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Tired, Worn-Out Mothers. Mrs, Lydia H, Josselyn, 501 Westminster St,, Providences R.-1.,is Treasurer of the Editors League of Rhode Island, char- teredin Providence, She writes: “My experience with Peruna has been most gratifying, Last winter I | contracted a severe cold, and for several days J coughed until my voice failed me. When other remedies did me no good, I decided to try Peruna, and within four days the cold was broken up, and the cough abated, “Within another week an increase in my usual strength and vitality told me} | that Peruna was doing all that it prom- ised, and more, Lalsoconsiderit very su- perior for tired, worn-out mothers, and have advised several to try it, and have seen most gratifying results from its use, “T give it highest praise.” ‘ | Bowel Trouble. | Mrs, Maggie Durbin, 1382 North St., Little Rock, Ark,, write “T was troubled for fi years with a ehronie discase, L tried everything | ard of, but nothing did me any good, Some doctors said my trouble wa tarrh of the bowels, and some said cou: | sumption of the howels. “One doctor said he could cure me, 1 But it Mps.JoHN| JNDERWOOD 3 Suffered With Stomach. Mrs, John Underwood, 520 W. Wal” nut St., Columbus, Ohio, writes: “Having had catarrh and stomach trouble and having suffered very much, I, after being doctored a long while, as a last resort took Peruna, The result was wonderful, I would highly recommend it as a good rem- edy. I still use or and would not be without it. I afways have it in the house,” Catarrh and Stomach Trouble. Mrs. IT, Frech, R. R. No. 1, Hickory Point, Tenn., writes: “Tam happy to tell you that Lam cured | ofecatarrh, I have followed your good and kind advice faithfully. I bless the day when I wrote you of my congiition, and I will always praise Peruna, I think r itis one of the grandest medicines on} earth. “Having been afflicted with catarrh 4 and stomach trouble for seven years and | - etter having tried four different doctors they only relieved me for a little while, I gave up all hope of being cured, Lonly weighed 130 pounds, and was so weak I could hardly get around the room, “T was induced to try Peruna, and to my great surprise I am now entirely | well. My weight is now 188 pounds, my | health never was better in my life. “] shall aiways praise Dr, Hartman and his remedies,” Thousands of families have learned a the use of Peruna and its value in the; throat, bronchitis and cats arched dea fuses treatinent of catarrnal ailments, | generally. PE-RU-NA IS A HOUSE THE COLORED MAN | IN THE NORTH. took his medicine two months, did me no good, “A friend of mine advised me to Peruna and I did so, After I had t two bottles I found it was 1 | me, so T continucd its use, and it cured me sound and well. | “Lean recom 1 Peruna to r and if any one wants to kn t Pe- runa did for me if they will write to me I will answer promptly.” | Peruna is a household remedy of grevi | merit, and is useful in many climatic ailments, such as cou | Chased and Shot in a Storm. Shenaudets Pa, Beb 10—Ex | hausted afer » fight of @ tnile | throuyrh » biiz2 rd, Issac Bevan was! riddled wit tn) +a he lay helpless, HOW the Cold Shoulder is Ex-, in @ snowirts His pursuer, Ane tae Ps thony Sinkivs oz. easpsied two revol- | hibited to Negroes in | vers into B-van and every one of the | Boston. welve builess fouad its mark. One) m - assed through Revan’s heart and| RayStannard Baker begins report: | saused inatant death |{ng the northern negro {n the Febru- | ary American Magezine. What he| Sinkleéwiez 4d been annoyed by chicken thi-v.s, so he set a burglar | 8998 about Boston, the abolition | alarm) He wis swakened by thie center, is interesting: alarm and he svt @ boarder at his} “10 Boston, of all places, I expect home armed theiuselves and gave ed to find much of the old sentiment. chage to she intruder by means of It does exist among some of the old- tracks iu bie u-wly fallen show. The | °? ™eD and women, but I was sur- chase coutinues for more than a! Prsed at the general attitude which |; mile, when B-van dropped over from , \Tencountered. It was one of hestta- exhaustion und was shot to death.) ton and witddrawal. Summed up, I | Seven chick-us were found ina bag think the feeling of the better class! which he carrie! He was unarmed, |! people tn Boston (and elsewhere Sinkiewicz gav- himeelf up to the au-|!0 Northern clitlee) might be thus thorities aud tins been charged with | 8**ted: : murder “We have helped the Negro to lib- erty; we have helped to educate him; Dr.J.M.Norris we have encouraged him to stand on SPECIALIST ON THE his own feet. Now let’s see what he can do for himeelt. After all, he must survive or perish by his own efforts: “In short, they have ’cast the ban- tling on the rocks.’ “Though they still preserve the form of encouraging the Negro, the spirit seems to have fled. Not long ago the Negroes of Boston organized aconcertat Theodore Drury, acolor- ed musician of really notable accom- plishments, was to appear. Aristo cratic white people were appealed to and bought a considerable number of tickets; but on the evening of the concert the large block of seats pur chased by white people was consp!- cuously vacant. Northern white people would seem to be more inter- Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat Catarrh and its effect on the ears, throat or lungs given special attentiom. Those in need of Glass- es can have their eyes , tested free and proper- | ly fitted. OFFICE--On jthe South Side in the Catterlin Building. — "Mo. VEEP T RPO RE, ested in the distant Southern Negro! MRS.LENAR. Moupy | Billousness, Indigestion. Mrs, Lena RK, Moudy, 556 Cay wood St, Portland, Oregon, See’y Royal Tribe of Joseph, writ “Por the past and pains in my rs biliousness and limbs made ful at night and would get a weak, faint feeling during the day so that L was not fitted to attend to my reg- This caused me serious annoyance and trouble, and T nat- urally tried many remedies, hoping to pet relief, “Peruna came as a friend in need. It toned up the system, relieved the blood of the poisons and induced a healthy action of the stomach, a fine appetite and restful sleep, Vithin three months IT was a ¢ Hang red person,and for nearly ayer now [ have enjoyed splendid heal ular duties, A Grateful Paticnt. liza d. c RF, shan in the Negro at their doors. “Before I take up the cruder and! | more violent expressions of prejudice onthe part of the lower class of white ‘men in the North I want to show the life miserable to me, My skin ae § sallow and dry, and indigestion was added to my troubles, T was wakes §| 5 Restorer of Lost Strength. Miss Bessie Farrell, 1011 Third Ave,, Brooklyn, N, Y., is President of the Young People’s Christian Temperance Association, She writes: joon ider ita most wonderful medicine."* “This medicine ia aurely a great «PS a is certainly a valuable §} 7 boon to suffering humanity.” nerve and blood remedy, calculated | ervous Dyspepsia tetany dy Sale ater dages to build up the broken-down heelih Mrs. J, C, Jamison, 61 Marchant St.) Pe-ru-na the Family Doctor, of worn-out women, 1 have found by personal experience thatit acts g a wonderful restorer of lost str assist the stomach to as and digest the food, and builiting up worn-out tissues, In my work L have ceasion to recommend it fre- quently, especially to sick women, “TL knew of nothing whiel is beier build up the strength of a young nother, in faet all the ailments pecul- iar to women, so I am ple: it my arty endorsement.” OO eee Pe-ru-na a Woman's Friend. rk, Mo., writes: T have felt for say that Peruna sed to give truthfully woman's friend, [ have D.8, Redford, no more I have been enred terrible pains and an er than I Using Perunaand Manalin, [thank you! have been, Ye sur medicine has worked jfur your advice,” like a charm,’ iOLD NECESS 4 ad) od | STONE WOULD FREE FILIPINOS IN 1913. beginnings of the cold-shoulder{ng as Offers Resolution Setting Forth | it exists In varying degrees in North- ;ern citfes, and especially {n Boston, | the center of abolitionism. “Supertficially, at least, the Negro in Boston still enjoys the widest free- dom; but after one gets down to real |conditions he finds much complaint over growing restrictions.” Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup} acts gently but promptly on the | bowels. 1 stops the cough by sooth- , {ng the throat and lung frritation | Sold by Clay’s drug ttore. Bryan Would Restore Nation. ' jand alarm—on the part of Negroes | ‘Islands by the United States, 1913, as the, date upon which tuis Government | | Definite Policy for Disposi- tion of Islands. Washington, Feb. 10.—In a reso. lution offered, upon which he {ntene | to deliver @ speech, Senavor Store sets forth a definite programme for the disposition of the Philipplie and names December 10, shall give the islands complete Inde- ‘pendence. The resolution in a gen- eral way represents the ideas of Wil- liam J. Bryan on the subject. Asa preliminary to the final step, | the resolution instructs the President Jersey City, N. J. Feb 10—W. J | to open negotiations with other Bryan, in an address here, said the | names “for the purpose of securing President’s recent message indicated there was a conspiracy among men of wealth to prevent the enforcement of the laws. This conspiracy wase consequence of the delivery of the county tothe highest bidder. He sald that Secretary Taft wanted to amend the present law against con- spiracy in restraint of trade by in- serting the word “unreasonable” and asked why not make the same amendment to the law against burg: lary or murder so that the burglar should be required to take only half or the murderer to slay politely. The attitude of the Democratic party, the speaker declared, has been vindicated by the country’s exper! ence with the ratlroads, “My work to the end of my life,” he added, “shall be devoted to the returning of this government to the people from whom It has been de- spot. Ee an agreement with them for the neu- tralization of the Philippine Islands and the recognition of their inde- pendence whenever the same shall be granted by the United States.” December 10 is chosen because {t is the anniversary of the signing of the treaty of Paris, in 1898, whereby the Philippines passed from Spanish to Amertean control. The text of the main section of the resolutton followe: “The President is requested on the tenth day of December, 1913, that is to say, fifteen years after the date of the treaty of Paris, to deliver the controland possession cfsald islands to the authorities representing the people thereof, including also all Government property therein, per- taining to the aiministration ofsuch Government, and withdraw there- from immediately thereafter the army and navy of the United States. Billous Headache. Mrs, Emily Kelloy ; Lawrence St., South Wash., member of Ladies of the Maccabecs, wri “Three months ago T had an attack of biliousness which | threatened to undermine my health and oan f Catarrh of Head. N | strength, Luekily for me, T tried Peru Mrs, Joseph Vittur, 5709 Erie St., naat thesuggestionof my friends before Austin Sta., Chieag , writes? | it was too late, |) “Your medicine, Peruna, was of “T found in a few days time that I did great benefit to me, 1 svttered with | not have the usual sick headache, tieitli catarrh of the hose and head for many or did food nau me any lo I Three botthes of Peruna cured two weeks’ time Poruna had completely rT had considered it impose ‘rid my system of the poison and bile, © toever be vt at and | was in a much | er condition, tow always ep Perunain the My skin assumed its normal color, Lhad 2 tye , and rec nend it to every asplendid appetite, and 1 was in every § one suffering from catarrh, As soon mn commence to sruna, and their | way improved in health, Tused Peruna for a month Jonger, and it wrought a wondrous change in my entire system, I as one of my echt cough | give them cough is soon gone, Watsonville, Cal, write “L was troubled with cramps in the stomach for six years, I tried many | Mrs. M.E, PF. b. 2, Bow- man, Ga,, write “Lam ready to speak Seymour, R, a few words im i Kinds of medicine, also was treated by | faver of Perana and Manalin, 1 have three doctors, They said it hs nd i tried them for nearly every ill of life for nervous dyspepsia. | was put on A) myself and famity them to be liquid diet for three m 1 i! alt the doctor claims them tobe, Perus proved under the treatin (as Tstop ped taking Meme L took the medicine for tw nacured me of daternal trouble when my octor could not, My advice to all suffering sult Dr. Martman, W j for me he will do for you.” women is, has done “y onial of a man whose Pe-ru-na in Tablet Form. ssimilar to mine being eured by] For two years Dr. Hartman and his Veruna, so T thought I would give it a} nts have incessantly labored to trial, T proeured a bottle at once and) ¢ Peruna in tablet forn id their imeneed taking it, T have taken) strenuous labors Lerowned nineteen bottles and am entirely cured. with suc Pr ohiect: te Hy gained 5 eth and flesh and) tiquid medicipes can now secure Peruns t a ditt Mt person, tublets, whieh rey ‘ vedicinal sg moe Perunais all thatis claimed | ingredients of Prana, } itablet is for it.’ equivalent toone ay { Peruna, PTY IN OVER ONE MILLION HOMES. Provided, hqwever, that the Unit States shall retain on such date an thereafter such enitable coaligg au KR Diss in Former Slave’s Homa. navel stations as inthe jtdgement of terete anton birbrs ty rts the President may eeem necessary, and that the delivery of said fslands so such native Government shoal) in iteel{{mply the assumption by isof the obligations then existing and tn cumbent upon the Government oft Mea United States and consequent upo : | the wranting of any franchise, asthe assumption of all outstand ing obligations of the Government lat that time, existing islands.” Woodmen Delegates. Butler Camp No. 2458 Modern Woodmen of America mes Thursday night and elected sixteen delegates to the county camp which convenes in this city Wednesday, April Let, 1908, for the purpose of electing dele- gates to the State Camp, which con- venes at Carthage the first Wednes dayin May. The following delegates were elected to represent Butler Camp: R. L. LAddil, H. G. Walton, B. F. Jeter, ©. W. Maddox, J. N. Kline, Arthur Steele, Jeff Cruteinger, A.W. WeMott, John 8. Ray, Philip Neu, Chas. L. Dunn, Geo. W. Vannoy, M. A. Richardson, ©. H. Caldwell, Harry W. Jenkins and Joe T. Smith. Sixteen alternates were also elected. No ijustructions were given, and each and every delegate will be free to exercise his rights, as he may deem proper and for the best interests of the order. Alber the tivai ar Kt Loulsi aves having t oOvresurn F arty and few years nae, hows ver returt in sal to Arcadia, near here, pouicless ond Without a place to spend bis days. Oliver Lowla, one ner slaves, had ma quiced witble home wuidap frown t forme ber The Jar of Coughing Hammer blows, steadily ap- plied, break the hardest rock. Coughing, day affer day, jars and tears the throat and lungs until the healthy tissues give way. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral stops the coughing, and heals the torn membranes. The best kind of a testimonial — “Sold for over sixty ycars.” Bert Barber, of Elton, Wis., says: “Lhave only taken four doses of your Kidney and Bladder Pills and PILLS. they mee cone = me more than any other medicine has ever done. a! We publish Mr. Barber refora to eWite! 's Kidney dup iavaes cbnth oie meatietsce. an der Pills. They are sold bY Bilious tipati tard vee Clay's drug store. \povery. Cure these with Ayer's Pills. Mato by 5. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Maes. Also gerne ot yers me