MISS ANNIE CATRON. IT CATARRH MADE LIFE A BURDEN TO ME. MISS ANNIE t'ATHON, 927 Main St.. Cincinnati, Ohio, writes: "As I have found Peruna a blessing for a, severe case of catarrh of the heail nnd throat which I suffered from for a numlier of year. 1 am only too pleased to give it my personal endorsement. "Catarrh, such as I suffered from, made life a burden to me. my breath vat offenUie, utomnch bad, and my heail topped up so that 1 was usually troubled with a headache, and althoush I tried many so-called remedies, nothing gave me permanent relief. I was rather discouraged with all medicines when Peruna was sug gested to me. "However, I did buy a bottle, and before that was finished there was a marked change in my condition. Much encouraged I kept on until 1 was completely tured in a month's time, and 1 find that nit general health is also excellent." People who prefer solid medicines should by Peruna tablets. Each tablet represents one average dose of Peruna. Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative. Ask Tour Druggisl for Free Peruna Almanac or X 90S. MIRACLE REPORTED. Image of Beautiful Vuutn Is Said to Have Appeared Twice. A ml:aele Is rvported to have oc curred In the village church at Brln, France. On two Sundays in succession dur ing the services on the priest plac ing the host In the monstrance, the Image of a wonderfully beautiful youth was apparent on the wafer. A great number of the congrega tion testify to the genuineness of the phenomenon. Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense oi me I and completely derange the whole sys tem when entering it througa the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy sicians, as the damage they will do is ten told to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hull's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by V. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thesyatein. In Im.viug Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken in ternally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by t J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Take Hull's Family l'Uls lor constipation. Captain Sticks to Business. Captain Watt of the Lusitania, Is not noted for affableness. He main tains that the captain's place is on the bridge, not In the saloon, and he believes that he best serves his pas sengers' Interest by insuring their safety rather than by looking after their entertainment. 2 Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. Paxo Ointment is guaranteed to cure n ,..nf Bl,na ni.i P.t..i i Piles in 6 to Hdays or money refunded. 50c. I France 1b responsible for the game of billiards. Devigne Invented it in 1572. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup for Children teetning.sortbns tfiRgums,reiucsinnamma. son, auuys paiu, cures wind colic, asc a bottle M. Metchnlhoff for longevity advises sour milk and an absence of worry. Itch cure. I i- Sanitary Lotion. :n jirli's by Woolford's Never fails. At druggists. After Central African Lore. Prof. Alexander Agassis, director and curator of the Harvard museum, will head an expedition to Central Africa within a short time for the purpose of pursuing his already ex tensive scientific Investigations. The details of the trip have not yet been fully mapped out, and the identity of those who will accompany him and the length of his trip are not known. VII1(7IM4 MERCHANT RID OF A VK11V iilG GRAVEL STONE. Another Remarkable Cure of Serious Kidney Trouble. C. L. Wood, a prominent merchant of Fentress, Norfolk Co., Va., was suffering some months ago with fre quent attacks of hard puin In the back, kid neys and bladder and the kidney se crctlons were Irregu larly scanty, or pro fuse. Medical treat ment failed to cure him. "At last," says Mr. Wood, "I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, and before one box was gone, I went through four days of intense pain, finally passing a stone, one-hatf by fjve-siiteentlis of an inch in diamter. Iiaven't had a sign of kidney trou ble since." Sold by all dealers, E0 cents a box. FoBter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. Si KM MM; mmm THE RESCUE OF ATWATER. The Corinthian was a ninety-four ton gasolene schooner, carrying a crew of twelve men, including her captain, L. E. Mwater, and hailing from Eureka, Cal. The disaster which involved the loss of two mem bers of the crew occurred on June 11, 1906, the schooner having strand ed at about 6 p. m. of that day on the western side of the peninsula sepa rating Humboldt Bay from the ocean, two or three hundred yards off shore and three miles northward of the Humboldt Bay life saving sta tion. Nine trips with the buoy brought In eight men without mishap, the buoy having been hauled up empty once through a misunderstanding of signals. Only the captain now re mained on board. The darkness had since the arrival of the Htntlon crew become so groat that objects on the ship could not be made out from the shore, and rescue operations had to be carried on altogether by signals. When the buoy came back empty It was again quickly sent out, but while the men on the beach stood waiting for the word to haul In the hawser parted and the whlpllne also came In, parted and without the tail- block. Four men were desnatched for another shotllne, a whlpllne and shots. While waiting for the extra material those who had remained abreast of the wreck cleared up the tangle of hawser, tackle and whip line under the keeper's dlreetio i end made everything ready for send ing out another line. The fourth shot carried the line across the ves sel'd sprlngslay. After several at tempts Captain Atwatei got the tn 11 block aboard and secured it, and the breeches buoy was then hauled out without the hawser and with the traveler block detached. The con tain got into the buoy and save the signal to pull away, but In crossing the rail he was swept out and thrown headlong Into the surf. Luckily be fore the seas could wash him away from the vessel he Bwam around to the schooner's bow nnd got hold of the bobstay, to which fortunate cir cumstance lie doubtless owed his life. The keeper did not suspect that anything had gone wrong with Cap tain Atwater until the buoy had been hauled In empty. As he had distinct ly heard the captain's signal he judged that he had placed himself In the buoy all right but that accident had befallen him after leaving ship. This meant that he was somewhere overboard. The buoy was sent out again, however, and McLean and Surfmen Hunt and Niokerson fol lowed it on the heels of an outgoing wave. McLean was first to the schooner, and located Atwater by the sound of his voice. McLean quickly caught up a bight of the whlpllne that swept within reach and dexter ously swung It to the man on the bobstay. The latter fastened the line around his arm and let go the bob stay, and McLean shouted to those on the beach to haul in. By this time the two surfmen had reached the spot where McLean stood, and all three of the rescuers, knowing that they could not retreat quick enough to escape an incoming sea, laid hold of the line. They were none too soon. In another moment a wall of water rushed upon them, bore them down, u""eu burled them and with relentless ,orce fl,,ns them shoreward. In the course oi tneir journey they were ruthlessly beaten against floating timbers nnd other wreckage which the sea had torn from the schooner, but through It all they clung despe rately to the line, McLean and the surfmen in a bunch and Captain At water a few feet further along be hind. When the call came to hanl j in the men on the beach hent to the work with a will, and soon the four men were pulled out of the water "like so many fish hooked through the gills," as Keeper Hcnni ex presses In his report of the wreck. From the report of the United States Life Saving Service. HORRIBLE FIGHT TO A' FINISH. Ten thousand persons r--ntly wit nessed the most cruel exhibition that has bsei presented to the border bab Itutes of the buU rings for the past seven year?, at th" prena at. Cludad Juarez, ?'rieo. Seven years ago 1 there was a battn between a lion an 1 a bull In vhich the .Ion tore the bull to shreds aud roared vlctoi ir.usly at the quivering bloody flc3h of the van- quished beast. To-day a buffalo from the plains of North Dakota battled with a fierce long horned bull from the Terrazas ranch in Chihuahua .and both ai'e dead. It was the worst battle that has ever been seen. The animals were evenly matched and they fought until both dropped In their tracks. Their bodies were practically ripped to pieces a, id their entrails were draging in the dust' of the arena, it was a battle that recalled the talcs of the Coliseum at Rome In the time of the Caesars, Hnd strong men sickened at the sight. Men ac cuBtomed, week after week, to see matadors dispatch bull after bull, but unaccustomed to such a sight as they saw this afternoon became as women. They were many visiting women among the crowd to-day and they mom VMmm were taken from the ring in an un-, conscious conditio!, at the sight of the awful conflict; men turned their faces away. The animals were goaded to fight by bull ring employes, who pricked and speared them until they were angry enough to fight anything. Then as each animal rushed at the other there wag a yell from the crowd and a roar of anger from the contestants. Lunge after lunge, the maddened animals made at each other and almost every time the r:acl horns went home In some part of the anatomy - of the opposing beast. Great wounds were gored In the legs, thighs, necks and sides of the beasts and their loins were ripped open as If they were but paper undergoing the punctures of a penknife. It was a fierce nnd bloody contest and Senor Felix Roberts, the owner of the bull ring, pronounced It "The grand attraction." Roberts furnished the bull and laid off the picadores and other fighters for the day. George Phillips of South Dakota, brought the buffalo all the way from the far northwst for the fight. Mora Amer icans witnessed the awful spectacle than Mexicans. SWAM THIRTY MILES. Edward Duvauehelle, of Molokal, Is the hero of a most remarkable story of human courage and endu rance, and of a marvelous escape from death, says the Honolulu cor respondent of the Chicago News. The fact that he was one of the team that represented the National Guard of Hawaii at the rifle shooting at Sea Girt, N. J., last fall, will perhaps add some Interest to the tale of his thrilling experience. Monday night, May 23, Duvau- chelle, who is a fisherman, living at Pukoo on the southern coast of Mo lokal, with three native Hawailans as companions, left, borne In a whale- boat with a load of fish for Lahaina, about twelve miles away. They ar rived there safely, sold their fish, and about 8 o'clock started In a dead calm to row back. A light breeie sprang up and they hoisted sail, making the sheet fast. A sudden squall caps!?id them before they could ease off the sheet. The boat became waterlogged and began drifting out to s'.a. They were at the time p mile or two from Kaap- l nnnali Landing, Mnni. They made I float with four onis nnd the Most, !nml with this to help Iheni, two of the natives, at. their own request, started to sw Im ashore to get heln. After awaiting their return for three hours In ynln llevauchelle and his remaining companion, Dan Pa waa, came to the conclusion that the two men had failed to reach the shore by swimming. They made a float of the boom and gnlt and all that was left of the boat's gear and started. The current carried them In the direction of Nnpill, and they were able to gradually make their wav toward the shore. When within half a mile of It they discovered, to their consternation, that the current was Battling against them and that In spite of nil their efforts they were drifting farther away this time In the direction of Molokai, which seemed to them to be about ten miles distant. They therefore made up their minds to swim toward the shore of that island. They seemed to bo making considerable headway, and by sunset were, as near as could be judged by the line of breakers on the reef, four or five miles from the shore. They had moonlight until nearly midnight, when the moon set. By this time Dan Pawaa was becoming exhausted and could barely keep himself afloat. Thereupon Duvau cliele gave up the float to him entire' ly, placing him on the middle of It, and he himself swam without the assisting buoyancy of the float. When about 500 yards from the shore of a little rocky inlet, about a mile from the Molokal coast, Pawaa was overcome with exhaustion, and bid ding Dnvaucbelle good-by, dropped from the float, sunk and never rose. DnVauchelle succeeded about an hour later In reaching the rock and drag ging himself, wounded and bleeding, beyond the reach of the waves, where he foil asleep from exhaustion, not awakening until past noon the next day. Then he swam to the Molokal shore, a mile away, and made his way home. BEAU TREES THREE BOYS. Mickey McGowan, William Corey and George Barry, the latter colored, were gunning for rabbjts near Ca hoonzie, writes the Port Jervla, N. Y., correspondent of the New York World, when they .'emr upon a grove of chestnut :.ees. While filling their pockets with . dies .uuts, they were startled by a smashing in the under growth and the scampering of their dog for cover. Then a big bear, with a chain and steel trap fast to one leg, came Into view, The boys "icgged it" for the near- est trees after McGowan had put a charge of birdshot into the animal's shoulder. Barry turned a shade o.' w'alte, when the bear uearly grabbed his leg as he was going up a tree trunk. The bear retired a few feet and the log, which was fast to the chain holding the trap, caught be. tween two scrub oak trees, holding It j fast. 1 Seeing that the bear was fast, the I two white boys slid down from their perches and said they were going home. Larry begged his chums not to leavo him. Getting their gunB the boys poured b double dose of birds'.iot into Bruin s hide. The bear, badly wou.ided, renewed hta jfforts to release himseif. The noise and the shots attracted George Boyd, who was bunting near by. The boys, having reloaded tiieir guns, they and Boyd poured a fatal volley into the bear's body. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS SEWER GA3 IN HOMES. The American Analyst gives the ollowlng test for the detection in an apartment of sower gas: Saturate un glazed paper with a solution of one troy ounce of pure acetate of lead in eight fluid ounces of rain water; let It partially dry; then expose in the room suspected of containing sewer gas. The presence of gas tn any considerable quantity soon blackens the test paper. OLD NEWSPAPERS USED. Old newspapers may be made to save a lot of work In the kitchen. They are very convenient, among other things, for peeling vegetables upon. When the work is done the peelings can be'rolled up in the pa per and put into the fire or the gar bage pail. Thus the washing of an extra pan is saved, as the vegetables can be washed off under the faucet as they are peeled. New York Tri bune. WARNING FOR CHILDREN. The Illinois State Board of Health urges parents to warn their children not to use while in school the pencils, books, etc., of other children, not to put into their' mouths pencils, toys or Jewsharps which may have been handled by other children and not to use the school drinking cup without thoroughly rinsing it. These precau tions are necessary not only when there is disease in the neighborhood, but at all times. BEDROOM VENTILATION. Simple bedroom ventilation may be accomplished in several ways, as by raising the lower sash a few Inches and putting a strip of wood under it, or a better plan Is that which consists in tacking a strip of cloth or heavy paper, ten or twelve inches In width, across the lower part of the window. In this way the lower sash can be raised almost as high as the top of the Bcreen, and no draught will be felt. Another method consists of a piece of wood which shall fit under the lower sash when raised, and into which two or more elbows are insert ed. These elbows are usually from five to six inches In diameter, and bent upward, thus directing the cur rent of air upward, The openings in the elbows should be covered with, fine wire screens tn exclude dust. Philadelphia Record. CLEANING SILK BLOUSES. Silk blouses can sometimes be sponged with soap and water with Impunity In order to restore colors which may have faded, but it Is al ways wisest to experiment on an odd remnant of silk or on a small piece which is hidden under the waistline before subjecting the whole of the blouse to this treatment. If, however, it is evident that silk will not stand an application of tepid soapsuds, French chalk will often have almost as good a result, says Woman's Life. The chnlk should be spread somewhat thickly over the surface of the silk and then covered with a large piece of blotting paper, when a weight should be placed on the top and the blouse left for two or three days, this pressing effectu ally removing dust stains, while grease spots will likewise be elimin ated at the same time. Popovers One cup flour, one cup sweet milk, one egg, generous pinch salt. Beat all together with an eee- beater five minutes. Bake in muffin rings in quick oven. Puffs For Dessert One pint of milk and cream, the whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one heap ing cup sitted Hour, one scant cud powdered sugar; add a little grated lemon peel and a little salt. Beat these all together till very light, bake in gem pans, sift pulverized sugar over them and eat with sauce flav ored with lemon. Codfish Balls Boll ono cud of cod fish with four good sized potatoes. nen done mash potatoes and fish together, add good sized piece of but ter and little pepper and one egg, beaten. Roll in a little flour to form balls and place in trypan. Fry brown on one side, turn and brown on the other side. These are very good. Serve hot on hot platter. Gingerbread One-half cud butter. one-half cup sugar, one-half cup mo lasses, one-half cup sour milk or cold water, one and one-half cups flour, two eggs, not beaten; one tablespoon ginger, one teaspoon sr.da. The se- crGt of navlnS it light and tender is In beating the soda and molasses to- sether thoroughly and In not beating the eggs. Add molasses and sou before the flour. Lemon Crumb Pie Put half a cup of bread crumba into a bowl, add enough milk to cover and let soak until soft and the milk absorbed. Cream four tablespoons of sugar with two tablespoons of butter, add two beaten eggs and the juice and grated rind of one large lemon; beat well, add the soaked crumbs, turn into a pie tin lined with good past and bake until brown- CHINESE WOMAN STUDENT. A Daughter of Shanghai Enter University of Berlin. The Berlin University, which among more than 7,000 students, in cludes 707 women of divers nationali ties, has jint Inscribed upon Its reg Ifters the first Chinese woman stu-il.-nt. Her name Is LI Tsu Zung, ai: she la only 17 years of age. The daughter of a Chinese physic Inn at Shanghai, she frequented a modern school until the age of 14, nnd then took private lessons. Miss Li Tsu Zung dresses In the Euro pean fashion, speaks German and English well, and her intention is to follow the English and German liter ature classes at the Berlin University. Why Sloan's Liniment and Veterin ary Remedies Are the liest to Use. Let me tell you why Sloan's Lini ment and Veterinary Remedies are the safest and most practical on the market today. In the first place. Dr. Carl S. Sloan Is the son of a veterin ary surgeon, and from his earliest in fancy he was associated with horses. He bought and sold horses while yet very young. He practised as a veterinary for twenty years, and has battled successfully with every dis ease to which that animal Is subject. All his remedies are the result of experiments made to save life or re lieve suffering while he was practis ing his profession. Any reader, by writing to Dr. Earl 8. Sloan, 615 Albany street, Boston, Mass., will receive "Sloan's Treatise on the Horse," free. This book tells how to treat horseB, cattle, hogs and poultry. Abstinence In Scotland. A generation ago water-drinking occupants of civic chairs were very rare In Scotland. Total abstainers, however, can claim as a result of the recent elections that 46 Scottish burgs are presided over by abstaining provosts. The llBt Includes Sir Will lam Bisland, Bart, Lord Provost of Glasgow, and Lord Provost Gibson, Edinburgh. DOCTOR SAID "USE CUTICURA" For Had Cne of Erzema on Child l)l.ene Ilml Readied a Fenrful Stnle Order Resulted in Cure. "When 1 was small I was troubled with "zena for nbouL three months. It wns all over my fn"e nhd covered j nearly all of my lij-ad. It leached such n State that it was ju?t a large Fc.ib till over, and the pain and itching were terrible. I doctored with an able physician for some lime and was then advised by him to use the Cuticura Kern edies, which I did and I was entirely cured. I have not been bothered with it since. 1 used Cuticura ISonp and Cuticura Ointment, but do not know exactly how inu -h was used to eomplete the cure. Miss Anahsl Wilson, North lUunch, Mich., Oct. 20, '07." SUBMARINE CABLE ENEMY. Little Creature of the Sea That Is Fond of Gutta Percha. The vicissitudes of a submarine ca ble are many. It may be torn by an anchor, crushed by a rock or ser iously damaged by a coral reef such as abound in the tropics. Some of the growths often found on a cahle tend to decay the iron sheathing wires. Thea, again a cable Is some times severed by a seaquake. It may be fatally attacked by the snout of a sawfish or by the spike of a swordflsh. But perhaps the little animal that makes itself most objectionable from the cable engineer's standpoint Is the insignificant looking teredo na valls. This little beast Is intensely greedy where gutta percha is con cerned, working Its way there be tween the iron wires and between the serving yarns. Thesllica in the outer cable corapond tends to defeat the teredo's effort at making a meal off the core and this defeat is fur ther effected by the core being en veloped in a thin taping of brass. But where the bottom is known to be badly infected wltt these mons ters of the deep the Insulator is often composed of India rubber, which has no attraction for the teredo and pos sesses a toughness, moreover, which is less suited for its boring tool than the comparatively cheeselike gutta percha. To Relieve Mothers, The working class mother, continu ally kept from church by the neces sity of preparing the Sunday dinner, seems likely to have the problem solved In one town of Lancashire, England, by the serving of a simple, ready-cooked meal from a central kitchen. It is predicted by a very modern architect that the house of one large room, a small electric kitchen at tached and an enormous enclosed porch, with facilities for outdoor Bleep ing, has come to stay. NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER inn iciiri ahd MODERN Capsicum-Vaseline EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE , PEPPER PLANT TAKEN DIRECTLY IN VASELINE I sisfii i DON'T WAIT COMES-Kfirp A - - - W Allilill a,?Pa9$: sure. safe and alwAys ready cure for pain -prh-r i- i1,CBClLI.LAP,SlaLE TUBES MADE OP PURE TIN AT ALL DRUGGISTS ANn DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c IN POSTAGE STAMPS A substitute for and superior to mustard or ny other plaster and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head ache and Sciatica. Ve recommend It as the best and safest external counter 'S "own .,so s an "'ernal remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we i claim for it, and It will be found to be Invaluable In the household and for children. Once used no family wtli be without it. Many people say it is he best of all your preparations " Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It Is not genuine, nd your address and w will mall our Vasallna BooMat dasorlblna our preparations whloh will Intarast you. 17 state si. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. iWY.r,c.t, Restoring Ruins. The famous ruins of Tintern At bey, Monmouthshire, England, are be ing restored as far as the four great arches are concerned, and more exca vations are being made around it In the htipe of finding new buildings. FIT.S,St.Vltns'r)iuiee:Nervnns!1iseasespek nmnenUy cured by Dr. Kline's Uveal Nerve Restorer, fci truil Imrtle iiv-d treatise free. Dr. H. K. Kline. L.1.,1M1 Ar-h St., I'hila., Pa, To get rid of daughters East Indians marry them to flowers. When the (lowers are dead the girls are wldow9, and widows cun bo sold chea i. Only One "ISromo ,uinine" That h Laxative Hromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. YV. Grove. Used the V olid over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25a, Pure Food for Animals. George B. McCabe, Solicitor of the Department of Agriculture, remarks that the national pure food law is for the benefit of beasts as well as human beings. The following exam ple Is citeo. Suppose a farmer liv ing in Indiana, near Chicago, should haul his hay into the Illinois metro polls for marketing. Suppose, also, that this farmer claims his nay to be timothy. If he b?11s It under this claim and the purchaser discovers that the hay contains red top, the farmer is liable to prosecution under the pure food law. Quite proper. Likewise, presumably, the faithful horse who at the dinner hour finds shoe pegs served, when the mtno calls for oats, will have quite as good a ground for complaint under the law as the unsuspecting housewife upon whom the unscrupulous peddler foists nutmegs made of basswood. In this war on the sale of fraudulent foods let no guilty man escape. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Pe-rn-na Almanac in 8,000,000 Homes The Peruna Lucky Day Almanac has become a Hxture in over eight million homes. It can be obtained from all drug gists free. He sure to inquire early. The 1808 Almanac is already published, and the apply will soon be exhausted. Do not put it ou. Speak for one to-day. Vienna's Circle of Green. Tip city of Vienna has recently un dertaken, at an estimated expense of $lo.uu0,000, to surround Itself with a belt of forests. The existing forests near the city are to be preserved, and others, together with broad, green meadows, are to be established in Buch a way as completely to encircle the city. Land is being reserved for the new plantations, which are to be connected with the celebrated Plater, which already forms a green border for the Austrian capital on the east This Idea is enthusiastically urged for the beautifying of the suburbs, of other cities, which are now. in many cases, not only unattractive, but often hideous. An Indian Critic. Dr. Carlos Montezuma, an Apache Indian, writes to the Philadelphia Pub lic Ledger a two-column communica tion denouncing the present admin istration of the Carlisle Indian School. He points out that the original purpose of the school, to give Indian boys and girls the ad vantages of a thorough and practical education, and to place them on an. equnl footing with the whites, ha been lost sight of. and that the insti tution is now conducted largely as military post. Dr. Montezuma de clares that the army officers in com trol of the school have no interest is their work, and that their attitude toward the Indian is that of the com mandant of a station on the West ern plains. Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-informed in ever; walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor, ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Fipj and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens anil relieves the internal organ on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug P. N. D. 2, 1908. If Rllllrlril with weak eyes, use EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT, Tin twit n.. Tim ir V..