Jasper County Democrat, Volume 5, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 June 1902 — Page 3

Easy Way to Make Money.

! The easiest money-making schema that ever came under my,notice, says a westerner, is at Jerome, Aria. Thera Is a little brook at that place that runs out of the lower workings of Senator Clark’s United Verde mine. This was er percolates all through certain sulphuretlc copper and gold deposits in the bowels of the earth, and as a result when it runs out of the mine into a pool arranged for its reception it la heavily loaded with liquid copper. The mining people dump scrap iron of all kinds into the pool, and the presence of the iron in the water precipitates the copper in solid form to the bottom of the pool, where it is picked up in Irregular shapes. I was told the last time I was In Jerome that Clark’s poo pie pick out of that scrap iron pool about SOOO or S7OO worth of practically pure copper every twenty-foui hours.

After Twenty Years.

Lusks Springs, Ind., June oth.-It would be hard to find a happier man than Mr. William Catterson of this place has been for the last few weeks. For twenty years his wife had Been an invalid with a complication of diseases, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and generally broken down constitution. Mr. Catterson had done everything that loving care could suggest, but in vain—his wife only grew worse. Recently, however, he heard of Dodd’s Kidney PUls and determined to give them a trial and was overjoyed at the splendid result. From the very beginning of the treatment she commenced to improve, till now she i» nearly well and Mr. Catterson is rejoicing. He says: "Nothing ever did her so much good. We will always praise Dodd’s Kidney Pills for the good work they have done for us.’

Longing for One.

"BJr the way, Miss Quickstep,” said the young man, brightening up a little, “I am awaked to take the part of the foolkiller in a charade. How ought I to dress for the part?” Suppressing a wild desire to tell him It would be suicide for him to act such a part, she merely replied, with a despairing glance at the clock: “I don’t know, Mr. Longstayer. I don’t believe there is any auch person.” —Chicago Trihna®.

Nothing of Value.

“So the English broke camp in confu tlon?” said the Boer commander. “Did they drop anything as they went?” “Only a few h's,” responded the spy.

IF YOU USE BALL BLUE.

Get Red Cross Ball Blue, the best Ball Blue. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.

The Reason.

Exempt—There’s one good thing about Mrs. de Sneere —she never Blunders her friends. “No; she hasn't any.”—Detroit Free Press. 1 find Piso’s Cure for Consumption the best medicine for croupy children—Mrs. F. Callahan, 114 Hall street, Parkersburg, W. Vs., April 16, 1901. Salt in water is the best thing to clean willoWware and matting.

MRS. ID kl. ROSER Grand-Niece of Ex-President James K. Polk, Writes to Mrs. Pinkham Saying: “ Dean Mm. Puteham :—I have been married for nearly two years, and so far bare not been blessed with a child. I hare, however, suffered with a complication of female troubles and painful menstruation, until very recently. MRS. IDA 1.. ROSER. " The value of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was called to my attention by an intimate friend, whose life had simply been a torture with inflammation and ulceration, and a few pottles of your Compound cured her; she can hardly believe it herself to-dav, she enioys such blessed health. I took four bottles of your Compound and consider myself cured. Isa ones more in fine health and spirits; my domestic and official duties all seem easy now, for I feel so strong I can do three times what I used to do. You have a host of friends in Denver, and among the best count, Yours very gratefully,— Mrs. Ida L. Roser, 320 18th Ave., Denver, Col." —ftOOO forf,lt If stow toitlmonlml li Hot tomlino. If yon are ill, don't hesitate to getabottleof Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound at once, and write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for special advice — it is free. Land Seekers! CENTRAL EASTERN COLORADO oSmr, Oreei uDOTIVE LANDS, In tracts to sait. good for all farm* ~P~Ull,?or KAIhWoBTOCK ofall FARMERR7* ~m,L Reel V®,** 1 “■ ■» O K.I.U Ur, fortunm ar. Mins made In Farm, end Oltr ProrertlM. h.ndll FeW$V*Y*S meathi 1 trlel nbnrfNlM to REAL. is jEjgws^waajßßa nENSiONW-s^ro?^

JUNE CROP REPORT.

SPRING WHEAT DECREASE OF 2,51 1,000 ACRES. The Condition of Winter Wheat Is Slightly Lower than a Month Ago, While Spring la Higher than at Thia Time Laat Year. Preliminary reports of the spring wheat acreage indicate a reduction of about 2,511,000 acres, or 12.8 per cent. Of the nineteen States reporting spring wheat thirteen report a reduced acreage, Washington being the only State having 100,000 acres or upward thnt reports an increase. There is a reduction of 745,000 acres in Minnesota and of 905,000 acres in North Dakota, due lurgely to unfavorable weather during sowing time iu the Red River valley; a reduction of 400,000 acres in South Dakota, resulting in the main from an increasing tendency toward greater diversification of crops, and a reduction of 640,000 acres in Nebraska, consequent on the gradual yielding of spring wheat to winter wheat. The average condition of spring wheat on June 1 was. 05.4, as compared with 02 at the corresponding date last year, 87.3 on June 1, 1900, and a ten-year average of 92.6. The present average has been exceeded only three times in the last fifteen years. Of the States having 1,000,000 acres or upward in spring wheat South Dakota reports a condition of 100, North Dakota 90 and Minnesota and lowa 95. In Washington and Oregon, which together have over 1,100,000 acres, the condition averages are 97 and 93 respectively. The average condition of winter wheat on June 1 was W.l. as compared with 76.4 on May 1, 1902; 87.8 on June 1, 1901; 82.7 on June 1, 1900, and 80.3, the mean of the June averages of the last ten years. During May there was a gain of throe points in Michigan, Illinois and Kansas, of one point in Indiana, two points in Nebraska und seven points in Oklahoma. On the other hand, there was a loss of two points in California and three points in Pennsylvania, with no measurable change in Ohio.

The total reported acreage in oats is about four-tenths in excess of the acreage harvested last year. Twenty-five States and territories report some enlargement of acreage and twenty-four some reductions. Of the nine States having 1,(X>0.000 acres or upward in oats New York. Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota report an increased acreage, no case exceeding 4 per cent, and Pennsylvania, Indiana, lowa and Nebraska a decrease, which only in the last-mention-ed State exceeds 1 per cent. The average condition of oats is 90.6, against 85.3 on June 1, 1901, 91.7 at the corresponding date iu UXXJ and a ten-year average of 90. Minnesota and Indiana report conditions corresponding exactly with their ten-year averages, Michigan reports two, lowa three. Illinois five and Wisconsin six {mints above und Nebraska one point. New York two, Ohio five and Pennsylvania thirteen points below. The average condition of apples is unfavorable. Of the fourteen large producing States but two report a condition above the ten-year average, as follows: North Carolina, 68, a gain of one point, and Michigan 87. n gain of six points. In Maine the condition is 93. New York reports a condition five points below the ten year average, Illinois and lowa nine points, Ohio twelve, Pennsylvania und Kansas sixteen, Kentucky, Yitginia and Tennessee seventeen, Missouri eighteen and Indiana nineteen points. The prospects of the peach crop are quite fuvorabie. Condition for the Week. The weather bureau’s weekly summary of crop conditions says: “The States of the lower Missouri vdlley have again suffered from excessive rains, which have also Interrupted farm work in the northern portions of Illinois and Indiana and the southern portions of Wisconsin and Michigan, Drouth is becoming serious in the Carolinas Und iu the central and west gulf districts. “With ample moisture and favorable temperatures corn has made good growth throughout the central valleys, but is much in need of cultivation in the States of the lower Missouri valley and Wisconsin. “With warm, showery weather of the last week bus been favorable to the development of rust in winter wheat In portions of Missouri ami Indiana ami has caused lodging to some extent in Illinois and Missouri. Harvesting has begun in the southern portions of Missouri and Kansas. On the Pacific const the wheat outlook continues promising, although grasshoppers are causing some damage.”

IN A HUTSHELL

During the month of May there were fifty suicides in Chicago,, breaking the record. Emperor William is experimenting with an alcohol motor plow on liis farm At Ivadinen. The Topeka school board has decided that it will uot employ married women as teachers. Townsend Miller, a Montauk half breed living at Jamaieo, L. I.; nn.l who claims to be 104 years old, has just been married the fourth time. lly reason of n strike and a lack of water with which to make lee, the Chicago ice trust has been forced to raise the price of ice to consumers. lemis D'Aiirignac, a brother of Madame Humbert, who Is concerned in the famous Humbcrt-Crnwford Inwsuit, lias been arrested at Tunis. He had been managing the Humbert pr<q>erty near Znghwuu, Tunis. The salaries of the following postmasters In Kansas have been increased SIOO a year: Clifton, Colby, Columbus, Concordiu. Downs, Elliuwood, Ellis, Enterprise, Erie, Frcdonia. The salary of the postmaster nt Florence, Ivan., has been decreased SIOO. In a fight in Leuven worth, Ivan., between Tlieodofi‘‘'**Fields and Cary Nichols, both colored, the latter was fatally wounded. Field wielded a knife with terrible effect, disemboweling Xichola. Nichols was the aggressor and u muck larger man thnu Fields. Fields wss arrested.

DIE IN HOSPITAL FIRE.

Horror* Attend Burning of a Chicago Institution. Ten lives were lost in a fire that swept through the sanitarium of the St. Luke Society, an institution for the treatment of habitual users of drugs and liquors, Wabash avenue and Twenty-first street, Chicago, Monday afternoon, among the victims being Alderman William K. Kent of the Fourth Ward, known as “Blind Billy” Kent. Some beat out their strength against the iron-barred windows and double-locked doors that cut them off from freedom and life on the top Boor of the five-story building, and others hurled themselves to death or fatal injuries on the pavements of the street. A dozen were injured in their flight from the place or seeking to rescue those of the inmates who still lived. Most pathetic of the struggles waged for life was that of Alderman Kent, who, blind and alone, freed from the bonds that held him to his bed by the flames leaping across the room and lapping at the mattress, made his way to the bars that held him captive and beat his hands against the screening until he fell back suffocated. He was so terribly burned that identification was only possible because of some dental work which had been recently done for him. Another man, a saloonkeeper named Newell, held fast in a strait-jacket and with his hands cuffed across his breast, lay helpless in his place, unmindful of the bolt's and locks that hemmed him In because of the fever of delirium which possessed him. He was found where he had been left by his attendants, burned almost to a crisp. A woman, maddened with the frenzy of fear, locked herself in a closet on the fourth floor and met death there while rescuers thronged the hallways all about her searching for whom they might carry beyond the reach of the greedy fire. Before midnight, in the eonrse of their preliminary examination into the disaster and its causes, the police made eight arrests. These prisoners were detained for the coroner’s inquest. They are the president of the sanitarium, John P. Nagel, who was conducting a gasoline fuel experiment in the basement, the present engineer and his predecessor and the former’s fireman, and some other employes of the institution. The building was damaged $5,000, and the contents, of which but little can be saved from the wreckage, to the extent of $30,000.

CITY OF 40,000 WIPED OUT.

Destructiveness of Guatemala Earthquake Is Appalling. Were it not for the overshadowing tragedies in the West Indies, the great earthquake disaster in Guatemala, the Central American republic, would have occupied a larger share of public attention. The seismic disturbances there were horrible in their destructiveness and fatality. Practically the city of Quezaltenango, a community of 40,000 souls, was destroyed. Buildings were toppled over and thousands of persons were buried in the ruins. The shocks, which numbered three, began at 8:15 on the evening of April 18 and in ninety seconds Quezaltenango was a ruin. In that city and in the nearby towns of San Pedro, San Marco, San Juan, Amatitlan and Solola, all of which were ruined, 2,000 lives were instantly crushed out and 4,000 persons were injured. Not many houses escaped destruction and the few that remained standing were badly cracked. The streets of Quezaltenango, after the shocks had spent their force, were strewn with dead and Injured. Bodies, ghastly in the terror depicted on the faces and bloody and mutilated, strewed the thoroughfares. Everywhere arose the cries and groans of injured. The shocks were preceded and accompanied by terrific thunder peals and by lightning flashes which seemed to set earth and air afire. Rain fell in torrents as though a cloudlmrA was emptying itself over the city and to add to the horror of the whole fires broke out and raged furiously. The present city of Quezaltenango, or rather the ruins, will be abandoned and another town bearing the name will lie erected a few miles north of the old site.

BETTER STICK TO THE FARM.

Advice to Country Boys by One Who Knows City Conditions. It is said that the annual increase of Chicago’s population is from (10,000 lo 70,000, and among the newcomers every year are young men from the country who are victims of the notion that opportunity awaits them in the cities alone, says an editorial writer in the Chicago Record-Herald. Under this delusion they condemn themselves very probably to the disappointments of an overcrowded labor market. If they get work it is at a small wage or salary, they m«st live in cheap boarding houses, pass from them to cheap tenements if they have the courage to marry, find more and more that their position is. one of anxious dependence, and that the imaginary charms of city life disappear to leave nothing but the depressing reality of buildings jammed together to the exclusion of light and air, of an all-pervading noise and dirt, of a routine which gives little but a bare subsistence in the present and holds out no promise for the future. In the vast majority of cases such roust be the result, and while country life may have some serious drawbacks it is plain that these young men make a capital mistnke when they come to consider the question of opportunity through an ignornnt contempt of their familiar surroundings. ,If instead of indulging in dreams of fortune building in the city they were to master thoroughly all the work of a farm, cultivate an Interest In it, add a new intelligence to it, take over the lands of their fathers, or acquire others by purchase, put into this life all the ambition of their dreams, they would do better iu the end than 90 per cent of the city people, have a grouter enjoyment out of living, aqd attaiu to nn enviable independence.

Telegraphic Brevities.

Jacob Clute, well-known gambler, t dead, California lawyers got $2,000,000 t fees out of the Fair estate. Fred W. Eherhardt is accused of kill Ing his wife at Chicago. A well of liquid asphalt is said to haw been discovered near Austin, Texas. The City Connell of Mobile, Ala., hai adopted an ordinance and made an appro* priution for the extermination of the mos* qnito by tha use of kerosene and paraJLirt oil.

SWEPT BY A STORM.

ILLINOIS AND lOWA IN TORNADO’S PATH. Wind Takes Several Lives and Does Great Property Damage—Blooming* , ton’s Loss Is Large —Country Districts and Crops Suffer. Illinois was swept by one of the fiercest storms in its history Tuesday night. The destruction of property was widespread. Several lives were lost. The whole State suffered, but the heaviest damage was done in the central and southern sections. Bloomington, Peoria, Champaign, IJrbana and several other cities were in the track of the storm and suffered heavily. Bloomington seems to have been the greatest sufferer. Damage estimated at half a million dollars was done there, and at Merna, ten miles from Bloomington, three young women were killed and half a hundred hurt by the wrecking of a dance hull. The victims were members of a party of 250 pleasure seekers that were participants of a dance at the town hall. The building collapsed and three women were crushed by falling timbers* Dozens of others were caught iu the debris and wounded. Three are reported dead in a suburb of Pekin. The entire east end of the village was swept away. Houses and barns were blown down at Groveland, Minier, Dilon, Hopedale and Delavan. Opposite Pekin the river overflowed ita banks and covered 60,000 acres of corn, which is believed to have been ruined. After a day of extreme jieat the storm broke upon Bloomington at 11 o’clock. Those who were awake took refuge ia cellars and vaults and many iu the uptown flats were forced to the street by the unroofing of their dwellings aud the Inpouring of water. Half the plate glass In the business section was smashed and the interior of stores wrecked by wind and water. The streets were emnideteiy blocked by fallen trees and vehicles could not move in any direction. All the light* were put out and the town was in utter darkness. Uncompleted buildings were blown down all over the city. People were panic stricken.

Destruction in Central lowa. The storm traversed a section of lowa. In Des Moines considerable damage was done and at Burlington several boats were sunk and many buildings unroofed. The storm struck the town of Jordan, a few miles east of Boone, and, although it is reported that no lives were lost, several of the principal buildings of the place were destroyed. Oskaloosa reports considerable damage from the wind. The town of Laurel was reported wiped out. Laurel is in Jefferson township, Marshal! County, and has a population of about 100 people. Burlington was visited by the storm. No lives were lost, but buildings were unroofed, and telegraph and telephone wires were blown down. Much damage to property resulted. Lightning struck In several places. The steamer Comet broke in half and sunk. Rob Roy, a pleasure craft, was badly damaged, and washed ashore. Barges and boat houses were filled with water or blown high and dry on the bank. There are many reports of damage in the surrounding country.

WILL MINE ICE

A Company in Arizona to Prosccnte a Queer Industry. Elaborate plans are being laid to put into operation nenr Flagstaff. Ariz., the most unique industry in the World. It Is the purpose of certain parties to utilize the ice caves which are found in abundance thereabouts. In these are almost inexhaustible quantities of the cooling product and it is the belief of tho parties engaged in the enterprise that the stuff can be marketed ut prices which will create a great demand for It. E. R. Dutton, a young man from New York, is at the head of the enterprise. It is the purpose of himself and his companions to supply not only scores of small stations, towns and lumber camps in the viciuity, but to provide a supply for the railroads of northern Arizona and New Mexico, even into California, as in the vast regions of what was once the northern part of tile great American desert ice factories have not yet bee„ introduced. Dutton made his way into the best known of these caves last summer. It is at the head of Clark's valley, seventeen miles southwest of Flagstaff. The cold in this cavern is intonse--not less than 60 degrees drop iu temperature being encountered iu the course of perhaps twenty minutes after one enters the cave. Tons upon tons of ice are stored here. Leading from this are passages into other caves, which are almost solidly walled with ice.

COL. ARTHUR LYNCH ARRESTED

Ks-Boer Officer Mnde Prisoner Upoi Ilia Landing in Engluml. Col. Arthur Lynch, who fought with the Boers In South Africa and who in November last was elected to represent (Inlway in th House of Commons, was arrested Wednesday morning on his ar rival in England from Dieppe, France. Col. Lynch, who was accompanied by his wife, was taken to London and was afterward taken to tlie Bow street police station. Subsequently Col. Lyncli was arraigned nt the Bow street police court on the charge of high treason uud was remnuded after formal evidence of hit arrest had been presented. Col. Lynch announced In Paris that he would return to Euglnd and take his ■eat in Parliament. He believed that tlie conclusion of the Boer war and • lie liberal amnesty terms granted the burghers would insure his pardon and immunity from nrrest. He was warned, however, that British detectives were watching to arrest him us soon as he set foot on English soil.

Cyclone Victims Dying of Lockjaw.

An epidemic of lockjaw has broken out among the cyclone injured victims of GoHad, Texas. Five persons died duriuii the last week. The victims so fur bav» all been white people, but now the negroes have been attacked. They are con ■idered by physiciuns more susceptible tc lockjaw than are white persons, and al are expected to die. So far not one p»*r son, attacked has recovered. The 101st anniversary of Brilfhaii Young's birth was celebrated In Ssb Lake City.

QUEER NAMES FOR YOWNS.

Wale* and Australia Carry Off the Palm for Tongue Twisters. “We have some odd names for towns In this country,” Bald a postal clerk at the postotilce, "hundreds of them, and here are Just a few: A. B. 0., Bugg, Tug, Toy, Topsy, Ono, Catfish, Sunfish, Vlm, Uz, Vox, Utt, Tongs, Sweetlips, Xenophon, Reclamation, Blood, Tonic, Log and Turtle. “These may be pronounced without dislocating the Jaws, but In some of the foreign countries may be found veritable tongue twisters. The palm may be accorded to Wales, however, and what do you think of this; “ “ ‘Llanfairpwllgwngyle, Anglesey.* “No, this Is not a lot of letters thrown promiscuously together, but Is really the name of a town in Wales. Here are two more equally bewildering: “ ‘Llanflhauhel Talyilyn, Bwleh, Breconshire.’ “ ‘Llanuwchllyn Bala, Merionethshire.’ “They say that the Welsh language is about as hard as Russian, and it would appear that this assertion is not far out of the way, especially when It is remembered that the following words are the names of towns in the country from which the heir apparent to the British throne derives his royal title: “ ‘Langwyllog,’ ‘Llwyndafydd,’ ‘Llan-drilloyn-Rhos,’ ‘Llansaintffrald,’ and ‘Llanymynech.’ “They do pretty well in Scotland, as the following two names will show: “Tynholm Klrkcubbrlghtshire’ and *Ttgb-na-bmaicli.’ “Now that Hawaii Is a part of the United States, Just try to pronotyjee these names of towns in the far-away Islands: “ ‘Hamaquspoko,’ ‘Kealakekua, ‘Waiohiuu,’ ‘Naianae,’ ‘Honoluluili,’ and ‘ La u pa h oelioe. ’ “Here are a few twisters In New Zeoland:

“ ‘Kalwarauara,’ *K au k ap a kafa,’ Walmangaroa’ and ‘Waiorougomal.’ ictoria conies to the scratch courageously with these: “ ‘Yackandandab,’ ‘W and 11 i gong,’ ‘Yarrnmyarram’ and ‘Coongulmerang.’ “In South Australia may be found ‘Orroroo’ and ’Oodlawirra’ and in Cape Colony we have ‘Teyatayaneng,’ ‘Urnzlmkulu’ and ‘Zurrbraak.’ “In the Transvaal they have towns named ‘Vrljiheld’ and ‘Piet Potgteters Rust;’ in Natal, ‘lxopo;’ In Queensland, ’Bogantungun’ and ‘Goondlwlndl,’ and In British Guiana ‘Beterverwagting’ and ‘Metenmeerzorg.’ ”

He Had a New Word.

“Say, I’ve Just annexed a new word, and I’m dead anxious to work it off on the lady boss of the flat house. She’ll think I’m ‘calling her out of her name,’ and perhaps have me summoned to court, and then, O Joy, the neighbors will give her the laugh and ahe’U lose prestige among her subjects.” “What Is the new word?” asked the second lookout for a new building that Is being erected near Herald Square. “ ‘Janitrlx.’ Never heard It? Neither had I, but It’s all right, and It sounds Just Insinuating enough to make the average Janitress boll. I know it’s good, for I read It over the door of public achool building No. 80, around in 87th street Of course the principal wouldn’t let It go If it wasn’t pure. And then, besides, I looked It up In the dictionary. ‘Mra. Blank, Janitrlx,’ that’s the way It goes. Just imagine yelling down the air shaft: ‘Here, you Janitrlx, the water pipe’s burst!’ and then imagine what will follow. How quickly you would be Informed thnt the Janitress, with the stress on the tress, was a perfect lady, and that she meant to have the law on you.”— New York Telegram.

ONE FARE FOR THE ROUND TRIP

Via the Grand Trunk Hallway System. Chicago to Boston, Mass. Selling dates June 12, 13, 14. Chicago to Portland, Me., Belling dates July sto 9, inclusive. One faro plus one dollar for round trip. Chicago to Providence, 11. I. Selling dates July 7,8, 9. For limits, time tables and further information, apply to Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. and T. A., 135 Adams street, Chicago, 111.

Civil Service.

First Venezuelan—Ha, ha! That’s a good one on the politicians! Second Venezuelan—What’s happened now? First Venezuelan—'Why, the President has issued an order bringing revolutions Into the classified service!—Puck.

Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?

Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot ®*x*. * powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Uot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N Y.

True Courtesy.

Aggressive Old Woman-Sir, Is this the amoking car? Polite Gentleman—-N’o, madam; you’ll find that two cars ahead.

Hall's Catarrh Cure.

I* * constitutional oure. lYlce 75 cents. • The oldest statue was found to Egypt. It Is of wood with crystal eyes, and represents a Tillage chieftain who haa been dead for G.OOO years. UNSIGHTLY Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell large 2 ox. package, S cents. Spanish Is one of the studies In New*>*inl> College, Mississippi. Prof. Nunes de VllllviceßClo is the instructor. CITS l*o<rwssss tly Carte. Nsau or nraumi > fi H rile 0r»» tar's UM of Dr. IClloo’s orsot h.r*o R* . STfc Men who, filter their courage usually falter when they need It. . Winslow's Roomreo Stsct for ChlMre* iMthlnSi softooi the SUBS, ryiaoo. IsSswWßUea, sP isfs tots. ours* wind sells. iTesats s bottle.

KOSPIKI SECRETS. A Nurse Says “Pa-ru-na Is a Tonic of Efficiency.” ” MRS. KATE TAYLOR. ” Mrs. Kate Taylor, a graduated < • ’ | nurse of prominence, given bar \ <> experience with Peruna In an . • open letter. Her position In so- < > ” ciety and professional standing “ < • combine to give special promt- ~ ’ nence to bejr utterances. < >

CHICAGO, .ILL., 427 Monroe St—“At far as I have observed Peruna Is the finest tonic any man or woman can use who is weak from the after effect* of any serious illness. “I have seen it used in a number of convalescent cases, and have seen several other tonics used, but I found that those who used Peruna had the quickest relief. “Peruna seems to restore vitality. Increase bodily vigor and renew health and strength In a wonderfully abort time.”—MßS. KATE TAYLOR. In view of the great multitude of women suffering from some form of female disease and yet unable to find any cure. Dr. Hartman, the renowned specialist on female catarrhal diseases, has announced bis willingness to direct the treatment of as many cases as mako application to him during the summer months, without charge. Address Tho Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio.

FACE Pimples, Blackheads, Red, Rough, Oily Skin Prevented by fitlcurj VSDAPMillions of Pooplo trm Chticvea Boap, assisted by Cuticcka Ointmznt, lor proserving, purifying,and beautifying tho ■kin, for cleansiug tho scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and Soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itellings, and chaflngs, and for all the purposesof the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use Cut*ccea Soxr in the form of baths forannoyIng Irritation*, inflammations, w„4 excoriations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative purposes. Conpleti Trtstnent fir Humors, sl. Ctraslztl ng of Ctmreu So ar (*Sc. ),to cleans* the akin of crust* and acales, and soften the thickened cuticle; Cuticu*a Ointment <S°o)..U> instantly allay Itchlne, Inflammation, and irritation, and soothe and iieal; and CUTICura Resolvent I’ills (2.1 c. to cool and cleanse the blood. A Single Set Is often sufficient to cure the icvcrestcaso. Cmcoxt Resolvett Pills (Chocolate Coated) are a new, tasteless, odourless, economical substitute for the celebrated liquid CcnccßA Resolvent,6o doses, price, 20c. th-owlxmt the wo*t Drttl.h D-~.li «rm rrvsch Ilvp-tiTltus S-le Ri.. I PO L ri . , l. D “'- **» C «“- •-

Y^"oiui»H)o l |Moir Over 2,000.000 people are now baying roods from us at wholesale prices -saving 15 to A 0 i>ercent on everything they use. You can do it too. Why not a*k us to send you our 1.000pagr catalogue ? -it tells the story. Send IS oents for It today. • CHIC AC, O The house that tells the truth. Keep Your Bowels Strong. Constipation or diarrhoea when your bowels are out of order. Cas» carets Candy Cathartic will male# them act naturally. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never iold in bulk. All druggists, ioc. c. N. XL No. 2i-1003 WHEN WtITINO TO ADVEKTISRS PLEAS! SAT ™ UT ,k * ■XWleewcsl la this HNT