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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1910)
. All 111 * Owa , A young man and his sweetheart ' Were walking together through lanes * nd fields. . " The young man was rather of a x tasbful nature and , had been paying & . atention to this same young woman : for a considerable time without hav ) ing plucked up courage to put the all It , jlmportant question. I On " this particular night , however , 'he mustered sufficient pluck to ask her : how she thought he was progress- : ing with his courting. At the same 'time his arm stole round r waist. "Well , Jack , " said th & < girl quietly , . ' "I think you are holding your own at .pre t. " . . .c . WANTS IIER " . LETTER \ PUBLISIIED ) , - " 'For Benefit of Women who Suffer . from Female Ills . Minneapolis , Minn. - "I was a great offerer from female troubles which . . ' :1i' : : ' . : i I ! " : " . ' . ' : ' ' ' : ' ' ' : : ; : ; : ; : ' caused a weakness 'i : i : ; ; " I : : ' ; ! : : : : ; : : : : : and broken down , "i . ! " . " " 1 : ' : . : ! : : ' 1 1 ; condition of the : i _ _ - f1 ! system. I read so . ; , ji muchofwbatLydia : : 4 ' : J1 E. Pinkham's Veg. I : ; . . 1 . . f . . . . etable Compound -'M .l j1jj ! : had done for other : i .Nil . . : , ; . ! : suffering women I o ! : : . . : , : : : ; - t - . - . _ , . ' , . 1111 i1 ? felt sure it would _ : " ; : 1k1H1 help me , and must 'e'i-.J : say it did help me. \ fl oo. . \ . ' , wonderfully. My - ' ; \ 1 pains all left me , I grew stronger , and within three months 4 : was a perfectly well woman. , "I want this letter made public to . show the benefit women may derive i ' from : Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ' . Compound.-Mrs. JOHN G. MOLDAN , ' 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 -oiclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis- -ftressing ills peculiar to their sex should toot lose sight of these facts or doubt -the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's I Vegetable Compound to restore their "health. . : ' If you want special advice write to Mrs. Pinlcbam , at Lynn , Mass. She will treatyourletteras strictly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping sick women in this way , free of charge. Don't . I.hcsitatewrite at once. WANT D n UAble. Energetic Men who . L LP can devote all or part of tlmo to tak1nc onteri for LUBRICATING OILS &nd GREASES. ' ' 'or pa.rtlct1a.Z'IiI c.ddressll..SWIFT , ClcTcIund , 0 ' , WESTERN CANADA . J.J. Hill , the Great Railroad Magnate . Says About Its Wheat-Producing Power t - "Xho creates need of this country + United States ] in another genera. a . tion or two will ! be the pro. ' Tiding of homes for its people and . producing . 4 sufficient for them. ' The . z days of ' our prominence \ . . . r as a wheat exporting \ I country are gono. Can . \ 4 ada is to be the great . , ; flfr4 wheat country. " \ ' . % w , This great railroad1 mag . d s nate is taking advantage L r. of the situation by cx- . ' tcnslvo railway build . . Jng-to thowlieat fields - ofjAVestern Canada. } Upwards of 125 Million - - - - Bushels of Wheat ' " , ; . - ircro harvested in 1909. Average Z- : . of tho three provinces of Alberto " " 1 Saskatchewan Manitoba will bo - , , ' : ; : - upwards of 23 bushels per acre. 'C # . , Free homesteads of ICO acres . - , I flli and adjoining pro- < 'mptlons of , t 100 acres ( at $3 per aero ) . aro to 1' ' tfi " be had in the choicest districts. /1 f I II" lt Schools convenient , climate I I I I eircllciit , soil tho very best , I . ! railways close at hand build- . ' t ius lumber cheap fuel easy to ' .1 ; t nfiX't and reasonable in price , , - ' . ' . ' ' . ' j water easily procured mixed ' . .4JfarmIn ; : a success. Write as to & best place for settlement sottlp-rs' 0 . . ' " jhcst railway rates. descriptive illus. . , . - . . : , ' trated "Lost Best West " ( sent free \ ' lon I appi Ication ) , and other informa = tion , to Sup't of Immigration Ottawa. Canada or to tho following : Canadian GoVt Agents : E. T. Holmes. . Jackson St. . St. Paul. Minn. . and J. MacLachlan. Bor 116. WatcrtovTO South Dakota. ( Use address nearest you. ) Please saytrhcro you saw this advertisement. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Don't Persecute your Bowels Cot cat < Gs&cfea ad rtyes. THer ore bruul . . . . . , . Try CARTER'S UtTLE . LIVER PILLS PardyY'- : . .lL. Aa - tiy 011 tzts ; . . . . , &od . : ICX4bc thcddf to cf e fthebovret Csr&Gce- fea&a. - Ee.-- - - . Sick Hea&dbe aa : ! In ! frcf . B , as nuEonj Loovr. Small Pill , Small Dose , Small Price GENUINE Must Bear SIgnature : , ' 4Jd 1' " / , - TI1.a1 Bottl Fr . . By Mail If you suffer from Epilepsy. Fits , Fsllhj Blckaew , Bpwma. or haye children that do PO , my New DU- coTery will relieve them. and all you are asked to do IB to eend for Free Trial (3 Bottle of Dr. .May's pIIptIcjd Oure . It has cured thousands where every thing ef.e fnlled. Guaranteed by May Medical Laboratory Under Pure Food and Drugs Act , June 30th , 1905 Guaranty No. : 18971. Please vrrlte , for Special Free $2 BotUo and give AGE : and complete fiddreu OR. W. H. MAY. 648 Pearl Strert. New Yort Trouble of the Ancient Hercules had killed the ' 'Eryman- thean bear. "It was a case of neces- sity , " he pleaded. "I was absolutely out of meat. A For , even in those days , the cost of living became sometimes almost pro- . hibitive. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching , Blind , Bleeding- or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. SOc. Coat of Living. The price of beef like the famous cow , Will jump o'er the moon some day And the tariff on milk will take a leap Clear up to the Milky Way. ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM will cure not only a fresh cold. but one of those stub- born coughs that usually hang on for months. Glv . It a trial and prove Its worth. 25c. 50o and $1X0. Not Well Taken. "Maria , for heaven's sake . . . please let me get in a word edgewise ! " "Well , what do you want to say ? " "If you insist on our having more milk and better milk I may as well buy " a cow- "Now , John , you know that's not trying to get a word in edgewise. You're trying to lug it in by the horns. " EIGHTEEN YEAftS : AGO HE TTAT1 LESS THAN THEEE DOJT.A "R.S. lIe Is Now One of the Richest Farm . era In t Saskatchewan , Central Canada. Arriving in Canada 1n 1891 , just eighteen years ago , E. A. GuiHemin , could speak but his 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 ol 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 ts ( the fortunate possessor of fifty quar ter sections of land , or 8,000 acres. Now Mr. Guillemin did not acquire all these acres as a result altogethei 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. Threshed Fifty Thousand Bushels. 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 ol 2100. 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 farra threshing , not a single day being lost in the two months which were spent I 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 sis successive years the returns were ez- cellent , that is in th'e 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 way by Mr. Guillemin. The farm consists of 6,880 acres , of which about 6,000 acres were undei crop this season. Pinches All 'Round. She-My new gown is just lovely ; ' it's a perfect fit. " He-Satisfied on that point , eh ? " She-Yes , I know it's a good fit , be- ause it pinches me so- " He - Well , it doesn't pinch you hal " ' is much as it" does my pocketbook.- Catholic Standard and Times. : - t Despair and Despondency t a : No one but a woman can tell the story of th'e suffering , the E , ! . despair , and the despondency endured by women who carry t ! ! ' b o daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and 1 I \ 'L : - - derangements of the delicate and important organs that are . distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com c - pletely upset the nerves if long continued. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is " - f a positive cure for . weakness and disease of the feminine organism. . I . . : ' \ IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONG o ; . I e - , .J \ SICK WOMEN \ WELL. t \ . a _ - It allays inflammation , heals ulceration and soothes pairr. f - ' - -i . It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood I. - - and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it , and a , . havc nothing to urge ' ' " ' rs fave , upon you as just as good. , i : It is non-secret non-alcoholic and , has t a record of forty years of cures. 1 ASK : : YOUR NEIGHBORS. They probably know of of its ' some many cures. . -LY' If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases - , and bow to cure 7 them . at home , send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay coat of mailing _ ely , 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 b 1- " - In handsome cloth-binding , 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce , Buffalo , N.Y.U n . f , -U t ] . . . - - , " . I . r.-iot . , r.15. : : , . . . . ' . .oItf : . _ " . . . ' , I ' . . . . . . . . . - . , ' t mTh ) i . - , -wm Back to the Farm. There are three all-important things lo be weighed by the city man who wishes to return to the farm. . The first is his wife. If she is in every lonse of the word a helpmate , loves the country and can give up what she has been used to in the city for the lake of the children and the building of a real home , then the prospects are Iairly favorable to begin with. The lecond thing to be considered is your years and capacity : for work ; the third , what is your capital ? If all these are favorable , don't lose a day In trying to get suitably located. If my one of these points is doubtful , deliberate well and move slowly. If yon have a fat bank account , and a wife tied to the fleshpots of the city you can do nothing in the country ; but , on the other hand , If your wife be one with you heart and soul , then capital might at a pinch be forgotten. As to the second point-that of years and capacity for work-this is very Important , because so many of those who we earnestly desirous of forsak- ing the city to-day are well advanced In years , who think that the country would afford them an easy means of earning a living. There is 'nothing easy on the farm. _ Loss on Farm Crops Due to Funlll. Prof. W. A. Orton , In an article on the importance of the development of farm crops resistant to disease , justi- fies his statements by pointing out that the present losses from plant dis eases are a heavy tax : upon the farmer. He states that in the United States fclone the average annual loss from oat Bmut Is more than 6,500,000 ; from kose-smut of wheat , 3,000000 ' , and from bunt , or stinking smut of wheat , more than $11,000,000. ( Loose-smut an- nually diminishes the value of barley $2,000,000 , a careful estimate of the loss in one State last year placing it els 7 per cent. The combined effect of the various diseases of fungal origin attacking the potato diminish the yield of this crop over $36,000,000 each year : The above account shows that . . . . hen finds when on free ran go. Horse meat , being free from tuberculosis , is probably slightly preferable to that from the butchers' stalls. Skim milk is a good substitute for meat , but be ing so bulky the fowls rarely eat enough of It to supply the required nutrlmen unless it is soured to a clabber and whey drawn off. Dried beef scrap Is a product of the pack- inghouses and if of assured quality makes a fair substitute for fresh meat. It should be fed In hoppers and should constitute about 8 or 10 per cent of the grain ration. Landing Bloclca of Ice. An easy way to take the blocks ot Ice fro.m a pond after they are cut is shown In the accompanying sketch , from Popular Mechanics. A plank ten to twelve feet long , with a handle at- tached to one end and a block of wood nailed to the other , takes the place of Ice tongs. One person can take out a heavy block of ice as easily . as three . ; : 44'5 : ' ! ' HOW TO REMOVE THE BLOCKS. men could with ice tongs. In remov- ing Ice blocks with this board , the op erator will not get wet. Value of a Good Garden. A good home garden is a great Insti tution. It means more on many farms than the crop of wheat , corn or oats. It furnishes food for the family J throughout the summer , and , if prop- erly handled , a liberal supply for win- ter. Some gardens are handled so skil fully that there Is a surplus of vege- tables for sale almost every week. It means much to the farmer and his family and should be planned with the utmost care and given the very best attention. \ Increasing Flow of Milk. It must be remembered that beyond a certain point grain will not Increase the flow of milk at all. The cow has a limit ; she can use just so much food . . COW STALL FOR WINTER - - - - ! iij - - - - = - ---r- . . \1. i- , _ . . _ ; _ _ . ----------------.J 0 - - - - - T - - . . 14 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - II , I I _ _ -j----r-1---- , . 0) I I . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' _ - - _ . _ _ . I . . . S . . . lbI. ) . . - = - - - - - L K K L 1:1T . = I'TH _ . ; i OPJ'T4 - , r A stall with movable wooden floor and fastening for the sam6T : The ad- vantage of this design will be appreciated In winter when the concrete Is too cold for the comfort of cows. Two iron pins set in the concrete floor near the front corners of the stall keep it ly place. The floor panel is easily removed for cleaning. . pan an annual loss amounting to over $55- 800,000 is sustained , due to the injury caused by fungi to cereals and pota- toes alone. The Farm-Wife. Where ends the road across the hill ? I do not know-I do not know ; But all day lone : and all the night I long to go-I long to go ! It runs so straight beneath the sun , So white beneath the moon ; It calls me from my work and dreams , And I must answer-soon. I i : bolt my door , I do my tasks , I kiss my goodman's cheek- ret I cannot hear my baby's laugh For what the road would speak. Where ends the road ? I only know Here , from the pasture-bars , i It [ is familiar to the sun ' And mistress to the stars. -Reginald W. Kauffman , in Lippin- cott's. Owls for Orchards. The fruit growers of New Zealand , after long racking their brains in vain to : find some way of getting rid of the small ; bird pest , recently thought of rying : owls , says the Sydney Mail. A hundred small German owls were or- lered from Europe , and a part of the order was delivered last September. The owls were liberated in the fruit growing districts and immediately roved ) a wonderful success. They kill ed waxeyes , finches , green linnets , thrushes , blackbirds and sparrows ; ilso mice , rats and young rabbits. They ted their young on caterpillars , grubs ind . beetles , and their only fault seemed to be an occasional fondness or a barnyard chicken. Animal Food for Poultry. Bones and meat secured from the utcher and cut into fine pieces by neans of a bone cutter are perhaps iie best substitute for the insecta a . . . . I ' and pay for it , and no more , and it is ' the business of the dairyman to find that limit , and he can readily do so by very gradually increasing the ration and keeping close watch of the cow's condition , of the voiding and of the milk yield. Every cow should be forced right up to her limit. She represents a sum of money and when idle earns nothing , but has to be fed and is taxi- ble. Most profit comes from keeping cows busy , and at their best all the time tnat they are in milk. - - - Correcting Defects of Hoof. If the horse has defective feet keej them carefully trimmed and shod , if necessary. The soft hoof should be shod and re-shod every six or eight weeks in the winter when the ground is frozen , and at all times of the year where the roads are rocked or gravel- ed. By keeping the horse with poor feet properly shod it will do good ser vice without loss of time. It is best , however , to breed for good feet. Wisdom In Buying Feed. When much food is to be bought the aim should be to grow so much coarse fodder that whatever is bought will be bought in the shape of fer tilizer. The wisdom of doing this arises from the less cost of transport- ing concentrates because of the less bulk which they contain in proportion to their nutriment. The fertilizer may be very profitably used in growing the coarse fodders needed. Moletnre for Brood Ega-II. A hen left to herself will get off her nest very early in the morning , when.I I the air is cool. She has the eggsheat ' ed to 103 or 104 degrees. She gets off the nest , and the cool air , coming In > contact with the warm eggs , causes the j 1 moisture to precipitate , and it moistens them sufficiently without any ; ' addition * al wetting. j , . ' 1 . . J Pleasant 9 efreshin , Beneficiat' I Syrup of Figs and Elixir of . , Senna appeals to the cultured , - ' . 0 and the well-informed and the - healthy because its component , , ' . . - parts are simple and whole- i ( . some and because it acts with- i : ' . . . . ' I r - 'e out disturbing the natural func"f ; tions , as it is wholly free from every objectionable quality or ' s. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . substance. In its production a . 1 : , . _ _ _ _ _ pleasant and refreshing syrup ' ) ' f jf of the figs of California is unit'L ) I ed with the laxative and car- . , . minative properties of certain plants known to act most bene- jttfiW ; ' & . . ' /k4-3 , ; % # - ficially , on the human system , when its gentle cleansing is de- sired. To get its beneficial ef- fects , always buy the genuine , 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. . . , . ' ® Vorni " SyrupCa' LOUISVILLE , KY. SAN FRANCISCO , CAL. NEW YORK , N. Y _ ; SCHOOL 1/ _ _ /J/1 \ . t " SHOES hj" pr "WEAR LIKE IRON" ' . - They wear best where the wear - , - -i-r _ is hardest. Made of selected U I . . lx leather specially tanned to resist 'i . . exactly the kind of wear a healthy . boy or girl will give them. . iju Two layers of leather are sewed in at : . - - . the tip instead of one , to prevent the . - % ; ; _ toes kicking out. The soles are - , ) ,4.'rl' : of extreme toughness. 9 c. Mayer Special Merit School Shoes t J are made to fit a child's foot in a comfortable , natural way I ' ' - ' .1 that/will prevent foot trouble in later years , yet they are : / . . . stylish and good looking. Only the genuine have the - : ° . . . ) Mayer Trade Mark stamped on the sole. ' FREE-If you will send us the name of a dealer who Joes nol 0 , . . V handle Special Merit School Shoes , we will send youfree , post- - paid , a handsome picture , size 15x20 , of George Washington. - We also make Honorbilt Shoes for men , Leading Lady Shoes , Martha Washington % . Comfort Shoes , Yerma Cushion Shoes and _ _ " - Work Shoes. IWEAR F. MAYER BOOT & SHOE CO. , LIKE IRON MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN " . _ . _ _ . _ k _ , - - - - - LI COLT DISTEMPER1 . . p _ _ td ; bo bandied ver ? easily. The ilclr . . aro cured and all others l - sam .Ovt&blo , no matWP how " , ed..tept : from baring ! the dT _ _ _ _ easo . by using SPOONS LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Gh'e _ the tongue , or In feed. AcU on the blood and expels germs > all forma distemper. Borl remedy ever known for mares In f o . _ _ _ , One bottle guaranteed to cur&ans case. COcan It a botUe ; t5a. - _ _ _ I HO doren ofdruggists and harness dealers or aeat ezpreespald : I I xnannfacturer Cut shows hotr to poultice throats. Our fr _ gj , _ _ _ I Booklet sire everrthlntr. Local agents wanted. Largest selling p borso remedy erlBtenoo - twelve years. ! ! -WI 8POHN MEDICAL CO. . t emJJf..ad eterIoIoIU , COShflTl , Ind.9 U. 8. A. F- 1 a _ _ _ ' - _ _ ' - - - - w , y' wLgo'LwAi - ' . _ _ l.J.- . p _ _ _ - . - _ . : e . . ' - , - - ' ' - . t. _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ _ .1 0 S - _ _ _ _ _ \ . . 1r4. , . - ' _ _ _ . ' The RAYO LAMP is a high-grade lamp , sold at a low price. - - . There are lamps that cost more , but Ihereis no better lamp ! at aay - price. The Burner , the Wick , the Chimney-Holder aro _ _ _ _ ' vital things in a lamp ; these parts of the RAYCf LAMP ar - perfectly constructed and there is nothing known in the art d lamp-making that could add to thcf value of the RA YO u .rf ; _ _ _ a light-ghring device. Suitable for any room in any hotae. . _ _ " EVcry dealer ' everywhere. If not at yonrs'WBlte ai ui . . for descriptive circular to the nearest Agency of the . 'YHITE . _ STANDARD OIL COMPANY LIGHT - ( Incorporated ) I - Don't resolve to be better to the world : limit your desire to be more patient with your family and neigh bors. If You Are a Trifle Sensitive. about the size of your shoes , many people wear smaller shoes by using Allen's Foot- Ease , the Antiseptic Powder tc shake into the shoes. It cures Tired , Swollen , Ach- ing Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just the thing for patent leather shoes. Sold everywhere , 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad- dress Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy , N. Y. In spite of present facilities , con- tracts are out or bills asked for a doz en new railway lines in England. ilrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething. softens the gums , re- luces inflammation , allays paIn. cures R-in l rolic . 25c a bottle. It is a hundred' years since a bank failed in China. DOCTOR YOURSELF y hea you feel a cold coming on by taking a few doses of Perry Darts' Painkiller. It Is better than Qninini and safer. The large 50c bottles aro the cheapest. "Bosh" is a Turkish word meaning 'nothing. " Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regu late l and invigorate stomach , liver and bowels. Sugar-coated , tiny granules , easy to take. Do , not gripe. In Russia 25,0'00,000 squirrels are slaughtered yearly. ' . . Only One BRO3rO' : ' QUININE" That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look , lor the signature of E. W. GROVE. * Used the world over to Cure a Cold : : . in One Day. 2Sc. Snakes : have no external ears , but "hear" by feeling vibration of soundman = their delicaie- scaly. covering : . . - : , . ' . ' - . ' . . ' J A $ _ 'Dollar ' for a Dime - Why spend a dollar when lOo buys ft bo of GASCARETS at any drug store ? Uif as directed-get the natural , easy resnlfc Saves many dollars masted on medicine that do not cure. Millions regularly ust CASCARETS. Buy a box now - 10f week's treatment-proof in the morn. ing. QO < CUT THIS OUT. mall It with your ad- dress to Sterling Remedy Company , Chicago. Ill. . and receive a handsome souvenir gold Bon Bon Box FREE. - Rcis \Vatf oni.roleinanWnabj PATENTSYntRon . Book * free. High , I & % l est references. Ectc result PAY IF rURED PILES \ T. ' , Jlal ) )011. . . ' and . . . . FREE RED CROSS 1'11. and flitflt Core. REA CO. . DEFT. B5 , MINNEAPOLIS. Hill. VETERINARY COURSE AT HOMI $1200 7Z and upwards can be mdt taking o ' , I ' .1 ' .1 ettrloary Course at houo dnrtnz sr Wm : teachtlaeteptert English : Diploma rranted. II ltloo ebtaittd orcuccMsfnl students : coatirlthln naclf , of all. Mtlsfaotioa . particulars free. Oata.t $ Teltrtmary C : . mp . Bdtae . kb. . " Dept. 10. Loadoo Ca.af ; . , S. C. N. U. - No.6 - 1910. EIcWN' S BaONCBI.AL TROCHES . Instantly relieve Sore Tfaeti , Ho nenea tm Coughs. Unexcelled for clearing the voice. AMI lately free from opiates or anything harmful Price. 25 cents , 50 cents and $ S.OO per ' bos , Sample cent on request. JOHN I. BROWN & : SON Boston Ma * - . _ . . _ _ - _ , . . . . . , . , . . . , . . - . _ , _ M.r" - . - , " .