The Brunswick daily news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1903-1906, June 14, 1903, Image 7

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SDNDAY MORNING. GRIPPE HURT KIDNEYS. TTey suffer*from °over th. kidneya ,or a ,on * time, dnes. Doan’s Kidney Pii, s overcome ttto °' Qr ' PPe medi - Auroea, New Mexico. —I received wldeh C T Sfl , mp, f , of Mp an ’s Kidney Pill 3 which I ordered for a gir l nine yeara old that was suffering with bed wetting, and she improved very fast. The Dills acted directly on the bladder in h er P case and stopped the trouble. J. 0. LuceTo Battle Creek, Mien. —My husband received the sample of Do, Js Kidney Pills and lias taken two more boxes and feels like anew man. He is a fireman on the Grand Trunk R. ]{., and tlle work £ hard on the kidneys. Mrs. Geo. Gifford. Pliny, \Y. Va - The free trial of Doan s Kidney Pills acted so well with me, I wrote llooff, the druggist, at Point Pleasant, to send me three boxes, with the result I have gained in weight, as well ns entirely rid of my kidney trouble ]\> water had becomo very offensive and ‘. v taine.d a white sediment and cio' • cou " would have to get up six and r I during the night, and the- times would dribble and car - A the voiding tempts, but, thanks to T ->* frequent at they have regulated Dona s Kidney Pills, Vralse them too - * Alt that, and I cannot Aiuch, Jas. A. Lakh am. Wb “7-7 Youth Handicaps. p, .* Other day I found as my com -fllon in a railway journey a young engineer. He had spent a good num tber of his not very numerous years in America, and he had realized the : spirit of that country. In the course of the conversation, in which he spoke frankly of his successes and his fail ures, of his difficulties' find of his friendships, he mfiile the observation tlwA the greatest Of hil hi s obstacles fceh-e in England .would have been the (greatest of at! his recommendations 3n and that was his youth. ’When he went -into a board of railway •directors and suggested that be should take on a great big contract the directors looked up at his beardless Jace and could scarcely keep their countenances, so shocked were they at the disparity between the proposal and the age of the proposer.—T. P.’s Weekly, London. The world’s population is increasing about 500,000,000 a century. . Health and beauty are the glories of perfect womanhood. Women who suffer constantly with weakness peculiar to their sex cannot re tain their beauty. Preservation of pretty features and rounded form is a duty women owe to themselves. When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhcea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, back ache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, or arc beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melan choly, “all gone ” and “ want-to-be-left-alone” feelings, blues, and hope lessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound removes such troubles. Case of this Prominent Chicago Woman Should Give Everyone Confidence in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkuam : It affords roc great pleasure, indeed, to add my •testimonial to the great number who are today praising Lydia E. Pink- j ham’s Vegetable Compound. Three years ago I broke down from ex rysieal and mental strain. I was unable to >per rest, also lost my appetite, and I became so and irritable too that my friends trembled,and ble to attend to my work. Our physician pre r me, but as I did not seem to improve, I was rgo away. I could neither spare the time nor ad was very much worried when, fortunately, r club friends called. She told me how she had ;<1 of ovarian troubles, andhow like my symp j to hers, seven bottles of your medicine cured her, and she insisted that I take some. “ I did so, and am glad that I followed her advice. Within six weeks I was a different woman, strong and robust in health, and have “ A number of my friends who have been troubled with ailments peculiar to our sex have taken your compound, and have also been greatly bftiefited.” Miss Elizabeth Daley, 870 Loomis St., Chicago, 111. President of the St. Ruth's Court, Order of For resters, Catholic. What is left for the women of America, after reading such letters as we publish, but to believe. Don’t some of you who are sick and miser able feel how wicked you are to remain so, making life a burden for yourself and your friends, when a cure is easily and inexpensively obtained ? Don’t you think it would pay to drop some of your old preiudiees and “Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which is better than all the doctors for cures ?” Surely the experience of hundreds of thousands of women, whom the Compound has cured, should convince all women. Follow the record of this medicine, and remember that these cures of thousands of women whose letters' are constantly printed in this paper were not brought about by “something else,” but by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, the great Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills. , , . Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want —a cure. Moral stick to the medicine that you know Is the Best, unto to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. M FORFEIT wo cannot forthwith produce the original letter and signature of above testimonial, which will prove its absolute genuineness. Lydia IS. Pinkham Medicine Cos., Lynn, Maes* THEIsINEF&IETTIG CO, B KT Machinery, Engine Lathes, Irak. Milling a* a* Engines and Ij ia -i * ipTJ* Machines, * Boilers, mtemtJrAl iilMf Upright Drills Saw Mills, Steam Pumps Dry Kilns. 80i,2rs ’ EtCl vwuuiUUU. Aching backs are cased. Hip. back, and lorn pains overcome. Swelling of the limbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sedi nient, high colored, pain in passing, drlb ' mg, frequency, bed wetting. Doan’s .i< ttey Pills reftiovc calculi and gravel. * eve palpitation, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness, dizziness. freb ’ Pills, p§f wit * y°>* wmj. address WW r' tfW * XplF for free xkAuMMrc Cr.yr mTivfigy trial box. FostEß-MiLBUBK Cos., Buffalo, K. Y. Pills' 61136 mill “ e friW trlal bo * loan's Kidney Name _ Poßtr-ofHce State Msdlcal Advice Free—Strictly Confidential. If fanners, prosperous, abandoned or otherwise, wish to he cheese- makers to themselves the United States depart ment of agriculture is prepared to give all the Information necessary to enable them to attain such independence. In a little tract called “Cheese Making on the Farm” it goes into the most helpful details with regard to making this toothsome and nutritious article of diet. Of course they cannot in point of excellence hope to extend the high standard to which cheese factories conform, and they probably will not try to do anything of that sort, remarks the Boston Transcript. But the amateur in making cheese can give himself certain privileges that will lead to a product having an individuality of flavor not found, and not possible, where it is made in wholsale quantities. Household ~ jjVgatters Soap and Gasoline. The best way to clean a wash silk waist is to wash it in a suds made of benzine or gasoline and a white soap. After tlie garment is clean it should be thoroughly rinsed in fresh benzine. No pressing will be needed as a result of the washing, but if the silk is wrinkled it should be ironed with a warm flatiron after it is dry. A hot flatiron must not, of course, be put on goods wet with such fluid. The rinsing liquid may be saved for another occa sion, providing it is allowed to settle and is then drained from the sedi ment. Delicate fabrics may he cleaned in this way. For a tllrl’s Koom. In furnishing her room ii girl should bear in mind that quality, not quantity, is the keynote to beauty. She should decide on a color scheme and stick to it. or if slj£ departs slightly from it, let her go in the right direction and choose a color which corresponds well with the main color scheme. In the first place she should avoid too many personal photographs, half a dozen of her dearest friends’ photos, and no more. Her room should contain at least one picture beautiful enough to raise her to a higher plane whenever her eyes fall upon it. She should lie cautious in dealing with posters, bric-a brac and gewgaws. Simplicity of hue and outline should be her main idea, striving rather to have a few good things than a groat many inferior ones. —New York Journal. Disease Germs on Vegetables. Vegetables collected from the mar kets have been found to contain thou sands of germs; they have been rinsed lightly in water, and the number of germs has been decreased only from forty to fifty per cent. Then they were washed pretty thoroughly, as the ordinary housewife would do it, and they still contained fully twenty to forty per cent, of the germs. Finally they were exposed to the running water from a faucet where the pressure was strong enough to force the water violently between the leaves. This method proved so effectual, especially when the hands were used to scrape parts of the leaves that were curled over, that only faint traces of germs were found left. This demonstrated, in other words, that it is possible for the careful housewife to cleanse her raw vegetables so that there need be no actual danger from eating them. They need to be washed in at least two waters, then exposed to the force of the running water. In the case of toma toes they should always be peeled. Scald them a little with warm water, and the skin will come off easily, and carry with it all germs.—A. S. Atkin son, M. D., in Good Housekeeping, Dcgirablo Pottery. Among our most desirable American potteries Dedham is noted for its beau tiful soft grayish white color, its bold crackle, and for Us decoration in soft, subdued hue. A rabbit border com bined with suggestions of tree stumps or little bushes is a very striking ef fect among its latest showings in plates and cups and saucers for table use. Among the decorative pieces a dark green and a dull gray vase are very interesting, while another is de cidedly brilliant from the strong red and yellow that mingles with its grays and browns. This Dedham is tlie American Chelsea of old that changed its name when it removed from one Massachusetts town to tlie other. Even tlie prevailing craze for candle sticks fashion has a correct mode for their use. Those of brass, copper or bronze are considered the most desira ble for tlie hall. Delft or faience for the drawing room; in the dining room, silver or glass; iu tlie boudoir, most elaborately beautiful affairs of gold, porcelain or china; for the bedroom dressing table, tall silver or china shapes, and on (lie bedside table, that holds the carafe of iced water, a low silver or china candlestick, with Us ex tinguisher and silver match safe. Thus while the candlestick has a place in each room of the modern house, its form and make expresses lls use.— Pittsburg Dispatch. recipes:' | Marmalade Pudding—Cream half a eupful of butter; add to it half a cupful of powdered sugar and oue cupful of flour; beat three eggs; add them to the butter and flqur mixture and beat in two tablespoonfuls of orange mar malade; pour into a buttered pudding dish and bake twenty minutes; serve with orange sauce. Minced Meat Browned—Mince cold roast beef very tine; add to it one table spoonful of chopped parsley, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, one teaspoonful of minced onion, one cup ful of grated stale bread, a little lemon juice and one cupful of stock or gravy; put this over the fire; then put it in a buttered baking dish; spread over but tered crumbs and put in tlie oven and when brown remove and serve with tomato puree. Egg Itolis—Kill) two tablespoonfuls of butter into two cupfuls of sifted Hour: add two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one teaspoon of sugar and half a teaspoon of salt; beat one egg; add to it half a cupful of milk; pour tiiis over the Hour and mix with a spoon to a dough; the dough should he quite soft: toss on a Homed hoard; roll half an inch thick; cut in rounds and hake on a slightly floured pan fifteen minutes in a quick oven. Apple Dowdy-Butter a baking dish; line the bottom and sides with buttered slices of bread: fill the dish with sliced apples and grate into them a little nut meg; mix half a cup of water and half a cup of molasses together and pour over the apples; sprinkle over this half a cup of brown sugar; cover with more buttered bread, butter side down; cover the dish with a tin plate and cook in a moderate oven two hours; loosen the edges with a knife and turn out on a dish; serve hot with sugar atul cveaui. THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS. 'fiffiJHLE' (TV !/ x cv) Near Tiverton, Devonshire. England, there is to be seen a blackbird with a white head and a speckled back. At the ninety-ninth birthday celebra tion of the Bible Society at the Guild hall recently the cake weighed ninety-’ nine pounds. The cake is an institu tion among the juvenile collectors, and a pound is added to its weight every year. Originally the common or domestic goat was a native of the highlands of Asia. Naturalists generally regard it as having descended from an animal found in the Caucasus Mountains and the hill country of Persia, called in I lie Persian language the pesang. The Bible is now widely read in India. At Singapore it is stated that the British and Foreign Bible Society will sell the Scriptures in over sevenfy five languages and dialects. The Bible has also been translated into sixt.v-six of the languages and dialects of Africa, The ancient tanner paid nil expert high wages to guess at the contents of his hides when sold by measure. To day an unskilled workman hands the Irregular shaped pieces to a little ma chine that looks something like a table with a double top, which, quicker than the mind of the expert could guess it, reckons with exactness the square con tents in botli the metric and standard systems. At the recent corn carnival at Peoria, Mo., there were 011 exhibitieu an apple of the pippin variety and an ear <>l! ordinary yellow corn, the former weighing six pounds and about the size of an average watermelon, while the latter measured fourteen inches iu length, contained 1*47 grains by actual count, was two inches in diameter, six inches in circumference, and was picked from its stalk nine feet from the ground. One thousand students of the Univer sity of Chicago belonging (o different political parties met the other day in a mock “National Democratic Conven tion,” which adopted a platform, placed nominees before the voters of the land and in other ways acted according to the customs established by real con ventions. The mimicking of the man nerisms of National leaders iu Presi dential elections was done in tine style, and the whole gathering was pro nounced a success. Tho X.aat TVootlon Ship IStiilt. The American siiip Aryan, which ar rived on Tuesday nightfrom Baltimore, is the last wooden ship built in Amer ica. To lovers of the once popular Yan kee clipper this example of a famous but disappearing type is held in pecu liar interest. Driven gradually to ob solescence by the less artistic but more economical fore-and-nfter, the clipper type of sailing vessel is every year be coming rarer. Other things being equal and barring shipwreck or conversion, the Aryan will one day be t lie sole sur vivor of the kind of ship that once made the American merchant marine the marvel of the world. The Aryan, however, has many voy ages to make before vessels like the Shenandoah, Susquehanna and Roan oke leave her as sole representative of the American wooden clipper ship. The Aryan was built in 1893 at Phipsburg, Me., and no expense was spared to make her outside lines in ac cord with the yacht-like traditions of her wooden sister and to equip her cab ins with as many home comforts as can lie installed in the afterpart of the roomy windjammer. Her gross regis ter is 2124 tons. She is 248.(5 feet long, 42.2 feet in beam and 2(3.3 feet deep. She came from Baltimore In 13(5 days. Her cargo consisted of 30.74 tons of coal, of which Captain Pendleton took such care that at no time during tho voyage did the temperature of (lie cargo register more than ninety de grees. She was favored with fine weather in the Atlantic and fair winds helped her around the Horn. In the Pacific she met with some heavy weather, but nothing to hurt her, and she reached port in fairly good time and in the best of condition.—San Fran cisco Cali. An Owl’s Flight For I,llb. While the whaleback steamer Forest Castle, from Liverpool, was off tlie Newfoundland banks an owl as white as snow fell exhausted on the deck. Tlie owl made a desperate flight from an iceberg to the ship. It was “dead heat” when it floundered aboard, and without a great deal of trouble was made prisoner. The sailors were utterly astonished at the arrival of the passenger. Some one saw the peculiar object coming la boriously through llie air, making a line fly for the whaleback. Away off on the horizon line was a great iceberg, which had worked its way further south than these terrors of the north ern sea are wont to do. When the “berg” parted company with the Icefield of tlie far north it probably carried with it the owl. which clung to its raft of crystal until flight, was useless, a stretch of open sea form ing a barrier over which tlie bird did not dare attempt flight. Like a sensi ble owl it held to tho refuge in sight, hoping for a better one by and by. When the Britisher Forest Castle ap peared on the horizon tlie bird made its one last dash for life. It was probably half starved and ill prepared for such a long chase—a stern chase, too—for the vessel, well to the smith, was also pay ing steadily in that direction. How ever, the race was won by the owl.— Philadelphia Press. Oxford’s llihle Ontpul. Tlie Bible publications of tlie Oxford University Press have been issued I'm 300 years, and can lie published in l.M> languages and dialects, livery yrar fully 600 tons of paper are used for ties purpose alone. Orders for 100.000 Bibles are quite common, and tlie sup ply of printi and sheets is -o great thal an order for half a million copies can be readily filled. On an average, from thirty to forty Bibles are furnished every minute.~The Gaston Magazine, Beaver Dam in New Jerseyl Mr. Justus Von Lengerke recorded in our columns two years ago the dis covery of a colony of beavers in the' wilds of New Jersey, a region from which the animal was supposed to have been exterminated long ago. Tho precise location of the colony Mr. Von Lengerke Judiciously withheld, for he was apprehensive that the beaver would prove a temptation to the trap pers. But now the animals have re vealed their whereabouts and forced themselves into public notice by rea son of their beaver nature and the activity and enterprise which it lias prompted. They have built dams and overflowed the adjacent farm lands, and land owners have at last become tired of destroying their work, and are now socking some measuro of relief. At Mr. Von Lengerkie’s suggestion, the New Jersey Legislature passed a bill for the protection of the beaver; and the aggrieved farmers are thereby re strained. Taken altogether, this is a very curious conflict between wild life and agriculture within two hours of New York city.—Forest and Stream. Plague of Wblves In Russia. As In Austria and Jlungary, so in Russia, the past winter will be re membered for the vast qualities of wolves which came out of the fore*!# and mountains and preyed on the vil lages. In one district In Eastern Russia over 16,000 head of cattle were lost. In tlio governments of Novgo rod, Tver, Olonotsk, Archangel and In Finland it was necessary from timo to thno to call out the soldiers to round them up and shoot them down. Thousands were disposed of In this way. The clipper ships of old are in little demand now. and many famous craft must resign themselves to be kindling wood. This does not mean that tho white sail is to leave the sea, for the new steel or wooden schooner of many masts still remains the cheapest car rier of slow freight. FITS I.miianeiitt.v cured. So Ills or nervous ness after first din’s use of Ur. Klim* s Great Nerve Kcal orer.it'it rial bottle aud trentisetree Dr. It. H. Klims, I.td., 831 Arch SL, Phila.,Ta A woman is never so skeptical as not to believe a man when lie tells bee he loves her. Liulii*! Can Wear Shoe* Ono size smaller after using Allen’s Font- Eas\ u powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all druggists and shot* stores, 25c. Don't ac cept any substitute. Trial package f hee by mail. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N.Y. Windmills in Germany are now uecd to produce power to drive electric motors Fully 2500 persons commit suicide in Russia every year. l'iso’s Cure cannot In* too highly sp* ken of ns a cough cure.—J. W. O’Brikn, 822 'I bird Avenue N., Minneapoli . Minn., Jan. 0, 1900. The valley of tho Amazon still remains almost unexplored. Carpets can be colored on the floor with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Flattery is a tool that will pry open al most any woman’s heart. nuftfiK ■ iiniiinwimaaMWMaKa Gray Hair | “I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor R for over thirty years. It has kept a my scalp free from dandruff and [I has prevented my hair from turn- u ing gray.” Mrs. F. A. Soule, 8 Billings, Mont. I There is this peculiar 1 thing about Ayer’s Hair fi Vigor —it is a hair food, -j not a dye. Your hair does b not suddenly turn black, j look dead and lifeless. | Butgraduallytheoldcolor a comes back, —all the rich, I dark color it used to have. The hair stops falling, too. j $1.09 n hotllc. All drttggiati. t If your druggist cannot supply you, n pend in ono dollar and wo will express | you i\ botl<*. in* sure and give tho name ■ of your nearest express office. Address, B J. A YKR, CO., Lowell, I BROMO SELTZER CURES ALI. Headaches 10 CENTS - - EVERYWHERE japyV, The Lass With a Glass HHBk. of Hire* Kootl’pfr brl(clit?>lif > r f f. t’Ytt*, df*t**eiiß tlid row., in Ik r qJ dieukty rind itcqiiires h.mi.'l Of * l,i> • tl 1 Kl-’l klioynilt KI'U.tM \ from liet lavorTt; beverage. i Si Ires i Kootbecr A ttif* fftpsti Slot is* :it!ifT Jmm (limk.ißH- I'!( . t fBEST m m BOWELS acflJajito, <rr7\ \ CATKARTIO GUARANTEED CtJRK for all bowrt trout: \ apur-ru-ir.s, IV > n . bad breath, bad Q ? blood, wind oil th- t. 4 ;iach. Moat- <1 Djv.* I,f ji ; h■> ■ .; . , is. pimpi* ', tj pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow akin and dii’zirif-:'". WI our bowel don’t move B rvtjularly you sir nick. Coi.ntipation kiii , i.-, ■■ people than ell oth.’i dDearc:: tt.p-.'Lber. It g starts chronic ailments axid long years of No roattvr wJiIL aii yt u> taV.km; | C ASC ARE! 3 today. for you will nr-ver wr-11 and stay w.-il unt : l you r‘t your bowels 5 right Take our advice, start with Career *r today und' r abiolu’u guarantee to euro or | raonoy refunded. The genuine tablet stamp dCC C. Ktv. r - ! 1 > 1 -Ik. Samp’' ; 2 boolilet free. Aldr. so Sterling Rn.- dy C0r..,, inv, Chicago or N-w Yt.rk. fi 0 * REGISTER OF THE U. S. TB'cfISURY USES PE-Rll-Nft FOP. SUMMER CATARRH Summer Catarrh Afflicts Men and Women. XT ON. HIDSON W. LYONS. I I Register of tho United States Treasury, in a letter from Washington, I). C., Bays: “ J find Per unit to be an excellent remedy for the ca tar rh a l affect lons of spriny and summer, and those who suffer from de pression from tho heat of the summer trill fimt no remedy the equal of Perru na.”—Judson Is'. Lyons. No man is better known in the financial world than Hud son \Y. Lyons, formerly of An gust a, Ga. 11 is name on cyery piece of money of recent date makes his signature one of the most familiar ones in the Uni- ted States. Two lnt r ttug Letter* From Thankful Women- Miss Camilla Chartier.s West Lexington St., Baltimore, Aid., writes: “Late suppers gradually af fected my digestion ami made me a miserable dyspeptic, suf fering intensely at turn**. I took several kinds of medicine which were prescribed by dif ferent physicians, but still con- Mpuod to suffer. Hut the trial of one bottle of Peruna con vinced me that it would rid ivuf of this trouble, so I con turned taking it. for several weeks and l was in excellent health, having gained ten pounds.”- Charticr. Summer Catarrh. Mrs. K<t*te Hohn, ]IIP Willoughby Avc., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: “When I wrote you T was troubled with frequent headaches, dia/.y, strange feeling m the htttd, sleeplessness, sinking feel ings, faintness and numbness. Sometimes I had hcarhbuin. My food would Disc to my throat after every meal, and my bow els were very irregular. “I wrote you for advice, and I now take pleasure in informing you that iny improvement is very great indeed. I did not expect to improve ho quickly after suf fering for live long years. L am feeling Cotton Gins and Presses j* MADE BY •.* j* CONTINENTAL GIN CO. Birmingham, Ala„ ENGINES and BOILERS Send for new catalogue just issued. —i* Trade Slang Wanted. ■ Dr. Hubert Jansen, the editor of the Trilingual Technical Dictionary which is being published by the Society of German Engineers, has sent out a batch of circulars relating to the pub lication. The object is to bring *out a thoroughly comprehensive vocabu lary of technical terms in German, English and French. Mathematical, physical and chemical words are to be included, as if not now of technical importance they may become so at any tlmo. Special effort is to be made to include all “trade” expres sions used In particular industries, local dialetical terms and even work men’s “slang” names for machines, etc., ns these often pass in time into general use. In order to make thi dictionary as complete as possible, collaboration is asked from technical men, institutions or works. The pub lishers will supply note books for jot ting down technical expressions (with or without their foreign equivalent) to anyone who is willing to collabor ate and these will be collected some time naxt year, and collated by the editor. The editors also ask that cir culars, price lists, etc., may bo sent to them, as these are a fruitful source of technical expressions. Proud “Will Crooks, M. P." From workhouse to House of Com mons Is the proud record of Will Crooks. When only a child of nine lie became an inmate of Poplar work house. It was only sheer hard neces sity that drove his mother and her five children there, hut a. few months afterward they were able to got their discharge, and young Will then first commenced to earn money by deliv ering cans on a milk route after school hours. At eleven he left school and went to work at a blacksmith’s. Today he Is chairman of tho Poplar Board of Guardians, member of tho London County Council, manager of tho Metropolitan Asylums Hoard, ami now member of Parliament for Hie Woolwich division- Tid Bits. According to vital statistics, the baby born in has three time; as good a chanr* of living as it would have had if horn fifty years ago. However, the baby born fifty years ago, if still alive, will probably bo satisfied with the chance that came bis way. Morphinism, Alcoholism, a -m * *.•■•" hum,, i.im W# w NMiiiu<thcnifi r*-f* lij yield to tho K'HtJ) tr at mo tit. • ‘/’i i i'f|*(ji'd viioo confidential Witte for j auii/iilct J ell phono 4f>3. Ke ;• Institute, ‘ll'ih Ave, D, JbfrinlnghiLU), A a. Hon. Judson W. Lyons, very good and strong. I thank you ho much for J’eruna. I shall recommend it to all suffering with tin- effects of catarrh, ami 1 consider it a household blessing. I shall never be without. Peruiin.” For those phases of catarrh peculiar to summer Ueruna will be found efficacious. fVrutia cures catarrh iu all phases and stages. It you tlo not derive prompt and satis factory results from tlie use of Peruita, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your ease and he will lie pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman iSuuitunum, Columbus, Ohio. TORTURING DISFIGURING Skin, Scalp and Blood Humours i From Pimples lo Scrofula From Infancy to Age Speedily Cured by Cuticura When All Else Fails. The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in Eczema; tlie frightful scaling, ns in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled bead; the facial disfigurements, as iu acne and ringworm; the awful suffer ing of infants, and anxiety of worn out, parents, ns In milk crust, tetter and salt rheum, —all demand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to success fully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent aro such stands proven beyond all doubt. No statement Is made regarding them that is not justified by the strongest evi dence. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent care, the absolute safety and great economy, have made them the standard skin cures, blood purifiers and humour reme dies of the civilized world. Rathe tlie affected parts with hot water and Cut icura Soap, to cleanse the surface; of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without rubbing, and apply Cuticura Oint ment freely, to allay Itching, irritation and inflammat ion, and soothe ami heal, nnd, lastly, take Cuticura Resolvent, to cool and cleanse the blood. This com plete local and constitutional treatment affords instant relief, permits rest and sleep in the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burning and scaly humours of tlie skin, scalp and blood, and points to a speedy, permanent and economical cure when all else fails. Sul*! the world. Cuticura K* olvt , nt,s'V.(ia form of ( liociilutu Coated Pillb, JtV;. per viul of O’). Oint ment. *>*:.. VSc. J'i-priU : London, ”7 CharUrliouao h*j . I'arii, r, Hue <l* la Palxs IJnaton, I’w CV.umtjJfc Z.v*. I'olt. r Dmi: ft (Jlm hi. Corp , Proprietor*. for ‘’How to Cure Kvcry Humour.** - AAlinrn CURED WIINOLIT CUTTINti, SiHlf LLII A Sew Veijetrtde Remedy. Cine tumcnlecd in 1 very Case freated. NATIONAL < AM L!: MEDICINE COMPANY. Austell Huildiuff. Atlanta, Ga. Ajjjss&w CURED Of opsy wi Rcmovrs -Gl Hurdling in 8 to 20 / days; effects n permanent cure j/f yf*' /k, in y>to days. Trial treatment ITDIWMV; tfiv''n free. Not hiagean be fairer ,'ify Ws it*.* Mr. H. H. Green's Sons. . Specialists, Box Atlnn’n, f-*- WELL GULLING IT. J. JJ. ILittoi, of r.-ru. Mias., wrll.* ns follows •’I v. ii 14y *liat I lihvm nuv.-r m-c:i ;i WVU InilHiur Mh'Mii* t l at wo .Kl “(puil tlk* ‘ <B. j<>" Miwhine U r Uiis purtof tl.uo M iry. It is tl. fastest niadilnu In rurtJt * r pmT tl.fC I cryr seen, nod I am well ploHHcl *lth it. I Have lm-1 no trouble with it at tire I Mar?id it." Cull -a wi-liinv ! nr fMkibilofWf.il Machinery •d.lnwrtLon.lllß .!A 4 Ffl N E CO.. Tiffin, Ohio. Cost, ;' idi ;-y?u'j>. 'i':u=* ” 1. Am. 23, 1 OUlft-iNOir/’; r T*"V’mftLARU T , H .T l *rT.v.w2 ; Thomt!39n’ Eye Wafit