McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Nov 1906, p. 3

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TNK OF WUS MID PERIL Ooto 8ay» that Lydia. B. WUdbasnle Vegetable Compound haa " Bar Lite and Made Her Well. Boy aaay lire, of beautiful younr gbftfepBleniaeriSoadiwtaattin w^rtomiMrintow^nanioodl Tfi£ myimsffularitiee «r displacement, tare been developed tola * period, resulting in years of Aiiss Emm * V< A mother should come to her child's aid at this critical time and remember that Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound will prepare the system for the coming1 change and start this try­ ing period in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. Hiss Emma Cole of Tullahom'a, Tenn., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: 441 want to tell you that I am enjoying bet­ ter health than i have for yaars, and l owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkhtun's vegetable Com­ pound. " When fourteen years of age I Buffered al­ most constant pain, and for two or throe years I had soreness an^painin my side, headaches and was dizz^^nd nervous, doctors all failed to help me. A** * J 1 Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound •was recommended, and after taking it my health began to improve rapidly, and I think it saved my life. I sincerely hope my experi­ ence will be a help to other girls who are pass- *ing from girlhood to womanhood, for I know year Compound will do as much for them." If you know of any young girl who is sick and needs motherly advice ask her to write Mrs. Pink ham, Lynn, Mass., and she will receive free advice which will put her on the right road to a strong, healthy and happy womanhood. Mrs. Pinkham is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham.and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. W. L DOUGLAS •3.50&*3.00 Shoes Birr IN THtWORLO fi-Doagiis $4 Silt Edra line. MBMTTEEYTTBDITAJ PNO8/J To Sltoe Dealer*: W. I* DonglM* Job. MUK Home Is the moat complete in thla country Send for Oatalo§ trrmrmm •ROES FOB *nr Gl '•» Sltlfl M ihlldven's tbaet; for «tyl«, fit and wear •jrjif'm riiiHnn't saoM. $8.as_to jr w. L. J>onslM Woinea'i the; excel other makes. •WSfc&X £52: - - -fcOhl'" " " , Doi 'lib JMT excel If I conla take you Into my large factories at Brockton* Maaa.,and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made* you would then understand why they hold their shape* fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever you live, yon cut obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. HI* nun* and price U steamed on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and Inferior shoes. Tmkm mo mubstU tut*. Ask year dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes upoa having fast Color Eyelets usea; they mill not wear brassf. Write lor Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 12, Brockton, Mass. I I | 1 """ - ' VJ STOVE POLISH ALWAYS READY TO USH. NO DIRT, DUST. SMOKE OR SMELL. NO MORE STOVE POLISH TROUBLES I M«U $15,434 With Only $175 ID six months and ten times greater fortunes for those associated with me, tbev helped me to earn the riches I now want you to join uaf. Tbemiares are only t&eaoh, it will be sate and we will make It grow. Investigate, It costs you nothing, send a postal; simply aay. send ni« your freepros- uectua. •• Bow to Sake Money." K W. NICHOLS. 18W MootogM St., Brooklyn, N. V. •IKE YOUR DOLLARS WORK Purchase Palmer Mountain Tunnel A Power Com­ pany stock. Urea.test ot COPl'EK-UOLi) mines. I.40U acres mineral land. Cross-cut tunnel of * JOB feet.. Immense amount of ore in sight. Large water power. Klectric plant now operating. Apply to JCTM sscusims rearsinr. M W»II str**, sew YORK. WHO wants a fine irrigated farm in the tam­ os* Peeos Valley. Kactero Mew Mexico, at Kosweii, planted to apples, alfalfa Liisb altitude, cool iilfeiBiers. mild win- M*. rich land, crops sure. Writ* tor description 2d price. LJLA.LAND HUM, BOHWKllt, N. M. Tbsaptu's Eye Watsr Delayed Telegram Suggested AwM TAm was * tamttam mn," said the night operator, "whose wife pre- suited him with a son while he was out drumming up trade. The doctor got the man's address, and, since his wife was doing none too well, wrote out a message giving him the news and telling him to return. "The doctor gave the message to Hie cook, who couldn't read. She forgot to send it, and the next day the drummer came home of his own ac­ cord. "Ha stayed a day or twoi, found his wife doing; all right and set out on his rounds again. Nothing,-as it hap­ pened, was said about the forgotten telegram. "And at the end of the week the telegram was * remembered by the cook. With an exclamation of horror --you know she couldn't read--Bhe- hurried to the office and sent to the drummer that delayed message. When he got it that night he was terrified. What he read was this: " 'Another addition--a son; yotp* wife very ill; return at once.' . : "He took the midnight train for home. He was like a man a trance. "Another?' he kept mutterlftg in a dazed voice. 'Impossible!' «. "Qn getting heme he was so reliev­ ed when everything was explained to him that he decided not to lira the cook, after alL" ' In the Shade of the 8phlnx. ¥be Egyptian pyramids will proba­ bly lose much of their magnificent and legendary appearance in the near future. The Egyptian government has given permission. for the erection of homes and hotels in the vast plain stretching from Eskebich to the Nile and covered with the ancient sphinxes and structures. Already several soci­ eties have been formed to avail them­ selves of the picturesque view tor the building of large hotels. All around the pyramids of Ghiseh there are tb be erected real American skyscrapers from nine to ten stories in height*. Australian Educator In America. William S. Mayer, one of the most noted educators of New South Wales, being connected with the University of Sydney, is visiting Boston. Mr. Mayer is a native of Great Britain and went to Australia IS years ago. ss TO REMOVE BAD OQOfas. Many Remedies for UnpieaaantSmelts v Csoklng. A generous lump of soda placed in pbts and pans in which fish, cabbage, onions and other strong-smelling foods have been cooked, will make them smell sweet and clean. ' A teaspoonful of vinegar boiling on the stove will counteract the smell of strong food. A teaspoonful of ground cloves on a few hot coals will produce the same result. A sponge placed in a saucer of boil­ ing hot water, in which has been add­ ed a teasponful of oil of lavender, gives a fragrance of violents to a room in which it has been placed. Flies will not remain where the odor of oil of lavender Is. A stale crust of bread boiled with cabbage will absorb the disagreeable odor. / A large lump of charcoal ia a re­ frigerator will prevent a musty smell. A pound of copperas dissolved In boiling water, if poured into drain pipes, will dissolve the grease and other impurities. An onion breath may be gotten rid of by swallowing a mouthful of vine­ gar or drinking half a cup of hot wa­ ter in which a pinch or baking soda has been dissolved. A few mouthfuis of lime water, or a few drops of the tincture of myrrh in a tumbler of water will sweeten an un­ pleasant breath, and a small piece of orris root, if chewed, will give a vio­ let odor to the breath. SICK HEADACHE Positively cored by these Little Pills. Tbey also relieve Dte- Hess from Dyspepsia, In­ digestion sod Too Hearty Raffing, A perfect rem­ edy tor DtBdan* Nausea. Drowsiness. Bad Taste In the Mouth, Coated Tongue. Pain in tb4 side, TORPID LIVER. Tbay regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS s. CARTERS PILLS. Gumma Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature Excellent Salad Dressing. For those who dislike the taste of Oil, the following salad dressing is very good: Mix together one tea­ spoonful each of salt, sugar, and mus­ tard, and oue-half teaspoonful of white pepper; add the well-beaten yolks of two eggs, and stir uutil thor­ oughly mixed and smooth. Mett two tablespoonfuls of butter in half a cupful of hot vinegar, and add tt slow ly to the eggs. Stir in gradually one cupful of sweet milk scalded, and mix all well tngrttner Cook.in a double boiler until thickened, but do not al­ low the dressing to boil or 11 will curdle. Let cool, then whip in the beaten whites of the eggs. Thin witb a little cream when ready for use. Cover tightly, and put in the refriger­ ator. This is a delicious dressing for various kinds of salad. ' j- ------ i»> j i Cider Apple Jelly. f " , Wtth cider fresh and Bweet "frtitn the press, try making apple jelly. /Wash and wipe fine flavored, rather tart apples, quarter and put into a preserving kettle with cider to near­ ly cover. Cook gently until the ap­ ples are soft, then strain and measure the Juice. There should be about half as much cider as fruit. Allow for each pint of Juice a pint of sugar, heating the latter in the open while the juice is cooking for 20 minutes. Turn the sugar in with the juice, stir until dissolved, remove the spoon and cook five minutes longer. Pour into hot sterilized glasses and set on thick- folded newspapers or a board ont of & draught. When cold, cover with paraffin, brandied paper or circles of paper dipped In white of eggf*. Onion Soup With Cheesfk V Cut into small eighth-Inch squares two medjum onions, or four ounces; fry them in butter and moisten with two quarts of broth, adding a bunch of parsley garnished with chervil, bay leaf and a clove of garlic; season with a little salt, pepper and meat extract; boll for 20 minutes then remove the boquet and pour the soup over very thin slices of bread placed in a metal or earthenware soup tureen, in Inter­ vening layers of bread and Parmesan cheese. Sprinkle a little Parmesan over the top of the soup. U 'a hot oven. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. "When you begr WET WEATHER CLOTHING* you want-complete protection &nd long service. These and many other good potato are combined 1* TOWER'S FISH BRAND OILED CLOTHING You curt afford temp any other UWM CO iM«M «**.' TOWtt CAMJkOutN CO (»•• Twrrti wii READERS thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask tor, refusing all substi­ tutes or imitations. Chestnut Stuffing. The following is a stuffing espe­ cially for turkey: Select 15 large chestnuts t*id boil them in water un­ til they are very tender; then re­ move the skins and shell and pound them in a mortar until they are a paste. Stir a vhai^pound of bread crumbs itto four ounces of suet (beef suet for choice), add salt Mid pepper and a .little lemon juice to taste. Mix into this a pound of the chests nut paste and the stuffing i» ready tot. use. Creamed Potatoes. ftor creaming, baked potatoes ape much better than boiled ones, as they are more mealy, and when one desires the empty shells for serving any form of potato not baked, they may be gathered by baking potatoes for a day or two for other meals, scooping out the inside and either mashing or creaming the potato, brushing the shells'with butter andx setting aside until time for using them. Juttlee Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, tnd* Haa Married 1,400 Couples. -1 Justice Geo. B. Law, of Brazil,.Ind ̂ has fairly earned the tltls of "The Mar­ rying Squire," by which he is known far and wide, havj ing already married some 1,400 couples; Ten years ago he was deputy county treasurer. "At that time," aaid Justice Law, "I was suffer^ ing from an annoy­ ing kidney trouble. My back ached, my rest was broken at night, and the passages of the kidney secretions were too frequent and contained sediment. Three boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me in 1897, and for the past nine years I have been free from kid­ ney complaint and backache." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a Foater-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y* RATTLE OP THE. RIVETE^: The Man from Oklahoma Thought It Was a Woodpecker.̂ ^Charley's nncle from Oklahoma was up town being shown the sights, he having come in the day before with a few loads of steers, and Charley was doing the honors. ^hey were walking along on Grand avenue discussing the tall buildings, when all of a sudden one of those rackety riveting machines began ham­ mering away at high speed on a top story of a steel skyscraper building. The old man stopped as if he'd run against something. He turned his eyes in the direction of the sound but could make ^ut nothing. When he turned to his bewildered nephew his eyes were fairly popping. "Great Scott!" he exclaimed. "But I'd like to see that woodpecker. It must be a whopper."--Kansas City Star. Disobedience Brought Death, An Italian prince had strictly for­ bidden one of his daughters to smoke, hut so great a hold had the habit ob­ tained over her that she secretly en­ gaged in the practice at every oppor­ tunity. One day she was indulging in a cigarette as she reclined on a bal­ cony attired in a dress of the lightest muslin. Suddenly her father appeared on the scene. In the hurry to hide the evidence of her disobedience the princess placed her hand with the burning cigarette behind her back. The result was startling and tragic-- her frock was immediately in a blaze, and she was fearfully burned from head to foot, dying after suEerias tensely. - • «: , /1 ^ Diet of American*. Die Woohe, in a two-page article, tells its readers "what Americans eat," taking as a type the average New York business man. Hot cakes, quick lunch dishes, pie, Welsh rabbit, ice cream, grapefruit, oyster cocktails, pork and beans and many other pure­ ly American dishes, and ice water, are referred to as Indigestion promoters. "All this," says the writer, "the Amer­ ican eats with relish. They are the dishes of the city and of the country. He balks at only four things: Frank­ furter sausages, sauerkraut, butter­ milk and limburger cheese--these he calls 'Dutch foods.'" A. N. K.--A (1906--48) 2154. Sloeovs., Liixinveivt Fbr Cough, Cold, Croup. Sore TKroat, Stiff Neck Rheumatism aad jia At all Dealers Price 25c 5Qo 6 *LOO Senh Free Sloan's Book on Horses Cattle, Hogs 6 Poultry Address Dr. Earl 5. Sloan 6I5 Albany Si: Boston* Mass* VIlK The Care of $hoea. Shoes may be kept up to the mark by rubbing the tops with a. piece of black cloth dipped in a solution of cream and black ink, and by polish­ ing the lower portions vigorously with a piece Of old flannel. An old pair of shoes, If treated in this way, and all missing. buttons replaced, will make a good appearance, particu­ larly If before this is done they have had the heels straightened.' Prune Cake. Cream a half cupful of butter with * cupful and a half of sugar, add a cupful of milk and the stiffened whites of five eggs alternately with two and ft half cupfuls of prepared flour, or enough to make a light batter. Fla­ vor with a few drops of essence of bitter almonds, and bake In four layer- tins. When cold put the prune Ailing between the cake layers. To Remove Old Wallpaper. Stir a quart of flour paste Into a pail of hot water, and then apply this mixture to the walls. Being thick, It will not dry quickly, but will saturate the paper, which may then be •craped or peeled off. Rsynsrd's Hiding Pises. ^ During a run of the Essex t?nt©n Hounds at Great Burstead, England, the fox took refuge in a brewhouse, and seated Itself on the copper of boiling water. Finding his position too warm, and being hard pressed by the hounds, it fled to the roof and sought safety among the rafters. Chairs were upset, plates and dishes broken and paint pots over­ turned by the hounds, until the arriv­ al of one of the whips, who caught jthe fox and liberated It. ~ A physician, writing to the British Medical Jouraal, says: "To-day thou­ sands are taking 'aspirin' without a doctor's prescription. If we had al­ ways prescribed it as 'acidi salicylic! acetici' very few would haye remem­ bered the name; the same appliea to hundreds of others." Spread Rapidly Over Body--Limbs and Arms Had to Be Bandaged^-- Marvelous Cure by Cuticura. "My son, who ia now twenty-two years of age, when she was four months old began to have eczema on his face, spreading quite rapidly until he was nearly covered. We had all the doctors around us, and some from larger places, but no one helped him a particle. The eczema was something terrible, and the doctors said it was the worst case they ever saw. At times his whole body and face were covered, all but his feet X had to bandage his limbs and arms; his scalp was just dreadful. A friend teased me to try cuticura. and I be­ gan to use all three of the Cutlcura Remedies. He was better in two months; .and in- six months he was well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont, N. H., Oct 24, 1905." North Carolina a Woodworking Stats. "North Carolina," said C. J. Field, of High Point, "is rapidly becoming the greatest woodworking state in the country. , We are now second only to Michigan in this particular industry and at the present rate of Increase will soon pass that state. In the cit of High Point we have factoriea and make everything from a hall rack to the finest bedroom suits. "Nine hundred solid carloads of fur­ niture are shipped out of High Point every month. Our trade is not con­ fined to the United States, for we ship furniture daily to China, Japan, Aus­ tralia, Cuba, England, France, Ger­ many, and in fact to nearly every civ­ ilized country in the world."--Wash­ ington Post . ;? r The Original Porous Plaster. It's Allcock's, first introduced to the people sixty years ago, and to-day un­ doubtedly has the largest sale of any external remedy--millions being sold annually all over the world. There have been imitations, to he sure, but never has there been one to even com­ pare with Allcock's--the world's standard external remedy. For a weak back, cold on the chest or any local pain, the result of taking cold or over-strain, nothing we know of compares with this famous plaster. Youthful Boaton Congresamen. All three of the congressmen just elected from Boston--Joseph P. O'Connell, John A. Keliher and An­ drew J. Peters--are young men and bachelors. It is the first time in the history of the city that husband and father has not been included in Bos­ ton's delegation to Washington and, Incidentally, it becomes the youngest delegation that was ever sent from any city in the country. How's This? 1 Wa offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for uf MM of Cst«rrb that cannot be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHEXEY * CO., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney Tor the laat IS rear*, and believe him perfectly hon­ orable ID all iiueluet-a tranwttOim and financially able to carry out aujr uhllKatlum; made liy hi* firm. WALDIKO. KINKAM A MARVIN, Wholesale Drugging, Toledo. O. Htil'i Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acUnc directly npon the blood and mocoua aurfaces of the jyftem. Teitlmonlali sent free. Price TO wsu |U bottle. Sold by all DDIKRUU. Take Ball'a Family Plllt fur conetlaattoa. Old Sofa*, Backs of Chairs, etc.. esa be dyed with PUTNAM FADELESS X>¥JLS, faat, bright, durable colon. If yon mhst waste time waste your own. Do not waste other people's. Smokers have to call for Lewis' Single Binder cigar to get it. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HI. Conscientious people are like Ideas. They refuse to strike a man when he la down. FITS, St. Vitus Dance and all Nerrous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for Free 12.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. R. H. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Nothing so Increases one's rever­ ence for others as a great sorrow to one's self. It teaches one the depth of human nature.--Charles Buxton. •ngllsh Labor Party Active. lii fBngland the Labor party is ask­ ing all the affiliated unions to double their subscriptions to the parliamen­ tary representation fund. It is Mtw two eeuta a member. Msster of Seventy Languages. Jeremiah Curtin, at, present living at Bristol, Vt., is the master of 70 languages. He began life on a farm, but by diligent study acquired one lan­ guage after the other. He is at pres­ ent doing special work. Besides his many translations he Is the author of a large number of books. He gradu­ ated at Harvard and shortly after­ ward President Lincoln appointed him secretary of the legation at St Petersburg. : ? ' ?i§'he Old-Monk-Cure will ^straighten out a contracted llipcie in a jiffy., w : • v"'-,Ab JACOBS OIL ~ Don't play possum with paint 'tends strictly to badness. , MM 2SC and 30c Vanderbilt Popular with Comrades* Cornelius Vanderbilt la slowly but surely earning his way to the front In the national guard of New Tork. In 1901 he was elected a second lieu­ tenant in the Twelfth regiment and is now senior first lieutenant in the or­ ganization. He has been detailed to the captaincy of one of the compan­ ies and will soon become a regular captain. The members of the regi­ ment show no jealousy over this pro­ motion, as they say it waa darned by good work as a soldier. ^ A, Positive CURE Ely's Cream Bain is quickly ateorbed. Gives Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes heals and protects the diseased mem­ brane. It cures Ca­ tarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. He- stores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Full size 50cts.,at DlSIt* gists or by mail; Trial Size 10 cts. by """ Ely Brothers, 56 "Warrea Street. NewYotk. DFSIRARI F far® P">pertiea EVERY YVHKRC Hkuiiinukk Arkansas,. Colorado, Florida.6eorat«. Indiana. Kansus. Keninckr, Ixnusiana, Nr«braak£ Ob o, Texas. Tennessee. Virginia. Florida mB,' grove facing Oran«e Lake. 14V. acres. 7 roomJfcoa eUOtoTUU oranico trees. Hrst c.uss condition, go will trade. Write for particulars. \VIi TJaw CLAWSON, ill Johnston Bldg., Cincinnati, • JAA or multiples 'bertwt m;iv fora sborttii f'"» >, i vested without, danjierof loss to rmanft itS* tnost profitable tines of business in the world. * ji5r; cent, interest Kuarameeit. besides a share Ik UbS pronts. Write tor particulars without, dalay inTVa ANtWIf* N «T"1V • ' "• •> In one pound of coal there is enough coloring matter to dye 600 yards of flannel magenta, to dye 120 yards aurln, to dye 2,600 yards scarlet, and 266 yards Turkey-red. National Pure Food and Druga Act. All the Garfield Remedies comply with the Pure Food and Drugs ^*aw. Take Garfield Tea for constipation and sick- headache. . And the less money a woman tuup to spend the more she talks shop. Lewis' Single Binder Cigar has a rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. IU. * \ He who hurries cannot walk with a stately atep.--Chinese proverb. Xre. WIMIOW'I Soothing Hjrrup. for children tntiuiig, (OKCIM THE uun», reUueee la. datamation allays pain.euros wind colic. t*r t trpttlr The deepest lot* !• that which pro­ fesses least. onus ASfegetafate Preparationfor As- similating tteRxxlandBegiifa- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of 6AST0RIA For Infanta and Children. Tiie Kind You Have Always ~ l M \ N 1 S / ( H U D K 1 . 1 N Promotes Digeslion.Cheeifuh nessarvdRest.Coniains neither (Mum,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT XARCOTIC . #WASWUZARW fee*- Wl1 A perfect Remedy forCoitsBpa- fton, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ness and Loss OF SLBEP. facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. •\ I t-» n.imlhs «,)(! } j U d S l S | j ( I M S EXACT COPY or WRAPPER. For Thirty Years CUSTOM! "w X DOCTOR'S TRIALS. |»ure for Chilblains. .Make a soft paste of soap and wa­ ter (any good, pure soap will do). After bathing feet in water to which salt has been added, put a thick coat­ ing of this paste on the affected parts; moisten frequently and also »p«i frequently. •' He Somstlmss Gets Sick Uks Other People. Even doing goo^Hq people Is hard work if you have too much of it to do. No one knows this better than the hard-working, conscientious family doctor. He has troubles of his own-- oft^n gets caught in the rain or snow, dr loses so much sleep he sometimes gets out of sort^. An overworked Ohio doctor tells his experience: "About three years ago as the result of doing two men's work, attending a large practice and looking after the details of another business, my health broke down completely, and I was lit­ tle better than a physical wreck. "I suffered from Indigestion Mid constipation, loss of weight and appe­ tite, bloating and pain, after meals, loss of memory and lack of nerve force for continued mental applica­ tion. "I became irritable, easily angered and despondent without cause. The heart's action became irregular and weak, with frequent attacks of palpi­ tation during the first hour of two after retiring. "Some Grape-Nuts and cut bananas came for my lunch one day and pleased me particularly with the re­ sult. I got more satisfaction from it than from anything I had eaten for months, and on further investigation and use, adopted Grape-Nuts for my morning and evening meals, served usually with cream and a sprinkle of salt or sugar. "My improvemefit was rapid and permanent In weight as well as in physical and mental endurance. In a word, I am filled with the Joy of liv­ ing again, and continue the daily use of Grape-Nuts for breakfast and often for the evening meal. "The little pamphlet, The Road to Wellville,' found in pkgs., is invari­ ably saved and handed to some needy patient along with the indicated rem­ edy." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a rear son." ikl N -IS *• i-'-**/' •• - ,:V> - - 1 * 5 . I • I •ir • K\ -• >S If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the j&me to the winning player, so exceptional merit in a remedy ensures the commendation of the well informed, and as a rea­ sonable amount of outdoor life and recreation is conducive to the health and strength, so does a perfect laxative tend to one's improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches, etc. It is all important, however, in selecting a laxative, to choose one of known quality and excellence, like the ever pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system effectually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant after effects, as it acts naturally and gently on the internal organs, simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance, without griping, irritating or debilitating the internal organs in, any way, as it contains nothing of an objectionable or injurious nature. As the plants which are combined with the figs in the manufacture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to act most beneficially upon the system, the- remedy has met with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact well worth considering in making purchases. It is because of the fact that SYRUP OP PIGS is ia remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by physicians that has led to its use by so many millions of well informed people, who would not use any'remedy of uncertain quality or mferior reputation. Every family should have a bottle of the genuine on hptnd at all times, to use when a laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale in bottles of one size only, by all reputable druggists, and that full name of the company--California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on the front of every package. Regular price, 50c per bottle. A L 'FPRNIA FIG SYRUP ( q •>• ' ... 2jbrTB rfcntnco rear

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