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About The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-???? | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1909)
THE BEST REMEDY For Women-Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Xoah, Ky. "I was passing through the Change of Lite ami suffered from headaches, nervous Erostration, and emorrhages. 'Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Componndmademe well and strong, so that 1 can do all my housework, and at tend to the store and post-otliee, and I feel much younger than I really am. "JLvriia il Pink. Sum's Vegetable Compound is the most successful remedy for all kinds of female troubles, and I feel that I can never praise it enough." Mrs. T.izib Holland, Noah. Ky. TheChangeof lite is the most critical period of & woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Womene verjrwher should re member Stat there isnootherremedy known to medicine that will sosuccessf ulljrcarry women through this trying period as Lyviia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs. For SO years it has been curing women f rom the worst forms of female tils -inflammation, ulceration, dis placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, backache, and nervous prostration. If you would like special advieo about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and anrajs helpful. ATTENUATED. He See, Satuantha. that shows hoi terribly thin some folks are. Alas, How Truel "1 often wonder," remarked Mr. Stubn, In solemn reflection, "if the last man on earth will hare the last word. "Of raursA ha will John." laushed Mrs. Stubh, "But why are you so sure?" "Because the last woman will give tt to him." Imaartant te Motlwv. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a sate and sure remedy for Infanta and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of la Tse FbrOver SO Years. The Kind Ton Have Always Bought Just Shoot Twice "t thought you said this sun would hoot a thousand yards? -It wUL- It wont. It only shoots 500 yards." "Well. It's a double-barreled gun. alat itr 1 A Pa.ans.tle Ky XnwIt Compouaded by Kxperieneed Physician, Conforms to Purs Kood and Drum Lanrm. Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drue (a for Murine Kye Remedy. Try Mu rine la X our fc-yes. lou wiu un Murine. It's not difficult to judge some men by their clothes policemen and letter carriers, tor example. You will respond very quii-Llv to the uxntKi iea trcmiment, I or mis natural laxative corrects constipation, purities the wwy, aim ocneius toe euure s.vsiu. It's the easiest thing In the world to point out the proper course for others to pursue. The envekipe was invented in 1CS5 and was in disfavor for a long time. Some men haven t sense enougn to do the best they can. ONl.ToNR-HROMOOriNINK. uumi HKOMO OC1M.NIC. U for U Mcnalnnt of K. l.m.Vt t teJtnsWoti nihiUntCoMitVMliu. ate. The dentist is Invited to attend many a swell gathering. To-wa. Tired. Arhln. , u Witta . . r . .M-IV . W Your L'fU.-ttll&'K. The airship habit will take an auto mobile income. 0XHIQ5 ; G30G3dS7 j i. lTi k r r !? ei Ifaaneteannat Tkomp$tBs Eye Water aotw eras, nasi TRY THIS BEEF TEA PUDDING Very Nutritious and Frequently Wil. Tempt Invalid's Appetite. Reef tea pudding is very "nutritious and is generally much relished b those who declare ihey could not toucb beef tea in any form. Take half a cupful of white or brown bread crumbs, one ess. and one tea cupful of beef lea. Put the crumbs into a basin make the beef tea hot, and pour over. - l-'t it stand for a few minutes. Beat the egst wel?, and mix it with a little cold beef to keep the esrs item curdltns- Ada to the crutuus. etc., and cither bake for twenty min utes or steam for thirty minutes. The necessary salt should ba in the beef tea; but of cuttrse invalids, as a rule, are allowed very little seasoning. If permitted, a little good mush room catsup might be served with it. A savory cup custard might be made as above, omitting the bread crumbs, and aHowiug only half the quantity of beef tea. Reat the egg. Add the beef tea cold. Pour into a buttered cup, cover with a buttered paper and steam gently for ten minutes. Turn out and serve hot. When beof lea is ordered for chil dren who are sick or delicate, it will frequently be found more pasatable for them if. instead of salt, sugar be used. This is done in many hospitals, so there is no reason why it should not be a common practice in our homes. And another hint I should like tc give in connection with beef tea is tc turn it into a jelly for a change. For a half pint of beef tea. dissolve one teaspoonfnl of powdered geh'tme in it while warm, add sugar to taste, and either a glass of sherry or a good home-made giuger wine. Turn into a wet mold, aud it will stiffen like an ordinary jelly. Chicago Inter Ocean. A little kerosene added to the wash water is said to make the clothes extra white. v To restore discolored ivory, paint it with spirits of turpentine and lay in the sunshiue for two or three days. Save the water in which potatoes have beeu boiled and use it to wash tarnished brass. It will come out as bright as new. A delieious saiad may be made of grapefruit pulp. white grapes and ttaiks of roiuaiue. dressed with oil and vinegar and sweeteued slightly. To take old stains from marble, mix one gill of soapsuds and oxgall and half a gill of turpentine, and as much fullers earth as will make a paste, and rub it on the stains. Leave it on for a few days and then wipe off. "What am I doing to the candle?" said a housewife. "I am rubbing it well with salt. My grandmother taught me this years and years aso. She said that if I wanted a faint light in a sickroom I could have a candle burn all night if I but rubbed salt into it well, being careful not to get the salt on the black part of the wick. I have "acted on this suggestion more than once and never fouud it to fail." Light, Crisp. Griddle Cakes. Put one cup of sour milk in a mix ing bowl, sprinkle over it one cup of sifted flour, but do not mix. Lay a fine strainer on the flour and sift through it one-half level teaspoon of soda, one-half level teaspoon of baking, powder and one-quarter level teaspoon of salt. Mix slightly, then add one well-beaten egg. one tablespoon of melted butter. Beat vigorously until smooth. If the batter is not thick like cream add a tablespoon of flour. If too thick, add a little milk or water. Rub the griddle with bacon rind. Drop from tablespoon. When done serve at once with butter, sugar or sirup. Grease on Carpets. An excellent paste for getting grease from carpets is made by mixing ful ler's earth with a little ammonia. This .mixture should be quite thick and should be applied with a lavish hand.. Let it remain over night, then brush oft with a stiff brush. Sometimes it is necessary to put on a second supply.- If the colors of the carpet ate delicate and there is danger of discoloring, the ammonia may be omitted. Should the tone of the- carpet seem to be dull after the grease is out. the color may be fresheued by sweeping with niiust salt. Lily Cake. One-third cup butter, one cup sugar one-nan cup iuiik. it cups nour, teaspoons baking powder, three egg whites, oiK-half teaspoon extract of lemon, two-thirds teaspoon vanilla. Cream and butter, add gradually the sugar and the vanilla. Beat the eg; whiles to a stiff froth and add. Sift the flour aud bakiug powder together thoroughly and add to the first mix ture alternately with the milk. Add lemon extract. Bake in moderate oven. Spiced Meat. - First mix dry 2 pounds of salt, one half pound black pepjier. one-half ounce tmace, one-half ounce cayenne pepper, U'i ounces nutmeg. Then prepare your meat for roasting iu the usual way, omitting pepper aud salt. Sprinkle plen tifully with the mixture and put in oven to roast. This is delicious. Put remainder of the mixture in a jar, cover tightly and keep for future use. German Puffs. Sift eight tablesitoonftils of flour into a pan, stir in one quart of milk very slowly; when quite smooth add the yolks of eight well-beaten eggs, a liaie salt, then the eight stiffly beat en voiles. Pour- into buttered cups asii. b-ke 20 miuutes. Serve hot with The Home,j wine sauce. WHAT WIFE SAYS "GOES." But It Sometimes is Bad for the Painting. When a property-owner knows noth ing about paint it is bad for the property-owner, and bad for the paint er. It would not be so if the' property- owner would always hire a skilled painter, and then really leave every thing to him. But the house-owner so often fools himself on one or the other of these things. The skilled painter in every commu nity has some of the most incompetent competitors that ever vexed a consci entious workman or contractor, and the incompetents get jobs generally by working cheap. In the next place. when the skilled painter is hired, they do not leave everything to him, as so many property-owners boast they do. They interfere most ignorantly and most fatally. They insist sometimes on using paint materials without in vestigating whether they are good or not. Or perhaps they insist on the painter's hurrying the work. Tm not going to have that painter's mess around my house a month," the wife says, and what wife says goes at the cost of a lot of wasted painting money. If the painter stays away a few days to allow the paint to thoroughly dry the owner says: - "That painter's neglecting this work guess he's side tracking me for Jones work. I won't stand it." What chance does a painterhavetodo good work for a man who is continually nagging at him and otherwise handi capping him (without meaning it, of course) ? A poor job is the inevitable result of such interference. Poor painting costs the houseowner money don't forget that. It might pay you to get the practical paint book, painting specifications and in strument for detecting paint adul terants, which National Lead Co. are offering under the title of House Owner's Painting Outfit No. 49. Ad dress National Lead Co.. 1902 Trinity Bldg., New York City. This company do not make paint (they leave that to the painter to do) hut they make pure white lead ("Dutch Boy Painter- trademark kind), and they can tell you how to save money by securing durable painting. Easy. Once there was an old woman who lived in a shoe. She had so many children that at first she didn't know what to do. A friend of the family who hap pened to come along just then, how ever, made the following suggestions: To put one of them in a factory. To have a couple more operated on and otherwise fussed over by the doc tors, f To put & couple of them in a coal mine. To send one to a modern public school. To bring up another on a pure food diet Which no sooner having been car ried into effect than the old woman settled down to a life of eas-a and lone omeness. New York Herald. Unfortunate Expression. That fruitful source of mirth, the mixed metaphor, is ever with us. It illustrates on almost every appearance the truth of the saying that the sub lime and the ridiculous are but a step apart. In a book on the laboring man, con taining some excellent ideas, there appeared the following sentence: "What manner of woman is, she who would turn her eyes toward other things, which would become ashes on her very lips?" The flippant answer is, of course, "A crosseyed woman. Youth's Compan ion. Wanted Longer Sermons. It was a proud boast one clergyman made to two or three others who were having a quiet chat in his study the other night namely, that he had ac tually on one occasion been asked to make his service, both prayers and sermon, a bit longer. His brethren regarded hlra with su perstitious awe, and one asked, feebly: "Where on earth was that?" "Well, boys," was the frank confes sion, "it was with a goal where I acted as chaplain for a short time. The poor beggars dreaded to leave the church for their cells." TWO DAINTY LUNCHEON DISHES. Hot Biscuit Chicken and Peach Pud ding Furnish a Meal. Hot Biscuit Chicken Chop the breast of a chicken quite fine, with six olives, a stalk of celery and a strip of green pepper. Add mayonnaise to make a smooth paste and season well. Make tiny raised biscuits, break them apart, fill with the prepared chicken. Serve hot on a lettuce leaf. Peach Pudding Skim and halve as many peaches as you wish, place half in each dessert dish and pour over a lemon custard covering the peach en tirely. Whip the whites of eggs (as many as is desired) until very stiff, sweeten, flavor and cover over all. This will be found delicious if eaten very cold and served with plain cake. An easy method of skinning peaches is to pour over them boiling water, let stand for two minutes, when they peel easily and evenly, leaving the peaches nice and smooth, without soft ening them. Cheese Balls. Mix well together 14 cups of grat ed cheese, Hi tea spoonfuls of flour, a pinch of red pepper, and the well beaten whites of three eggs. Make into small baKs labour 16) and fry a light brown. 1HAT A FORMER OREGON FARMER THINKS OF WEST ERN CANADA: Albert Nelson left Benton Co., Ore gon, in Sept., 1904, for the great. Canadian prairies. To quote from his "letter: "I was greatly surprised to find such an immense stretch of rich virgin prairie still almost unoccupied in the very heart of North America. The splendid crops of oats, wheat, bar ley, potatoes and hay I beheld in the settlements made me very eager for a piece of this rich soil, and I soon lo cated in the Goose Lake country. We have here a great stretch of the rich, deep clay loam of the Saskatchewan a. soil heavy and hard to break, bnt particularly well adapted for the re tention of moisture and production of the bright No. 1 hard wheat, and great crops of oats, barley, flax and po tatoes. I had 60 bushels of oais. weighing 441 lb. to the bushel, per acre. Some or my neighbors had stall greater yields Wheat yielded from 20 to 30 bushels per acre. We have all done well here, and" I could name "many Americans who came here with means to go ahead, who have done big already. For homesteads one has to go further west, but the best prai rie can be bought here for from $12.00 to $16.00 per acre. The climate is dry and healthy. This is the regular Saskatchewan fall weather frosty nights, and bright, sunny days ideal for threshing and hauling out of wheat. The trails are dusty, as thou sands of wheat teams are moving towards the elevators. "The sight of it makes one stop and wonder what it will be in a few years when the immense prairies get under,' cultivation. Heavy snowfall is the exception here. Snow generally falls in December and goes off in March. It sometimes gets very cold, hut the Saskatchewan farmer does not fear the cold. Winter is his season of rest The first or second crop he builds a comfortable house for him self, and warm stables for his horses. He need- not, Hke some, be poking about in the mud all winter attending a few beasts for a livelihood." INSTRUCTED. Doctor What are you doing in that tub? Youll catch your death. Patient Bnt, doctor, didn't you tell me to take the pills in water? GOVERNMENT CAREY ACT OPEN ING OF IRRIGATED LAND. MAY 6, the State of Wyoming Will Sell 100 Irrigated Farms at 50c per acre at Cooper Lake, Wyo., to those who have made applications for WATER RIGHTS NOW ON SALE at $5 per acre cash and- $3 per acre annually for ten years. Free railroad fare, sleeping and dining car accom modations and FREE DEED to TWO TOWN LOTS to all applying BEFORE MAY 1. Applications and particulars furnished by, TALLMADGE-BUNTIN LAND CO., Agents, Railway Exchange, Chicago. Agents wanted. Proving His Caution. Elder W. H. Underwood, chaplain of the state senate, was walking down a street at his home at Clay Center re cently with a friend. Another friend, with whom Underwood joked a good deal, met them and said: "Elder, I thought yon were careful of the com pany you keep." "I am," replied the chaplain, walking right on. "Tm not going to stop." Kansas City Journal. The Grip of Spring. During the last twenty years many of our citizens nave been attacked in the spring months by grip, h-onie have had serious or slight attacks every year or two. All know at to be a dangerous disease. If Lane's Pleasant Tablets (which are sold at 23 (cents a box by druggists and dealers) are taken when the first symptoms are felt, there is hardly a chance of the malady get ting a foothold. If you cannot get them near home, send 25 cents to Orator F. Woodward, Le Roy, X. Y. Sample free. The Rightful User. Knicker Why did you discharge your chauffeur? Bocker He persisted in taking his friends out when the cook wanted the auto. C. S. rat. OAK The genuine sold everywhere A CURE FOR FITS. The Treatment Is to Accomplish What Science Has Been Strug gling to Attain for Centuries, The intense interest that has oeen mani fested throughout the cenntry by the won derful cures that are being accomplished daily by cpilepticiile still continue. It is really surprising the vast number of peo ple who have already been cured of tits and nervousness. In order that everrborly' may have a chance to test the medicine, large trial bottles, valuable literature. His tory of Epilepsy and testimonial, will be sent by mail absolutely free to all who write to the Dr. M iv Laboratory, US Pearl Street, New- York City. His Humorous Error. During one of the banquets of the Church Congress in London, a cer tain bishop had as his left hand com panion a clergyman who was com nletely bald. During dessert the bald headed vicar dropped hi3 napkin and stooped to pick it up. At this moment the bishop, who was talking to his right-hand neighbor, felt a siight touch on his left arm. He turned, and, be holding the vicar's pate on a level with his elbow, said, "No, thank yon, no melon. I will take some pineap ple!" Fatal Catastrophe. Young Wife (mournfully) I am afraid, doctor, my poor husband with this wretched cold will cough up his life. Young Doctor (startled) Oh. 1 trust not, my dear madam; at least not until he coughs np my bilL Baltimore American. Pettits Eye Salve 100 Years Old, relieves tired eye, quickly cures eye aches, indamed, sore, watery or ulcerated ere. All druggists or Howard Bros.BuffaIo.Y. Some people would have to work overtime if they practiced half what they preach. Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Sore Throat will not live under the w root with Hamlins Wizard Oil. the best of all remedies for the relief of all pain. Some actors who claim to be wedded to their art have good grounds for a divorce. Yon Need a Tonic if yon feel languid and depressed all the time. The best thing to help nature bufld np the system is DR.D.JAYNE'S TONIC VERMIFUGE This great tonic is not a false stim ulant as many of the so-cailed 'spring tonics." It is a natural strength giver. For all nm-down conditions of.tte health it is an innloabie rem edy; imparts new life and vigor and builds cp the entire system. Sold by All Leading Druggists in tarn Use bottles, 50c mnj 35c SICK HEADACHE Positively era red by these Little Pills. They also relieve Di tress from PvsiiepeMa. in digestion and Too Hearty Ejuinjr. A perfeet mm edy for ltzzlaess. Nau sea Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth. Coat ed Tooewe. Patiw in the Side. TORPID UVEBL Ttiey regulate the Bowels. Parely Yegeutbtek SHALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Lincoln Directory Beatrice Creamery Cocpanj Pays the highest price for CREAM Please call on our Receiving Agent HERBERT E. GOOCH CO. BROKERS AND DEALERS Grain, Provisions. Stocks. Cotton Main Office, 204-205 Fraternity BWc Lincota, Nebraska. Bell Phone 515 An to Phone 2650 Largest House iu butt. CARTER'S 1 1 IVER CARTERS I f IVER Ask for tlhie lB.akerPs (Cocoa bearing this trade mark. Don't be misled by imitations JUST DOUBLE 320 ACRES INSTEAD OF 160 ACRES to nfaM mi m MIHIIIM twill!!, WSSBBirz l"cgsgPT tiut tuf be bkn bv m 32 w- ItO inr and I60 to be purchased at J! M frt mrmc Tan hmttm ate m &e grartt-taistng aca if d f n la ne at ab carrirtl taj wait aaoww-mnd i n A tanwaTwifl shattiy OK built to UnrinMB fcey.fer-aa). e wie watici" tutl rftasnsd minm mrmmr &e wheat-acids, wtvnt -boot mmi cW:! are cowvensevt, cliataCe ereiVa.rawisy ces to til tetii-mnt.-, ami luai atacscti gocdl "ft woo!f tsfce tfrtfce to tne?Iar? tion tnt vmt to tfce re eutfia'trf row to the North 9 unfnb&nt mt ever? twrsE. Oir!f cujrw Off jt Mai-urxt -iarm wff lKs!S Wesson i'ct 1m n A ig-ssty I Lamb atay auo ae pwcaaatd Storo taSwaw aad bad corny mrt at tow prices ami m eay Irrm For wtpt!t. maws and m?rasa?$M aa to low miwT at. appiv ca ap-rrsKedV?T f Inamtsrratfmt. OftOTaa. r -.-f r gs aotbortiea Canadian (aneraaet A--e r.T.KSJlTT. MI Bra-lark I rib taataa. TOILET AimSEPTIS -NOTHIHC LIKE IT FOR THE TEETH PaxtasS excels awy aVasi.Tta' Rmora tartar Iraaa oW tortK. bcaida akjatqjia, an fera) of decay and touch THE KOUTll THE EYES sEantEweCnl flBtst snsRaastelMaSf htf aP faaTall"". w3 ioHtoy ten V I Ml U aa I at caase cMMtk. Iwal : &e badyi JUsTM M POSTS' LARGE SAKPLE FREE! THE PAXTOal TOtLET CQu BOtrrCM. Protect tne Finger. Every woman who sew or ra fcroiders objects to the ronghw4 Krst finger of the left' fcan.L witicfe saBS impossible not to pn-k Xoc only fat the roughen! edge- ttaMicafly. sr it cat cites ob the worst, wprtialt wtoa doins allat embroidery, aad is aJww! Impossible to keep eieaa. : There is a new protector f.ir tfcis 'finger that seems to protect wi'ltaajt getting In the way of the sewer. It ;s made in a specially prepared sass that does not blant the ae--di. In" several sizes, and. best of ail. Is "heap enough for every sewer te mwm.. Without Ir-aoing. For the home nurse wito w.iold so willingly gown feerseif iat white to care for the family invaEd. bat w ha shrinks before the already lengthen ing laundry list, there is the axw of cotton crepe. It is inexpensive, and a good shaking will smooth i. mil, or. even if it be found to retjnfre seam ironing, the aoerest rub aril da too work, since it is not starched or sprinkled- This Trade Mark QnaatesAlI UaKCltnBBfy fa the pqCaiw of paint aiaSrrnls. It is an ansoiatnt stxstnaABC nf pnjsv try and tptabty. For yemr m protection, see tixat it r en tbe. sidr of e-rrrrluron!ajte-aranl yott bay. DILLIOUSGHASS W. N. U LINCOLN. NO- 1Z, R hataa.!Mnssv and throat, pwn&rx aW brad, and lit aSar aemm dock enfied ins tbe n if f i i iiaiim mm Tf i it. Lad tecta. bad brcata. sTpe. ami sajcfc nisarat ajnasi tonal ae&ai a. - asnUasnBnabOwt MHI itCIO -On vawaKaCnsfOSl- M M M PmXOamhm lamia yet w if j ( III TWLWWW teti-lfcvliait ft gww.-aTTrT.fcnwi'-f tlsi mnPmFr.ft mUtimm tvwi !.. !tlestf: . fTT-yen . m o- t-ntt Toss? Mod im 4 i nw i c Teati taw laV mw m mw m.m ana t a A mortem. kmp 4ert. snwrtnto 9 otiatm tsoatw- of Fnrjp- B4T 'it tm"lm !.-" at? -una. Oc it wtauupet auid iteie mmtn Ami waMfarfu I f!rmm,i&-&V0t1mrim iiwii.ir s.riTw .Oavc.t 'wo-r. Wr-tnn, m". . !-- .mm -e-v X f rreK r wmmI I4C mm wtlt aM mmm&m faUVM-HSBYvtttt MfWimilt-M bnfar,. SALZEJI SE0 CO.. 8a-. W, la tmm. -WW. f