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work a burton; rcct to Impossible; itawp fitful; appetite |irN out and jrou art tired all the time. Caa*t be well until the kidnejs are well. Uae Doan'a Kidney Pills, whlcb bare -restored tbouaanrtf of Buffering women to health and rigor, lira. William Wal loce. of 18 Capitol street. Concord. N. H., hji: "I woo In the early otagee of Bright'* Disease, and were It not for Doan'o Kidney Pllla I would not be living to-day. Pain In the bock wai oo intense Jibs t ot night I had to get oat of bed until the paroxysm of pain pesoed owoy. I woo languid anU tired and hadn't the strength to lift a kettle of water. 1 could not work, but a few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills relieved me. sud two boxes absolutely cured me." A FREE TRIAL of this great kid ney medicine which cured Mrs. Wol Isce will be moiled to any part of the United Spates'. Address Foster- Mil burr Co., Butfslo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers; price &0 ceuts per box. WHEN LIQUORS WERE CHEAP. Philadetphian Sighs at the Thought of Good Old Times. **I seldom drink liquor myself," said an elderly man. who was In a remin iscent mood, "but when I consider the prices charged for drinks to-day com pared with the prices asked In my youth. I can only wonder at the change that hae taken ploce. Long before the Germentown railroad was built my father used to keep a tavern at the corner of Ninth and Green streets. It was near the old hay market, and In those days the locslity was reslly a suburb. In looking through some of his papers the other doy I come ocross some old docu ments, omong which were several re ceipted bills from John Hoffman In 1826. Rye whisky was billed at 33 cents a gallon, applejack at 35, and Jamaica rum at 37%. Another bill shows a cherry brandy charged at 36 cents a gallon, and French brandy, presumsbly cognac, st $1. If we could buy the same brandy tjvday at $10 a gallon I guess we'd be lucky. And imagine buying good rys whisky for 33 cents a gallon! Why, It almost drives me to drink just to think of It" ? Philadelphia Record. Radium to Illuminate Gun* Sights. The discovery of the latest U6e to which radium can be put ? the Illumi nation of gun sights, and the like at night time ? seems to indicate that it will play an Important part in war fare. In gun sights, leveling Instruments and telescopes tnere 1b what is called a "fiducial" mark, which is used to obtain a faithful result. These marks of course are useless In the dark, and. though many ways of illuminating them have been tried, nothing has proved satisfactory. Mr. Andrew A. Common of Eaton rise Fating, was the first to attempt to Bolve the difficulty by the use of radium, and his experiments were so successful that he applied for a pat ent. Unfortunately, he did not live to have it granted, but the completo specifications submitted by Mrs. Com mon, his widow and executrix, have Just been accepted. ? London Daily Mail When the bonds of matrimony be tome frost-bitten It's hard work to tfiaw them out again. FIT3n*r"nvie-?tlv ?v.ire t. No fit* or nervous* bmw after first day's useof Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. *2 1 rial bott leand t reatlsef ree Dr. R. H. Klime. Ltd.. 831 Arch 8t.. Phlla. , Pa When a girl is in love the is hungry only between meala. Aak Tear P?s'?r For Allan's A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Conn, Bunions. Hwollen, Wore, Hot. Ual lous, Aching Rweatirg Feet snd Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoos easy. At all Druggists and Hhot stores, 36 cents, Ac eopt no substitute. Sample mailed Fsss, Address, Alton H. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. A girl with a dimple will laugh st any fool tning s man says. Mrs. >Vlnslow'sBootblng8yrnp(orehlldr?n teething, soften the gums.rrductslnflamma lion allays pain, cureswlnd colic. 26c. nbottle Manv a man who starts at the foot ol the ladder is down at the heel at the finish. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consump tion has anequal for coughs and colds.-- John F. Botes, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. A woman cares nothing about a man's first love if she is sure of being his last. Overheard on th? Pike. Mr. Easy? "Why should people visiting The Exposition at night use more Allen's Font - Ease than in daytime?"' Miss Foote ? "Because under the brilliant illumination of the grounds, every foot be comes an aire!" Mr. Easy? "Fair. Only fair! Pray, con duct me to the nearest drug store and I promise never to accept a substitute for you or for Allen's Foot-Ease." ? ? ? ? Foot Note ? The twain will be made one in June. Bather than become a spinster the aver sge girl will marry the wrong hud. Patent medicines tire never sold In the apothecary shops of Sweden. The Government limits the number of these shops, and there are only 350 in the whole country, Stockholm, with a population of 800,000, having only twenty-two. " ~ I>eafn?sa Cannot It* Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumblingsound or Imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, und unless the inflam mation can bo taken out and this tube re stored to Its normal condition, heating will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by ratarrh, which is nothlngbut an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will glv<< One Hundred Dollars for any vase of Deafness {caused l>y catarrh >t bat can Dot be cured by Hall 's Catarrh Cure. Xend for alrculsrs free. F. J. C'hf.ki:* A Co., Toledo, O, Hold by Druggists, 7.V\ Take Hall's Family Pll.s for constipation. Employes In Japanese cotton far* | tovles get only elglit to eighteen cent* j for a day's work of eleven or twelve ; hours. This work, however, is much less strenuous than in this country, ?ml much time Is wasted in loafing, talking, laughing and drinking tea. HOME UFE OF ttflWKO i '' ***? ' y ^ ? S. If ato' ?M- WITH A ww or SBCOtmc titrim or JAPAN. ?M ItMlfllly lMaUftiUT?r Maim to twrnwi, ??!* TWmiUt Orl HHI llipm to mi Mm* KHnU. aad to VIHtac HI* to liwn I?>mr I N very far back day* there wan un Empress of Japan who was held In quite spe cial love and reverence by her people, and, says the Louuon World, there are latter day Japs who maintain that this Empress Is now living among them and 1ms as sumed the form of Hartiko, their Mi kado's consort. #For a lady who lived so many cen turies ago, Haruko Is In appearance quite startllugly modern ; for her dresses? they are all made iu Carls or London? are always le dernier crl, and she wears them as one born to the Rue de Crenelle. Although not strikingly beautiful, at lesst according* to West ern taste, her Majesty has a singular ly fascinating face? it is so kindly. In telligent and expressive. It is a strange face, too, one fall of subtle contradictions, and with lines tbat tell averse tales. ? ? ? In spite of her Parisian toilets and her English man ners, the Empress is a thorough Orien tal, with all the Oriental's reverence for tradition and hatred of chauge. But she is passionately devoted to Ja pan; ther4 is no sacrifice she would not make for her own people. Her great desire In life, indeed, is to be completely at one with them in their hopes, fears and aspirations. Haruko was born in 1850. She was a daughter of Prince Tadaka. a mem ber of one of the great noble families from which the Mikados are expected to choose their consort*, and she was educated with a special view to the possibility of her becoming Empress. Her early days were spent at Kioto, the seat of the old Japanese court, where she lived as completely cut off from the world as if she had been in a convent. There she played until she was nearly nineteen, when she was brought forth and innrrled to the Mi kado, who was some two years young er than she was. Youthful and inex perienced as they were, the imperial couple seemed to have demeaned them selves with great dignity, and they soon became exceedingly popular. It was a time of great political ex citement in Japan, the morrow of a revolution; the old stat?* of tilings had Just been swept aside completely, and considerable doubt prevailed as to what the result would be, especially with so young a sovereign at the head of affairs. It was a piece of supreme good fortune lor Japan, therefore, that her Mikado h:ul not only able Minis ters to hcip him to rule, but a wise and prudent wife to snare his burdens with him. Ill spite of the Mikado's devotion to her, llnruko 1ms always been in n dif tieult position: for, although she is his ehief wife, and therefore Empress, she is not his only wife, and, what is still worse, perhaps, she is not the mother of his heir. She has no children, and this in itself has always been a source of grief to her. Luckily both for her self and her husband, however, she is no Sarah, and as scon as she realized that there was no chance of her bear ing him a son. she adopted as her own the son of one of her rivals, and de voted herself heart and soul to fitting him for his future station, lavishing kindness on his mother the while. The Empress is a charming hostess, and one of the entertainments she gives every year? the Clierryblossoni Garden Tarty? is surely one of the most charming of entertainments. As soon as the cherry trees are in blos som invitations arc issued for a Court garden party, and 011 the appointed day all the great personages in Tokio, statesmen and diplomats, with their wives and daughter*, and every one else of distinction, assemble in one of the imperial parks, near the entrance, where they await the arrival of the Einperor and Empress. At the approach of the imperial car riage they range themselves on each side of the Grande Allee; then they fall into rank behind their Majesties, and walk in procession around the park to admire the trees. When they arrive at the tents where refreshments are served, the Emperor and Em press hold a sort of informal court. They bid, their guests welcome, and ronverse with those among them whom they wish to show special honor. The Empress is always exquisitely dressed on these occasions, ami plnys her part as hostess with infinite kindliness and tact. At the present time there are neith er garden parties nor any other enter taniments in Tokio, for Haruko's whole time is devoted to trying to re lieve the sufferings of her wounded soldiers. She Is the President of the Red Cross Society, which she helped to organize immediately before the war with China, and she works for it In dcfaUgahly the whole day long. So long as the war lasts neither she nor any member of her court will spend any money at all on luxuries or amuse ment; all that they would otherwise have spent Ir this way Is to go to pro vide comforts for the army. Her Maj esty is in complete sympathy with her people in the war. and she will be broken hearted should any disaster befall them. She and the Cznrina Marie, the Pres ident of the Russian Red Cross So ciety, are not altogether strangers to each other, for some years ago, when the present Czar narrowly escaped be ing murdered In Japan, she nt once, without saying n word to any one or asking any one's advice, sent off a most touching sympathetic little letter to his mother, to tell her how very sor ry she was. FoicloTf. The foxglove is a hardy perennial 1 that hns a medicinal reputation. Plgi : talis is one of the most valued reme dies in heart troubles nnd is obtnincd from the plant to which the common ! name, foxglove. Is given. In olden j times It was esteemed 1 s an applica tion to ulcers, etc., nnd Italian pea Hants have a proverb. "Foxglove heals I all *orcs." Flowers of the foxglove 1 were reputed favorites with civet and fftlrltt. ** TH* etaHSX TOflFCOO. m"*""l?H? to War to P^toto. Eighty millions of ??opl*. w lew. In these United States. are talking very |HMy about torprdoes these days and probably nlnety-nino per cent, of tbem bare nerer seen a torpedo, bare no real Idea wbat a torpedo look# like and no idea, real or otbertrjae. of bow It works. In a general way. moat of them, probably, know that a torpedc la a cigar shaped affair used In nam* warfare. The popular Idea (a? aet forth by an Intelligent looking man in ? crowded elevated car the other day for the enlightenment of a companion and to their mutual satisfaction) Is of ar Iron cigar from four to six feet long and six to eight Inches In diameter at its thickest, stuffed full of some hlgb explosive, preferably dynamite, dyna mite being the dear public's one Ides of a high exploalve. This, according to the Intelligent looking n.an afore mentioned, is launched from a torpedc tube, apparently a sort of giant puttj blower, set In the side of a vessel, with a sufficient force to carry It through perhaps half a mile of *ult . wntei (against currents and tides and trifles of that sort! and bury Its nose In thr side of the enemy's vessel tpresuma bly armor plated) there to explode and "tear a gaping hole in ber bull.' Such is really the torpeda. described by a man to a companion on the Fifth avenue "L" a few days ago. and iis tened to with great satisfaction by every one within hearing, who bad doubtless been dlscusslug the Jap* aud their torpedoes, witbont even such a very liasy Idea as that of wbat a tor pedo really was. Like n great many other conceptions ef Intelligent looking ?men It Is way off? aud In Brooklyn at least there is no excuse for this way offness. since the Whitehead torpedo used by the Government Is made bore by the F. W. Bliss Company, and any number of It can be seen in the Ord nance Building at the Navy Yard, where there are always men around sufficiently pleased at any intelligent Interest In their craft to explain its construction and Its workings. A torpedo Is a cigar "iiaped affair and it is used In naval warfare. So far so good. Though to be accurate, in the newest models the nose lias been short ened considerably so that with the blunt head now in use the old descrip tion. "shaped like a porpoise." Is more truly descriptive to those of the nire ty-nine per cent, who have any idea how a porpoise Is shaped. But it is? much bigger than the general public has any idea of. There are two s:zt? in use in the American Navy, one about eleven feet in length and one nearly seventeen. Both sizes are a trifle over seventeen inches in diame ter where they are thickest. So far as being the simple little af fair "stuffed full of dynamite" that popular fancy has painted, a torpedc is an exceedingly delicate, complicated mechanism, made up of something like parts, all told. The only part that contains any explosive at all is the head, which contains approximate ly 110 pounds of wet guneotton. Ai.tl the head, even when it Is longest, is not much more than two feet in length a comparatively small proportion ol the length of the whole. The torpedo is, in fact, a very complete little ves sel, a propeller which runs by Its own power and steers Itself. In proportion as It Is able to run true. It is likely to succeed In its death dealing mission The force which projects it from its tube on its parent vessel is compara tively slight? the force engendered by the explosion of about four pounds of black powder? only sufficient to cast it (Is weighs between eight and nine hundred pounds) well clear of the ves sel. The energy which drives it HHK> to l."?00 yards through salt water at a speed equivalent to twenty-eight knots an hour and hurls it head ou against the enemy's bull with stirti dent force te explode it, comes from within.? Brooklyn Eagle. Substitute For Milk. Where milk is not to be had or there is hut little to use, cornstarch may take its place iu pudding sauces, especially if huttcr and eggs are used. Mix the cornstarch? two tablespooufuls? with a little cold water, cook it hy adding a pint ot hot water, letting it cook thor oughly1, then when a little cool heat in an egg thoroughly beaten. Return to the tire for a minute or two, then sea son with salt, a lump of butter or whatever seasoning you prefer? chopped parsley is good. This make? a white sauce good to serve with boiled onions, warmed over veal, dried beef I or salt ltsh, like codfish or finnan huddle, or, with the addition of sugar and the juice of a lemon and lemon extract, makes a fairly good pudding sauce. An Old PbrsM Knocked Out. "In season," a phrase constantly rfr curiing in old cookery hooks, has now almost lost the significance as regard? vegetables. Particularly is this the case with potatoes. You may. If you please, get new potatoes all the ycai round now, hut In the English market the foreign varieties arc most plentiful from November to April, before the na tive product is dug. A good many of the potatoes sold in the London mar kets during this period come from Malta, which raises two crops each year. The first is dug early in Novem her, the second enrly in February Curiously enough the seed comes eu tlrely from Ireland? an instunce of iin perlal reciprocity which is not gener ally known.? London Chronicle. KlMlnff th? Honk. The vast majority of people who hav* to take an oath in a court of law stll' adhere to the practice of "kissing thf hook." The Hospital does good servlci hy pointing out that by the act, of 1HW" every witness has the option of belnp i sworn in the Scotch fashion by raising I the right hand. No Judge or any othci j person has any right to object or ever to question a witness who makes thif daiui.? London Tit- Wits. K?-lf-SnWr)ont. A distinguished comedian, who tellf j stories very well, was Invited to v j dinner, and for the greater part of the i evening entertained the company. When he returned to his hotel tlior i oughly tired his wife said: "Well, did you have a good time?" "So, 1 enn't Bay that I did. Indeed if I had not been there I should Luvf been bored." The JtputN poem is generally lim ited to flee Um containing flee and seven syllable*. Grant waa the youngest man erer elected to the Presidency, but Rooae ?elt waa the youngest ever to become President. Built in 1282, and made famous bj Burns, the old Bridge of Ayr has been ordered to be cloaed, being unsafe foi traffic. The repairs will cost $25,000 Mountain climbing is taugbt sys tematically at lfoedliug. n?ar Vienna, where the low out abrupt mountain* present maoj of the most difficult Al pine problems. A monumental work of reference, an encyclopedia of sixteen la.-gj volumes, is just being published iu New York City. Wbetber by desigu or accident not a page is numbered. A large number of people in the cap itul of Kolnpur, India, on seeing a mo tor car for the first time, prostrated themselves before it. declaring that it was moved by an invisible god. Japanese dwellings are usually of but one floor. They ;iri> divided Into Ihe number of bedrooms the owner re quires by paper shutters which tit into grooves. These partitions cau be re moved at will. With 7K.000 postottices within its bor ders, tiic r nit ed States leads all othei powers of the world in this as well as in other lines. Germany comes next with 45.tl23 offices, and Great Britain third with r_\400. The district of Guayaquil, in the lie public of Kcuador. leads the wot Id in th? production of cacoa. and -has a larger output than the whole of Africa, which continent, however, is in many parts well adapted for its culture. A remarkable animal was late!y linrn at Itye, England, it is a hoar pig. with t lie Ik ad and features of an ele pliant. One ear is .f iuiinei.se propor tions, and a trunk protrudes from tlic forehead. Between the irjnk and the snout there is a huge eyeball contain ing two pupils. Aerial dinners are i:or the fashion in Paris. M. Hantos- 1 turnout recently gave one. at which the tables and chairs were suspended from the ceil ing l>y wires, the waiters walked on stilts, and the plates and dishes were ! raised on lifts. The guests got into j their seats by means of step ladders. I In the accident to Borrelly's comet a section of the heud broke from the tail and traveled away at the rate of twen. ty-nine miles a second iu a retrograde direction. The comet showed that the tail actually moved out from the head as a luminous stream, which remained visible for hours after its supply from the head had ceased. While bending over a gasoline fur nace the other day. Frank Northrop, a New Haven plumber, accidently ig uited a celluloid collar which he wore and was severely burned a*. bout the shoulders and head. Before the blaze was extinguished Nortliron dashed through the plumbing shop where he was at work and the flames com muni cat/Ml to the woodwork, but were put out A'itbout sending In an alariu. 8q??rlng Thing*. "I want to put my name on the regis ter," said a young man at one of the West Side hotel." this morning, "but 1 do not want a room nor a meal nor anything at all ? except perhaps u drink or two.*' The unprofitable guest looked slightly the worse for wear. His eyes showed that he had not slept during the night, and Ills apparel was in that condition wbleb indicated that he didn't care much wlmt happened. The clerk extended t lie register and he scrawled his name across the page. "I tell you how it is," he added, ' i come from Fond du Lac, and my folks will he looking in the papers to see my name. If they don't see it they may think I have stayed up all night or went to Chicago or something. Now you see that it gets into the papers, will you? and I'll make it all right," and he disappeared toward the liar. "Do you get many like that?" the clerk was asked. "Plenty of them," tbe clerk replied. "They u*e tbe hotel registers and tbe newspaper columns to square them selves with the folks at home when they want to get on a 'bat.' Milwau kee Wisconsin. An Automatic Teapot. Englishmen who are wedded to their cup of tea are rejoicing in the Inven tion of an automatic teapot. An alarm clock is connected witb a spirit lamp and a kettle. When the alarm goes off it releases a shutter wblcb covers tbe i spirit lamp, and as it flies back tbe shutter strikes a match? duly placed for tbe purpose? which lights the lamp, and thus beats tbe water in the kettle. As soon as this water boils an ar* rangement of wires causes the kettle to tilt and pour its contents into tbe pot set ready to receive it, the same ?ctlon ringing a little gong to announce the pouting out of the water and also I utomatlcally extinguishing the lump. Mothm' Vocal OntlM. Mothers and those w'no have the edu I cation of children 111 their hands are chiefly responsible for our abuse of I the English langttagc and our elocu tionary shortcomings. A mother snould make it 5? special duty to correct every mistake in the sound of her child's voice and iti its ehoice of words; and | If voire production, the right pronun ciation of words .< lid distinct reading ; aloud were made part of a child's ' training we should soon become an in. telligihle and mtis'eally-volccd people. Unchecked, we shail ultimately bark -^London World. (Mil AND CTtIL MMOUOTIOli Ciwpirlim That Qivt an Ida ef Its To NtllN tkt Mpltndt of tkl prod action of iron aid itMl la this country during oae year, one haa tc employ much larger standards of con* parlaoa than pounds aad tons. Pm Instance a blast fnrosce large enough to receive at one charge all the metal that paasss through all ths blast fur aacea of the couatry In one yeai would have to be built' to contain Z.OOO.OOO.OM cubic feat. Or to us* the slightly more conceivable oompar ison. It would have to be tweaty-foui times aa large as the great pyramid ol Cheops. The coke uaed la the procest of manufacture would. If piled up In ?a column 400 feet square, reach (,S0f feat up lato the shies, and the Iroa ore from which all the products art made, would. If plied up in a eolume one-fourth of the bulk of that coke reach Just ss high as the former some S4.CS0.ltl tons. If all the cat ralla were rolled Into one huge rail, tho dimension would be 1 1-6 miles long. SI feet hlgn. 81 feet scross the baso. and 4S feet across st the top. being wide enough to accommodate s locomotive and its tender. One huge wire nail containing the metal an nually drawn Into such a form would suke a column 1,000 feet high and 64 feet square, overtopping the renowned Eiffel Tower at Paris. The cut nsllc would reach to the heights of the Washington monument, and would far overtop the Park Row building, the highest In the world. DECREE OP TALMUDIC LAW. Wives of 'Jewish Soldiers All Given Conditional Divorce. According to the Jewish World, a rery touching editorial sppeared in a recent issue of the Hebrew Daily Haze 11 rah of Warsaw, Poland, where: the editor. Mr. Sorolow, calls atten don to the Talmudlc law which re quires every married man before go ng on the battlefield to grant a con litlonsl divorce to his wife, thst she nay remarry If he does not return within a reasonable time after the tnd of the war. The rabbis of Lodz have caused all the Jewish soldiers that left that city 'or the seat of war to grant such di /orces, and Editor Sorolow suggests that the example of Lodz should be x>pled all over Russia. Every married soldier, volunteer oi reserve, registers with a rabbi his name, address, age. height, birth marks, name of company and regi ment he joins, and the rabbi keeps a record of same until the soldier re turns from the war. If a reasonable tlmo after the close of the war elapses and the soldiei does not return, he is counted among the lost and unidentified dead, and his wife obtains the divorce from that rabbi granting her the right to re marry. Uood Partner for Whict. Dr. B. Holly Smith, one of Balti more's crack whist players, was at his favorite game the other evening In a private house. Some of the guests did not know as much about whist as he. His partner was a cer tain Mrs. W , whose knowledge of the game was confined to a few ele mentary principles. "Excuse me, Mrs. W ," ex claimed Dr. Smith, at the conclusion of a hand that his partner had played In a way to try his very soul, "but I signaled for trumps twice during that hand." "Did yoU?" she asked innocently. "Why, I didn't hear you." ? New York Times. . Straighten Up Tho itu In murcular supports of body weaken and let go u:ider Backache or Lumbero. To restore, strengthen ?nd straighten up, use St. Jacobs Oil Met 25c. and 0Oc. TRADE MARK. The Gate T0WER3 POMMEL SLICKER r HAS MEN ADVERTISED ' AND SOLD FOR A QUARTER Of A CENTURY, i LIKE ALL * .S'.wAitmoof 'TES aoniiKG. It I* m4c of the tot nttcrtftJ*. in VUck or /dow. fully ?uuantect ?*4 *oM %y r<Mbk 4e?kr? tximVcic >IKR TO Tnt 5K*N Of THE FISH. $500 Olvcn Away TlwAMllarr Wall Von tins TV?tmr?<l.?. ia*|r*nfi?aad vrrmtn. Kl rob* or k*I? ) on can cnrJyu? ml* with S?A f?*"1* In whit? *Dd jylToyUtlntf. Wotxliff f-br?dlog, ?ol hot WM?r ftlo* Arbitration. Bar ^ >?M|W. rropoflr |?. pCNtlON FOR ACS. A ?mt ordrr will plT? 1"T ?**. Writ# to n??- one# for W*nV? and ln#'m<?lonfc Ftm of *h?r|H>. NO PENSION NO PAY. AddreM , THR W. IV. WIM.tCOMPANT, WW# BuiMlJf, Itl Iud. it?, V)'Mblogt?a. IK f U. S. SENATOR FROI SOUTH CAROLINA Recommends Fe-ru-na For Dyspepsia and Stomach Trouble. Ex-Senator M. C. Butler. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of 1'eruna, write at once to Dr. Hartuian, giving a full statement of your case, and he will he pleaded to give you hu? valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, Crnidcnt ol The llartman Sanitarium. Columbus. 0. Catarrh of the Stomach is Generally Called Dyspepsia?Something to Produce Artificial Diges tion is Generally Taken. Hence, Pepsin, Pancreatin and a Host of Other Digestive Remedies Has Been Invented. These Kemedies Do Not Keach the Seat of the Difficulty, Which is Really Catarrh. EX. U. 8. Senator M. C. Butler from South Carolina wan Senator from that State for two terms. In a recent letter t? The Peruna Medicine Co., from Washing ton, D. naya: "J ran recommend Pet-una. /br dye pepmia. and ntamach trouble, t havt 6een ueitig your medtciiM/hraiWt period mud I /eel i*erytn*tch relieved, ii fa indeed a wmder/Ul medicine besides a good tonic. ''?If. C. Butler '. TCie only rational way to cure dyspepsia ia to remove the catarrh. Peruna cum catarrh, l'eruna docs not produce arti ficial digestion. It cures catarrh and leaven the stomach to perform digestion in a natural way. This ia vastly better and safer than resorting to artificial meth ods or narcotics. Peruna has cured more cases of dyspep sia than all other remedies combined, simply because it cures catarrh wherever located. If catarrh is located in the head, Peruna cures it. If catarih has fastened it self in the throat or bronchial tubes, Peruna curcs it. When catarrh becomes settled in the stomach, Peruna cures it, as well in this location as in any othor. Peruna is not simply a remedy for dyspepsia. Pcrunia is a catarrh remedy. Pcruua cures dyspepsia because it ia gen erally dependent upon ?aturrh. BEST FW IK BOWELS CANDY CATHARTIC S CURE for alt bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliouinrtn. btd breath, bad ? * OB e ?tomach, bloated bowels, foal month, headache, indigestion, pimplas. pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and disriness. When your bowels don't nova regularly you are sick. ?tuttchranle ? CA8CARETS I rtfht Take our ?qvicb, nan wiin v.ascarrts today under absolute rusrantee .? V-.- ? ^fttBde.d.. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample asd booklet tree. Address Sterling Remedy Company. Chicago cr New York. 50? CHICKS UYSPKPSIA. SICK HKAOACHK, BIIJOI'SNENS, N Kit VOCSNES8 TYNER'S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY &2.E ?RtE BOOKLET. AVrtip. Wok I3H. Atlanta, ti*. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST. Small Potatoes result from a lack of Potash in the soil. Potash pro- i duces size aud quality. We have vat u a bl e books which explain more fully the fer tilizing value of Pot a ah. We will ?end them free to any farmer who^ writes for them. GERMAN KALI WORKS, V.l Niimu St., New York. FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of In* struct ions absolutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToiiet Antiseptic . P?*tlne to in powder form to dissolve la water ? non-poisonouA and far superior to liquid antiseptics containing alcohol which Irritates inflamed surfaces, and have no cleansing prop- i erties. The contents ot every boi makes more Antiseptic Solu tion? la* ts longer goes further? ha* more uses In the family and doe* more good than any antiseptic preparation you can buy. The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Lcucorrhota, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female ill? l'axtinei* invaluaMo. I'aed an a Vicinal Wash we challenge th?? world to produce its equal for thoroughness. I tin a revelation in (-learning and healing power; it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggist* keep pHitlnr; price, WV\ ? box; If yo?rsdoe*not, rend to u?for it. Don't take a substitute ? therein nothing like 1 'ax tine. TTrltcforthe Free Bon of rnxf Ine to-<lny. R. PAXTON CO.. 7 Pore Bldjr.. Bo. ton. Mars. DR. WOOLLEV'S OPIUM & WHISKY ANTIDOTE tVlll enre permanently at your own home. Mr. T. M. Brown, of PcCJuccn. Ark., says : "Over seven ytars ago 1 was cured of the opium habit by your medicine, and have con tinued In the very best of health since." Mr. W. M. Tunstall. of 1/OVtnRr.ton, Va . ?ay?: "I am clad to ray that I firmly l-ellcvc that I am entirely and permanently cured of the Drink Habit, a? I hove never even no much an wanted a drink in any form since I took your eradlcator, now 18 month* a?u It #??.< the l>est money I evr r Invested." Mr*. Virginia Townscnd, of Hhrevcport. I.a . writes: "No more opium I have taken no other remedy than your*. and I make no mis take when 1 say that mv health Is liettcr now than It ever was In my fife, and I owe it to yon and your remedy. It has been twelve years ?luce I wa? cured by your treatment " i?r. Wool ley has ihottraiidi of ?ucli tMtlronn ials, with |crmls<lon to use then) A treat ment with so many recommendations from rhyslclans and cured patients tnusl le trood. I?r. Woollev's Antidote llM ifllltlllors, ((? all good art lcle? have i? |?crhBps you have tried ?omc of them, but there Is nothlUK like Wool ley's. It has stood the test of thirty year*. No man or woman who use* opium or wlii-kcv In any form, or who ha? friend* so aillictcd, should hesitate to write to DR. B. M. WOOLtEV, 100 North I'ryor Htreet, Atlanta, On., for hi* book on these <11 -ohm ?, which lie will send free and conlldcntlal. K?M?r?Bllndltor?Mr?:?^'.h^ ?or* KyM, Harry Co., Iowa City, U.,ba?* ft #urft eura The Sanative, Antiseptic, Cleansing, Purifying, and Beautifying Properties of Assisted by CUTICURA Ointment, the great .? Skin Cure, are of PricelessValue. For preserving, purifying, and beautifying: the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of fall ing hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes and cha fings, in the form of bathi for an noying irritations, ulcerations, and Inflammations of women, and many sanative, antiseptic pur poses which readily suggest them selves, as well as for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, CUTICURA Soap and CUTI? CURA Ointment are priceless. thro?fhoot ?h? world. CuMmro 8o?p. m?nt. MV.t AOr. (In form of CWolat* CiHf nil.. lie ptr ?!?! of ?01. l>?pot?: I<ondon, tl Cfc?rKr. bouM &j. i Ptrt?, I Knf d? to l'?l* ; Ho?tor, 1*T ColumW I'otttr l>ru? * Chrm l)nrp., Wolr I'roprlrtor*. mr S?b4 for " Bow to rnwrii, rurlf j, and Baaatl/y.* ADVERTISE " 'JV 5S'1"' I T PAYS nDADBV ?'?? me?mr; ?<~ \J T *???? >t4 ntn wmm <?,'? Ml ?f Mlanlili *n? |0 4*TI' I'iUwm Vrr*. ?' ? t. MIM i tout. >?< I. Ailutt, ??. GuRkS WHIKfc AU 1181 FAllS. n?at Cough Hyrup. THtti Oo?<T. Ct>o In time. PoK by dru??l?t>.