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HERALD AND NEWS, JUNE 15 1903. CH THE SPOT. r ,re an chinf back, paiua bt rhrumatitra, tirvH-out feelinia, putt reach U apot frt at tLa art 'V.s tb k:j-.Ti. 'a Kidney I'illa are (or the kid lea Bierbach, atona contractor, at 2025 Chestnut St, Erie, I'a aayi; "tor two lyeara I bad kidney trouble, and there waa auch a acvr pain through my loina and limb that I could not atoop Ior straighten up milhout great pain. f jhad difficulty in Iting about ana waa unable to rent at I night, arising in the morning tired and worn out. The kid ney accretions were f .i irregular and de posited beavy st'di- j Doctora treated me for rhcu I, but failed to help me. I lost (lij-nce In medicine, but Doan'a f I'illa relieved me so qui -kly thoroughly that I gladly made rut to that effect for publication, a as in 18U8, and during the ail which bve elapsed I have never I Doan'a Kidney Pilla to fail" T.EE TRIAL of this great kidney se which cured Mr. Bierbacb will jl-d on application to any part of tited States. Address Foster Mil Co., Buffalo, N. T. For sale by Dggists; price, 00 cent per box. FULL BLOOD jpanisn Jack t make Reason at Mark Rowell Farm, ltandolph. Hands, Weighs 1050. Fee, $10 to warrant, jr'fu-ther particulars inquire imv's blacksmith fchop JEW & BAKER. FOR SALE: One pair Draught raca; one Ma-e, with Foal from INTRAL VERMONT RAILWAY. Corrected to Jan. lit, IMS. OOINQ aol'TU , Train. teav Randolph . follow.: OOA, JVC. rllirht Eipr, daily, fnr Boatnn n.l .11 New England point. Tdpiukd C'w-htM anil SI--iiinir t.r fur Bualoa iris Lowell, alao t..r ttiirlDK&eld. 17 -A JVC. Mall wh-1t for Wr'iwee.ter. B""tnn and N-. v.ira. Parlor oar (rum Whit. Ktver Jut, . lo BoMon. 13I.M. Limited Eifreaa week dT for Boton and f .r Nw Vora, via 8irinirnVid and f,,r New Lonlon. Tbrouph Outi-hr. and Pullman Boft-.l Parlor Car to Buatuu and si.rliufllrl.l. 23 Xs. 3Vt. ; P.uenirer week day. for Whits Bivar Junc- ""0' . OOISU NORTH 00 A. 3VX. ' Xiirbt Eiprea d.llv fnr Montreal and the ' Vt. Week itavii f-r Otfdt'nalmrir, KH'tlfurd 1 and Ottawa. Bleilng car to Montreal. BO A.. 3VL. i Pameniror wk dav tt St. Altn, Mont- real, Ottawa and klchlord, oounectlng at Burllnirton for Troj aud Allianr. OO r. 3VL. Mall and Eprea week dara for Bnrllna t. . n, Caniliride Junction. St. Altiana. K ir Point. ir.-nlunr. Rich lord aud Montreal, 5 Pullman Parlor car to Montreal lO I. JVC. i Fipn-a week .tarn for Montreal ani fhlrairn. Pullman Parior car to Montreal and Pullman Sieeptair oar to Chicaao. I O. c. JOSKR. ? ;'n'ral Manairer. i J.E iitsatY, I Oen r. P ti-.en AR.nt. c.roaart- At'rrrf' iliOV'StiitKAT COMMEUCIALSCnOOL. itabllshcd 44 Years. I Utlors feaiures which cannot be fO'iml in anv other school f liundretls'or pradu 'ei placed In po rtions annualiv. . J L. G TUf TLE.Tnn. onn money 1UU IVIAlfPDCl I' me with stock and tools incluiiwL 'S-A d. r.ii utmnt'i Snrinir Ctf List" ; over 80 cuts of buildings and travel i' g instructions so yoo can go and trade with V r owners. Every farm is a bargain. This ! which is aiailed fret, will save von ti-re money. In Maine alone we sold 269 farms lait year. If yoo want to sell, get our t t desrriptioa blanks. Call on our local i. :nt or address E. A. STROUT FARM AGEKCY 150 N.na. SN.V. Tr.iii.elT.ii.pl., BOSTON EMt,lllted 1K3 I LAWRENCE & COMPANY, j Wholesale CosnmisslDa Merchants, poultry, Eggs, Fruit and Produce j p-ii.Tin Herhe. Melon". Apfrra. APPI J ,t. rte-. Bet trent- Fanecil UV1 at:onal '4 U n " f SENSIBLE HOUSECLEANING. Do Not Try to Do Everything- is One Day and Take Enough Beat ' for Fresh Attacka. Teople do houaeclea&isg In mazy dif ferent ways, but this is tba way I find best: Aa aoon as the weather become a little settled, I start in, so that my work U completed before the very aarm spell we usually get in tba spring seta in. One room a day is suf ficient for the housewife to do when the attends to all other work herself. Decide on something for dinner that re quires little trouble. Sometimes 1 pre pare the vegetablea the nlgbt before. If 1 am to have some that will not spoil, for instance: Carrots, potatoes, pars nips, turnips, etc., keep very nicely pared when they are covered with wa ter. (This plan I find works admirably for Sunday, too the vegetables can ba done Saturday night for the Sunday dinner.) I commence housecleanlng with the garret and finish with the cellar. I start right In after I bave done the breakfast dishes. If I can conveniently do it, the day before I dust the knlck knacka and pictures in the room I intend doing, and pack them into a basket, then In the morning It la clear sailing. And as a rule I bave only the finishing touches to do after dinner. I URed to ' u start right In and do another room, but I I find that does not pay as it makes me I including many of the thousands of testi too tired, and after I had finished mv mouial letters received from sufferers - . . . . .. - 1 wora, i usually naa a sica speu. so, you i r It waa not worth while. When cn- I bin room. I put up the screens to ; me winaows ngni away, so I nave very little trouble with flies all summer long. I In the average home, housecleanlng time la a season of dancer and dlsoom- ! fort To my certain knowledge, many a life baa been lost by overwork and exposure, due to unwise methods of bousecleanlng. This need not be. In early spring all closets, cupboards and bureaus can be cleaned, and all useless articles disposed of. All articlea that require laundering can be dona and laid away, and when the weather la so mild that beating atoves are no longer need ed, one room at a time can be cleaned. After that, all pictures and bric-a-brac can be cleaned and stored there, and the next room tackled. When the house wife gets weary and the larder geta empty, she can atop and bake a little for the good man, who will then be mora willing to help her lay the car pets. Do not neglect the routine of wholesome meals during housecleanlng, and do not try to renovate your house In auch baste that you will suffer the III effects for months to come. It la the height of folly to have the whole house In a state of confusion at a season when the buman system has been weak ened by wlnter'a seclusion Indoors. I have learned by many years of expe rience that the horrors of bouseclean lng may be banished by cleaning one room at a time and taking now and then a day of rest between rooms. Farm and Home. EXTRAVACANCE IN BUTTER. Better to Dispense with the American Custom of Using This Fat at the Sinner Table. With the many aigha beaved over grocery and creamery bills, it la en couraging to know that the crusade against butter at the dinner table Is rap Idly gaining ground, partly because it has come to be the fad. Once the fad Is established as a habit, however. It will carry Itself along, as it is a good, sensible one. It is a point in which we Americans are more extravagant than perhaps other nations. A full din ner usually contains in Itself more fat than can be readily absorbed by the system, and superfluous fat tends se riously to retard, even disturb, diges tion. To add butter out of sheer habit, to suffer from Indigestion because of too heavy a diet, and in turn fill up with j drugs and have to face the bills Is bad management. . . . Many a husband, while strongly advocating every econ omy, will feel. In spite of the gravy and Juicy meat, besides vegetable sauces, that some way his dinner Is not com plete without his habitual butter. At least start out the younger members of the family In the new habit, and event ually you will find they will feel better satisfied minus than plus the super fluous fat. The manufacturer has to 6tudy details In the process of exhausting from his raw material the very last molecule of his product, aud all this In relation to the expense In labor and time for se curing It. Not only Is this true of the product Itself, but every grain of the by-product has to be used to the best ad vantage. How little of this method do we apply In our households! More than that, one single attempt not entirely successful, we are prone to be discour aged. Each of our household items ol expense demands a critical scrutiny. Good Housekeeping. Lemon Fie. The juice of one lemon and Its grated rind. Three well-beaten eggs; one cup ful sugar, two and one-half cupfulls of bot water. Put together over the fire, and at the boiling point add two table spoonfuls of cornstarch wet with a little cold water. Bake the crust, then add i the filling. Frost with the white of two eggs. A Toast. Here's ro to-dv: the pRst I iron, Tr.e future ptanas wi'.h bckonlrg hands, Ard hole? for us we know not what. And tempt? us on to newer lands. To-day is ours. We know lis worth; It stands to u? for all past deeds. Here's to you hoping that to-day W1U answer to to-morrow's netds. Quick Graham Bread. Two cups sour milk, one teaspoonful salt, one and one-quarter cupfuls mo lasses, one teaspoonful soda, and enough graham flour to thicken about the same as hrown bread. Bake one hour In a omen as Well as Res Are Made miserable fcj Kidnej and Bladder Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, UiMuuraKCsandlessensambition; beauty, vigor ana cheerful ness soon disappear w hen the kidneys are out of order or dis eased. Kidney trouble baa become so prevalent that it is not uncom- ? nion for a child to be born afflicted with weak kidneys. If the child urinates toooften, if the untie scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it, the cause of thediffi culty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidnevs and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made miser able with kidney nd bladder trouble, a t,i, nr the same trreat remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of SwifflB.Doot i soon realized. It is sold by druggists, tn btty cent and one-dollar size bottles, ournayijjj bave a sample bottle nanmhlet telling all about Swamp-Root, rmrmj) In u'riiiitif Dr. Kilmer & Co. " " "? r i ffigg T.SSK ,)Ut r7nmber the name, Swamp-Root, jr Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the au dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle, FERTILIZER FREE FOR THE ASKING. Fanners, Gardeners, Florists, Seeds men, Greenhouse Proprietors, Nur serymen, indeed any one who will send bis name on a postal card to C, S. Page, Hyde, Park, Vt, and simply say "I saw your adv. This Paper. Send us a sample of your Page's Plant Food" will receive a sample promptly, free, postpaid. From what we know of the reputation of Mr. Page we are inclined to believe that bis Plant Food is the article of genuine merit and when you note the ingredients and he will send them to you with the mail sample you will see that the ordinary impositions that are too often practiced upon the farmers un der the bead of "Fertilizers" do not exist in Page's Plant Food. Address U. 6. Page, Hyde Park, Vt About Making Cardans. There is nothing better than Ground Bone In making gardens. pure A teaspoonful In a bill Is a perma nent benefit, lasting all summer. Enclose C3.25 in check or postal money order, or In a registered letter, and a trial barrel will be shipped to you promptly. If you don't need It all divide it with your neighbors. We publish a little booklet, abowlng bow to use Ground Bone as a Fertiliser In gardens and in greenhouses and to promote the growth of your flowers and shrubbery. Send your name on a postal card and It will bs sent to you free by return mall. C. S. Page, Hyda Park, Vt Butchers, Merchants and Hide Buyers Butchers, Merchants, Hyde Buyers Should write to Carroll S. Page, Hyds Park, Vt, who wishes to purchase their nides. Calfskins, Sheep Pelts, Tallow and Bones. He pays spot cash. He paya the freights. He pays full market values. He wishes to arrange with aome one In every village, where bs has no agent to sell Poultry Sup piles and to pick up for him Hides, Calfskins, Sheep felts, and Bones, ne furnishe9 money with which to bny and be keeps his agents thoroughly posted at all times as to market valuea. Write him for full partlculara. South Royalton Marblo and Granite Works, WT7 sorEn, Manufacturer and Dealer in Foreign and American Marble; Scotch, . Swede and American Granite. Monuments, Headstones, Tablets, Post Etc Prices Low. NEW, UP-TO-DATE DESIGNS. Randolph Foundry, Manufacturers ol Green Mountain Swlver Plows, Rrpalrn, Stnve Grte, Hog Trooirhi Feeil Boxefl, Pout Bare, Silo Kovla and Coup llnifa, Job Casting, Etc. Clapboards, Lath, Doors, Windows. Aeh and Spruce LuDiber.Job Work. Agent for Gray's Horse Powersand'Machines. Farming Machinery, Section. Twin and Oil. TKRMS CAbti. OSGOOD & ROUNDY, ttaiictoliDli. Vermont, Perfectly Satisfied WITH YOUR GOODS AND PRICES, are the words commonly used by our cus tomers in sending tor more goods. If you intend buying worstea, Monair, ransma or woolen goods for Shirt Waists, Hkirts or other suits, we nave cne gooaa in mnre Variety, ana me yriixv are uimiuaury quality considered. Thanking you for past patronage, e remain, respectfully yours. I C. F. LAVENE a CO., Bon Zbs, LDanon, a. h. Send for sample. PCMICHltTIS'S tnukiBiv EdflYROYAL PILLS SAFE. t-Mu-ri,.:.;, I ,!. Wfisi for (HKHKMKKh KM. MM. t If IB ft''-! ttttlsl wsMftllte ta- -..4 srtth Liu ril.rn Take other. Rrfuaw lBtiCr ulktttU.Ma mm4 lss'lav doaisw Buj of jonr lirtttgui. seail 4. m unfe tor Pktnlmhsra, TwttBMialt tud "KHIef Wr La.lMk. uttm, bi r I tars MmlL 10.O Ti.oiis. &otd b One Hinute Cough Cure ESt:':::Td i VT CCi - - --r SOME PERENNIAL PLANTS. Few of ths Flowra That Will Ho ward tha Gardener from Early Summer to Its Fall. Any of the following will give satis faction and beauty for many years: Perennial Phlox, a grand flower, and can be procured in a great many col ors and shades. A good selection of these improved phlox, well cared for, la a bed of beauty from June until late frost after the first year. Good rich soil should be selected for these plants ind a aunny location Is best to bring out their colors; place them 18 inches apart. If small plants are procured, this may seem to be too far, but they spread very rapidly by root Increase. Weeds must be kept down, and the roots not be allowed to dry out; cut the blooms just as soon as florets begin to fade, if not before, as seed bearing rap idly exhausts the plant, and prevents rebloomlng. A few seeds let ripen in the fall will Insure quite a lot of nice seedlings the next spring. Hollyhocks, both single and double, should be bad, and while the cut leaved double dwarf ones are pretty anywhere, the tall single ones are nicest In a group in some corner, or along a fence or build ing. Have all colons of the single ones mixed. If the bloom stalk is cut off before seed forms, the plant will bloom the second time, the same season, but the bloom stalk will not be so long. Hollyhocks are rank growers and re quire good, rich soil. Golden Glow, Shasta Daisy, Pinks In variety, Dyleta (bleeding heart), Platycodon, Perennial Poppies and Asters are a few more that are very desirable and once started, except the garden carnation and dlanthus pinks and Sweet Williams, will rapidly In crease In both plant and flower. Those excepted need to be renewed every third year, but tbey are so sweet and desirable In every way that they are well worth the extra trouble. These plants, without mentioning the bulboua rooted desirables which will require an extra "note,' will furnish flowers for bouquet and garden from early spring until after frost. Many are very fragrant By an oversight. hardy chrysanthemums were not men tloned. The house ones are lovely, al most beyond belief, but ths hardy ones if not so large, nor so many colored, are Just as nice In foliage, and the white ones and yellow ones, when well fed and cared for, will furnish very large bios' soma in abundance. These increase very rapidly. Don't omit these very de sirable plants. Where one baa some time, a sunny location and a few extra dimes, 1 know of nothing that will re turn rnore enjoyment than a half dozen or so of mall size tea roses. They re quire a rich, clayey soil, sunshine and to be watched that insects don't get a foot hold, but tbey are indeed beautiful. Farmers' Review. SOME SUMMER FASHIONS. What tba Shop Are Showing" in Ap proved Stylea of the Moment and What Can Be Copied at Home. An extremely attractive dress of nat ural colored linen was seen at one of the shops this week. It bad the usual plait ed skirt and had a blouse with a deep round yoke, which was embroidered with sprays of white wheat. There was a great deal of the embroidery, and the yoke was bordered at the collarless neck, and also where it Joined the blouse, with a conventional design in white. A broad fold of the linen In the front of the gown was embroidered with wheat sprays, as were the full sleeves. The sleeves were gathered into a high cuff, fastened on the outside with white linen buttons and loops. The belt was em broidered in the conventional design used In the yoke border. Very simple gowns of handkerchief linen, very fine and sheer, are embrold ered freely on both skirt and waist. Such gowns are especially recommended foi elderly women. Five out of ten of the summer gowns already seen are made with guimpes ot chemisettes; and the shops are showing tempting little band-made mull and thin linen affairs, laced and embroidered. In genious fingers should be able to make very pretty guimpes at home, especially if one be purchased for a model. The French blouses buttoned In the back and more or less elaborate are bound to be popular this year, as they were last. If the entirely hand-made variety. Inset with real lace and trimmed with all kinds of needlework. Is too ex pensive for people of ordinary income. there are numbers of machine-made waists on the same models which are very well worth wearing. Sometimes these waists show enough hand work to rid them entirely of a clumsy or shoppy appearance. They come In fine muslins, lawns and mulls, which are second only to handkerchief linen In popularity. Charlotte Russe. Make a custard with three well-beat en yolks of eggs, a pint of milk and foul tablespoonfula of granulated sug;ar. dissolve one ounce of soaked gelatine In a pint of boiling water, let It cool and slightly thicken, then stir It into the custard. Take a sponge cake as large as the dish In which it is to be served; tak off the top of the cake, and remove part of the Inside, lravirg a nice wall all around, and pour In the custard (after putting the cake In the dish In which It Is to be sent to the taUe), then cover with the cake top. and heap over It the whites of two eg?s. whipped to a stiff froth with four tableKpHir.fiils of sugar. Set in a very cool place until time to serve. For Poisoning. For accidental poisoning, vomittTig should at once be produd to eject the poison from the stomach. Mustard, aalt water, weak borax water or an ac tive emetic will any of them produce the 2es!red eJCec Take-Down Reheating Shotguns The notion that on must pay from fifty dollars upwards in order to get good shotgun has been pretty effectively dispelled since the advent of the Winchester Repeating Shotgun. These guns are sold within reach of almoat everybody's purse. Tbey axe safe, strong, reliable and handy. When it cornea to shooting qualities no gun made beats them. They are made in is and 16 gauge. Step into a gun store and examine one. FBEE: Stni mam and mJdrttt m a postal rarat tor aar Urgt illtlrmt4 catalog. , WINCHESTER REPEATING HIGHEST GSAH PRICES Paid for HIDES, SKINS. PELTS, TALLOW, BONES, SETS, ETC. I!y lihenil prices and square dealing we are satisfying hundreds of Uutthers and Dealers all over the state. We can do the same for you. TKV US. Burlington Rendering Co., Office and Factory, North Ave., HAVE YOU SEEN THE 1905 GASOLINE Write for Catalogue Giving full description Prices, etc. a jf-o v No Trouble to Start in Cold Weather. Send for testimonial and see for yourself Manufactured close to home by the CREENDALE GAS ENGINE CO, Worcester, Mass. OSGOOD & ROUNDY, Cen'l Agts. i o THE 134th HORSE SALE Johnson's Sale and . West Lebanon, N. H., Having bought the lease of fu-o. ness the same as ever at the oM staml. Auction Sale the Third Saturday of Every Month. Horses eonstantlv mi hand for sale or exchange, from the heaviest draught horse to one tit to raie. Hiwer to supply our customers with the U st at the lowest ims-siiue-niees. Husiness at the same old stand, done in the same old way. S, B. WITHINCTON, West Lebanon. N. H. R. J. KIMBALL & CO., MEMBERS OF The New York SINCE Hanover Bank Building, w. kiiknk kim HALL, New York. lkei;jhinsox. YOUNG MEIK High to lrarn i itcnttd try thrtn. V mprrirv trrhr. rr''"'e arcur pomiona anntiallT Valuabl lctutr. Utn durtna; theatir rar. Fir fold medala rrivl at ldtmatirma: ExDoailiona. feummtr arhaol f-.r tracher and othrra. i:!uatratd catalogue lr CAKNEU. HOIT. At-aanr. N. Y. , ARMS CO.. NEW HAVEN. CONN. y Burlington, Vt. ENGINES? All Engines ' guaranteed by ths Manufacturers. ThelMostiCompact Englns on the market. Nicely finished. lMMWJ.jiarCaMlt4 o Exchange Stable; Saturday, June 17th. Haslet, I shall continue the busi (ovens a call. We shall lo all inour Stock Exchange 1865. 7 Nassau St School graduamand othr arc wanted a th ALBANY BUSINESS COLLECE smohtmnd a m o aoomitfiao to prrparatioii l'r acrxl poaitiona la buaincw which naj