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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1906)
Bad Stomach Makes Bad Blood. Yon can not make sweet butter in a foul, unclean churn. Tne stomach serves as a churn in which to agitate, work up and disintegrate our food as it is being digested. If it be weak, sluggish ana foul the result will be torpid, sluggish liver and bad, impure blood. The ingredients of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discover}’ are just such as best serve to correct and cure all such de rangements. It is made up without a drop of alcohol in its composition; chem ically pure, triple-refined glycerine being used instead of the commonly employed alcohol. Now this glycerine is of itself a valuable medicine. Instead of a deleteri ous agent like alcohol, especially in the cure of weak stomach, dyspepsia and the various forms of indigestion. Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D.. of Bennett Medical College, Chicago, says of it: "In dyspepsia it serves an excellent pur pose. * * • It is one of the best manufact ured products of the present time in Its action upon enfeebled, disordered stomachs: especially if there is ulceration or catarrhal gastritis (catarrhal inflammation of stomach). It is a most efficient preparation. Glycerine will relieve man3' cases of pyrosis (heartburn) and excessive gastric acidity. It is useful in chronic intestinal dyspepsia, especially the flatulent variety, and In certain forms of chronic constipation, stimulating the secre tory and excretory functions of the intestinal glands.” When combined., in just the right propor tions. with Goiden 6eai rvinc, Stone root. Black Cherry bark, Queen ’s root. Blood root and Mandrake root, or the extracts of these, as in Dr. Pierce’s Goiden Medical Discovery, there can be no doubt of its great efficacy in the cure of all stomach, liver and intestinal disorders and derange ments. These several ingredients have the strongest endorsement in all such cases of such eminent medical leaders as Prof. R. B&rtholow, M. D.. of Jefferson Med ical College. Chicago: Prof. Hobart A. Hare, M. D.. of Medical Department, University of Pa.: Prof. Laurence Johnson. M. D., Medical Department. University of New York: Prof Edwin M. Hale. M. D.. Hahnemann Medical Col lege. Chicago; Prof. John M. Scudder. M. D. and Prof. John King. M. D.. Authors of the American Dispensatory, and scores of others among the leading medical men of our land. ho can doubt the curative virtues of a medicine the ingredients of which have such a profesBional endorsement ? Constipation cured by Doctor Pierce’* Pleasant Pellets. One or two a dose. i i 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ( 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Few Need Employment. In one of the English towns which opened an employment bureau for the unemployed a month ago. only four applications have been received, and one of these was from an out-of-wort grave digger. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOBIA, a safe and rare remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Tin. Kind Yon Have Always Bought. Cranks. How many people there are who want to increase the discomforts of life. There is always bobbing up that everything we have ever done is wrong, and that the only road to phy sical sdlvation is to follow his own schedule.—Philadelphia Inquirer. New York’s Expensive Lunch. According to one estimate the peo ple of Greater New York spend $300, 000 a year for their noon luncheon. This, of course, includes all classes from the swell dining rooms of the high class hotels to the cheap •■bean eries” of the slums. Philosopher's Answer. Thales, the ancient pholosopher. de clared that there was no difference between life and death. “Why then.” cried one of those to whom the remark was made, "don't you put an end to your life?” “Because,” was the reply, “there Is no difference.” Decided Horse Committed Suicide. In a lawsuit at Aberdeen. Wash. over a horse whose death the owner attributed to a man who had hired it. the court decided the animal had committed suicide. FOR MAN AND BEAST. KILLS PAIN ^ AND DESTROYS - ALL GERM LIFE. CURES RHEUMATISM I —————g=" -II WONDERFULLY PENETRATINC. f\ A COMPLETE MEDICINE CHEST. Price, 25c., 50c., and 51.00. Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, 6I^AIban]^t^Jtoeton^lass^| FAMOUS VESSEL IN MINIATURE Model of the Old Warship Constitution Preserved in Boston — Long Had Hung Unnoticed on Wall of Office in Yard Where “Old Ironsides" Was Constructed — Present Owner Will Preserve It as Sacred Relic. While agitation is going on publicly tnd petitions are being signed to save Old Ironsides from being sold for the copper and iron in her hull, there re mains hidden in a small paint shop on Atlantic avenue a relic as interesting in a way as the Constitution herself. • It is the builders’ model on the lines of which the famous war vessel was constructed, and which was saved from threatened destruction for fire wood by Capt. W. S. Nickerson, the present owner of the model. When the newly organized United States of America decided that a structor Humphreys as to drafts, molds and building instructions, and Col. Geo. Claghorne of New Bedford was selected for his knowledge of ship building to superintend the work of construction. How well these men yard until the present owner got pos session of it, and began to tear down the building preparatory to erecting the modem storehouses on the prop erty. The old model, unrecognized by the ftaiDtUOP Trtfc CoKSTITUTTOM^^ OWWtD BYW.S.NlCKfiBSOK. 1 (l jrrtv larger and more efficient navy was necessary, and it was decided to build vessels of a size that would compare with those of her principal enemy, Great Britain, Capt. Joshua Hum phreys of Philadelphia was given the order for the construction of the first vessel. As this first effort he designed the Constitution, which according to his instructions was to be the equal, if not the superior of anything afloat. The shipyard of Edmund Hart at the bat tery, known everywhere as “Hart’s raval yard,” was chosen as the best place to build a ship of her size and requirements. That nothing might be left undone to make her a monarch of the seas. Capts. Barry, Dale and Ttux ton were assigned to advise with Con- ; performed the work allotted to them can be judged from the fact that the Constitution still remains afloat af ter more than 100 years. The threat of Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte to destroy or get rid of the famous vessel is not the first that was made. A similar threat was made af ter the Constitution had captured the Cyane and the Levant in September. 1830. A storm of protest was imme diately raised all over the country, and Oliver Wendell Holmes voiced the protest in his famous poem, “Old Iron sides.” All this time and for years after the model of the Constitution hung on the walls of the office in Hart's yard, and remained there unnoticed, and unhon ored by the subsequent owners of the , workmen, was consigned to the lum ber pile to be sold, or given away for firewood. It was given to a man who carried it off to break up. but he, thinking to realize a desire for stimu lant, tried in vain to sell it in several places, and finally brought it to the shop of Capt. Nickerson, who gave him a half dollar for it. It was not until he heard the story of where it was found that even Capt. Nickerson recognized the model of the famous warship. With patience he cleared away the dust of years from it. and restored the model to its an cient likeness. Since then he has cared for the model with zeal, and has refused to take a price for it. and it stands among the most sacred relics in his shop.—Boston Globe. NO ENCOURAGEMENT TO SAVE. Banks of City of Mexico Don’t Want Small Deposits. Savings banks are practically un : known institutions in this city. If a | man has a small amount to deposit, with the expectation of being able to add to it from time to time, he will be at a loss to find a bank that will be willing to take care of his apparently insignificant sums and pay him inter est on the money that is thus gradual ly deposited. As a matter of fact, there are only about two places in the entire city that will show any interest in his small savings, one of these being a I little bank for working people, which was organized a couple of years ago. and the other place being the Monte de la Piedad, which receives deposits of any amount and pays 6 per cent in terest per annum on them. The lit tle savings bank has had a hard strug gle to maintain itself. It is a notice able fact, however, that the bank in — 1 question has few Mexican working | people as depositors, most of its pa trons being Spaniards who are work ing for wages as grocery clerks and . bookkeepers.—Mexican Herald. Easier to Run Than to Stoo. Quite a number of years ago there lived in Bennington. Vt., several I wealthy gentlemen who weighed over ”50 pounds each. They were very jolly, and would meet two or three evenings a week to tell stories and have a good time. Finally one of them proposed that they organize a lazy man’s club, and that no man weighing less than 250 pounds could join it. The vote was unanimous in tavor of this, and rules and bylaws were adopted. Two of the heaviest members of the club were Enos Adams, a prominent manufacturer, and Oliver Ayres, who each tipped the beam at 300 pounds, with James B. Meacheam, a leading lawyer, a close third. One day Mr. Avres was seen going down a small hill adjacent to the village in a sort of shuffling trot. He was complained of by another member, arrested, ar raigned and promptly “tried.” His defense was that it was harder work to hold back than to run, and he was at once acquitted. Compromise Verdict. In speaking of the humorous side of legal proceedings, a New York law yer tells of an extraordinary verdict rendered by a jury in Arkansas. The jury had gone out to deliberate upon the question whether the defendant had inflicted damages upon the prop erty of his neighbors by permitting his cattle to roam at will. The jurors had a “deadlock.” and, according to one of their number, it was soon perceived that they would never agree. Consequently, it seemed to them a good idea to effect a com promise; so they brought in this ver dict: “We, the jury, find the defendant almost guilty.”—Harper’s Weekly. II WHEN RAILROADING WAS IN ITS INFANCY j Railroad men of the present cannot withhold smiles when they see repre sentations like the accompanying cut, of the up-to-date railroad train of eight} years ago. This train comprised an engine, tender, four "carriages,” for one can hardly call them cars in truth, and two coaches. Railroading was in its infancy and the cars for freight were simply what they appear, stout wagons on wheels, and the passenger part of the train was simply coaches on* wheels. One cbserves with amusement that the en gineer wears a silk hat. In 1827 John Rogers of Baltimore published a brochure relative to rail Old-Time Train. roads and motive power, in which many facts which are now accepted without question by schoolboys, are announced as wonderful discoveries. It ' appears that Mr. Rogers had given the matter of railroad transportation con siderable study, but it is not surpris ing that he had no adequate concep i tion of the possibilities of the rail roadftg of the distant future, say of to-day. This can be seen from casuai statements here and there. For instance, he says in passing: “It may not be presumption to antici pate the time, not far distant, when persons and merchandise may be con ; veyed by the agency of steam and machinery from Baltimore to the Ohio river in about thirty-four hours.” In 1827 such a statement doubtless was received in an incredulous spirit by many, and yet what an under-state ment of possibilities it was, for now the modern passenger train runs from Baltimore to the ‘ Ohio river,” that is, from Baltimore to Pittsburg, in about ten hours, the distance being 342 miles. Trains also run from Baltimore to Parkersburg, a distance of 398 miles, in a little over twelve hours. So, gen erally speaking, passenger trains run three times faster than it was be lieved possible in 1827. Bride in z Basket. For the man with an automobile and who has been accustomed to the ways of civilization the Arabic wed ding is an occasion for rejoicing. It is all so different from at home. The bridesmaids are not the center of in terest. At a real swell function the bride rides on the back of a camel in a basket, accompanied by the husband to be with his best man and a full company of ushers on horseback. There is no danger of sightseers at tacking the bride to secure trophies from her wedding dress. For the sake of ventilation the. wickerwork is not woven too close, and it may be that there have been brides who have peeped out so that they sorrowed be cause there was a face in the company that they loved better than the bride groom. . ■ The Soda Bath. "Are yon taking soda baths?” is the I question -which women are asking one another most just now. The soda bath is declared to be a specific for rheuma tism besides rendering the skin soft and supple and the bather beautiful. Women have tried in turn the per fumed bath, the mud bath and the medicinal bath, but no other bath has ever met with the same favor as the soda bath. It is said to come from Eu rope and the method of procedure is as follows: One pound of washing soda is add ed to a tub of hot water and the pa tient must lie in this for fifteen min utes. Then follows the cold spray and the bather emerges with every trace of her aches and pains dispelled like magic and her skin glowing like the sky at sunrise.—New York Sun. Might Live Too Long. Old Gorrox—“I proposed to Miss Peachlv last night and what do you suppose she said?" His Friend—“She said ‘yes,’ doubt less.” Old Gotrox—“No; she said before giving me an answer she would like to look af my family Bible. Now, what do you suppose she wants to see that for?” His Friend—“Oh, she probably wants-to see if you come of a long lived family.” Repartee Among Parrots. Half the world knows that Lady I Iveagh, hostess and beauty, is possess ed of some of the most famous dia monds and pearls in all England, but ! only her intimates seem to know that she also owns several parrots. This amounts to more than it mav sound, for the birds are of rare breed, i of especially gorgeous and heavi- plu mage and are. moreover, all of them conversationalists. One will make a | remark, the next will answer. A third may contradict: but then there are a ; fourth and a fifth, and one of these j would almost certainly settle the question. They even use some French phrases, and their accent is better than is usually heard in Grosvenor ; Square or Dublin Park. One morning not long ago as their | mistress passed through the conierva tory where they are kept, one of the parrots squawked out: “Merry Christ mas!” "Ton sillv Hr*'” renlied Lady Iveagh. “It’s not Christmas.” ■f*nd like a flash came the remark: "Sorry I spoke.”—The Sunday ! line. RAISED FROM A DEATH-BED. Mr. Pitts, Once Pronounced Incurable, Has Been Well Three Years. E. E. Pitts, 60 Hathaway St., Skow hegan, Me., says: “Seven years ago my back ached and I was so run down that I was laid up four months I ; had night sweats and fainting spells and dropped to 90 pounds. The urine passed every few ^minutes with in tense pain and ! looked like blood. Dropsy set in and the doctors decid ed I could not live. nuc but me using i^oan s Kwney Pills, and as they helped me I took | heart, kept on and was cured so thor oughly that I’ve been well three I years.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. More money is wasted trying to in vent things to save it than in any other way. _ ✓ CHRISTMAS EVE IN THE DESERT. The edge of Death Valley, where annually many treasure hunters have perished in their search for gold, was j the scene of one of the most pleasing ! incidents in the initial trip of the Los Angeles Limited. The shadows ot j night had fallen upon the desert when I that point was reached on the home ward run, and the thoughts of most of the eastern newspaper representatives in the brilliantly illumined train were centered upon their far-away homes, wondering what the little ones were doing—probably yearning to be with them. While they were thus engross ed Santa Claus was busily engaged planning a surprise; and a delightful surprise it proved to be. When everything was ready the guests of the Union Pacific Railroad Company were called into their spe cial car, a state-room door swung back on its hinges, and there stood reveal ed a Christmas tree, glittering with tinsel and filled with presents, one or more for each guest. As his name was called each stepped forward and was handed a pretty souvenir, to which was added a large glass object encasing a generous sample of Cali fornia’s justly famed vintage. This delightful little incident relieved such mental tension as had existed, for it was a manifestation of the true Christ mas spirit that was appreciated as much as it had been unexpected. It was one of the touches of "nature that make the whole world kin,” for it served to bring still closer together the entertainers and the entertained on the initial trip of the Los Angeles Limited. For this reason, erewsome as its reputation is, Death Valley will always be associated with a pleasant memory in the minds of the news paper representatives.—“Telegraph Gazette,” Pittsburg. Cupid and Coupons. “I am very much In love with the banker's daughter. As soon as I saw her father's coupon scissors I had pal pitation of the heart.”—Tales. Garfield Tea, Mild Laxative. Nothing has yet taken the place of Garfield Tea. Nature's remedy ior kid ney and liver trouble, constipation and sick headache. Contains no harmful ingredients, nothing but medicinal herbs. Sold at all drug stores. Send for free sample to Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. “Friends of the Elephant” is the ti tle of a society just formed in Paris to combat the gradual extinction of the animal by hunters. Washing Windows. The method of washing windows has changed very much of late; have a pail of lukewarm suds made from Ivory Soap. Dip a soft cloth in the water: squeeze almost dry and wipe the glass off. Then polish with chamois as it leaves no lint ard does the work with more ease. ELEANOR R. PARKER. Sometimes when a boy comes out of coollege he can earn his living if there is no one to support him. Shake Into I'our Shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures pain ful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrowing nails. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Trial package FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. There probably tvouldn’t be any work to do in the world if we liked it. TO erRE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablet*. Drag prists refund money If it fails to cure. £. W. GROVE’S signature is on each liox. 25c. Only the doctors know how little real sickness there is in the world. Lewis’ Single Binder costs more tnan other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Y’our dealer or Lewis' Factory. Peoria, ILL There wouldn’t be much matrimony without a maiden effort. < TRADE , MARK. . St Jacobs Oil for many, many years has cured t and continues to cure RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA. ' LUMBAGO BACKACHE SCIATICA SPRAINS BRUISES SORENESS STIFFNESS FROST-BITES Price, 25c. and 50c. W. N. U., Omaha. No. £—1906. i i Scotland Yard. Scotland Yard widely known as j the headquarters of the London po lice, is a historical place, said to have been the site of a palace where kings of Scotland were received when they came to London. It is near the ban queting hall. Whitehall. The Scotch kings, retained possession of it from 959 till the rebellion of William of Scotland. Milton, Sir Cristopher When and other notables lived in Scotland Yard. Don’t you know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to any other. Is put up 16 ounces in pack age and sells at same price as 12 ounce packages of other kinds? Professor Tames Fish. After spending a great part of five months standing up to his peck in the water of the Lake of Luzerne Dr. Fastenraeh, a Zurich professor has succeeded in taming about 200 j fish so that they eat out of his hanu and let him lift them out of the wa ter. He has also taken some remark able photographs of his finny friends. Worth Knowing —that Allcock's are the original and only genuine porous plasters; all other so-called porous plasters are imitations. Queer Medicinal Prescription. A superstition less prevalent now than it was a few years ago is that the skin of a black cat laid on the bowels is almost a sure cure for in flam.ation. Like the recipe for hare soup, you must first catch your cat. kill it preferably at midnight—skin immediately and apply the skin warm to the patient. Dealers say that as soon as a cus tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im possible to sell them any other cold water starch. It can be used cold or boiled._ Danger in Amusements. The habit of dissipating every seri ous thought by a succession of aggre able sensations is as fatal to happi ness as to virtue; for when amuse ment is uniformly substituted for ob jects of moral and mental interest, we lose all that elevates our enjoy ments above the scale of childish pleasures.—Anna Maria Porter. Storekeepers report that the extra nuantity, together with the superior quality of Defiance Sarch, makes it next to impossible to sell any other brand. _ Suicide Stat sties. Sundays from 9 to 12 at night is the favorite time for women to commit suicide. Taking all days into consid eration, more men kill themselves than women in the proportion of seven tc fwo. DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS Save sio.- Per Cow EVERY YEAR OF USE , Over All Gravity Setting Systems And $3. to $5. Per Cow Over All Imitating Separators. Now is the time to make this most important and profitable of dairy farm investments. Send at once for new ] 906 catalogue and name of nearest agent. The De Laval Separator Go Randolph & Canal Sts. I 74 Cortlandt Street CHICAGO I NEW YORK Nervous Women Their Sufferings Are Usually Due to Female Disorders Perhaps Unsuspected A MEDICINE THAT CUBES Can we dispute C^lthe well-known C~ fact that American ■TS women are ner I Ivous ? J / How often dowe I I hear the expres 1 l sion, “1 am so ner 9 Wous, it seems as if &rl should fly,” or, 5x1“ Don't speak to make you irritable; you can't sleep, you are unable to quietly and calmly perform your daily tasks or care for your children. The relation of the nerves and gen erative organs in woman is so close that nine-tenths of the nervous pros tration, nervous debility, the blues, sleeplessness and nervous irritability arise from some derangement of the organism which makes her a woman. Fits of depression or restlessness and irritability ; spirits easily affected, so that one minute she laughs, the next minute weeps : pain in the abdominal region and between the shoulders; loss of voice; nervous dyspepsia; a tendency to cry at the least provoca tion-all these point to nervous pros tration. Nothing will relieve this distressing condition and prevent months of pros tration and suffering so surely as Lvdia E. Pinkkam s Vegetable Compound. 31rs. 31. E. Shot well, of 103 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y,, writes: “I cannot express the wonderful relief I have experienced by taking Lydia E JPir.k hom’s Vegetable Compound. I suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, back ache, headache, loss of appetite. I could not sleep and would walk the floor almost every night. “I liad three doctors and got no letter, and life was a burden. I was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkhan-.’s Vegetable Compound, aiid it ha3 worked wonders for me. “I am a well woman, my nervousness is all gone and my friends say X look ten years younger.” Will not the volumes of letters from women made strong by Lydia E Pink ham's Vegetable Compound convince all women of its virtues ? Surely you cannot wish to remain sick, weak ,nd discouraged, exhausted each day, when you can be as easily cured as other women. “JffS&’SS I Thompson's Ey» Water MIXED FARMING WHEAT RAISING RANCHING three great pursuits have again shown wonderful results on the FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS OF WESTERN CANADA. Mapnificent climate—farmers plowinp in their ! shirt sleeves in the middle cf November. “All are bound to be more than pleased with the final results of the past season s harvest.”— Extract. | Coal. wood, water, hay in abundance—schools, | churches, markets convenient. This is the era of $1.00 wheat. Apply for information to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or to authorized Canadian Government Apent—W. Y. Hennett, 801 New York Life Building. Omaha. Nebraska. (Mention this paper.) When Answering Advertisements Please Mention This Paper. nrriAMrr CTARPII «*"!*«* to work with and ULrlHllUL dlftnun ctarche* domes nicest, Your farm pays for itself _ * fa the Southwest, The light shaded portions represent wry fertile sections of tn# boatlnre8t. It is not an uncommon thing for a farmer in the Southwest to pay for his' farm in one year. This could only be done where the crops are big, the prices good, and the land inexpensive. Precisely these three conditions exist in the Southwest. Good rich land can be bought for a small part of what land costs in your locality. This land will yield 50 bushels of com to the acre, 30 bushels of wheat, 90 bushels of oats, as a regular thing. The average prices of grains sold by farmers in the Southwest during the past five years was higher than the prices secured by farmers in your neighborhood. Under such favorable conditions, the South* west farmer is bound to prosper. Now is your opportunity ^ to exchange your few acres at home for a bigger , ._ and more productive farm in the Southwest. You can sel 1 your present farm, pay off the mortgage and J have enough left to buy a big farm in the South west that will make you independent in a few year*. Write us what you want and we can place you in touch with the very thing you are looking for. The M. K. &c T. Ry. Land Bureau is an organ ization of reliable men whose business it is to find better locations for those who want to improve 'their condition. The "Corning Country" Free! The “Coming Country" is a very interesting paper pub lished montnly and devoted to the Southwest. This publication will post you on conditions in the Southwest better than anything that yon could read. I'll be glad to have the publisher place your name on the moiling list and send yon a free copy of the paper regularly for one year. Write to-day while yon think of ft for a free copv of the "Coming Gauntry,” and everything will be done to furnish you with information about to* South west. w» LAMGSTON, Secretary, M. K. k T. Land Bureau, 58« Wain wrig bit Building., St. Louis, Mo. c.c. c.-c. c. c.-c. c. c.-c. c. c.-c. c. c.-c. c. c.-c.c.c. I -- ! d A Special Representative Wanted P ^ (Man or Woman.) 0 p l# Best of references required. Address ^ O. S. HOWLAND, n 6 1 Madison Avenue, - - New York City. P 1 —---- I C.C. C.-C. C. C.-C. C. C.-C. C. C.-C. C. C.-C. C. C.-C. C.C. ANTI-GRIPIIE iyn rmnikir 15 guaranteed to cure ANInnunNt GRip«BAD cold, headache and neuralgia. -Ml,viftu,.. rn.-v*1 - I won’t sell AnLUOHpln, to a dealer who wooteieraetM IW5 mj EQUAL FOR HEWOE It. Call for your MON ET BACK IV IT BOVT CUKE. ' 1—#• IF. IMemer. E Xf« Muulaoturer.^prianleM, itm. PATENTS for PROFIT mast fully protect an Invention. Booklet and Desk Calendar FREE. Highest references. Common!catr-r?* confidential. Established 1861. ■aaoa, Fenwick ft Lawrence, Washington, 2). 0. i ■ j Best Cough Syrup. Taste* Good. Use I 1 to time. Sola by druggists. L KF