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HOUSEHOLD
MATTER^
%*>
_
Cold Henna K«k«d.
A tasty way or using up cold beans
liakiHl “Sow York style”—tliat Is, with*
cut molasses—is to moisten them with
a little melted butter and milk or
‘•ream, mould them into cakes, sprinkle
them lightly with grated cheese and
hake in the oven until they are
browned.
Knrebtt of Toinntoea.
A tomato rarebit makes a substantial
dish. Itre.ik into small pieces a cut
of soft American cheese and mix with
it a cupful of soft bread crumbs. Sea¬
son with salt and paprika and a little
onion juice. Turn the mixture into a
saucepan and stir until it is hot and
smooth. Serve at once on toast.
Ambrosia,
Grate one small cocoanut. Cut up
one-half dozen oranges in small pieces,
remove the seeds; cut one-half dozen
bananas in round slices. Put a layer
of orange in a deep bowl, sprinkle with
sugar, then put in some of the cocoa
nut, then banana and some shredded
pineapple, until all is used. Sprinkls
the top' with grated cocoanut.
Appetizer. .
A savory ap*eHm>r to be served be
Tore the oyst dinndl'boeiwS j or,fruit cocktail it i
r 'rtt fetoklte
<« leaf ffcgc ftlaced has been; on j[ littfe piece
spread with
vjEftovy past! an4 on %1 lettuce leaf
aont of crea.^ ch e«se sprinkled lightly
'with the -owdered yolk of a hard*
boiled es»
Thimlile Cakes.
Thimble cakes are gold and silver
like real tliimbles and like some kisses.
Take one eup of powdered sugar,
wiiites of six eggs, half cupful of flour
sifted, with a rounded teaspoon of bak¬
ing powder. Beat yolks and white of
eggs separately, add sugar to yolks and
last the flour. Bake in small mold*
These are silver thimble-;.
IleJmonlco Cream Boll,
Teel and chop fine a half dozen row
potatoes. Add just enough cream sauce
to hold the potatoes together, the
amount depending on the size of the
potatoes. Put into a buttered casser¬
ole or shallow baking dish and set in
a pan of hot water in the oven. Cook
until the potatoes are done, then roll
over like an omelette. Let them stand
a few monjents longer to crisp slightly,
but they must not brown. Turn on
to a heated dish and garnish with thin
slices of e^sped bacon and parsley.
Scalloped Macaroni.
Macaroni scalloped with oyster plant
Is one of the nutritious dishes of a
vegetarian restaurant. Put a layer of
boiled macaroni in the bottom of a
buttered baking dish and over it a
layer of boiled oyster plant cut in
small pieces. Season with salt and
pepper and turn some thin white
sauce. Add another layer of maca¬
roni and then of oyster plant and white
sauce and continue until all are used.
Have the top layer macaroni. icaront. mere There
should be white sauce enough
the mixture creamy.
with»buttered bread crumbs
TSuce firm, mild-flavored onions a I
quarter of an inch thick,, lay the
slices for three hours in weak salt
water. Rinse dry and drop in hand¬
fuls into deap fat, boiling hot, says
Good Housekeeping. Watch them
closely and skim out the minute they
are browned and crisp; Drain on
blotting paper, and either pile in a hot
dish or use as a garnish. Potatoes cut
lengthwise into straws, soaked mid
fried with the onions, help to make
them among the best garnishes for
a well-broiled steak or good roast.
Mints for,; the
Housekeeper^
Oak is darkened for decorative pur¬
poses by fumigation with ammoniated
vapor.
Maple syrup served with cottage
cheese after the fashion of griddle
cakes is a favorite dish in New Eng¬
land homes.
To cure a ring worm apply a strong
solution of borax and water three or
four times a day and cover the place
with the fine powder very often.
An experienced laundress recom¬
mends washing white silk embroidery
in lukewarm soapsuds. After washing
rinse in clear lukewarm water, dip
in gasoline and shake dry.
To clean silver easily, dissolve three
teaspoonfuls of baking soda in a quart
of boiling water, put in the silver, Jet it
remain five often minutes and then
rinse in hot water and wipe it.
ceased to find
“needles for
hey were de
or two at
and in the -kitchen to test vegetables,
cake, etc.
If a pan of sliced raw onions is
placed Upbtheria in a they room will in absorb wbich the there poison is
upMpvent the disease from spread
ipery onions should be renewed
.day.
r The scrapings of a jam pot (about
one tablespoonful) if heated, will, witli
the addition of two teaspoonfuls of
hot water and the same of lemon
juice, make excelllent sauce for a
boiled pudding.
Oil cloths should never have soap
used when washing them, as the lye
will destroy the colors and finish. They
are greatly benefited and last much
longer if a thin coat of varnish is ap¬
plied once a year.
A box of powdered borax should al¬
ways be kept on the sink shelf. A
little added to the water in which the
dish towels are washed will help much
to keep them clean, and at the same
time keep one’s hands soft and smooth.
There are many tricks In the use of
lustre paints which the amateur must
learn if she would be successful in the
decoration of china, chief among them
being to have the surface of the china
absolutely free from dust and lint, and
to shake the liquid often and well
while using.
The “Dead Line,”
Look around the world to-day, and
see what some of the men who have
long passed the “dead line” are doing,
and what they have accomplished.
L/iok at the young old military lead¬
ers ia little Japan who conquered
great Russia. Oyama was 20 year*
past his fatal line when he won his
great victories, and all of his ?ofp£
commanders were past Bib Marquis
Ito, the grand Old man of Japan, her
greatest Statesman, and the one who
has done more than any other to make
Japan what it is to-day, is still active
in the service of his COuiitry.
A Smiling Face Pays.
There Is a minister living out of.
the Bast Side who is a great joket.
He loves to tell his jokes at the table,
and, when he does so, the other mem¬
bers of the family are expected to
laugh. The minister has a son twen¬
ty-one years old, who gets awfully
tired of the jokes. Recently- he got
In the habit of scowling when his
father Would spring his alleged witti¬
cisms. The minister noticed this and
thereafter it was impossible for the
son to secure a second helping of any
of the food his father served. As a
result the Son would sometimes leave
the table hungry. One day the family
had turkey for dinner and the son de¬
cided to get all he wanted of It, Oven
if he had to laugh at his father's
jokes. Soon after lie^ had eaten his
first and allowance the' youi^^^K h?TN|j|tfier laughed. sprang It a
pun
wasn’t a simple was a roar,
which only ended ’when he fell otT
hlB chair. When the son had pulled
himself together again his father
looked sternly over his glasses.
“Ahem! Henry,” he said, picking up
the carving knife and fork, “pass me
your plate and let me help you to
some more of this excellent turkey."
—Kansas City Journal.
The Gray Wolf a Fighter.
From a private letter written by Dr.
Edward L. Munson, of Fort Asslna
boine. Mont., we are permitted to
quote a sentence or two which gives
a notion of the power of the gray
wolf, a matter that was referred to
in an article recently printed in these
columns. Dr. jpunson says: “A fort¬
night ago I ran into an immense old
dog wolf which must have weighed
150 or 160 poimde. I had only three
dogs with me v the rest of the pack
was off after alack rabbit. The dogs,
all fine fights®, all started for the
wolf, and he whippeck them in one,
two, three ordAr, In less time than it
takes me to^b^Hit. One he threw
over another, a cut ba^W^onisheil anciyashed the in third the chest dog's
of
throat. I do n*L think that he could
have done up three 100-pound wolf¬
hounds as easily, though these dogs
of mine are all good fighters and sav¬
age brutes, and one was an 85-pound
staghound.”—Forest and Stream.
Sunday-School Attendance Record.
The four children of Mr. E. Hall
worth, jeweler, of Great Harwood,
England, have created a unique rec¬
ord by their ’remarkable attendance
a t the Congregational lona^Sunday-school Sui j|
Illness. Alice
Ann, Ann. the the oldest oldest daughter, daughter. aged twenty
one, has never missed for fifteen
years, and Clara, aged eighteen,
James, aged sixteen, and Archibald,
ag«d thirteen, have respectively a rec¬
ord of twelve, thirteen, and elever
years’ unbroken attendance.
— 1 — .....— ■ .. .....
Cheap and Filling Food.
Now these be the virtues of the
cereals; they are cheap, easily swal¬
lowed and of moderate nutritive value.
There is an element in the average hu¬
man mind, half puritanic, half stingy,
which is inclined to count as a virtue
the ingestion of any food which is not
especially attractive but believed to
be nutritious. In ^ fact, to eat that
which is cheap ana filling is one of
the petty vices.—McClure’s Magazine
Lacking in Stylo.
Tailor (standing off and Inspecting
him)—You don't like that eveiij^ fe
suit? Why, my dear sir, the fit is ab¬
solutely perfect, every line.
Cholly—I know it. It fits me too
well. The other chaps will say I
couldn’t possibly have had it mad;
to order.—Chicago Tribune.
KNIFED
Coffee Knifed an Old Soldier.
An old soldier, released from coffee
at 72, recovered his health and tells
about it as follows:
“I stuck to coffee for years, although
it knifed me again and again.
“About eight years ago (as a result
of coffee drinking which congested my
liver), I was taken with a very severe
attack of malarial fever.
“I would apparently recover onh^Paf-',
start about my usual work
fer a relapse. After this had tTeen re¬
peated several times during the year I
was again taken violently ill.
“The doctor said he had carefully
studied my case and it was either ‘quit
coffee or die,’ advising me to take
Postum in its place. I had always
thought coffee one of my dearest
friends, and especially when sick, and
I was very much taken back by the
doctor’s decision for I hadn’t suspected
the coffee I drank could possibly cause
my troubles.
“I thought it ox-er for a few minutes
and finally told the doctor I would
make the change. Postum was pro¬
cured for me the same day and made
according to directions; well, I liked it
and stuck to it and since then I have
been a new man. The change in health
began in a few days and surprised me.
and now, although I am seventy-two
years of age, I do lots of bard work
and for the past month have been
teaming, driving sixteen miles a day,
besides loading and unloading the
wagon. That’s what Postum in the
place of coffee has done for me. I now
like the Postum as well as I did coffee.
“I have known people who did not
care for Postum at first, t®*awer, hav¬
ing learned to make it properly a word¬
ing to directions, they hav^wcome to like
it as well as coffee. I. never ip a
chance to praise it.” Name givfb by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Look for the little book, “The i
to Weliville,” in pkgs.
*
HEREDITY OR ENVIRONMENT.
Or Tommy Stringer Versa# the Advocates
of Euthanasia.
The automobile show in Boston has
had no more wideawake visitor thail
Tommy Stringer, the famous deaf,
dumb end blind boy. After he bad
been ibe bounds Tommy knew more
about tbe various exhibits than most
of the people who had actually seen
them.
This Tommy Stringer was first taken
to the Perkins Institution at South
Boston about thirteen years ago. Deaf,
dumb and blind from birth, he seemed
devoid of intelligence as well. The di¬
rector of the Perkins School, Mr. Anag
nos, says that Tommy was nothing but
P human puppy. It was months be¬
fore Tommy could be made to grasp
the connection between b-r-e-a-d and
the pieces that were Rut into his
mouth. Time went oil, year followed
year. In 1903 Tommy graduated from
one of the Boston grammar schools
equipped to enter the Mechanic Arts
High School in the autumn. To say
the least he was as bright ns most
sixteen-year-old lads.
Clearly here is an excellent example
of what education, environment, op¬
portunity-call it wliat you will, can
do. Yet there are moonstruck per¬
sons who would have laws making it
necessary to kill just such babies as
Tommy Stringer. Only the other day
a bill was introduced into the Ioivn
Legislature which would seem to cover
a case of tUi” kind. There are spook
worshippers' who will tell you that
there is nothing in environment. Ilerid
ity’s the whole thing, they say. If
you are born a fool you'll remain a
fool. “You can't make a silk purse
out of a sow’s ear” is one of the
choice premises of this school of
barnyard philosophers. Human nature
is always the same, let them tell it.
BuJ human nature isn't always the
same. “Human nature” is a very
vague term and can be made to do
yeoman service in any cause. It is
human nature for same people to be¬
lieve that the Constitution follows the
flag, and it is human nature for some
of us to believe with Air. Dooley that
the Supreme Court follows the last
election. Some people show their hu¬
man nature by eating other people,
while human nature leads a few to
mind their own business, which, reve¬
lation aside, is all tbe law and tbe
prophets. Human nature is as varied
as environment. Better environment,
which is only a high sounding term
for a better show in the world, leads
men, women and children to higher
planes of thought and deed as surely
as fire burns and caldron bubbles. Un¬
der right conditions mankind turns to
the good, the true, tbe beautiful. If
that statement is not true the upward
journey of humanity is a myth and
civilization is a delusion.
Plenty of people can see the physical
betterment that results from improved
environment. A good many can see
the relation between mental vigor and
life-conditions. It is in the realm
of the moral nature, so-calied, that my¬
opia and blindness are conspicuously
common. People who freely admit
that mental and physical health are
out of the question under certain con¬
ditions expeet moral health under
KTu/iUm 111 blame. lowland, bm
only themselves to It seems
never to occur to them that they are
themselves measurably related to their
environment. They would not look for
Susan Anthonys among the Hotten¬
tots, but they apparently expect to
find tbe flowers of civilization where
civilization shows itself chiefly as a
perpetual grind for enough to keep
body and soul together.
Now if widened and widening oppor¬
tunity has proved good for a part
of the human race it is fair to pre¬
sume that it might prove good for the
whole human race. It is sheer non¬
sense to talk about meat not being
for babies and all tbe kindred twad¬
dle of the opponents of freer, fuller life
is tbe veriest bosh. Hon. Grover Cleve¬
land might have died an Erie County
hangman. Tommy Stringer would have
remained a human puppy, but for
changed environment, and if heredity
were ail that some people think it is,
they would be eating human sirloin
in some South Sea islands—Henry
Waterman, of Padanaram, in the New
Bedford Standard.
England'* Pauper Clergymen.
No case can be more touching than
that of the impoverished clergyman in
England, struggling to keep up social
appearances, while be and his family
want bread. Ten cases ere reported of
deaths of clergymen in the workhouse,
one of the number, we are told, bav
iug once been wealthy, and spent
large sums in charity. This takes
place in a land where luxury is at its
greatest height, when fabulous sums
are given for baubles, and even for
rare postage stamps, and it is said
with that half a million of dollars a
day changes hands at bridge; while
millions untold are expended on the
forces required to purcfiise the mental
luxury of thinking imperially, and to
pay the cost of unnecessary wars. The
benefit of the Meals bill might at all
events be extended from the parent
whose child goes to school without
breakfast io the clergyman whose son,
when warned of the dinner hour, re¬
plies: “It is not my turn for dinner
to-day.” Think of the lot of the pau¬
per clergyman's wife! Depreciation
of tithes, and of the rents of glebe,
with increase of the cost of living,
with overcrowding of this, as of the
other learned professions, are no doubt
the immediate cause. But if tbe faith
of the people in the doctrine were un¬
shaken, the preacher and his family
xvould hardly be left to starve.—To
ronto Sun.
Married or Single.
Speaker Cannon recently received a
letter from a Washington hostess ask¬
ing him to compel members of Con¬
gress to explain in tbe Congressional
Directory whether they were married
or single. This hostess complained
that she had been entertaining certain
young statesmen under the mistaken
impression that they were unwed. She
thought that Mr. Cannon ought to be
held responsible for such impostors,
and she suggested the remedy.
. Lots of 'Em Do.
Some people lost sight of the fact
that of two evils it isn’t always neces¬
sary to choose either.—Puck.
fayln- Paint.
Springtime — after the weather has
become well settled-is painting time,
lbere is no (lust flyiug. nd Insects are
In the air at that time ready to commit
suicide by suffocation ill the coat of
fresh paint. The atmospheric condi¬
tions are also favorable at that season
for proper drying and increased life of i
tin; paint. i witli |
It should e a habit every prop
erty owner every spring to look over
his buildings, etc., and see if they need
“ wMI go'anot tier coine year” but putting whether in the the j
time has not for ,
proverbial ___* - 1 “siitoli -l.l. !_* id time” which ii-liioll shall cllilll
eventually “face pju*\” For one coat
of paint applied just a little before it is
actually needed will often save most of
tne paint on the building by preventing
it from letting go and causing endless
trouble and expense.
Paint lets go because linseed oil.
which is the “cement'’ that holds all
good paint together, gradually decays
or oxidizes, just ns lion exposed to nit (
and dampness Cause°of'Ihe wil: ^°wli decay or^oxi- |
alie trouble in both
rases, and the onV reason, outside apply of
its beautifying effect, that we
paint to wood or iron is because we
want to keep water and ni.‘ away from
them, Live prtint, that is. paint in
which the linseed oil 1s still oily, does
this effectually * hut dead paint,
very oil is
that is* pnint in which the no
longer oily, is no more Impervious to
air and water rum a single thickness
of cheesecloth roJof wifci'fl lie. it then we
app'.y a fresh oily paint befoie
the old p.-unt isMBto. the on lnnl "
new coat wlll^W-siate Wring the old coat.
and the whole will once more
become alive, an* this method of reuo
x-alion may go tm Indefinitely.
Tliis explains why it is heller econo- 1
my to repaint a rifle before It becomes
absolutely iieeVsary than a little iriler.
“”iT„,K',VC> afor"
In the days wliot repainting meant a
general turning of uhings upside down, j
a two-weeks’ “cluttering up” of the
place witli kegs, cuts and pails, a l°t j
of inflammable ana ill-smelling tnaier- utal ;
ials standing around etc the dread of
painting tune was natural. So was the
dread of soap-making tune, of shirt
making time, of cnidle-tnoulding time
and the like. But we live in an age
when soap comes Com thc stoic bet¬
ter and cheaper tlun we can make it,
when shirts are soil ready made for
less than we can lay the materials,
when we can bun coal oil or gas
cheaper than we can make tallow-rum
dies, and when all wflinvo lo do *vlu’ii
we want to repaint i' I to pick out our
colors from the earifat the store and
pay the painter for putting on the
paint.
When il comes to picking out (ho
paint it is not necessary that one
should be a paint chemist any more
than one should be au oil chemist when
buying kerosene, or a leparhneut store
buyer when selecting shirts, or a soap
chemist when buying-fonp. All that
is necessary (o insure a fair show is
some knowledge of tie character of
our paint dealer and the reputation
and standing of the maker of the paint
offered. Nor must 0115 ?xpeet to buy
a pure linseed oil paKQt for flic price
of linseed oil alone. II can lie taken
for granted when nnjj one offers to
sell dollar bills at a disce.int, lie is bail¬
ing a hook for “suekefS.” So it can
be ;aken for granted when any one —
whether mail order house, paint man¬
ufacturer or dealer—offers paint too
cheap, lie is bidding /or the trade of
“suckers,” 110 matter wliat his prom
<t«AO i .'v>
Tints sn 1 >1 !isi 111 o stores
imanv
KS.ftS-atlfSlWlS.mi'' fwdnet^, differ
Im
con
tained, but practically alike in having
their liquid portions composed essen¬
tially of pure linseed o'i:. The com¬
petition of the better class of paints
lias driven inferior goods practically
out of Hie market, and no manufac¬
turer of standing now pats out a poor
paint, muler his own name at least.
As to guarantees on paint, they can
be taken for wliat they are worth.
Any reputable manufacturer will make
good any defect actually traceable to
the paint itself and net to improper
use or treatment of it. The really im¬
portant guarantee which the paint
buyer should exact froin his dealer is
that 1 he paint is made by a manu¬
facturer tiiat knows liif busiuess and
that the paint itself lias a record. If
lie secures this guaranee he can af¬
ford to chance the rest (|f it—the paint
will undoubtedly give good service if
properly applied acconing to direc¬
tions.
It is a commercial and industrial
necessity for all this section of the
country that the denudation of the
White Mountains shall be prevented,
and this view of the hatter was for¬
cibly presented by Mr. Theophilus
Parsons, treasurer of* the Lyman
mills, says the Bostoi Post. Gover¬
nor McL-ane, of New Hampshire, did
not state the case aay too strongly
when he declared that “forest preser¬
vation in the White Mountains means
a hundred times mor* of benefit to
other states than to New Hamp¬
shire.”
Extinction of Chinchillas.
Chinchillas have teen so much in
request for furs in the last few years
that the species is in danger of extinc¬
tion in Chili and Bolnpu.
AILING NG VtW
Keep the K’dney. m tr« *n:t « the Kidneys
Will Keep*^ j. Well. '
Sick, suffering .$ Id women are
learning the true of bad backs
.7€?.r;“75,§é§ ‘@‘
553}? '.V
;»* T .vT-i N4 ‘9',
V's ‘
Soon after I began tak.ng Doan’s Kid¬
ney Pills I passed several gravel
stones. I got well and the trouble has
not returned. My back is good and
strong and my general health better.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bos.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Too Busy.
Some of us think life is a holiday,
Whep the fact is, we hhrdly have time
enough to shout “Horiray!” and hi
happy.—Atlanta Const' union.
aBiamaMw.fW" faiUMHEW
To Cure, Refunded by Your Merchant. So. Why Not Try IT? Price, 50c, Retail.
,how to cure
tbeiA Mrs. M W. G.
Dark, of Groesbeek,
Texa’i, says: “Back¬
aches' hurt me so I
could hardly stand.
Spells of dizziness
and sick headache
were frequent and
the action of the kid¬
neys was irregular.
WORLD’S GREAT BRIDGES.
Romans Were the First Great Build¬
ers of Stone Spans.
There is a great, hope for the fu¬
ture development of bridges in that
there seems to be a tendency among
financiers more closely to consider
the question of maintenance as relat¬
ed to original cost in large construc¬
tion enterprises, and this will un¬
questionably induce them to build
more lately of stene and brick than
has been the case until this genera
tion, says the Metropolitan Magazine.
In the construction of stone bridges
the Romans were the first great build¬
ers. Bridge building was in fact one
of the inost interesting problems they
had to solve. In architecture and
construction they were indeed a most
original and artistic people, too little
appreciated and studied by modern
Anglo-Saxon3. They were the forerun
erg 0 f our p reg fent construction. Until
their time the Greeks had not reached
’hat. measure of perfection now so
much considered, and theirs was the
culmination of the slow artistic de¬
velopnierit through the ages. The
Romans, however, had presented to
them untried problems to be solved
which called for new methods of con¬
struction, and of these the bridge or
aqueduct was one of the most inter
esting. They were practically the
g rs ^ people to use the principle of the
arch and voussoir construction,
rh e use of the arch , principle, , , . while ...
sometimes attributed to the Chinese,
was practically unknown to the an
cients of the western civilization until
the Roman conquest. It has been con
ten( , e( , that thc idea of the arch
Etruscans, g-iP'o ~ if this »«. is evolved true, it by is ,b in¬ e
deed coming near to Rome,
Such wonderful bridges as the one
built by Caesar Augustus at Rimini
or the Pont du Gard, the great aque
A situated abo „ t twenty miles from
Mimes built liiillf across tKa the Rivpr River nnr(1 Gard
and attributed to Agrippa; the bridge
of St. Augustus at Rome started by
Adrian, and many others too numer¬
ous to mention have scarcely ever
been surpassed. There seems to have
been a period between this time and
the twelfth century when few bridges
of importance were built, and it was
between the years 1178 and 1188 that
the famous bridge of St. Benezat at
Avignon was built. Several other
beautiful bridges soon followed, sim¬
ilar to it in construction. Then came
thc early Renaissance bridges, also
too numerous to mention—the old
Pont Neuf being, perhaps, the finest
in Paris, the famous bridge attrib¬
uted to Anunanati, the architect, in
ithe sixteenth century at Florence, al¬
so the largest stone bridge ever built
in the world, with a span of 183 feet,
and a rise of 60 feet over the Allier at
Vieille Breonde, France, or the bridge
at Chester over the Dee, 40 feet high
with 200 feet span.
BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUGS
-CURES BY ABSORPTION.
Cure* Belching of Ca*—B.vl Breath and
Bad Stomach—Short Breath—
Bloating—Sour rnotation*—
Irregular lit?art, Etc. -
feet on your etomach. It absorb# the g&a,
disinfects the stomach, kill# tbe poison
germs and cures the disease. Catarrh of
trie head and throat, unwholesome food and
overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely
any stomach is entirely free from taint of
some kind. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will
make your which stomach arise healthy the by undigested absorbing
foul gases from
food and by re-enforcing the lining of the
stomach, the food enabling with the it gastric to thoroughly juices. This mix
cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion,
sweeteus the breath, Heart action stops becomes belching ana
fermentation. strong
and regular through this process.
Discard drugs, as you know from experi¬
ence they do not cure stomach trouble.
Try that does a common-sense A soothing, (Nature’s) healing method
cure. sensa¬
tion results instantly.
We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will
do this, and we want you to know it. This
cSer may not appear again.
696 GOOD FOR 25c.
Send this coupon with your name
and address and your druggist’s silver, name
and 10c. ia stamps or and we
have wifi supply you a sample Mull’s free Anti-Belch if you
never used
Wafers, and will also send you a cer¬
tiorate good for 2oe. toward the pur¬
chase of more .Belch Wafers. You will
find them invaluable for stomach trou¬
ble; cures by absorption. Address
Mull’s Gkape Tonic Island, Co., 'll. 328 3d
Ave., Rock
Give Full Address and Write Plainly.
AU druggists, 50c. per box, or hy mail
upon eeeipt of price. Stamps accepted.
Love is mostly romance, but mar¬
riage is all matter of fact.
TERRIBLE ITCHING SCALP.
Eczema Broke Out Also on Hands and
Limbs—An Old Soldier Declares:
“Cuticura is a Blessing.’'
“At all times and to all people I am
Willing to testify to the merits of Cuti
cura. It saved me from worse chan the
torture of hades, about the year 1900, with
itching on my scalp and temples, break and af¬
terwards it commenced to out on
my hands. Then it broke out on my limbs.
I then went to a surgeon, whose treat¬
ment did me no good, but rather aggra¬
vated the disease. 1 then told him I
would go and see a physician in Erie. The
reply was that 1 could go anywhere, but
a case of eczema like mine could not be
cured; that I was too old (SO). 1 went to
an eminent doctor in the city of Erie and
treated with him for six months, with
like results. 1 had read of the Cuticura
Remedies, and so I sent ior the Cuticura
Soap, Ointment and P.esolvent, and con¬
tinued taking the Resolvent until I had
taken six bottles, stopping it to take the
Pills. I was now getting better. 1 took
two baths a day, and at night i let the
lather of the Soap dry on. I used the
Ointment with great effect after washing
in warm water, to stop the itching at
once. I am now cured. The Cuticura
treatment is a blessing, and should be
used by every one who has itching of the
skin. I can’t say any more, and thank
God that He has given the world such a
curative. Wm. II. Gray, 3303 Mt. V ernon
St., Philadelphia, Pa., August 2, 1905.”
When a woman gives a man a
piece of her mind she loses just that
much—and he gains nothing.
FITS.St. Vifus’ Danee.-Ncrrous per¬
cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Serv •
M trial bottle and treatisa Ire-.
Db. H. K. Kline, Ld., S31 Arch St., Pkila.,Pa.
Some whaling ship may yet blunder upon
the Nort h Pole by accident.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sy:up for Children
teething,softens the gums,reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain,cures wind eoi i ; 25 ; a bottl;
Folly and failure roost on the same I
perch.—Chicago News._ j
Great Distress Throughout the South
be eliminated by the use of Dr. Big- i
Huckleberry Cordial. It cures Dysen
Diarrhoea, Children Teething. At
25c and 50c per bottle.
The new Virchow Hospital in Ber¬
will have 800 beds. The total cost
construction will reach $5,000,000.
attending physicians will have
from $1400 to $S00 a year.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Kali’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Wo, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and bolievehim
honorable In all business transac¬
and llnancially able to carry out any
made by their firm.
West A Tbcax, Wholesale Druggists, To¬
ledo, O. Mabvix, Wholesale
Waldino, Kinnan Toledo, & O.
Druggists, Curelstakeninternally.ae;
Hall’s Catarrh
ingdlrectly upon the blood and muauous sur¬
faces of the system. Testimonials 9ent free.
Price, 75e. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Ten years ago. with a population of
32,000,000, 3000 technical RrtKBHf" schools, maintained representing nearly j I
all the principal industries, with an
attendance of over 200,000.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by YVoolford’s
The thing that makes a man like a
woman is he can never tell why.
Most married men act as though
they were glad of it—when their
happen to be present.
CRITICAL PERIOD
INTELLIGENTWGMEN PREPARE
and Pain of This Critical Period
Avoided by the Use of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
igS] * *
If her system is in a deranged condi¬
tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy this
or congestion of any organ, it is at
time likely to become active and, with
a host of nervous irritations, make life
a burden.
At this time, also, cancers and tumors
arc more liable to beg’n their destruc¬
tive work. Such warning symptoms flashes, diz¬ as
a sense of suffocation, hot
ziness, headache, dread of impending
evil, sounds in the ears; timidity, pal¬
pitation of the heart, sparks before the
eyes,irregularities,constipation, ble varia¬
appetite, weakness lauded and intelligent /inquietude
are promptly l>y
life when change
etable Compound is the world's great¬
est- remedy for women at this trying
period. E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
Lydia strengthens the
pound invigorates and
female organism, and builds up the
weakened nervous system as no other
medicine can.
Mrs. A. E. G. llvlund, of Chester
town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink
ham, says:
Dear Mrs. Finkham:—
“ I bad been suffering with a displacement
for years and was passing through the eham-o
of life. I bad a good deal of soreness, dizzy I
spellR, headaches, and was very nervous.
wrote you for advice and commenced treat¬
ment with Lydia E. Pinkham's I Vegetable happy
Compound as you directed, and am
to say that all those distressing symptoms left
me, and I have passed safely through the
change of life a well woman.”
For special advice regarding this im¬
portant period women are invited to
write to Mrs. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass
She is daughter In-law of Lydia E.
Pinkham and for twenty-five years has
been advising sick, women free of
charge. Her advice is free and always
helpful to ailing women.
When a man has occasion to boast
of his past he always selects a part
of it that/ others have forgotten.
HICKS’
CAPUDINE
IMMEDIATELY CERES
HEADACHES
Breaks up COLD 5
IN 6 TO H ttOUK.9 (
-fia! Bonk 10c. At Nia
How to Wash Glass.
When washing glassware do not put
It in hot water bottom first, as it will
be liable to crack from sudden expan
j B j 0n< Even delicate glass can be safe
] y washed in very hot water if slipped
' In edgewise.
(p '
EVERY MAN
OWN DOCTOR
A 600-page Illustrated Bm’i, containing
information, showing low to treat
.nd mire diseases with simplest medicines.
The book contains analysis of courtship and
marriage; rearing and management of < liild
ron besides valuable prescriptions, recipes,
’ ad
etc - ...... " 111 be ,JC m mailed, ’ l “ ’ 1 postpaid, 1 to any
dress on rceeipt of SIXTY CLN TS. Address - - -
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE,
110-1 IB Central Are., Atlanta, Ga.
& Company
SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
—ALI, KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mill#, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws.Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs,
Steam Governors. Full line Engines &
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue.
KILL THE LICE
#. Mbf CHICKENS wi'k
PRUSSIAN
LICE POWDER
Sure Death to Lies and Vermin I
j They can'* live where it is. Easy to apply. flock of Dust it in ^
“Killed every louse in iny
250 hens.”—D.Perry, Monroe,Wis.
__Prfce 25 and 50c a Pkg. By mail, 40 and
•ian Remedy Co., St. Paul, Minn.Ii
III
At a certain age, all
girls need the help of a
pure, reliable, tonic
medicine, to establish a
regular habit/that it may
rerrkin wM them,
through suffering, life. /M uc h after ter¬
rible in
years, Is prevented, and
sturdy health assured,
by taking
WINE
OF
WOMAN’S RELIEF
at this critical time of
life. “I gave Cardui to
daughter, ’
my young Maston, of
writes Geo.
Greenwood, Neb., “and
now she is a rosy
cheeked girl,' happy,
light-hearted and gay.'
Strongly recommended
for all female troubles.
Try it.
At all Drug Stores
C 16
You Cannot
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con¬
ditions of the mucous membfane such as
nasal catarrh,uterine catarrh caused
by feminine iiio, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach. these stubborn
But you surely can cure with
affections by local treatment ’) .■ ,
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
discharges ulauiai8 „, stops* and pain; W
inflammation soreness^ successful . .
Paxtine represents the most
local treatment for femiri-ne ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston, Mass.
THE DAISY FLY KILLER roy§ all
Una and
On. ~neC~ ’ “
#flo r Is comfort to »-v. T
m Clean, .OHS nea’ persoui. mu will
not «oll or lulura
mvthlnji. Try them
once and Y 0, » will
never be without
them. 1* tot kept
or dealer*, Kent
i,< ppqhl f >r tlflB#
IUUOI.D bOltIM,
|*:> Dr'iallJ
BrooUjn, 1
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
Removes alT swelling permanent in S to 20
days ; effects a cure
in30to 60davs. Trialtreatment fairer
given free. Nothingcon he
| K Write Dr. H. H. Green S Sons.
Specialists, Box B fibanta, Q?
(At23-'06)
How many wo
men realize that
the most critical
period in existence a wo¬
man’s
is the change of
life, and that the
anxiety felt by
women as this
time draws near
not without
reason ?