Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 18 Nov 1915, p. 3

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■■ 1 ^-ÂT %Mm& -ry> % x 6 ** i h- 7 Liver Sluggish? You are warned by a sallow skin, dull eyes, biliousness, and that grouchy feeling. Act promptly. Stimulate your liver -- remove the clogging wastes --make sure your digestive organs are working right and--when needed--take About the Household CANADA'S LIVE STOCK INDUS TRY. 81 BEECHAM'S PILLS Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the .World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 25 cents. be- Many a man fails to arrive cause he started with cold feet. Never judge a woman by the company company she is compelled to entertain. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A S T O R 3 A RAILWAY TIME TABLES FOR BOWMANVILLE. Grand Trunk Railway GOING BAST. GOING WEST Express 8.52 a. m. .'Express 4.22 a. m 10.18 8.86 p.m. 0.49 „ 7.18 9.68 , .'Express Local Local Passenger :Pas3enger Express Passenger Local Passenger Mail : Daily Canadian Pacific Railway Going West 6.07 a. in. daily 8.S8 a. m. dailyt 4.27 p. m. daily 7.48 p. m. dailyt t Except Sunday. 7.C0 9.45 „ 1.30 p.m. 7.11 „ Going East 10.46 a. m. daily 3 21 p. in. dailyt 6.59 p. m. daily} 12.57 a. m. daily C. B. Kent, Agent. PROMPTLY SECURED! In all countries. Ask -for our INVENTOR'S INVENTOR'S AD VISER, which will be sent free. MARION & MARION, . 364 University St., Montréal, Wood's Kiospüodine, The Great English Remedy• Tones and invigorates ■ the whole I nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Cures Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despondency, Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of price. Neio pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD MEDICINE CO.,TORONTO, ONT. (Ferswriy WMssr.) Negligee Shirt!! . $l°°JInd Over llEllllinEEEIlIllllllinillllHIid] WILLIAMS, GREENE & ROME LIMITED B BERLIN. ONTARIO ninniiirnrnniiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiriim DOCTORS DID NOT HELP HER But Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- * etable Compound Restored Mrs. Bradley's Health Her O z wn Statement. Winnipeg, Canada. -- "Eleven years ago I went to the Victoria Hospital, Montreal, suffering with a growth. The doctors said it was a tumor and could not be removed as it would cause instant death. They found that my organs were affected, and Éaid I could not live more than six mpnths in the condition I was in. ' 'After I came home I saw your advertisement advertisement in the paper, and commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it constantly for two years, and still take it at times, and both my husband and myself claim that it was the means of saving my life. I highly recommend it to suffering women."--Mrs. Orilla. Bradley, 284 JohnsonAve., Winnipeg, Manitoba,Can. Why will women take chances or drag out a sickly,half-hearted existence, missing missing three-fourths of the joy of living,' when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- ble Compound? For thirty years it Zv has been the. standard standard remedy for female female ills, and has restored restored the health of thousands of women who have been trou bled with such ailments ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to Lydia JS. Pinkhain Med- idine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. ..Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence* Tested Recipes. Cut stale bread into thin pieces. Put two pieces together with grated cheese between them; dip into a mixture mixture of egg, .well beaten and thinned with a little milk and fry, and you will call it good. Owl Cakes.--Choose dates of good size. With icing mark eyes and beaks -of owls on them. Cut and shape top of dates into ears. Have ready freshly baked and frosted molasses spice cakes. Press dates into these, use citron to form branches on which owl sits and with chocolate icing outline feet. ' Hobgoblin Cups.--Use cups made of .oranges with pulp removed in which to serve the sherbet, first marking faces with different expressions expressions on 'outside of skins with chocolate chocolate icing. Set on plate surrounded with paper pumpkin leaves. To make cider sherbet, sweeten cider to taste and add a little lemon juice. When frozen to a mush add one quart cream to every quart of cider used and finish finish freezing. Lemon Syrup.--Grate the rind of six lemons into the juice of 12 and let it stand over night. Make a thick syrup, using 12 cups of white sugar. When it is quite cool strain the lemon juice" into it, squeezing some of the oil from the grated rind. Bottle and set away for use. A tablespophful in ar glass of water makes a delicious drink for a hot day. A "Make Over" Meat Pie.--Chop cold meat very fine. To each cupful add one saltspoonful of salt and one and one-half saltspoonfuls of pepper, a pinch of Summer savory and one- half cupful of stock. Put into a baking baking dish and cover with a crust j of mashed potatoes. Brush over the top with milk and bake in an oven to a golden brown. -, / Sandwich biscuits require four cupfuls cupfuls of flour, four tablespoonfuls of baking powder, a teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of meat drippings, half a cup of milk and water to complete complete the wetting to the ordinary biscuit biscuit consistency. Roll the dough thin, like pie crust; cut, spread half the rounds with butter, add a filling of seasoned, finely ground, cooked ham; then lay on the covers and bake. This is a nice way to cook cabbage: Chop one head of cabbage fine, clean it thoroughly and boil in salted water for 20 minutes. When cooked spread it out to dry. Make half a pint of sauce with butter, milk and flour. Spread a layer of cabbage in the casserole, casserole, then a layer of sauce and sprinkle over it some grated cheese. Contimie these layers, finishing' off the top of the dish with several tablespoonfuls tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs. Bake for 20 minutes and serve in the casserole. Children are very fond of molasses pie. To make this you will need 1 lb. of flour, *4 lb. of breadcrumbs, % lb. of molasses," 6 ozs. of dripping, juice of one lemon, and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Make a paste of the flour, dripping, baking powder, a little water, then line a greased pie-dish with part of it; warm the molasses in a basin and work in the breadcrumbs gradually; lastly add the lemon juice. Then spread a layer of this mixture in the paste, now put another layer of paste, then more molassés, repeating till the dish is full, but finish tip with paste. Bake in a good oven for three quarters of an hour. Mixed Meat Loaf--Two pounds lean veal, one-half pound pork tenderloin, one-half pound sweetbreads, one-half pound lean ham, three eggs, one cup white breadcrumbs, three tablespoons cream, one tablespoon salt, one-half teaspoon pepper, one teaspoon onion juice and one cup* of canned mushrooms, mushrooms, cut in pieces. Put all of the meat through the food chopper twice, then add all of the other ingredients and mix thoroughly. Pack in a bréad pan, cover with buttered paper and bake in a brisk oven for one hour. Uncover and cook one-half hour longer. longer. Serve cold, sliced thin. the grease into soap, which will do its own cleaning. If the piano keys are yâshed with a soft flannel dipped in alcohol they will retain their color and not grow yellow as they do wh£n washed^ with* water. To preserve rubber heels, scrape all grit and mud out of them when cleaning cleaning the boots. Grit and small stones wear out the rubber as it revolves on the screw, making it fall off long before before the heel is really worn out. The best way to warm up a joint of meat is to wrap it in thickly greased greased paper and keep it covered while in the oven. By having it covered 'thus the steam will prevent the meat from becoming hard and dry, and the joint will get hot through in less tipie. When a child has the slightest tendency tendency to crooked legs he should have a very special treatment. .. His bones are too soft, and he needs more lime and iron. He should be taken off his feet at once, and have salt water bathing and massage. Here is an excellent way to kill moths in carpets which never fails. Wring a coarse crash towel. out of water and spread it smoothly on the carpet; iron it dry with a good hot iron, repeating the operation on all parts of the carpet infested with the moths. There is no need to press hard, and neither the pile nor ihe color color of the carpet will be injured, and the moths will be destroyed by the heat and steam. I It is appalling to see the amount of succulent juices which many ^ooks send swirling down the sink. The water water in which vegetables are cooked should always be saved. Onion water, for instance, gives the necessary flavor flavor to a tomato or vegetable soup. No matter how carefully we boil our foods, more or less of the flavor and mineral salts are lost. Cabbage and cauliflower waters make a good foundation foundation for a cream or vegetable soup without meat. Only- potato water and the first water in which old beans are cooked are not desirable. The last water in which beans are boiled, before before they are baked, may be seasoned with tomato and served as a bean bouillon. When you boil rice use plenty of water and save it, then use it to add nutriment to a vegetable soup, or boil it down and make blanc mange of it. * Mrs. Corbett Read the Advertisement and Tried It Avon, May 14th,. 1914; : "I have used 'Fruit-a-tives' for Indigestion and Constipation with most excellent results, and they continue to be my only medicine. I saw 'Fruit-a- tives' advertised with a letter in which some one recommended them very highly, so I tried them. The results were . more than satisfactory, and I have no hesitation .in recommending 'Fruit-a- tives" ANNIE A. CORBETT. Time is proving that 'Fruit-a-tives* can always be depended upon to give prompt relief in all cases of Constipation and Stomach Trouble. 60c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ottawa.. BEAUTIFUL ENGLAND RED CROSS MIRACLES. Household Hints. If you are inclined to believe that the age of miracles is past and wish visible évidence of Red Cross thauma- turgy, you have only to look at our returned soldiers who are now coming home in steadily increasing numbers. Nearly every returned soldier is a Red Cross miracle, for in the majority of cases à soldier is invalided home only when he is physically incapacitated incapacitated for further service. You may think that some- of them are sadly crippled and mutilated, but if you could compare their condition to-day with their condition when they were first placed in the hands of surgeon and nurse, you would be able to estimate estimate what the Red Cross has -done in the way of patching up and healing shattered bodies. In Canada, however, you can not see the greatest miracles of the Red Cross and Army Service Corps--the men who have been made sound and whole and as good as new again, and are once more back in the trenches, making one life do double service. Indeed, is is not a miracle that one mail having only one life to give should be able to give that life twice and even three times over--thanks to the Red Cross. Think what the Red Cross has saved, in that most precious of all commodities -- human life -- and be certain when next you put your name on a Red Cross subscription list that you have made a very profitable investment--to investment--to say nothing of performing performing a humane and patriotic act. * • Pte. Stanley J. Going, No. 150,094, isth Battalion, 4th Company, St. Martin's Plains, Shorncliffe, Hythe, Kent, England, cousin of Miss Lena Pennington, of the Bow.manville Post-Office staff, in a very interesting letter from the above Training Camp, dated October 14, 1915, writes in part as follows: "Here I\ am in England, otherwise known to Canadians as the Old Country. Have desired for years to see this land and the "homes of Merry England". I have my wish, but I would that it. were for other reasons than this war. Canadians Canadians cannot fully realize that it is such a terribly cruel war. • We already have seen much for ourselves and people tell us more. The dangers; are constant, as air raids are expected any night. Last night one of the camps had 14 men killed and some 35 others wounded; also, 17 horses are reported killed. We could hear the bombs exploding. Buglers were soon sounding all kinds of alarm blasts, and officers were running around ordering out all lights and we were under orders to move at any minute. I had no conception of the natural beauty of this country; the scenery is magnificent. The land is rather hilly and much is rolling, trees, vines, flowers on every side. Lovely hedges, many being built of stone; houses are chiefly stone, loo. Creeping vines on the hedges make them pretty. The houses appear ancient, and very few young men are seen in . the country; but seyeral young men were noticed in towns," whether fit or- not for service at the front, I cannot say. The route marching we get gives us a fine chance to see the country. The journey by bain from Plymouth to Shorncliffe was very interesting. The ocean trip was very exciting when a stojm. prevailed for a half day, putting many boys out of business. I kept my sea legs and enjoyed being on ' deck and seeing the big wa'ves and the steamer rocking. From noon of the last day we were under escort of three torpedo destroyers. destroyers. Torpedo boats are not large, but very powerful and speedy. We saw two gun boats, and, say, they are desperate desperate looking monsters 1 One wonders hew a gun can put one out of business, but it can." CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of -r / Buttermilk with a tablespoonful of freshly grated horseradish will remove remove freckles. Some coffee - needs boiling and some does not--one must experiment to find out. When pans are scorched, use a stiff wire whisk to get the burned j food off thé bottom. If you use - cleaning powder for saucepans be. sure' to wash out the pan afterward with cold water. The good housekeeper should > go over, her supplies every day. By this means she can avoid food spoiling. Figs are nice soaked in lemon juice, stuff éd with marshmallow or nuts, and rolled in powdered sugar. Putting a coat of varnish °on the linoleum yearly will make it last for years, and look bright and new. A little salt added when cooking sour fruits greatly reduces the quantity quantity of sugar required for sweetening. It is best to give linens a long soaking soaking before washing, if this method is followed stains will wash out e$s- iiy-. When boiling cabbage put a small head of celery into the saucepan. This will greatly improve the flavor. To give a delicious flavor to corn mush, drop in a -few chopped dates just before removing from the fire. Children love it. To wash anything that is greasy, use hot soda water. The alkali turns Next-Door Neighbors. For six years a bitter feud existed between the Browns and Robinsons, next-door neighbors. The trouble had originated through the depredations of Brown's cat, and had grown so fixed fixed an affair that neither party ever dreamt of "making up." One day, however, Brown sent his servant with a peace-making note for Mr. Robinson, Robinson, which read--"Mr. Brown sends his compliments to Mr. Robinson, and begs to state that his old cat died this morning." Mr. Robinson's reply was bitteri "Mr. Robinson is sorry to hear of Mr. Brown's trouble, but he had not heard that Mrs. -Brown was ill." Clear Your Skin. Eczema, psoriasis, ring worm, pimples, pimples, scales and crusts are due to myriad deeply buried germs in the skin. To secure relief au d cure these germs must be destroyed and eliminated. The D, D. D. Prescription, a mild compound in liquid form of oil of win- tergreen, thy mol and other healing elements, elements, will give instant relief in aT cases. Unlike salyes, it penetrates to the deeply and buried germs, killi and washés th?m out. All druggists have D. D. D. A generous generous trial bottle for 25o. Ccme in and let us tell you about our money back guarantee offer on a fnll sized bottle. Ask also about D. p. D. Soap. - Jury &LoveV, Druggists, Bowman ville. D. D. D. is Made in Canada. How the Gerntans Get Gold. Giving his impressions of a sojourn sojourn in Berlin, M. Maurice Shrauss says the streets are no longer safe at night-time, and crimes and outrages are on the increase. M. Strauss was assured that in making arrests the order was given to-single out,people who seem to be in e^gjr circumstances. At the police station these people are searched, and if gold is found in their possession they are reprimanded for their lack of patriotism, and are told that if they agree to exchange their gold" for bank notes or War Loan scrip they will be released, and nothing nothing more will be heard of thé charge on which they were arrested. *---: Worms, howc Ver generated, are found in the digestive tracts, where they get up disturbances detrimental to the health of the child. There can be no comfort for the little ones until the hurtful intruders have been expelled. No better preparation for this purpose can be had than Miller's Worm Powders. Powders. They will immediately destroy the worn? and coneofc the conditions that werufavorable to their existe icr* No Sw'ndle. You remember selling me some hair-restorer when I called the otfièr- dày to get shaved, you hoary-headed old thief ? " roared the v indignant customer. "You sold it under false pretenses, sir. You said it would re r store my head to its original condition." condition." "Well, didn't it work ? " asked the barber. Work? No. It's taken off what little hair I used to have, and I am as bald as the pavement now." "That's quite right, sir. No false pretense about that. I said it would restore your head to its original condition, condition, and you know, sir, most of us aré born bald." The cheapness of Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator puts ifc within reach of all, and it can be got at any druggist's; In- competing for the markets of the world there is no branch of industry industry that exceeds in importance that of live stock breeding and raising. Paraphrasing Paraphrasing the old Jingo cry, we have the land, we have the will, and we _have the climate. What is needed is j the means, and ever more means, and j simultaneously the ways of, marketing. marketing. However divergent in views and theories people may be, it cannot be denied that they are all united in a .common effort to improve both agri- ! cultural and industrial conditions. In I helping the one the other - is being aided. The interests are inextricably involved. If either is especially prosperous, prosperous, both ultimately must be, although although one may feel the benefits of extra demand and high prices before the other. In the past few years especially, a deal of scientific effort has been devoted devoted to the cultivation of the land j and improvement of productions of the soil, and sight has not been lost of the needs and necessities of that other branch of inestimable worth--* live stock, meaning thereby horses, cattle, sheep arid swine. In the latter latter direction pure-bred animals have recently been placed in various districts districts where their services were previously previously difficult to obtain, the registration registration of pedigrees has been nationalized, nationalized, systematized and subsidized, grants towards greatly liberalizing the premiums at exhibitions have been made', a special brarich has been established established in connection with the Experimental Experimental Farm system at Ottawa to investigate the cause of disease, to give counsel to breeders and to control control outbreaks of infectious or contagious contagious ailments, judges and lecturers have been appointed free of cost, cold storage facilities have been arranged, and refrigerator cars equipped and paid for, grants have been made under under the tremendously beneficial Agricultural Agricultural Instruction Act, with its ten million dollar attachment, for the encouragement encouragement of veterinary education and research, and everything possible has been done for the development and increase of co-operation. But one of the greatest lines of endeavor has yet to be mentioned, namely the improvement of marketing marketing and transportation facilities. Without inquiry and investigation nothing can be methodically and satisfactorily satisfactorily accomplished. With this principle in view a marketing commission commission was appointed, the duties of which were to ascertain advantageous points of sale and to effect and bring about the most convenient and economical arrangements for disposal, shipment and carriage to destination. It was in following this policy negotiations negotiations were carried on for the purchase purchase by the British Government of six and a half million pounds of meat canned in Canada. Owing to high freight rates, disturbances disturbances in shipping and scarcity of boats, unwonted difficulties have recently recently been experienced in exportation exportation and even in handling across the continent. It is towards remedying these and placing matters in a much better light and on a greatly improved footing that the commission has been created. In many ways there is evidence evidence that this is being accomplished, although undoubtedly there are obstacles obstacles to overcome that will be continually continually cropping up. Nor is the appointment appointment of the aforementioned marketing marketing commission the only step that is being taken. for the .advancement of the live stock and agricultural,interests, agricultural,interests, but a commission of influential, influential, widely-known and experienced business men has been appointed to go into the whole subject and to report report upon the most advisable measures measures to be taken for the advancement advancement of farming, breeding and raising, raising, shipping and selling and financing, financing, and for the aggregate prosperity of the country. Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over SO years, has borne the signature of ~ - and has been made under bis per lez- sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. ^ «-WV/A • v J vit A.A.A. IjXIJUj* All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA ©astoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it lias been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS 1 Bears thé Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought Bn Use For Over 30 Years ~H E C G m VA i I c COM PAN Y. NEW YORK CITY. At 16 a girl declares she will marry only for love, and at 26 she proceeds to fall in love with a rich man. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Must Bear Signature of See Fac-SImila Wrapper Below. .Uullaa4;u tÜJkke.e» amgen FOR HEADACHE* rtHZZINEP* tlllOUSKtS. FlPGreiNbLivt*. romttTiwios FOIMlUWIKIHÎ tôrTHECOMriUrOI UTW MWOTHAV* j|ÿ*<A r jrafeta&le.^ ■mearwimr OUBE81CK HEADAGHf, - " ' m Get"More Money" for your Skunk Muskrat, Raccoon, Foxes, White Weasel, Fisher and other Fur bearers collected in your section SHIP TOUR FURS DIRECT to "SHUBERT'MIie largest house in the World dealing exclusively In NORTH AMERICAN RAW FURS a reliable--responsible--safe Fur House with an unblemished reputation reputation existing: for "niore than a third of a century." a long: suc cessful record of sending Fur Shippers prompt ,S ATI S FACTORY AND PROFITABLE returns. Write for "tCbe Sfoubtrt fcbfpper." the only reliable, accurate market report and pricelist published. Write for tt-NOW--ife FREE A. B. SHUBERT, Inc. B 5 ."S1 ESTAUSTINAVE - »ptC 232CHICAGO, U.S.A. RED CROSS PUBLICITY. Goo<| Worl£ of Information Department Department of Canadian Red Cross. The Information Department at. the headquarters of the Canadian Red Cross-" Society in London is a vital link : in thé line of communication between between the soldier in hospital and his friends and relatives . at home. Only too often when a soldier is missing or has died on the field of battle it is the only medium whereby a soldier's relatives can learn details of his safety or of his last moments. This department carries on an immense immense correspondence with reference to the wounded in hospitals. The disembarkation disembarkation officers at Dover, Sandwich Sandwich and other /ports, and the commandants commandants of every military hospital, in France and England, are supplied with Canadian Red Cross post cards', blue in color, already stamped and addressed to the London Headquarters. Headquarters. As soon as a wounded Canadian Canadian soldier reaches a hospital the news of his arrival is despatched to London. The department has a large staff of officers, both English and Canadian, in all parts of France and England. One of these is given thé name on the blue card, visits the soldier, finds out his needs, and makes a weekly report report to the Information Department. These reports sometimes number 500 or 600 a day. A staff of assistants make use of this information to write letters to the relatives in Canada until until the prisoner is able to conduct his correspondence himself. These letters are signed by one of the Hon. Secretaries, Secretaries, and stamped with the name of the Commissioner, Col. Hogetts. The blue card is also sent at once to the parcel department, which immediately immediately forwards an individual per- cel to the man in hospital. With it goes a stamped post card with the words, "Is there anything more we can do for you?" Additional parcels are sent, containing what the soldier has éxpressed a wish for. The material for all this work comes from the Red Cross branches in Canada. Without a steady stream of supplies the. .system would break down in no time. It is the untiring workers in every province and town in the Dominion who provide the sinews for the Red Cross war and make its beneficent action possible. -- * Women Form Fire Brigade. A brigade of women firemen has been formed at Norwich, England. It consists of the members of the staff of a wholesale dry goods firm, and was organized to take the place of the men's brigade, which was disbanded because the members had all gone to the war." The new brigade is à smart and efficient organization. The instructor instructor is Inspector Thompson, chief engineer of the City of Norwich Fire Brigade. * ^Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA çsok's Cotton Root Compound. A safe, reliable regulating medicine. Sold in three degrees degrees of strength--No. 1, SI ; No. 2, $3; No. 3, S5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or.sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet. Address: THE COOK MEDICINE CO, TORONTO. ONT. (Formerly Wlsdsct.) Do you want to earn $10 a week or more in your own home ? Reliable persons will be furnished with profitable, all-year-round employment on Auto-Knitting Machines. $10 per week readily earned. earned. We teach you at home, distancé is no hindrance. Write for particulars, particulars, rates of pay, send sc. stamp. [f. AUTO-KNITTER HOSIERY CO. Dept 183 257 College St. - Toronto (Also at Leicester, England) Keep Food for Army Hot. One difficulty of the Italian commissariat commissariat is to get food from the valleys valleys to the camps in the mountains. The difficulty has, however, been solved solved and twice a day hot food is carried on the backs of mules in "cooking cases" designed by an Italian, the food is contain in a huge pan of aluminum aluminum with a circular opening, which can be closed hermetically by screws. The pan is enclosed in a casé lined with cotton and cork and the food keeps hot for more than ten hours. Constipation- ths bane of old age isnottobecured by harsh purgatives; purgatives; they rather aggravate the trouble. For n gentle, but sure laxative, use Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They stir up the liver, tone the nerves and freshen the stomach and bowels just like an internal bath. CHAMBERLAIN'S , TABLETS . Woman's best friend. From girlhood to old age, theeç Tjttle tfd health re- tSSWiO à clean, healthy, normal stomach. Take a Chamberlain's Stomach Tablet at night' end the ■our stomach ana fermentation, fermentation, . and the headache, have all goneby morning. All druggists. 2Be . or by mail from Chaakrlila MstfWt* Cisywy. Tinirts n ij • /.flj #1 ! HI

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