The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 July 1908 — Page 7
FACTS TOR SICK WOMEN Mrilß | i® Y \C< '"Tydta eTpinkham No other medicine has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many genuine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pi nkh ani’s V egeta hie C oni poun d. In elvcfy community you will find wcmeh who hav'e been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Almost every one you meet has either been benefited by it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,Mass., any wopan any day may see the files containing over one million one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and here are the letters in which they openly state' over their own signatures that they were cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved many ’women from surgical operations, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is, made from roots and herbs, without drugs, and is wholespine and harmless. \ The reason why Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the\feminine organism, restoring it to aXhealthy normal condition. Wtpmen who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or] doubt the ability of Lydia E, Pinkliam’s Vegetable Compound to restpre their health.
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Let us do your Printing s using < Eagle Linen j, for your office stationery. ) ( You can get the paper < £ and envelopes to match. ) > It U the real thing. Take no other. ? A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. DR. T. Felix Gouraud’s Oriental Cream or Magical Beautifier. 2'3 S -3 Removes Tan, Pimples, —2 •3'" Freckles, Moth Patches, Rash, and Skin Diseases, £JjSo_ zS’v and eyery blemish H " on beauty, and de- ►* ¥ Zy& /7 lies detection. It Bi 2aS A' -jt si &'ll stood the test r vl •;>/ «G/Z of 60 years, and •.a “ 3 1 J f~X is so harmless we >4 ~s. CSj tastelttobesujeit -“ ° In 1 Is properly made. — < o JJ Hl Accept no counter- / X CT? \ * elt of 4 sinil ?ar \ name. Dr. L. A. YjXi .j-Y'/T'Vl \ Sayre said to a f*l I * 1 Indy of the haut- / t on ( a patient): / ) 8a T '"As you ladies 1 S -I 8% will nse them, 's. I recommend ‘Goirasd’s Cream’ as the least harmful of all the skin preparations." For sale by all druggists and FancyGoods Dealers In the United States, Canada and Europe. FEfID.T. HOPKINS, Prop., 37 Great Jones Street Hew fork. nAICV El V. IF It I ED Placed xnywheie, attracts UmIoT rLI R. ILL tn and kill. hll flies: neaa.
Wanted— Stocks of Merchandise, Invoicing from io to 50,000 dollars in exchange for income property and some cash; Address Box 56, Marion, Ind. Invest |5 monthly in Oklahoma farm lands. Agents wanted. Write for particulars. C. W. Deming Inv. Co., Tulsa, Okla. WIDOWS’” 11 ” 1 N EW LAW obtained wntrp K-c--gerahy JOHN W. MORRIS, ■rJL.NSIO.NS Washington. D. 0.
The first time I saw General Grant was through our headquarters field glasses from the Howlett House line on the James river, opposite Dutch Gap canal. This line,across to Swift Creek and Fort Clifton on the Appomattox was held by Pickett’s division after the retaking of Bermuda Hundred, which capture so I pleased General Lee that he sent Pickett a complimentary acknowledgment of his services. It was th6 summer of 1864. General Pickett and I were riding along the line, looking over kt the Federal gunboats and monitors not more than 600 yards from our headquarters, When suddenly) I |saw a puff of smoke drifting, scattering, becoming a, mere shadow as it floated higher and was lost against the blue sky. i ' “Look—look. General !” I said. “Isn’t that beautiful?’’ . ■ ' ) “Dangerously beautiful. It’s frbm a shell. The enemy are firlngAwer tlief-e. Come, dear; whip up your horse, and let me get you out of this as quick as I can,” "y “No, Jndeed.” I said. “I’m not a bit. afraid, and if I were, funeral, do you think I would let Picjkett’s men see me run?” “Come, dear, please! You are in danger, useless danger, and ;hat is not bravery,” he said. * The General’s soldiers did not seem to agree with him, and Corse’s brigade when we passed sent up cheer, after cheer as I rode slowdy along. Jus’t then Captain Smith came across the field to greet us, “What is the caTuse of the firing. Captain?” asked the General. “The Federals are testing some guns, I think, for the entertainment of visitors. They are not firing at us. I learn that Mrs. Grant and some friends have come down from Washington this morning. They are over there to the right of that oak. Mrs, Grant, you see,” he said, handing me the field glasses, “is Standing between those two short, stout men. The one at the left with a cigar iff his "mjuith ffs Grant. The shorter, stouter, one oil the right is Ingalls. Grant’s Quartermaster General. who, they say, is one of the. brainiest men in tlie army.” “Yes, that’s old Rufiis," said the General. “See him laugh, the old rascal! But come; let's ride on.” , “No,” said Captain Smith, “it isn’t safe here. I would take Mrs. Pickett away. Turn to the. left there into that clump of frees.” ' “Unfortunately, Captain, Mrs? Pickeft outranks .me. She wil l not go, and I can’t issue a military order, hs in the case of an Insubordinate.” “Permit me, please, Mrs. Pickett, to add my entreaties to the. General’s. It really isn’t safe here.” “Let me get down and try our guns, too, please, and then I’ll go,” I said. “Not for the world,” replied the General. “The enemy are not shooting at US: Mrs. Grant is a kind-hearted woman, and would not even shoot tills way if she thought it interrupted our morning ride. Besides, she is very crosseyed, and doesn’t know directions.” The’ Captain saluted the General, lifted his cap to me, suggestively pointing to the beautiful grove oh our left, and rode away. I was watching his graceful horsemanship, which the Southerner has by inheritance through a long line of ancestors, , and, becoming ashamed of my disobedience, was, about to turn into the grove, when a cannon ball swept across the field, and then I saw Captain Smith’s horse dash madly on, bearing his headless body. As I looked it swayed from side to side, and fell a hundred yards in advance of the handsopae head. My heart stood still. It stands still even now as I faintly try to record the dread sight. One of the aimless balls, alas! had found a mark. The memory of General’Grant, as I saw him that day across the waters on the slope, quietly, peacefully smoking, always comes to me associated with the ■, fearful- sight that followed it. On July 17, 1864, when General Pickett was riding into Richmond to welcome his first baby boy, she loving, loyal men of his division built,bonfires all along their line in honor of the event. • The Army of the Potomac, knowing that there had. been no battle, were curious and anxious, accrediting the demonstration to ti e only plausible reason, foreign, acknowledgment of our Independence. General Grant sent out ‘ scouts to reconnoiter, and when he' learned the cause of tie celebration he turned to Ingalls and asked: “Haven’t we got sone kindling wood over here on o®r side of the line? Why don’t we strike a light for the young Pickett?” The light was struck by Grant’s order, and bonfires burned along the Federal line as well to welcome General Pickett’s heir. The next day this Tetter, marked “Unofficial,” came through the lines and was mysteriously delivered at Pickett’s headquarters: “July 18, 1864. —To George E. Pickett.: We are sending our congratulations to you, the young mother and the
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young recruit. Grants Ingalls, Suck- 1 ley.” This unofficial and the following official letter from General Lee’s headquarters are still sacredly preserved, and the ink and the ’sentiment expressed are alike un faded:' “Headquarters Army of Northern Virginia. — Dear General: Accept through me the congratulations of the General commanding and the whole army. My best wishes in addition. Yours truly, W. H. Taylor, Acting Adjutant General.” Some days later there came through the Federal lines a beautiful silver cup engraved, “For George E. Pickett, Jr., from his father’s friends.” Grant was at West Point at the same time as Pickett, but in the class ahead of him. In the Mexican war, where they fought together under the same flag, and through the long contest of later years, when they were on opposite sides, the old friendship never died. After the war, when the General and I were homeless exiles in Canada,, our beautiful house on the James having been burned by Butler, and General* Grant was Lieutenant General of the United States army, he wrote a letter to General Pickett (in March, 1866). In it he said: “I am sorry, Pickett, your wise advisers up by the throne there iiv Washington should have forced upon you the necessity of going away. It was not at all necessary ; for. had, it required another war, the cartel between General Lee and .myself should have helm carried out, and you ought to have known it.” ■ The first time I ever spoke to General Grant was at the Washington railway station. Not long after he became President of the United States hi; sent an invitation to me and the baby and an order to General Pickett to. come and visit him. “Hello, Pickett! Up to your old war tricks, coming in ahead of the trail:!” he said, as we came upon him. sitting in his carriage at the station, innocently waiting, not knowing that the train had arrived. He referred to an incident during the War. My first; sight of 'Washington was from the President’s carriage. Mrs. Grant was a beautiful hostess, and ail went well till night came, when I was so afraid that my baby would cry and disturb our hosts that I could hardly sleep. The next day, upon speaking of my uneasiness, the President said: “Let the baby do just what he pleases. The whole place belongs to him.” One evening when we were reminiscing I told Mrs. Grant of having seen her before, when General Pickett, who loved to tease me, repeated, much to my dismay, my belligerent remarks on that occasion.and the argument which he had used to curb my anxiety. “And do you know, Pickett” Grant interrupted, relieving my embarrassment, “that once we were foolish enough to think seriously of having an operation for that? We had consulted the best surgeons and been assured that it was a very simple thing ami n °t at all dangerous, and so we had de- . elded to have it done. But I got to worrying about it more and more, and the more I thought of it the more 1 didn’t want my wife’s- eyes changed even the least little bit from what they had always been? Well, all the arrangements had been made ; the hour for the operation was almost at hand. We were alone. I stood watching her put the-last little odds and ends into her handbag.’ All was ready, and we started to go. My hand was on tile knob of the door, when I stopped, turned, and, looking around at her, said: “‘My dear, I know that I am very selfish and ought not to say what I am going to; but I dou*t»want to have your eyes fooled with. They are all right as they are. They look just as they did the very first time I ever saw them—the same eyes I looked into when I fell in love with you—the same eyes that looked up to mine and told me that my love was returned. I have felt and seen that expression in them through all the years since then, and I don’t want it changed now. This operation might make, you look better to other people; but to me you are prettier as you are—as you were when I first saw you- No, my dear, I should miss the way you’ve always looked, and I don’t want any changes. So, if you don’t mind, please let’s keep your dear eyes just as they always have been.’. “She looked up with a surprised joy and said: ‘Why, it was only for you i sake that I was even, thiuking Os having anything done, and if you feel that way’ about it, I—I—“Well, Pickett, I was glad, and she was glad. I untied the bonnet strings I had watched her tying so carefully, threw the bonnet on the Hoot, I believe, and : took her by the band, and we turned and walked back into the/room, as ijght-hearted as a pair of children. The Veil of uncertainty had been parted, and a heavy load had been lifted from Our ■ hearts.” .Gyant reached over and -patted Gpr and the President of the United States looked into the same eyes that had looked their love into those of the youpg Captain in the years agone and had! become more beautiful to him in all the changes of time. —La Salle Corbels Pickett Berlin workmen obtain higher wages than those in other parts of the emplrel- These Berlin men also have a reputation of being the best workmen in Germany. Handel used, .when traveling, to order dinner for three, or, if hungry, for five, and then eat the whole himself.
Complimentary. “It is going to be war to the knife,” declared the suburban man who was feeding his chickens. “What now?” asked the friend. “Why, Binker sent me a box of axle grease and told me to use it oh my lawn mower.” “What did you do?” “I sent it back and told him to use It on his daughter’s voice.” Jnst Like a Man. Mrs. Stubb —John, how about the new shades? ~ Mr. Stubb (pettishly) —Oh, hang the shades! Mrs. Stubb (sweetly)-—Why, John, that is just what I have been trying to get you to do for a week. An Old Refrain Recalled. “Shopt that hat!” Xeee.xsary. De Quiz—Why does Dickson put a powerful headlight on both front and back of his machine? De Whip—-Because hrs car moves so slowly you can’t tell whether it is going or coming. Present at an Alibi. 1 often tell you that you can never gain anything by fighting? Boy—Yes’m, but I wasn’t doing the fighting in the case. Why He Fled. Young Borem—Tommy, does your sister know I am here? Tommy—l think so. She told mamma this inorniirg that she had a presentiment that trouble was coming.
A SPIRIT-ED REQUEST.
$. J MacTaggart (in the water) —Sandy, Sandy, a’ canna swim. x MacPherson (on the boat)— Weel, can.ye thvow’t tae me?-,—ldeas.
Strangle Behavior. Doctor—l regret to inform you, Mrs. Tightwad, that I fear your husband Is afflicted with softening of the brain. Mrs. Tightwad—Goodness gracious! What makes you think so? Doctor —He° insisted on paying me in advance. Her Little Scheme. Stern Parent—'What! Give you the hand of my daughter in marriage? Why, your salary isn’t stifficient'to pay rent. , Young Man—True, but I am figuring bn pa-rental assistance. Never Borrowed Trouble. Ardupp—Anyway, 1 never borrowed trouble. Knox—That’s queer. Ardupp—What’suqueer about it? Knox—lt’s one of the few things people are not expected to pay back. An Expert. Irate Father—TH teach you to kiss my daughter! Young Man —-Not necessary, sir; I have jusMearned. Challenged Them All. “The old man is feeling pretty good these days, isn’t he?’’ ventured the windmill agent. “Wall, I should say so.” -drawled the farmer’s son'. “Dad is feeling powerful pert. Yeou see, the doctor dosed him on iron all spring.” “Ordinary iron?” “No, I think it must have been scrap Iron. Dad has been feeling so pert he says he' can lick anything in seven counties.” His Preference. City Cousin—Which do you prefer, Mr. Oaks, tragedy or comedy? Farmer Oaks —Well, for the most part, I believe- I prefer tragedy, for when the killin’ comes ye feels that yer somehow gettin’ square with the actors.” Just a .Joker. MrS. Tellitt—They tell me dogs can be trained to do most anything. Mrs. E. Zee—Yes, .my lawyer told me that Eskimo dogs are even trained to conveyances. An Unfamiliar Tongne. . Lawyer—Your honor, want an Interpreter for my client. Judge — What language does h« Speak? Lawyer—He’s a cabman. . g
The Alternatives. “We get some sad cases,” said the at ; tendant at the lunatic asylum to thi visitor, and opened the door of the flrs> cell. Inside was a man sitting on a stoo and gazing vacantly at the wall. “Sad story,” said the attendant, “h» was in love with a girl, but she married another man, and he 16st his rea son from grief.” They softly closing the dooi behind them, rlfc’t proceeded to the uer. inmate. This was thickly padded and the man was stark, starinj mad. “Who is this?” inqtKed the visitor. ‘This,” replied the “thii is the other man.” •> ’ (Jetting; Old. Dickson —It used to worry me wher the barber informed me that my 1ml; was “getting a little thin on top.”N Wickson —But you got used to it eh? Dickson—‘No. Novr it worries m» becatisfe he 1 doesn’t mention it. I musbe getting old. To Be Sure. ; The Client—Have 1 no redress? - The Lawyer ; (absently)-)—Not unless you have more than cue sujlt of clothes A Rleh Poet. “I can’t expbet,” said Scribbles, “tc be as successful a poet as Deßiter. He has wealth oh his side £ ” “Nonsense’." He isn’t very well off.’' “He isn’t? Why? he has money to buy all the postage stamps he needs.”. --Philadelphia Press - , Her Goedness. 'Towne —Yes, . Hunter is really engaged to Miss Richley. Browne —So lie was telling me. He says she’s, not very pretty, but she’s good.) A? ? )■ ' Towne—Yes, godd Ifbr i a million in her pwn • right.—Phi'adelphia Press. Marvelous; Vetleran—Yes, I have participated in seventeen engagements. Willow— What, and ybu are still a bachelor? , A Different Thing. Miss Passay—He said I was verj sensible for my-years, didn’t he? Miss Kandor—No, deajr; he said yon were’“very sensitive about your years,” —Philadelphia Press.
A Blasted Hope. Horace—l cannot help telling you again I love you. Can-you not hold out any hope? Phoebe (wearily)—l did hold out one hope, but that’s= gone now. Horace —What was it? I Phoebe—l had hoped you wouldn’t mention this subject again. Reciprocity. Wool—How do you like your new flat? ■ Yah Pelt—All right, except that the man across the hall is learning to play the flute: Wool—You ought.-jto get an accordion. Van Pelt—l did; ghat’s why he got the flute. Heavy Roll. Reggy Sapp—l ca:x feel that I an Surrounded by thought waves from my own head. Miss Tabasco-—Thought waves! Gra <HouS! Now I know why you look st pale —you are sqasid:. The Trusty. “ft seems to me that you trust that convict . beyond the bounds of prudence.” “Oh, he wouldn’t dare escape.” “Why not?” “Two wives are wafting for him if come out.”—Houstor Post Sumy Meii’s Luck. His Wife—lTais afternoon I called o? the family who recently moved into thi flat across the hall. Iler Husband —Well? His Wife—The mffn is so deaf he car hardly hear a Word his wife says. ■ Her Husband —It does not seem ai though some ffien have more luck thin sense. Petice fcr Once. “I tell you, ijudson is a slick chap, : laughed Silas Ryetop. “He took hb wife to Washington and kept her in thi congressional library four hours.” “What did he do that for?” aske< Hiram Hardapple. j “Why, begosh, tpey fine you if yoi talk in that buTiding, and for four hour she didn’t speak a word.” Kind pf Him. The Lady—All the big strawberriei are on top of this box. I can see that The Peddler—Well, ma’am, if yer’t rather have de dititle ones on’ top IT just turn de box upside down.
TEXAS SCHOOL GARDENS. Agricultural Branch of the Training of San Antonio Children. The schpokgaruen system of San Antonio, Tekatfl is on ap established, practical basiK It is said that this city has more gardens attached to its schools than any place of its size in the world. There aye 0-19 of these cultivated plots attached to the twenty-nine public schools. The gardens are in charge of school superintendents, but the work of planting, cultivating and harvesting the products-of each is carried on by the pupils of the school to which the garden belongs. The gardens vary from one-tenth to one-quarter of an acre. It is estimated that the total acreage ik more than 100, or equal to that of a good-sized farm. The boys of the schools take a great pride in their gardens, says the Kansas City Star. The teachers declare that \since the gardens were established the übys are much mbre industrious in their studies, that they learn more readily and that they alt show evidence of material improvement in their health and physical condition. The climate of San Antonio is pecm liarly adapted to the operation of the school garden system. The work can be carried on during practically the whole school term, tfertain vegetables can be grown successfully' during the fall and winter. The signing gardens are planted garly in February, and the products are; matured and harvested by the time the school term ends in .Tune. An enormous quantity of wgqtables.- is . grown. The boys take such a keen h, forest in the work that they givi\little time to playing the games that ustndly consume a good part of the time \f young students. There is much rivalry among the different schools over the gardens. Text-books bn agriculture now are used in the public schools of San Antonio. The youths, are given a basic training in farming and gardening, and are enabled to put their knowledge to practical use in the gardens that are provided for them. Energetic boys who become interested in the work do not confine their labors to the school garden/ but many of them have converted unsightly back yards and vacant lots at their homes- into cultivated plots. Information Cheerfully Doled Out, Mrs. Chugwater—Josiah, what is Tfiwlw lH apoth- ES TH AR O DI LUN apothecaries’ weight? . Mr. Chugwater—Apothecaries! wait? It’s the. interval that elapses between the time when you give the. apothecary a prescription and the time when he tills it. Can’t you tell from the word- itself? — Chicago Tribune. ' . All Fp-to-Date Houaekeepers Use Red Cross Ball Blue. It makes the clothes clean and sweet as when new. All Grocers. . AU Three, Kinds.. ThereTs a village in New England which clings fondly , tp the customs of the past, and has small regard for innovations. Not long ago an old resident died. The lawyer who went'up to settle the family affairs stayed overnight at the little inn. . Y He was a dyspeptic and ever cautious about his food. Therefore he looked Searchingly at the waitress as she stood at the breakfast table the next morning to greet him. * “I’m—er —obliged to be very careful of myself,” he said,, solemnly. “My diet is extremely limited. What sort, of breakfast food have you? That is all I take in the morning except dry toast.” “We have apple, squash and mince,” said the girl, regarding him in kindly and sympathetic fashion. “You can take your choice, or have all ’ iree, if you like.”
Nothing Too Good the American People
BOXES A MONTH, proving that the American people recognize, that What is BEST FOR THEM is none too good. Why this enormous patronage ? . The answer is simple: Cascarets are pure, clean, sweet, mild, fragrant, harmless but effective little tablets- for the treatment and cure of Constipation and all Bowel Troubles. They are put up in neat little enamel boxes, easy to buy, easy to carry (in vest-pocket or purse), easy to take and easy of action, always reliable, always the same, they “work while you sleep” and wake you up feeling fine in the morning. They not only regulate the movement and stimulate the muscujaf* walls of the bowels, but they keep the ENTIRE CANAL CLEAN and antiseptic, forcing out and destroying all disease germs that breed in the accumulated mlth unless promptly and regularly discharged. Therefore, they are a great preventive of disease, and may be taken continuously as a precautionary measure. The new Pure Drugs Act, adopted by Congress on June 30, 1906, and in effect January 1, 1907. is a GOOD LAW and means better and PURER drugs for the American People. We endorse it and will live up to it in SPIRIT and LETTER, —an easy task, as we have always been actuated by the same principles and no changes are required in our formula or package. ■ ' . A We adopted OUR OWN PURE DRUG LAW in 1896 when the first box of Cascarets came on the market and have lived and worked and produced under it ever since. To-day,after a record of nearly 100,000,000 boxes said, Cascarets STAND the greater in PURITY, QUALITY and MEDICINAL MERIT than any other preparation for Bowel trouble in all the world. This should be a great argument for any one, to try Cascarets AT , ONCE, and be healthier and happier for it. Some people have CHRONIC CONSTIPATION with all the horrors derived from it; others have HABITUAL CONSTIPATION- from carelessness and neglect, but nearly EVERYBODY has OCCASIONAL CONSTIPATION, which, if not promptly taken care of is liable to result in its degeneration into the worse forms and cause great suffering and perhaps death. Cascarets, if taken patiently and regularly, will remedy all of these awful troubles, but if taken promptly at the very first sign of an irregularity of the Bowels, will act as the FINEST PREVENTIVE ever discovered and o will keep all the machinery running in good order. 75s We advise you to get a little 10c bpx of Cascarets TO-DAY and carry, it in your purse or vest pocket. Take one when you feel anything unusual about your bowels. Your own druggist will sell you the little box, Under GUARANTY of satisfaction or money refunded. All druggists, 10c, 25c, 50c.
iwim IHANI ss Should" be inseparable. For summer eczemas, Xjashes, itchings, irritations, inflammations, chafings, suhburn,- pimples, blackheads, red, rough, and sore handX and antiseptic well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are invaluable. Sold throughout the world: Depots: London. 27, Charterhouse Sq.; Paris, 5. Rue de la Paix; Australia. R. Towns &. Co.. Sydney: India, B. K. Paul, Calcutta; Japan, Maruya, Ltd . Toklo; So. Africa, Lennon, Ltd., Cape Town. etc.. U.S. A.. Fetter Drug Achem. Corp.. Sole Props.. Boston. Otf-Pout-tree. Cuticura Book on Core ot Skim i __._ll!l!S v / '■ AH in Getting Used to It. The ruan at the desk had stopped the book agent in the middle of his harangue. “I’ve no doubt tlie work you are selling is all right, and a ,g<H>d one." he said, “but I’m quite sure 1. don’t want it. I am kort-y to have to shut you otft but tjiis is my -.Busty day and I haven't titri<‘ rf td listen to you. You don’t mind it, do.v<ni?” “I don't niind being turned down, 1 ” answered rhe btiok a]gent.‘ “I'm , used to that. You’re tlie fourteenth., straight, since I struck lire hiiilding. | But you're the I first one that’s done) it kindly, and that—that sort o’ breaks line all up, you know. Good day, sir.” | There are 262,fi<)l> Sunday schools in Silie world, with something like 26,000,000 pupils.
CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Hare Always Hough! Bears the /■’ Signature of *1 r- ■
F. W. N. U. - - - - No. 27—1908 When writing to Advertisers plense say you saw the Adv. in this palier.
There is NOTHING TOO GOOD for the American people—that’s why we started to make Cascarets Candy ' Cathartic. The first box made its appearance in 1896, and the enthusiastic endorsement of the people has been bestowed upon Cascarets ever since. . The sale today is at the rate of OVER A MILLION
