AN HONEST DOCTOR ADVISED PB-RU-NJL. MR. SYLVESTER E. 8MTTH. Boom SIS, Onnlta Block, St. Louis, Mo, writes: Parana is the beet friend a aiok man can havs. "A few months ago I canto hero In a wretched condition. Exposure and darapnasa had rained my one robust health. X had catarrhal affection of the bronchial tabes, and tor a time there was a doubt a to my recovery. "My good honest old doctor advised Be to take Parana, which I did and in short time my health began to im prove very rapidly, the bronchial trouble gradually disappeared, and in three months my health was tally re stored. Accept a grateful mui thanks fat his restoration to perfeot health." Pe-re-aa far His Patients. A. W. Perrtn, M. D. 8., 860 Halsey 8L, Brooklyn, X. T., says : I ana using your Parana myself, and am recommending it to my patients In all eases of catarrh, and find it to be more than you represent. Parana can be had now of all druggists in this sec tion. At the time X began mains it. It was unknown." Food Products Libby's Ylenna Sausage You've never tasted the best sausage until you've eaten Libby's Yfeua StBsage. It's a sausage product of higH food value! Made different! Cook ed different! Tastes different and is different than other sausage! Llkby's Vicaai Scasage. like ail of the Libby Food Products; is carefully prepared and cooked in Litby's Greet Ufkite Nfcaea. It can be quickly served for any meal at any time! It is pleas ing; not over-flavored and has that satisfying taste! Try it! L&ay. Bcftta A L&ky, Caicaf. 3D A Favored Pawl. 1 has been told.' said Miss Miami Brown, "dat da parrot is one of the toogee' ttved birds dat is." "Da statement."" replied Mr. Erastus Pinkley. "Is strictly ornithoiogicaL' "I wonder why f "l 'specks dat one reason why da parrot Uvea so long is dat ha sin' good to eat." Washington Star. That an article may be good as wall as aheap, and glva entire satisfaction. ta proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package con taining one-third more Starch than can be had ot any other brand tor tha same money. Sleighing All tha Year. Because of the lichens which grow abundantly on the stone-paved streets ta Madeira, making them slippery, it is possible to use aleighs tha year around. "Ethel, you should not monopolize all the conversation." "When will I be old enough to, iuamtna?" Yonkers Statesman. Sufficient onto tha day are tha 14 hoars thereof. The nlace should not honor tha but tha man tha place. Agesilaua. DwaLiUttMiiaaalala. tu-ruar lalkiuw. SaodSar Blunt language Is often used in mak tag anarp retorts. '4, Giaw Mr. Wsssts w'm SaoSbBsc Sjmpw Psrehiidraa uMbioc. -- - in niM.imm SiMiiin.njit. niMiniiwti lnniiiau 0 SERVE CODFISH FOUR RECIPES FOR DELICIOUS DISHES. Left-Over Portions May Be Utilized in Patties Prepared a La Mode Cooked with Either Maca roni or Spaghetti. Codfish a La Mode. Take a large cupful of salt codfish that has been boiled and finely shredded, add a gill of vinegar, two tablespoons of melted butter, a saltspoon of black pepper, the juice of half a lemon, a little minced parsley, and one egg well beaten. Form in balls with the hand in oval shape, and roll in egg and cracker crumbs. Fry in hot fat and serve with bechamel sauce. Codfish Patties. If you have any creamed codfish remaining from break fast it can be utilized in this way. Make some tiny puff paste shells, ba king them in a quick oven; when cold' fill with the creamed codfish, lightly dusting with grated nutmeg; cover the top of each shell with a teaspoonful of whipped cream, lightly salted, and return for an instant to a hot oven. Serve with fried parsley and thin slices of lemon. Timbale of Codfish. Break in short lengths either macaroni or spaghetti, and boil in salted water until tender; dress it with cheese and melted but ter according to taste and add one well beaten egg. Butter and bread crumb a plain mold and when the macaroni is nearly cold fill the mold with it, press ing it well down and leaving a hollow in the center, which should be filled with codfish prepared as follows: Freshen two good sized pieces of cod fish by changing the water frequently In which it is soaked, then boil for 20 minutes, putting it on in cold wa ter. Remove from the fire, and shred it finely with a silver fork, adding a small cupful of cream, a tablespoon of melted butter, a dash of cayenne and a teaspoon of onion juice. Cover the top of the mold with a layer of macaroni and bake in a moderate oven for half an hour; turn from the mold and serve garnished with blanched; celery. Codfish Chowder. Fry six slices of, fat pork crisp in the bottom of the, pot in which you are to make your. chowder; take them out and chop them in small pieces, putting them back in the pot with their own gravy Cover this with a layer of shredded salt codfish that has been freshened in cold water, and continue with lay ers of minced onions, sliced potatoes. split crackers, tomatoes and parsley; sprinkle with summer savory, cayenne pepper and celery salL Alternate these layers until the pot is three-quarters full. Pour in enough cold water to partly cover the ingredients and stew gently for one hour, watching that the water dues not boil away. When the chowder is thoroughly cooked turn it into the tureen, adding a cupful of rich milk, and serve hot with toasted bread fingers. Oranges for the Lunch Box. Many tourists enjoy putting up a dainty luncheon at home, which may be partaken of whenever liked. In such a box a Kttle corner filled with oranges is sure to be most appreciat ed. Select large navel oranges, free from skin and all the bitter white which sometimes clings to the fruit. and separate into sections. If the or ange sections are long, cut them half through in two different places with a sharp knife, or if the sections are short cut them' only in the center. Pack them at once, and very closely, in paraffin paper in either a tin crack er box or a pasteboard box. The juice will not run out if the fruit is carefully handled, and a section will quench thirst much more effectively than water, and they can be taken out of the box without soiling the gloves. For Timing Eggs.' An egg alarm is one of the latest additions to the kitchen equipment. It is a German invention, at . least it comes to us from that country, and is intended to act as a reminder to the cook when the eggs are done. It is made of an oblong piece of porcelain fitted in the center with a clock dial and an alarm bell. The dial is marked off into minute sections up to the num ber of five. When the eggs are put into the water the alarm is set for two, three, four or five minutes and the cook need not be bothered with watching the clock to see that the eggs do not boil too hard. When the time is up the bell rings sharply as a signal that the eggs are done just right. Making Mint Sauce. For a good, simple way of making old-fashioned mint sauce use one large tablespoonful of chopped mint, three fourths of a cup of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Mix the three together and let them stand an hour then serve. Delmonico's rule for mint sauce differs from any other rule. It alls for one-quarter of a bunch of finely-minced mint leaves, half a cup ful of water, half a cupful of broth or consomme, four tablespoonfuls of vin egar, a table3poonful of salt and half an ounce of sugar. Mix together and erve In a sauce bowl. Good Fish Salad. Soak twq big salt herring in water over night. Then clean fish of all bones and skin and chop fine. Chop six or seven boiled potatoes and five boiled red beets and two big onions. Mix all together with pepper and enough vinegar to soften the mixture. Pre& hard in molds and when shaped turn out on a flat plate. Chop the whites and yolks of three hard boiled eggs separately. Then decorate the top with alternate rows of whites, yolks and beets. RETURN OF REGULARS TO POSTS NOT ALWAYS BEST Curious Instances Where Teams Played Winning Ball with Subs in the Lineup. Will the return of Flick and Turner to Cleveland"s lineup increase the. team's winning percentage? ' The natural answer is a quick and. emphatic "Yes." But wait a moment, please. A little while ago the Yankees were in the lead of the American league race and were winning about two games out of every three. Ball was playing short for the New York team, Elberfeld was in the hospital. "Wait till 'Scrappy' returns, and we'll win them all," said some of the Yankee- players. Well, "Scrappy" .came back with all his old-time fire and enthusiasm, and the Yankees im mediately began to lose. - The White Sox, with a patched-up infield, were recently defeating every thing in sight. They lost but one game in a stretch of 18. We'll get Isbell," said Fielder Jones, "and then we can't lost evetf one In 18." Isbell, brilliant player. great hitter, fine fielder, man of brains, came, and the White Sox promptly tumbled out of first place and into fourth. Probably that it is usually .fatal to break up a winning team. It takes time to get the new men accustomed to all the signals their predecessors had become thoroughly accustomed to. Flick and Turner will add batting, fielding and base running ability to the Naps, but it is, too much to expect that their acquisition will bring a larger percentage of victories for a few days at least. DANE RICHEST OF FIGHTERS Battling Nelson Reputed to Be Worth Over $100,000. Battling Nelson the other day, at San Francisco, won the title of light weight pugilist of the world from the man who defeated him at Goldfield, Nev., almost two years ago. He knocked out Joe Gans in the seven teenth round, after a fight as desper ate as any that had been seen there in years. Nelson can lay his horny mitts upon more available cash to-day than any other fighter in the business. In his climb to the position as topnotch light weight of the world the Dane has passed the $100,000 figure and is now busily engaged in reaching the $200,- 000 figure. Nelson knows how to keep the coin of the realm. He has been accused of being "batty" on several occasions. but the rest of the fighting brigade Sattling- HeXron. only wish they could inherit that kind of foolishness which would add to their ring record and bank accounts. Still, when it comes down to solid facts. Nelson has no one to thank for his championship hpnors. Nobody took his beatings and no one admin istered the defeats but himself. To date Nelson has acquired all of the choice real estate in Hegewisch, now known as Burnham. Besides this, he recently purchased some vineyard property in California. Nelson's biggest earnings for one fight was at the time he fought Gans at Goldfield, Nevada, September 3, 1906, when he received for his end $22,500. Since then he has been kept busily engaged in coast battles and exhibitions. His recent battle with Gans netted the Dane close to $15,000. From now on, however, they will all have to come and see the Dane. The championship title is worth thousands. The Dane will be the biggest card there is on the road, and he can well afford to remain idle unless the pro moters come across. Siever Three Times with Detroit. Eddie Siever, who has been turned over to Indianapolis, has had a unique career in the major leagues. He start ed in Detroit under George Stallings, and under that manager developed in to a good left hand twirler. Then he threw out his arm in an extra innings struggle with Rube -WaddelL He went to the association, then to St. Louis. He made good with St. Louis, then went back again. For the third time he came up with Detroit under Bill Armour, and has been there ever since. ft BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS. Hope Abandoned After Physicians' Consultation. Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash ington" Sts., Centraiia. Wash., says: xr years I was weak and run down, could not sleep, my limbs swelled and the secretions were troublesome; pains were intense. I was fast in bed for four months. Three doc tors said there was no cure for me, and I was given up to die. Being urged, I used Doan's Kidney Pills. Soon I was better, and in a few weeks was about the house, well and strong again." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N- Y. WAS ONLY RED BLOOD. And Three-Year-Old Had Been Told That it Was Blue. Three-year-old Allan had a very aris tocratic grandma, who prided herself on her own and her husband's blue- blooded ancestry. She told him heroic deeds of them and warned him from ever playing with boys of low degree. One day Allan came screaming up stairs to his mamma and grandma, holding his hand up covered with blood, where he had cut his little finger. They were both greatly alarmed, as he was a child who rarely cried or complained when hurt. Mam ma washed the blood off and, exam ining the cut, said: "Why, dear, it's not so very bad. Does it hurt you so much?" "I'm not cryin' 'cause it hurts," he said, "but 'cause it's only red blood, and grandma said I had blue." Phila delphia Ledger. For and Against. A Philadelphia lawyer, retained as counsel for the defense in a murder trial, tells of the difficulties in getting together a Jury. "Counsel were endeavoring," says this lawyer, "to elicit from the various prospective jurors their views con cerning the death penalty. "One man to whom the question was put, 'Are you against the infliction of the death penalty?' replied, 'No, sir.' " 'What is your business?" he waa asked. 1 am a butcher,' he replied. "When the same question was put to the- next man he answered that he was against the death penalty. "'What is your business?' " 'Life insurance,' said he." Where the Urchin Scored. The bnsy man stopped before an office bnilding and leaned from his carriage. At the same moment an ambitions urchin ran forward and piped: "Hey, mister, kin I hold yet horse?" "No, you can't!" snapped the busy man. "Won't charge y much," insisted the urchin. "I don't care about the charge." impatiently responded the man, throwing a blan ket over his bony steed. "My horse win not run away." "Gee, mister, 1 didn't think he'd run away!" "No?" "No, I thought he might fall down." Readjusted Conditions. "Do yon think these trusts and mer gers have put the great capitalists on terms of friendship?" "Not as a rale," answered Dustln Stax. "It has simply brought the fighting to closer range." Washington Star. Lemon Butter Cake. Beat one-fourth cup of butter to a cream, add gradually one and one-half cups of sugar and yolks of two eggs. Sift two and one-half cups of flour with two heaping teaspoons baking powder; measure one-half pint of wa ter. Beat the whites of eggs to a stiff froth; add half the water and half the flour to the eggs and but ter and beat well; then add the rest of water and flour and beat thorough ly, stirring in the whites. Bake in three layers; put together with: Lemon Butter Juice, pulp, and grated rind of one lemon, one egg, and one-half cup sugar. Melt a piece of butter size of walnut in farina kettle; add the other ingredients and boil till thick. This will keep some time and is a fine springtime jelly. Fold Tablecloths. Tablecloths with embroidered mono gram or initial in the center or above ihe first plate ought never to be fold- j ed in half. Divide first and press, then fold over the left side. In this way the cloth can be straightened and divided evenly without any trouble whereas if it is folded left side over right you would have to use the left hand to straighten the cloth, which is awkward. After pressing smooth and dry fold cloth back and forth, starting at one end. Do not crease. In this way yon have but two ci eases in yoar tablecloth The Republicans evidently believe that the constitution does not count for much nowadays, for the word con stitution does not appear in the speeches of Senator Lodge, or Mr. Bur ton, made at the Republican conven tion, and only one reference to that in strument is made in the platform. This reference occurs in the resolution re lating to the enforcement of the thir teenth, fourteenth apd fifteenth amend ments. When Mr. Taft addresses the Pros perity convention in New York he will have a chance to set forth an exact plan for becoming highly prosperous and plethoric on average Dingley wagts of $10.08 a week. M The Vital Point. Jndge Gillette was one of the most dignified of old-fashioned jurists. One day he was holding court at a county- seat in a rather out-of-the-main-road county, when a violent hubbub in the hallway interrupted proceedings in the court-room. After quieting the dis turbance, the sheriff returned to report to the juige. "It was two men fight ing," explained the official. "Danny Flannigan and Jake Jenkins, tough characters about town: I have put them under arrest." And he waited, expecting that the magistrate would order both offenders to be brought in to his presence and committed for con tempt. What was the sheriff's astonishment, therefore, when the judge beckoned him to the desk, and bending down, said in a confidential whi3per: "Which licked?" Illustrated Sun day Magazine. A Difficult Lesson. "It is next to impossible for a man to teach a pretty gfrl how to whistle," said a musician who is a good whis tler. "How is that?" he was asked. "Well, providing she is not your wife or sister, when a pretty girl gets her lips properly puckered she usually looks so bewitchingly tempting that he kisses her, and the consequence is she doesn't have a chance to blow a note. ITCHING HUMOR ON BOY His Hands Were a, Solid Mass, and Disease Spread All Over Body Cured in 4 Days By Cuticura. "One day we noticed that our little boy was all broken out with itching sores. We first noticed it on his little hands. His hands were not as bad then, and we didn't think anything serious would result. But the next day we heard of the Cuticura Remedies being so good for itching sores. By this time the disease had spread all over his body, and his hands were nothing but a solid mass of this itch ing disease. I purchased a box of Cuti cura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment, and that night I took the Cuticura Soap and lukewarm water and washed him well. Then I dried him and took the Cuticura Ointment and anointed him with it- I did this very evening and in four nights he waa entirely cured. Mrs. Frank Don ahue, 208 Fremont St, Kokomo, Ind, SepL 16, 1907." In after years women discover that mirrors are not what they used to be. "SAlSiOJ jsaspinb aqj -JEnsn aac ssauaAiSJoi jo paau )se aqj aABn oum asoqx Don't forget that a thing isn't done because you intend to do it. ttaVituol . Constipation May bcpvtnanei orercome by proper rsonal efforts WitKlKe assistance b-ftheong truly Ijenejicjal laxative resAedy, Syrup of UUW.fSn--a, jwhicK enables onelojora reufar Kabits daily $o tkol assistance To na ture may be gradual) a'tSpcwsed-a-ilci rWen no longer needed as the best sf remedes.4ei reouired. areto assise nature ana1 not to supflant tke natarv olfactions, vhWh must depend ufti tatefy upon proper nourishment, per efforts W rKt ljvi.,6 e.er logeTsts beneficial effects, alMay hvy the genuine "Fig Sykxjp Co. only SOLD BV ALL LEADING DRUOCISTS ac size only, rsgtttar price aOrrrrfiottle Lot Lie Sond Yob a Paehago of Defiance Starch with your next order of groceries and I wifl guarantee four l& Restored to Health fry Lydia E. Pi nk ham's Vegetable Compound. MmmM tOHmt Tw Jmp. Miss LIIBaa Boss. Ss East Mth Street. w York, writes: "Lydia E. Pinkham's Yegeta. bie Compound ore, came irregularities, pe- noane amanmc, audi after evernhniaT eiss had failed ts help axe, and I feel it a dstr t let others knew cLtt-" KatharinsCrag.raa Lafayette St, IMnvf-r, am writes: Tkuu to Lydia K. PhikharaTa v entaoieUecnnooois) I amweILaftsrsBffeiiisr for months from ne cos prostration." Miss Marie Stctt. saan, of LmutbL, Ia, writes : "I was in raa- ladiitustioa, and pons eirculasioa. Lnua E 2s Pinkham's Tagstat l iwf Compound asa2e as wen ana wtaaam." Miss EOen M.Olsim, of 417 S. Ess S&, Ks- wasee. lil-. says: iy Ctwuuuuud Cttird of backache, suto ache, and established my periods, after tbe beat local doctors had failed to beip nse." FACTS FOR SICK WORSEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been ths standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cored thousands of women who have been troubled -with displacements, inflammation, nice ra tion, fibroid tumors, irregnlarities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling; fiatule ncy, indipes tion,di2adness,ornerTou3 prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham Invites all stele women to write her for advice. She bas guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, AL&m. SICK HEADACHE CARJEECS Positively ensa wy thca LittI rills. Tbey sJso relieve rjt tressigDMlij p fls. Is) difrntioa mad Too Hearty Eating. A fief fee rea ed-f lor Pii linfas, Kssr ses. Drointaesa, Bad Pais rs ta Side, TOBFTO LIVES. Irrnx IVER PILLS. They regulate the Bmla Purely Tea-etabta SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SHALL PRICE. Genuine Mast Bear Fac-Simile Signature EEF0SE SC3STITUTIS. PAKKER'S HAIR BALSAI Cmm sas TSi niu s k WIDOWS1"'" wrw law rswsvAW aisasu Uafnrtrdwn!TfcaMa) Cm V.l ere. as . saw hjs issues W. N. U LINCOLN, NO. 30, 1908. ED UCA TMOMA M- Nebraska Military Academy A Tst-etsasariliiarT I aid bviktinsmwt srovadm. Pii kuiseBs. 8pcialisnii ni t jmm js. forinfncswlif. snores rjeof Svr sad i&fiilsraaas.s' Cotner University Methaayjiebi. Uneaten Siwsl alisr.Coxscst lilxnlAns. Medicine. SVauol: Kbto. Mmme. Ex pression. Basinem. StraL Art. Acaisxt- 8v ter opes aepKebBTT. Hsryak Kssessasvers low. 8eBdforcalsfcv.su. that yon will be better satisfied with it than with any starch you have ever used. I claim that it has no superior for hot or cold starching, and It Will Not Stick to the Iron Ko cheap prem rams ara riven with IE LANCE .STARCH. bnt TOT SR OSaVTHIBD MOM YOB TOUS MOSKT thsA Oi SBT other brand. DEFIANCE STARCH easts 10c for a 16-oz. package, aad I will refund your aOBy if at ticks to the iron. Truly yours, Borar Jon; The! i lie . r sTs.j i mSMJ vy sgrs y1 tTOCT CARTERS T7SVER 5flW MS to amis 0VSQ Eitr to us TsoftM CMot. Can. m Ji i a arteaaaav iamdsijsneass