The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 07, 1907, Image 3

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    WEAK, PALE, THIN
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Restored Mrsi
Robbins To Health and Also Cured
Her Daughter of Anaemia.
Mrs. Jo:ie Robbins, of 1121 Clar
St.. Decatur, 111., says: “I was weak,
thin and troubled with headaches. Mj
appetite failed so that I did not rel
ish my food. I was unable to do my
work because my limbs pained me
so and my feet were swollen. I got
numb and dizzy, my tongue seemed at
times to be paralyzed so that I
couldn’t speak distinctly. My extrem
ities, when in this numb state, felt as
if some one was sticking needles into
me all over their surface. Through
my shoulders at times I had such pain
that I couldn’t sleep. Many times I
awoke with a smothering sensation.
“When the physician’s remedies
failed to benefit me I began to look
for something that would. My sister,
Mrs. McDaniel, of Decatur, recom
mended Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills to
me and I at once purchased some. I
was greatly encouraged when I saw
how they acted on my nervous condi
tion and continued using them until
cured. I am now able to attend to my
duties and have not consulted a phys
ician since.
“I also gave them to my daughter
who had always been weak and who
at this time seemed to lack vitality.
Her cheeks were colorless and she
was thin and spiritless. She had an
aemia and we feared consumption, be
cause every time she went out doors
if it was at ail cold or damp she
would take cold and cough. But Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills brought color
back to her cheeks and strength to
her body.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or sent postpaid, on re
ceipt of price. 50 cents per box. six
boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co.. Schenectady, N. T.
PENMANSHIP A FINE ART.
Typewriting Has Not Driven Hand
Work from the Field.
There is a renasissance in penman
ship, despite the speedy comforts of
the typewriters. Ten years ago it prob
ably would not have occurred to any
one to show a page of manuscript at
any exhibition; to-day pages or books
of script form a feature of ever# show
which takes to itself the name of arts
and crafts. Some of the work is in
Roman capitals, but the form cf letter
usually adopted is the unciel or half
unciel. Apparently all the writers
have founded themselves in these
models. Within these last few years
not only has the art attracted a good
deal of attention, but it has become
quite the rage, so that in some circles
it creates no more surprise now to
learn that an amateur is taking les
sons in script than it would have done
some years back to be told that he or
she had taken to poker work. From
one viewpoint it is difficult to say
where writing ends and illustration
begins, but though in the recent re
vival the two arts naturally have gone
hand in hand, the scribe and the illum
inator are not necessarily one and the
same person. Some of the illumina
tions show most elaborate and minute
figure decoration, so delicate in color
ing and so refined in treatment that
it challenges comparison with the best
of old work.
Oldest Living Scotchman.
James Grieve, who was born in
Borchilly, Glenquoich, in Glengarry,
on New Year's day, 1800, is the oldest
living Scotchman. He was a shepherd
up to a few years ago. He can remem
ber incidents of nearly a century ago.
He lives very simply and seldom
eats meat. He married in 1322,
three of his 14 children ■urvive.—
Greenoch Herald.
MORE BOXES OF GOLD
And Many Greenbacks.
325 boxes of Gold and Greenbacks
will be sent to persons who write the
most interesting and truthful letters
of experience on the following topics:
1. How have you been affected by
coffee drinking and by changing from
coffee to Postum.
2. Give name and account of one or
more coffee drinkers who have been
hurt by it and have been induced t)
quit and use Postum.
3. Do you know any one who has
been driven away from Postum be
cause it came to the table weak and
characterless at the first trial?
4. Did you set such a person right
regarding the easy way to make it
clear, black, and with a snappy, rich
taste?
5. Have 'you ever found a better
way to make it than to use four heap
ing teaspoonfuls to the pint of water,
let stand on stove until real boiling
begins, and beginning at that time
when actual boiling starts, boil full 15
minutes more to extract the flavor and
food value. (A piece of butter the size
of a pea will prevent boiling over.)
This contest is confined to those who
have used Postum prior to the date
of this advertisement.
Be honest and truthful, don’t write
poetry or fanciful letters, just plain,
truthful statements.
Contest will close June 1st, 1907, and
no letters received after that date will
be admitted. Examinations of letters
will be made by three judges, not
members of the Postum Cereal Co.,
Ltd. Their decisions will be fair ind
final, and a neat little box containing
a $10 gold piece sent to each of the
five writers of the most interesting let
ters, a box containing a $5 gold piece
to each of the 20 next best, a $2 green
back to each of the 100 next Best, and
a $1 greenback to each of the 200 next
best, making cash prizes distributed
to 325 persons.
Every friend of Postum is urged to
write and each letter will be held in
high esteem by the company, as an
evidence of such friendship, while the
little boxes of gold and envelopes of
money will reach many modest writers
whose plain and sensible letters con
tain the facts desired, although the
sender may have but small faith in
winning at the time of writing.
Talk this subject over with your
friends and see how many among you
can win prizes. It is a good, honest
competition and in the best kind of a
cause, and costs the competitors abso
lutely nothing.
Address your letter to the Postum
Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.,
writing your own name and address
clearly,_
HOW TO MAKE MAYONNAISE.
Recipe That Is Sure to Please the
Most Fastidious.
To make mayonnaise is indeed a
fine art in cookery; unless the great
est care is observed the dressing will
be either too thick or too thin, or it
will curdle at the stage when the
oil is poured in. Here is a famous
recipe for mayonnaise that cannot
fail to please the most fastidious:
Peat the yolks of two eggs until
they are creamy and then add, very
slowly, three or four tablespoonfuls
high-grade salad oil, and next two
tablespoonfuls of vinegar, slowly, as
the oil. Now pour the contents from
the mixer into a saucepan of boiling
water. You are to continue stirring
until the dressing begins to get thick,
when it is to be removed from the
water and stirred until cool. Now
add one-half teaspoonful of salt, two
tablespoonfuls French mustard, one
.teaspoonful sugar.
Having previously beaten the
whites of the two eggs and a fourth
of a tumbler of cream, stir these in
with the dressing in the order named.
As this will make a rather large quan
tity of dressing you may save half for
another time and in that case do not
add the \ jipped cream until you are
almost ready to serve at table.
ADDING A PILLOW RUFFLE.
Work Requires Care and Attention
for Success.
In putting a ruffle on a sofa pillow
be sure to allow plenty of fullness at
the corners. Itaste it carefully, with
the right side of the ruffle to the right
side of the embroidered front; on top
of this baste the other half of the pil
j low, right side ,ln. Sew in a seam
an eighth of an inch deep around three
sides, leaving a big enough space on
the fourth side to turn the cover and
slip in the pillow.
When the cover is turned and
pressed the pillow should be put in,
care being taken to work it down well
to the corners. The real pressing, by
the way, if an embroidered top is used,
should be done before the back is
basted on, leaving just a final “rub
off” for afterward. As embroidery
must always be pressed on the wrong
side, and preferably on some soft,
thick substance, the iron should be
slipped inside the cover. Be sure,
first, that it is not hot enough to
scorch.
After the pillow is in. the cover
may have the open edges neatly blind
stitched together, or they can be
turned back, whipped to prevent fray
ing and fastened with small hooks and
buttonholed loops.
Spinach Cream Soup.
Put your spinach into a saucepan
with a cupful of cold water, and bring
to a fast boil. Keep this up until the
spinach is tender and broken to pieces.
Turn into a chopping tray, straining
off the water in which it was cooked,
but not draining the vegetable. It
must be quite moist. Chop very fine
and run through the vegetable press.
It should be a soft paste. Have ready
a scant quart of boiling milk in a
farina kettle. Never forget to drop a
pinch of soda into milk when you boil
it. In a frying-pan melt two table
spoonfuls of butter and stir into it a
tablespoonful of flour. Cook and stir
smooth, add to the spinach paste. Let
the whole simmer for a minute. Pour
in the hot milk, stirring all the time;
take from the fire, season to taste with
salt, pepper, a little sugar and a dash
of nutmeg and pour out. Strew sip
pets of fried bread on the surface of
each plateful. .
Sewing Hints.
Metal eyes which protrude beyond
the edge of the material, where a
hook and eye fastening is employed,
should always be carefully and neatly
covered with buttonhole stitching.
Needles should never be kept in
flannel-lined needle books, as sulphur
often enters into the composition of
this material. Sulphur invariably
rusts the needles in time.
Bent pieces of whalebone can be
strengthened by being placed in cold
water for two or three hours. This
will make them pliable. They should
than be pressed under a heavy weight.
When making a skirt it is always
best to try it on the first time on the
wrong si<Je, then reverse it and :lnish
it on the right side.
Love Cakes.
Mix with one pint of sifted flour
one-half teaspoonful of salt and half
a pint of cold butter. Work together
until of the consistency of meal; then
add just enough cold water to mix
into a dough and roll out one-eighth
inch thick and cut into hearts. Pierce
some of them with an open-top thim
ble, and use as the tops for the un
pierced one3 after they are baked.
When these pastries are cold spread
the bottoms with currant jelly and
place the tops on. Serve in a pretty
basket lined with rose foliage.
Banana Compote.
Make a syrup of four tablespoon
fuls of water and four tablespoonfuls
of sugar; add the rind of one-halt lem
on, two cloves, one inch of stick cinna
mon; cook ten minutes; then drop into
the syrup six bananas cut into fourths
It is best to cook just enough pieces
of banana at a time to cover the bot
tom of the sauce pan. When the
fruit becomes transparent and soft
take it up carefully, put into a prett>
dish and pour over the syrup. Cool
and serve with whipped cream slightly
sweetened and flavored with lemon.
Vermicelli Pudding.
Boil one cupful broken Italian ver
micelli in well-salted water to cover
for ten minutes, then add to a pint
and a half boiling milk. Simmer 20
minutes in a double boiler, then take
from the fire and pour over four well
beaten eggs stirred together with one
cup sugar and a large tablenpoonful
butter. Flavor with a teaspoonful va
nilla, turn into a well-buttered pudding
dish and bake in a rather slow but
steady oven for half an hour. Serve
with cream sauce.
Dried Dates.
Dried dates make a nice breakfast
fruit if slightly simmered in boiling
water and servid with rich cream,
either hot or cold; they are a whole
some fruit for everybody to taka at
this time of year.
i
HEREDITY IS NOT ALL.
Physicians Now Believe Less in Trans
mission of Disease.
Medical men are coming round to
the view that it is the personal his
tory that is of primary importance, or,
in other words, that a man's own man
ner of life, his record of health, and
his circumstances should be more
carefully considered than the illnesses
that his ancestors died of. Dr. Rabag
liati, a medical examiner for insurance
companies, who is well known in the
profession which he adorns, and of
high repute in the north of England,
has devoted much thought to this
question of heredity from a life insur
ance point of view. In his opinion it
is not so much disease that is trans
mitted from one generation to an
other, but organization, or “human
ity,” as he expresses it. Any member
of the human family may suffer from
any disease to which humanity is sub
ject, and when an individual so suffers
It is the cause of the ailment that
must be inquired into. Exposure to
this or that set of conditions brings
varying results. If the body Is exposed
to one set of conditions it will take
on gout; if to another, consumption;
if to a third, cancer; and so on.
SOME WIVES ARE DIFFERENT.
Quiet Cynicism, or Good Honest Row
—Which Is the Better?
“Most men,” said the man of experi
ence, “think it must be awfully nico
to have a wife who takes things as
coolly as Dave Potter’s wife takes
them; but others, more discriminat
ing. prefer a good honest row to her
style of quiet cynicism. The way she
behaved the other day when she
found a letter in Dave’s pocket from
a girl is an example of her method.
“ ‘I don’t see,' wrote this girl, ‘how
on earth I can ever live without you.’
"Dave's wife read that gush, and a
lot more just like it, without ever turn
ing a hair.
“ ‘Well,’ she said, quietly, ‘that girl
Is a fool. If she knew you as well as
I do she would be wondering how on
earth she could ever live witn you.’
“And that, In the opinion of the dis
criminating few, cuts a whole lot
deeper than a common, everyday rum
P<iB. _
PREPARE THIS YOURSELF.
Tells How to Make the Best Blood
Tonic at Home.
For those who have any form of
blood disorders; who want new, rich
blood and plenty of it, try this:
Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half
ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce;
Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces.
Shake well in a bottle and take in
teaspoonful doses after each meal and
at bedtime. Any good pharmacy can
supply the ingredients at small cost.
This is the prescription which, when
made up, is called “The Vegetable
Treatment;” by others, the “Cyclone
Blood Purifier.” It acts gently and
certainly does wonders for some peo
ple who are sickly, weak and out of
sorts, and is known to relieve serious,
long-standing cases of rheumatism
and chronic backache quickly.
Make some up and try it.
Where It Hurt Most.
“Young gentlemen,” said the college
president, notwithstanding the fact
that he was addressing the students,
“young gentlemen, hazing must be
stopped and stopped at once. It has
injured the college more than any
of you ever could guess. Only last
week a gentleman declined to give
us $1,000,000 because there was so
much hazing. Hazing is a bad thing
financially."
“How about morally?” asked the
student.
"Aw-aw, really, there may be some
thing in that, but—aw—the—the point
has never come up, and I—aw—am
not prepared to answer. But the point
Is worth considering.”—Chicago Jour
nal. ____
Expect Contest Over Will.
A contest is expected over the wih
of Mrs. Isabelle Beecher Hooker, sla
ter of Henry Ward Beecher. Mrs.
Katherine Burton Powers of Brook
line, Mass., granddaughter of Mrs.
Hooker, is expected to contest the
will. The bulk of the estate which is
estimated a* about $70,000, is given to
the son of Mrs. Hooker, Dr. Edward
B. Hooker of Hartford. Mrs. John C.
Day of New York, daughter of Mrs.
Hooker, receives nothing “because,’
according to the will, “she and hei
daughter are so amply provided foi
by the estate of her late husband.”
A man should never be ashamed to
own he has been in the wrong, which
is but saying in other words that he
is wiser to-day than b« was yesterday.
—Pope._
COFFEE THRESHED HER.
15 Long Years.
“For over fifteen years,” writes a
patient, hopeful little Ills, -woman,
‘while a coffee drinker, I suffered
from Spinal Irritation and Nervous
trouble. I was treated by good physi
cians, but did not get much relief.
"I never suspected that coffee might
be aggravating my condition. I was
downhearted and discouraged, but
prayed daily that I might find some
thing to help me.
“Several years ago while at a
friend’s house, I drank a cup of Post
um and thought I had never tasted
anything more delicious.
“From that time on I used Postum
instead of coffee; and soon began to
improve in health, so that now I can
walk half a dozen blocks or more with
case, and do many other things that
I never thought I would be able to
jo again in this world.
“My appetite 1b good, I sleep well,
and find life worth living, indeed. A
lady of my acquaintance said she did
not like Postum, it was so weak and
tasteless.
“I explained to her the difference
when it Is made right—boiled accord
ing to directions. She was glad to
know this because coffee did not agree
with her. Now her folks say they ex
pect to use Postum the rest of their
lives.” Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little
book, “The Road to Wellville,” in
|kga. “There’s a reason.’”
MORTALITY REPORT
CONSUMPTION AND PNEUMONIA
HEAD DEATH LIST.
Statistics Show That the Greatest
Number of Deaths From Lung
Trouble Occur in Winter.
The Bureau of Census has published
a report presenting mortality statistics
for the United States for the five cal
endar years 1900 to 1904.
As shown in the table, tuberculosis
of the lungs and pneumonia were by
far the leading causes of death. The
greatest number of deaths from lung
trouble occur during the winter
mouths. Colds are so prolific of lung
Trouble that they should not be neg
lected. Persons with weak lungs
should be especially careful.
A noted authority on lung trouble
advises that as soon as a cold is con
tracted the following simple treatment
should be given. The ingredients can
be purchased from any prescription
! druggist at small cost and easily pre
pared in your own home. It is said to
be so effective that it will break up a
cold in twenty-four hours and cure any
cough that is curable.
Take one-half ounce Virgin Oil of
Pine (Pure), two ounces of Glycerine
and eight ounces of good Whisky.
Shake well and take in teaspoonful
| doses every four hours.
Be sure that the Virgin Oil of Pine
(Pure) is in the original half-ounce
vials, which are put up expressly for
druggists to dispense. Each vial is se
curely sealed in a round wooden case,
with engraved wrapper, with the name
i —Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure)—guaran
teed under the Food and Drugs Act,
June .lO, 1906. prepared only by Leach
Chemical Co., Cincinnati, O.—plainly
printed thereon. There are many rank
imitations of Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure)
which are put out under various
names, such as Concentrated Oil of
Pine. Pine Balsam, etc. Never accept
fr-'-s'' ns a substitute for the Pure Vir
"(•’ c-;i of Pine, as they will invariably
produce nausea and never elect the
(irnired result
PREACHER AND THE POET.
Writer Speculates on Shakespeare as
a Churchgoer.
i
! Prr bably Shakespeare did his own
; thinking on questions of religion, said
little, and conformed strictly to the ex
isting order. Still we question if he
was a good churchgoer. The town and
church of Stratford had a decided bent
toward Presbyterianism, and there is
reason to think that he did not get
on well with it in this respect. Him
self the wisest of preachers, he does
not seem to have been fend of preach
ing. That which sounds most like it
—and very wise it is—comes from
Polonius. whom he calls "a prating old
fool." We fear that when he walked
to church with his wife he went no
farther than the porch, but strolled
along the Avon, where he was found
by Susanna and Judith on "a grassy
bank" in close converse with "daisies
pied and violets blue," and “herb-o'
graee" as became Sunday. And in
winter he was not sorry “when cough
ing drowned the parson’s saw." The
preacher and the poet have never got
on well together, and will not until
they are identically the same person,
as Cardinal Newman says; and they
must not divide and antagonize what
Sod have joined together.—Theodore
T. Munger in the February Atlantic.
CHILDREN TORTURED.
Girl Had Running Sores from Eczema
—Boy Tortured by Poison Oak—
Both Cured by Cuticuca.
“Last year, after having my little
girl treated by a very prominent phy
sician for an obstinate case of ec
zema, I resorted to the Cuticura Rem
edies, and was so well pleased with
the almost instantaneous relief afford
ed that we discarded the physician's
prescription and relied entirely on
the Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oint
ment, and Cuticura Pills. When we
commenced with the Cuticura Reme
dies her feet and limbs were covered
with running sores. In about six
weeks we had her completely well,
and there has been no recurrence of
the trouble.
“In July of this year a littl^ boy
in our family poisoned his hands and
arms with poison oak, and in twenty
four hours his hands and arms were
a mass of torturing sores. We used
only the Cuticura Remedies, washing
his hands and arms with the Cuticura
Soap, and anointing them with the
Cuticura Ointment, and then gave
him the Cuticura Resolvent. In
about three weeks his hands and
arms healed up. So we have lots of
cause for feeling grateful for the Cu
ticura Remedies. We find that the
Cuticura Remedies are a valuable
household standby, living as we do
twelve miles from a doctor. Mrs. Liz
zie Vincent Thomas, Fairmont, Wal
den's Ridge, Tenn., Oct. 13, 1905.”
“Warfare" In Africa.
In the neighborhood of Lake Tchad,
Africa, the other day, six negro troop
ers. commanded by a corporal, armed
with carbines only, successfully de
fended a little mud fort against 500
warlike Tauregs, and when the Tau
regs gave up the attempt and retired,
the troopers sallied out and “pun
ished" them.
Some men are like some horses;
they will stand without hitching, but
tie them to a post and they will pro
ceed to kick over the traces.
Rings
Round
Eyes
The ills peculiar to women, take different forms.
Some ladies suffer, every month, from dark rings round their eyes, blotches on their skin and tired
feeling. Others suffer agonies of pain, that words can hardly express.
Whatever the symptoms, remember there is one medicine that will go beyond mere symptoms, and i ;
act on the cause of their troubles, the weakened womanly organs.
W e of Cardui
Mrs. M. C. Austin, of Memphis, Term., writes: "For five (5) years I suffered with every symptom
of female disease, but after using the well-known Cardui Home Treatment, I was entirely welL"
lAfDITF IIC A I ETTED Write today for a free copy of valuable 64-pace Ulustrattxl Book fer Wonts. If you need Mad*
Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp.
i For children teething, softens tho guns, reduces tn
, lUmmstlon. allays psln, cares wind colic. 25c a bottle.
A toast—May the best you wish for
be the worst you get.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES produce
I the brightest and fastest colors with less
! work and no muss.
i ___
Some men outlive their usefulness
and some others are born without
any.
You always get full value in Lewis’
\ Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Your
I dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
Many a man’s idea of hospitality is
to bring other men home and have hir,
wife cook for them.
PILrs «l KI D IK <1 TO 14 DATS.
PAZO OINTMKNT ik *rnararm c*d to cum *nv ca«e
nr Itcn »»»f. Wind. Weeding «.r Prniru<ling Pileb m
G U days orwoi.ey refunded. 50c.
It isn’t always policy to believe the
: man who tells you what he would do
i if he were in your place.
Panthers and Grizzly Bears.
Ship Furs Prlts McMillan Fur & Wool
Co., Mfnnranoii?, Minn. Write for price?.
According to statistics nine-tenths
of the men who commit suicide are
married. Comment is unnecessary.
Gsrfield Tea. an absolutely pure and ef
fective laxative! Made of Herbs. Take it
to purify the blood, to overcome constipa
tion and to eradicate rheumatism and
chronic disease?.
Idleness and pride tax with a heav
ier hand than kings and parliaments.
If we can get rid of the former we can
easily bear the latter.—Franklin.
Give Defiance Starch a fair trial—
try it for both hot and cold starching,
and if you don’t think you do better
work, in less time and at smaller cost,
return it and your grocer will give
you back your money.
It is not enough that we swallow
truth; we must feed upon it, as in
sects do on the leaf, till the whole
heart be colored by Us qualities, and
show its food in every fiber.—Cole
ridge.
In a Pinch, Ua« ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures painful, smart
ing, 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. Accept no sub
, stitute. Trial package. FREE. Ad
dress A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
It is said of home-made troubles
j that they are very like home-made
clothes, they never fit well, and they
generally last longer than others.—
Spurgeon.
Stats of Onio. C:tv of Toledo, I ,
Litas Cocty. f
Fraxk J. c'riKXEY makes oath that he Is set'or
partner of the ttr:n of F. J. Che:iey A Co., dolaj
• business in the Chy of Toledo. County ami State
afore** d. and that said Arm will pay the sum of
i ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every
case of Catakbb that cannot be cored by the u*e of
; Hall’s Catarrh Core.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence,
- this 6aIi day of December, A. D.. 188R.
4 -r*— i A. W. ©LEASON,
jeBAL \ Notary Pyblic.
Hall * Catarrh Cure la taken Internally and acta
directly «>n rhe bi.HKi and mucous surface* of the
system, bend for testimonial*, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by all DrnTrials, 75c. \
Take Hall s Family Pill* for constipation.
—
j If you nave knowledge, let others
| light their candles at it.—T. Fuller.
\ The General Condemnation of So-Called Patent /
N or Secret Medicines Ui
1 of an injurious character, which indulge in extravagant and unfounded pretensions M
■ to cure all manner of ills, and the M
B National Legislation Enacted to Restrict their Sale B
m have established more clearly than could have been accomplished in any other way B
fl The Value and Importance oi Ethical Remedies.
U 1 Remedies which physicians sanction for family use, as they act most beneficially and fll
W M are gentle yet prompt in effect, and called ethical, because they are of \W
m Known Excellence and Quality and of Known Component Parts. 1
B To gain the full confidence of the Well-Informed of the world and the approval of B
B the most eminent physicians, it is essential that the component parts be known to and B
B . approved by them, and, therefore, the California Fig Syrup Company has published for many B
M M years past in its advertisements and upon every package a full statement thereof. 'The per- . B
m B feet purity and uniformity of product which they demand in a laxative remedy of an ethical k fl
character arc assured by the California Fig Syrup Company’s original method of manufacture, k|
known to the Company only.
HT There are other ethical remedies approved by physicians, but the product of BB
W the California Fig Syrup Company possesses the advantage over all other family laxatives VS
■ that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts, without ^B
■V disturbing the natural functions or any debilitating after effects and without having to gi
IIV increase the quantity from time to time. ^3
BB This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known under the name of mfk
Syrup of Figs, and has attained to world-wide acceptance as the most excellent of UM
B w laxatives, and as its pure laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well
B " known to physicians and the Well-Informed of the world to be the best of natural BB
fl laxatives, we have adopted the more elaborate name of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of * I
fl Senna, as more fully descriptive of the remedy, but doubtlessly it will always be fl
fl called for by the shorter name of Syrup of Figs; and to get its beneficial effects, B
fl always note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company—California F'ig Syrup Co.— B
V plainly printed on the front of every package, whether you simply call for Svrup B
1 of Figs, or by the full name, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, as Syrup of Figs M
I and Elixir of Senna is the one laxative remedy manufactured by the California Fig M
B 1 Syrup Company, and the same heretofore known by the name, Syrup of Figs, which I a
has -given satisfaction to millions. The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists I^fl
IV throughout the United States in original packages of one size only, the regular price ■]
1 of which is fifty cents per bottle. “m
H Every bottle is sold under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with the B
I Secretary of Agriculture, at Washington, D. C., the remedy is not adulterated or mis- B
3 branded within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906. *
L CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. \
■yl San Francisco, Cal.
J Louisville, Kv. U. S. A. New York, N. Y. V
£ London, England. V
CKSTORIft
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the / »
Signature /%$
w
a Jft* In
/y. Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CAST9BIA
TWC CCMTAUO COMPANY. RCW VMM CITY.
RHEUMATISM
£& CURED \
The Circulation Stimulated ijl
and the Muscles and Joints |
lubricated by using §
Slo&NS
Lirv.im.eivt
jvV Price 25c 50c 6U00
Sold by all Dealers !
Sloans Treatise On The Horse" Sent Free
.« Address Dr.EarlS.Sloan.Boston^Mass.
"i»eV«wu«} Thompson’s Eye Water
W. N. U.. OMAHA, NO. 10, 1907.
PtfSAS T J Vfl0 Unexcelled for general farm
UAfilAf kikdU* ing. stock, dairying, fruits, truck
etc.; convenient to the very best market* and t» anspor
tation facilities Write nearest office for lists and pub
lieations. M. V. Richard*. Land and Industrial Agent
Southern Re. ami Mobile.*OhioR.H. Washington. D-O
C. 3. (Those. West. Agt..»i34( hemiral Bldg ,St. Louis,Mo