Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 46, Plymouth, Marshall County, 18 August 1904 — Page 2
TLbc tribune. Established October 10, 1901. O .lj Republican Newepaper In th Couaty. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. OFMCE Blssell Building, Corner LnPorte mod Center Streets. Telephone No. 27.
bUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, in advance. 11.50; SIj Months. 75 cents; Three Months 40 cent, delivered at any post office ADVERTISING RATES made known on application. Entered at the po'toffiee at Plymouth, Indiana, as second-clxss mall matter. Plymouth, Ind., August IS, 1904 MOST ANYBODY WOULD BE. Justus 5. Stearns, of Michigan, who wrs a candidate fur the gubernatorial nomination before both the republican and democratic conventions and discarded by each, now makes the announcements that he Is entirely out of politics. Most anybody would be In that blissful state If be was thrown out bodily as Mr. Stearns was.- South Bend Tribune. PARKER A STRADDLER. Chicago Chronicle: It is sufficiently evident that Judge Parker gained the democratic nomination for the presidency by evasion if not by deception For more than a year he had been an avowed candidate for the nomination o" his party, and yet duting all of that time not a word fell from him that would give the slighest indication as to his sentiments, his opinions or his principles. He expressc d an opinion to the effect that the gold standard had been "irrevocably established " He had nothing .to say about the principle involved. He was silent as to his own convictions on the subject. With these facts in mind we may read the speech of acceptance delivered by this gentlemen yesterday without surprise and without particular interest. A man who gains a presidential nomination as a blank may well assume that it is good policy for him to accept it as a blank. Aside from his miserable evasion of the financial question, which is a mere repetition of his telegram to the convention, there is but one other subject as to which his dodging tactics may be severely characterized and that is the lawlessness in Colorado, Falling naturally into the line of thought adopted by all the other straddlers, be commits the fatal blunder of classifying the authorities of that state in the same category with the criminals who have made war upon the state. Chicago Chronicle. District Chairman Fletcher, of Knox will probably call the democratic congressional convention to meet in South Bend about the last of Aug ust. Nebraska Democrats and Populists failed to effect fusion on a national ticket and it is said will make their principal campaign for the legislature in the hope of sending W. J. Bryan to the Senate. The chief objection to Roosevelt urged by democrats is that he is un safe. He is more than that, ne is positively dangerous to the success of the democratic party at the Novem ber election. The different kinds of Wisconsin re publicans are now in the Supreme Court of that State trying to find out who has rights on the State ticket, narmony is getting some pretty hard bumps up that way. The city of South Bend is evidently to be made the center of a strong fight on the part of the democracy. That party somehow seems to have become imbued with the idea that working men are a class all by them selves, and that they estimate govern mental policies only by their personal effect. The working men are better thinkers than all the average demagogues who seek to influence them. Elkhart Review Port Arthur squadron is reported to have made a dash for the open sea, and the Japanese fleet, under Admiral Togo, is In pursuit. A great naval battle is expected. The desperate attempt to escape from the beleaguered fortress is taken as evidence that the place is in dire peril and its fall is near. General Xuropatkin is reported tohave taken advantage of the Japanese Inactivity to retreat 'jorth of Liao-Yang and thus escape from the coil that so long has held hin. Discounting the fall of Port Arthur and the defeat of Kuropatkin, diplomats are discussing the probable result. It is believed that while Japan will welcome peace Russia will refuse to abandon hostilities.
William J. Bryan loses the $50,000 legacy from Philo S. Bennett, the Connecticut Supreme court deciding that the letter in which the testator conveyed the gift is not part of the will.
It is worthy of comment that most of the leading officers of both the Russian and Japanese armies are men past middle life. Field Marshal Oyama, of Japan, is 64 years old, Gen. Kuroki is 60 and Gen. Nodzu 63. Gen. Kuropatkln, the Russian leader, is 54. William J. Bryan is coming to Indiana. His time this month will be occupied with Chautauqua engagements, but early in September he will report for duty to the Hoosier headquarter. It is understood that altogether he'will spend more thn a week in this state. The Presbyterian general assembly at Buffalo, New York, adopted by a two-thirds vote, a resolution which in substance provides that Presbyterian ministers be enjoined fsom marrying divorced persons who are ineligible in the churches belonging to the interchurch conference. Former Governor Hogg, of Texas, as straight a democrat as the country contains, says of Judge Parker's acceptance speech: "In diction it is elegant, In promise it is faint, in material discussion it is a trimmer." That is a good estimate of the judge's maiden political effort. Fifty years of America's greatest progress have been republican years and in the next decade the republican party will cap the climax by completing one of the greatest engineering projects the world has ever witnessed, the Panama canal, on which Uncle Sam will place his seal of ownship. Gov. Durbin has begun the prepaI ration of his final message to the state legislature. It is said to touch upon very live topics; The governor believes lhat a chief executive who has served four vears owes it to the stale to turn his experience to account by suggesting reforms wherever he has found they are needed. Mr. H. J, Whlgham, a correspondent with the Russian army, praises the enlisted men, but adds: "The Russian officer, gallant, reckless, spendthrift and altogether bon garcon belongs to another age than the present. From general down to youngest subaltern it would be difficult to find one In a thoussnd who knows or cares anything about the science of modern warfare." Senator Lyons, chief of the speakers' bureau of the republican state com mittee, reports that there Is a great demand from over the state for speeches by Senators Fairbanks and Beveridge and J. Frank Hanly and many persons want to hear Gov. Dur bin expound state issues. There is also quite a demand for Gurley Brewer. There will be no formal opening of the state campaign, but each coun ty will have full sway to start the ball rolling when it chooses. All of the great Independent papers seem to have been disappointed in Judge Parker's speech of acceptance They all admit that he has failed to express himself forcibly on the issues of the campaign; that his speech is cautious and vague; that there is no ringing keynote, no electrifying bat tie cry, nothing that inspires one with i sense of a lofty mission in the speaker's party, and with a spirit of fierce aggression toward the party of the second part with which issue Is joined on a platform that reads much like an agreement. A dispatch from Philadelphia states the mint there is the only one in the United States which makes cents and nickels, and there will be a record breaking production of those coins from September to December. The mint will devote itself exclusively to this coinage, and, as a result, $25,000,000 will be turned out each month . In the last four months ot the year the demand for subsidiary coin is so great that the $100,000,000, it Is estimated, will be exhausted by February. This has been a record-making year at the mint. In one month more gold was coined than in any other similar time. Since January $117,0000,000 in gold has been turned out, most of which has been forward ed to the sub-treasuries. In the vaults at the present time are 100,000,000 silver dollars held as collateral for silver certificates.
Delegates to a convention may be fooled In making a platform and naming candidates but it is pretty bard to fool the voters at the ballot box.
It will be a little awkward for democratic oratora to explain that they not only support the party platform, but also the private views of the candidates as expressed in telegrams and confidential letters. The Elkhart Review is 32 years old. It is the oldest daily paper in northern Indiana outside of Fort Wayne and during the past 32 years has been one of the best and most reliable papers In the state. Its editor has always had the courage of his convictions, has always dared to print what he believed to be true. The democratic congressional convention called to meet at South Bend, Sept. 1, is utterly unnecessary as the finding ot a candidate was placed In the hands of a very small committee several months ago, and these managers have decided to nominate Nelson J. Keilly, of the Studebaker Co. unless he backs out before September I. The democrats of Elkhart county will send no delegates to the democratic congressional convention at South Bend September 1. All democrats who attend from that county will be allowed a vote in the convention. It is evident that the democratic organization in Elkhart county sees no hope uf success in the county, district, state or nation. It is stated that one of the. most remarkable trips in connection with the exploitatiou of the world's fair was completed when Rev. S. P. Verner, thePresbyterian missionary, who brought eight pygmies out of the African jungles, arrived in St. Louis. Ills journey included 26,000 miles, 800 miles of which was covered on foot through the wild deserts of Central Africa. The trip lasted eight months. About Resigning. Because Judge Parker has resigned bis high judicial office to accept the candidacy of a political party for president, the democrats are claiming that Senator Fairbanks should resign bis senatorial position while running for vice-president. There is a wide difference in the two cases, tbougj. Judge Parker could not consistently hold a position where he is obliged to give an opinion from the bench that might seriously conflict with his political opinions and sayings. Senator Fairbanks, it should be remembered, holds a political office and if be should be elected, of course will be compelled to resign it, but there is nothing in the duties of bis senatorial position that will conflict with his candidacy. Grover Cleveland was governor of New York when he ran for president and did not resign until after bis election. The same was the case with President Roosevelt when he was a candidate for vice-president. There are many cases on record where men holding strictly political positions did not resign them when made candidates for another. It is the opinion or good authorities like that of Justice Brewer, of the United States supreme court, that no man holding a judicial office should accept a nomination for a political one. South Bend Tribune. Costliest Residence in New York. Who owns the costliest residence in all New York? A New Yorker? Never! Just an immigrant from the West; a one-time peddler of clocks, Senator William A. Clark, 'Billy" Clark, the copper king; "Maj." Clark of the Nez Perces campaign of 1878, whose income is over $1,500,000 a month. The mansard roof of the Clark palace on the Highlands of Fifth avenue is being sheathed in copper from the owner's mines. The walls are constructed of marble lrom his own quarries. In the basement are Russian and Turkish baths, etc., and on the second floor are the art gallery and dining room. The gallery will contain many of the celebrated paint ings of the world, and the house and its contents will represent an outlay of $8,000,000. So much for copper. New York Press. Grossman Pamily Reunioru Members and relatives of the Gross man family assembled at Lake Max Inkuckee Sunday August 7 spent an enjoyable day together in the way of a family reunion. The occasion was in honor of Ferree Grossman and sister Cora, uf Parksburg, Pa., who have been visiting at the home of Daniel Grossman and other relatives in this vicinity for a few weeks. Fifty-two members of the family constituted the gathering and in addition to the oleasant social features of the meetlng a steamer accommodating all the party was chartered and a Lake trip of two hours was enjoyed, when at noon an elaborate dinner was spread from well filled baskets. Arrange ments were make to hold another family reunion next year at a date to be decided upon later.
TWENTY-TWO MILES LONG.
Sale Made ot Dausman Ditch at Six Cents a Cubic Yard. On Thursday, at the court bouse, Drainage Commissioner S. C. Funk and County Surveyor Wallace Dillingham conducted the sale of the construction of what is known as the Dausman ditch. This is a large ditch commencing near Hasting, in Jefferson township, running in a westerly direction for sixteen miles with two arms oi about six miles, making the entire ditch a total of over twentytwo miles in length. It drains over half of Jefferson, most all of Scott township, Kosciusko county, and a large portion of Bourbon and German townships, Marsball county, or a total of eighty-nine sections. It will be from six to twelve feet deep and from eighteen to fortv feet wide. The digging alone will cost over $31,000 and will be an economical piece of work, it is said, considering the amount of land drained and the price paid. The contract was let for 6 cents per cubic yard to John Hughes, of Nappanee, and the sale was exceedingly well managed to secure as low a bid as 6 cents. Drainage Commissioner S. C. Funk will have charge of the construction of the ditch with Surveyor Dillingham as engineer. The bids on the work were as follows: H. G. Harding, Vincennes, 8c; Keck & Mutti, Bremen, 7.75c; Millei Dredging Co., Wlnamac, 7.45c; Monarch Dredging Co., Plymouth, 6.93c; Jerry Sherwood, Valparaiso, 6 70c; John Hughes, Nappanee, 6c. The contract was let at nearly 3c a cubic yard below the estimated cost, and much less than the usual price paid for such work. Warsaw Times. Back To The Cabbage Patch, One of the distinct features of th age is the tendency to return to agriculture. Where a few years ago the farmer boys were rushing to the cities to crowd the professions, there is now a decided" move in the other direction. The natural reaction that must always follow a movement so radical in some measure, accounts for the disposition to return to the soil for a livelihood, but there is more. The agriculturist has become a professional man. The college and the university have added a special course for bis benefit, and given bim a degree. He is a botanist and .a chemist, and science has taught bim to take in the jaded and wornout farm, and with intelligence cause it to blossom like the rose. The disspiritlng labor which bent the form of the elders and sent the lads scurrying cityward has been lightened by devices that better accomplish the end sought Changes at Studebakers. After January 1, 1905 Gol. Geo. M. Studebaker will relinquish the management of the carriage department, become more closely lndentified with the excutive department; and, as president of the Studebaker Automobile Co., give especial attention to the dl rection and development of that busi ness. Mr. E. Louis Kuhns will relinquish the management of the sales depart raent and assume the management of the spring vehicle factories. Mr. Lloyd F. Weaver will relinquish the management of the San Franciso Branch and assume the management of the sales department at the home office. Mr. Chester N. Weaver will be come the Branch Manager at San Franciso. Heavy Rains in the South. llalns have been very severe throughout the gulf states. Espec ially is this true regarding the south west part of that country. As a sample of rain storms of that section we take the following from the At lanta Constitution of Tuesday; Americus, Ga., August 8. (Special) Rains continue throughout this section, this being the ninth day of heavy downpours. The farmers de clare that Irreparable injury is being done. Fodder is ruining in the fields while blackrot and rust is spreading in cotton. Nearly all farm work is suspended. From a dozen other points southwest of Atlanta came sim liar reports. The Canteen Question. I hava always thought," writes a army officer, "that the Jokes on the aboiitlon of the canteen were pure fabrications. However, a woman of intelligence last night asked me this question: 'Is It true that the soldiers no longer are allowed to carry canteens on their backs because a few men were found who put liquor in them? I hear that the soldiers are now forced to drink impure water from wayside brooks and that an epidemic of typhoid fever has broken out in the army in consequence." Teachers County Institute. The teachers of Marshall county will hold an institute at the court room in Plymouth, beginning Aug. 22 and continuing the entire week. Pres. Parsons ani Prof. Dryer of the state normal and Mis Ida M. Haines, of Plymouth, will be the instructors.
A STATESMAN'S QUEER LETTER
Views of Ohio Congressman of 1836 With Reference to Railroads. In the office of the general manager of the Grand Rapids & Indiana railroad is a letter dated 1836, which well illustrates the difficulties under which the pioneer railways of tbis country were constructed and the opposition with which they were met. The letter was written by Congressman Mason of the Springfield, Ohio, district at the time when a bill providing fur the construction of a railroad along the National pike from Springfield to Richmond. Ind , was pending. The letter reads. Dear Perkins The committee on roads and canals has come to a decision in favor of the road fjom Springfield to Richmond. This is sorrv business; it will f;lve us a deal of trouble. There is great danger in my opinion the road will be overlaid with one scheme after another. I am opposed to all these experiments and as a railroad in lieu of the present macadamized road. I have no idea it will answer the purpose at all. No one can travel on horseback or in carriage of any description on a railroad no matter how wide it may be nor how finished Could you drive livestock on such a road? No not within a half mile of It. The few that might escape being slaughtered by the engine in its passage through the drove would be frightened and driven in the woods, where they would not be berd from again. For that reason a new road would have to be opened immediately to accommodate the people on the line. They could not go to market or any where else In the direction of the road. Besides, how is it to be kept up? Who is to superintend It? How long must people wait at the point where the cars start after they arrive there and are ready to pursue their journey? Would not the affair soon become a monopoly in the bands of a few enterprising capitalists? Is not the whole scheme wild and visionary? "It is a great while since I have had the comfort of a line from you. We have no news here. Since Great Britain has undertaken to cettle the difficulty between General Jackson and bis cousin, the king of the French, we shall be cheated out of a war, and the majority in the Ohio Legislature will have nothing to do but tend to domestic affairs. Still we shall be urged to make appropriations for national delense. Yours with esteem." S. Mason. Rumblings Along the Rail. The Lake Shore management has just closed a contract with the British government to carry the British Australian mails across tbis continent on the Twentieth Century limited. This mail service will be handled between New York and Buffalo by the New York Central, by the Lake Shore proper as far as Chicago, and by the Lake Shore's regular Western connections Chicago and Northwestern and Union Pacific trom Chicago to San Francisco. Canadian railroads here tofore have handled the British Australian mails Recent improvements in the Lake Shore roadbed and equip ment, however, give the Lake Shore exceptional facilities for handling fast mail trains. Mr. Hanly and Labor. "Investigation is quite sufficient to prove the truth of the assertion that Mr. Hanly, private and publicly, has always been an earnest friend of labor, and there is not an iota of evidence to the contrary, notwithstanding the industrious efforts cf sell-perpetuating democratic politicians masquerading as labor leaders who have resorted to all manner of questionable schemes to discredit . Mr. nauly's candidacy in the estimation of organized workingmen." Lafayette Courier. Praised Indiana Militia. General Frederick Grani, who has charge of the Army of the Great Lakes, was a visitor at the recent camp of instruction of the Indiana National Guard. Several days ago he wrote a very complimentary letter to Governor W. T. Durbin in regard to the work of the Indiana National Guard, praising our soldiers very highly for their work in the camp and stating that they stood at the top notch of state militias. Moro is a Wonder. Mande Cochero, a member of the Moro tribe of the Philippine Island now at the World's Fair, has entered in the standing broad jump event of the Olympic games. During practice thursday, and on his first trial, Coehero jumped 10 feet 9 inches, which Is within six inches of the the world's record and comes within four-tenths of an inch of equaling the jump that won the Olympic event at Paris in 1900. Hanly at Clear Lake. Hon. J. Frank Hanly of Lafayette, republican candidate for governor attended the annual meeting of the Nor thern Indiana and Southern Michigan Pioneers association at Clear Lake nine miles northwest of South Bend, Wed nesday afternoon. He spoke for an hour in an entertaining manner.
Not a White Man's Country. Tie New York World, the leading democratic paper of the United States is trying to bring democrats to their senses on the suffrage question. It says the claim that this is a "white man's country" or a "white man's government" is a denial of the Declaration of Independence, a challenge of the constitution. The supreme court has affirmed the right of the several states to prescribe the conditions of suffrage to their citizens, provided only that the right to vote shall not be denied on account of 'race, color or previous condition of servitude." If any southern state shall undertake to maintain an intelligent man's government or a thrifty man's government, it has the same right to do so that Massachusetts and other northern states have exercised. But all the states are alike forbidden by the constitution and by the very genius of our institutions rom making the accident of color a test of equal citizenship. A government or a party which would take In the George "cracker," the "poor white" of other states, the members of tne mountain vendetta, the Baltimore "plugugly," the Chicago "hobo" and the New York "tough" because they are white and exclude Booker T. Washington because be is black, is not democratic, whatever it maybe. This is nota"white man's country" save in the sensj that the white men are in a vast majority and therefore will continue to rule it. But that majority will never assent to the doctrine, born of the stultifying and blighting Institution of slavery now happily 40 years dead, that a man who is good enough to produce wealth and pay taxes and fight and die for his country is not fit to have a yoice in its government, under any conditions whatever, if he is black. New York Sun for Roosevelt, The New York Sun, an independent paper with a decided democratic leaning which has been openly opposed to President Roosevelt, gets down off ot the fence and after a calm view of the situation comes out heartily in support of the whole republican ticket. Its position is stated in these positive words: "As the case is now made up we prefer the impulsive candidate of the party of conservatism to the mildly conservative, temporizing, opportunist representative of the Hun vote in the background. We have more faith in the distinct promises of the Chicago platform, not ignoring the many serious defects of that cocument, than we have in the miserable hell-broth of dishwater and dynamite concocted at St. Louis a month ago by a party afraid to renounce its criminal follies and tasted today at Esopus by a respectable candidate who declares with gusto that its flavor is admirable. We shall therefore advocate the election of Roosevelt and Fairbanks and advise the defeat of Parker and Davis."
Taggart Needs Negro Voters. Some surprise was expressed throughout the south when Davis, Parker's running mate, said to the West Virginia convention that no plank for the elimination of the negro vote should be put in the platform. In order to appease the indignation of the anti-negro democrats the follow ing dispatch comes from Washingion: "The failure of the democrats of West Virginia to declare for the elim ination of the negro vote was the re suit of the advice sent to the State conyention by William F, Sbeehan and David B. Hill, who, as the man agers for Parker, feared that such a plank in Davis state would imperil the National ticket in Indiana. Taggart had confided to Sheehan and Hill that he proposed to divide the negro vote in Indiana, and the New Yorkers wired to candidate Davis suggesting that It would be wise to omit the plank." Cure for Rheumatism. Washington Irwin, forty-eight years old, a negro, gigantic in size, of Charleston, S. C, claiming to be a preacher, lay on a cot In the improvement camp at Manchester station, near Lawrenceburg, - day after day, saying he was disabled by rheuma tism,' while his race administered to his wants. Eventually the authorities concluded he was shamming, and while his tent was filled with sympathizers, constable Farrel stalked in carrying a valise in which two large black snakes, captured alive, had been concealed. The constable turned the snakes loose in the tent, and the first to reach the door in the wild flight for the hill was the rheumatic colored preacher. He failed to return. Fairbanks Should Not Resign. There is no reason under heaven why Senator Fairbanks should resign bis seat in the senate. His is not a judicial office. In its duties are none that conflict, under the most exacting system of ethics, with his campaign for the vice-presidency. It would at best invite complications, do no good and endanger the state. The appoint ment of a successor would quickly cause conflicts, and the resalt would be bad In every way. The demand of the democracy is the only dlmand for such action. Elkhart Revie
The Accentuation of Cullom, Senator Cullom is not the mouthpiece of the administration, but be is Chairman jf the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, and knows whereof he speaks, and what hs said in bis recent speech at Piano, 111., may b taken as an accentuation of the work of the administration, and it will be so recognized. Dealing with the foreign policy of the United States, Senator Cullom said: Our position during thenar has been one of strict neutrality. Our interest InChina is an indirect one a commercial Interest. We have no territory there, we have no sphere of influence to protect, but we do have an interest in seeing that the open door for trade is maintained. We will not lend our sympathy or aid to either country in the present conflict, as both nations have been our friends, b it whatever the resalt of the war may be, we will insist that our open door policy shall be continued." The insisting will be supplemented by performance by the swinging of the doors wide open for the passage of the American merchant and manufacturer to be protected by the strong arm of the United States and the wise and the firm diplomacy of the administration of President Roosevelt, in time oi peace, as well as in time of war,and in time of war as well as in time of peace. The stand taken by Secretary Hay against the holding of cotton and breadstuff's to be contraband of war, as Russia Insisted, has been also, but later, taken by the governments of France and of England. Even Russia indicates that after all, and unless the stuffs are plainly intended for the use of the armies of either combatant, the position of the United States is satisfactory to her. It is most certainly satisfactory in the United States, and what issatisfictory to the United States the administration of President Roosevelt will cause to be made satisfactory to other governments, for this Government will not assume a wrong nor an unjust nor an illegal position. It was hardly necessary for Senator Cullom to make the statement he did make. But it is an accentuation of a policy known to all Americans and satisfactory to them Commercial Tribune.
The Blessing ot Work. The injunction which was granted on application of opponents of the IIinois prison-labor law to stop wor In the Joliet prison has been dissolved, and the warden has put the inmates at work again, much to his relief and to their betteiment. He was already finding that the Idle men were becoming moody, restless, quarrelsome and bard to manage, and two bad shown definite signs of insanity. He expected a further development of insanity had the idleness continued, and was looking forward to the administration of his office with dread. If ever work Is a blessing and It most assuredly belongs in that category-it Is when the workers are confined within four walls and have nothing else with which to occupy their minds. While hands are busy some thought must be taken of the work. When the tasks are over the physical weariness prevents unwholesome brooding over personal woes, and the result of the labor is shown in the improved tone of mind and body. If a law could be passed compelling idle people outside of jails to do a certain amount of daily labor a good many social problems might be solved. The tramp question would be eliminated of course, but this would be a minor consideration. Such a law should include women as well as men. If there were no idle women and no idle men there would te precious little minding of other people's business; there would be less gossip, less scandal, less mischief, and altogether a general betterment of social conditions. Irdianapolte Star. Enterprise In Mexico. Mexico is bidding for industries and she Is getting them on a large scale. Great factories are being erected in every part of the republic and their products are being protected by the laws of the country. Hundreds of thousands of people who were once idle have learned to work in the mills and factories which have been started, $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the onlv positive cure now known to tho medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a consti- -tutiocal treatment, Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the diseases, and giving the patient. strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer one Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimo nials. F. J Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall'a Family Pills for constipa tion
