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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1910)
. .. J r FAMOUS DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION. i DVcncnC '-S-j mw bbii His Mrji-- " ..tlll W URDU AC TAM JMiHFlil PJ " VS w l V Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Rdief-PemaMBt Care CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS new. fail. Purely reget. able act surely but gently oa the liver. Stop after. dinner diitrcu cute iodi. gestion improve tha complexion brightea sue eyes. dsiaU Ml, 5maU Dote, Saull Price GENUINE must bear igneture : For Rheumatism r Irivo oot pain. Strengthen nerves. Balld op vt.t'ta. At Ilniir Sor- S1.H1. No cum. no pay. AS rt for frwi trlul offi-r. Western lCleclroiKxia Oo.. lh-vt. 11. Lot. Anculcs. Cal. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CZrsnrrt and beautifies Uie hslr. I'r.tn..ttt a laiuiiaut piowth. N-ver Falls to Hotoro Orty Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures trmlp iwrtrn & hair Iftilui Vic.ndtlAIt PniEgwU MADE PROMISE OF SECRECY Therefore Caller Could Only Guess Who Had Taught Youngster to Stand on His Head. "The venerable countess of Cardi gan, the author, you know, of that wicked book of memoirs, thinks the modern girl is too athletic and hoy denish," said an English visitor to New York. "The countess of Cardigan often tolls of a young man who was drink ing tea with a beautiful girl when her little brother slipped into the room. ""Mr. Mannering. the boy asked, 'can you stand on your head?' " '.No. said the visitor. laughing, '! don't believe I can. "'Well. I can." said the boy. 'Look here. "And he stood on his head very neatly in tiie corner. "'Ha. ha!' laughed Mr. Mannering. "Aid who taught you that?' 'The urchin frowned. "'Sister.' he said, 'told me I must never tell" Public Library Has Roof Garaew New York's first roof garden to open this season was opened on the roof of the Hamilton Pish park branch of the public library. It is a chil dren's paradise, with gayly striped awnings to protect against sun ox showers, and on the newly painted green tables big vases of lilac and dogwood blooms. And over in one corner of the rof garden Hans Christian Andersen's story of "The I'gly Duckling" was read out of a big blue and gold fairy book by Miss Eva Wheelock. the as sistant librarian, who rejoices in the nickname of "Peter Pan." Twenty live small children on 2f small bam boo stoo'.s surrounded Miss Wheelock, and at exciting crises in the tale the tiny stools would tip away forward till their legs were lifted several inches in the air. When the exciting mo ment was past down they settled with a thump, only to rise again a few minutes later. They literally hung on the words of the speaker. New York World. Despisery. Little Girl Mother, that's such a nasty little boy; whenever he passes me he makes a face. Mother Very rude of him. I hope you don't do it back. Little Girl Oh. dear, no! I simply turn tip my nose and treat him with despisery. Plenty of Time. Flanigan Phot would yez do if yez lived to be 200 years old? Lonigan Oi don't know jit. Brook lyn Life. There's no reason whj" a woman shouldn't take boarders if she wants to. but t-he shouldn't try to board a moving train. A Breakfast Joy Sweet, Crisp. Golden-Brown Post Toasties Read- to serve from the package with cream no cooking necessar. "The Memory Lingers" Pkgs. 10c and 1 5c FOSTL'M CEREAL CO.. Ltd., l.:tle Creek. Mich. EEivssaSsalialaW 'RU-M WM POR 1 IA BTaTaTSBV MCkUTFtK aW WITTLfc iaiar allYCK Jr ipiyy- &Zcc&&z plpl LONG LIST OF FLAVORINGS Well to Keep on Hand or in Memory Ingredients That Are Most Savory. Many flavorings are used In neat dishes, some of which are familiar to all cooks onions, carrots, turnips and garlic being perhaps the most widely known. IJutter, too, may be regard ed as one of the most common sea sonings, and of course makes the dish richer. Meat extract is also used for flavoring meat dishes and other foods, as are also, though less commonly, similar extracts made from clams or other "sea food." The following list includes these with various others, a number of which it is convenient to keep always on hand: Onions, car rots, green peppers, parsnips, turnips, tomatoes, fresh, canned or dried; cel ery tops and parsley, either fresh or dried; sage, savory, thyme, sweet mar joram, bay leaf, garlic, lemon rind, vinegar, capers, pickles, olives, cur rant jelly, curry powder, cloves, pep per, corns, celery seed, meat extract, chili sauce, pepper sauce, or some sim ilar hot or sharp sauce, and some kind of good commercial meat sauce. SERVING IN PROPER MANNER Uncooked Vegetables Must Be Put on Table So That Appetite May Be Tempted. Uncooked vegetables. such as onions, radishes and cucumbers, should always be prepared in an appetizing manner for the table. A large Ber muda onion may be sliced to form sections resembling those of an orange. If these are placed in a saucer-shaped dish and the sections di vided with curled parsley the result will be very pleasing. Cucumbers cut into cubes and chilled are nicely served with olives, surrounded with parsley or upon lettuce leaves. Rad ishes, especially the small red ones, may be cut into thin slices and mixed with salads. They look tasty among wax beans in a vegetable salad. By cutting the thin skin of a radish into flower-like petals and folding them back, each radish will appear like a miniature rosebud. Cucumbers cut lengthwise and hollowed make pretty receptacles for a vegetable salad. Olla Podrida. This Is a savory mixture of rabbit, oysters, vegetables and herbs. Clean and parboil the rabbit, disjoint and put in an earthen baking pot or cas serole with a dozen oysters, a pint of good consomme or broth, a bay Unf. mace, thyme, parsley and salt and pepper to season. Cook about an hour, dish the meat on a platter, strain the mixture and return the gravy to the stove in a saucepan. Thicken with a tablespoonful of flour stirred smooth in a quarter cupful of butter and add it to two minced anchovies and a tablespoonful of white wine. Pour over the meat and surround with vari ous vegetables, such as cabbage, tur nips, onions, peppers, beans and car rots that have been cooked together until tender. The name olla podrida means a medley. Chicken Broth. Clean the chicken and separate it at the joints. Remove all the skin and fat. Cover the chicken with cold water. Add one tablespoonful of salt, one saltspoonful of pepper, one small onion sliced. Simmer until the chick en is tender. Remove the best part of the meat, and put the bones and gristle back and simmer until the bones are clean. Wash and soak two tablespoonfuls of rice half an hour. Strain the broth. Remove the fat. Put the broth on to boil again, and add to it the rice, and the nicest por tions of meat, cut into small pieces. Simmer until the rice is tender. Add seasoning to taste, and serve at once. A few spoonfuls of cream may be added if desired. Velvet Collars. Though the velvet band around the throat has been worn for some time, it Is too becoming to be lightly dis carded. Stunning new bands are be ing shown in it crossed by slides and buckles set in seed and pearls and Parisian diamonds. Some of these have a group of three bars in the middle of front with an other at back to serve as clasp; others have the bars at inch wide intervals around entire collar. The velvet comes in several widths, from a half inch to two inches. Often instead of a straight bar or slide the jeweled effects are arranged like a Greek cross or are oval. The Draped Toga. There has come about a fashion of wearing an immense! j long and wide draped garment over one's smart aft ernoon lrock. It is of the color of the gown and is edged with a wide band of fur or a deep fringe. It is thrown around the body some what as a toreador throws on his scarf. only in a more classic fashion. It sweeps down over the right hip, goes across the chest, over the left shoulder, across the back and is caught with a buckle at the right hip. When gracefullj- done it is exceed ingly pretty on a slender figure. It may be of chiffon or gauze. It must be soft and it is prettier when sheer. Veal Croquettes. Make a cream sauce of one table spoonful of butter, two tablespoon fuls of flour, one cupful of cream or milk, one teaspoonful of onion juice, a little salt, pepper and paprika; one beaten egg may be stirred in. the pan left one minute and removed from the fire. Add to this two cupfuls of minced veal, a little ham. chopped mushrooms, sweetbreads or truffles. Any two more of these ingredients are good mixed, but he veal alone may be used. When the mixture is cold, form into small cylinder or pj'ramid shapes, egg and bread crumb them and fry in boiling hot fat for two minutes. , Bread Omelet. j Boil a cupful of milk and pour It i over a teacupful of breadcrumbs. Let stand for some minutes. Break six eggs into a bowl and stir until mixed Do not beat them. Add the bread and milk, season with salt and pepper and I turn into a hot pan containing a spoon ful of boiling butter. Fry slowly and when brown turn and brown on the other side. MS Ifywaucn -" aVSaMLaasiBBr ''mWf " -- J Are j-ou still breeding scrubs? The hoe killed the weeds but made little mulch. If j-ou are readj to plant do not wait upon the moon. Roiled milk is good for chicks and will help bowel trouble. Colony houses are of two kinds stationary and movable. Where there Is a will there Is a way to clean the farm of weeds. Where there is a will there Is a way to clean the farm of weeds. A good farm level costs little com pared with its worth and usefulness. There Is something wrong on the dairy farm that does not have a few bogs. If .here is one clean farm in the neighborhood, they can all be clean, or nearlj' so. Do not plant trees when the soil Is wet and stickj ir it is liable to be packed too firmly. Feeding the dairy cow is one of the first things that the successful dairy man must thoroughly understand. Cow-testing associations, started some years ago. have been a wonder ful help In weeding out unprofitable cows. Roots of young trees should never be allowed to become dry. Cover with earth or wet sacks while waiting to be planted. Whitewash the trunks of the fruit and orchard trees with lime. This will repel borers, bark beetles and other insects for a time. Plant plenty of hay crops. Work stock and dairy cows must have roughage if they are to do their part in making the farm profitable. Perhaps the most effective and sat isfactory method of making a ewe own her lamb Is to place her in a hurdle where she can eat and com fortably lie down. Ten j'ears ago the quality of the range horses on many of the large western ranches was so Indifferent that carload lots sold as low as $10 a head. Now they will bring $l."i0. It will not cost the farmer more than ten cents an acre to select out of his wheat bin the plumpest and heaviest kernels for seed. He will then improve his crop and yield. Much kindness and respect for ani mals can be taught children by giving them pets A pet pony has often taught children valuable lessons about the horse and given them Incentives for outing in the fresh air. We should select our hens from some good flock that is well bred and where the hens have a uniform ap pearance and then buy a first class rooster from some breeder who has a different strain of the same breed, so as to avoid inbreeding. The question of the proper amount of seed to sow is never settled. Tv& and one-half bushels of average oats, sown broadcast, are not too many on average land, average seasons; and about one-half bushel less when drilled in. is looked upon as about right by most oatsgrowers. Common wood ashes, with a few poultry droppings, are a cheap and most approved fertilizer for the grape vines. Too rich a fertilizer, such as stable manure alone, produces a growth so rank that rot is apt to be encouraged, while the flavor of the fruit is impaired by the nature and rapidity of growth. Thorough tarring of corn will, to a great extent, prevent pulling by crows and blackbirds, but perhaps gophers and ground squirrels would only laugh at it. Moisten the seed with warm water, then stir in coal tar at the rate of a teaspoonful to the peck, be ing sure to stir until every kernel is black. Dry with ashes, land plaster or slaked lime. Don't imagine, unless you have an extraordinary large bank account, that you can go out and buy good dairy cows any time you take a no tion. The only way to get an effkieut herd is to raise your own cows. You may start in by buying some good foundation stock, but when this has been done figure on improving the Irr1 liv hiivinsr srnrwl liitllu nnH raicimr .. . .- j a o - ...w ...... ....... .0 the heifers from -our best milkers, j As to the The lungs are the life. When a man can breathe lustily no ordinary malady can kill him. I know an old chap who was given up three years ago by seven "able" physicians and oae "able" Mir.: eon. Their verdict was: "He ra : last over three weeks." He is Mill in the ring, while three of the doc oif have cashed in their checks. A nan can live 40 days without food, a i w cays without water, aad a few ' Do not plant corn too deeply. Few farmers barrow quite enough. Harsh treatment never pays with a cow. Keep the plow sharp and have It cut all of the furrow. The most important citizen of Amer ica today is the farmer. Provide sprinklers, sprayers and stakes for your garden. The big shoveled cultivator Is a thing of the past, or should be. Roth the grass and the exercise gained in getting it are helpful to the hog. A knowledge of marketing products to the best advantage is an important factor in profits. The best prize winnere are usually raised in incubators. Remember the main object of farm ing this j-ear is to provide and main tain a comfortable home. Every farrowing pen should have a good fender to prevent the sow from lying on and smothering the pigs. Ewes and lambs run well over young grass land, but they must be kept moving, so that all is grazed evenly. Until about seventy years ago poul try keeping was almost wholly a home industry, producing for home con sumption. It Is not too late to prune the or chard. If you could not do it sooner, do it now. Gather up the dead branches and burn them. Keep the walks in your garden neat and attractive. Fence corners with weeds and poorly kept walks are sure evidences or a careless gardener. In all regions where snow lies Ions on the ground, winter poultry keeping is necessarily intensive, but that is no reason for continuing intensive meth ods through the summer. The corn plant, as well as other plants, must draw its nourishment from the soil. In order for the plant to be well nourished the soil must have a large amount of plant food. Build a place for martins to brood on jour farm. Their "chirps" are cheerful and their services valuable. They drive off birds of prey and greatly reduce insect depredations. It is alwaj-s perplexing to know what varieties of strawberries to plant. The old varieties which are know n in the community should be re tained until the newer sorts are test ed on a small scale. Eastern growers mostly grow fruit as a side issue and take what they get both when they gather and when they sell it. while the western grower makes a business of growing his fruit and gets what he asks for it. Ail needed improvement around the place should be made before the sea son for cultivation arrives. Sheds for manure, shelter for stock and room for hay should now have atten tion. Let the silo have consideration while j-ou are building. Alfalfa has proven a great success all over the country west of the Mis souri river. It is extending in popu larity north into the Dakotas and south into Texas, with everj' evidence that it will become the adopted tame hay crop for those sections. The young pigs must have drj nesta I and the bedding should be changed j frequently and lime, or some other disinfectant sprinkled in the nest when it is cleaned. Many young pigs become infected with disease through their navels coming in contact with damp and foul nests. Give the girls a chance to have a garden of their own. Light work in the garden will greatly benefit health and furnish helpful exercise in the open air. Information about plants is essential to good education and should not be neglected. Let the girls be come interested in the garden. The most important time in the call's life comes when we take it upon ourselves to feed and care for it. and . at this time we should exercise a lot j of kindness and gentleness, for . roughness creates distrust and lear, ' and the chances are that calves will j never lorget their first lessons and ita- j pressions. In the I'nited States and Canada the subject of soil inoculation has as sumed a peculiar significance in con nection with the successful growing of alfalfa. First established on our western coast, alfalfa has gradually spread to the east, leaving in its wake more fertile fields, better grain crops, larger herds of cattle, and more nu merous flocks of sheep. Those old blackberry canes, if left among the new ones, will add greatly to the discomlort of the women folks when the berries ripen and are being picked, but if you remove them now, the way will be clear for berry pick ing, while a damaging ditch some where In the field or meadow-land also may be effectively filled with these A-orthless brush at little or no real espense. Lungs minutes without air. The lungs are j the oul. A man can live without stomach, bowels, heart, liver, kidneys. splen or brains but he can't live without air! The air cleans the blood. Driuk air by the million cubic feet and j-ou will never die. Don't wait for th tank of oxygen to come alonjs DMnk deeply of the common ether. Have it pure acd plug yourself ful' every hour. IN HIGH SOCIETY. sft4at First Burglar I've been in the very best houses lit town. Second Burglar I am much sought sfter mj'self. UNSIGHTLY COMPLEXIONS The constant use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for toilet, bath and nursery purposes not on! preserves, purifies, and beautifies the skin, scalp, hair and hands, but prevents inflammation, irritation and clogging of the pores, the common cause of pimples, blackheads, redness and roughness, yellow, oily, motny and other unwholesome conditions of the complexion and skin. All who delight in a clear skin, soft, white hands, a clean, wholesome scalp and live, glossy hair, will find Cuticura Soap most suc cessful in realizing every expectation. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are ad mirably adapted to preserve the health of the skin and scalp of in fants and children, and to prevent minor blemishes or inherited skin hu mors becoming chronic, and maj be Msed from the hour of birth. Cuticura Remedies are sold throughout the civ ilized world. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.. sole proprietors. Roston, for their free Cuticura book. 32 pages of invaluable advice on care and treatment of the skin, scalp and hair. Wedding Fee Counterfeit. A well-dressed stranger entered the office of Justice William R. Williams. Montciair. X. .!.. and after shaking hands astonished the justice by say ing: "I'm here to redeem that coun terfeit $10 bill I passed on you. Two years ago I called on you with my girl and two witnesses and you mar ried us. I handed j-ou a $10 bill. I had a counterfeit in my pocket book that I'd carried for several years. I never missed it until jvsterdaj. Then I remembered that I'd accidentally handed you the bill." The caller pro duced a good $10 bill, but the justice refused to take it. "Don't let that worry you. m.v dear fellow." he laughed. "I never knew it was a counterfeit. No kind of money sticks to me over night. I'm married, mj--self." From Habit. Life Insurance Agent The company has rejected your application on the ground that j-ou lied in your answers. Why did you say that j-our circulation is good? Mr. Koloom Honest. I couldn't help It. That's my business. You see. I'm advertising manager on the Daily Boomer. Puck. It costs more to live now than it did a hundred years ago, but they had no baseball then. What He Knew. "You can tell me the names of the twelve apostles. Sam?" said the pret ty Sunday school teacher one morn ing. Sam's face fell, and he shifted his weight from one foot to the other. "Can't do it, ma'am," he said, sor rowfully; and then his eyes bright ened: "but I can call off all of the pitchers in the league teams." he vol unteered. Harper's Magazine. How's This? We offer One Ilundmi Dollars Rnrard for any easr ot 3tar(ii that raonuv to curat by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J CHENEY CO- Tolrdo. O. Wr. thr undrrslcnrrt. have knoan J. Cheney for t!i- tut 15 jears. and believe him perfectly hon tirablr In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by hi Orra. Walding. Kivvan A SUrviv. Wholesale DrucKl'ts. Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is takrn Internally, acting dlrectlv upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the systeni. Testimonials sent free. iTke 75 cenu par bottle. Sold by all Hniczista. lake Hall's Family I'tlls for constlpaUoa. The Quoter. "You never quote poetry in j'our speeches?" "No." replied Senator Sorghum; "quoting poetry is too often like send ing an anonymous letter. A man re sorts to it when he wants to say some thing and shllt the responsibility of authorship." CUT THIS OUT Anl mall to the A. II. I.-w!s Moillcln" Co., St. l.oiiis. Mo., and tlnv will s-nl yoi in. n 10 d.iv treatment of .VATCKIVS RKMK DY XI! talI-ts) fiuarant'-d for niiou iiiatlsin. Constifatlon. Sic's Ileailarhe. I jv r. Ki.lruv and lUo'.d I!P"a:fS. Sold by nil Dnmslsts. l?fttr than Pills for IJvir Ills. It's free to you. Write today. High Finance. Knicker Why did you pay $W.?. for that hat? Mrs. Knicker I had to do it to make my check book balance. The know: man who plants a ladder never what will come up. Mr. 'Wlnlow, Soothing Syrap. Fnrrhliuifn t-imn. ".iftrnstni-icuiav. msueesln- aiuD.aturiiin.i'uresWiDtltMlic. x:.i Ujiuo. ;ie that dies Shakespeare. pays old debts.- Afraid of Ghosts Many people are afraid of ghosts. are afraid of germs. Yet the ghost is a fancy and the germ is a fact. If the germ could be magnified to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. Germs can't be avoided. They are in the air we breathe, the water we drink. The germ can only prosper when the conditioa of the system gives it free scope to establish it self and develop. When there is a deficiency of vital force. languor, restlessness, a sallow cheek. a hollow eye, when the appetite is poor and the sleep is broken, it is time to guard against the germ. Yon can fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold en Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power, cleanses the system of clogging impurities, enriches the blood, puts the stom ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition, so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. "Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol, whisky or habit-farming drugs. AH its ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine of known tMrosmos and with a record of 40 years cures. Accept no substitute there is nothing "just as good." Ask your neighbors. The Valuable Match. There was a loud splash, and a mo ment later a dripping head appeared above the waves. On the end of the dock was a stevedore nonchalantly lighting his pipe. "Help, man!" cried the chap In the water. "Can't j-ou see I am over board? I can't swim." "How often have you been down?" asked the stevedore, shielding the flickering match from the wind. "Once. I believe, but hurry up. man! Give me a hand!" "You wait! You have two more times yet to go down, and I have only one match. I'll catch you on the last trip." Exchange. A Quick Cat. Some years ago the proprietor of a hetel in southern New Hampshire told the following story: He said that ! when he was a boj" he had occasion to go into the garret of his house one j morning and that the family cat fol lowed him up the stairs. One of the . windows was open, and when they en ! trred the garret n frightened mouse jumred out of the window, and the cat. jumping after it. caught it in mid air and. whirling round, jumped back again into the same window. The Man Invasion. The witch out for a moonlight j jaunt on her favorite broomstick. had just escaped neing run aown oy an aeroplane manned by a joj--rider. "Oh. this is simply maddening!" she cried, hj-sterically; "to think of ! man invading the one field of which i we women have had a monopoly for ' centuries! And I believe I heard the l brute saj as he passed: 'Oh, j-ou kid witch!'" A Grievance. Hewitt It is no longer fashionable j for a woman to have a small waist. Jewett I know it; jou long-armed t follows have a cinch. If You Have Common Sore Eyes, if lines blur or run together, vu need PKTTIT'S EYE SALVK. iV. All drug ' g's-ts or Howard Rnn., ltuflnlo. X. Y. We are our best when we try to be it not for ourselves alone, but for our brethren Phillips Brooks. Lewi' SinN' Binder straight ;V cigar i made to satisfy the Mnoker. i A mustard plaster can always be depended upon to do something smart GfldtU&L 2ae6tam When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn't any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble? Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "ejjlwaweeawBwe riaaBn.:S:M::::' V:ammBBmmmlmii:H'- '-'''ammmtaflaammaBWBmE aammWaBBmammmL sWi; say a few words in praise of your medicine. When I began taking it I had been very sick with kidney and bladder trou bles and nervous prostration. I am now taking the sixth bot tle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and find myself greatly improved. My friends who call to sec me have noticed a great change." Mrs. A. H. Sanborn, Irasburg, Vermont. We will pay a handsome reward to any person who will prove to usthat these letters are not genuine and truthful or that either of these women were paid in any way for their testimonials, or that the letters are published without their permission, or that the original letter from each did not come to us entirely unsolicited. - What more proof can any one ask? For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and bertt, and has thousands of cures to its credit, MaaVfeMrs. Pinkham invites all sick women aTsnaF, to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. MICA UEFIlNCECsllWattr Starch I makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 10c. Few people A Double-Header. "What kind of a candle do you want, my little man?" "It's for pa. and, by what ma say about him, I guess it must be the kinl that you burn at both ends." Pity is akin to love, and if a young; man has an obese bank balance it isn't diflicult to find a girl to pity him. Gives oae a sweet breath ; clean, whit term-free teeth aaiuepticaiiy cieaa ..,U J iLMiin(i,i that Krvath after smoking dispels ail disagreeable perspiration ana ooay oaors i preaated by dainty women. A qeick for sore eyea and catarra. A Eule Paxtinc powder d solved m a gbss of hot water nalcn m deltcfilful antiseptic SO- bjtioa. possessing extraordiaary ckasBiig, germicidal and heat ing power, sad absolutely harra U, TW m. Samiile. 50c a large box at druggifl or by maiL THE PAXTOH TOILET CO., BosTOH. Mas. PATENT jiinr dims. M-pai;" lunik ami a.tYlc- KHKK. K-r.ihlivh.-tllx-U. KlInrrraMAI .. Ha, k. W AlalM.U.U KptBimmHaBeMBa! Bsaa7AfisB9keKla?la?lfiSc5lli2Bsss. LaBKUIKrSiSnffWiealnl aHaHRMlSlklSlBscQSB mm m Send postal f or la- If la- m Free Package I I 1 1 ! k of Pax tine. I Better aa more economical I taaa liquid aatiseptlcs I FOB All. TOILET USES. I aaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaBBavaeaeaaaaaaj aLr.-'f-MiaiMmmt Fitchville, Ohio. My daughter was all ran down, suffered from pains in her side, head and limbs, and could walk but a short distance at a time. She came very near having: nervous prostration, had begun to cough a good deal and seemed melancholy by spells. She tried two doctors but got little help. Since taking fjydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound-. Blood Purifier and liver Pills she has im proved so much that she feels and looks like another girl. Mrs. C Cole, Fitchville, Ohio. Irasbunr. Vermont. MI feel It mv dutv to 4.Ym k. t-mllHAt.i AXLE GREASE is the turning-point to economy in wear and tear of wagons. Try a box. Every dealer, everywhere STANDARD OIL CO flacurpunttcU) Stop ! taking liquid physic or biff or little pills, that which makes you worse instead of curing. Cathartics don't , cure they irritate and weaken the bowels. CASCARETS make the bowels strong, tone the muscles so i they crawl and work when they do this they are healthy, producing right results. CASCARETS ioc a box for a week's treatment. AUoaiKRists. Uisgest jailer ia the world. Milium boxed a mouth. DAISY FLY KILLER EZESZsd. a'.cUau,rtift,ina- UU Alt Seaaeav l vct&Kii .rjitti ti.I or tip fr. Bill nt mi! or injur v any ihio. fiakrnirdcf-r-ur.Ofa:itVlrr. ut abtgrnWlfM0e. lMROLPKlSIKS IVllHaValb-aW. Bructl;, ftte ! 1 mSCmWaL8Svmmumum Ul:l ThtaptfR's Ewt Wattr