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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1905)
THREE YEARS AFTER. Eugene E. Larto, of 761 Twentieth avenue, ticket seller In the Union Sta tion, Denver, Col., says: "You are at liberty to repeat what I first stated through our Denver papers about Doan’s Kidney Pills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason in the interim to change my opinion of that remedy. I was subject to severe at tacks of backache, al ways aggravated If I sat long at a desk. Doan’s Kidney Pills absolutely stopped my backache. I have never had a pain or a twinge since.” Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all druggists. Price EO cents per box. Some men will miss heaven because they sit so long by the wayside dis secting their guide books. CUTICURA SOAP The World's Greatest Skin Soap—The Standard of Every Nation of the Earth. Millions of the world’s best people hse Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuti cura Ointment, the purest and sweet est of emolient skin cures, for preserv ing, ,-urifying and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whiten ing and soothing red, rough and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchlngs and chaflngs, and many sanative, antisep tic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, especially mothers, as well as for all the pur poses of the toilet, bath and nursery. The recording angel knows the back alley as well as the front yard. TO CUKE A COED IN ONE DAT Take Laxative Bromo yutulne Tablet*. All drug gist* refund the money If K fall* to cure. E. W. urove'a signature 1* on each box. 2Se. Too many are willing to wash the disciple’s feet with boiling lye. More Flexible and Lasting, won’t shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better re sults than possible with any other brand and one-third more for same money. _ All the great work in the world Is aimply doing the best that is in us. .• DO YOU I Couch I OOrsl'T DELAY BALSAM ft Cures Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat, Croup, (nfluenza, Whooping Cough. Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first •lages.and a sure relief ia advanced stages. Use *t once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers every where. Large bottles 25 cents and 50 cents. Look for this brand on harness, collars, saddles, horse blankets, lap robes, etc. Made by Harpham Bros. Co., Lincoln, Neb. Drop os a card and will mail you a souvenir. TWENTY BUSHELS OF WHEAT TO THE ACRE Is the record on the Free Home* stead Lands of WesternCanada for 1904. The 150,000 farmer* from the United State*, who luring the past seven years have gone to Canada participate In this prosperity. The United States will aoon become an Importer of wheat. -et a free homestead or purchase a farm In Western Canada, and become one of those who will help produce lt» Apply for Information to Superintendent of Immi gration. Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized Canadian Sovemment Agent—W. V. Bennett, 801 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska. I NCUBATORS. The OLD TRUSTY In tubatora are made by Johnson, the Incubator Man, who made 50,000 be *ore Inventing hli OLD fRUSTY. A pay-fnr-ltself hatoh *r. Forty daya’ free trial \nd a Are year's guaran a?e. For big free cata rngitt, 800 poultry lllus iratlons, address. Ml. Ml. JOHNSON CO "Box O. T*t Clay Canter, (ftI a yriQ Pays (or THE DAILY REVIEW, •SI A IlA<1 * Delightful Daily Newspaper For The American Home. A LL Important news; a brilliant magazine feature jit every day; department# devoted to literature, poetry, art. science, education, religion, hygiene, do mestic economy, fashions, travels, recreations, busi ness markets, etc. Nothing admitted to reading or advertising columns which parenu cannot read to their children. Subscription price SI a year: 75c for 6 mo.: 50c for 3 nn>. Subscribe to-day. Chicago itevlew Co., 399 Coca-Cola Building., Chicago, Hi. W. N. U., Omaha. No. 1—1905. Mankind's Many Languages. There are no fewer than five thou* sand distinct languages spoken by mankind. The number of separate di* alects is enormous. There are more than sixty distinct vocabularies in Brazil, and in Mexico the Nahua lan guage has been broken up into seven hundred dialects. There are hundreds in Borneo._ Chemistry on Railroads. The operation of a modern railway Is a place where chemistry would hardly seem likely to be much in evi dence, but every large railway system maintains expert chemists in whose laboratories questions of vital import ance to railroad economies are con st&ntly undergoing minute chemicaJ study. _ Egyptians Used Fine Tools. When the pyramids were built the laborers did not work under such dis advantages as have long been attri buted to them. Researches show that they had solid and tubular drills and lathe tools. The drills were set with jewels and cut into the rocks with keenness and accuracy. Founds Important Fellowship. Mr. Francis Galton, F. R. S., has founded in London University a fel lowship for the promotion of the study of "National Eugenics,’* the study of the agencies under social control that may improve or impair the racial qualities of future generations, either physically or mentally. The Beggars of Naples. Lever says somewhere that when he threw out a handful of small coin to the Neapolitan beggars the blind were the first to see it, the paralyzed to run for it, the maimed to pick it up, the naked to put it in their pock ets. and the dumb to blaspheme their la-luck in being out of the scramble. Costly Plano Leather. It is said that the most costly leath er in the world is known to the trade as piano leather. The secret of tan ning this leather is known only to a family of tanners in Germany, though the skins from which it is tanned come almost entirely from America. SPECIAL NOTICE. UNDOMA Hair Tohic will lend to your hair that soft fluffy appearance appreciated by people of good tast« and refinement. Ask Your Barber. Send us your name for free treat ment. THE UNDOMA COMPANY, Omaha. India’s Political Divisions. In traveling the 1,900 miles from the northern extremity of India to southern one passes through as many political divisions as there are great divisions of Europe, and differing as widely in climate and customs. When a man is too old to be made a fool of by a pretty woman he's cer tainly in the centenarian class. You never hear any one complain about “Defiance Starch.” There is none to equal it in quality and quantity, 16 ounces, 10 cents. Try it now and sava your money. Art seldom pays; in which respect it resembles a good many artists. Defiance Starch is guaranteed biggest and best or money refunded. 16 ounces, 10 cents. Try it now. . Love measures life by its chances to give itself away. ’The letter of Miss Merkley, whose picture is printed above, proves beyond question that thousands of cases of inflamma tion of the ovaries and womb are annually cured by the use of Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound “ Deab Mbs. Ptrkhah : — Gradual loss of strength and nerve force told me something was radically wrong with me. I had severe shooting pains through the pelvic organs, cramps and extreme irritation compelled me to seek medical advice. The doctor said that I bad ovarian trouble and ulcera tion, and advised an operation. I strongly objected to this and decided to try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vege table Compound. I soon found that my judgment was correct, and that all the good things said about this medi cine were true, and day by day I felt less pain and increased appetite. The ulceration soon healed, and the other complications disappeared, and in eleven weeks I was once more strong and vigorous and perfectly well. “ My heartiest thanks are sent to yon for the great good you have done me."— Sincerely yours, Miss Margaret Merkley, 275 Third St., Milwaukee, Wis.— $6000 forfeit If original of abooo lottor proving gonulnoneoc cannot bo produced. WINCHESTER "LEADER” AND "REPEATER” SHOTGUN SHELLS The proof of the shell is its shooting. Be cause they shoot so well, Winchester Factory Loaded “Leader” and “Repeater” Smoke less Powder Shotgun Shells have won almost every important prize shot for in years. Good shots shoot them because they give bet ter results, shoot stronger and more uniformly and are more reliable than any other make ALWAYS SPEOIFY WINCHESTER MAKE OP SHELLS Flag Song. )ut upon the four winds blow, Tell the world your story; thrice in hearts’ blood dipped before, They called your name Old Glory! Stream, Old Glory, bear your stars High among the seven; Stream a watchfire on the dark, And make a sign in heaven! ifighty harvests gild your p'atafc Mighty rivers bear them, everywhere you fly you bid All the hungry share them; Blooms the wilderness for you. Plenty follows after, Jnderneath your shadow go Peace and love and laughter. iVhen from sky to sky you float. Far in wide savannas. >’ast horizons lost in light Answer with hosannas. Symbol of unmeasured power. Blessed promise sealing, til your hills are hills of God. And all your founts are healing! Still to those the wronged of earth Sanctuary render; For hope and home and heaven they see Within your sacred splendor! stream. Old Glory, bear your stars High among the seven; stream a watchfire on the dark, And make a sign in heaven! —Harriet Prescott Spofford. At Kenesaw. “An old diary,’’ said a One Hundred and Twenty-Fifth Illinois man, "re minded me of that mysterious man on horseback at Kenesaw. This is what I recorded in my diary June 19, 1864: ‘Again ordered forward, but the John nies have gone to higher ground. We follow them up, and at night we are at the foot of a mountain, up the sides of which are skirmish pits, and near the top seems to be breastworks, with here and there embrasures for batteries. We soon know that the bat teries are in place all right, and nine teen of our cannon open to reply to the rebs on the top of the mountain. At the same time a furious thunder cloud comes up and joins in the hurly burly, and such a roaring, shaking, and quaking as ensued is seldom wit nessed.’ That reads like it was writ ten at the front, under the conditions stated by a soldier present and a par ticipant. He was at the foot of Kene saw, in Georgia, and belonged to Col. Dan McCook's brigade, all right, but when he made his record he did not know the name of the location. “History later made the name mem orable: incidents of a few days later fixed themselves on my memory, es pecially the charge of June 27, 1864, on the dead angle of Kenesaw. by Col. McCook’s brigade. I belonged to company K, One Hundred and Twen ty-Fifth Illinois. Our colonel, Oscar F. Harmon of Danville, 111., was killed after Col. McCook fell while command ing and leading the brigade in the sec ond effort to rush the works. He was within the twenty-foot line of the enemy’s works. My place was on the extreme left, and after we had made the rush and during the confusion which ensued, some calling on us to go forward, others to fall back, I lay down, uncertain just what to do. In the interim I looked just in time to see Gen. Charles G. Harker fall from his horse. He was the only mounted officer or person I saw. I cannot re call the color of the horse, nor could I say as to his leading a charge. He was to my rear and left; that is, be yond the extreme left of McCook's brigade, which was not so close to the rebel works as was the right wing, which was lodged on the outside of the works at a point about twenty feet from the angle to the north. I could see the colors of one of the regiments planted in the loose earth at the foot of the works and our men were lying flat on the face of the breastworks in support of the colors. “Just as that scene was before me I had one side of my hat torn out by a rebel bullet. This volley gave us a chance to get the drop on the rebs and the firing slacked. It seemed to me like pot hunting on the river below Danville when I was a boy. The fir ing got so slack that I got up and looked around. Everybody was gone except the dead and wounded. The brush and undergrowth screened me, and I straightened myself up and de liberately walked back to the rear un til I came to the rifle pits evacuated by the rebels some ways down the hill. As I recall it now it seems to me that the Johnnies must have thought that they had killed enough of us for one killing, for when we had pulled ourselves together the soldier instinct resumed the ascendant and of ficers and men re-formed and pushed up to the brow of the hill, where we fortified within twenty-seven steps of the rebels and made it about the hot test place for the space of the frcnt of the brigade that the rebels held at any time from Chattanooga to Atlanta, and we kept it hot until the rebels evacuated their position July 2 and 3, 1864, when we followed them to the Chattahoochee river.’’—Cuicago Inter Ocean. Southern Woman's Experience. Writing in the Raleigh News and Observer Susan Dahmey Smedes gives this fragment of civil war history: “One of our war experiences was keeping house for two weeks in a box car. We were coming back home from Georgia. The journey consumed two weeks, because our engine al ways stopped us at night, and also at all the cities for a day or two. The car next ours brought the servants. We bought provisions in the towns and they cooked nice hot meals along side the track. We had beds, tables, rocking chairs, books, and work bas kets. Even the cat had not been left behind, she belonged to the naval branch of the service, and was given me by one of Capt. Eggleston’s sailors. She personally had never smelled gun powder, but all her family, her mother, brothers, and sisters, had gone down to the fight in Mobile bay, and been captured by the Northern fleet, in the gunboat Gaines. “It seems a strange thing to say, but all that party look back on that trip as the most comfortable ever made by rail. While we were eating and sleeping and talking, and now and then receiving a visitor, our serv ants were improving the fleeting moments by the most tremendous re ligious revival. The sound of their prayers, exhortations, and singing overpowered the noise of t^n engine and train, day and night it seemed to go on. “A pleasant incident on that journey was a breakfast sent us by a former neighbor as we were lying near Colum bus, Ga. I must enumerate the viands all or nearly ail were delicacies at that stage of the war. There was real cof fee, with real sugar to sweeten it (not sorghum sirup), biscuits of real wheat flour, butter, though it was selling at $4 a pound, broiled chicken, beef steak and fried potatoes. We did not leave a crumb, and every member of that party maintains to this day that there never was nor ever can be as fine a breakfast as that one. “It is now forty years since all these scenes were enacted. I feel to this day, and I speak for nearly every Southerner whom I have heard ex press an opinion, that it is well the war ended as it did. It was always my father’s opinion that if the South had succeeded secession would have been but the beginning of many seces sions, and we should have been split up into many weak states instead ol being the mighty nation that we are. “May Old Glory float till the end of time over an undivided country!” Cherishes His Old Ff«g. G. C. Large of Taylorville, 111., has in his possession the remnants of a flag which was made by the women of Buckhart township in 1860. It was carried by the One Hundred and Fif teenth Illinois regiment of Spring field, where the regiment was named Mary Lincoln, in honor of the wife ol Abraham Lincoln. The flag was not taken through the war. as only the national colors are used in the na tional service, but it was brought back to Christian county, where it has since remained. It has been used in every political campaign since the war, but this is the first time it hat ever seen a Republican candidate fot president victorious in Christian coun ty. The flag was made entirely by hand and shows beautiful workman ship.—Chicago Chronicle. The Badge Monsy Cannot Buy. The department of Indiana has a ( bronze badge, the pin bearing each | year the name of the place where I INDIANA. the department of national encamp ment is held. A cherry ribbon sup ports a disk containing the state seal, 1 surrounded by the inscription, “De partment of Indiana, G. A. R.” Last Casualty in Civil War. Dr. Clayton Tiffin, a well-known physician and surgeon of Hamilton, Mo., had the distinction of command ing the Union soldiers who fought the last battle of4 the civil war in which a life was lost. During the struggle he commanded at different times three companies at Richmond, Mo. His last command was composed of vet erans of Ray and Carroll counties, who had been mustered out but had re-enlisted under him. It was with a handful of these that he had an encounter on May 23, 1865, with the remaining remnant of Bill Anderson’s bushwhackers and guer rillas. Anderson had been killed, and Arch Clemons, who had been his first lieutenant, was in command. The engagement was fought about eight miles from Richmond. Capt. Tiffin had with him only five men. They were fired upon from ambush by the bushwhackers, and. Madison Walker was killed. Capt. Tiffin was himsell shot through the toe of his boot, the ball not cutting the flesh. This skirmish occurred about 6:30 o’clock in the evening of the day men tioned. Capt. Tiffin was reinforced and pursued Clemons’ command all night, and the guerrillas surrendered the next morning at Lexington. Three days later, May 26, 1865, Kirby Smith surrendered all the Confederate sol diers west of the Mississippi river and all who had opposed the union forces had been disarmed. Capt. Tiffin is quite sure the last fight was in Ray county and that Mad ison Walker was the last soldier in that great struggle to give up his life. Unpatriotic School Teacher. The Woman’s Relief Corps of Tole do, Ohio, recently preferred charges against a school teacher of Wood county. His school was presented with an American flag and when re ceived the teacher was evidently not in a patriotic mood, for instead of unfurling it at the top of the school house staff he buried the emblem upon the dirty floor and invited the schol ars to participate in a war dance upon the flag, which invitation seems to have been accepted. Day of Many Engagements. Nov. 27 was the anniversary of nine teen engagements during the civil war, as follows: Waynesboro, Greys villc, Ringgold, Brown’s Cross Roads, Thomas Station, Reynolds Plantation, Jones Plantation, Pea Vine Creek, Taylor’s Ridge and Buck Head Creek, Ga.; Fort Esperanza. Texas; Bartlett Mills, Va.; Black River Bridge, Miss.; Cleveland, Lawrenceberg, La Vergne, Mill’s Creek, SerougsvUle, Tenn., and Cartbftufe. Ark. Plenty of Good Clg&*«. What’s this complaint from certain Did smokers about not being able to get a good cigar nowadays? It sounds more like the growl of a chronic kick- ' er than anything more reasonable. There are more cigars of a cheap qual ity on the market now than formerly, out the supply of cigars of the best quality is not thereby diminished. They cost money, but they can be had for the price.—Boston HeraliL Girls as Bank Employes. Employment of girls in banks is no new experiment. The Bank of France took women into its employ ment as long ago as 1852. This be ginning only consisted of four girls in very minor positions. Before a year was finished the four had become twelve. Twenty years later the num ber was 100 and to-day 300 women work in the bank, of whom three are among the principal cashiers. Books From the Forest. A youngish man strolling through a wood remarked sententiously to his companion: “I once upon a time had an interest in 4,000 trees that grew lere.” “How did that happen?” he was asked. “My latest novel.” he •xplained, “had a circulation of 1, 600,000 copies, and the paper on which it was printed was made of wcod fiber —cellulose—requiring about 4,000 trees.” Utilizing Fish Skin. In Gloucester the “king town" of fish, the humble cod, has been utilized j with success for making leather for ; shoes and gloves. In Egypt men walk on sandals made from the skins of Red Sea fish. In Russia certain peas ant costumes are beautifully trimmed 1 with the skins of a fine food fish, the turbot. Bookbinders in Europe are binding books with eelskin. Relief for Toothache. Warm a raisin, split it and apply to the gum above the aching tooth. This will also break an abscess. Another remedy, almost unfailing, is a mixture of chloroform and camphor. Your! druggist will mix it in the right propor- i tions. Temporary relief can be ob- [ tained instantly by applying a bit of ; white bread to the tooth and holding it there. __ Origin cf Petroleum. Until recently it was almost tiniver- ! sally believed that petroleum, like coal, was derived from fossil "egeta tlon or possibly from animals or fishes of some long past age. Now it is as serted by many scientific men that it may not be of any organic origin, but may be due to subterranean chemical action. _ Odd Names. Fremantle, Western Australia, is a town with some queer names. The mayor is a Cadd, the chief printer is Cant, a contractor named Thick nas just sued a local soup preserving company and a man named Offspring Webb was recently fined for keeping an unlicensed dog. A Seventy Pound Eel. In the recent storm which raged on the Upper Solway the largest eel ever seen in the district was stranded off Powfoot. It measured 6 feet in length. 25 inches in girth and weighed 70 pounds.—London Daily Express. Magnetic Needle Untrustworthy. Over a large area of central Rus sia the magnetic needle does not point north or south. It is at one part de flected to the west and at another part to the east and at one place it points due east and west. Insist on Getting It. Some grocers say they don’t keep Defiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 oz in a package. Which they won't be able to sell first, because Defiance contains 16 oz. for the same money. Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 oz. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking. The rooters are always content to let the other fellows do the digging. give permanently cured. No fits or nerrrosnese after ■ 119 first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restor er. Send for FREE 82.00 trial bottle and treatise* PS. EL H. Kune, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, P* A bushel of potatoes may do more good than a wagon-load of prayer. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. Pot children teething, softens the pume, reduces to QammaUoD, allay a pain,cusoawlndcoilc. 26cabotue. One never knows a man any better for tearing him to pieces. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in ^.pound pack ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. Important to Mothors. Examine carefully every bottle of CA9TORTA, a safe and cure remedy for infants and children. and see that it Bears the Signature of — * " *9 la Use For Over 30 Tears. The Kind You Have Always Bought. He is always a poor man who knows qo more in life than making money. DR. McOREW For 30 rears has made a specialty of DISEASES OF MEN. Eight een years in Omaha. His Home Treatment has permanently 1 cur«d thousands at small cost, 1 Save time and money by describ ing your case, and write for Free book and terms of treatment. Med , lclne sent in plain package. Box I TH6. Office 215 South 14th Street, ' Omaha. Nebraska. SISTERS OF CHARITY Uses Pc-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Grip and Catarrh—A Congressman’s Letter. In every country of the civilized ■world Sisters of Charity are known. Not only do they minister to the spir itual and intellectual needs of the | charges committed to tueir care, but i they also minister to their bodily needs. With so many children to take care of and to protect from climate and disease, these wise and piudent Sis ters have found Peruna a never fail ing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United States. A recommend re cently received from a Catholic insti tution in Detroit, Mich., reads as fol | lows: Dr. S B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: Dear Sir “The young giri who used the Peruna was suffering from laryn gitis and loss of voice. The result of the treatment was most satisfactory. She found great relief, and after further use of the medicine we hope to be able to say she is entirely cured. ” —Sisters of Charity. The young girl w’as under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for catarrh of the throat with good results as the above letter testi fies. Send to The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio, for a free book writ ten by Dr. Hartman. The following letter is from Con gressman Meekison, of Napoleon, Ohio: The Peruna Medicine Co., Colum bus, O.: Gentlemen: “I have used sev eral bottles of Peruna, and feel greatly benefit ed thereby from my catarrh of the head, and feel encouraged to believe that its conti n u e d use will fully eradicate a dra^ase of thirty years’ standing.”—DavidV.eek ison. Dr. Hartman, one of the best know if „ physicians and surgeons in the Unit ed States, was the first man to form ulate Peruna. It was through his genius and perseverance that it was introduced to the medical profession of this country. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hart man, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to givo you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Colum bus, O. THAT IS CURABLE BYA1INIMENT RUB IT IN HARD HAVE YOU A HORSE? WOULD YOU LIKE US TO SEND YOU A BEAUTIFUL SADDLE? FOR THE MOST WONDERFUL SADDLE OFFER EVER HEARD OF. an offer by which anyone can have the nlceat (addle In hla neighborhood, cut thli ad out and (end it to ua and you will receive our New, Big end Beautiful Special Saddle Catalogue, large, handaome photographic illustrations of ail kinds of Men’s, Women’s, Boys’ >nd Girls’ Saddles, Stock Saddles, Ranch and Range Saddles, SMALL. MEDIUW AND LARGE. PLAIN AND FANCY SADDLES. EVERT IMAGIN/ ILE KIND AND STYLE AND SHAPE OF SADDLE. OUR PRICES WILL ASTONISH AND PLEASE YOU. Yau will gat eur Very Lateet and Moat Astonishingly Llbaral Offer, you will get our New Free Trial l’lan, you will receive a saddle offer that every hor*e owner should have at once, if you own horse, don't fall to cut this at) out and send to us today and see what all you get by return mall, free, postpaid. address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.. CHIC*G° THERES NO USE ARGUING Defunct Starch b fa very be* Starch nk l’i a fact Hundred* v(3 testify CD fc Try ft once younel. We guarantee Mttafarfa* or money back You can’t loac. Defiance Standi b ahaolutefy free from It nakes fa clothes Soak beautiful and wfi not rat them. Gal I of your grocer. t* nonce* far 10 ctrt> aao-third m you get of any other brand. THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO., OMASA, MS. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Psper. BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH 5YRUP cures coughs and cokls.