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THE VALE EXPOSITOR FIUDAY, FEH. 2, 1!0G. YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO SUFFER From Constipation, Bowel and Stomach I Trouble. Q. What Is the beginning of sickness! A. Constipation. y. "What is Constipation? A. Failure of the bowels to carry off the waste matter which lies in the alimentary canal where it decays and poisous the en tire system. Eventually the results ara death under the name of some other dis ease. Note the deaths from typhoid fever and appendicitis, stomach and bowel trouble at the present time. Q. What causes Constipation! A. Neglect to resjwnd to the call of na ture promptly. Lack of exercise. Kxces ive brain work. Mental emotion and im proper diet. .... Q. What are the results of neglected Constipation A. Constipation causes more suffering than any other disease. It causes rheu matism, colds, fevers, stomach, bowel, kidney, lung and heart troubles, etc. It is the one disease that starts all others. Indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhoea, loss of sleep and strengt U a re its symptoms piles, appendicitis and fistula, are caused by Constipation. Its consequences are known 'to all physicians, but few sufferers realize their condition until it is too late. Women become conllrined invalids as a result of Constipation. Q. l)o physicians recognize this? A. Yes. The first question your doctor asks you is "are you constipated" That is the secret. O. Can it be cured? A. Yes, with proper treatment. The common error is to resort to physics, such as pills, salts, mineral water, castor oil, in jections, etc., every one of which is in jurious. They weaken and lncreasa the malady. Y'ou know this by your own ex perience. Q. What then should bo done to cure itt A. Get a bottlo of Mull's Grape Tonic at once. Mull's Grapo Tonic will positively cure Constipation and Stomach Trouble in the shortest space of time. No other remedy has before been known to cure Constipation positively and permanently. Q. What is Mull's GrapeTonic? A. It is a Compound with 40 per cent, of the juice of Concord Grapes. It exerts a peculiar strengthening, healing influence upon the intestines, so that they can do their work unaided. The process is gradual, but sure. It is not a physic, but It cures Constipation. Dysentery, Stomach and Bowel Trouble. Having a rich, fruity grape flavor, it is pleasant to take. As a tonic it is unequalled, insuring the system against disease. It strengthens and builds up waste tissue. S. Where can Mull's Grape Tonlo be ? A. Your druggist sells it. The dollar bottle contains nearly three times the 50 cent size. Good for ailing children and nursing mothers. A free bottle to all who have never used It because wo know it will cure you. 140 FREE DOTTLE )8 TRFE. Rend this coupon with your name and 4treB, your dructcUt'n name aud Wo. to pay jiONtnne aud we will aupply you a nuinple free. If you lime never uied Mull's ;raie Tonic, and will alto aend yon a rerttnVnt (rood for ai.tx) toward tbe purcbaaeof more loulo from your druggtu. Mull's Crape Tonic Co., lis Third Ave., Rock Island, 111. Clr$ Full Addrett and Yfrite rialnly. t cent. SO cent and al.OO bonle a at all driiRstlit. Tbe SUM bottle routalua about alz tlmea aa much at tbe 83 cent bottie a id about three tlmea aa much a tbe & cent dottle. There la a great aavtuit in buyluu the ai.uo aize. The genuine has a date and number stamped on the label -take no other from your druggist. When a fellow Is refused by a gin, ,and takes to drink. It is sometimes dif ficult to determine whether he is drowning his sorrow or celebrating. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully erery bottle of CASTORIA a afe and sure remedy for infanta and children. and aee that it Bears the Signature In Um For Over 30 Year a. The Kind Yon Hare Always Bought. I know a divorced woman who toolc horrible revenge on her ex-husband. Bhe remarried him. I am sure Plso's Cure for Consumption caved my life three years ai?o. Mr. Thos. Robbiks, Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17. 1MXX Odd Bequest in Wills. Among the wills of early days are found bequests which are amusing. In 1648 the widow of John Granger of Seituate, Mass., In her will "gives to her son John a saw, a broad axe, and a narrow axe. when he is 21 years of age." To daughter Elizabeth a bed and bedding, one heifer, also one great mortar and pestle, and one great ket tie." ( Furnace Ventilation In Mines. The furnace as a means of ventila tion Is said to be more economical In deep mines than in shallow ones, as It acts by heating a column of air; the higher that column the great er will be the difference In the weight of air In the upcast and downcast shafts, and consequently the greater the motive power. Africa's "Sneeze-Wood' Tree. One of the natural curiosities of South Africa Is the "sneeze-wood" tree, which Is so-called because one cannot cut It with a saw without sneezing, as the fine-dust has exactly the effect of snuff. No Insect or worm will touch It; It Is very bitter to the taste, and when placed in water It Inks. PATENTS for PROFIT win at fnliv protect an Intention, poonet ana I IIC Calendar rRKF. dar J'ltr.r;. lllinrn r"mrn-w, t'omnmntratione ronnaentiai. mudhipw i Kaaaa, eawiek Lawreaea, Waaaiaftea, 9 That truth is sometimes strauger than fiction Is Illustrated by queer stories from that mysterious border land lying between wakefulness and the complete unconsciousness of sleep the land of dreams. In the witcheries of the necro mancer, dreams play their part; but soine of the strangest manifestations of them are In the realms of fact. Murders have been revealed and murderers caught through their agency; searchers have been led to burled treasure; death has been fore told and disaster predicted. One man not long ago brought upon himself a breach of promise suit because he proposed to a woman while dream ing In her parlor. A peculiar dream was that of Mrs. I. R. Andrews, president of the Oma ha Woman's club, who located the dead body of her husband in the Platte river, Nebraska. Mr. Andrews, a wealthy lawyer of Omaha, recently went to a gravel pit which he owned on Cedar creek, 100 miles from that city, to pay off em ployes. He was not seen alive again. When the telegram telling of his disappearance reached his home his wife had already started for the scene of the tragedy, having been informed by a dream of his fate. When she arrived at the gravel pit she was told that her husband had gone down the river the night before. She Insisted that, In her dream, he had gone up the stream. Parties were sent out in both di rections, and the body was found up the stream, near where, In her sleep, she had seen a muffled figure following her husband. In two dreams on the two nights preceding his start for California, a couple of months ago, Clark Emll Thornland, a retired Swedish mer chant of New York, foresaw his death in a railroad wreck. So vivid were these visions that Thornland wept when he kissed his daughter and grandchild good-bye. Indeed, it was with difficulty that he was persuaded to start, lie said he did not expect to reach his destina tion, and took with him only enough money to pay expenses, believing that if he took more ho would lose it in the wreck. Just as ho had foreseen, the train . r..L. ,j u - i. . was wrecked. It was the California flyer, on the Santa Fe road, which met its fate near Kansas City on Oct. 30. TURNED JOKE ON HIS FRIEND. n This Case Last Laugh Was Decid edly the Best. J. Q. Hoyt, once postmaster at Bar- net, Vermont, and Seth Ford, White Mountain stage line owner, also of Barnet, were great friends, and were always playing Jokes on each other. Hoyt was a tailor, his shop being opposite Mr. Ford's residence. Ford once bought a suit of clothes of Hoyt, who told him they were "hall cotton." Ford took them home. Ills wife looked them over and told him they were "all cotton, and no half about it." He took them back and said: "Hoyt, you said these clothes were half cot ton. "They are," said Hoyt. "Well, what Is the other half?" "That Is cotton, too." Some time afterward Hoyt's store and the safe keys were missing. They were supposed to have been dropped by him into a box of suspenders while he was showing a prospective buyer the stock, and that the next pair of suspenders he sold he sold the keys with them. In some way Ford got the keys and returned them to Hoyt, saying: "Here, Hoyt, do these belong to you? I found them under my chicken roost." Russell Would Protect Him. William E. Itti8sell was once a member of the First Corps Cadets, and when he was governor took par ticular Interest in his visits to the annual encampment. No one was prouder of the Governor than George Washington Jones, a colored gentle man who had been employed to do some menlel service for Mr. Russell when the latter was In college. At one of the governor's visits to camp Mr. Jones was also on hand, and celebrated the occasion so ener getically that he was placed under arrest over night, and made to "po lice," or clean up the camp grounds the next morning. He smothered this Insult to his pride until he could at tract the attention of the officer of the day, when he complained as fol lows: "My name Is George Washington Jones, and If Billy Russell knew I was doing this, he'd give you h 1." Bos ton Herald. When newb of the accident and its fatal result to Thornland was tele graphed his daughter, Mrs. Charles Thoren, Brooklyn, the family related the victim's prophetic dream. Strange things are being done con stantly by persons while asleep. Some weeks ago, at Wilkesbarre, Pa., Kate Smith, In her somnambulistic rambles, climbed to the roof of the house of Mrs. Sol Hlrsch, in which she lived. How she got upon the roof Is a mys tery, for she could only have gained It by a climb of which any woman would seem Incapable. A somewhat similar but more dan gerous experiment was that of George Tauwalt of 300 Plane street, Newark, N. J. Early one morning Mr Tauwalt was n t Illy 1U lyimClinbedto found clinging to the edge of a third story window at his home, and was rescued from bis perilous position with difflculty A more tragic result followed the sleep wanderings of Harry Davis of MInersville. Pa, Walking in his dreams, he fell from a third-story window and crashed to his death A few weeks ago Mrs. Maggie Mc Cracken, CO years old, of Village Green, Fa., arose from her bed after midnight and started upon a somnam bulistic tour of the neighborhood. Un fortunately she fell Into a small stream near her home and was drowned. Two cases wherein dreams had to do with death and disaster also came from the Interior of Pennsylvania. At Troy, last summer. Policeman Edward Fenner was killed during a pistol duel with robbers. A few hours later Comfort Smith, a farmer, drove into town and related a dream of the night before. "I saw Ed Fenner fighting a pistol duel with three men," he said to the authorities, "One of the men was wounded." Smith's description of one of the men-was almost identical with that of a suspect whom the authorities were already following. On Oct. 29, at Monongahela, Pa., one of those disasters that so frequently attach themselves to coal mines oc curred. Among those killed was Gen eral Manager Hornlckel. It transpired later that at about the hour of the tragedy in the mine near midnight Mrs. Hornlckel awoke with a scream. She said she had witnessed In her dreams an explosion, and that her husband was among the victims. HAD FINISHED THE CHURNING Maine Man's Work Done, But Little to Show for It. Albert Bowden, of Orrlngton, Maine, runs a small sawmill near his home, and in it is one of the old-fashioned up-and-down saws. He also keeps a few cows, and it has been customary for his wife to do the churning while he was engaged at the mill. Mrs. Bowden, however, recently went on strike, and informed her other half that he must churn that week. He therefore took the churn to the mill and attached It to the gearing of the up-and-down saw. Then he started the water wheel, and soon had an up-to-date piece of machinery in every particular. Noticing that things were moving smoothly, he attended to some other duties, until his attention was called to the churn by a "chug-chug," and, looking that way, he saw buttermilk spattering about, and on reaching the machine was Just in time to see the bottom go out of the churn and his week's butter go Into the mill pond. He surveyed the ruins a moment then went to the door, and, calling to the house, said: "Wife, I've churned." Bible Authority For It. Mr. Rundlett, at one time a mer chant In the town of Newcastle, Me., instructed his clerks to strictly fol low the precepts of the Bible la all of their dealings. One day a lady came In to buy piece of dress goods, and one of the clerks spent a great deal of time showing her various cloths, which she said weren't good enough. Seeing that 6he was "fussy," the clerk said he thought he had a better piece in the rear of the store. He showed her this piece, which she had already seen, but told her It was much finer and worth 60 cents a yard more. She said that she could readily see that It was better, so made her pur chase. Mr. Rundlett, who had seen the transaction, censured the clerk, who replied that he hadn't done anything but what he could refer to the Bible to Justify. "Why, how Is that?" asked Mr. Rundlett. The clerk replied: "Well, she was a stranger, and I took her In." FALL WHEAT RAISING IN ALBERTA. The Spring Wheat Areas Ara Rapidly Increasing. It Is only a few short years sines the Impression prevailed that a large portion of the Canadian West was un fitted for agriculture. To such an extent did this impression prevail that districts larger than European principalities were devoted solely to ranching purposes, and flocks and herds roamed the ranges. But the agriculturist was doing some hard thinking, and gradually experiments were made, slowly at first, but sure ly later on. As a result, to-day In Southern Alberta, which was looked upon as the "arid belt," large quanti ties of the finest winter wheat in the world are now grown, and so satis fied are the farmers and buyers that the industry has passed the experi mental stage that elevators by the score have been erected in the past two years and others In course of erection, to satisfy the demands that will be made upon them In the near future. Manitoba, "No. 1, Hard" spring wheat has achieved a world-wide reputation, and there can be no ques tion that ere long "No. 1 Hard" win ter wheat from Alberta will attain similar repute. The great market for this production will undoubtedly be the Orient, and, with increased rail way facilities and the erection of ad ditional elevators and flouring mills, a largely Increased acreage will be broken to winter wheat. The Increase of population In Southern Alberta In the past year has been largely due to settlers from the United States who have brought in capital and en terprise, and who have been uniform ly successful In their undertakings. A few more such years of growth and "Turkey Red" winter wheat will wave from Moose Jaw to the foothills. Information regarding lands in the Fall and Spring wheat belts may be obtained of any Canadian Gd-nrnment Agen Highest Active Volcano. There are no fewer than twenty lofty volcanic peaks clustered about the city of Quito, the capital of Ecua dor. One of these, CatopaxI, is the highest active volcano in the world Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application aa tlier cannot reach the !! eaued ortlon of the ear. 'f here la only one way to cure deafueaa, and that I by count It utliiI reiueiile. Xeafneaa la canned ly an inflamed condition of the ruueoua llntnjf of the Kuxuchlan Tube. Wheu tlila tube la inflamed you have a rumbling aound or Im perfect hearing, and when It la entirely cloned, Heaf. nea la the reiult, and utile the Inflammation can be taken out and thla tube rentored to Ita normal condi tion, hearing will he denroyed forever: nine caea oat of ten are catmed by atarrb, which la nothing but an Inflamed condition or the mucous aurrace. We w ill (rive One Hundred Jinllara for any caao of reafnea (caused by catarrh) that cannot he cured by llall'a Catarrh Ture. send for clrculara.f ree. K. .1. ClItNtV CO., Toledo, O. PoM br rrti(r(t't. .". lake iiall'a-i aiiilly l'llla for conatipatlon. Jewels on Mahomet's Tomb. Mahomet's tomb is covered with Jewels worth $12.f00.000. Swift & Company Year 1903 8ales. The total distributive sales for 1905 exceeded $200,000,000. This total Is realized from the sale of fresh meats (beef, mutton and pork), provisions, produce (poultry, butter and eggs), soaps, glues, oils, bones, fertilizers, feathers, casings, hides, wools, pelts and other by-products derived from cattle, sheep, hogs and poultry. Margin of Profit. The Industry Is operated on a mar gin of less than 2 cents to each dol lar of sales. Swift & Co. do not sell at retail. Their entire output Is sold at wholesale to many thousands of dealers In various parts of the world. There are hundreds of local slaughter ers throughout the United States, who buy their live stock In competi tion with the packer doing an inter state and International business. Like wise the packer must sell In compe tition with the local slaughterers. There are no secret processes In the Industry, no complicated and expen sive factories, and as live stock can be purchased tn almost every hamlet and city, and the preparation of meats Is simple in the extreme, local slaughtering will long remain a fac tor In the production of fresh meats and provisions. Economic Advantages. The large packing houses will, how ever, always have these advantages: Locations at th9 chief live stock cen ters, with the opportunity to buy the best lire stock; manufacturing in large quantities, at the minimum of expense; utilization of all waste mate rial; refrigeration; mechanical appli ances; highly efficient business man agement These advantages are re flected In the quality of the packer's output, a quality that has reached Its highest development In the products bearing the name and brand of "Swiff Purchasing Live Stock. The principal lire stock centers are Chicago, Kansas City, Omaha, St TESTIMONIALS HARD TO GIVE. 8ome Subterfuges Employed by Kind Hearted Persons. The giving of a "character" to do mestic servants Is one of the severest tests of the employers' character. An Irish master, being called upon to write a testimonial for a groom whom he was discharging for drunkenness, gave him a good character, but omit ted to mention one trait. The groom returned the letter, objecting that it did not say he was sober. The mas ter added "sometimes sober," and the man was content. The woman who had to recommend the inefficient cook she had kept for seven years only because she was afraid to give her notice went one better. She had cov ered three pages with undeserved commendations; she had placed It in an envelope and addressed it, and her conscienco pricked her badly. Then she had a happy idea, and broke open the seal, adding to her letter, as a postscript, "God forgive me!" It satisfied her conscience, but history does not relate if It satisfied the oth er woman. New York Tribune. Rode on Turtle's Back. In the North Borneo Herald It Is recorded that two English women, Mrs. McEnroe and Mrs. Darby, re cently paid a visit to the lonely Island of Tanganac. Among other adven tures there the two sat up one night to watch for turtles, and at midnight saw a large one come out of the sea on to the sands. When it was return ing to the water first Mrs. Darby and then Mrs. McEnroe mounted on Its back and rode for some distance. &lch, Juicy Radishes Free. Everybody loves juicy, tender radishes. Baker 'knows thin, hence he offers to aend you absolutely free sufficient radinh seed to keep you in tender radishes all sum mer long and his great saxzer's bargain seed book. with its wonderful surprises and great bargains in seeds at bargain prices. The enormous crops on our seed farms the past HoaHon compel us to issue this special catalogue. SEND THIS NOTICE TO-DAT. and receive the radishes and the wonder ful Bargain Book free. Remit 4c and we add a package of Cos mos, the most fashionable, serviceable, benutiful annual flower. John A. Salzer Seed Co., Lock Drawer W., La Crosse, Wis. New Species of Bird. Dr. E. A. Mears, an authority on ornithology, recently discovered sev eral new species on the summit of Apo, a volcanic mountain of the isl and of Mindanao, In the Philippine group. PUTNAM Color mora ooodt brioMer and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water better than any other dye. You Can dye ny garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUQ CO., Unionvllf, Mlmsourl. Louis, St Joseph, St Paul and Fort Worth. The same methods of pur chasing cattle, sheep and hogs prevail at all cities. At Chicago, which is the largest market, there are about two hundred and fifty buyers, repre senting packers, local slaughterers in various cities and exporters. Of this number, less than a score are employ ed by Swift & Company. The farmer ships his live stock to Chicago, consigns them to a commis sion firm at the Union Stock Yard3, who sees that they are unloaded and put in pens. Then the buyers Inspect them, make their offers to the com mission dealer, who accepts or rejects as his Judgment dictates. AH buying must be finished at 3 o'clock each day, and the buyer must pay spot cash. If the commission man has no satis factory offers, he can hold his stock over to the next day. He gets his commission from the farmer, and nat urally strives to get the highest pos sible price for his client Wholesale Distributing Houses. A wholesale distributing house is a giant refrigerator, but Instead of shelves there are trolley rails, from which are suspended hooks to hang the carcasses. Some of the houses cost as much as a hundred thousand dollars to build and equip. As a rule they are of pressed brick, the lnsides being lined floor, wlls and celling with highly polished hardwood. The floors are covered dally with fresh sawdust, and all are kept spotlessly clean. There are over three hundred of these wholesale houses In various cities of the United States, and the publlo Is always welcome to visit them. Packing Plants. All the Swift & Company plants are located at the creat live stock mar kets, In the heart of the great agri cultural sections, where can be pur chased the finest grades of cattle, sheep and hogs. We have seven pack ing plants, employing at each from two to eight thousand persons. The following gives the locations and sites of the different plants: Tumors Conquered Without Operations Unqualified Success of Lydia E. PinKham's Vegetable Compound In Cases of Mrs. Fox and Miss Adams. One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy, lumor. So-called "wandering5 pains" may come from its early stages, or the pres ence of danger may be made manifest by excessive monthly periods accom panied by unusual pain extending from the abdomen through the groin and thighs. If you nave mysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation, ulcera tion or displacement, don't wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the horrors of a hospital opera tion; secure Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound at onco and begin its use and write Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., for advice. 'Read these strong letters from grate ful women who have been cured: Doar Mrs. Pinkham : (First Letter.) "In looking over your book 1 6oe that your medicine cures Tumors. I have been to a dof tor and he tells me I have a tumor. I will be more than grateful if you can help me, aa I do so dnwi an operation." Fannie D. Fox, Bradford, Ta. Dear Mrs. Pinkham: (Second Letter.) "I take the liberty to congratulate you on the success I huvo had with your wonderful medicine. "Eighteen months ago my periods stopped. Shortly after I felt so badly I sub mitted to a thorough examination by a phy sician, and was told that I had a tumor and would have to undergo an operation. 44 1 soon after read one of your advertise ments and decided to give Lydia E. Pink bam' s Vegetable Compound a trial. After taking five bottles as directed, the tumor is entirely gone. I have again been examined Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound! About two-thirds of the average hu man henrt i occupied by self-love. . FADELESS DYES Packing Plants. Floor Buildings, Space, Land, Acres. Acres. Acres. Chicago 44 87 47 Kansas City .7 30 19 Omaha 6 28 23 St Louis 7 19J 31 St Joseph .... 6 25U, 19 Y St Paul 5 12 18 Fort Worth ... 3 15 22 Employes. The total number of persons em ployed in all the Swift packing plants and branch houses aggregate over 20,000 persons. Conditions for em ployes In the various manufacturing and operating departments Is contin ually Improving with the construction of new buildings and the installation of new and up-to-date equipment Sanitation and Hygiene. The housewife makes no greater ef fort to keep her kitchen clean than we do to keep In sanitary and hygienic condition our abattoirs. They are thoroughly scrubbed at the close of each day's operations, and automatic appliances are used wherever possi ble In order to eliminate the personal handling of meats. Rigid rules gov erning these points are strictly en forced; laxity means dismissal. Visitors Always Welcome. No other industry In the world gives such a cordial welcome to visit ors as Swift & Co. We keep open house the year around, and maintain a corps of specially trained guides, with special elevators and rest rooms. In one year we have entertained over a quarter of a million of men and women; In one day-Clrand Army Day, 1901 we entertained 23,000. Among our visitors have been ambas sadors from foreign governments, princes, noblemen and distinguished citizens from all lands and eminent folks from every state In the Union. We wish to familiarize the public with our methods, and the best way to do that is to let the public see for Itself. We have no secret processes or methods In any department Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon. Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon are more widely and favorably known by the physician and be says I have no signs of a tumor now. It has also brought my periods around once more; and I am entirely well . I shall never be without a bot tle of Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the house." Fannie D. Fox, Bradford, Pa. Another Case of Tumor Cured by Lydia E. l'lnkliuin's Vegeta ble Compound. Dear Mrs. Pinkham: 44 About three years ago I had Intense pain in my stomach, with cramps and raging headaches. The doctor prescribed for me, but finding that I did not get any better be examined me and, to my surprise, declared I had a tumor. "I felt sure that it meant my death warrant, and was very disheartened. I spent hundreds of dollars in doctoring, but the tumor kept growing, till the doctor said that nothing but an operation would save me. Fortunately I corresponded with my aunt in one of the New England States,who advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound beforesub mitting to an operation, ana I at once started taking a regular treatment, finding to my great relief that my general health began to improve, and after three months I noticed that the tumor bad reduced in size. I kept on taking the Compound, and in ten months it had entirely disappeared without an oper ation, and using no medicine but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and words fail to express bow grateful I am for the good it baa done me." Miss Luella Adams, Colon nade Hotel, (Seattle, Wash. Such unquestionable testimony proves the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and should give confidence and hope to every sick ' woman. Mrs. Pinkham invites all ailing women to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. a Woman's Remedy fcr Women's Ills W. N. U. DETROIT. No. 51906. than any other brand. Their popular ity is due to the uniform quality and flavor of the meat and to their fins appearance when received from the dealer. Each piece Is branded on the rind, "Swift's Premium U. S. Inspect ed," and wrapped in cheesecloth and white parchment paper. Look for the brand, "Swift's Prem ium." when buying hams and bacon. Swift's Silver Leaf Lard Is a strictly pure lard, kettle rend ered, and put up In 3, 5 and 10-poqnd sealed pails. It Is America's Stand ard Lard, and enjoys a high reputa tion and an enormous sale. Swift's Soaps. An Interesting feature of a trip through the Chicago plant Is a visit to the soap factory, one of the largest and most complete In this country. There we manufacture numerous toi let and laundry soaps, and washing powders. Among which are: Wool Soap, widely and favorably "known; for toilet and bath, and wash ing fine fabrics. Crown Princess Toilet Soap, highly perfumed. Swift's Pride Soap, for laundry and household use. Swift's Pride Washing Powder, un surpassed for all cleaning purposes. Swift's Specialties. Swift's Premium Ham Swift's Premium Bacon Swift's Premium Sliced Bacon. Swift's Premium Lard Swift's Winchester Ham Swift's Winchester Bacon Brookfield Farm Sausage Swift's Sliver Leaf Lard Jewel Lard Compound Swift's Cotosuet Swift's Jersey Butterlnt Swift's Beef Extract Swift's Beef Fluid Swift's Premium Milk-Fed Chlcktat Swift's Soaps. Wool Soap Scented Toilet Soaps Swift's Pride Soap Swift's Prlds Washing row 1st