The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 15, 1902, Image 7

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Lost Hair
‘‘ My hair came out by the hand-
ful, and the gray hairs began to
creep in. I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor,
and it stopped the hair from com-
ing out and restored the color.”’—
Mrs. M. D.Gray, No. Salem, Mass.
There’s a pleasure in
offering such a prepara-
tion as Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
It gives to all who use it
such satisfaction. The
hair becomes thicker,
longer, softer, and more
glossy. And you feel so
secure in using such an
old and reliable prepara-
tion. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists.
If your druggist cannot supply you,
send us one dollar and we will express
you a bottle. Be sure and give the name
of your nearest express oflice. Address,
J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
The Home of the Kindergarten.
The Japanese have the most perfect
kindergarten system in the world. In
fact, they originated this method of
instructing by entertainment instead
of by punishment inflicted. Their
play aparatus for such purpose is ela-
borate, but all of it is adapted to the
infant mind, which it is designed at
once to amuse and to inform. The
little ones of Japan even become some-
what interested in mathematics by
seeing and feeling what a pretty
thing a cone, a sphere or a ¢ylinder
is when cut out of wood with a lathe.
They make outlines of solid figures
out of straw, with green peas to hold
the joints together, and for the in-
struction of the blind fiat blocks are
provided, with the Japanese charac-
ters raised upon them.
Tea Output to be Reduced.
At the annual meeting of the Cey-
lon Tea Planters’ Association it was
resolved to take steps to effect a
combination with the Indian planters
to restrict the output, says a Colum-
bo correspondent. If the owners of
80 per cent of the tea acreage in In-
dia and Ceylon join in the movement
a reduction of 10 per cent will be
made in the output, or an equivalent
amount of green tea be manufactured.
On no other basis, it was considered,
can the present unprofitable condition
of the tea trade be remedied, its
growth in Ceylon having been so
rapid as to overtake the demand. It
was estimated that this year the ship:
ments to London would be 9,000,000
pounds less than those of last year.
THE SURGEON'S KNIFE
Mrs. Eckis Stevenson of Salt
Lake City Tells How Opera-
tions Fer Ovarian Troubles
May Be Avoided. :
‘““ DEAR MRs. PinxaAM : —I suffered
with inflammation of the ovaries and
womb for over six years,enduring aches
and pains which none can dream of but
those who have had the same expe-
mr aa
STEVENSON,
MRS. ECKIS
rience. Hundreds of dollars went to the
doctor and the druggist. I was simply
a walking medicine chest and a phys-
ical wreck. My sister residing in Ohio
wrote me that she had been cured of
womb trouble by using Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, and advised me to try it. I
then discontinued all other med icines
and gave your Vegetable Compound a
thorough trial. Within four weeks
nearly all pain had left me; I rarely
had headaches, and my merves were in
a much better condition, and I was
cured in three months, and thisavoided
a terrible surgical operation.” — Mrs.
Ecgis STEVENSON, 250 So. State St.
Salt Lake City, Utah.—g5000 forfeit if
above testimonial is not genuine.
Remember every woman is
" cordially invited to write to Mrs.
Pinkham if there is anything
about her symptoms she does not
understand. Mrs. Pinkbham’s
address is Lynn, Mass.
The Doctor—'‘One layer of paper is bad enough
you have three bere. Baby may ren ea
ive.”
cannot thri .
IT WON'T RUB OFF.
Wall Paper is unsanitary. Kalsomines are tem-
porary, rot, rub off and scale. ALABASTINE is a
ure, permanent ond artistic wall coating. ready
bo brush by mixing in celd water. Kor sale
Ly paint dealers everywhere. Boy in packages
and beware of worthless imitations.
ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. $
VHP CDV VN
NSIO JOHN W.MORRIS,
} Washington, B.C.
co ly Prosecutes Claim
posiepensiull.l2 Seon ams.
dyrsiu civil war, 16 adjudicating claims, atty since
THE MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Crain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 red ul 4 75
y6—No. 2.......... BT 68
Corn—No. 2 yellow. ear.. 71 716
0, 2 yellow, shelled.. 6936 0
iXed ear......... 68 69
Oats—No. 2 white. 49 50
0. 3 white..... 4814 49
Flour—Winter patent. 410 410
ancy straight winters. 3 80 4 00
Hay—No. 1timothy............. 400. 14 50
Jover No. 1. ............ ...... 07 1H
Feed—No. ! white mid. ton........ 21 00: 2125
Brown middlings............... 20°00 20 50
Brap. bulx,..."._. .............. 2) 00 20 50
Straw—Wheat ....... .............. 700 73
Brg ra naa ease ada aire 700 7.50
Dalry Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery. Ble
Ohio creamery... 2g
Fancy country rol 18
Cheese—Ohio, new. .. 13
New York, new 13
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per M.................. ¢ 18 14
Chickeng—dressed ... ,.............. 16 17
Egge—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.......... 1636 17
Fruits and Vegetables.
Green Beans—per DOX.......cccostereuene
Potatoes—Fancy white per bus. .
Uabbage—per Crate. ........c.cue
Onions—per barrei ...............
BALTIMORE.
Flour— Winter Patent..............$890 415
Wheat—No. 2 red..... 80% 81
Corn—mixed 66 6615
BEB wcoverurrs erriivinisisinnss 15 1514
butter—OQhio creamery. . 24 25
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent...... .........8350 400
Weeat—No, 2red....... bo 86
Corn—No, 2 mixed. 6416 65
Ouats—No. 2 white. ........ 50k 51
Buiter—Creamery, extra. 23 24
Eggs—Penupsylvania nrsts.... 16 1656
NEW YORK.
Flour—Pateats.............. 1..$3 95 415
Wheat—No, 2red.. 89 894
Corn—No. 2........... 68 Gedy
Oats—No.i2 White. 51 Slim
" Butter—Creamery .......... we 2 23
Eggs—Stateand Peunsylvania......... 17 174
LIVE STOCK.
Central Stock Yards, East Liberty, Pa.
Cattle.
Prime heavy, 1500 to 1600 1bs. $685 TOO
Prime. 1300 10 1400 lbs... 670 660
Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs. 6 50 670
Fathelters............... 6 15 6 15
Butcher, 900 to 1000 1bs. 52 A]
Common to fair........ 425 5 10
Oxen, common to fas .............. 800 550
Common togood fat bulls and cows 850 52
Milch cows, each... ......... ...; 2500 3500
Extra miich cows, each............ 4000 5000
Hogs.
Prime medium weights.............8 735 745
Best heavy yorkers and medium... 715 TR
Good to choice packers............ 7 Ub 15
Good pigs and light yorkers. e095 1 T00
Pigs, common to good... ... 660 67
Prime heavy hogs. ... 6 60 G6 70
Common to fair... 6 2 670
Rougns........... 6 00 675
Stags... nL EL 5 00 550
Sheep.
5 90
575
540
30
iambsclirped.... ...... .......... 6 60 6 85
Lambe, good to choice, clipped... .. 550 650
Lambs, common to fair, cipped.. 450 500
Spring. Lambe... i. 5. 0. 900
Calves.
Yeal extra. .'...... 40) € Co
Veal, good to choice 350 410
Veal, common heavy 35) 450
Veal, common to fair 250 400
DISTRIBUTION IS HEAVY.
Merchants Who Waited for Lower
Prices Before Buying Are Con-
fronted by Higher Rates.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review
of Trade says: At a time when con-
sumptive demands surpass all previ-
ous records in the nation’s history it
is unfortunate that production should
be curtailed. Yet that is thé. present
situation. Fires, labor controversies
and a tornado stopped work at many
points, greatly reducing the output,
and many more wage disputes must
be settled before the end of the month,
or furnace fires will be banked and
wheels cease to revolve. Losses by
the elements have been severe, and
many foundries and shops were to-
tally destroyed. Prices of commodi-
ties on May 1 rose to the highest
point in recent years, gaining 6.3 per
cent. over the corresponding date last
year, but this week there has been a
material decline in some products,
notably grain. Railway earnings are
steadily gaining, full returns for April
exceeding last year’s by 10.6 per cent.
and 1900 by 25 per cent. Procrastin-
ating consumers who predicted a col-
lapse in the iron and steel markets
similar to the break that occurred two
years ago have greatly augmented the
pressure by tardily attempting to sup-
ply their requirements. It has been
obvious for some time that there is
utterly lacking the artificial move-
ment tending to inflate prices that
was conspicuous in the opening
months of 1900. The only limit to
prices appears to be the ability of pur-
chasers to pay fancy figures, accord-
ing to the urgency of their needs.
Meanwhile there is no advance on
long-termed contracts, and these cover
the large bulk of the business. Pro-
ductive capacity is being greatly en-
larged, but there is no evidence as yet
that the ration’s needs are not ex-
panding equally fast. More encour- |
aging weather reports have made the
outlook brighter for a normal wheat
yield, while the wide discrepancy he-
tween census figures and those of the
Agricultural Department regarding the
crop of 1899 suggested the idea that
in succeeding years the production
was heavier than officially reported.
These influences were depressing, while
there was little of a‘sustaining nature
in speculative operations. Wheat
exports from United States ports dur-
ing the week were 3,477,378 bushels,
flour included, compared with 5,579.
037 bushels in the preceding week, but
there appeared an increase over the
3,132,223 bushels shipped a year age.
Special reports indicate that the
spring wheat outlook is good. Fail-
ures for the week numbered 218 i
b
|
|
{
in
the United States, against 187 last
year, and 24 in Canada, against 26
last year.
Exonerating British.
As a result of the consideration by
the Attorney General of the report of
the investigation made by Lieutenant
Colonel Crowder of the "army, Secre-
tary Hay will make the announcement
that the Britis: government is not
violating the neutrality of the United
States.
OIL WELLS OF JAPAN.
Modern Methods of Drilling Have De-
veloped Petroleum Industry.
Mr. Rentiers, of the British Consu-
late service in Japan, has submitted
to the British Board of Trade a re-
port on the petroleum industry, which
has of late attracted much attention
and reached considerable dimensions
in that country. The only place in
which the oil is produced in large
quantities is in the province of Ech-
igo, on the west coast, the center of
the industry being the town of Ar-
nase, where the largest oil company
in the country has been at work since
1888 with machinery imported from
the United States. Here wells are
dug in the sea and carried above the
sea level by a double ring of piles |.
filled in with earth. In the north-
ern part of the province oil was dis-
covered in 1889 and led to a fever of
speculation. In 1892 there were be-
tween 600 and 700 speculative com-
panies with small capital at work in
Echigo, and most of them failed. On
their ruins arose large companies
working on a great scale and with
imported machinery. Hand boring
has almost ceased to exist, and with
improvement in methods of winning
the oil came improvement in the
transport of the oil to the refineries.
Pipe lines were introduced to convey
it from the wells to the refineries
and from the latter to the railway
stations, and it has been proposed
to construct a pipe line all the way
to Tokio, the capital, about two hun-
dred miles away. In 1899 the total
production of the oil in Japan was
18,833,915 gallons, of which 18,713,
230 gallons were produced in Ech-
igo.
A Historic Punch Bowl.
The most revered piece of silver
plate in the United States navy is
the massive 18-pound silver punch
bowl of the battleship Indiana, which
bears the honorable scars of an his-
toric battle. During that famous
blockade and naval battle before San-
tiago de Cuba this rich piece of table-
ware was struck by a fragment of a
mortar shell fired from the Socapa
battery, and which burst in the ward
room passage of the battleship. A
five-pound bit of the shell struck the
bowl on one of the stoutest parts of
the body, yet where the seal of the
State of Indiana forms the central
portion of a beautiful decoration. The
seal is still there, but not as the art-
ist designed it, for it now forms a
part of a large, irregular indentat-
tion, which, in the estimation of the
officers and men of the battleship,
enhances the value of the bow! a
thousand times over.
Portugal Halts Civilization.
The Portuguese sits at his cafe at
the coast of his East African posses-
sion and collects custom dues and
sells stamped paper. For fear of the
native he dares not march five miles
beyond his seaport town, and the
white man who ventures inland for
the purposes of trade, or to culti-
vate plantations, does so at his own
risk, as he can be promised no pro-
tection. The land back of Mozambi-
que is divided into ‘holdings,” and
the rent of each holding is based upon
the number of native huts it contains.
1he tax per hut is $5.00 a year, and
these holdings are leased to any
Portuguese who promises to pay the
combined taxes of all the huts. He
also engages to cut new roads, to
keep those already made in repair
and to furnish a sufficient number of
police to maintain order.
All Newspapers Talk Weather.
There are over 2,000 daily papers in
the United States, and each one of
these prints in a conspicuous place
the daily weather predictions. Dia
it ever occur to you that there is no
other information that receives pub-
lication and attention by readers each
day of the year in every daily paper
of the country?
weekly papers in the United States,
434 semi-weekly, and 14,734 weekly
publications, the greater number of
which publish the weekly weather
crop bulletins of the bureau for their
respective States.
St. Louis has nearly $17.000,000 in
bank or in sight for Exposition pur-
poses, and has reason to expect a great
deal more.
HEADACHE, BACKACHE,
DIZZINESS
(PE-RU-NA CURES PELVIC CATARRH.)
“I am perfectly well,”
says Mrs. Martin, of
Brooklyn. ‘“Pe-ru-na
cured me.”
Mrs. Anna Martin, 47 Hoyt street,
Brooklyn, N. Y., writes:
“ Perunadid so much for me that I
feel it my duty to recommend it to
others who may be similarly afflict-
ed. Abou! a wear ago my health was
completely broken down, had back-
ache, dizziness and irregularities,
and life seemed dark indeed. We
had used Peruna in our home as a
tonic and for colds and catarrh and
1 decided to try it for my trouble. In
less than three months 1 became reg-
wlar, my pains had entirely disap-
peared, and I am mow perfectly
well.”’— Mrs, Anna Martin,
Miss Marie Johnson, 11 Columbia, East.
Detroit, Mich., is Worthy Vice Templar
in Hope Lodge No. 6, Independent Order
Good Templars. Miss Johnson, as so many
other women also have done, found in Pe-
runa a specific for a severe case of female
weakness. She writes:
“I want to do what I can to let the
whole world know what a grand medicine
Peruna is. For eleven years I suffered
with female troubles and complications
arising therefrom. Doctors failed to cure
me, and I despaired of being helped. Pe-
runa cured me in three short months. 1
can hardly believe it myself, but it is a
lessed fact. I am perfectly well now, and
have not had an ache or pain for months.
want my suffering sisters to know what
Peruna has done for me.”—Miss Marie
Johnson.
Miss Ruth Emerson, 72 Sycamore st.,
Buffalo, IV. Y., writes: ‘I suffered for two
years with irregular and painful menstrua-
tion, and Peruna cured me within six
weeks. I cannot tell you how grateful I
feel. Any agency which brings health and
strength to the afflicted is always a wel-
come friend, and to-day the market is so
MRS. ANNA MARTIN,
filled with useiess and injurious medicines
that it is a pleasure to know of so reliable
a remedy as Jou place before the public.”
—Miss Ruth Emerson.
It is no longer a question as to whether
Peruna can be relied on to cure all such
cases. During the many years in which
Peruna has been put to test in all forms
:and stages of acute and chronic catarrh
no one year has put this remedy to great-
er test than the past year.
Peruna 1s the acknowledged catarrh rem-
edy of the age. Dr. Hartman, the com-
pounder of Peruna, has written a book on
the phases of ecatarrh peculiar to women,
entitled, “Health and Beauty.” It will be
sent free to any address by The Peruna
Medicine Co., Columbus, O.
f you do not derive prompt and satis-
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case and he will be
pleased to give you his valuable advice
gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. O.
There are 47 tri- |
Frog Farming.
After laughing at the French peo-
ple for their frog-eating proclivity,
the United States is doing very well
in that line, for the Food Commission
estimates that we catch in this coun-
try about 2,000,000 frogs. These frogs,
which have been hopping for years
more and more into gastronomic fa-
vor, are sought for in all parts of the
country, furnishing a paying indus-
try, not only for the hunters of them
in their natural haunts, but for scores
of persons who have frog farms and
raise them as they might raise chick-
ens. To these persons the frogs
mean an annual investment of $100,-
000, according to the report of the
commission,
100 to the consumers.
The British Postal Department, in
conjunction with the Belgium Gov-
ernment, are having made a telephone
cable to connect the two countries
under the North sea.
Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Eacge,
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns,
Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous,Aching,
Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s
Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At
all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac-
cept no substitute. Sample mailed FreE.
Address Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
In the Grand Canyon of Colorado a
man’s voice has been heard a distance of
eighteen miles.
FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervous-
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nervellestorer.¥2trial bottle and treatisefree
Dr. R. H. Kui~g, Lid., 981 Arch St., Phila., Pa
One miner is killed for every 1,060,000
tons, of coal raised.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma-
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. abottle
It is one thing to count the cost, and
quite another thing to pay it.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure.—J. W. O'Brirx, 322 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900
|
When a fellow is a bad egg don’t try to |
beat him.
and that means $150,-|
Guests Pass With Glaciers.
Hotelkeepers in the Alps have a
new trouble and are complaining at
the loss of patrons, who are moving
away from the glaciers. Yes, the at-
tractive glaciers are actually passing
from the landscape, and as they re-
cede the hotels along their borders
find that their registers are shorten-
ing. These glaciers are not running
away, by any means, but they are de-
teriorating slowly, with a persistency
that means their final annihilation.
Hotels that a few years ago stood
moving ice now. find themselves a
attractiveness of the site is lessened.
Laid Up for Sixteen Weeks.
St. Jacobs Oil and Vegeler’s Cur-
ative Compound Cured Him.
“1 have been a great sufferer from Rheu.
matism for many years. I was laid up with
Rheumatic Fever for nine weeks in 1894, and
again for sixteen (16) weeks in 1896. 1 tried
many medicines 1 saw advertised and others
to take Vogeler’s Curative Compound, which
did me more good than all other medicines.
In fact, I feel quite a different man since I
have been taking the Compound. All my
see’'me about and looking so well.
only say that Vogeler’s Curative Compound
taken internally:and by using St. Jacobs Oil
cally cured me. I have recommended Vog-
eler’s Curative Compound to a lot of my
acquaintances, and they tell me that it has
worked wonders.
“ Wishing you every success in the sale of
Jacobs Oil, I remain, gentlemen,
“ Your obedient servant,
“ GEORGE CLARKE, Gardener,
“23 Beechcroft Road, Surrey.” |
ja free sample of Vogeler’s Compound.
outwardly acted like magic in my case. I |
had been taking medicines {for years without |
obtaining benefit, but Vogeler’s has practi- |
FOR EVERY
Humour
Price $1.00
CUTICURA SOAP, to cleanse the skin
of crustsand scales and soften the thick-
ened cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT,
to instantly allay itching, inflamma-
tion, and irritation, and soothe and heal,
and CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS,
to cooland cleanse the blood. A SINGLE
SET of these great skin curatives is
often sufficient to cure the most tortur-
ing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleed-
ing, crusted, scaly, and pimply skin,
scalp, and blood humours, with loss of
hair, when all else fails. »
n -
Millions of People
Use CUTICURA SOAP, assisted by, COTICURA
OINTMENT, for preserving, purifying, and
beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp
of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stop-
ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening,
and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for
baby rashes, itehings, and chafings, and for
all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nurs-
ery. Millionsof Women use CUTICURA SOAP
in the form of baths for annoying irritations,
inflammations, and excoriations, or too free
or offensive perspiration, in the form of
washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for
many sanative, antiseptic purposes which
readily suggest themselves to women.
CuTicuRA RESOLVENT PIrLLs (Chocolate
Coated) are a now, tasteless, odorless, eco-
nomical substitute for the celebrated liquid
CUTICURA RESOLVENT, as well as for all other
blood purifiers and humour cures. In Screw=
cap vials, containing 60 doses, price 25¢.
Sold throughout the world. Boar, 25c., OINTMENT,
80c., Prius, 25c. British Depot: 27-28, Charterhouse 8q.,
London. French Depots 5 Rue de la Paix, Paris. PoTe
YEE Droc & CEEM. CORP, Sole Props., Boston. U. 8. A.
438
CANDY CATHARTIC
10e Ee TT sls) a A) All
86c. 50e. : Druggists
| Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk.
very near to a great river of slowly |
considerable distance away, and the |
1 was recommended; finally I was induced !
neighbors and friends are quite surprised to |
I can |
your Vogeler’s Curative Compound and St. |
i
|
Send to St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd., Baltimore, for i
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something just as-good.””
SEND FOR OUR F
CATALOGUE
FISHING
BICYCLES,
DAKS, TENNIS, SEW-
ING MACHINES, BABY
CARRIAGES AND
SPRING AND SUMMER
SPORTING GOODS. IT
WILL SAVE YOU MONEY.
WE ACTUALLY SELL AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
FOR CASH.
SCHMELZER ARMS CO.
« KANSAS CITY, MO.
REE
ASE
} TACKLE §
“2 yh
Colorado Beats «World
IN SUCAR BEETS.
Six Million Dollars have just been invested in sugar
factories. Four Million more will be invest d this’
year. ihe best posted sugar men ot the world are
buying immense acreage for. sugar bests. Colorado
took first prizes at Chicago exhibit last month for
highest tonnage per acre, and highest percentage of
sugary being over twice as auch’ as some States. We
are offering a tew shares of stock tor sale in The
Colorado Sugar Mfr. Co. The first and only sugar
stock offered to tie public. The company owns ona
of the most modern and «.:mplete refining plantsin
the world, situated ina « i Xi
ubscribed F ,
n cash. 'T'Lis is an Qnporaiey of a
i ctory 1s La. it and paid for. For full
particulars write to
Wi. GELDER & CO.
29 Broadway, New York, or Exchange
uliding, I'enver, Coio.
PNW
20,0 03
PISOIS CURENO
PH GURES WHERE ALi ELSE FAILS,
by Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
an in ti Sold by Sruggists,
the age.
3
functions in any
highest degree, is
it to public favor.
The Qeientific Production
of a laxative of known value and distinctive
action is rapidly growing in public favor, along
with the many other material improvements of
The many
who are well informed
must understand quite clearly, that in order
to meet the above conditions a laxative should
be wholly free from every objectionable quality
or substance, with its component parts simple
and wholesome and it should act pleasantly
and gently without
fulfils most perfectly the requirements, in the
The sale of millions of bottles annually for
many years past, and the universal satisfaction
which it has given confirm the claim we make,
that it possesses the qualities which commend
A
BR ani
poy
Feed a inc aati
nett
disturbing the natural
way. The laxative which
TITRE
ns
Ree SARL
Mindsdontio
Ein 3
Its Excellence
is due to the originality and simplicity of the
combination and also to the method of manu-
facture, which is known to the California Fig
Syrup Co. only, and which ensures that per-
fect purity and uniformity of product essential
In order to get
Its Beneficial Fffects
always buy the genuine and note the full name
of the Company—~California Fig Syrup Co.—
printed on the front of every package. h
process of manufacturing figs are used as they
are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal
virtues of Syrup of Figs are obtained from an
excellent combination of plants known to be
medicinally laxative and to act most beneficially.
(upon fia Svar
San Francisco, Gal.
New York,NY
Price fifty cents per bottle.
to the ideal home laxative.
Louisville. Ky.
all druggists
x.
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