Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, August 29, 1907, Page 7, Image 7

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    TEN YEARS OF PAIN.
Unable to Do Even Housework Be
cause of Kidney Troubles.
Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin
ton St., isapoleon, 0., says:"For
fifteen years I was a great sufferer
u - from kidney trou
\ bles. My back pained
fifT'i ,ij. \\ me terribly. Every
■ * urn or move caused
k ayh sharp, shooting
f ia s ns - My eyesight
was l )00r ' dark spots
' ' appeared before me,
' and 1 liacl dizzy
spells. For ten years
I could not do housework, and for two
years did not get out of the house.
The kidney secretions were irregular,
and doctors were not helping me.
Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick
relief, and finally cured me. They
saved my life."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Rule of Cornish Chapels.
In Cornish (Eng.) chapels the in
variable rule is for the men to sit |
on one side of the building and the i
women on the other.
A visitor and his fiancee, who are 1
staying in the district, went to chapel, j
and just before the service began the j
young man was greatly astonished
when the chapel steward, observing ]
that the couple were seated in the j
same pew, came over to him and, in
an audible voice, said: "Come on out
of that, me son; we den't 'avo no
sweethcartin' 'e;c."
The Three Milkmeil.
A man in a small western town
bought a quart of milk and on arriv
ing home found it was adulterated
•with water. The next day he posted
bills in different sections of the town
reading:
"I bought a quart of milk yesterday
which I found to be adulterated. If
the scoundrel will bring me another
quart I'll not denounce him."
The next day he found three quart
cans on his doorstep. There were
three dairymen in the town.—Judge's
Library.
Fresh Fuel.
The scrap between the married cou
ple had died down to a few listless
mutterings, and the canary bird in the
cage was beginning to think about
singing again, when she remarked, as
a sort of afterthought:
"At any rate, everybody in my fam
ily thinks I am very intelligent."
"Yes, by the side of them you are,"
he replied with a bitter snort.
After this the scrap was renewed
Jubilantly.
The Crack in His Armor.
"It's a good thing for a man to be
a little bald," said the girl as they
walked along in the rear of one be
neath whose hat showed a small bare
half moon. "It takes the conceit out
of them. Now there's John. He has
a bald spot that he has spent about a
hundred dollars onto no effect. When
he gets too smart all I have to do is to
glance carelessly toward that vulner
able spot and he subsides immedi
ately."
Old Bell Still Tolls Curfew.
In the belfry of the old parish
church at Bury, England, the curfew
that tolled the knell of the parting day
300 years ago is still in place, and is
rung every night at sunset.
Man does what he can, and bears
what he must, and the name by which
he calls the result is left to each to
decide; a clever man calls it happi
ness.—Goethe.
I FOOD
FACTS I
[ |
| Grape-Nuts [
FOOD
A Body Balance
People hesitate at the statement that
the famous food, Grape-Nuts, yields as
much mAjrishment from one pound as
can be absorbed by the system from
ten pounds of meat, bread, wheat or
oats. Ten pounds of meat might con
tain more nourishment than one pound
of Grape-Nuts, but not in shape that
the system will absorb as large a pro
portion of, as the body can take up
from one pound of Grape-Nuts.
This food contains the selected parts
of wheat and 'tjarley whi«fi are pre
pared and by 'atural means predi
gested, transform yl into a form of
sugar, ready for ir -mediate assimila
tion. People in all of the world
testify to the value of Grape-Nuts.
A Mo. man says:"l have gained ten
pounds on Grape-Nuts food. I can
truly recommend it to thin people."
He had been eating meat, bfead, etc.,
right along, but there was lfo ten
pounds of added llesli until Grape-Nuts
food wa3 used.
One curious feature regarding true
health food is that its use will reduce
the weight of a corpulent person with
unhealthy fiosh, and will add to tho
weight of a thin person not properly
nourished. There is abundance of
evidence to prove this.
Grape-Nuts balances the body in a
condition of true health. Scientific se
lection of food elements makes Grape-
Nuts good and valuable. Its delicious
flavor and powerful nourishing prop
erties have made friends that, in
turn have made Grape-Nuts famous.
"There's a Reason." Read "The Road
to Wellville," ,'n pkgs.
HORTICULTURE
BUDDING.
The Operations Which Are Necessary
to Success.
Budding consists in taking a bud
from one tree and inserting it under
the bark of another tree. It is used
to take the place of grafting, and is
practiced in a commercial way in
propagating peaches, plums, cherries,
roses and certain varieties of orna
mental trees and shrubs. It is essen
tial that the bud and stock unite free
ly. To have this occur the cells of tho
cambium layer of the stock must be
in a state of active division, indicated
Budding Operations Illustrated.
by the ready separation of the bark
from the wood. The union of the
two, the bud and the stock, takes
place at the edges of the bark of the
inserted bud; for this reason the bud
should be inserted as soon as it is
cut from the twig so as to avoid dry
ing out. In climates having severe
winters budding is most satisfactory
when performed near the end of the
growing season. The buds should be
plump and mature when taken from
the shoots of the current year's
growth. The "bud stocks" should be
cut the day the buds are to be in
serted. trimmed and wrapped at once
in a damp cloth to prevent drying on.
Trimming consists in cutting off the
leaves, saving a bit of the stem to
use as a handle in inserting. In cut
ting the buds, use sharp knives; in
sert blade of knife one-fourth inch be
low bud, cut upward just behind bud,
removing but • little of wood, coming
out about one-fourth of an inch above
bud. (See fig. a.)
To insert bud, make T-shaped in
cision in stock about two inches above
ground . (See Fig. b.) With the
spatula or budding knifo loosen tho
lips of bark in angle of the T cut and
slip in the bud. (See Fig. b.) The
bud must be helfl firmly in place by a
bandage wound above and below, be
ing careful to leave the eye of the
bud uncovered. Raffia fibre (wet),
bast, candle wick or waxed cloth may
be used for tying. Raffia is usually
employed. If the bud "takes," Re
move fhe bandage in about ten days
by cutting locs© on back side of stock
to prevent the hindering of growth of
bud. In three or four weeks cut off
the stock just above bud to stimulate
the growth of new bud.
Peaches are budded in the same
year that the pits are planted. As
soon as the seedlings are large
enough to hold a bud they are ready
for budding.
After budding, examine the stock
frequently and remove any suckers
that may start at base of seedling.
Water Pumped Through Plants.
Few realize how continually the
plants that grow on the earth are
pumping water from the soil into the
air. Every normal plant is engaged
in this work, and the surface of the
earth is covered with them except in
the regions of eterr.al frost and tho
great deserts. Experiments made in
Utah showed that through June, July
and August of one year each foot of
soil lost by evaporation of moisture
through plants over nine pounds of
water. When this is multiplied by tho
number of feet in an acre it gives
over 190 tons of water for a single
acre. When this is extended to tho
plant-covered surface of the world it
indicates the fact that a good-sized
ocean of water is by the plants
pumped up into the air each year and
that for each day a good-sized sea is
so returned back to the element from
which it came—the air.
Chance £o Increase Income.
Selling prepared fruit and garden
stuff, such as mustard, canned kraut,
canned tomatoes, horse radish, canned
fruit, preserves and the like, will be
tho source of a great deal of Income
to the farmer. In !he case of fruit,
especially, it will furnish a profitable
market for a great deal that would
otherwise goto waUe. It is a very
small town and a pnor market indeed
that will not consume .all the stuff
that can be sold from the farm in this
way.
Pinching Back.
Pinching back the new growth is
another way of saving a great deal
of sap for the formation of fruit.
About The time the peaches or other
stone fruits are haif formed, take a
sharp pair of shears and clip off abou'
half of this year's • -owth of wood on
all parts of the tree. This retards the
growth of shoot and leaf and the sap
Is savod for the development of fruit.
CAMERGN COUNTY PRESS, THURSOAY, AUGUST 29, 1907.
ARE PHYSICIANS' PRESCRIPTIONS
NOSTRUMS?
To one no* qualified, and few lay
men are, to discriminate intelligently
between physicians' prescriptions, pro
prietary medicines and nostrums, it
may seem little short of a crime to
hint even that physician:?' prescrip
tions are in any manner related to
nostrums; nevertheless, an impartial
examination of all the facts in the
case leads irresistibly to the conclu
sion that every medicinal preparation
compounded and dispensed by a physi
cian is, in the strict sense of the word,
a nostrum, and that the average,
ready-prepared proprietary remedy is
superior to the average specially-pre
pared physicians' prescription.
What is a nostrum? According to
the Standard Dictionary a nostrum is
"a medicine the composition of which
is kept a secret." Now, when a physi
cian compounds and dispenses with
his own hands a remedy for the treat
ment of a disease —and it is authorita
tively stated that probably 00 per
cent, of all physicians* prescriptions
in this country are so dispensed—the
names and quantities of the ingre
dients which constitute the remedy
are not made known to the patient.
Hence, since its composition is kept a
secret by the physician, the remedy or
prescription is unquestionably, in the
true meaning of the word, a Simon
pure nostrum. Furthermore, the pre
scription compounded by the average
physician is more than likely to be a
perfect jumble- -replete with thera
peutic, physiologic and chemical in
compatibilities and bearing all the ear
marks of pharmaceutical incompe
tency; for it is now generally admitted
that unless a physician has made a
special study of pharmacy and passed
some time in a drug store for the pur
pose of gaining a practical knowledge
of modern pharmaceutical methods,
he is not fitted to compound remedies
for his patients. Moreover, a physi
cian who compounds his own prescrip
tions not only deprives the pharmacist
of his just emoluments, but he endan
gers the lives of patients; for it is
only by the detection and elimination
of errors in prescriptions by clever,
competent prescrlptionists that the
safety of the public can be effectually
shielded from the criminal blunders
of ignorant physicians.
Nor can it be said that the average
physician is any more competent to
formulate a prescription than he is to
| compound it. When memorized or di
rectly copied from a book of "favorite
prescriptions by famous physicians,"
or from some text-book or medical
journal, the prescription may be all
that it should be. It is only when the
physician is required to originate a
formula on the spur of the moment
j that his incompetency is distinctly evi
; dent. Seemingly, however, the physi
cians of the United States are little
I worse than the average British physi-
I cian; for we find Dr. James Burnett,
lecturer on Practical Materia Medica
; and Pharmacy, Edinburgh, lamenting
! in the Medical Magazine the passing
of the prescription and bemoaning the
| fact that seldom does he find a "final
man" able to devise a prescription
even in "good contracted Latin."
And what, it may be asked, is the
| status of the written prescription—the
prescription that is compounded and
j dispensed by the pharmacist—is it,
j too, a nostrum? It may be contended
j that the patient, with the written
j formula in his possession, may learn
| the character of the remedy pre*
J scribed. So, possibly, he might if he
I understood Latin and were a physician
j or a pharmacist, but as he usually pos
! sesses no professional training and
| cannot read Latin, the prescription is
| practically a dead secret to him.
Furthermore, the average prescription
is so badly written and so greatly
| abbreviated that even the pharmacist,
! skilled as ho usually is in deciphering
| medical hieroglyphs, is constantly
obliged to interview prescribers to
find out what actually has been pre
scribed. It may also be contended,
that inasmuch as the formula is
to both physician and pharmacist the
prescription cannot therefore be a se
cret. But with equal truth it might be
contended that the formula of any so
called nostrum is not a secret since it
is known to both proprietor and manu
facturer; for it must not be forgotten
that, according to reliable authority,
95 per cent, of the proprietors of so
called patent medicines prepared in
this country have their remedies made
for them by large, reputable manufac
turing pharmacists. But even should
a patient be able to recognize the
names of the ingredients mentioned in
a formula he would only know half
the story. It is seldom, for instance,
that alcohol is specifically mentioned
in a prescription, for it is usually
masked in the form of tinctures and
fluid extracts, as <aro a great many
other substances. It is evident, there
fore, that the ordinary formulated pre
scription is, to the average patient, lit
tle less than a secret remedy or nos
trum.
On the other hand, the formulae of
nearly all the proprietary medicines
that are exploited exclusively to the
medical profession as well as those
of a large percentage of the proprie
tary remedies that are advertised to
the public (the so-called patent medi
cines) aro published in full. Under
the Food and Drugs Act, every medi
cinal preparation entering interstate
commerce is now required to have the
proportion or quantity of alcohol,
opium, cocain and other liabit-form
ing or harmful ingredients which it
may contain plainly printed on the
label. As physicians' prescriptions
seldom or never enter interstate com
merce they are practically exempt un
der the law. And if it be necessary
for the public to know the composi
tion of proprietary remedies, as is
contended by those who through ig-
noranee or for mercenary reasons ar®
opposing the sale of all household
remedies, ichy is it not equally neces
sary for patients to know the compo
sition of the remedy prescribed by a
physicianT Does any sane person be
lieve that the opium in a physician's
prescription is less potent or less like
ly to create a drug habit than the opi
um In a proprietary medicine? As a
matter of fact. more opium-addicts
and cocain-fiends have been made
through the criminal carelessness of
ignorant physicians than by any other
means.
Unquestionably, there are a number
of proprietary remedies on the market
the sales of which should be prohibit
ed, and no doubt they will be when
the requirements of the Food and
Drugs Act are rigidly enforced; many
are frauds, pure and simple, and some
are decidedly harmful. Of the aver
age proprietary remedy, however, it
may truthfully be said that it is dis
tinctly better than the average physi
cians' prescription; for not only is its
composition less secret, but it is pre
pared for the proprietor by reputable
manufacturing pharmacists in magnifi
cently equipped laboratories and un
der the supervision and advice of able
chemists, competent physicians and
skillful pharmacists. It should not be
considered strange, therefore, that so
many physicians prefer to prescribe
these ready-prepared proprietary rem
edies rather than trust those of their
own devising.
JUST THE SAME A3 CURRENCY.
Third Son Felt He Had Nothing to
Reproach Himseif with.
William Knoepfel. of St. Louis, has
invented and hopes to patent a secret
plowing method for the cure of bald
ness. "A genuine cure for baldness,"
said Mr. Knoepfel the other day,
should make a man very rich. Why,
men grow rich on fake cures. It is
amazing, it really is, what fakes some
of these cures are. Yet there's money
in them." Mr. Knoepfel gave a loud,
scornful laugh. "In their crookedness
they remind me," he said, "of the
third son of the old eccentric. Per
haps you have heard the story? Well,
an old eccentric died and left his for
tune equally to his three sons. But
the will contained a strange proviso.
Each heir was to place SIOO in the
coffin immediately before the inter
ment. A few days after the interment
the three young men met and discuss
ed the queer proviso and its execu
tion. 'Well,' said the oldest son, 'my
conscience is clear. I put my hundred
in the coflin in clean, new notes.' 'My
conscience is clear, too,' said tho sec
ond son. I putin my hundred in gold.'
'I, too, have nothing to reproach my
self with,' said the third son. 'I had
no cash at the time, though; so I
wrote out a check for S3OO in poor,
dear father's name, placed it in the
coffin and took in change the S2OO in
currency that I found there.'"
PUSHED THE BEAR ASIDE.
Surveyor Tells of Experience He Does
Not Care to Repeat.
To walk right up to a monster bear
and try to shove it out of the way and
then escape without so much as a
scratch is an experience of a lifetime.
Harry I Engelbright found it so a few
days ago in Diamond canyon, abova
Washington, says a Nevada City cor*
respondent of the Sacramento Hee.
The young man, son of Congressman
Engelbright, has just returned from
the upper country, where he has been
doing some surveying, and relates his
thrilling experience. It was coming
on dusk, at the close of the day's work.
In the brush-lined trail he saw pro
truding what he thought were the
hind quarters of some stray bovine.
He walked up and gave the brute a
shove. It came to its haunches with
a snort that made his hair rise and
caused him to beat a hasty retreat.
The big brute looked around and then
shuffied off into the woods. It was
either asleep or else so busy eating
ants from an old log that it failed to
hear the young surveyor, whose foot
steps were deadened by the thick car
pet of pine needles. Later it was
learned that the same bear, a monster
cinnamon, had lrilled a dog earlier in
the day. The dog ventured too close
and with one blow of its paw the big
beast sent it hurtling yards away,
dead as a doornail.
Magnifying Choir Leader's Voice. ,
In the old village of Braybrook in
Northamptonshire, England, is a mon
ster trumpet, five six inches in length,
and having a bell-shaped end two feet
one inch in diameter. The trumpet is
made up of ten rings, which in turn
are made up of smaller parts. The
use of this trumpet—only four of the
kind are known to exist at the present
day—was to magnify the voice of the
leader in the choir and summon the
people to the church service. At the
present time neither the choir nor
the service is in need of this extraor
dinary "musical instrument," but the
vicar of the church takes care of the
ancient relic and is fond of showing it
to all visitors.
Painfully Exact.
A New England man tells of a pros
perous Connecticut farmer, painfully
exact in money matters, who married
a widow of Greenwich possessing in
her own right the sum of SIO,OOO.
Shortly after the wedding a friend met
the farmer, to whom he offered con
gratulations, at tho same time observ
ing: "It's a good thing for you,
Malachl, a marriage that means $lO,-
000 to you." "Not. quite that, Bill,"
said the farmer, "not quite that."
"Why," exclaimed the friend, "I under
stood there was every cent of SIO,OOO
in it for you!" "I had to pay $2 for
a marriage license," said Malachl.
LEFT IT TO THE OLD HENS.
Amateur Fancier Thought His Re
sponsibility Had Ended.
An Indiana man tells of the efforts
of an author belonging to the Hoosier
school of historical novelists to put
In his leisure time as a "hen farm
er" in that state. The literary per
son's venture afforded his agricultural
neighbors no end of amusement.
During the first year the amateur
farmer discovered that all his little
chickens, which were confined in
coops, were languishing at the point
of death. The novelist went over his
"hen literature" to locate the cause of
the trouble, but to no avail.
Finally he called upon an old chap
named Rawlins, to whom he put the
question:
"What do you suppose is the mat
ter with those chickens?"
"Well, I dunno," said Rawlins.
"What do you feed "em?"
"Feed them!" exclaimed the novel
ist-farmer. "Why, I don't feed thera
anything!"
"Then, how'd you suppose they
was a-goin' to live?"
"I presumed," replied the literary
person, "that the old hens had milk
enough for them now."—Llppincott's
Magazine.
Used Ink for Bluing.
"One can never be too careful about
apparently harmless articles setting
about the house," said a housewife the
other day. "Net long ago my husband
brought homo one of those big tall bot
tles of ink from the office. It had got
to be such a nuisance buying one of
the small five-cent bottles every time
we ran out of ink, that he said ho
would bring home a supply.
"About a week after that I got a
new maid, and when she did the wash
ing she took the big bottle of ink for
bluing. Of course every stitch of our
white clothes in the washing was
ruined."
Architects and Closets.
An architect, says a writer, com
plains that women have a mania for
closets and that when a woman is al
lowed any liberty in the matter she
changes his whole architectural plan
in order to make room for them. This,
he says, makes him a laughing stock
among his fellow architects. This is
very interesting, but why do architects
make plans if not to make every effort
themselves to secure conveniences? A
house may be architecturally perfect
and yet not fit to live in, and it certain
ly is not if there is not closet room
enough.
Cunning Chap.
"Yes," confessed the blushing girl
with the white parasol. "1 thought it
rather odd that Jack should keep on
asking about our college yell. Finally,
to get rid of him, I told him it was
three yells in quick succession."
"What then?" asked her chum.
"What then? Why, the goose kissed
me three times before I could re
monstrate and when I gave a yell for
each kiss mamma thought I was giv
ing the class yell."
Her Secret Sorrow.
"That woman over there has some
hidden sorrow," declared the sym
pathetic one, as she came in and took
her seat at a table not far away/ "I
have often noticed her. See. Her
companion orders everything she
could possibly want, and yet she sits
there silent with a face like a mask.
I am awfully sorry for her."
"Don't you worry," advised her pes
simistic friend. "That's her husband
with her. She's bored, that's all."
Foreign Waterways.
Since we began the neglect and
abandonment of canals, France has
quadrupled her waterways. Accord
ing to figures furnished by commer
cial associations, the British isles
have 8,000 miles of canal and It does
not all antedate the railroad.
The Reason Why.
"How did you come here?" said one
Mexican bull to an old acquaintance,
as they met in the arena.
"How?" replied the other, with a
glance around. "I may say I was
roped in."
A life in continual need is half-death.
—German.
m CONSIDER WI T*y\\
I First, that almosteveryoperation W- 112 \ B
I in our hospitals, performed upon RTSSZO 'WC"~ / 1 P
I women, becomes necessary because / Iff
I of neglect of such symptoms as a t\. I c
Backache, Irregularities, Displace- % \ X, / B
ments. Pain in the Side, Dragging \ 1 B
B Sensations, Dizziness and Sleepless- \ \ Vff
' Second, that Lydia E. Pinkham's
H Vegetable Compound, made from ■
M native roots and herbs, has cured
■ more cases of female ills than any
| other one medicine known. It reg-
Ej nlates, strengthens and restores women's health and is invaluable in
II preparing l women for child-birth and during the period of Change
g of Life.
Third, the great volume of unsolicited and grateful testimonials on
H file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass.. many of which are from
H time to time being 1 published by special permission, give absolute evi
pj dence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs.
H Pinkham's advice.
I LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound |
For more than 30 years has been curing Female Complaints, such as
Ej Dragging Sensation 3, Weak liack, Falling and Displacements, In-
U flammation and Ulceration, and Organic Diseases, and it dissolves
Hand expels Tumors at an early stage.
| Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women
I Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
| write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Mass. foradvice. She is the Mrs. Pinkham who
■ has been advising sick women free of charge for more tlinn twenty
I years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law, Lydia E. Pink-
E ham in advising. Thus she is especially well qualified to guide sick
fcj women back to health. Write today, don't wait until too late.
AFFLICTED ONLY AT TIMES.
Good Reason for Capt. Bascomb's In
termittent Hearing.
When Capt. Bascomb had left hla
old friend, Capt. Somers, and the new
school teacher sitting on the south
porch, and had disappeared down the
road, the young woman spoke of him
with some curiosity.
"I understand from Mrs. Bascomb
that her husband was very deaf, 'al
most stone-deaf,' she told me, I'm
sure," said the school teacher. "But
he seemed to hear all we said with
perfect ease."
Capt. Somers leaned toward her
and spoke in a low, cautious tone, al
though there was no eavesdropper to
hear him.
"Don't let Mis' Bascomb know it,"
he said, hurriedly. "He does seem
to hear pretty well when she ain't
round, but none of us folks ever let
onto her. She's a good woman as
ever lived, but a most tremendous
bosser and an everlastin' talker. An'
we all think that Gersh Bascomb be
gun to realize ten years ago that if
he didn't want to be harried right off'n
the face o' the earth, the thing for
him to do was to grow deef, gradual,
but steady—an' he's done it, to all
intents an' purposes, ma'am!"
Youth's Companion.
CAME PRETTY FAST FOR PAT.
At That, He Had Had Only Whnt the
Doctor Ordered.
A Philadelphia physician says that
not long ago he was called to see an
Irishman, and among other directions
told him to take an ounce of whisky
three times a day. A day or so later
he made another visit and found tha
man, while not so sick, undeniably
drunk.
"How did this happen?" the physi
cian demanded of Pat's wife, who waa
hovering about solicitously.
"Sure, dochter, an' 'tis just what
you ordered, an' no more, that he
had," she protested.
"I said one ounce of whisky three
times a day; that could not make him
drunk," the physician said. "He has
had much more than that."
"Divil a drop more, dochter, dear,"
she declared. "Sure an' oi didn't
know just how much an ounce was so
oi wint to the drug store an' asked,
an' the lad —he's a broth of a boy,
too —told me that an ounce was 16
drams and Pat has had thim regular,
an' no more!" —Harper's Weekly.
A Country Marvel.
The little fresh air boy was com
fortably quartered in a farm house
near the salt water for his summer's
outing. The first day he strolled down
the road to the marshes and he stared
in astonishment at the cat-tails grow
ing there. Then turning around to a
native of the place who was accom
panying him he said: "Gosh; I didn't
know that sausages grow orf sticks."
Pronounce These Rapidly.
Tbe vicar of Dwygyfylchi-cum-Pen
maenmaur told the royal commission
of the church in Wales recently that
he had been at Pistylecum-Carnguwch,
Llangefu!-cum-Tregaian, Llandyfuan
cum-Llanfair and Arleechwedd.
ALCARHNE
M 1 IMMEDIATELY CURES
Headaches and
Indigestion
Trial botlle 10c A< drut storoi
7