The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, April 29, 1903, Image 3

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    Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
It cleanses my
e feel strong, and
in every way,’’—
¢, Brooklyn, N.Y.
rich blood
life to every
body. You
fed, refreshed.
xious to be |
fcomestrong, |
b2ous. That's
"Sarsaparilla
ou.
All druggists.
at he thinks of Ayor’s A
11 about thisgrand §
low Lis advice and §
R Co., Lowell, Mass.
Drugglsts
, Never sold in bulk
who tries to seil
that there
chon Kind” of stoves
soof, ashes or oxoes-
for trade marl.
ir own horn unless
wind.
too highly spoken ot
O’Brien, 322 Third
3, Minn., Jan. 6,1900
aliy absent-minded,
ously
DYES do not stain
kettle, except green
thao
in thy world
el of.
m famine, and in-
y the discovery of
precious metal.

YARD TO BEAR.
Bl When the back aches
§ and pains so badly,
| can't work, can't rest,
can’t sleep, can't eat,
it's hard to bear. Thousands of ach
nz backs have been relieved and
cured. People are learning that back:
ache pains come from disordered Kid-
neys, that Doan's Kidney Pills cure
every Kidney ill, cure bladder troubles,
urinary derangements, dropsy. dia:
hetes, Bright's disease. Read this tes:
timony to the merit of the greatest of
Kidney specifics,
J. W. Walls, Superintendent of
Streets of Lebanon, Ky., living on East
Main street, in that city, says:
“With my nightly rest broken, owing
to irregularities of the kidneys, suffer-
nz intensely from severe pains in the
small of my back and through the kid-
1wys, and ammoyed by painful passages
af abnormal secretions, life was any-
thing but pleasant for me. No amount
if doctoring relieved this condition, and
‘or the reason that nothing seemed to
sive me even temporary relief I be-
ame about discouraged. One day I
ioticed in the newspapers the case of a
nan who was afflicted as I was. and
was cured hy the use of Doan's Kid-
ey Pills. His words of praise for this
‘omedy were so sincere that on the
strength of his statement I went to
he Hugh Murrey Drug Co.'s store and
zot 2 box. I found that the medicine
was exactly as powerful a kidney rem-
ady as represented. I experienced
fuick and lasting relief. Doan's Kid-
ney Pills will prove a blessing to all
sufferers from kidney disorders who
will give them a fair trial.”
A Free TRIAL of this great Kidney
medicine, which cured Mr. Walls, will
be mailed to any part of the United
States on application. Address Foster-
\lilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
yy all druggists, price 50 cents per box.
The yearly gross earnings of the
United States Steel Corporation are ap-
proximately equal to the gross rev-
enue received by the United States gov-
ernment.
iL { oi. >
Ri G Re
C hicago, speaks
ng women about dangers of the
ual Period
how to avoid pain and
g and remove the cause by using
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
oun WomEN: —I suffered for six years with dysmenor-
ul periods), so much so that I dreaded every month, as I
eant three or four days of intense pain.
The doctor said
he to an inflamed condition of the uterine appendages caused
and neglecged colds.
ng girls onlly realized how dangerous it
vould be spared them.
i5 to take cold at
em. Thank God
3. Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound. that was the only
time, Ts \
ich helpzd me any.
Within three weels after I started to
tieed a manked improvement in my general health, and at
y next monthly period the pain had diminished consider-
up the treajtment, and was cured a month later,
Tam like
prvsinee. I ain in periect health, my eyes are brighter, I have
inds to my) weight, my color is good, and I feel light and
ss Aeyxes BrLer, 25 Potomac Ave. Chicago, Ill.
thly sickmpess reflects the condition of a woman's
ything unusual at that time should have prompt
ttention.
Fifty thousand letters from women prove
. Pinkhfam’s Vegeiable Compotnd regulates men-
makes {those periods painless.
VY I
AT MISS LINDBECK SAYS:
“ DeArR Mrs. Pixxnay: — Lydia E. Pink-
am’s Vegetable Compound has greatly bene-
ted me.
buble was painful menstruation.
nth went by that T was getting worse.
I will tell you how T suffered.
My
I felt as each
I had
ere bearing-down pains in my back and abdo-
n.
« A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham’s
icine.
during my periods.”
I did se and am now free from all
Jessie C. LixDBECK,
1 6th Street, Rockford, Iil
FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN.
Remember, every woman is cordially
invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if therc
is anything about her symptoms she does
pnderstand.
Mrs. Pinkbham’s address is
is free and cheerfully given to every ail-
r it.
thousand women.
Iier advice has restered to health
Why den’t you try
anot forthwith nroduce ihe original letters and signatures of
dia L.. Pinkham Medicine Co, Lynn, Mass.
ich will prove their absolute genuineness.
Ly
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 large hospitals,
or helping private doctors, or employ-
ed by the 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 yot1 know women are 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
are; you go into a man’s dispensary
after a busy morning, perhaps after a
rush, and you wouldn’t be able to find
a thing—he wouldn't himseli—not a
thing; but if it is a woman who does
the dispensing you will soon see the
difference. Eveay bottle will be in its
place, everything neat, spick and span,
and ready fcr use in a moment. No
time is wasted there in a glorious hunt
around for the simplest thing.
How Ermines are Captured
Perfect fur, of the delicate ermine at
least, would be marred by the ordinary
snare, so the trapper devises as cun-
ning a death for the ermine as the er-
mine devises when it darts up through
the snow with its spear teeth clutched
in the throat of a poor rabbit, writes
Agnes C. Laut, in Leslie's Monthly.
Smearing his hunting knife with grease,
he lays it across the track. The little
ermine comes trotting in dots and
dashes and gallops and dives to the
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 the ermine has
licked, so he licks the knife. But alas
for the resemblance between ice and
steel! Ice turns to water under the
warm tongue; steel turns to fire that
blisters and holds the foolish little stoat
by his inquisitive tongue, a hopeless
prisoner till the trapper comes. And,
lest marauding wolverine or lynx
should come first and gobble up price-
less ermine, the trapper comes soon.
And that is the end for the ermine.
Some Morning Thoughts
Keep yourself {from the fatal malady
of bad humor, from grumbling, from
: little irritations, from rudeness.
| Tomorrow is only a stranger, when
he is today consider how you shall en-
. tertain him.
Go forth this day with the smallest
| expectations, but with the Igrgest pa-
tience: with keen relish for and ap-
preciation sf everything beautiful,
great and, ood, but with a temper so
genial that the friction of the world
shall not bear upon your sensibilities.
Let your thoughs be abundant, but
keep your mouth under restraint.
When we cannot find contentment in
ourselves, it is useless to seek it else-
where.

i ————————————
CURE BLOOD POISON, CANCER.
Aching Bones, Shifting Pains, Xtching
Skin, Pimples, Eating Sores, Etc.
If you have Pimples or Offensive Erup-
tions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Erup-
tions, or rash on the skin, Festering Swell-
ings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any part
of the body, old Sores, Boils, Carbuncles,
Pains and Aches in Bones or Joints, Hair
or Eyebrows falling out, persistent Sore
Mouth, Gums or Throat, then you have
Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm
(B.B.B.) Soon all Sores, Pimples and Erup-
t.ons will heal perfectly. Aches and Pains
cease, Swellings subside and a perfect,never
to return cure made. B.B.B. cures Can-
cers of all kinds, Suppurating Swellings,
Eating Sores, Ugly Ulcers, after all else
fails, healing the sores perfectly. If vou
have a persistent pimple, wart, swollen
giands, shooting, stinging pains, take Blood
Balm and they will disappear before they
develop into Cancer. Druggists, $1 per
large bottle, including complete directions
for home cure. Sawple frec by writing
Broop Baru Co., 19 Mitchell St., Atlanta,
Ga. Describe trouble and free medical ad-
vice sent in sealed letter.
The eye is most sensitive to green colors.
Two boys. aged fourteen and fifteen, re-
cently committed suicide in Berlin with the
same revolver.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders For Childrer
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse ir
the Children’s Home in New York. Cure
Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor
ders. move and regulate the Bowels and
Destroy Worms. Over 80,000 testimonials
At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed Freer.
Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Colorado produced - last year more dol
Jars’ worth of silver than Alaska did of
gold.
H. H. GnekN’s Soxs, of Atlanta, Ga., are
tho only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world. Hee their liberal offer in advertise-
ment in another column of this paper.
" oy :
. There isn’t a world of difference between
horrowing money and borrowins trouble.

vn: PISO!
URES

THE KEYSTONE STATE
Latest News of Pennsylvania Told iv
Short Order.
Pensions granted: —Samuel C. Tus:
sey, Hollidaysburg, $6; Wilson Switzer,
West Freedom, $8; John Morgan, Ca-
nonsburg, $8; Patrick Dougherty, Gi-
rardsville, $8; Frederick Dieche, Mead-
ville, $8: Daniel Grubbs, Wilkinsburg,
$46; WilliamH. Williams, Saegerstown,
$8: James B. Redin, Pittsburg, $12;
Elizabeth Thompson, Pittsburg, $8; M
J. Saney, Oil City, $12; Joseph T.
Shoemaker, Oakland, $12; George
Dupham, Pittsburg, $10; Conrad R.
Beechling, Erie, $12; Samuel D. Dunn,
Parnassus, $10; Jesse M. Smith, Knox,
$10; Thomas B. Mikesell, Blairsville,
$10; Henry Hunt, Tyronville, $12;
John Riffel, Summit, $12; Virginia
Johnson, Pittsburg, $8; Thomas Wool-
bert, Johnsonburg, $8; Frederick M.
Gipner, Pittsburg, $10; James Rossell,
Vanderbilt, $8; James W. Foster, Con-
neautville, $10; John W. Nichols, Al-
legheny, $8: John G. Myers, Punxsu-
tawney, $24: Thomas S. W. Kitson,
Shippingport, $40; Hugh A. Hooks,
Adrian, $33: John Abbey, Indiana, $55;
Samuel B. Yoder, Pittsburg, $46; Sam-
uel Cunningham, Indiana, $40; John C.
McGrath, Agnew, $46: Jacob Kreger,
Kingwood, $55; David Owens, Pitts-
burg, $46; Joseph W. Horton, East
Brady, $46; Frederick Ott, Johnstown,
$46; Henry Lewis, Edinboro, $55; John
A. Snyder, Pittsburg, $12; Joseph N.
Cannon, Bellwood, $12.
Jacob J. Hefner, a miner, was crushed
to death by a fall of coal at DuBois.
Harry Hoover, with a bullet wound
in his thigh, was arrested at New Cas-
tle, and is being held pending an in-
vestigation. Sf
The Odd Fellows building at Carry
was damaged by fire to the extent of
$13.000. Charles Spratt, who occu-
pied the lower floor, lost heavily.
Owen McBarnes was killed in a run-
away near Mercer.
South Sharon voted to issue $30,500
in bonds for a new school house.
The survey for the new trolley road
between Kittanning and Moss Grove
has been started.
Beatrice Bigelow, niece of State Sen-
ator Sisson, was killed by a train at
Erie.
Blowing 4
in the Jeannette plant of
Window Glass Company.
The Pennsylvania Railroad has
awarded the contract for the erection ol
the new roundhouse at Hollidaysburg.
Grover Mitchell, of Moravia, was
machines are being installed
the American
{ held up and robbed by highwaymen,
who secured his watch and $8 in money.
Rev. T. D. Roth and Rev.’ S. M.
Mountz, joint pastors of the Butler
Lutheran congregation, have each re-
signed.
An application for the release from
jail of George West, charged with the
murder of Ralph Stivers, was made in
court at New Castle.
The remains of the brakeman killed
on the Unity branch of the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad was identified at Derry
as those oi P. F. Mahan, of Shamo-
kin.
Lottie Evans, of Washington, as a re-
sult of a love affair, attempted suicide
at the boarding house of Mrs. Rose
Hannon by swallowing carbolic acid.
The girl was found in her room scream-
ing with pain as a result of swallowing
the acid. She was taken to the Wash-
ington Hospital.
An unknown man was found mur-
dered on the outskirts of the town of
Shenandoah. He was shot through the
head and bore evidence of having been
dragged from the roadside to the place
where his body was found. His pock-
ots were turned inside out when he was
found.
Erie police have formed a union and
threatened to strike if their demands
of $60 a month salary are refused.
Fire in the yards of the Monessen
Lumber Company destroyed $15,000
worth of property before brought under
control. Ra
Five Chinamen were arrested at Erie
charged with being in the United States
in violation of the Chinese exclusion
act,
Several arrests were made at Punxsu-
tawney as a result of a disturbance in
the Jewish synagogue. The alleged oi-
fenders were bound over ior a hearing.
Mrs. Julia Ann Dachrodt, Easton's
oldest woman, is dead, aged 035 years.
Four Chinamen who arrived in Erie
from Dunkirk, U. Y., have been placed
under arrest by government detectives
on a charge of having been run across
the Canadian border. They were found
hidden in a State street laundry.
John P. Lloyd, a prominent contrac-
tor. died at the Cambria Hospital of a
fractured skull, the result of a fall sev-
eral days ago.
A union store will be opened at Sum-
mit Hill and conducted under the man-
{ agement of the United Mine Workers
of America. > :
An cpidemic of typhoid and scarlet
fever is baffling the Health Board of
Lansford. Many cases have been re-
ported.
Councils have chosen Randolph Her-
ron, of New York, to be the superin-
tendent of the sanitary sewerage work
to be done at York in accordance with
the $400,000 loan voted at the recent
election. nas
Charles Hague, 9 years old, of Ches-
ter. fell under the wheels of a freight
car and had a leg taken off.
The citizens oi Marion Heights, 2
town located on the summit of a meun-
tain west of Mr. Carmel, have organ-
ized a fire company.
In a shanty ten feet square, where he
lived alone. John Moluski, of Mt. Car-
mel. was found dead by a party ol
children. His death was due to old age.
Hibner, Hoover & Co.'s warehouse
at Dubbis. with its contents. was de-
stroved by fire. Loss, $25,000; partly
insured.
Eli Cope, Brideport’s chief of police,
was arrested on the charge of assault.
Louis Bergener ,of Beaver Falls, was
arrested on a charge of conducting a
speak-easy. :
The voters of Wooster township,
Wayne county, decided for saloons by
a vote of 120 to 128.
At Corry. Vera Mclean, a High
School girl, attempted suicide by shoot-
ing with her father’s revolver.
At Washington the presbytery of the
Présbyterian - Church elected Rev.
N. Houston, oi Cross Creek, moder-
ator.


ROBERTS M.D
AATTLLA AMAL LLWVAAWALVVR LAV WAAAAVVWAAY
" Robert R. Roberts, M. D., Wash-¢
ington, D. C., writes: ¢
“Through my own experience
Jas well as that of many of my ¢
friends and acquaintances who ¢
| 3 have been cured or relieved of ca-¢
jtarrh by the use of Hartman’s¢
§ Peruna, I can confidently rec-¢
ommend it to those suffering ¢
3 from such disorders, and have no ¢
§ hesitation in prescribing it tomy ¢
§ patients.’’-- Robert RB. Roberts ¢
ATT LALLALLALLL LRA LWIA BAVA LRA L WOOL
CONSTANTLY increasing number of
physicians prescribe Peruna in their
regular practice. It has proven ils merits
so thoroughly that even the doctors have
overcome their prejudice against so-called
patent medicines and recommend it
their patients.
Peruna occupies a unique position
medical science. It is the only internal
systemic catarrh remedy known to
medical profession to-day. Catarrh,
everyone will admit, is the. cause of one-
half the diseases which afflict mankind.
Catarrh and catarrhal diseases afflict one-
half of the people of United States.
I. H.. Brand, M. D., of Mokena, Ill, uses
Peruna in his practice. The following case
is an example of the success he has through
the use of Peruna for catarrh.
Dr. Brand says: “Mrs. ‘C.,” age 28, had
been a sufferer from catarrh for the past
She came to me almost a
She had tried the Cope-
land cures and various other abd
specialists, and had derived no benefit
from them. She told me she did not
watery eyes.
physical wreck.

TITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- |
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer.$2trial bottleand treatisefres i
., Phila.,Pa. |
The beauty about diplomacy is that it
»nables both sides to claim a victory.
|
Beware of Ointments For Catarrh Tha
Contain Mercary, .
as mercury will’ surely destroy the sense ol |
smell and completely derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous |
zurfaces., 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 mereury, and is taken internally, acting |
directly upon the blood and mucous surface: |
of thesystem. Inbuying Hall's Catarrh Cure
be sure to get the genuine. It is taken in. |
ternally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F |
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free,
1:3" 30ld by Druggists; price, 75¢. per bottle, |
Hall's Famij~_ Pills are the best.

HC ROB
HB
The Standard Rh
STANDARD
cure for rheumatisn
FDR]
dies do incalculable harm to the dige
pletely overcomes this difficulty—bene
ti
be, to effect a perinanent cure.”’
HL
) Ly
to |
. |
in
the |
as |
seven years; could not hear plain and had |
PROMINENT PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBE PE-I

Dr. M. G. Gee, of San Francise
““Pe-ru-na is of Especial Be
ft 1o Yomen.”
N
)
SA TN wav
want to spend any more money on medi-
cines unless I could assure her relief.
“1 put her on Pe-
runa and told her
to come back in
two weeks. The et-
fects were wonder-
ful. The cast-down
ABV LAA LLB
aan
| first saw her had
left her and a smile
adorned her face.
She told me she
felt a different
woman, her hearing
was
" 7 A, her eyes
F. fl. Brand, M. D. ¢ trouble
ATVIALVVLVR SY YWSN more,
“This is only one case of the many I
have treated with vour valuable medi-
| cine.”—F. H. Brand, M. D.
Catarrh may invade any organ, of the
body; may destroy any function of the
body. It most commonly attacks the
| head, nose and throat, but thousands upon
thousands of cases of catarrh of the lungs,
GET WET! ime
| ASK YOURIDEALER,FOR THE |
SLICKER
| MADE FAMOUS BY. A REPUTATION
2 EXTENDING OVER MODE TH fe
| eZ
| E
i ”, did
her
not
any
FPL LR AAA LLRRLLRIL RL LLL LL
AVA VAAVMAAVAAA LAVAL AAA A RA
.. HALF A’ CENTURY.
; TOWERS garments and ;
1752) \\ hats are made of the best *
ws materials in black or yellow
\ for all kinds of wet work.
SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED IF YOU STICK TO
y THE SICN OF .THE FISH.
A. J TOWER CO BOSTON, MASS U.S. A
TOWER CANADIA inited. TORONTO, CAM.

03
“ ITPAYS
ADVERTISE ™ $850 N
eumatic Remedy.
because able physicians declare that it is the only absolute
1 in its various forms. A prominent
hysician recently said : *‘I have never been able to write a
prescription that will cure rheumatism,
stive organs.
owing to the fact that the usual reme-
RHEUMACIDE com-
fits rather than injures the organs of
digestion—hence it can be taken for an indefinite period, or-as long as necd
The Doclor quoted covers the case exacily, *‘ Rheumacide *” is absolul:iy Farmless.

GEIS
All Druggists, $1.00,
Bobbitt Chemical Co., =
SOR RIR
i
THY
Stil
\'$3
og
The Douglas seeret process of tanning the holiom soles |
than any other tanance. The sales have more than dou-
bled (ho past four years, which proves its superieriy.
| 1899 Sales: 82, 203, 8813.23 i
1902 Sales; $5,024,340.00 '

|
HERR RIE
produces more flexible and longer wearing leather | 3
or expressage prepaid.
= Baltimore I'id., U. S. A.
SRR i REI
W. L. DOUGLAS
22and $
hoes Union
<> fade
0 to 135.00 yearly
3.5 3 shoes
ou ea
vy way as those x
n $4500 to 8H.00, The
songlas shoes proves
ther mal
gualled
at any price.
glas makes and sells more men’s
> velt (hand-sewed process) shoes
than any ~ her ahs arte in the world.
3 will be paid to anyone wir
25,000 Rewar can disprove this stateme:d
Made of the best iuported and American leathers
look she had when,
improved “and |
stomach, kidneys, bladder and of
rgans have been cured by Pern
Peruna is able to cure catarrh
t may be located by its direct act
he mucous membranes, Catarr¥
nflamed mucous membranes. Peru
tt once to cleamse and mvigorate
arrhal condition of the mucous men
0 matter where it may occur 1
ody. Its action is the same
mucous lining of the nose as 4
mucous lining of the bowels. It ct?
atarrhal inflammation wherever i
eecur.
Dr. R. Robbins, Muskogee, I. T., wri
~“Peruna is the best medicine 1 know
for cough and to strengthen a wel
stomach and to give appetite. Beside pr
scribing it for catarrh, 1 have order
for weak and debilitated people, and
not had a patient but said it helped I
It is an excellent medicine and it fits
many cases.
“l have a large practice, and have .
chance to prescribe vour Peruna. I hope
you may live long to do good to the sick
and suffering.”
We say Peruna cures catarrh. The peo:
ple say Peruna cures catarrh. Prominent
men and women all over the United States
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, Gee’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. Bul
when any one medicine cures hain-
dreds of people, it demonstrates its
own value and does not need the ¢n-
dorsement of the profession.
‘“Peruna has performed so many
wonderful cures in San Francisco
that I am convinced that itis a valu-
able remedy. 1have frequently ad-
vised its use for women, as I find it
insures regular and painless men-
struation, cures leucorrhoea and
svarian troubles, and builds up ihe
entire system. I also consider it one
of the finest catarrh remedies |
know of. 1 heartily endorse your
medicine.”’—M. C. Gee, M. D.
Women are especially liable to pelvic
catarrh, female weakness as it is cominonls
called. Especially in the first few week:
of warm weather do the disagreeable
symptoms of female weakness make them
selves apparent. In crisp, cold weather
chronic sufferers with pelvic catarrh do uot
feel so persistently the debilitating effects
of the drain upon the system, but at thet
approach of symmer with its lassitude and
tired feelings. the sufferer with pelvic ca
tarrh feels the need of a strengthening
tonic.
Peruna is not only the best spring tonic
for such cases, but if persisied in will effect
a complete cure. Write for a copy of
“Health and Beauty,” written especially
i for women by Dr. Hartman. If you want
to read of some cures, also, write for a
copy of “Iacts and Faces.” That will sure
ly convince you thag our claims are valid.
If vou do not derive prompt and satis
factory results from the use of Peruna
| write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving @
| full statement of your case and he wil
be pleased to give you his valuable advice
gratis.
Address Dr. Hariman. President of
| Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio.
The
bs og een A RE
Feed Your Land
with fertilizers rich. ;
| Potash!
® and your cropwill crowd your barn,
Sow potash and reap dollars,

r ive books aire a comrlete treatise on
fe ers, written by men who know. Write
vw them.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nnssau Street, New York.
cartridges ana shot shells
are madein the largest and
nn
factory in the world.
AMMUNITION
of U. M. C. make is now
accepted by shocters as
“the worlds standard” for
it shoots well in any gun.
Your dealer sells it.
The Union Metailic
Cartridge Co.
Bridgenert. - Conn.
ATENTS,
TRADU-MARKS AND PUNSIONS,
Are You Interested?
Aijllions of dollars have been made out of Paten‘s
and Trade-Marks., Millions of dollars ars appropri.
ated to pay pe ¥ 20 y enrs practice.
For Informatio and literature, FREE, writo to
THE W. WiLLs COMPANY,
Wills Bualding. #1: Ind. Ave, Washington, D. Q
DR 0 ed = NEW DISCOVERY; gives
S quick relief and eures worsp
eases. Book of tastimonia s and 10 days’ treatmon)
Wreeo. ¥c. ¥. XE. UZLEN'S BONS, Bex 3, Atlante, Go