Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
EE +— — See CONGRESSMAN HOWARD Of National Reputation Are the Men Who Recommend Peruna to Fellow Sufferers A Remarkable Case Reported from the State of New York CONGRESSMAN HOWARD OF ALABAMA House of Representatives, Washington, Feb. 4, 1899. ‘The, Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, io— Gentiemen—“I have taken Peruna ow for two weeks, and find | am ‘very much relieved. I feel that my ure will be permanent. I have aiso ‘taken it for la grippe, and I take pleas- are in recommending Peruna as an excelient remedy to all fellow suffer- -ers.”"—M. W. Howard. Congressman Howard’s home ad- dress is Fort Payne, Ala. UsT people think that catarrh is a | disease confined to the head and nose. Nothing fs farther from truth. It may be that the nose and throat is the oftenest affected by ca- tarrh, but if this is so it is so ony because these parts are more exposed to, the vicissitudes of the climate than ‘the other parts of the body. very organ, every duct, every cavity f the human body is liable to catarrh. A muititude of ailments depend on ca- bh. This is true winter and sum- ah Catarrh causes many cases of ehronic disease, where the victim has mt the slightest suspicion that catarrh thas anything to do with it. The following letter which gives the experience of Mr. A. C. Lockhart is a ease in point: Mr, A. C. Lockhart, West Henrietta, WN. Y., Box 58, in a letter written to Wr. Hartman says the following of Peruna: “About ‘fifteen years ago I com- meénced*to be ailing, and consu'ted a plysician. He pronounced my trouble avec of dyspepsia, and advised me, ifter he had treated me about six months, to get a leave of absence from my business and go into the country. & did so and got temporary relief. I went back to work again, but was taken with very distressing pains in my stomach. “I seldom had a passage of the bow- els naturally. I consulted another physician with no better results. ‘rae disease kept growing on me, until I had exhausted the ability of sixteen of RKochester’s best physicians, The last physician advised me to give up my work and go south, after he had treat- ed me for one year. “T was given a thorough examination with the X-ray. They could not even determine what my trouble was. Some of your testimonials in the Rochester papers seemed to me worthy of con- sideration, and I made up my mind to try a bottle of Peruna. Before the bottle was half gone I noticed a change for the better. I am now on the fifth bottle, and have not an ache or pain anywuere, My bowels move regularly every day, and I have taken on eight- een pounds of fiesh. I have recom- mended Peruna to a great many and they recommend it very highly. I have told several people that if they would take a bottle of Peruna, and could then candidly say that it had not benefited them, I would pay for the medicine.”—A, C, Lockhart. Mr. W. P. Peterson, of Morris, IIl., says: “I was nearly dead with catarrhal dyspepsia and am now a well man, bet- ter, in fact, than I have been for twen- ty years or more. “Since I got cured by your Peruna L have been consulted by a great many people.” If you do not derive prompt and sat- isfactory results from the use of Pe- runa, 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 pe Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. PATENTS. Gist of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Michael Beck, Minneapolis, Minn., @team turbine; Luther Case, St. Paul, Miinn., fender for street cars; George &. Cyr, Brooks, Minn., rolling coulter; Kéwin H. McHenry, St. Paul, Minn., track level and guage; John L. Mc- ey, Minneapolis, Minn., detachable fread barrel; Frederick W. Sorenson, Benson, Minn., screen for threshing spachines; George W. Weber, St. Paul, Minn. riveting press. Lothrop & Johnson. patent attorneys, 911 & 912 Pioneer Press Bldg.. St. Paul, Minn. ‘When a married couple starts out to @o light housekeeping, it means that @hey expect to get half of their living @t “mother's.” , etc. all for 16 centa st: mn Catalog. poctively eworth. $0) te Sy planter of garden and farm seeds, JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO, W La Crosse, Wis. Ment smoked in afew nours with KRAUSERS’ LIQUID EXTRACT OF SMOKE,° Made from hickory wood. Delicious flavor, Cleaner, c.uonper. No smoke houso needed. Send fur elteula:. i RIGAUBSEst & DiU., Milton, Pa Seore eyes eset THOMPSON'S Eye Water tPISO'S*CURE-FOR:- 13 CURES WHE PLSE FAll $ Boot Ce ey : ugh Syrup. ‘Tastes Good. Use Ri _intime. Sold by druggiste, a SnCONSUMPTION “@ When a man is down his enemies stop kicking him and his friends begin. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take Laxative BROMO Q) Ne TABLETS. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure, E. W. Grove’s signature is on the box. 25c. On with the merry dance. The old hen is ergaged for every set. Avold baldness, gray hair, dandraff and thin locks, by using Parker's Hair BALSAM. ‘HinDERCORNS, the best cure for corns. 15cts. FITS Permanently Cured. Notts ornervousness after ‘Grst day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Kestorer. @ni for FREE 82.00 trial bottle and treatise, Te. R, H. Keane, “.td., 981 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa, Men whose only books are women’s looks are the students of folly. Hamlin’s Wizard Vil Co., Chicago, sends song book and testimonials for stamp. Get Wizard Oil from your druggist. Running water often gets its start from a spring. Each package of PUTNAM FADE- LESS DYE colors more goods than any other dye and colors them better, too. The fewer airs some musicians can play the more they put on. Dow <owen's WET! FISH BRAY? ical Clots Witt Keep You Dry NoTrHwine Etse Wit Tanwe No SustituTe. Free CATALOGUE, Strowine Furt Line 07 GARMENTS AND HATS. A.J.TOWER Co. Boston. Mass. | CONGRESS a a a, A, SY In the Senate. Washington, Feb. 6.— The senate yesterday passed the District of Co- lumbia appropriation bill and practi- cally considered the bill making ap- propriations for the support of the West Point military academy. Dur- ing the day the ship subsidy bill, by a vote of the senate, was formally laid aside and superseded as th2 unfinished business, In the House. The house continued discussion of controverted questions in connection with the postoffice appropriation bill. Mr. Griggs of Georgia spoke against organizations of postal employes formed with a view to forcing legis- lation in their interest. Mr. Moody of Massachusetts discussed the question of railway mail pay from the stand- point of a member of the joint postal commission. Mr. Bromwell of Ohio and Mr. Caines of Tennessee assailed the appropriations for special mail fa- cilities from New York to New Or- leans, and Mr. Catchings of Missis- sippi and Mr. Meyer of Louisiana de- fended these appropriations as neces- sary for the expedition of the South- ern mail. In the Senate. Washington, Feb. 7. — Two impor- tant measures were disposed of by the senate yesterday, the military acad- emy appropriation bill and war revenue reduction measure. The former was under’ consideration less than an hour. ‘The only change made in it was the strengthening of the provision against hazing at West Point. During the remainder of the after- noon session the war revenue reduc- tion bill was before the senate. A de- termined but unsuccessful effort was made to reduce checks and to provide that telegraph and express companies should bear the burden of the tax on messages and packages sent. The finance com- mittee’s amendment levying a tax on transactions in so-called “bucket shops,” modifying the tax upon cigars and cigarettes, and providing for a rebate on unbroken packages of to- bacco, in addition to several others of a minor character, were adopted. An amendment substituting an income tax for the war revenue measure, offered by Mr. Morgan of Alabama, was re- jected by a party vote of 21 to 38. The bill then passed without division. In the House. Debate on the postoffice appropria- tion bill consumed another day in the house. About two hours were occu- pied by Chairman Loud of the postof- fice committee, who was a member of the postal commission, in the discus- sion of the subjects investigated by it. The remainder of the time was occu- pied in debate upon the three subjects, pneumatic tube, special mail facilities and railway mail pay. It was agreed before adjournment that the debate should close to-day at 12:30 p. m., when the votes should be taken upon the several amendments wihch are pending. In the Senate. ‘Washington, Feb. 8.—The senate held both day and night sessions yesterday. At the day session the pension appro- priation bill, appropriating $144,000,000, was passed after a few minutes’ con- sideration. The ship subsidy bill was then taken up and Messrs. McLaurin and Morgan, both Democrats, made speeches upon it. Mr. McLaurin an- nounced his intention to support the bill and Mr. Morgan opposed it in vigorous language. He asked Mr. Alli- son for an estimate of the appropria- tions for the present session and the latter replied that he thought the ag- gregate would. be about $760,000,060. Mr. Hale expressed the opinion that the figures would be nearly $800,000,- In the House, The postoffice appropriation bill, de- bate on which has consumed almost an entire week in the house, was passed yesterday. The debate hovered about three topics, railway mail pay, pneumatic tube service and_ special fast mail facilities, but it bore no fruit. The amendment to reduce the rate of railway mail pay was ruled out on a point of order, the amend- ment to continue the pneumatic tube service in New York, Boston and Phil- adelphia was abandoned with the pur- pose of making the fight in the senate, and the motions to strike out the prop- ositions for special mail facilities were defeated. In the Senate. ‘Washington, Feb. 9.—An ineffectual effort was made in the senate yester- day to secure an agreement upon a time for a final vote upon the shipping bill. Vigorous protests were made by opponents of the measure against any such agreement, even for a date in the indefinite future. Mr. Pritchard of North Carolina spoke in support of the shipping bill and then the naval appropriation bill was considered the rest of the day, the shipping bill be- ing laid aside informally. The naval bill had not been acted on when the senate adjourned. In the House, Yesterday was probably the last day to be devoted to private pension legis- lation by the house of representatives in this congress. High water mark, made in the Fifty-first congress, was almost touched yesterday when 184 bills were passed against 197 passed at a single session in the former con- gress. In all the house at this session of congress has passed about 900 bills, |a number considerably exceeded in the | Fifty-first. A general pension bill was passed to restore to the pension rolls widows of soldiers of the rebellion who subsequently married and became widowed or divorced. By the terms of the bill, however, its benefits are limited to widows of soldiers who were married before the close of the rebel- rion and who are now dependent upon their own labor for support. In the Hous-. Washington, Feb. 11.—The considera- tion of the diplomatic and consular ap- propriation bill in the house Saturday developed something of a sensation when Representative Brown of Ohio, standing in the center of the Repub- the tax on bank | | Pe Ncan side of the chamber, made a speech strongly condemning a colonial policy and urging that congress should at once give assurances to the Filipinos that the purpose of the United States was to give them independence. His announcement that he would advo- cate a resolution to this effect was loudly applauded, particularly on the Democratic side, and at the close of the speech many of his Republican as- sociates crowded about him and con- gratulated him. Representative Miers of Indiana and Dinsmore of Arkansas also spoke on the Philippines. In the Senate. During almost the entire session the senate had under consideration the naval appropriation bill. Practically the bill was completed when it was laid aside for the day, all the com- | mittee amendments being adopted, but as the measure was about to be placed on its passage Mr. Butler of North Carolina precipitated a discus- sion of the armor plate question. In order to enable some others to speak upon the matter the bill was laid aside until Monday. Eulogies upon the late Representative Alfred C. Harmer of Pennsylvania concluded the session. In the House. Washington, Feb. 12.—Yesterday was a field day in the house, being by far the liveliest day during the present session. A very interesting debate over the constitutional limitations on the power of the senate over revenue legis- lation initiated by the house was pre- cipitated when Mr. Payne, the chair- man of the ways and means committee, brought in the resolution of the com- mittee to disagree to the substitute proposed by the senate as an amend- ment to the war revenue reduction act and to ask for a conference with the senate. Mr. Tawney of Minnesota championed the cause of the house and | its paramount rights over revenue leg- islation. The house voted, 233 to 38, to ask for a conference. Later in the day, during the consid- eration of the diplomatic and consulat appropriation bill, en impassioned pro- Boer speech by Mr. Sulzer of New York drew from Mr. Mahon of Penn- | sylvania a recital of the raising of a | fund of about $1,200 for the benefit of the widows of Boer soldiers at a meet- ing at which Mr. Sulzer provided. He declared that after the “terrapin and cold bottles got in their work” only $18 was left for the Boer Widows. This stung Mr. Sulzer to reply at length, and a very lively row followed, the climax of which was reached when Mr. Sulzer had read an anonymous letter which made a sensational personal at- tack upon Mr. Perry S. Heath, late as- sistant postmaster general, charging him with being’ Neely’s sponsor and then denying it after the arrest ot Neely, and also making allegations against Mr. Heath in connection with government deposits in a New York bank. Mr. Knox of Massachusetts de- clared that it was “contemptible” to attack a gentleman who could not re- ply through the medium of an anony- mous letter, and moved that the in- fraction of the rules be reported to the house and stricken from the record. The Democrats filibustered against «he motion to expunge the letter from the congressional record and finally forced an adjournment, the effect being to permit publication of the letter in the record, In the Senate. Shortly after the senate convened the naval appropriation bill was passed. The shipping bill was then taken up and kept before the senate during the remainder of the legislative day. MINNESOTANS FOR THE ARMY. Several Recommendations for Com- missions Have Been Made. Washington, Feb, 13.—Recommenda- tions have been filed by Semator Clapp for the appointment of the following Minneosta officers for lieutenancy com- missions in the new army: Capt. George J. Becker, now in the Philip- pines; Charles M. Bunker, who served in the Fifteenth Minnesota; Capt. Fred L. Baker of the Fourteenth Minnesota and J. Colfax Grant of Minneapolis, who served in the Thirteenth. Information has been received here indicating that Capt. Bjornstad of St. Paul desires a first lieutenancy in the cavalry arm. A recommendation has been sent to the department for his appointment by Gen. Wheaton. It is also reported at the department that Dr. Henry F. Hoyt of St. Paul, who is a major and assistant surgeon in the volunteers in the Philippines, desires to remain. Representative Heatwole has, recommended Col. Frederick of Red Wing for a position in the pay- master’s department. Mr. Heatwole has also recommended Capt. John N,. Loye of Red Wing. who is with the Forty-fifth, and Edgar F. Davis of Zumbrota, formerly of the Fourteenth Minnesota. Representative McCleary has indorsed Louis C. Vogel of New Ulm and Loren B. Towne of Worthing- ton. Also Dr. John Milton Edwards for a place as assistant surgeon. MRS. MAYBRICK STILL IN JAIL. Report of Her Pardon Denied in London. London, Feb. 13.—The officials of the home office say there is no foundation whatever for the report that Mrs. Florence Maybrick has been pardoned. A member of the embassy said: “We would be the first to be notified of any such action, or proposed action, by the British government. Not a single fact has arisen to give the slightest justifi- cation for the story or to make the re- lease of Mrs. Maybrick more probable than heretofore.” FLORIDA ORANGE REVIVES. Largest Yield Since the Big Freeze of 1895. Jacksonville, Fla., Feb. 13.—Col. B. W. Wrenn, traffic manager of the Plant systema, says that the yield of oranges this year in Florida is the best since the freeze of 1895. Last year there were shipped 700,000 boxes, and this year the shipments will reach a million and a quarter. Hastings, Minn., Feb. 13. — Henry Hamann of Empire, who shot his two brothers in a fit of insanity, was brought here by Deputy W. H. Browne of Farmington and adjudged insane and committed to the Rochester in- sane asylum by Judge Moran, It was found necessary to put the straight jacket upon him. | Unappreciated Activity. “I tell you that laziness doesn’t pay. The surest way for a ahead is to keep moving.” “I fancy you're right. me last week.”—Stray Stories. Still More Counterfeiting. The Secret Service has unearthed an: other band of counterfeiters, and secured a large quantity of bogus bills, which are so cleverly executed that the average per- son would never suspect them of being spurious. Things of great value are al- ways selected for imitation, notably Hos- tetter’s Stomach Bitters, which has many imitators, but few equals for disorders like indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation, nervousness and general debility. Al- ways go to reliable druggists who have the reputation of giving what you ask for. No Longer Yonng. “Come, children,” said Mr. Widwer, introducing the second Mrs. Widwer. “Come and kiss your new mamma.” “Gracious!” exclaimed little Elsie, “if you took her for ‘new’ they stuck you, pa.”—Philadelphia Press. You Can Get Allen’s Foot-Ease Free. Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted, Le | Roy, N. Y., for a FREE sample of Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures sweating, damp, swollen, aching feet. Makes new or tight shoes easy. A cer- tain cure for Chilblains and Frostbites. Atall druggists and shoe stores. 25c. He Believes in Trusts. Handout Harry—Wot do yer tink of dis anti-trust agitation? Tiepass Teddy—I’m dead agin’ it. I run up against altogedder too much anti-trust ez it is—New York Journal. ‘What Do the Children Drink? Don't-give them tea or coffee. Have tried the new food drink called GRA) It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the e of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-O is made of pure , and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about 34 as much. grocers sell it, lc and 25c. Other people must die in order that the undertaker may live. | low to get That's. the way four of my tenants got ahead of DOWNFALLS Sometimes in winter at every step there is danger of SPRAINS BRUISES which cripple or hurt deeply, but at any time from’ whatever cause St. Jacobs Oil will cure surely and promptly IN 3 OR 4 YEARS AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED if you take up your homes in Western Can- ada, the land of plenty. Illustrated pamphlets, giving experiences ef farmers who have be- come wealthy in grow- ing wheat, reports of delegates, etc., and full tion ax to reduc d railway rates can be had on application to the Superintendent of Immigration, Department of Interior, Ottawa, Canada, or to Ben Davis, 144% East Third St, St. Paul, Minn., or T. O. Currie, No. 1. New pe ilwaukee, Wis. NSIO JOHN W.MORRIS, Washington, D.C, 7 Suopenatully Rrowpgutes, Claims, udiceting claims, atty since jyrsin civil war, 15 adit efa NS ~ N. W. N. Uz —No. 7.— 1901. Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. = One Night Treatment Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distress- ing cases when physicians and all else fail. Cured by $i bam it Baie B Sq Ha weg gee § Cutleura pry tens hand, ed hay eee Just to think, after doctoring three years, and EOE Solis ater ones See that time, Cuticura cured me. It now been two years since I used itandI | do not know what sore hands are. I never lost aday’s work while I was it or since, and I have been working at the samz business, and in acids, etc. THOS, A. Glicur , The Set $1.2 ‘uring, and humiliating skin, scalp, and bi scales, and soften the thickened cuticle, Curtcura Ointment (50c.), {> instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritati m. and saothe and. Lal, and Corroura Resoivent (50c.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A SINGLE Set, is often sufficient to cnre the most torturing, dislig- food humors, with 1o-s of hair, when allelue falls, Gold. A. CLANCY, 310 Montgomery St., Trenton, N. Je Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor, Consisting of CuticuRa Soar (2ic.), to cleanse the skin of crastaand = ' t the world. Potter Dru@ AnD CHEM. Corp., Sole Props., Boston, U. 8. Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soa Assisted by Cuttcura Ointment for preserving, pnrifving, and beautifying the ekin, an cleansing the scal| softening, whitentug, and soothing Te annoying ‘rritations, | the form of crusts, scales, and dandruf, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for inflammations, and chy of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, e stopping of falling hair, for ings, or too free or offensive pers; fe id for many eanative Aish veto which readily suggest themselves to women, and especially moth and for Rie purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion cowtonian those ‘who have once used it to use any other, esnecially for preserving and purifying the skin, ecalp, and hair of infants and children. Cuticura So\P combines delicate emollient: erties derived from CUTICURA, th \d the most refreshing of flower an be compared with it for preserving, 'WENTY-FIVE CENTS, One PRICE, viz., follet ‘and BEST baby soap in the world. purifying, and beautifying nis, No other foreign or domestic ollet hai ‘with it for all the parpores of the toilet.'bathi and nu soap, however expensive, is to be compar ven in One. e great skin cure, with the purest of cleansin; Gdors.. No other. ae medicated soap ever compounde d is skin, scalp hal; tad Soar Thus it combi: and ‘complexion 2 the BESS $$ $$$ $f ——_____ + ___— ’ { A) ——<$<—<<$<$<$_—___;-__—