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MORNING.
GRIPPE HURT KIDNEYS.
result* of Ia (Irippe remain \\ ith the kldnevs (or n long time.
suffer from ox er exertion and Iho heavy drugs of tlrlppe medl
, Doan's Kidney Pills overcome this condition.
■■ KA, N*w Maxim. I received
gw free sample of Doan’s Kidney Pills
I ordered for a girl nine years old
Bv vfa suffering witli hed welting, and
mti' improved very fast The pills acted
jlßirectly on the bladder In her ease and
[■toppeft the trouble. J. C. Lcckko.
| Bim* Orkek, Mien.—My husband
, roeived the sample of Doan's Kidney
| 'ills and has taken two more boxes and
W" is like anew man lie is a lin man on
Grand Trunk K It., and the work is
" ard on the kidneys. Mrs. Geo. Giitobd.
Puwy, W. Va. The free trial of
• 'toon’s Kidney Pills acted so well with
F ne, I wrote Jfooff, the druggist, at Point
i peasant, to seud me three boxes, with tho
result 1 have gained In weight, as well as
entirely rid of my kidney trouble. My
water had become very offensive and con
stained a white sediment and cloudy. I
'would have to cot tip six and seven limes
[during the night, and then the voiding
would dribble and cause frequent at
tempts, hut, thunks to Doan's Kidney Pills,
they have regulated all that, and I cannot
praise them too much. Jab. A. Lanham.
—* -
Where Youth Handicaps.
7 The other day I found as my com
panion In a railway Journey a young
engineer. Ho hart spent it good num
ber of his not very numerous years In
America, and ho had realized the
frit of that country. In the course
tho conversation, in which ho spoke
Slltkly of his successes and his Tull
es, of his difficulties and of his
friendships, the mau- the observation
that the greatest of all his obstacles
hero in England would have been The
greatest of all his recommendations
In America, and that was Ids youth.
When ho went into a board of railway
directors and suggested that he
should take on a great big contract
the directors looked up at Ills beardless
faco and could scarcely keep their
countsnances. wo shocked worn they
at tho dlspnrlty between the proposal
and the age of the proposer.—T. P.'s
London.
The world’s population Is Increasing
about 600,000,000 n century.
JraiiSffiKLVMinlH
jb \ -^331
Af A V>• >2: Wiiiilßßr •
: J
Health anil beauty arc the gloricß of perfect womanhood. Women
who suffer constantly with weakness peculiar to their sex cannot re
tain their bounty. 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, leueorrho-a, displacement or ulceration of tho
womb, that bearing down feeling, inliammation of the ovaries, back
ache, bloating (or tlatulcnoe), general debility, indigestion, and nervous
prostration, or are lieset with such symptoms ns dizziness, faintness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melan
choly, “all gone ” nnd “ want-to-bc-left-alone ” feelings, blues, nnd hope-
they should remember there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E, Pinklmm’s Vegetable Compound removes such troubles.
Case of this Prominent Chicago Woman Should Give Everyone
Confidence in Lydia Li. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
* 4 I)rah MHft. Pinkiiam :It afford me groat pleasure, indoed, to add my
testimonial to tho groat number who arc today praising’ Lydia R. Pink
htlDl’H Y Pgt'tftblo < 'nmpotmd. Throe years agfo I broke down from ex
—cessive physical and mental strain. I was unable to
secure proper rest, also lost mv appetite, ami 1 became ho
n ©rvousuml irritable too that my friends trembled,and
* wua una *^ e nttend to my work. Our physician pre
serihi-d for me, but. as 1 did not seem to improve, I was
fcjais advised to g’o away. I could neither spare the time nor
money, and was very much worried when, fortunately,
Ri ono ln .V elub friends called. She told me how she had
L. r \ w) been i*u rod of ovarian trouble**, and how like my syrap
toms were to hers, seven bottles of your medicine cured
her, find she insisted that I take some.
“ I did so, and am glad that I followed her
(Aj SSBEfepJ, * ''Vrr a. advice. Within six weeks 1 was a different
!: . 1 yV woman, strong and robust iu health, uud have
t been, so ever since.
“ A number of my friends who have been
\ trou *i >d -A'tmofitg beeuliar to our sex
''J your compound, and have also been
V " v *-' greatly b^heflted.”— Miss Elizaubth Dalkt,
Loomis St., Chicago, 111. President of the St. Ruth’s Court, Order of For
resters, Catholic.
What Ls left for the women of America, after rending such letters
as we publish, but to believe. Don’t some of you who are sick and miser
able feel how wicked you aw to remain so, making life a burden for
yourself and your friends, when a cure is easily and inexjiensively
obtained ‘t Don’t you think it would pay to drop some of your old
prejudices nnd “ r lVy l.ydia L. Pinkliain’s Vegetable Compound,
which is better than all the doctors lor rurrs?’ 1 Surely the experience
of hundreds of thousands of women, whom the Compound has eured f
should'convince all women.
Follow tin* record of this modi' in \ and remember that these cures
of thousands of women whoso letter.; are constantly printed in this
paper were not brought about by "something else,” but. by Lydia E.
Pinkhuin’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 tho Best. Write to Mrs.
Pinkham for advice. v
*rnnn forfeit If yto oinni>t forthwith produce the latter end signature of
üboYO tvaliuivuial, wUicU wiil prove it* nt>*olute genumonoap.
yVVvv Ly.Uiy i.. riuklium MimUcluo Cos., Lynn, Mae*.
THE MILNER & KETTIG CO. 7ffiT
Machinery,
Engines and
Boilers, j*
Saw Mills,
'‘Porcupine”
Dry Kilns.
Aching backs arc eased. Hip, back, and
loin pains overcome. Swelling of the
limbs and dropsy signs vanish.
They correct urine with brick dust sedi
ment, high colored, pain in passing, drib
bling, frequency, bed welting. Doan’s
Kidney Pills remove calculi and gravel.
Believe heart palpitation, sleeplessness,
headache, nervousness, dizziness.
address
\ft. „ ‘“T"* for fres
Vs.lKuxm.ix CtiMWiaMnhNLgy trlsl
Foutkr-Uilbvks Cos., lluffalo. N. Y.
Please mail mn free trial box Doan's Kidney
Pills.
Name ... .
Post-office
Slate _______
Medici Advice tree. Strictly Confidential.
If farmers, prosperous, abandoned
or otherwise, wish to be 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
faotorles conform, and they probably
will not try to do anything of that
sort, remarks the Doston Transcript.
But tho 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
wbolsale quantities.
pßlii
Treatment of Potato Scab.
It is impossible to overcome potato
scab, but quite possible to prevent It
if the seed tubers are properly and
thoroughly treated before planting.
The most approved treatment is to
soak the seed tubers for two hours In
a solution of one-half pint of formalin
(obtainable at most drag stores) in 15
gallons of water. The entire tuber
should be treated In this way before it
Is cut, if the grower is in the habit
of cutting for seed. After cutting the
tuber, as a further precaution against
scab, dust the portions with sulphur,
which will also have the effect of pre
serving the cut piece from rotting,
should the soil be wet, yet not in any
way injuring the growing qualities.—
Indianapolis News.
Feeding Separator Milk.
Somebody writes to complain of the
effect of separator milk on young
calves, causing scours or indigestion.
Tho trouble was not with the milk hut
Its condition. Being heated at the
creamery and remaining warm for sev
eral hours It quickly sours, and sour
milk produces trouble sooner or later,
besides which, the calf will not drink
enough of the bad tasting stuff to keep
him growing at fill speed. The milk
should he fed as soon as it comes from
the crertmery and Bhould he fed warm.
Illg feds of cold milk rain a calf’s di
gestion. If the milk is put in a cool
place in a pail that Is washed clean
every day, it will usually keep sweet
till the second feeding. If only slightly
acid, its taste can be restored by add
ing a teaspoonful of cooking soda to
the gallon. Separator milk is as good
as any milk with the cream taken out,
but to fatten veal calves a little flour
or some other starchy food must bo
added, and the milk must be warm and
sweet. Owners of separators have an
advantage here, being able to feed the
milk fresh from the machine. —The
Cultivator.
Colt Management.
Nature supplies its mother with tho
food best adapted to the needs oT a colt.
It is well fitted to keep up the colt's
animal heat and build up bone and
muscl, and ound out its bodyin short,
to keep it in the best of halth. The
food of natupre is in solution, and eas
ily digested.
It is not best to change abruptly
from such a food to solid materials,
and a good plan is to begin to reed a
little grain somewhat before weaning
time. Thus, the colt’s digostivo or
gans are able to accustom themselves
gradually to the materials they will be
called on to turn into horso flesh.
Ground feed will not be amiss for a
time and may have a little bran mixed
wllli It. Good hay is not bad colt feed,
but some grain should be added, un
leus tho colt Is on good pasture. It
pays to feed liberally, to encourage n
thrifty condition and rapid growth.
When the colt is weaned, the ration
should bo gradually Increased. By
getting the colt started right and by
keeping it growing, profitable results
can be look's for.—Rice Journal and
Gulf Coast Farmer.
Calves and Butter.
It is often difficult for one to ehoose
between making less buttor and hav
ing calvos grow less. Experiments
show, however, that, if properly done,
a cheaper fat than cream can be add
ed to skimmed milk with good results.
The trouble with doing the latter is,
that the food should be warmed to
about the temperature of the body, be
fore being fed, and this heating is
very often Improperly done. If the
milk is allowed to boil, the milk is
cooked. That Is undesirable. Some
add cold water to cool milk that has
become too hot. Such dilution is un
wise.
Tests by the Maryland Experiment
station show that cooking milk in this
manner detracts considerably from
its digestibility. Ordinary fresh milk
has a digestive co-efficient of 94.57
percent, while milk cooked for 30 min
utes at a temperature of 190 degrees
F. has a digestive co efficient of 87.26
percent. This would indicate that the
practice of allowing milk to remain
on a stove for some time, even should
the boiling point not be reached, is un
wise. Not only is there a loss due to
the indigestibility of the cooked milk,
but such milk generally results in the
derangement of the animal’s system.
Unless milk has been allowed to stand
until it is sour or has developed con
siderable acid, it is a much better
pfaet’o6 to treat duly to a temperature
of 90 or 95 degrees, at which time it
should be removed from the heating
plant and immediately fed to the
calves. Where for any reason milk
has undergone a fermentation and it
is necessary to destroy the organisms
by heating, a temperature of 160 or
170 degrees, maintained for a period
of 10 minutes is sufficient to bring
about their destruction.
Poultry as Insect Destroyers.
There is one valuable advantage of
keeping poultry on the farm that is
generally overlooked, and that is the
vast number of insects destroyed by
them.
If every insect caught by a hen in a
day were counted and an estimate
made of the number of insects eaten
by a flock of 25 hens, it would show
that hens are more useful in that re
spect than may be supposed.
When busily at work scratching the
hen secures many grubs and worms,
while the larvae of insects also assist
in providing them with food.
A flock of turkeys will search every
nook and comer of a field for insects,
and as a turkey can consume a large
amount of food it will make away with
a vast number of them each day.
The active guinea is ever on the
search over the fields for insects. It
does not scratch, but every blade of
grass is looked over, and it i ajvly
comes up to the barnyard io seek
food. Its industry prompts it to secure
it? own food, and in so doing hundreds
of insects are destroyed.
The ravenous duck, whose appetite
Engine Lathes,
Milling j j*
j* .<* Machines,
Upright Drills
Steam Pumps,
Boilers, Etc.
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS.
seem* never satisfied, will attempt to
seek enough in the fields, and It cap
tures not only insects, but the field
mouse and small reptiles will be eaten
if other food Is not plentiful; but If
Insects abound they will be content
with eating them in preference to
anything else.
The goose also Is an excellent for
ager and does good service.
When we consider that the work of
poultry in .the fields is from early morn
until sunset, and that this work cpn
tlnues throughout the whole season,
the number of insects destroyed will
appear too great for estimation. This
valuable service on the part of poul
try should bo entered on the credit
side of their account. —Commercial
Poultry.
Management of Hotbeds.
ff possible tho bed should be located
upon a south or east slope with a
building or fence to protect it from
the north and west winds. The soil
fer the bed is usually excavated to a
depth of about two or two and one-half
feet and filled with manure. The ma
nure should be piled and allowed to
heat for a few days and then turned be
fore being placed in the beds. It should
be thoroughly tramped as thrown Into
the bed, taking special pains to firm it
around the edges, over the tops of this
place four inches of black soil. For
the first few days the temperature will
ran high in the beds and no planting
should be done until it begins to re
cede, which is usually about the fifth
or sixth day. When it fails to about 90
degrees you are ready for planting.
The seed may be sown directly in
the soil, or if the plants are in pots
they can he buried to the rim in soil.
Special care must he taken for the
first few weeks in the matter of ven
tilation. The fermentation is quite
strong, which gives off an abundance
of ammonia and If this is allowed to
accumulate the plants will be burned.
The ventilating is done by raising the
hash at one end for two or three inch
es. They should be raised about the
middle of the forenoon and closed as
the temperature falls, which is usual
ly at 2 or 3 o’clock in the afternoon.
Late in the spring, about planting out
time, the plants should be hardened off.
This process consists in gradually giv
ing them a lower temperature for a
longer period each day until they are
finally adapted to outside conditions.
Bright, warm days are selected for
this work and the sash is left off an
hour the first day, two hours the sec
ond day, and so on until finally left off
at night.
In bright, sunny weather the plants
wiii require water at ieast once a day.
There is no rule about this, however,
and whenever tho soil shows indica
tions of becoming dry it should be
thoroughly watered so that every
particle is moistened and no further
water given until the soil needs it, re
gardless of ttie fact as to whether the
interval is one day, or three or four. —
National Fruit Grower.
Diseases of Garden Crops.
Last season tomato vines were sud
denly destroyed in some sections, al
though apparently free from disease.
Growers have had much to contend
with in defending cabbages, beans, to.
matoes, egg plants and othercrops from
both insects anj diseases, butoccasion
a!!y something appears with which
they are not familiar, and before a
remedy can be applied ihe is
lost. The cabbage crop has been ren
dered difficult to grow profitably since
the Introduction of the white butterfly,
nnd now a disease, which made its ap
pearance in 1890, and has spread until
it is a serious difficulty. It attacks
cabbage, turnips and cauliflower, and
is sometimes styled as both dry and
wot rot. The government, in its bul
letins of experiment station work,
states that on the leaves the disease
begins with a yellowing near the mar
gins, the veins becoming brown or
black. It spreads from fho margin to
the stems, and from the stems to other
leaves, or up and down the plant. The
woody tissue becomes brown, hence
the name of black or brown rot of the
cabbage. It may be spread by the bite
of insects, or the plants may become
contaminated through the seed bed,
manure or soil. The remedy is to be
careful of the seed bed and kind of
manure used, the selection of anew
location of cabbags every year being
an advantage. These precautions will
reduce the loss to a minimum. A New
Jersey report mentions a disease of
celery, describing the affected leaves
as badly blotched with brown, the dis
eased spots having a watery appear
ance. The disease spreads through
the leaf in about three days and decay
is even more rapid. It is believed that
careful and timely spraying with bor
deaux mixture or some other fungicide
will keep the disease in check. There
is a disease of boar.s which manifests
itself upon the pods in soft water
soaked, spreading spots, and the leaves
and stems are similarly affected. The
disease attacks all kinds of beans, lu
pines tnd peas. Spraying the growing
plants with bordoaux mixture and re
jecting all distorted or wrinkled seed,
so as to guard against introduction of
the disease, are the best remedies. Cu
cumbers and melons are attacked by
the disease, the symptoms of which
are the sudden wilting and collapsing
of the plants. This is due to the clog
ging of the channels of water supply
of the plants by the extremely rapid
and abundant growth of the bacteria,
which live in the channels and cause
the disease, it being spread by insects.
Investigators have suggested no rem
edy for the disease as yet, but may be
able to do so after further experi
ments. — Philadelphia Record.
Befogged by Sand.
An explanation of the recent “col
ored" rains which have fallen in Eng
land is found in the story told by the
skipper of the steamship Sok, which
recently arrived in Plymouth. England,
from South African ports. Off the Af
rican coast tight days the vessel was
enveloped in a sand sterm of such den
sity that speed had to be reduced, tho
fog horn had to be blown, and in the
middle of the day the cabins had to be
lighted. During all this time the ship
was navigated by dead reckoning.—
Now York Commercial Advertiser.
Beaver Dam in New Jersey.
Mr. Justus Von Lengerke recorded
fn 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. The
precise location of the colony Mr. Von
Lengerke Judiciously withheld, for he
wa3 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 has
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 seeking some measure of relief.
At Mr. Von Lengerke’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
Now York city.—Forest and Stream.
Plague of Wolves in Russia.
As In Austria and Hungary, so In
Russia, the past winter will be re
membered for the vast quantities of
wolves which came out of the forests
and mountains and preyed on the vil
lages. In one district in Eastern
Russia over 16,000 head of cattle were
lost. In the governments of Novgo
rod, Tver, Olonetsk, Archangel and
in Finland it was necessary from
time to time 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 the
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 pi-muir-jntly cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. IClino's Great
NorveKestorer.!f2lrial bottle and treatisefree
Dr. li. H. Koine, Ltd,, 931 Arch St., Fhila.,Pa
A woman is never so skeptical as not to
believe a man when he tells her he loves
her. ___
Dailies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after rising Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new siioes
oasy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching
feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At
all druggists and shoe stores, 26e. Don’t ac
cept any substitute. Trial package Free by
mail. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y.
Windmills in Germany are now used to
produce power to drive electric motors.
Fully 2500 persons commit suicide in
Russia every year.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
es a cough cure.—J. W. O’Brien, 322 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0,1900.
The valley of the 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.
Gray Hair
mmmmmmmmammmmmmm ■—
“I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor
for over thirty years. It h*s kept
my scalp free from dandruff and
has prevented mjMjair from turn
ing gray ’’ Mrs. F A. Soule,
Mont.
There is this peculiar
thing about Ayer’s Hair
Vigor—it is a hair food,
not a dye. Your hair does
not suddenly turn black,
look dead and lifeless.
Butgraduallythe old color
conies back, —all the rich,
dark color it used to have.
The hair stops falling, too.
SI.OO a bottle. All druggists.
if your (IrumpHt onnnot supply you,
Rend'us one do tin r and wo will oxpresa
you a bottlo. Be sure and vivo the name
of your nearest express office. Address,
J. <\ A YER CO., Lowell, Maes.
BROMO-^1
SELTZER
CURES ALL
Headaches
10 CENTS-EVERYWHERE |
Bith a Glass
tbeer, brightens her 1
me the roses in her £#
ind acquires sound w
tnd buoyant spirits \
*r favonte beverage. I
i ires |
CATHARTIC ,£0?
tc,Z R ANTEE D CUR E fir all bowel troubles. appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad
Q blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul‘mouth, headache, indieesticn, pimples,
E pains ofter eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dimness. When your bowels don’t move
I regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people then all ether diseases together. It
I starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, etert taking
I CASCARETS today, for you will never g“t well and stay well until you ?et your bowels
| right Tr.ke our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or
I money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped CC C. Never sold in bulk. Sample an-
P booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or F. rv York. S ca
REGISTER OF THE U. S. TREASURY
USES PE-RU-NA FOR SUMMER CATARRH
Summer Catarrh
Afflicts Men and
Women.
TTON. JUDSON W. LYONS,
Tj Register of the United
States Treasury, in a letter
from Washington, I). C., says:
“I find Peruna to be an
excellent remedy for the
catarrhal affections of
spring and summer, and
those who suffer from de
pression from the heat of
the summer will find no
remedy the equal of Peru
na.”—Judson IF. Lyons.
No man is better known in
the financial world than Jud
son W. Lyons, formerly of Au
gusta, Ga. His name on every
piece of money of recent date
makes his signature one of the
most familiar ones in the Uni-
ted States.
Two Intorentlng Letters From
Thankful Women.
Miss Camilla Chartier,s West
Lexington St., Baltimore, Md.,
writes:
“Late suppers gradually af
fected my digestion and made
me a miserable dyspeptic, suf
fering intensely at times. I
took several kinds of medicine
which were prescribed by dif
ferent physicians, but still con
tinued to suffer. Rut the trial
of one bottle of Peruna con
vinced me that it would rid
me of this trouble, so I con
tinued taking it for several
weeks and I was m excellent health, having
gained ten pounds.”—Miss Camilla Chartier.
.Summer Catarrh.
Mrs. Kate Bolin, 1119 Willoughby Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y., writes:
“When I wrote you I was troubled with
frequent headaches, dizzy, strange feeling
in the head, sleeplessness, sinking feel
ings, faintness and numbness. Sometimes
l had heartburn. My food would rise 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 my
improvement is very great indeed. I did
not expect to improve so quickly after suf
fering for live long years. 1 am feeling
Cotton Gins and Presses
J MADE BY J* J*
CONTINENTAL GIN CO.
Birmingham, Ala.,
ENGINES and BOILERS
Send for new catalogue just „ , r^
Trada 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 time. 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., as these often pass in time into
general use. In order to make ths
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 next year, and collated by the
editor. The editors also ask that cir
culars, price lists, etc., may be 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
he became an inmate of Poplar work
house. It was only sheer hard neces
sity that drove his mother and her
five children there, but a few months
afterward they were able to get 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 the Poplar
Board of Guardians, member of the
London County Council, manager of
the Metropolitan Asylums Board, and
now member of Parliament for the
Woolwich division. —Tid-Bits.
According to vital statistics, the
baby born in i*O.J has three times as
good a chan'-* of living as it would
have had if r.orn fifty years ago.
However, the baby born fifty years
ago, if still alive, will probably bo
satisfied with the chance that came
his way.
KJplcV Morphinism,
Alcoholism,
jj g -qi Tobacco Habit, nnd
a W Neui asthenia rcadllj
yield to tfie Ke*l}-
treatment. Correspondence confidential.
Wilte for pamphlet, bell phone 493. Kce ei
Institute. 2720 Ave, D, Birmingham, Alft,
Hon. Judson W. Lyons.
very good and strong. I thank you so
much for Peruna. 1 shall recommend it
to all suffering with the effects of catarrh,
and I consider it a household blessing. I
shall never be without Peruna.”
For those phases of catarrh peculiar to
summer Peruna will be found efficacious.
Peruna cures catarrh in all phases and
stages.
It you do not derive prompt and satis
factory 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,
Ohio.
TORTURING
DISFIGURING
Skin, Scalp and Blood
Humours
From Pimples to Scrofula
From infancy to Age
Speedily Cured by Cuticura
When Aii Else Fails.
The agonizing itching and burning of
the skin, as in Eczema; the frightful
scaling, ns in psoriasis; the loss of hair
and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled
head; the facial disfigurements, as In
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 are 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 cure,
the absolute safety and great economy,
have made them the standard skin
cures, blood purifiers and humour reme
dies of the civilized world.
Bathe the affected parts with hot
water and Cuticura 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 inflammation, nud soothe and heal,
and, 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 the skin, scalp and blood,
and points to a speedy, permanent and
economical cure when all else falls.
Sold throughout the world. Cutieuro Resolvent,soc.(fn
form of Chocolate Coated I’ille, 25c. per vial offr l ). Oint
ment. M)c., Bop. K c. IVpote : London, 27 Charterhouse
Sq s Pans, 5 Rue de lit Puixt Boston, 137 Colamb'43 Ava.
Potter Drug St Ch em. Corp., Sole Proprletore.
ttjF*Send for ‘’How to Cure Every Rumour.** *
nflsyrrn curtd without cutting
I.HRULR A New Vegetable Rented)'.
V ■**"*■—'■■ — 1 j ■——— -‘-Iso Piles, Fistula and Sores.
Cure Guaranteed in [very Case Treated.
national cancer medicine company,
Austell Building, Atlanta, Or.
S Draw I
Removes all swelling in 8 to so
days; effects a permanent cure
in ’30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
given free. Nothingcan be fairer
Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons,
Specialists, Box Atlanta, f*-
WELL DRILLING
Y-
J. H. ITattox. of Ecru. Mis*., writes as follows: s
“I will say that I Lave never seen a Well Drilling
Machine that wcnld ennal the “Ohio” Machine for
this part of the country. It is tho fastest machino
in earth or rook that I ever eeeu. and I aiu well
pleased with it. I have had no trouble with it since
I started it.”
Parties wishing- to buv thiakindnf Well Machinery
address LOOMIS MACHINE CO.. Tiffin, Ohio.
,L in Fold hv druggists. ffe
Am. 23. 1903.
QUlfi-jffDia ?;.TWALflnifl T , Y
! Thompson 7 ! Eye Wa!