Newspaper Page Text
Bad Coughs
“ I had a bad cough for six
weeks and could find no relief
until I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pecto-
ral . Only me.” one-fourth of the bottle
cured
L. Hawn, Newington, Ont.
lead Neglected colds always
They to something serious. chronic
run into
bronchitis, pneumonia,
asthma, Don’t or consumption.
wait, but take
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
just as soon as your cough will
begins. A few doses
cure you then.
TlrecalK*: 25c., 5(c., Jl. All tfrsfpiti.
Don mi It your doctor. If bo say* take It,
then do ns bo »ny*. If ho toll* you not
to lako tt, thou don't take it. He kt now*.
Leave tt with him. Wc are willing.
J. AYKK CO., Lowell, Mass.
( wkitfamd > GlIARAN. TEED BY A
$ 5,000 ITAA1IY DAisIV IILrUut nrDftCIT I
Railroad Par. Paid. 500
FHBE Courses Offered.
Board al Coat. Wrlto Quick
GE0RC1A-ALABAA1A CJSINES3 COLLEGE, Mtcon.G*.
r
P
cartridges and shot shells
are made in the largest and
best equipped ammunition
factory in the world.
AMMUNITION
of U. M. C. make Is now
accepted oy shooters as
“the worlds standard” for
it shoots well ! n any gun.
Tour dealer tells it.
i The Union Metallic
Cartridge Co.
Bridgeport, Conn.
l J
NO MORE...
CURLS IN YOUR HAIR
MS Uj Kii
Carpenter’s OX MARROW POMADE
(bewakb c rorr atiowii.)
Takes them out bartrain. and keeps your scalp In splendid
shape Into tho Tnat'a why you need
It. It’s highly perfumed* too.
PRICE, 25 CENTS,
At the Drug Store, cents or In stomps. mailed on rocetpt of 26
A(Wr«», CARPENTER & CO.,
I.oulsville, Ky.
I
UVER ana
m BLOOD
Va SYRUP
Ing the cause.
CAPUDINE
d I P| aaa **nv ftckiuwn Riul
\ • y rf Traveler* S5 Nausea, <11/-
ALL HEADACHES bottle.
effect on brain or be* 10c. 25c anuftOc a
(.Liquid.)
ID O 25 P
^pry-ii"ir-i"irrjii8iM tt] !n time. Bold by drugglRta. * CT3 «
ANOTHER ODD THING.
"And there Is another strange thing
I have observed," remarked the aged
philosopher, stroking his long white
heard.
"There is?” asked the Interested
listener. "What is it?"
"That the coming man is alwaya
one who has got there."—Judge.
TRANSLATED.
"I heard her boasting that her din¬
ner party was a success from the be¬
ginning. and ended with the greatest
'eelaw' What's eciaw anyway?”
"Why—cr—that was the desert, of
course. Didn’t you ever oat a choco¬
late 'eelaw'?”—Philadelphia Press.
HOW IT LOOKED
“Is he a confirmed bachelor??"
"Yes; he refers to matrimonial
bonds as indigestible securities."—
Puck.
A VOICE FROM THE PULPIT.
Rev. Jacob 1>. Van Doren, of f>7 Sixth
street. Fond 1 >u Luc, Wis.. Presby¬
terian clergyman, says: "1 had at¬
tacks of kidney disor-
dors which kept me in
tlie house for days at a
time, unable to do any-
thing. " hat 1 suffered
can hardly be told.
t Complications set tit,
the particulars of
J which I will be pleased
to give , , In a personal ,
m interview requires to any informs- one
tlon. vybo ibis I cau con-
r.T* sclentlously say.DoaDs
Kidney Pills caused a
la general Improvement
iu «'-y Ha’.''
. rought ,, great relief ,, by lessening the
pain and correcting the action of
kidney secretions.”
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all
dealers. Price, 50 cents. foster-Mil-
burn 0©., Buffalo, N. Y.
f It
Alfalfa as Hough Febd,
Alfalfa Is much better ns n rough
fowl for hurries than timothy. They
ran he maintained on it alone, with no
bait results. Twenty pounds of al-
falfa hay a day Is aufildent to maintain
at rest a horse weighing 1400 pounds,
—,----
Ilon’t Keep C.'remn Too J.ong.
Where a family lias hut one cow the
butter Is frequently bad, no matter
how carefully the churning may have
been done. T Ills is due to keeping the
cream too long before churning. The
new cream is mixed with the old, and
the butter is not good. This eah be
j avoided by churning be more frequently.
Cream should churned as soon
as it reaches the proper stage of ripe*
ness, and where there is a mixture of
the cream of different ages it Is ira-
possible to have the butter of the best
quality.
Ronpflude a Germicide.
,Soapsuds will destroy plant lice If
used around trees and vines, especial-
ly tlic aphides Hint work on the rools.
Tlie suds may lie sprayed on the leaves
as " e ’* 118 thrown on tlie ground.
Whale oil soapsuds are used to destroy
scale, and if a little crude carbolic
acid is added to tile suds it will he all
the better. I-Vir asparagus and celery
soapsuds are excellent, and when
thrown on the manure heap they ns-
slst in preventing loss of ammonia.
If soapsuds are to he thrown away it
will lie an advantage to throw them
where they will provo beneficial,
Selecting 8oc<1,
The proper time in which to select
seeds is late in the fall or winter. The
reason for requiring this portion of the
year for so doing is because there is
no hurry, and the work can be done
better. Tlie common practice of lay¬
ing the seed corn aside to remain till
spring has done great damage to the
corn crop, as very often the excess of
imperfect grains is such as to cause n
failure of germination over the whole
field. Every ear of corn should lie ex¬
amined, and the inferior grain shelled
off. Vegetable seeds also require ex¬
amination, for insects, dampness, mid
other causes interfere with their safe
keeping. Of course, every farmer is
supposed to be careful with ids seeds,
hut very few farmers know the condi¬
tion of their seeds until Hie time when
they are required, and then they are
too much hurried to do anything with
them. The long winter nights are
sometimes made the tedious occasions
for a general assortment of seeds.
Should any particular variety of veg¬
etable appear to have “run ont” do
not retain tlie seed from it at all, but
procure a fresh supply from the seeds¬
man. In fact, it is best to renew all
seeds once and awhile, ns it is bene¬
ficial and prevents mixing varieties.
Itrnclng a Sagging Oats.
The plan of preventing gates from
sagging, shown In the illustration, is
one of the best used. It has tlie merit
of being cheap and decidedly effectual.
As will be noticed from the drawing,
the posts are sunk in the ground two
feet or more, and tlie ends set into n
heavy sill. This is best done by mor¬
tising the sill. Both posts and sill
should be well covered with tar to
prevent rapid decay. On this sill is
then built a wall of stones to within
eight inches or a foot of the surface
of the ground, and on this wall is laitl
a heavy piece of studding which is
spiked to the posts. In the absence of
stones, braces of heavy studding may
be run from the bottom of each post
next to the sill up to the top piece of
t -n fi
fi*
i’i i r e
**•> I--. «><'*••** V,A I-
_.-r
>1
BRACES for a oat*.
studding; the stone wall, ns suggested,
makes the stronger foundation. Built
in tlie manner indicated, tlie gate will
work for years without sagging.—In¬
dianapolis News.
.
«i
Feeding Chicken*.
Young chickens should be fed little
and often. The great danger in feed¬
ing chickens up to the time they arc
feathered Is from overfeeding. It oc¬
curs far more frequently than does
underfeeding. Overfeeding Is more apt
to occur with brooder chickens that
have little chance to exercise than it
does with chickens that run with the
hen. There is far less danger of over¬
feeding with whole or cracked food
than there is when all ground food
is fed, for the reason that digestion
must take place more slowly. It there-
fore follows that as between hard and
soft food, where both are fed, the
larger the proportion of ground food
the chickens eat the faster they will
, and eomersely, the l.irgei the
proportion of cracked or whole gram
they cat the slower thc7 will grow 1
and the less will be the dangers from
digestive troubles. It really becomes
a question of seeing how fast we can
grow them without "feeding them off
-,hoiv feet"—which means without in-
jmdug their digestion. Most feeders
will prefer to keep on the side of
safety and not trv to force them too
y )ts .
The first food should be given about
twenty-four hours after hatching ha*
completed. Tlie volk sack, which
Uas | UM , U enclosed within the body a
fl . w hours before hatching began, con-
tains ail the food that is required until
tbc digestive system is in working or-
j, T . The mistake sometimes is made
0 f leaving the chickens so long with-
out nourishment that they are. weak-
ened—but the mistake * is more apt to
be mauC jn the thci . (lir e 0t ; t u , nei s
ray more attention to keeping their
’ ones warm than they do in hunt-
ins for a big dinner. We should do
tho saue.—Country Life iu Aiatika-
POWER OF OCEAN TIDE8.
Cay of Fundy Presents an Interesting
Problem.
Tidal power has been utilized In
I only a very small way ; its large use
I has always been considered dubious.
In the first, place, tides of a height
readily available are local In their
occurrence; and, second, tld iS are 03-
sentlally periodic, so that their direct
power Is avallatde only in two short
dally periods occurring in cyclic or*
dcr during each part of the twenty-
f our }, onrg a3 the month i3 rounded
ou t. Hence, the first problem of tide
utilization Is storage of power,
u , s posf ,ible by the use of multiple
reservoirs to extend the use of the
tides throughout the twenty-four
hours. A three pond system accom¬
plishes this end at considerable cost
in complication of waterways and va¬
riations in head, and even a two pond
system helps to a steady use of tidal
power for part of the day. There
is, too, great variation In the rate of
flow in the tides in different locali¬
ties, the most favorable case being
that In which the tide rises and falls
most rapidly. But the main trouble
with the tides is that- the total rise
is relatively small, compelling one to
deal with low, as well as variable
heads, and to provide enormous res¬
ervoirs to store even enough water
for use in two daily five hour runs.
In very few places would it be pos¬
sible to rely on more than six feet
mean working head.
Thia means that If the storage pond
were nix feet deep, each square mile
of reservoir would store water for
5,000 hor.se power for a five hour run*
lCven this is an unusually favorable'
case, and It Is evident at once that
hydraulic works on this scale imply
a very large investment for the power
obtained.
The only tidal powers to be taken
seriously as able to count in large
work are much as exist in exceptional
spots, like the Bay of Fundy, where
the tide runs forty feet high under
normal conditions. There it would
be possible to obtain for two five
hour rune more than 50,000 horse
power per square mile of reservoir-
A glance at a map will show that the
Inner extremity of the Bay of Fundy
Is almost a tidal lake, known as the
Basin of Minas. At its outlet rise
two great headlands, less than three
miles apart, while .no narrower tide-
race between them takes the full cur¬
rent for the basin within. This covers
an ar"a of more than 400 square
miles, so (hat it is safe to say that
through that narrow gap more than
200,000,000 horse power hours run
daily to waste.
To utilize it would require an en -
gineering feat more tremendous than
anything yet attempted by man, but
in years to come tlie game may be
worth the candle.—Cassier's Maga¬
zine.
CURE BLOOD POISON, CANCER,
Aching Dunce, HhUttK t’nine. Itching
Skin, l-imples, Kilting Seres, Etc.
If you have Pimpiea or Offensive Erup¬
tions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Erup¬
tions, or rash on the skin, Festering Swell¬
ings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any part
of the body, old Sores, Boils, Carbuncles,
Pains and Aches in Bones or Joints, Hair
or Eyebrows falling out, persistent Sore
Month, Gums or Throat, then you have
Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm
(B.B.B.) Soon all Sores, Pimples and Erup¬
tions will heal perfectly. Aches and Pains
cease, Swellings subside and a perfect,
never to return cure made. B.B.B. cures
Cancers of all kinds, Suppurating Swell¬
ings, Eating Sores, Ugly Ulcers, after all
else fails, healing the sores perfectly. If
you have a persistent pimple, wart, swollen
glands, shooting, stinging pains, take Blood
Balm and they will disappear before they
develop into Cancer. Druggists. $1 per
large bottle, including complete directions
for home cure. Sample free by writing
Bf.oot) Bat M Co., 55 Balm Bldg., Atlanta,
Ga. Describe trouble and free medical
advice sent in sealed letter.
Porcelain making gives employment to
20,000 persons in Japan.
The Stealing of Cattle.
One source of immense trouble to
the cattleman has boon the calf thief,
Many a large “outfit” has gone out
of business on account of the “rust¬
ier." Where cow herders have to ride
(ho range for fifty or seventy-five
miles they are likely to he forestall-
ed , in . , branding ,, a calf ... l) 4 v some vigilant . ,, ,
rustler, whose little mountain ranch
is near the usual grazing place of a
hunch of cattle. Or _ very possibly ,
the puncher for the big 3C ranch
has caught and branded the calf with
its proper mark; and when many
months later ho rides on a yearling
branded BOB he lias no means of
knowing that the owner of the latter
brand has deftly touched up the 3C
with a running iron by the artistic
addition of two strokes and an added
letter. It may be stated parenthe-
tioally In passing that more than 0110
large “outfit" of today got its start
entirely from the “rustled" cattle. In
the more arid Southwest rustling is
I10 * so common because most of the
water is pumped and rattle get into
(j le haliit of coming home often to
^ r i n K and can be watched more close-
, y „ ut ovon ,i iere u is a factor of
no s !i s ut importance.—Leslie's Month-
... 5 __*
’ 1
BRAVE FELLOW.
"Y'es," said the dentist, ' to insure
painless extraction you'!! have to tako
gas, and that's fifty cents extra."
‘’Oh!’’ said tho farmer, "I guess the
0 - 1 wav'll be best; never mind no
. ••
"Y’ou’re a brave man."
“Oh! it ain't me that's got the
tooth; it's my wife.”—Philadelphia
Ledger.
—1—
WHAT COULD PAPA DO?
Higgins—What do you mean by
fighting in the public street?
Higgins, Jr.—Well, Tommy Sproul
s a:d vou were my father.
H'ggins—Well, and ain’t I your
father?
Higgins, Jr.—I suppose so. but a
{c uer don't iike to have it thrown at
him right out afore folks.—Boston
Transcript.
A PROMINENT CHURCH WORKER SAYS
SHE OWES HER LIFE TO PERUNA.
j. 1 mi/i
i
i
,*-*
A r. ia if
i i
mmmm t/rljc i, 'if ^
' * ” Mmmw: //i/ll f s« 7“ y* a' 4 * ' a T
.
Mrs. . A *• IS*
Lafountalo Hattie ? ^JAILEDTO , 'Tocrop.si^ PRESCRIPTIONS XEiaVE
11 j Ohio, Mrs. writes Hattie from La Gabon, Fountain, O., Treas. follows: Protected Home Circle and Catholic Ladies of i j
as
“Alter mg first child was born I suffered /or several months I afraid wtth j
] \ bearing down pains accompanied by dreadful headaches. iras *
mg health teas ruined/or life, and lelt very downcast about It. One day *
J when a friend teas visiting me she told me of I'eruna and what It had *
J done for her when she suffered with Irregular menstruation. My hits- *
f Land procured a bottle the same evening and I began to take It dally t *
* : according to directions. Uc/ore the first bottle was used X was enllrtly
J well, and you certainly have one grateful woman’s blessing. 1 have *
J also advised n ds to use it.” AIRS. HATTIE I.A FOU.XTAIfi. *
/
Secretary ' Woman’s State Federation
Says: Pe*ru-na Does More . T Than
■ IS Plelmod L/iaifTieCI T for , u III II
Airs. Julia M. Brown, Secretary of the
Woman’s State Federation of California, Angeles,
writes from 131 Vi Fifth St., Los
Cal., “I as follows: of
have never known any patent
medicine do which did what it remedy professed does to
except Peruna. This
much more than it claims, and while 1
have never advocated’ any medicine 1 feel
KEEPING TRACK.
“Won’t you have another biscuit?”
asked the hostess.
“No, thank you,” she replied; “real¬
ly, I don’t know how 'many I have
eaten already.”
“I do,” said little Robbie, eagerly;
“you've ate seven. I’ve been count¬
ing."—Town and Country.
KEEPING UP THE RECORD.
Traveller (to the ferryman crossing :
the river)—Has any one ever been I
lost in this stream?
Boatman—No sir. Some professor !
•was drowned here last spring, but they !
found him again after looking for twu
weeks.—Pearson’s Weekly.
THE REAL THING.
“How can you tell, papa, when peo¬
ple are way up in society?”
"When their diamonds are genuine,
and their- manners are not.”—Life.
Tlie Oldest Ferry.
Perhaps the oldest ferry in the world
is the cross-channel service, from Ca¬
lais to Dover. It has been in exist-
enoe for more than twenty centuries,
Sind (lie vessels which have been on-
gaged in it include every variety of
shipping, from Caesar's high-peaked
galleys, propelled hy banks of oars, to
the new turbine steamer.
Catarrh Cannot He Cured
With Loc.it, applications as they cannot
reach the seat of the diseass. Catarrh is a
blood or constitutional disease, and in order
io cure it you must take internal remedies,
HaU .„ Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
a"ts dlrcctlyontlic blood aud mucous surface
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine.
Jt was prescribed by one of the best physi-
.-inns in this country (or years, and is a reg-
ular prescription. It is composed of tlie
^urme^SrS.y'on t“
coussurfaces. The perfect combination o’
the two ingredients is what produces such
wonderful results in curing eatnrro. hend
lor testimonials, free, Props., Toledo, O.
I-'. J. Chesey Jk Co.,
Sold by druggists, prioe, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The' growth of the nails is more
rapid in children than in adults, and
slowest in the aged. It goes on rnorq
rapidly in summer tlrau in winter.
Mrs. Behind Stanford is Said to carry
a larger amount of insurance than any
other woman in the world. Her poli-
c les amount to more than 51,000,000.
DIDN'T ’ DARE
„ wh don - t y ou try to demonstrate
1o vour CO nstitutents that you are
al)Ie . unse s , ae ,, on. „„
ra P an
“My dear sir, answeiei Senator
Sorghum “If these people who have
known roe for years were to find me
doing something in which I had no
apparent interest they d get suspied-
°us and decide that I was engaged in
a deep and diabolical plot. Wash-
ington Star.
j FRUGAL.
i “So the little darling is going to
school, eh?”
“Voc les. indood inueeu. She’s our too T/ / VO line * to
learn ‘much, but as we nave to pay
! taxes we may as *rat somethin^
I for it.”—New York Journal.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed &
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c.
that it is but justice to speak a good word
tor it because I have found it to he such
rare have exception. known several who
“I women were
little better than physical wrecks, mothers
who dragged out a miserable, painful ex-
istencc, hut were made well and strong
through the use of Peruna. I have known
of cases of chronic catarrli which were
cured in a short time, when a dozen dif-
with ferent remedies had good been experimented I it
and without results. use
and myself I have when always I feel nervous found that and the worn results out,
were most satisfactory.” JULIA M. BROWN.
VOLUME 77. KO 61 DECEMBER IT. 19C.T.
THE YOUTHS ii ///; COMPANION
*175 A TEAR 6'errs a corv.
Copyrl*hl. lOOS. Sy Ptrrf
tt:
1 ri* Offer.
Cmuiai!- drwl hk- rr.urh the jea as i New Subscription you Ini hornet Xlllly will ef
Only a who and sends this slip the o! this Paper at i any
then IK 4 The New Subscriber culs out or name once l ip Jimmy down,
tll.ll «tn al with $1.75 will receive: v wain’l
(pun ( FREE AU the issues of The Companion tor the remaining weeks of 1903.
In fact, 308 man,
lXMUiVl) The Double Numbers lor Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s. oent
pioneer man
oilier. • i The Youth’s Companion “Springtime” Calendar for 1904, lithographed Stilling
aliotes t at fight*
•km bri in twelve colors and gold. erythin*
(.inking Then the fiftytwo issues of The Companion for 1904 library of the best reading for I have to
bushedt —a “1
ami at member of the family. ' 8 am am
l-'.U.'.AS every - kin* you
Month Illustrated Announcement and Sample Copies of tflt Taper Free. . ■ tm CU • V. ill.
tniou* • brother,
river to i Ah think
•t For ttw Fi tl THE, YOUTH'S COMPANION. BOSTON, MASS. n word ■ HUM ol
danglii'l i a hand.
perhap*. ai id rice Kerchiefs, tiny* bottle* •’ Thai I wifi; *na tor your take, MUly,
• Of jew Fimol> •■led tom!); perfumes, all breeches, three pretty • ring sdnm- of - m T' If tor " And no flther." Lewis Hoyf* mother has homed
It* ills that ir.uk* womanhood fairer gad me to ask you to took after him, too," Hilly
inoreal attract! vo. T continued. " She is afraid he will get into
And to procure these along with more W. Cghis with cLtkir boatmen and he ‘gouged,’
- quick
sutwUntls! ftKiotfs of exchange, the young ^*^5 ___ he has *urh a Utmpex. 0
riontlcremen braved all the perks arid , " Lewis Ifitet take hi* chsnoo r. jlh tht
hardship* of a voyage of a hundred day*, \ others," taid Marion, smiling
duration, exposel every day ef It to wreck " But, Marion, there is another -bo
and h.wKikw bullet -J would cry her eyes out i( anything befall* u.
wlwru Just the within nlien the mouth of of FUh the Creek, Ohio J. -VO XT' Lewis," *’ Who wId ? ” askod M illy, Marioh, lb tones curiously. follof meaning.
sw current t "
“hacks up” the smaller stream, lay as “ And you hkve hot noticed cried
’’ aik ” o( lira, towr laden with everything " Not Molly, not my little siater? "
which such (raft carried (and ere a the young mtn. surpriwxi. _
MOST UNREAL.
Wife—I dreamed last night that I
was in a store that was just full of
the loveliest bonnets, and—
Husband (hastily)—But that was
only a dream, my dear.
Wife—I knew it was before I woke
up. because you brought me one.—
Phipadelphia Press.
PUBLIC SPEAKING.
"Oh, I couldn’t possibly take half
an hour on that, subject'.”
“Nonsense! Why, you can fill
twenty minutes explaining the diffi¬
culty of treating so important a sub¬
ject in so short a time.”—Puck.
FITSDerinanently cured. N'o fits or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Greai
NerveBestorer.$2trial bottle and treattsofreo
Dr.lt.H. Klin e, Ltd.. 331 Arch St,, T hil l., P i.
Bloodhounds arc to aid the Berlin police
in the tracking of criminals.
Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for child rev
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflam na¬
tion, nlmys pal n,cure s wind colic, 'da .', a bottle
The world depends on the United States
for cotton.
___
Ido not believe Tiso’s Cure for Consump-
lionhasan • }u»l for coughs and colds— John
i .Boyer,T rinity (Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1501.
There are six eanais connected with the
Thames, which extend altogether 324 miles.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes cost but 10
cents per package.
In Bengal last year there were 38,000
deaths from plague.
STUART’S
GIN And BUCHU w
To all who suffer,or to the friends of those
who st'ffer with Kidney, Liver. Heart, Bladder
or Blood Disease, a sample bottle of Stuart *
Gin and Buchu. the creat southern Kidney and
Diver Medicine, will be sent absolutely free of
SSuq u*rG < ^ U »^ UART
8 t . Atw.Qw
HER GREAT FORTUNE.
A Woman Saved from Lite-Long
Misery and Made Happy
and Useful.
A woman confined !o the house for FCV-
eral vears with a chronic ferns.e hope of derange¬ being
ment had finally given up
cured. physician after physician,
She had tried remedy, without an)
and remedy after
permanent Her improvement. hail cost her husband , ,
treatment hundreds of dollars.
who was a poor obliged man denv themselves
They had comforts been of lilt* to in order to got
many enough the physicians.
money to pay Weenie weak,
The woman had nervous
and wretched, and scarcely aide to keep
I ! out ing of her neglected bed. Her and children ragged, were leva use grow ol
I the up of mother’s cure. Her hus¬
want a discouraged and bro¬
band was becoming overwork.
ken down with day she hap
Picking up the paper one which contained
pened to read an item would treat
the news that ])r. Hartman
such eases free of charge' hy letter. s * 'he
toms. telling her
Nhe soon received a letter
ZT'ZX*™ (the principal remedy being
treatment she
Penmat at once, and in a few weeks
was well and strong again, able to do her
OW T n his 0 «!ffer of five home trealmen, to
women is still open to a'.I who may need
the services of this eminent physician. will be
I All letters answered, applying for and treatment be held atrtctl)
prompt. y
confidential. Pocahontas
Miss Annie Council Honan, Post Men (Women's of
Yentassee of Ked
Branch York I, writes from 872 Eighth Avc.,
New : with
'•Three months ago I was troubled
backache and a troublesome heaviness
about the stomach. restless Sleep sleep. brought The me doc- no
rest, for it was a
tor said mv nervous system was out of or-
der. but his prescriptions didn’t seem to
relieve me. I was told that I'eruna was
pood for building up the months nervous I system. know
After that using it is. it I for two that it made
now want to sav
a new woman of me. The torturing and I feel symp¬
toms have all disappeared my¬
self again. Peruna did me more good than
all the other medicines I have taken.”
ANNIE HOBAX.
Miss Mamie Powell, Lake Charles,
Lou isiana, writes:
“I sincerely believe that Peruna is wom¬
an's best friend, tor it has headaches, certainly back¬ been
that to me. 1 had had
aches and other aches every month for a
long time, but short!after I began tak¬
ing Peruna this was a thing of the past,
and I have good reason to be grateful. I
take a bottle every spring and fall now.
and that keeps my health perfect, and 1
certainly am more robust now than I have
been before and am weighing more. J do
not think any one will he disappointed the of Pe- in
the results obtained from use
runa” MISS MAMIE POWELL.
If ,, do , derive , . prompt and , .
you not satis-
factory results from the use of i’eruna.
write at once to Dr. Hartman, and giving he will a
full statement of your case,
be pleased to give you his valuable advice
gratis. Dr. Hartman, President of The
Address
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
ij ■t
•22 CALIBER. RIM FIRE CARTRIDGES.
Winchester .22 Caliber Cartridges shoot when you want
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THE BEST
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V!
4 BRAS®
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/•*' ’ it is often imitated but
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at KiS'inimeo from now
Cash with order.
j WANTED—20,0)0 pounds Pressed Cat-Fish
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Ship us your furs.
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Avery&jpan»
MACHINE RY
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Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
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AAI.Km IRON
W. L. DOUGLAS
»3.SS&*3 SHOES UNION MADE.
You can save from $8 to $5 yearly by
wearing W. L. Douglas $3.80 or $3 shoes
They equal those
that have been cost¬
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to mouse Si.00. sale The of \V. iiu- L. f j
Douglas shoes proves I
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ail other makes. ft £
Soi l hy retail shoe
dealers Look everywhere. and
for name
price That on fioiu.-i.-is bottom Cor¬
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onation prows Ihrrv is is
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Corona is the highest
graife Pat.heather made.
Fast Color FurlCs turd.
Our $4 Gill Cage Line cannot be equalled at any price.
Shoes by mail, 25 rents extra. Illustrated
Catalog free. IV. L. DOl'tiLAS, Ilrorkton. Mass
us Ul O
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Quick
Belief.
VKswaar t or Removes all swelling in 8 to 30
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in 30to 60 days. Trial treatment
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- -—•—
~
Give the name of this paper when
writing to advertisers—(At44-’3-
For over nine rears I suffered with chronic con¬
stipation and during this time 1 had to take an
injoction of warm xtater ones every 24 hour* before
I could nave an action on my bowels. Happily I
tried C as carets, and todny I am a well mao.
Daring suffered the nine years before I used Caaenrets I
untold misery with internal piles, Thank*
to you I am free from all that thia morning. You
can use thia in behalf of suffering humanity.”
b. F. Fisher, Roanoke, Ill.
Best For
f Mm w^J^ ar The Bowels ^
CAN OY CATHARTIC
•I?
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 603
AKNUAL SALE, TEN WiLLION SOXES
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