Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1910)
WANTS HER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn.—“I was a great Bufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so muchofwhatLydia E. Pinkham’s veg etable Compound had done for other suffering women 1 felt sure it would help me. and I must say it did help me wonderfully. My pains all left me, I r''grew stronger, and within three month? I was a perfectly well woman. ‘‘I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”—Mrs. JohnG. Mold an, 2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis, Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu ine testimonials like the above prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should hot lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want special advice write to Mrs. Pink ham, at Lynn, Mass. She will treatyourletterasstrictly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women in this way, free of charge. I>on’t hesitate — write at once. WESTERN CANADA What 1.1. Hill, tho Great Railroad Maenate, Bays About its Wheat-Producing; Powers ** XilO ereategt nerd of this cotmtry [United States] in another genera tion or two will be the pro viding of homes for its people and producing sufficient for them. The days of our prominence as a wheat exporting country are gone. Can ada is to be tho great wheat country.” This great railroad mag nate is taking advantage of the situation by ex tensive railway build ing: to the wheat fields _of Western Canada. Upwards of 125 Million Bushels of Wheat were harvested in 1009. A rage of the three provinces of Alberta. Saskatchewan and Manitoba will be upwards of 23 bushels per acre. * Free homesteads of 160 r.cres, " and adjoining pre-emptions of 160 acres (at $3 por acre>, are to be had In tlio choicest districts. Schools convenient, climate excellent, soil the very best, railways close at hand, build ing lumber cheap, fuel easy to get, and reasonable In price, water easily procured; mixed farming a success. Write ns to best place for settlement, settlers’ low railway rates, descriptive illus trated “Last Best Wept’ (sent free on application', and other informa tion, to Hnp’fc of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to the 'following Canadian Gov’t Agents5 K. T. Holmes. 315 Jackson 8t., St. Paul. Minn. ; J. M. MacLachlan. Box 116,Watertown. South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett, Room 4. Bee Building, Omaha, Neb. (Use address nearest you.) Please say where you saw thie advertisement. Children’s Coughs c"‘^ehe % One* Much Unnecessary Suffering * r - P CURE W BIST Wi.mil TOH (j}l&%S«»%QS Gives instant relief—soothes and heals the little throats and prevents more serious illness. Children l like it too—so pleasant to take and does not upset the stomach. All Druggists, 25 cents. - ... .. VETERINARY COURSE AT HOME gas AAA year and upwards can be made taking our vlfcvv Veterinary Course at home during spare time; taught In simplest English; Diploma granted, po sitions obtained forsuccessfulstudents; cost within reach •fall; satisfaction guaranteed: particulars free. Ontario Veterinary Correspondence School, Dept. 10, London, Canada W3MTFD Lady or Gentleman of fair educa WV AXl w ■ 1— aP tlon to travel for lirm of large capi tal. Salary $1,0.72per year.payable weekly. Expensesad vauced. Address Geo. Clowe, Philadelphia, !*«., Dept. U Learn Piano by Ear (tarts you playing at once. Particulars free. F. \\. Little, iss doth street, fittsbi kg, pa 61OUX CITY PTG CO^ 1,332^-6, 1910 “Hump,’* There Is no time to sit around «J^e< And dump, dump, dump, The man who gets discouraged is A chump, chump, chump, No matter how put out you feel, No matter if you miss a meal, Just put your shoulder to the wheel And hump, hump, hump. The lucky men are always on The jump, jump, jump, If there’s a leak pull off your coat And pump, pump, pump, Good spirits make a pleasure trip, A heavy heart will sink a ship, Don’t for a minute lose your grip But hump, hump, hump. The doleful man is always up A stump, stump, stump, Down the toboggan slide his form Goes bump, bump, bump, The gates of glory stand ajar To him who takes things as they are So hitch your wagon to a star And hump, hump, hump. —Mortimer Crane Brown in Hulett Wyo.. Globe. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets small sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, regulate and in vigorate stomach, liver and bowls. Do not gripe. What a ci.ance for the man who can invent an appliance for making both ends meet. TO CCllE A COLD 1M OXE DAY Tike LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signature is on each box. 25c Admitting that a man s wife should /be his partner, it is not clear by what right he is made the silent member. DOCTOR YOURSELF when you t—I a oold coming on by taking a few doses mi Perry Davis' Painkiller, ft 1 s better loan Quinine Cdakfai. The large 6$o bottles are the cheapest. He Was the Goat. There was a goat in our town And he was wondrous thin. And yet wherever food was he Was always butting in. i. And when he found the food was gone He never acted blue— He merely ate the dishes and He ate the table, too. He ate a family washing and The clothesline at a bite; And then he ate a whetstone, just To whet his appetite. He might have been there eating yet, Hut that’s an open question— He ate a box of breakfast food And died of indigestion! —Cleveland Leader. EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO HE HAD ! LESS THAN THREE DOLLARS. He 1* Now One o( the Richest Farm ers in Saskatchewan, Central Cn nn da. Arriving in Canada in 1S91, just eighteen years ago, E. A. Guillemin. could speak but bis native language. He is a Frenchman. He had but a little over $2 in his pocket, thus be ing short over $7 of the $10 required to secure entry for' a homestead of 160 acres. He eventually borrowed the money, and. near Forget, Sas katchewan, he started life in Canada on the homestead in which to-day he is the fortunate possessor of fifty quar ter sections of laud, or 8.000 acres. Now Mr. Guillemin did not acquire all these acres as a result altogether of his farming operations, which were extensive. He looked with satisfac tion upon what he was doing on his limited area, he was saving, careful and had foresight. Surrounding land could be had for about $3 per acre, and he continued buying as his sav ings would permit, until now he has fifty quarter sections, some of which he can sell at $25 per acre. Tlirenhcil Fifty TIioumiimI llnuhel*. This year he was engaged in thresh ing on his place for 54% days. He threshed out 50,000 bushels of wheat, of which he sold 34.000 bushels, one train load, at a price varying from 84 to 87 cents per bushel. He has on hand still 16,000 bushels. In addition to wheat he raised 30,000 bushels of oats, 7,000 bushels of barley and 500 bushels of flax. He owns 104 horses and a number of cattle, but since the construction of the railway he has been engaged chiefly in raising wheat. This year he bought his first threshing machine, paying for it the sum of $2,100. He estimates that the machine earned for him this fall $3,000, thus paying for itself in one season, and leaving him $900 to the good, the weather was very propitious for farm threshing, not a single day being lost in the two months which were spent in this work. The wheat averaged 23 bushels to the acre and graded No. 1 and* No. 2 Northern. In the past nine years, seven good crops have been harvested on this farm. For six successive years the returns were ex cellent, that is In the years 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905 and 1906. In the two following years there was a partial failure. As the years have passed the quality of the buildings on the farm have been steadily improved, and are now as good as can be found in the district. About $10,000 has been in vested in this w’ay by Mr. Guillemin. The farm consists of 6,880 acres, of which about 6,000 acres were under crop this season. How the German Blinded Him. From the Philadelphia Times. J. Campbell White, secretary of the laymen's mission movement, during his work for missions had had some ciueer experience, but one he had in a mining camp in Montana some years ago gives him much amusement when he reverts to the story. There was a German immigrant in the camp, who had received a letter from home. He was Illiterate and no one in the camp understood enough German to read the letter to him. He was of course overjoyed to learn that Mr. White could read German. As the missionary began the man from the hanks of the Rhine clapped his hands over Mr. White’s ears. “What are you trying to do?” ex claimed Mr. White, after he had been able to free his ears from the fellow’s palms. "Dot letter vas from mine girl. I hold your ears so you don’t hear vat In it vas!” was the reply. Don’t just now recall the name of the party who wrote: “My soul be on thy guard, 10,000 foes arise,” but he must have been an analyst look ing at drinking water through a mi croscope. It is the things said confidentially and not susceptible of proof openly that gets a man Into trouble. I About all that can be expected from the present boycott is to bring the price down where the stealing of a pig will not constitute grand larceny. PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD | If you suffer from bleeding, Itching, i blind or protruding Piles, send me your 1 address, and I will tell you how to cure 1 yourself at Nome by the new absorption I treatment; and will also send some of this I home treatment free for trial, with ref j erences from your own locality if request ed. Immediate relief and permanent cure I assured. Send no money, but tell others j of this offer. Write today to Mr*. M j Summers, Box 2, Notre Dame, Ind. p--—I DADDY’S ut GOOD-NIGHT STORIES By Farmer Smith. DR. BEETLE GOES RIDING. "Daddy,” said little Ethel one night, "do tell me more about the Lady Bug.” "The Lady Bug had a great time get ting her bungalow fixed up, but all the other bugs were very good to her, be cause she belonged to the royal family. "One day when she was sitting on the porch of her bungalow the Fire Fly flew down at her feet almost ex hausted. " 'Pray, what is the matter? asked the Lady Bug. •' T had such a fright,' answered the Fire Fly. 'I was quietly eating a piece of cake which some one at Miss Lucy’s had thrown out of the window, when the Big Red Rooster came along and almost caught me. It is a busy world around here when one has to keep on the lookout for all the things that are likely to eat one up.’ “ 'I am very sorry to hear it,’ said the Lady Bug. “ 'I suppose you do not realize what it means, for every one is so good to you,’ said the Fire Fly. ‘I know that the chickens will not eat you; why, everybody seems to love you, dear, kind Lady Bug.' 'You are so good, I am sure I do not deserve it all,' said the Lady Bug, blushingly. "Then the Fire Fly flew away and left the Lady Bug all alone. By and by she heard a noise, and, looking around, saw Dr. Beetle driving up with the new carriage and team of June Bugs. “ ‘Good morning, my dear, dear Lady Bug: how are you this fine morn ing?’ asked the good doctor, at the same time shouting 'whoa! whoa! to his fiery steeds. “ 'I never felt better in my life,’ said the Lady Bug. ” ‘Then you must get in with me and take a long ride,’ said the good doc tor, making room for her beside him. “The Lady Bug climbed in, and to gether they started away. “ 'How beautifully you drive,' said the Lady Bug. 'Would you mine* driv ing me around to invite my friends to my party?’ "‘Not at all: not at all.’ said the doctor, beaming at her over his glasses, and they drove to the Potato Bugs, the very first place.” —*— MR. AND MRS. POTATO BUG. "Tonight I will tell you about Mr. and Mrs. Potato Bug and their three children, Faith, Hope and Charity,’’ said Ethel’s father. “Just about the time the Lady Bug arrived Mr. Potato Bug found that his family had eaten their home up, and he had to get another fbr them. You see, potato bugs live on the leaves of potato vines, and when they get hungry then they eat their house up. So when Mr. Potato Bug found that they had eaten their whole house up, including the back door step, he was very busy looking around for some other large, juicy leaf on which to make his home. ” ‘My dear, good wife,’ said he, 'I hear from the Cricket that there is a lovely- potato patch over where the Lady Bug has her bungalow, and I think we will move over there.’ “ ‘All right,’ said his good wife, 'but I think you ought to get a hickory leaf to move us on. You remember the last time you moved us, the children ate I up the potato leaf before they got to their new home.’ ’’ I guess you are right,’ said her husband; ‘you wait here and I will go and get a hickory leaf, and then I will carry you all safely to your new home.’ "So off went the Potato Bug and soon returned with a large hickory leaf. His wife was getting the children ready, and when he called to her she had their things on, and they were ready to go with him. “Over the lumps of earth he pulled them, the sun getting higher all the | time and the day getting hotter, until finally he arrived at their new home, and the children and their mother jumped off the leaf. "Mr. Potato Bug sat down to rest, and no sooner had he begun to get cool than he looked up and saw that Faith, Hope and Charity were eating up the front porch of their new home. ” ’Here! here!’ he cried. ‘Do not start eating the front porch; begin with the back porch first.’ “So the dear children scurried to the back porch and began eating it up as fast as possible.” THE FIREFLY’S WARNING. "Daddy," said little Ethel one night, "what makes the light In the Fire Fly’s body?" “I am sure I cannot tell you,” said her father. They say that It’s.the Fire Flies cooking their supper In the kitch en. But that has nothing to do with the time that the Fire Fly warned the Potato Bug family so that they got out of the way Just In time. “Frank. the hired man at Miss Lucy’s, had got ready to put some poi son on the potato plants, and Sonny, that was the little boy who lived at Miss Lucy’s, was getting the tomato cans for him. "It so happened that the Fire Fly, who was under the grindstone, was Just near enough to hear what was said. "‘Yes slr-ee,’ said Frank; ‘there will not be a potato bug left within 10 miles of here when I get through tonight.’ “ 'That was enough for the Fire Fly. Ha was a good friend of Mr. and Mrs. Potato Bug. and he thought the best thing for him to do‘was to go over and tell Mr. Potato Bug what he had heard. So as soon as Frank and Sonny had gone, the Fire Fly unfolded his wings and started for the new home of the Potato Bugs. "When he arrived there Dr. Beetle and the Lady Bug were talking to Mr. and Mrs. Potato Bug and the children. “‘Run for your life!’ said the Fire Fly to Mr. Potato Bug, for Frank Is coming to get you. I Just heard him tell Sonny that there would not be a potato bug within 10 miles of here by night.’ “ ‘Then you all get into my carriage,’ said Dr. Beetle, ’and I will drive you over to the Lady Bug’s bungalow, and you may hide there.’ "You would have laughed to see them all hustling into the good old doctor’s carriage, and they had no sooner got out of sight than Frank and Sonny came down the potato patch. “ 'I wonder where all those potato bugs have gone?’ said F'rank to Sonny." Quite Likely. Parson—While your boy, Homer, la away at college, I hope he’ll keep up his bible studies. Mrs. Tungtwist—I’m sure he wilL They say he's the most bibulous stu dent there. Even in the Jungle. Baby Monkey—Oh, mamma, look at the man with the big teeth and eye glasses! I’m afraid! Mamma Monkey—Don't be afraid, mjr child. He's very fond of children. The trouble with a political poll Is |hat It as frequently pulls down as up Ispahan. There are roads from dawn to eunset through the valleys of Kashmir. I should like to watch the ships come down from Cadiz to Tangier. When the awkward-moving camels take their cumbrous loads and start From Damascus to Palmyra, I must ! follow in my heart; Tet these fancies lure me Idly as a face whose smile is wan. For the world Is all a desert till you come to Ispahan. There the women at the fountains talk and loiter In the sun. On their lips old Omar's verses tasting pleasures while they run. There the night Is cool with fragrance and the quiet day drifts by Like a pageant of Illusion compassed In an arch of sky. I shall take the road some morning through Tabriz and Teheran Passing far across the desert till I come to Ispahan. Life and death there throb with mystery. beat with human yearnings still. I shall feel no press of knowledge making truth the germ of 111. There they listen to tho Sufis while the purple evening falls. And the distant line of camels ends the Journey at the walls. All the shows of things are Idle till I leave the Hamadan On my way across the desert to the domes , of Ispahan. —Lewis Worthington Smith in Woman's Home Companion. One of tho best evidences of a man’s wealth in the present agitation of high prices Is to see him take the down town car with egg sticking to the ends of his mustache. DOCTOR’S BEST FORMULA For Remarkably Quirk Action oa Colds and Coughs. | This prescription will frequently ' cure the worst cold in a day’s time, and It is a sure cure for any cough that can be cured. "Two ounces Glyc erine; half ounce Concentrated Pine; put these into half a pint of good whiskey and use In doses of teaspoon ful to a tablespoonful every four hours. Shake bottle well each time." Any druggist has these ingredents in stock or will quickly get them from his wholesale house. The Concen trated Pine Is a special pine product and comes only in half ounce vials, each enclosed in an air-tight case; but he sure It is labeled “Concentrated." This formula cured hundreds here last winter. When one man pins his faith to luck and another to hard work, It Is the latter who is generally lucky. A Generous Gift. Professor Munyon has Just Issued a most beautiful, useful and complete al- I manac. It contains not only all the sci entific Information concerning the moon’s phases, In all the latitudes, but has illustrated articles on how to read character by phrenology, palmistry and birth month. It also tells all about card reading, birth stones and their mean- j lng, and gives the interpretation of dreams. It teaches beauty culture, man icuring, gives weights and measure and antidotes for poison. In fact, It Is a Magazine Almanac, that not only i gives valuable Information, but will af- , ford much amusement for every mem ber of the family, especially for parties and evening entertainments. Farmers and people In the rural districts will find this Almanac almost invaluable. It will be sent to anyone absolutely free on application to the Munyon Remedy Company, Philadelphia, Pa. Silence gives the most unsatisfac tory kind of consent yet discovered. How often In after years does a wom an contend that she never said "yes," and was therefore unwilling. There Is mere Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put to gether, and until the laat few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by eon ftantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proT en catarrh to he a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treat ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Is th« only constitutional cure on the market. It la taken Infernally In doaea from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and tes timonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. 8old by Druggists, 7Sc. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. There Is many a man so full of fight that there Is a continual conflict in his own statements. PILES CLUED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in b to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Opportunlty Is always knocking at the door, but some men expect It to break down the door and fill the iarder unaided. A Little Cold. He caught a little cold— That was all. So the neighbors sadly said, As they gathered round his bed, When they heard that he was dead. He caught a little cold— That was all. (Puck.) Neglect of a cough or cold often leads to serious trouble. To break up a cold In twenty-four hours and cure . any cough that Is curable mix two ounces of Glycerine, a half-ounce of j Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure and : eight ounces of pure Whisky. Take a teaspoonful every four hours. You can buy these at any good drug store and easily mix them In a large bottle. Tho price of husbands seems to have been affected by the higher cost of living when a good plump husband, or a husband with a good plump pocket book, sells readily In the New York markets for $25,000. If Yon Are a Trifle Sensitive About the size of your shoes, many peo ple wear smaller shoes by using Alien a Foot-E!ase, the Antiseptic Powder to ■ hake into the shoes. It cures Tired, Swollen. Aching Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for breaking In new shoes. Sold everywhere, 26c. Sam ple sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olm sted. l.e Roy. N. Y. If the unexpected didn't happen once In a while, there would be no oppor tunity to get In with "I told you so.” BROWN’S Bronchial Troches fortanthf relieve Sore Threat, HoUlintu end pMfha uneaceQea fee clearing the voice, Abes, ■rtely free (tea estate* ev earthing harmful, ntn. M cento, SO eeafr sad $1.00 pee bom fr»yi Mat ea request. JOlfrl L BROWN fc SOW, froeme. Meat. ’ r:-1T' Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna appeals to the cultured and the well-informed and the healthy because its component parts are simple and whole some and because it acts with out disturbing the natural func tions, as it is wholly free from every objectionable quality or substance. In its production a pleasant and refreshing syrup of the figs of California is unit ed with the laxative and car minative properties of certain plants known to act most bene ficially, on the human system, f when its gentle cleansing is de sired. To get its beneficial ef fects, always buy the genuine, (i for sale by all reputable drug- ■ gists; one size only, price * fifty cents a bottle. The name ' of the company — California Fig Syrup Co.—is always plain ly printed upon the front of ev ery package of the genuine. I-OUISVILLE, KY.SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. NEW YORK, N. Y. . — - l • The RAYO LAMP ir a high-grade lamp, sold at a low price. There are lamps that cost more, but there is no better lamp at any price. The Burner, the Wick, tho Chimney-Holder—all are vital things in a lamp; these parts of the RAYO LAMP are perfectly constructed and there is nothing known in the art of lamp-making that could add to the value of the RAYO aa a light-giving device. Suitable for any room in any house. Every dealer erorywhore. If «ot at yours. ■ wait® for descriptive circular to the noarost Agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) COLT DISTEMPER Odds On. From Tit-Bits. A Durham farmer was traveling to London to consult a lawyer, when the fear struck him that he had left cer tain important papers behind. He made u hurried search of his bag. "If I did leave those papers," he re marked, “I’m a fool." The search proceeded, and a moment later he said: "I believe it'll turn out I'm a fool." Just as he was examining the last bundle of papers he exclaimed: “Well, I'll bet I’m a fool." A man on the other side of the com partment lowered his newspaper for a moment and said, slowly and deliber ately: "Oblige me, sir, by laying a little money that same way for me." Clip this out. Renowned Doctor’* Prescription f*» Rheumatism and Back Ache.. "One ounce Syrup Sarsaparilla cor pound; one ounce Torla compound; add these to a half pint of good whis key. Take a tablespoonful before eacl meal and at bed time; shake the bottle before using each time.” Any drug gist has these Ingredients In stock or will quickly get them from his whole sale house. This was published pre viously and hundreds here have beet cured by it. Good results show after the first few doses. This also acts as a system builder, eventually restoring strength and vitality. Not Enough Boy. From the Cleveland Leader. Hopkinson Smith tells the story of the southern slave who diagnosed a boy’s Illness In her master's home. "It’s a case of too much watermelon," she said. Thereupon she was in formed w-lth great dignity that there could be no such thing as “to much watermelon.” "Well,” she retorted, "then there ain’t enough boy." If at first you don’t succeed in pick ing the winning horse don’t try again. Don't Persecute your Bowels Small Pill. Small Doaa. Small Price GENUINE Boat Bear Signature. i4 $—D°aar for a Dime Why spend a dollar when 10c buys a box of CASCARETS at any drug store? Use as directed—get the natural, easy result. Saves many dollars watttd on medicines that do not cure. Millions regularly use CASCARETS. Buy a box now—10a week’* treatment—proof in the morn ing. QO« CUT THIS OUT, mall It wltn your ad dress to Sterling Remedy Company. Chicago, 111., and receive a handsome souvenir gold Bon Bon Box FREE. PILES P4Y ,P cuaeo and Fl.tnlm Car*. REA CO.. DEPT. B5. MINNEAPOLIS. HINA P) Watson E.C'«lpman,W»sl> IrR 1 9 ^ lugton.D.C. Books free. Hlgh» I I ftsBI B W est references. Best results. Despair and Despondency No one but a woman can tell the story of the suffering, the despair, end the despondency endured by women who carry ■ daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and derangements of the delicate and important organs that are distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com pletely upset the nerves if long continued. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for weakness and disease of the feminine organism. IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing to urge upon you as just as good." It is non-secret, non-alcoholic and has a record of forty years of cures* Ask Youa Neighbors. They probably know of some of its many cures. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to euro them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing •a/j, and he will send you a free copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser—revised, up-to date edition, in paper covers. In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.