia a large number of Indians are employed In the different branches of the can neries each year. The Indians are ex pert fishermen and are especially de sirable as employees in the business. The Indian women and old men of the tribe work in the canneries while the able-bodied men do the fishing. The duties of the Indian women consist mainly of washing the fish in prep aration for cooking and canning. They are, it is said, the most efficient for this branch of the cannery work of any procurable labor. A Color Riot. “Some people seem to get in a frenzy over the yellow peril.” “Yes, in a regular blue funk." It's easy to gauge a man's intelli gence: Draw him into a discussion, and if he agrees with you he's sensi ble. Peruna Did Wonder For My Boy Mrs. Nelli* Cou rter, 38 Franklin Ave, Norwalk, Conn, writes: “Peru-. na has don* wonders for my boy. I can not praise it enough. 1) the best medi cine on earth. Let me tell you why I think so. • My son has been afflicted with ca-1 tarrh since he was a baby five months old. so that for years I had to watch him all night long, and keep his moutli open so he could breathe, as he could not breathe through his nose. “He has always been very delicate. •'Since he commenced taking th% Feruna I can go to bed and sleep tUg night" A\egctable Preparation for As - j similat ing the Food aitd Regula tmg the Stomachs and Bowels of i Promotes DigcsIionChcerful nessand Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral ; Not Narcotic Rrcpr DrSAsflEl/VTV/rSR Pumplun Seed - Alx Senna * \ AorheUe Sails - Anise Seed - fypperminl - \ FiCarfonateSetUi • ( H'orm Steel - ClanAied Sugar ^interpretn Flavor ' A perfect Remedy forConstipa tion. Sour Stomiach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of The Centaur Company. NEW YORK under the Foodaw Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTOBIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought \ ' t Kjjjj Thirty Years CASTOBIA ▼ MB cBMTACJR OOMRARY, NBN YORK 0»TY. Take the Blood Out and Wash It. Drs. V. A. Urevitch and N. K. Rosenberg have discovered a way to | to take the blood out of the body, wash it and put it back again. In | the Roussky Yratich they describe their experiments upon animals. The idea, of course, is to rid the blood of poisonous substances. They found i they could remove half the blood, prevent its coagulation by adding i sodium citrate, wash it with salt so lution and return the purified red corpuscles into the circulation. It was not necessary to return the white corpuscles. The New York Medical Journal re marks that this, taken together with the transplantation cf organs and the growth of tissues outside the body, “forms an entirely new chapter in experimental medicine. Who can tell what the future has in store for us?" itching~burning eczema R. F. D. No. 3, Caldwell, Ohio.— “When our baby was about two i months old she broke out over her ! body, face and head with eczema. It was bad, about as thick as it could be. It broke out in a kind of pimples. They were red and sore. She was very 1 cross and restless. The eczema would itch and burn till 6he couldn't sleep. It looked very badly and would peel .iff where the places were. Her clothes would irritate the eruption. “We gave her medicine, but It didn't do any good. We had heard about Cuticura Soap and Ointment so we sent for a sample and it was not very long till she was better. I bought some more Cuticura Soap and Oint ment which cured her completely." (Signed) H. E. Smith, Mar. 21, 1914. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each Tree,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post :ard “Cuticura, Dept. L. Boston.”—Adv. Asking a Lot. “How will you have your eggs, sir?” “Fresh.”—Boston Evening Trans cript. It may be more blessed to give than to receive, but most of us are willing to let the other fellow have the bless ing. Don’t be misled- Ask for Red Cross Ball Blue. Makes beautiful white clothes At all good grocers. Adv. Figures may not lie, but some of them get tangled up in statistics. How the Minister Is Treated. Once upon a time a manager aske< George Ade if he had ever been takes for a minister. “Xo." replied Ade, “but I have bees treated like one." “How was that?” “I have been kept waiting for mj salary six or seven months.”—Ladies Home Journal. - ; " TO! T! O'.VN PRIUCBT TV IT. I. TEI.I. YOl Try Murine Eye Remedy fnr Red, Weak. Waietj Eye and (smnnlated Eyelids; No SxuarUnft irsi Eye Comfort Write for Book of th • Ey* bj niui. Free. Murine Eye Femedy Co.. Cu.cajfo Tell a weeping woman that tears art pearls and she will think you ar« stringing her. A Home-Made Poison Uric acid, unknown in the days of a simple, natural, out-of-door life, is a modem poison created inside the human body by a combination of meat-eating, overwork, worry and lack of rest. Backache <>r irregular urination is the first pro test of weak kidneys. When the kidneys fall be lt nd lp filtering out the excess uric acid, there is dinger of gravel, dropsy or Bright's disease. Jlean's Kidney pills strengthen weak kidneys, b it if the diet is reduced, excesses stopped, and fresh air. exercise and sleep increased, the med icine acts more quickly. Doan's Kidney Pills h:ive a worid-wide reputation as & rebahie k dcey tonic. A Nebraska Case J E. B. Wll.on Pierce. Neb. says: “I was in bad shape r\wuh a constant pain slrin the small of my m back. Mornings I >was so lame 1 could Tw hardly stoop and If \I did manage to jPbend over, It was ail Y I could do to f straighten. I tired easily and had to get up several times at night to puss the kidney secretiona I / mm w sp'-ni nun areas ox /* f dollars doctoring but found no relief until I took Doan’s Kid ney Pills They restored me to the best of health and I have never had *> sign of kidney trouble since Doan's Kidney Pills are the best kidney medicine I know of.” Get Doan's at Any Store. 50c a Do* DOAN’S 'V.I’IV FOSTER-MJLBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. R ..a ivmr_NQX-TRY POPHAM’S •ASTHMA MEDICINE i Give-* Prompt and Positive Relief in Every 1 $ Case. Sold by Druggists. Pri«*e$l.(Xi 1 | Trial Package by Mail Jdc. t WILLIAMS MFG. CO.. Props., Cleveland, 0.! ..»~a I PARKER’S HAiR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. 60c. and tLOOat DmgctBts. W. N. U„ OMAHA, NO. 45-1914. To the Woman Who Realizes She Needs Help You are nervous. You have crying spells.” You are dejected. You don’t sleep well You have backache. You have lost ambition for your work. You are beginning to feel old and look old. These symptoms, more than likely, are produced by some weakness, derangement or irregularity peculiar to the feminine organism. Dr» Pierce’s Favorite Prescription {In Tablet or Liquid Form) wHl aid you In regaining youthful health and strength—just as it has been doing for over forty years for women who have been in the same condition of health you now find yourself. It soothes and invigorates. It upbuilds and uplifts. Your medicine dealer will supply you in tablet or liquid form, or send 50 one<£nt stamps for trial bos. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Race's Pleasant Pellets regulate Stand, lira ad Bowls. Easy ta take.