Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 2, Decatur, Adams County, 25 October 1894 — Page 6
REPUBLICAN RANT. OUR ILLS ALL CHARGED TO M'KINLEY’S OVERTHROW, ilarefacett Assertions Made by G. O. P. Orators anti Rhetorical Dead Marches of xCepublican Organs—Principles of the Two Parties Great Saving on Woolens. McKinleyism and Labor. During the present campaign all the Republican orators from Reed, Harrison and Me: inleydown have as-erted in every speech they have mad„. and are still asserting, fha- the country reached the loftiest height of prosperity under the McKinley law: that under its benign operation wa.-es rose contin ally; that every man who wished to work had plenty to do and plenty of pay for doing it. and that this blissful state i;f thing- continued to grow more blissful even down to February, 1893. Then the people made the horrible discovery that they had elected not only a Democratic I’resident and a Democratic House, but also a Democratic Senate, and thus removed the last remaining obstacle in the wav of accompli-hing what they themselves had ordered Congress to do. Thereupon all was changed in the twinkling of an eye. Every enterprise stopped short, wages began to sink, workingmen could find nothing to do, impenetrable gio m settled down upon the face of nature, and -for the rest see any rhetorical dead marches iu the Republican papers. Now, s > much of this as relates to labor under McKinleyism is pure sic tion. The McKinley law went into effect Oct. 6, I'liii. According to Bradstreet’s record the number of strikes and lockouts in that month was fifteen, all of them iu the protected industries. There were strikes of piano makers, coal miners, boot and shoe factory operatives, cigarmakers, incande-cent lamp makers trunk makers and saddlery workers against reduction of wages. Glass workers struck against boys doing the work of men. Dail manufacturers reduced wages 10 per cent. The failure of a worsted mill in Philadelphia threw 500 per-ons out of employment, and a shut-down of nine collieries near Pottsville, l'a., threw 3,000 men and boys out of work. A carefully compiled list of attacks on labor by threatening to reduce wages, by shutting down and in various other ways, shows that some 1, 00 of these were made during the two years c mmencing with October, 1890, in the protected industries alone. The number of these events by months was as follows. isno. 1891. October 19 3’j November 2* 42 December 61 37 1891. 1832. January 8* 27 February s; 3f March 59 58 April 41 4. May TO 42 Juue 38 5> July 46 to August 42 61 September 37 40 October (four days! 59 676 580 676 Total 1,165 In this list, be it remembered, there is not a single case of striking for higher wages or of aggression of any kind on the part of employes. In most cases there was either resistance to reduction of wages or loss of employment by shut-down or failure. Here are some sample Iter. s: Oct. 11, I'9o. The 130 weavers in John.on. Cowdin v< Co.'s silk mills in Paterson, N. J., strike because of a 10 percent, reduction of wages. Oct. 15. Kittredge s woolen mills at Dalton, Mass., discontinue operations after running steadily for nearly a quarter of a century. O, t. 10. 18a0. The Richland and Nelson miners at Dayton. Tenn., to the number of 1,200, strike against a reduction of wages. Oct. 21, 18<rt. Leather workers in Brooklyn. N. Y., on strike because their wages had been reduced from 812 to $9 per Week. And so it runs, only from bad to worse, throughout the two years. The recorded facts show reductions of wages, tne shutting down of establishments, including silk, cotton, and woolen mills and iron works, on acc untof business depre -ion and other things not indicative of the highest degree of prosperity, or of the full employment at top wages of everybody wishing to work. These facts the Republican campaigners find it vonvenient to ignore as they sound the mighty chorus from Chicago to the sea to the effect that everybody was busy, fat, and perfectly happy until the people made the terrorizing discovery that they were in earnest when they voted McKinleyism down in I'9o and again in 1892. —Chicago Herald. Keen Up the Fight. That able independent Democratic paper, the New York Herald, eloquently supports the advanced position taken by President Cleveland and Chairman Wilson in favor of keeping up the tariff reform tight till al’, odious class legislation is repealed. The Herald -ays: , The first of these Republican citadels that must go is the sugar trust monopoly, which has 'grown s> great/’ on four yea -.- of Republican protection. ” Republican orators and editors are busily trying to insult the intelligenca of the people by telling th* m that the Democratic party, which from Jefferson's time to the present has fought against mon poly, has now espoused it: and they a e harping especially upon the “prote- tion” giv. n by the’ new tariff to the sugar trust. But this casuistry will deceive few. The sugar trust was notoriously the offspring and progeny of Republican tariffs enacted in recent years. The McKinley law, signed by President Harrison iu 18:,o, provided that “all sugars above No. 16 Dutch standard in color shall pay a duty of 5-10 of 1 cent per pound ’ and an additional *l-10 of 1 cent per pound on German and other foreign sugars, making a total of tie cents on every 100 pounds. The new tariff reduced’ this duty to “1-8 of 1 cent per pound." which, taken with the incidental ' protection'' afforded by the new ad valorem duty of 40 per cent., makes the total protection to the tru-t now as stated by Senator Aldrich, the leader of the ' Republican “protectionists , only *42- hundredths of a cent per pound," o: 42- cents j>er hundred pounds. But. even if the Gorman bill had
given the trust more plunder than the McKinley bill, this is all the more reason why the jteoplu should unite as one man with the Democratic partv as the onlv one which is making or likely to make any effectual effort to break’the sugar tru-t's iron grip on the neck of the nati n. Germanism is Republicanism wearing “the stolen livery of Democracy.” But let not Republican leaders fondly dream that they can dec *ive the people and save the “protected" monopolies which the Reeds and McKinleys have built up. The remnant of “protect onism,” surviving in the new tariff, will cost the people at least $1.200.i*00,0. 0 a yea". This will have to be paid a- a bounty and tribute to the oppresso s ami spoliators. The people cannot rest under this burden of slavery. True to their instincts as freemen, they will enthusiastically ,oin in the new campaign so brilliantly opened by Mr. Wilson, knowing well that it mj-t triumph. For treeJom's battle once begun. Bequeathed l y bleeding sire to son. Though baffled uft. It ever won. The Two Parties. WHAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY STANDS FOR. The Republican parly, by its traditions and tendencies, tne teachings of its leaders, past and present, and its whole history, ha-a steady momentum toward sectionalism, high government. interference with local rule and 10. al control of elections, extravagant expenditures. heavy taxes, bounties, subsidies and exorbitant protection. “Ideas of governmental meddling and centralization dominate it; class interests hold it firm y to evil r rurses.” Ttiesc things are incompatible with free and pure governm nt. The American people need none of thes ■ things: only a small minority really desires them. WHAT THE DEMOCRATIC PA HTYSTANDS FOR. The Democratic party, by principle and tendency, by the tradition of its elders and it* steady momentum, tends to economy, to low taxes, to revenue tariffs, immediate respoiisibi ity to the people, and no federal interference with local rule. These are tho very essentials of free and pure government. if the people want these things —and surely they need them more than at any other time in their history—that party, and that party alone, is the instrument they must use to secure them. Upon other gieat issues also the scale turns in its favor. It is as trus worthy as its opponent on the monetary (uestion, while its ancient financial traditions are sounder than those of any great and long-lived par r y we have ever had. And—what is truly a crowning merit it is. and ever has been, a national party.—Chairman Wilson, in North American Review. An Independent Opinion. Harper's Weekly, in speaking of the new tariff law. says: “In the first place, the law has made certain the replenishment of the treasury, and removed all risk of a further increase in the permanent national debt. Again, it insures the cheapening, to a substantial extent, of a multitude of the necessaries and comforts of life, reducing the co-t of living for every household, without weakening the resources of the Government. Clothing of every description, cloths, dress goods, blankets and carpets will be cheaper and better everywhere for its passage. Imported food, wools and lumber, china and glass ware, pocketknives and table-knives, nearly all the completed go *ds the u-e of which is so large a part of civilized life, together with the materials of which they are made, share in the large reductions of duty. These changes alone will certainly, within a few months, make every man’s daily earnings more valuable to him than’now. But thev will do far more than this, They will do much t > revive depressed industry and to restore general prosperity. A pretense is made by a few manufacturers of anticipate I distress from the reduction of certain protective duties, but for this we can find no foundation in the law. But the brightest feature of this tariff is found in the fact that it is a turning-point in the history of our econ mic legislation. It signa’lizesthe final stag.* in the most cost!.- experiment ever tried by a peaceful nation. The experiment ’has failed. In the new law the nation has turned its face toward justice, toward economical truth, toward lasting prospe. ity, toward ultimate free.lom of trade: an 1 the movement henceforth will be in that direction.” The Saving on Woolens. Mr. Jacob Schoenhof, an appraiser of textile goods in the custom house at New York, estimates that, because of free wool and reduced duties on woolens, the consumers of this country will save 9*163,000,000 yearly on w'oolen goods alone. Be has prepared statements showing the saving on woolens, worsteds, hosiery, carpets, wool and felt hats, etc. He has prepared samples of different kinds of cloth, and has attached the cost of importing each under the old and the new tariff laws. An all-wool challis women's dress goods that formerly cost 68 cents now costs 51 cent*.. An all-wool cashmere that cost 82 cents now costs 58 cents. On a sample of coatings the saving is 81.16 per yard. What, the consumers will save because of reduced duties would purchase our whole I wool clip and pay the wages of all , workers in woolen mills, .'till, we expect to hear the McKinley lambs bleat • until the November election. After I that event the country will have decided that free wool and cheaper and better clothing has benefited all and hurt nob >dy, and we will hear but little more about “protection to wool. ” Significant from >1 iryland. The Washington County, Maryland, Democrats, at a convention held to elect Congressional delegates, j ledged themselves “to unite with faithful Democrats everywhere to continue the fight until the interests of the great masses of the peo, le shall no longer be sacrificed to the special interests of the favored few, but shall finally and fully triumph over the greed and tyranny of monopolies and trusts. ” On the same 'lay the St. Mary County I emocra’s adopted the following resolution: “We commend the able, brave, and patriotic administration of President Clev • and, and rea lim our adherence to the principles of the Chicago platform of J 892. and we urge a further contest in the interest of tariff reform until all the promises of that platform are complied with.” < arpet Industry 800 mine - . Free wool is having a healthy influ- I ence ou the carpet industry of the country, as all th: soaioe grades of : wool used in making carpets are im- i
ported, scarcely any of ft being pro duced in this country. St ange to relate. since the pas-age of the tariff bi.l putting wool on the free list wool has advanced ten cents per pound, thus enhanc.ng the value of this product. The farmers who have held their wool and kept their sheep will be benefited largely by the advance in prices. The la gest carpet factories in Philadelphia have resumed opera*ti ns and are running night and day, and claim they can now compete with the wor d in arpet manufacture. —National Glass Budget Failure of Reciprocity. Without a reciprocity clause the Me Kinley bill would not open a foreign market for another bushel of wheat or a barrel of pork, said James G. Blaine. 1 He had the recipr city clause inserted to open the markets of the countries south of us to these produ ts. Blaine knew that these were agricultural countries, and were exporters rather than importers of farm preducts. Ho, however, hoped with his reciprocity club to obtain com essions in the countries in favor of American products. He knew that his good, protected i friend, the man fact .rer. would get ■ the kernel of reciprocity, and possibly the tarmer, who was getting tired of the husks . f protection, might rejoice at sight of the reel, rocity shell. In accordance with this reciprocity clause President Harrison imposed a duty of three cents a pound on coffee from Venezuela and Colombia, because these countries were so mean that they wou d not play reciprocity with us. This has increased somewhat the price of codee in our markets and has diverted the tra e of these count: i- s to Europe. As we would not take their chief product they could not take our goods in exchange. Eng'and laughed at our recipr. city efforts while she profited by our folly. With the removal of this discriminating duty on coffee and of heavy duties on wools our trade with South America is beginning to “pick up.” The whole reciprocity scheme has been a dismal failure. The Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin thus sums up the situation “The fact that our exports to Brazil have increased much more slowly since the reciprocity policy was instituted than before, and that a direct effect of that policy was to check our trade with the two most northern countries of South America, is sufficient evidence of the failure of the system which only in Cuba lias yielded any particularly gratifying results. We are in a position, therefore, to watch with considerable inteiest the ei’eet of a more liberal customs policy upon our traffic with our sister r publics to the south of us, and the fact that Venezuela an 1 Colombia coffee is coming back here, and that a ship load of Argentine wool arrived off the port of Boston before the new tariff law went into effect, suggests the probability of a liberal increase of our export trade.” Enjoying Demormtir Times. The St Louis Globe-Demo -rat Rep. gives very little comfort to its party's calamity-howlers in referring to the business revival in that city. It says: "In this city at least nearly ’all ’races of the panic have disappeared. The nutnberof idle persons, aside frm the chronically and constitutionally idle who are always present in every large city, is very little greater than it is in normal years, which is a trustworthy indication that the hard times are virtually ended. In other directions, also, are seen evidences of the business revival in St. Louis. All the great mercantile lines report far greater activity than was known in the last half of I'9', and in some of them the trade at present is fully as extended as as it has been in the average years at this time. Merchants generally in none of the more important branches of trade have any cause any longer to complain of lack of patronage, and they are not complaining.” The Business Revival. And now let our Republican friends quit whining and join the rest of the country in getting down to business.— Rochester Herald. Throughout tho South the feeling of confidence in a returning prosperity is manifested. The turn of the long lane has been reached.—Memphis Commercial- Appeal. The Democratic party agreed to repeal the McKinley bill. That enactment is off the statute book and a fairer law takes its place. Now watch the rising tide of prosperity.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Do NOT forget that hundreds of shops and mills were closed up under the McKinley law. throwing thousands of men out of work, and that these same shops and mills are being reopened under the new tariff law. —St. Paul Globe. The sacredness of McKin’eyism is forever shattered. The tendency to higher duties is. we believe, permanently arrested. The country will learn that the McKinleyites are not the only people who can make tariffs. —lndianapolis News. The revival of trade will be followed by a revival of prosperity in the manufacturing centers. The surplus stock which was in the storehouses of the factories has boon exhausted, and the mills must be started again to supply demand.—Brooklyn F.aglo. As TO tne lasting revival of tho industries incident to the growth of the foreign trade which is expected to result from the new act. time will have to prove this claim. Certainly all the indications thus far are favorable to the conclusion that the country is entering upon an era of substantial business prosperity.—Baltimore Herald. There can be no doubt that the present period is the beginning of a decided change In the tariff policy of the American people. It is the first step in the return to the position occupied by the nation now almost thirty years ago. There has been a long, a weary, and. at times, a discouraging effort to obtain it. -—Boston Herald. In every part of the country there seems to be a revival of business interests. if not of great proportions, still a movement upward, with brighter prospects. The rush to withdraw goods from the custom-houses is an implication of increased activity in manufacturing and trale interests that will command attention. —Hartford Times. FOUR years McKinleyism has livedfour years in which the country has been driven rapidly down into the lowest depths of the valley of commercial depression. Now there is ar* end of it. McKinleyism goes to take its place among the great mistakes, the cruel mistakes of history. The new order of things begins.—Boston Post.
THE WAR IN THE EAST | GREAT BRITAIN WOULD LIKE TO . interfere. Other Powers Will Not Support Her - , Japan Is Meantime Thrashing thin* Russian Activity-Combatants Wlli I Left Alone for Ibe Pressnt. — Strmrele In the Orient. As the war between China and apan progresses, the situation become m re interesting and more critic*- A have now reached a pass where s of tho European governments wou * like to interfere, but their mutua ealousies and conflicting interests and the po sible re-ultof a general intercontinental struggle limit interference thus far to d:pk untie talk'. It would b** manifestly to Great Britain’s commercial interest to have the -truggle : come to a speedy end, and with such | object in view she ha ■ sounded other , governments' intentions. German, is averse to any interference: Russia is proses e:ly pro- Japanese, and will brook ' r.o interference to the injury of Japan: 1 rance, ■ wh’ch secretly rejoices whenever the . Bri ish lion gets a kink in its tail and i which is the ally of Russia. ha- no desire to med .le in tho matter, and Au-- * tria, follow! g the example of Ger-j many, does not seek to embroil herself , in a’matter that does not directly c *ncern her. Italy alone of the great i powers hearkens to England s wishes, i for she is anxious to divert the atten- • tion cf her enslaved millions fr. m j maladministrati n at home to some possibly brilliant exploits abroad. But i Italy would be a frail reed for England j to relv on in anv interference in oriental affair... and thus the e mbatants In ; the far east will be left al< ne for the j pre.-’ nt to settle their difficulties. Rn.-ian Activllr. In the expected final defeat of China i and the possible di-meml>erment of her I territory there doubtless will be ; Europ *a:i interference. The nations | mo=t intimately affected outside apan are Russia and'E* gland, and their interests are as antagonistic as they well can be. Russia will unque-tionably endeavor to secure an increase of Manchurian territory, with the object of establishing a r.ew sea port on the Pacific, reveral years ago she asked such a grant from China, but was refused and now it seems as though the present war turned up most opportunely for her pur-po-e For some reason she is now busy m ’bilizing troops in eastern Siberia She has a powerful fleet of war vessels at her Pacific port of Vladivostock. and has there collected an army of 30.000 men. At Irkutsk is another army of 30.100 and all along the line of the Amur River are the t ossack settlements. which are bound to contribute a large number of men on any demand made on them by the (. ar. Thus without moving a ton of freight or a single man from her we-tern Ueparimei.t-, Russia has a strong available army and fleet in the east, and when the time comes that it suits Russia to decla-e herself she will be ready to strike a strong blow in carrying out her traditional policy • f establishing the vast empire on a broader and grander basis on the shores of the Pacific. How soon that time may arrive can only be conjectured. it probably will not 1 e before spring. One thing is certain, that the Muscovite will not allow the present opportunity to pass without availing of it to establ sh nia power permanently in the Pacific. Such action by Russia England w< uld resent. Long ’ago she threatened that if Russia would ae- * quire any port in Corea she w uld e-ize Port Hamiit* n. which commands the entrance to th" . - lL is altogether pro' able that the two nations may begin their long threatened quarrel over India, not in Afghanistan after all, but in the seas that wash the coast of sluggish China. •Japitn’h
Meantime Japan is making strenu-! ous efforts to force the war to a finish I Since the beginning of hostilities she I has maintained the upper hand bv land and sea, and is now concentratin'" her efforts to invade China and march upon Pekin, the capital of the empire Her Corean army, after having driven the ( hinese out of the peninsula, is I marching rapidly on Moukden, ca ital of the Chine.-e province of Manchu ia and after the capture of that cit. o' If'WjOOO souls, which should not be ve-v ■ difficult, this army is to march on Pekin. Meantime another Japanese army is ready for the invasion if China a d if a successful landing can be made on the Gulf of Pechili tr th I armies will unite under the walls of i Pekin. This is believed to be the Japanese ' programme; but in war programmes : cannot always be carried out as drawn ' up and something may yet occur to 1 mar Japanese plans and prot act the struggle beyond the present year ■ \\ hile . apan is thus prosecutin'" the war with vigor. China i, divided and distracted. Ihe government tse’f is m disunion, one faction contending for war to a finish, the other for ', eace ‘ Among the masses db-ati<fncti«n v ' ists and petty rebellions are . r UD i I up. Tne navy, defeated bv the Janar? ' ese at the mouth of the y'“u I , 1 *' ! ha- lost its courage; the army is badl-' Vni“i a h ~(l u i. PPe ' ’’ and among 1 hi h am. .ow there is corruption a d distrust. Lelying on its bo undies- re- i sources the government, however ' hope- to be able to overcome the a i vantages hitherto gained bv its adver- I sary . but it will be many months before the work war material can be carried out. and meantime Japan has ample time to deal deadly itself at Chlua and even capture Pekin MADE FROM MOLASSES. Pure Spirit, Now VU^ ctared from the rup of Sugar Beets. An experiment of grea* commerc al value has u>t been sue e sfully fie I m Omaha, Neb., namely, the production nf pure spirits from beet sugar molasses. The consequences of Os, will be far reaching. It will fuse the production ot an entirely n»w indu-trv and it will afford g:4at ad t^n al t to the sugar manufacturers, al hitherto the mol tsses incidental to the making of beet roo' suga ■ has n t been used for anythi g and hrs bee a total 10-s. The process eonsi-ts i n the application of a secret chemied preparation, which transforms the X la ses into a sort of glucose, perfec lv adapted t_> distillery uses. ‘
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ’ Into ill be tried in Biverton. There will soon . one • N a ca-'e which wmi haye | of cme before tne v h j c k if the pr “e---widpract callyena ' t- C vrae'.i « of the doctrine: I(.hr>t an > etieeinthe nite . .v at • ail at 1 a-t be a Img -"’e. in in»i* | I ,’irecti n. 1 easing this the b , ' t t-are going V', d and ot»ro*ed to the ana « > term ned are the docu . . > a all s the death by c< ns m pUon o 1 • VO ng woman named sadie Le.l. ! begwi to cough about fcn “it d L 6 ’d- clareV'the ‘g’rl’w -B riends. hearing of her ~...e. . Mrs. Bessie T. Glenn, a Cbr.stian scientist, t * her, ami after one si Ung w*th the girl the latter was so m proved with a belief in the womans n<>wer that she told her parents they had better tell the call a ain. This they did and r-adie f und herself solei in the nanus oi the woman. ... Sadie’s cough grew worse. But still she ha I faith in Mrs. (Henn find that woman intimated th t she should have 'sime recompense, although she had j declared that she never to k :In ail was given her. >adie a 1 the i time ge ting worse. A f w weeks ago Sadie died. Mrs. Glenn wa< not c mi je'entto give a certificate of death, i and when the local physician was »p- --: pealed to he refused, as it was not h:s case and to Sadie s death had to oe ■ reported to the con n-r. In New Jer* i gey there is a law which provide" that a person who practices ‘aith cure or under thL guise of ChrUian science ■ attempts t» make cures by religio n j means, commits a crime and must be i punched by not le s than thirty days it .e acts of the ca-o came to j the knowledge of the jurymen, they I were but a short time coming to the c inclusion that Sadie Fell would have lived longer had a regular physician been empl yed and having ; r-H»f that Mrs. Glenn was a pract : c n_ r Christian Scientist "he was held in bail to await the action of the grand jury. When her ca"o comes up in court the interest of m nv j erssons throughout the country wi I center in the little New Jersey town, and i Mrs. Glenn is convicted and sent to prison it will he the greatest blow Christian Science could receive. Other States ton, ma take counsel from New Jersey and laws of a simila’- nature may go on the statute books all over the United States.
IN THE POLITICAL SWIM. Georg* Denny. Jr., the Republican Leader i i Breckinridge’* District. Os intr-'rest is George Denny, Jr., Republican < andidate for Congress in the Ashland District of Kentucky, W. ( .
P. Bre c k inridge's old dis trict. For years Judge Denny has been one of tho most prominent Republicans in the State. He has earned tho honor bestowed upon him by his hard work for his party. t His political career was begun by his e.ection a s bounty Judge of Garrara
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GBonc.F. dexxv, jucounty in 079. The following year he was made < hairman of the Republican state Centra Committee As a delegate from his district he attended the conventions of 18'4 and b*** at Chicago. Judge Denny stumped the .'"tate for the Republican ticke* in .* orris B. Beardsley, rece: tlv nominated for Lieutenant Governor * f Co >- neci<* t by the Dem xsratic state Conranti.in r **
vention was one of the 1-ali g . dates for Governc*r. Mr. Beardsley resides a B'i. eport, was a repre ontative of that city in the nnectic: t ( eneral Asee nbly, and was conspicuously a tive in progressive legislation. Brio- to his election to the Stat ■ Io fislatureheserved tor manv .
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island re C ar ] B . g ot oth “ “ te , ln the strairei re a ’ on , P® The France and Inland w’ tlUg between vVt b * de } l.ers is at present e ultimatum to W ’ e: ' of an T V n T ‘"' era ’ ,h,c CUeks. • J - M. Derr, a , at l n . ' James barn-wire again, t * 1 George Deattv „ | jeven years and' e l e *“ senten ced to L ' e to f u , ‘ ®unt-.s an? ' i 116 pen ’tentiaTv a Cd nine
SCIATIC SHE H.w -» I roTuii.rut k- , k Hg wHh It Hi* < u’r * M I a r **m Rent . t 1! n. John M. * reuce County, late sixteenth JuULiu I>.>t*’ a : > ■ ft w ii.en that A years . ... M - that he s* oa ’e<A* Hi* m hole system :.• ‘ :d‘ « ;n it e ; tj'.G.* s f his |.::.l"» e:- • a :,v t.* inert* *’r HU hi- life was pra itia ly i r *.i Euiine il phyeiciars Mtre , ‘ known means of relief ernpi 45 M avail, and it indue 1 see i .. Keutu was to lose / . valued cltUeni * }t at this tinio that J- : p J beard of Dr. Williams’ Pink i”ii* t j| people. He promptly aj* * . . pXjl own case, and as h re-u i. r t e'.l ii an. The effect of n, !~» j HE mar'elovsc Rice re 4 . ; • f bts limbs, h s appet.te retur Qe /j •utiire avails pt-rs r• »*,; .. MHi roiery The ~j. H| nd Touched for bv the Co “ <nd *' auds us on«* of the 4 . cures known in the annals of u I/>o discovery iu medicine more discussion, both in n t-i. and hi the newspapers. 1. an hr A. Pink Pills. The many r-ma Ids- - Ist fected by these pills have t r | jfa • e irreftt-*"t profuim*untry and abroad They hue ■ laJ| a.v.G* . y s- Iliff of th’ l n >sts and it has been ascerta nej are an unfailing f - eases a- locomotor ataxia, part 4 . lOU -s. M. Vitus’ dan* e *c ati x r nervous fa. effects of la grippe, p t phat 1 heart, pale and sallow e**:..;'.-** line r- suiting fr . triticn: all diseases resu tinz ft .ted humors in the blood. * nr- n’.c erysipelas, etc. P j ecit.c for trouble* pwcu'. . .1. h «»>pnre«ai<»e* Irregular : f rnis of weakness, AR Irrißation. 1 correspondent sav< ■ ing you must u.>o largo H v. at- A small quauti’y a M base of a plant is us no b’-uelit. 3 M rule I have found out is 1 M •: > iiiare foot of groi.n M ; we can k**op -'a - * M I'u.r and full of flower the u;. | M " d"on. As a test 1 guv* H the amount and lost them a. 9 /.•' ■•a ’.yor not at a... j H ’<• give Io > gal on- a ■ .an to give 59 gallon ’.a. aa H B’illßl.iiy and F ar b--’ y A zf) TO Pl TON I V/ sW needed'.'. .I.re al ■ v r hl •’ ■< H /JST I 1 f C'Sl S/ / ( ■ -- ■ I fl /11 r« / ' I $ A » U n ,:J ■ • H strong, plump, round an.l : .V* H iag so effective as a stre-r*-: ■ and flesh maker is known h- ' o I - I c f cod liver oil and its h?.ay v • ciaj H It r /uses every organ of :?.■ sw H tivitv, purifies, enriches a:: 1 H the blood so that the body n . r ’ n B and strengthened. If you are ’ . H weak, too nervous, it may be t. . :i I assimilation is at fault. Act:: I < f bile is necessary for the rec■ fat foods m the blood. Too oft :: the ■ b-. Id" back this element whi<:. a I digestion. Dr. Pierce’s Gul i; n M.ca I I’l-covery stimulates, tones u? r'*'- yTO | ’ * I t..e muscles, stomach and nerve' k- : ‘**l I rich blood they require. I Spent Hundred! of Dollars w Ith no Beoe#- I M J. Coleman of ?? : '■ I A' !*-»•) ■ • A h **♦ I
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writes: ‘Alter suffering from dyspepsia end constipation with untold agony fnr at ka®t 18 months. I am more than pleased to say that after i;- ng Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and ’lleasant Pellets’for one tn.nth. I was entirely cured, and from that day to this I do not know, thank God. what erm a flight headache is. I paid a doctor on Tremont St., Boston, in one day (for his advice only.) the sum c Sio.oe with s;.so for medicine, and derived no
I benefit. I got more relief in one !rotn v medicines. as far as my stomach w.. • than from all the other medicine I u-~'. If any person who reads this is dy*’P f ‘psia or constipation and will u * c 'X medicine as I have done, he will nevi.: r-.gret* DO YOU Weoffer ernpl»yn.ei/ e “?■ txr a wobh-h in each CVLI-t? WAKT pay S«5 a month S , WApv cQuif'd. Addraes WUKK r*Co., Eox 1760, PL-la-iedhiai*
★ WORLD’S-FAIR ★ I HIGHEST AWAI?P ; o ’■great Has justly acquired the reputation of Y Die Salvator for 1M D S T he-Aged. Ax Incomparable Aliment f> r the Growth and Protection of INFANTS i-'J LO R EN A Superior nutritive in continued Fe' ss > And a reliable remedial agent m all gastric and enteric diseases’ often in instances of consultation o'ff patients whose digestive organs were 11 ' duced to such a low and sensitive ci’n® 11 ' that the IMPERIAL GRAM 't " 3 : the only nourishment the stem*would tolerate when LIFE seeingepending on its retention And as a FOOD it would be diffcu ll t 0 conceive ot anything more pahUbk Sold by DRI: G GIS TS. Shippim Def *'' - JOHN CARLE & SONS, New Y
