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Miss Agnes Miller, of Chicago, speaks ter young women about dangers of the Menstrual Periqd ? how to avoid pain and and remove the cause by su ffering using Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, "To Youno Women*:?I suffered for six years with dysmenor rhea (painful periods), so much so that I dreaded every mouth, as I knew it meant three or four days of intense pain. The doctor said this was due to an inflamed condition of the uterine appendages caused by repeated and neglected colds. "If young girls only realized how dangerous it is to take cold at this critical time, much suffering would be spared them. Thank God for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, that was the onljf medicine which helped me any. Within three weeks after I started Mk take it, I notieed a marked improvement in my general health, and ftl the time of my next monthly period the pain had diminished consider ably. I kept up the treatment, and was cured a month later. I am like another parson since. I am in perfect health, my eyes are brighter, I have added 12 pounds to my weight, 1115- color is good, and I feel light and happy." ? Miss Agnes Miller, 25 Potomac Ave., Chicago, 111. The monthly sickness reflects tho condition of a woman's health. Anything unusual at that time should have prompt and proper attention. Fifty thousand letters from women prove that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound regulates men? struation and makes those periods painless. READ WHAT MISS LINDBECK SAYS: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham: ? Lydia E. Pink? ham's Vegetable Compound has greatly bene fltted me. I will tell you how I suffered. My .trouble was painful menstruation. I felt as each month went by that I was getting worse. I had severe bearing-d-wn pains in my back and abdo? men. "A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's medicine. I did so and am now free from all pain during my periods." ?.Tessie C. Lindbeck, 1201 6th Street, Rockford, 111. FREE ADVICE TO WOMEX. Remember, everv woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Pinkham's address is .. bar advice JS (.rae and cheerfully (riven to every ail oinun \\i>" :?*ks> for tc. * ??? ? >? . iv .1 '..-. \\r>t*\th than one hundred V -?and A "?'?'' v* u> '*'>* J?* ?J Limn. mg w moro $50 OFORFE'T if mumu* forthwith pnt.n1* tho original letters and signatures of kbOTO tsattlmoiiistla, which trill j.iovu their absolute genuineness.' v - Lydia E. Fiokltam Medicine Co,, Lynn, Mau. Established 1870. Thc Po'il-Ir. srcrrl proross of tanning In? bottom solo, produces mord flexible and lossier ^onrlnt loather than mir other tauiiace. The M le? hm. more than ii nu bleil tb* put four year*, whlrh prore. lt. taperiirllT. UM Sales: ??.?OS.SSS.Sl 1302 Sales: S,".,O^J,!MO.?0 I.. DOUGLAS ""-1 $3.?S Shoes SfiiSS ti ?a\e from $3.00 to #5.00 yearly W. L. Dou^hts S3.50 or S3 Sit ors. ust as good in every way as tho?e that en posting yon from $4.00 to ?5.00. The HM *ale of \V. I.. Douglas shoes juoves r superiority over all other makes. ;!d by retail ilioe dealfert erelfsTbere. <fbe genuine littve name and prlcfl d on tho bottom. 'J'ako nc aoBtitnte, Fast ColorKvtlrtsiutd. AV. h. Douglas ?4 (iilt Kdgo Line cannot he equalled at any {trice. W. It Douglas makes and sells more men's (loodytiar welt (hand-sewed process) shoes than my cher manufacturer in tho world. COR OflP Rnis/arH wil1 he l'aid to anyone who ip/L d\\l\JU ncndlu eau disprove tins statement ll ide c: tile best Imported and American leaOn-ia England bil) s her eggs and butter (rom France and Denmark, her chick? ens from Scandinavia and Russia, and her green vegetables from Holland. HTS permanently cured.No fl ts or nerroo!* ceis after first day's nae ol Dr. Kllno's Grea': Ken-el!estoror.<,2trialbottle.in(ltreatis9fro) Lr. IL Ii. Kline, Ltd.,1)31 Arch St..Phila., Pa. The beauty about diplomacy is that ii triable* both sides to claim*;*, victory. Hcwnre af Ointments For Catarrh Thai . Contnln Mercury. ns mercury will surely destroy thy senso o] satf-ii and completely derange tbe whole sys tem when entering it through tho mucous snrfaeea. Such arti'-les should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phy? sicians, as the dani ugo they will do is ten told lo tho good you can possibly derive from them.* Hall's Catarrh (ure, manufactured hy F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, 0.. contains ^fltr-Fftercury. and is taken internally, toting directly upon tho Mood and muooussurfaco) of the system. In baying Hall's Catarrh Curt bo sure to (et the Rennins, lt ls taken in tcrnally, and is made tn Toledo, Ohio, by F .1. ('boney & Co. Testimonials free. CiTSoM by DniR.Ti^ts: price, lie. per 1 io tl io. Hall's Family Pills are the best. A new kind of lightning?vortex light nine?has been photographed in Switzer land. in (Senube stamped C C C. Kever sold in bali. beware of tbe dealer who tries to sell ?'frpxetbJDg jest S3 good." Choosing a Wife by Music A German professor proposes to solve the difficulty some people seem j to have in choosing a wife by "trial o*. j music," reports thc London Express ; Everything depends on thc taste of thi subject under study. If she prefer? waltz music, and above all Strauss' ilV toxicating strains, she is certainly_/ri.;? olous. If she loves Beethoven s?ie lt artistic, but not practical. Doe? sh J prefer Liszt? Then she is ambitions while a devotee of Mozart wouM bfj rather prudish. Why an admirer o? Offenbach should be cunning' is no: very clear; but remembering thc* 0 per fl ol Faust, it is easy to understand thal any girl preferring Gounod mus', bl romantic and tender-hearted. It is hard upon Flotow that bec'-nist his music is oitl of fashion a taste- fol it denotes a vulgar soul; while Gotta chalk fares little better, pleasing, ac cording to thc German professor, oni.v the superficial. Massenet is supposed to attract the tiP'xL: while a devotion <o Wagner's music fs a distinct proof oj egotism. Saint Saens, however, is a composer the admiration for whom dc~*? note.^/a- girl of intelligence and v cl!*! balanced character. t Merciful Escapes Punch publishes these "merciful es? capes:" In a recent account of election proceedings in which a candidate, was pelted with dirt, mud thrown in thc faee of his wife, and his daughter struck with a stick, a daily paper remarked that "the police had difficulty in pre? venting a breach of the peace." A correspondent sends a brief ac? count of various other episodes, in each of which by an equally narrow margin a contretemps was similarly avoided:? "The extensive premises of Messrs. Blank and Company, oil and tallow merchants, were complcly gutted by fire last night, all five stories being ablate at once. It needed all thc efforts of the local brigade to forestall what promised to be a conflagration." "A motor car proceeding along the High street thc other evening, took frig!.'., it is supposed, at a constable on duty and exploded, blowing the occu? pant; in various directions over the adjoining buildings. Thc policeman is to b* congratulated upon averting what*! might have been a serious accident." '* How Ermines are Captured Perfect fur, of the delicate ermine at least, would be marred by thc ordinary snare, so thc trapper devises as cun? ning a death for thc ermine as the er mine devises when it darts up through the snow with its spear teeth clutched in thc throat of a poor rabbit, writes Agnes C. Laut, in Leslie's Monthly. Smearing his hunting knife T/itli grease, he lays it across thc track. The little ermine comes trotting in dots and dashes and gallops and dives to tho knife. That greasy smell of meat it knows, but that frost-silvered bit of steel is something new. The knife is frosted like ice. Ice thc ermine has licked, so he licks the knife. But alas fof t?i li semblance between ice and steel! Icc turns to water under the warm tongue; steel turns to fire that blisters &bd holds thc foolish little stoat by his inquisitive tongue, a hopeless prisoner till the trapper collies. And, lest marauding wolverine or lynx should come first and gobble up price? less ermine, the trapper comes soon. And that is thc end for the ermine. CURE BLOOD POISON, CANCER. Aching nones), Shifting Tain*, Itching Skin, Pimple*, Katine Sorrr, F.to. If you have Pimples or Offensive Ki*Gp? lions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Erup? tions, or rash on the skin, Festering Swc!l? ings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any pafl of the body, old Sores, Boils, Carbuncle^ Pains and Aches in Bones or Joints, Bail or Eyebrows falling out, persistent Sore Mouth, Gums or Throat, then you ha vs Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all Sores, Pimples and Erup? tions will heal perfectly. Aches and Pains cease, Swellings subside and a perfect,neTer to return cure made. B.P.P. cures Can? cers of all kinds, Suppurating Swellings, Pating Sores, Ugly Ulcers, after all else fails, healing the sores perfectly. If you have a persistent pimple, wart, swollen glands, shooting, stinging pains, take Blood Balm and they will disappear before they develop into Cancer. Druggists, SI per large bottle, including complete direction* for hollie cure. Sample free by writing Br.ooo Balm Co., 19 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ca. Describe troublp and free medical ad? vice sent in sealed letter. Thc eye is most sensitive to green colors. Two boys, aged fourteen and fifteen, re? cently committed suicide in Berlin with tin? same revolver, MotJier/3ray'?SweetFowrter<> lpor Children Kuec'esriiully used by Mother Gray, nurso Iii the Children's Homo in Kow Vork. Curt FovcriaUhesH, Bad (stomach. Teething Disor <lerfv>i$Vovo find regulate tho lioweis antf ]>63tr6yAYorms. Over 30,000 testimonials At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed Free, Address A-lle-h 8. Olmsted, Lo Boy, N. Y. Colorado produced last year more cl ol larr verth of silver than Alaska did o! goldi ______ II. fr, ftfeBSX's Hons, of Atlanta, Ga., are ihe cnK" Successful Dropsy Specialists in th. ?Vorld.' l&O thelr liberal offer in advertise, i-ient in toot her column of this paper. A Race of JTothers The notion that the Japanese womafi is a tnitk. and slavish creature, littla better thin a servant in her household,. is .ltoffftther a mistaken one. On thfl contrary, she is addressed as *'Okm : --ama," tew honorable lady of the house, i .- c-.i is treated with the greatest respect I Slid consideration by her husband and j luff family. She is the mentor, the au j Ucrat, ?od idol of the home. In do ' mastic aftuii* she has full control. Her j dSties afc onerous, bitt never repugnant to her. pie) consist of managing the I he-uphold, practicing economy, male ? ii ii her horned -1 P st j aP-ce '????' ''>' "or cheerfulness . .-,...n. an?J the education and instruction > ".-??? .the EAU entered school they are still j under her tutelage. A Japanese house is til? acme of purity. To a Western eye tbe aspect of the interior of a Japanese j house may at first seem bare and bar? ron. In truth, the Japanese abhor dec? oration of any kind, and consider it not only inartistic, but extremely vul? gar. Ties idly',' ?st, eat, U's bard lo bear. Thousands of ach? ing backs have boen relieved and rared, People are loaming that back? ache pains come from disordered kid? neys, that Dean's Kidney Pills cure every kidney 111. cure bladder troubles, urinary derangements, dropsy, dia? betes. Bright's disease. Bead ibis tes? timony to tho merit of the greatest of kidney specifics. J. IV. Walls, Superintendent of Streets of Lebanon, Ky., living on East M.i'n stree'. In that elly, says: "With my nightly rest broken, owing io Irregular!:les ol* ibo kidneys, suffer? ing ii tensely from severe pains in tho sinai] ol' my back and through tho kid? neys, and annoyed by painful passages of abnormal secretions, lifo was any l li lng bul pleasant for mo. No amount if doctoring n lleved this condition, and for the reason that nothing seemed to Sive mo even temporary relief I be? came about discouraged. Ono day 1 no Herd in th:- newspapers tho ease of a man who was afflicted ns I was and was cured liv ibo use of Donn's Kid iK-y Pills. His words of praise for this remedy wore so sinecro that on tho I strength of bis statement I went to j the Hugh Murrey Drug Co.'s store and gol a box. I found that tbe medicine was exactly as powerful a kidney rem? edy as represented. I experienced Ulick mid last ing relief. Doan's Kid? ney Pills will provo a blessing to al! sufferers from kidney disorders who will give thom a fair trial." A I-'itm; TniAL of this groat kidney medicine, which cured Mr. Walls, -.rill ie moiled to any part of tho United States on application.' Address Poster Milburn co.. Buffalo, N. Y. For salo hy all druggists, price 50 cents per box. /t>omc Horning Thoughts Keep yourself from thc fatal malady 3>f bac1! humor, from grumbling, from it ile irritations, from rudeness. Tomorrow is only a stranger, when ic is (oday consider how you shall en* :ertaifi him. Go forth this day with thc smallest txpectktions, but with the largest pa? tience: with a keen relish for and ap? preciation of everything beautiful, great Sud good, but with a temper so genial that the friction of thc world thai) rot bear upon your sensibilities. Let your thoughs be abundant, bu', keep your mouth under restraint. When we cannot find contentment in iiirsclves, it is useless to seek it else ere THE SABBATH SCHOOI INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR MAY 3. Subject: raul Arreited, AcA? xxl., 30-3J Golden Tex!. 1. Pet. Iv., lG-Mcmorj Verier., 30-32?Study Verger, 17-39 Commentary on the Way's Lessou. I. Paul confers with the church at Jem salem (vs. 17-S6). Thc day after their ar rival at Jerusalem the elders and leader.' of the church, of whom James, thc brothel of our Lord, was chief, met together, arie? Pad gave them a report of his work. Hie settlement by vote, eight years before, o! the Question as to thc necessity of keeping the Jewish law, had not changed the opin ion of all the Jewish Christians. Their friendship at this time was very doubtful. Paul was endeavoring by every possible means to heal the breach between them. H. Paul purified in the temple (vs. 2G 29). Pour mer. had come to Jerusalem to complete a Nazarite vow. Paul reluctantly agreed to pay their necessary expenses, and foi- a week to live with them in UM temple, and then to stand with them whih their licad? wen shaved and while the} took their hair to burn it "under the sacri fiee of the peace offerings" (Acts 21; 23, 24; Num. C: IS). This was not a compro? mise, it was a concession, but while Paul attempted to refute certain slanders he at the same time ran the risk of almost cor tain misrepresentation on the other side. The Let that unexpected trouble grew out of it does not brand his actions as unW-St or wrong, for the Jews would have found some other pretext if this had not come tc them. Their charges in verse 2^ show I heir attack was premeditated. The ques tion i. asked, Did Paul do right in thus purifying himself in the temple? Our an? swer is, Yes. What were his motives? Ht did not do it to avoid persecution, or ever death?he was ready to die in Jerusalem He did not take this course to gain favor with the church, or for nny selfish purpose. Hil sole purpose was to gain aceess to the hearts of these Christians and lead them into a deeper Christian life. Poad 1 Cor. 9: 19-23. UL The mob and the rescue (vs. 30-39). Paul was in thc court of the women in the romp!e, in or near tho room set apart foi the ceremonies of a Nazarite's vow. Cer? tain (Taws who had been Paul's opponents at Kphesens were watching him. They had seen Trophimus, an Ephesian, in tho city with Paul, and when they saw Paul in the court of tho women with stranger! they ?rapposed he had taken Trophimm into the temple. They stirred up a mob against Paul, charging him with having pol? luted the temple.- Ile was dragged down the <teps through the Cate Beautiful into the court of the Gentiles. He would have been killed hut for the arrival of the Ro? man guards from the tower of Antonia. 30. "Was moved." That a Gentile WU entering the sacred precincts of tho temple appears to have been sufficient to startle all Jerusalem. "Dragged him." Paul WSS handled roughly, "Out of the temple." Out of the women's court into the court, of the Gentiles. They wished to murder him, and yet not pollute the temple. They s'rained at gnats and swallowed camels. "Doors." Tho fo'ds of the Cate Beautiful, which nore of solid Corinthian brass, and Opened from the women's court to the court of thc Ccntiles. "Were shut." Prob? ably by the Levites, who had the c-are of the temp'e. They may have feared that the e -owe! would return, or some new dis turbar.ee arise. 31. "Seeking to kill him." There was murder in their hearts, and they were beat? ing him with the expectation of eausing hia death. But the onset was sudden, and they were not furnished with proper weapons, and there appears to have heen a little de? lay. It, was this short delay that gave tho Roman officer time to rescue him. "Tid? ings came.'' When a servant of Jesus is in great distress Cod sends him aid at tho proper time without waiting for his pray? er.-. "Chief captain." The chief military O-Ucer of the Romans in Jerusalem iras ned in the tower of .ntonis, which v ? _itua . I at thc northwest comer of i tiie temple area. He was nearly equivalent ; to our colonel, and commanded 1000 men. His name wai Claudius Lysias, as we learn i from i hap 28: 20. 32. 33. "Soldiers and p?vt\?vOTi*." A tu . pntarnanded 100 men, The chief tin ordered out ,i force sutBcientli , large to overcome all opposition and re order. "Ran down." The tower wag | above the temp'e on the hill Acra. Thij quick movement on the part of the Ro man soldiers was what saved Paul's life. "When they gav,-," etc. The Jewish moh was intimidated at sight of the Roman troops and'at once ceased their murderous attack. "Took him." The verb implies a formal arrest. The chief captain did not come to relieve Paul, but to protect him and give him a hearing. "Two chains." He was probably bound between' two sol diets. 34, 3.5. ''Could not know." It was diffi? cult for the mob to make out a charge against thc prisoner which would be intelli? gible to the Roman officer. If a Creek had entered into the holy place he was liable to death, but Paul was known to be a Jew. nor was there any Creek to be found on thc spot. "The castle." The literal meaning is encampment or barracks. This was not the castle or tower of Antonia, but only that part of the tower which was used as permanent quarters for the soldiers. "The stairs." Which led from the court of the_ Gentiles up into the tower. "Wast horner" The crowd pressed on Paul so as to awaken the fear of some outrage or treachery, and to fully protect their pris? oner the soldiers carried him, either id their arms or on their shoulders. 36, 37. "Away with him." The apostle is rejected in the same terms used nearly thirty years before, when Christ was hur? ried to the cross (Luke 23: 18; John 19: 15); "yet in the midst of this wild storm of human passions a divine result is being worked out." "May I speak." Paul, amid the storm, is the self-possessed master of his position. He avails himself with undis? turbed skill of every advantage within reach, first to assuage the chief captain, and then the people, in order to attain both safety for himself and triumph for the truth. "Speak Greek." It is probable that Greek was the native tongue of the chief captain, and when he knew that Paul understood that language the conversation that follows took nlace. 38, 39. "That Egyptian." The Egyptian to whom allusion ia made is described by Josephus as one of the many impostors of that time, who announced that he was a prophet and gathered an army with which he undertook to overthrow the Roman Government. A large number were killed and others taken prisoners, bul the leadci eseaned and the whole city was searching for him. Lysiss hoped that he was now caught in thc person of Paul. "A Jew." Ha was also a. Roman (chap. 22: 27, 28) "No metal city" Tar-us was the metropo? lis of Cilicia. arrr] a*city remarkable for its culture and philosophic studies. The Thrifty Editor. Not long ag* an Eastern Senate! received a reqifest from a country edi tor in a mountainous section for a big package of seeds. He desi! cd a good ly number of packages, which were forthwith sent to him, as it was sup posed, for free distribution among the farmers cf his vicinity. Thc Senatoi had been in the habit of sending out big packages ot' the seeds furnished by the Agricultural Department, tr prominent men In different localities, who disposed of them where they would do good. Thus the Senator acquired know] edge of a new use for thc generous gratuity of the government. It wasn't long thereafter that a letter came from a rival editor in the same town, com plaining that the first-named knight of the quill was using the reeds tr boom the circulation of his paper, bj offering packages cf seeds to thos; who subscribed with him?Washing ton Post. Russian Education for Koreans. Ten young Koreans are being sent by the Emperor of Korea to finish their education in Russia, tho first of regular parties whose expenses tb* Emperor will pay. PROMINENT PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBE PE-RU-NA. foB __ Dr. M. C. Gee, of San Francisco, Says " Pe-ru-na is of Especial Bene? fit to Women." HHS, _.-*-? ROBERT R. ROBERTS M !> Robert R. Roberts, M. D, Wash- <| > bicton, D. C., writes: <? j "Through my own experience ? as well tut that of many of viy ? friends and acquaintances who t have bern cured or relieved of ca- 5 lurrh by thc use of Hartman's? I'rrnna, I can confidently rec-t om mu nd to those suffering t /rom such disorders, and have no t lu sltation in prescribing it to my * patients."?Robert Ii. Roberts. * A CONSTANTLY increasing number of physicians prescribe Peruna in their regular practice, lt has proven its merits so thoroughly that even the doctors have overcome their prejudice against so-called patent medicines and recommend it to their patients. Peruna occupies a unique position in medical science. It is the only internal systemic catarrh remedy known to the medical profession to-day. Catarrh, as everyone will admit, is the cause ot' one half the diseases which afflict mankind. Catarrh and catarrhs! diseases afflict one half of thc people of 'lin i ted States. K. II. Brand, M. D.. of M ken;., ni Paruna in Ins practice. The following ease icc* - be ba. brough the usc ol Peruna for catarrh. Dr. Brand says: "Mrs. '( ..' age 28,.hs/ beeu i mfferei from catarrh for :.-.r paal seven seat.-,; ould not heai pVtfln nd hat watery eyes Sh< .'-,,.c to me almost i phfiucal irtscV. She had tried t1"- Cope Lind cures and various other so-caliec apecislists, and had derived no benetii from them. She told me she did nol Women as Dispensers of Medicine Although the outside world knows but little about it, there are some hun? dreds of women who spend their work? ing hours in mixing drugs and dispens? ing medicines. Some have passed on and become chemists, the first woman chemist in London having qualified as long ago as 1875. But there are many who are simply dispensers in the dis? pensing rooms of the huge hospitals, or helping private doctors, or employ? ed by thc large dispensing chemists and in the laboratories of large dyeing and chemical works. To a great extent these women are the daughters of med? ical men. for the fact that the portals of this profession were open and, com? paratively speaking, were easy for wo? men to enter, has hardly been realized until lately by others. Many apothecaries say. women make much better dispensers than men; foi they are neater and take up the profes? sion more as a life work. Men who have failed in their examinations fall back upon dispensing, but women go in for it, and you know women arc nat? urally more careful in little things; they are more accurate. This is no doubt why they get on so well in this profes? sion. They are much neater than men arc; you go into a man's dispensary after a busy morning, perhaps after a rush, and you wouldn't be able to find 1 thing?he wouldn't himself?not a thing; bul if it is a woman who does thc dispensing you will soon sec thc difference. Eyety bottle will be in its place, ever'hi'ig neat, spick and span, and ready .? -r use in a moment. No :ime i wast1 ' there in a glorious hunt around tor the simplest thing. The yearly gross earnings of tile United States Steel Corporation arc ap? proximately equal to thc gross rev? enue received by the United Str-.tes gov? ernment. ..'j^_r__f___BE3__J " For 25 years I have never I missed taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla $ every spring. It cleanses my U blood, makes me feel strong, and fj does mc good in every way." ? 1 John P. Hodnette, Brooklyn, N.Y. Pure and rich blood carries nev/ life to every part of the body. You are invigorated, refreshed. You feel anxious to be active. You become strong, steady,coiirageous. That's what Ayer's Sarsaparilla will do for you. CLOD a bottle. All.rugti.ts. Aslc yo^r.doctor what lie thinks of Ayer's S.ii3:ipirilU. Ho knows all about this grand J nl.i r'.imily metlir-lne. Follow his advice aud r, wi will be s;itlsf>'i. J. (.'. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. ^s Buses Bpi. all tu. fails. Rcs! Cu'JiCh Syrup. Tai-tcr- Goi'd. Cse in time. Suki hy drr-ggUU. want to spend any more money on medi? cines unless I could assure her relief. "'I put her on Pe t runa and told her 5 to come back in J two weeks. Thc ef * leets were wonder > fol. The cast-down ' look she had when 1 first saw her had left her and a smile adorned her face She told nu reit a different v ruin) bei beering mis ira iroved soo . lier eyes did _. ijp__, I , V. II. lWnd. M. D.^tiflw-^T auj , ' vvvvv%%.*?vji_affi-??< more. -.' ? |r obi ute el the n. ay 1 i i'.u\e treated with \,>ur s_! isble cine." -F. H. Brand. M. 1). Catarrh may invade any organ of the noilv; may destroy any [unction of the itody. lt most commonly .attacks the f cad. nose and throat, but thousands upon ?i housands of eases of catarrh of the lungs. Tiic bald-headed man realizes that there is plenty of room at the top. ' The Kioan, Kool Kitchen Kind" of stoves make no 3mok;\ smell, soot, ashes or oxceS' e-lve heat. Always lo ..k for trade mark. You can't blow your own horn unless you are able to raise the wind. Piso'sC'uro cannot bo too highly spoken ot .ns a cough cure.?J. Vf. O'Bf.ien, 3113 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900. Some mea arc naturally absent-minded, and others forget judiciously. Putnam Fadkli:s.s Dyes do not stain the hands or spot the kettle, except green aud purple. There is more fun in the world than most ot us have any idea of. ^ There isn't a world of dilfereuee between oorrowinr: money and borrowin.': trouble. stomach, kidneys, bladder and other pelvie ireaus have been eured by Peruna. Peruna is ahle to cure catarrh wherever t may be located by its direct action upon he mucous membranes. Catarrh means nflamed mucous membranes. Peruna acts it once to cleanse and invigorate the ca arrhal condition of the mucous membrane io matter where it may occur in the body. Its action is the same on the mucous lining of the nose as on the mucous lining of the bowels, lt cures the ?atarrhal inflammation wherever it may occur. Dr. R. Robbins. Muskogee, I. T., writes: "Peruna is the best medi: ino I know of for cough and to strengthen a weak stomach and to give appetite. H?side pre "ribing it for catarrh, 1 have ordered it for weak and debilitated people, and have not had a patient but said it helped him. lt is an excellent medicine and it fits so many cases. "1 have a large practice, and have i .?nance to prescribe your Peruna. I hope you mav live long to do good to the sick and suffering." We say Peruna cures catarrh. The peo? ple say Peruna cures catarrh. PronjineAt men and women all over the 1,'nitcd fctatcs from Maine to California do not hesitate to come out in public print to say thal Peruna is what it is recommended to be, an internal, systemic catarrh remedy that cures catarrh wherever it may be located. Dr. M. C. (lee's Experience. Dr. M. C. Gee is one of the physicians who endorse Peruna. In a letter written from 513 Jones street, San Francisco, Cal., he says: "There isa general objection on the part of the practicing physician to advocate patent medicines. But when any one medicine cures hun? dreds of people, it demonstrates its own value and does not need thc en? dorsement of the 2>>'ofesslon. "Peruna has performed so many wonderful cures In San Francisco that I am convinced that lt is a valu? able remedy. J havs frequently ad? vised its use for women, as 1 find it Insures regular and painless men? struation, cures Irucorrhoea and ^varian troubles, and builds up the entire system. I also consider it ono ?if the finest caarrh remedies 1 know of. I heartily endorse your medicine."?M. C. dee, M. D. Women are especially liable to pelvic catarrh, female weakness as it is commonly called, (.specially in thc first few weeki/ of warm weather do the disagreeable lymptoms of female weakness make them selve> apparent. In crisp, cold weather chronic sufferers with pelvic catarrh do nol feel so persistently the debilitating effect? of the drain upon the system, but at the ipproach of summer with its lassitude and tired feelings, the sufferer with poiiic ca? tarrh feels the need of a stieuginenin.; tonic. Pennie is n ?' only the be I tprins I iii e foi- ....??;. eases, I i- p ?? ? ttVd . (romp!) ? cure Vi rite i'->r ,i ropy 4 _ . . ? B ??: ' wi ".ten especially _i_j-xi>,Tr ?>: Mme '"..it- ibo, write for i I copy of "Pactsj and Kaccs Tba ? airs >:i that oui claim* .:?? valid If yul d' io' derive prompt and satis* factory results from the use of Peruna, write al once to Dr. Hartman, giving s full statement of -your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice grati<. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, Ohio. J3*mjmmmmeaammntnwriim _v_flfcd_a__?fcaa DONT ga GETWEIIW ?ASK YOUD DEALED f OD TH.* MADE FAMOUS 6Y A DEPUTATION EXTENDING OVED MORE THANES HALF A CENTUPYL 'TOWER'S garment, and hats are made of the be it materials in black or yellow for Ml kinds of wet work. ttTiirACTON 15 C-APAKTEcD IP YOU 3TICJ1 TO , , TO SIGN OF TH? fish. ; A. J. TOWER CO.BO5r0.-J. MASS.U. X A TOW);:? CANADIAN CO., lim:.! TOPOMTO, CAN -? o*m *?S_>7 K 3??B_kU " ~ rn The Standard Rheumatic Remedy. QT A MM A DH because ao'c physicians declare that it i3 the only absolute cure for rheumatism in physician recently said: ifs various forms. A prominent "I have never been able to write a prescription that will cure rheumatism, owing to the fact that the usual reme? dies do incalculable harm to the digestive organs. RHEUMACIDE com? pletely overcomes this difficulty?benefits rather than injures the organs of digestion?hence it can be taken for an indefinite period, or as long as need be, to effect a permanent cure." Tne Doctor quoted covers Ute case exactly, " Rheumactde " is absolutely rarmless. All Druggists, $1.00, or exprcssage prepaid. Bobbitt Chemical Co., . . Baltimore fid.. U. 5. A. cartridges and shot shells are made in the largest and best equipped ammunition, factory in the world. AMMUNITION of U. M. G. make is now accepted by shooters as '"the worlds standard" for it shoots well in any gun. Tour dealer sells it. The Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 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