The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, February 21, 1906, Image 8

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    A TRAINED NURSE
v
After Years of Experience, Advises Women In
Regard to Their Health.
Mrs. Mactha Pohlman
of 66 Chester Avenue,
Newark, N. J., who is a,
graduate Kurae from the
Blockley Training School,
at Philadelphia, and for
alz yeara Chief Clinio
Nurse at the Philadelphia
Hospital, writes the letter
printed below, She haa
the advantage of personal
experience, besides her
professional education,
and what she haa to nay
may be absolutely relied
upon.
Many other women are
afflicted as she was. They
eaa regain health in. the
aame way. It is prudent
to heed such advice from
such a source,
lira. Pohlman writes:
" I am firmly paraniided,
after eight years of x)xrence
with Lydia E. Pinkbara's
Vegetable Compound, that it
la the safest and best medicine
for any suffering woman to
use."
" Immediately after my
marriage I found that my
health began to fail me. I be
came wade and pale, with
severe brarinK-down pains,
' fearful brv-'kaehos and fre
quent dizzy spells. The doctors
prescribed for me, yet I did
not improve. I would bloat
after eating, and frequently
become nauseated. I had
pains down through my limbs so I could
hardly walk. It was ns bad a case of female
trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, however,
cured me within four months. Since that
time I have had occasion to recommend it to
a numbar of patients suffering from ail
forms of female difficulties, and I And that
Mrhile it is considered unprofessional to rec
ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly
recommend I.ydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable
Compound, for I he.ve found that it cures
female ills, where nil other medicine falls. It
Is a grand medicine for sick women."
Money cannot buy such testimony as
this merit alone can produce such re-
culta, and the ablest specialists now
ajrree that Lydia 15. Pinknam's Vege
tublo Compound is the most univer
sally successful remedy for all female
diseases known to medicine.
When women are troubled with ir
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the female organs, that bearing
clown feeling, inflammation, bnekache,
bloating (or flatulence), general debili
ty, indigestion, and nervous proi.tr.v
. tion. or are beset with such svniptoms
as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excita-
Lydia L Pinknam's Vegetable Compound Success Where Others Fall.
Cut Your Work
in Two
Atkins Saws cut
not only wood, iron
and other materiali
better than any
other, but they cut
work.
That is because they
are made of the best steel
in the world by men that
know how.'
Atklnt 5awa, Corn Knlrea, Perfection Floor
Scraperi, etc., are told by all good hardware
dealcre. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATKINS (EL CO. Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturers la the WorU
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis
Bkamcuks New York, Chicago, Minneapolis
Portland (Oregon), Seattle, San Franciico
Meupbii, Atlanta and Toronto (Canada)
Accept no substitute--Inilit on ths Atkins Brand
1 SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWf OJfi t
- VTirfaWliilUiiMMififttsniMn '
Drill for Water
Proipect lor Minerals
Drill Test and Blast Holes.
Wo make
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horse, S!eim or
Gasoline Power.
Latest
Traction Machine.
LOOMIS MACHINE CO
TIFFIN, OHIO.
That Delightful Aid to Health
$axtme
Toilet Antiseptic
Whitens the teeth purifies
mouth and breath cures nasal
catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes,
and by direct application cures
all inflamed, ulcerated and
catarrhal conditions caused by
feminine ills.
Paxtine possesses extraordinary
cleansing, healing and germi
cidal qualities unlike anything
else. At all druggists. 50 cents
LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE
1
The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass
G
REGORY'S SEEDS
OBI J were lunm.wtii. it
MritrthrMwarrtoU. Wrtutof
r nana AkUIDalU FKKK.
J. J. H- iirrr ft.
That Baby of Yours
ITmAs Hoxsia'a Croup Cwrtt for Conrha, Coldp, Crimp
tr Vnemiumi. Jt iireveatFt MomWiinim !ruup sad
iitri. Wcentf, at DniisiBor luaLl.
A. 1. HOXM1E. JUuflal N. V.
PATENTS
48 p. book free. nirhfwt refit.
lAmg experience. V ltrgernld
ftCu.pept 6l,WahluBlun,D.O
DROPSY tZJ222Z!i
nt uih. Hook r tMttnllf Md SO Omym' trMla.tt
sfrM. or. 11. H. trnssva hohh, a, aiiu,
a A for Be worth of Irartlnr ISM noYritlea In Owne
II C nrt Oardn HfMla. H' worth of UnlTeraal i"r
I U miuui CouiHHia fma with awry order.
BciUUANO'H hKKV H'A'OKE. BALTIMORE.
ET lIIUtJI Washington, U.tT
7 ,Wf
1
Coal a
Gas If
J0il. J
bility. Irritability, nervousness, sleep
lessness, melancholy, "all-gone " an;.
" want-to-be-lcft-alo'ne'' feelings, blues
and hopelessness, they should remem
ber there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound at once removes suoh troubles.
No other female medicine in the
world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement.
The needless sufferinfrof women from
diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible
to see. The money which they pay to
doctors who do not help ihem is an
enormous waste. The pain is cured
and the money is saved by Lydia E.
Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound.
It is well for women who are. ill to
write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass.
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the
dnuphter in-law of Lydia K. Pinkham,
her assistant for many years before her
decease, and for twenty - five years
since her advice has been freely (riven
to sick women. Ip her great experi
ence, which covers many years, she
has probably had to deal with dozens
of enscs lust like vours. Her advice
i is strictly confidential.
London saloon keepers say that
they nre likely to be driven out of
business whenever a large Jewish
population settles In their neighbor
hood. The .lows nre reported to be
mnoh more abstemious In the use t
liquors than Christians.
Vi'C.:ii in 1- 1 :!v.,.ii-3i. 1 n .ics ornervono
neift"r first ilay'ns' of Dr. Kline's Grfist
Nerve UValorBr, tit rial bottle andtroatlsefrne
Dr. KH.Kli.sk, Ltd., 31 Arch St.,Fhila.,Pa.
The work" of Schopenhauer are being
translated info .bipanese.
To (.lire h olil In O11V flar
Take l.axatlvj 1 lonio Quinine Tablets.
Druifirlst refund money if it fails to cure. E.
Vt .Grove's slirnnture on each box. 25c.
Of the 6HJ female students at the Uni
versity 01 Jk'riin, 4s3 are Germans.
BABY COVERED WITH SORES.
Would 8ci'Hrh antl Ter lite Flash t'n
less Hanill Were Tied "Wonlil Have
Died But For Cnticura."
"My little son, when about a year and
a half old, organ to have sores come out
on his face. 1 had a physician treat him,
but the sores grew worse. Then they be
gan to come on his arms, then on other
parts of his body, and then one came on
his chest, worse than the others. Then I
called another physician. Still lie grew
worse. . At the end of about a year and a
half of suffering he grew so bad 1 had to
tie his hands in cloths at night to keep
him from scratching the sores and tearing
the flesh, lie got to be a mere skeleton,
and was hardly able to walk. My aunt
advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment. I sent to the drug store and got a
cake of the Soap and a box of the Oint
ment, and at the end of about two months
the sorea were all well, lie haa never had
any aores 01 any kind since. He is now
strong and healthy, and I can sincerely
say that only lor your most wonderful
remedies my precious child would have
died from those terrible sores. Mrs. Kg
bert Sheldon, R. D. Kr. 1, YVoodvilte,
Conn., April :2, IDOj."
Statue of Odin Found.
Interesting relics of Ancient French
Roman origin have been unearthed In
the French commune of Gueret.
Among other things is a granite t.tatue
of Odin." Archologists are greatly In
terested by these discoveries, as very
few relies of his kind exist In the
Louvre museum.
DEATH SEEMED NIA3.
How s Chicago Woman Found llelrt
When Hope VTna Fast Fading Away.
Mrs. E. T. Gould, 014 W. Lake St.,
Chicago, 111., says: "Doau's Kidney
nils are all that saved me from death
by Bright's Dis
ease, that I know.
I had eye trouble,
backache, catches
when lying abed
or when beudinf!
over, was lan
guid and often
dizzy and had sick
headaches and
bearing down
pains. The kid
ney secretions
and frequent, and
were too copious
very bad in appearance. It was in 1903
that Doan's Kidney rills helped me so
quickly and cured me of these troubles
and I've been well ever since."
Sold by all dealers. CO cents box.
I Foiter-Billburn Co., Buffalo, N. v,
- If
Preparing Corn Land.
' The following is a plan which we
have found to put most lund in ex
cellent condition: We use only two
tools a disk harrow and a plank drag.
The disk is set to cut about its full
depth, and the furrows are lapped, so
that the land will be left level. We
disk twice, trying, as far 0.3 practica
ble on. our hilly lands, to run the sec
ond time at right angles to the course
followed the first time. We then finish
up with the drag, which leaves the
land smooth and in fine shape for
drilling. By this plan most of the
stalks will be thrown out of th earth
by the disk, and the drag will break
down any that are left. The most seri
ous objection to the disk is that It
leaves a sort of gutter around each
cornshock, which the drag will not al
ways fill up. To obviate this and
the turning around the shocks, some
farmers bring the corn from sixteen
rows on each side to make a row of
shocks. The shocks are thus neces
sarily made very close together in the
row, and the row is left until the corn
Is hauled off, when twice through with
the drill will seed this strip. The ex
tra labor in the corn-cutting, however,
seems to me to more than make up for
that saved in preparing and seeding the
land. A sprlngtooth harrow might be
made to answer instead of a disk on
corn land; hut we have found drag
harrows very unsatisfactory, as they
will be continually dragging up tho
cornstalks and othe rtrash. The plank
drag is, I think, far preferable to the
roller for use on such land, as it
smooths down and fills up any ridges
and depressions much better than any
roller could. Country Gentleman.
Keeping the Weight.
Not unusually do animals weigh
less in the spring thiin they do the
fall before, when they were turned Into
winter qmirters. The dry, bulky food
given with rut grain fails to maintain
the weight of the animal. Usually sud
den thames are made in (he fall from
grass to fodder. The animals will not
take kindly to such sudden changes,
hence a failure to eat results in a
shrinkage In their weight that is very
hard to regain with bulky winter
Lfoods.
Corn fodder alone.'Vhether shredded
or not, does nut maintain the weight
of an nitimal in good flesh. While it
is a forage worth saving, it docs not
fully answer. Sheep will lose 'when
given fodder alone. Wheat or rye
Btraw will carry tattle through the
winter, but their live weight is greatly
diminished, especially where they are
In good flesh when turned on straw.
Timothy hay does not maintain the
weight. Even where the best of clover
hay Is used for roughage, grain is need
ed to make the animal grow.
If a profit is to be realized in win
ter feeding, the animals must increase
and not decrease in weight. A gradual
change from grass to drj; forage will
prevent the first shrinkage in live
weight. The feed should consist of at
least a small amount of grain, even
with the best forage. Then do not give
fodder as the only bulky food. Glvo
all the variety possible. An occasional
feed of clover hay, sorghum forage,
cowpea hay or timothy hay along with
the corn fodder will not only sharpen
the appetite of the animals, but will
cause them to clean up their, fodder
better than where they are compelled
to live on the corn fodder alone. W.
B. Anderson, in the Indianapolis News.
Feeding a Horse.
We go to France for good horses, and
following is something from the Petit
Journul Agricole of France, on how
to feed good horses. Three meals are
necessary and sufficient, with an Inter-,
val of four or five hours between, to
keep a horse in good condition. Oats
take at least two hours to digest, hay
takes three hours, and because It take3
so long to digest It should be given
when the day's work is over. The
evening meal should be a full meal, the
animal being then at rest and able to
digest its food at leisure. There should
be an interval of half an hour be
tween the return of the horse to tho
itable and his getting his evening
meal.
Too much food at a meal or too long
abstinence between meals, followed by
voracious feedings, is conducive to
colic, and indigestion. Irregularly fed,
be Is given to showing his impatience
by letting his hoofs play about the
woodwork of his stall. Giving "refresh
ers" at odd times is also bad. Remem
ber that both stomach and bladder
should never be loaded in work time,
whether llgnt or heavy work is dope. A
horse, therefore, should not be ridden
or driven immediately after a meal,
on the same principle that It oueht not
to be fed sooner than half an hour af
ter work Is over. Between one end
of the year and another a horse con
sumes an amount of dry heating food
which calls for a special regimen to
neutralize the excessive proteid con
sumption that has taken place. Thus
in autumn a ration of carrots given be
fore the evening meal of oats is good,
and so in spring, at the fail of the win
ter coat, a little green meat Is bene
ficial, mixed with hay and oats, for the
evening meal. Another maxim, much
disregarded in practice is that the
horse should be watered long before
being put to work, and then verv spar
ingly. American Cultivator.
DEN
The Making of Prize Cattle.
The university cattle which won
third prize at the fat stock show In
Pittsburg In competition with, the
world, were the last cf six carloads
purchased three years ago for the pur
pose of determining the influence ol
age upon the cost of beef production
which the experiment station la con
ducting in co-operation with the Fed
eral Department of Agriculture.
One-tbird of the original bunch of
cattle was finished as yearlings, and
topped the Chicago market for the
year. The second third waa finished
as two-year-olds, and also topped the
Chicago market for the year. The third
portion of these cattle won third place,
as stated above, and topped the Pitts
burg market for heavy cattle, bring
ing per hundred, the next besl
load of heavy cattle bring $0.50.
They were high-grade Herefords,
purchased In the neighborhood of Co
lumbia. In the meantime the experiment sta
tion has in the same experiment ma
tured one bunch of yearlings Angui
and a bunch of yearling Shorthorna
They now have on feed 90 Shorthorns,
with a view to covering tho same
ground, with a different breed.
In addition to the test of the Influ
ence of age upon the rate of cost ol
gain, these cattle were divided into lots
of eight each and fed different grain ra
tions on iasture, one group receiving
shelled corn alone, another one-fourth
cottonseed meal and three-fourths
shelled corn, nnother one-fourth lin
seed meal and three-fourths shelled
corn, another one-fourth gluten meal
and three-fourths shelled corn, all
having access to equally good grass.
In the case of the yearlings and two-year-olds
a more rapid gain, and as a
rule a cheaper gain, was made on the
mixed feeds than on corn alone. It Is
also true that in every case the young
er cattle receiving mixed feeds became
latler, carried a better bloom, and were
from every point of view more mar
ketable. In tho case ,of tho thvee-year-old or
the mature cattle, however, the differ
ence in the rale and economy of gain
between straight corn and mixed feeds
was almost inappreciable, and there
was not a marked difference in the fat
ness of the different groups. H. J.
Waters, Dean of Missouri Agricultural
College, In Home and Farm.
Facts Ahout Ashes.
The use of wood ashes for fertilizing
purposes Is among the oldest of ration
al agricultural practices. The disap
pearance of forests and the substitu
tion of coal as fuel have reduced the
commercial importance of ashes to
comparative insignificance. Notwith
standing these recognized facts, there
Is hardly a subject related to the fer
tilizing of crops so surrounded by er
ror as the often accepted belief In the
superiority of ashei over all substi
tutes. The real value of ashes Is eo
great that harm only can come from
the exaggerated and erroneous concep
tions of these persistent advocates.
They are found umong farmers and
specialists in many sections, as wide
ly separated in surroundsing and
practice as at the nursery
men of . New York and the
pineapple growers of Florida. These
two classes of acriculturists are
among the most intelligent of all crop
producers, yet I recall one of the for
mer who took great pains to collect
thousands of bushels of ashes, which
he used on the supposition that they
contained at least 5 percent of actual
potash, only to learn, after they had
been applied to hl's trees that they reul
ly contained about one-half of 1 per
cent. One of the latter class of con
sumers applied many tons to his plan
tation, under the Irapressioti that he
was using 40 percent of potash,
through a misinterpretation of a com
plicated analysis, later to learn that
his expensive alleged hardwood ashes
contained about 3 percent of the ma
terial for which they were purchased.
There must be some reason beside In
cidental ignorance for the practice of
these men. The belief in ashes is
founded on real value. The error re
sults from a misunderstanding of facts.
There seem to be two errors in be
lief, which are chiefly responsible for
common mistakes In the use of ashes.
First, is the supposition that the pot
ash in ashes is in better form than
that from other sources; second, that
the constituents of ashe3, having al
ready existed in plants, possess some
direct and special adaptation to the
requirements of plants.
The fact8'are, that the benefits from
the use of ashes, and they are great,
are due in only a comparatively small
degree to the potash they contain. The
amount of this constituent is usually
small, and may bo secured more eco
nomically from other sources. Home
and Farm.
The Origin of It.
She I wouldn't he surprised If the
servant girl were listening at the
keyhole.
He Nor I. That's a woman's
trick.
She Oh! Indeed?
Ho Of course. That's why It's
called Eve's dripping. Philadelphia
Press.
Nitrogen Is so vital to the growth
of plants that large sums are expend
ed for fertilizers rich In that element,
THE SAILOR'S TRUNK.
A Round Canvas Bag Four Feet Long
and the Same the World Over.
"The sailor's trunk," sold an old
salt, "is a canvas bug cylindrical In
form and about four feet long and
eighteen inches In diameter, and
when he's got -thnt bag packed with
his stuff the whole outfit, bag and all,
constitutes his kit. He couldn't enr
ry a resular trunk even- if ho wanted
to, for there would be no place for it
in a ship's forecastle. But a dun
nage bag takeB up only so much
room as the stuff inside of it takes
up that Is to say, If It's only half
full you can fold it down to half its
space, and then if the bag is full you
can press It, and you enn bend and
twist It, you can make good stowage
with it In the place where It has to
go, and so you can get It, with as
much stuff in It as a trunk would
hold, into a space where you couldn't
get a trunk at all.
"And then this bag is a mighty
sight handier to carry than a trunk
would be when the sailor man goes
ashore, or when he goes from his
boarding house to a vessel when he
ships for a new voyaeo. He can just
pick that bag up and sling it over
his shoulder, and It's flexible enough
to lit there easily, and Bag down a
little forward and aft, making it
easy to carry.
"In the days when deep sea sailing
ships were commonly used, before
the day of steam kettles, in the old
days when the jlbbooms of ships
along the waterfront used to stick
out across the street In long rows for
block after block, you could see a
ship captain walking down South
street with a dozen men trailing after
him, his new crew, each man with
his canvas trunk, or dunnage has,
his kit, on his shoulder, making for a
vessel lying at a wharf, or for a tug
to take the men to some vessel lying
out In the stream ready to sail.
"You can't see such processions
much nowadays, for the day. of the
square rlgser is more and more wan
ing, but still you can even now occa
sionally meet a man walking along
South street with his dunnage bag
over his shoulder. There are still
some ships, and the sailor man hasn't
quite gone out ret.
"You can buy dunnage bags In nny
of the sailors' outfitting stores, and
you can also buy them second-hand,
just as you can anything else In the
world that I know of. And then some
sailors make their own dunnage
bags, many sailors being mighty
handy with tho needle, and every
sailor carrying In his has a house
wife, with noodles and thrend and
buttons and such things, just as
every soldier everywhere carries one
in li i 3 knapsack.
"If the sailor mnn makes this bag
nt sea he nets tho material for It of
new canvas from tho ship's canvas
supplies In chai'20 of the sailmiiker,
or maybe the captain Kives him for it
n piece out of an old wornout sky
siill one that perhaps the sailor has
more than once furled himself the
canvas from the bigger lower sails
being too heavy for It.
"The ban Is 'mado with a shirring
string at the open end, by which It
can be closed there. Sometimes If
his bag Is packed so plumb full that
he can't close the end tho sailor
puts over his stuff, on top. a ennvas
disk for a stopper, nnd then draws
the shirring string on that.
"Sometimes the sailor carries his
dunnage bng always just ns It was
made, in the plain canvas, and then
sometimes he pnints it to make it
waterproof. And sometimes they or
nament 'em.
"A common way of doing this is to
paint on the butt or closed end of
the bag a star, maybe a double star,
one Inside of the other and In differ
ent colors, the Inner star In a ring,
and outside the ring the rays of nn
other star, running round like the
points of a compass. Sometimes they
paint pictures on them, maybo pic
tures of ships.
"A sailor might paint on his dun
page has a picture of his favorite
ship, just as ho micht have such a
picture tattooed on himself. Or if
ho couldn't do it himself, and he
wanted such a picture, he mlrrht find
somebody in the forecastle who could
do it for him, and paint a very pretty
shin, too: how he came by his art no
body knows.
' "But whatever they tnav do about
such details as these, the sailors of
whatever country use a dunnnse bag
in which to carry their personal be
longings. The world over, In the
ships of every nation, a dunnage bag
serves as the sailor's trunk." New
York Sun.
Starlings on Long Island.
Two men were waiting for a train
at Borough Park. "See those birds
over there?" asked one.
"Yes. What of them? Whnt sort of
birds are they?"
"Well, I should say they were black
birds, the same that are baked in a
pie and mado a dainty dish to set be
fore the king."
"Wrong," replied his companion.
"Guess again." The second man gave
It up. Just then the birds flow up
and away.
"Look!" said the first man. "Ob
serve their short,, forked tails. They
are starlings."
"Starlings on Long Island?"
"Yes. A few years ago somebody
brought over a lot of starlings from
England nnd let them loose hereabouts,
They have flourished and multiplied
and now you can frequently see them
In this neighborhood. They are the
result of one of the few experiments
at the acclimatization of England birds
Dn Long Island which have succeeded."
-New York Press. .
HE ATTENDS TO BUSINESS
i who goes straight to work to cure
I Hurts, Sprains, Bruises
A by the use of
St. Jacobs Oil
and saves time, money and
It Acta Like Moaic.
CIO CURE THE GRIP
l IN fINF rAV
- ill win. uvil
MIP1NE
nuNO
NO SATISFACTION.
Railroad Man Who Had No Use for
Automatic Device.
A certain Western railroad, which
has not yet been "reorganized" by
Wall street, is still owned and oper
ated by the blunt-spoken old lumber
man who built It. Iast year, after a
particilarly severe accident upon it,
the agent of an automatic block signal
system called and tried to get a con
tract for Installation.
The old lumberman examined the
device attentively and seemed much
Interested.
"Your chief engineer recommends It
highly," said the agent. "He told me
to use his name with you, and be
would see you later."
"Wall," said the lumberman, "I
reckon it is a pretty machine. I like
to sit here and see It work myself, It's
so all-fired sure. But come to using
it on my rood now, young feller, I've
been running a railroad some longer'n
you, nnd I'll tell you something.
"Accidents Is bound to happen abou
once In so often, no matter what you
do. I've got three brakemen In jail
now, and I've vowed to hang The next
one, and the public Is pretty well sat
isfied. But what satisfaction Is it go
ing to be for anyone if I go to work
nnd hang an old automatic machine?"
Youth's Companion.
Scotland Yard.
Scotland Yard, widely known ns the
headfiinrters of the London police, Is
a historical place, said to have been
the site of a palace where kings of
Scotland were received when they
came to London. It Is near tho ban
queting hall, Whitehall. The Scotch
kings retained possession of it from
859 till the rebellion of William of
Scotland. Milton, Sir Christopher
Wren nnd othej notables lived in
Scotland Yard.
oxes
31 3
300 Boxes of Greenbacks
For the most words mado
up, from these letters
Y I - O Grape-Nuts
331 people "will
Around the fireside or about the well-
lighted family reading table during the
winter evenings the children and
grown-ups can play with their wits and
see how many words can be made.
.' SO people making the greatest nnm
bcr of words will each receive a little
box containing a $10.00 gold piece.
10 people will each win one box con
taiiiir.g a $5.00 gold piece.
300 people will each win n box con
taining $1.00 In paper money and one
person who makes the highest number
of words over nil contestants will re
ceive a box containing $100.00 in gold.
It Is really n most fascinating bit of
fun to take up the list evening utter
evening and see how many words can
be added.
' A few rules are necessary for abso
lute fair play.
Any word authorized by Webster's
dictionary will be countedvbut no name
of person. Both the singular and
plural can be used, as for Instance
"grape" and "grapes."
The letters In "Y-I-O-drnpe-Nttts"
may be repeuted in the same word.
Geographical names authorized by
Webster will be counted.
Arrange the words in alphabetical
classes, all those beglnlng with A to
together and those beginning with E to
come under E, etc.
When you ore writing down the
words lenve some spaces in the A. E.
and other columns to fill in later as new
words come to you, for they will spring
Into mind every evening.
It Is almost certain that some con
testants will tie with others. In such
eases a prize Identical in value and
character with that offered in that
class shall be awarded to each. Each
onewill be requested to send with the
list of words a plainly written letter
describing the advantages of Grape
Nuts, but the contestant is not retiuired
to purchase a pkg. These letters are
not to contain poetry, or fancy nour
ishes, but Pimple, truthful statements
of fact For Illustration: A person'
may nave experienced some Incipient
or chronic ails traceable to unwise se
lection of food that failed to give the
body and bruin the energy, beulth and
power desired. Seeking better condi
tions a change In food is made and
Grape-Nuts and cream used lu place of
the former diet. Suppose one quits the
meat, fried potatoes, starchy, sticky
messes of half-cooked oats or wheat
and cuts out the coffee. Try, say, for
breakfast a bit of fruit, 0 dish of
Grape-Nuts nnd cream, two soft-boiled
eggs, a slice of bard toast and a cup of
Postum Food Coffee. Some amateur
says: "A man would faint awny on
that" but my dear friend wt will put
gets out of misery quickly.
Price, 25c. end 50c.
pHTI-GBIFIHE
ct'l IS GUARANTEED TO CURB
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
1 won't rail Ani l-Ctrtp!n to a rJoala r who won't OnaraatM It,
Call for Tour MONfcY BiCK If IT IIUEKH'T CUBS.
F. W.JDtemer,JI.Ii., Manufacturer, Sprinaflrld, Jim.
The Baldwin locomotive works of
Philadelphia turned out 2,250 locomo
tives iii the year 1905.
AGnamnteet1 Cure 'or flTea.
Itchlni?, Blind, Bleedin?, Protru(lln PUh.
Ilni!?gitHnroaiitlirjrizeclto refund money!!
FazoOlntment fulls to eureln 6 to 11 days.50e.
Measuring Clothes by Photograpny,
When one conies to tho indusoiat
nnd commercial uses, the list of uses
of photography Is endless. An In
genious German gentleman now sup
plants the tailor's measurer nnd. mea
sures a man for a suit of clothes by
photographs. The latest improvement
in the phonograph Is a system by
which a photographic film records
the motion of a sensitive fame, and
the variations In intensity In the band
thus obtained are made to cause vi
brations in a telephone circuit, re
producing the original sounds much
more clearly than by former methods.
The tunnel builder and railroad con
tractor not only keep in touch with
the progress of the work, the condi
tions and the effects of blasting, but
provide against damage suits by "be
fore and after" views. In many fac
tories sample books are made photo
graphically, showing exact construc
tion, design, wood and finish.
One might go on indefinitely, but
enough has been outlined to give
some hint of tho part tho? camera,
plays in every material branch of hu
man activity. Henry W. Lanier in
The World's Work.
Waste in Coal.
With fhe methods now In use.
seven-tenths of the force In coal is
wasted. A few years ago the waste
was nine-tenths. Mr. Edison declares
that a bucketful of coal should drive
an express train from New York to
Philadelphia, and a few tons be stiffi:
cient for tho largest ocean steamship,
whoso bunkers must now hold thou
sands. ' . .
of Gold
earn these prizes.
dollars to your pennies that the noon
hour will find a man on our breakfast
huskier and with a stronger henrt-bcat
and clearer working brain than he ever
had on the old diet.
Suppose, If you have never really
made a move for absolutely clean
health that pushed yon along each day
with a spring in your step and a re
serve visor In muscle and brain that
makes the doing of things a pleasure,
yon join the army of "plain oM common
sense" and start In now. Then aftfr
you have bpen 2 or 3 weeks on the
Grape-Nuts training you write a state
ment of how you used to be and how
you arc now. The simple facts will In
terest others and surprise yourself.
We never publish names except on per
mission, but wo often tell the facts In
the newspapers and when requested
give the names by private letter.
There is plenty of tfme to get per
sonal experience with Grape-Nuts an
write a sensible, truthful letter to b,
sent in the list of words, as the contefj
does not close until April 30th, 190(i.
So start In as soon as yon like to build.
Ing words, and start' In using Grape
Nuts. Cut this statement out and
keep the letters Y-I-O-Grapc-Nuts be
fore you and when you write your let
ter you will have some reason to writ
on the subject "Why 1 Owe Grape
Nuts." Remember 331 persons will win
prizes, which will be jwurded in an
exact and just manner as soon, as the
list can be counted after April 30th,
1000. Every contestant will be gent
a printed list of names and addresses
of winners on application In order to
have proof that the prizes areisent as
agreed. The company Is well Kiiowa.
ail over the world for absolute OdeHty
to its agreements and every single one
of the U31 winners may depend on re
ceiving the prize won.-
Many persons might feel It useless to
contest, but when one remembers the
great number of prizes -M33D the
curiosity of seeing how many -..ords
can reully be made up evening after
evening and the good,, natural, fun ami
education in the competition, It seems
worth the trial; there is no cost, noth
ing to lose and a Sue opportunity' to
win one of the uiuny boxes of gold or
greenbacks.
We make the prediction that some
who win a p:ize of gold or greenbacks,
will also win back health and strength
worth more to them than a wagon full
of mouey prizes.
There are no preliminaries, cot but
this statement and go at It, and send
in the list and letter before April Soth
1900, to Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle
Creek, Mich., and let your name sod
address b plainly written. .