THOUSANDS OF WOMEN A DYING FROM CATARRH Jj&s Pe-ru'na Cures, That h Why the frfrv B&y 5j People Like It. VfTi I " ?IAI1 ,he Advertisement in theff 'oLlI.) 1 II World Could Not Make Pe-rn-Bi 11 V II 88 pPular as ' ls- HI v Jf x I i",BMakflr'tNDY,neI1'' 21 w'b,,ri S (v PL I I "''"'una wn recommended to in abetit I V , TV. ' f November Co'ds Should Not Be Al lowed to Develop Into, Chronic Catarrh. Pe-ru-na Cures a Cold Promptly and Permanently. "I am glarl to recommend IVnina an it bai (ion no much for me. I had imn g great anffrr frnm catarrhal colds un til I wa urged to try l'cniiia, and I am Sappy to any tliat it hna entirely Mirel BP. I hll never be without it and moat cheerfully recommend it to ntters who are afflicted aa I hare been." Katherine lauter, Zi') 13th St., Mil waukee, Wig. .Moat people think the aticcesg of re runs dependa upon the ue of advertixe mciiti. I'ndoubtedly the adverti"" menfa help aorne. lint hy far the grent t nnmber of people who hear of I'e runa. hare their attention called to it by friend. Some one get cured of chronic catarrh br Peruna. After he ia certnin of hla cnre, he la aure to rerominond it to hia frienda. Friend recommend it to friend and the news api.-ad from tongue to tongue. All the advertisement In the world could not make Peruna as popular as H la. Peruna cures. Thai Is the rea son people like It. Peruna cures a very stubborn disease. That Is why everyone recommends It. Peruna cures chronic catarrh ki,tr all other remedita fail, which explains why t K.i ins A MILLION AMERICAN BOUNCING BABIES are kept crowing with the delight of living; because thoir mamaa have learned, to use CASCABET3 Oandy Cathartic. You all know how neighborly neighbors tell each other of the really good things they have learned from experience. OASCAKETS are one of those good things, and the kind words said for them has created a sale of nearly A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. It is easy to protect infants against children's com plaints, bocauae all these perils have their beginning in stomach and bowels, and we have in CASO ABETS a perfect rnodicine that will always keep the delicate machinery in a child's body clean regular and in working order. Children like the little candy tablet, and are kept Bafe from all stomach, bowel, blood and skin diseases. All druggists, 10o,26o,60o. Never sold in bulk. Guaranteed to cure or your money back Genuine tablet stamped OOO. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. m For 'Bruises and Sprains Mustang Liniment For MAN OH BEAST Hllr)dn('8. Is very romiinm arnmiK the Moors. At forty-live the "re light beglnf. to fall. The afikllun due, It Is said, to the eircsslve use of coffee. Pilos! Pilos! Piles! I uf4 or wmir rtrnniiwi, , ,n. I'llaa ml mil kimH: No ". vf. ll"rl or ".'! i1 L. " At'HI LETH 1. . n. 'llrtmn.l lr..liniit. I km, rrmrtt lh ' t,lm lhrn..h lh atsnarh. Vre (I ft bl nt i rue t:t frw b,i HiiMlal iiiinrHiMii. . -"7- " Metasl Cm., Immk H.I I. Slellee I Mii." i ext i.iri ewt m b.i- "e5.l csurth who ste as bmilserln iprsyuw lh J k.e,a AH 1M mmI Benibrsses AU hMllnaD4 smrtklsf P" IIM of Crasm sre rl pfopee mi Is the re,rm"T BMiry p thsfsertHossi S.lsalosf.fylfisk n e I g h b o r recom mend! It tn neigh bor. Peruna cnrea ' " catarrh permanent ly, and this way hna gained a lifeliiriK friend. People who hare, been cured by Pe runa mnny yenrs ago hare been e(cer to recommend Peruna to their frienda ever since. This ia the way Pe runa is advertised. It advertises itself, fts merits are its chief advertisement. Once cured of o distressing and exas perating a malady as catarrh, it beenmee the duty of every one to pass It along; to call the attention of those who are still victims, to a remedy that rarely fails to cure. Beware of Chetvp Imitcitlona of Po-ru-ntv Bo Sure That You Get Pc-ru-rii. There are no substitutes for Peruna. Allow no one to persuade you that there is something just as good. The success of Peruna fins tempted many people to devise cheap imitations. Beware of them. P.e sure that you get Perunn. Miss Jennie Driscoll, 870 Putnam are., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: "I heard ao much in praise of Peruna aa a peci!ie for catarrhal affections that w uur u ivj,y CANDY CATHARTIC to ivtAiV Mi-Hi, iis stj: ANNUAL SALE 10000.000 Greatest in Wl.cn a rr.ari has outlived the habit of expecting happiness, It doesn't take much to keep him going. Cm- the Pnmoin Ked Crou Hall Bine, Large J-o. j,ai'kK S cents. The Kui Company, Huuth itcad, In1 The men who have made a noise In the world have not used their mouths alone. "Llttlo Colds" neglected thous ands of lives sacrificed every year. )r. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup cures little colds cures big colds too, down to the very verge of consump tion. A firm with so odd Dame doe bus iness on Washington street, Buffalo. Arm's Dime li English A Irish, iiikI English Is sn Irishman, while i h Is of Voflllsb parsDtaga. r.Wfr;- when I found myself with a bad case ol catarrh of the head and throat Peruna was the first thing that I thought of. And my convictions were not wrong, for in a few weeks after using Peruna sys tematically I was entirely rid of this aggravating and distressing disease, catarrh. "If people knew how efficient Pe runa was for this trouble they would not hesitate to fry it. I have all the faith in the world in it, and have never known of a case where the person was not cured in a ahort time." Jennie Dris coll. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results frnm the use of Perunn write at once to I)r. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of .The Hsrtman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. rfiliftnU. -mmmaMm- BOXES the World No Si t Nr jle In ftlurk. Variations In stocks are endless. So long as the collar Is pretty and becoming, Its mode Is unquestion able. Just now stocks are having vogue. One of the most charalng new stocks Is made of applique lace. It Is cut with straight, stole ends, which arc about eight lnnhes long. All the edges are llnlshccd with a p.inric band In pale blue, palo pink or other desirable shade. PUTNAM FADKI.rcsS DYES do not stain the (lamia or apot the kettle, ex cept green and purple. To accept tho Inevitable qnletly and gracefully Is the mark of wMom. Mr. AtiMln'a quick rnMnit mirkwhont miikcfl tender. cr!py hmwn cakes. Your roccr can tell all aliout It. Dlptherla relieved In twenty min utes. Almost miraculous. Dr. Thom as' EclcctrleOll. At any drug store. At the height of one mile the nv. orage velocity of the wind Is fi.ur timet as great as at the surface. What Ji we live for, If It Is not tc take life leas difficult for others.? Clusters of Alberts containing twenty-nine separate outs have been plucked this season at T. mplecorobe. Somerset, England. THE FIELD OF BATTLE INCIDENT8 AND ANECDOTES OF THE WAR. The Veteran of the Rebellion Tell of Whistling Bullets, Bright Bayonets, Bursting Bombs, Bloody Battles, Cinp Fire, Festive Bugs, Etc., Etc "Thej ar going to build a monument to General William If. Gilxwu In Ohio," Bald th Major, "and it ought to be a big one. I remember Gibson before the war, wiiea be ranked as the most elo.-. quern man in the new Republican par ty. My boy's lie-art went out to him when he was distnlssel from the State Treasurer's office because of the defal cation of another man. There were a lot of us younpstprs who frrleved over the enforced silence of Gibson In the campaign of JSG0, and who rejoiced when the cloud lifted from his person ality In 1SG1. "When Gibson announced that he would raise a regiment for the Union rervlce over 400 men in his county came to him. His fervid, picturesque oratory was heard ajtaiu in central Ohio, and over 700 Ohio born men served In his regiment. The Foriy nlnth Ohio, under Gibson, was the first fully organized Union regiment to enter Kentucky, aJi 1 the survivors of the reg iment remember with a thrill the en thusiastic reception at Louisville. "There were speeches by men of the South, who could speak well, but not one could speak as did Colonel Bill Gibson on that day. He was a revela tion ro the Kentucltians, and he was the pride of his own men. who cheered themselves hoarse over his triumph as an orator. The Forty-ninth was a Cffhting regiment, and, re -eriliiing, the men served under their eloquent Colonel until November, 1S(!5, doing duty In the last month under Sheridan In Texas. "When Gibson returned to bis old home in Tiffin there was no cloud on his name, but he was Inclined to keep out of the political field. I heard him for the first time after the war at a night session of the Ohio Agricultural convention In the Senate chamber of the capltol. The main question before the convention was the permanent lo cation of the State fair at Columbus, and we who were In favor of the propo sition felt sure we had won the day. There had been a long, stormy debate, with strong speakers on our side, when, Just before midnight, we demanded a vote. "Just then a member of the State Board of Agriculture entered the room with General Bill Gibson and asked that the General be permitted to say a few words In the Interest of Seneca County. There were loud protests, but an old soldier cried 'Kl 1)1 nil fin vnn ' When General Gibson speaks Ohio lis tens.' I Joined In the call for the Gen eral, although I knew that if he spoke we were beaten. Many of the lights In the large, bigh-ceillnged room had been turned out, and the General stepped for ward In the circle of light from the cen tral chandelier. "He knew the convention was against him, and for a minute he seemed to hes itate. Then be began to speak lu his old way, and In ten minutes tho crowd was with blm and our cause was lost. I did not care. It was like the taking of wine to hear Gibson's voice. lie up- pealed to us in the name of tho counti.v people, saying, among other things; 'Men! Think of It! What are you pro posing to do? Ignore the wKhes of those who make the fair and e m -uiit tU convenience of those who profit by 'its location?" "At the close of his short address he put on his overcoat and started out. We voted against permanent location and surrounded Gibson. Later I heard him at many political meetings. In the first McKlnley campaign In Ohio I heard him In a church In a remote village, where men of all parties gathered to greet blm. He began to talk to them In a neighborly way and worked along un til he was speaking after the manner of an exhorter urging men to save their souls. "He knew his men and he was after the Democrats In his audience. He could talk as rapidly as Ingersoll or as delib erately as Conkllng. And In this speech he talked rapidly and deliberately by turns, frequently asking the Democrat ic soldiers how they could vote the Dem ocratic ticket when they thought of 18(51 and 18M. Turning to a group of old Whigs, he said: 'Boys, how can you bear to think of Old Tippecanoe and Tom Corwln and Henry Clay and vote agnlnst Major Mc Klnley? You can't, boya, because I can remember when you were sick for a week because the locos defeated Clay. Think of that. Remember how sick you were, how you loved the man who stood for what McKlnley stands for now.' And at the close of the meeting the rheumatic and stubborn old Whigs promised their old friend. General Bill Gibson, they would vole for McKlnlev." Chicago Inter Ocean. , A f.iicky Irmiiirntloti. "It was at Cedar creek, Virginia, that circumstance happened to a comrade and myself which goes to prove that words spoken nt certain times can pro duce awe where guns fall," said Leroy Ilannn, who served In Company L of the Second Connecticut heavy artillery, to an old comrade. Continuing. Mr. Ilanna Said: "We had been guarding a ford for several days and had bad sev eral skirmishes with the Confederates, In which we lost a number of our men. On the morning of October 10 a com rade named 'Jack' Dorstman and my elf were sent to make a detour through the foothills and try to discover a good road for-J advance. "We had proceed, about a mile from the camp when, without a moment's warning, we came face to face with even rebels, all heavily armed and on the lookout for us. It was a tight place, and meant either capture or death, for we two could not hope to cope with seven. Just as the foremost rebel brought his piece to his ! shoulder an idea came to me like ! a flash. Throwing up my left arm with the palm of my band extended outward, I exclaimed: 'Hold! Surrender! The Sixth corps is in the mountains, and if you shoot you seal your own doom.' "It must have been the dramatic fire I put Into these words that had the ef fect of awing them, for one by one they "hold! si. kukxdku!" lowered their guns and we made them captives. We took their guns, bent them between two trees and threw them into the bushes. When all their pieces had been confiscated we marched our prisoners into camp and then start ed out agais. This time we had tra versed about two miles when we came upon a rebel orderly who was riding like the wind. Dorstman sprung Into the middle of the road and com manded him to halt and surrender. In stead of obeying he leveled his gun, but for some reason It missed fire. Dorst man fired, but missed him. Then he shouted to me: 'Shoot him, you fool!' I did so, and ever afterward regretted It. He was the only man that to my knowledge I wounded or killed during my term of service." A War Story from Texas. General II. commanded the Depart ment of Texas for some time during the war, says a writer In the Detroit Free Press. He was a pompous character. His chief pleasure seemed to lie In the direction of a special car for himself and family, to the exclusion of even his i staff officers. He generally took a week ! ly trip from Houston, his headquarters, I to Galveston, and on such occasions he invariably monopolized a special. In the limits of all the Confederacy, coaches were then a scarce commodity. On one occasion, when every freight car on the road was called Into requi sition for the purpose of conveying troops to Galveston, and every car be ing crowded within, as well as on top, with troops, the Inevitable special coacfr was attached to the rear of the train. The troops appropriated the top of tho special to their use, It being a more comfortable place for them than on top of the box cars. In the special sat the General and his family a cosy circle, Indeed. It was a raw day, and as usual there were objurgations, deep and loud, among the troops, as to the uncomfort ableness of the situation. Just before the train started a wild harum-scarum Texan, William Ochil tree, a brother of the famous Colonel Thomas I. Ochiltree, espied the family sitting around the stove, and raising his stentorian voice he could, and can to this day, holler louder than any man in Texas, and on account of his melodious voice, is auctioneer for the largest auc tion house in the State yelled out "Lord, boys, come here! I'll be dad snatched If here ain't the old he bear, the old she bear, and all the little cub bears." To say that, In a moment's time, tho top of the special was crowded mass of humanity, doesn't be gin to express It. The great wonder was that the top didn't cave In and let the boys down In a struggling heap upon the General and his family. It was too much for the General, and he or dered bis car detached, and Bill Ochll. tree was placed upon a diet of bread and water for a considerable neriod The General did one good thing, any way, for he caused Bill to grub stumps and earn his rations by the sweat of his brow. Bill has tamed down since those, days, and is one of Houston's very re. spertrd citizens, but chickens roosted high during the war If Bill Ochiltree was In the neighborhood. Money-Making Family, i ne net tits are on the road to weallh," says the sage of the grocery, I understood they was doing rlghl well," observed the grocer. "Yes, they had n big wheat crop and their corn turned out twice as good at they expected; the oldest daughter rut away with a summer boarder ilmi owns a oil well In Texas; the ymingei daughter is engaged to a sickly mil lionaire; the old man was hit by an automobile nnd gets accident Insur mice and damages from the chaffeur. and now they are going to move tc the city, where the old lady will havj a chance to collide with nJTollev cm and make the company settle." Judge Crnel of Him. Mistress So you are going to leavj because tho gasoline stove blew you u. In the air? Alice No, ma'am; It's because of thi Insult your husband offered. Mistress What did he say? , Alice Nothing, but he began sing lag, "You can't keep a good girl down BACKACHE. Backache ls a forerunner and one of the most common symp toms of kidney trouble and womb displacement. READ MISS BGLLMAN'S EXPERIENCE. " borne time ago I was in a very weak condition, my work made me nervous and mv back ached frightfully all the time, and I had terrible head aches. " My mother got a bottle of Lydla E. Pinkiiam's Vegetable Com pound for me, and it seemed to btrengthen my back and help me at once, and I did not get so tired aa before. I continued to take it, and it brought health and strength to me. and I want to thank vou for tha good it has done me." Miss Kath Bollman, 142nd St. & Wales Ave., New York City. $5000 forfeit If original of aboue letter proving genuineness cannot be produced. Lydia E. Pi nkham's Vegetable Compound cures because it is the greatest known remedy for kidney and womb troubles. Every woman who is puzzled about her condition should write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and tell her all. Kissing is a delight unkown to tht Miorl women of New Zealand. What t iey meet each other, and wish t d -monstrate their mutual affection, t icy en sp each other by the should ers and rub their ooses together. In times of sorrow, when mourning foi the death of a relative, for instance, two women will sit together and moan hy the hour, all the time rub bing their noses together. Greene County's Sensation. Catskill, N. y., .0v. 10. Ulster and Greene Counties are ringing with tha news of tue wonderful recovery of George F. Ayers, who lives at 1G Divis ion street, in this city. One year ago Mr. Ayers was suffering from Brigbt's Disease of the Kidneys and the doctors gave him little relief and less hope. To day Mr. Ayers is as well as man could wish. He tells the following story: "About a year ago I was at Wesl Gamp, sick with Bright's Disease and without hope of ever being better, when an old gentleman from Bath, N. i., advised me to take Dodd's Kidney I ills, telling me they bad cured him of the same disease. "I had tried so many remedies that I was past hoping and told him so, but when he bought me a box of Dodd'j Kidney 1'UIs and coaxed me to try 1 dul so -lUst t0 humor his whim. 'that was the means of saving my life. I took that box and half a dozen more Thanks to that old man and Dodds Kidney Pills. I am cured." Peware of the hair tonic that a bald-headed barber tries to sell you. What's the i-ecret of happy vigoroui health. Simply keeping the bowels, the stomach, the liver and kidneyi strong and active. Burdock Blood Bitters does it. No, C'irrlellla; the fishing smack wasn't invented'by a summer girl. Every square mile of sea is estl mated to contain some 2000,00,00 fish. Don't forget a large 2-oz. pneknge Bed Croa Ball Hlue, only 5 cents. The Russ Compnny, oulh Bend, Ind. II ALL'S CATV It Kit CUM! is taken internally. Price 75 cents. Avoid a slanderer as you would a scorpion; both sting for the mer pleasure of doing it. Mm. Wlnplow KOOTHINo nYHVP for chtldrM tccllilnif. tuftrna the rini. rert-t . InlUinatlon llfc pain, cuici wind colic. 25c nullle. IV. L. DOUGLAJ $3 & $32 SHOES u$ W. I. Oiurjlai Hhons are the elnnaarn of the worn. W. I,. Itaurlin mailr ind aolil nor men' Hta4 fur Holt (Hand Smril I'rcrf.ii hm-a I IkaSnl It inoalh. of H'f2 I Inn anr olhor ntnafarUmy cm nnn RKKiwiiH'iito ; im W I UiUUU ran dloirnlf lhl llalraint. IKJSi.. tl.IH.WW ff.'-i-L. lett Imnorltlt anil Anmr.f" Icttthert, Mftf'l Patent Calf, Intmel, Calf, Calf, M KU, Colt, Mat. kanqaroo, VneX t'olor Kyolt-t Caanfelaal I Tha ft"l'n hawW '. t, SO TOLAS' PkI on litjhaani thml he mm, 'it, extra. Win. Calnlnafita, W. U DOtlOLAS. BBOCKTON. MAS 5 N. N- U. MO. 745-46, YORK, HE