Mis Wifo Shrieked. “Good story they got out about the professor, hey?” “What's the matter, did he forget again?” “Naw. Better than that, His wife got up the other morning and was slip- ping her shoes on when she gave a lit- tle shriek. ‘What's the matter?’ he asked. “‘Why, I was putting my shoe on and a snake slipped out of it,” she cried. “Only one?” said the professor. “Why, there should have been three. I put them there last night to keep them warm.” “All goods aro alike to PUTNAM FABELESS tree they color all fiberw at one belding, Sold by all druggists. - The average annual amotnt of coal fined in Enecland from 1851 to 1900 is 130,- 000,000 tons. How's This s We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by [all's Catarrh Cure, HE it & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F.J.Che- ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per- } rablo in all business transactions fectly hono and flnaneially able to carry out any obliga- tion made by their firm. : Wrst & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WALDING, KinNAN&MARrvIN, Wholesale Drug- gists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free, Hall's Family Pills are the best. (German empire Po Hair Splits 1 ve used Ayer’s Hair Vigor § 8 for thirty It is elegant for a hair dressing and for keeping the § hair from splitting at the ends.”’— J. A. Gruenenfclder, Grantfork, Ill, The population of the : includes 3,000,000 who use the Polish guage. o Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CASCARETS help nature, cure vou without a gripe or pain, produco easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cas- careTs Candy Cathartie, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. 7ears. Hair-splitting splits friendships. If the hair- § splitting is done on your own head, it loses friends § for you, for cvery hair of § your head is a friend, : The shark holds the record for (long-dis- tance swimming. A shark has been known to cover 800 miles in three days. aud yer’s Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. All druggists. pe Many School Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours, cure Feverichness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all druggists’, 256. Sample mailed free. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y. The practice of punishing pupils by de- ; Se dot ! TL ducting credits for scholarship has been forbidden in the San Francisco schools. If your druggist cannot supply you, { send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Be sureand give the name of your nearest express office. Address, J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. FITSpermanently cured.No fits or nervous- ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestorer.&2trial bottle and treatise free Dr. BR. H. Kniss, Ltd., 931Arch St. Phila., Pa. W. C. HOLMES Improved yy Farm Level “Eclipse.” Best un-to-date level made. Price #4.50 with rod. Write for desc tive circular. 12 North Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. [1 Sir Thomas Lipton says there are “no girls like American girls.’ Mrs. Winglow's Scothing Syrap for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25¢ a bottle. i 2 2% NEW DISCOVERY; gives 2 wick relief a cures rst sases. Book of ‘ostimoninis and 10 das’ treatmoat Free. Dr. H. HE. GREEN S SONS, Bex. B, Atlanta, Ga 20 large comet has appeared within our environment since that of 1882. ATLANTA, GA, WEEK ENDING MARCH 9, 1900 Fifty Cents a Year Less Than a Penny a Number. THE SOUTHS LITERARY WEERLY Published at Atlanta, Ga.—Circulation Over 50,000. The SUNNY SOUTH is the Great Literary WeeK yp ofthe South. Itis devoted to Literature, Romance, Fact and Fiction, and gives the best ofall that is currentin iis field. Among its contributors the most noted southern writers appear--Joel Chandler Harris, Harry Stiliwell Edwards and others of rowing fame. Serial stories froin Anthony Hope, Maurice Thompson, Sidney R. Crockett, Mrs. Ge :rge Corbe’'t end Arthur W. Marchmont have appear- ed, and others are in waiting from the pen of authors of national note. A short story contest brought out mearly five hundred splendid short stories, all worthy a placein Ghee SUNNY SOUTH'’S rcadable col- umns. Cther contests are contemplated that will successfuily exploit the ripening field of taient that only needs such fostering to illustrate the wealth that is shy to assert itself. The SUNNY SOUTH teems with the life of tha great south. The gen- fal sunshine warms everything into activity, and the season is never cold enough to check the hand of industry. The paper com=s fragrant with the breath of the magnolia and pine, and g'ves out the very air of the orarge, pam and bay. The beauty and pathos, the romance and mystery of the land where the corn stores up the golden sunshine ani the cotton whitens in the moonlight, will be given in the weli-filled columns of this fascinating weekly. The subscription price is Only Fifty Cents a year, alike to all persons, ajents, newspapers, pcstimasters and eve:y one eise. Clubs of flve, achhmpanied by the full $2.50, entitle the club raiser to the paper one year gratis, Send on a Postal Card the names of six of your neighbors who would appreciate the opportunity to read a copy of The Sunny South, and one sample will be mailed free. You can get your club of five out of these very people. The SUNNY SOUTH enters over 50,000 American homes now; and during 1902 is sure to be welcomed in fully as many more homes, as the great weekly feast of good things, the Southern Li erary Weekly, whose coiumns for 1902 will be the most readable of all the papers that come to you. Address All Communications to Che SUNNY SOUTH, Atlanta, Ga. CLERR THE TRATH! Fere's the monarch—nothing Mkeiton earth. Salzer’s New 20th Century Oa 7 prizes as the biggest fs Salzer's oats are bred t Our new 20th Century O 0 com oat growing and we expect dozens of farmers to reper ning from 200 to 800 busbels per acre. Price is the swim and buy this variety this spriug to sell to 1bors the coming fall for seed. It will surely pay you. enm—— zizes’s Marvel Wheat--42 bus. por Acro n spring wheat on earth that will yield = payingerop north east, south, and in every state fn the Union. We alse have the celebrated Macos- roui wheat, yielding on our fa~ms, £1 bushels per acre. ———— SFELTZ The most marvelous cereal and hay food on earth, producing from 60 to 80 bushels of grain and 4 tons of rich hay por acre. - — VEGETABLE SEEDS We are the largest growers and our stock o st Peas, Beans, Sweet corn an? all money making vegetables is enor sare very lew. Onion seed GO bs conts aad up a pound. Catalogue tells. x obo, 5 For 10c— Worth $70 4 Our great catalogue contains full description @f cur Beardless Ysariey, yielding 109 bushels: ear Tripic Income Coin, g2ing 490 bushels; 3 our potatoes, viclling G00 bushels per acre Rour grass and clover mixtures, producing 6 tons of magnil@@ut hav: aur Pea Oat. with its 8 tous of hay, sad te w of green fodder per acre. Salzer wort: $100 to any wide aw farmer with 10 farm sc-d $10 to get a start—is mailed receipt of 10c. postage) revolutioni yields in 1902 i 0. ery “LEADER” and] “REPEATER” SMOKELESS POWDEIR SHOTGUN SHELLS are used by the best shots in the country Recause they are so accurate, uniform and reliable. All the world’s champfonships and records have been on and nade by Winchester shells. Shoojt them and you’ll shoot well. SED BY THE BEST SHOTS, BOLD EVERYWHERE —— ——— a ———— —. 2 —— 5 PENNSYLVANIA BRIEFLY TOLD. Condensed Special Dispatches From Many Points. PATENTS AND PENSIONS GRANTED. 000 in Revenues Collected, Part of Which Has Been Returned to the Counties—Con- science Money $2.02—Farmer's Frenzy Causes Disaster—Tries to Kill Himself. Pensions granted: William Putnam, Stoney Fork, $10; Thomas Griffith, Claysville, $10; Addison H. Simmons, Banksville, $8; John Thomas, Bradock. $12; James H, Vores, McConnellshurg. $12; Jacob Dutra, Kerrmoor, $8; Oliver S. Rumberger, Warriors Mark, $12; David Behana, Monongahela, $8; Henry Bearly, Lewistown, $10; Jeremiah M. Wibley, Port Royal, $12; Robert Mil- ler, Soldiers’ Home, Erie, $6; Mary Bloom, Troy, $12; Peter J. Hand, Titus- ville, $8; William D. McTeeters, Black- lick Station, $10; David Putt, Saxtion, $14; James Huffman, Oak Forrest, $10; Jacob Zimmerman, Coalport, $10; Bell McDowell, Grove City, $8 Patents granted: Harry W. Baler, Oakmont, hot air furnace; James H. Ba- ker. Allegheny, brake beam; John T. Blake, Pittsburg, rail joint connection: Jurtwin L. and W. P. Brington, Brad- ford, piston valve for air compressors; Henry L. Dixon, Pittsburg, glass pot furnace; Simon J. Freeman, Bradford, coffee or tea pot; Edward E. Frutchey, Towanda, shoe lace fastener; John W. Frye, Oil City, casing head for oil wells; Franklin R. Heister, Centerport, steering mechanism for motor vehicles; Julian Kennedy, Pittsburg, shaft coupling; Walter Kennedy, Allegheny, plant for coke making; Daniel Lesh, West Fair- view, spirit level; Herman Moon, Grove City, clutch; George R. Moore, Erie, mail bag catching and delivering me- chanism: Josph Morgan, Johnstown, ap- paratus for metal rolling; George Saylor, Mattawana, grate; Edward A. Schooley. Pittsburg, railway torpedo; James Shel- ton, Towanda, stocking; Herman Tiede- mann, Pittsburg, rail joint; Christ Fa- rez, Tyrone, bolt fastener. Taylor Pugh was appointed class postmaster at Trooper. Harry Rosenberger, a miner, aged 40 years, of Yorkville, was caught beneath a fall of rock at Pottsville and his life crushed out. Mrs. Randolph Hanler's dress caught fire at her home in Newtown, but with rare presence of mind she extinguished the flames herself and escaped with bad burns. The general store at Elam, occupied for ten years past by T. D. Bullock, a dwell- ing and a barn were totally destroyed by fire, entailing a loss of $10,000. Spencer G. Gilbert, A. Carson Stamm and W. L. Gorgas were named as the Board of Commissioners of Public Works at a joint convention of the Har- risburg City Councils, and will serve for a term of four years. Miss Anna fckley, of William Penn, refused to marry John Link unless the ceremony were performed in open court. The bashful groom reluctantly consented and the nuptial knot was tied by Judge A. L. Shay. While Reuben Deisher, a school di- rector, living near Alburtis, was crossmg a railroad track, the team was struck by a train and Mr. Deisher was thrown out and was seriously injured. Robbers broke into the Park school building, Mt. Carmel, and stole a large quantity of text books. Frank Simmers, aged 32, was caught under a falling reel of wire cable at North Mahoney Colliery and killed. Henry W. Wartmau, aged 50 years, living near Freemansburg, was run over and killed by a train on the Jersey Cen- tral Railroad. George Dunn, 12 years old, died at Rendham from hydrophobia. Five weeks ago he was bitten by a dog, which sank his teeth through the boy's nose. The wound was cauterized, and no evil re- sults were feared until Friday, when the boy began to develop symptoms of hy- drophobia. He grew rapidly worse and died in great agony. Fire was discovered in the basement of the High School, West Chester. ‘The pupils left the building quietly, and in a few minutes the fire department had the flames extinguished. An overheated furnace was the cause. Charles C. Riley, a brakeman, fell from his train near South Fork and was killed. The Young Men's Missionary Society of the Moravian Church, Bethlehem, cel- ebrated its sixty-first anniversary. Rev. Dr. Arthur L. Pierson, of New York city, delivered an address. In a railroad wreck near Fortage, John McFarland, a brakeman, of Mahaffey. was killed in the caboose of his train. A car of merchandisc and one of household goods on the Pennsylvania Railroad were entirely consumed by fire in front of the station, Lewistown. The fire is supposed to have been caused by spontaneous combustion. While George Shope, ar aged Pein Township farmer,was crossing the Penn- svlvania Railroad at Duncannon with a four-horse team, a train struck the wagon and wrecked it. One horse was killed and Shope jumped from tite back of the saddle horse just in time to save his life. ; Tamaqua Lodge, Spanish War Vet erans’ Association, was organized at Ta maqua, with about fifty charter members The officers are: Commander, G. B. Kline: senior vice-comnmander. W. H. Clewell, Summit Hil'; junior vice-com- mander, C. F. Shindel; adjutant, Frank D. Kershner; quartermaster. Edward M. B. Shepp. — : A man supposed to be suitering with smallpox was arrested at Darby, but be- fore a physician could be summoned he escaped from his captors and fled. fourth z The School Directors c= Gwynedd have received $70 bequea bv the late Lizzie I. Jones, of Doniity, South Dakota, with which to purchase library books for the West Point and Gwynedd Western Schools. Miss Jones was for a number of years teicher o: these schools. Judge Johnson, at Medis, granted 2 new trial in the suit of J. LE. Johnson against the Chester Traction Comg for damages for the loss of . being run over by a car. Tt was showy that an official of the company was seen talking to a juror. Johusos lost Lis case le NAVAL BATTLE IN PANAMA HARBOR. Insurgents Sink War Vessel of Colombian Government. Panama, (By Cable).—A novel naval battle was fought in the harbor of Pana- ma between the so-called “warships” of the government and the revolutionary forces. The government got the worst of it. Gen. Carlos Alban, the military com- mander of the Panama district, was killed, and the Chilian line steamer Lau- taro, recently mounted with cannon and used by the government for its forces, was partly burned. A number of the men on this vessel ! were killed. It is reported that her crew rebelled. The revolutionary fleet consisted of the steamers Padilla, Darien and Gai- tan. They sought to force a landing off Saoana. The government ships were the Chilian line steamer Lautaro, the Pacific Steam Navigation Company's steamer Chicuito and the Panama Canal Company's steam- er Boyaca. The first-named steamer was seized by General Alban, and the other two had been chartered by the Colom- bian government. The revolutionary gunboat Padilla sur- prised the Lautaro at the opening of the fight, and began shooting at close range. Many men on board the Lautaro were killed. The United States cruiser Philadel phia stood near during the fighting, pre- pared to take any action to prevent the bombardment of the isthmian towns or any injury to American interests. The crew of the Philadelphia assisted in extinguishing the fire on the Lautaro. The killing of General Alban, the gov ernor of Panama, is deplored. and his death may have the effect of bringing to the government side large numbers of men anxious to avenge his loss. During the fighting the guns at Las Bovedas fired at the rebel ships. SIXTY KILLED, MANY INJURED. Spanish Mill Town Wrecked by an Explosion ——Scenes of Suffering. Barcelona, Spain, (By Cable).~—The explosion of the boiler of a spinning mill destroyed half the village of Puente de Vilumara. % A hospital is filled with the injured. Sixteen mutilated bodies of working people buried in the debris have basen re- covered. These include the manager of the spinning mill and his two sisters. It is estimated that 60 were killed and 100 injured. The dead include many chil- dren. Queen Regent Maria wired her condolences. The boiler exploded in the evening when the the mill hands, many of whom were accompanied by their wives aud children, were eating supper before be- ginning their night's work. The build- ings of the mill collapsed and the debris was hurled jn ail directions, de.trozinz other pie and killing or injuring many of those in the vicinity. Owing to the darkness the work of extricating the victims proceeded with great diffi- culty. Groans came from victims whose mutilated limbs were pinned down by the ruins. Cristina has fr To Protect Him From Anarchists. Chicago, (Special).—Assurances were given by Mayor Harrison to Dr. W. Wever, the consul of the German Em- pire, that extraordinary precautions would be taken to protect Prince Henry from anarchists during his visit to Chi- cago. The announcement that Emma Goldman was en route for this city, and that the two local “reds” colonies intend- ed making demonstrations against the ideas of royalty at thc time of the Prince's visit, caused Consul Wever to apply to the city’s chief executive for special protection. Caved In On Miners, Joplin, Mo, (Special ).—In a cave-in at Ada Mine at Carterville, near here, three miners lost their lives, another was injured fatally, and several others were seriously hurt. The accident was caused by a premature explosion of dynamite, which blocked the entrance to the mine. It took several hours’ work by the men from adjoining mines before the impris- oned miners were reached. The Ada Mine is owned by a Chicago syndicate. New Hope for Miss Stone. Constantinople, (By Cable).—Reliable news has been received here that Miss Ellen M. Stone, the captive American missionary ; Mrs. Tsilka, her companion, and the latter's baby, are well. Negotia- tions which it is expected will result in the early and safe return of the captives are in progress. John G. A. Leishman, the American Minister here, is now di- recting the negotiations. More Merciful Than Just. Des Moines, Iowa, (Special).—As practically the closing act of his adminis- tration, Governor Shaw made public the names of 473 prisoners to whom he had extended executive clemency within the last two years. The Governor's record in this respect, it is stated, has never been equaled in Towa. ODDS AND ENDS OF THE NEWS. Rev. G. F. B. Howard, who served a term in the Ohio penitentiary, was sei- tenced to two and a half years in the Detroit House of Correction for securing money by false pretenses. The Pere Marquette Railway Steamer Company's steamer struck at the mouth of the Ludington harbor, and the pas- sengers and crew were taken off by the breeches buoy. James Cooke van Ben Schoten, LL. D, professor of Greek language and hitera- ture in Wesleyan University, died at Middletown, Conn., at the age of 74 ears. President Francis, of the Exposition Company, finally decided that the Lou- isiana Purchase Exposition should be postponed for one year. In reply to interpellations in sympathy went out to the Boers, the government could not inter- vene in their behalf, as such action would | entangle the foreign policy of France Prince Henrv's itinerary in the United | States, as approved by the Emperor and : himself, includes visits to Chicago. Mil waukee, Niagara Falls and Boston. the French Chamber of Deputies, M. Dei- | casse, the minister of foreign affairs. ex- plained that while the French people's | suffering | Old Joe, the Nidnt Watchman. (From the Pall Mal) Gazette, London.) How often on returning home late on a dreary winter's night has our sympathy gone out to the poor oll night watchman as he sat huddled up over his cage fire, overlooking the excavations which our City Council in their wisdgm, or otherwise, allow the different water companies to make so frequently in our congested streets. In all weathers, and under all cli- matic conditions, the poor old night watch. man is obliged to keep watch over the companies’ ='operty, and to sce that the red lights are kept burning, to be sure; what privations and hardships; they have aches and pains, which nothing but St. Jacobs Oil can alleviate. “Old Joe” is in the employ of the Lam- beth Water Works, and is well and favour- bly known. He has heen a night watch. man for many years, in the course of which he has undergone cxpes riences. What with wet and cold, he con- tracted rheumatism and ly doubled him up, and it began to look a serious matter for old Joe whether he would much longer be able to perform his duties, on which his good wife and himself depended for a livelihood, but as it hap- pened a passer-by, who had for some nights noticed Old Joe's painful condition, presented him with a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and told him to use it. Od Joe followed the advice given; he crawled home the next morning and bade his wife rub his aching back with the St. Jacobs Oil “a gentleman gave him,” and undoubt- edly his wife did rub, for when Old Joe went on duty at night he met his friend and benefactor, to whom he remarked: “Them oils you gave me, Guv’nor, did give me a doing; they wuz like pins and needles for a time, but look at me now,” and Old Joe began to run and jump about like a young colt. All pain, stiffness and soreness had gone; he had been telling everybody he met what St. Jacobs Oil had done for him. Old Joe says now he has but one ambition in life, and that is to always to be able to keep a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil by him, for he says there is nothi -g like it in the world. St. Jacobs Oil serves the rich and the poor, high and low, the same way. It has eonquered pain for fifty years, and it will do the same to the end of time. It has no equal, consequently no competitor; it has many cheap imitations, but simple facts like the above tell an honest tale with which nothing on earth can compete. What a life, many sciatica, which fair- . Denmark leads tue world in per capita interest in agricuiture. Each inhabitant has on an average a capital of $585 invest- ed in farming. Brooklyn, N.Y., Jan. 20ih.-—Yor many years Garfield Tea, The Herb Cure, has been earn- ing a reputation that is rare—it is universally | This remedy presents unusual at- | Eps. tractions to those in search of health; it is | praised ! made of hers that cure in Nature's way—by removing the cause of digease ; it is pure; it « cansesthes tablishes a yo organs; it is equally good for young and old. In nine of the great cities of the United States there are 200,190 telephones. Tetterine Cures Quickly. “Only two applications of Tetterine cured a bad case of Ring Worm from which I had suffered.” —Julian M.Solomon,Savannah,Ga. 50¢ a box by mail from J.T. Shuptrine, Savan- | nah, Ga., if your druggist don’t keep it. An ordinary railroad engine will travei about 1,000,000 miles before it wears out. Piso’s Cure i% the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.— War. O. ExpsLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900, rien L418 13 parts is =v ol the hippopotamus in some fuliy two inches thick. 1t is estimated that of the whole popu. | lation of the globe about 90,000 die every he pm gh) | gi Td i h i N ~ i by 7 OE Rev. Marguerite St. Omer Brig} Mount Calm Street, Detroit,. Mic Lecturer for the W. C. T. U., recom: Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comp “DEAR Mrs. PINkHAM : — My professional work has for tf twenty years brought me into hundreds of homes of sickneg I have had plenty of opportunity to witness the sufferings of and mothers who from want, ignorance or carelessness, are f but surely being dragged to death, principally with female weal and irregularities of the sex. I believe you will be pleased to that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has d more women than any other agency that has come under my no Hundreds of women owe their life and health to you to-day, and, t fore, I can conscientiously advise sick women to try it.” —MARGUER St. OMER Brices. $5000 FORFEIT IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GEXNU When women are troubled with irregular or painful menstryabig weakness, leucorrhcea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bed ing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulend general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, they shoul] remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and pgnarfied endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. m, purifles the blood and es- | t action of the digestivo | § Small crops, unsalable veg- etables, result from want of EMPIRE, BROADWAY AND 63d ST., N. Y. CITY. § ABsoLuTELY MODERATE Potash. {| FIREPROOF. WT RATes. From Grand Central Station take a7 Jparked | | | 2k | | | f 1 Avoutie it 1s one | Broadway and 7th Ave. Sgven niinuted On crodsing any of the forries, take the tevafad Railway to 59th 84, front whi | 1ninute’s walk to hotel. | The Hotel Empire 1estanyant ig noted for its ex. | cellont ooking, efficient servine arid Mods ate priced, | Within ten minutes of amusemont # has | ceutres, All cars pass the Entpire. Send to Empire for descriptive Took tats. WwW. JOHNSON QUINN ¥ MORTIMER M. KELL Vegetables are especially fond of Potash. Write for our free pamphlets. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. Gold Medal ot Buffalo Exposition. Lead the McILHENNY’S TABASCO World. Are You Sick? Send your name and P. O. address to The R. B. Wills Medioine Co., Hagerstown, Nd. AD =RTISE IN THIS IT PAYS ER. B NUA4. Bes”. Cough Syrup. 2) + time. Sold by drugg u AN AN The x TS " or the robust man. Syrup of Figs is well known to be a combination of the laxative principles of plants, which act most beneficially, with pleasant aromatic liquids and the juice of figs, agreeable and refreshing to the taste and acceptable to the system, when its gentle cleansing is desired. The quality of Syrup of Figs is due not only to the excellence of the combination, but also to the original method of manufacture which therefore all important, in buying, in order to get its beneficial effects, to note the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package. Louisvilie, Ky. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS. TA i a Rt TT of Syrup of Figs is due to ‘ts pleasant form and perfect freedom from every objectionable quality or substance and to the fact that it acts gently and truly ‘as a laxative, without in any way disturbing the natural functions. requisite knowledge of what a laxative should be and of the best means for its production enable the California Fig Syrup Co. to supply the general demand for a laxative, simple and wholesome in its nature and truly beneficial in its effects; a laxative which acts pleasantly and leaves the internal ofgans in a naturally healthy condition and which does not weaken them. To assist nature, when nature needs assistance, it is ali ‘mportant that the medicinal agents used should be of the best quality and of known value and Syrup of Figs possesses this great advantage over all other remedies, that it does not weaken the organs on which it acts and therefore it promotes a healthful con- dition of the bowels and assists one in forming regular habits. excellent qualities may be mentioned its perfect safety, in all cases requiring a laxative, even for the babe, or its mother, the maiden, or the wife, the invalid, TIE TT Distinctive Value The Among its many ensures perfect purity and uniformity of product and it is San Francisco, Cal. New York, N. Y. fli ili PRICE FIFTY CENTS PER BOTTLE. di ! A | in UR pL earn GE ETE EE SA Da La ts TL Ai) n uy Cr A TT PLE ROR ' qu BHO aa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers