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ALL SICK WOMEN SHOULD READ MRS. FOX’S LETTER In All Parts of the United States Lydia B Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound Has Effected Blmilar Cures. Many wonderful cures of female ills are continually coming to light which have been brought about by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., which is given to sick women absolutely free of charge. The present Mrs. Pinkham has for twenty-five years made a study of the ills of her sex ; she has consulted with and advised thousands of suffering women, who to-day owe not only their health hut even life to her helpfpl advice. Mrs. Fannie D. Fox, of 7 Chestnut Street, Bradford, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham “ I suffered for a long time with female trouble, and finally wm told by my physician that I had a tumor. I did not want to submit to an operation, so wrote you for advice. I received your letter and did as you told me, and to-day I am completely cured. My doctor says the tumor has disap peared, and I am once more a well woman. 1 believe Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound U the best medicine in the world.” The testimonials which we are con atantlypuhlishingfrom grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at tynn, Mass. She asks nothing in return for her advice. It is absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precioua than gold. V.. ■■ - . - -- GLOBE-WERNICKE Elastic Booh Case Is the original and only perfect sectional book case made. The doors are non bind ing, dust proof, operate on roller bearings and positively < nnnot get out of order. Call and see them or send for catalog No. 105, RICE & CO. Next to PostofBce Vicksburg, Mies. Increase Year Melds Per Acre 1?V 0ne ^ Tiie Results || of liberally using our fertili ■ I zers. is to pay off a mortgage f a on the old farm. Read the fol t j lowing from Messrs. Wherry I a & Son, owners of the Magnolia 1 fl Fruit Farm. Durant, Miss.: I Li "We made $900 from one acre I r strawberries, on which your fertilizers were used. Bight |m j years ago we bought this place ■■L at $30 per acre. It was then Mr considered to have been worn out twenty years before, but by liberally using Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers under peas and velvet beans, we can now grow almost any thing, and have been offered $350 per acre for the place. We experimented with a great many brands of fertilizers, but find the highest per-cent, cheaper.” Now don’tyou think Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers would enable you to pay off a * ~ mortgage if you had one? Well, don’t use any other. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. Richmond, Va. Norfolk. Va. Durham, N. C. Charleston, S. 0. Baltimore, Aid. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Memphis, Term, Shreveport, La. The 1—— Wanted. Old defaulted or unsaleable stocks and bonds. Remainders of estates bought. All uuquoted or un listed securities dealt In. No charge for valuing- old fcecuritiea. Valuable book on old securities pre sentea to holder of any extinct stock not mentioned therein. R. M. H1VIVTU15. icooin la2, l»r« ihice r.xchf ye. New t ork. 1000 gallon Cistern - 18.50 1550 gallon Cistern - - 21.50 2100 gallon Cistern - 25.45 Cypress sash and doors very cheap Wire screens and doors cheap. H.F.LEW18&CO., Limited 816XIier«uue St.. NEW OLEANS, LA. Send for Catalogue. Write for Prioei. Banker and Business Man Have a Spat In a town not a hundred miles from Vicksburg there was sharp talk be tween two citizens. So far as the writer could learn, a prominent bus iness man needed a good sum of money and the banker required conditions the former thought unreasonable. Com mccially speaking, the banker was right, but bis customer thought one of the conditions nquired reflected on his credit. There wore very sharp words, but the matter was Anally ad justed. The banker who is careful, and well posted, flatly told the mer chant he would not lend the amount of money asked, unless the former's residence and stock were well insured. When the borrower ngrotd to insure in The Mississippi Home Insurance Company, one of thebest'in the South the loan was made. The world’s production of coal in ISS'J was 370,000,000 tons. DON’T MiS5 This. A Cure For Stomach Trouble— V New Method, by Absorption—No Drugs. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour Eructations, Heart Pains, Indigestion. Dvs pepsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weight in Pit of Stomach. Acid Stomach, Dis tended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic? Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach lor ture ? Let us send vou a box of Mull's Anti Belch Wafers free to convince you that it cures. Nothing else like it known. It’s sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical Science. Drugs won’t do—they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers cure and we want you to know it, hence this offer. This offer may not appear again. ,---1 1270 GOOD FOR 25c. 114 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we will supply you a sample free if you have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also 6end you n cer tificate good for 25c. toward the pur chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou ble- cures by absorption. Address Mull's Gkape Tonic Co., 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, 111. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per box, or by inaii upon receipt of nrire. S^’-s accepted. Chinese students in Japan now number more than 3000. TWENTY YEARS OF IT. Emaciated by Diabetest Tortured With Gravel and Kidney Pains. Henry Soule, cobble-, of Hammonds port, N. Y., says: “Since Doan’s Kid ney Pills cured me eight years ago, I’ve reached 70 and hope to live many years longer. But twenty years ago I had kidney trouble so bad I could not work. Backache was persistent and it was agony to lift anything. Gravei, whirling head aches, dizziness and terrible urin ary disorders ran me down from 168 to 100 pounds. Doctors told me I had diabetes and could not live. I -was wretched and hopeless when I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills, but they cured me eight years ago, and I’ve been well ever since.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Glasgow, Scotland, spends on drir.k $10, 000,000 n year. j. StecKler, Seed Co., Ltd. Richard Frotscher’s Successors, 518 Graiver St. New Orleans, La. HIGH GRADE SEEDS. Quality the Best as shown by our awards: Grand Prize for Southern Seed Exhibit, and four Medals from Louisianna Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., and Gold Medal from Portland, Oregon Exposition. We deal in Everything that grows and Instructive Seed Manual for 1906 Free fo oil applicants. Mention this paper when writing. FARMERS, ATTENTION. June buds Elbertas six cents each; all varieties I and 2 vear Peach trees It) to 15c. Apples, Pears and other nursery 9tock very low; closing DUt stock. Order quick. Satisfaction guaran teed. DEKALB NURSERY CO.. Ft. Payne. Ala LEWIS H. WHITE 521 Bienville Mreet, NEW ORLEANS. Highest market price paJd for HIDES RAW FURS ANli WOOT ..."B The Lankford Collar | H A farmer writes us from Texas' H d that “there ought to be a law g y passed to compel people to use the R i| LANKFORD COLLAR.” Write us « S3 for his name and address. Cata- « ?§ Couch Bros, and J. J. Eagan Co. H y Atlanta. Ga. Memphis, Tenn. B LaFAVETTE stogk farm LARGEST IMPORTERS IN AMERICA OP THE J. CROUCH & BON, • PE0 8 Great German Coach-Stallions The Beet Horse to Cross on Small Southern Mares. EVERY COLT A HIGH-CLASS ONE. The Coming horse for the South. 160 head sold In the South last year. Our last Importation of 81 Stallions ar rived Nov. 1.1905. All Stallions guaranteed; lilwral terms made. Catalogue on application. If your country meed8 a stallion write us. J. CROUCH A SON. Nashville, Tenn. QH.p||P I rllllBrllVE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE IF BAB BOLD, HEADACHE AHD NEURAL6IA. IlL l I I wea’t sail Aatt-Orlwtue to a dsalat who won't Qaarastw I*. UM. by Call tor ysur MONET BACK IF IT BOMN’T CHS*. JT. IF. Jlsmer, M.D., Manufacturer, BprinaiM*$ Mm> FIT'S permanently mired. No (Its or nervous ness after first (lay’s use of Dr. Kltne's Gfea’ Nerve Restorer,tUcrial bottle andtreatlsefreo Dr. It.H.Klikk, Ltd., 031 Arch St., Pblln., Pu. The Russo-Chincse bank at Yokohama is reopening. To Core a Cold in One Day lake Laxative Promo. Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money If It falls to cure, E. W. Grovo’s signature on each box. The first man to stereotype a newspaper was Charles Craske. Itobbeil In Chnrch. Just think what an outrage it is to be robbed .if all Ihe benefit* 01 the services iy continuous coughing throughout the congregation, when Anti Uripine is gusran teed lo cure. Sold everywhere. 25 cts. F. W. Diemer, At. 11., msnufacturer, Springfield. Alo. Bachelors have a difficult time in Korea; ,hey may not vote. A Guaranteed Cnre For Filet, » [lohinp, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding PUs*. Druggists are authorized to refund money It Pnzo Ointmont fal Is t o ou re In 6 to H days. 50c. There are no newsboys in Spain. Worn in sell newspapers on the street. Plso's Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible nedicine for coughs aud cold;.—N. W, 5AMCZL, OoeanGrove, N. J.t Feb. 17, 1900. The history of coal is comparatively modern. Itch cured in 3C minutes by Woolford’s lanitary Lotion; never falls. Hold by Druggists. Mali orders promptly filled by Dr. Detehon, Ciawfordsvllle, Ind. tL. The new Italian postage stamps will not scar the monarch's head. Taylor’* Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen Is Nature’s great remedy—Cure* Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At dm* Cists. 25c.. 60c. and fl.OOper bottle. The Ranchers of u’.iAsta, Siskiyou and Modoc counties, California, have begun a war of extermination oil wild hoas. Cures Blood, Skin Troubles, Cancer, Blood Poison, Greatest Blood Purifier Free. If your blood is impure, thin, diseased, hot or full of humors, if you have blood poison, cancer, carbuncles, eating sores, scrofula, eczema, itching, risings and lumps, scabby, pimply skin, bone pains, catarrh, rheumatism, or any blood or skin disease, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) accord ing to directions. Soon all sores heal, aches and pales stop, the blood is made pure and rich, leaving the skin free from every eruption, and giving the rich glow of perfect health to the skin. At the same time. B. B. B. improves the digestion, cures dyspepsia, strengthens weak kidneys. Just the medicine for old people, ns it gives them new, vigorous blood. Druggists, $1 per large bottle, with directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, fra. Describe trouble and special free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. B. B. B. is especially advised for chronic, deep-seated cases of impure blood and skin disease, and cures after all else fails._ The season catch of herring by the boats of Yarmouth and Lowestoft, on '.he ea3t. const of England, was this ••ear C 10.000.000. or 40,000,000 more than last year. The value cf the catch was mor:-' than $2/00.000. 81(10 Iteward. 8100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to iearn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that seienee has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrll Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s CatarrhCureis takenlnter ually,acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surlaoes of the system,thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitutlon and assisting nature in doing it i work. The proprietors havo so much faith ii its curative powers that they offer Ono Hun dred Dollars for any caso that it fails to oure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Chkngy & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Tako Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Slaughter of Fur Game. “What a gap there must be In the ■auks of squirrels and rabbits and jussy cats this year,” said the natur alist. “Nearly every woman you see s wrapped in fur, and squirrel and c/hat passes for ermine seem to be Tie most popular. Of course, the squirrel is genuine, but there isn’t snough ermine in the world to make ill the white furs one seas and sell •hem at medium price. It certain.y *s amusing to see a haughty dame lecked in the fur of some Inoffensive bunny or tame cat.”—New York Or ASS. _. Sending Messages In Paris. The telephone system of Parts leaves considerable to be desired and meets with constant complaint on the Part , of thg subscribers. One of the 'atter endeavored to test the speed if the various means of communlca ion of the city, sending messages in ’afferent ways from his room in the ’tue Richelieu, in the centre of the '.ity, to a friend on the Avenue de la 'irande Armes, near the Bois de c5ouiogno. He found that a bicycle messenger had made the trip in 11 minutes and 15 seconds, as compar ed with 23 minutes for a cab. A mes sage sent via the Metropolitan Rah fray required 31 minutes, by omnibus E4 minutes, a telegram 35 minutes, a tnessage by the pneumatic tube three hours, while the message sent by telephone did not arrive at all.—Har iier’s Weekly. THE LITTLE WIDOW A Miglity Good Sort of a Neighbor to Hare “A little widow, a neighbor of mine, persuaded me to try Grape-Nuts when my stomach was so weak that it would not retain food of any other kind,” writes a grateful woman, from San Bernardino Co., Cal. “1 had been ill and confined to my lied with fever and nervous prostration for three long months after the bifth if my second boy. We were in despair until the little widow’s advice brought relief. "I liked Grape-Nnts food from the beginning, and in an incredibly short lime it gave me such strength that 1 was able to leave my bed and enjoy my hree good meals a day. In two months my weight increased from ninety-five lo 113 pounds, my nerves had steadied lown and I felt ready for anything. Vly neighbors were amazed to see me rain so rapidly and still more so when they heard that Grape-Nuts alone had irought the change. “My four-year-old boy had eczema, - cry bad, last spring and lost Us ap letite entirely, which made him cross i ncl peevish. I put him on a diet of .’rape-Nuts, which he relished at once. He improved from the beginning, the ‘czema disappeared and now he is fat iiid rosy, with a delightfully soft, dear kin. The Grape-Nuts diet did it. 1 ' 111 willingly answer all inquiries.” lame given by Poslum Oo., Battle .'reek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little >ook. “The Road to WeUrilie.” in pkjrs. REAL ANARCHISTS THE WEAL* THY. So Patterson Declares He Finds as Chicago’s Commissioner of Public Works. “Certain capitalists of Chicago an Inarchists. I say they are, and with emphasis. I believe men are anarch ists, no matter how big their bank ac counts, who take the attitude that law floes not exist for them and that they Ire exempt from obeying it. “Millions of dollars worth of prop erty is illegally occupied at the pre sent moment in Chicago by rich In dividuals and corporations who have not a vestige of right to it, and many of whom give arrogant defiance to the taw. II that is not anarchy, what is?” This was the reply of Commission er of Public Works Joseph Medlll Pat terson, when questioned concerning a Speech made by him in the University of Chicago, when he put the "real an archists” in the rankq of the wealthy. Mr. Patterson amplified his views then expressed and said some very Strong things about his experiences since assuming office with wealthy “anarchists” and their representatives. “Since I have been trying to make people obey the laws,” said the com missioner, “and trying to get them to do the legal, the right and the fair thing, I have been brought in contact with a brazen defiance of law in this city which is amazing. “Why, it is an absolute fact that many—I do not say all, by any means —but many, of the wealthy men and firms of the city actually believe they are above the law. The law may exist but it certainly does not exist for them. That is their position. They defy the law, ignore the law, laugh at the law, all with an arogance that makes my blood boil. Wealthy Arms occupy city land both on sidewalks and underneath sidewalks, without paying one cent of compensation and without an atom of title. They do not pay taxes on the land thus illegally occupied. Again, land belonging to the city in the shape of stub ends of streets abutting on the river is occupied by business men without compensation, title or right. Yet again, made land is grabbed by private persons, who have no title to it. They give no consideration to laws. “Still, again, wealthy firms in this city are in the habit of stealing wat er—it is stealing, and nothing else The water costs the city pumping and labor, and that these firms take out right. Sometimes they steal the wat er by means of their own pipes, and sometimes by changing the meters. “I am now trying to insist that such firms as we have found acting in ttyis way shall pay the city what is due. I have told some of these firms that ex posure will certainly follow their further refusal to settle. At present I will not mention names. Two of the companies, however, who have been stealing water are large brewing companies. “Still, again, I may mention the rail roads which refuse to install gates at grade crossings. The law says they shall install such gates, but they do not care what the law says.” “What is the value of all the prop erty which is illegally grabbed in one way or another?” Mr. Patterson was asked. “It is very difficult to make a close estimate,” he answered, “but the sum will certainly run up in the millions. In the loop alone, for instance, 1,200, 000 square feet of property is illegally occupied by bay windows and other sidewalk encroachments apd in oth er ways. Two hundred thousand dol lars should come to the city in the way of compensation each year. “These men, who are acting illegal ly, are preventing the people from having the amount in their public treasury that should be there. Proper compensation paid to the city for its property which is being illegally used means to the city and to its peo ple more police, better fire protection and generally more money for crying civic needs.”—New York Herald. What Hunger Is Scientifically. Hunger is the sensation felt because of the contraction of the muscularis either of the pylorus or possibly also the entire stomach or of the duode num, or of the contraction of the muscularis of all these structures. If the contraction is more intense it is felt as a painful hunger. If the con traction is slight, then the sensation of the hunger is also of slight degree; it is evanescent. Hunger is a lesser degree of pain, and is produced by the contraction of the muscularis. This is the reason why hunger passes away after a cer tain lapse of time, even if no food has been taken; it means simply that the muscularis becomes tired and contrac tion gives way to relaxation. Absence of contraction, the inability to con tract; relaxation, distention—these be ing the opposite, the reverse of con traction results in the opposite of ap petite, anorexia, provided, however, that such distention is not caused by an overabundance of the irritating acid gases. Anorexia is the sensory symptom of uistention of the stomach and upper portion of the intestine by non-irritating gases, accompanied by complete or partial relaxation of the sphincter. This is the condition we observe in chronic pyloritis, chronic gastritis, and chronic inflammatory conditions of the first portion of the small intestine.—Dr. Mark l. Knapp, in American Medicine. Electric Tramway in Japan. The first electric tramway built in Japan was the line, eight miles in length, which was opened in Kioto in 1895. Since then other cities of im portance have built electric tram ways, and there are now seventeen companies with an aggregate capital bf 36,000,000 yen ($18,000,000), whose lines already opened aggregate 120 miles, with ' eighty-five miles more building. Most of these companies have not yet a very profitable busi ness; but that the profits will be large is indicated by the fact that the electric tramways of Tokio ah ready pay annual dividends of not less than 10 percent.—Railroad Gaz ette. An Incident of the War. An luteres’Ing Incident of life In Libby prison, at Richmond, Va., dur ing the Civil War was recalled the other evening by Col. C. E. Bradshaw, who wu a prominent figure In th: campaigns In the Southwest. Co! Bradshaw was addressing a meeting of representatives of the patriotic or ganizations of Washington when the name of Bishop McCabe was mo: tloned. "I recall one of the darkest, storm lest, rainiest nights at old Libby,’ said Col. Bradshaw. "The Union prlf oners were huddled together on on< of the lower floors and the rain wa coming In on them In a perfect dr luge. Among the captives in blu was Bishop McCabe, then a cbaplair. In his excess of good nature he saw the humorous side of even such it situation as I have described. Whllo our boys, hungry and cold, were try ing to keep warm and dry a voicn was raised above the howling of the tempest outside and could be heard In all parts of the prison: “‘Hands on your pocket books!’ “The voice was that of Chaplain McCabe, who knew fu’l well ther was not a single dollar in all tha: great crowd of shivering Yanke; soldiers. The sally caused an out burst of laughter nctwiths anding the uncomfortableness of the situation. Col. Bradshaw also relates that in o certain battle In the Southwest it fel' to his lot to take his own brother pris oner. It appeared that both the Colonel’s fa* her and brother were ir the Confederate military service, w-hll he espoused the cause of the Union The Bradshaws are Kentuckians When his brother first fell into his hands, he added, he was scarcely recognizable owing to his full growth of beard and his generally begrimed —Wntshincrtnn Star. Gladstone’s Early Joys. Mr. Henry Chaplin, that doughty /quire of protection, retails occas ionally a story of the late Mr. Glad 'tone with much gusto. When Mr. Tladstone was quite an old man, it dianced that he and Mr. Chaplin were staying at the same country 'louse together on a visit. One night 'ifter dinner the Grand Old Man ask ed Mr. Chaplin whether his grand mother had not lived in a certain Itreet in Mayfair. Mr. Chaplin re plied that she had dcine so. “Well,” “-.aid Mr. Gladstone, "1 remember it listinctly. I lived next door to her .’or a while when I was a child. She jsed to give evening parties. When (he carriages were assembled to take ip, my brother and I used to creep out of bed—it was in the summer *ime—softly open the window, get out iur squirts and discreetly fire away it the coachmen on the boxes. I re member the intense delight with which we used to see them look up o the sky and call out to ask each jther whether it wasn’t beginning to rain.—Dundee Advertiser. FOUR YEARS OF AGONY. YVliole Foot Nothin*: But l’rond Flesh Had to Use trutchea — “Cuticura Remedies Best on Earth.” “in the year 1896 She side of my right foot was cut oft from the little toe down to the heel, and the physician who had charge of me was trying to sew up the side of my foot, but with ho succesa. At last my wboje foot and way up above my calf was nothing but proud flesh. 1 suf fered untold agonies for four years, and tried different physicians and all kinds of ointments. 1 could walk only with crutches. In two weeks afterwards 1 saw a change in my limb. Then 1 began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment often during the da}’, and kept it up for seven months, when my limb was healed up just the same as if I never had trouble. It is eight months now since I stopped using Cuticura Remedies, the best on God’s earth. I am working at the present day, after five years of suffering. The cost of Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $6, but the doctors’ bills were more like ?600. John M. Lloyd, 718 S. Arch Ave., Al liance, Ohio, June 27, 1905.” Anew French Order of Merit i» on the nn’-t v^'-no- mstttnted. Admiral Hichborn Praises Pe-ru-iia . lTurm—r-r~irr"r"~'HT~~i'n n Admiral’s Words Carry Weight. Rear-Admiral Hiehborn is one of the best known officer's of our navy. His statements concerning Peruna will have much weight as they go out in the world. What he says is echoed by many other officers of high standing. What the Admiral Says. Philip Hiehborn, Rear-Admiral of the U. S. Navy, Washington, D. C., writes: “After theuseof I’erunafor a short period, I can now cheerfully recom mend your valuable remedy to any one who Is In need of an invigoral tny tonic.’’—Philip lltchborn. i An Ever-Present Poe. The soldier and the sailor are especially Bubject to catarrh. In the barracks and on the field Peruna is found equally effica cious to overcome this physical enemy. If taken in time it will prevent colds from developing into catarrh. Even after a cold has settled in some organ of the body Pe runa can be relied upon as an efficacious remedy to promptly overcome it. Peruna will relieve catarrh, whether acute or chronic, but a few doses of it taken in the first stages of the disease will be more effective than when the dis ease has become established. 1 For Your Family and Your Horse The Best Antiseptic Known. TRY IT FOR Rtamafisn!, Strains, Sprains, Swellings and Enlargements. Price, 20c., 50c. and $1.00.H Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, i Albany St., Boston, IViass.B VIX 4.-1906. arasa-Jkr5fe.~«^U:d3in«UB|i MS CURES WHERE All EISE FAIIS.Q, ----— - |£] Beet Congh Byrap, T«ste» Good. B» r] Kjrea Thompson’s Eye Water friaaBaaftagi / High Class \ I AND-OTHERS. | Tho better class of druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity, 1 who devoto tbeir lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies ana ■ purest medicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians prescriptions fl scientific formula. Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, Dili | always under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation me 1 i • They are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes ■ all standard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pharmacy and the fines an ■ ^ best of toilet articles and preparations and many useful accessories and remedial appliances. « The earning of a fair living, with tho satisfaction which arises from a knowledge of the benefits conferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their grea es reward for long years of ctudy and many hours of daily toil. They all _ know that byrup o Fio-s is an excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore they are selling many millions of bottles annually to the well informed purchasers of the choicest J remedies, and they always take pleasure in handing out the genuine article bearing the tu 1 ■ name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Do—printed on the front of every package. * They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation ana m of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, or over-eating, that there is no other remedy so pleasant,. prompt and beneficial in its enect3 as Syrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. . Owing to the excellenco of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it gives and ths immense demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, but there are individual druggists to bo found, here and there, who do not maintain the dignity and principles of the profession and whoso grood gets the better of their judgment, and who do not hesitato to recommond and try to soil tho imitations in order to make a larger profit. Such preparations sometimes have the name—“ Syrup of Figs”—or “Fig Syrup” and of some piratical concern, or fictitious fig syrup company, printed,on t^e package, but they never have the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of the package. The imitations chould be rejected because they are injurious to the oystem. In order to sell the imitations f Ithev find it necessary to resort to misrepresentation or deception, and whenever a dealer passes B off on a customer a preparation under tho name of “Syrup of Figs” or ‘Fig Syrup, which ■ does not bear the full name of the California Fig Syrup'Co. printed on the front of the package, V he is attempting to deceive and mislead the patron who has been so unfortunate as to enter his 1 establishment, whether it bo large or small, for if the dealer resorts to misrepresentation and and deception in one case he will do so with other medicinal agents, and in the filling of physicians’ prescriptions, and should be avoided by every one who values health and happiness. I | Knowing that the groat majority of druggists are reliable, we supply the immense demand I 1 for our excellent remedv entirely through the druggists, of whom it may be purchased every- I 1 where, in original packages onlv, at the regular price of fifty cents per bottle, but as exceptions 1 '1 exist it is necessarv to inform the public of the facts, m order that al may decline or return I 1 any imitation which may be sold to them. If it does not bear the full name of the Company- J \ California Fig Svrup Co.—printed on the front of every package, do not hesitate to return the M B article and to demand the return of your money, and in future go to one of the better class of ■ B druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best of everything in his line at reasonable prices^^^ M