CATARRH THIRTY YEARS The Remarkable Experience of a Prom inent Statesman Congressman Meekison Gives Pe-ru-na a High Endorsement Congressman Meekison of Ohio. Hon. David Meekison is well known 'not only in his ownState, but through out America. He was elected to the Fifty-fifth Congress by a very large majority, and ia the acknowledged leader of his party in hie section of the .State. Only one flaw marred the otherwise complete success of the rising states man. Catarrh with its insidious ap proach and tenacious grasp, was his only unconquered foe. For thirty years he waged unsuccessful warfare against this personal enemy. At last l'eruna -came to the rescue lie writes: "I have used several bottles of Pe runa and I feel greatly benefited thereby from my catarrh of the head. I feel encouraged to believe that If I use it a short time longer I will be fully able to eradicate the the disease of thirty years' standing." David Meekison, Member of Cougress. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of l'e runa, 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. Belief About the Earth. Newton, the great Sir Isaac, surmised, Although be could give no reason (or the conclusions be bad reached, that in tbe course of time tbe earth would become perfectly dry. Others, mostly De Verne, Professor A. L. Hamilton and tbe younger Lysauder. all believed that eventually tbe earth would be come as dry as tbe proverbial chip. Even In this day and age tbe theory bas many adherents. rT8 PrmanintlT Cured. Jo tin or nerroninea III after Writilaj'ni.oof Dr. Kline' Great Nona Restorer. BvJd for Ffi.BE 94.00 trial bottle and treat u. i)B.B.U.KuHi.I,td..U31ATcbBU.Philwlelphia,Pi. Ilad Seen One. Dan Leno, the English comedian, told of appearing before a swell Lon don audience at the bouse of a lord. '.Tbe languor of his listeners made hlra feel not too happy, and he was glad to retire to tbe dressing room allotted him. While he was removing the grease paint a very young peer, who had strolled after him, stood watching the process. He told Leno In the most approved drawl that some of his say ings had really been rather funny, "es pecially that one. ,vou know, where ;your wife made a pancake on a grld lron and the pancake slipped through and put the Ore out. That made me laugh awfully, because I know what a gridiron Is. I have seen one." TO CURB A COUOH IN ONE HAY ITfie Adam'i Irish Mohs Cough Balaam Prescribed by the best physicians for Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Bronchitis and all throat and lung troubles. 25c, 50c. At all druggists. mints WHrMt & !L"EiMFAi&""Tr; Counh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use In time. Sold trf druffoints. IL.A.N.U. No 47 TRIVIAL, YET FOTENT. Che Tyranny of the Sniiill and the Helplessness of Mankind. The "tyranny of littleness" Is the cruel despotism not of one muster, but of a multitude of small ones. Witness the Ironclad sway which any sovereign ruler of the kitchen may wield over a helpless household. What happiness or misery Is bestowed lightly by one who turns a toaster or brews a pot of cof fee! Wo are all slaves to milliners and tailors. The milkman holds us helpless In his clutches. The chore man orders us about. Tbe ma Id of all work beck ons, and we follow. We bow and scrape before the haughty plumber. We who would strike down mon archs and measure swords with min isters of finance, what sorry figures we cut In the community If slighted by the laundrymon! We scarce can hold dur own against a surly rallwny por ter, and It Is but by the courtesy of Master Boots that we emerge from our hotel apartment. And who shall stand before the overwhelming power vested in an offended waiter? We cannot even mount a trolley car If the conductor and motorman choose to Ig nore us. Tbe man who rules the Stock Ex change cannot rest at night because an Infant's voice banishes dreams. He Is a victim to the Insect world. Who will abolish the tyranny, of flies and of mosquitoes? Behold the tyranny of horses, dogs and cats, to which the great majority of mortals submit without a murmur. What muster Is as exacting as a tight shoe or a torturing collar? A parrot or a pet canary can sadly try men's souls! Yes, "things arc In tbe saddle and ride mankind." Who will do Justice to the tyranny of the depraved Inanimate taskmasters? A diamond necklace changes the his tory of empires. A courtier's cloak may pave the way to royal favor. A glove, a handkerchief, a gloss slipper, what things to conjure with! Slaves of tbe lamp! Slaves of the ring! Ah, the supremacy of trivial things, that one reul tyranny to which we all bow down! Is there no hope thnt we may some day throw off the heavy yoke? Well Is It for us to meditate upon this vital problem which touches each so closely. And ns we medltute I we mny grow wise enough to break ' some of the multitudinous shuckcls that hold us spiritless and helpless In the power of the urch tyrant. "Little Things." Caroline Tlcknor In Brundur Magazine. The Strain on Parent. "What Is mohair, mammy?" asked Sally Peterson Jones, looking up from her slow perusal of the newspaper and keeping her place on the page with a dusky forefinger. Mammy Jones began to rock faster. "You know w'ut hair Is, I s'pose, don' you?" she Inquired. "Oh, yas'm," responded Sally prompt- ly. "Well, den, does you know w'nt a mo Is?" nsked her mother rocking still faster. "No'm," admitted Sally with great reluctance. "Well, chile, you can't 'spec' me to take de pluce ob a natchel blst'ry ob j animals fo' you," suld her mother calm- ly, allowing the rocking chair to slack- en Its speed. "W'en you've bunted up de mo In one ob your schoolbooks an' , know Jes' what he looks like, come to me, an' I'll 'splaln de rest. But chlllen mus' und'tuke Bome work on dere own eddlcn.tlou. shorely. 'Taln't right fo' nayrents to do It ah" A Carious State of Affairs. You must be very cautious how you treat your neighbor In Isle of Jersey, for he cun have you arrested on the slightest pretext and if be has a grudge against you can bring about such n cularalty by simply giving a fic tional account of your misconduct to the nearest lawyer. The latter will de mand a line, and should you decline to pay It he will cause you to be thrown Into prison to await trial. Then, even If you are acquitted on the ground that the charge Is unfounded, you have ab solutely no claim against your persecu tor, though you may have suffered a couple of months' Imprisonment for nothing-. London Tlt-Blts. Lnceraakinjf by Hand. Making late by hand Is a well de veloped art In Paraguay. It was taught the natives 1:00 years ago by the mis sionaries and has been transmitted from generation to generation till It Is now quite general throughout the re public. .Some towns ure devoted to making a certain kind of luce. In one town of 8,000 or 0,000 inhabitants al most all the women and children find many of the men make lace collurettes, handkerchiefs and ladles' tics. An other town makes luce embroidery and others drawn thread work, such as centerpieces, try mates, teucloths and dollies. The designs used In making tbe luce are taken from tbe curious webs of the sctuitroplcul spiders that are so numerous there. On this ac count it is called "naudutl," an Indian name which uieuus spider web. "She seems to have abandoned ber moral suasion ideas relutlve to tUe training of children." "She has?" "Howdldlthnppen?" "Well, 1 was largely Instrumental In bringing about the change. You see, she has no children of her own, and I grew weary of her constant prcuchlng and theorizing, so I loaned her our Wil lie." "Loaned her your boy?" "Precisely. She was to have him a week on her solemn promise to confine herself entirely to moral suasion." "Did she keep her promise?" "She did. hut at the expiration of the week she nunc to me with tears In her eyes and pleaded for permission to whalj him Jiif onci.' itiyosotls i.t"'K tmeiiot) needs partial shading, but i:ot the shade of a tree. Plant unions taller flowers or around rosebushes, and It will do well. rienty of yellow blossoms should be secured for places which luck sun shine. Yellow Is gjod iu almost every situation and Is the cheeriest of tones. Good cultivation causes an abun dance of fibrous roots to be made. Tbe growth of any plant Is largely meas ured by the number of Its fibrous roots. feOK OUT When the cold wave flag is up, freezing weather is on the way. Winter is here in earnest, and with it all the miserable symptoms of Catarrh return blinding headaches and neuralgia, thick mucous discharges from the nose and throat, a hacking cough and pain in the chest, bad taste in the mouth, fetid breath, nausea and all that makes Catarrh the most sickening and disgusting of all complaints. It causes a feeling of per sonal defilement and mortification that keeps one nervous and anxious while in the company of others. In spite of all efforts to prevent it, Che filthy secretions and mucous mat ter find their way into the Stomach and are distributed by the blood to every nook and corner of the system; the Stomach and Kidneys, in fact every organ and part of the body, be come infected with the catarrhal poison . This disease is rarely, if ever, even in its earliest stages, a purely local disease or simple inflammation of the nose and throat, and this is why sprays, wasnes, powders and the various in haling mixtures fail to cure. Heredity is sometimes back of it parents have it and so do their children. In the treatment of Catarrh, anti septic and soothing washes are good for cleansing purposes or clearing the head and throat, but this is the extent of their usefulness. To cure Catarrh.! permanently, the blood must be purified and the system relieved of its load! of foul secretions, and the remedy to accomplish this is S. S. S. which has membrane and is carried through the circulation to all the Catarrh infectedi portions of the body, they soon heal, the mucous discharges cease and the patient is relieved of the most offensive and humiliating of all complaints. S. S. S. is a vegetable remedy and contains nothing that could injure the most delicate constitution. It cures Catarrh in its most aggravated forms, and cases apparently incurable and hopeless. Write us if you have Catarrh, and our physicians will advise you without charge. THE SWIFT SPEOtFlO OO., ATLANTA, OA. .. A MAN'S BLUSHES. Be Will Fly tho lied Siitiinl Mote Quickly Thau a Wo num. "If there is any one thing that makes ino want to get up and talk right out In meeting it is to hear It said of n man that 'ho blushes like u woman,' " said the social philosopher to a repre sentative of the New York Times. "How women ever gained the repu tation of having run up a corner In blushes Is beyond my comprehension. The report does her a grave Injustice, for as u matter of fact she not only baa no monopoly In blushes, but does not make use of the share that properly belongs to her. There are some wo men, of course, who Mush If you oven blink nn eyelid Iu their direction, but as u general thing men blush mucu more readily and more violently than women. "This Is not a random statement that 1 am making for tbe purpose of hear ing myself talk, but a sober deduction founded on careful observation. For years I have made it a point to study the sexes In moments of embarrass ment, and the statistics I have Jotted dowu prove that in nine cases out of ten the average mnn will fly the red signal of distress much more quickly than the average woman. This holds good In all sorts of situations. "Crack a Joke at a man's expense, be blushes; ply him with awkward questions, he bk'shes; subject him to some humiliation or let some ludicrous accident befall him In public, and be straightway rivals the boiled lobster In hue. A woman may redden slightly under tbe en me circumstances, but ber blush Is diluted and perfunctory com pared with the brilliant, sunlit glow that suffuses the countenance of man. "I don't attempt to explain the phe nomenonphysiologists und moralists may do thut If they enn but mereiy flvc the facts for what they are worth n the hope thnt the next time a story writer has a crop of blushes to dispose of he will ring a few changes on tbe old phrase that has done duty for Ken rations and say of the heroine lhac ihe "blushed like n mini.'" FORf Manchester, Va., March 6, 1801. Gentlemen: I had all the symptoms that aooompany this disease, uoh as mueua dropping- In the throat, a con stant desire to hawk and spit, feeling of dryness In the throat, eoug-h and pitting- upon riaing- in the morning-, oaba forming- In the note, whioh re quired muoh effort to blow out, some times causing the nose to bleed and leaving me with a alok headache. Z had thus suffered for five years. I I oommenoed to take S. S. S. and after I had taken three large bottles, I noticed a change for the better. Thus encouraged, Z oontinued to take it and in a short while was entirely, oured. JTOSON A. BELLAM. Main and Vine Sts., Ztiohmond, Va.' JTM Ana no equal as a blood puriner. it restores the blood to a natural, healthy state and' the catarrhal poison and effete matter, are carried out of the system through the proper channels. S. S. S. restores to the blood all its good qualities, and when rich, tmre blood reaches the inflamed' ... ,