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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1907)
MISTAKES J O Arc said often to be burled six feet under ground. But many times women call on their family physicians , suffering , as they Imagine , one from dyspepsia , another from heart disease , another from liver or kid ney disease , another from nervous , pros tration , another with pain here and there , and in this v.-ay they present aJikc to themselves and their easy-going or over- busy doctor , separate diseases , for which he , assuming them to bo such , prescribes his pills and potions. In reality , they are ail only xi/mpttjins caused by some uterine flisease. The 'physician , Ignorant of the cause of suffennpVJ Pps uphi trcatmcnt until large bills are m\de. JTh ffering patient gets no bcttcr\Jjit > rcasba.afythe wrong treatment , but probably \vors5T _ nrfjppr mndjcffip Mlyo Tr Ptnreft's Fq ynrtn | PrcscTinlion. directed to the cause \yonTq nave cfitireiy ' rfMnoyi.'rt iKe/d / iscase _ , there by dispelling alTinose OibCfeiSing sy m p- toms , and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. It has been well said , that "a disease known is half cured. " Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a Scientific medicine , carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician , and adapted to woman's delicate system. It is made of native. American medicinal roots and Ms perfectly harmless InJts effects in any crin < iiwin < iT ni > c 1frr\nCe \ _ As a powerful invigorating tonic "Fa vorite Prescription" imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs dis tinctly feminine in particular. For over worked , "worn-out. " run-down. " debili tated teachers , milliners , dressmakers , seamstresses , "shop-girls , " house-keepers , nursing mothers , and feeble women gen erally , Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the greatest earthly boon , being un- cqua ] da ' an appetizing cordial and rc- storativcto'fiic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv ine "Favorite Prescription" is unequalcd and is invaluable in allaying and sub duing nervous excitability , irritability , nervous exhaustion , nervous prostration , neuralgia , hysteria , spasms , St. Vitus's dar-cc , and other distressing , nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the titerus. It induces refreshing sleep Mid relieves mental anxiety and despondency. . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach , liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as candy. By He was a man with a . .irge , rotund personality , and he stood tt the bend of a long line of impatient men , women and -children who were waiting for a chance to pay their fares and get past the turn stile of the elevated railway at Madison and Wabash. He was searching leisurely in his pock- ts for the necessary nickel , but it wasn't in any of them. Finally he produced a' ? . " > bill , which he slowly and methodically unfolded and passed over to the monopolist inside the ticket office. "Dom his bastely hide ! " fervently ex claimed a man with a strong Tipperary accent , half way down the line. "O , you mustn't talk that way ! " said a. sweet , feminine voice directly behind him ; "but thank you , ever so much ! " Chicago Tribune. Wise Child. "But , Tommy , " said his mother , "didn't your conscience tell you you were doing wrong ? " "Yes'm , " replied Tommy , "but I flon't believe everything I hear. " Phil adelphia Press. ELEVEN YEABS OF ECZEMA. Hands Cracked and Bleeding : Xall Came Off of Finsrer Cutlcura Remedies Bronglit Prompt Relief. "I had eczema on iny hands for about eleven years. The handa cracked open In many places and bled. One of my fingers was so bad that the nail cauie off. I had tried so many remedies , and they all had failed to cure me. I had eeen three doctors , but got no relief. Finally I got a cake of Cuticura Soap , a boK of Cuticura Ointment and two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent Pills. Of course I keep Cuticura Soap all the time for ray hands , but the one cake of Soap and half a box of Cuticura Oint ment cured them. I recommend the Cuticura Remedies to all suffering with eczema. Mrs. Eliza A. Wiley , R. F. D. No. 2 , Liscomb , la. , Oet. IS , 1006. " A Bumper Crop. A Kansas man was telling storlea with reference to the propensity of farmers to overstate the size of their wheat-crops , says a writer in the Sun day Magazine. lie told of an elderly man in Topkn , who was engaged in the hardware business. A farmer , who i was always giving skilfully padded accounts - ' counts of his wheat-harvest , called on j the hardware dealer one day , and be gan Ills usual boasting. "You don't tell me ! " was the polite rejoinder of the hardware man. "Well , 11 have' been doing some farming this j year myself. " j "I didn't know that , " said the farmer. I "I always supposed your interests were j confined to the city. So you have a j farm , eh ? What do you raise ? " j "Wheat , just wheat , " was the reply. I "Good crop this year ? ' ' j "Fine ! " ! "llow many bushels ? " { "I don't know jut how many bush- j els. " replied the hardware man , in a slow , hesitating tone , calculated to im press every word upon his listener ; i "but my men stacked all they could outdoors , rind then stored the rest of It In the barn. " Almost Enviou.s. In 1S85 there was a great celebra tion in London in honor of Dr. Samuel Johnson , and among those in attend- .ance was the Australian "crack" crick- . cter , Bonner , then at the lic'ight of his fame. ; As one of the guests , says the com- j piler of the recently published "Let- i ters" of the late Dr. George Birkbeck Hill , Bonner's health was proposed. His response was noteworthy. "After seeing the way in which Dr. Johnson's memory is revered , " he said , with great simplicity , "I am not sure that I would not rather have been such a : in than have gained my own great est triumphs In cricket. " TWO TERRIBLE YEARb. The Untold Agonic * of Neglected Kidney Troubles. Mrs. James French , Go Weir street , Taunton , Mass. , says : "When I began using Doau's Kidney t Pills I was so run down and mis erable that I coul'l hardly endure it. Terrible pains In the back attacked me frequently , and the kidney secre tions were much disordered. I was a nervous wreck , and there seemed no hope. Doan's Kidney Pills brought my first relief and six boxes have so thoroughly cured my kidneys that there has been no return of my old trouble. " Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. Tno Story of a Charm. A titled English lady has a story ot a woman who had a little Japanese charm given her. Every time she wore it some mischance kappened , and she generally fell ill. Her sou at last took the jewel to the keeper of the Japa nese curios in the Paris museum and requested to be informed what the charm represent. "This , " said the ex pert at once , "is the emblem of sick ness. " The woman never wore it The "Walter's Explanation. "I'll have some poached eggs this morning , " said the thespian , as he seat ed himself at the breakfast table. "Very sorry , sah , " replied the dusky waiter , "but our eggs won't poach. " "What do you mean ? " "Why , sah , you see , dis is a 'dog town , ' where de theater folks comes to try dere plays , and consumquently de condition of de eirgs is such as to evade poachiu' , sah. " Yockers Statesman. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT\ similatfog tbeRjotfaiuIRegula- Bears the ting Hie Stomachs andBowels of bS Promotes ness and Rest.Coniainsneittor OpiioiuMorphuic norMiocral NOT NARCOTIC. lBCorloaaStS& + Wemfad- Aperfect Remedy forConsfipa- lion , Sour Stomadi.Dlarrtaa YvrQrms onvalsionsFcvcrish- For Over ness ardLass OF SHEEP. inik Signature of iny Years NEW YOEK & 'Guaranteed underttetoocjari " i Sa HBi" " Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE cENrxun COMPART , NEW YORK orrr. CHICAGO. Sustained improvement in lie promin ent industries imparted a more buoyant tone to current activity. Muck of this is due to the favorable weather transi tion , which is not only proving highly beneficial to the crops , but has also in jected unprecedented strength into the leading lines of retail trade here and throughout the interior. Stocks of sea sonable goods now undergo sharp and widespread reduction and the fear of carrying over too largely is a diminish ing factor. Wholesale dealings for for ward deliveries steadily gain in dry goods , footwear , clothing and hardware. There is also an unusually large num ber of visjting buyers in the markets for general merchandise , and orders by the road salesmen indicate that country store keepers in the Chicago tributary region do not curtail in their selections of fall and winter needs. Failures reported in the Chicago dis trict number 22 , against 14 last week and 25 a year ago. Dun's Review of Trade. NEW YORK. Long awaited seasonable weather has- further improved retail trade and crops , slightly enlarged reorder business with jobbers and made for more confidence in the placing of orders for future delivery. In some sections also collections have re sponded in a measure to more favorable influences , but payments are still back ward. Taking the wholesale trades gen erally there is a rather more quiet tone perceptible , part of it due to the smaller than expected reorder business and also to the advance of the season of midsum mer quiet. There is a disposition this year , more perhaps than in recent years , to await clearer indications of the out turn of the growing crops , and there is less assurance as to booking ahead in many lines than was quoted at this time in 190G , but the trade situation proper unquestionably shows a more optimistic feeling than was possible a few weeks ago. Business failures for the week ending June 20 number 1G3 , ngainst 1G1 last week and 173 in the like week of 100G. Canadian failures were thirteen , against twenty-two last week and nineteen a year ago. ago.Wheat Wheat , including flour , exports from the United States and Canada aggre gated 2SoO,222 bushels , against 3.37G.9G2 last week and 1,7GOG09 this week last year ; for the last fifty-one weeks of the fiscal year 107,172.082 bushels , against 132,710.004 in 190fG. . Corn exports were 9S8.S32 bushels , against 783,455 last week and 5"i2,9G7 a year ago ; for the fiscal year to date , 70,520,313 bushels against 109,350.293 in 1905-G. Brad- street's Commercial Report. Chicago Cattle , common to prime $4.00 to $7.10 ; hogs , prime heavy , $4.00 to $0.03 ; sheep , fair to choice , $3.00 to $ o.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , 90c to/91c ; corn , Xo. 2 , 51c to 53c ; oats , standard , 41c to 42c ; rye , Xo. 2 , Sue to SGc ; hay , timothy , $14.00 to $21.00 ; prairie , $9.00 to $15.00 ; butter , choice creamery , 19c to 24c ; eggs , fresh , 12c to 14c ; potatoes , new , per bushel , $1.25 to $1.40. Indianapolis Cattle , shipping , $3.00 to $ G.G5 ; hogs , choice heavy , $4.00 to $ G.10 ; sheep , common to prime , $3.00 to $4.75 ; wheat , Xo. 2 , S9c to 91c ; corn , Xo. 2 white , 52c to 54c ; oats , No. 2 white , 44c to 45c. St. Louis Cattle , $4.50 to $0.90 ; hogs , $4.00 to $ G.OO ; sheep , $3.00 to $5.75 ; wheat , Xo. 2 , 90c to 91c ; corn , Xo. 2 , 50c to 52c ; oats , Xo. 2 , 43c to 44c ; rye , Xo. 2 , Sic to S3c. Cincinnati Cattle , $4.00 to $6.00 ; hogs , $4.00 to $ G.OO ; sheep , $3.00 to $4.85 ; wheat , Xo. 2 , 93c to 94c ; corn , Xo. 2 mixed , 53c to 54c ; oats , Xo. 2 mixed , 4Gc to 47c ; rye , Xo. 2 , SGc to SSc. Detroit Cattle , $4.00 to $ G.OO ; hogs , $4.00 to $6.30 ; sheep , $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , Xo. 2 , 92c to 94c ; corn , Xo. 3 yellow , 54c to 53c ; oats , Xo. 3 white , 4Gc to 4Sc ; rye , Xo. 2 , SGc to S7c. Milwaukee Wheat , Xo. 2 northern , 99c to $1.00 ; corn , Xo. 3 , olc to 52c ; oats , standard , 43c to 44c ; rye , Xo. 1 , SGc to S7c ; barley , standard , 75c to 76c ; pork , mess , $15.95. Buffalo Cattle , choice shipping steers , $4.00 to $ G.50 ; hogs , fair to choice , $4.00 to $6.40 ; sheep , common to good mixed , $4.00 to $5.00 ; lambs , fair to choice , $5.00 to $7.25. Xew York Cattle , $4.00 to $6.50 ; hogs , $4.00 to $6.GO ; sheep , $3.00 to $5.00 ; wheat , Xo. 2 red , 95c to 97c ; corn , Xo. 2 , 60c to G2c ; oats , natural white , 50c to 51c ; butter , creamery , 22c to 25c ; eggs , western , 13c to IGc. Toledo Wheat. Xo. 2 mixed , 92c to 94c ; corn , Xo. 2 mixed , 55c to 56c ; oats , Xo. 2 mixed , 45c to 47c ; rye , Xo. 2 , 7Sc to SOc ; clover seed , prime , $9.30 Brief News Items. Smith , Garbut & Co.'s large sawmill , near Lyons , Ga. , was destroyed by fire. Loss , $100,000. The Goethe and Schiller monument pre sented to the city of Cleveland by Ger man citizens was dedicated the other day. Fire at Willow City , X. D. , destroyed fifteen business places and practically wiped out half the business portion of the town. Mrs. J. Wilbur Chapman , wife of the Presbyterian evangelist , was operated on at South Bend , Ind. , her right leg being cut off at the knee. She is reported to be doing well. Prescott Keys of Concord , Mass. , has withdrawn his contest of the will ofhis uncle , Henry Milliken of Boston , which gee nearly $1,000,000 to Harvard uni versity , Tuskegee institute and Waltham hospital. WHY OKCHAFcO CONFESSED. He Claim * It Wax for Ilcliul of Coa- Mcieixce tiuil Xot for Kcvrard. Of no less absorbing iuteivst than tin story of his crimes was th tostimonj which Ore-hard , the multi-assassin , guvt iu the final stage of his cross-examina tion at Boise , Idaho. lie wept wher he told how he came to confess. Ir openiug this part of the cross-examlna tion Ilichardsou tried to show that co ercion had been attempted by the pen itentiary authorities to obtain a con fyssion from Orchard after his arresl for the Stcunenberg assassination. Or chard testified that he was placed in a new cell house , in a steel cage , witL solid walls and steel-barred doors. He was takeu to the penitentiary without his consent and not advised as to his rights. Hewas permitted to speak onlj to the guard and to the man iu th ( next cell , who was Bob Wetter , a con deuiued murderer. His meals wert served in the cell. He was not allowed to exercise nor leave his cell , nor was he permitted to read books or papers After about ten days Detective Me Partland visited the penitentiary ant ] Orchard was taken to the clerk's oflicc to talk with him. He did not kuo\v who he was , until he was told that the visitor was a Pinkerton detective. lie complained to McPartland about the treatment he was receiving and thej had a mutual talk about their past lives , McPartland telling him about his part iu the Molly Maguire affair , Later McPartland talked about the Bi ble , telling how Kiug David was a mur derer aud had repented and how St , Paul had been transformed from a bad man into a good one. McPartland told him about "Kelly , the Bum , " who was implicated in the Molly Maguire out rages and was permitted to leave the country after turning State's evidence , Orchard said McPartland had not beec the first to turn him to thoughts of re ligion ; he had been thinking about their himself. McPartland told Orchard thai he believed he had something to dc with the Steunneberg murder and thai he was aided by officers of the West ern Federation of Miuersf but made no promise to him if he would confess , Richardson took Orchard back to his boyhood in Canada and had him tell that he went to a Methodist Sunday school when a boy and to church with his mother and his first wife. He at tended Quaker meetings with his moth er and had also gone to Christian En deavor meetings. He never belonged tc the Salvation Army. Returning to the first visit with McPartland he said the detective upon leaving told him to think over his past life. The next time the detective came he told Orchard he could do the State aud country a great deal of good and that the State usually act ed fair with its witnesses. Orchard said he knew what McPartland was af ter and had no faith in what he said about the State's treatment of its wit nesses. On the third visit Orchard com menced to tell the detective some of his wrong doings. McPartland theu told Orchard he was a tool of the Western Federation. About this time he had made up his mind to tell all , as he did not care to live any longer. In fact he was tempted to kill himself. He did not want to put the crime on auybody else , but had thought of his past life and what a monster he had been. He did not care much what happened to him and yet he was afraid to die , for he believed the grave did not end it all. A Bible was sent to him by a mis sionary society iu Chicago , and after reading in it he came to the conclu sion that he would be forgiven if he freely repented and made a clean breast of his crimes. Since that time he has never been in doubt He had told Steve Adams , who by this time had been brought to the penitentiary also and occupied the same cell as Or chard , that he intended to kill himself with the crystal of his watch , by cut ting au artery. He said he belonged to Colburn Lodge of Masons and knew that Peabody , Bell , Goddard and others whose lives he sought to take were high degree Masons , but did not know that Steunenberg was. Even after he confessed he contemplated suicide. His confession he believed to be a duty to God , country , society and himself. He did not get this language from McPart land. Steve Adams was arrested on the strength of Orchard's confession. Upon his promise to the penitentiary authorities he urged Adams to make a confession and said that the truth would come out some time. He told Adams then that if he ever got out he would "cross the pond , " meaning that he would go to Europe. He did not say this because any promise of escape hadrbeen held out to him. He had nev er received a promise of immunity. Lnvra Repealed by Duma. Three obnoxious laws were repealed bj the Russian douma , as follows : Provid ing for the punishment of persons ex pressing approval f political cnifcies ; ex cluding from military service persons ac cused f political crimes , or under sus picion , and penalizing private instruction in Poland. The douma voted for tfie abolition of the re-establishment of field court-martial for the punishment of civil ians implicated in spreading revolutionary tdeas in the army. CroUer "Wlms Derby. Richard Croker , tke one-time master o : New York City , as the leader of Tam many Hall , who has been living in Eng land and Ireland for several years , and devoting himself to the breeding of race horses , achieved the greatest distinction of the English turf when his 3-year-old colt , Orby , ridden by the American jockey , Reiff , won the Derby race at Ep som Downs. The stakes amount to $32- 500 , and Mr. OVoker is said to have won $100,000 additional in bets at the prevailing odds of 10 to 1. - First , that almost every operation in our hospitals , performed upon women , becomes necessary because of neglect of such symptoms as Backache , Irregularities , Displace ments. Pain in the Side , Dragging Sensations , Dizziness and Sleepless ness. ness.Second , that Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Compound , made from native roots und herbs , has cured more cases of female ills than any other one medicine known It reg ulates , strengthens nnd restores women's health and is invaluable in preparing- women for child-birth and during- the period of Change of Life. Third , the great volume of unsolicited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn. Mass.- many of which arc from time to time being published bv special permission , give absolute evi dence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkhain's advice. Lydia E. Piakham's Vegetable Compound For more than 30 years has been curing Female Complaints , sv.ch as Dragging Sensations , Weak Back , Falling and Displacements , In flammation and Ulceration , and Organic Diseases , and it dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation tc Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn , Mass , for advice. She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years , and before that she assisted her mother-in-law , Lydia E. rink- ham in advising. Thus she is especially well qualified to guide sick women back to health. Write today , don't wait until too late. There is NOTHING TOO' Nothing Too GOOD for the Americas- people that's why we started , Good to make Cascarets Candy Cathartic. The first box made- For the its appearance in 1896 , and the enthusiastic endorsement of American People the people has been bestowed upon Cascarets ever since. The sale today is at the- rate of OVER A MILLION , BOXES A MONTH , proving that the American people recog * nize , that what is BEST FOR THEM is none too good. Why this enormous patronage ? The answer is simple : Cascarets are pure , clean , sweet , , mild , fragrant , harmless but effective little tablets for the treat ment and cure of Constipation and all Bowel Troubles. They are put up in neat little enamel boxes , easy to buy , easy to carry ( in vest-pocket or purse ) , easy to take and easy of action. , always reliable , always the same , they "work while you sleep and wake you up feeling fine in the morning. They not only regulate tne movement and stimulate the muscular walls oJ' the bowels , but they keep the ENTIRE CANAL CLEAN and antiseptic , forcing- out and destroying all disease germs that breed in the accumulated filth unless- promptly and regularly discharged. Therefore , they are a great preventive oi disease , and may be taken continuously as a precautionary measure. The new Pure Drugs Act , adopted by Congress on June 30 , 1906 , and lot effect January 1 , 1907 , is a GOOD LAW and means better and PURER" drugs for the American People. We endorse it and will live up to it io > SPIRIT and LETTER , an easy task , as we have always been actuated' by the same principles and no changes are required in our formula or pack * age. age.We adopted OUR OWN PURE DRUG LAW in 1895 when the first- box of Cascarcta came on the market and have lived and worked and pro * duced under it ever since. To-dayafter a record of nearly 100,000,000 boxes sold , Cascarets STAND' the greater in PURITY , QUALITY and MEDICINAL MERIT than any other preparation for Bowel trouble in all the world. This should be a great argument for any one , to try Cascarets AT ONCE , and be healthier and happier for it. Some people have CHRONIC CONSTIPATION with all the horrors derived from it ; others have HAB. ITUAL CONSTIPATION from carelessness and neglect , but nearly EVERYBODY has OCCASIONAL CONSTIPATION , which , if not promptly taken care of is liable to result in its degeneration into the worses forms and cause great suffering and perhaps death. Cascarets , if taken patiently and regularly , will remedy all of thess- awful troubles , but if taken promptly at the very first sign of an irregular , , ity of the Bowels , will act as the FINEST PREVENTIVE ever discovered and will keep all the machinery running in good order. 75 $ . We advise you to get a little lOc box of Cascarets TO-DAY and carry it in your purse or vest pocket. Take one when you feel anything unusual' obTT yA0 br ° els'.Your own Druggist will sell you the little box , under- GUARANTY of satisfaction or money refunded. All druggists , lOc , 25c , SOc. EXCURSION FARE FROM CHICAGO Boston and return - $21.00 Double Track Going- dates July 9 , 13 , 22 , 23. 25 , 26 , 27 , 23 , Ausast 6. 10. 20. 24. September 10,14 , 24 , and 23,1907. Jamestown Exposition , ( Season tickets via New York one way , $36.80 Norfoik , Va. , and return (60 ( days " ' * $30.70 Other routes and fares. Golnir'dates daily until Nor. 30.1907. Philadelphia , Pa. , and return . . . . $20.00 OnlythrouuhsleepinsrcarrouteviaNiajraraFalls. Goinsdates July 12.13,14.15and 16,1907 Saratoga Springs , N. Y. , and return - $18.76 Goin ? dates July 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 and 7,1907 : also in September for Grand Army meeting ( so m dates and-fares to be named later ) . Various New England Resorts , one fare plus $2.00 for round trip , Based on one way fares in effect January 1,1907. Goinjr dates July 9,13. 22. 23. Autmst 6.10. 20 , 24 , September 10 , 14. 24. and 28,1W7. Various Canadian Resorts , one fare plus $2.00 for round trip , Based on one way fares in effect January 1,1907. Goinpr dates daily June 1 to September 30,1907. Attractive optional trips by Lake and River , including St. Lawrence River and Rapid * in some cases without additional charje , are also offered in connection with the above. Libeial stopover privileges. Full particulars can be obtained by writing- GEO. W. VAUX , Assistant General Passenger and Ticket Agent 135 ADAMS SIVEET , CHICAGO UndereMtlmated Hi * Powers. "Yes , I was out in all that storm. My rain coat was soaked , and " "But you can't soak a rain coat , you know. " "I can't , hey ? Here's the check for it. " To convince any woman that P.tx- tlne Antiseptic will improve her health and do nil we claim for it. We will send her absolutely free A large trial box ot Paxtine with book of Instruc tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. cleanses and heals mucous m e m - brane af fections , such -as naaai catarrh , pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by femi nine ills ; sore eyes , sore throat and mouth , by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles la extra ordinary and gives Immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and rec ommending It every day. so cents at druggists or by mall. Remei. r , however , IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TKTIT. THB B. PAXTON CO. , Boston , S. C. N. U. - - - No. 27 1907. Food Products Libby's Vienna unequalled for their delicious taste. They are put up in most convenient form for ready serv ing1 , requiring- only a few min utes preparation. They have a fine flavor and freshness which will please every one. An Appetizing Dish. Drop a tin of Libby's Vienna Sausage in bolhjg "Eater until heated ( about 15 minutB ) and serve as taken from the tin od3 small plate garnished with lettuce ieateS. . Aik your grocer for Llb r'/and Inalit upon getting Ubbj' * . Libby , McNelll & Libby , Chlcajjo