The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 08, 1905, Image 3

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    Sy
AIGNED
tee De.
nvestiga-
read to ,
> Society
contains
ations:
removal
lexander,
H. Hyde,
Gage E.
cer and
iety who
ember of
sociates”
into the
ry dollar
1e policy-
any of
0 refund
ould com-
of Presi-
managed
1d should
rganized.
5 mada
busines
thorough.
sts of ite
'S.
extrava.
lave ex-
partment
$10,000,
1 deposit:
for the
rs of the
ILURE
her With
from the
ust Com-
statement
er broth-
by frau-
. the se-
senger &
,"Va., on
ust com-
that they
her with
was not
n answer
» for the
er Com-
ter.
NTS.
e United
rk fran-
wg, fell
ar Steub-
hurt. He
h a shot-
p,
per cent.
nings re-
the third
, law for-
vn mines
that the
a loss.
lgin, who
omen in
) to char-
royed the
d several
the rail-
ough one
announce
arry on a
ne
5 old, an
eland and
Alliance,
,. 04, a
led by a
in near
lian, 60
ough the
, and will
11 locomo-
yvernment
received
ion, mak-
Philadel.
st of this
S.
ion which
sed lease
ks to the
Company
an, presi-
drew the
le to pay
e. Mr.
itcome of
revelation
. hold to-
to pass
had been
Dead.
F. Marsh,
2 United
ives from
pF Hlinois,
v.,’ H1.. ‘He
congress
inth term.
VESSEL
Sunk by
itish
bled the
gton from
ed to be
off the
by the
h vessel,
le to. him
at;
Wp
Bs
bid
* to write her for advice.
—
Crooked Rivers.
The River Jordan has long been
considered the most winding river in
the world, but it is not in the same
class as the White river in Arkansas.
This river flows 1,000 miles in going
30 miles as the crow flies.
FITS permanently cured. Nofits or neryous-
nessalter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer, $2trialbottle and treatise fres
‘Dr.R.H.Krixg, Ltd. 931 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa.
A a Dn
The census of children in Oklahoma the
‘hast year was 204,726.
Chaffee’s Spectacles.
Lieut. Gen. Chaffee has the most re-
markable pair of spectacles in Wash-
ington, They are of enormous size,
perfectly round, and are encased in
heavy rims of black tortoise shell.
When he puts them on they impart an
unusually severe look to his strictly
military features. °
Best British Gunner.
Able Seaman Samuel Hollinghurst
Is said to.be the. best gunner in the
British fleet. Firing with a six-inch
gun, while the war ship Drake was
going at full speed, he put seven suc-
cessive shots through a target measur-
ing six feet by eight, at a distance of
1,000 feet.
Prisoner Can Wear Queue.
Judge Rogers, of the United States
District Court at St. r.ou:s, has given
a Chinaman under sentence for pass-
ing counterfeit money, permission tec
wear his queue in the penit@itiary.
INTERESTING LETTER
WRITTEN BYANOTABLEWOMAN
Mrs. Sarah Kellogg of Denver, Color
Bearer of the Woman's Relief Corps,
Sends Thanks to Mrs. Pinkham.
metuesendipis
The following
lgtter was written
by Mrs. Kellogg,
of 1628 Lincoln
Ave., Denver,
Colo.,to Mrs. Pink-
ham, Lynn, Mass.:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :-
“For five years I
: was troubled with a
Ja y tumor, which kept
3 : rowing, causing me
Mrs. arak Kellogg B onses on EE
eat mental depression. 1 was unable to at~
nd to my house work,and life became a bur-
den tome. Iwas confined for days to my bed,
lost my appetite, my courage and all hope.
. ‘
I could not bear to think of an operation,
:and in my distress I tried every remedy which
I thought would be of any nse to me, and
reading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound to sick women decided
to give ita trind, I felt so discouraged that I
had little hope of recovery, and when I began
to feel better, after the second week, thought
it only meant temporary relief; but to my
great surprise I found that I kept gaining,
while the tumor lessened in size
*‘ The Compound continued to build up my
general health and the tumor seemed to be
absorbed, until, in seven months, the tumor
was entirely gone and 1 a wellwoman. Iam
so thankful for my recovery that I ask you
to publish my letter in newspapers, so other
women may know of the wonderful curative
wers of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
ompound.”
When women are troubled with irreg-
ular or painful menstruation, weakness,
leucorrheea, displacement or ulceration
of the womb, that bearing-down feel-
ing, inflammation of the ovaries, baclk-
ache, flatulence, general debility, indi-
gestion and nervous prostration, they
should remember there is one tried and
true remedy. Lydia E Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound at once removes such
trouble.
No other medicine in the world has
received such widespread and unquali-
fied endorsement. No other medicine
has such a record of cures of female
troubles. Refuse to buy any other
medicine:
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women
She has guided
thousands to health. Address, Lynn,
Mass.
Health is too valuable to risk in ex-
periments with unknown and untried
medicines or methods of treatment.
Remember thatitis Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound that is curing
women, and don’t allow any druggist
to sell you anything else in its place.
DESIGNS and
PATS is
SECURED OR FEE RETURNED
Send postal for our new book, just out : ** What to
Invent, How to Invent, How to obtain a Pat-
ent, How to sell your Patent when obtained;
with instructions relating to assignments, shop
rights, county and state rigtitsand royalty contracts,
JOHN S. DUFFIE & CO.. Pat. Attys., Washington, D.C.
JOHN W.NMORRIS,
NSIO Washington, B.C.
ecutes Claims
Su iccessiully Prosec: te Bureau.
yraiu civil war, 15 adj adicating claims. atty sinca
P..N. U.. 23,:1908.
WCE ETT ETE
CURES WHERE ALL EL
Best Cough Byrup. Tastes G
in time. Bold by di
Be IN ES
NEW DISCOVERY; gives
D ROF S quick relief and cures worst
cases. Send for boek of testim nials and 10 days’
treaiment Free. Dr. H. X. GREEN'S BONS, Atlanta,Ga
TRADE-MARKS
ERE)
A New Death Test.
Although physicians assert that the
possibility of being buried alive can
only occur where a medical examina-
tion has not been made, German
papers state that a stronger, abso-
lutely reliable guaranty for discerning
actual death is still demanded. The
discovery of a new medium for ascer-
taining death, with perfect certainty,
will therefore attract attention. It
consists in injecting a solution of
fluorescine deep into the tissues. If
circulation exists the skin and muec-
ous membranes become very yellow
and the eyes assume the color of
emeralds; if the circulation has
ceased, none of these results occur.
The discoverer, Dr. Icard, proposes
that at least two hours before bodies
are placed in coffins such an injec-
tion with fluorescine be made. If life
is not yet extinct, the injection does
no’ ‘harm, and the coloring disap-
pears.—Medical Record.
Spend Much for Beer.
Wage earners in Baden, Germany,
spend much of their earnings ° for
beer, especially at places where
credit is extended. A government re-
port referring to the subject cites one
quarry where many of the men were
securing from 6 to 9 quarts a day. A
limit of 33; quarts has been fixed by
law since the report was made, the
cost of that quantity being.from 320
to 25 per cent. of the wages received.
It is to Smile.
“Does your paper get out a color
ed . supplement on Sunday?” uskea
the northern visitor of Col. Bilood-
leigh. “Not at all! The negroes reaa
the same paper as the whites!” re-
plied the distinguished editor.—
New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Post Offices in the Alps.
There are several post offices
among the Alps at .a height of
6,000 or 7,000 feet. yne letter box
from which the postman must make
collections. four times daily, is 10,000
feet above the level of the sea.
Appendicitis Fad.
It is all the fad to have appendicitis
at London mow. Princess Victoria
was operated on for the disease a
short time ago, and it set the fashion.
The leading English surgeons say
they are besieged by women who
claim to be suffering with appendici-
tis and must be operated upon.
ULCERS FORTHIRTY YEARS
Painfal Eruptions From Knees to Feet
Seemed Incurable—Cuticura
Ends Misery.
Another of those remarkable cures by
Cuticura, after doctors and all else had
failed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of
Gainesvilie, Texas, in the following letter:
“For over thirty years I suffered from
painful ulcers and an eruption from my
knees to feet, and could find neither doc-
tors nor medicine to help me, until I used
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, which
cured me in six months. They helped me
the very first time I used them, and I am
glad to write this so that others suffering
as 1 did ray be saved from misery.”
Koreans Like Cigarets.
A taste which has enormously de-
veloped in Korea of recent years is
that for cigarets. Native tobacco is
used by the countrymen in their long
pipes, but in the cities and even
among the laboring classes, when they
can afford it, the use of the cigarette
has become almost universal.
To Launder Delicate Muslins.,
Many muslin dresses may be successfully
laundered at home, which, if put in the
ordinary wash, would be hopelessly ruined.
Wash quickly through warm Ivory Soap
suds; rinse, dip in rice water, and dry in-
doors, as the air will frequently fade delicate
colors; iron with a moderately hot iron.—
ELEANOR R. PARKER.
The Pekin robin is becoming naturalized
in the parks of London.
Use Allen’s Foot-Ease.
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and
Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, apowder
tobe shaken into the shoes. Cures while you
walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25¢.
Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent
Free. Address, Allen 5. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
Students at Japanese universities are not
obliged to serve in the army.
H. H, GREEN'S Sons, of’ Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists ia the
world. Bee thelr liberal offerin advertise-
went in another column of this paper.
Japanese dead are buried in a squatting
posture, chin upon knees.
Mrs, Winstow’s 3o0tnin gs Syrup tor children
testhing,solten tas zawms, reduces inflamma-
uon,allayspain,cures wiud colie,23¢c.abottle,
Rome has seminaries represerting eighty-
seven orders.
Piso’s Cura cannot he too highly spoken!
asa cough cure.—J. W. O’Briex, 522 'fnird
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 19),
The American Academy ni Fine Arts in
Rome is ten years old.
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
DUN’S WEEKLY REVIEW
Weakness is Noted in Pig Iron, but
Confidence is Expressed in
Future—Building Active.
‘Warmer weather is needed to re-
store normal conditions, both in cities
and on the farms. The season opened
bright with promise, dealers prepar-
ing for a heavy spring business, but
abnormally low temperature and ex-
cessive moisture retarded consump-
tion, and burdensome stocks must be
carried over unless accumulations are
reduced by clearance sales at bar-
gain prices. A few weexs of hot
weather would greatly improve the
situation, however, particularly as to
be reflected in other industries very
promptly.
A little weakness is noted in pig
iron, but most lines of finished steel
are in good demand and confidence is
expressed in results a month hence,
unless theré should be a serious con-
troversy regarding wages. Other
leading branches of manufacture are
making favorable reports, the rise in
prices of raw material acting as a
stimulus at textile mills, but any ex-
cessive inflation. would prove injur-
ious. Incomplete returns of railway
earnings show an average gain of 7.7
per cent. Foreign commerce at New
York for the last week was also fav-
orable, exports exceeding those of
1904 by $4,837,389, while imports
.showed a small gain of $481,854. The
only development, in the coal market
is the usual monthly agvance in price
of anthracite. Coke ovens are less
active, reflecting the reduced output
of pig iron furnaces, but contracts
are being placed for delivery during
the first half of next year. Textile
fabrics are stronger in tone, because
of the upward tendency of raw ma-
terials, and also on account of the
limited supply of goods in first
hands, often making prompt delivery
impossible.
Failures for the week in the United
States are 198. against 211 last week,
234 the preceding week and 220 the
corresponding week last year. Fail-
ures in Canada number 29, against 19
last week, 11 the preceding week and
20 last year. :
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear............ 52 53
No. 2 yellow, shelled.. .. 50 51
Mixed ear...................... 43 49
Oats—No. 2 white. eee-. 35 34
No. saywhite....... ......0. 34 35
Flour—Winter patent............ . 580 6 00
Fancy straight winters........ 5 45 5 50
Hay=No. 1 imothy....}.......... 1275 1300
Cloyer No. 1.................. 1275 1309
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton........ 2100 2150
Brown middlings.............. 1857 18%
Bran, bulk,...................... 1800 18295
Siraw—Wheat « 675 700
OBE, cree sri ian creas 6 75 700
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery $ 30 31
Ohio creamery.... 20 2
Fancy country rol 16 3%
Cheese—Ohio, new.... 13 14
New York, new.. Soi vii 13 14
Poultry, Etc.
Fens—poer1b.....xeeeeeerien iin, 14 15
Chickens—dressed 16 18
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.... . 18 19
Fruits and Vegetables.
Apples’bbl............... NR 4
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 2 = 1 20
Cabbage—per ton.........c.eaennees 18 (0 21 00
Onions—per barrel................ 250 3
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............ $ 505 595
Wheat—No. 2 red..... i 93 04
Corn—Mixed..... . 51 52
Eggs....... vel... nul 16 18
Butter—Ohio creamery.... 2 23
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550:75 7
Wheat—No. 2 red.... —vie 99 1 0L
Corn—No. 2 mixed. 5) 51
Qats—No. 2 white...c..cocvvunn.... 36 7
Butter—Creamery................ 24 23
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patents..... Serene $§ 60) 650
Wheat—No. 2red........... 102 104
Oorn—No. 9............c8e:- . 55 a6
Oats—No, 2 white.............. os 37 88
Butter —Creamery ........c......... 24, <5
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 17 i8
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle,
Extra, 1450 to 1600 Ibs ...
Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs ..
Medium, 1200 to 1800 lbs
Tidy, 105) to 1150
.$6 20
co
FLUO LQ Og
x
Common to fair... . .
Oxen, common to fat .... .
Common togood fat bulls and
Milch cows, each
UB UToao
SU C=)
a
<
Primeheavy hogs..................
Prime medium weights...
Best heavy yorkers and me
Good pigs and lightyorkers
Pigs, common to good ............
Roughs
BEB esses ensure dce agains
Sheep.
etn. ena $ 5 00
Good to choice oe 485
Medium... 475
Common to fair., 40)
Tombs... 0... l.% 8 00
Yaal, extra. ......,... 430 650
Veal, goou to choice. . 33 45)
: Veas, common heavy 30) 375
i A Girl Evangelist.
Miss Myrtle N. Parke, who has
been called to the pastorate of the
Christian Church at Ramsey, Ill., id
noted as an evangelist. She is but 18
years of age.
While taking
walk ex-Judge
his usual morning
John Kennedy Ewing,
aged 81 ye was killed by a Balti-
more & Ohio train at Uniontown. As
he approached the crossing and heard
the whistle of the train Judge Ewing
became bewildered and attempted to
jump forward, but was struck by the
train and hurled 60 feaf, his leTt arm
and both being broken and his
| head cut.
Mrs. Minnie Osborne, 80 years old,
| of Stoneboro, dropped dead at the
home of her granddaughter, Mrs. John
Hake, at New tle, whom she was
visiting
the agricultural outlook, which would
GOVERNMENT LIGHT
HISTORIC CHICKAMAUGA PARK
ABLAZE WITH ILLUMINATION.
United States Svafem of Lightine Mile
tary Post Pronounced Gratifyingly
Successful=Six and One-Half Miles
of Mains— Sixty-Five Street Lights. °
Chickamauga Park, Ga.,May 31.—The
United States. Government has here
in operation one of the largest acety-
lene gas plants in the worid. "The mil-
itary post at the entrance of the his-
* torical Chickamauga vattlefield, where
thirty thousand Union and Confederate
soldiers were lost in the memorable
battle of September 19 and 20, 1863,
contains about one hundred buildings,
the seventy-five principal ones of which
are lighted with acetylene. To accom-
mains and two miles of service pipes
are in use,.while sixty-five street lamps
brilliantly. illuminate the avenues of
the post.. gs
In 1903 the War Department in-
stalled a test acetylene plant at Fort
Meyer, Virginia. The results were so
gratifying and the superiority of the
illuminant so evident that the Govern-
ment, March 20, 1904, placéd the con-
tract for the Chickamauga plant, in
which every citizen of the United States
should have his pro rata of pride. 1
But the Government has not confined
its acceptance of acetylene to this mili-
tary post. Since becoming satisfied of
the efficiency, superiority and econom-
luminant, the United States has in-
stalled a number of plants in Indian
schools and other Government insti-
tutions.
Acetylene gas is one of the simplest
as well as the most perfect of artificial
lights. It is made by the contact of
water and carbide (a manufactured
product for sale ata nominal price), is
absolutely safe and gives a beautiful
white light soothing to the eyes and
nerves. It can be produced anywhere
—in the farm home, the village store,
the town hall, the church—and is so
easily maintained as to be practical for
all classes.
It is a matter for national congratu-
lation that in beautifying so historic
a spot as Chickamauga, nothing but the
best, including the lighting system, has
been deemed good enough for the
American people.
First Woman Ordained.
. Rev. Antoinette Brown Blackwell, of
Elizabeth, N. J., the first ordained wo-
man minister in the United States and
probably in the world will’ pass her
eightieth anniversary May 20. In
June she means to attend the National
Woman Suffrage convention at Port-
land, Ore.
No Goods Marked With Star.
The Turkish government has is-
sued an order to its customs authorl-
ties not to admit any roreign gooas
which bear the mark or design of a
star. It is supposed that the reason
for this is that the representation o.
a star is part of the Turkish coat
of arms.
What Whiskey Does.
Mr. S. M. Hussey, in his “Reminis-
cences of an Irish Land Agent,” gives
the following quotatina from a parish
priest’s sermon: “It's whiskey makes
you bate your wives; it’s whiskey
makes your homes desolate; it’s
whiskey makes you shoot your land-
lords, and—with emphasis as he
thumped the pulpit—it's whiskey
makes you miss them.”
When He Feels Rich.
When a man has paid all his fam-
ily bills and has a dollar and a quar
ter left over, he feels as if he hae
inherited a gold mine.—New Yorx
Press. :
Railroad Rate Lewislation.
Testifying before the Senate Com-
mittee at Washington, Interstate Com-
merce Commissioner Prouty said in
discussing the proposition to give that
commission the power to regulate rail-
way rates:
“I think the railways should make
their own rates. I think they should
be allowed to develop their own busi-
ness. I have never advocated any
law, and I am not now in favor of any
law, which would put the rate making
power into the hands of any commis-
sion or any court. While it may be
necessary to do that some time, while
that is done in some States at the
present time, while it is done in some
countries, I am opposed to it. The
railway rate is property. It is all the
property that the railway has got. The
rest of its property is not good for
anything unless it ean charge a rate.
Now it has always scemed to me that
when a rate was fixed, if that rate was
an unreasonable rate, it deprives the
railroad’ company of its property pro
tanto. It is not necessary that you
should confiscate the property of a
railroad; it is not necessary that you
should say that it shall not earn three
per cent. or four per cent. When you
put in a rate that is inherently um-
reasonable, you have deprived that
company of its rights, of its property,
and the Circuit Court of the United
States has jurisdiction under the four-
teenth amendment to restrain that: I
have looked at these cases a great
many times, and I can only come to the
conclusion that a railroad company is
entitled to charge a fair and reasonable
rate, and if any order of a commission,
if any statute of a State Legislature,
takes away that rate, the fourteenth
amendment protects the railway com-
pany.”
No Tainted Money Wanted.
The Rev. Campbell
notice directly in his London pulpit
that gifts from brewers and other
persons engaged in “unholy traffic”
were not wanted.
he said to the congregation,
nwt believe in shaking
tree to put money on
“does
the devil's
the Lord's
table.”—Washington Star.
plish this six and one-half. miles of
ical advantages of this particular il-
Morgan gave |
“Your minister,” | §
|
Color at Harvard.
W. E. Curtis, writing on colored
men at Harvard, made this observa-
tion: There are about a dozen col-
ored students at Cambridge at pres-
ent coming from different parts of
the south. They make no claims to
social recognition, and none is offer-
ed them; but in the class room, in
the “gym,” and on the athletic field
there is perfect equality. No colored
student wil visit the rooms of a white
student unless he is specially invited.
Colored students do not expect to be
admitted to the social clubs, or to live
in the same boarding houses as the
white men, although the Harvard
baseball team threatened to leave a
hotel in Washington last summer be-
cause the proprietor wanted - Mat-
thews, one of their number, to take
his meals in his room. In scholar-
ship and in athletics, no distinction
is made on account of color, either by
the faculty or the students—white or
black, the best man wins.
a dinner, or any other social func-
tion.
How He Avoided Trouble.
When a Scotch schoolmaster en-
tered the temple of learning one
morning he read on the blackboard:
“Our teacher is a donkey.”
The pupils expected there would be
a cyclone, but the philosophic peda-
gogue contented himself with adding
the word “driver,” and opened the
school as usual.—Chicago Journal.
Studying Psychic Lore.
Ral Kezir, a Hindoo, who is visiting
the large cities of the country, is in
Boston. He belongs to Benares, In-
dia, and his mission in America is
to investigate the progress made in
various cults in the larger cities who
have engaged in psychic research.
Decline of Fox-Hunting.
Fox-hunting seems to be on the
wane in England. Some attribute
this to the inroads of the automobile
and others to hard times and “the
loss of many hunting men during the
South African war.”
London has dicovered, to its hor-
ror, that the. big electric lamps
on the facade of the Mansion House,
the Lord Mayor's official residence
were “made in Germany.”
But no
colored man ever appears at a ball or:
MISS MARIA DUCHARME.
Everywomanin Anierica is Inter«
ested in This Young
Experience.
Girl's
155 MARIA DUCHARME,
182 St. Elizabeth St, -
= Doe» Montreal, Can. i
PELVIC CATARRH WAS
DESTROYING HER LIFE. .
PE-RU-NA SAVED HER.
Miss Maria Ducharme, 152 St. Elizabeth
“I am satisfied that thousands of women
suffer because they do not realize how bad
they really need treatment and feel .a
natural delicacy in consulting a physician.
“I felt badly for years, had terrible pains,
and at times was unable to attend to my
daily duties. I tried to cure myseif, but
finally my attention was caused to an ad-
vertisement of Peruna in a similar case to
mine, and I decided to give it a trial.
“My improvement began as socn @s
I started to use Peruna and soon I
was a well woman. {feel that I owe
my life and my health to YOUr won -
derful medicine and gratefully ac-
knowledge this jact.”’--Mariac Duch-
arme. .
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for
free medical advice. i 5,
All correspondence strictly confidential.
Et iy RE re
Uniform excellent
Lion Cofiece
Facts Are Stubborn Things
nt quality for over a quarter of a
century has steadily increased the sales of LION COFFEE,
The leader of all package coffees.
is now used in millions of homes. Suth
popular success speaks for itself. It is g
positive proof that LION COFFEE has the
Confidence of the people.
The uniform quality of LION
COFFEE survives all opposition.
LION COFFEE keeps its old friends and
makes new ones every day.
LION COFFEE has even mere
than its Strength, Flavor and Qual-
ity to commend it. On arrival from
the plantation, it is carefully roast-
ed at our factories and securely
packed in 1 Ib. sealed packages,
and not opened again until needed
for use in the home. This precludes
the possibility of adulteration or contact with germs, dirt,
dust, insects or unclean hands. The absolute purity of
LION COFFEE is therefore guaranteed to the consumer.
Sold only in 11b. packages. Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON
$
~ 5
SPI
E CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Natural
Flavor
Libby's “HIGH
Corned Beef Hash
Veal Loaf
Food Produc
The appetizing flavor and satisfying quality of LIBBY’S POTTED AND DT VILED MEA
due to the skill of the Libby chefs and to the purity and strength of the ingredients used.
Food Products
For Dreckfast, Dinner and Supper.
Brisket Beef
Soups
They are ready tolserve—Your Grocer has them
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