The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, February 18, 1904, Image 3

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tevens
igures
at the
claims
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rnings
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t $18,-
100,000
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ay de-
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d, and
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er this
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, 1904,
lat the
as re-
, 1904,
LL. TY.
Caused
of Con-
ecuted
murder
Greens-
or then
ference
ry Sent
ary: at
1all up-
1d loyal
s, Fath-
e been
are re-
leading
e been
er Fili-
at the
ary de-
fles, 5,-
1d $700
missary
ngitives
r a par-
le quar-
at the
Water-
1 were
ild, and
was re-
wagon,
ZED,
Arouses
een ca-
nanding
minican
tion of
there.
e Clyde
govern-
ignation
vas said
he prob-
such an
of the
Admiral
ly would
t of the
s Union,
n strike
factories
1 Glass
s about
f which
ie to an
y non-un-
and the
red man-
celebrat-
nd anni-
nths ago,
y Dayton
rank six
and was
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in Balti-
310.000.0000
g 5
A Hydrophones.
Professor Gray's invention for trans-
mitting sound under water has been
tested by: the - Metropolitan Steamship
company, and the captain’s report that
they have been unable, invariably, to
locate accurately the Boston lightship,
upon which sumerged bell was being
rung, when approaching at full speed
at distances of three miles and up-
ward. .
Young women may avoid ¥
much sickness and pain, says
Miss Alma Pratt, if they will
only have faith in the use of
Lydia E. Piokham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Judging from the letters she is
receiving from so many young girls,
rs. Pinkham believes that our girls
are often pushed altogether too near
the limit of their endurance now-
adays in our public schools and semin-
aries.
Nothing is allowed to interfere with
studies, the girl must be pushed to the
front and graduated with honor; often
physical collapse follows, and it takes
years to recover the lost vitality, —
often it is never recovered. Miss Pratt
says, —
“DeAR Mgrs. PINEmAM:—1 feel it
my duty to tell all young women how
much Lydia E. Pinkham’s won-
derful! Vegetable Compound has
done for me. I was completely run-
down, unable to attend school, and did
not care for any kind of society, but
now I feel like a new person, and have
gained seven pounds of flesh in three
months.
“I recommend it to all young
women who suffer from female weak-
ness,” — Miss ArmA PraTT, Holly,
Mich. — $5000 forfeit if original of above letter
proving genuineness cannot be produced.
LEGAL ADVICE
case and we will advise
From competent
Lawyers. No delay.
No publicity. Write
us the facts of your
as to the law govern-
ing it and the best course to pursue. knclose
money order for $1.00. No additional charges,
ASSOCIATED LAWYERS,
BOX 51. PITTSBURG, PA.
The FREE Homestead
eran] Westar
be; 7a Canada
Are the STAR ATTRACTIONS For 1904.
lions of acres of magnificent Grain and Grazing
nds to ba had as a free gift, or by purchase from
way Companies, Land Corporations, etc.
THE CREAT ATTRACTIONS.
Good crops, delightful climate, splendid
school system, perfect social conditions,
exceptional railway advantages, and
wealth and afiinence acquired easily.
The population of Western Canada increased 128,000
by immigration during the past year, over 6,000
being Americans.
For a deseriptive Atlas and other information
a PY Mr. W. D. SCOTT,
Superintendent of Immigration,
Ottawa, Canada.
Sour Stomach
*‘I used Cascarets and feel like a new man. I have
been a sufferer from dyspepsia and sour stomach
I 3
»
me. Iw
my friends as the only thing for indi
Bou stomso and to keep soe DoSets n good con-
n. ey are very nice to eat.’
7 “Harry Stuckley, Mauch Chunk, Pa.
Best For
The Bowels
Dy ANY CATT: oD
; X . >
EErermsss™
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good,
ever Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 2ic. 50c. Never
sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC.
@uaranteed to cure or your money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 509
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
CAPSICUM VASELINE
IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES)
A substitute for and superior to mustard or
any other plaster, and will not blister the
most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and
curativequalitiesof thisarticlearewonder-
ful. It will stop the toothache atonce, and
relieve headache and sciatica. We recom-
mend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritantknown,also asanexternal
remedy for pains inthe chest and stomach
andallrheumatic,neu1..igicand gouty com-
plaints. A trial will prove what we claim
forit, and it will be found to be invaluable
in the household. Many people say‘itisthe
best of all of your preparations.” Priceis
cts. atall druggists or other dealers, or by
sendingthisamounttousinpostagéstamps
we wilfsend youa tubeby mail. No article
should beaccepted by thepublicunlessthe
same carriesourlabel.asotherwiseitis not
genuine. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 State Street. NEW YORK City.
SEEDS
Buccessfully Catalogue free.
gown for nearly 3.3. H. Gregory & Son
half a century. Marblehead, Hass,
RN IO JOEIN WW.MORRIS,
Washington, B,C.
Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
te Principal Eximiher U.S. Pension Bureau,
Joiek sivil war, 15 adj ndieatinz claims, atty since
P. N. U. 8,04,
A Bred 1 — i
CURES WHERE
Best Cough 8yrug
Russell Sage Retires.
Russell
drawn from participation in the af-
fairs of the financial district, and now
spends most of his time in his new
home, in Fifth avenue. Instead of ar-
riving at his office early and remain-
ing late, as has always be2n his cus-
tom, Mr. Sage drops in during the
forenoon, looks over his mail and re-
turns home early in the day. He sel-
dom attends meetings of directors of
the corporations in which he is in-
terested.
There are 29.000 Indian children in
school, 62,616 Indians who can speak
English and 143,974 Indians who wear
civilized dress. ond
Beware of Ointments For Catarri Tha
Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys-
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Sucharticlesshould never be used
except on prescriptions from reputable phy-
sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains
no mercury, and is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blo6d and mucous surfaces
of thesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure
be sure you get the genuine. It is taken in-
ternally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F.
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists; price, 75¢. per bottlo,
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation,
The efection of galvanized iron
houses in Bloemfontein, the capital of
the Orange River colony, has been
prohibited.
The legislative council at Pretoria
has voted in favor of the introduction
of Asiatic labor into South Africa.
To Wash China Silk Dresses.
China silk dresses may be quite success-
fully washed. Remove all spots with ben-
zine, then wash in warm soapsuds, rubbing
between the hands, rinse through several
waters. Use Ivory Soap and do not rub the
soap on the dress.” Wring as dry as possible,
wrap in a sheet or clean cotton cloth, and,
when partially dry, iron.
ELEANOR R. PARKER.
The priests and monks of Italy live long-
er than any other professional men in that
country.
Teosinte and Billion Dollar Grass.
The two greatest fodder plants on earth,
one good for 14 tons of hay and the other
80 tons green fodder per acre. Grows
everywhere, so does Victoria Rape, vield-
ing 60,000 ibs. sheep and swine food per
acre. [A.C.L.]
JUST SEND 10C. IN STAMPS TO THE
John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.,
and receive in return their big catalog and
lots of farm seed samples.
China’s population, according to recent
estimates, numbers 426,000,000 of souls.
I amsurePiso’sCure forConsumption saved
my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tuomas Ron-
BINS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1900.
On the West Indian Island of Nevis
there is a population of over 13,000, with
only one doctor.
Cider for Gout.
According to United States .Consul
Boyle, at Liverpool, cider has become
a most popular drink in England, due
to a considerable extent to its recom-
mendation by many physicians for
rheumatic and gouty disorders. He
says the cider of England is usually
very goed, and is put up in an attrac-
tive manner. ‘During the past two or
three years there hag been a great re-
vival of the cider trade. He says there
is no reason why the United States
should not get a good share of this
growing trade, especially a: much of
the cider for, this year’s coi ~mption
is made from Canadian apples.
What necessities’ of life does the
United States import?
SA SNE
Fi
A Profes:-ional Nurse Tells Her Exe
perience With Doan*s Kiduey Pills.
Montague, Mass.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.:
Gentiemen—I heartily wish those who
are suffering from backache and dis-
turbed action of the kidneys would try
Doan’s Kidney Pills. As was the case
with me, they will be more than sur-
prised with the results. I had been
troubled for years with my spine. I
could not lie on either side. Spinal
cramps would follow, and words could
not explain the agony which I would
endure. While in these cramps I could
not speak or move, but by making a
great effort after the cramp had left
me I could begin to speak and move &
little, but my whole back was so soré
and lame that I could not even have the
back bathed for some time. My nerves
were in a terrible. state. I would rath:
er sit up at night than go to bed, dread-
ing the cramps and the terrible back-
aches. I consulted physicians, but got
only a little relief for the time being.
Seeing your advertisement, my mother
urged me to try Dean’s Kidney Pills.
After using one box I was better, and
have ever since been on the gain. I
have no backache and no cramps now,
and I feel like a new person. My nerves
are better and I know my blood is purer.
Words cannot express my thanks to
you for what Doan’s Kidney Pills have
done for me. In my work as profes-
gional nurse I have a chance to recom-
mend them, and they did me so much
good that I will do so on every possible
| occasion.
| cents per box.
i
HATTIE BRIGHAM, Nurse.
Doan’s Kidney Pills are sold at 50
Address Foster-Milburn
Co., Buffalo, N. Y., for a free trial box.
Sage has gradually with-
# get a good-sized box
, manured with the ashes.
i
some disease is caused by a sporeless
Grape vines usually need very little
manure other than mineral, and that
chiefly potash. In European countries
it is the habit of vineyards to burn
the prunings every year and apply the
ashes. No other fertilizer is used. In
fact, stable manures are objected to,
as they make the vines grow rank,
and the fruit will lack the flavor that
belongs to fruits whose vines are only
TO DESTROY LICE.
For destroying root lice on peach
trees, when transplanting dip the trees
in a decoction of tobacco—one pound
of tobacco to two gallons of water,
boiled down to one-half. If this care
is taken the trees will be comparatively
safe for a number of years unless an
infected orchard is near. Do mot set
a young peach tree where an old one
has been, as the root lice live a long
time in the soil, »
Pid
WATERING CELERY PLANTS.
My rule for watering the celery
plants, affer the boards are in place
for blanching, is whenever the soil is
dry. The watering is done from the
outside, along the bottom of the
boards, and the plants are soaked; no |
sprinkling. Care is used that but lit-
tle water gets among the tops, which
would cause them to rot. Several
times during the blanching period
liquid manure is poured to the plants
in the same way as the water and the
results will be the same.
LETTUCE DROP.
This constitutes the most destructive
disease of lettuce, and is characterized
by the plants wilting and dropping into
an insignificant mass. This trouble-
soil fungus, which attacks the stem of
the plant, and the only effectual rem-
edy is found in soil sterilization.—
American Cultivator.
LOW-HEADIED FRUIT TREES.
While there may be some objections
to the recent plan of trimming back
trees of orchards so that they will
bead low, the main objection being
that it is somewhat difficult to calti-
vate close to them, they are offset by
the advantages in other ways of work-
‘ing with them. This is essentially so
since spraying and thinning has De-
come SO necessary to the best results.
There is no doubt but what the low-
headed tree may be more easily and
economically sprayed than the tail tree,
not that the fruit is more easily
gathered; also, there is less trouble:
with sun-scald, because of the protec-
tion afforded Dy the. low-spreading
branches, Growers should bear this
method in mind when setting out trees
this fall, for the first step in making
low-headed trees must be done when
the trees are set. Cut them back
sharply when setting, and the follow-
ing season, as the lateral branches are
seen, head them back to the desired
height, which differs according to va-
riety and class as well as to individ-
ual ideas. Apple trees are usually
headed back to within three feet of
the ground, while pears, peaches and
cherries are headed back to eighteen
inches or two feet.—Indianapolis
News.
WINDOW GARDENING.
Success in this line comes only to
these who really love fiowers; for sue-
cess means plenty of care and work.
Of course we have said many times,
“prevention is the best cure,” and “in
time of peace prepare for war.” but
we shall keep on saying it for we
know how prone we all are to put off
getting the plant food until our treas-
ures have been impoverished, or we
neglect to watch out for mealy bugs,
red spider, scale, ophis and worms in
the soil, until the pests have gained
such a foothold it is next to impos-
sible to get rid of them.
One must water plants with brains,
as well as water to succeed well. A
good plan is to go over them once each
day, giving water to those only which
show a dry surface. A few weeks’
observation will show a marked dif-
ference in the amount of water need-
ed by different plants. Watch care-
fully for draughts around the windows
where plants stand. The window sill
is a poor place to set flower pots;
there is almost always a stream of
cold air pouring in around the plants,
which is, to say the least, discouraging.
Shelves on brackets which bring the
plants out from the sash a few inches
are preferable. The swinging brack-
ets which hold from three to five pots
are fine, as they might be taken away:
from the windows at night. :
Where one loves window plants and
has no fire at night a good plan is to
and cover the
outside with table oilcloth. Have "a
cover somewhat larger than the box,
enough to cover and hang down about
four inches. This box answers for a
FACE 1 TRAE EEN
A FAVORABLE OUTLOOK.
In Restoring Baitimore There Will Be
Great Activity in. Building
Trades.
R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of
trade says: War, fire and cotton
were the adverse factors of the week,
yet the country stood the shocks re-
markably well and there are numer-
ous encouraging symptons. To =a
large degree the outbreak of hostili-
ties in the Orient and the collapse
of the cotton boom had been discount-
ed, and the disastrous loss of the
conflagration was offset very largely
by the stimulus it will give to many
industries, notably structural steel.
In restoring Baltimore there will be
great activity in the building trades,
while large stocks of, goods must be
replaced and orders filled by jobbers
and manufacturers elsewhere.
Actual business is still restricted
in’ the iron and steel industry, but
there is more confidence in the future,
and the extensive starting of plants
by the leading preducer suggests that
foreign markets will be entered more
aggressively than ever bfore. Struc-
tural steel prospects have greatly im-
proved because of the Baltimore fire,
as it is certain that an enormous ton-
nage will be required to restore the
ruined buildings. As to pig iron no
improvement is seen. Minor metals
have developed irregularity, but hard
coal is in good demand,
New England shoe shops are still
fully occupied on spring lines and
fall samples, but few additional or-
ders for spring delivery have appear-
ed during the past week.
Failures this week in the United
States are 228, against 246 last week,
302 the preceding week and 230 the
corresponding week last year. Fail-
ures in Canada number 25, against
29 last week, 28 the preceding week
and 20 last year.
IRON TRADE IRREGULAR.
Sales in Finished Product Larger in
Pittsburg and Chicago.
Of the business outlook Bradstreet’s
say: The Baltimore disaster and the
beginning of hostilities in the far
east, though affecting the speculative
market to some extent,
have as yet
had no notable results on trade out-
side of sections immediately concern-
ed. The iron trade is irregular. Pig
iron sales are not large and prices dis-
play ease, despite talk of large tran-
sactions in the Central West. West-
ern trade in finished: products is re-
ported larger at Chicago and Pitts-
burg. Wire goods, plates, bars and
structural note improvement and the
pipe business is better situated than
a year ago. Steel billets are reported
being shaded through the ‘exchange
of scrap and pig iron therefor. Other
metals are dull, but copper is rather
firmer, while lead is strong. Wheat,
including flour, exports. for five days
ending February 10, aggregate .1,746,-
255 bushels, against 2,604,226 bushels
last week, 2,856,439 bushels this week
last year, 3.175,481 bushels: in 1902 and
. 4,814,878 bushels in 1901.
MARI NTS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Fleur and Feed.
Wheat— No. 2 red... eS 87 90
Rye--No. 2...... 68 73
Corn—No. 2 yellow he 53
No. 2yellow, 5) 51
Mixed ear....... 4% 43
Oats—No, 2 white 4 45
No. 83 whi 0 43 44
Flour—Winter patent 25. 43)
Straight winters .. 8 400
Hay—No. Itimothy........ 2518.95
layer No, 1... .....; + 2 1150
Feed—No ! white mid. 50 2200
Brown middlings........ 21 2 2150
Bran, bulk ........... 50 180)
Straw—Wheat ............. 5 9 00
BY 850 900
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery............ Ss 26 3
Ong, creamery. |... 0 Tl. 24 25
Fancy country roll.............. 16 17
Cheese—Ohio, DOW ........¢ccu..inn. il 1%
Now York. new................ 12 13
Poultry, Etc.
Hehs—per Ibi.....;........... 8-4 15
Chickens—daress 17 18
Turkeys, live 14 17
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh ......... 35 37
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per vas...... 100 105
Cabbage—per bbl...... sca 225 n2 hy
Onions—per barrel ..... Sa. 280 XD
Apples—per barrel........ ....ceeeeeee 204. 38)
BALTIMORE.
Flour— Winter Patent $450 4795
Wheat—No. 2 red 94 96
Corn—mixed 50 51
Begs .......... . 32 34
Butter— Cream . 23 2%
PHILADELPHIA .
Flour—Winter Patent..... evnnin $B 400
Wreat—No. 2red....... 97
Corn—No. 2mixed... 4 50
Oats—No. 2 white. .......... 48 45
Butter—Creamery, extra 22 20
Eggs—Pennsylvania first: 80 Si
NEW
Flour—Patents...... : 435
Wheat—No. 2red 95 2
Corn—No. 2.......... 56 57
QOats—No, 2 White.. 50 51
Butter—Creamery .. : x2 25
Eggs—Stateand Pennsylvania 30 22
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Prime heavy, 1450 to 1600 lbs......§ 510 525
Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs. .... . 500 31
Medium, 1200 to 1300 lbs. 465 490
Fathelers...... .;....... 300 49)
Butcher, 900 to 1000 lbs... 3 60 4 49
Common to fair......... 300 370
$i3en, common $0 fat ............. 200 4 03
- Common togood fat bulls and cows 250 350
Milchcows,each...”.. .. ... ...... 253) 8600
Hogs.
Primieheayy hogs......... 0... 5 .$ 550
Prime medium weights B60
est heavy yorkers and medium... 5 60
Good pigs and lightyorkers 475
Pigs, common togood....... 400
Reughs ... 0... ................ 375
Biggs... 300
Sheep.
Extra, medium wethers
Good to choice
Medium...
table to hold the plants by day, at
night they are placed inside the box,
the cover placed over them, and in
very cold weather a blank
thrown the box.
paper will help make it
a shelf put across one side or e
the inside will p
the plants, short or dwarf ones being
plaved under and on the shelf,
over
Veal, extra......
Veal, good to choi
Veal, common he
{
|
FOR THIRTY YEARS
PRS
a
Congressman Mookison Suffered With
~ Catarrh--Read His Endorsement
of Pe-ru-na.
MUTA VVLVTIACANUADCA2VASF VANDA S2VVVVVVLVVVVRBVAVR°
IMAM UIA AM BBAABAUNAL: 21a 24 EBDVTL~ = © 1338
CONGRESSMAN MEZKISON, OF OdIO.
ar,
*
LBV
9
“
MAR AAAVFAAA TING SIV2 AE
VR YAIR
Hon. David Meekison is well known, 1
10t only in his own State but throughout
America. He began his political career by serving four consecutive terms as Mayor
of the town in which he lives, during which
founder of tlie Meekison Bank of Napoleon, Ohio.
Congress by a very large inajority, and is
his section of the State.
nly one flaw marred the otherwise compicte
Catarrh, with its insidious approach and
foe. For thirty years he waged unsucc
he became widely known as the
He was elected to the Fifty-fifth
in
time
the acknowledged leader of his party
success of this rising statesman.
1cions grasp, was his only unconquered.
warfare against this personal enemy.
fe
ese ul
At last Peruna came to the rescue, and he dictated the following letter to Dr. Hart-
man as the result:
cocovooeee
OC00000C0I00000000600CR0CP00000V00O000000CCOQR000000@C02OCLIODOCOE 0o00c008
“I have used several bottles of Peruna and I feel greatly benefited
thereby from my catarrvh of the head. I jeel encouraged to belicve that
if I use it a short time longer Iwill be fully able to eradicate the disease
of thirty years’ standing.” --David
eeecoec
Meekison, ex-Member of Congress.
©0000200000000000200000000000000C02090000000000000000000900000000000¢06 .
HE season of catching cold is upon us.
The cough and the sneeze and nasal |
twang are to be heard on every hand. The
origin of chronic catarrh, the most cem-
mon and dreadful cof diseases, is a cold.
This is the way the chronic catarrh gen- |
erally begins. A person catches cold, which
hangs on longer than usual. The cold
generally starts in the head and throat.
Then follows sensitiveness of the air pas-
sages which incline one to catch cod very
easily. At last the person has a cold all
the while seemingly, more or less discharge
from the nose, hawking, spitting, frequent
clearing of the throat, nostrils stopped up,
fr’! feeling in the head and sore, inflamed
ti. oat. ¥
The 'hest time to treat catarrh is at the
very beginning. A bottle of Peruna prop-
erly used never fails to cure a cominon
cold, thus preventing chronic catarrh.
While many people have been cured of
chronic catarrh by a single bottie of Pe-
runa, yet, as a rule, when the catarrh be-
comes thoroughly fixed, more than one bot-
tle is necessary to complete a cure. DPe-
runa has cured cases innumerable of ca-
tarrh of twenty years’ standing.
best, if not the only internal remedy for
chronic catarrh in existence.
But prevention is far better than cure.
Every person subject to catching cold
should take Peruna at once at the slight-
est symptom of cold or sore throat at this
season of the year and thus prevent what
is almost certain to end in chronic catavrh. |
The Birds’ Breakfast-Table.
There is a suggestion for all girls
and boys who live where snow falls
in “The Birds’ Breakfast-table” in the
February St. Nicholas, telling how
many Hudson River valley birds are
fed winter after winter at Cherrycroft.
Cherrycroft is the home of Amelia E.|
and stands on the |
Barr, the writer,
banks of the Hudson near Cornwall.
The hospitality of Cherrycroft is
widely known among its bird neighbors
near and far that every fall Mrs. Barr
lays in grain, corn, and hickory-nuts by |
the bushell to provide for her feathered
guests.
Gordon Curtis recounts the apprecia-
tion of Cherrycroft’'s generosity shown |
during the blizzard of 1888.
There are 190,227 professional beg- |
are |
gars in Spain, of whom 51,348
women. In some of the cities beggars
are licensed to carry on their trade.
Seeking alms is recognized as a le-
gitimate business, and the munici-
pality demands a percentage upon the
collections. Seville is the only city
in the kingdom which forbids begging
in the streets.
Professor = Lombroso finds that
among 1,000 soldiers and operatives
the proportion of left-handed people
is 4 per cent among the men and 5 to
8 per cent among the women.
There is a way of trifling that costs a heap of money.
1t is the |
SO |
Among the interesting inci- |
dents of this pretty hospitality Isabel |
1 Mra’ A; Ga.,
writes: .
“LI saw that your catarrh remedy, Pe
| runa, was doing others so much*good that
j 1 thought J would epséser-~~scboeve
ox
Snedeker, Cartersville,
try it and see what
it would do for me.
| My case is an oid
one, and I have
1 none of the acute
symptoms now, be-
| cause I have had
| the disease so long
i that I had none of
| theachesand pains,
| but a general run-
| down condition of
| the whole body—
| sorenoseand throat
| and stomach. had
{a good. appetite, 1 ed
| but my food did 8 Mrs. A. Snedeker.
| not nourish my sys- tee00e00es eocecesse
| tem. I had come down from 140 to about
| 75 pounds in weight. I now feel that I
lam well of all my troubles.”—Mrs. A.
| Snedeker.
| Send. for free book
[Winter Catarrh,”
| “Health and Beauty”
| ony.
{ If you do not derive prompt and satisfac-
| tory results from the use of Peéruna, write
{ at ence to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state=
| ment of your case and he will be pleased to
i give you his valuable advice gratis.
|
{
|
000600090 0000060000023060
4
000000000 000000000000000000
on catarrh, entitled
by Dr. Hartman.
sent free to women
Address Dr. Hartman. President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. O.
ONION
Largest growers of
$1.50 per
pound, and
no better
sced is
found on
.earth.
How to grow
1,200 bushels
Onions per acre
with each ounce order.
Catalog Se, for postage.
LA CROSS
Go., "A Lees
i=
| & BY MAIL
| Send $1.
| and plainly
| 4 state what
| you wish to know and our specialists will
| safely advise you as to your rights or liabili-
| ties under the laws of your State. All com-
| munications confidential. Address
| Associated Atiornays Law Consulting Bureau,
| 106-108 E. Saratoga Street, - Baltimore, Md.
| DR O PSY NEW DISCOVERY; gives
{ quick relief and cures worst
cases. BOOK of testiuonwmis and 10 days’ treatment
j Free. Dr. BE. H. GREZN'SSONS. Eox B. Atlanta, Ga.
Neglect
Lumbago and Sciatica
and it may put you on crutche
s, with loss of time and money.