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AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE.
An Ohio Fruit Raiser, 78 Years Old,
Cured of a Terrible Ca4» After Ten
Years of Suffering.
Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men
tor, Ohio, says: "I was cured by Doan's
Kidney Pills of a severe case of kid
ney trouble, o£
eight or ten
years' standing.
I suffered the
backache and
other pains in
the region of
t)
These were es
pecially severe
when stooping
to lift anything.
JUSTUS.
and often I could hardly straighten
my back. The aching was bad in the
daytime, but just as bad at night, and
I was always lame in the morning. I
was bothered with rheumatic pains
and dropsical swelling of the feet. The
urinary passages were painful, and the
secretions were discolored and so free
that often I had to rise at night. I
felt tired all day. Half a box served
to relieve, me, and three boxes effected
a permanent cure."
A TRIAL FREE.—Address Foster
Milburn Go., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
W a E
While Engineer Ed White and Fire?
man Harry Ahcrn were speeding
through the Palisade canyon with a
freight train at night, they were star
tled by a large wildcat landing sud
denly on their engine from a near by
-iliff.
The animal emitted a blood-curdling
cry as it landed, and when the dust
was cleared away they saw the angry
beast only a few feet away glaring at
them. The .two men seized weapons
with which to beat off the animal, but
It made no show of fight, leaping from
the flying train to the ground. It roll
ed a dozen feet before it stopped, but
apparently it was unhurt, as it scam
pered away immediately.—Winnemuc
ca Correspondence Sacramento Bee.
Wisdom of a Woman.
Mrs. Hix—What makes you look so
happy, niy dear?
Mrs. Dis—01). my husband and I
have just had an awful quarrel.
Mrs. Hix—I fall to see the connec
tion.
Mrs. Dix—Why, there's a new seal
skin sacqiie in it when, he asks me to
forgive him.—Detroit Tribune.
$100 Reward, $100.
hTbe
readers of this paper wilt 1)0 pleased to learn
ml there Is at least one dreaded disease that science
lias been obi® to cure fu all lu stages, aud tbafc Is
Catarrh, liall'r Catarrh Cure la the only positive
care now kuibwn to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
IjeloK a constitutional disease, requires a eonstUu*
ttunal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure ts taken la*
ternally, actinic directly upon the Mood and mucous
eurfacea of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation «f the disease, imd Urln^ the pattent
strength by building up the constitution and assist*
Ing nature lit doing Ha work. The proprietors have
so much faith In li« curat.ve powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for t.ny case that It falls to
cure. Send for list of testimonials,
Address F..). CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Hold by all Druggists, ?5c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Household Hint.
The Visitor—Your cook is perfec
tion itself. How do you manage her?
The Hostess—Easily. We learn
what dishes she likges best herself
and then we have only those.—Puclc.
Perhaps.
"I suppose the 'Echo' is called 'she'
because it talks back like, a woman."
"Perhaps it's because it returns your
call in such a perfunctory w?.y."—
Philadelphia Press.
Earliest Green Onion*.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., always have something new, some
thing valuable. "This year they offer
among tiieir new money making vege
tables, an Karliest Green Eating Onion.
It is a winner, Mr. Farmer and Gardener!
JI/-ST SEM) THIS NOTICE ASD ISO.
and they will send you their big plant and
need catalog, together with enough seed
to grow
1,000 fine, solid Cabbages,
2,000 rich, juicy Turnips,
2,000 blanching, nutty Celery,
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1,000 splendid Onions, _£
1,000 rare, luscious Radishes,
1,000 gloriously brilliant Flowers.
In all over 10,000 plants—this great 'offer
is made to get you. to test their warranted
vegetable seeds and
aix fob nuT 16g rosT/MJEi
providing you will return this notice, and
if you will send them 26c in postage, they
will, add to the above a big package of
Salter's Fourth o¥ .luly Sweet Corn—the
earliest on earth—10 days earlier than
Cory, l'eep o" Day, First of All,
etc. [W.N.U.]
8ort of an Omnibus Bill.
Shortly after his return a young
man who clerks in one of- the big of
fices down town was telling a friend,
p.bout the St. Louis fair.
"It cost me $50 to do that fair," h*
said, waving his hand majectically.
"Does that include the $10 I loaned
you circus day?", the friend asked.
"Yes, and'tS more which I was about
to ask you. for."—Duluth News-Trtb
tine.
ImUntlr stops th* pain of
Burm m4 ScaM*.
Alirsr* bcalswtthoat scats.
A SOX
HANOV I
WHEX IN FARGO VISIT TUB*
FURNITURE CO.
Urges! Stock West o« Tvrln Cities.
MIXED FARMIM
WHEAT MIUM
RAMCH1M
Three Great puranlts have again ataowa wonderful
results on tbe Free Homestead Lsnds of Westera
Canada this year.
Magniacent ellmate—farmers plowing In tbetrshlri
Sleeve* In tlie inlddlo of November.
"Allan bound to be more than pleased with tbe
flu! results of tbe ptat season's liarveeu."—Extract.
CosL-lood, water, hajr In abundance. Bchoola,
ch^csLai markets convenient.
jGffiyW Informatton to Supeirlnteadeat of Imnil
•nam, Ottawa, Canada, or to anthortied Canadian
Government Alcent—Cta.rles ruling, Clifford Bloek,
Orand Forks, North Dakota.
^Pleaseesj:where von "-tlcetn^at.
|B*st
C_ O N I O N
1 Jtt
NO WONDER IT-DIDN'T WRITE.
Woman Bought' Fountain Pen—Forgot
to Fill It.
Manufacturers of fountain-pens-It itve.
their troubles .as well as those who
use them. One of the most prominent
makers of this style of pen has a com
plaint clerk to whom those who have
trouble are sent to have their difficul
ties righted. Sometimes the clerk will
find that It is simply a case o( dirty
oen, and the thing is soon adjusted.
A woman came in the other day and
went at the clerk like a Turk.
"I bought this pen some time ago
and I have never been able to use it at
all. I thought this was an honest firm,
and if it is not, I should at least think
It would not attempt to cheat a worn
in. I want my money back."
"Let me look at the pen," said the
mild-mannered clerk.
"Here it is," snappishly said the
woman.
^The clerk looked at it and with only
a causual observation saw that the pen
had never been filled. Then he said:
"I think, madam, if you would fill
this pen that you would find it worked
all right."
He then filled it and handed it to
her, and she said sheepishly, the snap
having all disappeared: "Oh, I didn't
know you had to put ink in them."—
Brooklyn Eagle.
Reminder of the Catspaw.
Somehow that request of Italy, Great
Britain and Germany that the United
States take charge of the collection of
Venezuelan claims reminds the natur
ally suspicious of the story about Ihe
monkey and the cat and the fire and
(.he
chestnuts.—Indianapolis News.
THERE IS JUST ONE SURE WAY.
Dodd's Kidney Pills build up Run
down People. They make healthy
Kidneys and that means healthy
people. What Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Duffey say:
Nora, Ind., Feb. 6th.—(Special)—
That the sure way of building up
run-down men and women is to put
their kidneys In good working order Is
shown by the experience of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph L. Duffey of this place.
Both were weak and worn and dis
spirited. They used Dodd's Kidney
Pills and to-day both enjoy the best
•f health.
Mr. Duffey says: "I was very weak
and almost past going. I tried every
thing which people said was good but
got no benefit till I tried Dodd's Kid
ney Pills. They helped liie in every
way and I am strong and well now."
Mrs. Duffey says: "I was so bad
that if anybody would lay down a
string I felt I" could not step over It.
Since taking Dodd's Kidney Pills I
can run and jump fences."
Healthy kidneys Insure pure blood,
Dodd's' Kidney Pills Insure healthy
kidneys.
SAD TALE OF A TUB.
Englishman's Call Was Short, but
They Had a "Bawth."
The two pretty American girls had
met two delightful Englishmen on the
way across, and had given a cordial in
vitation, warmly seconded by their
mother, to Sir Charles and his friend
to visit them at their country home.
One day a message came saying the
two men would arrive that afternoon.
The family was thrown into a fever of
excitement, and many plans for the
entertainment of their guests were
suggested and abandoned. It was
finally decided that as Englishmen are
notoriously fond, of a "tub," and their
guests were coming directly from the
train, they should first be invited to
take a bath. After that the. hostess
would rely on the inspiration of the
moment.
The young men arrived promptly,
and after some demurring were hur
ried off to the bathroom. In about an
hour they emerged, and went immedi
ately to their hostess, saying: "We are
sorry to leave so soon, but we only
came to make a call and. our train
leaves in fifteen minutes."—Lippin
TOtt's Magazine.
HER BLOOD TOO THIN
GENERAL DEBILITY BESULTS FROM
IMPOVERISHED BLOOD.
The Remedy That Makes New Bloor
Banishes Weakness, Headaches, In
digestion and Nervous Trochlea.
Hundreds of women suffer from head
aches, dizziness, restlessness, languor
and timidity. Few realize that their
misery all comes from the had state of
their blood. They take one thing for
their head, another for their stomach,
a third for their nerves, and yet all the
while it is simply their poor blood that
is the canse of their discomfort.
If one sure remedy for making good,
rich blood were nsed every one of their
distressing ailments would disappear, as
they did in the case of Mrs. Ella F.
Stone, who had been ailing for years and
was completely run down before she re
alized the nature of her trouble.
"For several years," said Mrs,Stone,
I suffered from general debility. It
began about 1896 with, indigestion, ner
vousness and steady headaches. Up to
19001 hadn't been able to find any relief
bom this condition. I was then very
thin and bloodless. An enthusiastic
friend, who had nsed Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, urged me to give them a trial aud
I finally bought a box.
I did not notice any marked chaugt
from the tine of the first bos, but I de
termined to give them a fair trial and I
•kept out. When I had finished the
sccond box I could see very decided signs
of improvement in my condition I be
gan
1o feel better all over iand to have
hopes of a complete cure.
I used.iu all eight or ten boxes,'qua
when I stoppetl had got back
my
toadM
regu
lar Weight aud a good healthy color and
the gain has lasted. I can eat what!
please without discomfort. My nervous
ness is entirely gone, aud, while I had
oonstant headaches before,. I very rarely
have one now. I cheerfully reoom mend
IW. Williaius' Piuk Pilla to womeirwho
suffer as I did." ...
M». Stone was seen at her pjfetty
home ia Lakewood, R. I., where as the
result of her experience, Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills are. very popular. Thes^fa
tuous pills are sold by all druggists. A
took that every woman needs is pub
lished by the Dr. 'Williams -Medicine
Company, Schenectady N. Y. It is en.
titled "Plain Talks to Women, "aud will
Imaeut free on ceqowt.
By-Karl M. Pratt,
THE TELEPHONE GIRL.
Remember /am thy telephone girl—
Not "Flossie" or ".Lizzie" or "Madge" or
"Pearl",
II.
I hou xhalt speak plainly and loud and
clear,
And call tho number so I may hoar,
"I-
slialt' hnng up thy receiver when
I hou hearest: "Busy—please call again."
IV.
ii hou shalt he patient thy temper halt
Keroemher buzzing is not my fault.
V.
llot
doubt what' I tell to thee—
1 will only double, the .work for me.
xri2u
Rlia,t
sentlc^nd kitid in speeeh,
Nor swear, nor mutter, nor rudely
soreecli.
VII.
thou shalt not llirt, noi\ request a date,
Nor show thyself such an addlcpaie.
VIII.
I hou .shall not, if on ft party line.
uive heed to signals that are not thine.
IX.
Lhou shalt. when told to put in a dime,
Drop it in quickly, and not lose time.
Thou shalt not mu?mur. hor make com
a
Rut act as if thou wert all a saint.
One of the curiosities of Burma is a
cigar of monstrous and alarming ap
pearance, which every one smokes
from an early age. "The indigenous
article is a monster eight inches long,"
writes 'V. C. Scott O'Connor in his
book, "The Silken Bast." "It consists
of chopped wood, tobacco, molasses
and various herbs, wrapped in the sil
ver-white skin of a bamboo. So wide
in diameter is it that It completely
fills up the mouth of any young dam
sel who tries to smoke it. For pres
entation purposes this long cheroot is
often wraped at one end in a coat of
purple or gold paper. It accumulates
a formidable mass of fire at the light
ed end and requires some skill in
smoking. But the Burman infant ac
quires this skill before he can walk
and while he is still at the breast. No
one thinks of smoking such a cigar
through. Two or three long puffs, the
lips of the smoker thrust out to meet
the circle of the cigar aud It is put
down or passed on to some good fel
low sitting by."
A member of the Washington bar
who recently returned from a trip to
the Ozark mountains' of Arkansas re
lates an amusing experience he had
with a ta% gaunt native in one of
the most desolate passes of that
vange.
"-We were riding in a springless
wagon over the roughest road it had
ever been my misfortune to encounter
in all my travels," said the lawyer,
according to the Washington Star,
"and the desolation about lis was
almost appalling. For more than an
hour we had not seen a human being.
Suddenly a member of our party
spied a figure of a man against the
skyline ahead of us. As we approach
ed the man we observed" that he had
a basket on hifl arm. He greeted us
with the salutation:
"Hello, j'ou uns. Be you strang
ers?"
We assured him that we were visit
ors and remarked about the utter
Before an audience of London child
rena scientist delivered a lecture the
other, day on the methods of measur
ing time as employed by the ancients.
The lecturer began with the Chal
deans, who, like the Chinese, observ
ed the movements of the moon and
stars, and believed' that an eclipse
was due to the devouring of the moon
by a dragon.
Then the lecturer pame to the Egyp
tians, who erected obelisks to serve
as the gnomons or pointers or sun
dials. ...
To the delight of the juvenile audi
ence the lecture room was darkened
and the sun tan electric glow lamp)
was manipulated at the end of a fish
ing rod to make a model obelisk cast
the shadow:
The Greeks, always artistic, placed
a buoyant figure of a magician in a
long glas jar, and water dripped in,
and as the figure rose it pointed to
the hour on a marked sun dial.-
Whin Finnlgin first went to Flannlgan
He writed tin pages, did Finnlgin
An* he tould Jist how the smash oc
curred.
Full many a tajus. blunderln' wurrd
Did Finnlgin write to Flannlgan
Aftlier the cars had gone on agin.
That wuz how Finnlgin
Repoorted to Flrtnrilgan.
Now. Flannlgan knowed more than Fin
nlgin—'
He'd more idjucatlon, had Flannlgan—
An' it wore 'm-clane an' eomplately out
To tell what Finnlgin writ about
In his writin' to Mister Flannlgan
So he writed back to Finnlgin:.
"Don't do slch a sin agin:
Make 'em brief. Finnlgin!" -•...
When Finnlgin got this from Flannlgan
He blushed rosy red, did Finnlgin
Expert Plum Pudding Maker.
Turning a home talent into a trade
has been the work of a young widow
in .a northern New York town. This
time it was plum pudding. Possessing
a famous recipe handed 4own by an
ancestral colonial dame, this young
woman, from being famous for her
puddings -among family and friends,
took to supplying fritnds' friends until
now annually threfa thousand plum
pudding hags Ieaw her hands for
".,k
Onk Park, Illinois.
THE SUB8CRIBER.
The telephone subscriber, at the ending
of the year,
Took down hia 'phone receiver, and put
it to his ear.
"Hello," he wild, "O Central Girl, connec
tions do not break
I have some resolutions I am just about
to make.
"Hereafter, when I'm calling for a num
ber I shall not
Kly Into bitter tantrums If the number
can't be got.
"Hereafter, when you signal, 'Line Is
busy, call again/
I shall not be so foolish as to blame it on
you then.
"Hereafter, when the telephone begins to
ring full strong.
I shall answer in a hurry, lest I keep you
waiting long.
"Hereafter, when I make a call and am
delayed .a bit.
1 shall not flash like fury, nor act as in
lit.
"Hereafter, when I'm angry when the
talking is not clear,
I shall not yelp profanely till I blister up
your ear.
"Hereafter, when another on my party
line is called,
I shall not rubber, either, till the line of
talk is stalled.
/•Hereafter—O, hereafter, Central Girl, I'll
try to be
Just as mild and calm and pleasant as
you always are with me."
Curious Ways of Burmese
Travel in Burma has its advantages
and its disadvantages. One of the lat
ter is to be found in the roads. Mr.
O'Connor says: "Presently we come
upon the cart containing the advance
baggage stuck deep in the mire and
unable to proceed. It is not for any
lack of spirit in the little beasts that
are harnessed to it, for, small though
they are, scarcely bigger than big
dogs, the cattle in this district are ex
tremely well bred, very handsome and
full of pluck and endurance. One of
the little cattle is half buried in the
slush and his legs are entirely hidden.
The yoke presses heavily upon his
neck and he is in sore straits.
"Slowly the cart is unladen of all its
burden, the driver stands up and calls
to his cattle by name. They make a
splendid, frantic effort, go down on
their tinees, recover and so come pant
ing out of the slough in which they
have been entombed. Such is the Bur
man unmetaled highway at this sea
son. after three days of fine weather."
Was There for Business
desolation of the place, to which he re
plied
"Yes, this is a lonely kentry up
liyar in dese mountains. Thar' ain't
much hyarabouts but rattlers an' big
stones an' the like."
How Ancients Kept Time
Said Finnilin to Flannilan
SuiJerintindint wuz Flannlgan
Boss uv the siction wuz Finnlgin.
Whinlver the kyars got often the thraek^.
An' muddled up things t' th' divil an
buck,
Finnlgin writ it to Flannlgan,
Aftlier the wrick wuz all on again:
That is, this Finnlgin
Repoorted to Flannlgan.
3
A member of our party informed
the native that we were as hungry
as hawks and asked him if he knew
where we could purchase food. Un
covering his basket he exposed abmit
six of the toughest looking pies I had
ever seen the likes of and informed
us blandly that they were for sale
at fifty cents apiece.
"Whew! Fifty, cents apiece?" 1
queried. "Why, at Uttle Rock you
can buy fine pies at from ten to twen
ty cents each."
"Huh," rejoined the native, disdain
fully, "I reckon you kin at Little
Rock, but yer In the Ozark mountains
now, an' say, stranger, duz yer think
I'm up hyar in this dodblasted pizen
kentry fer the good of my health?"
The system which the Greeks fol
lowed of dividing the day into twelve
equal "hours" from the rising to the
setting of the sun was irregular. It
behooved the Greek schoolboy to be
good in summer and work off his
superfluous boyishness in winter, be
cause an hour's "imposition" in sum
mer was twenty minutes longer than
in winter.
A description of the hour-glass led
to the exhibition of a new adaptation
of it.
A breakfast egg was suspended
from the beam of a pair of scales, and
dipped into, a saucepan .of boiling
water. The sand from an hour-glass
trickled into the scale which hung
from the other end of the beam until
the egg was cooked.
Then the weight of the sand lifted
the egg out of the saucepan and rang
an electric bell.
An he said: "I'll gamble a whole month's
pa-ay
That It will be mlnny an' minny a da-ay
Befoore Sup'rintindint that's Flannl
gan—
Gits a whaclTat this very same sin agin:
Ifrom Finnlgin to Flannlgan
Repoorts won't be long agin."
Wan da-ay on the siction-of Finnlgin,
On the road sup'rintlndld by Flannlnn
A rail gave .way on a bit av the ctlrve,'
An some kyars went oft as they made
the swerve.
"There's noobody hurted," sez Finnlgin.
But repoorts must be made to Flannl
gan."
A** he winked at McGorrlgan,
As Carried a Finnlgin.
He was shaiityin' thin, wuz Finnlgin^
As minny a railroader's been agin,
An' the shmoky oi' lamp wuz burnln'
bright
Ini Finnlgin's shanty all that night—
Bllln down his report was Finnigln
An' he writed this here: "Mister Flannl
gan
Off agin.
,0i agin.
Gone agin—Finnlgin."
—S. W. Gillian.
points from Maine to California and
even across to England.
In November the young manufac
turer and her home assistants began
to prepare the fruit. After the baking
the loaves are packed daintily in para
fine paper and then in heavier, white
paper, afterward to be tied with scar
let ribbon and decked wity a sprig
at
holly. Tucked within the* box Is
a
recipe for the brandy sauce, to be set
burning when the pudding isjserved.
Hard Lines.
Tv:i I :'^r.ips met midm-a viaduct In
1 1
oI'm, \W:iry, wli'M'** yeli boon since
•.'•'•I yrr.i l:r Yr-li socmi'd to hfv
'i a-.'o.ljjJT.tlo Ciirt' kind snd
int li.iti niKiit." n(Vv yu*
ii' in dc workhouso. old So\Z''"_
"W'nrrs 'n. (linl."*rnpliod
sii\:cl
VTfaV?.'-.-',I
a (itiViif o' lnngh luck. pFTfrt^it
I Mi'd oh I liitd 'jtisl
t'liy from To'i.'do. Tired? (!•(, but
I wo cp rut inly i!l in. So.',rig«.t"s jjpto
mi i-nipiy froislil car and srraped up
so:iii liay tin I laid on the jjlepr, an'
wc.nt to sleep. I mils' a slept iiko a
roc'.-. I woke up at daybreak nex'
n.r.niiir an' looked out the (loot-,"and
hlasl nie if 1 wasn't back in Toledo'
PucI
Not Complimentary,
"Now, 1 don't suppose," said Miss
Passay, coyly, "that yon could guess
my a 'c."
"Really," replied Mr. Meauwell,
or—wouldn't like to. I'd be sure-to—
or—guess too high."—Philadelphia
Press.
Proof to the Contrary.
Ray nor—Thare's one good thing
about 1905 .anyhow. The financial
question doesn't come up for settle
ment again this year.
Sliyne—Doesn't it? Look at these
Christmas bills, will you?—Chicago
Tribune.
DR. J. H. RINDLAUB (Specialist
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
Fargo, N. D.
First Cause.
Ragson Tatters—Gee whiz! Yer
lookin' tough. Wat's dj. matter?.
Hungry Higgins—Eatin" too .much.
Ragson Tatters—G'on! Dat wouldn't
give yer a black eye.
Hungry Higgins—Naw,' hilt' d!rt» wuz
de beginnin' of it. De bartender
ketched me al de free lunch.
1
The Portrait Painter—1 am glad to
hear you admire my \voi:l /Mi'. I'ork
ham. Have you ever been done in
oil?
Mr. Porkham—Not on your life.
Whenever them Standard guys float
anything your Uncle Hiram dons a
cork vest and then keeps off.—Puck.
TO CrRK A COM) IX ONK DAY
Take Laxutlvc Uromo Tiihiet*. \jj «nur»
ffiiils refund ihe If It r»IN tu run*. K. \V
Urove's signature Is ou each box. '4'tc.
Too Superstitious to Work.
Hobo—Excus'cr tue, lady, hilt I can'.t
chop uo wood fur yer. I'm supersti
tious about beginnin' any work on Fri
day.
Housekeeper—Well, you can come
back to-morrow, 1 hen.
Hobo—Tor tell yer the truth, lady,
I'm so awful superstilious that all days
look alike to me.—Chicago Journal.
Chances for Speculation.
Archie—Ma, is heaven a land flow
ing with milk and honey?
Mother—So we are told, my child.
Archie—Well, ilia!
Mother—What is il?
Archie—Is the milk sleriiized
Houston Chronicle.
Conceding Something.
Doctor—Now, sir, you must stop
drinking between meals.
Luschmau—Lei me make a compro
mise proposition, doctor.
Doctor—Well, what is it?
schmau—I'll stop drinking |e
ween drinks.—Philadelphia Preijs.
A Silver Lining.
"My poor hoy, your father's .death
must be a terrible grief lo you."
"Oh, I don't know. Miss. I shall be
able to wear trowsis wot fit me. now."
—Ally Sloper.
Setting Him Right.
"Matchmaking," tia'id the youirg wid
ow, "is one of woman's rights."
"So?" sneered the old bachelor. "I
always thought it. was one of her
weaknesses."—Detroit Tribune.
The Ruling Passion.
Mrs. Furbelow—1 met Mrs. Kohlfeet
to-day and she was wearing a porous
plaster.
Mrs. De Style—How was it trim
med?—Houston Chronicle.1
One must not blame the church be
cause one happens to know something
of the secret life of some of its
members.
liiiitihimiiihiihiimiitiiiiiiiiiuimuuituin.. ilhi.utilmii iilm
i!iiMi.iii'nilhuiiiiiitiiniHiimin iKOitiiiii'iijtiiiiiniiiiiiiimiti-iiii-iiimiiitHiiii
AVfegetabte Prepar&tionfor
As
similating the Food andReguIa
ting the
Stomachs andBoweis of
I A N IS,'°( I I N
Promotes DigesKonJCheeiful
ness and Rest .Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NAHCOTIC.
Aw
afOUUrSiMVUPfTCfOR
Mmyhm Sent"
Jtx Sain*
KMUStUt
AmeSt Ml
A perfect Remedy forConstipa
tlon. Sour Stomach,Diantoea
Worms .Convulsions,Feverish
ness and Loss op SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
XEW "YORK.
W 1 I 1 1 I
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
'.Ministers of AH Denominations
Join In Recommending
Pe-ru-na to the
ht
Mrs. VPlnsiow'B Soothing Syrnp.
For children
tcctlilnir, nofnms the
kuhb, reduce# to*
flam.'iiiUloii.allayuimlD.ouroH
wiudcollu. 25uu bouia.
BISHOP OWES HEALTH
AND LIFE TO PE-RU-NA,
People.
Public speaking especially exposes
the throat and bronchial tubes to
catarrhal affections.
limit hing the air of crowded assem
blies, ami the necessary exposure to
night air which many preachers must
face, makes catarrh especially prevalent
among their class.
i'eruna has become justly popular
among them.
S/5H0P /..//.///!L5£y.
iVrtina is tin- most prompt ami sure
remedy for catarrh I hat can betaken.
I Many a preacher has been able to
m:ct hit engagements only because he
keeps on hind a bottle of I'eruna, ready
to meet any emergency that may arise.
On His Last Leg.
"I fear you are not loiTg for this
world," observed the turkey who had
managed to survive Thanksgiving, as
he paused sympathetically before the
pen of Ihe Christmas :,oose.
"No," was the sad rejoinder, "I feel
a sthough I already had one leg in the
gravy."—Town Topics.
Why He Discarded.
They were playing bridge, and Ihe
beginner's game, either from nervous
nc.-s or ignorance, led his parlner after
a while to inquire into his method.
"Do you discard from strength or
weakness?" she asked.
"Usually from frlghl." was the
prompt response.—New York Sun.
lr. Uaviil H••lliiiMl.v'i* Favorite Itrmeil?
1
'-umtf.vfipttpMfi Atid
{Iver
fl^
-v-
Hnrleni !:.K,
rave rn» prompt nml roiuplotn rHIrf fnundrfipopMiiWtol
Ji. T. Trow-brld^f,
A Souvenir I
"Yes," said the erstwhile summer
girl, "it's all off. I sent everything
hack to him yesterday."
"Not the ring?" asked her friend.
"No he said I could keep that if
I'd send him the hammock I caught
him in."—Philadelphia Press.
am 8ure J'Jko's (.'in-#! for Oon.sumpll'jn j-itvii
my llf': thl-ro ycnr.M Tiios. ItoltnlNP.
Mnptf Street, Norwi'-h, N. V.. I-Vl. 17, 1 ill in.
One's life is like a letter: No mat
ter how well composed or elegant, it.
is futile if not directed right, or even
not directed at all.
CUSTOM!
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
(I
The Friends of Pe-ru-na.
Despite the prejudices of the medical
profession ajr.'iinsl proprietary medi
i-ines, tIn clergy have always main
tuined :i strong conlidi-nce anil friend
IV lll^ I HIX
TJiey have discovered by per
poru'iiri' IVruna lous al
i'l:iimr«l lor
The Bishop's Strong Tribute to Pe-ru-na.
Ii. II ITalsey. IlisliopC. M. 1C. Church. Atlanta, (la., writes:
"I have found I'erima to be a great, remedy for catarrh. I have suffered
with this terrible disease for more than twenty years, until since I have
been using I'enina. which lias relieved me .if Ihe trouble.
I have tried many remedies and spent a great ileal of hard-earned
money for tln-in. but I found nothing so effectual in the curc of catarrh as
the great medicine, Per
una.
'•I feel sure that I'eruna is not only a triumph of medical science, but
it is also a blessing to suffering humanity.
"I'.very individual who sullcrs with respiratorv di'-cases will find IVruna
a magnificent and sovereign remedy." -I-. II. Ila'l.scy. P.p. C. M. K. Church.
•sonal
all that is
We have on file many letters of recom
lucnd.'ition like, the one given above.
We can give our readers only a slighti
glimpse of the vast number of gratt
fill letters Dr. lli.rtmari is constantly re
ceiving. in praise of his famous catarrh
reined v. I'eruna.
A CLEAR.
HEALTHV SKIN
Sandbolm'a Eczema
I and Skin Remedy
Purifies, Then Heals.
I'olilvely rnjvs Krzijina, I'lmplea.
Kruptti'MH. Ihmcl luten ami till 11k
I «if the wktii. An nhflolutt!
cm* for liiuxIrufT or Sr-i!p 11kcmwi-.
$1.00 Per BMtle. Send for FREE BOOKLETS.
your •Jruyytht ur Imrhi-r or »c*nd to
BAMDU0LH DRUG CO., Des Moines, IOWA.
9
It Cures Colds. C'oukIis. Sore Tliroat. Croup,
Inllui iizn. Whimpiny Com-li. Hrnncliltls uml
Asthma. A ci-rtuin i-arefor Consuiniillim in (irst
stii^i s.amlii sure relief In iulvuiici'clstu&es. 1,'ko
nt diii c. Yen will see the exi-i/lleiit c-ITect after
tiikinif the lirst dose. SuM by drillers every
where. J.ur .rr buttles tI5 cviits and 00 oenls.
fOBB
Shoes for Menl
The newest and most per
fect shoes for men on the
market. Stylish and up-to
date in every particular—fit
perfectly, look swell and
wear well—built
On Honor
both inside and out and
made from the finest leather
obtainable.
Your dealer has or can get
Mayer "Honorbilt" (lioet for
you. Send us his name and
rcceiveFree our beautiful hew
style book.
4
.V
We also make "Western
Lady" and "Martha Wash
ington" shoes. Our trade
mark is stamped on every sole.
F. MAYER BOOT SHOE CO.
MILWAUKEE. WIS.
BEGGS' CHERRY C00GH
SYRUP cures coughs and colds.
iSH
gj
•i
3
il
*v_,i