Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 72, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1914 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

WHAT $lO DID FOR THISWOMAN The Price She Paid for Lydia E.Pinkliani’sVegetable Compound Which Brought Good Health. Danville, Vs.—“ I have only spent ten dollars on your medicine and I feel so much better than I i did when the doctor was treating me. I W « *BB don’t suffer any ■?JH bearing down paina • -o / ‘ at all now and I sleep AsSjltsSS well. I cannot say ’ enough for Lydia E. “7/ Pinkham’s Vegetal/z® \7i ill hie Compound and • I j *1 Liver Pills as they I I \ have done so much ■ for me. lam enjoying good health now and owe it all to your remedies. I take pleasure in telling my friends and neighbors about them.’’—Mrs. Mattie Haley, 501 Colquhone Street, Danville, Va. No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope ttotil she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you, write to Lydia E.PinkhamMedicineCo. (confidentiaDLynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and Answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Saglptchewan Improved Fam) •io. Bna». Write owner MA WILTOS.TOBOITO.CASAB4

Only One “BROMO QUININE” To get the genuine, call tor full name/LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of K. W. GROVB. Cures a Cold in Ono Day. 25a. The Medium. “How can you drink to anybody with your eyes, as the poet says?” “I suppose, in an When a man is unable to buy diamonds for his wife it will help somr to praise the biscuits she bakes. Anybody can dye successfully with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Adv. In this age cash will keep friends longer than diplomacy.

the yield «l WHEAT ii*V^SPBRBr r *'” 1 "' on many farm* in ups»l 3-IJiMxON Western Canada in tax'll iJfpfEn’ 1913. some yields f l!| sE§aQ£ SS'-'BffilX f' ’* e T™v e - t .A s high i as 100 bushels were f<r fl recorded in some hjflaU districts for oats, lens 1 JTj BO bushel, for barley and U from 10 to 20 bus. for flaa. ■jr'/S- j J. Keys arrived in the sC§SjU grata! country 5 years ago from ■Tft»Sn #z3t-l Denmark with very little lk J3 ’THI means. He homesteaded. BiMwfll 3 . JFI worked hard, is now die BfTwnl Ett| rais:'™"» Ol li.a tS K acres, which will realize him tgflW'll abouC H.OOO. His wheat rf3£S&] weighod 68 lbs. to the bushel r wSU and averaged over J 5 busheb 9T ~1 tothoacro. «z* Thousands of similar inluSh r, J stances might be related of the ■ r VI EgSldw homesteaders in Manitoba, Sas- IV.ill IgKibW katchewan and Alberta. toF?if The crop of 1913 was an abun- V InC' A dant one everywhere in Western «■! Mgj®' Canada. V® 1 / Ask for descriptive literature and V/ reduced railway rates. Apply to W Superintendent of Immigration. Vl J a Ottawa. Canada, or A® Q.ta|btM.4UamM>LlT.MMlk* ViL M. T. Mdasst, 171 Jaftsnss Aw n DstistL W Canadian Government Agent *" "’“SSiSSS Bwt Cough Syrap Tastes Good. Uss | iaUnte. gold by Dnwabte- gs