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THE VEGETARIAN MAGAZINE

AMONG OUR ADVERTISERS

If you are uncertain what to eat, see Byron Tyler's ad Read about his macerated wheat and learn what it does for others. It cures constipation and stomach ills. Write him.

Have you tried the Christians' foods or read their books? See ad in this issue, read it, and write asking what you wish to know. Refer to this magazine. It helps them; it aids us and will benefit you.

Read our ads of Los Angeles cafeterias. If you live in Los Angeles patronize them. If If you are so unfortunate as to live out of the Golden state and visit there this winter, call. See ad and get address.

If too far from New Jersey to buy Jersey honey write S. W. Snyder, one of our stockholders, who has thousands of colonies of bees in Center Point, Linn county, Iowa. He sells honey and trees.

Have a drink-of Dole's Pineapple Juice. See ad in this issue. Write about it and don't fail to get the pinapple juice. Best thing for diphtheria and throat trouble, pineapple. This juice saves the trouble of preparing. Say we sent you.

Charles Courtney Haskell, the Health Scientist, advertises in this issue. He cures cancers without drugs, etc., according to the laws of nature. Write him if you wish more light on this subject. Norwich, Conn. Look up ad and mention this magazine.

The editor had the pleasure of sampling Wesson Cooking Oil a few weeks since and found it highly satisfactory. It is pure cotton seed oil processed in such a way that it is freed from objectionable residue, usually accompanying products of cotton seed oil.

Look over our ads in this issue and see among them the one of Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York, who publish "A Fleshless Diet," one of the greastest books on the subject yet written. See, also, review on this book in this issue. Get it, read it and learn how to live instead of dying by slow degrees

A new ad this month, St. Helena Sanitarium, in Sanitarium, Cal. If you or your friends wish a rest cure and want to taste the joys of a California winter, write this place. You will be made happy and well. See ad. Mention this magazine. Dr. Rand, once associated with this magazine, is the resident manager.

This is the time of year when you need carbohydrates in your system more than in mild

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weather. Honey is nature's remedy for ills and furnishes the heat and energy sought in sugar. Honey is organic and thus safe. Sugar is inorganic and a poison. Write H. Hann for details about honey. He raises bees and they raise the taxes for him. He's in New Jersey and the railroads are all about us.

Dr. H. Lindlahr has a new ad in this month. Do you know about his Chicago Sanitarium? He has one of the most sane and well equipped sanitariums in the country. The doctor is authority on diseases and how to cure them without drugs or singing psalms over you. He uses no salt in his sanitarium dietary, he fights vivisection, vaccination and practices nature cure in a logical and not brutal way. Write him for terms and mention this magazine.

If the Millennium hasn't come products made by the "Millennium Food Company" håve reached us. See ad in this number. Mr. B. P. Freshel, late of Chicago, understands how to manufacture leather with no sacrifice to animal lives. He also produces candles, soaps, milk, furs and other similar products which have previously been taken from the animal kingdom. He produces all these articles from the ve etable kingdom and his work is attracting unusual interest. Write him about his products, and mention this magazine. Address is in his full page ad, Those living near Boston will find here a source of interest to vegetarians.

Dr. J. E. Low, the well-known dentist, who has made the general public so much in his debt by the invention of the crown and bridge system of dental work, office at 126 State Street, Chicago, has opened a branch office at his residence, 25 Fifty-third Avenue. He has done this for the accommodation of his many patrons who live in the vicinity of his home and cannot always conveniently visit the "Loop" district. He is meeting with unusual success in this step and his old time patrons will find it a great convenience. Dr. Low has given a life study to preserving the natural teeth, which the average dentist extracts with apparent fiendish joy. At least it seems so to the victim. His great success in treating the disease, Pyorrhoea-Alveolaris has been most marvelous, earning for him an enviable reputation. Chicagoans will be glad to know where to go for dental work and out-of-town patrons will feel well repaid for a trip to the city for a visit to his office. Dr. Low is the president of the Chicago Vegetarian Society, having lived the system of strict vegetarianism for twenty-five years, proving well its value.

Air, the kind that you can't help getting if you go out doors, if you open your windows, air that is free and that no Trust has grabbed yet, is the element which sustains life, health, happiness and longevity. Air is the one thing that most people fear. Physicians do not bottle it

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and label it in Latin. Ministers do not preach it from the pulpit. The soap-box orator on the street corner does not advocate it. The apothecary shop does not advertise it and there is no three million dollar institute that treats with it, so it is little used, little known. Its essential qualities being common, unchained, without money and without price it is unappreciated. We are told that in the "Black Hole" in Calcutta, India, during the war of 1756, 146 healthy people were shut in with no ventilation. eight hours 123 died. They died for lack of oxygen. Thousands are dying slowly every day for lack of this same necessary element of life. Every eight hours we take into our lungs as much air as would fill a room eight feet square but when it has been expelled from the lungs it is no longer oxygen air. It has been chemically changed and is carbonic-acid gas and must be instantly expelled from the lungs, being poison. When you sleep in a room with no ventilation you inhale the poison which you have exhaled from our lungs, poisoning your entire system. A crack in the window has but little effect. It may preserve you from death, but it does not preserve you from the effects of the carbonicacid gas. Steam heated flats can be enjoyed without freezing all in the room, and still have fresh air circulating through the lungs all night. Note the ad of a window tent in this issue and see how it is done. The editor uses one of these and gets the benefit of a regular automobile trip all night, while dreaming of how to most efficiently whack the public on diet, fresh air, dress reform and a heap of other "cranky" subjects which are vital. "The Morning After" finds her as vigorous and full of pugnaciousness as ever, due to feeding on oxygen all night. The invalid cannot afford to miss the use of this tent. The girl shut up all day in a steam heated office, cannot afford to lose her rosy cheeks and youthful appearance by again being shut up in a close bedroom. Use the window tent. If you cannot sleep on the roof or on the porch these winter nights, get a window tent and say goodbye to your doctor, laugh at your druggist and smile on the world, for you can be well and happy at a low cost.

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ANY OLD SOLDIER WHO MADE A HOMESTEAD ENTRY
OF 40, 80 OR 120 ACRES IN ANY STATE IN THE UNION BE-
FORE THE YEAR OF 1874, HAS A CLAIM COMING TO HIM
FROM THE GOVERNMENT PROVIDED HE HAS NEVER
SOLD THIS RIGHT OR TAKEN UP ANOTHER HOMESTEAD.
IT DOES NOT MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE WHETHER HE
PROVED UP ON HIS ORIGINAL HOMESTEAD ENTRY OR
SIMPLY LEFT IT

A soldier who never made a home. stead entry or one who entered land after June 22, 1874, has nothing to sell.

We Buy These Claims. The widow or heirs of a soldier can also sell these rights.

R. H. Peale & Co.

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Judge Building,

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH

Vegetarian Specialties and Novelties

The Vegetarian Society of America, seeking to supply pure food to meet the wants of the people, presents the following articles, which can be had on receipt of prices attached, at the office of the Society, 1023_Foulkrod Street, Frankford, Philadelphia: PURE PEANUT BUTTER-1 pint, in tin can, 30c., by mail, 50c; 12 pints, in tin cans, $3. Preferred by physicians for patients. Testimonials sent on application.

WHOLEWHEAT GRAHAM FLOUR-In bulk, 5 lbs. for 25c. This contains all parts of the wheat ground fine, avoiding the usual objection to Graham flour, the irritation produced by large flakes of bran. Sample by mail, 7

UNPOLISHED RICE As grocers are not yet selling unpolished rice, we send a sample by mail for 10 one-cent stamps; in bulk by express or freight, 9c. a lb.; 100 lbs. 7c. a lb.; 300 lbs., 6c. a lb. It is as much better than polished rice as Graham is better than white flour, and yet it looks as well when cooked.

UNPOLISHED RICE FLOUR-Rice flour at the drug stores made of "Glucose & Tale Coated rice" cannot be fit for use by nurses. Flour made of unpolished rice, carefully picked over by hand, is found excellent for patients. Also for nursing mothers and children. 12 cents a pound. Sample 10 cents by mail.

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condemned on account of tuberculosis, smallpox and other diseases, are sold to soapmakers, the Vegetarian Society of America obtains from a reliable manufacturer, a friend of the president, Olive Oil Castile Soap. It is sold at moderate prices. sample cake is sent postpaid for 10 cents with prices on larger orders. Those Vegetarians who have tried it use no other soap either for toilet or laundry purposes.

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KO-NUT-A butter made from cocoanut oi thoroughly purified. 3 lb. can, 50c.; 5 lbˆ can, 80c.; 25 lb. can, $4.00; 60 lb. case o 3 or 5 lb. cans $9.00. To save freight order by the case, but less can be had by express if desired.

THE VEGETARIAN SOCIETY MILL has been greatly improved and especially adapted for ladies, being easily run by children, who are delighted with it, for making Fruit and Nut Butters, Flavoring for Ice Cream, Bread Crumbs, Whole -Wheat Graham Flour and other Health Foods Price, $4.00. With extras, $5.00. VEGETARIAN BOOKS-All books on Hygiene, Vegetarianism and kindred subjects, including Broadbent two and three cent health booklets, a list of which is sent free, can be had by mail. The following are printed and published by the Society: AMERICAN VEGETARIAN COOKERY, containing 250 recipes, well adapted to beginners, 15c., with list of vegetarian and health literature.

OUR POSTSCRIPT, a tract for inclosure in letters: 100, 25c.; 500, $1.00. Seven numbers have been issued, embracing the following subjects: 1, Synopsis; 2, The Vegetarian Principle; 3, Anatomy; 4, Physiology; 5, Chemistry; 6, Economy; 7, Agriculture and Vegetarianism.

THIRTY-NINE REASONS WHY I AM A VEGETARIAN—With portrait of the author, Henry S. Clubb, 10c. copy.

A SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS FOR VEGETARIANISM-By Wm. Penn Alcott. With portrait of the author, 5c.; 25 copies, 50c.

UNPOLISHED RICE THE STAPLE FOOD OF THE ORIENT-A lecture with instructions for cooking and recipes for about one hundred different methods of preparing unpolished rice for food. By Henry S. Clubb. Price 15 cents. A second edition in preparation.

ALL OF THE ABOVE sent on receipt of price, either check or money order, payable to Henry S. Clubb, 1023 Foulkrod Street, Station F, Philadelphia.

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