Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Charlotte News from Charlotte, North Carolina • Page 3

Location:
Charlotte, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DOGS FOR BEAR HUNTING. SPORTING MISCELLANY MAKES "WRECKS 'LOST mm EYE ERCTOf NOT CURES Through Coffee Drinking Thousands who have had their health ruined by Mercury testify that it makes wrecks instead of cures in the treatment of Contagious Blood Poison. While it may mask the disease in the system for awhile, when the treatment is left off the trouble returns with renewed violence, combined with the disastrous effects of this powerful min- prq1 Mercury, and Potash, which is I suffered greatly from Contagious a common, treatment for Conta- iSSiSSSiSSi o-ior Blood Poison, eat out the lining me any good-in fact the treatment Sf the stomach and bowels, produce chronic dyspepsia, cause the teeth to tainly cured him, and I immediately Hug Animals Weighing 110 Pounds Taught to Fight to the Death Against Great Odds When the Game Is Carolina Bruins. Marshall W. Bel! a young attorney' of Cherokee county, while in N.

told an interesting story of a breed of bear dogs that has been in his section of the; State for decades "Black bears abound in the Unaka Mountains which form a part, of the Great Smokies and lie about 'the Di- between the Tellico river on the one side and the and Big and Little Snowbird creeks on the other," said Mr. Bell. Mr. J. H.

Dillard and others killed seven bears last season, some of which weighed close to 500 pounds. This year, however, Bruin seems to have decay, make spongy, -tender gums, iy-fa -ath effect the bones and muscles, and leave This was two years ago, and I can truth- rnmnlete nhvsical wrecks fSlly ay entirely cured. 7 its victims complete pnj bicai wrecks. Bowling GreenjKy. D.

M. SANDERS. Another effect of this treatment is mercurial Rheumatism, the worst and most hopeless form of this disease. There is but one certain, reliable antidote for this destructive poison, and that is S. S.

S. It is the only medicine that is able to go into the blood and but few cases of kind before and they have been caused by whiskey or tobacco. Leach has never used either, but has been a great coffee drinker and the specialists have decided that the 1 case has been caused by this. Leach stated himself that for several 5 drank three cups for breakfast, two noon and one at night. According the records of the specialists of this country this is the first case ever caused by the use of coffee.

The nerve Is ruined beyond aid and his case is incurable. The fact that makes the case a queer one is that the sight forward has been lost and the side sight has been retained. According to the doctor's statement the young man will have to give up coffee tte rest of his siSht wiu folI and the entire nerve be -Register- Gazette. Let, it be remembered that the eye3 may be attacked in one case and the disappeared irom our country. Deen treating one of the queerest chestnut crop was a failure, and it is cases of lost eyesight ever in history, generally believed that the Graham 1 The patient is O.

Leach, of Beach County bears have migrated to the 'county, and in the "last four months Mississippi River bottoms; old hunters he has doctored with all of the special-claim that they do that occasionally ists about the country and has at last when mast is scarce. But this year is returned home with the fact impressed 1 cure tne disease permanently. S. S. S.

does not hide or cover up anything, but so completely drives out the poison that no signs of it are ever seen again. S. S. S. is made entirely of roots, herbs and barks, and while curing Contagious Blood Poison, will drive out the effects of any mineral offer a reward of 5R1.000 PURELY VEGETABLE.

for proof that S. S. contains a particle of mineral of any kind. Book with instructions for self-treatment and any medical advice wished furnished without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC ATLANTA, ra.

44 J. KEEPING THE WORLD WARM. Companion 1 H'HT HH- ring the cold months as the average American does, the resulting demand Myron Gnmshaw will winter Buf- for fuel wollld revolutionize the world's falo. He. is first-class shape.

He says trade and transportation. Nothing im-he would like to go back to his old presses our winter travellers among love, and is very sore over his Boston the civilized peoples of Europe more experience. Doubtless, Buffalo would than the low temperatures which thtty be pleased to have him back again. endure. Mr.

Howella in his 'rPi again. endure. Mr. Howells. in his 'recent MOSTLY NONSENSE" A JUNGLE JINGLE.

A missionary from the Sunny South Caught a cannibal's eye; The cannibal smacked his spacious mouth And winked and said "Hi-yi!" The mission man in a skillet of grease Sizzled like a "harricane;" On mortal life he'd loosed his lease, This fryin'-Pan-American PRECAUTION. I tell Hit's des lak dis, I useter lub dat wench, But since she sed She wisht me dead Is laid her on de bench. Kase I knows if She lets a "miff" Make her say all dat, She niout git riled An' hab me biled 'Fore 1 could rech er slat! "A VAUNT, SWEET MAIDEN." If her white-shod feet e'er twinkle, i .1 j-iKf ivvo utau, uamiy, uim. stars, And her hair is a sheen of bright gold, suddenly waking up to the fact that That would enrapture the hard-heart-J the deaths from this cause are over ed Mars; per year, arid tfeat it is Bright's If her eyes have the hue of the zenith I Disease. Dr.

Loomis, of Bellevue Hos-And her cheeks the sunset's rose. 1 pital, decares, nine-tenths of people And her lips hold the Nectar of Bac chus, The world but the tip of her toes: It is time that she should heave ballast -Xo longer is she for this earth-To mingle again with Ae angels, Where her charms will pass at their worth! DREAMING OF YOU. The birds sing sweeter all the day, The breeze more gently sigs; The wanton flowers nod more gay, In rhythmic dip and rise, And the sky As when I sit and" dream of you. The happy hours fly not sq swift Across the path of-dreams; Nor smiling cherubs fill each rift With which their heaven teems So oft as when -beneath the yew .4 I sit entranced and dream of you. The sweetest songs you sang to me, When last we met and kissed, Come thronging back- their minstrelsy Is haloed' round my trVst.

And God is good-the world seems true-Wken'cr I sit and dream of you. C. D. SMITH. "Al" Copeland has been appointed track and field coach at Princeton.

Marvin Hart and "Tommv" Burns have agreed to fight in Los Angeles on January 26. V- A. Fenneman, won the two-mile skating race last night at the West-port Palace Skating Rink. The Cumberland and George's Creek Baseball League will meet in Cumberland tomorrow to make arrangements for the baseball season. M.

J. Reagan has offered $250,000 for the grounds, club and franchise of the Boston National League Club, but the owners refused, holding out for $275,000. A one-mile roller skating race will be held at Electric Park on next Monday night. Fenneman, Mettee and Howard are the leading, rivals and a hot contest is expected. The University of Pennsylvania Athletic Association has elected John Blakeley chairman of the board of coaches.

Blakeley has been chairman of the base-ball committee. The new board of arbitration of the National Association of Professional Ball Clubs met in Chicago yesterday and acted on 30 disputed cases that had been left over from the old board. A golf contest was played by moonlight at Pinehurst, N. on last Tues day night. The play was in regular daylight form, except that four caddies were used, in order to locate the ball without delay.

Not a ball was lost. Walter Camp urges the amalgama tion of the regular football rules com mittee with the New York conference committee. There will be a joint meeting of the rules committee on tomorrow and action is to be taken upon the matter of amalgamation. The Vorwaerts Junior second team would like to hear from all 85-pound teams for a game on January 19. The Vorwaerts' line up is as follows: Ward, Rolpp and Fisher, forwards; Holenber-ger, center; Neal, Block and Lenzeman, defense.

Send challenges to Hoen- 422 West Pratt street. 1 The faculty of the University of Wis-1 consin has adopted resolutions to be presented at the football conference of the "Big Nine" colleges of the Middle West at Chicago on tomorrow. The resolution proposes as a remedy for the evils that beset football a suspension of the game for two years. "Bob" Fitzsimmons will box at an exhibition in Sioux Falls on. Saturday night for the benifn.

of Louis Hanson, who was hurt in the recent collapse of a blacks-mith shop in which Fitzsimmons was working. Hanson brought suit for damages, but agreed to accept' a benefit performance instead. The Game Protective Association for Talbot county has adopted resolutions asking the Legislature not to change the fish laws of the county, as fish are more abundant this year than usual. Bills will be presented in the Legislature providing a tax of $1 for hunters in the county and a tax on dogs. A closed season of one year will also be asked.

It's rough on a girJ if her beau neglect's to Impure breath arising from the use of liquor or tobacco is completely neutralized by daily use of ffiiifflY Liquid, Powder or Paste ASK YOUR DENTIST a 1 Somp nennlrv nnpstirvn hp atntprrvonta 'tVlo. "'y tce bodv- Personal experience with thousands prove the general statement true and physicians have records of great numbers of cases that add to the testimony. The following is from the Rockford, 111., Register-Gazette Dr. William Langhorst, of Aurora, on nis mind that his case is incurable. A portion of the optic nerve has burned, rendering his sight so limited that he is unable to see anything before him, but he can see "plainly, anything at the side of him.

There have been hold of the bear. She was game to the 5 tains to her, home, a place twelve miles away and nursed. She partially recovered, but remains a cripple the rest of her life." St. Louis Republic. WEALTH IN AGRICULTURE Statistics Prove That No Other Interest Compares with Farming.

Prof. Andrew M. Soule, of the Virginia Agricultural College, has compiled statistics of the live-stock industry in the United States which will he revelation to many. Under the head- ing of of live stock he includes fowls as well as cattle. In his view, ho voca tion offers greater opportunities than the breeding of stock.

In 1,899. accord-; ing to his statement, there were 822,238 domestic animals in the United States, of which 17,139,673 were classed as dairy cows, returned a year- ly profit of at least $170,000,000 to their owners. This amount, is est! mated, might be almost doubled scientific feeding. Here in Professor Soule's opinion, is a good field for young men who are lookng for a chance to establish themselves in a profitable business. The professor is an earnest advocate of a return to the simple life the life cf the farm.

But he considers agriculture a profession and advises no one to try it without preparation. To the man who is in earnest and who is fitted for agricultural work -the professor suggests that there should be an inspiration in bur bumper crops of corn and wheat. Reverting to the live-stock industry, Professor Soule states that Chicago, the metropolis of the middle West, would sink into insignificance commer cially if it were not for its trade in live stock and it mnnnfiivoo whirh nro inr ludfiri the. nnpk'itis' nri curing of meats. The wholesale trade oi r.hiVae-n in ififu was $1781000 000 The live stock transactions aggregateed poultry products, butter aud' eggs, slaughtering' and packing, aggre- gate is and if Chicago were' deprived of this trade its coin-' mercial importance would dwindle greatly Americans are nrone t0 think that their country owes its greatness and prosperity chiefly to its manufactures.

Professor Soule gives some figures coh cerning this which are suggestive. In 1899 there were. 10,381,765 persons en- gaged in agriculture and 7,085,992 in manufactures. Taere were 512,329 mannfantririnsr establishments with a total npnitaliatinn of S9 a large proportion of which was watered The net value of tne manufactures, de- ducting -'the cost of crude materials, was $5,981,545,000. The value of farm1 products and' live stock-in 1899 was 739,118,000.

The manufacturer- would have enjoyed little prosperity if farm products had been reduced by 50 per cent. The moral of Prof. Soule's article is that the United States needs more farmers, and that the figmman' in rrini1f ifrc ia euro rvf Tiia rowot'fl 1U Ui 1VU1IU1 AhJ kJU A. J-X-lkJ 1 II I A Having a Congressional Walking From the Philadelphia Inquirer. State Representative Munnell Wilson, of Kentucky made a thorough canvass of his district on foot and says he will make a campaign for Congress in the sameTway.

Mr. Wilson is be: lieved to be the first man to run for Congress in a walking match. There is consolation in the Bible for all exc 3t the woman who osn't invited when her neighbor gives a party. LETTER TO NEWS: READERS. R.

H. Jordan Co. Guarantee Hyomei to Cure Catarrh cr It Costs Noth- Editor of The News: In view of the prevalence of ca tarrhal troubles at this season of the year, we want to tell your readers that we have never sold anything thaL. gave more satisfaction Hyomei, when used ia catarrna, troubles. You get immediate relief from the treatment, and 'consistent use will prove to every sufferer, as it has to many or our customers, the virtue of this pre-1 paration.

The complete Hyomei outfit consists of a pocket, inhaler, a medicine dropper, and a bottle of and the price is only $1, while additional bottles can be obtained for 50 cents. We postively guarantee a cure when Hyomei is used in accordance with directions or we will refund your money. This certainly shows our faith and belief in the virtues of Hyomei. Yours very R. II.

JORDAN CO. If not convenient to obtain Hyomei of R. H. Jordan or some other druggist it will be forwarded from the laborato i-y by 'mail on receipt of price. he at to I 5 stomach in while In others it may be kidneys, heart, bowels or general nervous prostration.

The. remedy is obvious and should be adopted be- fore too late. Quit coffee, if you show incipient disease. It is easy if one can have well-boil-, ed Postum Food to serve for the hot morning beverage. The withdraw- al of the olt kind of coffee that is do- ing the harm and the supply of the elements in the Postum which Nature uses to rebuild the broken down nerve cells, insures a quick return to the old joy of strength and health, and it's well worth while to be able again to "do things" and feel well." There's a reason for x.

POSTUM xi an mc ymyic ui luc cat lu buuuiu suddenly insist on being: as warm du- book, "London Films," casts a gentle slur on the English fireplace, with its meagre outgiving of heat, but concedes that the end it is a' Question 'of whether you would rather be warm and well, or cold and well; we choose the first course, and they choose the last." ine rest oi tne worm maites small deinands upon the fuel supply for warming dwellings. In some cold regions of the earth it is regarded as detrimental to health to have 4-ooms ai uuiaiiv iicaicu. aii xiitixiy uuiix i- gions the people have little more ar tificial warmth than the domestic animals in. our barns. The United States has been peculiar ly fortunate, first in its enorinous wood ed areas, and second in its coal-beds, oil-wells and.

natural' gas. The coal supply, it is estimated, will last, at the present rate of consumption, nearly three thousand years. However long the great coal supplies ui i.ub yvuiiu xuay iijiu it ia siuc to predict that the people of the temperate zone will not have to migrate to the tropics each winter, even after all the coal is exausted. The winds and the tides may be harnessed to dynamos as effectively as the waterfalls, and there are other -heat-giving possibilities; but for the present coal is the world's chief reliance for artificial heating. Peck'' Son." What Peck's Sun, Milwaukee, says about the cattle kings.

"The-time is coming- when men will be prosecuted for starving a thousand cattle to death in the West, as an eastern farmer would be prosecuted for starving one animal to death. Any person who has traveled across a cattle range by rail, and seeri thousands of dead cattle lying beside the track, starved and frozen will be glad to see the law enforced. A cattle king has no more rigrht to starve his cattle than, a farmer has to starve his horse." Sometimes nervous woman's aftlict-ions are imaginary. Again they are a form of actual and terrible illness. In any event, Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea makes you well.

A great nerve tonic. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets R. H. Jordan Co.

People ask -vfrhy is your COR MEAL so good? Finest equipment of modern machinery the best corn money will buy and-a miller who knows not how cheap, but how good is our motto. THE STAR MILLS 'PhOne 297. COLD DAYS WILL COME During January and February days when the mercury will try to knock the bottom out of the thermometer. Potatoes will freeze in the store room and the water pipes burst and flood the parlor. 3 A Bird Garland or Columbian Heater Will keep the' housfe comfortable during that kind of weather.

They are built for that' purpose and in operation are as economical as efficient. Come and see them. J. JJcGausland Go, vouth Try on St. NOTICE TO HIE PUBLIC All persons having new plumbing or change in loca tion of plumbing fixtures, or where a fixture or more are taken out to, be replaced by ctness.

or wnere mere is any auuiuuu tu lu yiuiuuiug, should see that they get the Final certificate from the firm doing the work which is issued by the plumbing inspector. E. HYUND City Plumbing Inspector an exception; we usually have plenty of bears. "The Plott bear dog is a growth; he lias been in the making for many gen erations, and is just about as good as there is in the business. Mr.

Jack Dill ard, of Murphy, my home town, is a bear hunter and he keeps a pack of the famous Plott dogs. "Old man Plott, the originator of this breed, lived in the Balsam Moun tains. In looks and general appearance the dog is like a massive cur of the most repulsive sort. He will not run anything but a bear and a coon, whose scent is something alike. The average one weighs from 90 to 110 pounds, and his body is knotted with muscle, and his most striking quality of character is grit, pure grit, of the finest grain.

He will fight to the death, and against great odds. He never gives up when overpowered. MAKES BUT FEW FRIENRS. "If you meet him in the road he will Siv iio not interfered with in any way, but will take care of himself if forced to do so. There are two ways.

to deal with him; let him alone or kill him as quick as possible. If you would strike him use a hand-spike and back it with every bit of physical force that you can muster. He is a solemn sort of dog, and makes but few friends. If you trespass on his rights you must kill him. "Jude, old Jude, was a typical Plott bead hound.

She was kept by. John Denton, whose home was on a creek in a wild section of the mountains. She whelped a litter of puppies. It required days of searching to find her little ones, which had been deposited in a hollow log in a dense thicket of laurel. Like a lien guarding her young, old Jude watched her babies, and it re quired strategy to get them to the house.

Denton tried to take the little fellown while Jude 'was there, but he soon saw, that it be more dan gerous than to undertake to steal cub from p. bear. Therefore, the next time Jude came up for food, Denton tied her and then fetched the mrppies in. Yes, sir. eld Jude bad a call from the wild 'Jude -'will- "suffice to show im the Plott.

doi in the best best She was a fine individual. One! day when in her prime she led a race after a 500-pound bear and held aim at bay until a hunter come and shot him. That is the time she came near beinc killed. i "The hunt was on Steel Trap ridge, that leads to Snowbird Creek, in Graham. The dogs struck the trail early in the morning, and ran it until well up in the day, when the bear made a stand after a lively run bver the mountain knobs and through coves.

The pace was fast and hard for Bruin; he could not stand it. Being pressed bv the hounds, he stopped, backed against a tree, and made ready to fight. At the baying of the dogs some hunter slipped up within rifle range and fired a shot into the bear. Old Jude knew well what to do when the bear turned on her. She had the courage to attack him, but her training was such that she made it warm and unpleasant for the grouchy old animal without closing: in on him.

i While the other dogs charged at his head she would approach him from the rear and nip his hind legs. At this Mr. Bear would wheel around and snap at her, but she would not be there. She knew how to get out of the way. The teasing, biting and harassing was kept up and the skirmishing fight she made was so fast and furious that it took the breath out of the bear.

The dogs were taught to do that sortoffikw dogs "were taught to do that sort 61 fighting until the gunner arived and does hi part, which is to wound the animal so that he cannot get AT HER BEST. On this particular day old Jude was at her best. She drove hard in the chase and kept the younger dogs hustling to keen up with her and in the round-up battle she did clever work. She so directed the fight that not a single dog got hurt until after the shot, the signal to close in. was fired.

The bear was kept busy. "A hunter heard the change -in the cry of the dogs and knew that his time had come. He beat his way among the laurel until he got close enough to do effective wojk with his trusty rifle and pulled down. The aim was accurate, but the ball did not. strike a.

vital spot. But the moment the dogs heard the crack of the rifle thev closed in on Bruin and fought to kill. In the very first round two dogs were killed outright. As the bear fell he grabbed old Jude and bore her down with him; she fell fighting. The bear fastened his jaws inthe small of her neck and tore off the flesh to the hollow, but she kept on fighting until she was so maimed and weak that she could not raise her head to take hold.

"Round and round the dogs and bear went, cutting, tearing at each other until they vere 100 yards from; the place where the fight began. The bear was tired out by tne time the hunters got to him. When the boys had gather ed at the ssene of the death. Old Jude was missed. Her friends went in search of her, arid found her in what they considered a dangerous way: One of the party made a litter of his trousers and carried her close to the.

dying bear and stretched her on the ground. ui jiii, uiicr tiunivui dragging her mutilated parts, and took RUSSELL SAGE LOSES A PENNR. Drops It Buying a Nespaper and Hunts For Five Minutes. New York Correspondence Philadelphia Record. An elderly man approached the newspaper stand of Arthur Hoteling, at Thirty-eighth street and Broadway, early "Wednesday morning and picked up a daily newspaper.

He handed Hotel ing a When the youngster gave him the paper and" four pennies in change a cent fell to the sidewalk. The old man bent to look for it. He searched for five minutes, while an interested crowd watched him. Then he gave up and walked "That was Russell Sage," said a by stander. FATAL MISTAKES.

Think of a simple mistake in a name costing tens of thousands of lives per year. But it is a fact. Every third or fourth person will admit "a little kidney trouble." We are over 40 have some form of Bright's and the Health Commissioner of Chicago, in October, 1904, showed that six per cent, of the adult young of that city have it. And the census shows that out of 63,612 deaths from kidney trouble in the year 1900, 58,748, over nine-tenths, were due to Bright's Disease. 7 What is to be.

done? Simply this No matter how 'mild your kidney trouble it; to be safe, treat it at once as Bright's Disease. There is one specific known, Fulton's Compound for Bright's Disease. Recovery is almost certain, nearly nine-tenths recovering. Ask remarkable booklet that in cludes no cases except those that were supposed to be incurable. This book let Isfor.

thoughtful people. Woodall Sheppard, Agents. Methusala was all right you bet For a good old soul was he, They say he would be living yet, Had he taken Rocky Mountain Tea. R. H.

Jordan Co. is rcauirca. i Mathewson has his left arm in a plas- ter cast. He claims he hurt it by collid- ing with a Pittsburg player in the first series tne pirates played at tne POlo grounds last summer, but that did not hurt iim at the time, It was given out that Pattee, the second baseman of Jersey City last season, had been drafted by Washington, fctt lt appears that he on the list of the Brooklyn Club. Manager Lajoie, of the Clevelands, is advocating white stockings for his piayers ior next season, rne Diooa-poisoning from which he suffered last summer as the result of wearing colored hose, and which may havS cost his team the championship, is the cause of the agitation.

A baseball rule that would be immen sely popular with tne patrons of the game would read about like this: "Any batter failing at any time, under any circumstance, to run out a drive into fair territory, shall be fined a month's salary and barred from the diamond for 30 days." "I- don't believe that a player who always does his level best is ever sub jected to much criticism," says "Addie' Jones. "In all the years I have pitch ed for Cleveland not one unkind word has been said about Tne in the news Papers. That isn't because I nave al- ways played good ball, for my work at liat5 ueen veiT ousn leaguey. 1 think it is because, sick or well. have done tho est 1 could." Michael O'Neill of Scranton, who was one of the pitchers of the St.

Loms Nationals 1904, and on their reserve list, but who refused to play there the past season, preferring the lork "outlaws' has been sold to Brooklyn for $5000. His old manager, Donovan made the deal yesterday, he Question arises, however, will he 00 reinstated The, deal by which Pittsburg and -Youngstown promoters proposed to l1? representing those cities in th.e. Tri-State League is off. Fitsburg not accept the proposition made some weeks ago. THE BRAVEST BATTLE.

Joaquin Miller. The bravest battle that ever was fought, Shall I tell you where and when? On the maps of the world you will find it riot; Twas fought by the mothers of men. ray, not wnn a cannon or battle shot, With sword or nobler pen; Nay, not with eloquent words or thought, From mouths of wonderful men; But deep in a walled-up woman's heart Of woman that would not yield, But bravely; silently bore her part Lo, there was the battlefield. No marshaling troops, no bivouac song, No banner to gleani and wave; But, oh! these battles, they -last so long, "From boyhood to the grave. Yet faithful still as a bridge of stars, She fights in her walled-up town-Fights on and in the endless wars, Then silent, unseen goes down.

Oh, ye-with banners battle shot, And soldiers to shout and praise, I tell you the kingliest victories fought Were fought in these silent ways. Oh, spotless woman in a world of shame! With a splendid and silent scorn, Go back to God as white as you came, The kingliest warrior born! Whiskey blossoms are often on the bum. THE DIAMOND CURE. The latest news from Paris, is, that they have-discovered a diamond cure for consumption. If you fear consump tion or.

pneumonia it will, however, be best for you to take that yreat remedy mentioned by w. T. of vanleer, Tenn. '1 had a cough for fourteen years, nothing helped me, until I took Dr. Kinffs New Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds, which gave in stant relief and affected a permanent cure." Uneoualled quick cure for Throat and Lung Troubles; At WoodaH Shepard's drug store; price 50c and S3 with joyous hearts and smiling: faces they romp and play when in health and how conducive to health "the games in which'; they indulge, the outdoor life they enjey, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to forrrrand the wholesome diet of which they should partake.

health preserved, not by constant medicaticn, but bcarefuravoidarice "'of dvery medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature, and if at 'any time a remedial agent is required, assist; nature, only thosevof known excellence should be used remedies which arc pure and wholesome and 'truly benefitl in'effcctriike 'the pleasant "laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California. Fig Syrup Co, Syrup of Figs has come, into general favor jn many millions -of vell informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome; simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to most beneficially arid presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Calif oaiian blue figs are used to promote the' pleasant taste therefore it is not. a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer toall weirmfe-rmed do not approve of patent medicines and never favor.

Indiscriminate self-mediCation. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the' full- of 'thc California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front c-f every" package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size cnly. If any- dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of. any other company, dc not accept it.

If. you fail to-get ihc genuine you will not get its bqneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it. is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, nenever a laxative remcdv. The 11 IfOOlll to.) liyumei si.vu, gudiauieeu.

iua-i uuihb xicc. Ithaca. N. Y. 000.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Charlotte News Archive

Pages Available:
117,215
Years Available:
1888-1928