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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1908)
rî Night Sweats S Cough. E. W . W alton, Condr. 8. P . Ry., 717 Van Ness i t . . Ban Antonio, Ton., writ««: “ During th«ram m er and fall of 1902, my annoyano« from catarrh reached th at «tag« where it waa actual misery and developed alarm ing symp toms, such a« a very deep-seated cough, nlghtew eats, and pains In the bead and chest. I experimented w ith several so- called remedies before I finally decided to take a thorough course of Peruna. “Twoof my friends had gone so far as to Inform me that the thing for me to do waa to resign my position and seek a higher, more congenial climate. Every- oite thought I bad consumption and I was not expected to live very long. “ Having procured some Peruna, I de cided to give it a thorough test and ap plied myself assiduously to the task of taking It, as per Instructions, In the meantime. “ Ths effects were soon apparent, all alarming symptoms disappeared and my general health became fully as good as it had ever been in my life. “I have resorted to the use of Peruna on two or three occasions since th at time to cure myself of bad ooldi.” I l l l t e r a e r l a th e H a lte d S tates. A study of the United States report on Illiteracy reveals some Interesting Items. Iowa beads the list with only 23 Illiterates to each thousand popula tion, Louisiana at the other cud of the list with 385 to each thousand. No State with compulsory education has more than 84 illiterates to the thou sand. The eighteen States without compulsory education laws have from 111 to 385 Illiterates to each thousand of population. Wham ChlldrMT W ere Made «• X It may seem strange that there was a period In English history when Ju venile smoking was enforced officially^ but It la nevertheless true. The diarist Hearoe, in writing of the Plague of London, says: “Even children were obliged to smoak. And I remember that I beard formerly Tom Rogers, who was yeotnan beadle, say that when he was a school boy at Eton that year when the plague raged all the boys of that school ware obliged to smoak In thp school every morning, and that be was never whipped so much In his life as be was one morning for not smoak- ing." ______________ _ Tk* C aantry’s re e l D r e a a e d Maa. The host dressed man in the United States, according to the best of au thority, Is C. 8. Eddy, a banker’s clerk of Providence, It. I. Eddy possesses some fifty-odd suits. He says that is approximately the number, but really it'a too much trouble to count them, yon know. There Is a suit for each day In a month, suits for social func tions, for driving, walking, for almost every special thing a human being can do. Moreover, It la' said he Is con stantly adding to his oollectlon. Rat H a r t to Da. "George," asked Mrs. Ferguson, “If P should want to put some money in the bank while yon are away bow will I go about it?” “That’s easy, laura,” asid Mr. Fergu son. “All yon bare to do la to go to tha bank, make » noise like a depositor, and there will be somebody to eee that you don’t get away till you have got rid af your money."—Chicago Tribuna M ochen w in fia d M ia W JM loW * S o o th in g • y ru p th e beat rem edy to nee toe th e ir o h .'to r 's d u rin g th e te e th in g p e rio d . The Alphabet. The great Phoenician alphabet, the parent of every form of European writing and of the scripts of Persia. . For Infants and Children. Arabia and India as well, owes but little to Egypt It to true that In the construction, of their alphabet the Phoenicians made use of certain hier Bears the atic characters found In their trade Signature of < dealings with Egypt, but this fact In no way detracts from the glory of the T it f a r T a t. Indention which belongs to the “Yan- Affable Barber—You're very bald on i kees of autlquity.”—New York Amerf top. air. can. " Self-Consol oui Customer (much an- Catarrh Cannot be Cured . noyed)—What If 1 am? You needn’t talk so much. 'Ow about that squint w ith LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as th e y c an n o t reach th e seat of th e d l u a a . C a ta rrh la a blood of yours?—London Telegraph. or c o n s titu tio n a l dl ease, a n d In o rd e r ‘o c u re C A S TO R IA Tbi Kind You Have Always Bought R e s e a te d It. It you m u st tak e In te rn a l rem edies. H a ll's C a ta rrh C ure la tak e n in te rn a l.y , a n d a c ts d i rectly u p o n th e blood a n d m ucous surfaces. H a lls C a ta rrh C u re is n o t s q u a ck m edic ne. It was prescribed by o n e of to e best p h y sic ana In th lr c o u n ts / for y e ars a n d is a re g u la r pre rrlp U o n . I t Is com posed of th e best tonic* know , com bined w ith th e best blood p u rilie rs, a c tin g d ire c tly on th e m ucous surfaces. The perfect c o m b in a tio n of th e tw o In g re d ie n ts Is , * i.p rodnceB sn c h w o n d e rfu l re su lts In cur- Ing C a ta rrh Pend fo r tc s t'm o n la ls free. - .7 x J- £ t,JCS* v * CO. .P ro p s ., T oledo, 0 . gold b y D r n n l- t* . p ric e 7V. T ake H a ll’s F a m ily P ills for c o n stip a tio n . Caller (trying to be complimentary)-— I notice one interesting peculiarity about your little boy. He is ambidextrous. Mrs. Struckoyle (with a frosty gleam In her eye)—Not at all, Mrs. Highaome. His lega are just as straight as any body's. e The favorite amusements of Queen Wl!U<>lui!na of Holland are skating and ridinc, but as a child her bobby was the The quarts lamp is the latest electric keeping of poultry. lighting apparatus. It la a mercury-va por lamp with a quarts tube In a glass globe, and resembles an arc lamp in gen eral appearance. It is to be used as a single lamp at 220 to Its, and has a rat ing of 3,000 randies, consuming 0.25 watt per candle power. Its life is given at 1.000 hours, nnd an advantage claimed for it is thst it is unnecessary to replace any electrodea. ....... ■ —— j —.— TY* {leanest, lightest and most comfortable T sM . PO M M EL SLIC K E R At the same tint cheapest in the end b e m u s e It w ears longest *359 Eveorwherci Every garment, guaranteed waterproof Catalog » J T O W C D CO B O STO N . U S A TOW TS CANAOMN CO LIMITCO CRESCENT E G G -P H O S PH A T E BAKING POWDER * * A modem leavcnerat s m oderate price: Is 30 per cent, m ore cfHctent than “T ru st" oe Cream- o f-T artar product* and absolutely free from the health-racking Rochelle Salts residue Invariably accompanying their use. Get it from you r G rocer 25 c'FÜLL POUND' 25 c "You Insisted on our coming to this hot, horrid place,” shrilled Mrs. Ootaome. "and I’m sunburnt till I look like an Apache Indian!" “Not at all, my love,” said Mr. Out- aome. "Your complexion is a clear, beau tiful light brown.'* Thus did a soft tan, sir, as it were, turn away wrath.—Chicago Tribune. A lm o s t R e e o a e lle d to It. The Moors were preparing to leave the Alhambra. “We might as well go, anyhow,” they said. “The Americans will be here pretty soon looking for souvenirs.” Hastily gathering up their trinkets, they departed, only regretting that they couldn't take the glorious landscape along, t o o . ______________ A d d in s to H is SaWertaars. The Doctor—I expected to go out of town next Saturday, as usual, to spend Sunday with my family in the country, but professional duties forbid. The fates are against me. The l ’rofesaer—The fates are to blame, are they? Well, k's natural tor a week ender to come to a lame conclusion. H o rro rs a t P o lit ie s . "Then you knew something of It al ready?” said the chairman of the notifi cation committee, much chagrined. “Yea,” answered the nominee, “I saw an intimation of it in the newspapers. In fact, gentlemen,” he added, with a hroml smile on his sunny f^ce, “I had a priuter’s inkling of i t ”—Chicago Tribune. P ale, Thin, N ervous ? I 1* t o u r so o th almlUr In any war to ths above? If •o. ne noed to wnnr ■ wobbly, annaabl* partial pints or lll.a u ln t. ordinary brides worh. Tha Dr. Wlaa ijitem of “ T E E T H W IT H O U T P L A T E * " T he rem it of X years' espartos«*, the sew wsy of rsplaelsa t a l k Is th* a o s th - tm th Is foot, tenth la a ppm rear*, tenth to oh no yoar food upoa, as you did span yoar nntnrel m m . Oar form la no oigaa* I rod w* m a do year m tlra crows, brides or plat* work la a day If neeeerary. Positively palalma as- t root las Only hlgk-elaae. nrlmtlSo work. WISE DENTAL CO., INC. Dr. X ^ j r i m . H ^ . X y m - U Seroad » » u p . » rtoofifi e Then your blood must be in a very bad condition. You certainly know what to take, then take it — Ayer’s Sarsa parilla. If you .doubt, then consult your doctor. We know what he will say about this (rand old family medicine. Sold for over 60 years. T h is I* th a f l n t g aaetlen y e a r doctor woold “ A re your bowel* re g u la rT " H . know* th a t daily a s S o a of th * bowel* to absolutely ««■»ntlalto recovery. K eep y o a r Hvar ee ttr* dm m ’ of A y s r t f l W ****** laxatlT* ■dll <ers Ä S sL u. BEST TREATMENT FOR CATARRH SO M ETH IN G FO B EVERYBODY The delivery of London's milk re quires 4,500 horses. No -fewer than 372 different ways of spelling Ypsllantl have been copied from envelopes and recorded by s post master. “Thera are s couple of awful bores The African peanut la tooa delicate at my club.” "Indeed! Who la the than the American aa an a rt tela of other?” ' food, but it yields more generously In Child—Co0k.com« quick, the nursery’s oil, and to more easily crushed. afire 1 Cook—What goea on iu tbs When a vessel to on her trial trip nursery Is no affair of mine. Tell tbs •he runs four times over a measured governess. mil«, twice with and twice against the Landlady—You make an awful notes tide. Her average speed to thus a r with that flute. Boaider—Well, l ’in "Ived aL sorry to hear I t Landlady—8o'a ev Sailing vessels are coming Into vogue erybody else. again, especially within the last five “I notice that you always alt at your years, after having been practically wlfe’a left, Mr. Meggs.” "Yes,” frank banished from the ocean by the quicker ly replied Mr. Meggs; “that’s the side and more easily controlled steamships. her glass eye is on.” Owners of even the smallest toy man Candid Friend—You will have to ufacturing establishments In the Nu- work hard to win the heiress, linpecn- remburg district, Germany, cater for ulus One—I'll have to work a Jolly the foreign trade. Factories employ algbt harder If I don’t ing from alx to twenty people are no Poet—Well,thepublishersbave finally exception. accepted one of my poems. Frank Dokl Indiana In Canada are to be Friend—Out of gratitude you ought made wealthy by the sale of their pine never to submit tnem another. lands. The total revenue from the sale Nell—Love doesn’t seem to agre* of the lands will approximate $1,000,- with Maude. 8he Is thinner by twenty 000, and some families will receive as pounds than she used to be. Belle— much aa $20,000. 8he has loved and lost, eh?-—Tit-Bits. Telegrams from Kiev state that "Suppose I lend you the money you there to a plague of caterpillars In want, bow do I know that I shall ever many parts of southwestern Itusaia. In see It again?” "Is the word of an hon some places the railway tracks are est man worth anything?” "Oh, of covered by swarms of the Insects and course! Bring him to me!” traffic to being hlndred owing to the Dawaou—The facial features plainly Mate of the rails. indicate character and disposition. In China to a bad place for furniture. ■electing yoilr wife. Were you governed In the antmner montfia It to ao damp by her chin? 8 pen low—No; but I have that furniture put together with glue been ever since we married. Yalta apart and drawers stick, while In First Landlady—I manage to keep the dry moat ha furniture goes to the my boarders longer than yon do. Sec ether extreme and often exhibits crack* ond Landlady—O, I don’t know. You half an inch or more in width. keep them so thin that they look loager Several earthquake shocks have been than they really are.—Tit-Bits. felt recently In the Congo district, Af- Mrs. Neybore^-I bought a new piece ‘rlca. There have been no casualties, of music for my daughter to play, and J>ut the natives were panlc-atrlcken. I think abe'll master It soon. She waa Many of them ran for miles and re trying all afternoon. Mias Pepper— fused to return to their villages unless 8he was, very!—Pearson's Weekly. 'hey received guns and ammunition. » “Mise Rtchly,” pleaded the kneeling Canada’s government has sent out a youth, “tell me, la there any hope for survey party to lay out the town site of me?” “I can’t Bay,” replied the poeti Fort Churchill, the future metropolis cal girl ; "yon might consult an Insanity of Hudson Bay. The only settler who expert, however."-—Baltimore News. la now on the proposed site, which to The Gardener (tendering hla resig on the east side of Churchill river, op nation)—“No, air. It's the missus I h i t e the Hudson Bay post, will be en can’t abide. She's got Inter the ’ablt titled to a free grant of 100 acres. The following advertisement recently o' talkin’ ter me Jest wot she does ter you. 'She fergits I can leave when I appeared: “Being aware that it to In wants ter."—Sketch. delicate to advertise for a husband, I Barnes—I hear your bouse was refrain from so doing; but If any gen broken Into the other night and lots of tleman should be Inclined to advertise silver plats and Jewelry stolen. 8hedd for a wife, I will answer the advertise —Yes; but the rascals entirely over ment wltuout delay. I am young, am looked the ten tons of coal In the cel domesticated, and considered ladylike, kppty,” etc.—Philadelphia Gossip. lar.—Boston Transcript Borne navvies in a railway carriage “Ah,” he sighed, “I was happier when I waa poor.” “Well,” they an were once In loud conversation, swear swered coldly, “It la always possible ing boisterously the while. One of for a man to become poor again.” But them waa especially fluent “My somehow the Idea did not seem to Im friend." said another passenger in shocking tones, “where did you learn press him favorably.—Chicago Post. Civil-service examiner (very sternly to use aueh language?” “Learn!” to Eraatua Smith, colored, who aspires cried the navvy. “You can’t learn It. to the office of mall carrier)—“How far guv’nor. It’a a g ift that’s wot It 1 a " Is It from the earth to the moon?” —Dundee Advertiser. Of the late Langdon Smith, the jour Erastus (in turn)—“Golly, boss, ef yo's gwlue ter put me on dat route 1 don't nalist and author, a Denver reporter said the other day: "I remember my want de Job!” first visit to Washington. Smith, big “Paw, would It be ungrammatical to and handsome and vivacious, showed «ay, T seen you when you hid $10 un der the bureau?’ ” “Yes, son, both un me about From an eminence a great grammatical and dangerous. When you pale dome rose up against the blue aky, are in doubt on such points always the dome of the Capitol. ‘What Is come to me, and never go to your moth th a tr said I. T h at?’ said Smith, ’Oh, that’s the national gas works.” er."—Cindnhatl Tribune. A process for protecting Iron and Who was the first man, Bobby?” she asked. “George Washington,” answer steel from rust has been Invented and ed the young patriot, promptly. “Why, patented by T. W. Coslett, of Temple no, Bobby ; It was Adam.” "Oh, well.” row, Birmingham, England. This con said* Bobby, who never falls to prove sists In Immersing the article In a hot himself right, “I wasn’t counting for phosphortzed solution containing an Iron compound. The surface of the eigners.”—New York Press Iron la converted into ft mixture of “I observe that you Invariably praise ferrous and ferric phosphates, and pre your rivals,” said one actress. “Yes,” sents a pleasing dull-black appearance. answered the other. “It’s the wisest This process makes the Iron highly re thing to do. It sounds magnanimous sistant to corrosion, and Is being ap and also conveys the Impression that plied to all kinds of light engineering you do not consider them worth being work, such as cycle frames, gun bar jealous of.”—Washington Star. rels, etc. Gayboy—A fellow can’t be too care Otto E. Schaar, president of a club ful about his letters to women. Hen- of New York waiters, said the other psek—That’s right. A woman got three day of a parsimonious young man: letters from me once that have kept “He resembles a chap they tell about me In hot water ever since. Gayboy— in Bucks county. Thla chap lived You don’t mean It? Henpeck—F act alone with hla father. On the old They were Yes.—Philadelphia Press. man’s death he would Inherit the farm. “What a nice little boy I” said the Well, finally the old man took sick. minister, who was making a call. His end drew near. The son sat up Won’t you come and shake hands, my with him a night or two, expecting him ■on?" "Naw I” snapped the nlco little to pass away, but he lingered on. On boy. “My gracious! Don’t you like the fifth or sixth night the aon. In me?” “Naw! I had ter git me hands stead of sitting up, put a lamp, turned an’ face washed J 1st because you come.” very very low, on a table by the bed —Philadelphia Press. and went to hla own room with the Her luck—"I met your wife yester caution: 'When you feel that It Is all day. “How well she la looking.” “Yes. over with you, fathef, don’t forget to We have been expecting her rich aunt blow out the lamp.' ” to visit us this summer.” “Ah!” “Of A beautiful story la told somewhere course I don’t mean t hat expecting her of Sir Hubert Herkonier, the great nunt baa made my wife look so well, painter. Hla father waa a poor man, but It has kept her f rom going away nnd the professor brought him from anywhere Jor a r e s t”—Chicago Record- his native land of Germany to live Herald. with him In his beautiful house near London. The old man used to mode) ▼ ary S aa a cloa a . in clay In bis early life, and now that A farmer had a very sagacious dog he had leisure be took to It again In which he had trained to count bis hto old age. But his hands trembled sheep as they passed through a partic and the work showed signs of Imper ular opened gate, against which a pile fection. It was his one sorrow. At of atones were placed for the dog’s use. night he went to bed early, and when As each sheep passed through the dog he had gone hla son would go Into the placed one of the stones aside. One ■tudlo, taka his father's poor work and day, much to ths farmer’s surprise, he make It aa beautiful aa possible. When found the dog trying to break a stone tha old man came down In the morn In half, and on htmaelf counting the ing he would look a t the work and rub flock he found thers had been an ad hla hands and aay, "H al I can do aa wall aa ever I did.”—Scholars' Own dition In ths night of a lamb. ■ ■ ■ B e The entire inner portion of our bodies is covered w ith a soft, delicate lining called mucous m em brane; th is is kept in healthy condition by the nourishm ent and vital vigor it receives from the blood. So long as th e circulation rem ains pure th is membrane will be healthy, but when th e blood becomes infected with catarrhal im purities and poisons th is inner lining of the body becomes irritated and diseased, and the unpleasant and serious symptom s of Catarrh commence. There is a tight, stuffy feeling in the nose, watery eyes, buzzing noises injthe ears, often slig h t deafness, difficult breathing, etc. The disease cannot be reached by,external treatm ent, though such measures afford tem porary relief in some instances. S. S. S. cures Catarrh t?y cleansing the blood of all im purities and poisons. Then aa rich, pare blood circulates through the body, th e inflamed, irritated membranes heal, the discharge ceases, headaches are relieved and every sym ptom disap pears. Catarrh, being a disease in w hich, th e'eu tirfi blood circulation is affected, can only be cured by a remedy th a t goes to the very bottom and rmovea every particle of the im purity from the blood, and th is is ju st w hat removes S . S. S. does- Book on Catarrh and any medical advice free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. U tn e lT A a a tra lla a ( a d rts . All children in Australia are drilled, but the elder boys are attached to the Australian military forces by means of the cadet corps. Almost every large school has Its band of cadets, who wear neat khaki uniforms and are armed with light rifles. In the use of which they are frequently instructed. Every year those boys have shooting matches, and the scores prove that among the youngsters there are many who have already become skilled marksmen.—London Standard. W h it« P e r il l a t h e E a s t. The “white peril” to as threatening to the East aa the “yellow danger” is to the West. China and Japan should agree to stop the Europeans and the Ameri cans from cornering the whole of the in dustrial and commercial markets in the far East.—The Taiyo, Tokio. at. Vita** D eer* end orm a* DM FITS aratly ra n « by Dr. I -la*'* Greet I a n * Re storer Bend for FXSS St.** trial bottle end treaties. Dr. A H. Elia*. I d ., Ml Aiah Bt., Philadelphia. Be. B ay a a A C lc rs ra ra . Bishop Potter, at an ecclesiastical dinner In New York, read a Coopera- town school boy’s essay on Clergymen. The essay, which created much amuse m ent waa aa follows: “There are 3 kinds of clergymen btsh- upa rectors and curat*, the biahupa tell the rectors to work and the curata have to do I t A curate la a thin married man but when he la a recter he get* fuller and can preach longer sermons and becums a good man.” H aw It H a fte e td . “True, the night was dark, but-he appeared to jump deliberately In front of the automobile.” “Force of habit The poor fellow was an actor and natnrally dived for the spot light.”—Kansas City Journal. R e lic a f th * P o e t. “So, woman, you treasure another man's photograph?” “Don’t be foolish, Henry. Thla is a portrait of yourself when you had hair.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. re sc e n t m a p le in e A house painter iu a New Hampshire village waa proceeding down “the main street” one day when be waa accosted by a feUow-towusman. “Hello, Tom!” called the latter... “Why, -I thought you were wording ou old Spinner's bouse to-day.” “I waa about to commence the Job" ■aid the painter, “when the old man picked a quarrel with me. He said he’d put the paint on hlmiielf.” “Do you think he’ll do It?" “Well," said the paluter. With h smile, “when I passed just now that to where he bad put a great deal of I t" rte v e r a n uae B e fo re . The butler, tired of having nothing to do, bad gone out to the stable* to com mune with the coachman, and was nosing around in his asual dignified way. "My word!” he exclaimed, looking with some curiosity at an implement ha had just picked up. ‘That's the biggest safe ty razor I ever saw. How do you put the blades in it, Jawge?" “Safety razor!" howled the coachman. “You bloomin’ idjit, that’s s currycomb !* The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physi cians could sanction for family use because its component parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial is effect, acceptable the system and gentle, yet prompt. In action. In supplying that demand with Its excellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits . f the laxative for Its remark* Me - access. Thst Is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well- Informed. To get Its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufac tured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leadtng r’rugglsta. Price fifty cents per bottle. to 2BMTTU S 3 CIS. »Mil 6CTCBB ^ D O U G L A S WHEN YOU COME TO PORTUNi »3 0 0 SHOES >350 ARRANGE TO STOP AT T H E C O R N E L IU S PA l f . AND ALDER STS. A New and Modern European H otel cater:n particularly .to S tate people. A refined place f. ladies visiting th* city, close to th* abopplr._ center. Rate* reasonable. Free Due. - IL L CUUIKE, (Ml it terUM Notai) Ijr. IS O U R M OTTO Said an Employer: "Stick to qualiij It will win out in the end.” We dc ‘‘stick to quality.” That is the retson our graduates are so thorough and in such demand. Investigate our claims ti superiority. Catalogue, business form* and penwork free. Call, phone or write. Portland Business College T e n th a n d M o rriso n , P o rtla n d , O re g o n A. P . A R M S T R O N G . L L . B.. P R IN C IP A L ’ XT. L . D o u g la s m a k e * a n d a e lls m o r e m e n ’s B3.0O a n d S U M sh o e * t h a n n a y o t h e r l n e n u f a e t u r e r In t h e w o r ld , b e c a u s e th e y h o ld t l i e l r s h a p e , fit b e t t e r , a n d w e a r lo n g e r t h a n a n y o t h e r m a k e - Shoe* t t AN Price«, for Every Manber of tin F*irJy, Sen, Ecys, Women. Kiss** A Children L.Dradu |I .M n il l i e« a c t M » O r a a u w l •«■sited at say pries W. L Doojlae «1.M aa* M »a .M ahoM in «tete* latte w art* *» -< C o lo r E yolrta Trad SmlnalHIp. v r T a k e N o a a betH uaa. W. L. Douglas nua* and price la Ramped on bottom. Bold every where. Shoe* mailed from factory to any p u t ot ihe world. Catalovue free. W. L DOUGLAS, IU Spirt St.. Bnckrta. Mara. P N U N o . 39—OR : Y I7 H K N w r i t i n g t o a d v e r t i s e r * p ia ) I T m e n tio n th la p a p a r. B U SIN E SS COLLEGE PORTLAND, OREGON B E H N K E -W A L K E R ST U D EN TS SU C C EED . W H Y ? They ar* Trained for buslneea In a businera-lik* way. Why not enroll in a reputable school th a t place* all o t its graduates? I. M. WALKER. Pre*. SEN D FO R CATALOGUE PREMIUMS O. A. BOSSERMAN. San a i V E I N A W A Y FO R C A R T O N T O P S O R S O A P W R A P P E R S From " 2 0 - M U L E - T E A M " B O R A X P R O D U C T S *M>-MULE-TEAM” Boras. H. 1 and M b. Carton*. Boraxo B ath Powdar . Violet Boric Talcum Puwdct. Boric Spangles. Baric Acid, Bora-aid Scan Powder. "RVMULE-TEAM" Boa». Q uran ot Borax Soap. Borax aid Laundry 8 o a p 7 ’I0-MULE-TEAM‘’ Soap Chip*. Send for 40-page Catalogue of 1,000 Valuable Prem ium s We Give Free For Tups and W rappers from "SO-MULE-TEAM” Borax Product*. Ton wW find many articles ot Household and Personal use th a t you can obtain ABSOLUTELY FREE. AD you have to t o l i I* SA VE YOUR TOPS OR W RAPPERS. Address P A C IF IC C O A S T B O R A X C O ., Oakland, Cal. *