Left Money for Oild rarposn,
Two hundred years ago John How
of Guildford, England, left property
real or personal, upon curious terms
Its incomo was t? reward "the female
domestic who remained at least twc
years In one situation within the borough,
and who should throw the highest
number with two dice In competition
with nnother aspirant for the
money"?that is to say. It was to encourage
fidelity of service and, It must
tfe feared, a spice of gambling. So the
other day Clara Howard and Florence
Ansell, both of whom had been In one
? iv.v w * CI vif, 111 H UIB, linen u^aiuat
one another, and Clara, casting seven
to Florence's five, received a check for
twelve guineas ($60.)
An Illuatrlout Quartet*
Many years ago there was tried In
Indiana a very interesting case from
the fact that each one of the four
lawyers retained, although then not
known outside of their own state, yet
within twelve years enjoyed a national
reputation.
The members of the legal quartet
became illustrious were Gen. Harrison,
who became president of the United
States; Thomas A. Hendricks, who became
vice president; David Turpie,
who was United States senator, and
Walter Q. Gresham, who rose to the
circuit bench and filled two posts in
President Cleveland's cabinet.
Dog Una Tobacco 11 olilt.
Monte, a fox terrier from the Dlemton
kennels, has the tobacco habit. Slu
uses the weed after the fashion kuowr
as the poor man's smoke.
When she sees her master smoking a |
cigar or cigarette she whines and begs
until he blows the smoke in her face.
Then she goes beside herself with delight,
dancing and biting at the smoke
and lapping it with her tongue.
When she has had a good sinoke she
likes to go to the vichy bottle to draw
herself a drink.
The dog is owned by Dr. M. It. Palmer.
a police surgeon, who resides on
Seventh avenue.?New York Times.
Berlin has 63 public monuments and
is making ready for some more.
The host men are not always In the biggest
places. So. 15.
"TO YOUNG LADIES,
From tho Treasurer of tho
Young People's Christian Tem5>eraiice
Association, Elizabeth
Jaiue, Fond du Lac, Wis.
i
"Pkar Mns. Pinkham: ? I want to
tell you and all the young ladies of the
country, how grateful 1 aui to you for
all the benefits I have received from
using I.vdiu E. l'inkhum's Vegetable
Compound. 1 buffered for
MISS ELIZABETH CAINS,
eight months from suppressed menstruation,
and it effected my entire
system until 1 became weak and debilitated,
and at times felt that I had a
hundred achc3 iu as many places. I
only used the Compound for a few
weeks, but it wrought a change in mo
which I felt from the very beginning.
I have been very regular since, have no
pai 11s, and find that my entire body is
as if it was renewed. I gladly recomwn,.rwl
1?? I." DI..IO. -*<
j bj* a in n 11 < I III n 1
table OoinpounU to everybody."?
Wish Ei.izakktji Caink, 6l> W. Division
St., Fond du Lac, Wis.?$5000 forftit if
mbot'fi testimonial Is not genuine.
At such a time the ^rentest aid to
nature is Lydla E. Pinkhnm'j
Vegetable Compound. It prepares
the young system for the mning'
change, and is the surest reliance for
woman's ills of every nature.
Mrs. Pinkliani invites all
young women wlio are ill to
write Iier for free advice. Address
Lynn, Muss.
P<KU$52.
UNION MADE.
^8^ Sola l>y 6j Douglas Stores in I
\\ "'-^Ti ??l American iitics. and the beat H i
J(CT' :H retail shoe dealers everywhere. H
Ik fj (an! inn! 'Die genuine have H
fw ~Ja W. I.. Douglas' naino and price B
stamped on the bottom.
?2 A'otlcr Increase of infer in table belour R
I B^laBaaMracBa
' V' B
1W01) ? 1,'25?,7.yi Pairs.
fcaeaeeoEK*Be?cjcv_.^aa
VMH-= Pairs.
B islncss More Than Doubled In four Tears. I
r* and sell, mor men's fl |
And s I ..'aielini-* than anv oilier twnni.vnutuetnrvrii. }1
W.l. ltoUMlaef:. .00 Aid ll.to shoe* placed side hy I
side w llh *5 no and Ja.oo sum s of other mnVes am I
found to t>' (net n< good. I l ev will outwear two I
pull e of ordinary $t 00 and is.M shoes.
I Ma da of the best leathers, Including Patent I
Coramt Kid. Corona Colt and Kational Kangaroo. V
ftil Color I?relet* end Aletp llleek ItoeLa I **4. I
W.I.. noM(lea as "Ollt I 1 re I.lee" reaeol be equelleS. I
Sluieslir msll.liilrU.rstrn. Cslnlna I
B. B. B. SENT FREE. . 1 J
Corn Blood und Skin Disease*, Cancers,
Bone l'alns, IIcHIuk Ilmnon, Ktc.
fionil no money, simply try Botanic Blood
Balm at our expense. B. B. B. cures
1 IMirtttlnti oonltfiv conlv {fnlilm* IVvitmn
Ulcers, Eating fiores, Scrofula, lllood
I'oison, Bono Pains, Swellings, llheumatism,
Cancer, and all Blood nnil Skin
Troubles. Especially advised for ehrouio
eases that doctors, patent medicines and Hot
Springs fail to euro or help. Druggists,
$1 per largo bottlo. To prove it cures
B. B. B. sent free by writing Blood Balm
Co., 12 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Oa. Describe
trouble and frco medical advice sent in
sealed letter. Medicine sent at onco, prepaid.
All wo ask is that you will speak a
good word for B. B. B. when cured.
If a man wants to keep his good name
he'd better not have it engraved ou his
umbrella.
A Natty Practice.
A nasty practice is what the Chicago Inter
Ocean calls the pasting of repeated layers
of wall paper, one upon another, thus
covering up the tilth and germs of disease
thnt may bo propagated In the very absorbent
and decaying moss of flour paste, paper,
animal glue, colors, etc.
They give opinions of eminent health officers
and sanitarians, urging that such practice
should be stopped by legal enactment,
and also take occasion to say that tlieso
sanitarians recommend Alnbostino i?s a durable,
pure and sanitary conting for walls.
The Inter Ocean says: "This is a very important
question, and. as it costs nothing to
avoid this danger, why take any chances?"
How much of the alarming spread of smallpox
and other diseases may be due to unsanitnry
wall coverings?
The planetoids, of which there arc over
300 known, have all been discovered since
January 1, 1801.
Ncnltoiird Special ltnto*.
623.10 to Dallas, Texas, and return, account
I of the Confederate Veterans ltu-union.
Tickets ou sale April 18th, 111th, and 20th,
| good to return until May 2d, by depositing
| ticket with joint agent at Dallas, an oxteui
si.>n of linal limit can be obtained until May
! 15th, 1902. At a meeting of tin* Mecklenburg
' Camp of the Confederate Veterans, held in
I . tin munii mu, 11 wiis uuillliniousiy
I voted to use the Seaboard Air Line Knute,
iiinl the Seaboard lias arranged for speeinl
ivirs, 1 iotli Sleeper ami Day conches. For
I further information cnll on or address A. V.
liarrill, P. A T. A., 23 South Tryou htrcet,
Charlotte, N. ('.
It must ho the spur of tlie moment that
i makes time go so fast.
111 n g Worm Knitted.
"Rend box of Tetterlne. It's the only thine;
that makes any impression on a stubborn
King Worm." Mfs. Katie Olilliam, Montaliui.
Andersen County, Texas. ,r?0e. |<y inni'
from .1. T. Shuptriae, Savaunnli, (la., if your
| druggist don't keep it.
The grindstone is one stone that's never
1 left unturned.
Tyner's Dyspepsia Itemedy Cures Sour
Stomach and Head nolle. At Druggists, 50c.
Most men like to be told that they arc
working too hard.
The more you flatter some people the
more they rise in their own estimation.
FITS permanently cured. No fltsornorvons*
ness after llrst day's uso of Dr. Kline's Ore it
Nerveltostorer.$2 trial bottle and trentisofred
Dr. It. 11. Ki.ink, l.lil., 'Jill Arch St.. I'liiln., l'.i.
The man who feels that he is fully appreciated
has yet to he horn.
It requires no experience to dye with Pcrj
nam Fadbi.khn Dykh. Simply boiling your
goods in the <lyo is nil that is necessary.
Sold by all drtfggtets.
Atlsa was probably the first fellow to be
called a man of the world.
riso's Cure cannot he too highly spoken of
' ns n cough euro.--J. W. O'JIhikn, J'J'J Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. (>, 1'JOU
The favorite air of the average girl is a
: n;illionnire.
The largest order of merit in the world
is the French la-gion of Honor, which now
ha* reached half a million members.
llriit For tlie Itowsli.
No matter what ails you, hotulacho to .?can cer,
you will never got well until your bo woU
are put right. Carca ukth holp nature, cure
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
i natural movements,cost you just 10cents to
start getting vour health back. Cahcareta
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up In metal
boxes, every tablet lias C. C. C. stamped oa
It. l'cware of imitations.
Camels arc the only annuals that cannot
swiiA.
Cnlnrrli Cannul be ( nrril
With local applications, ns thev cannot roach
the scat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutional disease, and in order to cure it
you most take internal remedies. hairs Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, and acts directly
on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is not a quark medicine. It was
prescribed by one of the host physicians in
this country for years, and is a regular prescription,
It is composed of the best tonics
known, combined w itli the best blood purifiers,
acting directly en the tnueous surfaces. 'i lie
perfect combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results in curing
catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
t\ Ciii nky ,v Co.. Crops., Toledo, O.
Sold by Pruggists, price, 75".
i Hall's Family Pills are the host.
I Weak?]
^ 44 I suffered terribly and was ex- X
I trcmely weak for 12 years. Tlie
doctors said my blood was all
turning to water. At last I tried
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and was soon
feeling ail right again."
Mrs. J. W. Fiala, Hadlyme, Ct.
No matter how long you
have been ill, nor how jj
poorly you may be today, H
I Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the 1
best medicine you can jj
take for purifying and en- 0
riching the blood.
Don't doubt it, put your jj
whole trust in it, throw g
away everything else.
SI 00 a koflle. All drngtlsls. j|
Auk your doctor wlint he ?Klnk< of Ayor's B
SaraapartUa. Ilr know* all about this i:ran<I B
old family medicine. Follow lilt advice ai..i 0
I we will be sntlsHeil.
J. C. Avku Cc.. 1/owcll, Mass. B
McALLEN s business college, &nn0 ?:
Kucceiaful School. Wo ma'arln Oataloflir free.
I j Thompson's Eye Water
*
FIRE AT ARP'S HOUSE
The Alarm Made Bill Get a Move On
Him.
.
iCHIMNEY SOOT CAUGHT ON FIRF i
Water Poured on Soon Put Out Blaze
,
in Kitchen?Arp Gives Some l-ire |
Statistics.
Fire and water and air. The throe
things that eost the least and are the
most necessary to our existence are the
most dangerous when unrestrained.
Last Sabbath evening my wife and 1
walked down to Jessie's house to comfort
her in her sick bed, and play with
llin ?...l V.~l.. -
V..X. milt OHIO ttuil nil l?f IMC lllll"
baby boy. Suddenly the fire bell gave an
alarm and my wife walked out on the
veranda to find out where the fire was.
In a moment she came hurrying back
and almost screamed. "It's our house?
it's our house; run quick. Oh! mercy."
1 threw the baby down on the floor?
no. I didn't eithor?and departed those
roasts with salaerity. Firemen and
people were hurrying that way. I
struck a fox trot for awhile, but sot*
relaxed into a fast walk, and then a
slow pull up the hill, for I felt my palpitation
coming on. Ilefore 1 reached
the mansion 1 met some of the advance |
guard returning, who said the fire was |
out. So I sat down on the front steps j
to blow for a minute. When I went I
through the hall to the kitchen where |
the commotion was, 1 found our daughters
and some good friends still
drenching the smoking walls and
pouring water down the fine up in the
garret. The accumulated soot of- twenty
years had caught on tire ana somehow
get to the lathing and then to tiie
roiling and dropped down to the floor.
Nobody was at home. The cook was in
her cabin asleep. Her little boy was sit- j
ting on the back steps and when our j
girls arrived he very quietly pointed to
the kitchen and said: "Dar's a fire in ;
Mar." Then they heard the cracking
(lames and saw smoke pouring through ,
j a broken pane. On opening the door
they were astounded, for the whole
room seemed ablaze. One ran to tho
front door and streamed "Fire, fire,
fire." ni.il tho-nlhnr u-i.nt t > tl... i. 1..
phoiu and then t'noy Hew to the water j
faucet and good neighbors gathered in
nri< 1 filled the buckets and went to
| work. They were just in time, for a
de1.ay of ten minutes would have caused
the loss of the house and all of our
time-honored furniture an I pictures
jand books and my wife's tine clothes
and golden wedding presents. When 1
left Jessie's house my wife hailed mo i
on the run and said save something,
| but I am not certain whether it was
, iier fine dresses in the wardrobe or her
silverware in the dark closet or her
Iliblc. 1 reckon it was the Bible that
she has read a chapter in every night
for all these long years. I had a good
old Baptist aunt in Home and when
her house caught on fire away in toe
i night and the firemen came running i
she ran out in her night clothes and
i begged them to save her Christian lni
dex. She had a stock of them and treas- ,
! tired them more than anything else.
Our good old professor. Charles F.
I F. McCoy, of Franklin college, used to
lecture to us students, anl his favorite
subject was 'The Regularity of Irregular
things." and lie satisfied me
that the longer my lions-' escaped a lire
tile more I was liable to have one. The
chances against me incro.se! as the
I years rolled on, and so i have been cx|
pecting a fire. The insurance companies
understand this and base all their
calculations and rates upon it. Thvy
i will tell you what is the average life of
i a dewlling. a store, a gin. a planing
I mil or a church. The professor illusi
trated with a dice box and said if you
; cast the dice a dozen times the six
! spot might come up three or four times
j in succession and the /ip? ewr.ni
j times. but if you < aset the dice a thousand
times, each number from one to i
I six would show up about an equal nurn- ]
ber of times. That is according to tho
i calculation of chances and proves the j
! regularity of irregular things. So it is"
i with the rainfall which, however tin- i
certain in its coming, amounts to
; about the same every year. Since lSS3j
the losses by Are in the United States]
have averaged $105,000,000 a year, the
lowest being $100,000,000 and the high-'
est $110,000,000. and yet In 1871 the loss
in Chicago alone was $200,000,000.
But where did fire come from and
: who gave it and when. There is no .
mention of fire in the Mosaic account
of the creation nor for two thousand I
' years after it. Cnt.il after the flood
there was not much need of fire, for
the pc >t'h> were not permitted to eat
meat. Their food was the fruit of the
! earth. Hut I reckon they did have fireand
blacksmith shops and made hammers
and hoes and nails, etc. N nli
could no* have built the ark without
j tools and nails. The presumption is
; that the Creator supplied Adam with
tools to dress the garden and Abel
with knives to sacrifice the firstling? 1
of bis flock, but there are Indian tribes
in our day and negroes in Africa and ,
Esquimaux in the Arctic regions w'm ,
have no knowledge of iron or its uses.
1 A thousand years before Christ. Homer ;
I wrote that Jupiter only possessed tar
element that we rail fire and wh< n
man was created man he refused to
give him fire. But Prometheus stolr j
i nme from heaven and gave it to man
and it made Jupiter so mad that he
chained him to a rock and sent eagles
1 t > cat his liver out and as fast ns tliev
eaf it by dnv ft>e liver grew again hy
night, hut finally lie was unchained I
i and the eagles driven away. It seems
I that Prometheus was a friend to m n(
kind, and hy the command nf JupIC r
; actually created man o>-t cf the mud
; that was left after the flood not Vr>- ,
aii's food, hut the flood of Deucalion
away hark in the ages. Ho was a gorl
! noarlv as powerful as Jupiter and was
I alwavs in a quarrel with him. Mo.
taught mankind arohitoeturo, nstron >mv.
figures, moiioine. navigation and
all the arts that adorn life. At Athens
and other an< ient eities. temt)les were
hullt to his honor. They believed that
the very fire that he brought down
from heaven was still preserved and
was always burning on an altar in the
temple of Vesta. It Is railed the snored
fire?the Vestal fire?the fire of the
I hearthstone a id must not he allowed
! to go out. If it does go out from arei1
dent even the family who loses It must
>
go to the temple of Vesta, and get a
new supply.
Of course all those "stories about the
pods are superstitious, but they are
very fascinating nets and old Homer
still stands 0.3 the greatest pOet, and
ranks as the equal of Shakespeare or
Milton. That reverence for sacred fire
is not yet extinguished, and it is said
that the Roman Catholic priesthood
burn candles in their cathedrals day
and night because the custom was
handed down from the ancient churches
and those rhurrhes probably pot it
from Grecian and Roman mythology.
Anyhow, we know that the Jews had
great reverence for fire, for they had
iu woe il in uit'ii m:'riiiirs, nun uoa appeared
to Moses in a burning bush and
descended on Mt. Sinai in fire and the
Israelites were guided through the wilderness
by a pilar of fire by night, and
fire came down from heaven and destroyed
Sodom and Gomorrah and
many other important events wore
marked by fire. In our young days
when there were no matches it was no
sure or certain thing to find fire on the
hearthstone every cold morning that
came. Some times the live chunk that
was buried in the ashes at bed timo
went out or was burned up. and then
one of the boys had to go to a neighbor's
and borrow fire. It was alway3
called borrowing fire, for it was reasonably
expected that the neighbor
would sometimes find himself in the
same condition. The Cherokee Indiaus
made fire by rubbing two hard dry
sticks together with great rapidity. 1
have seen little Indian boys do it very
quickly, and I tried to imitate them,
but I failed.
But if the good pure vestal fire came
from heaven I reckon old Satan got
some of it when he fell and took it
down below. That's the kind that concerns
lis most. The old preacher who
used to go around preaching about the !
"Mountains of Hepidam where the lion |
roaretli and iho whangdoodle mourneth I
for its first born, and he played on a
harp of thousand strings?sperots of ,
just men made perfect." also had a few J
broken remarks about fire. "My imper- ;
tinont hearers, there are several kinds |
of (ire. Tlierr- are fox fire and camp fire i
ami fire and fall hack, but the kind that I
i <uis;iriis you most .Mr." i ne nre mat is
nr.t squcnrhcd and is called hell fire for
short."?Hill Apr in Atlanta Constitution.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Mrs. Admiral Dewey, who has boon
III at I'nlin llcncli, h'la.. is eonvahscent.
Joseph K. Wood, United Slates Attorney
for the Second Division of Alaska,
has resigned.
Duke Charles Theodore of Havana,
the celebrated oculist, lias jii>i performed
his IikmmIi operation for cataract.
Prince Henry lias pronomuod the
American cavalry the best in the world,
judging from what he saw at West
Point.
Henry White, first Secretary of the
United States Kinliassy in London, has
licon practically selected to succeed
(leorire V<m L. Meyer . s United States
Ambassador to Italy.
Aimer McKitiley. brother of the martyred
President, lias become interested
in a promising Florida colored boy,
whom lie will educate as an object
lesson of tlie possibilities of tlie race.
President lloosevclt's acceptance of
the invitation of the t'oney Island
.lockey Club to see the Suburban run
makes hint the first President to accept
ail invitation of this kin.i since tlie
(lentil of General Cm lit.
llear-Adtuiral A rent Schuyler Crowninsliieil
served as a junior oiiieer during
the latter part of the Civil War.
lieitu; graduated front the Naval Academy
in 18(id. lie was made Captain
in 1SMI. and is fifty-two years of age.
The Maharajah of .Teypore. India, i
will attend the coronation of King Kdward
in a manner quite in keeping
with his luxurious mode of life. lie
has chartered an ocean steamship for
Ids private use. His suite will number
120 persons.
General I.ew Wallace has the most
luxurious author's "den" of any A titer
lean writer, li is erected on the
lawn. In shape it resembles an
Oriental mosque. The interior is
one large room, handsomely furnished
and decorated.
LABOR WORLD.
Porto Tlieo eitrnrinnkers have gained
$1 more per ItttHt without strike.
About L'tHto Norwegian laborers have
been hired for railroad work itt Can
a da.
The troubles among diamond cutters
of Antwerp will lie settled without a
strike.
Tlte threatened strike of street eat 1
moil at New Orleans, I.a* has been
averted.
A State Federation of bailor will
soon be organized in the State of
Washington.
Members of (lie Iron Mohlc/s' I'nion
of America will receive a live per cent,
increase in wages.
The carriage makers' strike at Cincinnati.
Ohio, is off. concessions having
been made by both sides.
The Hoot and Shoe Workers' International
I'nion lias decided to hold a
convention in Detroit in June.
The boilerniakers and iron sliiplmild
ers have increased in membership in
the last ten years from lono to 15,000.
The brewery strike at Cincinnati,
Ohio, lia.s been renewed because of dis
mii isi ;hm ion over I lit* sc.dement terms.
The masons of Full Itiver, .Mass.,
have slarteil .111 agitation for an eighthour
day, which bids fair to involve
members of the allied trades.
Moistening machines have been
placed in the working rooms of the,
great cotton mills at Lawrence. Mass.
The air is noticeably purer and tin
work is made easier for the employee.
The Chicago Federation of La hoi
has appointed a special committee to j
investigate the age limit problem 1
Among workmen, for the purpose of
devising a plan to give old men em- j
ploy menL
The ltapid Transit Company, of St.
Louis, Mo. has issued notice that no
employe will be discharged 011 account j
of ohi age. Veterans will be given 1
work they can do and their original 1
pay will he continued while they live. I
I
DAN GROSV
"Pe-ra-na is an Exc
Remedy?I am a
sisiilii
HON. DAN. A. (iKOSVENOR, 01
Hon. Dan. A. <5rosvenor, Deputy An
ter written from Washington, D. sa;
M Allow me to express my f
derived from one bottle of Perun
derfi.il changes and 1 am now as
of tile very best spririj.; toriius It ?
In a recent let tor he says:
*'I consider Peruna really mo
I wrote you last. I receive nume
all over the Country asking me i
Invariably answer, yes. "??-1>hsi.
A Con^reHMiiMii'K Lotlor,
linn. II. W. oplen. ("uiivrresstnan
fruni Imulsiann, in a letter written at
Washington, I>. C.. says the following
of l'eruna, the national catarrh remedy:
"I cati conaclentlousl a recomtnettd
your I'cruna as <t /ln? tonic
ami all aroutt.il yoml tactile I tic to
those who are lit- need of a catarrh
remedy, ft has hecti com mended to
me by pennte who Itacc v.sed tt, as a
remedy partlcularl j/ effective in the
cure of catarrh. For those who tucil
a good catarrh medicine I know of
no.hitty better."?//. IF. ttyden.
Trent C?t?rrl> t.. S..-I....
Tip spring la the timo to troat pa-1
tarrh. Cold, Wet winter weather often'
retards a curq of catarrh. If a course I
E
I Capudinec,",re,s \
r Headaches, 3
* LaGrippe, Colds, etc. ?
& Money back If It falls IS ft *o. All DngBt r? 8
klilS
flM F V MADE EASILY
hiaUftL I x AIN,) PAP,I)LYBan
\i) i I Wo want inen with energy
Mill P'lt; will give them Munition Id which j
they cult make monov rat Ml, th? labor lolng 1
light ami i-inplu. mi nt th" >enr mound It rs {
qu.reit no capltm or great eilu-.ttlon. Main,'of
our li.-ht miirMnrii ore cam try hoy* Pruflt
quick ami sure \V rlt? at unto for particulars. i
llUlHilNM I I II. CO., Kiaer 11'dp, Atlanta, Uo.
<?< * ISMS'" COll Cff of rysi? Assert pttoa.
< "i" Keg* \ w'l"LuO lsf*> ton <lu*r*nt?*tL
f T: ft Writ* for prices. .KSSK MARDEN
i??'?:y.j s Chsrles Ht. am. Mw
eI?0?PER0US
EOPLE, *F?
u' &S~H LJ?5
A
ENOR SAYS:
iellenl Spring CsSarrh
s Well as Ever."
: 1 >Jfe
(jl "III
THE FAMOl S OHIO FAMILY.
idltor for the War Department, in a W'trs:
jratltude to yon for the benefit
a. One week has brought won>
well ns ever. Besides being one
s an excellent catarrh remedy."
? DAN. A. CiElObVl?NOU.'
re meritorious than I did when
rous letters from acquaintances
if my certificate is iresinJne- 7
A. Grosvtnor.
of IVruna is taken during the early
spring months iitc cure will lie prompt
aiul permanent. There ran i>r no fail
tires it' IVruna is taken intelligi iMly
during tin* favorable weather of spring.
As a systnair ratarrh remedy IVnuiii
eradicates catarrh from tlir sysit'iii
wherever it may ho located. It
euros ratarrh of the stomach or bowrIs
with the same eortaiuty as catarrh
of the head.
If you do not derive prompt and .satisfactory
results from the use of IVruna
write at once to l>r. Hartman.
giving a full statement of your case,
and he will no pleased to give you his
valuable advice gratis.
Address 1 ?r. Ilartman, President of
The Ilartman Sanitarium, Coin minis.
Ohio.
""" T
Any Pcsition.. k
is a comfortable otic to the ?
woman who wears the . . 3
Royal
Worcester
or tjon. x on |j
Corsets.
Sir.light front.
Ease, grace and elegance.
Ask your dealer to show ^
them to you.
Royal Worcester Corset Co.,
... \\ orccstcr, Mass.
f
FATs; PEOPLE
Itcil lire Your tVeli:lil With
"REDUCTO "
Reduce Your Fat and Be Refined.
Refine Your Fat and Be Reduced.
"II? .1 ( <-(f?" Is it perfeelly hninileM vegetable compound
imtor.eil l v Ili- ii-antl. of pliy .iciaii* nml
pro,ill* who liuvi* tried II.
Wr winl >ou tin* Koimu'n. you make "Itednclo"
til li. in.- If you i i'slri*. you know full well tin* Ingredient*
nml therefore tired have no fmr of evil etTrrta.
Hcml tine llollnr lor Iteerlpt nml Instructions,
everything lunlliillu j lain envelojie. Address,
<;i\i-i:\i; i . KiiicaI, t o.
jjfUl S. Jeffers m Ave. Hi l.oiil., Mn.
I have used Ripans for several
years in my general practice as a
first-class extempore remedy for
t-l: .i: ?i w
iaiw uimiiw, iinu uavci
carried them in my vest pocket in !
the little paper cartons. At banquets
and at lodge meetings I have
often passed one to an adjacent
brother.
At ilruifk'ists.
The Five-Cent packet Is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle,
CO cents, contains a supply for a your.
So l.i
SALZER'S SEEDS.
Or .at ratalogur, with l.rfr ntimbor of *ce?l n.iun>lf
I. nllr l i Ii r? ript of bv Wui lliSlO.Otltoget ?start.
Sal/rr'a >IhkIc Crii-liri! Sliflln. lint on wartli.
II 36per Jcull>.b o' If' for Sw>lb?. *' .Ml for loo lb?.
JOHN A. 8ALZER SEED CO., La Crosse, Wis.
jarf rough By run. Tattta Wood. Uiio P*
CfiJ ln (too. Bold by tfruriitut*. IM