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r CURE BLOOD POISON, CANCER. . Aching Bono, Shifting Tain*, Itching Skin, Bitnplea, Bating Sore*, Etc. I? you have Pimples or Offensive Kruptions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Fruptions, or rash on the skin, Festering Swellings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any part of the body, old Sores. Boils, Carbuncles, Pains and Aches in Bones or Joints, llair or Kyebrows falling out. persistent Sore Mouth, Gums or Throat, then you have Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon ail Sores, Pimples and Krup tlons will heal perfectly. Aches ami Pains cease, Swellings subside and a perfect,never to return cure made. B.B.B. cures Canoers of ail kinds. Suppurating Swellings, Eating 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, $1 per , large bottle, including complete directions for home cure. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., 19 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. Since 1861 the Bible Society of Scotland has issued nearly 2"2,OOO.tOO copies of the Scriptures. F11S permanently cuicu..?o ....> nervousness alter lim day's uso of l>r. Kline's Groat NerveRestorer.titrial bottleand treatisefree I>r. R.h. Kline, Ltd., 931 ArchSt,,l'hila.,l>a. A married man always resents afh'ice from a bachelor. ^ Mrs.'Wiaslow's SoothlngSyrup lor children teething,soltea the gums, reduces inflamine -n..?.onoirt oin-uo wiiw) nnllf 9Ju? ahnfctlti UVU,Owa?o^mu,vu*v^ " ? Some people are so polite that it seems as thougn they want to botrow money. 1 do not believe Piso's Cure for Consutnptlonhasan equal for coughs and colds?Joss fc'.fcoYKB, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, IWj. X; Some people run into debt and then com' plain that they were pushed in. Putnam Fadeless Dyes color more goods, per package, than others. ?mi?55? mm?5555 Tired Out\ " I was very poorly and could B hardly get about the house. I was f tired out all the time. Then I tried 3 Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and it only I took two bottles to make me feel perfectly well."?Mrs. N. S. Swinney, Princeton, Mo. Tired when you go to bed, tired when you get up, tired all the time. i whv? Ynnp MnnH is im- a Tf kkj A VM* VAVW ?# .... g ?ure, that's the reason, ou are living on the border line of nerve exhaustion. Take Ayer's Sarsaparilla and be quickly cured. fiffcgS; Ask your doctor what ho thinks of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. lie knows all about till* grand old family medicine. Follow his advice and we will bo satisfied. j. C. Ateb Co., Lowell, Mass. The man who is everybody's friend is teueially his wor*t e?emv. Ask Tnnr Dealer For Allen's Foot-Caae, A powder to shake into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corns. Bunions, Swoolien. Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-.Eas0 makes new __ . or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and shoe stores. 25 cents. Sample mailed Fkee. Address Allen S. Olmsted. LcRoy, N. Y. Archibald Eyre, who writes the complete novel in the April Lippincott, is an English novelist whom the critics have booked for a sustained flight. His novel. "The Trifler," is both captivating and capital. The worst thing about being good-natured is that you are apt to be imposed uoon ThOUSll In t ee| t in matic pains, urinary too frequent urinary discharge teli ot kidneys out oi order. Doan's Kidney Tills cure all kidney Ills from common back-ache to dangerous diabetes. A. T. Ritenour. owner of the wood yard at 125 East Cork street, Winchester. Vs.. says: "Ever since I had la gripj>e I have been a sufferer from kidney troubles, which made themselves apparent in racking pains through the region of the kidneys and across the small of inv back. The pains were always severe, and sometimes so sharp and biting that they compelled me to take to my bod. The kidney secretions furnished further evidence of disorder. They were off color, irregular and painful of passage. Added to this there was an annoying weakness. The newspaper advertisements of Doan's Kidj ney Pills attracted rnv attention, and I r 1 procured a box of that remedy at Fra nek Baker & Sons' drug store. The {relief I experienced was magical. The pills lifted me from my bed of siekplaced me on my feet and made me ji well man. I can work as well as ?veri Doan's Kidney Pills, I believe, saved ^my life. They are a great remedy to stop kidney troubles resulting .from coldiS." A Free Tiuai. of this great kiclney medicine which cured Mr. Kitenour will be mailed to any part of the United States ou application. Address F^sterMllburn Co.. BptJalo. K. Y. Foi sale by all druggists. Price. SiKrppts per bo*. v k4 ' - ESSfc v.--. &ti . ' A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "CIRCUMSTANCES OF LIFE." The Kev. Dr. Frank Oliver Hall Say* We Mutt Learn How to Face the Pros- j perity n? Well an ttie JUuru tonni- j tions of This World. New Ygjik City.?The Rev. Dr. Frank Oliver Hall, pastor of the Church of the Divine Paternity, preached Sunday morning on "Facing the Circumstances of Life." He took his text from Philinpians iv: 12: "I know how to be abased, and I also know how to abound. 1 have learned the j secret." Dr. Hal! said: In other words, Paul said. "I have learned the secret of how to be independent of circumstances. I know how to face humble circumstances, and 1 know how to face prosperity." That is a great le-son. and ore which few men ever do learn. But it is a lesson which we all need to learn in order to preserve happiness, the integrity of caaiacter and to make the most of life. First?Let us look first for the secret of how to face humble circumstances. Kvery one stands in danger of being reduced to poverty. No matter how much you may possess to-day, on the morrow it may be all swept away. If you put your money in a bank the cashier may abscond with it and leave you with nothing but a book with certain hieroglyphics scribbled therein to indicate that you were once affluent. If you put your money in mining stocks, the ore may give out, or bad management may ruin the enterprise. If you invest in % railroad, a rival line may get all the traffic, or some unscrupulous speculator may wreck the business for his own enrichment. If you buy real estate, it may depreciate upon your hands, or a fire may sween awav vour holdings in a night. If you conclude to wrap your treasures in a napkin and hide it in a hole, some thief may discover and steal it. "So no matter how rich you may be, to-morrow you may be as poor as any. Proverbially, riche3 take to themselves winps and fly away. It is, therefore, extremely important that one learn the secret of how to face humble circumstances. What is the first step to be taken in this direction? (1) My firs; word of advice is this: Train yourself to work. Learn to be useful in some specific way. Learn to perform some service of importance so that you might be dropped down in any portion of the civilized globe absolutely without resources, and .vet be able at once to command at least the necessities of life from the community in which you find yourself, in rei turn for tiie service which you are able to render. I take it that this was one of the great j reasons foi the contentment of the man | who wrote the words of our text. He was j independent because be was a skilled work- | man, and knew how, by the use of his i hands, to command in any community the | necessities of life. The Jewish people were extremely wise in many directions, and their wisdom was nowhere more manifest than in the rule which they made as to the education of youth. Every Jewish boy, no matter what the circumstances of his 'ife, must be taught a trade. The boy Saul, although probably from an early age predestined by his parents to become a scholar, a teacher, a religious leader, was nevertheless taught to make tents. That is, he knew how to weave camel's hair and other material into the fabric of which tents were made. Thus, after his conversion to Christianity, when his worldly prospects were ruined, and he had cast in I liis lot with the poorest and humblest people on earth, he was, as far as it is possil ble for a man, independent. How was it ! that this man was able to travel over the ' world delivering his message to slaves and t j people without resources? When he went j j to a new community he at ouce sought j I work, and found it because he was skilled j : in making something which that commu- j j nity needed. He earned his bread by the . I work of his hands, and spoke his message | because he loved it. And when the peo- j pie to whom he spoke came to him out of ; gratitude and wanted to contribute to- j ward his supnort, lie accepted their hum- 1 ble gifts on tne principle that the laborer 1 ia imrtliv of hio hire, .and thanked them, i but repeatedly declared that such gifts were not necessary to his life. "For I am not in want," he said. '"1 can earn the j necessities of life." In what an enviable position such a man ; stands. How much better it WOllld be if i every religious teacher of our time had , , been taught some useful occupation by , which he could command the necessities of life. He might never be called upon to ; use his ability in that direction, but the ' possession of it would mean liberty. He , I would no longer be haunted by the fear j that if he did not conform his opinions to [ tho.-se of the church authorities the bread ; would be taken from the months of his children. The knowledge that he had pow- ! er to command bread for his family by the > toil of his hand- would give to him entire j freedom in search for truth and in uttering it. And if this is true of religions teachers < it is just as true of people in other depart- i j ments of life. Liberty is but .a dream for i any man Who must conform bis political ! opinions to those of his ennaloyer unless he j would see his supnly of food cut off. Many j a man in the business world works for and ! votes for measures in which he does not , believe, or becomes a n.arty to trickery and ! dishonesty, because these are for the in- ! terest of the employer, and unless he works ? . * 1 f :i_ 1 ior ine lrueresi ox nis employer w$ i.uuut | will lack food. Many a girl marries a man j she distrusts, or even despises, because she j must marry or become a pauper. Therefore let those who would find the j secret of independence in the face of hum- j Lie circumstances first learn to work, learn to command some useful occupation by j which they may win from the world the j necessities of life in return for honest and , worthy sen-ice. 2. Hut this :s not the whole of Paul's secret. For one who has known?prosperity ! to be obliged to face humble circumstances, | to maintain courage and cheerfulness, is : extremely difficult. How shall he be able i to do this? Let him meditate upon the relation of ; values. Paul had been a man of great i promise, and was on the high road to ' wealth and exalted position, but he lost it | all and came to associate with slaves and I people held in social contempt: he went ! oack to tent-making, and from being a re- j ligious leader became a common laborer, i Put his courage, instead of being dimin- j ished, was increased. Xo braver man ever ' lived. His cheerfulness was constant. When they had scourged him and placed : him in the torturing stocks he sang. Xo J pessimistic word ever escaped him. no j gloomy reflection can be found in his let ters. How did he escape gloom and do- ! spair under such circumstances? He had J learned the relation of values. "AH things j which once stood to my credit I have now, for Christ's sake, come to reckon as loss. More than that, I reckon everything eke as loss, on account of the exceeding value of knowing Jesus Christ my Lord. And i for Ilis sake I have lost everything, and reckon it all a? the merest refuse if I can but pain Christ, and be found in union with Him." Here was a nun who counted wealth, position, country, home, everything as so much refuse if only be couid feel that he possessed a true, honest Christlike character. 2. But that is not the whole of the secret. Listen. "I have learned the secret both to I>e tided and to be hungry, both to abound and to be in waut." How? Berau-e ' '-ave discovered that "I can do all It hi".!'; T[jua"that strengthened me." To the i who really believes in God, that vatchcs over hiin and loves him. the I he ready no such thir.p .as advar sily. i ( lie man of immense wealth .and _ aerosity. some man in whose oi l iwpJifitJy believe, were to ?erl? you out and say, "Come, serve me. 1 need . you. Go to work in my shop, or my vine- | yard; take up your residence in my house; what is mine shall be yours, and it shall be my care that you and yours do not suffet want." If you really believed in that man and trusted him, there could be no further anxiety on your part. Only as far as you disbelieved in him, only as far as you distrusted his honor or his generosity could you he anxious. Now the richest being in the universe, God who owns it all. has laid Himself under obligation to us by bringing us into the world. God has duties, as every moral being must have. If a father or a mother has duties toward m (2nd must have duties to ward t><. Ho has invited us to come and j livc in His house, yea. has brought us bora whether we would or not, and He has said in effect that, it we will do as well as we I ean He will care for us. Tt is only as far as we distrust the providence of God. or disbelieve in Ilis providence, tint anxiety can find a place in our lives. "Why are ye anxious?" ashed Jesus. "If God elothes the grass of the field and enre? for the birds of the air. shall Tie nor much mure care for you, 0 ye of litt'e faith?" But this is only one-half of Paul's secret. He had learned how to be abased, hut he had also learned how to abound. He had learned to face adverse circumstances, and he had also learned to face prosperity. We must all have known people who caine unscathed through adversity, and were afterward ruined by prosperity. Under the influence of good fortune they become conceited. arrogant and selfish. More people have been spoiled by wealth than by poverty: I have rome to feci that no greater evil can befall a young man or woman than to be rich through the effort of father or grandfather, and so be freed from the blessed necessity of winning one's own way. Those who struggle from poverty to affluence by learning first how to be abased af.i 1 fn nVinnnd Rut those terwr.iu xaiu uun ?* who begin in abundance are frequently spoiled bv possessing without effort what we are apt to call the blessings of life. Wealth may be a blessing, but poverty is oftener so. Jesus said: "Blessed are the poor." Now a poor man is not blessed because he is poor. If that were so how easy for any one of us to secure blessedness. But poverty urges to effort and effort opens the door to large attainment. How, then, may one cultivate and preserve such admirable qualities of character, the true riches of the soul, while facing prosperity? (1) Let him in the first place take a lesson in humility. We are apt to say of a wealthy man, "He is independent." It is a false saying. No man who lives in a civilized community is independent. The only , really indepcr.d"nt being is the savage man ' who lives bv himself in the wilderness, dressing in the skins of wild beasts and eating roots. The moment he exchanges his bear skin for a blanket he places himself under obligation to the man who raises the sheep, the man who cuts the wool, the man who spins the vim, the man who weaves the hlanket. The momeut he exchanges his diet of roots for one of bread he places himself under obligation to the farmer who raises the wheat, the reaper who cuts it. tihe miller who grinds it. and to thousand? of others whose busy brains and hands have constructed the instruments which make these processes possible. This truth is extremely far reaching. Not only for material wealth are we under obligations to our fellows, but also for our intellectual wealth. Others have labored end we h&ve entered into their labors. It is creditable for a man to study and possess the wisdom of the ages. But let him temf?er his pride in the abundance of bis intelectual possession with the thought that every ereat truth be 'earns has been discovered by another. Our abundance of ina-II-"*. 1 rlnrr mit" nt the iei:i*i:iuni ianv-? no.-. uw ^ solid rook by the mrn of the pa9t who labored jiv'th bleeding hands. And this is just as tru? of those spiritual riches which we value. Liberty of thought, how much has it cost in the suffering and mighty courage of men who have long since gone to their reward? The environment of our lives which conduces to purity of Imart, how much did it cost in the struggle of our ancestors out of a beastly state into dc- ! coney of living? Le! us pot be wise in our j own conceit, but in the midst of our alvand- j r.nec lcf us think humbly, sobeviy. aero-ding .as Cod has given unto us, through the ministrv of our fellow men. the measure of nil things which we possess. '2) Then as we face abundance, even as when we face wont, let us endeavor to appreciate the relation of values. Is the man who possesses wealth hotter than the man j who possesses nothing? Perhaps. But not ( because he possesses wwilth. Istheunivcr- j flity graduate, the man who possesses intel- 1 lectual riches, better than the man who has j rever been to school? May be. But not j became he is a univers.' y graduate. The | man who possesses much and is stings* is j worse than u!-c man who possesses little j and is stingv. because there mav be an ex? cuse for fiie s'cin?*uie-s 01 in<* man ?tu? ivi- | only a crust and faces starvation, but there is no excuse for tiie man who goes on adding barn to barn or thousands o. dollars to other thousands, while his neighbors hunper. There mav be excuse for the ignor- | ant man for not trying to advance the in- : tellectoal standards of the community in I which he lives. He has nothing to give, no capital to work with. But there is no excuse to be made by the man mho has had all thp advantages that the colleges rffor.l, for doinp nothing for the world. He has power and should use it. The only r^hes wor'h while are in the character. Use your abundant nos-essions to help build the kingdom of Cod. a? the workman uses ins tools to construct a wa1! or to build a bridge. So shall your dollars be transformed info character, and your intellectual achievements minister to ethical attainments. (3) Finally learn to ia"e prosperity by continually acknowledging that what you seem to possess you do not really possess at aH. You arc onlv a ti-ustee of a nortion of the estate which belongs to God. I i possess so many golden dollars. How beau- j tifnl tlicv are. how substantial, how en- | during. Set* me oluteh them. They are mire. I will hold them. Xothine shell roh me of them. Xothing? Wait. Shortly this kind of mire which clutches so firmly shall he palsied in death and later crumble to dust. The grasn upon the gold shall he loocened. Mine? It was never mine. Out of God's eartli it came. In God's earth no human power ran prevent its ultimately returning. "Xnked came I into the we'd, and naked shall I depart thither." Tonight, may be, that journey shall commence. TIow absurd, then, to talk of my possessing wealth. 7k:t thee is one posse- ion which we I shall keen, and which shili endure as long I as we endure. Character shall endure, be- i cause my character is myself. If one lias | learned love, tlint shall abide. Parity of heart, honesty of purpose, kindness of lit"? shall endure, for these he'one to the_ ho mortal soul of man. ^m<t .testis. rnc 1 man who in lite snirit of love ministers to | the sick. clothes the naked, feeds the hui- j pry. visits the prisoners, he and he alone j shall hear the voice of Him avho sitteih upon the throne, sayinp. Tome ye blessed, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.' " ?? From Everlasting to Everlasting. From whatever angle the love of Christ is regarded, it is unspeakable. It is unspeakable in its length. It had no beginning; it knows no break; it has no end. The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting. It is unspeakable in its breadth. It includes each and all. It is like a benediction upon every soul. It is unspeakable in its depth. It saves to the uttermost. .And it is unspeakable in it* height. It makes us joint heirs with C'hrra*. kinps and priests with God forever.?A. .1. F. liehrends. The very personification o: envy is that | which the Iienpeckvd husband and the bachelor who has be%a J reappointed JP love I feel for fs.ch other. \ ( - / I DAN GROSVI i "Pe-nwia is an Exce Remedy?I am as HON. D.1N. A. OROSVENOR, OF ' Hon. Dan. A. Grosvenor, Deputy Auditor f< from Washi gtou, D. C., says: " Allow me to express my gratitude one bottle of i'eruna. One week has br nou? a* icell an ever. Besides being one an excellent catarrh remedy."?DAS'. In a recent letter he sayss "I consider Per una really more mt you last. I recti ra numerous letters country asking me If my certificate i yes."?Dan, A. Grosvenor. A County Commissioner's Letter. j Hon. John Williams, County Commis- ct sioner, of 517 West Second street. Duluth, ai Minn.. says the following in regard to Pe* J< runa: "As a remedy for catarrh I can cheerfully recommend Peruna. I know what it is to suffer from that terrible disease and L I feel that it is my dutv to speak a good t( word for the tonic that brought me imme- tl ? !! AntA fhor, USt JfllLUHS s, The boaster doesn't have to be loaded to shoot off his roouth. J , Catarrh Cannot He Cured W With local application", as thoy cannot reach ; ? the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood j \ orconstitutional divas?, and in order to cure j it you must take internal remedies. Hall's ! Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. _ M It was prescribed by ono of the best physi- ; ? elans in this country for years, and Ls a reg- ; ular prescription. It is composed of the 1 best tonics known, combined with the best g 'blood purifiers, acting directly on the niu- j V cous surfaces. The perfect combination of J * the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. r. F. J. Cheney A Co.. Props., Toledo, O. , Sold by druggists, price, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. 1 | The Great Rhe I SPRING BLOO ff Positively cures r.ll dismsvs arising from impuri S {ion. Chronic Constipation, Kidney and Liver Irou! En powerful blood purifier every Spring. You need it. \ | RHEUMS *3 BEWARE OF DANGEROl |n RHEUMACIDE benefits instead ofinittringthe d Jj RHEUMACIDE is a powerful alterative, but old peo; < Price $i.oo at Druggists, or express O. Bobbltt Chemical Co., ... IBSwi I LIVER AMD BL i has been curing people afflicted just preparation for toning up the system. What you need is just this medic well as ours that you take it at one 50c and $1.00 per bottle. Dr. Thach Yes, your drugget sells it. Be s 1% Write our Consultation Departrr receive free confidential advipe. Mimm MEDIO,# G3? 9 > / ? I f vrr y St ENOR SAYS: \ llenl Spring Catarrh lAf~ll P.. 99 wen as ever. THE FAMOUS OHIO FAMILY. or the War Department, in a letter written to you /or the benefit derived from ought wonderful changes and 1 am of the very best spring tonics it is A. GROSYESOR ritorlous than I did when 1 wrote from acquaintances all over the [a genuine. I invariably answer iate relief. Peruna cured me of a bad ise of catarrh, and I know it will cure ay other sufferer from that disease."? ohn Williams. A Congressman*! Letter. Hon. H. W. Ogden, Congressman from ouisiana. in a letter written at Washing>n, D. C., says the following of Peruna, le national catarrh remedy: okee Remedy of Sweet 0 hs, Colds, LaGrippe & Jf apudine Cures Nervousness AliO NEF.VCUS HEADACHE. )o., '2 tie. and 30i*. at Drugstores. CANDY CATHAHTIC^^f S. 1>rtL27*xU lauiae stamped C C C. Never sold in balk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." "l?E$s^?f$ I mmmmr 1 ismatic Cure rt mmitiCD I u r v k\ i e 9m sm. k ties in the blood, including Catarrh, Indiges- I He*, etc. Every person-in the lard needs a B ,'ou want the best?the standard. That is iCIDE,. JS SUBSTITUTES. ?j igestive organs as many so-called medicines do. I, )!e or children can take it with absolute safety. I prepaid on receipt of price. .J Baltimore, Hd.. U. S. A. ? Does'nt that word ex- Q|| j ss your condition? Ww j in'tyou depressed, d and all fagged out ? WR iiver stop to figure out jh;;| / you feel that way, ragj ' how you can get over 1 Well, we have done . fpfi thinking for you and i give you relief. For SHIR'S 1 000 SYRUP U as you are. It's the greatest ftaSg building new blood and muscles. :ine, and it's your advantage as e. Commence taking it today. R5| ler's Liver Medicine (dry), 25c. ure it's Dr. Thatcher's, though. lent, explaining symptoms, and jgtSJ , Shaffanooga, Tenn. ij| 5B| ? yW "1 can conscientiously recommend your Peruna as a fine tonic an t all around good medicine to tha*r who are in need of a catarrh rem- dy. It Uae been com mended to me by people who have used it as a remedy par- * licularly effective in the cure of catarrh. For those who need a good catarrh medicine 1 know of nothing better."?H. W. Or,den. w. f.. urimin, conca.t, aexas, writes. "I suffered from chronic catarrh for many years. I took Peruna and it con>plctely cmed me. 1 think Peruna is the est medicine in the world for catarrh. My general health is much improved by it? use. gs 1 am much stronger than I nav? been fir years."?W. E. Griffith. A Congressman's l etter. Congressman II. Bowen, Kuskin, Tazewell County, Ya., writes: "1 can cheerf ully recommend your valuable remedy.Peruna, toanyone who in Buffering with catarrh, and who la in need of a permanent and j effective cure."?H. Bowen. Mr. Fred. D. Scott, Larue, Ohio, Right ; Guard of Hiram Football Team, write?: " | "As a ipecific for Jung trouble I place j Peruna at the head. I have used it myself for colds and catarrh of the bowel?, and it is c. splendid remedy.- It restore? yjf vitality, increase? bodily strength and niaK-* a sick person well in a short time. 1 givt Peruna my hearty indorsement/'? " 3 Fred. D. Scott. G-ra. Ira C. Abbott, fiOU M street, N. W,, Washington, D. C., writes: "I am fully convinced that your remedy I is an excellent tonic. Many of ray friend* have used it with the most beneficial results for coughs, colds and catarrhal trouble."?Ira C. Abbott. Mrs. Elmer Fleming, orator of Reservoir Council No. 168, Northwestern Legion of Hon^r, of Minneapolis, Minn., write? from >2 2C35 Polk street, N. E.: "I have ^ troubled^ all m^j my head. I took* relieve ttU?rfor| | forms Peruna is* ^ / ;j the medicine of the^ age. It cures when* all other remedies) recommend Peruna' ** > 1 as a catarrh reme-jMrs. Elmer Fleming,; 7 dy." ? Mrs. Elmer? Minneapolis, Minn, j Fleming. %???%????%????????, Treat Catarrh in Sprtag, The spring is the time to treat tatarrb. / | Cold, wet winter weather often retard? a cure 01 caxarru. n a iouiw ux irmu * ... : ? taken during the early spring months tbo cure will be prompt and permanent. Thar* . can be no failures if Peruna is taken inteQ^ gently during the favorable weather of spring. '' l?JH As a systemic 'atarrh remedy Penaa eradicates catarrh from the system wherever it may be located. It cures catarrh ' of the- stomach or bowels with the saiso, certainty as catarrh of the head. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna writ* at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full state. ment of your case, and lie will be jileasoi ' to give you his valuable advice gratis. ' /v Address Dr. Hartman, Presiderit of Th? i Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus/ Ohio. ''/"Sj ium and Mullein B^rdyGEm it and Lung Troubles. Thoroughly tcstooi ars. All Druggists. 2Jc, fiOc and Sl.OOx M Potash ^ is net complete.' I C.:ir books are complete t muses JH. sgisss if jJ?'*<4 UNION MACE 1 > W. L. Dcuglzx ntakaa and r.offm / . fitwe r.-rtin'ss Ooodyear Walt (Hnnw~ Ssjvrsd Procaaa) shcoa than-any cthar manufacturer In the world. $25,000 REWARD will ho pall *o anyone who K*y TSi can disprove this statement. fpfBecause \V. L. Douglas ,^a Isthe largest manufacturer SSy^Kl jw he can buy cheaper ami in : Zt3m produce Ins shoes at a ' >y lower cost than other < on-r * reriH. which enables hins _/f to sell shoes for $.>.50 ami i $3.00 equal in even- /?fev way to these soM els The Dou?!as secret prv WmSwJsTwKJvi9 cess of tannin* the bottom solei produces absolutely pare leather; more flexible and wlU wear lonifpr than any other tann nee in the world. The sales have more than doubled the post four years, which proves its superiority, why no* t rive W. I.. Douglas shoes n trial and save money. Sutler Inrrru.p riMM Sales: S4.30Jll*S3,tt In ltii.liio.nl \I002Salt**: .**.?,Oil J A ciln of in Fonr Years. W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 CILT EDCE LINK* Worth S3.CC Co'tipare-J */!th OtharMakM* , Ti'.e best i ur>r-.e1 on I American leathers. Iiegr$ Patent C'i!~ Enr.nei. Six Calf. Calf. Vtei Kid. Corma Cjlt. and Ma mnai Kanqaron. Fast Color Eyelets. . Pvt'ihn ? -n-e trenuino have W. L. DGUGLA? Uil'J .c'l! name and price stamped on bottom. _ ^ w'"j matt. V.c. f-d!t . I"m. i ataioyjmr. , TV. I- OOI'OIjAS, UKOVKTOft,-MAttO, "^OROPSY 'I J 10 OATS' TiUTMEiT fSEL Uav# mado C:cpsy and its coo* icationa a specialty for twenty jars witl' tno zaest voadarfQ icccss. IIa7s curod ciiaj thou* id casts. B E7..H.3. SZSXH'atOM ?n n Atlanta, 3% So. 14. Y ? V I PAY SPOT CASH FOR } miliBOaL^TT LAND WARRANTS ; Issued to soldiers of any wcr. Also Soldiers' Addh tiorsl Homestead Kl?ht?. Write m# at once. IBAKK H. BliGr.K. P. O. B'. x Its, Denser. Cola til CBRCS WHERE AU EU( FAILS. PIT WJ Best Couxb Syrup. Tastes OooC. use M Prl in t!me. Sold by d rmnrtat*. t?i