Democratic Press, Volume 2, Number 78, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1896 — Page 2
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MC KINLEY THE CANDIDATE. Th* probability that Maj. M> Kinley will be the Republican numluec for Preaident give* sincere pleaaura to all Democrat*. No other «*au«Udnte at amis ; ao clearly for the odious policy of pro-1 tret lon, nor would any other Repute!l can leader Incur the name deep-rooted j hostility which the American people, showed toward the author of the tariff law of IMMt. Viewed lit the light of past history there la every reason why the | Democrats should welcome the choice | of the Ohio Major an the standard- j bearer of the | arty of trusts and monopolies. Six years ago the tariff bill, to which . the accident of his selection as chair-1 man of the Committee on Ways and Means fastened Mr. McKinley’s name. I was passosi through Congress. The new j measure was extolled as the embodi-1 meat of all protection wisdom and wonderful results of prosperity and | political success were predicted by its friends. Both prophecies were doomed to signal failure. Instead of becoming more prosperous > the country began to show signs of business depression. I’rices of goods ad- , van's d. and with dearer goods consumers could not afford to buy as much as i formerly, so manufacturers found the demands for their products decreasing.! The people grumbled because they had l to pay higher prices, and wherever it | was |s'ssible they bought less. Thus instead of a busiuws boom the McKln- 1 ley law brought decreased consumption. the first step toward industrial I stagnation. The political results of the new tariff! were no less discouraging to the protec- i tionists. In the fall election*. held the! same year in which It was passed, a | House of Representatives was elected s in which there were only eighty-seven j Republicans. The Republicans lost the States of Connecticut, Nebraska. Indiana, Michigan. Rhode Island. Wisconsin and even the high-tariff stronghold of Pennsylvania. Kansas was carried by the Populists, and the States of Minnesota, lowa and Mr. McKinley’s own Ohio were carried by very narrow Republican majorities. In New York State only eleven Republican Repreacutatives were elected as against eighteen In the preceding Congress, and lu Ohio only seven Representative* instead of sixteen as before. Maj. McKinley was among the defeated candidates. This showed what the people thought of McKlulej-ism. In 1881 there was a repetition of the Democratic victories in the various State elections. The Republicans who had been claiming that their defeat In 1880 was due to a failure on the part of ■ the voters to understand the new tariff ; law began to invent other excuses. In 1882 the whole country was again called to vote on the square issue of the McKinley law versus tariff reform. The Republicans insistisl that each vote for the Democratic candidate* waa a vote against protection. The Democrats accepted the issue and everywhere denounced the tariff of 1890 as a fraud i and robbery. Once more the American people expressed their opinions in emphatic form by triumphantly electing a Democratic President. House and Senate. As the result of their swindling tariff scheme the Republicans lost control of the < ’.tire administration of . the Federal Government. These are the plain tacts of recent history. What reason is there for supposing that the policy of McKinleyJsni. so obnoxious lu 1890, 1801 and 1892, will be regarded with more favor in 1800? Ha* Earned His Hire. Republican anti-McKinley organs artindignant at the lavish use of money In belialf of protection’s candidate. The country, they think, is menaced ■ with a new danger and they are warning the Republican jxirty to beware. There is nothing new in the situation, unless it Is that new bands are distributing the funds. McKinley has earned all and more than the barons of protection will expend in his behalf. They are supplying him with money from the motive which has always led [ them to equip the Republican party. As long as this fund was utilized for I the defeat of Democrats the organs of j Allison. Reed and Morton saw nothing censurable in it. Only a short while ago these same organs now berating the manufacturers were advancing arguments to prove that Republicans who grow rich off the tariff were not only justified in making large campaign contributions. but should be applauded for their jmtrlotlsm. McKinley is now getting the boodle because he will give the barons more for their money than the other candidates. He will be nominated in June because he is the logical candidate of a party which has been supjiortcd by the men whom it has enriched at the expense of the people. Clarkson, Platt and Quay are. after all. only sub-bosses. The real bosses are the protection barons, who will use any one or all the little bosses If It becomes nece-seery to do so in order to nominate McKinley. Surely the laborer Is worthy of his hire.—St. Louis Republic. What Was Done with the Wool? A tariff-mongering organ in Boston asserts that "the worst injury” which the Wilson tariff has inflicted upon the woolen manufacturers of this country Is in "compelling" them "to turn their attention to the manufacture of lowstock and the production of cheap and Inferior fabrics to comm-te with the shoddy goods sent lu such huge quag
titles from abroad.” There Is not an hontwt nud intelligent manufacturer, who will Indorse this assertion. The best answer to It Is In the enormous Importations of the finest flews which formerly found their way In extremely I small quantities to this country. AVhat j as,- do Amerlcnn manufacturers muka of all this tine wool, If they do not convert It into flue fabrics to clothe the American people? Do they eat it, or do they kt it lie idle for the consumption of moths In the warehouse* of Import- | era? Philadelphia Record. j The Latest Protection Scarecrow. Senator Cushman K. Davis, of Minne- | sot a. hits Joined the MeKinleyltes, who are trying to ware the American people Into voting for protection by holding up the alleged danger of the competition of cheap Ja|Ninese good*. In a telegram sent to the Republican convention of lit* State Senator Davis urged the adoption of a high-tariff platform for i the sjH-chil purpose of shutting out the low-priced products of Japan. The | Minnesota Republican* have never been i iln favor of high protection. Senator I Knute Nelson having voted for the Mills Idll when he was a member of the , House, but In resismse to Senator Davis' appeal they put themselves on record as favoring the policy which lias done so much to lui|toverish the | farmers of their State. That the men who four years ago I howled for protection against the pauper labor of Europe are now using Japan and China as an excuse for heavier taxation on imports is an encouraging : sign, it shows that they realize that ' the European cheap-good* s<tire Is played out, and that a new dodge must be worked. But their anti-Japanese campaigucry has no better foundation than tliat of 1892. Its sham is exi>osed in a recent statement issued by Joseph Nimmo, Jr., a Republican, who was formerly chief of the United States Treasury Bureau of Statistics, who says: "The value of our trade with China and Japan, as compared with certain otluT countri<-s for the year ended June 30. ISM. was: China and Japan, 851,513,148; Great Britain, France and Germany. $803,042,815. "In connection with this it is also of interest to advert to the total value of , our foreign commerce, and to the total value of our internal commerce. The total value of the foreign commerce of the L'nlted States during the year ended June 30, 1894, was $1,547,133,194. It is Impoocible to state with any degree of accuracy the value of the internal commerce of the I’nited States, but from all we know it appears safe to say that it amounts to fully $25,000,000,000 annually. How absurd, then, to ati tempt to delude the people of this country with the Idea that our trade relations with China and Japan constitute a governing condition of a total commerce fully 50<> times as great. 'To assume that American farmers, miners, manufacturers and Industrie' workers can l>e reduced to the level ol Chinese coolies by a trade of such comparatively insignificant proportions, and consisting. In so far as relates to imports, almost exclusively of tea. silk and other commodities not produced in this country, and which, therefore, does not compete with American farmers, miners, manufacturers and industrial workers. Is a vagary too absurd for serious consideration, even in the conflicts of partisan warfare.” This testimony of an eminent Repub Hcan should be conclusive reply to the absurd stories of the threatened flood of cheap g(*«ls from China and Japan which are lieing spread through the country by the McKinleyiteorators and press. The so-called "Japanese danger” is merely a fake devised for political purposing. It should not ndslead t single voter into supporting the part' of high taxation. Did McKinley** Tariff Make Yon Rt h? Major McKinley’s high taxation scheme for making everybody wealthy by taxing everything they used, was in full operation for four years. It certainly had a fair trial, and there is no doubt but that it enriched a few protected trusts and monopolies. But did j it make the millions of farmers rich? Did the workingmen In the mills, sacI torles and mines become capitalists through a policy which Increased the cost of the goods they used? It would be only fair that at the coming elections the votes of eleven million citizens should lie cast in proportion to benefits received. Those who were made rich by MeKlnleylsm should vote the Republican ticket. All the rest should support the Democratic candidates. Did protection make you rich? New Southern Cotton Milt*. President Dwight, of the Nashua Manufacturing Company, Nashua, N. H., recently visited Cordova, Ala., and selected a site on which his company will at once erect a SGGO,CK>O cotton mill. The new factory will be the largest ol ' Its kind lu Alabama, and will be equipped with all the latest and Itest improvements in machinery. ' Calamity-croaking McKlnleyltes will please take notice that their efforts to 1 scare business men from undertaking new enterprises are not meeting wltl. much success. Lying stories of indus--1 trial ruin caused by low tariff taxes are 1 of little weight when compared with ' one fact such a3 the above. • Friend (reading manuscript)—A pom • beggar Why poor? Do you know I of any rich beggnrs? Author—Lots of • them. They’re howling for a hlghe: . tariff.—Puck.
NOTES AND COMMENTS. M«w Jersey has had a collateral Inheritance tux a little more than three years, but Its State Treasury bn» been enriched to the amount of s3i«,usit 59 t y the tax during the Hine. The l'nlted States I'oetoflter Depart-1 mettt now use* over li.wtu railway cars . on t.’io,o"o mile* «f road, aud keeps J (MX) clerks on the move, traveling lu ch'ws 140,000,000 miles a year, during whirl'- time 9,000,000.(100 piece* of mall matter are handled. Bt. Ixtul* hns organized war ngnlnst the new woman. Her most exclusive feminine club Is responsible for the crusade. A tendency to revolt against tlie restrictions of conventionality has bee:i observed, and although nothing definitely monstrous has been done. It Is deemed wise to meet the emergency at the start. A new Add for feminine energies is always a theme of Interest. Miss | Hattie Louise Burns, of Chicago, deser* < a the congratulations of the bradii. «s world, and the thanks of womanGenre, womanly and devoted to pretty kind. Gentle, womanly mid devoted to ( pretty gowns, she is still actively engaged in the hotel business, aud Is : making of it a sue<-ess. The annual waste of the British ar- ; my is altotit ffIJXKt men—more than the I entire tinny of the l'nlted States! ! I There has licen much talk of resi-rves. , England has over 80,090 reserves, all . supposed to be mature mid exjieri- ' enct-d soldiers. The Duke of M ellington. when asked what his reserve, would l>e in certain event twilit les. said. ; "Th • people of England!" Our reserve Is the people of America. One of these days, warns the New I York Tribune, under the stimulation of British enterprise and British capital. Burmah may be a aeriou* coiujs’tltor of the l'nlted States aud Russia in tinpetroleum markets of the world, oil wells have been worked there for I 2.000 years, but in a rude and primitive manner. Now they are turning out many millions gallons a year, and the quantity is increasing in a startling ratio. The quality of the oil Is also - very tine. Evidently the ancient realms of the East are by no means yet "worked out." According to off7-ial statistics the public domain of the L'nlted States ori- I giually conslstisl of 1,815,009,000 acres of land, of which all but 588,000,000 acre* have tieen disposed of. Os the laud remaining unentered Arizona lias I 55,000,000 acres. California 45.000.01*1, Colorado 40,000.000. Idaho 40.000.0u0, Kansas 941,000, Minnesota 5,000.000. Montana 73,000,<**>, Nebraska 10,000,000, Nevada (11.000.000, New Mexico 58,000,000, Oregon 37,000,000 and Wyoming 30,000,000. These immense tracts include great mountain areas , which will Is- forever wortldess for cultivation. l*it they include also millions of acres of arid land which can be made fertile if money enough is i spent in irrigating them. In the British Medical Journal a Paris correspondent says at least 2,- * 500 physicians in France are battling with starvation, and he adds that physicians themselves are largely re- j sponsible for this state of affairs, j They “have taught lady patronesses of different societies to diagnose diseases. 1 to dress and bandage wounds, to vaccinate their own children and those of their neighliors. Medical science is vulgarized In every way. Doctors write in important daily papers explaining how bronchitis and cramps of the stomach are to Is* cured, ami in fashion journals they teach how to cure pimples and avert headaches. Five hundred thousand gratuitous consultations are given yearly in Paris dispensaries, and in this way a large amount of fees is diverted from the medical profession.” Speaking of women in the professions. a writer in "The Cougregationalist” says: “The advance in medicine n.ny Is- gauged by a few salient facts. When Harriet Hosmer, a sculptor owhom Massacliusetts is justly proud, wished to study anatomy, she knocked iu vain at the doors of medical colleges In New England and New York. Crossing the Mississippi she went to Dr. McDowell, dean of the Medical Col-»» lege in St. Ixmis, who said to her, with true Southern chivalry: 'You shall study anatomy in my college, and if anyliody interferes with you lie will interfere witli me first.' Yet in her own State, not long after, the first medical school in tile world for women was opened. This was in Boston, November 1, 1848, with twelve students. In the same city to-day are two hospitals, the New England Hospital for women and children and the Vincent Memorial Hospital, which were started aud are managed by women.” A factory for the employment of exconvicts will lie planted in Chicago if the plans of the bureau of charities of the Civic Federation are carried into eceet. The proposition is that the work of the Illinois Industrial Association, repesented by A. C. Dodds, shall lie taken up In a larger way. He has conducted a broom factory in which con- | victs were employed. It has been a failure. It is proposed that an organization be formed to take charge of t’lis factory as a philanthropic and ‘ charitable institution. It will lie run whether It pays or not.. It will lie con- ' ducted by a board of directors of an association Instead of a single person. The gentlemen interested in the 1 scheme do not deem the reformation of convicts a hopeless task, even after I hearing the experience of Mr. Dodds, who has for years made the problem | of the convict ids sjiecial work. In the old home, under his management, | there had been posted a set of rtilw*. |
ft was the chief pleasure of the men to break these rules. They raccoadad in bn nking all of them. H was not uncommon for them to sally «»»»* philanthropic Imflliutloii to "crack a crib" nud bring the plunder Imck to the ! lioum*. Once two of them had gone | down Into the kitchen mid manufac--1 tured counterfeit money. A new bridge to Is- erected over the Tennessee River at Knoxville, while not to !*• of uttusunl size, will lie, the engineer in charge nays, a wonder In I the engineering aud arvhltectunil world. It is to be built entrely of pink marble, quarried In Knox County and within n few miles of the site. It will be l.tMMi fed lottff trom “out to out” of nbutment* mid will be 240 feet long In the main spans of arch, which. It Is claimed, Is twenty feet longer than the longest arch In the world It will rise nt the crown of the channel spans 105 feet above water, with four largest eldedly imposing strusture. It Is to be n solid marble bridge from alite to aide, with n fifty foot roadway over I<*» feet above water, with sou largest spans in the world. The Immense arches will Is* eight feet deep nt the keystone, fifteen fret nt the skew- ■ 1 >aeks. or spring lines, and will spring ‘ from piers thirty feet high am! forty 1 fret wide. The piers go to solid rock. ! the substructure Ilnn-Slone. twelve feet ! Ih-low the water surface at the bridge site. The arches and spninln-l filling I will lie constructed of concrete. The parapet walls will !»• eonstru<-ted of i saweil marble slabs, with heavy blocks I <>n pilasters every fifteen fret, project--1 Ing above the wall proper and giving wlmt might be called a aenil-cnstell | ated effect. A corrcs|H>ndcnt of The Youth's I Companion sends a suggestive i-lip-ping from i local paper. The idea is advanced that one reason why the fanners of the country cannot have i free postal delivery is that roads an- so ' hard to travel. If the roads were good. 1 isisttnen on cycles might deliver the mailt everywhere. The Comimnion thinks the thought is one which dwellers in the country will do well to ponder. The increasing interest in the subject is attested by the spine given to tin discussion of the question in the daily newspapers and other periodicals. In a recent issue of the New York Indejs-ndent Prof. Shaler. of Harvard Cnivcrsity. and several other experts, till eight pages with their contributions resiieeting the need of better common roadr, the liest metbisls of construction. and tlie obvious value of highways convenient for travel. Massachusetts sets the example for the rest of the country .and Prof. Shaler. who isa monlwr of the Highway Commission, gives an account of the method adopted ly that commonwealth to promote the building of good roads. Vniler this systi m three-fourths of the expense is met by the State, and tlie rest of the cost by tlie counties in which the work is done. Tlie Massachusetts plan of State aid has been tried two years without showing serious defects, and Prof Shaler regards it as a practical method of dealing with the road-build-ing problem. An Important suggestion in these article* concern* the pnqier trehrical training of civil engineers who wish to make highway construction a specialty. The highest skill in engineering is required to exemplify the best methods in highway work. The study of materials to be used and of their proper disposition is a necessary preparation for expert treatment of tlie road question. Tlie Companion concludes by asserting that the old theory in rural districts, that any one who could order workmen alsmt vigorously and make animals do thefr liest was tit to lie a highway constructor, is giving place to the sensible con--1 <-lu*<on that careful training is needed for work which is designed to Increitse the convenience and prosjierity of the community.” Transplanting Teeth. Among tlie wonders of modern surgery there Is nothing more remarkable, says tlie Cincinnati Enquirer, than the transplanting of teotli. Some years ago a dentist created a sensation by extracting a tooth from the jaw of one person and inserted it in the jaw of another. Since that time the iqierntion lias licen repeatedly trh-d. but with not altogether satisfactory results. At least 25 per cent, of these cases have failed of success. Considering that the experiment is in its Infancy, this is encouraging. The method Is to select the tooth H’quired for the purpose, pains being taken thnt it Is of just the size and shape to fit tlie space of fie one removed. The crown is severed from the root, which is then depriv-d of its pericementum nnd siuijied to suit the ojicrator. A thorough cleansing of tlie nerve canal is rtext in order, then tlie npex of the root Is filled and I hertncticaliy sealed with a tiny plat'na tube carefully fitted Into tlie nerve canal. After the most careful course of antiseptic trentinent tlie socket Is prepared to receive the new r sit. wh>h is secured in place and so covered t’mt i it is safe from shocks and pressure. After al’out six weeks, or when the union has taken place, provided tlie operation Is suecessft.l, a porcelain ! crown is attached to the root, and the j atlent hns a fine, strong and natural looking tooth. A Severe Critic. Dr. Thomas Augustine Arne, the composer of England’s famous national liymn, “Rule Britannia,” once was called upon to judge lietween two very bad singers. After patiently hearing J them, he said to one of the contestats, “You are tlie worst singer I ever heard iln my life." "All!” cried the other exi ultingly, “then I win?” "No,” sa.d Dr. Arne, "you can’t sing at all!”—San Francisco Argona-
INDIANA INCIDENTS. RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK. A Man with Too Much Money- Rlv*l* for n Olrl’* Affection* Flaht " Bloody Hattie Mmplo lercuionie* Over the Body of Pearl BryanThey Find »IWO in a KatcheL A brnkmnan on th* Feorlt division nt tie- Vandall* Railroad, nunied Roed. w«» Unri'le-I a satchel cmtalninz loO” athi-r day, •nd the man who gave it to mm fvideatly wanted to lie rid of it for all time, A paanengrr who boarded the tram at Decatur and left It at Mount Zion handed the satchel to Reed he left the i-ars, saying: "Take <-«re of thl» for me. Tlie trainmen decided to open the satchel, bt-caiiM' the man had acted In a peculiar miinner, ami in it they found s.■<*> lu bills. jentnusy Lend* to n Flcht. Henry Wllaon was a suitor for the hand »f Nora Mclntyre, daughter of Thomas Mclntyre, living near the Frankliu-Rusli County line, but he was supplanted in the young girl’s favor by Samuel Templeton. a seliool teacher who recently came into the neighborhood. The other night the rivals met at a country dance, and when Templeton ventured _ outside the bouse he was attacked by Wltoon, armed with a knife. Templeton u»ed bi* revolver, and mutual friend* joined in. " hen the smoke cleared away Templeton wa* found dangerously atabbed in the hrraat and back, while Wilson bad a bullet in hit thigh and Charles Bolster, a friend of Templeton, wa* *hot in the neck. The condition of all three men is alarming. During the fight, which was general, brass knuckles, knivea. (tone* and chib* were used, and everyone of the participants is bruised snd battered. The partieipants are all members of prominent families. and <lisi>atchos from the quarter indicate intense excitement in the neighborhood. The young woman whose charms caused the melee was borne to her home iu a prostrated condition. Pearl Bryan'* Funeral Service*. Several hnndred people were attracted to Foreat Hill Cemetery in Greencastle Friday afternoon by the announcement of the funeral of Pearl Bryan, the Fort Thomas victim. The body was brought home on Feb. 9, aud has been kept in the public vault in the cemetery awaiting burial. The family have hoped for the finding of the missing head, but they abandoned that idea and decided on interment. Six young men, former classmatea of the deceased, took tlie white casket from the vault nnd carried it to the Bryan lot. A quintet sang two songs. Dr. H. A. Gobin. of De Pauw University, read Bible selections and spoke of the lifo of the de<-eas<si. and offered a fervent prayer. This was followed by more music, after which the remains were lowered to their last resting place. Numerous costly and beautiful floral offerings were placed on the casket and grave by classmates and friends of the deceased. All Over the State. Perry Jordan, aged 55, of Anderson, took morphine instead of quinine by mistake and died in a few hours. A. J. Conover, the alleged forger, held St Peru on a charge of having bogus checks in his possession, has been released, the authorities finding no case against him. i Daniel Baugh, of Jeffersonville, celebrated the 107th anniversary of his birth Wednesday. He is probably the oldest man in the State. He is hale and hearty and retains his mental faculties. Rev. Dr. John Rutledge, of Oakville, was arrested, but was released on bond of SI,OOO. The indictment was returned by the recent grand jury. It is charged that on Dec. 24 last Rev. Dr. Rutledge united in marriage Charles Jones aud Miss I-alo Hunt, though the United Brethren Chun-h had revoked his license. It is alleged that he had no aufliority to perform the marriage, ami was guilty of felony. He is one of Delaware County's oldest resident*, and has been a physician and minister at Oakville for a number of years. It is not known why th* licensu was revoked. Theodore Frank was severely injured Saturday night while attempting to clean | out a dance near Inwood. Frank, Grimsley and Thompson, three of the most spirited young men in the vicinity, had partly carried out a plan to (brow out the young men at the dance aud take possession of die hall. Frank was the first one in rhe hall, and, taking hold of the smallest man in the room, received a violent blow across the head with a stove poker, in the hands of Charles Meyer. Instantly all the men present joined against the intruders. Knives, guns, stove pokers and stones were freely flying in the room. Mr. Meyer, living close by, heard the racket and went over to see about it. With the help of several others he quieted the fighters. Frank, Grimsley and Thompson were arrested and put under bonds. Early Wednesday morning tlie authorities of Bremen were notified to meet the west-bound limited express un the Baltimore and Ohio road aud arrest a gang of thieves supposed to be on board. They had boarded the train at Garrett and, catching Theodore Beilstein, of Chicago, on the platform, robbed him and threw him from the rapidly moving car. One us the gang remarked that he believed Bciletein held the keys to the express safe. After he had recovered from the shock Beilstein crawled, bruised atid bleeding, to Garrett and notified the authorities. I Offu-ers were lined up on both aides of the track, aud as soon as the train slowed up the gang was located between the cars. They made a desperate resistance and two of 'them got away. Four were arrested, and when about n block from the depot one of them knocked down the oflicer who had him in charge and made a dash for liberty. The officer* opened fire, Which was returned. Two of the thieves were idiot and one will die as a result. Robert Torrey, for years with Buffalo Sill** show, while going through a livery stable at Valparaiso, was struck on the head by a bale of hay and killed. The block coal miners of the Brazil district asked the operators for a joint conference, which was granted. The miners met in secret session and formulated a scale for the ensuing year which they will present at the joint conference. It is said that they will ask an increase in the price of inkling iu the same ratio as that granted in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Th* operators say they are not in a position to grant a raise.
Noeilril A Double H « Minn, l.vgcr. «‘b- „( re.ia' ■ niai./y, near Autun, I ran. t ,. ‘ ■ . mother of « child of n,„ t. with two |HTfc.t In, tt ,l, ai d ■ ! The Infant ba* oxe. 11,.nt M every chance of llvitqj. \ stru*? K feature ot the ease I. t!mt 11„. ~ priest Im* Is'C'i ordered by <■ , ISB cal authority to perform a.e ‘H tnony of Impllstn. Man I* a sort of tie., whh hwesj. B too apt to juilg,’ of l>\ tin. l,a rK
Spring I Medicine I Tour blmd in Spring is almost esnatnn I t e full of ImpuriUea-the aceumuiMo* I of the winter months. U 4 <i veatUMijg I of sleeping r« oms, Impure air in dwt||* I Inga, factories and shop*, ov»r.6»u ß . I heavy, improper f'.ods. ai.ure if I kidneys and liver properly to do extra I work thus thrust upon th. m, ar« th* I prime causes of this condition. It m I of the utmost importance that )ull ’ I Purify Your Blood Now, as when wanner weather comes »nd I tlie tonic effect of cold, bracing sir n I gone, your weak, thin, inqure 110.4 | will not furnish necesairy strength. | That tired feeling, loss of appetiu. wifi I open the way for serious disease, maed I health, or breaking out of humors a 4 I impurities. To make pure, rich, red blood Hood’s Sarsaparilla stands uuequailed. Thousands testify to its merits. Millions take It as their Spring ! Medicrue. Get Hood's, because Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the on* True Blood Further. All druggists It, Prepared only by I' I. H<>...! Ain |. ~ q Hood’s Pills ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Douglas s 3. SHOE If you ray •< to f jr shoes, exR W see uhat a good shoe you can buy for V ■ OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS, CO NG It ESH, Bt’TTOM, and I.ACE, made In all * n N,’ 1 leather by skilk'd work* ' men. We make and o more / ’ ‘ //\ than any cFall „ lt , .. r k manufactnrer In the world. None genuine unless name and price is sumjed on the bottom. f fl Ask yonr dealt r fnr our SS, 4, J S •4, 83.50, •’4.34>. Shoes; .T f I • 4.50, S 2 and SI.7A for boys. AaCX • ‘ TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer / J to pay carriage. State kind, style I I width. (>ur Custom Dept, will nil your order, bend for new Ulus* trated Catalogue to !U>* R. W. L. DOUCLAS, Brookton, Mast, One as good as another. It is easy to say that one preparation is as good as another, and it is easy to waste money by buying something you know nothing about —and receiving no benefit. When the body is weak and you want to give it strength, when health is failing, what wisdom is there in experimenting with a substitute, when for a few cents more you can buy the original article? For more than twenty years Scott's Emulsion has been the standard Cod-liver Oil emulsion. It contains more pure Norwegian Cod-liver Oil than any other emulsion in the world, and will stand the test of time as being a perfect, insep- > able emulsion. You canh afford to take a substitute for it*
