Food Products Libby'o Vienna Sausage It distinctly different from injr ether sausage jrou crcr tasted. Jitit try ooe cm sad It li sure to become a meal-tuae necessity, to to aerred at frequent intenrals. Ubby'm Vhtnna Smu- S0O Just suits for breakfast, ! fine for luncheon and aatitfief at dinner or supper. Like all of Libby's Pood Products It It care fulljr cooked and prepared, ready (o-enre, in Ubby'm Groat White Kltohen- the cleanest, most scientific k itches in the world. ' Other popular, ready-to sans Ubby Pure Foods art. Oooked Oorned Boot Peerle Dried Beet Veal Urn f Evmpormted Milk BmkBd Bemnn Ohow Ohow Mixed HoMm Writ for fm booklet, "How to make Good Thing to Eat". Insist on Ubby'm at pear Ubby, MoMelll A Ubby Chlomgo L4NT..IR RI ATED t AND. Paiiwliuil water rights, fine water, prodnetlra son, rap ullarM unknown. AO bushels wheat par ftera. PU to 5 ton, alfalfa. Healthful climate. tn Umber. Inl euy. Write now. UN WOOD LAMD CO., Book Springs, Wyoming. STABUSHEn IBM Ha Knew. "II yon struck one of those golf tails and hit a man in the eye, what would you do?" asked the man who was Interested in first aid to the Injur ed. ' "Oh, I'd have to play It from Just where I found It," replied the enthus iastic golfer. Yonkers Statesman. Mrs. Wirmlo w's Soothing; Syrup forChildren teething, softens the gams, reduce, inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. 32 Blessings of Cheap Money. If It is true that cheap money is as, some claim, a blessing, then the re public of Columbia, in Spanish Amer ica, should be of all the elect the most supremely blessed, for there (old is at 10,000 per cent premium and a, paper dollar is worth less than a cent Nominally, one dollar gold is a hun dred dollars paper, and $100 gold is equal to $10,000 paper. They talk in big figures In tbat country. Money seems cheap, but in reality it is dear, and the people have very little of it, comparatively speaking. ' A man with an income of $10,000 a month with dif ficulty meets bis necessities, while the laborer at $100 a day finds it hard pickings. But for bountiful soil, where provisions are so abundantly grown that no one can really be in want, they would find their lot desper ate. Moody's Magazine. Milk In Chunks. It is now proposed to deliver milk to customers frozen. This is really nothing new, as that is the way it is commonly handled in Siberia in win ter. You buy mlik there in chunks, frozen round a stick which serves as a, handle. Mothers don't say to their children, "Take care and don't spill the milk,'' but "Take care and don't break the milk," for a chunk of It dropped on the bard frozen ground will break Into a thousand pieces. The Pathfinder. Her Objective Point. Nell Miss Giddiglrl says she takes a walk every morning for her com plexion. Belle Tes, I notice that she always walks In the direction of the drug etor. Philadelphia Record. Every package of Post Toasties -Contains a little book "Tid-Bits made with Toasties." A couple of dozen recipes Of fascinating dishes, A help in entertaining Home folks or company. Pkgs. JOc and 15c At grocers The Influence i on Europe of f Returning Emigrants! The effect, past, present and pros pective, produced upon the social and political condition of the United States by the millions of emigrants who 'have came hither from Europe during the last sixty years is a sub ject of endless discussion, but very little attention has 'been given to tha retroactive effect produced on their home-keeping countryimen by emi grants returning from America to their native lands, sftys the New York Sun. With 800,000 of these in 1907 the influence must tiave been consid erable. An independent Investigation of the question has been undertaken by Mr. EM ward A. Stelner in Italy, Austria-Hungary and Russian Po land, and we find the outcome of his observations set forth in the June number of the American Review of Reviews. To appreciate what these return ing emigrants have done we should recall the fact that previously to the beginning of emigration to America the Slavic peasants both in Hungary and Poland were gradually losing allotments of land and were deterior ating physically and socially. Intem perance and indolence were driving them Into the hands of usurers, and they were fast dropping into the land less class and 'Into dependence upon casual labor. The returning emigrant from the United States set ' a very different ezamiple. He evinced an eagerness to buy the land which the dearth of labor and the resultant rise of wages often forced large land own ers to sell. Mr. Stelner says that during the years between 1899 and 190f the land owned by peasants in creased in some districts as much as 408 per cent, and even ilf all the emi grant furnishing districts In Austria Hungary and Russian Poland are tak en together, fcue increase in four years reached the remarkable figure of 173 per cent. The deduction from these facts is that not only was money brought back from the United States and invested in land, tout the home keeping peasant also was led by ex ample to beieome imore Industrious and thrifty. Mr. Stelner has been told, he says, by unbiased landwoners and manufacturers that while wages have risen in the countries named nearly 60 per cent, since the emigration to the United States began, the efficiency of tne workers in almost all depart ments has been increased correspond ingly. It seems, too, that the change in the standard of living among laborers in Austria Hungary and Russian Po land has been so great as to be al most incredible. Usurers to a very large extent have been driven out of business, and the peasant's house has ceased to be a mud but with a straw thatched rooff; Indeed this type of dwelling has been, according to Mr. Stelner, condemned by law at the Initiative of returned emigrants. The rural shopkeepers report that they have been obliged to augment their stock 'by many varieties of goods and Oiat the peasant now wants the best there is In the market. Noteworthy is the demand for American clothes. The returned emigrant from the Unit ed States can be recognized by his necktie and collar,, and especially by his shoes and the gold filling in his teeth. Mr. Stelner recalls that he asked Pastor Holubek of Bosacz 'n Hungary what effect the returned emi grant had produced upon his parish. The reply was: "The returned emi grant is a new man. iHe carries him self differently; he commands the respect of his fellows; 'ho treats his wife better, and he keeps the windows of his house open." It is well known that Europeans of the lower classes we might almost say of all classes are averse to fresh air in sleeping rooms, especially at night. . Mr. Stelner says that there is not a town or village of any notable size within the field of his inquiries, al though this extended from Naples to Warsaw, to which a larger or smaller group of emigrants had not returned. It seemed to him that he could note among them a quickening of tne mor al sense, especially among the men who had come in contact with the better class of American mechanics. He was (particularly struck with the respectful way in which these men spoke to their wives, which was In striking contrast to the conduct of the home-keeping peasants, among whom a woman is etiU an Inferior be ing. On the whole Mr. Stelner's ob servations have convinced him that emigration to the United States has been of material value to the three monarchies now chiefly concerned in the outflow, namely, Italy, Austria Hungary and' Russia, It has. with drawn Inefficient labor and has re turned some of It capable of more and better work. It has through the influence of the returning emigrant lifted the status of the peasantry to a degree which could hardly have been achieved toy a revolution. Rapid Flights. We are getting motor wild. We are thinking that going fast is the chief end of life. Were is a man in New York who claims he has invent ed a vehicle that will go a million milles a minute; that Is, when it gets in good running order. At the start, lie purposes to go from New York to Chicago In 90 minutes. And thon i sometimes lie will go to Mars la 140 minutes. He proposes to do this in a motor worked on the principle of centrifugal Torce. There are no wings or pro pellers to this vehicle. It is simply a projectile. Such speed will beat the planets. It will keep up with a comet, and run around it, and guy it tor being so slow. The Inventor might get it ready to accompany Halley's comet, on Its grand cycle around the sun, next year. Very interesting such a flight would be. It would make the Wright hoys' medals worth not 30 cents. Yes, we are getting very fast; too fast, even on earth, without pestering the skies. Our bralnworks are keyed to our legs and we had better be care ful. Columbus Journal. LIFE AT CAPE NOME. Hardships Not Common and Prices Reasonable Under the Midnight 8un. Duscussing life at Cape Nome, A. H. Lehrfeld, of Cape Nome, who is at the Riggs, said recently: "The most ridiculous question put to me by my friends is, 'How do you manage to stand the climate out there?' From about May 1 to AuguBt 1 we have the midnight sun, with one prolonged day, and then It begins to get dark at midnight, and December 21 we are able to see the edge of the sun for two hours. "The country is Just beginning to get settled," continued Mr. Lehrfeld. "They have found quartz ledges, which Insures its permanence. "People ask me about the comforts of that country. I answer, 'Let me say tnere are three large slaughter nouses In Nome and stores galore. A stor age company has three big plants there, and three large ocean-going steamers keep them supplied with the finest the market affords, which are sold a little In advance of those charged in the States. The best su gar has been selling at twenty pounds for $1, fresh eggs at 30 cents a dozen, potatoes at $2.50 a crate of 100 pounds, and other things in propor tion. Coal has been Belling at $14 n ton, and the Standard Oil Company has a big 'plant up there and oil Is cheap, and eo is the best quality of Pacific Coast lumber.' "We have an electric light plant," added Mr. Lehrfeld. "The buildings ere well put up' with two thicknesses of matched boards, with tarred paper between them, and ajs weather proof. 'It would astonish yon people In the States to walk Into a home in Nome and find the walls papered, adorned with iptctures, carpets on the floors, a piano 1n the parlor, and a kitchen as well equipped in a way as can be found in Washington. We have a fire department, a volunteer organiza tion, and It is the. best organization of that kind in the country." Wash ington Herald. CURBA'S FUTURE. Mr. Austin Fears Insatiable De3lre for Revolution. H. A. Austin is the author of a suggestive article on "Cuba's Fu ture" in The North American Review. The fact that the Cubans appear to be Imbued with 'an Insatiable desire for revolution is likely, in 'Mr. Aus tin's judgment, to render Insecure any Cuban government of the island. Should the present republic fall, something more than repaciticatlon will result from the American inter ference. Annexation to the United States does not seem altogether prob able for the present, and Mr. Austin concludes that the most logical and probably the easiest solution of the question would be the establishment of a protectorate. He says: "These revolutions will undoubted ly continue to recur, under a republic, so long as the present conditions ex ist, for the simple reason that It Is Impossible to create a sufficient num ber of political offices to satisfy the ambitions of all the political leaders or so called 'generals.' The, make-up of the Cuban is different 'from that of the American citizen. In this coun try, If a man is removed from office under a change of administration or for other political reasons, he usually takes it as a matter of course, or if he is defeated at the polls, he either smothers his feelings or lays plans for a future battle of the ballots. With the Cuban it is different, at he Is removed from office or loses a victory at the poll, he immediately begins to 'agitate' not by that sort of peace ful agitation which Is intended to in struct the people in the principles of the .political party or fiction to which he belongs, but by that agitation which smacks of personal revenge, which appeals particularly to tue law less element, and brings together in a- protesting body the class of citizens who are ever ready to take up arms against the existing government, or to use alleged political grievances as a pretext for committing robberies and other depredations." The Witty Warden. "You'd" hardly expect to find a sense of humor in prison officials," says an American representative on the International' Prison Commission, "but during an inspection made by some Americans interested in penal matters of a penitentiary In England one of us was thus surprised. " 'I presume,' observed the Ameri can, "that here, as elsewhere, you prison officials find existence painful enough.' " 'I think you may fairly say so, sir responded the warden, with a grim smile, 'seeing the number of felons ro have on our hands.' Great Britain's coal output in 1908 shows a decrease of 2.35 per cent, or 6,806,473 tons. Chocolate Pecan Cake. One-half cup butter and 1 cup sugar beaten together, 2, eggs well beaten, 1 cup milk, 1 cup chocolate syrup, 1 cup maple pecans (I get both of these at a soda fountain), 1 cup raisins, 1-2 teaspoon soda dis solved in the milk, 3 1-2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon cream of tartar sifted with flour, 1-2 teaspoon- vanilla. Mix quite thick and bake in moderate over for forty-five minutes. New York World. Poached Eggs In Cream. Put a quart of hot water into a frying pan with a tablespoonful of vinegar and a teaspoonful of salt. Break each egg separately into a saucer first, and slip it carefully into the water. Let it simmer until the white is eet, lift it out with a skim mer and place it on a hot dish. Empty out the saucepan, put in half a cup of cream or milk, a heaping ing teaspoonful of butter, a saltspoou ful of salt and a teaspoonful of flour. Stir until thick, -and pour over the eggs, which may be on toast or not as desired. Serve immediately. New York World. Filet of Beef. Have some filet cut into slices about an Inch thick; melt a piece of butter the size of an egg in a sauce pan and put in flat the meat sprin kled with salt and pepper. Let it stand in the butter one hour, then put he saucepan over a quick fire and burn the meat on each side. Take the meat out and keep it warm, meanwhile add to the butter a table spoonful of flour; stir it smooth; put In half a pint of bouillon, half a pound of mushrooms already peeled, wash ed, and cut up if too large, and lastly the meat. Cook until the mushrooms are done. Add the juice of half a lemon and serve with the meat in the centre of the dish, the mush rooms around it and the gravy poured over. New York World. Baked Tamale. Boil until tender one small chicken, or that amount of any tender meat. The meat from soup bones Is fine used this way, and veal is as good as chicken. In fact, you can use to ad vantage any tender left-over meat. Strain oft the broth, remove the bones, and break into small pleceB. Put into a frying-pan two tablespoon fuls of lard or drippings, and when hot add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and let brown a little. Then all the meat, sated to taste, with one cupful of broth and two tnblespoonfuls of chili powder. Stir and cook ten min utes. Set off to cool and add a small cupful of raisins (whole) and about the same of olives. Now make a stiff batter of three cupfuls of cornmeal and one of flour, salted, into which is rubbed throe-quarters of a cupful of lard or dripplngB, moistened with one beaten egg and one cupful of broth. Line a deep pan with the butter, and bake one hour. The Delineator. Boston Cream Cakes. Put in a saucepan half a cup of butter and a cup of hot water. When they begin to boil, stir in a pint of sifted flour, beat and work well until perfectly smooth. Remove from the fire and when cold add five eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately. Beat in the yolks first and then the whites. Stir In half a teaspoonful of soda and a teaspoonful of salt. Drop on buttered tins In large spoon fuls an inch or so apart. Bake in a quick oven for fifteen or twenty minulos. When the cakes are done and have cooled off, make an incis ion in the side of each cake and put in as much of the following cream filling as the cake will hold. Put half a pint of milk over the firo in a dou ble boiler, etlr in one cup of sugar, two tablospoonfuls of cornstarch and two eggs well beaten, and when the mixture has cooked sufficiently to thicken, add a teaspoonful of butter, remove from the fire and beat for a moment. When cool season with va nilla, New York World. Housekeeper's Hints. . If you want to get the best results In embroidering initials, do not use a twisted cotton but one that Is soft and mercerized. A fruit jar rubber slipped over the projected end of a teapot lid will pre vent the lid from dancing up and down when the "kettle bolls." An attractive garnish for veal or chicken loaf ts to put sprigs of cress on top of the lonf and at the ends of the platter, and surround it with stuffed olives. Did you ever try leaving eiderdown baby blankets or wrappers out-of-doors on the grass, in a driving rain? Turn from time to time until it gets clean without getting lumpy. Slip coverings for the furniture are especially pretty this year. They come In the figured cretonnes and cost no more than the dull linen ones whfch have been used for so long. Cold fish is not specially appetizing, but mixed with a cream sauce, mold ed in individual fish molds and served hot with Hollandaiso sauce for a luncheon course it is worthy of a chef. When staining new floors, first brush over with a fairly weak solu tion of glue and water. When the floor Is quite dry take two ounces of permanganate of potash and dissolve j ia half a gallon of boiling water. Shish this over the part to be stain ed. If not quite dry enough give a second coat. Let it dry again, and polish with beeswax and turpentine. HONOR TO NAVIGATOR French and Italians to Join In Cel ebration, On the strength of their claim that Giovanni De Verrazzan sailed through the Narrows and landed a boatload of men on Manhatttan island Vn 1624, Italian and French citizens of the United States have secured the incor poration of a Franco-Italian celebra tion In the Hudson-Fulton proceedings In New York next September. Ver razzano was an Italian navigator in the employ of the French government, and inasmuch as Hudson admitttedly did not enter the river which now bears his name nntll 1009. the Latin Americans who were pushing Verraz zano's claim, convinced the Hudson Fulton committee that the very least that could be done in justice was to grant them a place in the coming cel ebration for a glorification of Verraz zano on their account. More than this, they have taken up subscriptions from their fellow countrymen in the United States, for a statute of the Italian expjorer. Ettore Xlmenes, an Italian sculptor, accepted the commis sion and Is at work in New York on a fourteen-foot effigy of the sixteenth century navigator. It will be cast in bronze and erected in a public park In that city with elaborate ceremonials. MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are in doubt as to the cause of your disease mall us a postal re questing a medical examination blank, which you will fill out and return to ns. Our doctors will carefully diag nose your case, and It you can be cured you will be told so; if you can not be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us In any way, for this advice Is absolutely free; you are at liberty to take our advice or not as you see fit. Send to-day for a medi cal examination blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sta., Philadelphia, Pa. She Rather Suspected It. "Darling," he said, as he hugged and kissed her. "Darling, can't you see can't you guess that I love you?" "Well," she replied, looking at him, "I should certainly hate to think that this is Just your natural manner of behaving in company." Boston Transcript. Sore throat is no trifling ailment. It will sometimes enrry infection to the entire system through the food that is eaten, llamlins Wizard Oil is a sure, quick cure. A Kick. "I thought the Agricultural depart ment was run In the interests of the farmer." "Well, ain't it?" "I wrote 'em for some literature to help me get summer boarders, but thpv bnrl nothlne of the kind in stork." Suicide Slow death and awful suffering follows neglect of bowels. Con stipation kills more people than consumption. It needs a cure and there is one medicine in all the world that cures it CASCARETS. 99 Caaeareta-lOc. box week's treat ment. All druggists. Biggest seller Id the world million boxes a moots. SAFETY RAZOR AT LOW PRICE. SUPERIOR TO BEST SOLD AT ANY PRICE. The small price la made possible by the great demand for this Razor. The smell profit en .ach aggregating as large sum aa If we sold fewer ate greater prlee. The benefit Is tha consumer's. The Blade Is of the finest steel, sclen tiflcally made and tempered by a secret procesa.-and the blade, of course, Is the impor tant part of any Razor. Tha frame la of aatin finish, silver plated, and "angled" eorraetly for safe, quick and clean shaving. The tough bearded man finds this Razor a boon; the eoft boarded man finds it a delight. These blades can bo stropped. Buy ono and you will recommond It to all your friends. Tit at Is tho best test of any article. 5 cts. i Writ BOOK PVBUSHINQ HOUSE, Chicks Doing Well ? If Not, Learn Why from a Book Costing Less Than the Value of One Chicken......... Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the beat result.. The wy to do this ia to profit by the experience of other We offer a book telling all you need to know on the subject a book written br a T who made his living for 25 years in Raising Poultry, and in that time necessarily had to experiment and spend much money to learn the beat way to conduct the business for the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage stamps. It tells you how to Detect and Curt Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which 1'owls to Save for BreeoV ing Purposes, and indeed about everything you must know on the subject to malt, a success. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. 13 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. "MEMOIRS OP DAN RICE," TBM CLOWN OP OUR DADDIES. At Last, There is on Sale a Book Brimful of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell yon that the constant quest of his customer Is for ."a book which will make ma laugh." The bookman Is compelled,1 to reply that the race of American humorists has run out and comic lit erature is scarcer than funny plays, A wide sale is therefore predicted for the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the Clown of Our Daddies, written by Maria Ward Brown, a book guar anteed to make you roar with laugh ter. The author presents to the pub lic a volume of the great jester's most pungent Jokes, comic harangues, caustic hits upon men and manners, lectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad venture, original songs and poetical effusions; wise and witty, serious, satirical, and sentimental sayings of the sawdust arena of other days. These "Memoirs" also contain a series of adventures and Incidents alternat ing from grave to gay; descriptive scenes and thrilling events; the rec ord of half a century of a remarkable life, in the course of which the sub ject was brought into contact with most of the national celebrities of the day. The book abounds in anecdotes, humorous and otherwise; and it af fords a clearer view of the inside mysteries of show life than any ac count heretofore published. Old Dan Rice, as the proprietor of the famous "One Horse Show," was more of a national character than Artemus Ward, and this volume contains the humor which made the nation lauga even while the great Civil War raged. This fascinating book of 600 pages, beautifully Illustrated, will be sent postpaid to you for $1.50. Address Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard street, New York City. No Sense of Humor. "I never knew until I attended thi, horse show what an absurd terra 'horse laugh' was." "What impressed you?" "Why, there's no such thing as a horse laugh. The horses looked right at Uie ladies' hats and didn't eve smile. Stray Stories. TOILET ANTISEPTIC NOTHING LIKE IT FOR TUP TriTTU Faxnne excels any dentifrice "It I Lb I II in cleansing, whitening ani removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying all germs ol decay and disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. TUC Mm ITU Paxtine used as a mouth IMC MUUIII wash disinfects the moutk and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs which collect in the mouth, causing sore throa bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness. THF rVCQ when inflamed, tired, ache I fit kILd and bum, may be Butantly relieved and strengthened by Paxtine. PJITIRDLI Paxtine will destroy the germs W I Anntl that cause catarrh, heal the in flammation and stop the discharge, it is sutf remedy (or uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless vet Dowerful germicide.diiinfeltant and deodorizer. I Used in bathing it destroys odors and leaves the body antisepbcally clean. rOR SALE AT DRUO. STORES, 80c. OR POSTPAID BV MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BO8T0N, MA8S, P. N. U. 32, 1909 If fimirtfrt with wenk eyes use 5 EXTRA BLADES 25? w Trrrrr- f it M in postage stamps or cash brings it prepaid by mall In apodal box. nam and full address very plainly. 13 Leonard Street. M. v. city.