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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1906)
!Backache, “The Blues” Both Symptoms of Organic Derangement in Women—Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief. How often do we hear women say: “It seems as though my back would break,” or “Don’t speak to me, I am all out of sorts"? Thesesignificantremarksprove that the system requires attention. Backache and “ the bines” are direct symptoms of an inward trouble which will sooner or later declare itself. It may be caused by diseased kidneys or some derangement of the organs. Nature requires assistance and at once, and LydiaE Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound instantly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. It has been the standby of intelligent American women for twenty years, and the best judges agree that It is the most universally success ful remedy for woman’s ills known to medicine. Bead the convincing testimonials of Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. Cotrely. Mrs. J. C. Holmes, of Larimore, North Dakota, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham;— “ I have Buffered everything with backache and female trouble—I let the trouble run on until my svstem was in such a condition that I was unable to be about, and then it was I commenced to use Lvdia Pinkham’s Vege table Compound. If 1 had only known how much suffering I would have saved I should have taken it months sooner—for a few weeks’ treatment made me well and strong. My backaches and headaches are all gone and I suffer no pain at mv monthlv periods, whereas before I took Lydia E, Pinkham’s V egetable Compound I suffered intense pain. ” Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 12th Street, New York City, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “ I feel it mv duty to tell all sufferingwomen of the relief 1 have found in Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, When I com menced t. iking the Compound I suffered everything with backaches, headaches, and female troubles. 1 am completely cured and enjoy the best of health, and I owe it all to you,” When women are troubled with irreg ular, suppressed or painful periods, weakness, displacements or ulceration, that bearing-down feeling, inflamma tion of the female organa, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general de bility, indigestion and nervous prostra tion, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excit ability, irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, “ all gone ” and “ want-to-be-leftralone” feelings, blues and hopelessness, they should remem ber there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound at once removes such troubles. No other medicine has such a record of cures r? female troubles. No other medicir : the world has received this widest/ .ad and unqualified endorse ment Refuse to buy any substitute. FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN. Remember, every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkhatn if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Pink ham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, her assistant before her de cease. aad for twenty-five years since her advice has been freely and cheer fully given to every ailing woman who asks for it. Her advice and medicine have restored to health innumerable women. Address, Lynn, Mass. aw Mrs. rintniUDs AUYice—a nonan oesi unasrsianas a nomacs You W ill Prosper in the Great Southwest In Oklahoma. Indian Territory and Texas are vast areas of unimproved land—land not now yielding the crops of which it is ; capable. The same conditions apply to the i towns. Few lines of business are adequately represented. There are openings of all sorts—for mills and factories, for. small stores, for banks, newspapers and lumber yards. You have only to get on the ground to prove this. To enable you to do so the Missouri, Kansas Sc Texas R'y offers Rates Cheaper Than Ever March 6th and 20th On above dates most line* will sell both one-way and round trip tickets at exceptionally low rates. If ycmr nearest railroad agent cannot give yen the rates, write me for particulars. If you’re in any way interested in the Southwest. I'd like to send you my paper "The Coming Country.” Address G. A. McNVTT Blossom House. KANSAS CITY. MO. Tickets on sale everywhere, via DEAFNESS CURED IB*-PAGE BOOK which explains how to cure deafness I at home; Its free: write for It. j DR. W. 0, COFFEE. ItO Century Bidr.. Dcs Manes, la. | PATENTS lor PROFIT must folly protect an Invention. Booklet and Desk Calendar FREE. Highest references. Communications confidential. Established 1861. Mason, Fenwick k Lawrence, Washington, D. C. PIT & PITLESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames, $25 and up. Write us before you buy. We save you monev* Also Pumps and Wind Mills. BECKMAN BROS., Dea Moines, Iowa. DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 10c. When Writing Advertisers Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U., Omaha. No. 9—1906. Women Envy Men’s Vices. Women hare a perpetual envy of our vices; they are less vicious than we. not from choice, but because we re strict them; they are the slaves of or der and fashion.—Johnson. U. S. NAVY enlists fnr four years young, men of good character and sound physical condition between the ages of 17 and he as apprentice seamen; oppor tunities for advancement: pay 116 to $70 a month. Electricians, machinists, black smiths. coppersmitrs. yeomen (cierkst. carpenters, shipfitters. firemen. musi cians, cooks, etc., between 21 and 25 years enlisted in special ratings with suitable pay: hospital apprentices IS to 2S years. Retirement on three-fourths pay and al lowances after 30 years service. Appli cants must be American citizens. Free transportation from place of en listment to Naval Station, and free outfit of clothing, amounting to $15. furnished every recruit. Upon discharge fre transportation to place of enlistment. For full particulars address Navy Recruiting Station. Rostoffice Building. Omaha. Neb., or Navy Recruiting Station, BURR BLOCK, 12th and O Sts.. Lincoln, Neb Jaws and Genius. A Philadelphia doctor claims thai defective speech is usually an indica tion of an inferior intellect Possibly but don’t jump to the conclusion thai every glib talker is therefore a genius. Acme Dyopepsia Cure. Positive cure for all diseases of gtoraach. liver, and bowels, Keeommended bv leading physicians. 1h« ‘lire that cures. MO tablets 11.00. Send money with order to Acme Dyspepsia Cure Co., Ironia New Jersey. When a woman says she is of little consequence she does not expect tc be other than commanding. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrop. •/or children teething, softens the gums, reduces .lammaf.i n, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a DottiSi Jealousy is like enmity: The less said about it the better. r- , FOR EMERGENCIES IT HOME And for the Stock on the Farm NCTHINC EQUALS i The Great Antiseptic I Price, 25c., 50c. and $1.00. \ Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, .1615 Albany St., Boston, Mass. ANTI-GRIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CUKE GRIP* BAD COLD, BEADACBE AID IEURAL61A. I won’t sell AntUGrlp^ae to a dealer who won’t Guarantee It. Cali for tout MOV RT BACK IT IT DOIT CVRE. M. W. JWwcr,Jfca»MM»nnfiiotnTer.epHwg|toMJ Mm. MAKING THE ARROWS PERFECT. Why Grooves are Invariably Cut In the Shafts. In making an Indian arrow three small undulating grooves are cut on the shaft, running down to the head from the lower end of the feathers, says the Southern Workman. This has attracted the attention of some of the ethnologists, who gave the mattei considerable study and wisely con cluded that the little lines were made for the blood to run through or that they represented lightning. An old Omaha, who had the reputation of be ing very skillful in cutting grooves in arrow shafts, was called by the chief to do that work for him on some ar rows he was making. The chief him self was a fine arrow maker, but he recognized the skill of the old man in this particular line. While the work was in progress the chief’s son. who had reached the inquisitive age and was looking on with wide-eyed inter est, suddenly asked. “Venerable man. why are you making those crooked lines?’’ The chief gave a hearty laugh and said, “Father, tell him. for he will be making arrows himself 6ome day, and he should know how.” “Every sapling,” answered the old man. “out of which the arrow is made has some defect, however faultless it may ap pear to be. The good arrow maker takes a great deal of pains to smooth out and straighten the imperfections by oiling and heating, but the wood in time v ill spring back because of its inherent defects unless these grooves are cut in the shaft soon after sea soning and straightening.” TOOK NAP IN PERILOUS PLACE Workman Asleep in a Window Twelve Stories from the Ground. The other day in New York, Morris Spencer, weary of window cleaning, calmly sat down and fell asleep on the narrow ledge of the twelfth story of a Wall street sky scraper. Before closing his eyes, he dropped one leg carelessly over the edge of the ledge and leaned his head back against the window frame; then he slipped off into dreamland. For three hours the window cleaner slept on his narrow, lofty bed. uncon scious of peril. A bad dream—a sud den start—and off he would have turn bled, to be dashed to destruction on the granite pavement 135 feet below The ledge was only two feet wide. A man in an office on the twelfth story of the building across the streei saw Spencer. He telephoned to the ground floor for Policeman Ross ot the traffic squad, who was passing. The latter made his way to the win dow through which Spencer had pass ed to reach the ledge, grasped his arm and shook it gently. Spencer awoke at the first shake, got up silently like a cat, crawled in side to safety and without a word went away to clean more windows. A crowd watched the “rescue” and cheered. Alas for the Polished Floor. “Aunt Louisa,” as the late Mrs. Louisa Eldridge was lovingly called, was well known as an actress, but she was even better known as the organ ! izer of the annual Christmas festival for stage children at Pastor’s theater in New York. “In presenting their Christmas gifts to the stage children.” said an actress, ’Aunt Louisa made the jolliest littlp speeches. I well remember what she said to me when I was a juvenile in presenting me with a crutch, for 1 had sprained my ankle badly in a snow scene. “She said she hoped I would incom mode no one with my crutch, as her cousin, a veteran colon 1, sometimes incommoded people with his wooden leg. "Her causin, she said, was once din ing with a man whose floors were oi highly polished and costly inlaid woods. “The host got nervous as he saw the colonel clumping and clattering about on his expensive floors. He was afraid they would be scratched up. “ ‘Hadn’t you better come over here on the rug. colonel?” he said. ‘You might slip out there, you know.’ “But the colonel with a loud laugh struck the floor firmly with his wood en leg. “ 'No fear of that,’ said he. ‘There’s a nail in the end, you know.’ ” Moonrise. The fernbrake trembles in the lifting dark. Pale spangles glance along the mellowt giay. Above the ancient wood a rounded bark Drops Illy petals down a dusky bav And eornerwise. and all a-sllp between The trees, soft shocks of raveled si.vei lean. The cornfield chiefs make bold essay tc break The moon spears, with their tawn\ * pointed shields; FYom mullein tent and grassv camp* awake The moonlight pipers of the autumn fields: And moist, delicious fragrances of night Wind through the argent fleeces of the light. A still, black stream inlaid with cameo Asleep In dim retreat of svcamore Awakes, with rills of laughter, just be low A curve, and from the crescent of the shore An old mill rises in the vellow mist And grinds, with silent wheel, a shadow grist. —Harriett Whitney Durbin in Every body's Magazine. Railway Employes. In the service of the railways of the United States to-day more than a mil lion and a quarter of men are em ployed. Of this multitude 52,451 are engine men. 55,000 are firemen, 40,000 are conductors. The number of en gines in active use is 47,000, the num ber of passenger cars 40,000, and of freight cars 1,760,000. These cars and engines, if placed in line, would half encircle the globe. School Children Drink Spirits. Out of the forty-nine school children in the lowest class at Nordhausen, Germany, the medical officer reports that thirty-eight had drunk wine, forty spirits and all more or less beer; while out of a class of twenty eight girls sixteen confessed to hav ing been drunk. Largest Gas Receiver. The Los Angeles Gas and Electric company is erecting what will be the largest gas receiver in the United States. It will be 210 feet in hight and 210 feet In diameter and will hold 5.000,000 cubic feet of gas. RHEUMATIC PAINS Disappear Whan Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Purify tha Blood and Heal Inflamsd Tissues. Rheumatism is a disease of the blood, canted by the failure of the body to cast off certain poisons. External applica tions are of use only in securing tempo rary relief front pain—the core for rheumatism lies in purifying and en riching the blood. Mrs. Frederick Brown, of 40 Sumpter street, Sandy Hill, N.Y., was a sufferer from inflammatory rheumatitan front the time she was sixteen. She sbts “It first appeared in my knee joints, then in my hips and waist. It became a regular thing that I wonld be laid ur all winter. The rheumatism affected mostly my bsnds, hips, feet and shoulders. My hands were all pulled up and my feet became deformed. 1 lost my appetite, couldn’t sleep and sometimes I was compelled to cry out, the pain was so intense. “For several winters I was under the doctor's care and while liis medicine re lieved the pain for a little while there seemed no prospect for a permanent cure. I was confined to my bed, off and on, for weeks Rt a time. My limb* swelled dreadfully at times and I was redneed almost to nothing. “ In the spring of 1904, upon the ad vice of a friend. I began to use Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. At that time I wasn’t able to do anything and could barely eat enough to keep alive. I felt a change for the better in about a mouth. I began to eat heartily and I suffered less pain. Of course I kept on the treatment, using care in roy diet, and in abont three months 1 was cured. I am entirely well today and do all my own work.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills enred Mrs. Brown by driving the rheumatic poisons ont of her blood. But von must get the genuine Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, sold bv all druggists and by the Dr.Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. What is a muff? Something that hold’s a lady's hand and doesn’t squeeze it. To Get the Beet Out of Life: Order the life habits to conform to the laws of hygiene, take proper rest, food, drink and exercise, have plenty of light, fresh air and sunshine, and take a cup of Garfield Tea dally This mild laxative Insures Good Health. Druggists sell Garfield Tea. Don’t borrow money on your pros pects if you ever hcpe to catch up with them. A GrARASTrED fT'RE FOR FIL.E8. Itching. Blind. Bleeding. Protruding Piles. Prug glsts are authorized to refund money tf PAZO OINTMEN T falls to care tn 6 to U days. 5uc. A man never realizes how many peo ple want to treat him until he has sworn off. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Made of extra quality tobacco. Your denier or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Ancient French Custom. Dumas in his ‘ Isabel of Bavaria” re fers to an ancient privilege which au thorized the deputies of the six mer chant bodies to accompany the kings and queens of France upon their entry into Paris from the gate of St. Denis to the palace, followed on this occasion by the representatives of the different manufacturing bodies clothed to rep resent the “seven capital sins,” and, by way of contrast, the "seven Chris tian virtues.” Great Desire of Humankind. ‘‘There is in man’s nature a secret inclination and motion toward love of others, which, if it be not spent upon some one or a few, does naturally spread itself toward many,” said Lord Bacon three centuries ago. The re mark might be applied with good rea son to the unmarried woman, who within the last half century, has be come a moving power in the world. Fine Pictures in Barber Shop. There is a barber at Verdun, says the Paris Figaro, who decorates, his shop with priceless Corots, instead of the usual advertisements of some body’s soap or hair wash, and. what is more strange, knows what he is doing. They were a present from the artist himself to a cousin of the barber and came to him as a legacy. Umbrella Stands on Cars. There is an agitation in Glasgow. Scotland, to have umbrella stands provided on the platform of the elec tric street cars. When a man undertakes to prove his importance he is inclined to over step the mark. FOOD AND STUDY A College Man’s Experience. “All through my high school course and first year in college,” writes an ambitious young man, “I struggled with my studies on a diet of greasy, pasty foods, being especially fond of cakes and fried things. My Bystem got into a state of general disorder and it was difficult for me to apply myself to school work with any de gree of satisfaction. I tried different medicines and food preparations but did not seem able to correct the dif ficulty. “Then my attention was called to Grape-Nuts food and I sampled it I had to do something, so I just buck led down to a rigid observance of the directions on the package, and in less than no time began to feel better. In a few weeks my strength was re stored, my weight had increased, I had a clearer head and felt better in every particular. My work was sim ply Rnort to what it*was formerly. “My sister s health was badly run down and she had become so nervdus that she could not attend to her music. She went on Grape-Nuts and had the same remarkable experience that I had. Then my brother, Frank, who is in the postoffice department at Washington city and had been try ing to do brain work on greasy foods, cakes and all that, joined the Grape Nuts army. I showed him what it was and could do and from a broken down condition he has developed into a hearty and efficient man. “Besides these I could give account of numbers of my fellow-students who have made visible improvement men tally and physically by the use of this food." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There’s a reason. Read the Uttle book, "The Road to WellvUle,” in Pkgs. Dorothy is a tiny maid of 4 years, whose father always gets shaved at the barber’s. When on a visit re cently she found an uncle who shaved himself. She watched, this perform ance with intense, but silent aston ishment for two or three mornings, but finally broke out with "What makes you do that. Uncle Will? My papa doesn't wash his face with a lit tle broom and wipe it with a knife.” Religious Symbols on Coins. Religious symbols on coins were common to all the countries that ac cepted Christianity, the bust or mono gram of a ruler on the obverse and on the reverse a cress or Christian tem ple. But as the simplicity of classic ism disappeared before the elaborate composition and decoration of the middle ages we find heraldic devices substituted, which gave a national and individual character to the coinage. Forgive the Cook. At last she is vindicated. Cooks have long been celebrated for their inflammable tempers, no excuse being made for them, but a German scien tist has come to their rescue, and as serts that their crossness is not a fault of character by a symptom of a disease common to the profession, and induced by the habitual heat and light to which they are exposed. Miser Leaves $750,000. Father Aeby, a noted miser, has died at Berne, aged seventy. When he was twenty-two a fortune was be queathed him. and from being a spendthrift, he at once became a miser. He lived on bread and water at a cost of 3 cents a day and left $750,000. The sum of $100,000 in gold and silver was found under his bed room floor. Monkey Wears Glasses. In the Breslau zoological garden there is a spider monkey, which was operated on for cataract and now wears glasses. It seems to do well and to understand the reason for its strange facial adornment. Woman Stirs Up "l rouble. A woman at Yarmouth. England,, received a lawyer’s letter, warning her against annoying a next door neighbor. She hung the letter on the clothes line in her backyard, and now there is more trouble. A NEW DEPARTURE IN SPEED. On Monday, February 19th the Big Four Ry. inaugurated a new fast train service, Chicago to Cincinnati, leaving Chicago 11:30 p. m„ arriving Indian apolis 4:40, Cincinnati 7:45 a. m„ con suming eight hours and fifteen min utes covering three hundred miles of distance. This schedule is the same as the fastest time made by day-light trains between above cities, and will make but one stop, at Indianapolis. The train will consist of Pullman’s latest sleepers, ladies' coach and smoking car Chicago to Cincinnati, with a local sleeper Chicago to Indianapolis and sidetracked at latter place for occu pancy until 7 a. m. This will be a passenger train en tirely and no express or mail will be handled. This will allow patrons to visit the theater or their friends be fore leaving Chicago and they can eat breakfast in Cincinnati next morning. For tickets and reservations on this train apply to all ticket agents or I. P. Spining, General Northern Agent, 238 Clark St., Chicago. Tbe teiiow with more money tnan he knows what to do with always has more friends than he needs. Worth Knowing; —that Allcock's are the original and only erenuine porous plasters; all other so-called porous plasters are imitations. The future has little in store for those who neglect the present Congressman Meekison Gives Praise to Pe-ru-na For His Recovery. ... ■ ■ ■»»■■■ ■■■ -* i CONGRESSMAN MEEKISON PRAISES PE-RU-NA. Hon. David Meekison, Napoleon, Ohio, ex-member of Congress, Fifty-fifth A District, writes: "/ have used several bottles of Peruna and I feel greatly benefited !' ; thereby from my catarrh of the head. I feel encouraged to believe that if ' | ! I use It a short time longer / will be fully able to eradicate the disease of < / thirty years’ standing.”—David Meekison. <| ANOTHER SENSATIONAL CURE: Mr. Jacob L Davis. Galena. Stone county. Mo., writes: “I have been in bad health for thirty-seven years, and after taking twelve bottles of your Peruna I am cured."—Jacob L. Davis. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. 1 WANTED. Limited territory only left. Our list of .special representatives is nearly complete. Answers must reach, us immediately, with best of references. H. S. HOWLAND, I Madison Avenue, Hew York City. No doubt vou’ll need a TOWER’S FI8H BRAND SUlTcr SUCKER this season. Make no mistake — it’s the kind that!s guaranteed to keep you dry I and comfortable in the hardest storm. Made in Black or Yel low* Sold by all reliable dealers. A* J. TOWER CO.v / BOSTON, U.S.A. fl TOWZA CAW AD LAW CO., Ltd. _ A Toronto, Can. DR. COFFEE’S 80 - PAGE EYE BOOK FREE It tells bow to cure ere diseases I at home without visiting a Doctor—Write to j DR. W. 0, COFFEE. JtO. Century Bide.. Dei Moisei. Is. $16 AN ACRE in Western Canada is the amount many farmers will realize from their wheat crop this year. 25 Bushels to the Acre Will be the Average Yield of Wheat. The land that this was grown,on cost many of the- farmers absolutely nothing, while those who wished to add to the WO acres the Govern ment grants, can buy land adjoining at from $6 to $10 an acre. Climate splendid, school convenient, railways ciose at hand, taxes low. Send for pamphlet “20th Century Canada” and full particulars regarding rate, etc., to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or to the .following authorized Castilian Government Agent—W. Y. Bennett, 801 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska, (Mention this paper.) /High Class Drug®!?! AND—OTHERS. | The better class of druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity, 1 who devote their lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies and | purest medicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians’ prescriptions and I scientific formula. Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, but ■ always under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation medicines. I They are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes I all standard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pharmacy and the finest and 1 best of toilet articles and preparations and many useful accessories and remedial appliances. 1 The earning of a fair living, with the satisfaction which arises from a knowledge of the benefits conferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their greatest reward for long years of study and many hours of daily toil. They all know that Syrup of | Fig3 is an excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore they I are selling many millions of bottles annually to the well informed purchasers of the choicest * U remedies, and they always take pleasure iu handing out the genuine article bearing the full flf 3 JV name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package. F They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation and ft of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, or ft over-eating, that there is no other remedy so pleasant, prompt and beneficial in its eiiects as Syrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. Owing to the excellence of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it gives and the , immense demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, but there are ‘ individual druggists to be found, here and thete, who do not maintain the dignity and principles ' of the profession and whose greed gets the better of their judgment, and who do not hesitate j to recommend and try to sell the imitations in order to make a larger profit. Such preparations I sometimes have the name—“ Syrup of Figs”—or “Fig Syrup” and of some piratical concern, I or fictitious fig syrup company, printed on the package, but they never have the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of the package. The imitations I should be rejected because they are injurious to the system. In order to sell the imitations I they find it necessary to resort to misrepresentation or deception, and whenever a dealer passes M ft off on a customer a preparation under the name of “Syrup of Figs” or “Fig Syrup,” which I m does not bear the full name of the California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of the package, ft M * he is attempting to deceive and mislead the patron who has been so unfortunate as to enter his ft W establishment, whether it be large or small, for if the dealer resorts to misrepresentation and f M 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 great majority of druggists are reliable, we supply the immense demand I ft f°r our excellent remedy entirely through the druggists, of whom it may be purchased every- j ft 'where, in original packages only, at the regular price of fifty cents per bottle, but as exceptions I ft exist it is necessary to inform the public of the facts, in order that all may decline or return M ■ *ny imitation which may be sold to them. If it does not bear the full name of the Company— m ■ California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package, do not hesitate to return the m W article and to demand the return of your money, and in future go to one of the better class of ■ ^^^druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best of everything in his line at reasonable prices. Jm I