OMfi OP THE8E WOULD HAVE PER MITTED EXTENSION OF STREET IN CHICAGO PARK. •r ' ;/7, ) • ,;y,r "i NEUMONIA now has its anti-toxin. It has been tried in four hundred cases with only four failures to cure, and those four were in ex tremis when first treated. And, in many instances, with pneumonia traveled its brother assassin, ty phoid fever. It has been tried out in a new, raw country where pneu monia comas at its most violent and collects its heaviest death toll, but, ____ even under these extreme condi tions, it has been tried and appar ently proved. Broadly the remedy is simple. A culture of the germs In a patient are taken. From each a vac cine is developed, and an anti-toxin, made by mix ing the vaccines in the exact proportions In which the germs are found in the body, la injected in > very large doses. Moderate doses are regarded as Ineffectual, merely serving to further entrench the causitive germs. But, by this remedy, they are not left standing room. They are cleansed from the body as with a hose. The three germs which combine monia patients are pneu xs-s MANY MEASURES SIGNED Leavlhg Only 8eventy-Flve of the 277 Passed by the Last 8esslon of of the Illinois Legislature Unacted Upon. pneumocoecus, the direct cause of pneu monia; staphylococ cus, which is respon sible for localized pustuleB and ab- * rind stropto coccus, which causes erysipelas and blood poisoning and is ever ready to attack the weakened hu man structure. Each of these germs de velops a metabolic fluid which can be transformed into an anti-toxin. As the doctors put it, the remedy Is auto-gen ous. Combine these 6elf-created enemies, and send back an army of them, and the germs are anni hilated. That is why all the two thous and cases treated have recovered. Once the anti-toxin was administered, the germs did not have a ghost of a chance. This way to meet pneumonia's swift thrust is • the discovery of Dr. August Francis Schafer, a country practitioner of Bakersfield, California. If Dr Schafer had been in Paris, instead of an oil town in the depths of California, we would have been electrified by his discovery two years ago. As it is, he waited until he could bring it forth with its record of two thousand cases before he even took into his confidence the nearest medical society. Without those two thousand cases doc tors would have been free to doubt. With them he has met the professional requirement of an in fallible remedy. How has he done it? How could a country doc tor discover what all the laboratories of Europe have failed to reveal? These are natural ques tions. But it was not a fluke. The discovery was not made by accident. Dr. Schafer studied dis ease germs diligently for ten years and developed a laboratory not matched in the hospitals of San Francisco before he injected his anti-toxin into a human being. Then he tried it on himself to make sure that it was harmless. He Is a scientific s tudent , with a thorough knowledge of medic ine and jsurgery. He would have worked out his theo ries anywhere. The accident lay in the fact that he lived in Bakersfield. The Pneumonia Test. No more severe test could have been given the anti-toxin than Bakersfield has afforded in the past two years. In that district pneumonia accom panies most diseases, often in the duplex form. In ten per cent, of the cases abscesses develop in ^the lung, or pus accumulates in the pleural cavity. Moreover, it comes swiftly and strikes suddenly. The oil rushes have built towns in a night. Rapid •change, exposure and bad water have been fol lowed by typhoid and pneumonia. Men have gone to bed feeling badly and never seen the end of the next $ay. They have fallen in the streets as if stricken with a plague. But for two years now most of the physicians in that part of the country have been inoculating their patients with serum provided by Dr. Schafer, and, contrary to the ex- • perience of all previous rush settlements, there has been no epidemic of pneumonia. Extreme cases have been the rule in Dr. Schafer 's pract ice . Even af te r al l hope has been given up, he has pulled patients through. Among the pneumonia cases cured by him, beforo he took the world into his confidence, were: Two infants. Twenty ch i ld ren f rom two to e leven years o ld . E igh t chron ic a lcoho l ics , th ree of whom had had de l i r ium t remens . S ix teen cases wi th meas les a s wel l a s pneu monia Three u i ih b lood po i son ing in the i r hands and le«s in add i t ion to pneumonia . T lu<-e wi th pe r i ton i t i s compl ica t ions ; and Twenty- two pa t i en t s over s ix ty yea rs o ld . Among e igh teen cases of dup lex lobar pneu monia was a man of n ine ty two , an a lmos t un preceden ted recovery . There were , bes ides , two cases fo l lowing opera t ions a t ch i ldb i r th , one th ree and the o the r Bix days a f t e r The second woman as in despera te s t r a i t s when Dr . Schafe r saw her . She had a pu l se o r 1M when i t cou ld be pa l pitated a t a l l , and her t empera tu re was 108 .8 . Bu t the recov To develop the anti-toxin from tbe pa tient's germs takes several days, and usually there is no time to waste, so in his Bakersfield prac tice Dr. Schafer worked out a rough for mula which was found to be effective in local cases. He prepared what he termed a "mixed in fection," which is worth knowing about for the lives it has already saved. As far as experiments have gone, it might be called the pneumonia anti toxin. It Is composed of equal portions of the counter-irritants to the three germs predominant in pneumonia. This mixture was the result of long experiment and is unquestionably a certain remedy for pneumonia in Bakersfield. It is made by stimulating the artificial growth of the three germs by ordinary laboratory methods until the metabolic fluid thrown off has progressed sufficiently, when the cultured mass is Incubated, macerated and disintegrated. The mixing of the resulting vaccines requires great skill. This stock anti-toxin will probably prove to be valuable anywhere. In the first few days follow ing the announcement of the remedy in January of this year, when San Francisco physicians could only believe it the work of a quack, Dr. Henry Spiro took a chance with it in a desperate situa tion, with astonishing results. "A pneumonia patient was apparently dying," he explained afterwards, "and, in what seemed his last breath, he begged for any relief. But I could do nothing for him, except try the new Schafer remedy. And so, as a last reaort, I Injected into his veins twice the amount of the anti-toxin Dr. Schafer prescribed. "An hour later he showed improvement. Be fore night he was out of danger. In eight days he walked from the hospital In much less serious cases it would ordinarily have taken him at least three weeks " The char t s and records o f th i s case a re in S t . F ranc i s Hosp i ta l , San Franc i sco In p rac t i ce the s tock an t i - tox in has been used , bu t , un less the pa t i en t has shown immedia te bene f i t s , cu l tu res have been t aken and spec ia l p repa ra t ions made in which the an t i - tox ins have been mixed In the exac t p ropor t ions in which the ge rms were found l l the body And , in every case In which th i s bars been done , the pa t i en t has p rompt ly ra l l i ed and go t we l l . Two years ago Dr . Sc i a fe r took in to h i s conf i dence four o the r phys ic ians in Bakers f i e ld . One of them, Dr . ?« . N r . B rown, a lone t r ea ted over a thousand cases wi thou t a dea th Some of them were for publ i sh ing thed i scnvery to the wor ld They sa id I : Schafe r was h id ing h i s l igh t under a bushe l . t Dr . Schafc r was aga ins t i t . l i e knew that i t he had a rea l , endur ing l igh t , i t would sh ine ou t f rom under the bushe l . First It became known in the surrounding coun try that Bflkersfiehl was the place to go to and be cured. Then the news gradually spread, and cure a^fter cure made the light burn brightly under the bushel. But it was not until this winter that it attracted the attention of San Francisco physi cians. Several, after listening to tales of seeming ly impossible cures, went down to Bakersfield, dubious but curious. Among these visitors was Dr. Frederick Fehlel- sen, a scientific bacteriologist who discovered the micro-organism which causes erysipelas. He re mained two weeks, and at the end of that time returned enthusiastic. After some difficulty ho was able to persuade the San .Francisco Medical Society to invite Dr. Schafer to deliver an address. The facts of Dr. Schafer's cures were unbeliev able, but the audience could not help being im pressed by the intense, dynamic aspect of the man. They might doubt tbe possibility, but they could not doubt Dr. Schafer's earnestness. Against their will they had to take him seriously. Vviien the meeting closed, they arranged for a clinic at the Southern Pacific Hospital, where Dr. Schafer, in the presence of the chief surgeons of the biggest hospitals, agreed to cure every case that was brought before him. He accepted them as they came and the worst was reported cured in eight days. In other words, he was given a trial before a competent jury, and proved his case. At the February meeting of the San Francisco Medical Society Dr. Schafer was to speak at length and the hall was crowded, but there were many physicians present who had not had a first hand opportunity to study Dr. Schafer's methods and, although he was supported by men whose medical reputations were above reproach, they refused to permit the society to endorse him. They held that it was a matter for each member to work out in his own practice. The address was never delivered, but, meanwhile, lives were being saved every day by the use of the anti-toxin. During that trying month in San Francisco Dr. Schafer was careful not to advance a single claim He mwhely showed the results of his experiments and let them speak for themselves. To medical men he was quite open, but a mystery surrounded him because he refused to talk for publication He refused because he felt the delicacy of his po> sltion. As he himself expressed it, he was "the victim of the magnitude of actual accomplish ment." It would have been very easy for him to have acquired the reputation of a charlatan. But he is entirely saved from that by the fact that he has been furnishing his anti-toxin free from the beginning. Far from making money out of hi? discoveries, he has sunk his small fortune of $40,- 000 into his laboratory work and at one time, about five years ago, just before he clinched his discoveries, he went deeply Into debt. Even at this is being written, he Is preparing three hun dred samples of his serums which are. to be sent to leading physicians and surgeons In all parts of the United States. With them Dr. Schafer has agreed .to leave the final verdict as to the value of his remedies. Other Tests. Pneumonia is not the only disease Dr. Sciuifer has cured, but it has attracted most attention on account of its seeming Infallibility. Back of the remedies lies a new theory of medicine. Its prin ciple is revolutionary. It disregards many cher ished medical ideas. But it gets results. .Little a?) they have«been able to understand it, many of the best physicians and surgeons in San Francisco have recommended it. "Regardless of all doubts and theories," said Dr. W. B. Coffey, the Southern Pacific surgeon, "I have seen real men who have been made well by it." Other diseases In which Dr. Schafer has brought permanent cures with his anti-toxins are scarlet fever, rheumatism, diphtheria, typhoid fever, dys entery, erysipelas, tetanus and certain forma of tuberculosis. With that li-t let us stop and take breath. Al together the various anti-toxins Dr. Schafer has produced have been used in 4,500 cases with only ten deaths. Of the 150 people treated in San Fran cisco only three died. This comes pretty nearly being a panacea. Do you see why Dr. Schafer is so canny with his re marks? Suppose he had announced he could cure anything. He would have been promptly dicred- ited. But when you come right down to it. Dr. Schafer is convinced that he can cure anything. The only disease he has encountered In his prac tice which he has not been able to cure entirely is tuberculosis. But even that has yielded, except in severe cases. It is Dr. Schafer's expressed wish not to lay too much stress on tuberculosis. He fears too great credence. He does not wish to raise hopes. Nor does he want to have his office in Bakerfield be sieged by tubercular patients. At tbe present time he is planning to have his anti-toxins avail able in every community, where any doctor can administer them. He is firmly convinced in bis own mind that he has brought a great boon to humanity, and he wants all humanity to have the advantage of it. There is to be no patent, no restriction of any kind on the development or use of his remedies. That is one of the reasons why those who have become acquainted with his work in California believe in him so completely. WHOLE DAM FAMILY ARRIVE! Thirteen of 'Em Came to America From Rotterdam on the Steam ship Rhyndam. Chicago.--For a few hours Chicago ||ad the privilege of entertaining the "whole Dam family," s topping off here cm i ts way from Rotterdam (no t named af ter the family) to a fa rm ; . t Pella, Iowa. The Dam party consist *d of Jacob Dam, his wife and e leven children, and his mother, brother and s i s t e r - in - l aw. They a r r ived In New York f rom Rot te rdam on the s t eamer Rhyndam. Consp icuous in the fami ly a r -e two se t s o f I ) am twins . Mother Darn i s fo r ty - four . Then , in o rder o f sen io r i ty , the Dams a re a l igned a s fo l lows ; Hendr ick Dam and "h i s twin s i s t e r , P le te rne l l a Dam, aged seven teen ; Jacob Ham, J r . , and h i s twin s i s t e r , Hl l l ig je Dam, aged f i f t een ; Johannes Dam, e leven ; Pe te r F rans Dam, n ine ; Sb in t j e Dam. e igh t ; Leender t Dam, s ix ; C: ; rne ! . -4 I ) am, th re i , and Ar ie Dam, one year old. Of the ten chil dren, three are girls. Old Query Revived. A farmer finds a one dollar bill and appropriates It by right of discovery to himBelf. He goes to town and pays it to a newspaper man on what he owed him; the newspaper man hands it over to a merchant to set tle his account; the merchant pays his meat bill with It, and the butcher pays it back to the original finder for i a calf he has bought; after which the farmer takes It to the bank and dis covers it to be counterfeit, and on tha "ensuing Sunday puts it into the mis sionary collection. Query: Are all- these debts canceled by the spurious one dollar?--Hiawatha World. The Inference, Mrs. Lenox--I really don't know what would happen, William, if yoc ever agreed with me on any'subject. Lenox -- Something serious, nc doubt, for we'd be dead wroaj, raj dsar.--London Opinion. Springfield.--Governor Deneen ve toed ten bills which are before him for signature. The most Interesting: from a Chicago standpoint was the Strauss measure, which would have permitted the extension of Division street through Humboldt park. The bunch of bills the executive re turned to Secretary of State Rose was accompanied by messages giving the gubernatorial reasons why he refused his signature. In some instances the governor stated the bills have beon so loosely drawn they referred to nothing and were unconstitutional and noneuforce- able by their language. The executive reasons for vetoing the Humboldt park bill are summar ized as follows: "It Is easy to see that through in discreet or improper exercise of the powers conferred by this bill the unity of a public park could be so de stroyed as greatly to impair its ca pacity to serve the purposes for" which it was created. The law with re spect to the use of public parks is well settled in this state. "Park authorities, whether they be the city council, village board, or park commission, have no right to divert to other purposes any public parks under their control. Every citizen, not only of the city or village, but of the state, has the right to the free use and enjoyment of public parks and any use which shall deprive the citi zen of that right is contrary to the Intent and purpose of the creation of the public parks. "I think It unnecessary as well as inimical to the interests of our publli park system to grant them (the park commissioners) the pawer to extend through the parks under their control streets for ordinary traffic purposes." A compromise on waterway-water power legislation, which may end the extra session of the general assembly within the coming week, when it is called to convene, is probable. ^ The basic point of the agreement in sight hinges upon the Immediate au thority to be granted by act of the leg islature to a state commission named by Governor Deneen to take over the four water power sit^s now known to be the strategic points along the Lock- port-Utica stretch of deep waterway. Coincidently, authority is to be grant ed to this commission to open negotia tions at once with a federal commis sion to be appointed by President Taft. The points in the proposed compro mise now under discussion are these: Legislative authority to be granted to Governor Deneen to name a com mission of three Republicans and two Democrats to proceed without delay to secure possession in the name of the state of the four power sites in the vicinity of and below Joliet, along the route of the lakes-to-the-gulf deep waterway. An appropriation of approximately $400,000 to be made from the state treasury for the purchase of neces sary lands, and the conferring of the right upon the commission to con demn necessary lands. Provision that the Illinois commis sion shall be authorized to proceed with negotiations between the nation and the state as representing Illinois, looking toward the ultimate construc tion of a deep waterway, to which, however, by the terms of the compro mise bill, Illinois would not necessar ily be committed at this juncture. No move to be made at any point toward the actual issue of the $20,- 000,000 bonds which have been au thorized by vote of the people, pend- ind a report to either a special ses sion of this general assembly or to the next general assembly. All of the expense of the purchase of the sites in question, and the de velopment of one or more of the pow er sites obtained by the commission, to be paid by direct appropriation from the state treasury, not exceeding a maximum of $4,000,000 or by a bond' issue based upon the power sites ob tained from the first $400,000 appro priation. Twenty-six more bills, leaving only T5 of the 27 passed by the last session of the legislature unacted upon, were signed by Governor Deneen. One is an appropriation of $600,000 for the new penitentiary at Joliet. The money is to be used in securing a site and the preparation of plans, the re port on which is to be the basis of a Commission Cltlep Meet. Mayors of 15 Illinois cities now ruled under the commission forjji of government met in Peoria fot the purpose of forming a permanent or ganization by which they hope to solve the present commission form of government law in a uniform manner, thereby preventing a difference in in terpretation of its various clauses in different cities. The meeting was called to order by Mayor Martin R. Carlaon of Moline, who originated the Idea of a permanent organization. Name Normal Faculty. At the meeting of the state board of education the following new members Of the faculty of the State Normal university were chosen: Miss Mabel Carney, Cheney, Wash., special teacher of rural school meth ods. Arthur Madden, Freeport, professor of agriculture. Miss Lillian Sabine, Mount Pleasant, Mich., professor of rhetoric. Miss Clara Penstone, Superior, Wis., and Miss Frances Moorhouse, Urbana, high school training teachers. further appropriation to be made by the next general assembly. The bill providing for the creation of a ne* Insane asylum near Chicago, com panion measure to the appropriation of $500,000 for the institution which was signed several days ago, alqo waa approved by the governor. Other bills signed were: English--Illinois Retail Merchants' association act, requiring managers of fire, bankrupt and such sales to live in town 120 days. Scanlan--Requiring health offi cers to report deaths to the state board of health. Shanahan--Creates the office of inspector of apiaries. House appropriations committee--Dis tributes $1,015,000 for extraordinary expenses of charitable institutions In 1911 and 1912. Governor Deneen signed the wom en's ten hour law, which prohibits the employment of women for ihore than ten hours each day. The act amende; the present statute and it require* that employers of women shall keep books showing tfce number of hours each one works. The law also pro vides for inspection of these books by the state factory inspector. Violation is punishable by a fine. The bill caused one of the bitterest contests in the session of the legisla ture just closed. The chief argument made against it .was by representa tives of the workers on the Chicago elevated railroads, who asserted that the law would result in the throwing of many women out of employment^ their places being taken by men. Rep resentatives of the Chicago social set tlements upheld the bill. Several other bills were signed by the governor. They had been delayed until the last minute, so that Gover nor Deneen could Btudy thepi. In an opinion given to the governor by At torney General Stead, midnight of June 10 was set as the time limit for action by him. Final action on the last of the bills remaining before him was announced by Governor Deneen shortly after midnight. Approved and signed The O'Conner outer harbor bill. Worklngmen's compensation. Municipal court civil service. Omnibus appropriation bill carrying $8,178,000 for ordinary and contingent expenses of the state government. Governor Deneen permitted Repre sentative Shurtleff's tuberculin test bill to become a law without his sig nature. Vetoed: The Kleeman Calumet harbor bill. Employer's liability. Representative Church's bill pro hibiting the publication of details of crime and executions. Lyon's dependent children bill. Approves Woman's Ten-Hour Act. Governor Deneen approved the fol lowing important bills: Enlarging the powers of the rail road and warehouse commission. Creating a state rivers and lakes commission. Revising the state automobile laws and creating the offices of county su perintendent of roads. Adult probation act. Placing express companies under the jurisdiction of the railroad and warehouse commission. Creating the office of county audi tor in all counties of over 75,000 popu lation. Requiring that all fees collected by state departments be«tunied into the Btate treasury. Authorizing the incorporation of burial societies. On the ground that the general health of school children might be placed in the hands of persons lack ing knowledge of the subject, the gov ernor vetoed the Carter bill, authoriz ing the appointment of one or more school nurses by boards of education or school directors. The governor also vetoed the Magill bill making legal the election of trus tees of religious corporations without ratification of the congregation, and the Glackln bill providing that the library tax in cities under 100,000 shall not be reduced below a rate of 10 cents on each $100 of assessed valuation. Both were pronounced un constitutional by Attorney Genera) Stead. Water Analyzed; Safe to Drink. City water is safe for drinking pur poses according to a report received from University of Illinois chemists by Commissioner Spauldlng. Being compelled to use a small per cent, of water direct from the river because of the excessive demand dur ing the heated period, Spauldlng sent a sample of the fluid to the university experts for analysis. The analysis shows that the water from the city mains is free from bac teria likely to cause ill health and that It can be freely used with every guarantee of safety. The city fathers expected* to get busy and define regulations for the coming celebration of July Fourth, but because a desired ordinance was not ready, no action was taken. The com missioners propose to further limit the size of firecrackers used in the noise- making of the national holiday and to absolutely prohibit the use of loose gunpowder. New Corporations. The following Chicago corporations were licfpsed by the secretary of state. * Morrison, photographer, $15,000; pic tures and other merchandise; William L. Koehne. Melvin H. Sykes, J. E. Dietrich. Pilsen Furniture company, $2,500; furniture, carpets, household goods, etc.; Charles Bleier, Jacob L. Frank. Imperial Dress company, $5,000; ladies' garments; Alexander I. Stone- man, Isaac S. Brill, M. Maude Miller. Imperial Ladies' Ready to Wear company, $5,000; ladies' garments; Alexander I. Stoneman, M. Maude Mil ler, Isaac S. Brill. Eastl-rn Picture Frame company, $2,500: pictures, frames, glass, wire, etc.; Alexander I. Stoneman, Isaac £5. Brill, M. Maude Miller. Acme Typewriting company, Chi cago; Capital $5,000; manufacture and deal in office supplies, furniture, etc. Incorporators--Hubert E. Page, W. M. R. Vose and Samuel H. Gilbert Odin Telephone Exchange company Odin; capital, $15,000. Incdrporator* --James M. Dace, W. II. Farthing. A trial package of Munyon's Paw Paw Pilla will be sent free to anyone on re quest. Address Professor Munyon, 53d fe Jefferson Sts,, Philadelphia, Pa. If you are '.u need of medical advice, do not fail to write Professor Munyon. Your communi cation will be treated in strict confidence, and your caae will be diagnosed as care fully sas though you had a personal inter view. Munyon's Paw Paw Pilla are unlike all other laxatives or cathartics. They coax the liver into activity by gentle methods. They do not scour, they do not gripe, they do not weaken, but they do start all the secretions of the liver and Btomach in a way that soon puts these organs in a healthy condition and corrects constipation. In my opinion constipation is responsible for most ail ments. There are 26 feet of human bowels, which is really a sewer pipe. When this pipe becomes clogged the whole system becomes poisoned, caus ing biliousness, indigestion and impure blood, which often produce rheumatism and kidney ailmentB. No woman who suffers with constipation or any liver ailment can expect to have a clear complexion or enjoy good health. If I had my way I would prohibit the sale of nine-tenths of the cathartics that are now being sold for the reason that they soon destroy the lining of the stomach, setting up serious forma of indigestion, and so paralyze the bowels that they re fuse to act unless forced by strong purgatives. Munyon's Paw Paw Pills are a tonie to the stomach, liver and nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken; they en rich the blood Instead of Impoverish it; they enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is put into it. These pills contain no calomel, n«v dope; they are soothing, healing and stimulating. They school the bowels to act without physic. 1 Regular size bottle, containing 45 pills 25 cents. Munyon's Laboratory, 53d Jk Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia. V • Musical Note. A music teacher In a New England school was trying to make the chil dren in the fourth grade understand the value of a triplet--to get them to know that three-quarter notes under a brace were equal to two quarter notes. She couldn't make them unde- stand; and finally, in despair, she asked: "What are three little babies born all at the same time called?" "Accidentals!" shouted a small boy, with a vague remembrance of the les son of a week before. How can a man expect his wife to be Interested in his business when half the time he doesn't know the color of her last new dress? Constipation causes and seriously aggra vates many diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated granules. It's easier to put up a bluff than It is to put up the stuff. Chew and smoke untaxed tobacco, cheap Mil uodupvu- BatsriwiHuoJ" a Cl«r«5Ti.ls,TSSa. Charity is too often charily dis pensed. ID SAYS: No Athle te can do himself justice if his fee t uui *•. Many thousands are us ing da i ly , abread and in this country, Allen's Foot- Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes. All the prominent Golfers and Tennis Playera at Augusta, Pinehurst and Palm Beach got much satisfaction from its use this Spring. It gives a rest- fulness and a springy feeling that makes you forget you have feet. Allen's Foot- Ease is the greatest comfort discovery of the age and so easy to use. It prevents soreness, blisters or puffing and gives rest from tired, tender or swollen feet. Seven teen years before the publ ic , over 30 ,000 testimonials. Don't go on your vacation without a package of Allen's Foot-Ease. Sold everywhere, 25c. Don't accept any substitute" Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. Your Liver Is Clogged Up That's Why You're Tired---Out of Sorts ---Have No Aj>p< CARTER'S LITTI LIVER FILLS will put you right in a few days. T h e y d < their dut> CureCoi stipation, Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature 1 DETIANCE STARCH MntM motbea olcMfc