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ST. LOUIS LOCALS.

A. Schirenberg, Twenty-third Street and Cass Avenue, reports business fair and increasing.

Wm. Brauch, manager of the Carey Pharmacy, Twenty-second Street and Cass.Avenue, says business is very good.

Wm. Cummins, 3062 Cass Avenue, says business is fair, with prospects of getting better. He has been in business at this corner for twenty-three years.

Manning Waldeck always has his fishing outfit ready so that he can go fishing at a moment's notice. He usually brings home some fish for his friends.

S. A. Lavine, a graduate of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy, '03, is owner of the Labadie, Euclid and St. Louis Avenues. He reports business good.

C. Norford, with the Stoermer Drug Co., Sarah and Olive Streets, is a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, '04. He reports business fair and improving.

F. C. Pauley, Jr., proprietor of the Hamilton Pharmacy at 924 Hamilton Avenue, is a graduate of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy, '07, and says business is fair and getting better right along.

dinner at the Jefferson Hotel, October 8, in celebration of his semi-centennial.

F. A. Moses, of the Wellston Pharmacy, 6201 Easton Avenue, goes out on a fishing trip every week and always has a few fish for his friends.

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F. A. MOSES.

C. G. Arras, 6125 Bartmer Avenue, has one of the finest and best arranged stores in that part of the city. He says business is fair and considerably better than it has been.

C. J. Haeberle, owner of the Hodiamont Pharmacy, Maple and Hodiamont Avenues, says business is fair and increasing right along.

Edgar N. Sanders, a graduate of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy, Class of '84, quit the drug business some years ago and is now engaged in the automobile business, but he still has a soft spot in his heart for his old college friends and would like to meet them all again.

Charles Renner, who attended the meeting of the N. A. R. D. at Atlantic City, N. J., says "Next to

Dr. A. H. Juengel, a graduate of the St. Louis College of Chicago, St. Louis had the largest number of delegates

Pharmacy, '02, is now interne

at the City Hospital.

E. M. Norton, formerly doing relief work, accepted a position as prescription clerk with the Judge & Dolph Pharmacal Co., on Olive Street.

Dr. F. E. Meyer, formerly at Ste. Genevieve, is now proprietor of the Cottage Pharmacy, Spring and Cottage Avenues, and reports business very good, in fact, so far every month this year has been better than the corresponding month last year.

DR. A. H. JUENGEL.

A. Stetzlini, 3501 Cass Avenue, reports business fair and increasing. He is one of the great fishermen and manages to bring home a nice lot of bass and croppie after his weekly fishing trips.

W. M. A. Smith, Boonville, Mo., lately in the drug business at McAlester, Okla., is permanently located as prescription clerk with Ambrose Mueller, at Webster Groves, and is well satisfied with his change.

J. Oldakowski, a graduate of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy, bought the drug store on Elliot and Gamble Streets some time ago and says business is fair, and that he is well satisfied for the time he has been there.

Dr. George A. Bowman, president of the St. Louis Society of Dental Science and for fifty years a practitioner of dentistry in St. Louis, was honored with a

at the meeting. The members attended the sessions very diligently so as to be able to report fully to those members who were unable to attend." As a whole, he said that the St. Louis delegation had a very fine trip.

H. W. Friedewald, Page and Goodfellow Avenues, has one of the finest stores in that portion of the city and reports business fair.

R. G. Houghland, with the Clara-Etzel Pharmacy, says business is fair, but could still be much better.

A. J. Temm, North Market Street and Clara Avenue, says he is doing a nice business and is well satisfied since he opened his store on the above corner

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H. W. FRIEDEWALD.,

O. J. Cloughly, 5601 Easton Avenue, reports business fair. He is a great admirer of fine dogs. He has some of the finest breed of bull terriers in the city.

1. M. Clark, after leaving the public schools of Upper Alton, entered the drug business of the W. A. Clark Drug Co., owned by his brother, at Upper Alton, remaining for a few years. He then attended the St. Louis College of Pharmacy, graduating in 1907. Soon after graduating he entered into partnership with F. W. Runde, Ph. G., under the firm name of the Tower Drug Co., 2100 East Grand Avenue. He reports busi ness fair.

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A tripled advertising campaign (giving prescription) has just been resumed on Toris Compound and Concentrated Pine Compound.

Every druggist knows that these goods are money makers for the trade, should keep a liberal stock on hand and give us his hearty co-operation. Both of these products can well be considered as staples; wherever they have been established, they continue to repeat with amazing regularity which is the best evidence of their intrinsic merit.

Globe Pharmaceutical Company

124 EAST OHIO STREET

Chicago

TRADE NOTES.

Rheumatism No More.-Serial No 9846 is the trade mark of a rheumatic cure made by E. F. Davis, a druggist at 916 North Kingshighway, who reports that he is having many calls for the remedy.

The Coca-Cola Company has won its suit in the United States Circuit Court against Max Jacobs and the Western Bottling Works, and the court has issued a decree that forbids the defendants to make or sell or advertise that they have for sale, either in bottles or by the glass, any beverage, as "Kos-Kola," "ColdCola" or by any other name so similar in sound or appearance as to lead customers to believe that they are buying the drink known as Coca-Cola. This decree also forbids them infringing on the trade name “CocaCola" or trying to sell any other drink in place of CocaCola and thereby deceiving the public. The court has made this decree perpetual and final.-[ Chicago Evening American, October 10, 1908.

Hesse Envelope Company Makes Important Addition. The Hesse Envelope Company, manufacturers of envelopes, St. Louis, Mo., have just installed a lithograph department with an equipment the best that money can buy. The concern will not only lithograph envelopes but will do a general line of commercial work. The addition of this plant means that this is the only concern in this great country which manufactures a complete line of regular size envelopes and lithographs them in its own establishment. They take the order for lithographing envelopes and turn it out complete. Other concerns either farm out the lithographing or the making of the envelopes. Orders for all kinds of commercial lithography are now coming in from the South and West and the new department is already quite busy. The company have adopted the Off-Set press which not only permits of a higher class of work, but also gives a capacity of six or eight times as much work within a given time.

The company operate a branch house in Dallas, Texas, and is one of the leading houses in the Southwest in their line.

Druggists Have Been Deceived So Many Times in the past with new dyes that they are naturally very skeptical when another dye is offered as "One Dye for all Fabrics."

The Rainbow Dye Company, however, hold themselves in readiness to challenge this skepticism. They are willing to guarantee that every one of the eighteen standard Rainbow colors will dye cotton, wool, silk, linen and mixed fabrics at the same time, with the same dye and in the same bath, if their simple directions are carefully followed, or they will authorize the dealer to refund the money to his customer, and will in turn refund the amount to the dealer.

The Rainbow Dye Company are offering to the trade the smallest and most unique cabinet, at the smallest investment, of any cabinet now offered on the market. It is given with orders for one gross of the goods, and includes twelve packages free, thus affording the dealer an unusually large profit for a very widely advertised and guaranteed product.

The Rainbow Dye Company, New York City, will be glad to forward to any dealer, on application, a color card of Rainbow Dyes showing a sample of cotton, wool, silk and mixed goods sewn together and dyed at the same time, in the same bath and with the same dye, together with literature giving a full description of their unique cabinet and their various propositions to dealers.

MO. PH. A.

Mo. Ph. A. Committees for 1908-1909. Deceased Members.-Fred R. Dimmitt, Chairman, Kansas City. P. H. Franklin, Marshall; A. S. Ludwig, St. Louis; F. L. Barnes Kansas City; W. B. Kerns, Bunceton.

Drug Adulterations.-Dr. Chas. E. Caspari, Chairman, St.Louis; Mrs. D. V. Whitney, Kansas City; Wm. K. Ilhart, St. Louis; H. D. Llewellyn, Mexico; A. Brandenberger, Jefferson City. Exhibits.-H. J. Nie, Chairman, Kansas City; C. E. Zinn, Kansas City; F. W. Robinson, Warrensburg; E. L. Rhodes, Lincoln; Geo. L Parsons, Kansas City.

Entertainment.-J. C. Wirthman, Vice-Chairman, Kansas City. Chairman and members will be named when location of 1909 meeting is decided.

Ladies Entertainment Committee.- Mrs. H M. Whelpley, Chairman; Mrs. Otto F. Claus, Vice-Chairman; Mrs. J. C. Wirthman, Mrs. Wm. Mittelbach; Mrs. Oscar H. Ott; Mrs. L. A. Seitz; Mrs. C. W. Loomis; Mrs. E. C. Hamill; Mrs. D. V. Whitney; Mrs. T. T. Duncan; Mrs. H. J. Stolle; Mrs. W. H. Lamont; Mrs. A. C. Meyer; Mrs. Dan Liddy; Mrs. Ed. Hunter.

Legislation.-Charles L. Wright, Chairman, Webb City; Henry O. A. Huegel, St. Louis; Dr. A. H. P. Bohning, New Hampton; Louis Grother, Warsaw; P. H. Franklin, Marshall.

National Formulary.—Mrs. D. V. Whitney, Chairman, Kansas City; W. C. Knight, Columbia; Ambrose Mueller, Webster Groves; C. H. Cleeton, Higbee; Leo Suppan, St. Louis.

Membership and Attendance.-E. H. Dudley, Chairman,Kansas City; W. R. Scheldrup, Pierce City; H. F. Sum, St. Louis; H. W. Servant, Sedalia; Ed. G. Orear, Maryville.

Papers and Queries.-Prof. Francis Hemm, Chairman, St. Louis; H. M. Pettit, Carrollton; J. F. Llewellyn, Mexico; C. E. Meyers, St. Charles; F. G. Uhlich, St. Louis,

Trade Interests.-Wm. F. Ittner, Chairman, St. Louis; F. C. Whitman, Warrensburg; R. B. Tilley, Columbia; A. Nicholas, Trenton; W. D. Webb, St. Joseph.

Transportation.-W. B. Kerns, Chairman, Bunceton; S. J. Althoff, Higginsville; W. E. Bard, Sedalia; J. J. Frey, St. Louis; T. B. Montgomery, Warrensburg.

United States Pharmacopoeia.-Wm. Mittelbach, Chairman, Boonville; Francis Hemm, St. Louis; O. W. Smith, Sedalia; H. M. Pettit, Carrollton; Otto F. Claus, St. Louis.

Auxiliary Committee of Jobbers.—(To solicit new members.)— Judge W. T. Bland, chairman, McPike Drug Co., Kansas City. Auxiliary Committee on Membership and Legislation.

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American Pharmaceutical Association.-Charles Gietner, St. Louis; Wm. Mittelbach, Boonville; A. Brandenberger, H. M. Pettit, Carrollton.

N. A. R. D.-Charles L. Wright, Chairman, W. M. Federmann, Kansas City, Alternate.

Illinois Pharmaceutical Association.-Dr. H. M. Whelpley, Chairman, St. Louis; Leo Suppan, St. Louis.

Kansas Pharmaceutical Association.-A. F. Zimmerschied, Chairman, Kansas City, Kan.; T. A. Mosely, Kansas City, Kan. Missouri Medical Association Same Committee as on Legislation.

12438

The World Takes Off Its Hat to Oliver Number 5

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It is impossible in the limited space of this announcement to adequately describe the new machine. A brief resume of its commanding

The World loves advantages must suffice. a winner.

Here's one that won over every typewriter under the sun.

It's the new Oliver

Hats off to the victorious Oliver!

The new Oliver is the first to reach the goal of typewriter perfection.

While other typewriter makers rested on their laurels, the Oliver Typewriter Company's corps of mechanical experts were bending every energy to the task of making a new world's record.

The splendid result, the wonderful new Oliver Model No. 5, represents the highest achievement of typewriter invention.

Speed possibilities have been vastly increased. Time and labor-saving features hitherto unknown have been perfected. Years of durability have been added.

Simplicity has been reduced to its lowest

terms.

Efficiency has reached its utmost limits.

Not until Oliver Model No. 5 was absolutely perfect down to the minutest detail-not until

The Oliver Disappearing Indicator is the only device on any typewriter for indicating the exact visible printing point at time of stroke.

The Oliver Balance Shift Mechanism gives the new model a fifty per cent advantage over all other shift key machines.

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The Oliver Line Ruling Device, the Oliver Non-Vibrating Base, the Oliver Automatic Paper Feed, and scores of additional improvements that make for accuracy and speed, are found on Model No. 5 and nowhere else.

Every employer, every operator, every business executive interested in raising the standard of efficiency in all departments, should write for catalogue giving full details of this wonderful typewriter.

we were fully prepared by increasing our fac- Extra Men Wanted At Once!

tory capacity to meet the enormous demand for it was news of the coming wonder permitted to reach the outside world.

This is the first public announcement of Oliver Model No. 5, and it will go down in history as marking a new epoch in the typewriter industry.

Unprecedented demand for the new model necessitates the employment of extra salesmen immediately.

Good salaries and permanent positions to men of character and ability. We train our men FREE in The Oliver School of Practical Salesmanship. Address at once,

The Oliver Typewriter Co., 117 No. 8th St., St. Louis, Mo.

MENTION MEYER BROTHERS DRUGGIST WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS.

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