FOR TWENTY-ONE YEARS j TBE SABBATH SCHOOL
C«ttrrh Remedie? and Doctor* Failed
—Pe-ru-na Cured.
IstcrmatloMl Lcmob Cm
Fcbnury &.
CATARRH THIRTY YEARS.
L K. KIDD. ELGIN, ILL.—Id ■ *erjr recent commu bicatioo from tbit place come* the new. that Mr. Arthur Emeit Kidd, a wellkabwn architect of that city, ha* made complete recovery from catarrh of fhc bead, from which h« bad •uflrred for nearly a quarter of a century. He write* from 18 Hamilton arc.: “1 am «2 year* of a*e. and hare had ca tarrh of the head for over half of my life, illowed by
ea Me Day's Laeioa A then. de*cribed in oar last leaMn. "Dea ssihXHia: i rutted morelniitful fielda. "Came to CorGreece. It wa. the waalthicat and wicked"‘AZ ■Id' £1 Sti i ‘'^"Aquila-rnaciUa." "Moot devoted ' friend, of Paul, persona of culture and i C&2: "S “S U S3 i Sfw “rt„ o ’ rsas '■ srjr.,: , .S's«-.“TT: d *s i !
throat, eyeai-ht, a rcdu.vd m;
“1 tried nearly every catarrh remedy advert urd. beside* a great many difierent physician*' treatment*, all of which failed
i^jrsa.'ats&.'S^fsa i AquOa in Rome not lone after (Rom. 16: j S S) and many Jena rcaidcd there when ,«
1 pounda Feel tip
>nths a; bottles, i t happier
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Reruns,
pleated to give you hit valuable advice gratis Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. Askyurfinggistfirafm P»-n Biilimc Vf M UNION MADE I ' W.L. Ommttmm —Asa mmd aW/a $25,000 REWARD will b* psld to as roe* who caa dlsprovs ini* stalowat. Because W. L. Douglas is the largest raanufacturer ha can buy cheaper and produce bis shoe* at s lower coat than other codcema, which enable* him to tell shoe* fort 83.00 equal in < ■ray to those mid where for $4 and *3.00.1 W. L. Douglas 83J0 am|I$3a}>omare wom by thousand* of men who have been paying84 and fS.not believing they could get a first-class shoe for 83A0 or 83.00. He has convinced them that the style, fit, and wear of hla 83.30 and 83.00 shoes I* juit as good. Giva them a trial and aave money. W. I_ DOUGLAS SAGO GILT EDGE LINE, Worth SSGO Compared Ochsr Mahas. t Am
man. going from one t.-ntmaker'a door to ,
Sss :
(1 Cor. 4: IS).
4. “Reaeoned —peranaded.” From the Sr-siiaf t.srssLrJsrz:: wa* the Meniah and the go*pel true. The l
Kri.'J'KS
(acadonia; Timo-
Sni.'SsiT^sgssJ 1 '*' thy from Thewalonica and Silaa_
Capsicum Vaseline Pat up In Collapsible Tubes. A toheUtuU tor and Superior to Mm*lard or any other plaater. and will not hluter the moat 4*1 leal* .kin. The pain allaying and soraUv* qaalltlaa of this article are wonderful. It will S£ «d!SiS^ “ “ d »—■ We recommend It a* the beet and mfaet eiSarnaJ eounur-lnllani known, also a* an exteroal remedy for p*ln* In the eheet and atom-St^“S—S-I • houaahold. Many people nay "It la the bait of •Byoar preparation* * Kwlags 1 by lha pabl ml. a* otharwl oesemowii iimFicntBt co. *” “■ Street. New Terh City-
JACKS
r...TwmKWraaaios LAVE. Am m 4aa* c, tmatm Mreeyad Onauaer tamm aaaw ta*. Si am m
... EStiSS STSSlPSi Si ‘rA-A'itiii'TJZ'iti-S. The«*aIonian*, and aoon after a second letMs«s^*rr,fiSwtar doubt eUrred up by the intense earnest* M.K"~'Sr*srK,^‘ss! rtitiVttz frLti^i as sa«* iToZ^h."^^ ‘XSs
to the Jew* in other place*.
7. “A certain man a bouae." Used for zr-TAS-titiAsr:,. Svss
T 1
rSiSEftL.—
'i»2?j~
house " The first rc-
the conversion of an 9. -nle^tpiS'the Lord." It 1* likely that Paul wm at thia time much diatroaed
LONHBESiMEAN MttKIbO.N OF OHIO. Hon David Meekieon » well known, not only in hi* ou* State, but throuehout irsr<„z,??ti“£‘'iti tw l> "i“' .'"—•I't “ a '-~ Only one flaw marred the otherwise complete success of thia riaing atatesman. Catarrh, with its inaidioui approach and tenacious gra*p. wa* hi* only unconquered
man a* the result:
I •• I have used several bottlr* of Pcruma and f /eel gremtly bene- 3 i filed thereby from w»y catarrh of the head. 1 /cel t ncouvoped to be- J [ Heve i Hat 1/t uee if ebort Ums longer 1 trill be fully able to enul- 3 I Icale the disease or thirty years’ standing.’ —David Meeklson. J
[ tlemb-r of < n no rets.
T%i* i* the way the chronic catarrh gen•rally begin*. A pereon catche* cold.
cold all the while aeemingly, more or lea* discharge ffom the nose, hawking, apitf
. iH*feelin tore, inflamed throat.
The beat time to treat catarrh i* J>e very beginning. A bottle of Perm iroper.y used, never fails to cure a co
. . . _ a rule, when the cat become* thoroughly fixed m6re than bottle ia neceeaary to complete a cure. Peruna ha* cured case* innumerable of catarrh of twenty years’ atanding. It ia the beat, if not the only internal remedy for chronic catarrh in existence. But prevention is far better than cure. Every person subject to catching cold should take Peruna at once at the slightest symptom of cold or acre throat at thii •ca»on of the year and thns prevent what ia almost certain to end in chronic ca-
tarrh.
Send for free book on ea tarrh. entitled "Winter Catarrh,” by Dr. Hartman. "Health and Bfeauty" sent free to women
Ask rouR drumist for a face Pc-ru-ma Almanac
l n 3 permanently cured ."Mo nts or narronsnear aftar drat day's use of Ur. Kline's Great Nerve 11 ret orer. gk trial bottlaand trestle* tree Ur. H.H. Run*. Ltd., 881 Arch Kt.. Phlla-.Pa-
first convert was the
ruler of the synagogue be had left. Hi* decided conree made the conduct of other* — Chief ruler.'’ /
enti- T —b
'Sti
Mia. Winslows Soot bin gSyrup for el Ieethlnggotten the gums, redneee lalli l Ion .allay* paln.cnres wind oolle. 38c. *
Hon .allay* pato.i Few men can lo tain their popularil
oolle. 38c. a bolt 1 .-
: their money and re
Any one can aye wflh PtmtAU Fade Lem DrE*; no experience required. Perhaps two may live aa cheaply as one, but somehow or other they never do.
*N aaT
_ cawp-t cATMmnvic
. 4CCC Mem aoU h bal * the dealer who tries to acO “aoxathiag jest as guoi."
■NBCIT TREES. •KKAMERTAL p STRAWBERRr PLgMIE, ■ kRBCR-.ROSES CRAPE VINES.
A R WATRII
mth, since in other place* he
drawn when opposition came. Fear op crates again*t faith, and God forbsda it. li ''With thee" To soatnin thee is trial, to give utterance in the Spirit, to give point and edge to thy words, to pro tect thee from hostile enemies, and to make thee victor in every conflict. Though men oppose and leave thee, I will not. Una the assurance came in the boor of necessity. "No man-Wt Thee.” No mar
shall oppose or condemn thee, to
thee. He wm not to
place. He should be a _. to the indgment aaat (r. 12). b«l fence aboard crush him. "Much “Not many already o - '
but many in whom be to receive the gospel.”
II. “He continued.” Paul's Mar, or de
wsa not. rebellion. To know
ra&gas ked and brought
.ted tT&od. preparedneai
sttondeuey, wa* not G«l'* will was to do it. He feared nof trials so much as a failure to follow U» Lord's guiding hand. A word of command with a promise of help settled all doubts and gave courage for the undertaking "Yew and air months” Durin. thUthS be wrote the second fetter to the Tbtsen
true that people often say thnl th* turning up of leaves ta a rlgn ol rain, but the sign doe* not seem to b* a vary true one, declares tho Monthly Weather Review. There are many kind* of trees like the silver-leaf pop lars. In fact all the poplars, the map!* and some of the «aka. which turn their leaves op wbisovqr there is a fairly stropg steady rind, but they dc It an much Is clear weather as lx rainy. Pohslbly the belief may have arises from the fact that winds cap able of tnrnli _ low rainstorms.
Is the Standard Rheumatic Remedy.
Ths DULY BSEMSSBd sa the aartst that o disease without delag Irreparable harv te tbs Cg-thu organs UNEQUALLED as a BLOOD PURIFIER.
CHEERFULLY RECOMMENDS IT.
I hadto'uss 1 bottles beforel ours seems to be 1 cun cheerfully
For safe by Druggists, or sent exprenagr prepaid o Bobbitt Chemical Co..
receipt at $igo. rw.
REPEATING BIFLEsf repeat. They don’t Jam, catch, or fall to extract. In a word, they are the only reliable repeater*. Winchester rifles are made in all desirable calibers, weights and styles; and are plain, partially or elaborately ornamented, suiting every purpose, every pocietbook, and every taste. WINCHESTER AMMUNITION made for all kinds of shooting In all kinds of guns. FH EE-fciTi etSimSiS fc£3£! ! PINCHES ret HE PEA TING AIMS OK KEW BAVIN. COMB. H
Juvenile Uallsntr}'. ( He was a tiny little fellow, surely not ' more than five years old, and as he called for his afternoon papers at the coiner of Twelfth and Market streets many i people gazed at him with mingled amusement and pity. He had long ’ brown curls, wet with the drenching ' rain, and his shrill little voice had baby lisp. A very stout, elderly w
,... JF Running up to
water and at the passing procession sagons and trolley can The little . 'sboy js-as quick to size up the
her he excli
together the ridiculous pair their way to the opposite curb. Ther the stvt woman opened her purse gravely banded the litilc fellow a coin and disappeared in the Reading TerCapuin A. T. Mahan. U. S N.. has been elected an honorary member of the Royal United States Instruction for life, in acknowledgment of his valuable contributions to the literature ol the
British Nav;
Navy.
The five
My Lungs
“ Aa attack of la grippe left me with a bad cough. My friends said I bad consumption. 1 then triad Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral and it cured me promptly.” A. K. Randles, Nokomlt, III.
You forgot to buy a bottle of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral when your cold first came on, so you let it run along. Even now, with all your hard coughing, it will not disappoint you. There’s a record of sixty years to fall back on. Tkra* at**.: tic.. S4c. II. All treated
Cousll roar doctor. If h* un tskc : tbM do u lx un If h. MIL r<x n to tsko K. then dost tsk. It. H. Loo. Lure It with hlM. w. arewiiilos.
4- C. ATEB OO-LowaT
LowolLMu*.
'°.5“s.S£ ! advertise 1 * wiV" it pays
BEAUTY AND PURITY
Ancient and Modern Ideas on the Subject. Time and Disease the Effacing Agents of Beauty. What Has Scienco Done to Restore the Lily and the Rose?
gloriuuc r of the
cvicr vusii an me icwera oi rccomLtlon In the world, and yet nose ae diaUngulsbed aulborliles has i even a hint of how beauty Is to
Socrates called beauty a
tyranny, Plato a pi‘ Theocritus a dell
Theophrastus a silent chest, O a solitary kingdom. Homer a gift of nature, Ovid a favoi god*. Aristotle affirmed r
was better than all the letters ofrecc mendatlon In the world, and yet n< of these dial
left us even
zr
the lllv and the roae Into the pallor of age, disease dots the fair face with cutaneous disfigurations and crimson* the Roman nose with unsightly flushes, moth, if not rust, corrupts the glory of eyes, teeth, and lips yetbeantlfu! by defacing the complexion, and fills the sensitive soul with agony unspeakable. If soch be the unhappy condition of one afflicted with slight skin blemlshe*, what most be the feelings of those In whom torturing humors have for years run riot, covering the aklu with scales and sores and charging the blood with poisonous elements to become a part of the system until death? It is rain to attempt to portray soch suffering. Death In many cases might be considered a blessing. The blood and fluids seem to lie impregnated with a flery element which, when discharged through the pores upon the surface of the body. Inflames nnd burns nntll. In hla efforts for relief, the patient tears the skin with hi* nails, and not until the bipod flows does sufficient relief oomc toexuse him
to desist.
Thus do complexions: defects merge into torturin,. disease, and piqued vanity give plsce to real suffering. A little wart on the nose or cheek grows to the all-devoorlng Inpoa, a patch of tetter on the palm of the band or on the limbs suddenly envelops the body In Its fiery embrace, a bruise on the 1 g expands Into a gnawLg ulcer, which reaches out Its fangs to the aofferer'a heart In every paroxysm of pain, a email kernel In the neck multiplies Into a dozen, which eat away the vitality, great pcarl-Uke scales grow from little rasb-llke Inflammations In such abundance a* to past credulity , and so on may we depict the snflhrlugs to which poor human nature la subject, all of which involve great mental distress because of personal disfigurations. If there were not another external disease known, eczema alone would be a sufficient Infliction on mankind. It pervades all classes, and descends impartially through generations. While
some are constantly
others have patches In the
the breast, on tbe palms of the bauds, on the Urabe, etc., hot everywhere its distinctive feature !a a small watery blister, which disc hare es an acrid fluid, causing heat, inflammation, and Intense ItcliTng. Bing-worm, tetter, acallcd head, dandrurlT belong to thia scaly and Itching order of dlsoosea. Psoriasis, mr modera leprosy, with Ita mother-of-pearl scale, situated on a reddened base, which bleeds upon the removal of the scale, la to be dreaded and avoided, as of old. Impetigo, barber's Itch, erysipelas, and a •core of minor disorders make up In part the ealslorne of external diseases of the akin. Thus far we have mode no nlluslou to those afflictions which are manifestly Impu ritlea of the blood, via.: swelling of the glands of the throat, ulcers on tbe neck and limbs, tumors, abscesses, and mercurial poisons, with loss of hair, becan-e the whole list can be comprehended in
the one word scrofula.
It la In tbe treatment of torturing, disfiguring humors sod affection* oft the skin, scalp, and blood, with loss of hair, that the Cot I curs remedies have achieved their greateat success. Orlg-
4M- fBEMpam *
pounded ,abtoll
In aay ell
ufancy to a and 'lie edfee.-n.
ira system wlU r-,o v tiny of their lemsio-
cleanse the blood. This treatment afford* 1 ns'ant relief, permits rest and humors, and points to a speedy, perm:, nent, and economical cure of torturin,-, disfiguring humors, eczem'*, raabw, sad inflammaU-ns, from infan
stUntlng the Outlcura e an Individual ocrutlny
form the medlclnil properties of CnM-'-ra Ointment, th* gr-.:t sk.i; cure ard Ks , M.*rs,?s3Ssr?ir^ frc-blna of flower 'dots. !•. parUcj and invigorates the pores ct the «-i-, i:od Imparts activity to Ike oil g « Mi-1 tubes, thi:« furnishing an oct’-et •••i unwholesome.matter, wnlch if rrtclued would cause pimples, blackwell as scalp affecUooa and irriiaiL n -, falling hair, and baby raabt*. Its z«. .- tic sud contlnnrtu •ctlon on thenatn.sl l-ibricatore of the -.kin -cep* the i-itet transparent, soft, flexible, and h.sllLy. Hence Its constant use. as-iste.1 by sj occssiona: use of Coll cur*. Ointment, realizes the falre-.t complex! n. th* •oftest. > hi test h-.-v, auo '-e mV. luxurlact, glossy h:.*r wltfclc the domain of the mo--. sovuitAd adcatl'c
“■SSS'Mi • tlyaf .rtowturlag,
leratlona. Whll enveloped In It,
to small
confined
amtll
P. OB the hands,
InaaycUmat able to the
they
bsolutely pure,unchang(
ato, alway a ready, and agrecmost delicate anti senslL've,
ang and old the most
surcesaiui curative of modern tlmcE This will be conatdc ed strong language by those acquainted with the character and obalinscy of blood and skloliumore but U la justified by Innumerable successes where all the remrdli s and methods In vogus have failed to cure, and,
In many cases, to relieve, even. Tbe Cntlcurn treatment Is a
agreeable, speedy, cct comprehensive. Bathe
parts freely with hot water and Outioora sonp, to cleanse the sur acc of Croats and scales, and soften tbe thickascd cuticle. Dry. wlthon t hattl rtbblig, and apply Outlcura Oln tmenl
s at once leal, and
vcasfril external <
disfiguring Lumors of Um eiln sn’i »c*lp. tuciudlmr loss of lair, i». | ivk-I Of which a single anoint!kg wr.h It, precctled by a hot With with Ct lcnr»Soap, and followed In the se verer casrs by a frill dose of Cntlcurs Resolvent, is sufficient to affoM taunt Hate relief In the most dlstre^riuz ft**L* of l.ciiag, burning, and real/ humor/. p« ru>lt rvt and sleep, and point to a • p-eoy cure when all othg- irrot dies fkll. It la especially so In the treaWeU < f Infanta and children, deam-top, soothing, and healing tbe most distressing of Infantile humors, and preserving, purifying, nnd beautifying the skin, ecalp, and
hair.
Cntlcurs Ointment i oaseases. at tho aame time, the ctuim of satisfying the simple wants of tbe toilet of *3 »««•, In carlag for the skin, aca*p, hair,.and bands far more effectually, agreeably, and economically than U.* moat expensive of toilet emollients, while free from every Ingredient of a doubtful or dangerous character. It* •* One Night Treatment of tbe Hands," or •• Single T vBttnent of the Hair," or
of this,
purification fluid*, none
tugle ter a ling.
_ —neetR_ Soap, Is sufficient evidence Of all remedies for the of tbe blood and circulating
approacbee In specific met—. Outlcura Resolvent. It neutralises and resolve* away (hence Its name) *erof> Inua, Inherited, and other humors In the blood, which give rise to swellings of the glsnds, pains In the bones, and torturing, disfiguring eruptions of the skin and scalp, with loea of hair. Outlcura Resolvent extends Its purifying Influence by means of tbe pore* to the surface of the akin, allaying Irritation, Inflammation, Itching, and burning, and soothing and healing. Hence Ita success In the treatment of distressing humor* of the skin, scalp, and blood, with loss of hair, which fall td be permanently cured by extenul
remedies Moot.
Tbe grandest testimonial that esn be offered Outlcura remedies la their world-wide sale, doe to the pereoral recommendation* of those who have used (hem. It la difficult to realize ths mighty growth of the business done under this name. From .a small beginning in the simplest form, against prejudice and opposition, against monied boats, countless rivals, and trade Indifference, Cutlcura remedies have beawie the greatest curative* of their time, and, la fact, of nil time, for nowhere In the history of madldne to to be found a no'her approaching them in nopularlty and sale. In every cauov and with every people they have met with the mune reception. Thaeonflnra of the earth are tho only limit* to their jgWrtfe- They have conquered tbe To the test Of po.-olsr jedxuwM nil thing* mundane must flnaUy okoo, The civilized world haa rendered It* verdict In favor of CuUenra.
Taylor’s

