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CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. B.B. B. Cnres Deep- Seated Case* Especially ?To l'roee It ?. It. B. Se.it Free. These diseases,* with aches and pains i% Whes, joints and back, agonizing pains in shoulder blades, hands, fingers, arms and legs crffipled by lheutnatism, lumbago, sciatica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose bleeding, ringing in the cars, sick stomach, deafness, noises in the head, bad teeth, thin hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh are sure signs of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon a!! aches and pains stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of cases cured by taking li.B.B. It strengthens weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., 18 Mitchell St.. Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. It is quite natural that an ocean greyhound should occasionally* run dov.n a catboat. ??a?? - """"TJ I Coughed j i " I had a most stubborn cough ? for many years. It deprived me [J of sleep and I grew very thin. I P then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, $ and was quickly cured." ; t R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. 9 i Sixty years of cures jj and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it's the greatest cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. There's cure in every drop. Threshes: 25c., S?c., SI. AHdrsnists. \ Consult tout doctor. If he ssys tike It, then do u he 117*. It he tell* 70a not to tike It, then don't tike it. He knows. Lesre It with him. We ire willing. J. C. AYKR CO.. Lowell, Miss. Minor Mention. Captain Hobson roasts Congressman Bankheads in a letter, for preventing his being pensioned. Governor Jennings, of Florida, is criticised by some of the Btate papers for appointing a commissioner to St. Lonis without authority of legislature. Precedents, however, are shown by governor's friends. ess of Montrose, with Harry Milner, who was 40 years or more her junior; of Lady Randolph Churchill with George Cornwallis-West; of Hugo de Bathe with Mrs. Langtry; of Mrs. Sloane Stanley with Shelley Bonteya, and many others. Natural gas is flowjng from a well, 1 mile from Hartsells. Ala. It burned to the height of 40 feet after it had been controlled. North Carolina is getting up a roster of troops who served in confederate army, to be sent to secretary of war for publication. "Folks blames lots er things on de devil,'' says Brother Dickey, "fer de reason dey's 'fraid ter saddle 'em on any er de res' er de family!" l^he March skies are looking just as blue as a fellow who has a thirtyday note in bank, and not a cent to pay it with! PAllliL PERIODS are overcome by Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Miss Menard cured after doctors failed to help her. "JLydla E. Piukham's Vegetable Compound cured lue after doctors had failed, and I want other girls to know about it. Dur ing menstruation X sunerea most intense pain low in the abdomen and in my limbs. At other times I had a heavy, depressed feeling which made my work 6eem twice as hard, and I grew pale and thin. The medicine the doctor gave me did not do me one bit of good, and I was thoroughly discouraged. The doctor wanted me to stop work, but of course. I could not do that. I finally began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and felt better after taking the first bqttl^, and after taking six bottles I was entirely cured, and am now in perfect health, and I am so grateful for it."?Miss Gkorcie Menard, 537 E. 152nd St., New York City.? $5000 forfeit if original of abovo lettor proving gtnuinenott cannot fc? prcductd. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures female ills when all other means have failed. So. 18. fBJkt.Mrill.Ui.l.dil CBSES WRt?E All USE F?US. PI Bast Cough Syrup, iutw Good. Use M in tiroe. fry WH OUR SUNDAY SERMON] THE GROWTH IN GOOD THINGSf : The Idea of Growth Close to the Foundation of the System of Our | Religion. ) Kenv York City. Dr. Charles II. I'arkI hur.-t. paMor of the MadNon Stir,are IVesbytc-riaii Church, preached Sunday mornw f !*? ? T!,in.T. HI flip lug vjiuHiiiij i" i..v , ? Kingdom of Clod." The text was from i!. Peter iii: IS: "Crow in sracc and i:i the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour .lesus Christ." To grow; growing in the things of the kingdom of Cod; that i? our matter tins morning. It is a great Bible word, "grow' is: particularly a great go;pcl word. The word incarnates the idea of life, and of life that is swelling, crowding apart the shell and crushing up in the direction of becoming a tree; knocking down walls and breaking forth, into territory outlying. "1 j am come that thev might have life and j that they might have it more abundantly," more and more of it. life doubling and quadrupling upon itself. That is one of the ideas that lie close at the foundation of Cod's system of production and administration?life, and more and more of it. Everything is for the sake of the things that grow. What cannot grow is for the sake of that which can? scaffolding a'ong which the living walls can be built, trellis up which the growing vines can clamber. The first two days of Cod's great week were only a sort of creative prelude. getting things ready, the seas collected. the land dried off. in readiness for the iish that live, the grass and the trees that grow?and man; scaffolding and trellises prior to the temple and the vines. It was a strange moment in our long history when the first live thing began to be, something that was no rock, no mineral. And the old torturing problem is, where it came from?out of the ground'; Out of God's hand that had been holding it till the right moment came? Out of the air and drifted down from some other globe that had commenced harvesting before our furrows were plowed? Which? But it was a supreme moment?one of the moments when it almost seems mat God must have stopped an instant to ruminate, as the Genesis reeord intimates He did when at last there began to be a man. romething that God eould enjoy and see His own great divine face borne back to Him in a small human reflection. Even before that supreme hour struck things had none on reshaping themselves and reshaping themselves; but reshaping is not growing. The glacier in every step of its frozen journey reshapes itself, but the glacier does not g-ow." The great hills, the earth itself, take all kinds of shapes from century to century, from aeon to aeon, but they do rot grow; but the corn grows, and man grows?at least sometimes; some men. The body grows, at any rate; that is the rule. It not simply exists?a mineral does that, a block of stone .does that?but it lives, and. from infancy up, with a life that is more and more a life ? blade, ear, full corn; which is the physical side of that verse in John, "that they might have life and have it more abundantly." And not only is there the kind of growth that makes the individual more and more richly a live thing, on the way from infancy to mature manhood, and more, completely and hcanteously human on his'animal side, hut the race as a whole appears to have been progressing in that respect till we may suppose that man. as the last forty or more centuries show him?is about as good ' a thing physically as he can be; the sort of human animal that Hod had in His eye when first He went about to produce man. We have reached the limit in point ef stature and presumably in point of refinement of organization. Arrived at this.stage, any new growth that the race might make would have to be I a striking out into some fresh channel. The body being a finished body, the rising current of life in man?in the growing man?will, perforce, seek some new issue for itself. No longer needed to make for him a more highly organized body, the waxing tide overflows iato the shaping of a more finely organized mind. The life is there, the growing life is there, and so when one thing is finished another thing has to be taken up. and when, in the course of long year cf development, mar. had become perfect as an animal he started in upon the course of making himself perfect as an intelligence. Thi.t is what he is doing now. and it is I inexpressibly wonderful what he has al ready achieved in this direction. The race cannot contemplate itself in respect of the advance made within historic times upon line? of thought and research without "beholding itself with feelings of admiration verging close upon reverence. It is not easy to understand how one can take account of the steadily advancing line of progress made by man into the domain of truth, the truth of the physical world at any rate, without becoming aware of a certain impulse, a certain infilling of life from somen here that inundates wider and wider patches of newly reached area, as the rising tide, inflowing from the sea. rolls with each recurring billow farther up on the sloping beach. How many thousand years it lias been since man commenced to think, theorize and discover nobody knows, and the Bible docs not tell us. but up to date the record is a tremendous one. and there is no limit in sight. All of this is telling us what a wonderful thing it was that (lod did when He started the race on its career of growth and conquest. Whether you think of the way in which 1 he human Ac has penetrated into the'stellar space? and read out in terms of every day Kngli*b the thoughts that at the beginning of time Clod wrought into the glittering fabric of the heavens, or whether you thi*of what at shorter range has been effected by the study of our own globe and of the laws that nervade it. of tiie forces that actuate j it and of the ways in which its mysteries have been solved and converted into commonplace utilities, the story is one and the same all the way through. All these discoveries of course celebrate the splendid omnipotent wisdom of a God that could make such a world, but they celebrate the magnificence of the human creature that could, in point of intelligence, grow far enough toward God to be able .to make the discoveries, ferret out the purposes of things, think out in common words the thoughts that the Creator put into things, and go on year after year, century after century, millennium after millennium, forever widening the area of knowledge and creating for human thought an empire steadily advancing upward, outward and ( downward upon lines laid down by the in- , finite mind. , It is certainly easy to say, and it is very i common to say, that the realities of the spiritual world are things that cannot be confidently gotten at. Just as certainly ] it in nasi- nnd vArv natural thiiur for i the denizens of the olden centuries to say, or at any rate to think, that the great i lights that shone in the heavens could not be gotten at, or that a man could not hold 1 instant and intelligible intercourse with his distant neighbor 3000 miles across the sea, but such intercourse is now matter of i history, and as to the heavenly bodies that \ were on^e but an impossible and uninter- < pretable vision, the human mind up to a j certain point contemplates them to-day < with as assured and as steady a thought as that with which it marks the flight of a t bird or th? flutter of a leaf. In the realm of the spiritual, on the con- \ trarv. not a great deaf has been achieved .< yet that the spirit of man can encourage < itself with or that it can found great ex- j pectatior.s upon and profound anticipa- \ tions. So tar as such matters are con- 1 oerned we are not much farther along in < the realities of the world spiritual than the wirld was along geographically in the iavs when Columbus was wondering if j < / there were not. more beyond the shores o* Spain than the tineentii century yet knew of, or much farther than the world was along astronomically when David sheplierded his Hocks and musingly watched tl. " st' t's hovering above the Judcan hills. And we should Jie stimulated in the di* rrelion of coming into closer quarters with the sublime facts of the spirittifU world? 'i'od. toul and all the eternals, if we would keep closer company with those impulses of oips, those spiritual appetites, that instinctively lean and extend themselves in the direction of that suspeeted but nn? /?! '.1 rl'!if rf> U not an impulse yet i detected ir our nature, whether physical | or mental, that has not been found in j course of time to he co-related with somethin;" outside that precisely matches it. Thirst means that there is water, and the water is there waiting. The eye means that there is light. and the light is there waiting. The budding interrogation in the child's mind means that there is truth, and the truth is there waiting. So far as we J have yet cone the inward impulse has i shown itself to be an infallible prophecy of an outward reality that perfectly fits it. I And those great longings c? the soul that swell within us in our host and freest moments. so gr.-a' sometimes as to be beyond our power to articulate, these, too. it is foolish and stupid in us to treat as less trustworthy and infallible than are the j miictcr appetences of the intelligence or | the coarser instincts of the body. There is j no safe creed that does not start in with j k confession of faith in one's own superb j self?superb in the sense of being gifted with powers that nut him in direct rela- i tion with the rocks under him, the air about him. the great (lod overhead, and the eternal realm of Spirit, human and divine. And that gives a man something to go upon. It at once makes the farthest star in the heavens a proper object of inquiry. and lays out before him a highway into the heapt and centre of the kingdom spiritual. - ? But the highway into the heart and centre of the kingdom spiritual is not abroad that is being numerously traveled. We arc about as far along on that road as Columbus was on the way to the Western Continent when he was still heaving anchor in the harbor of Palos. But the road is as feasible and passable as the waterway of the Atlantic. And the worm is going 10 pet there. The re'.icious impulse, the passion of the divine is in us for a purpose. fJod is knowable and He is going to be known. Spiritual things are discernible and they are going to be discerned. There is such a thing as the life eternal and there is such ? thing as having a realization of that life, having it here, too, as a matter of clear and definite experience. We are not saying anvthing just now as to the nature of the highway that leads into the midst of the spiritually discerned realities that compose that kingdom, nothing just now aoout the steps a man takes in treading that highway. The only impression I am studying to leave this morning is that there is a continent of reality as distinct from the continent of every day interest as the Western Hemisphere of our globe is distinct from the Eastern; that we are i endowed with faculties which to the degree in which they are develoned and exercised make the matters of that remoter continent as certainly distinguishable and as confidently appreciable to the earliest Spanish explorers; that spiritual discernment has just as solid a meaning in its relation to things spiritual as ocular discernment har in its relation to things material, and that it is capable of yielding results that are just as convincing and satisfying, and be as solidly planted in the assurance of the man that has become spiritually cognizant of them; that the soul is endowed with the faculty of a vision that is as true ar. the vision of the body, independent of bodily vision and a thousand times more richly and wonderfully gifted. Men are interested in houses, lands, clothes, money, markets, commerce, science and art, but there is not much interest in religion. There is interest in the matter of being saved, whatever that may mean, bnt desire to be saved is no more religion i than the desire to be crotten out of the j water when you have fallen overboard is i navigation. This does not mean that there are not a ; good many who have an inkling of the j meaning of the spiritual kingdom, some- : thing as men at sea gain a suspicion of j distant land by observing the imnalpable ! blanket of mist that hovers about it. It is not much in itself, and yet it is a great j deal, because of the much that it is capa- ! bio of widening out into. It is a kind of i spiritual coast line which, seen from .afar, i appears to be but a filmy thread, but i which is for all that the solid edge of a solid lontineut. Nor does that which we have been saying mean that there are not those who have already traveled a good stretch of distance into the midst of things, the spiritual verities, that make out the spiritual world. In al* departments of life and in all j directions of growth there have always I been men who have outrun their fellows, I pioneers in the enterprise of discovery, I giants in research who have stood high and I iooked over the shoulders of their contemporaries, who have lived in the same world as they, but at tiie same time lived in a larger world than they. In the world of religious thought and experience we call such men prophets. A prophet, prop- j ..1-lv onKiVinc is not so much a man who is able to see what is going to be as lie is I one who sees more widely than others the j things which are now. There is such a j thing, even in matters of science, as coining I so into accord with the spirit of scientific j truth as to be able to see with a firm and | fast xision where eyes less sympathetic have failed. Exactly the parallel of that has been true over and over again in that other world of truth mysteriously hidden that is our special concern this morning. And, as I say, we call such ones prophets. And there are prophets now as in the old days?men anu women whose spiritual steps are more than abreast with their own day. Tliev know what tlicy see. they realize what they feel, and it is as feeble and infantile for those whose eyes have in them a feeble light to deny the uncovering that has been made to these prophets and proj)lieiesses of a longer and purer sight, as tor you and me to slur over with ironical contempt the revelations brought back to us by those who have climbed farther than we into the heights of the material heavens. JJut that is the war history grows; that is the way the world becomes larger?a few prophets, pioneers in the van. and the rest plodding on behind?some not even plodding, some no nearer millennium than when history started out. Of course, the great pronhet of all prcmhets. the great seer of all seers, was Jesus Christ. It would seem that to His eye the things of the hcavenft kindom were as near and as distinct as were the long hidden invsteries .L- --i-_ . ti.g 01 ine MJirti MMt'ii: uimiui t iu uic mmuu of Copernicus. He did not reason. Christ did not. nor conjecture, nor guess; He saw. When He told of God, of the soul, of the life eternal, He spoke of that which He knew and testified that which He had seen. He came not as a delineator. While He was telling things to people He saw the things that He was telling them. There is nothing in the Bible about supposing, but there is a great lot in it about seeing. Like all the great verities, this one we * have been handling this morning grows upon us with the handling. It has made us feel, some of us, that we are out at sea still, and that instead of having yet planted * firm foot upon the solid territory of the continent eternal we are only inspecting what rather looks to us on the whole to be coast line, and instead of pushing our boat up. come no nearer to actually landing tn3n to get our sea glass out and spend our odd moments in trying to make out whether what we try to focus our glass upon is land, mirage or imagination. In the meantime the continent is there, the winds blow athwart it, the sun warms it, the jt.ars smile down upon it. A whitewashed reputation doesn't enlure any longer than a whitewashed fem*? i f DISCU A Stealthy, Insidioi Thousand Womei There are a multitude of women, espe- ! cialiy housewives, and all other "women j obliged to be on their feet constantly, v.ho are wretched beyond description. 1 simply because their strength and vitality is sapped away by catarrhal discharges from tne pelvic organs. These get ut) in the morning tired, drag themselves through their dui'.y duties tired, only to go to HM at night as tired as before. VMMVWMMWWVWI^VX VWVWV^ Mr>. Eva Uartlio, 133 East 12tK Street, N. Y. Clty.N'. Y., writes:?"1 .aoffored for' three years with what isgeno-aily known as h-tK-or'rhca, in connection with ulceration ot ti.e womb. '1 he doctors advotitod an operation which I dreaded vory much, and strongly objected to go under It. Reading of the valne of Pcruim, I thought it best to give this well-known remedy a trialvso I bought three bottles of it at once. Now I am a > changed woman. Peruna cured me; it took j nine nottlee. bnt 1 felt so much improved I j kept taking H. as 1 dreaded an operation so j much. I am to-dily in perfect health, and ' have not foil so well. or fifteon years."?J1 r? , Eva h'artho. MISS LOTTISK Ma HON. Mita Lonls* Muhon, 3 Glen Bailie street, Toronto, Out. Can., H*?r?l?fj <>t t lie IiJ?s'? l>auchteis, and Secretary of lady Maccabees, wrltei:?"If all women knew of the benefits to be derived from tak pg Peruna jvc j would have many happier and more icalth1. 1 women. My hraith has never been loo lobust, and 1 am easily fakiguert and can not t-land much. Abotft a year ago I was so run down that 1 bad to taJtfe to lny bed, and became weaker and we&k?r. A friend advised me to try Peruna, and I have great reuson to begiateinl, for in two weeks J. wasout or bed. and in a month I was perfectly well, and 1 dow llnd that my health is much more robust than formerly, so that I take Peruna once or twice a month and keep welL"-Louise Mahon. vvwwwwwwwwwwvwwwwvw Peruna is such a perfect specific for each case that when patterns have once used it they ean never be induced to quit it until ; they are permanently cured. Jt begins to | relieve the disagreeable symptoms at once, i The backache ceases, the trembling knees are strengthened, the appetite restored, the digestion made perfect, the dull headache is stopped and the weakening drains are gradually cured. These results certainly follow a course of treatment with Pe- j runa. Barbara Albertv, corner Seventh and Walnut streets, Appleton, Wis., writes as 1 follows in regard toPerupa: "For veare I have suffered with backache ana severe pains in the side. I doctored so much tiiat I became discouraged. A school friend told me how very much Peruna had benefited her and I sent out for a bottle, which did more to relieve me than all the other medicine I have ever I Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bnlk. Beware of the dealer Who tries to sea "something just as good." fAPUDINE Cour v CURES Stomach ? AND . . Indigestion 10, 25 and 5^c. at Drugstores. So. 13. 1 PAV SPOT CASH FOR ?ttJKv LAND WARRANTS issued >0 soldier* c? :?ny war. Also Soldier*' Addition*! Horjefe?d Jrii?lit8. Write me at nee. FKASK U. RiiO/.R. P.O. Box 1-tfi, Beuve ', Colo News of the Day. An electric fire pump is in use in Rnnon The irlpa ic tn nhtnn pnrrpnf for operating the motora from adjacent electric tram cables. The whole machine can be placed on a hand-cart or on a little two-wheeled wagon drawn by one horse. Its total weight, with accessories and two rnfen on the seat, is about a ton. A Frenchman, writing in Revenue Bleue of Paris regarding President Roosevelt as an orator notes the following characteristics: "A discourse for him is a veritable struggle. He has no little paper at hand; nothing but his memory and will to aid him. He neither recites nor improvises. His speeches are a singular mixture of conversation, political harangue and preaching." IS NOT A ( BUT IT CURES Rf And all diseases arising frntn impurili Injure the digestive organs, tatarrh, disappear under the powerful blootl put TWO BOTTLE Gentlemen:?I take pleasure In bearln of your " Khedmacide. Two bottlea cur be of any benefit to you In advertising yoi Tours truly, W. H. RAND, AH Druggists, Ji.oo, 01 Bobbitt Chemical Co., yburs/bra ( ISED CAT is, Weakening Enenr 1 Suffer Needlessly F MK<. EVA BAKTHO. t MK<. ANNA MARTIN. [ POTATOES : I LwffittKiwfrufSMdPotitattliAmfrln. i [ , l 'Tkr*'Kar?l XcW Yarl.er"s-lTeaKaly?;r"? Ear. . I lr \VW<?nn?Li a >i#ld of 74? ba. per u. l'rlre* | 1 | dirt cheap. Vnaimath seed hook ilndsnmpleof < i Teoalate,Hltrltt'ilacnronl Whcut, 08 bu. per < I f ft.. Olant Clover, tt'-.ujoa reeelrt of |0c pottage. I ? JOHN A. PAT.ZERHEEDCO. UCnmc. ffle. Iwvvvvvwvvwwwivvwvwt e$25 Every Day Can be easily made with our Well Augers & Drills On# man and one home required. We are the only niakera of the Tiflln WellBonne and Rock-DnUing SJachine. Warraated the 15- -t oa Earth! Many of onr customers make from $80 to $40 a day* Book and Circulars FS?E. Adrtrcos. LOOMIS MACHINE CO.. TIFFIN, OHIO. Fill'IT IHKEf. OKMUKMAI, llttt;* 8TRAWBKUIIV FLAX 18. M1KIU .HOM> CRAPE VI.\E& A8PARAGl'S. ETC. ry"r*tnlogu^ ??nt on ?oop;icatlon. A nice lot of I -fl.Arna awJ U.aaail lMt mni.ll. RaaL. Kaill blnndrd < orfcrrls and Pailela at ?1 each. Also pure TOI.AND CHINA aHOATS. three monthi Id at (4.0U eaah. J.D WATKIXff & II HO... Hallsboro. Va. Hj rfgs? YO'W Wlb. PIK? T im*? i Jk tyfi M WATtRPSOCF OlkCP CUOfHIMC LVWYWHfcRt. \ =7 TVbejt irvlcn^jiilWiwrtrcnarid ?jmtyoeven jeers experience how f*s<fc TOWER'S ilictcn Coabond Hob fa/ran the world cw Thty air radcin I block or jtllowfor all kirds of wtt work. TOffJrt #rrf?WQf Jarmefl teornjbeilGNOf iim THE rl3H d ft.1 yantoedto givex& 1JQft bfecti?A!l rdailc dealers xlftKein. ... A.J.TWH CCLIQ57Ci.Hbi.ttiA. ILL Willi) TOitlCAMP(JU(Ca,LiadcimOHTO.CAA wmiA :URE-ALL, HEUMATISM rs in the* hlocd. It positively wilt not Kidney, Lirrr and Stomach troubles ifying qualities of this medicine. S CURED. Raleigh, N. C. ft testimony to the curative properties eil my son ot a bad case. If this will ir meritorious remedy, you can use it. Stctrard, 2V". C. Institution for Blind. r expressage prepaid. - Baltimore, rid., U. 5. A. J 1 UearHeacf ] 1-SELTZER, VTjHE&p: vj \ r . ; ARRH V to Women?Many lrom This Cause. aken. I used it faithfully for two weeks, ma it completely cured me. I have not lad any pains gince, anywhere, but feel ike h new woman. I am truly thankful or what Peruna has done for ine."?Bar jara Alberty. v^.vwv%.v^.vwwwwwvwwvwwwv%'v%^ Mr*. Kolc Mann, 806 Bathnrst Street, r?r<?nto, Onr, Cau., Vice President of the L.ndle*' Aid Hoctefj, writes;?" I aru pleased o give praise to Peruna for the blessed relief found through-its use. I suffered for years vlth bUekacne and dragging,dowu pains and >ften had to go to bed and stay there when I vae so busy that I could illy be spared. It fas tborcforo a simple godsesd to ine when l-Vruna was brought to my notice. Every lrop seemed to give me new life, end every losi- made me feel much better, and I promsed myself tnat if I found that it cured mo I ivmtld advocate it so that other suffering vcjmen should know of it. I have been in ?er:ect health for one year, I enjoy work and pleasure because in stich line health, and no :rouble seem- too heavy to bear when yon are n good health. Peruna has simply been a household blessing, and 1 never will be wlth>ut it again."?Mrs. Kate Mann. VR?. KATF MANN. Mr*. Ann* Martin, 47 Hoyt <t., Urook ya, N. Y., wi !(? :?" Peruoa did so muon or ine that I feel It mr duty to recommend t to others who may bo simiUi.rly afflicted, tbout a year ago my health was completely uvken down, had backache, dizziness and ir e/ularitles. aud life seemed dark Indeed. A e had used Peruna in oar home as a tonic, ind for colds and catarrh, aud 1 decided to ry it for my trouble. In less than threo uontbs I became regular, my pains had en irely dlsippeared, and I am now perfectly s ell."?Mrs. Anna Martin. Mrs. Win. Hetrick, Kennard, Wasbingp ton Countv, Neb., writes: "I am nity-six years old and have not felt well since tfie Change of Life began ten years ago. 1 was tn misery somewhere most of the time. My back was very weak ind my flesh so tender it hurt ine to lean r.jg ><7am?? the hack of a chair. 1 had pain r jndor my shoulder blades, in the small of my back and hips. I sometimes wished myself out of this world. Had hot and :old spells, dizziness and trembling of theffmosj'and was losing tiesh all the time. After following your directions and tuking Peruna I now Jcel like a different person. ?Mrs. Wui. Hetrick. ?- ^ If you do not derive prompt and sntfriactory results ft oin the use of Peruna write Mb. it dnce to Dr. Hartma.n, giving a full statemffit of you.* case, and he will be pleased to rive you his valuable advice gratis. Peruna can be purchased for $1 per bottle it all first-class drug stores. . Addrestf Dr. Hartman, President *1 The* Flartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. Which ? | ? m A lean and potash-hungry soily wasted seed, wasted labor and idf^; gins?A MORTGAGE. Or, plenty off Potash r, in the fertilizer, many bales and a~ m"' busy gin--A BANK ACCOUNT. If^rp Grandma is m Mwlto Renera'^ R'^ 1 j think 9he will recommend B BLOOD SYRUP 9 H because she has tried it and knows it fit m cures. Been on market 50 years and i* xT reliable. Ychi try it. V '<} 60c and $1 00 at good druggists. Dr. [S Tfiacher's Liver Medicine (dry;, !i>cents. flfc B it's Dr. Thacher's. though. I Write our Consultation Department. H ;1 explaining symptoms, and receive free Si B confidential advice. Mm * THACHETt MEDICINE COMPANY vS flr Chattencoga. Tenn. Createst. Cheapest Food in Earth for 8heop, Swine* I Cattlofctc. | Will be worth $100 to yoo to read wbwt Siklxer'r cuMlOf ttjrt about r?p?. ; Billion Dollar Grass will positively make ran rich; 12 tow of ha.r toil lots cf fwufirp per acre, so * !?> broaei, Pcuoai, tfpelU, Xlacarool I wr.eat for urll, hot soils, CJ has. per | \ scTt. 2'K'.\ Centers 0?t?, V.A hut. per , \ ere wi I Troslatc", YiaiUs 100 1 EForthloNctlconnd 10o, wc null b.'tfcau.l'f on ! Id Farm Bfeo* 1 Kovtllict, fttJl/ worth to gc'.h sun |mrseepCO..^^; ^DROPSY k?> a 10 OATS' TE?A7*EJlT PBCL L7 *" xi Ears nadoDrspiy tad its pVtb. y plications a ipecialt> ^or PSr i fears with tea neat wasdernt 1 . I toccata. Hare cured many tbuM ^TC/jw and cuei. tmouama* lwpyfa'i.y U ItUata. 3a. mFSm.'S Taompion'a Eye titer