eM us ne to e n sta- Erie nine n and None ntinue on a g for r was at the m the and . Both lished, Xpress | Fire- nt be- 1 were AZZaAge hurled t, and of the ing an Butler, toward was station. bridge 5 was it was before adway, appara- nd two Jutler. in the oolness ntained ond ap- 1til the r >. Plate of tin plating hose of tion of usiness. of the Iron, robably oncern. ed him per an- to in- pendent ufactur- eet & United R e—Pas- rt. plying entucky y of 50 three into a n. cy Car- he was ’ kK was Hutchin- entucky ably fa- ors Were oeria. railway yermany > steam- ort ma- Siberian ) to the ast Sibe- until the noyarsk, * Yeniei- NTS. war has ago and wn soci- as found Atlantic daughter Connells- by light- hich was was de- ons by a on to re- he Irish ATS, a re- chant, of cide by ED Scattered ly blown of dyna- house to line near ad are: rT, Harry corge Ar- e scatter- 500 feet. in sink- y sought se. Light- ing and elf, ignit- two kegs of wood mains of oved. troiler of & society, om office, ecause he yn regard- standing ly on the st Com- Atod 3 ted in « gg - — > SE - i Few Herse Cars Left. Electric traction has been employed in Germany a quarter of a century. Now there are only thirty-three miles of street railway track in the country operated by horse power. The elec- tric trackage amounts to 2,400 miles or 3,500- miles of single track. FITSpermansntly cured. No fits ornervous= ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer, ¥2triat bottleand treatise free Dr. R. H. Kuixg, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, Japan's goid production for the year was $5.076,000. Mrs. Winsiow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, soiten the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, ailays pain,curestind colic, 25c.a bottle, Manchuria is gaining by the Russian- Japanese War. Tamsure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago. —Mrs. Tronas Ros- ERTS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 Japan has never as yet been invaded by a foreign foe His Glass Eye. Two men at Chanute engaged in a fight the other day and one, by a ficrce blow, destroyed one of the other man’s eves. The man who lost his eye had the other man arrested on the ‘charge of mayhem. It devel- oped in the evidence that the eye which was destroyed was a glass eye, and the defence claimed that the charge cof mayhem could not be main- tained. The court was. of the same opinion, and it was suggested that a charge of malicious mischief be sub- stituted in its stead, for breaking the glass eye, or in other words, suggest- ed the judge, “for breaking the win- dow to his soul, the pane in his face.” —Kansas City Journal. Proved His Faith. The Emperor of China sacrificed to the god of agriculture on the second day of the third moon. He person- ally plowed a portion of the ground in front of the altar “as a proof that the profession of agriculture is an honorable one. KIDNEY TROUBLES Increasing Among Women, But Sufferers Need Not Despair THE BEST ADVICE IS FREE Of all the diseases known, with which the female organism is afflicted, kidney disease is the most fatal, and statistics show that this discase is on the increase among women. rs Emma Sawyer Unless early and correct treatment is applied the patient seldom survives when once the disease is fastened upon her. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most efficient treat- ment for kidney troubles of women, and is the only medicine especially preparcd for this purpose. When a woman is troubled with pain or weight in loins, backache, frequent, painful or scalding urination, swelling of limbs or feet, swelling under the eyes, an unedsy, tired feeling in the region of the kidneys or notices a brick- dust sediment in the urine, she should lose no time in commencing treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham's- Vegetable Compound, as it may be the means of saving lier life. For proof, read what Lydia E. Pink- ham's i Compound did for Mrs. Sawyer. . wi “I cannot express the terrible suffering I had to endure. A derangement of the female organs developed nervous prostration and a serious kidney fronbla. The doctor attended me for a year, but I kept getting worse, until I was unable to do anyiing and I made up my mind I could not live. finally decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound as a last resort, and I ant'to-day a well’ woman. I cannot praise ittoohighly, and I tell every suffering woman about my case.” Mrs. Emma Sawyer, Conyers, Ga. Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to women ; address in confidence, Lynn, ass. = 53 Cream Separator FOR S2 we sell the El celebrated BUNDEE CREAM WSE'1SEPARATOR, | pounds per hour; 350 pounds ca- b00 pounds capacity per S$ 4.00 uaranteed diately return any money you may havepald for freight charges or otherwise. 1 this ad. out at once and mail : to us, ahs you ee turn mail, free, postpaid, our LATEST Rp SEPARATOR CATALOGUE. You will get our big offer and our free trial proposition and you will re 0. WE SELLA 8300 PIANO FOR $195 To introduce. Buy direct and save the dif- ference. Easy terms. Write us and we'll tell vou a ut ° ROFFMANN’S MUSIC HOUSE, Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa. eee RE ALL ELSE FA Tup, ‘'astes Good. & by : P. N. U. 30, 1905. eyes, use mice | IOMpSON’s Eye Water | Salting Asparagus. The old and widely accepted idea that heavy applications of common salt were necessary to grow aspara- gus has been thoroughly disproven by modern practice as well as by a chem- ical examination. Good asparagus, as is well known, may be grown without salt, but sometimes upon soils of the sandy type better asparagus may be grown with it. Some tests made at the Arkansas experiment station call attention to these facts and advise those growing asparagus for home use to plant it in open rows imstead of in the thick bed, as has been the custom in the past.—Farmers’ Home Journal. Clean Water Troughs. Only water troughs or fountains that can be easily cleaned should be used in the poultry yard. troughs sometimes become slimy, though the water in them appears to be cléar and ciean. A broom and soapsuds should be used on such troughs, afterwards rinsing thorough- ly with clear water. If this task is attended to ounce a week and the troughs filled with fresh water every morning the hens will be amply sup- plied with all the fresh water that they need. If ducks are kept the troughs should have slats of lath across the top, to prevent them from wallowing in the water and making it filthy. Corn for Young Pigs. At the Wisconsin station an experi- ment was conducted to determine tue effect of feeding corn to young pigs. Two lots of pigs consisting of three each were used in the experiment. One lot was fed cornmeal. The pigs were given all the meal mixed with enough skim-milk to make a tnick slop. These pigs were at an age when . they should have been growing wone and muscles and the corn-fed lot were given unnatural treatment. The mixed feed lot made a profit four times as great as the other, made four times as much gain, and their thigh bones were -50 percent stronger. Corn is one of the best feeds that we have to- day, but those who use it with certain classes of animals would do well to always bear in mind that although it is an Al food its use should not be abused when feeding it to growing stock.—Weekly Witness. ‘The Slow Horses. The farmers and stock raisers of this country would save millions of dollars every year if they could but realize that the basis of all perform- ance of more than ordinary worth is blood. Any cow will give some milk, any steer or hog will make some meat, any sheep will produce = some kind of a lamb or some sort of wool, and any horse pull, run or trot some— but what every farmer needs and should want is an animal that does its part well. We have seen hundred of men laugh at and ridicule the horse that finished away in the rear in the race at the county fair, and a whole lot of these same men were kceping cattle, hogs, sheep and poultry that couldn’t come within a mile of any good animal of their class because they were not bred right. When we make fun of a man who goes to the races with a slow horse let us tunk of the man who is raising scrubs for meat, dairying without dairy blood, or breeding horses that are not intended for anything particular.—National Stockman. : Humus in the Soil. In order to maintain the fertility of the soil, two things are absolutely essential: First, the soil must be kept stocked with a sufficient supply of de- composing organic material (humus) to keep it mellow and porous enough to permit of the free circulation of air and moisture. Second, the soil must be supplied with sufficient min- eral plant food to meet the require- ments of the crops. There are in gen- eral two ways of doing both these things. Humus and plant food may both be supplied by feeding a part of the products of the soil and returning the manure to the land; or, the min- eral plant food may be supplied by the use of commercial fertilizers and the humus by frequent cropping with grass and legumes, or by green man- ures. Sawdust is also good to add to the humus of the soil. The university of Minnesota publishes the results ob- tained from the expernmental produc-: tion of humus from different materi als, including sawdust.” It was found that the humus from sawdust is rich in carbon; but poor in nitrogen, phos- phoric acid and potash. Experience has demonstrated no amount of plant food will compensate for a -lack of humus. Humus consists of decaying vegetable or animal matter and is most abundant in new soils and in soils that have been tilled by rotating crops. The importance of humus can hardly be over-estimated and lack of attention to this requirement counts, in part, for the numerous abandoned farms in all the older see- tions of the country.—Evan Woolly in The Epitomist. ac- Wooden - Swedish Turnins a Good Crop. The continuous wet and cold weath- er in this section during the past three seasons so seriously affected both grain and forage crops that we resolved last spring to grow some ad- ditional crop not easily influenced by such atmospheric conditions, and de- cided upon the Swedish turnip, or rut- abaga, as likely to prove the most satisfactory, all things considered. It is a crop which, if properly fer- tilized and cultivated, gives enormous returns, vields of 10 and 15 tons per acre not being at all uncgmmon, it is greatly relished by all kinds of stock, and is about equal in value to corn sil- age, although in some cases costing somewhat more to grow. Frequently the sced is drilled in the field and afterward thinned to six or eight inches apart in the row, but we always refer to sow the seed in a bed, and transplant. This, according to our own experience, gives stronger plants and takes less time. About the middle of June the secd was broadcasted in the bed, and fine young plants were ready for trans- planting in July in the field. The soil of this field was sandy and very light and poor. We first grew a good crop of peas by means of the mineral fer- tilizers, and after these were re- moved, the vines which were about 2 1-2 feet in height, were turned under to furnish humus, and allowed to re- ‘main undisturbed in the moist earth for two weeks to decay, then the field was prepared for the turnip plants, which were set in rows 30 feet apart for horse cultivation, and about ten inches apart in the rows. All members of the turnip family are voracious feeders upon potash and equally fond of phosphoric acid, while a liberal amount of nitrogen must be given. Barn manures particularly of cows or sheep will furnish this satis- factorily, but horse manure is not con- sidered as good for this crop. The or- ganic nitrogen usually contained in the ready mixed fertilizers answers the purpose equally well, and having on hand such a fertilizer especially prepared for root crops, we mak: a liberal application to the soil about the: young plants, afterward working it in. About four weeks later the application was repeated. These young plants thrived from the start, rains were less frequent than earlier in the season, but the moisture con- tained in the soil, dissolving the plant foods, rendered them directly avail- able, and there was no check in growth until the crop had matured, except upon low-lying plots, where there was not sufficient drainage to completely carry off the surplus rain- falls. The turnips upon such ground were much inferior in size to those grown upon the well-drained portions of the field, which were of great size and of the finest quality for table use. The estimated yield was at the rate of 12 tons per acre. A portion was disposed of for table using, bring- ing from 50 to 60 cents per bushel, the rest were placed in the vegetable cellar and twice each day since they were gathered have been a highly rel- ished and beneficial food for the stock on the farm. They have contributed greatly to the milk supply and no taint is ap- parent in either milk or butter. The turnips are sliced and fed the milch cows directly after the milking is done. Horses are as fond of these roots as the cows or sheep and their heir becomes glossy, and in fine con- dition through such feeding. We must again call attention to the fact that zood fertilizatzon must be given, that growth from the start may be contin- wavs a high grade potato fertilizer may be used with good results. A Tair dressing upon soils which are not poor, is-a fertilizer containing 20 pounds of nitrogen, 40 pounds phos- ricric acid and 40 pounds of potash. The application should be increased: if the soil isgpoor—E. A.& Season, Madison, O., in American Cultivator. America Greatest Country on Earth. “America has impressed me as be- ing the greatest country on the globe, and China will learn many valuable lessons from the United States. It is a nation. of vast territory. It is rich in agriculture, and its manufacturing industries have grown to such an ex- tent that it is almost incomprehen- sible. While America is much young er than Europe and is an infant in arms as compared with Ching, it has ‘made the. largest’ strides of any: na tion, and not omly China, but Europe as well can look to your shores and learn much that will be of great ben- efit. “Washington, your national capital, is a beautiful and healthy city. It is cleaner than London, Chicago, or any other city in Europe or America, It reminds me of Hamburg and Berlin. Those two cities and others of the German Empire are clean and heal thy. Washington, with its beautiful broad, clean reets and its magnifi cent parks, has impressed me gr Paris has been said to be the city in the world, 1 after Washington.”—Writer New York World. FIVANGE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’'S WEEKLY REVIEW. General Disposition to Provide for a Large Volume of Fall and Winter Trade. R. G. Duin’ & Co's view of Trade” says: , “Weekly Re- Hot weather tended to retard activity in many productions and undertakings and postponed forward business that could be delayed without loss, but acclerated the consumption of seas sonable merchandise and advanced the crops much nearer maturity, Confidence in the future increasa- with each day favorable for harves% ing, and much of the winter wheay is now beyong danger, while lat ¢ corn is rapidly gaining lost ground Inquiries indicate a general disposi tion to provide for a large volume of fall and winter business, clothing and manufacturers receiving liberal orders from traveling salesmen, while cancellations are exceptionally few. Real estate®transfers are large and building operations numerous, often overtaxing facilities for delivery of lumber and other materials. There is comparatively little interruption from labor disputes, and the net re- sult in all commercial and manufact- turing branches is exceptionally sa- tisfactory for this mid-summer per- iod, which is usually the dullest of the year. Some improvement is noted ‘in de- mand for pig iron, which has been the least active of the industrial un- dertakings, while footwear facteries are less eager to secure forward bus- iness because of another advance in hides. Railway earnings thus far reported for July exceed last year by 7.4 per cent, and foreign commerce at New York alone for the week shows gains of $2,105,120 in exports, and $3,667,642 in imports, as compared with the corresponding Collections are week in 1904. improving, money is easy and fluctuations in securities narrow. Failures last week numbered 193 in the United States, against 231 last year, and 23 in Canada, compared with 20 a year ago. MARIE RETS, PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Whoa NS 2 red... yo—No. 2....... 85 Corn—No 2 yellow, ear. 61 No. 2 yellow, shelled 6) Mixed ear... 45 Oats—No. 2 whit 35 0.8. white:......... 34 Flour—Winter patent.... 5 65 ‘ancy straight winters 6 40 Hay—No. 1 Timothy...... 11 09 lover No, L....0...... 9 50 Feed—No. 1 white mid. to 20 50 rown middlings.... 70 Bran, balk,.......... 18 00 Straw—Wheat... . 675 7 00 Oat... .... esse sseenisivnnrinne sve 075 700 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 22 24 Ohio creamery........ y 20 20 Fancy country roll. 16 18 Cheese—Ohio, new...... 13 14 ew York, new. ae 13 14 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b......cccevue aetna rh $ 14 15 Chickens—dressed........ . 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 18 19 Fruits and Vegetables. ADPDISS BD) ..eriirironrensss »one 25) 400 Potatoes—Fancy white per bu. 30 35 Cabbage—per ton..........eeevuvee 18 00 21 00 Onions—per barrel. . 2 50 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.......... ...$ 5 525 ‘Wheat—No. 2 red........... ‘ee >» 94 Corn—Mixed..... . 51 52 Eggs....... Semenkierasasavase 16 18 Butter—Ohio creamery......... 20 22 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550 57 Wheat—No. 2 red 99 101 Corn—No. 2 mixed 50 51 Oats—No. 2 white 36 87 Butter—Creame 2 22 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 16 17 6 59 ; 104 2 56 38 . 2 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... w 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock. Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Extra, 1450 to 1600 1bs ..............8540 575 Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs ... 52 540 “Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs. 4 90 525 Tidy, 1050. 10.1150. . .... .. 450 4 85 Butcher, 900 to 1100..... 400 470 Sommon ‘10 fair. ..e.... 7 3 850 37 Oxen, common to fat hae RTD 400 Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 330 Milchcows,each...... ........ ... 1600 4500 we Hogs. Prime heaby hogs... ........ 610 Prime medium weights... .. 6 15 Best heavy yorkers and medium... 610 Good pigsand lightyorkers........ 575 Pigs, common to good ............ 489 RO ng on 415 Stage. non fon ws 2 1000 359 500 515 535 5 60 475 52 250 400 550 800 Veal. Oxia... ur.ziniunaiolidves 50 70 Veal, good to choice. ... 390 450 Veal, common heavy 30 37 GASOLINE SAVERS. By all means have that handy con- trivance called a “gasoline saver.” One can buy a “saver” at a hardware store and pay a dollar. An iron hoop off an old pail will answer. On this is laid a round piece of tin, sixteen inches in diameter. On this may be set several small dishes, all cocking at once. For want of something small enough use quart tomato cans, which are plenty large enough for a sr y of two. If one cares to have extra ‘second, @ story’ to the it may easily and added by any compete-t is handy for boiling ihe te of one may be one of the very holding about course a COOK an th “saver,” cheaply be tinner. It need would not epare a meal for thi ne burner, but t ment is admirable for for a family of one ga the two. "take AN OLD MAN’S TRIBUTE. An Ohlo Fruit Raiser, 78 Years OlA4, Cared of a Terrible Case After Ten Years of Suffering. Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Mentor, Ohblo, says: “1 was cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills of a severe case of kidney trouble, of eight or ten years’ standing. 1 suf- fered the most severe backache and other pains in the region of the kidneys. These were especially severe when stooping to lift anything and often I could hardly straighten my back. The aching was bad in theday time, but just as bad at night, and I was always lame in the morning. 1 was bothered with rheumatic pains and dropsical swelling of the feet. The urinary pa Ssages were painful and the secretions were dis- colored and so free that often 1 had to rise at night. I felt tired all day. Half a box served to relieve me, and three boxes effected 2 permanent cure.” For sale by all deniers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co... Buffalo, N. ¥. SIDNEY JUSTUS. The Libraries cf the Country. The United States commissioner of education has in his annual report a chapter on the libraries of the country. Only those containing 1,00 velumes or more are counted. There are nine librarics that contain more than 300,- 000 volumes each, and 59 that have over 100,000 each. It is shown that the North Atlartic States confain more than half the entire number of libra- ries enumerated, 3,006 libraries con- taining in tha aggzregate, 27,805,980 volumes. New York is at the head of the States, having 934 libraries, with 9,079,863 volumes: Massachusetts next, with 624 libraries and 7,616,994 volumes; Pennsylvania follows with 491 libraries, containing 4,580,312 volumes. These three States have nearly 30 per cent of the libraries and 40 per cent of the number of volumes reported for the whole country. Tak- ing the country as a whole, there is one library containing at least 1,000 volumes for every 11,000 of the popu- i lation. Caution to Purchasers of Winchester Guns We find Winchester Repeating Ritles and Shotguns are being offered by certain of the trade, not customers of ours. at cut prices, and that such guns have been altered since leaving the factory, includ- ing the changing and obliteration of the factory serial numbers. Not knowing to what further extent these arms have been tampered with, we this opportunity of advising the public in general that we assume no re- sponsibility whatever connected with any such arms, and caution all buyers to see that the numbers have not been changed or obliterated. All genuine Winchester Repeating Rifles and Shotguns are numbered and all Win- chester Single Shot Rifles are numbered, except the Models 1900, 1902, 1904, and the Thumb Trigger Model. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. Uses of Sait. Salt may be made useful in many directions besides table use. First, as tooth powder, it will keep the gums hard and the teeth beautifully white. Also, if you have a tooth extracted and the bleeding does not stop, rins- ing the mouth with salt and water will prove a quick remedy. Mixed with hot water it makes a good gargle for a sore throat and if a little is put with lemon juice stains on fingers from ink, peeling totatoes, etc., will be eas- ily removed. When teacups are dis- colored rub a little salt on the stains before washing them and the blemish quickly disappears. DISFIGURING ULCER People Looked at Her in Amazemente Pronounced Incurable—Face Now Clear as Ever—Thanks God For Cuticura. Mrs. P. Hackett, of 400 Van Buren St., Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I wish to give i thanks for the marvelous cure of my moth- er by Cuticura. She had a severe ulcer, | which physicians had pronounced incur- able. It was a terrible disfigurement, and people would stand in amazement and look after her. After there was no hope from doctors she began using Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, and now, thank God, she is completely cured, and her face is as smooth and clear as ever.” Bull Fighting Pays. “Bombita,” the greatest of the Span- ish toreadors, has retired at 30 years >f age, with a fortune of $400,000. without counting jewels worth ahout | PENSIONS. $80,000 more, presented to him by ad- niring enthusiasts. Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed | for 20e; PIMPLES BLACKHEADS To treat Pimples and Blackheads, Red, Rough, Oily Complexions, gently smear the face with Cuti- cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, but do not rub. Wash off the Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water, and bathe freely for some minutes. Repeat morning and evening. At other times use Cuticura Soap for bathing the face as often as agree- able. No other Skin Soap so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective. Cuticura Soap combines delicate medicinal and emol- lient> properties derived from Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. Two Soaps in one at one [lice namely, a Medicinal and Toilet Soap for 25c. otter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. B~Mailed Free, “How to Preserve, Purify, and Beautity.” “I ind Cascarets so good that I would not be without thems I was troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarets Candy Cathartic 1 feel very much better I shall certainly reccommend them to my friends as the best medicine I have ever seen.” Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River, Mass. Best For The Bowels & & Wa “Worms Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, ever Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 50¢, Noven gold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6oz ANNUAL SALE. TEN MILLION BOXES » FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to Jin their sex, used as a douche is marvelou cessful. Thorou; cleanses, kills disease germs. stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh, axtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure sly suc- water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for SE TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of THE R. PAXTON COMPANY Instructions Pree. BOSTON, Mass. destroys all the E R fon and aflordas comfort to every home—in room, sleeping room aud all places where meg Liem. If not kept b, Sex ase saless¥ (on lors pent propail HAROLD SOMERS, 149 DeKalb Ave.; Brooklyn, N. Y: On age at 62, Civil War. On disability and for widows—any war. We have records of service. Laws and { advice free. A, WwW. | 618 Walnut Street, t incinuati, Ohio RE RE AT SS SE, { Let Common Sense Decide | fs another story. berries, fudges at the piantation, are E skillfully roasted at our fac- § tories, where precautions you § would not dream of are taken bj to secure perfect cleanliness, flavor, sirength and uniformity. From the time the coffee leaves the factory no hand touches it till it is opened in your kitchen. McCORMICK & SONS, FN BERT ! od 3 ] to dust, germs and insects, passing 3 through many hands (some of x them not over-clean), “blended,” gi you don’t know Low or by whom, Es: is fit for your use? : don’t. Of course you But LION COFFEE The green b selected by keen i This has made LIN COFFEE the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. i £3 E Millions of American Homes we FE 8 There is no stronger proof of merit 5 8 ing popularity. “Quality survive 2 7 No i Sold only in 1 1b. packages. > Es ' (Save your Lion-heads for valu > premiums. ) 2 Ae SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. SRE