The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, April 29, 1915, Image 7

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    &tch,
Woman
Qffanfam
Is it possible there is a woman in this country who con
tinues to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound a trial after all the evidence that is con
tinually being published, which proves beyond contradic
tion that this grand old medicine has relieved more suffer
ing among women than any other one medicine in the world ?
We have published in the newspapers of the United States
more genuine testimonial letters than have ever been pub
lished in the interest of any other medicine for women—
and every year we publish many new testimonials, all gen
uine and true. Here are three never before published:
From Mrs. S. T. Richmond, Providence, R. I.
Providence, R. I.—“ For the benefit of women who suffer as I have
none I wish to state what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
has done for me. I did some heavy lifting and the doctor said it
caused a displacement. I have always been weak and I overworked
after my baby was bom and inflammation set in, then nervous pros
tration, from which I did not recover until I had taken Lydia E. Pink
ham's \ egetabie Compound. The Compound is my best friend and
when I hear of a woman with troubles like mine I try to induce her
to take your medicine.”—Mrs. S. T. Richmond, 84 Progress Avenue,
Providence, ILL *
From Mrs. Maria Irwin, Peru, N.Y.
Peru, N.Y.—'“ Before I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound I was very irregular and had much pain. I had lost three
children, and felt worn out all the time. This splendid medicine
helped me as nothing else had done, and I am thankful every day
that I took it.”—Mrs. Maria Irwin, R.FJ). 1, Peru, N.Y.
From Mrs. Jane D. Duncan, W. Quincy, Mass.
South Quincy, Mass.—“The doctor said that I had organic trouble
and he doctored me for a long time and I did not get any relief. I
CQW I V/flO h Ik.,1-1-TT_i-ll n **
.—' —• * «*u.uum o f VAJilipUUIlU. LUI
vertised and I tried it and found reUef before I had CJ
finished the first bottle. I continued taking it all If}
through middle life and am now a strong, healthy (, /
woman and earn my own living.”—Mrs. Jane I). II
Duncan, Forest Avenue, West Quincy, Mass. 11
to LYDIA E. PINK HAM MEDICINE CO. to'
(CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS..foradvice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered to
oy a woman and held in strict confidence. n
Send THIS AD AND TEN CENTS
tor a Three .Months’ Trial Subscription to
Every Child’s Magazine
A splendid publication for boys and girls. Beauti
ful Illustrations—Interesting stories and poems.
Departments of Art. Music, Nature and Books. Pre
miums and cash commissions for new subscriptions.
Subscription 75c. 314-16 S. 19 St., Omaha. Neb
DEFIANCE STARCH
is constantly growing in favor because it
Does Not Stick to the Iron
and it will not injure the finest fabric. For
laundry purposesit has no equal. 16 oi..
package 10c. 1-3 more starch for same money.
DEFIANCE STARCH CO., Omaha, Nebraska
It is twice as easy to fool yourself
as it is to fool other people.
ALI.EN'S FOOT-EASE for the TROOPS
Over 100,000 packages of Allen’s Foot-Ease, the
antiseptic powder to shake in to your shoes, are
being used by the Gerinau and Allied troops at
the Front because it rests the feet, gives in
stant relief to Corns and Bunions, hot. swollen
aching, tender feet, and makes walking eas\.
Sold every where, 25c. Try It TODAY. Don't
accept any substitute. Adv.
Some men die of heart failure and
Eome live with brain failure.
TOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU
Try Marine Bye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery
Byes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting—
just Eye comfort. Write for Book of the Eye
by mail Free. Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
The Lord freezes the water, but we
are expected to cut our own ice.
Wash day is smile day if you use Red
Cross Bail Blue, American made, therefore
the best made. Adv.
A man works for his children, a
woman lives for hers.
Stop That Backache!
There's nothing more discouraging
than a constant backache. You are
lame when you awake. Pains pierce you
when you bend or lift. It’s hard to rest
and next day it’s the same old s'.ory.
Pain in the back is nature’s warning of
kidney ills. Neglect may pave the wav
to dropsy, gravel, or other serious kid
ney sickness. Don't delay—begin using
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the remedy that
has been curing backache and kidney
trouble for over fifty years.
An Iowa Case
Mrs. A. J. Lam-»»wrv
bert. Sll Cook St.,pc/«r«
Sioux City, Iowa,
savs: "Mv bladder010'* __
was badly In- /
flamed and I wras (
feeling miserable V/
when X began us- t
ing Doan’s Kidney ^
Pills. They gave
me prompt relief.
Some time later bJ
when I was again
suffering from (f)
_1 _ J 31_ ^
dered kidneys.
Doan’s Kidney Pills fixed me up all
right Since then I haven't suffered.”
Got Doan’a at Any Store. 80c ■ Box
DOAN'S “piViV
FOSTER-MILB U RN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when \he liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently butfirmly comj
pel a lazy liver toj
do its duty.
Cures Con-,,
stipation. In
digestion,
Sick
(carters
WTTLE
IlVER
|plLL5.
r;eaaacne, -
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine^must bear Signature
I PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit.
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
60c. and $1-00 at Druggists. I
Nebraska Directory
THE PAXTON SSs
Rooms from 91.00 up single, 75 cents up double.
CAFE PRICES REASOKABU
Fable l>p to Date.
A counterfeiter was once walking
along a lonely side street when he
was stopped by a bold, bad robber.
The robber presented a large open
faced revolver and demanded coin. He
got it—about two gallons of lead dol
lars fresh from his victim’s private
mint.
Next day the robber bought himself
an automatic pistol of the latest de
sign, a weapon which he had long cov
eted. He paid for the gun out of the
proceeds of his latest haul and was
immediately haled before a magis
trate and sent up for a long term of
years for counterfeiting.
Moral—If they don’t get you for
what you’ve clone, they'll get you for
something else.
Advancement.
“Have you been making any prog
ress since my last visit to Crimson
Gulch?” asked the serious stranger.
“Yes. Ever since some whist play
ers struck the town we have been
more refined. They didn’t last long,
but their influence lingers. Every
time a player says he can open a
jackpot everybody around the table
says, 'Pray do.’ ”
A Dashing Woman.
"Does she exercise her voice very
much?”
“Why, she makes running com
ments on everything.”—Judge.
A FOOD DRINK
Which Brings Daily Enjoyment,
A lady doctor ■writes:
“Though busy hourly with my own
affairs, I will not deny myself the
pleasure of taking a few minutes to
tell of the enjoyment obtained daily
from my morning cup of Postum. It
is a food beverage, not a stimulant
like coffee.
"I began to use Postum 8 years ago;
not because 1 wanted to, but because
coffee, which I dearly loved, made my
nights long, weary periods to be dread
ed and unfitting me for business dur
ing the day.
"On advice of a friend, I first tried
Postum, making it carefully as sug
gested on the package. As I had al
ways used ‘cream and no sugar,’ I
mixed my Postum so. It looked good,
was clear and fragrant, and it was a
pleasure to see the cream color It as
my Kentucky friend always wanted
her coffee to look, 'like a new saddle.’
“Then I tasted it critically; for I had
tried many ‘substitutes’ for coffee. I
was pleased, yes, satisfied with my
Postum in taste and effect, and am yet,
being a constant user of it all these
years.
“I continually assure my friends and
acquaintances that they will like Pos
tum in place of coffee, and receive
benefit from its use. I have gained
weight, can sleep and am not ner.
ous.”
Name given by Postum Co., ilaitlo
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well
ville,” in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms:
Regular Postum — must be well
boiled. 15c and 25c packages.
Instant Postum—is a soluble pow
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
in a cup of hot water, and with cream
and sugar makes a delicious beverage
instantly. 30c and 50c tins.
Both kinds are equally delicious and
cost per cup about the same.
“There’s a Reason” for Postum.
—sold by Grocers.
HEAVY HORSE A MONEY-MAKER FOR FARMER |
-■ — - _k
Better and Heavier Horses for Work in the Field—They Are Good Money
Makers. 9
fBy J. M. BELL.)_
Both for farm work and for sale, the
heavy horse is a good money-maker.
In past years the so-called “fast horse”
was the ideal animal, but now the au
tomobile has driven the running horse
out of business. The carriage horse of
today is a heavier animal than in days
gone by.
The farmer now who goes to work
in the field, or Aho hauls loads on the
road, cannot afford to spend his time
with a light team that can draw only
a small load. Labor is too scarce and
too high priced. Deeper plowing, and
more work must be done on the same
acreage. It is imperative that heavier
teams must be used.
For a number of years the weight
of best selling horses on the city mar
kets has steadily Increased. Only a
few years ago horses weighing from
1,200 to 1,400 pounds each were con
sidered large enough for heavy team
ing. Now the demand is for 1,600
pounds to a ton. No city company can
afford to hire an expensive man to
drive a light team. Increased supply
and sale of commercial products has
brought this condition.
For these reasons the heavy horse
has risen in value of late years, and
the importing and breeding of heavy
horses has been taken up on a large
scale. But the demand for heavy
horses has always exceeded the sup
ply. Good heavy drafters weighing
around l.SOO pounds find ready sale at
over $300, and choice ones of this class
in the largest cities bring from $400
to $300.
There is every evidence that the
heavy horse is the coming work animal
for both farm and city, and that good
prices will hold, if not increase, for
years to come.
The farmer who is in the field for
making side money from his horses
will be wise to breed for weight and
finish.
PROPER CARE FOR
HORSES AND COLTS
Oats Go Well With Timothy Hay
—Straw and Corn Diet Is
Liable to Cause Trouble.
Oats are the best general food for
a horse, and go well with timothy hay.
Once or twice a week give a feed of
corn and clover with bran mash. Give
only what will be eaten up clean.
Some horses are predisposed to
colic, and a straw and corn diet is
almost sure to cause trouble at fre
quent intervals with such cases.
Horses fed regularly often get in
the habit of pawing in the stable.
Feed them regularly, and if not driven
or used every day turn the horses out
into the yard for exercise.
Many horses are ruined by being
brought into the barn too hot and left
to stand in a cold draft, or hitched to
a post to stand, unblanketed, facing
the wintry blasts.
If you starve the colt the first win
ter, he is liable to come out very thin
in the spring and worth less than
when weaned.
Some farmers keep their horses on
straw with just a little grain in win
ter. Bran should make part of such
a ration.
It is believed by many that clover
hay gives the horses heaves. This is
a mistake. If a horse is fed the prop
er quantity of clover and not over
fed, there is no danger of the heaves.
Do not give horses water immedi
ately after eating. An hour after they
have finished their meal is soon
enough to water them.
The colt’s training must begin short
ly after birth. A halter should be put
on so he can be caught and handled
every day. Never tease him.
WEED OUT USELESS
RAMS AND WETHERS
Keep Sheep Supplied With Salt
Variety of Feed Is Best
Keep Lambs Growing.
Weed old rams and wethers out of
the flock and send them to the mar
ket. They are a nuisance with ewes
and small lambs.
Don’t let the sheep get half-starved
for salt. If you do, when you salt
them they will eat so much they will
be sick. Give some every day. In
everything be regular and moderate.
Feed rations that will keep the
bowels regular. Variety is what we
need to aim at.
There is little to eat in the pastures
yet, so keep the sheep in. As soon
as they get a taste of green grass they
will not want dry hay, and are apt to
fall ofT in flesh; that ycu do not want,
for the lambs must be kept growing.
When your lambs get enough good
milk from their mothers they will
grow. It is the hungry lambs that
stand around bleating and with backs
humped. It looks bad. Lively Iambs
are the ones that will bring you the
money a little later.
Make a Cold Frame.
Every farm woman should have her
own cold frame. If she is at all handy
with the saw. hammer and nails she
can construct one herself, if neces
sary. The only expense about it. then,
is the glass sash. Any sort of glazed
sash may be used, and the cold frame
made to conform to its dimensions.
Culture of Blackberry.
Farmers’ Bulletin 643, United States
department of agriculture, contains a
very interesting discussion of the cul
ture of the blackberry. Missouri stands
at the head of the blackberry states
with 6,000 acres, New Jersey, second,
with 4,300, and Illinois, third, with
3,500 acres.
Colony Plan for Poultry.
Tl|p colony plan for housing poultry
may be adopted to good advantage on
many farms. This system does away
vith the danger of tainted soiL
FEEDING ENSILAGE
AND DRY ROUGHAGE
Success Depends Upon Produc
ing Most Milk at Least Cost
—Safe Rule to Follow.
No fixed rule can be laid down to
feeding that will apply to all cows
alike; and yet success depends upon
procuring the most milk at the least
cost, from each cow in the herd.
Cows must be fed to their full ca
pacity, to obtain the best results, but
there is as great necessity not to
overfeed as there is not to underfeed.
Care should be exercised not to feed
too large an amount of grain to pro
portion to roughage.
A safe rule to follow is to feed
twice as many pounds of roughage as
of grain. If the cow will eat ten
pounds of grain food and 20 pounds
of roughage there will be little, if
any, danger of her going off her feed.
When feeding ensilage it is safe to
estimate three pounds of ensilage to
one pound of dry roughage.
As a rule the kinds of roughage that
have the greatest protein content will
be found preferable to carbonaceous
forage and fodder plants.
WEANING THE PIGS
IS NOT DIFFICULT
Little Fellows Should Be Given
Sufficient Food to Make
Them Independent.
If the pigs have been properly man
aged for the first month after they
begin to eat, and are taking feed in
amounts sufficient to make them more
or less independent of the sow’s milk,
weaning will not be a difficult matter.
The time to wean will depend on the
way the pigs are eating. If they are
not thoroughly accustomed to a grain
and skim milk ration the time must be
delayed. If the sow is not to be bred
soon there is no harm done by letting
the pigs run with her until the age of
twelve weeks or longer.
Breeders differ widely as to the age
at which pigs are weaned. The ma
jority wean at six to ten weeks; some
wean earlier than this.
A considerable number let the pigs
run with the sow until her instinct
tejls her that they are old enough to
shift for themselves. If the sow is
taken away and is still milking she
may be returned to the pigs once a
day for two or three days until dry
ing off is complete.
COMFORT OF HORSE
IS OF IMPORTANCE
Remove Harness at Noon While
Animal Is Eating—Remove
All Dust and Sweat.
The work horses should be fed early
in the morning and they should have
a liberal feeding. The comfort and
rest of the horses will be vastly pro
moted if the harness is entirely re
moved at noon while they are feeding.
Rub them down carefully and cleanse
from dust and sweat.
Allow them plenty of time for a
good meal and partial digestion before
they are put to work for the after
noon. It is poor policy to put them
to work after eating a hearty meal.
Color Denotes Condition.
Look at the ram’s skin. It is a
bright cherry color. If not, it should
be. A bright cherry color is a good
indication of perfect health. If it is
blue, the ram is going out of condi
tion. A white skin is ordinarily in
fected with parasites.
I Get a Good Stand.
1 The degree of success in securing a
good stand lies almost wholly within
the power of the farmer through the
choice of ripe seed, and its proper
curing and preparation.
HOttftV.
HKiDmr
mrnm
FIGURE COST OF BAD ROADS
Hauling Produce More Expensive
Here Than in European Countries
—Total Haulage Expense.
“American farmers have begun to
figure the matter of roads a little dif
ferently than in former years,” says
President Claude S. Briggs of the
Eriggs-Detroiter company of Detroit.
“When the good-roads movement was
in its infancy they used to ask them
selves ‘How much will good roads
cost me?’ Thanks to the intelligent
propaganda of the daily and farm pa
pers as well as other agencies farm
ers are now asking themselves ‘How
much are bad roads costing me?’
“According to government experts
the cost of hauling a ton of farm prod
uce a mile varies from seventeen
cents in localities where fairly hard
gravel roads exist to thirty-five cents
a ton in parts of the country where
the roads are in poor condition. On
the other hand, in those European
countries where hard roads prevail
the cost is as low as nine cent3 a ton
a mile. The department of agricul
ture has estimated that the total haul
Climbing the Continental Divide.
age expense to American farmers for
n year is approximately $500,000,000.
And every dollar of this sum comes
from the farmer’s pocket, for he is
the one great producer who cannot
add the haulage expense to his wares,
for the prices he gets are on a de
livered basis.
“I believe that if every farmer w'ould
take pencil and paper and figure the
amount in tons of the produce and
stock he markets in a year, multiply
It by the number of miles he must haul
it to market, multiply the total by 25,
which is about the average haul
ing cost a ton a mile, and then
consider that he could save nearly
half of this amount every year if
he had concrete or other hard
roads all the way to his market, he
would become an earnest good-roads
worker.
“And this actual dollars and cents
saving doesn’t take into consideration
the many advantages of good roads
in bringing neighbors closer together,
in making it easier and pleasanter to
get to church, school, entertainments,
etc.
“With wider interest in better roads
must come a more efficient system of
road building and maintenance. This
is work for experienced and compe
tent highway engineers, just as much
as building a railroad is the work
of highly-trained specialists. It is no
plaything for politicians.”
SLOW IN TAKING ADVANTAGE
Certain Loss Due to Bad Roads Made
Apparent When Sledding Is Good
During Winter.
The heavy snows and excellent sled
ding serve to emphasize what might
be accomplished if good roads pre
vailed all over the country. Farmers
can take their bobs and put on twice
as heavy loads as is possible at other
times. It is not argued, of course,
that with roads as smooth as a dance
hall floor the teams could pull on
wheeled vehicles the loads they do
now on bobs. But there is a certain
loss due to bad roads that is made
all the more apparent by the ease
with which transportation is made
when the sledding is good, says South
Bend Tribune. And to think that for
all these years nature has been show
ing us the advantage of good roads
and we have been so slow to take the
hint! It should make us ashamed of
our blindness and stupidity.
Solve Social Ills.
Elbert Hubbard says that “Good
roads are the most needed thing in the
world. Good roads and quick, safe
and cheap transportation are going t"
solve most of our social ills.”
Many Benefits Derived. »
Good roads will decrease ignorance,
poverty, discouragement, immorality
profanity, back taxes, sheriff’s sales
and grouches.
Gardening Time Coming.
Gardening time will be here be
fore you are ready for it, if you are
not careful, regardless of the cold
winds today!
Brings Market Nearer.
The good road brings the market
nearer to you.
Severely Pruned Fruits Die.
Stone fruits, especially the plum,
when severely pruned, as peaches fre
quently are, are very apt to do poor
ly, and often die.
Avoid Indigestible Feeds.
Indigestible feeds, such as bran-and
cob meal, should be kept away from
the hog trough.
Essential to Success.
Regular feeding is essential to suc
cess, and three feeds a day are better
than two.
"LIFE, LIIIII HID
MHMESS’
A Western Canada Farmer
Writes as to Conditions.
A. G. Hansen is a farmer living near
Clavet, Sask., and as an old resident
of Minnesota, takes strong exception
to some of the articles appearing in
American papers disparaging the true
conditions in Western Canada. The
‘Cottonwood Current" of Cottonwood,
Minn., an important weekly paper in
the southwestern part of the state, re
cently published a letter from Mr. '
Hansen, which is interesting reading.
In his letter Mr. Hansen makes a
splendid case for Western Canada
against those who seek to deter farm
ers in the States from settling in Can
ada. He says:
“The district in which we live is a
fair comparison to any other district
in the country, made up mostly of set
tlers from the States. The majority
here consists of Americans from Min
nesota, Iowa and the Dakotas, with a
few Canadians and an odd English
man. We have been here eleven years,
ever since this part of the country was
settled, and the majority have done
well. If they have not, it is certainly
not the fault of the country.
“There has not been a crop failure
in this district since settled. This
year was the poorest, caused by lack
of rain, although a fair estimate of
wheat is about twelve bushels per
acre, average, and oats about ten.
Some farmers got as much as twenty
five bushels of wheat per acre, and we
all got good prices.
“The taws of Canada are nearly the
same as those of Minnesota, and we
enjoy the same privileges.
“So far as the European war is con
cerned, we suffer to a certain extent
as all the world does. Canada is giv
ing a helping hand to her Mother
Country, and we American-Canadlans
firmly believe it is Canada’s duty to
do so. I have not heard one Ameri
can-Canadian who has expressed a dif
ferent opinion. Canada is not com
pelled to send her soldiers. The serv
ice rendered is all voluntary service.
“The accusation that old settlers are
considered undesirable citizens and
are forced out of business, even in
danger of being ‘mobbed at their own
* In nil fnlnn n rvi foKrin'l.
tion in the mind of badly informed
correspondents. There are a few who
have been discovered carrying letters,
others papers and plans to prove them
spies, and whose object is to conspire
against the government. These have
justly been arrested. Such a class of
people cannot be considered good citi
zens, whether living in Canada or in
the United States.
"Some people are failures wherever
they are, and as an excuse for failure
in their country it may seem easy to
put the blame on the Canadian people
and the Canadian government. Fact
is, thousands of people from the United
States are emigrating to Canada at
the present time, which shows they
are not afraid of the Canadian govern
ment.
"The government is giving away,
free of charge, provision through the
winter to farmers in certain districts
affected by the drought, and is also
sending seed grain to those in need
of help. This is very different from
driving settlers away from their own
homes.
“I have always observed that the
people who love their Mother Country
most are those who make the best citi
zens of their adopted country The
glorious Stars and Stripes' will al
ways stand for what is good and noble
to us, though we live in a neighbor
country where we also enjoy life, lib
erty and the pursuit of happiness. ' —
Advertisement.
ALFALFA SLED, $9 09. Fixmi for &*»* on
crop payments J Mulhall, Soo City. la. Adv.
If you wish your flattory to stick, se
lect a man as the mark for it.
ONE CENT LETTER POSTAGE
BEING AGITATED
One cent postage rate on letters is again
being brought Into prominence and many
high officials declare that it is sure to coma
in the near future. All classes of business
would be greatly benefited by its adoption,
and estimated statistics show there would
be such an increased demand for st mpa
that the apparent loss of revenue would be
more than made up. *
It is an impossibility to place an estimated
value on health, it being a most priceless
possession—but, perhaps you have been
careless or negligent and have allowed
weakness to develop until you are now in a
badly run down condition, with pcor ap
petite, impaired digestion and constipated
bowels.
In order to get back to health and
strength you must first help Nature restore
the Stomach. Liver and Bowels to a nor
mal conation. This suggests the friendly
aid of llostetter’s Stomach Bitters. You
will find it an excellent tonic, appetizer
and strength maker and well worthy of
your confidence.
It is an absolutely pure medicine, adapt
ed to all ordinary family ailments, and your
health will be greatly improved by giving it
a fair trial at once. Be sure you get tha
genuine Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters with
our Private Stamp over the neck of Bottle.
Florida Lands
For Sale to Settlers
in tracts of ten acres and up
wards, in Volusia County,
adapted to cultivation of citrus
fruits, vegetables of all kinds
and general crops. Situation
healthful. Send for circulars.
Write in English. Railroad runs
throughtract. Will sell on month
ly payments. Agents wanted.
Address
Florida Land & Settlement Co.
Care Alex. St. Clair-Abrams, Attorney
615-19 Dyal-Upchurch Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla.
A Typewriter
in Every Home
The typewriter has
come to be a ne
cessity in almost
every family If the
daughter is a stenographer she
can increase her earning power
by home practice. The father
and sons need a typewriter for
their correspondence The
mother likes to keep recipes
and other data In neat, read
able form. You will be inter
ested in our booklet, “A Lesson
In Operating the L. C. Smith
& Bros. Typewriter.”
L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter Co.
1819 Famam Street
Omaha Nebraska
dv i rv losses SURELY PREVENTED
I Al ,K fa? Cutter** Buckle. PHI*. Low
IIELjJmVI* priced, fresh, reliable; pn\ erred b;
Wwjtem otoekmca. becausr tkiy
m mm i-i protect where other vaociaet fall.
T ■ „ m ^ Write fqr booklet and te^UnooUt^
f f* 1 V 10-doao pkge. Biaskleg PHI* )l.«
JLiU\# 50-doaa pkge. Biaeklag P*»U 4 »
Uae any Injector, bat Cutter's beet.
The superiority of Cutter products Is due to over 0
years of specializing in vassfaoe sad ssruait oily.
Insist on Cutter s. If unobtainable. order direct.
The Cutter Laboratory. Bert Hey, Cal., ar Chicago, UL
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 17-1915.
^ | ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
}» I A\egetable Preparation for As -
similoting the Food artdRegula
j£[| ring the Stomachs and Bowels of
5*^ Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
y ness and Re st Con tains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic
^ Atpr tfOU DrSAMVU/m/rSR
H;
l. AWhtlUS+fo
JJ Amu St*d *
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|tf • ClerfildS*f*
IgQ Wimkryrttn Ft*v*r /
t'j'c A perfect Remedy for Cons tipa
tjtfl lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
>jj3 ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
$ Fa Simile Signature of |
y
The Centaur Company. I
& NEW YORK.
to
V
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
emu
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMS CCNTAUN COMPANY. NCW YOON ©fTY
■B—■—
Catarrh Can Be CurecT
FREE PROOF TO YOU
Dr. Gordon’s Home Treatment, wherever used, is producing
results heretofore unheard of. Guaranteed to give satis!ac
tion or no pay. Don’t say it can’t be done. TRY IT.
Hurry, my friend, act today. You cannot conceive how
much this means to you. We will send ptoof free. Drop
us a postal or letter today.
Home Remedy Company, Lincoln, Nebr.
% ,