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AR ICISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 1, 1904 ADVERTISEMENTS. SOCIETY WOMEN weo owe seauty AND HEALTH T0 PE-RU-NA. There are a Million Women now Ailing Who Should Remember that Pe-ru-na is an Infallible Specific for Spring Colds and Coughs, Lassitude and Nervousness Incident to the First Warm Weather. = N s Mamy E Jupce 228 PICHMOND ST WEST 2 TORONTO, CAN spr Year to Treat Chronic Catarrh. Notwithstanding tbat a Great Number of Peopie Have Been Cured of" Chronic Gatarrh by Taking Pe-ru-na During the Past Cold Season, Yet it Cannot Be Denied That (he Cold, Wet, Stormy. Weather Has Retarded Many Cures, And in Some Cases Actuaily Prevented a Cure. everyone tailing be lo- nown rem- ing Time the Best Season of fhe | MARY E. West, M JUDGE. 228 Rich- | mond writes ““I have been troubled with catorrh almost ever since | can remember. About five years ngo it settled in the middle ear, caus- ing great difficulty in hearing. |am indeed grateful to say that shree bottles of Peruna relieved me so greatly that | felt encouraged to continue rts use. After taking eleven bottles more, nently” cured. | have spent hundreds of dollars on-bottles of medicine without relief, while $14 spent for Peruna cured me within | a few short weeks." A Cold in the Head or Th-oat Is Aimost C Certain to Develop nto Catarrh 1. Neglected. ATARRH ally begins as a cold weglect . ; then it ey it he has s very foolish indeed rest easy until the catarrh is | Thousands pay no atten- 1t fs too late. e cold never be- catarrh is pre- catarrh has become Peruna will cure h longer. ational reputation n the humbler endorse Peruna. is claimed for it. It | cures catarrh Toronto, Canada, | I was entwely- and perma- | | A Serious Mistake Which Thousands are Making. HE first stage of commonly known as h is what is catching cold.” | It may be in the head, nose, throat | or lungs. Itst ning is sometimes so | severe as to ca 1 chill and consid ble fever t may be so slight as to not | ninder a pe from his usual business. | In perhaps a majority of cases little or no attention is 1 to the first stage of catarrh. and it is that nearly one- half of the have chronic catarrh in some form » neglect a cold is to invite chronic | catarrh. As soon as anyone discovers ‘Y!l first symptoms of catching cold he | should at once t » use of Peruna | .according to direc on the bottle, and ss away without the cold is -sure | s he cold i | sure to er second st tarrh, 50 misera wa | time one hs « cough chronic ca | tarrh would bé practically an unknown disease | 1SS LORETTA WALL, 350 N. Dale St, St. Paul, Minn., writes: “Last spring I had a very severe case of | catarrh of the sto and bowels. 1 { took three: bottles of Peruna and found | myself galning very quickly in every retta Wal THE FIRST SJAGE OF CATARRH. | | 1SS ELLEN* CRAWLEY, Madison Ave., La Grange, writes: “For years | had been a sufferer with catarrh of the throat and larynx. | got hoarse on the slightest provocation, and my voice became weak, and tired very easily. | could not talk for any length of time and 1t was very annoying. | was very much discouraged, as nothing seemed to help me until a friend persuaded me to give Peruna a trial. 1 did not have much con- fioence in it, as everything else had failed me, but | tried it just to please my friend. My delight, therefore, may be imagined when | began to improve at once, and | have kept right on improving until my voice is strong-and I am never hoarse now. Pe- runa has done a great deal for' me." --Miss Elien Crawley. M RS. W. WASHBURN, 123 8. Villere 5t., New Orleans, Financial Secretary of Camp No. 2, Sons and Daughters of America, also Recording Secretary of the Lady Standard Mutual Benevolent Assoofation, is a lady of prominence of that place. She writes: “Last spring 1 caught a severe cold, be- ing repeatedly exposed to wet in our ainy season. It settled all over me and in a few days I had chills and fever with inflammation and headache so that I was unable to be about. I had one of your booklets in my home, and had read in an indifferent way of the value of Peruna, but when I hecame sick T thought about it and sent for some. 1 found it truly wonderful. It simply hunted out every sick and ailing_place in my body and within a week I was well. I used it about two weeks longer, and have been in the best of health since.’—Mrs. W. v 241 8. ., s = CATARRH OF LUNGS Is Gefierflly the Resu t of a Neglected Cold—Pe-ru-na Cures Coughs, Colds and Catarrh. ATARRH of the lungs is, ordinarily, known as consumption; also called tuberculosis. In these cases the ca- tarrh has usually found its way into the lungs by the gradual extension of the disease from the throat through the bronchial tubes. Consumption is the natural termination of all cases of neg- lected chronic catarrh. Every one who is affilcted with chronic catarrh is liable to be attacked with consumption at any time. In the first stages of the disease Peruna is a sure cure; in the later stages of the disease Peruna can be relied upon to produce great benefit, and in a large | per cent of cases produce a permanent cure. All those aflicted with this dread disease should begin at once treatment | with Feruna. A slight ccugh, which, without a ves- tige of doubt, would soon disappear with the use of Peruna, becomes chronic bron- chitis, which requires a persistent use of Peruna for some time. There are a great many cases of consumption every year du2 directly to a neglect of cougk which, if Peruna had been the house and used accrding to direc tions, would have been prevented. RS. L. E. CLAUDER, Eleventh Street, Newark, N. J.. writes: “Peruna has done for me what much medicine of various kinds did not seem to touch. 1 shall keep it on hand and whenever I take a cold, as one frequently does, T will use it. I am in ail respects now well. Appetite good, sleep well and system regula 59 1 M 1SS MARGRET FAHEY, 49 Adams 8t, Troy, N. Y, writes: “We have used Peruna in our family for years and I am very pleased to say that it cured me of catarrh of the lungs when the doctors gave up all hope of my re- | covery. I used Peruna for six months |and at the end of that time my cough | had disappeared, my appetite was much | better and I had gained ten pounds and { looked the picture of health. I am in | perfect health now and feel that Peruna | | | not enly cures catarrh, but builds up the | | 8ystem, and is therefore a grand medi- | cine."—Miss Margret Fahey. The best cure or preventive known { to the medical profession up to date for | catarrh in all.its conditions is Peruna. | During the uncertain weather of spring- time it js an unnecessary hazard for any one to neglect to guard himself from | taking disease, by taking Peruna. | M RS. VIOLA MARSHALL, 420 West | son St., Springfield, Ill, writes: Two months ago when I sought | your advice, and you told me that I was suffering from systemlc catarrh, I had | gotten so bad that I could not bear the | | jolt of ‘walking and had to lie down"most | | of the time. T began taking your Peruna | and now I feel like a new woman. 1 can | walk just as far as I please without | feeling any fatigue and I have takén only three bottles of Peruna. I shall never se pralsing Peruna nor thanking Dr. | Hartman for his kind advice."—Mrs. |V Marshall. Peruna is of national fame as a ca- tarrh remedy. It is the only internal, sys- temic catarrh remedy known to the med- ical profession. It makes diseased mu- | cous membranes healthy, whether it is | the mucous membrane lining the nose, | throat lungs, stomach, kidneys or pelvic organs. ce /4 1SS MARTHA KAPLANSKY, Pres- ident “Sokol” Club, 1538 West 16th St., Chicago, Ill., writes “Myhealth was in such a state that my _friends were alarmed over my ‘condition. I doctored and taok nearly everything that was recommended to me, but .nothing seemed to have any effect on me until | took Peruna. My lungs were in a weak condition, were sore all the time, and the slightest cold would settle there. | was scarcely ever free from pain and had lost much in weight. My physician advised a change -of climate, and | was about to go away when | was persuaded to try Peruna. 1 began to improve with the first bottle, and kept steadily improving until | was well. 1 also gained in weight and feel like my old self again.”—Miss Martha Kaplansky. RS. JUDGE J. F. BOYER, 823 Da- vis St., Evanston, Ill, says: “If any one has reason to praise Peruna it. is surely myself. Last spring I became so run down from the serious effects of a lingering cold that several complica- tions united in pulling me down. I coyld neither eat nor sleep well and lost flesh and spirit. I finally tried Peruna and it ° did wonders for me. In two weeks I was like another person, and in a month I felt better than I have ever done before. 1 thank Peruna for new life and strength.” If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory 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 ad- vice gratis, Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. VAST ASSEMBLAGE TAKES ~World’s Fair g the predic- t- forecaster, who ot the the latter part honor of exposition ie. commence- s was 9 o'clock g t was made to ea the oj2n- g da s large as that ch fil grounds one ar ag hen the osition bulldings ere de d w such po ‘an stration -buiid- as possible they procession and St. Louis, in exercises cted the head of t column was a de- ient of the J rson Guards, who to do police ithin the expo- tion while it continues. Then came the Philipp &C &' band, followed by the Philippine scouts, an imposing body of men, who marched well. Behind them and leading the officers and tors of the exposition came Sous and. Follewlag the officers end directors were the members of-the nationdl commission, and last of all the | board of lady managers, some of whom wére on foot, while others preferred the more juxurious method of riding in car- riages DISPLAY OF GOLD LACE. As the column from the Administra- tion building entered the plaza a long was bright and | , Where the! the opening were | ¥ - Ilm' formed of representatives of for- | eign Governments, which had assem- {bled in the Hall of Congresses, came | pouring into the plaza from another | avenue. This column was also headed |by a detachment of the Jefferson Guards, - followed by & band. At the | iead of the line immediately behind the music were the members of the expo- sition committee on foreign relations. * Then came commissioners and repr: | sentativks of forelgn Governments whicli have Embassadors accredited to the United States, marching in the or- ler of presentation of credentials to the exposition. Following these came vepresentatives ing Ministers accredited to the United States, and then a great number of other representatives of foreign Gov- ernments and colonies, also In the or- der of the presentation of their cre- dentials to the exposition. This column presented by far the yest appearance of the day, for the foreigners made a prodigal ‘display of g0ld lace and bright colors in glitter- ing contrast to the black silk hats and dark frock coats which were so prom- inent among the officials and dignitar- | ies of the exposition. , A third column came shortly after- ward, formed of representatives of the States and Territorial governments in | the Union. The participants §n | exposition quickly took their places ‘at the base of the Louisiana monument, where a small stand had been erected the listeners. The assemblage | called to order without delay by Presi- {dent D. R. Francis of the exposition, who while the Rev. Frank W. Gunsaulus of Chicago delivered the following fnvo- cation: PRAYER BY REV. GUNSAULUS. | “Almighty God, author of all good- | ness, in whose hand are all our times, whe art from all eternity unto all of Governments hav- ! the | for the speakers and seats provided for | was | requested the audience to -rise| " PART eternity, we pause upon this glad and | inspiring moment where an hundred re- joicing years are met, and we offer thee our praise and prayer. We humble ourselves and yet we exult in thee | to-day as we tmplore thy spirit divinely to open the gates of this our festival and prosper it with holy guidance, re- membering that ours is the unchanging | God. We celebrate the significance of | far-reaching events; we shall, here, day by day rehearse the story of un- counted transformations. “O thou eternal Love and Light, stay us and gulde us—thou who art the same yesterday and forever! We know not the swiftness of time or the | startling miovement of events, ‘while | we pray for the life and good of the | President of these United States and all others in authority with him. We percelve not how weak is man when we implore thy blessing upon the offi- cers of this centennial celebration and upon their work. Only when we are sure that thou, who will protect and guide them, didst aforetime succor and lead our fathers on their way, do we gratefully recognize that the continuity | of American history is in the life and purpose of God as revealed in the prog- ress of man and that in thee we have the future as in thee we had the past. For this we adore thy great and holy name and make mention of thy goodness and power. “We remember gratefully the days of old. We thank thee for those silences and solitudes, well nigh eternal and in- finite, 1 Which-God wrought in natural manners here creating a measureless oppertunity and advantage in soil and | | sky, river and rock, forest and climate —a challenge for the hands and hearts which should meet and -master the nascent energies and build common- wealths in these new realms for the glory of God and the good of man. But thou hast often taught us how poor are resources apparently inexhaustible, how worthless are flashing ores and hidden streams without man, thy serv- ant and child, vice regent of thyself made kingly by thy providence ‘and grace to subdue and transform accord- ing to thy plan, GROWTH OF THE NATION. “So we thank thee for our fathers and our mothers, who, by thy good spirit wrought righteousness, while they stopped the mouths of wild beasts, quenched the violence of even prairie fire, rocked their children to sleep with the wolf's howl shivering the quiet night, overcame the savage and the pestilence, conquered poverty, turned wilderness IntQ gardens and trans- formed hot deserts into fields where bloom. the rose and cornflower and where ripen apples of gold in pictures of silver. “The little one has become a thousand and the small one a strong nation. The wilderness and the solitary place have indeed been glad for them. Verily, the Lord hath hastened it In his time. Make us worthler of such fatherhood and motherhood, and because we shall henceforth serve more devoutly their God, who is also our God, we lift up IN 'St. Louis Puts Forth Her Best and Bravest Efforts in Honor of Her Great and Magnificent Exposition. day is the consciousness of our short- comings and our iniquities. By the same might with which thou hast led and protected, spare us and pardon. “From our greed and foolish pride, from our fear of men and our faith- fulness to thee, we appeal to thee through him who suffered for all our sins. May no splendid events of our history hide from us thy righteousness revealed betimes in flame and thunder. Clouds and. darkness have indeed been round about thee, at times In our his- tory, but ever justice and judgment have been the habitation of thy throne. We have sinned against thy command- ments, and lo; thou hast done great and good things for us and wonderful. “Thou hast blessed us in basket and in store and planted in the midst of the garden of our growth tne tree of life, which bears twelve manner of fruits, whose leaves also are for the healing of the nations. When we have most offended agalnst thy holy law, we have done it amid all the glory of thine infinite goodness. Deliver us, we pray thee, from our sins and forgive, re- ‘newing in our fresh vision of Jesus Christ the assurances of thy pardon. FAREWELL TO THE PAST. “Farewell the past; welcome the fu- ture,” O our King! May we not fail thee, O thou God'of Nations, since thou hast called us to tasks so sublime and hast spread every banquet with hands of love and for the richer tri- umphs of thy kingdom in and through INAUG like the eagle’s; we shall mount upon wings; we shall run and not be weary; we shall even walk and not faint. Give us the ehnobling expectation that as our God hath commanded our strength because of the very greatness of our way in the past, even so shall he lead us on from enterprise to enterprise of faith, from aitar to altan of devotion, | even from Gethsemane to Calvary of self-sacrifice, so that %e may follow | the uncrowned holiness from glory unto | ! glory. |~ “Accustom us to the truth which shail lead us to seek first the kingdom of | God that in the light and for the pur- poses thereof all triumphs of science lupplled, all conquests of discovery, all victories of philosophic endeavor, all | fruits of the tilled soil, all tamed tides of ocean, all songs of happy homes, all opulent literatures yet to be written, | all art waiting here to be created—so | that all thesec things shall be added | unto us. Then shall he be crowned, in- { deed, and with many crowns. And then shall be answered, so far as we fay | be made worthy to receive the answer, the words he has taught us to say when we pray.” Dr. Gunsaulus concluded his eloquent | invocation with the Lord’s Prayer, in which the audience joined. ADDRESS OF FRANCIS. President Francis, as the chief execu- tive of the exposition, then delivered the following address: *“Thig universal exposition was con- ceived in a sense of obligation on the part of the people of the Louisiana | purchase to give expression te their gratitude for the innumerable blessings that have flowed from a century of membership in the American Unlon, to manifest their appreciation of the manifold benefits of living in a land our eyes, on this day at least, to the the governments of men. To this end , whose climate and soil and resources hills whence cometh our help. Glad is our thanksgiving, fervent our praise, but quick and tender on this exultant may we have that righteousness which, coming from above, is life and hope. “Then our youth shall be renewed are unsurpassed, and of having their Jots cast in an age when liberty and enlightenment are established on foune« URAL CEREMONY dations broad and deep, and are the heritage of all who worthily strive. “To rise to the full measure of such a sentiment required an undertaking of comprehénsive proportions and the participation of all races and of every clime. The magnitude of the enter- prise was never lost sight of by its promotors, but its mammoth propor- tions, constantly increasing as they de- veloped, never for a moment shook the confidence, weakened the energies or diverted from their well deflned pur- poses those who had been entrusted with the responsibility and the work. Continued on Page 28, Column 1. e ———— NEW ADVERTISEMENTS HAIR WON'T PFALL OUT If You Xill the Dandruff Germ Witk the Wew Treatment. John N. Fuller, a well-known citizen of Colfax, Wash., says: “I had dandruff so badly that it caked on my scalp. Her- picide completely cured me.” George H. McWhirk of Walla Walla, Wash., says: “Herpicide completely cured me of a, bad case of dandruff of 30 years’ standing.” They took the only realiy sensible treat- ment, a remedy that destroys the dan- druft germ—Newbro’'s Herpicide. Stop dandruff, hair won’t fall out, but will grow naturally, luxuriantly. Allays $ch- ing instantly and makes hair glossy and soft as silk. One bottle will convince any doubter of its merits. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sam- ple to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. e — These two words, Schilling’s Best, are perfect assurance of getting your money’s-worth. At your grecer's; monagbachy