Catarrh of Digestive Organs and . Bowels. RB. MARY M. MARSHALL, Tip- ton, Mo., writes: : "I suffered three years with catarrh of the digestive organs and bowels. I was unable to find relief, until as a last resort I was induced to try Peruna. #1 began the use of Peruna when J was confined to the bed and can say that I experienced benefit from the first dose, "I have taken five bottles in all and believe that I am cured of my trouble, "Yam enjoying as good health us an old lady of my age could expect. My age 1877, "I recommend your medicines to suaf- ferers whenever I meet them, and some of my friends aro using them with great success. "1 will always feel grateful to you for Your grand medicine and kind ad- vies and trust that many others may be as greatly benefited as I have been." @ Pe-ru-na For Béwel Trouble. Mrs. L. 8, Tinker, 8562 Second street, Macon, Ga., writes: "Two years ago my grandson suffered with hemorrhages of the bowels and he was treated by different doctors, but without cure. "We quit all other treatment, and be- gan the use of Peruna, and after the use of three bottles he seemed to be quite well, He is able now to walk six miles to school every day. "Peruna has certainly worked won- ders for him, and I shall not hesitate to recommend it," ASSASSIN 15 PROUD {mense estates, {posited in the Dank of England, MURDERER URGED TO CRIME BY MOTHER. She Confesses That Assassination | of Governor Was at Hery Suggestion. | Vietha, May The mother and : three sisters of Siezinsld, who mueder- | wl Count Potoeki, of Lem: | borg, have been arrested, THe mothe has confessed that she persuaded hee son tg kill the count, whom she de Serhod as the oppressor of the Ruth enine. © Not only did she him to commit the crime, but kim' money for the exceution of died, The Ruthenian students cheered Sie- | zitski asi be was being taken to the court to-day, Sierinski iv only twenty | years old, very small; and is said to | TIposEES remarkable intelligence. He is | the son. of a priest who was a deputy i the Galan Diet. He Very popular with his fellow-stitfonts, be ing of 4° bright "and cheerinl. dispodi®! ton, "Io the cabman who 'drove him to the police he gave tor] kvonen--all the money he had on him --suying that he hail wo longer wny use dor money © as hoe knew he would be hanged, he remarked to the come | missaty that he would again kill such | a man ay Usunt Potooki, and when} the oficial said that he was a young | man to commit such a crime, he re: | plied that what he did was quite natyral, On being furthers cquestionad; | he aid: "TT wm no criminal, Anothey | Ratheniun will remove the vext poy ernor. 1 killed only to warn Cont Potavki's suconssors.' y On boing taken to his cell, Siczinsk; asked for food, remarking thst he PARLR000000000000000084 A BEAUTIFUL FACE The Secret of Parisian Wo- men's Beautiful Complex : ions, governm I encourage | gave Lha was : } i station To the ube ol most women, Pare HAR nan beanty-so werld-fam nh the lashes amon themselves © ehurong And vet it ig ow fact Soar p Slinven's and beantifal. 3 that Parisiennes,: BS fentures are eonecrned | ph beautiful gleois, ds a role oo Their. beauty consists fargely of im. w Ponta competion. An Americ, Tai iditioy u friend in Paris, oh. aimed From her the sceret of the cleat, LT i of Frenchwo- save it ix a wash that is : and apphal to ] ditches and pools gna stall lakes Lwonds to. the west of Declin, | mom ito Hike gnats,' of Byris for waking [7 the | How Fires Are. Pari ED THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NN" \ R J MAY 2, 1908 a -- (2 { Miss Eva Schell, 127 N. Quincy St., Topeka, Kas., writes: "I unhesitatin, fresh eold "Finally I began taking Peruna for a cold and was Ly to note that it was ridding me of the catarrh also. i "lcomtinued touse it faithfully and the result was s added to the difficulty, complete cure in a very few months." ----aN SE ) MISS ANNA CARSTEN \/ Miss Anna Carsten, Clayton, 111, wr "Your medicine, Peruns, did me so n "1 am feeling so wal not taken any mediei been dead by this time 17 I had not used i, 1 now and have no trouble with my stomach. 1 have ne for four or five months, "If I am ever troubled with anything of the kind again, I shall take noth- ing but Peruns. I can cheerfully recommend it to my friends." ites: much good. I believe I should have A Severe Cough. Mrs. Emma Martin, Odessa, Mo., writes: : "I cannot thank you enough for cure ing me, For two years I doctored my cough which cost me many dollars, but still T seemed to get worse. My cough was #0 bad I could not sleep, Peruana, I took it according to diree- tions, and in a short while I felt better, and after I had taken a second bottle I felt entirely well. "After the use of six bottles I feel that Iam cured, and therefore recommend this grand medicine to sll who suffer Wibha cough as J did." 4 rm -- had not "eaten anything for days. 2 Count Polocki had, besides his mn fortune three im arge de titnated of $10,000.000. His only son. a bay of devedt, is being eilucated in Fagland. * FROGS TO EAT GNATS. Thousands Imported to Rid Re "sort of Nuisance. Bethin, May 2 thousand frogs have been bought from nn breed or neter Hiddesheim and placed in 1! ai tie Seven Fikonbury, 'a small place m to which Thousands of Berliners the: families flock on Sunday This™ &xperitent is beino the ho of redweing the act made in placue breed ol which the is marshy in wooils round particularly millions and make Life i Hr wherever there nnben rhe. fond of the larvae of it is hoped that in tl HRPae will be reduced ---------------- MESSAGE FROM SEA. Frogs are the nats, and IS manner h Party Desert Island. It Tells of on Paris, May from the con has ite A bind torr of which was tied» On the eard"Was written the message . "SFuhruary 26th, 1908-Are lost on an sland wpchiivied,. thicty-twe de gies Intitade norih by forty-sin long- ude $ Wa have Toad far five monthe Come and Belp, us." Ah 'mékshge Was sigred by the cap Wn awl six men of the boat Lagtour, | fuin Se Laenire . i | ces ita amin ise Teeth Pay For Dinner. i Panis, May 2.<An amusing inciden ctr Bt a rostaiirant in the Ru stat Le: yesterday. After an exoel | Cine wr provincinl visitor named | corre that ki: pocketbook | dina rk and that he was une dhe bill, 3 : noel position' to the pro- | srietioe, bit the latter, who was re | "tent swindlixl by po individual whe | . Csame story, refused to take | tn exrder : Wis ©, 00 On nal il folowing al acase for non-payment. to atoid a scandal the visitor was obliged to tenve his gold-mounted ar. : BARE. a guarantee 'that be "and pay for his meal ambus Bull Fighter Retires. Be--=Muntonio Fuentes, fighter, who has heen! immortalized in v, has retired | at the see for forty, after taking part | it no fewer than eight hundred com- 1 POA a gore : Caused In Paris. Mav 2 «There were 1,745 fires! aris daria; ar, revulting in | a Joss of i i i i | " o Finally, 1 purchased s bottle of | keep it in tie house, You have my sin- sxoldiers, § he i yhareed feut about i their. troubles were not yet over. A %bho disappea pe A Household Remedy. Mrs. Celia Eibling, R. R. No, 8, Payne, Ohio, writes: ¢ "I have better health now than I have had for years, and sm fleshier than I have ever been. I am so thankful to | you for what you have done for me, "1 cannot praise Poruna enough, I cere thanks for your advice, "My husband is taking Peruna, now. He had such a congh he thought he had consumption, but he is getting bet- ter, - "He has taken it only one week and it bas done him good." A DESPERATE FIGHT Sn FIERCE BANDIT CHIEF Is CAPTURED AT LAST. Band Leads Mountain in His to His Paid Traitor Soldiers Home. May 2.The ba ) Paulino, ha Eastern Portugal for mouths and com- mitied captured near Yeérnin, frontier tarday, member of his The informer, by the au soldiers to th the mountain Pauline, himseli val chief terrorized whit who atrocities, w clove many VER n to Lhe the treachery rigand's fain i home 1 ; i 1 vas alone vl wot mn ¥, ana 1 oldie finall wherenpon to blow brains, or as empdy After to-hand fight, he and eonveved to ial mu the willing tried revol down however, out his but the } } desperate ved was tied with Paulino committed many r fers. and has many farmhou weeks ago hotige, forced and danghter entered a farm ant h vife the hot the farmer cook a meal | members of gar apd then all thre So es A WOMAN'S THROW, \ Exploding Siphon Mistaken Bomb. L~During with her hushand morning a woman pained Daval threw a soda water siphon at him. It miseed him, went through a win dow, dropped Lito a passing motor a violent vesterday 5 : Paris, » May { eal, and exploded like a bomb. The four oreapants of the cab were the lace and hands, » bat Policemen in uniform aml two de ectives in plain clothes who happened | the! eth, and arrested the two people init, i at to be passing, made a rush Two of they proved to he Russians, and they had the greatest diffienity in convincing the magistrate before whom | they were en' that they were not militant anarchists. * Thev were kept in custody all night and were only set feee this morning | 3 a {after the woman who hod thrown the (50 ta rough King Winter she soon pro- pt. the siphon had presented hegself her re- lice station and expressed grets for his display of temper. Mystery Solved By A Ring. London. May 2.--The second of the two bodies found in the River Trent has been identibed hv means of a weds | ding ring as that of Mrs. Martha Cor- don of Sidewav Old Hall, Fenton, ted in December last. ai A -- tin ii. Brine Baths For Paupers. London, May S=The Southwark guardians: have pidecidedt tn send pas g why R magazines may say, the women of the United States continue to have faith in Peruns. These women know s great deal moré about Peruna than the editors who have, These women have tried Peruna in their families, They have taken it themselves. They know it will help them, : They have suffered from various ail- ments, and Peruna has come to their re- lief, even when the doctors failed tO cure them. Such women cannot be convinced by any editorial spasm that their favorite household remedy is a humbug. Peruna goes right on in its conquest over disease, Its fame is spreading all over the earth, Especially among American women is Peruns a beloved household remedy. It is entirely useless for anyone to try to dissuade them from the results of their own experience. ~ gly recommend Peruna as a splendid specific for catarrbal affections. 1 was a sufferer with this trouble off and on for a number of years and each FAITH THAT CANNOT BE SHAKEN. Despite everything that sensational | ficial effect upon thainternal organs of | the body that are lined by mucous mem- for selfish purposes, written against it. | beneficial in a great many ways. "T took it for a cough and a cold cured me, branes. For various chronic climatic diseases Peruna is a reliable remedy. The testimonials concerning Peruna are given in the language of the people. We do not change or add to sanything they may say concerning it. The evidence is overwhelming that Peruna is a safe, reliable, invaluable remedy for the household. Headache and Backache. Mrs, Franziska Gaengel, Dominion 1, Old Bridgeport Mines, C. B., Canada, writes: x "I thank you for the benefit which 1 derived from Peruna. There may be many who are suffering from the same disease that I had, for which they have not yet been able to find the correct remedy. "For the benefit of such persons I wish to say that I suffered with headache and backache and had a severe cough. I was in bed several weeks and could Mrs. Christina Clow, 411 E, Platte Ave., Colorado Springs, Col., writes: "I have taken Peruna off and on for six years and have found it very , also for catarrh of the head, and it I took it for a tonic and reason to speak well of your medicine." gave me streagth. I have every "Then 1 consulted Dr. Hartman, who advised me to take Peruna and gave me observed. "I felt better after taking the first bot- tle. Ihave taken several bottles mow and am feeling so well that I can do all my work, "I will never be without Peruns again, abd recommend it $0 all." Catarrh of the Stomach. Mrs. Mary Allen, Route 6, Franklin, Tenn., writes: "Iam glad to be able to tell you that I am well of catarrh of the stomach, and am sincerely thankful to you for your advice. "If it had not been for Peruna I would never have been well. I had three phy- sicians. One of them told my husband that he could not cure me. "I had been sick about nine months when a friend asked me to try Peruna to gratify her; so I commenced taking it. Ican eat and walk and work. © "Everybody says I look as well as I ever did, Oh, you don't know how thankful I do feel to you! I have got further instructions, which I carefully | | For ' several other people to take Peruna, I praise it to everybody." Peruna is & remedy for the mucous not do my work. I tried many rome- membranes. It therefore' has a bene ll dies in vain, FASCINATION IN FAD COLLECTORS FIND MENTAL { RELAXATION IN IT. | ' be! Bargain Eagerly Sought--Million oh aire Collectors Spend Much Time in Endeavor to Get Rare at Reasonable the world to adopt the adhesive post age stamp, aml from the time of their first ww 1543, down to and includ r 1906 were not less than 431 ht numerous trifling varieties "In trying to get mation about these stamps the collec of a fasci thing be kne for the Brazil, POETICAL SELECTI NS. in there varieties Where I Come In. httle boy has learned a Jot since 0 | he started off to school : | Minch that [long ago forgot Intely learned by rule: 5 knew how to parse, but now Iw 5 gong from me ; the gramnoer 10 a I fea My t vot he has but wh additional infor- i t He tion began to exercise the first stamps at a them finally for hun w he was Lb American Aion and mn, nn handy we a 1y ag her consul-general Specimens Prices. Ye had become ispderation tre difference and his niece ¢ boundaries secondary ex 'He guishi early all th mitch yuble in between the 1843 up to 1866 the figures had the nd New rk Sung out prot though I could have ved the Seungt . mole than hall suspect he vhgards ¥ i$ a dune 10 Perhaps I migh wd lemrn if ind had fewer daily care Fits © I I seription and ne But, afte i cit black. But he he eats, bf fey PS Issues as from stamps showed just from to G00, without value or in arly all in printed perseyve her all when certam variety i stan eries he t the | of ind ther the reon put the rest some stamps of h into a the tumnp deal collection actually bought rv Brazilian possession of a few rietie Wy the he the rare va 'And left Rio he not complete collection problem ancl : x a | winds, How Miss Spring Won King Winter | Some King Winis on an April day ! And he Miss Spring il 'never | 8 give way. | store blew and flung his frost robe far { and fendd the curih as stiff as time awver in Chic of a st promine ih » hie e some of ! "1 yous "The amps the was stamp d cr, ho knew that he willed 'a smile, aware I warn ekiy, 11 do lawyer and was all : extremely hard worked man, replied ; don t that | busy Why, 1 3 at times in de You no 4 ; and and | you are io ou want bu fast ed her smie so broad y stamp Yeu, done "deep, That King Winter almost went ho asleep. the | work do BWYE i ir; Iv and | break. that I too much thing clan nave a A have Thin he gathered his strength with at rage of blows By the North Wind's aid, flustering snows, And he bandied his Liows jes Spring I'l never give in, But ti Ha, | And hike a down Pp suggest take up some kind of collecting pur isuit that will furnish a depree of men al rst, so 1 thought of stamps, and the physician thinks that collecting them will answer the par e nicely." | "The collection of stamps { a curious fascination. Some years ago ! a Uhicagetin was appointed consul- | generui at Kio de Janeiro, Brazil. Af | ter he had been stationed there for a | while his mice, who lived in Chica "0, { wrote and asked if he would send her ! Ng Sovome Brazilian stamps. "The voninlgeneral told vie of the | sttaches of the office 1g tear off some | Miss 'stamps from letters ahicl cams to | thand In the conrse of ondinar basi | vest, and these were forwarded to the | Chicago girl i "Upon reeviving the stamps she! on wrote and thankdd her woele for thems, | King Winter lay prone and | bat stated that the stamps he had | {sent were not the kind she wanted. as | {plenty of the ecopimon and 'current | ; : I wareties were easily obtainable in| it's eisy to_peint with good paint, | Chicago. What she wanted was the | it dorks so nidtly and looks so fresh. {old Brazilian stamps of ihe obsolete | Ramsay's Paints fe good paints | isgies. { good all the way through. Frery | "The gathering of the latter stamps | books jo town sharld be tovthed up | he found to be u task of contidernble | Twith Ramsay's Paints. WA. Mitchell | difheutty. but he weot to work, vigit-| ibag & fll stock. Ranmsay's Paints, the | od the diferent local stamp dealers, | right paint to right. { made Goquiries in various directions | ght pain Jnr COWRA 'their pro- | for the stamps. avd "in the course of | mises even in 8 storage plant. | a few months had acquired an expert | _ Ganden oni og rd fresh Bt | knowledge of the numerous Bragilian| ed 8.8 "Brasil wa: the second country in end SOE a pleasure ot the meek ne, I'll sever give ih bo mun came up, and Miss Spring jaughed gay : ha let ma give you a breath of NOKFes ses May his 'arms rumpled wp as in last death throes. ' And his strength was mocked with the > caw' of the grows Then he be rose on a day when the snow was gone ! Ard be told Miss Spring how her 2 had won A place in bis heart which had long bee: cold-- Then a Leap Year fit made Spring quite bold, posed t In her languid lap he rapidly domed, Tied when Summer called in on i new iy ilo, strong { x Gea. C, ---- the | Wool, Newbhoro, Ont. $ } i i i to speak of the distin: PACE FIVL stamps in the world, bs. atest 'number of them,™ jammed to the top nt issies. He also had become the leading authority on the stamps of Brazil. After his return. to the United States he disposed of his to a dealer and the latter said, when he saw the number of Brazilian stamps the trunk contained, that he could scarcely believe there were so many stamps of this one coun try Brazilian 2 had the the trunk with the in collection CXisleple in The Modern Doctor. I went to a moders doctor to learn wh iH was Was wre oft Togier, and life 0 WOE 4 song. of my pulse, as they all dos he gamd at my outstretohed t i He took off my coat snd weskit and harked at each wheezing lung, He fed me a smal glass penstalk with figures upon the side, And this was his final verdict whem all of my marks ded spied ; Do you eat frid eggs % Then quit ft, You dos't ? Then hurry and cat 'em, Along With sowe bay that was cut in wy - There are ma other foods 10 beat 'em Do vou walk 7 Then stop tostanter, For exercise will not do For peoplé with whom it doesn't agree And this ™ the rule for you 3 Just quit whatever you do do And begin whatever: you don't | For what you don't do may agree with 1 you As whatever you do do don't." Yea, thus saith the modern doctor Tradition be double darned ! What the oldsters knew was nothing coms pared to the things we've learned There's nothing in this or that thing that's Certain in every case Apy more than a single boutet's becom. ing to every face, It's ail in the diagnosis i the patient's fix-- The modern who mows his 1 up to a host of tricks, {120 you sat roast pork 2 Then stop it | You don't Then get after it guickiy, | For the lougreared uss gives the laugh | to grass | i that tells us business is And delights in the weed that's prickly, Do vou sleep with the windows open 7 | Then batten thenw good and tight, {And swallow the same old fetid ain { Through all the snoomesome night. { Just quit whatever vou do do Armd do whatever you don't { For what you don't do may agree you As whatever you do do don't Wp ------------c--. with A Growing Menace ome Journal, Toronto. I'he more or less frequent reports of where medienl men lend assist. {ance to the contravention of the | laws of nature and of the land in the { young women from the cons of their folly, give | cause for concern. It is bad enough to have quacks and charlatans secretly at this kind of business, but {if the medical profession is to encour- | age it, where will it end? The only | hope of stopping wholesale murder in making the punishment so se- vere that those on the ove hand who are tempted to interfere with the pa result of theie indiscretion will the grave danger, while those | who ave inclined assist them will he led to hesitate before doing so. But until the man is made to feel as | keenly as the woman the result of de- | parture from the path of virtue, there will be little hope of eradicating or (even minimizing this side-stepping of the laws of sorietw | cases endeavor to save grave lies | tural | realize to and of God Big lips For Little Favors. Philadeipjia; Ledgers "Ut 1s surprising," said James Teamer of Newark, NJ. the veteran Pullman porter and philosopher, "how a tip a porter sometimes gets for a very little He added : "A passenger ono tipped me exten because he L did not leave his shoestrings coiled up inside his shoes after | had blacked! 'them He said nothing made him macdder than to slip on his shoes in a hurry in & sleeper find that he had to take them off again because the shoe Ever since that have been careful not to leave r of the shoes I An One passenger « being thoughtful wasn't me that did the think: tip did that for me, and 1 i" big doing thing said only to strings were inside time | shoestri black, 1 hag thanked me But Insuie mors it he never forgot asturtinm seed at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Sweet peg socd ene of shoes kick more the people advance in Price will cause some to than ever You ma of good treatment if you trade at %iilhert's stores A man long as she 'is talking be sure wo cures not who listens so tied to do the To the woman who bakes, Royal is the greatest of time and labor* savers. Makes home baking easy, and a, profit. The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar With minimum trouble and cost bis- clean and greatly superior to the ready- made, dry, found-in-the-shop variety.