Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 40, Plymouth, Marshall County, 7 July 1904 — Page 2

tEbe tribune.

Established October 10. 1901. Only Republican Newspaper In th County. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. OFrlCEBissell Buildtnjr, Corner LaPorte and Center Streets. Telephone No. 27. 8UBSCRIPTI0N RATES One Year. In advance, HA); Sil Months. 75 cents; Three Months, 40 cents, delivered at any postofflce ADVERTISING RATES made known on application. Entered at the potofSce at Plymouth, Indiana, as second-class mall matter. Plymouth. Ind., July 7. 1904Madison county has two candidates for United States senator. They are Governor Durbln and Edgar E, Ilendee. The question agitating the minds of the Parkerltes is which of the two does Grover prefer. He indorses Parker, but goes fishing with Harmon. " -Theodore Roosevel is the only pres ident of the United States who was bom in a large city, all the others having first seen the light in farm houses or in small villages. Apparently there are to be no dark horses in the Indiana senatorial cam paign. Every republican who is not hopelessly tied down is entering him fcelf in advance. There will be small chance for surprises. The decrease in official poor relief in Indiana in recent years is notable. It has interested all who have had their attention called to it. It means not onlv that creat sums of money have been saved but greater still that thousands of persons have been saved from pauperism. Both thev and the State are better as a result. Nearly all the gentlemen under consideration in connection with the democratic nomination for governor hesitate to declare themselves as being avowed candidates. They prefer to await the action of the St. Louis convention. The nomination will probably go to Hugh Dougherty of Bluff ton if he consents to make the race. Let the orators orate and the organs blow as they may. yet the one thing that appeals to the voter more than anything else is the living fact that under the republican party comes business and under the opposition comes blight. This is a fact recorded in the actual experience of the people, and all the arguments and all the theories that ever found birth 'In the wildest imagination or the most convincing logic will not remove this vital fact from the minds of the people. If John Sharp Williams of Mississippi and Joseph W. Bailey of Texas are made temporary and permanent chairmen respectively of the democratic national convention, it will suel? be giving deserved recognition to the old south from which the democratic party receives all its electoral votes. Williams and Sharp have attracted wide attention in the democratic party. Both favor Parker for president and both engineered instructions through their state convenHon for the New York judge. . The south furnishes the great bulk of votes for the democratic ticket and southern meu control the democratic party of the United States In both the . senate and lower house of congress. The southern leaders who know there is no chance of electing a preside it seem perfectly willing that democrats of the north shall furnish presidential candidates and the money to run presidential campaigns, so long as all the offices of importance and profit are held by southern men. It sometimes seems strange that the south does not present a candidate for president, but tiie democratic leaders of the south are not so foolish as their brethren of the north. Republicans assume that Senator Fairbanks will be elected vice president and that a republican legislature will elect his successor next winter; consequently candidates for United States senator are springing up In every congressional district. The most prominent men mentioned at present are Congressmen Hemenway of Evansyllle and Crumpacker of Valparaiso, Governor Durbin, Hon. Robert S. Taylor of Fort Wayne, and Hon. Addison C. Harris of Indianapoils. There are, however, many more spirants and it b a free for all race. Indlar a republicans have always sent their ablest men to the United States create and they should elect a man of nore thin ordinary ability to take ths pl-ce of Skater Fairbanks.

Russians are reported to be losing

interest in the war and they haven't much else left to lose. Paul Morton the new secretary of the navy, says he is a Roosevelt democrat. There are lots of that kind of democrats this year. Uncle Joe Cannon can run the congressional machine, bold the politics of Illinois In check, and preside over a national convention, but when malaria tackles him he has to go to sea. The giand jury at St. Louis has begun a new boodle investigation. Sometimes it looks as if it would be the part of economy to establish a permanent bureau for that sort of thipg over there. When Mr. Cleveland was told that Mr. Bryan intended to briiig a surprise at St. Louis his hand trembled for a mument and a flush of expectancy rose upon his countenance. Then be proceeded calmly with his bait cutting. Roosevelt and Fairbanks; not very euphonious when it comes to shouting, but then the victory is so certain that there won't be any necessity of "whooping-up" during the campaign. Besides, what's the matter with "Ted" and "Charley.' General Miles found oil In Texas and might have struck water at Indianapolis If he had been a good mixer. The general still has bis eye on St. Louis and thinks he will get the democratic nomination for president when the other candidates get badly mixed. Grover Cleveland says the paramount Issue Is the tariff. One would think that with his big experience of borrowing money to run the government during operations of 'the "Wilson bill" that the ex-president would be somewhat skittish in his free-trade notions. Rey. Silas C. Swallow, the "fighting parson" of Pennsylvania, was nominated for President and George W. Carroll of Texas for Vice Presi dent by the Prohibitionist national convention in Indianapolis. The ac tion being taken unanimously after General Miles formally withdrew his name. Never in the history of any party convention was there the harmony that exists in the National Republican convention at Chicago. Both the candidates for president and vice-pres ident were nominated without a dls senting vote and the platform was adopted with the same unanimity. Perry S. Heath, formerly secretary of the republican national committee, has severed his connection with the Salt Lake Tribune, of which he has been the publisher lor the past three years, and has returned to Indiana. United States District Attorney Llppman succeeds him in the management of the Tribune, and it will be a more pronounced Roosevelt- organ. An exchange remarks: "If the So cialjsts who declare that they are go ing to make i. government based up on the golden rule really believe what they are talking about, it would be interesting to know what there Is in the constitution or the by-laws now to prevent anyone from living according to that golden precept, and then if every one lives according to that injunction, what need shall we have of government of any sort? The attempt of Hendee and his friends at Anderson to unload Governor Durbin on Inldanapolls is indignantly opposed by the governor and his friends. Meantime' Indianapolis maintains a dignified silence becoming to a Kindly nature which does not want to hurt anybody's feelings. Several Indianapolis politicians who believe that they are big enough for United States senator are glad that Hendee is a candidate, but they privately insist that the governor belongs to Anderson. The commissioh charged with the preparation of a currency system for Panama reached an agreement at Washington last week which establishes a coin equivalent In fineness and weight to thedollar of the United States as the standard, and which also makes the United States dollar legal tender in Panama. Under the terms of the agreement the Panama government will recoin or convert the Columbian silver into coins the size of a silver dollar. Tb2 amount of this silver is nor ccticatcd at Cl,5CO,C0O.

The rest of the world th'uks that

both Russia and Japan have bad enough in the present conflict, but as neither of them thinks so, the war must go on. "Forget the past" is the slogan taken up by the democratic leaders in St. Louis, who show a disposition to spare Brvan's feelings as much as possible hut to snow him under in the national convention. Theodore Roosevelt is the first New York man ever nominated for president by the republican partp. He is also the first man In the history of the country to be nominated for the presidency after succeeding to the presidential chair through the viceprrsidency. Roosevelt is a sort of reccord breaker, anyway, on general principles. A Hornble Statement It is stated from an anti-Turkish source, says a London dispatch, that the victims of the recent Armenian massacres numberad nearly 6.000, instead of 3,000. At the village of Akhbtthe number of persons killed was so many that the bodies, - which were thrown from a bridge, dammed the river, the Turks freeing the obstruction by firing artillery into the heaps of corpses. What Bryan Says. William J. Bryan, en route to the St. Louis convention, said: "I hope for a good platform and for a good candidate as a result of the convention. By a good platform I mean one that honestly and without evasion states the democratic position on public questions. By a good candidate, I mean one who can be enthusiastically supported by good democrats. And by good democrats, I mean those who have In the last two campaigns aided the democratic fight against pluto cracy Crop Prospects. Crop prospects just now are as good as could be reasonably expected, says the New York Weekly Financial Review. The promise at present is for a wheat crop of about 580,000.000 bushels, a corn crop of nearly 2,3oo,000,000 bushels and a cotton crop of 11,000,000 bales. Corn is the only backward crop; but nearly all the other crops have had a good start, are in good condition and have reached a degree of maturity that will enable them to withstand ordinary adverse conditions of weather, which,- of course, must be counted upon in all calculations. The wheat crop of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois is unusually light, but will be almost made good by heavy crops of wheat In other states. Leagues (or Ccuntesy. If we are to have any fine clviliza tion In this . country, good manners must be drilled into the school child dren; aud the Outlook proposes to the teachers of the country that they shall organize everywhere in the schools leagues of courtesy, voluntary associa tions of boys and girls for the purpose of advancing the standards of manners and developing those Instincts of conr tesy, kindness and helpfulness which are characteristic of the American in all parts of the country. The Amer ican ought to be the most courteous and the best-mannered person in the world, for his natural kindness, his desire to be helpful and to make him self agreeable, are recognized every where. Six State Senators Have Died. Senator Gray of Evans Hie died a week ago Monday. This makes the sixth member of the last senate that have died since the last election. The Indianapolis Sentinel says: This Is the largest number of deaths between sessions ever recorded so far as is known. "Senator Burns, of South Bend, died several weeks before the close of the session, and Senator Gibson just at the close of the term. Since the assembly adjourned Senators Benjamin Starr, of Richmond, Charles De Haven, of Kokomo, John C Lawler, of Salem, and James Gray, of Evansville, have died. Four of the members, Senators Bums, Gibson, Starr and Gray, were holdovers, and new members will have, fp be elected for the unexpired terms at the coming election, making 29 vacancies in the senate to be filled. All the dead men but one were republicans. No Licking ol Stamps. Business houses will soon be allowed to send third and fourth class matter through the mall without first affixing stamps to the envelopes. Rales governing the sending of this class of mail matter are now being prepared by the post office department. The most important . restriction will be that compelling the business house to mail not less than 2,000 identical pieces in order to obtain this privil ege. Under the new rule the person mailing the matter must .appear at the pestofice and notify the post mister that a certain number of letten are to t3 mailed; .' The cost of mailing 13 then estimated' by the WW.

One ol the Blue Laws. Roselle, in the State of New Jersey, got tired of the old blue law forbidding husbands kissing their own wives on Sunday to say nothing of others and the chief of police was notified by the citizens that they would not obey it. And why should they, except on the geueral principle that all laws should be obeyed until repealed. As pointed out by Judge Coxe of the United States Circuit Court, about 14,000 laws are passed every year, and the average citizen has a hard time keeping up with the procession. Ignorance of the law does not excuse its violation, as every one knows, so it is necessary to be very circumspect in one's conduct. But a man should have the right to kiss his wife on Sunday. Not only should he have the right, but he should exercise it. Out here in Indiana there is no legal restriction of the privilege a privelege which should also be a pleasure and our citizens are not driven to the necessity of openly defying the authorities as is the case In New Jersey. A woman a short time ago - died and when her will was probated it was found that she bad left her husband only five dollars out of an estate which reached the sum of $75.000. The

reason given was that he had not kissed her once in seven years. She served him exactly right. He is the sort of man who could follow that New Jersey blue law to the letter without any qualms of conscience. Sunday is a day which should be properly observed always, but the old blue law restrictions are not calculated to meet present conditions. Antidote for Beer. Now that the Prohibition convention is in session here, there may be a certain timeliness in calling attention to a new antidote for the drink habit. It is not intended to intimate, ofcoune, that the convention delegates or their accompanying friends have any personal use for such remedies; the natural Inference is that they have a philanthropic and professional interest in acquiring and disseminating all possible information on the subject; also, it must b admitted even by themselves that their presence inevitably, though innocently on their part, suggests intoxiconts. This antidote, which has been discovered and is recommended by a Cincinnati doctor, who may be presumed to have had abundant experience in the treatment of the drink habit, is the simple and agreeable use of candy. When a man drinks beer or other intoxicants, this physician says, he speedily loses the taste for sweets, the drink supplying that want in the system, or perhaps deadening it. Log ically, then, it follows that sweets must ifffset the desire for beer; there fore, all the person who is addicted to beer has to do Is to eat a nickel's worth of candy whenever be is moved to take a drink. Tnis. asserts the doctor, will soon destroy the desire for Intoxicants without any bad after effect. Indianapolis Star. More School Loan Decisions. At Lawrenceburg the town was in in debt to the constitutional limit of two per cent., but as a new school house was required the "school city" issued ten-year bonds for the purpose. A suit was brought to test the validity of the law of 1903 providing for such action, and asking an injunction against the bond issue Judge Downey held that the school city is a distinct and separate municipality from the civil city, and that the act of 1903 gave the school city the right to issue bonds regardless of the amount of in debtedness of the civil city. This ruling is in line with the opinion rendered by Attorney General Miller some time ago. Not Candidates But Voters. In speaking of Adam Wise of Mar shall county as a possible democratic candidate for congress in this district, W. H. Blodgett of the Indianapolis News says: "He is strong in the belief that Hearst will be nominated for the presidency and if so Mr. Wise may decide to give Congressman Brick a chance on the political track. And if be does the republicans will find they are not running against Frank Hering or Dr. Bower?" Now what was the matter with Dr. Bower and Frank Hering? It was not the men but the voters who did not support them who caused their defeat. Elkhart Review. Time to Check Evil. -Information from Kalmazoo states that the police of that pretty, cultur ed and wealthy Michigan town "have unearthed a deplorable state of affairs in the shape of clubs where young men and girls hold carnival of gamb ling and drinking.". Apparently the Kalamazoo police are as negligent of duty as the police ot most other cities. Why should such a state .of affairs ever spring into existence? SI ply because the police, as a rule, are not properly selected, not systematically trained in their duties, not governed by a suitable, judicious head, and prefer to shirk rather than perform such duties as they do know about. If you want ail tne news, end in a clear and resdablo shapo you'll rjet it in The Tribune.

The Storm Center at St. Louis. Under the circumstances it is clear that the committee on resolutions will be the storm center of the St. Louis convention. Three conspicuous men on that committee will be David B, Hill, of New York: Senator Arthur Pue Gorman, of Maryland, and William J. Bryan, ot Nebraska. New Jersey will, no doubt, put on a man who will reflect the platform views of Giover Cleveland, and he will probably be former United States Senator Smith. The Nebraska State platform written by Bryan: the Maryland platform, written by Gorman, and the New York State platform, written by David B. Hill, will form the basis for the committee's work. John Sharp Williams, the leader of the party in the national House of Representatives, has also brought with him a piriform which will ba submitted to the committee whether Williams is a member of that body or not.

Japanese Women Assist Army. The London Times publishes an extract from a letter from Tokio, as follows: "One admires the way in which the Japanese women fall into their places as a support of the army medical service. In time of war all of the male personnel are drafted from hospitals in the home territory, and join the field army. Women nurses step Into their places in the hospitals and carry on the work there. Nursing sisters are all fully trained auring a three years' course in hospitals belonging to the Red Cross Society, or other civil hospitals. They go through a theoretical and practical course of about three years after they have been trained. I have just seen a large university hospital where the instruments are looked after and the dressings arranged by Japanese women, and nothing could have been done more Skillfully or more in accordance with the principles of asepsis," Individuality of Wrong Doing. Now and then somebody says something in a stump speech which has the ring of common sense, the convincing quality of clear thinking. Joseph W. Folk, the man who covered the St. Louis gang of official thieves with the execration of the public if not with that of the Missouri supreme court, is credited with saying several things of this kind in bis recent speeches seeking nomination for the governorship of his state. In one of them he is reported as follows: I do not like to hear it said that there have been so many democratic boodlers and so many republican boodle rs. The boodler is a democrat or a republican merely as a cloak to his yillany. I say the boodler is not a democrat; he is not a republican; he is a criminal and he . ought to be treated as such by all political parties. This is the plain, unvarnished truth and when men will learn and practice its application to all the relations of life the world will be infinitely the better. The Iowa Plan. The Iowa plan of confining confirmed drunkards in an asylum is working well. An average of fifty a month since the law went Into effect eight months ago have been sent. The drunkard is put in a little different class from the criminal or insane, and at the same time is forcibly protected from his own weakness for liquor. The drink of the inmates is stopped. They are required to work on the asylum farm, and as soon as they are pronounced cured are released. About 75 per cent of those sent to the asylum thus far have been discharged as cured. Sword Fish in Kankakee River. A queer looking fish was caught in the Kankakee river by R. L. Gordon, says the Hebron News. It is said such a fish was never known to be caught except in waters' in the tropical and subtropical zones. While some or the sword fish grow to an enormous size this one measured exactly three feet. While Mr. Gordon and a number of his friends were sailing down the riyer their .launch was punctured by this aggressive fish which drove Its sword through the boat so far it could not be . loosened until its bill was broken off. This Mr. Gordon used for a harpoon and the fish was safely landed. Boy Instantly Killed. Ernest, the five year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilmer living three miles east of Bremen, was crushed to death under a heavy bay rack while playing In his father's barn Monday afternoon. Ernest and another boy about the same age were playing in the barn and a heayy hay rack was leaning up against the side of the building in such a position that as soon as Ernest stepped on Jits edge it fell over on top of him. The screams of the little fellow who witnessed the accident attracted the attention of the family and as soon as possible the rack was removed from the boy but it was too late as death had undoubtedly been instant. His head was crushed in a horrible manner. v When billious ts&a Chanbarlain's Stoaach tad Liver Tablets. For eals by all druggists.

The Appcttite of a Bird, When an old-fashioned hostess, urges her guests to eat, after the conventional manner of showing hospitality, and remarks, "Why. you .havn't the appetite of a bird!" she really speaks the truth, though she does not intend to. The average man, if he had a bird's appetite, would devour from thirty to thirty-one pounds of food a day, which would be a tax on the larder of his hostess. Recent experiments have proved that the average bird manages to eat about one-fifth of his own weight aaily with ease, l he can get so much food; and in a wild state, though the bird has to hunt for his daily provender, he is eating a large part of the time

during the day, and manages to get his full rations. ,The sm iller the bird the more vora cious seems to be its appetite and its power of absorption, A German sei entist recently kept a canary under jbservation for a month. The little creature weighed only sixteen gram mes, but in the course of the month managed to eat 512 gammes'. weight of food; that is, about thirty-two times its own weight. The bird must therefore have eaten its own weight in food every day. . An ordinary man with a canary's appetite would cons ime 150 pounds of food a day. But the canary is an ex treme case. The ordinary bird, In good health, will be satisfied with onefifth of its weight a day by way of food. The Man Mho Wrote -Dixie." The man who wrote "Dixie" is dead. An old time minstrel, he passed awav at his home in Mount Vernon, Ohio, at the ripe age of eighty-eight. It is not known whether Dan Emmett ever composed anything else or not, but if he did it was lost in the tummultuous acclaim that greeted the stirring notes of "Dixie" from one end of the union to the other. It is true that there was a time when the baud that was bold enough to play t Dixie" ia certain northern cities would have been greeted with the kind of applause that meant battered horns and broken noses. But times have changed. When the band suddenly swings into "Dixie," North or South, it is now the signal for vociferous cheers It fires the heart and arouses an audience to the highest pitch of enthusiasm wherever played. It was the marching music for the confederate armies of the south. It quickened the step and thrilled the heart of the weary and tatiered follower of Lee, Nothing could better illustrate the passing of all sectional bitterness and hate than the cheers that are given to "Dixie" by a northern audience. The voice of the minstrel is stilled, but trie music of "Dixie" will never die. Record nerald. A Western Knight A staff correspondent of the Indianapolis News gave an interesting picture of Mr. George A. Knight, of California, who captured the Chicago convention by his speech seconding the nomination of President Roosevelt. Mr. Knight represents a type of character often met with in the far West, a combination of intellectual culture with a degree of unconyentionality that may at first be mistaken for coarseness, but which one soon discovers is only superficial. It is not an uncommon occurrence in the mining regions or on the ranches of the Pacific States ts meet men in overalls, slouch bats and cowhide boots who are graduates of Eastern colleges and inclose touch witti the best literature of the day. Their rough garb, suited to the business they follow, represents one phase of Western life and their intellectual culture another. They easily exchange the character of a mine boss, ranchman or cowboy for that of a cultured gentleman. It is the American way. Many Changes of Venue. According to the report published by B. F. Johnson, State Statistlcan, there were 1,718 changes of venue granted from the Circuit, Superior and Criminal courts of Indiana, 185 of these being criminal cases and 1,531 civil actions. There were 720 changes of venue taken from the judges and 998 from the county, Marlon county ranked second in the number of changes taken. It was exceeded by Ylgo county, which had 94 cases, Marlon having 93. Switzerland county was the only one in the state having no changes. There is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies and by constantly failing to cure vrith local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constituuttonal cure on the market. It is taken internally in daces from 10 drops to a teaspoonf ul. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars tor any c&zs it fails to cure. Send for circulars asdttiocnfels. A?j?T3u Cheney, Toledo, O

MORTUARY

Eli Boone. Eli Boone was born in Holmes county, Ohio, April 9, 1835 and departed this life at his home in Tyner June 23, 1904 aged 69 years, one month and 16 days. Mr. Boone had lived in this community for more than years. He was a soldier of the rebellion and served his country in the 53rd Indiana regiment, receiving his discharge July 21, 1865. He leaves a wife and 11 children and 10 grandchildren to mourn his death. The funeral took place at the family residence June 27 Rev. S. H. Yager officiating. Burial took place at Barber cemetery. More War News in Future. Japan, having developed her plans of campaign, promises to give the war correspondents a bettar chance hereafter to find out what is going on. In this connection it may be said that the Japs are the first and only people who have ever succeeded to any extent in keeping newspaper men from gatttng the news when there was news to be had. The success of the Japanese in this respect Is even more wonderful and surprising than their triumphs over the Russians, Guessed the Puzzle. Logansport Pharos: A Logansport woman received a letter a few days ago informing her that she had been awarded a diamond ring for making a correct guess on a puzzle. She was requested to send $2 to New York to cover the expenses of shipping. She thought it a little expensive, but sent the money. She received a thin gold wire ring with a diamond chip in it that could hardly be seen. The riug would be expensive at 25 cents. A McKinley Democrat Marshall Field, the great Chicago merchant, is bei&g talked of as a "running mate" to Parker on the democratic ticket to be nominated at St. Louis Mr. Field voted for McKinley in both the latter's contests, refusing all aid to Bryan, "the peerless." Circling the Loop in an Automobile. Circling the loop in an automobile is the high priced feature of John Robinson's shows at Plymouth Monday, Jufy 11. Mephisto 's actual work covers twelve seconds and for this he receives sixteen dollars. This "Riding the Loop" is a marvelous performance, daring In the extreme, and nothing like it has ever before been conceived and executed. Seated in an automobile on a little perch at the dome of the arena this dare-devil performer shoots down a narrow incline at a terrific speed The great momentum sends the auto, up into and around the barrel-shaped loop like a flash, and as he shoots around this cylinder, his head hanging downward, while the automobile obeying the law of centrifugal fores, clings to the surface. The reserve speed carries him into the arena from the tangent of his curved course, where bowing and smiling, the audience after a short breath-holding spell, applauds this intrepid and skilled artist to the echo, thrillad by the daring nerve of this marvelous performer. Safeguard the Children Notwithstanding all that ia done by boards of health and charitably inclined persons, the death rate among small children is very high during the hot weather of the summer month in the large cities. There is not probably onecase of bowei complaint in a hundred. however, that could not be cured by the timely use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sale by ail druggist. Piles Upon Top of Piles. Pj'es upon tup of piles of people have the piles and DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures them. There are many different kinds of Files, but if you get jhe genuine and original Witch Hazer Salve made by E C. De Witt & Co. of Chicago, a cure is certain, g. A, Tisdale, of Summerton, S. C, says, I" had piles 20 years and DeWitt's Salve cured me after eiery tlingelse failed." Sold by J. W. Ricard. Ask the readers of this paper who are suffering with indigestion or dyspepsia. to call on them at once and get a bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Care.' If you knew the value of this remedy as we know it, you would not suffer another day. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is a thorough digestant and tissue-building tonic as cell. It is endorsed personally by hundreds of people whom it has cured of indigestion dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart and stomach troubles generally, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat. It is pleasant, palatable and strengthening. The pill that will, will fill the bill. Without a gripe. To cleanse the liver, without a quiver. Take one at night. DeWitt's Little Early Risers are small easy to take, easy andgentlain effect, yet they are eo certain in results that no one who usea them is disappointed, For quick relief from billiousnees, sick headache, torpid liver, jaundice, dizzi ness and all troubles arising from an inactive, ßlu;isa liver. Early Risers ere unequalled. Bold by J. W. Ricard.. Tell your neljhocrs about the rjecd. qulitlc3 of Tns Teejuns.