Rensselaer Journal, Volume 10, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 May 1901 — Page 7
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
tty local ap illcatlons as they cannot reaoh th* fliseanert portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by cons till ilonal remedies. Deafness Is caused by an InilanW condition of the mucus lining of the F'.iisuxchian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sounder imperfect hearing. and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal tondltion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucus surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall’s Family pills are the best. We strike hard to get bargains and then don’t respect them as we do the things for which we are overcharged.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take Laxativb Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money If it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s signature is ou the box 25c. There are 72,000,000 cubic miles of water in the Atlantic ocean; 141,000,000 in the Pacific.
NO WOMAN CAN BE BEAUTIFUL
-•with a bad complexion. DR. CRANE'S QUAKER TONIC TABLETS clears it. . The sap of the sugar cane produces from 15 to 20 per cent of sugar.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pstn, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Excavations are being carried on at Pompeii around the Basilica.
!do you 'Cough don't delay KEMP’S BALSAM
R Coras Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat. Croup, In* ffuonza. Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect, after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 25 cento and SO centsD C IA/ A D Fl win be paid Ri g 0 1’'"“ for a case of I I backache, nervousness, sleepless■L y*"4 I I I ness, weakness, loss of vitality, InI i I I ■ ctplent kidney .bladder and urinary dffiorderi that can not be cured by the great kidney, liver and blood medicine. SOo ▲tail Druggists. Write for free sample. Address KID-NE-OIDS, St. Louis, Mo. > HOLLYHOCK POULTRY FARM 56-page Illustrated Poultry Catalogue. The secrets of'successful poultry raising told in plain language; all about incubators, brooders, poultry houses, how 4. ynl to hatch and raise every chick, what, when and how to feed, forcing, hens to lay and hundreds of valuable subjects contained in no other catalogue. Tells of 35 varieties popular thoroughbred fowls and quotes extremely low prices. Send 4c in stamps for postage. Hollyhock Poultry Farm. Box 1457, Des Moines, la. HAVE YOU MONEY TO INVEST? A limited amount of funds wanted for stock tn an exceedingly meritorious and profitable MININO enterprise. Will prove a very profitable Investment for small as well as large capitalists. You can Invest from 450 to *5,000. A specially favorable proposition made for the first available funds. Fdr terms and full information address R. G. RUXTON, 134 Van Buren Street Chicago. Illinois. FARMS FOR SALE. *6,000 buys S6O acres, 4 miles from Lakota, Nelson County, North Dakota, *8,400 buys 820 acres • mlfes from market, 150 acres under cultivation. •IBOOibnys 160 acres 2M miles from Lakota, 120 acres uader cultivation. We have other good farms for sale Cheap. Terms reasonable. If you want productive, cheap land or choice investments, call on or Wilt* HAHDXKH, BKRBITT * HAOLKH, Lakota, N. Daksta. m il TFMTft WITHOUT FEB Ral rl I MM KA I Mk unless sncceasfiil V* ** I Lil I MSioiil description', I ■■ ■ and get free opinion. " MILO B. STEVENS * CO., Estab. 1864. Div. 2, 817—14th Street, WASHINGTON, B. C. Branch offlees: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.
If Your Wife is nervous and your doctor’s medicine does her no good, why don t you write to Dr. Oreene about her and get his advioo f This will not cost you anything, and it will probably be the means of making your wife a well woman. Dr. Greene’s address is 38 W. 14th St., Now York City. He is the discoverer of Dr. Greene's Nervura and has the greatest success curing nervousness in all its forms. It is no exaggeration to say that thousands of women and mon have been made well through his oounsol. Absolutely no charge for advice by mall.
FRAGRANT for the TEETH and BREATH lew Size SOZODONT LIQUID . . . 25a New Patent Box SOZODONT POWDER . 25c Largo LIQUID and POWDER ... 750 MiWF At the Stores or by Mail, postpaid, for the Price. A Dentist’s Opinion I U AB an antiseptic and hygrienio mouthwash, and for the care and preservation of the teeth and turns I cordially recommend Sozodont. I consider it the ideal dentifrice for Children’s Use.” [Name of writer upon application 1 HALL & RUCKEL, NEW YORK.
W. L. DOUGLAS /'’x S 3 & $3.50 SHOES S." Th® real worth of my >3.00 and >3.30 shoes compared with S3® other malt®. Hft.W) to >5.00. My »4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be 3ualled at any price. Best In the world for men. v ft If I • cl * •u« r « '"«»’• Me .hoes, Goodyear fr&MWk. /. V elt ! H .? l| d- s 9' , . l;< !.rr<>rm),lh»n nay Other manufnc- --AvW’fci J-X Iw’Hpwyßi.OOOtoaayoaewhocan f ®WOTO that my etaieaneat hi not true, 3 4 _ (Sinned) W. 1., Dougins. Msi'. 1 T*** 1 "° •wb.tltwte! Inslrt on having W. L. Douglas shoes A with name and prlee stamped on bottom. Your dealer should /Bk. keep th*m ; I give on® dealer exoln.lve sale In each town. If ' //Jffffln •• “°*? no * kee P them and will not get them for you, order itfWfeiwi /Jwwjfifrsdirect from factory, enclosing price ana 23c. extra for carriage. Over 1.550,000 satisfied wearers. New Spring Catalog free. « VwtMwlydet.uWudwiv.iy. W. L DOUGLAS, Brookton, Mass. ?
PRONOUNOE IT.
Bigrldur Jonsdottir, Kirmarstodum, Reykholasvelt, • Bardastrandarsyslß, Iceland, Europe. This is the address given in an order for Dodd’s Kidney Pills received and filled by the Dodd’s Medicine Company of Buffalo, on April 16th. This unique direction means that to reach the sick people of Iceland, the parcel must travel to New York, then to London, Eng., then northwest to Greenland, to be landed finally, on the lonely island at the edge of the Arctic Circle. This is a pointed illustration of how United States goods find their way to the remotest corners of the earth, today, produces better medicines, as well as better manufactured articles than any other country in the world, and this fact accounts for the demand for Dodd’s Kidney Pills from every part of the known universe.
The Kitchen Garden.
Whether the “garden" be a two-acre plat or a city back yard twenty by thirty feet, there are certain things that should be planted for the infinite comfort derived through the summer from such provision. Herbs come first, that garnishings and" soup or sauce flavors may always be at hand. If besides the place for herbs there be space for a fair-sized garden, let preference be given to cucumbers, which axe good only when freshly picked; tomatoes, and about three plantings, two weeks apart, of lettuce and radishes, which are wholesome only when fresh. If more space still be at command, give the next choice to green beans of the stringless variety, and corn, both of which are so much better if freshly gathered; then peas, carrots (a most delicate vegetable when small), beets and okra.—Woman’s Home Companion. J A
Wonderful Milking Record.
The milking record for New Zealand has been put up by a Plains settler and his wife, who, without any help except what could be given by a 20-month-old infant, milked seventynine cows twice dally. It is a fact, and can be vouched for, that he delivered on an average 2,000 pounds of milk a day at the factory, and not a penny was spent in wages last year.— New Zealand Record.
The Grand Trunk Rallway System.
The picturesque route to the PanAmerican Exposition, will mail on receipt of 2 cents in stamps, sent to its City Passenger and Ticket Agent, 249 Clark Street, Chicago, the handsomest descriptive folder of the Pan-American Exposition yet issued.
For its unexampled electrical display the Pan-American exposition will receive five thousand horse power electric power from the great plant of the Niagara Falls Power company, twenty miles distant.
When your liver is out of order do not dose yourself with poisonous drugs that harm and never cure, but take Garfield Tea, the HERB remedy that CURES. Senator Hoar believes and acts on the belief that the last car in a train is the safest.
Do Not Spoil Your Clothes
by using inferior soap. Maple City Self Washing Soap gives the best results. Try It. All good grocers sell it. Paul of Russia was insane during the greater part of his life. Coe’s Cough Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break up acoldquickex than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it. Hope is the best medicine a physician can give his patients.
Their little cottage stands apart From all its splendid neighbors, As if it felt a touch of shame At Mother Drudge’s labors. A bit of vine to make it sweet Is all it has, or maybe, A pansy in a broken pot To please the precious baby. And there she works from dawn till dark To keep the kettle going, For all the comforts of their tot Must be of her bestowing. And would she even breathe a prayer, So scanty are her riches, Ser poor petitions must be dropped Between her hurried stitches. With rosy cheeks and rugged limbs. With tiny caps and dresses, Bhe sees her bonny children blessed, And comforts her distresses. Unconscious of their stinted lot, And ignorant of crosses. *Twould seem a shame to pity those Who never dream of losses.
THE GENTLEMAN
“ didn’t know enough to take off his hat!” As the elevator sedately moved upward, bearing Miss Hallowell to the eighth floor, these words were spilled from it directly into the sun-burned ears of John Peck, of the sixth floor. He realized that it was his hat which bad not been “taken off,” and that through the medium of this hat he had Incurred the displeasure and scorn of Miss Hallowell. He inserted a key In the keyhole of 'Apartment 603, entered, and strode noisily through the inner hall until he reached his room. He was angry and hurt Nothing so cruel as a woman’s tongue, and nothing that leaves a man so defenceless. John removed the offending hat and examined it critically even approvingly. It was a sombrero. The chances were that no hat in that whole great city could equal it in fineness of texture and in genuine worth. “Out West” from where John Peck recently had come {and where at this moment he heartily wished he were), the quality of a hat is of supreme importance. A hat is actually an integral part, not merely an adjunct, of a wardrobe. It is carefully selected, jealously cherished and proudly worn as a thing of art. The cowboy is more tender of his boots and of his hat than he is of his pony. However, despite the evident fact that this was a hat to be esteemed among all rival hats, John admitted to himself that he ought not to have kept it on his head while he was in the elevator with a woman. It dawned upon him that there is a distinction between private and public elevators. He had committed an error against society. Take a man who has been on the range for seven or eight years, and In that period scarcely has seen a woman, and transplant him to a city, and although at heart he is a gentleman he is likely at first to scratch the polish of metropolitan civilization. Thus to oblige a woman, whether pretty or ugly, John Peck might brave a norther, but he might meet her the next day in an elevator and forget to doff his hat. Miss Hallowell had learned only the latter portion of this hypothesis, and now up on the eighth floor she was graphically recounting to her friends her truly harrowing experience. Miss Hallowell, maiden lady, was large and angular and severe, but she had a little mind, easily disturbed. “I just glared at him all the way,” Bhe incited, with proper emphasis, “yet I don’t believe he even thought of his hat! I never heard of such a performance! He looked like a cowboy, and the little fellow in the elevator says that he rooms on the sixth, in the Morris apartments. I shouldn’t think the Morrises would take a lodger like that!”
“He’s a relative of Mr. Morris,” explained one friend, “and I understand he’s from Arizona. Anyway, he’s come to the city to stay awhile, and of course Mr. Morris felt obliged to give him a room until he found permanent quarters.” “Well, he isn’t a gentleman!” asserted Miss Hallowell, conclusively. For Miss Hallowell was quite sure that she knew a gentleman when she saw him. ******* While on the top floor of the building Miss Hallowell had been vigorously narrating and condemning; while two floors below John Peck had been sitting on his bed wrathfully brooding over criticism by effete society; while, later, Miss Hallowell had descended to her own apartments at 617, on the same floor with those of the misbehaving Morris family, far down in the basement a Are had been bom, and from moment to moment it had been growing. Brought forth in stealth. In stealth It sought to live until its stature was assured. At 8 o’clock that night it had been only a tiny flicker of flame which the breath of a babe might have overcome. At 8 o’dock two buckets of water could have prevailed against it. At 10 o’clock a single extinguisher, wisely wielded, could have subdued it. At 11 o’clock it still was afraid to be seen. So slowly and so craftily was it eating Into the cranny leading between the walls. But at 12 o’clock it had arrived to Its manhood, it had established its stronghold, and it was ready to flaunt the red banner of defiance in the face of a thousand people. Therefore it recked not that during the midnight hour the engineer, tardily traversing tiu' corridor, smelt
MOTHER DRUDGE’S BABIES.
And yet of all their little lives They miss this crowning glory, To cuddle close in mothers arms And listen to her story. They never watched how many stan Are in the golden dipper, .... Or fell asleep at dark to dream » Of Cinderella’s slipper. The doughty giant Hercules _ May charm their wiser neighbors—* They never heard a word of him Or all his mighty labors! Of Midas, and the golden touch He craved to make him richer; Or how the milk came foaming up In old Philemon’s pitcher. The daily fight for daily bread, For little coats and dresses, Leaves scanty time for Mother Drudgs To dream of tendernesses. Yet though the days and weeks are foil Of disappointed maybe’« Life seems a sweet and pleasant thing To Mother Drudge’s babies. —Ola Moore, in Youth's Companion.
By Edwin L. Sabin.
smoke, and peering in saw fire, and, awakening the elevator boys as he ran,, rushed to the alarm box and pulled the lever. Fast as sped the elevator boys from story to story, summoning the tenants, faster sped the flames. The fine aparthouse, with its convenient hallways, its unique furnishings of maple, its varnished floors, its tastefully tinted ceilings, was after all a very flimsy structure. The contractors deemed that they were the only ones to know this —but fire long had been in possession of the secret John Peck, sleeping the sound slum* ber of a perfectly healthy man, at the end of an inside hall, with the Mosrises absent for the night, and no one near to arouse him, and Miss Hallowell, slightly deaf, also asleep at the end of an inside hall opposite him, did not comprehend the situation until their rooms were thick with smoke and the blaze was seeking for them. When they leaped from their beds they found the floor hot to their feet. The man and the woman emerged from their apartments simultaneously, and met face to face on the landing. No thought now of outward semblance of lady and gentleman. The elevator shaft was a flue up which whirled gusts of resinous smoke, glowing cinders and bursts of torrid air, while from stairs beneath little flames spouted eagerly. The draft caused the doors to slam behind the two. The elevator cage was somewhere below and descending. “Quick—try the back way!” cried John. “Through our apartmenthurry!” “Oh, I can’t, I can’t!” wailed Miss Hallowell, frantically. “I can’t move. My knees are so weak!”
“But you must!” appealed John. “Give me your hand—give it to me, I say!” Her collapse irritated him. “Get up! I’ll carry you, but you must try to walk.”. “No, no, I can’t,” she answered, with a sob. “Go on. Don’t you dare to touch me! I’d rather die here than get caught in that long corridor.” “Then the fire-escape in front,” he urged. “I’ll help you.” “No, no!” she protested hysterically, raising her hands to keep him at a distance. “Don’t touch me! don’t touch me! I’l stay here. You go!” “O thunder!” ejaculated John, with a sudden lapse into his forceful Western speech. “I’m shore not goin’ to leave you here all alone.” “You jest get under this, and I’ll make a try for that blamed elevator,” he said, as lightly as he could, and he clapped on her head his sombrero, which through habit he had snatched as he was bolting through his room. For a second time while in her company he was wearing it. He pressed the electric button, but already the elevator was crawling upward, after its last load—clutched at by the hungry flames as it brushed them in passing. From landing to landing it came, taking on in ones and twos persons who, like Miss Hallowell, had been unable to help themselves, or who, like John, had remained to help others. None would wait for the downward trip, for who could tell what might happen between minutes? The heat now was intense, and the cage was in the midst of a greedy, roaring furnace. Fire from the stairs curled into the sides of the elevator, and when it had swept painfully by licked its retreating floor. Its load was in torture. Men and women alike fought the operator as he bravely persisted in ascending. As he wrenched it back the door of the shaft blistered John’s hands. “Can’t go no higher!” gasped the elevator boy, as the cage hesitated opposite. “Get in, quick!” “Quick! Quick!” echoed the people, writhing as they were jostled against the hot iron-work of their prison. “For God’s sake, don’t stop! There’s no room!” shouted the voice of a man maddened by torture. “Down! down!” “You bet there’s room, pardner,” replied John, recklessly. “Lots of it! Ladies first—-” and with a swift motion he dragged Miss Hallowell from her knees and fairly rammed her in between the squirming bodies. Then then —in an Instant some frenzied hand jerked the lever and the cage shot down. Flames from the fourth floor closed over It like a barrier, and sprang vengefully up the stairway. Thus abandoned, John Peck turned to the door of the Morris apartment But the night-latch had fallen into place—and his keys were in his room. Desperately he tried Miss Hallowell’s
door. That, too, was locsea. ue dashed at the stairs. A volcano of fire met him, smote him in the face and hurled him backward.—The Criterion.
SPEED OF AN EARTHQUAKE.
Preliminary Tremors Travel at the Rato of 345 Miles a Minute. Speaking of the Indian earthquakes of 1897, a London scientist says the 1 , vibrations traveled to Europe, where they were recorded at very many sta-' tions, and no donbt would have been equally well recorded at any other places on the surface of our world had there been provided suitable instruments. The preliminary tremors, which are probably waves of compression, traveled through the world to reach Italy and other countries with an average rate of 345 miles per minute, or 9.0 kilometers per second—a rate which, it will be observed, is higher than that at which similar movements can be transmitted through glass or steeL The large waves, which are probably quasl-elas-tic gravitation waves, by .traveling over the surface of the earth, reached Europe at a rate of 113 miles per minute, or 2.98 kilometers per seconds. It Is likely that these latter disturb-; ances reached stations in Europe by; traveling from their origin in two di-: rectlons round the world. As an indication of this, we are told that at sev-i eral of the European stations slight undulations are to be seen on the* seismograms at times we should ex-| pect to find such markings, had they, traveled from India to Europe by the' longest possible route. From the period of these waves, which is taken at twenty-two seconds, and their velocity, their length may be inferred, an estimate of which is thirty-four miles; while their height, as deducted from their length, and the maximum angle of tilting, Is estimated at twenty Inches. The slowness of the movement was such that they could not be felt, while the magnitude was such that the unaided eye of an observer would not be able to recognize any differential movements In his surroundings. The largeness of these disturbances and their great duration, extending over several hours, preclude them from the category of tremors, vibrations or microsclsms.— Dispatch.
Rats Clogged the Furnace Flue.
A Slater man tells a rat story which he assures a reporter is absolutely true: “Several days ago, John, the colored man employed by Hull & Edwards, butchers, went to the slaughter house,” said he, “and attempted to start a fire under the scalding vat. For some unaccountable reason he, could get no draft through the chimney. It developed later that on account of the earth being warm under the vat from previous fires, the rats, which were known to be numerous about the slaughter house, had taken refuge under it. There was but one way for them to get out and that was to come through the mouth of the' furnace. As they left the furnace! John got a stick and began ing them. He succeeded in killing 104, by actual count, and I presume more got away than were killed. So many had taken refuge under the vat that' the draft was cut off. After they madei their exit no further trouble was experienced in making the fire burn.: In addition the rats have been very scarce round about the other slaughf ter houses since the rat Killing bee.”— Kansas City Journal.
Potent Cause of Forest Fires.
The most frequent causes of woodland fires in our State (New York) are the small fires started by farmers for the purpose of burning brush, logs and stumps, in order to clear some piece of land. These are known locally as fallow fires, and the operation is generally alluded to as burning a Toiler.” This work, as a rule, is carelessly done, and as the farmer always selects a dry time in order to get a good bum, as he terms it, the fire escapes too frequently into the adjoining forest Having piled the brush and logs into heaps for burning, the farmer seldom employs any extra help to guard against* the escape of the fire, and so when a breeze springs up, as is very apt to be the case, he is unable to control the flames or prevent them from being driven into the adjoining woods. Too often he is known to set fire to his brush heaps and then go away to attend to other work, leaving the fire unwatched. Nearly all the burned areas in the Adirondack region are due to the carelessness of men employed in these petty agricultural operations.— Report of Forest, Fish and Game Commission.
Concerning " Whatcom. "
The citizens, of New Whatcom, Washington, assert and publish to the world that when Uncle Sam lately invited his children to stand up and be counted, they, the said citizens, were not counted accurately. The census gave New Whatcom a population of less than 7000. The citizens, being convinced that their numerousness had been understated, appointed a committee, which employed enumerators who counted citizens in New Whatcom up to the number of 918&. and swore to their count. New What, com, through its Commercial Club, is diffusing the news that it is bigger than Uncle Sam thinks. It is a pleasure to aid it in spreading word of Its growth, and also the news that by act of Legislature it Is New Whatcom no longer, but has dropped the “New" from its name and is now plain Whatcom.—E. S. Martin, in Harper’s Weekly.
The Floating Population.
There are always 1,200,000 people afloat on the seas of the world.
SPRING CATARRH MAKES PEOPLE WEAK AND NERVOUS
W illll
MISS ANNA BRYAN OF WASHINGTON. D. C.
Miss Anna Bryan, a favorite cousin of William Jennings Bryan, is well known socially in Washington, D. C., where she has a host of friends. Miss Bryan recently studied music at Fairmount Seminary, of Washington, D. C. In a recent letter to The Peruna Medicine Co., of Columbus, Ohio, she say
1459 Florida Avenue, N. W., Washington, D, C. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen-—“At the solicitation of a friend I began some weeks ago to take your Peruna and I now feel like a new person. I take pleasure in recommending it to all a good tonic and a permanent cure for catarrh. ’’—Anna Bryan.
AM RS. BERTHA KOCKLER, 177 /•I Guinett street, Brooklyn, N. Y., * ’ ■ writes: ‘‘Peruna and Manalin have done me very great service, and I recommend them with pleasure to all who suffer with nervous catarrh of the stomach as I dm. Should such a disease ever attack me again I shall immediately take Peruna. I now feel very well and have a good appetite all the time. I
Bl MAM-M-MAI! DON’T YOU HEAR BABY CRY? Do you forget that summer’s coming with all its dangers to the little ones—all troubles I bred in the bowels. The summer’s heat kills babies and little children because their little insides are not in good, clean, strong condition. 5 r> Winter has filled the system with bile. |) Belching, vomiting up of sour food, rash, H flushed skin, colic, restlessness, diarrhoea or I constipation, all testify that the bowels are out k of order. 1 If you want the little ones to face the coming’ dangers without anxious fear for their lives, see that the baby's bowels are gently, soothingly, but positively cleaned oat tn the spring time, end made strong and healthy before hot weather sets in. The only safe laxative pleasant to take (they • ask for more) is CASCARETS. Nursing mothers make their milk mildly purgative for the baby by eating a CASCARET t of CASCARETS? you will guarantee, all irregularities of the little and big childrens insides are CURED BY LIVER TO IN IC
bloated bowels, foul DMnll°Ui^n e Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together* St ta * ■tarter for the ehronle ailments Tufa Inn. will C ?* CAKK « to-day, for you ~
Thompson’s Fye Wator
have gained in weight. I recommended Peruna to an acquaintance of ours and he is making remarkable progress. I looked so badly for a time before I began your medicine, that now when I meet some of my friends they say: ‘I was very much worried about you, but now you are looking so well.’ I shall always keep Peruna and Manalin in the house as family medicines.” —Mrs. Bertha Kockler.
GUARANTEED alsallar |B the worl4 .
for oa ea *y term,, or exch.nze. In la, Seb., Minn, or S. D. J. Mulhall. Sioux dfy, low.
Thousands of Fair Wiaia Are Navor Without Panina, The National Catarrh Ramady.
Miss Marls Coats, President of Um Appleton Young Ladies* Club, writes the following concerning Peruna: Appleton. Win. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.
Gentle m e n—"I find Peruna an exes Dent spring and summ e r medicine and am glad to call the attenti o n of my friends to IL When that languid, tired feeling comes over you, and your food no longer tastes good, and
i - JqEq o 'wT x '
Mlm Marte Ooetee.
small annoyances irritate you, Peruna will make you feel like another person inside of a week. I have now used it for three seasons and find it very reliable and efficacious.”—Marie Coats. Mrs. Al. Wetzel, 21 South 17th street, Terre Haute, Ind., writes: ‘‘Peruna is the greatest medicine on earth. I feel well and that tired feeling is all gone. When I began to take your medicine 1 eould not smell nor hear a church bell ring. Now I ran smell and hear. When I began your treatment my head was terrible, all sorts of buzzing, chirping and loud noises. Three months ago I dragged around like a snail; now I can walk as briskly as ever. I am going to go and see the doctor that said I was not long for this world, and tell him that Peruna cured me.’*—Mrs. Al. Wetzel. If all the tired women and all the nervous women, and all the women that needed a tonic would read and heed the words of these three fair ladies who have spoken right to the point, how many invalids would be prevented and how many wretched lives be made happy. Peruna restores health In a normal way. ' Peruna puts right all the mucous membranes of the body, and in thia way restores the functions of every organ. If it is the stomach that is out of order, and the digestion impaired, Peruna quickly makes things right by restoring the mucous membrane of the stomach. If the nerves tingle, if the brain is tired, if the strength is flagging and the circulation of blood weakened by flabby mucous membranes of the digestive organs, Peruna reaches the spot at once by giving to these membranes the vitality and activity which belongs to them. The pelvic organs are also lined with mucous membrane which in the female sex is especially liable to derangements. Peruna is an absolute specific in these cases. The women everywhere are praising it No other remedy has ever received such unqualified praise from such a multitude of women. If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
Use Certain Com Curu Price, 15c.
