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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1914)
CHAFING DISH IDEAS POINTERS FOR USERS OF POPU LAR COOKING APPARATUS Recognised Moit Valuable Friend of Surprised Hoiteie, There Are Things to Be Remembered as to Care and Operation. No wonder the chafing dish li pop. ulur. There's magic In It. When one has assisted at a chafing dish supper, loiinauty is over lorever. Besides allowing a woman to appear at her nest and exhibit cooking as a fine art, the chafing dlHh will always serve as a friend In need to the surprised host ess. A word of caution Is necessary, however. Keep the chafing dish clean Under no circumstances place it on a fabrlo cover, but use marble, slate, wood or tile. Keep It away from cur tains and protect filmy sleeves while working around the chafing dish. A piece of slute roofing Ib convenient to hold the lamp. Above all, when the aiconol has burned out, do not put In a fresh supply until the tray has thor oughly cooled off, otherwise you may encounter an explosion. Keop all chafing dish articles and utensils ready where they can be reached without trouble. Use an agate ware utenell. It will heat In a third of the time required by tin or Conner, Procure a small wire toaster, that fresh toast may be served with each chafing dish delicacy and a second al cohol lamp to keep one dish hot while another Is In preparation. Do not for get the various wooden-handled spoons and mixing forks. The most Important article on the larder shelf Is prepared beef stock. A great number of chafing dish recipes have as their fundamental In gredient soup etock. This can be made excellently and at short notice by dissolving a dessertspoonful of con centrated fluid In half a pint of boil ing water, adding pepper, salt, two or three drops f extract of celery and a tiny teaspoonful of onion Juice. Be sides stock the chafing dish expert has in her commissary department some fine East Indian curry powder, caviare, tomato catchup, anchovy paste, canned mushrooms, salmon, chicken, sardines, cheese and all the ordinary season ings, Including paprika. Bread and butter sandwiches, iced tea, coffee or chocolate, fruit cake, pickles and wafers form a foundation for a lunch to which the addition of the hot dish prepared In the chafing dish Is the finishing touch. Chafing dish cookery is really very simple and anyone may soon learn to stir up de licious things with little preparation, provided one knows something defi nite to begin with. It would be well to purchase a book of recipes and be gin at the beginning. To make chicken croquettes a never failing and universally liked dish, take the following for six or eight people: Three cupfuls of chicken chopped fine, one cupful of bread crumbs and two eggs well beaten. Roll the chicken and bread crumbs into small, pear-shaped balls, dip Into beaten eggs and bread crumbs and fry In butter In the chafing dish. Oysters are always acceptable and appetizing. The easiest way to cook is to pan them. Heat a tablespoonful of butter and when it melts add the Juice of half a lemon and a teaspoon ful of chopped parsley and stir in the drained oysters. Cook only until their edges curl and lift out quickly on strips of buttered toast. Oyster stew Is also easy to prepare in a chafing dieh. Kansas Corn Cake. Two cupfuls of cornmeal, one cup ful of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two tablespoonfuls of lard, one-half cupful of brown sugar, one egg. Use milk enough to make a soft batter. Sift together meal, flour, salt and bak ing powder. Add lard and sugar, then beaten egg and milk, and beat thor oughly. Turn into greased pan and Hake in moderate oven. Delineator. Jellied Grapes. Wash two bunches of grapes, then plunge them Into boiling water for half a minute. Remove skins and Beeds, leaving a cupful of pulp. Make a sirup of half a cupful of sugar and a cupful of water, add grapes and a table Bpoonful of gelatin that has soaked in cold water. Let thoroughly melt and boll up, then turn into a mold. Pea Soup. Take a soup bone and one pint of split peas, put on back of stove in cold water and let it come slowly to a boll. Let it cook slowly all day; about two hours before it is needed season to ta3te. Onions- may be added if de sired. This makes a very nice supper dish, is easily prepared and needs very little attention. To Wash Greasy Tine and Irons. Pour a few drops of ammonia Into every greasy roasting pan after filling the pas with hot water. If the pots and tfans are treated in this way im mediately after using and left to stand until it is time to wash them the work of cleaning them will be found half done. Furred Kettles. When kettles become furred, that Is coated on the Inside with a hard de posit from the mineral and other sub stances in solution In water, which are set free in boiling, they can be cleaned by boiling whiting in then tor om or two hours. FINE FRUIT IS PINEAPPLE Healthful, Delicious, and Not E pensive, It la Deserving of Much Wider Recognition. For pineapple mousse, mako a sirup with one cupful of sugar and quarter or a cupful of water; add gradually the yolks of four eggs, stiffly beaten, beating all the while. Cook In a double bollor until the custard begins to thicken, then strain and cool, stir ring occasionally. Put two cupfuls of shredded pineapple through a sieve and add to the custard; lastly, fold In two cupfuls of cream, stiffly whipped. Pack In Ice and salt, and lot stand several hours to harden. Another dessert for hot weather Is pineapple charlotte: Dissolve a tablespoonful of powdered gelatin In two cupfuls of boiling water; add the juice of a lemon, a large orange, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and a little grated rind of the orange. Stir ovei the fire until the sugar is well dis solved. Strain over a cupful of shred ded pineapple; pour the mixture intc a dish which has been lined with ladyflngers, and set In the refrigera tor to harden. Serve with whipped cream. Pineapple cream alto calls for golal tin and Ib a dessert specially good 111 hot weather. To make this, dissolve two teaspoonfuls of powdered gelatlu In a cupful of boiling water. Add a cupful of sugar, two cupfuls of cooked Bhredded pineapple, and two table spoonfuls each of chopped candled orange, lemon peel and cherries. Whip two cupfuls of cream until stiff and fold Into the pineapple mixture; pour Into a mold, and put in the re frigerator to harden. Serve with whipped cream and decorate with can dled cherries and pieces of pineapple. CONCERNING CHANGE IN DIET Meat Eater Must Go Somewhat Slow When He Becomes Convert to Vegetarianism. Many people are deciding to Join the ranks of the vegetarians, for a time at least, but this should be dond with the greatest care and thought. It will be a step taken with extreme danger unless the food values are considered, and those who cannot give time to study them had better keep to the fieshpots, even if In a limited way. The meat eater cannot take up the new diet at will, as the blood has to be kept to a certain heat, and this can only be done by foods with which the constitution is already fa miliar. With regard to flour, the mainstay of the home, it -should not be wasted on cakes and the like, but kept care fully for bread, which Is as necessary as life itself. The housewife should not be selfish in the home in using this valuable commodity recklessly, and the maker of cakes, which also require large quantities of sugar and butter, at the present time Is commit ting a criminal act, even though It is one that only her own conscience can punish. The principal meal In the day should be the dinner, of course, and the housewife who takes oft a course or two is doing an act of self-denial which Is of Inestimable value to her country. Exchange. Veal With Mushroom Sauce. Broil the steaks slowly over a clear fire, turning often so that they will not scorch. When done keep the meat hot on a platter In the oven while you make the following sauce: Drain the liquor from a can of mush rooms and cut the mushrooms In halves. Cook together a tablespoonful of butter and one of browned flour until they are dark brown In color. Pour upon them the mushroom liquor and a cupful of beef stock. Stir to a smooth sauce, salt and pepper and add the halved mushrooms. Cook for two minutes, stirring constantly, then pour over and around the veal steaks. Corn Meal Cutlets. The recipe for this good meat sub stitute comes from the Battle Creek sanitarium. Turn the corn meal mush Into bread tins previously wet with cold water. Slice when cold. Beat one or two eggs slightly, add one table spoonful of water or milk to each egg, also one-eighth teaspoonful of salt. Dip the sliced mush Into the bread crumbs, then into the egg mixture and back into the bread crumbs again. Place In a buttered pan and bake In a quick oven until a rich brown. Serve with butter or maple sirup. Walnut Cream Cake. Fnr the lavers use anv rfie-nlnUnn cake recipe. The following is very good and easily made by beginners: One cupful sugar, one-half cupful hntter. three eess (whites and vnlka separately beaten), one and one-half cupfuls flour, one and one-half tea spoonfuls baking powder, one-half cup ful milk, vanilla flavoring. Bake in three layers. Sour Milk Plea. One cupful sugar, one coffee cud- ful sour milk, two-thirds cupful mo lasses, one cupful chopped raisins. on tablespoonful vinegar, one tea spoonful clovea and cinnamon, two eggs, salt to taste. This makes three pies. Chocolate Cake. One cupful sugar, one-half cupful butter, three eggs, one-half cupful milk, two cupfuls flour, three tea spoonfuls cocoa, one teaspoonful r ailia. Sift flour before measuring- FOOLED THE PANTHER UNCLE BILL OBJECTED TO FUR NISHING HER MEAL. Old Frontiersman Naturally Delights Relating to Hie Grandchildren How Narrowly He Eacaped From Hideous Death, Uncle Bill Joyce Uvea down In southwestern Missouri, on the edge of the Ozark country. He haa lived there a great many years, for he is an old man now, and he Is full of entertain ing reminiscence ot the days when that corner of the Btate was still al most a wilderness. Among the stories he loves to tell the open-mouthed children of a more sheltered genera tion Is this account ot a llvaly adven ture with the animal that all old frontiersmen used to call a "painter." Uncle Bill will begin: One day In the summer of 1857, I shouldered my rifle and started for a day's hunt. I was bound for a small prairie some five or six miles from home. After hunting for doer a spell without seeing a sign, I turned Into a small grove of walnut, oak and mul berry to hunt for squirrels. I got a good many of them during the morn ing. Once or twice I stopped to listen to a queer noise that I could hardly hear, it was so far away. It was a long, quavering cry that died away gradually. r:ut it came no nearer, and finally stopped altogether. When it came noon, I went to a spring I knew of and ate the lunch that I had brought with me. Then I thought I would go on to the prairie and hunt for wllu bees that was real ly what I had In mind when I started. But I felt sleepy, and thought I would take a nap flrat, and so I stretched myself In a shady place and fell asleep. I woke a little later to find myself covered with leaves and small brush. I was puzzled sure enough, for I couldn't think what could have cov ered me up, but I decided to find out First I got a dead log about six feet long, laid it where I had slept, and covered it with leaves and brush. I looked to c:e whether my gun was loaded, and then I hid In a clump of bushes some twenty or twenty-five yards away. After about twenty min utes I heard a noise. I peered out of the bushes, and saw a large she panther coming through the trees, followed by a quarter-grown cub. She circled round thi mound of leaves a couplev of times; the cub followed every action of Its mother. After the second round, the old panther crouched as if for a spring. She crouched lower and lower, and kept drawing her feet closer together. She kept her eyes fastened on' the mound of leavej all the time, and swayed her tail from side to side with a slow, regular motion. When she had gathered her feet as close together as she could, she sprang for the pile of leaves. She landed in the very middle of the pile, and gave several long, wicked rakes with her hind feet. Then she began to smell and scratch in tlie leaves. It didn't take her long to find out that there was nothing but an old log there, and she stopped scratching and began to look about. I thought that now was the tlmo to settle matters. I was a little t" her left and behind her; I caught a sight Just at the base of her ear, and fired. She gave one leap and a shrill scream, and then lay still. After making sure that she was dead, I looked for the cub. It was sitting near by on the side of a lean ing tree, spitting and snarling angrily. I soon put an end to that with a rifle ball. I never knew a man so well hunted as I was without being hurt. She probably took me for dead, and covered me to keep other animals from finding me while she went after her cub. Youth's Companion, That Settled It. Mrs. Charles H. Anthony of Mun- cie, whose beautiful wardrobe, de signed by herself, Impressed Paris before the outbreak of the war, said to a New York reporter the other day: "Now is the time to Introduce mod est, home-made fashions for the fall and winter. The European fashion market Is Idle now. Let the Ameri can designer, then, get to work. "American women will welcome modest fashions, for few of them are as perverse as the American woman heard about in Paris. "A friend said at a ball to this woman's husband,: 'How the men are flocking round your wife! I thought you said you'd never let her wear one of those shock ing evening gowns without shoulder straps? ' T know.' the other man answered. 'but she happened to hear me say it.' " Buffalo Express. The Zuyder Zee. The Zuyder Zee, or Southern eea, was formerly a lake surrounded by feni and marshes, its present extent being chiefly the result of floods which occurred In-the thirteenth cenUry. Its area is about two thousand square miles and the average depth from ten to nineteen feet It has always been the work of the Hollanders to recover is much as possible of the land lost to them in this manner In past ages, and In the literal sense they can be said to have made half their country, hav ing reclaimed over one million acres from eea, lake and river since the six teenth century. TYPEWRITERS, ALL MAKES Mm Lnrrtt assortment flpe. clnl l'rlr,.. Million ui SMITH PKtMII.R, 915 Vs. ktachiiiM hintiMl (in I , . I approval and a-uaran- r . . zi.PVjl teed by Home enncorn. 'r'-t fl Writ for umplw of ?; tU"I make W" preferred. TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE, 15IJ Wuk. St., Portland, Or. NEW HOTEL HOUSTON Dava Houston, Prop, H. B. Thorsnes, Mirr. Thoroughly modern. 101 Hooms of comfort. Mod prat i'rii-M. Three minutes' walk fmm Union Depot. Writ, fur rat.. 72 N. Sua &, PORTLAND. OR. WEEKS' BREAK-UP-A-COLD TABLETS A guaranteed remedy for Colds and La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist. It's good. Take nothing else. Adv. Tobacco Habit Cured Not only to users of pip and elg-ara, but th. vicious cigarette habit It overcome by using th. "NITltlTE" tr.alm.nt. Prleo complete, pontage paid, 11.00. Lau.-Davla Drug Co., 8d and Yam hill, Portland, Or. (Wh.n writing- m.ntlon this papar.) If Mcintosh Red eloped with a Pip pin would he be shadowed by a North ern Spy? If Wagener wedded a Grimes Gold en would they become Wealthy? If the Wlnesap drank cider from a Grnvensteln would he call It DellclouB? If the Senator was wrecked on a Spltzenburg would it Crabbe his act? If Arkansas Black kissed a Rome Beauty would the Maiden Blush? If the Duke of York made love to the DuchesB would It cause a Blue Pearmain? If Ben Davis stepped on a Winter Banana would he swear, "By Jona than?" The danger In sowing mines lies in the possibility that the grim reaper will get the harvest. The startling discovery has been made that college men are consider ably more ignorant of Biblical affairs than of bibulous matters. Kola Tablets have many frienda who use them as ag-eneral tonic and (or Kidney trouble. Price 26s per box, 6 boxes for 11.00. For sale by Laue-Davla Drug Co., 3d and Yamhill Sts.. Portland. Ore. Curtain Hints. When "doing up" lace curtains fold them lengthways and starch the edgos only. In this way an economy In starch is effected, the curtains look better and they do not so quickly wear Into holes db when starched all over When buying window shades get an extra set of catches. Put one set at the usual place, the other about a foot lower, In cold weather bang the shades on the lower catches and leave the window down from the top. This gives perfect ventilation and prevents the shade from blowing about. Good Old Times. "Father," said the small but pert boy, "didn't Esau sell his birthright for a mess of pottage?" "Yes, my son." "H'm! That was some high cost of living, wasn't it?" Otherwise Engaged. "Bligglns' boy doesn't Bay as many bright things as he used to." "No. Bligglns has taken to tango dancing, and hasn't time to think 'em up." Sprains.Bruises Stiff Muscles Sloan's Liniment will save hours of suffering. For bruise or sprain it gives instant relief. It arrests innammationand thus prevents more serious troubles developing. No need to rub it in it acts at once, instantly relieving the pain, however severe it may be. Here'a Proof Charles Johnson, P, O. Box i06, Law ton't Station, N. Y., writes: "I sprained my ankle and dislocated my left hip by falling out of a third itory window ail mouths ago. I went on crutchea for four months, then I started to use some of your Liniment, according to your direo tions, and I must say that it U helping me wonderfully. I threw my crutches away. Only used two bottles of your Liniment and now I am walking quite well with one cane. I nover wiU be with out Sloan's Liniment.'! AU Dealers, 25c Send four cents in stamp for a TRIAL BOTTLE Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. DeptB. Philadelphia, Pa. SLOANS LINIMENT 1 I if, Kills I PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Wei ao goods fasm ana brighter colors tkaa any Mhctay. Ev.ry package guaianusd I color Silk, Vool. Cotton an Ml... Goods .ton. souk 10 cants ajackaga. Writ, lor f, booklat "Hr to Dy ana Mti Colon," calendar, blottus. ota. MONBOS DIUG COMPANY. DfpaftsMM Z. Quasar, Ulawsj Only One Queen Left Alive In Europe Dutchmen everywhere celebrated re cently the thirty-third hlrthdny of their beloved monarch, Wllhelmlna, the world's only ruling queen. Wllhel minu whs born ou August 31, 1880, and ascended the throne on her eigh teenth birthday, flftoen years ago. The Dutch queen Is very old-fashioned In her Ideng and opinions. Sho has In herited warlike Instincts and docs not appreciate having The Hague made the "peace capital" of the world, At the hist peace conference in the Dutch capital the queen remained sternly aloof, and her openly unsympathetic attitude, and especially her refusal to lay the foundation-stone of the peace temple, aroused much Indignation among the pacificists. It was only af ter long and enrnest persuasion by her ministers and other rulers that Wll helmlna consented to give royal sanc tion to the ceremonies held recently at the pence palace.. Queen Wllhelmlna Is bitterly oppos ed to womun suffrage, partly because it runs counter to her old-fashioned notions about woman's sphere, partly because In Holland suffrage and so cialism are so closely associated. Wllhelmlna, like her mother, Queen Regent Emma, before her, Is a stern and uncompromising teetotaler. She has never touched a drop of liquor in any form or on any occasion, and nev er permitted wine or alcoholic bever ages In the palace until after her mar riage to Prince Henry of Mecklenburg Schwerln a dozen years ago. It Is said that mnny three-cornered qunrrels be tween the prince and his royal wife and mothor-in-law disturbed the at mosphere of the royal residence be fore the queen finally submitted to her husband's wishes and permitted wine to be served to guests. The Dutch queen is one of the proud est and fondest of royal mothers. Upon little Princess Juliana, now in her fifth year, the Queen lavishes a wealth of affection, and all the hopes of Dutch monarchists are centred up on this healthy little mite of feminine humanity. The wee princess Is all that stands between royalist Holland and one or the other of two fates equally horrible to the queen the "gobbling up" of the country by Ger many or the establishment of a so cialistic republic. A TREATMENT THAT HEALS ITCHING, BURNING SKINS Don't stand that itching skin humor one day longer. Go to the nearest druggist and get a Jar of reslnol oint ment (50c) and a cake of reslnol soap (25c). Bathe the eczema patches with reslnol soap and hot water, dry and apply a little reslnol ointment. It'B almost too good to be true. The torturing, itching and burning Btop ln- Btantiy, you no longer have to dig and scratch, sleep becomes possible, and healing begins. Soon the ugly, tor turing eruptions disappear completely and for good. Adv. Which would you sooner do, eat rnanKsgiving dinner with the Ger mans in Paris or partake of Yuletlde Joy with the Cossacks in Berlin? She was my leading lady, And she took me through the store To go broke on Christmas shopping Her misleading made me sore I A Berlin paper was punished for caning tne advance a retreat. Even the retreat was only a strategical ma neuver. There may be nothing significant In the fact that the kaiser is moving his troops from Lyck, Is It modesty on the part of the man agement that prompts them to Import a band to blow their horns for them. The village cut-up wants to know if velvet jumpers are persons who land on soft Jobs. YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine EyeKeinedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyeaund (Jrauulaleu Kyelide; No Smarting lust-Eye Comfort Write for Book of Hie Eye by mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. War's Effect on Drug Markets. That the great war in Europe will perhaps lead to the establishment in the United States of one or more dis tributing centers for the drug products of the entire world, as well as It will tend to encourage the manufacture In this country of many of the drugs now Imported, is the belief of Dr. Martin I. Wilbert, of the Division of Pharma cology of the United States Public Health Service. Virtually all of the great drug mar kets of the world are In the war zone, and stocks on hand in the foreign ports are not available for export ei ther because of blockade or because the local governments have prohibited the exporting of drugs. The depen dence of the people of the United States on Europe for most of the drugs used In this country is emphasized by the unprecedented Increase in the price of some of the more widely used drugs and the practical exhaustion for the time being of some of the more important articles which are made or conrolled by the European countries now at war. In a report on the situa tion which Dr. Wilbert has made for Surgeon-General Rupert Blue, of t'ae Federal Public Health Service, he says: "There Is an urgent need for estab lishing for ourselves and for the Amer ican continent generally a distributing center for the drug products of the world. Outside of the trade few peo ple of this country are aware of the fact that by far the greater number of drugs sold In the different countries Of the world are marketed through London, Hamburg or Trieste. A few drugs like the products of the Dutch colonies are marketed through Am sterdam, and some of the drug pro ducts of Turkey and western Asia come to this country directly from Constantinople or Smyrna. The bulk of the drugs used In this country, how ever, even Including those of Ameri can origin, are distributed from the great drug markets of the world cen tered in the cities of Hamburg, Trieste and London." 15 nEKC, Dill INU A DDFTITP Inils.MIL. vnn SHnnin tdv I IMOTCTTCDIO Iii u o i l i itn oi ni l n ii I aiowacn diners i It tones the stomach brings back the appetite assists digestion and as similationpromotes liv er and bowel activity prevents Bloating, Heart burn, Indigestion; Bili ousness and Malaria. i J Get a bottle this very day Get a bottle this ver Majority Like New Rule. Summarized reports from the twenty-eight cities of the third class In Pennsylvania concerning their prog ress under commission government during the first six months of 1914 were presented In an address recently delivered "by A. M. Fuller, president of the Allied Civic Bodies. The in formation, received In the form of an swers to questions, Includes reports from nineteen banks and twenty Indi viduals, and, as reported In The Amer ican City, Indicates general satisfac tion with the new form of government. The questions and answers were aa follows: Has the new form of government, In your opinion, proved a success? Twenty-two cities reported, very briefly, yes; three, no, and three, no opinion. Are your citizens generally pleased with the new system? Twenty-one cities reported yes; three, no, and four, no opinion. Has it tended to create more inter est in city affairs on the part of citi zens? Twenty-three cities reported yes; two, no, and three, no opinion. Would not the "general manager plan" In conection with the present system render the government still more efficient? Twenty-one cities re ported yes and seven cities reported no. Moving pictures seem to be all-Important. They have them at the apple show and now the good roads conven tion Ib talking of them. Ruptured Persons suffer more from Inexperienced truss fitting than from hernia. Why not buy your trusses from experts? Try Lsue-Davis Drug Co,, at 3d and Yamhill. Portland. Ore., who are ex pert, and know how. Europe's Highest Flowers. Not less than eighty-six species of flowering plants above the snow-line have been discovered by Herr von Klebelsberg in the Tyrolese Alps. Of these fifty-six species continued to ex ist up to 300 feet above the Bnow-line, and six were still found at more than 1,600 feet above, while one the gla cial Ranunculus reached 12,000 feet above sea-level on the Grossglockner and nearly 13,900 on the Finsteraar horn. No other vascular plant In the Alps Is known at such a height. Most Skin Trouble Readily Overcome The Active Principle of Famous Remedy Works Wonders. Many people havo marveled the waj 8. 8. overcomes skin troubles. The ex planation Is tho fact that 8. 8. 8. works In the blood and the blood Is really a most Intricate and extraordinary mass of arteries aid veins. When you como to realize that the skin and the flesh beneath are composed of a network of tiny blood vessels you solve tut mystery. Thete are wonderful medicinal properties In 8. 8. 8. that follow the course of the blood streams just as naturally at the most nourishing food elements. It Is really a remarkable remedy. It contains one Ingredient, the active purpose of which is to stimulate the tissues to tha healthy selection of its own essential nutrl mont. And the medicinal elements ot this natchloss blood purltier art Just aa essen tial to well-balanced health as the nutri tious elements ot the meats, grains, fats ind sugars of our dally food. Not one drop of minerals or dtugg !a used In Its preparation. Ask for 8. 8. 8. and lust insist upon having It. And If you da. lire skillful advice and counsel upon any matter concerning the blood and skin, writs to the Medical Department, The Swift Specilic Co., 621) Swift Bldg., Atlanta, G. Do not allow some sealnus clerk's elo quence oyer something "Just as good" ss 8. 8. 8. to fool you with tha same old mineral drug. Beware of (1) substitutes. Uislut upon B. 8. 8. P. N. V. No, 48, IS 14 WHEN writing- to adrtrtlssrs, pl lion this paper.