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Show A Simple Prescription For the Hair. In the good old days our mothers used to tell us to use garden sage for dandruff and falling hair. A simple sim-ple infusion was made of the common garden sage and applied to the roots of the hair. This old tlmo remedy 13 still used in many sections of the country coun-try to this day. It has also been dlo-covered dlo-covered that the Indians of the northwest north-west used to make a brew (or tea) of the wild sage (sage brush) and apply ap-ply it for all scalp affections. White people also used this sage brush tea with good results.. A careful study has been made of the different kin! of sage and It has been found that the wild Bago or sago brush contains much more of this certain curative i property than does the tamo sage. The reason for this is apparent The ! wild sage grow ing as It does In a soli , rich In sulphur and volcanic ash nat- I urally contains much more medicinal matter. ; One of the main objections to the use of these crude preparations, especially es-pecially so of the wild sage, was the disagreeable odor of the brush. This , objection has been overcome after three years of careful experimenting in. a laboratory especially fitted fo-tbo fo-tbo purpose so that you can now procure pro-cure a preparation free from all the disagreeable odors but still containing all the active principles of the wild sage. This preparation Is guaranteed to cure dandruff and stop falling hair, and will do so if directions are carefully care-fully followed. "' Ask for Sage Brush Hair Tonic. Tor pale at all tho leading Drug Stores I and Barber Shops, in this city. |