Foo( Products Ntvtr Vary in Quality or Taste Because the utmost care la taken by LAhf, Chef. to select only the choicest materials and prepare them in the same careful manner every time. You are thus assured of uni form goodness, and this is the reason that the use of Libby's gives such general satisfaction to every housewife. Try Libby Dried Beef Mexican Tamalet Ham Loaf Chili con Came Vienna Sausage ' Evaporated Milk For luncheon, spreads or everyday meals they are just the thing. Keep a supply in the house, you never can tell when they will come in handy. Ask forlibby'iand be sure you get Libby's, Libby, McNeill & Libby Chicago MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A CVrUIn Ow fof FeTPHfhnp roniattpa tlon, Homnftrbe, Htornnrh Troublr Terthinc I mnf A -.. inrl !! Motfitr OrtK Worms. fbrBrrnk up Co I da MtUMlpOhtld- n M noun. At all Urnf-iMa, 26 ct r Hntn. ouddm maura r una. ananw, K.wYorkUitr. A. S. OLMSTED, Ut Roy. H.Y. The difference remember this it mar save your life. Cathartic, . bird not and cannon ball pills tea spoon doses of cathartie medicines all depend on irritation of the bowel until they sweat enough to move. Cas carris strengthen the bowel muscles so they creep and crawl naturally. , This means a' cure and oaly through Cascarett can you get it quickly and naturally. M C "caret lOe bet-WMk! treat meat. AU drug-gists. Biggest sellvr In the world million boxea ft muou Granulated Eyelids Cured The worst cases, no matter of how long standing, are absolutely cured by Dr.Porter's Antiseptic Hoalinff Oil A soothing antiseptic discovered by aa Old Railroad Surgeon. All Druggists re fund money if it fails to cure. 25c, 50c & (1. full Madlda, Co. Hodgtf, TaiaB. Den Sin I mitt laTthat DR. PORTHR S ANTI imiC H BALING OIL ll on, ol tb .felted leniedle. know! to m. 1 bad granulated eyelid, ,0 badly It earned fctlBdaeiB lot about lit week,, I got a bottla ol DR. rORTBR 'S ANTISEPTIC H BALI N Q OIL and ap to to. Ilmoot tblt writing have Bled, about ball ol It and Bir yl ,r almoat entirely well. I with every body could know tbo yalua ol DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HHAL IN O OIL . Youa truly (Slga.d) CI.FMBNT BASHAMS Made by Maker of Laxative Bromo Quinine W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES - 5, 4, -3.50, '3, 2.50 & 2 THI STANDARD FOR 30 YEARS. Million, of mi waar W. L. Doaslu abm be. mom thaj are thai krw st prices, quality eon- in in worm, Mada ttpoa keaer.of tha baat taatbara, br the Boat .killed workman, ia all the lataat fashion.. W. I Douglas $8.00 and $4.00 ahoa equal l Blanch Wo-fc : M.00 to S8.00. f $oyf,Shett,t3J2.S0t3 t-T W. L. Douglas rmara mrr, thrlr Tain, by stamping pit name and prtca on th. bottom. Look for It. Tk Hnhalltiite. fail Color Eyelet i. Aak ycMar rinnlrr for W. I PonslM ahoet. If no! foraaleinyonr town wrltefor Mall order('atalog.llvtw. In. how to order by rnatL Bttoe, ordered direct from factory delivered free. W.L.l)ou,laa, Urocatoa. Mass, LADY to a eiirtjaens na m orery town; Beat teuA, bou.-bolil neceealtlee. Large demand f (a goona, Sneceaa guaranteed. Write at BRKNNAM fc CO., New Orleans. La. BIjAIR'S PZIiXjS. CELBHRATRn EMJ1.1MH KKtl F.O Y for GOL'T AND KilKL'M AT1HM. BAKU AND RtLIABLK. AT VOUtt UKUUUIST. PATEI1TS Watson E.rslrKiaia, Wash ington, DC. Bookufraa. Hlga eat raleranoee, jjsst laauiya. P. N. U. 21, 1910. tr afllleteaV sTbajssa'sEyeWater Brit la weak .i ii ii i 1 V a . to Jk5J .zw now to - PREPARE kTIIEIL Stuffed Tpppers. Remove from a half dozen good sized peppers the seeds and Inner pith. Place In boiling water and cook for fifteen minutes.- Pour over a cup ful of fine bread crumbs two table spoonfuls of melted butter. Beat an egg and mix It thoroughly In the crumbs. Stir in a half teaspoonful of salt. Pour over a cupful of chopped cold meat some stock, enough to moisten It woll. If the stock be lacking, use water. Thor oughly mix all. Fill the poppers with the mixture. Arrange them In a pan half filled with hot water. Bake In a moderate oven until the peppers are thoroughly done. Usually it re quires an hour In a moderate oven. New York Times. Hamburg Steak Villi Tomato Rnnce, Never buy your Hamburg steak al ready chopped, no matter how fresh and enticing it may look. Too often the most Inferior grades of meat are used and then sprinkled with a pre servative to give them a fresh ap pearance. Get a piece of lean ment from the round, not necessarily the tenderest portion, and have the butcher put It through the grinder while you are there. If you like on ions with the steak chop one fine nnd add. Season with salt and pep per, shape Into Bmall, round, flat cakes and having your frying pan hissing hot nnd just lightly greased, with a bit of suet, lay In the cakes. In ten seconds turn nnd In ten seconds more repeat. This gives a nice brown crust on each Ride ot the cakes and It will not be nncessnry to turn so often. Cook five minutes If desired rare; a little longer for well done. Serve with tomato satire. Melt a tablespoonful of butter In n saunepnn, add a tablespoonful flour, a half-tea spoonful salt nnd a dnsh of pepper. As soon as blended, jiour in little by little one cupful strained tomato with a few drops onion juice, and cook threo or four minutes and pour round the meat. New York Telegram. Mushrooms and Chicken. .Cut the stems from ten medium sized fresh mushrooms. Remove the gills and peel neatly. As soon as peeled drop them into a bowl of cold water. The flavor will be much Im proved If to the water has been added the juice of one lemon. Chop the mushroom stems very fine. Mix with them one small -white onion well chopped. Place them In a sauoepan In which has been melted a heaping teaspoonful of butter. Cook for two or three minutes and then add the mushroom Btema. Cook slowly for five minutes. Season with pepper and salt to taste. Take oft the stove and mix with the mushrooms. Mince tender parts of chicken, preferably the white meat. A cupful will be required. Push through ft sieve. Mix with It two tablespoon fuls of butter cut into fine pieces. Mix thoroughly. Beat the whites ot two eggs and moisten the meat with this, stirring well. Season strongly with salt and pepper. Keep on Ice until chilled. Mix with it a teacupful of whipped cream. Fill the mush rooms with this mixture. Place them In a buttered pan. Place them In an oven and cover with buttered paper. Bake until firm. Serve with either tomato or cream sauce. The latter Is more delicate and is usually pre ferred for this dish in the South. New York Times. Dryness of Bkln and general erup tions call for more fruit to be eaten. Almond meal may be used Instead of Boap It the latter Is irritating to the skin. To remove match marks from a polished or varnished surface, rub with a rag dipped In water, and the stains will disappear. ' In the' summer the fruit phosphates are not only grateful fluids for the palate, but they have a tonic, diuretic and other medicinal virtues as well. If scars remaining from pimples be bathed In a saturated solution ot boric acid and then anointed with lino ointment they will readiry disap pear. Whenever bread crumbs are to be used they are much better If seasoned first with pepper and salt. This does not refer to. their use on sweetened puddings. A wrinkled, dry skin has been de prived of Its natural oil. Almond soap should be used Instead of soap, and the face should never be washed In hot water. To make the eyebrows grow: Four ounces of alcohol, two ounces of cas tor oil, fifteen drops ot the oil ot bergamot. Apply with a tiny brush night and morning. ' Even though currants can now be bought "cleaned," the careful cook washes them through several waters, dries them on a soft cloth and puts them in a slow oven for a time. You cannot be too careful of what you put on your complexion. Many of the cheap face oreams are made with a basis of white vaseline, or lardj both of which are extremely harmfuf tothAftkio. . ' HOUSEHOLD ' HINTS' i THE COLUMBUS STATUE AT WASHINGTON Foreigners have often commented n the absence from Washington City, where statues ot heroes and near heroes occupy almost every available space, of any monument to Columbus throughout the entire United States ot Columbus, like those of a certain ancient Roman, are conspicuous by their absence. On the other band, throughout Latin America Btatues of Columbus In bronze and marble are numerous and ot great beauty. At last, however, the great discov erer is to be honored, an Act of Con gress approved March 4, 1907, pro viding for the erection of a statue In a sultablo location, onethundred thousand dollars having been appro- printed for the purpose, and a com-! mlttee named to select the design, j At the time the bill was enacted, President Taft was Secretary of War and chairman of the committee. It has been decided thnt this me morial shall be placed in the plaza of the new Union Depot. This build ing, which cost eleven million dollars, is regarded as the finest structure of Its kind in the world. It Is not inap propriate that the statue should stnnd at this noble gateway to the national capital. In response to the Invitation of the committee, twenty-one models wore submitted by sculptors of Interna tional reputation, though only two or Ihree were submitted by foreigners. So uniformly high was the merit of I JbV j, a. k - " " fVrf a" t)I ' ;;?:, . ..... . Jfe. ...S. r A MODEL OF THE COLUMBUS STATUE BY LORADO TAFT, WHICH IS TO STAND IN THE PLAZA OF TUB NEW UNION DEPOT AT WASHINGTON. these designs that the work of selec tion was extremely dlfllcult; Hut the design finally chosen, the work of Lorado Taft, of Chicago, meets with general approval. It was selecterf on account of Its simplicity, combined with an effective harmonization with Its setting in front of the great station building. The model shows a grasp of the architectural problems in volved, and besides presents a fine characterization of Columbus himself. who, Incidentally asailor and soldier, was primarily a great thinker. Mr. Taft will receive the contract for erecting the statue, which is to form part of the scheme for a central foun tain dominating the plaza and facing the Capitol Building. Other designs of especial merit were submitted by Philip Martlny, of New York, who received a prize of Ave hundred dollars; Augustln Que' rol, ot Madrid, Spain, who was given third honors and a prize of five hun dred dollars;. Henry Herlng, of New York; T. Otto Schwelger, of Phlla delphla; Louis Welngartner, of Bromsgrove, England; and Pierre Feitu, of New York. Harper's weeKiy. "All Off." A. W. Warner, the Belolt avlntor. was praising his Curtlss aeroplane. "it goes as well," he said smiling, "as Harkness on the slide." "Harkness. you know, allnnnd on a slide one day and began to sail down a long hill on his back. "Half way down Harknesn ran tntn a woman with an armful of bundles. She fell forward on his chest, and the swift glide continued, with the woman on top. "At the bottom of the hill thn wo man kicked and struggled, trying In vain to slse. Harknean her, waited patiently for about a min ute: then he said In a smothered voice: " 'Pardon me. madams hut vmt'ii have to get off here. This Is as far as I go.' "Philadelphia Bulletin. Lettuce as a food nlant fin a a ord of being eaten by Persian kings more than two thousand years ago NEW DETENTION HOME AND JUVENILE COUHT BUILDING, MILWAUKEE. Showing the possibilities In a city that is willing to meet the situation fully. This building is to cost $80,000. The Survey. Novel Clothespin. New the old-fashioned wooden clothespin that has done Its humbla work so well for many, many yean may have to go. It has a rival, de signed by a Texas man, which It much more artistic and Is said to be cleaner. The new clothespin Is mads of wire, galvanized iron or aluminum wire of good quality, nnd Is guaran- lec mux to itm mo ciuuiea. The whole device shown In the illustra tion is made of one piece ot wire, twisted and Intertwisted to form pin and chain. The wavy pieces of Iron shown form a sort of spring. The pin. Is hooked over a garment, be tween the outward flaring end of the loop and the lower part ot the spring t f ' r t Jf 1 -.W ' ... tirvf-frryy . section. By the depending chain the pin is then given a downward tug and the resistance of the Bpring and the spring coils at the top holds the whole firmly on the clothesline, which fits Into the concave part of the spring end. There Is ao danger of such a pin coming loose and allowing the clothes to drop. Washington Star. The Least Shrinking of Living Ladles Mrs. Herbert Henry Asqulth, wife of the British Prime Minister, stands for that type of female character which Is antithetical to the reserved and demure English woman ot the Victorian period. Chatty, self-possessed and daring, Mrs. Asqulth, In her personal qualities, Incarnates the new Englishwoman. . Nearly three anrl a niiarfo, million tons of potatoes were raised In Ire land last year., f mim- ' When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn't any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble? -: Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I a I down, suffered from pains in tier side, head and limbs, and could walk but a short distance at a time. She came very near having nervous : prostration, had beer tin to cough a (rood deal, V W i say a few words in prai.se of your medicine. When I began taking it I had been very sick with kidney and bladder trou- ' blcs and nervous prostration. I am now taking the sixth bot tle of Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and find myself greatly improved. My f riends who call to see me have noticed a great change." Mrs. A. II. Sanborn, Irasburg, Vermont. We will pay a handsome reward to any person who will prove to us that these letters arc not genuine and truthful or that either of these women were paid in any way for their testimonials, or that the letters are published without their permission, or that the original letter from each did not come to us entirely unsolicited. t " What more proof can any one ask ? . 1 For SO years Lydia 13. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit, I Mrs. Pinkharn Invites all sick women tar" aaf to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs. Pinkhain, Lynn, Mass. The Most Brilliant Peer. Marked as Is the superiority ot Lord losebery to every other talking man In England, it Is not to his tongue alone that he owes bis central position just now on the political stage. He is the most appreciated of peers to day because he proclaims the doom of the house of lords. Archibald Philip Primrose, fifth Earl of Rosebery, sometimes leader of the Liberal party, once prime minister of England, and always the bright particular stf.r of the peerage, burns in the present cri sis with all that genius for oratory that has made his country for years hang upon his words. The fate of the house of lords, suspects the London "Post," Is In his hands. Lord RoBe bery alone can save the hereditary chamber from extinction, and all the conservative organs in England im plore him to devise the plan. He is at this moment meditating it. Insist the champions of his order, but he is content for the time being to veil his thoughts' In the splendid rhetoric for which he Is so famed. No other speeches are so widely read and quot ed as his. No other speaker was ever so many kinds of an orator as he. No other politician has sprung so many surprises upon his country; and all England now awaits the greatest of them all the plan which, it is confi dently predicted, will, at the moment, avert the crisis which now portends the doom of the most ancient cham ber of privilege In history. Current Literature. Rewards of Toil. There is a time in every man's edu cation when he arrives at the convic tion that envy is ignorance, that Imi tation is suicide, that he must take himself for better, for worse, as his portion; that, though the wide uni verse Is full of good, no kernel of nourishing corn comes to him but through bis toll bestowed on that plot of ground which Is given him to till. The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that Is which he can do nor does he know until he has tried. Emerson. According to C. Hart Men-lam, chief ot the biological survey, the increas ing ravages of wolves are to be added to the many other leakages of Amer ican wealth. In the Northwest last year, he says, the depredations amounted to $13,000,000 in value of property destroyed. What Aits Your Do yon feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequent head aohet, coated tongue, bitter or bad teste in mornintf, "heart-buro,," belching of gas, acid risings in throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy apellt, poor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptoms ? If you bare any considerable number ol the cbova symptoms you are suffering from bilious ness, torpid liver with indigestion, or dyspepsia. Or. Fierce' Golden Medical Discovery ia made ap of tha most valuable medicinal principles known to medioal science for the permanent cure of such abnormal conditions. It is most efficient liver invigorator, stomach tonic, bowel regulator and nerve strengthened The "Golden Medical Discovery" if not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glance at these will show that it eontaina no alcohol, or harm ful habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined glyoerine, of proper strength, from the roots ot native American medical, forest plants. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. Y, Fltchvllle, Ohio. f My danprriter wan all run and seemed melancholy by spells. She tried two doctors but got little help. Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifier and Liver Pills she has im . proved so much that she feels and looks like another girl." Mrs. C. Colo, Fltchville, Ohio. Irnsbiirg, Vermont. "I feel it my duty to The Women's National Game. There Is always something Imprest slve about a crowd that is swayed hf a single emotion; you get an impres slon of force, says Mary Heaton Vorsf In "Success Magazine." These worn, en, who a few moments a so had been quiet shoppers, formed a mob. They swayed and pushed as though moved by a common impulse toward a tabic where were the embroideries. From their throats came a little dull growl, a curious notpo--the whisper of a mob. the noise of a mob in joy or in anger or in fright, or just Its restless mur mur as it waits, is different from any other noise that comes from tho hu man throat quite distinct, of a curl ous animal timber. I heard it once on the occasion of the throwing of a bomb; again from the crowd waiting for a bank to open, and a third time in a theater when fire had been called; and now here It was In miniature from a couple of hundred women wait ing to buy 10-cent embroideries. They were poor women with shawls and baskets, women with babies in their arms, women with threadbare clothes carefully brushed, who must think be fore spending each dime In the dollar, but for once indulging in the great sport of American women bargain hunting. . 21 Millions of Bibles. The nlnty-fourth annual report ot the American Bible Society shows that during the past year the total issue ot publications at home and abroad nmnnnlwl tn 2.826.831. of which 1.427.. 247 came from the Bible house In New York and 1,399,384 from the society's agencies abroad, being printed on mission and other presses In Turkey, Syria, Slam, China and Japan. These issues consist of 327,636 Bibles, 645 743 New Testaments and 1,953,451 pamphlets. The total Issues of Bibles by the society in 94 years amounts to 87,296,182 volumes. In his report on the cavalry operv tions of last year on Salisbury Plain, issued by the British war office, Lieu tenant General Sir Douglas Halg attri butes "great Importance to young of ficers being encouraged to hunt and play polo." The number, of accidents on street and steam railroads within the city of New York was 56,481 In 1908, while In 19D9 the number was reduced to 62,-618. ft