The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 19, 1895, Image 7

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    FARM AND GARDEN,
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO
AGRICULTURISTS. .
Soma Up-to-Date Hint* About Cultiva
tion of the Soil and Tltldi Thereof—
Horticulture* Viticulture and Flori
culture
ljHETHER manure
should be ferment
ed, that Is, piled up
in a heap and al
lowed to heat, in
the mean while
being turned and
kept moist enough
to prevent a vo
latilization of am
monia, has been
one of long con
troversy. Experiments by Professor
Voalker of the Royal Agricul
tural society of England, and of
others, have shown that the fer
mentation of manure, when properly
conducted, results In Its decomposition,
and under proper conditions does not
involve loss of ammonia, although car
bonic acid, or a part of the organic
matter, Is lost. The material thus lost
has a relation to the physical condition
of soils and the decomposition a rela
tion to the warmth of the soil and a
relation to the chemical reactions in
the minerals of the soil. The question,
then, is whether this loss is compen
sated by a slightly more soluble man
ure at the time of its application.
On sandy soils this loss of organic
matter, It would appear, is a serious
matter, for It is already deficient in it
and the water-holding capacity that it
brings to the soil is of value to it.
In soils already overrich In organic
matter and inclined to retain moisture
too much—and these are soils where
decomposition is likely to be slight—
another question will be presented.
Again, fermentation, unless carefully
conducted, will result In loss of the
nitrogen or ammonia of manure. It
may be said that gardeners who seek
to produce very early crops generally
advocate the fermentation of manure,
because it will give them an earlier
start, through its greater amount of
available nutritive or soluble materials
and because the manure can be spread
much more evenly and be commingled
with the soil very much more thorough
ly.
Chinch Bags In Oklahoma.
At the Oklahoma Experiment Station
Farm, at Stillwater, as well as in many
other parts of the territory, chinch
bugs were nearly or quite as injurious
to crops in the summer and fall as was
the dry weather. Experiments at the
Station and throughout the territory as
well as in different states, in causing
the destruction of the chinch bugs by
the introduction of disease among them,
were generally unsuccessful. The con
ditions under which the disease rapidly
spreads are not fully known, but it is
evident that dry weather is unfavorable
to such spread. With present knowledge
it is unwise to rely on the introduction
of disease as an effective method of de
stroying these destructive insects. It
has been proved entirely possible to
prevent the passage of the insects from
one field to another, except at the pair
ing season, when they fly freely, by a
system of barriers and traps. Furrows
with steep sides of finely pulverized
earth, or lines of coal tar on a well
smoothed surface, have been found en
tirely effective. The insects will collect
in holes in the furrows or at the side
of the coal tar line in vast numbers and
be destroyed by hot water or a kerosene
mixture. Something can be done to
make the passage of the insects difficult
by keeping the corn, sorghum and sim
ilar crops as distant as may be from
the smaller grain and millet crops.
Green Manuring.—A report from the
New Jersey Station gives the plan of
an experiment for the improvement of
light lands by the use of crimson clover
and cow peas and a statement regard
ing the method of cultivating cow pens
on a larger scale in New Jersey. Cow
peas, following crimsog clover, yielded
at the rate of 14,400 pounds of green
material per acre. The vines con
tained 2.27S.1 pounds of organic dry
matter, 70.6 pounds of nitrogen, 17.3
pounds of phosphoric acid and 50.4
pounds of potash. The roots on one
acre weighed only 1,030 pounds, -and
contained 295.2 pounds of organic dry
matter, 4.2 pounds of nitrogen, 1.5
pounds of phosphoric acid and 4.4
pounds of potash per acre. The roots
and vines grown on an acre contained a
total of 34.8 pounds of nitrogen, 18.8
pounds of phosphoric acid and 54.8
pounds of potash. The nitrogen in the
vines is equivalent to that contained in
437% pounds of nitrate of soda and is
valued at about $11.
Propagating Raspberries.—The prop
er way to propagate the black cap rasp
berry is by sticking the long, snake
like tips in the soil and growing a new
plant from these. If the soil has been
well cultivated and the plant is very
vigorous a plant can be made not only
from the tip of the main stem, but from
most of the branches. So soon as they
are well rooted the new plants should
be separated from the old stem. The
wind blowing the bush loosens the
branches where they are rooted in the
soil and uproots them. This is pretty
sure to happen if the plant is left with
these numerous rooted tips in the
ground over winter. Freezing and
thawing is hard enough on any new
plant, bi)t is especially so to one at
tached to another above it and con
stantly pulling it upward. As the soil
is loosened when thawed, up flies the
branch with its rooted tip, and a short
time in spring sunshine destroys its
vitality.—Ex.
When washing anything that has a
cream tint do not rinse In blned water,
bat in clear water.
Th« Economical Cow.
As all successful breeders realize, the
time Is past when we can wholly rely 1
upon the pedigree as a guide in select
ing the animals whose characteristics ■
we wish to perpetuate in our flocks or j
herds. Not that the law of heredity Is !
any less true than formerly, but be- ,
cause we are coming to appreciate that j
an animal parent Is more likely to
transmit Its own characteristics rath
er than those of some ancestors. So,
instead of studying the pedigree and
the pedigree only, the breeder of today
will study in Its connection the individ
uality, the type and general conforma
tion of the animal with special refer
ence to their economy of production,
appreciating the fact that more and
more will the "cost of production” be
the standpoint from which all animals
kept for production be Judged. Apply
ing this principle to dairy cattle, the
question is raised, What sort of a cow
is the most economical and therefore
the best cow? That cow is the most
profitable which will produce a pound of .
butter fat the most economically, and
although it is conceded that there is
more difference in the individuals of
the same breeds than there is in the dif
ferent breeds, that breed which con
tains the greatest proportion of most
economical cows is the best breed.
In order for a cow to produce a pound
of butter fat economically (which
should be the standard by which all
dairy cows should be Judged), she must-i
be able to consume a large amount of
coarse fodder, which, of necessity, will
always be grown in large quan
tities by every farmer and dairy
man. All of these coarse foods
contain the same Ingredients found in
the grains and concentrated by-prod
ucts, but not in the same proportion,
and for this reason a cow is obliged to
eat 60 pounds of corn stalks to get the
amount of nutriment which she would
obtain from a few pounds of corn meal
and bran for example. Hence it fol
lows that if an animal can consume
enough roughage, whose intrinsic val
ue is a very few cents, and get from it
the same amount of digestive nutrients
that would be obtained in eight pounds
of highly concentrated food which is
intrinsically worth that many cents or
more, she will bo, by far, more profita
ble than one whose limited capacity
will allow her to take but a few pounds
of roughage and the main part of whose
ration must be highly concentrated and
expensive.
uonsmering tne general type or tne
Holstein breed, Is it too much to say
that as a breed it contains a greater
proportion of cows capable, on ac
count of their large storage capacities,
of making butter cheaper than any oth
er breed? I was very much interested
in looking over the results obtained at
the Minnesota Experiment Station from
a herd of 23 cows composed of nearly
all breeds and their grades, to find that
in a year’s trial the cow that produced
the most butter was a high-grade Hol
stein and that the next greatest amount
was produced by a registered Holstein,
the two making 494 and 453 pounds re
spectively, at an average cost per
pound of 8.06 cents and 9.06 cents. Of
course it is unfair to draw any conclu
sions from so few figures, but they cer
tainly serve to indicate that the large,
roomy Holstein, properly handled, has
before her a future as a large and
economical butter producer.—H. Hay
ward in Journal of Agriculture.
Smutty Corn and Steers.
There is scarcely a year that there
is not more or less smutty corn. We
would be pleased to have the views and
experience of feeders on this subject in
the Farmers’ Review. Having fed
thousands of steers in twenty-five years
successfully, without losing a steer
from this smut; we tasted it to know its
flavor; not using narcotics, or spirits,
we found it had the flavor of cornmeal,
drv ground. Hence we stacked the en
tire season’s crop and let it sweat. We
feared spontaneous combustion, but the
wind changed dally, and cooled the
stack to the windward, and thus pre
vented spontaneous' combustion.
Stacks, one rod wide at the base, two
rods long, ten feet high, setting stover
at an angle of forty-five degrees, like
a roof, built at one-half pitch. It saved
dry, sweet and clean. Last season we
fed no husked corn in the ear, with very
little hay, thus reducing cost, buying no
ear corn. The average steer’s weight
was less than in other years. The pro
fit equal, or nearly so, because no ear
corn was bought. They were fully ma
ture, fine, fat and fleshy.
Richard Baker, Jr.
High-Headed Orchards.—Every year
a great deal of fruit is lost by heavy
winds blowing it from the trees. This is
before it has attained full size. This is
partly due to the fact that trees are
generally headed too high, a relic ol
times when the high-branched tree was
cut up until a team could walk under it
to plow and cultivate. If the orchard is
headed low there will be little growth
under its branch, which when loaded
with fruit will frequently be bent down
until they touch the earth. The fruit
on low trees is easily gathered from the
ground or with a short step ladder. If
there were no other reason for low
heads in trees thi3 of ease in gathering
the fruit would be sufficient to make it
always advisable. No kind of stock
should be allowed in orchards except
pigs. Cattle and horses will eat both
leaves, fruit and branches as high as '
they can reach, and to get the fruit out'
of the way of being eaten by stock
seems to be the reason for the high
pruning and heading of many old or
chards.—American Cultivator.
Is Golden Rod Poisonous?—Dr. C. F.
Scott, Wisconsin’s state veterinarian,
states that the golden rod, which has
been suggested as our national floral
emblem, is responsible for the death of
hundreds of horses in the mining
camps in the nothern part of that state.
Horses turned cut to graze feed on the
plant aid it is reported to be so poi
sonous that no administered remedy
will counteract its effects. Dr. Scott
declares that the golden rod should be
exterminated as a poisonous weed.—Ex. '
SPEAK AT LAST.
AN AGRICULTURAL PAPER TELLS
TARIFF TRUTHS.
Vital Interests of Farmers I snored by
Farm Papers Generally—Afraid to Mix
In Polities. So Let Farmers Suffer—A
Southern Journal for Protection.
v n
Agricultural papers, as - a general
thing, da not mix up much with
political matters. Why, it is hard to
say, because the interests of agricultur
ists are wrapped up, and Involved, in
tariff legislation, as are other interests.
Any agricultural paper that has the
true welfare and prosperity of its sub
scribers at heart would, without any
hesitation, give full discussion to tbo
policies of free-trade and protection.
Then it would nbt take farmers long to
understand the question, and the result
would be a unanimous verdict for pro
tection. The Sugar Planters' Journal,
of New Orleans, apologizes because it
has "no taste for politics.” It follows
of blunders, the government has been
brought to the verge of ruin. Either
through ignorance or by design, our na
tion, which was once and could and
should be again the most Independent
on the face of the earth, has been made
the suppliant of European money
changers, and our gold and other na
tional wealth is being rapidly diverted
to foreign lands.
So much for the nation; but when it
comes to Louisiana, one of the nation’s
children, we have been betrayed “in the
house of our friends;” pacified with
promises after the democratic congress
had broken a solemn contract, and now
those promises, which were considered
as sacred as legislative enactment could
make them, are trilled with and sought
to be annulled on mere quibbles. This
is more than human nature can stand.
Have sugar planters any longer hopes
of justice or reasonable legislation at
the hands of the democracy? We say
no, emphatically no. Loulsana’s in
terests before the war made her a pro
tectionist state; her interests to-day
lead her in the same direction. There
fore, all sugar planters who consult
their own bedt individual interests
should declare that they are done with
the democratic party, state and nation
al, now and forever, and standing to
gether with thousands of other pa
triotic citizens all over the state, who
wish economical and just government,
strive to build up a good, honest party,
which’ believes in fair elections and
honest count at the polls, and the main
tenance and protection of all Ameri
can industries.
Some Wool Grower* Happy.
There are good times in Australia.
Wool growing is the Btaple farm pro
Tla Flat* Trad* and Tariff.
"fiflfc jT^nie Plates ^’TqggersTT’rt
- iWade’ni Foreign Ceantr|ea_ __ ._
land. Marketed m the
United States
during the three fiscal gears
ending June 30, l09i,l89fiViS95]
Kotu do honds in American TTn Plate Factories, like the prospects
Hour dolose u/ha sell food,psdcjpthes to_tiu
Hoiu do those. u*ho;rent .houses and furnish street car andiml
>ioad .transportation Ito jthesebands} [li ke.'such'a prospect t
this apology, however, with such a ring
ing editorial in favor of protection that
we take pleasure in reproducing it as
follows, from the issue of October 5,
1895:
A year ago, the dangers which men
aced the sugar industry caused our
sugar planters, and thousands of others
whose interests were allied with them,
to forsake the democratic party and
ally themselves with the former sec
tional but now great national party, the
Republican Protective organization. In
making this change, it cost many of us
a severe struggle, for it meant the sun
dering of life-time political ties, but to
many others it was really a return to
their former principles, as old Whigs.
A few years ago, it would have meant
Oat of Sight,
Where is the Free Trade Donkey?
a sundering of social ties, as well, but
thank God we have at last reached an
era of political as well as religious
tolerance.
When we review the political history
of Louisiana since the war, and remem
ber the struggles we had to overthrow
radical corruption; then look around
us to-day, and realize that after all our
efforts to secure good government, state
and municipal, we to-day have corrup
tion equally as great as that which
caused us to resort to arms to right our
wrongs. It should cause the most serious
reflection on our part. What can we
expect from the present democratic
state government?
Turning to the national government,
what do we see? Incompetency of so
gross a character that, by a long series
duct there. It is, in fact, the mainstay
of the colonies. A good demand for
wool and an advancing market natural
ly make tho Australians feel happy.
The largest woolen house in Melbourne,
in its latest report, had this to say:
"A fair total has changed hands at
rising prices, and there is every indi
cation that the demand at the sales will
be particularly keen. The noticeable
expansion of trade of the past few
months has led to a very large absorp
tion of the stocks existing at tho be
ginning of the year, and in this respect
the position of the market Is regarded
most favorably. A very promising out
look is presented for the forthcoming
season, of which we Bhall hold the open
ing sale on the 16th prox., and a sub
stantial Improvement on the values of
its predecessor is assured. The posi
tion as regards the local market recalls
that of 1889, ‘and appears likely, as
then, to secure a large addition to the
total disposed of In the sales.”
This is very cheering news to Ameri
can wool growers. Free wool in the
United States enriches the Australian
farmer. But it ruins the American.
Hop* ana Wool Cheap.
Farmers in this state who have grown
hops this year are uncertain whether
to have them picked or to let them rot
on the poles. The reason for this is
that the cost of picking hops is more
than they sell for. The lot of the west
ern farmer, who grumbles because the
price of wheat has declined from a dol
lar to 62 cents a bushel, is a happy one
compared to that of the New York
farmer, whose chief product is hops.—
New York Evening Post.
The state of the hop industry is no
worse than that of wool growing. Wool
was put on the free list by the tariff of
1894, and the duty on hops was reduced
from 16 cents a pound, under the tariff
of 1890, to 8 cents. But the depression
that fell upon all industry with the ad
vent of Clevelandism has brought the
price of hops down to the amount of
duty per pound. In the year 1894 we
imported, according to the Evening
Post, 8,300 bales of hops, each weighing
500 pounds, or a total of 4.160,000
pounds. These hops ought to have been
raised upon American farms.—New
York Democrat and Chronicle.
A Demount Own* (Jp,
For the fiscal year to date the deficit
is now sixteen million dollars, and the
hope of making both ends meet for the
twelvemonth is vain.—N. Y. Herald.
What is there that is illustrious that
Is not also attended by labor?—Cicero.
FOLLOWING FANCY.
Ban, tha Up-to-Data Fanpla Bad Fl*«t
nra in Wlntan
People are fanciful and It is Fancy,
after all, that is happiness, and the mo
tive which dictates to the world. Some
one fancies that the cosy lire at home
and the environment of favorite boohs
la enough to make life worth living dur
ing the winter months. That will do
for the way worn, weary, easily satis
fied, old fashioned man and woman, but
the up to date cavalier and the new
woman require a change—many
changes in fact, and they seek in the
dull winter days to find the climate they
wearied of in spring and wished would
pass away in summer. Sitting behind
frosted window panes and gazing on
the glistening snow crystals they sigh
for the warmth and brightness they j
love better now than a few short
months ago and, in no other country!
may these whims, these fancies be so j
easily gratified as in America. Abso- j
lute comfort in these days, and in speed
and safety, too, instead of the wasted j
time and discomforts of the not distant i
past. Ponce de Leon who sought :the j
fountain of Eternal Youth on the shores
of Florida consumed many of the pre- j
| cioua days of later life, and died before :
; attaining the great prize. De Soto was
1 lured in the same direction and found
j at Hot Springs, by the aid of Ulelah,
[ the dusky Indian maiden, the wonderful
product of the “Breath of the Great
Spirit,” but before he could return home
and apprise his friends of the great dis
covery and enjoy the certainty of gold i
and youth, which ho believed he had in
his grasp he fell a victim to the mlasml
of the Great River and found a grave in
its muddy depths. To-day the seeker
after health simply boards one of the |
magnificent trains of the Missouri Pa- i
clflc System, and after something to!
I eat and a nap, wakes up to find himself
| in this delightful winter Resort, ready
to embrace health which seems- to be |
Invariably renewed by the magic of the
air and water. In De Soto's time the
secret of the Fountain of Life was sedu
lously guarded by the savages, but now
a hospitable people opens its arms to
receive the tourist whether his quest be
for health or amusement. Fancy some
times tires •of Hot Springs, strange as
it may seem, but Fancy says “the fields
beyond are greener" and the climate
of San Antonio is more desirable and
thus another ride in another palace, and
new scenes and new faces please the eye
and satisfy the restless cravings of this
master of man. Thus from the Father
of Waters to the waves which wash the
western shore of this great country the
tourist is led by a whim, but moBt de
lightedly captive. Mexico has been
described as the Egypt of the new
world, and the comparison is fitting,
and he who dare not face the dangers
of the deep, and prefers to retain his
meals as well as his life, should make
the journey to the land of the Monte
zumas, and there learn the story of the
ages within the faces of a people which
change less in the passing years than
any other on the Western Continent.
This is the land of Sunshine and Color;
of history and romance; and as bright
eyes will smile at you from under be
witching head gear as may be found in
Castile or Arragon.
Fancy carries one to California of
course, and this journey, as it once was
termed, is now so easily performed as
to have lost all of its terrors and left
only a most emphatically delightful
trip to be the subject of many future
conversations. The land of fruits and
flowers and fair women; Fancy can ask
no more after this tour unless it has
been satisfied for once; and still it is
Fancy which takes the wearied traveler
back to the home and the familiar sur
roundings and the friends and loves of
home. There he may contemplate new
Journeys and new dlvtfrtlsements, but
there lingers in his memory a pleasure
he would not part with, and be hopes
soon to again enjoy the comforts af
forded hy this Great System of Railway
which has taken him safely out and
brought him safely home and has not
robbed him of the joys which Fancy
brings. F. P. BAKER.
The region in the immediate vicinity of
the Dead Bea is said to Le the hottest on
earth. „
Take Parker's Glaser Tunic kerne with yea
Yon » in rind It to eic.'i'd your expect* I dm Id
ab-ting cold*, and many Ills. actiea auu woaknoMMM.
Wisdom is the principal thin;; therefore
get wisdom; and with all thy getting get
understanding.
Pnln |a aat conducive to pleasure,
eapecia ly when occaoloimu by corns H.n.u room
will please you, for It removes them perfcc.ly.
Honor women; they strew celestial rosea
on the pathway of onr terrestrial life.—
Hoite. _
Pino’s Cure for Consumption is an A No.
1 Asthma medicine.—W. K. Williams, An
tioch, Ills., April 11,1894.
Bearing up under trouble and distress is
all well enough, Lut many prefer to Leer up.
UililliUttl
ft
Get rid at once of the stinging, festering smart of
BURNS os SCALDS
or else they’ll leave ugly scars. Read directions and use
iST. JACOBS OIL.
iiminiinnnt
1V+vtvVVTVvTTfrTVTTVfVttvtvvi
Timely Warning.
The great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
&0many misleading and unscrupulous imitations
r<>f their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
j& Baker & Co. are the eldest and largest manu*
m, facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
Chocolates on this continent. No chemieals are
used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be 'sure that
- -A
1
:■ "V
they get, the genuine waiter eager & oo.a gooae.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, ,
DORCHESTER. MASS.
:• )
■ ■ &
Catarrh Cam Hat Ba Cared
With local application* a* they ana*
not reach the seat of the disease. Ca
tarrh Is a blood or constitutional dis
ease, and In order to cure It you must
take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh
Cur* Is'taken Internally, and acts di
rectly on the blood and' mucous sur*
faces. Hall's Catsrrh Cure Is not t.
quack medicine. It was prescribed by
one of the best physicians in this coun
try for years, and Is a regular prescrip
tion. It Is composed of the best tonics
known, combined with the best blood
purifiers, acting directly on thr mucous
surfaces. The perfect combination of
the two Ingredients Is what produces
such wonderful results in curing Ca»
tarrh. 8end for testimonials, free.
T. 3. CHENEY & CO., Prop*., fV ;
Toledo, O.
Bold by druggists; price, 75c. •-.« .>>3
Hall's Family PUla. 25c. ' r
Jtew Form of Blond Poisoning.
A 4-months-old infant. Maria Care
gJtta del Domino, died at Now York
recently from convulsions and septicae
mia, a form of blood poisoning., Not
long ago the parents of the little one,
as la the custom of Italians,''" had the
ears of the child pierced for ring*. Af
ter the operation a piece of 'lino groan
floss was run through the ear and fast
ened, so that the hole should not'prow
together. The dye in the piece^of floas,
it ia believed, caused the blood poison*
^_— ■ *
"Hannon** Hagie Oora Balve,** %
. WerroMed to ears or money nfoaded, Ata (MB
dngsletlmla Friesl*oeote. ■ 'jt . .
Opera In London. • h
A uw house for Italian Opera is'to
be built in London on the site of Her
Majesty’s theater in llaymarket, which
was torn down some yeani’ugo. Marcus
Mayer is to be manager and J. H. Me
pleson operatic director. Mayer saya
the new Imperial Opera Company, lim
ited, will have a capital of $1,7(10,000,
and will produce Italian opera and send
their company each year on an Ameri
can tour from October to April, while
the London season will be from May to
August _
Tun Most (Simple and Safe Remedy for a
Cough or Throat Trouble is ‘‘Brown’s
Bronchial Troches. ’’They possess real'
merit_
The oldest perfumes were thosewecovered
from Egyptian tombs, dating 1,500 to 3,000
years Lefore the Christian era
liegeman's t'sMpssr lea with Olyeorlae,
Cure* chapped band* end Pace, Tender nr Sore Poet
Chilblaiiw, pllee.ee. C. Q. Clark Co.. New Saves, OS ,
7he man who loals is least satisfied with
his pay. __
JPITO-All Pits stepped freebyDp.KUae’aOrsaa
■arvejtaatorer. ilonuartertti*nratnaylas
lareelouaeurea. Treathw an.l St trial hotl le frerta
itcaau. baud to Dr. Kilne,Ml Arch at., t-ml*.,fa.
“1 would like some powder please." “Face
or bugt’’—Life.
It the Baby la Catliag Team.
Sa rara and bn that old and wen-triad iwsaadj, ha
Wmtam't sooraua Sracr for CklUree Taalhiae>
The Pilgrim,
(Holiday Number.) Full of bright
sketches—prose, poetry andr iUustrn
tlons—by bright writers and artists,
Entirely original, new and entertain
ing. Mailed free to any address on re- '
ceipt of six (0) cents in postage stampa
Write to Gea H. Heafford. Publisher, .'
415 Old Colony building, Chicago, 111.
There are at present exactly 1,580 inllsn. . ;
of water meins in the city of London.
Billiard table, second-hand, for sale
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Akin,
Ml B. 12th St.. Omaha Nab,
„ — 9NJOYA
Botiz the method ana results when
Syrup of Figs is token; it is pleosont
and refreshing to the taste, and acta
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, eleanseis the sys
tem effectually, dispels coldsv head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in ,
its action and truly beneficial m its
effects, prepared only from tits most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for anyone who
wishes to try it Do not acoeptany '
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP COL
8An nuMciaoo, cal
tomviuE. n. mew roue. n.t