PNEUMO PHIHAHOMA.ONLA Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906, by Guaranteed under the For the treatment of Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Coughs and Colds, Mastitis, Tonsilitis, Pelvic or Abdominal Inflammations. Abscess, Felon, Rheumatic Swellings, Measles, Whooping Cough, Scarlet Fever, Bruises, Sprains, Etc. The Endermic Antipyretic, indicated in all acute fevers. Strictly Ethical. Detailed to your Physicians. PNEUMO-PHTHYSINE has revolutionized old methods of reducing temperature. Also in cases of emergency giving prompt and lasting relief in local painful conditions. SEND NAMES OF PHYSICIANS WHO HAVE NOT USED. Pneumo-Phthysine Chemical Co. Chicago, Illinois Dr. Wolfstirn's Rheumatic and Gout Remedy No. 253. Guaranteed under the FOOD and DRUGS ACT, June 30, 1906. CONTAINING 14% ALCOHOL Stocked by All Drug Jobbers Price 75 Cents Per Bottle Taurocol Tablets | Taurocol Compound Tablets (TOROCOL) Torocol is a combination of Bile Salts, Extract of (TORŌCOL) With Digestive Ferments and Nux Vomica Manufactured exclusively for Physicians, Prescriptions and Dispensing. Complete formula. Samples and literature on request. If you will put in a small stock we will guarantee their sale PRICE: TAUROCOL TABLETS, package of 100 for 84c; package of 500 for $3.50. For sale by all Wholesale Druggists THE PAUL PLESSNER COMPANY DETROIT, MICH. PRICES CUT IN TWO $49 Now for the New Oliver Nine-Was $100 No costly sales force any more of 15,000 men. No wasteful methods. But dealing direct between the actual manufacturer and the actual user. That is the sensational new Oliver plan. It saves the druggists and doctors $51 on each machine that used to go to middlemen . and sales expense. Not a change has been made in the famous Oliver Nine-not a penny's alteration in value. Just sales frills cut Such frills out in order to get to bed rock. used to cost the people millions of dollars. Until Oliver rebelled. Now every druggist and doctor can own a standard visible Oliver the finest, the costliest, th emost successful typewriter ever built. Our special medical model - with all the characters and figures you use is also priced now at $49-easy terms-over a year to pay. This typewriter has no comparison for writing prescriptions, bills, etc. It is the easiest and speediest to operate. PRINTS THESE MEDICAL SYMBOLS B339 It includes all the Oliver features-many exclusive. To pay more than $49 for a lesser typewriter would be pure waste. Free Trial - No Money Down Easy payments. Who ever heard of a more liberal offer? You act as your own salesman. You make the Oliver Nine convince you. No one will influence you while you decide. Merit alone must make you want the Oliver. Else you will return it. FREE BOOK Che High Cost Of Typewriters The Reason and the Remedy Read all the secrets of the typewriter world in our startling exposure, entitled "The High Cost of Typewriters-The Reason and the Remedy"-one copy free to each one who asks. Then, after reading it, ask for an Oliver for free trial. Write for your copy of the book at once. You'll be amazed. The Oliver Typewriter Co., 2234 Oliver Typewriter Bldg., Chicago, Ill. Old Style Brushes Make Way SANITAX are in a class by themselves, patented trade marked, fully guaranteed. Note the open work construction into which th finest selected imported Russian Bristles are han drawn. SANITAX BRUSHES are easy to se because they are easy to clean. A moment und the hot water faucet and a SANITAX BRUSH as sweet and clean as the day it was bought. N wood, no glue, no dirt-consequently no germs Our National Advertising in The Saturday Evening Post, Harper's Bazaa Vogue and other magazines is reaching the be class of buyers-Consumers who are willing discard old style unsanitary brushes for the new san tary SANITAX. Dealers don't have to wait for o brushes to wear out-Handle this modern line-t twentieth century demand for clean and sanita equipment has created the SANITAX market. The No. 426 medium long extra stiff imported gray Russian Bristle Hair Brush, retail price, $1.50 and The No. 416 medium long stiff imported white Russian Bristle Hair Brush, retail price, $2.00 are both wonderful values and strong popular selle Write your jobber for special introductory offer, cluding free metal counter display. There is a complete SANITAX line and it offers quick money turnover SANITAX BRUSH COMPAN 2335 South Wabash Avenue CHICAG WE URGE EVERY DRUGGIST TO BUY A $12.00 QUANTITY OF Antiphlogistine AND SAVE 5% DO IT TO-DAY THE DENVER CHEMICAL MFG. COMPANY, NEW YORK, U. S. A Display it! Put it in your window! Keep it in a prominent place! Push it, and cash in on the advertising. MULSIFIED COCOANUT OIL is the biggest advertised-biggest selling-biggest repeating shampoo sold today. Don't be afraid to keep a good supply on hand. The sale is absolutely guaranteed, goods being returnable, through your jobber, at any time, for any reason, for full price paid. THE R. L. WATKINS COMPANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO NEWS FROM HERE AND THERE J. L. Goudcheaux is manager of the Edgerly Drug Store, at Edgerly, La. G. W. Busby, Allen, Okla., is a chemist member of A. Ph. (Associated Pharmacists). L. Dale Beaver is a registered pharmacist with McFall's Drug Store, at Hominy, Okla. Dr. R. H. Kline Co., Red Bank, N. J., has a business which was founded in 1871 at Philadelphia, Pa. H. J. Davis is manager of the Tremonton Mercantile Co., Tremonton, Utah, and owns the Corner Drug Store. The McFall Drug Company owns "the busy store," at Hominy, Okla., and has a motto, "Get it where they've got it." L. C. McClelland is an energetic and enterprising pharmacist with the John Schaeffer Drug Company, at Des Moines, Ia. "Our customers' confidence is our biggest asset," says E. L. Maffitt, of Oakville, Ia., who further announces, "We guard it zealously." Will F. German, Ph. G., is the new manager of the Wilson Drug Store, at Sulphur Springs, Okla. He was formerly in business at Ft. Smith, Ark. Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd., is a wholesale drug firm established in business at Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1883. It is a member of the N. W. D. A. The Charles Ilfeld Company is a firm at Las Vegas, New Mexico, which advertises "Wholesalers of Everything." That certainly must include drugs. Howard E. Man, of the firm of Man & Simmons, at Decatur, Tex., permits very little in the way of current pharmaceutical literature to escape him. This firm owns the Eagle Drug Store, formerly known as the City Drug Store. Wall's Text and Reference Books.-New, revised and enlarged editions of pharmaceutical text books by Professor Otto A. Wall, of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy are now on the market. The three books are Wall's Manual of Pharmacognosy, $4.50; Wall's Work on The Prescription, $2.50; and Wall's Lessons in Latin, $1.50. Address the C. V. Mosby Co., Medical Publishers, St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis Visitors. Ray L Burket, Geo. Borgfeldt & Co, New York City. Mr. Crowley, C. J. Tagliabue Mfg Co, Brooklyn, N. Y. C. A. Damon, Becton, Dickinson & Co, Rutherford, N. J. Geo. H. Draper, E Fougera & Co., Inc. George Dickely, Geo. Borgfeldt & Co, New York City. G. F. Ivins, A. J. Hague Co, New York City. Chas. O Janssen, Wausau Abrasives Co., Chicago, Ill. I. Schirmer, Century Cork Co., New York City. Harry A. Abrams, Hauser & Weil, New York City. Mr. Wessel, Max G. Cohn & Co., Inc, Mr. Brickway, Japanese Tissue Mills, Holyoke, Mass. H F. Dilzer, Roger & Gallet, New York City. Geo. H. Flanagan, Rand, McNally & Co., Chicago, Ill. W. H. Hinn, E J. Wilkins Co, Gloversville, N. Y. E. V. Michels, Peter J. Michels, Brooklyn, N. Y. R. J. Sickels, The Arms Manufacturing Co., Deerfield, Ma C J. Weissbrod, Emil Weissbrod & Sons, Inc, Greenfield, P. F. Coco, Lock Moore & Co., Ltd., West Lake, La.; R. Gowan, Clarksdale, Miss; H E. Lehman, Pocahontas, Ark Christie, La Plata, Mo.; P. E. Holloway, Montrose, La.; Os Hadley, Miami, Okla.; John Grubel, Bunker Hill, Ill.; W. F. strong, Broken Bow, Okla.; J. M. Pillars, Jr., Pinckneyville W. S. Merrick, Waco, Tex; E. J. Huxtable, Douglas, Ariz; Caskey, Quanah, Tex.; P. H. Cureton, Bunker, Mo.; F. L. ows, Douglas, Ariz. George A. Briggs, representing the A. P. Bab Co., of New York City, was in St. Louis rec sprinkling the trade with Corylopsis Talcum Po C C. Thompson, Springdale, Ark.; C. C. Lemly, Hot Sp Ark.; J. F. Whitley, Winnfield, La, Winnfield Drug Co.; McCann, Ponies, Neb, of Porter & McCann; W. E Dela Cardinal Drug Co., Muskogee, Okla; H E Carter, Bismarck, Dr. P D. Gunn, West Plains, Mo.; Jno F. Curry, Moberly, Ed Ballweg, Edwardsville, Ill.; W. N. Marbut, Mt. Vernon, A H. Heidbreder, Quincy, Ill; H. L Baker, Callao, Mo; Middlewirth and wife, Diamond Drug Co., Lamar, Mo.; W. R. Fayetteville, Ark.; F. E. Robinson, Shawneetown, Ill.; L. Gr Colecamp, Mo.; C G. Rosa and wife, Mt. View, Ark; Walt Adams, Torney, Tex; Chas. M Treece, Steele, Mo.; Dr. Borbar, Pittsfield, Ill.; J. B. Mattox, Sullivan, Mo.; D. H. I Ft. Scott, Kan; H T. Pendergrass, Eureka Springs, Ark.; Brewer, St. James, Mo J. P. Doyle, Rector, Ark.; H. O. B back, Ashland, Ill. The American Druggists' Fire Insurance Co.quarterly meeting of the Executive Committee held at Cincinnati, August 24 and 25. During the first half of the year the company w insurance of $11,147,843.53 at a premium of $116,10 Its increase in business for the first half of the amounted to $1,264,530.53 at a premium of $13,48 Of the business written it reinsured $1,962,704.88 premium of $22,517.24. The net losses of the pany for the first half of the year amounted to 391.29. The net expenses for the first half of year amounted to $31,798.34. On July 1st the pany had in force insurance amounting to $20, 593.39 at a premium of $213,957.85. On July 1st total assets of the company amounted to $490,48 with liabilities of $7,436.34. Reinsurance reserv $87,660.36, leaving net surplus as to policyholder $395,392.32, and making available for the prote of policyholders the sum of $483,052.68, or practi a half-million dollars. During the first half of year the company saved its policyholders in the of their premium the sum of $38,702.02, and s commencing business has saved the drug trad the cost of their insurance the sum of $374,778.2 The Executive Committee approved the purc of $30,000.00 32 per cent Government and 42 cent Federal Farm Loan Bonds. The book valu Government and Municipal Bonds and Stocks o by the company amounted to $454,443.33. Much ness was transacted by the Executive Commi especially in the consideration of the future. committee decided that each of the new policyhol of the company shall be presented with one of i ventory books, which will be of special servi view of the fact that the new Government Income Law will practically require every retail druggi have an annual inventory. |