A REMARKABLE STATEMENT Mrs. Sheldon Spent $1900 for Treatment Without Bene fit. Finally Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound. Englewood, I1L — “While going through the Change of Life I suffered wiui neaaacnes, ner vousness, flashes o1 heat, and I suffered so much I did not know what I waa doing at times. I spent $1900 on doc tors and not one did me any good. One day a lady called at my house and said she had been as sick as I was at one time, and Lydia E. Pink “-'ham s vegetable Comneund made her well,so I took it and now I am just a3 well as I ever was. I cannot understand why women don’t see how much pain ana suffering they would escape by taking your medicine. I cannot praise it enough for it saved my life and kept me from the Insane Hospital.’’—Mrs. E. Sheldon, 5657 S. Halsted St., Englewood, 111. Physicians undoubtedly did their best, battled with this case steadily and could do no raore,but often the most scientific ^ treatment is surpassed by the medicinal properties of the good'old fashioned roots and herbs contained in Lvdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If any complication exists it Says to write tbe Lydia E. Pink am Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mass, for special free advice. Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Try^p^^ LAR1ER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS A i uiciv vcgcrciuic. nci gently on the liver, A eliminate bile. and^B Boothe the delicate^B membrane of the^H^ bowel C u r Constipation, Biliousness, CARTERS • ITTLE liVER ■che aad Indigestion, aa millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SM ALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Diet for the Lean. L»r. Louis Henry Levy, in Pictorial Review says: "Though the lean individual may be the more agile end vigorous, leanness !■> also associated with those of a nervous temperament. It is not al ways a desirable condition, since it prematurely ages the face by the early appearance of wrinkles. It is also the accompaniment of chronically diseased stomachs, resulting from a disturbed ^ digestion and poor absorption of the digested foods. "The foods which arc best adapted for the lean are those that have been . denied to the obese person—the starches, sugars, and fats, but suffi cient care must be exercised to pre vent disturbing an entirely good stom ach. Let the lean one eat well of the rich foods and sever relations with the. sour and spicy ones. Above all, let her cultivate a sunny, restful dis position, with a nervous system under steady control, for these are the trade marks of the robust and plump per son.” If women had their choice between cold feet and small ones, there would be less demand for leather. It isn't at all likely that a woman "ill ever discover that she’s beautiful If she waits for another woman to tel* her. Feel Achy All Over ? To ache all over in damp weath er. or after taking a cold, isn’t nat ural, and often indicates kidney weakness. Uric acid causes many queer aches, pains and disorders of the organs. Well kidneys keep uric acid down. Tired, dizzy, nervous people would do well to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. They stimulate the kidneys to activity and so help clear the blood of irritating poisons. A Nebraska Case Mrs. Geo. Earl. Madison, Neb., says: “The pain and stiff ness in my back was awful and I suffered from dizzy spells and , hot flashes. Puffy sacs came beneath my eyes and my feet and an kles were swollen and painful. Doan's Kid ney .Pills rid me of all these troubles and I have had but little cause for complaint since.” viat Uotn'i at Any Store, 50c a Box DOAN'S VSSV F06TER-MILBURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dmohred In water for doth— (tope pehric catarrh, ulceration and inflaw. “*»?“• Recommends by Lydia E. Pinkham Mad. Co. for tea yaara. A healing wonder for naaal catarrh, ear*throataadeoreayea Economical ecnJcid.1 powr. Fata T eJH | WITH STALE BREAD MANY DISHES MAY BE PREPARED FROM REMNANTS. Can Be Put to Excellent Use for | Stuffing and Meat Frying—Bread Custard Pudding Is Good— Jelly for Invalids. Of all the left-over remnants of food j from the kitchen bread is the most i common, perhaps, and many pieces are ; daily thrown away which a little j thought would turn to excellent use. If the left-over pieces are not utilized the i same day, an excellent plan is to wrap I them in pieces of waxed paper and store them in a stone jar. They will ! keep well for a week in this way. Dried Crumbs for Stuffing and Meat Frying.—Put the crusts and small pieces in a baking pan and dry4n the | oven without burning. They may then be put through the food chopper and stored in clean Mason jars until want : ed. They may be used as a basis for meat croquettes, poultry stuffing and other things. French toast may be made from the whole slices of left-over bread. It is I an excellent luncheon pick-up dish. I Beat an egg and add a little milk. Dip | the slices of bread in this and fry a nice brown in hot drippings. Serve I with butter, jelly or marmalade. Bread Custard Pudding.—Cut the i bread in dainty shapes and butter lib | orally. Make a plain custard of eggs, j milk and sugar. Put in baking dish I and float the buttered bread oh top., | Sprinkle with grated nutmeg and hake j in a quick oven until brown. This is I excellent. To make croutons for the various soups so much relished in season, out the bread in cubes and fry in buttc-r or dripping just before serving with the soup. Add five or six to each plate of soup. These are delicious with almost | any soup. Bread Jelly for Invalids.—Scald the stale bread freed from crusts. Mash to a paste until of innshlike consisten cy. Add a little sugar and flavoring i mold, chill and serve with cream. Sterilized bread crumbs are epeeial i ly valuable for the young children in the household. A jar should be kept I filled with these. They may be heated j when wanted and sprinkled in soft i eggs, soups, milk, fruit juices and, in ! deed, anything eaten by vpry young i children where fresh bread is often l positively dangerous. Dried bread is also valuable for mix | ing with various other foods for feed i ing the household pets. — Peach Dumplings. i Mix and sift two cupfuls of flour. ! one teaspoonful of baking powder, one i half teaspoonful^ of salt and one-half i teaspoonful of sugar. Work into this two tPnspoonfuls of lard. Mix with three-quarters cupful of ice water. Have all of the ingredients very cold, mix quickly, handling as little as pos sible, and roll out thin. Cut the dough into pieces just large enough to cover one-half of a preserved peach, roll them up and hake in a quick oven. Serve with hard sauce and the sirup from the preserved peaches. Apple Chutney. Twelve sour apples, one mild onion, three peppers, one red. one cupful of chopped raisins, one-half cupful cur rant jelly, two cupfuls of sugar, juice | of four lemons, one tablespoonful of ground ginger, one-quarter teaspoon : fttl of cayenne, one tahlespoonful of salt and one pint of cider vinegar. Chop the tipples, onions and pep ; pers very fine, add the vinegar and jelly and let simmer one hour, stir 1 ring constantly. Store as canned fruit. Stewed Kidneys. Remove the fat and center from six kidneys and soak in cold water. Slice, season with salt and pepper, roll in flour and saute In hntter. Add to the fat in the pan one tablespoonful ol butter and two tahlespoonfuls of flour: J brown, and add three-quarters cupful I of stock. Season with salt, pepper. | onion juice and table sauce and pont i over the kidneys. American Cream. Half box gelatin, one quart milk 1 Set on back of stove to heat gradual ly. Boil a minute or two. Take off stove and stir in yolks of four eggs j well beaten with three tahlespoonfuls sugar. Then add whites, well beaten -with three tahlespoonfuls sugar and two tahlespoonfuls vnnilla. Put In dish ready for table. Serve next day | with cream. For Bamboo Articles. A soft rag saturated with solution of equal parts of spirits of camphor and | linseed oil is a handy thing to keep J around the house. It is the best thing ; you can get to rub down bamboo furni ture with, for ii loosens the fiber and makes the wood more elastic. For this reason it will not crack when exposed to changes of temperature. Combination Cake. One-third cupful of Imtter, one cup ful granulated sugar, three small eggs, one-eighth cupful coffee, one and one half cupfuls flour, two level teaspoon ; fuls salt, one capful of dates, cut I small, one cupful of chopped English ! walnuts. Marshmallow frosting is | nice if you like it. --- Developing Interest in Study. The conscious student must fight off distracting thoughts and fatigue. When he becomes interested in his study, however, the subconscious brain takes hold. The best ways to develop inter est are by collateral reading, original thought on the subject and conversa tion with those who are interested. To Pick Up Broken Glass. Even the smallest pieces of broken glass can be easily picked up with a bit of wet absorbent cotton, wnich can then be destroyed by burning. To Remove Fruit Stains. To remove fruit stains from the hands jtvash in clear water, dry slightly and then hold them over a lighted ,match. * WHERE THE WILD TURKEY CALLS—THE REAL THANKSGIVING BIRD A 1 NEW THANKS GIVING JAMES W. BECKMAN THIS is tlie week of Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving day is an Ameri can custom started by the Pil grims who landed on The new continent and faced hardships which few can realize who are reared in the wealth and luxury of the land to day. The season had been a hard one. Many had died and tlie prospect of starvation during the cold winter with Its ice and snow loomed, large. So, when the harvest yielded enough to keep them until another season would produce the necessities of life, they met that last Thursday in November in year 1621, and gave thanks to their f string together on under side of tish. If fish is to be stuffed it must be done first. For stuffing, one-half cupful bread ! rrumbs and four teaspoonfuls melted ! putter, four teaspoonfuls of finely j chopped parsley or onions, two tea- j spoonfuls salt and one of pepper. Add milk to moisten, put in fish and sew it up. When fish is put in the pan it is resting on its belly. Cut gashes in back pf fish about two inches apart and in sert narrow strips of salt pork. Dredge with flour and baste often with the j pork drippings. Allow ten minutes to i every pound and ten minutes extra, j V\ hen done remove string, place on j platter and pour over it this egg sauce: j Three tablespoonfuls flour, two of but ter. and one pint [Killing water, one half teaspoonful salt and a little pep per. and one hard boiled egg. Melt butter in saucepan, add flour and stir in boiling water slowly. Let boil five minutes, stirring constantly. Add the ! egg chopped tine, and salt and pepper. Garnish with parsley. WILL BE ENJOYED BY ALL Rich Chocolate Cake Suitable for a Birthday Celebration or Any Special Occasion. Two cupfuls of sugar, three-fourths of a cupful of butter (good measure), one cupful of buttermilk, whites of sis eggs, yolks of four eggs, one teaspoon ful of soda, one-lialf cake of good choc olate. three scant cupfuls of flour sift ed together with the soda, one tea spoonful of vanila. Cream the butter i and sugar, add the yolks of the eggs j i previously beaten to a cream, then al- j I ternating. the buttermilk and the flour. ; The vanila and chocolate are added j last, the chocolate having been melted in a bowl set in a boiling tea kettle : Bake in a moderate oven. Test with a broom straw and when this, thrust in the top, comes out dry the cake if j done. The frosting, also brown, is made j with one cupful cream, two cupfuls sugar, butter size of an egg, three squares of chocolate. Mis together and put on to boil. Let it boil slowly j until it balls when thrown into cold ■ water. Remove from stove and let the bubbling subside, then beat until it can be poured on the cake and glazed with a knife. — Berry Pudding. Beat to a cream one cupful of but j ter with two cupfuls of sugar, add four 1 well-beaten eggs, one cupful of sour cream in which one teaspoonful ol soda is dissolved, and four cupfuls ol flour. Stir all together and add one quart of berries, dredged lightly with flour. Wring a pudding cloth out In boiling water, dredge it with flour and j pour the batter in, tying It loosely enough to allow the pudding to swell. Plunge this into boiling water and boil , for three hours. This pudding can be steamed, but an hour longer should be allowed for the steaming. Serve with j wine or vinegar sance. Invalid’s Chair. A chair for an invalid or an elder ly person may be made very conveni ent by placing a drawer beneath the scat, arranging it to pnll out at one side. It can !>e provided with a lock if desired. The drawer can be read ily manipulated by anyone occupying the chair, and makes the infirm feel fairly independent, as many useful ar ticles and treasures may be kept there, and he will not have to ask for every little thing he uses. Delicate Cakes. Buy a nice Jelly roll with not toe : much jelly. Cut in slices an inet ] thick. Frost with white, pink or choc ! olate frosting on top and sides ant? put coconut or chopped nuts on top. Frosting—Four tablespoonfuls milk; make quite stiff with confectioners sugar and flavor and color as you like Chocolate frosting must be a little thinner than plain before chocolate or cocoa is added. Pickled Red Cabbage. Slice up the cabbage fine and place it in a colander; sprinkle each layei ! with common salt. Let the strips drain for two days, then put them in a jai and cover with boiling vinegar. If a : spice is used it must be put in with the vinegar in the proportion of one ounce if whole black pepper and one-half ; ounce of allspice to the quart. Duration of Lightning Flash. A flash of lightning lights up the ground for one-millionth of a second, yet it seems to us to last ever so much longer. What happens Is that the im pression remains in the retina of the eye for about one-eighth of a second, of 124,000 times longer than the flash lasts. Some Egg Tips. A tiny pinch of salt added to the whites of eggs makes them beat up quite quickly. A tablespoonful of water added to each white of egg before heat ing will double the quantity. To pre : vent eggs from cracking when boiling always dip first in cold water. For Greasy Woodwork. Paint or woodwork that has become greasy should be cleaned with a cloth dipped in turpentine. Then wipe with a clotn dipped in water to which a little kerosene has been added. , For Spotted Paintings. A few drops of ammonia in a cupful of warm water, applied carefully, will remove spots from paintings and chromos. To Boil Cracked Eggs. An egg that Is cracked can be boiled by inclosing it in a piece of soft pa per. THE STRICTEST ATTENTION I mast be paid to the first evidence of weak* ■ess in the stomach, liver or bowels— Neglect only invites illness. BE WISE IN TIME—TRV HOSTETTERS STOMACH ^BITTERS Timde 9nppUe<2 by THE BNG COLE CO.. OMAHA l^vid Coie. owner FBHOTSTIltS.CElEIT.fSOi.Ttf WHOLESALE ONLY CDTD TOatLfOtJXTKT tfl Ullil ">■ Wepsj Cash lor IIt. poultry COOK BOOK FREE! - Mention tins paper. WANTED .end ns the numes Blufr., tojsISIS&y. SrffiBfttSsyy PATENTS B.tes r^uAtu.. Utghe.t refl^s^^^ Directory fHEPflXTON»”^ S=ttSs«aSS£ ANDIRONS • Every thing for the hearth. A Send for catalog. W SUNDERLAND BROS 303 So. 17th. St. Om.hu Neb. J U Time to Migrate. (ioin sout' fur de winter?” .. . .'\ure ’ ing- answered Frisco Mike. Ain t heard none o’ dese swells offer m ter give away fur overcoats, have yer?” “No.” “And none o’ de welfare societies is invitin’ boes ter rally roun’ an’ toast dui tootsies :it a radiator till devi’lets bloom ajrain.” “Dat's right.” Exactly. So it's me fur a rattler °TX an’ ,ie Ian' °’ (,e sunny sout. —Birmingham Age-Herald. AN APPRECIATIVE LETTER. Mr. M. A. Page, Osceola. Wis.,' un der date of Feb. 16, 1916, writes: Some years ago I was troubled with my kidneys and was advised to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. It is now three years since I fin ished taking these Pills and I have had no trouble with my kidney' since. I was pretty bad for ten or twelve years Mr M 4 Pare Pn0r t0 >'our Mr. M. A. Page treatment and wU1 say that I have jen in good health since and able to do considerable work at the advanced age of seventy two. I am glad you induced me to continue their use at the time, as I am cured. Dodd’s Kidney Pills, 50c per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tab lets for indigestion have been proved, 50c per box.—Adv. Just a Quibble. . “A mere quibble,” said a society leader iu a discussion of the divorce problem at Newport. “A quibble,” he continued, “as worth less as the wife’s.” “A man said, looking up from his paper: “ ‘Here’s another miser leaving hal* a million to charity. I wonder why all the misers you read about are bache lors?’ “ ‘Oh. his wife answered, ‘married misers are so common they’re not worth mentioning.’ ” Similar. “This reminds me of some of the new-fangled poetry they're printing in the magazines nowadays." observed the man who was viewing the parade of the Punkville Preparedness league. “On account of the rhythm. I sup pose,” suggested his friend. “No, on account of the Irregular lines.” And some men who are short on linir imagine that they are exceptionally long on brains. Cure that cold —Do it today. CASCARAjjJ QUININE The old family remedy—in tablet form—safe. sure, easy to take. No opiates—no unpleasant after effects. Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. Get tfie genuine box with Red Top and Mr. Hill’s picture on it-25 cents. At Any Drag Store t TYPumn tasmsrsz : j13 111 eaperieace has demonstrate* g g g g ■ w tj)e miraculous effU Cscy. and hannlessness. of Antityphoid Vaccination. Be nccinated NOW by your physician, you and your family. It is more vital than house insurance. Ask your physician, druggist, or tend for Har* you had Typhoid?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine, results from use, and danger (no Typhoid Carrion. Prsdutlnt Vaccine aid tar*an nadir U. S. Ua—se The Cuttar I itsratmj. BarMsy. Cal.. Chlaage, IIL