Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 21, Plymouth, Marshall County, 1 March 1906 — Page 4
Only Republican Newspaper in the County. HENDRICKS & COMPANY OFFICE Bissell Building, corner Laporte and Center Streets.
Entered at the Postoffice at Plymouth, Indiana as second-class matter. Plymouth, Ind., March 1, 1906. Judge John H. Baker of Goshen, is apprehensive that unless the Hepburn rate bill is .judiciously amended, it may not stand the test of constitutionjlity. He holds that the right of appealing to th 2 courts from any decision that might be rendered by a commission cannot be denied by legist: tion. Railway rate legislation Is now squarely before the senate, the Hepburn bill being reported from committee with Tillman as sponsor, Aldrich explaining the position of the Republican members, Culberson offering a substitute for the whole measure and others waiting to offer hordes of amendments. 3 The Indianapolis Sentinel suspended publication Sunday, having been absorbed by the Indianapolis News and Star. The Democrats of Indiana are talking of starting another paper, for it leaves them without any state orguL. The Republicans have ben without a state organ since The Journal suspended publication. j & & Most alarming views with reference to the relations between Germany and France prevail in certain diplomatic quarters where the situation is considered to be extremely tense and a conflict by no means unlikely. The ambassador of one treat Eiirnncm power tells the Associated Press j that war, in his opinion, is inevitable, and has, in fact already been decided upon. j & j Anyway, Senator LaFollette sems to be letting them know that he is in the Senate. . He has won his fight in the Senate committe on Indian affairs to prevent a steal of the lano of the five civilized tribes in Indian territory. The Wisconsin man may not be allowed to speak, yet he has a way of doing things, of making his desires plainly understood and of securing what he goes after. J J J A Terre Haute dispatch says that fifty per cent of the coal output of Southern Indiana is now controlled by a railroad merger, and arrangements are perfecting to control the remainder, unless the late decision of the United States supreme court upsets the calculations. It is only a week since the Rock Island interests got possession of 34 mines with an annual output of 1,000,000 tons of coal. 1 Jonce Monyhan, Republican candidate for the nomination for treasurer of state, is out in a statement announcing that if he is nominated and elected that he wil turn over all interest earned on public funds in his hands to the state for the benefit of the taxpayers. Mr. Monyhan has already visited eighty of the ninety-two counties in the state and has made a very successful campaign. J jt j Th; ordinary citizen, need not lie awake nights in fearful anticipation of the bankruptcy of Uncle Sam. The January statement of the treasury shows that, as compared with the year before, the deficit has been reduced from 500,000 to $3,100,000, and that the net gain of revenue from imports during the corresponding period was 2,500,000. At the same rate of increase there will be a surplus before July. j Jt j Gov. Folk struck the keynote of reform when he said: "This movement against graft is not a movement against -wealth, but against the abuse of it." The point is characteristic of the present revival that is going on throughout the length and breadth of the country. Opposition to riches honestly acquired is not the object; the questionable manner in which some people 'iecure their dollars, however, is being vigorously and rightly contested. i Great enthusiasm is reported among the American t oops in the Philippines over the prospect of a war with China. This is a discouraging note. It is all rig it to have troops ready for war, hut they should never be anxious for it. A soldier's business is to fight, and it is not surprising that inaction should breed unrest. But even so, it is rather unpleasant to think of soldiers as longing for a chance to exchange target practice for the real business of shooting down men. 58 j& jt What is called the economic plan of handling the public funds is not at all new, it is the O'Keefe plan. Treasurer O'Keefe of Marshall County has for years been turning into the county's strong box all interest accruing on public funds in his keeping. When Senator Parks introduced a bill in the legislature three years ago embodying the so-called reformed plan, he was ridiculed by papers and politicians, and Treasurer O'Keefe was denounced as a "fool" and a "crank" and the senate committee to which the bill had been referred was called in the middle of the afternoon in their haste to report adversely to it. Now rriany of the same papers
and politicians who saw.no merit in Senator Parks' measure .are professing great admiration for the reform plan. The Senator says he will again introduce the bill requiring the deposit of state and other public funds in banks, the banks securing them accounting for reasonable interest. The revelation in the Sherrick and
storms cases was enough to settle the matter in the public mind in favor of the same method suggested by the bill of Senator Parks three years ago. 8 8 fc Through the good offices of President Roosevelt it now seems that the great coal strike expected April 1 will be averted. In compliance with the President's wish, expressed in- a letter to President Mitchell of the miners, another convention of the United Mineworkers will be held at Indianapolis March 15, at which an effort will be made to come to terms. It is thought that concessions will be made both by the miners and the soft coal operators. tC 0 President Roosevelt says: We cannot expect China to do justice unless we do China justice. Our laws and treaties should be so framed as to guarantee to all Chinamen, save only the excepted coolie class, the same right of entry to this country and the same treatment while here as guaranteed to citizens of any other nation. America should take the lead in establishing international relations on the same basis of honest and upright dealing which we regard as essential between man and man. j8 5 The impression sems to prevail in some quarters that as a result of what Congress has done, or will do, the railroad business will be turned upside down within the next few months. As a matter of fact Congress has so far moved with discretion. It has been careful not to take a radical step. It might have hauled the railroads of the country up before its own committees for the purpose of ascertaining the truth as to mergers, ownership in coal lands, stone lands, etc., and as to favoritism alleged to be shown to the Standard Oil Company, the big meat packers and other concerns, but it did not. It was careful to provide that another body, the Interstate Commerce Commission, shall make such investigations as are to be made. Roosevelt and Tillman. It is early to estimate the exact effect that will be produce upon the measure or in the public mind by the spectacle of Tillman in charge of the President's rate bill. The situation has elements of incongruity, if not of absurdity, inasmuch as the man who is to push the President's darling project through the Senate is also the President's most bitter enemy in public life. It is opportune to remember, however, that whatever may be thought of Tillman in some of his aspects, he is a tremendous fighter anda stubborn stayer. Tillman is disliked by the discerning for his ungentlemanly outbreaks, but good taste is not the sine qua non or the ne plus ultra of statesmanship. He is wrong on nearly everything which he appears to believe, but this does not prevent his being right on something else. He is vituperative and unscrupulous, but worthy causes have been advanced before now by coarse and unscrupulous advocates. We may be sure that Tillman will push the bill with vigor and give its enemies no quarter. It is on the whole an inspiring sight to see two men mutually at enmity joining forces in a cause which both believe to be right. Mr. Tillman evidently has the opportunity of his life, and here's two to one that he improves it. Indianapolis Star. The Danger in Judicial Review. The principal hitch in the Hepburn rate bill in the senate has ben over the question of review of the action of the interstate commission by the courts. This review, it is claimed by the friends of the railroads, is a constitutional right which can not be denied. On the other hand, it is charged that unless the right of review is carefully guarded, it may by delay defeat the ends of justice. A striking illustration of the reality, of this danger is. furnished by a statement presented in the senate by senator Tillman, from an independent oil producer's company in Pennsylvania. Prohibitory rates were placed upon the shipment of oil to New York in 1888; complaint to the interstate commerce commission was at once made and a decision obtained in favor of the oil producers. The raliroad campany appealed to the courts, and although beaten in every case has continued its appeals, until now the matter is in the United States supreme court and still undecided after'17 years. Meantime some of the oil producers have died insolvent and others are living in bankruptcy, all because the railroad company chose to favor the Standard Oil and was able to delay justice by means of "court reviews." FOR SALE An imported French Percheron Stallion, 8 years old. Bay with heavy mane, weighing about 1800 pounds and very gentle. For particulars write THEODORE SCHWEIR, w McCool, Ind.
RAILROAD RATE BILL.
A Republican Measure Fathered by the Democratic Party. Senator Tillman, though one of the minority of the committee which has been considering the Hepburn bill, did not hesitate to take charge of that measure as he was asked to do when the committee directed that measure to be reported to the senate with out amendment by a majority consisting of five Democrats and two Republicans. When he reported the bill to the senate Monday he did not hesitate to say that he meant to push it to the best of his ability. He gave notice that he would move to consider the bill as soon as the statehood bill was disposed of, or sooner if he thought there was unusual delay in disposing of the latter measure. He further gave notice that he would ask for a vote on the bill as soon as possible. This means that he regards himself and expects to be regarded by the supporters of the bill as its manager in the senate. Thus we have a state of things which is unusual, though, it may not be unprecedented. Here is a bill which bears the name of Mr. Hepburn, the chairman of the house committee on interstate and foreign commerce and a Republican, of course. He is credited with its authorship. Whether he is rightly so credited or not, the Republican members of the committee assumed the responsibility for it and treated it as a Republican measure during most of the time the committee had it under consideration. Toward the last they sought to bring the Democrats of the committee to its support and make some concessions to that end. This looked like an effort to divide responsibility with the Democrats and the latter seemed not unwilling to share it, as the vote on the passage of the bill in the house snowed. Of course party responsibility can not be avoided in that way. When the bill went to the senate and into the hands of the Elkins committee it was again treated as a Republican party measure. The Republicans took it in hand and made an effort to come to some agreement about it without consulting the Democratic members. It soon became apparent that the Republican members could not reach an agreement. The disagreement was upon a p !nt which the friends of the bill regarded as vital. They insisted that the interstate commerce commission should have pow.r not only to prescribe a reasonable rate in place of any one it should find to be unreasonable but also to put it in effect. They did not deny the right of appeal, but they insisted that tho commission's rate should be effective without waiting on the slow process of appeal to a circuit court and then to the supreme court and that it should remain effective if sustained by the courts. They insisted that the railroad companies would have their remedy by injunction in case the commission should make a rate having th; effect to confiscate their property and that they were entitled to no more protection. The opponents of the bill claimed that it undertook to deprive the companies in part of the right of appeal or that it would deprive them of property rights while their appeal was pending. They insisted that the right of appeal should be expressly recognized to whatever extent might be necessary for the protection of those rights. Here was the vital difference between friends and enemies of the bill. Other questions involved upon which there was disagreement were of minor importance. On the main issue there were five Democrats and three Republicans on the one side for the bill as it came from the house and five Republicans on the other. By this vote to report the bill it became a Democratic measure so far as the committee was concerned and it was so treated when the pitchfork senator from South Carolina was designated to take charge of it in the senate. Now, if it passes the senate it will in all probability pass by a majority composed mostly of Democrats, while a majority of the Republicans will vote against it. That is the probability though there is a possibility of some such stampede for the bill as occurred in the house. And the result of the probable division will really make the bill a Democratic measure. Strictly speaking of course, the Republican party must be held responsible because it has a large majority in both houses and has abundant power, if united, to pass or defeat any measure at its pleasure, but for all that each party will have an excellent opportunity if failure comes to place the blame upon the other. In Township 83 Years. Isaiah McCoy, near St. Omer, Decatur county, last week celebrated his ninety-second birthday anniversary. He is one of the few persons living whose father was a revolutionary soldier. His grandfather also served under Washington, aid both were present at the surrender of Lord Cornwallis. Two sons of Isaiah McCoy served in the civil war. Mr. McCoy was born in Kentucky, and moved to Decatur county in 1819. He has lived in Adams township for eighty-three years.
Deeds Estate to Church. The will of the late John Bashor, a rich and eccentric farmer living near Goshen, has been probated. Mr. and Mrs. Bashor deed to the North Indiana Conference of the M. E. church all their lands, the same to be managed by the bishop's deaconess board for the benefit of the church. The two aged people retained a life lease in the estate valued at $25,000. In his will Mr. Bashor gives all his personal property worth $20,000 to his wife, who is also to have the income from the land deeded the church as long as she shall live. At her death everything is to become the property of the church.
Will Push Statehood Bill. Senator Beveridge, at the close of Senator Dick's speech asks for unanimous agreement that a vote may be taken on the statehood bill within thenext two weeks. At a meeting of the steering committee, it was practically agreed tha no obstacles shall be placed in the way of an early vote on the statehood bill. Some of the best informed Senators believe that before the bill comes to a final vote the Foraker amendment will be accepted by the Territories committee. This is the amendment providing that Arizona and New Mexico shall vote separately on the question of joint statehood and stipulating that a negative vote by either shall defeat the union. Vice and Crime in Chicago. At last the decent citizens of Chicago have become aroused to the awful conditions that surround and confront them. What to others has for years appeared as a plain probability has now become a stern reality to Chicago's citizenship in general. Great meetings are being held to devise ways and means for rescuing the city from the grasp of vice and crime. The utterances of the speakers at these gatherings are interesting and instructive. They teach a wholesome lesson that whenever a community tolerates the spirit of lawlessness to assert itself, in mild form at the beginning, vice will at once become emboldened and crime will steadily increase. There is no escape from this. Pardon for Young Foster. Formal application to the President for a pardon for Worth Wr'ght Foster, the New Albany young man dismissed from the naval academy for hazing, will be made in a few days. Both Senator Beveridge and Senator Hemenway arc interested in the case. Foster, instead of pouting, has gone t$ work as a day laborer in the ship-building yard at Newport News. ADVERTISED LETTERS. GENTLEMEN. Lelie Thomas O. I. Newhouse Leonard Morris C. H. Tillitson H. I. Schroeder Frank Phlecher Wm. Coulter Charley Fletcher John Rhodes John SethorfT A. M. Griffen John Miller LJrias Myers Ellis E Jacobson M. R. Shepler Mrs. Edna M. Mason ladies Miss Sue Miller Mrs. May Wilson J. A. Yockey, P. M.i soil Impoverished soil, like impoverished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A chemist by analyzing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different products. If your blood is impoverished vour doctor will tell vou what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich, red corpuscles that are lacking in it. It may be you need a tonic, but more likely you need a concentrated fat food, and fat is the element lacking in your system. There is no fat food that is bo easily digested and assimilated as Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil It will nourish and strengthen the body when milk and cream fail to do it. Scott's Emulsion is always the same; always palatable and always beneficial where the body is wasting from any cause, either in children or adults. We will send you a sample free. Be pur thftfc this picture in the form of a label in on the wrapper of every bottle of J?inulsion you buy. scon & mm. CHEMISTS 409 Pearl St.. ((ewToiK 50c. and $1.00. AH Druggist. Indigestion is much of a liabit. Don't get the habit. Take a little Kodol Dyspepsia Cure after eating and you will quit belching, puffing, palpitating and frowning. Kodol Digests what you eat and makes the stomach sweet. Sold by Fred Wenzler.
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JklJoctors Medicine Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is not a simple cough syrup. It is a strong medicine, a doctor's medicine. It cures hard cases, severe and desperate cases, chronic cases of asthma, pleurisy, bronchitis, consumption. Ask your doctor about this. I hare need & trrent deal of Ayer't Cherry Pectoral for conn lit and hard colds on the cheat. It has always done me reat (rood. It is certainly a most wonderful Conen medicine." MICHAEL J. Fitzgerald, Medford, N. I. itadebT J.Cayer Co., Lowell, At Also manufacturers of --i . JP SARSAPAÖLLA. HAIR V100S. g Ymi v.ill hasten recovery bv talc ing ono of Ayer's Pills at bedtime MONEY TO LOAN ON REAL ESTATE. AT 5 PER CENT INTEREST. Will also furnish Complete Ab stracts of Title to all lands in Mar shall County, Indiana, on short notice. Abstracts guaranteed. Call and see me. L. M. LAUER, Atty. Michigan St., Plymouth, Ind. SHERIFFS SALE By virtue of a certified copy of de cree and order of sale, issued out of the office of the Clerk of the htarkc Circuit Court, to me directed, on a judgment in lavor of The Mortgage Trust Comp?ny of Pennsylvania, and against Stephen I. Brown and Emma m. Brown his wife, Cyrus C. Barrett and Mary Barrett his wife, and Benjamin D. Miner, requiring me to make the sum of Two thousand three hundred seventy-nine and 68100 dollars ($2379.68) with interest on said judgment and costs, I will offer for sale, according to the order of said Court, at public auction, on Monday, March 26th, 1906, between the hours of ten o'clock a. m. and four o'clock p. m. of said day, at the east door of the court house. in Plymouth, Marshall county, Indi ana, as the law directs, the following described real estate, to-wit: The South sixty acres of the west half of the northwest quarter, and the South twenty acres of the east half of the northwest quarter. All in section nineteen (19), township thirty-three (33) North, Range one (1) East. Situate in Marshall county, Indiana, to the highest bidder for cash, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, subject to redemption. MONROE STEINER, Sheriff of Marshall County, Ind. E. B. McConnell, Atty. for Pltff. 21t4 Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Itch, Ring Worm, Herpes, Barbers Itch. All of these diseases are attended by intense itching, which is almost instantly relieved by applying Chamberlain's Salve, and by its continued use a perrianenr cure may be effected. It has, in fact, cured many cases that had resisted other treatment. Price 25 cents per box. For sale iy Fred Wenzler. Cured Hemorrhages of the Lungs. . "Several years since my lungs were so badly affected that I had many hemorrhages." writes A. .M. Ake, of Wood, Ind. "I tok treatment with several physicians without any benefit. I thei started to take Foley's Honey and Tar, and my lungs are now as sound as a. bullet. I recommend it in advanced stages of lung trouble." Folev's Honev and Tar stops the cough and heals the lungs, and prevents serious results from a coid. Ketuse substitutes. For sale by all dealers. The best safeguard against headache, constipation and liver troubles is DeWitt's Little Early Risers. Keep a vial of these famous little pills in the house ar.d take a dose at bed time when you feel that the stomach and bowels need cleansing. They don't gripe. Sold by Fred Wenzler. The best way to rid the system of a cold is to evacuate the bowels. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar acts as 1 pleasant, yet effectual cathartic on the bowels. It . clears the head, cuts the phlegm out of the throat, strengthens the bronchical tubes, relieves coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, etc. Sold by Fred Wenzler. If you are troubled with Piles and can't find a cure, try Witch Hazel Salve, but be sure you get thrxi made by E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. It is the original. If you have used Witch Hazel Salve without being relieved it is probable that you got h old of one of the many worthless counterfeits that are sold on the reputation of the genuine DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. For sale by Fred Wenzler. Very Low Rates West Northwest Southwest and South. Via Nnckle Plate Road. A splen did opportunity for Homeseckers desiring: locations in the West. Tickets on sale 1st and 3rd Tuesdas of the month. Fii'l information of local Agent or address C. A. Melin, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. 410. Always Keeps Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in His House. "We-would not be without Chamberlain' i Cough Remedy. It .is kept on hat d continually in our home," says VV. W. Kearney, editor of the Independent, Lowry City, Mo. That is just what every family should do. When kept at hand ready for instant use, a cold may be checked at the outs.'t and cured in much less time than after it has ecome settled in the system. This remedy is also without a peer tor croup in children, and will prevent the attack when given as soon as the child becomes hoarse, or even after the croupy cough appears, which can only be done when the remedy is kept at hand. For sale by Fred Wenzler. Low One-Way Rates to Points in California Oregon and Washington. Also to points West and Northwest via the Nickel Plate Road. Tickets on sale daily to April 7th inclusive. Full information of local Agent or address C. A. Melin, T. P. A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. 4-6 Our 190G pickle contracts may now be secured at Haag Bros, store. Those expecting to raife pickles this season are advised to sign these contracts without delay. H. J. HEINZ CO.
rnFEK now.
This is the time to do your papering. Paper never cost so little as this year. y?e ask your patronage on orre condition only, viz., that we furnish best paper at least monev. Ingrains 20c Ceilings 20c Borders, per yard lc Granites, from 6 to 9c Tiles, from 30 to 40c Good papers from ... 4 to 8c (with one and two band borders. Everything priced by the double roll. Pile's mi le PLYMOUTH. Ffgq 11 Yot Frco to Ycu end Every Clctcr Women Sirftektaa Frcm Women's Alimente. f am woman. I know as a woman what other women know. I know women's diseases. I have entered as most women naffer, bot I aare cared myself. Hot immediately, net suddenly, bat I studied, experimented, investigated, searched the world for a core for my own woman troubles. And I found It. It cares the diseases of women. women's woes yield to its at aoge power. The Buffering, ailing ones of our sex are brought again to the full flush and glow of girlhood days. What about your daughter mother? Is It not your part to guard ht-r, shield her from the ixposures and humiliations of office treatment? . Is there any real necessity for such an expert enoet Very seldom indeed. My Home Remedy hji saved this dread ordeal to thousands of sensitive girls and young women. Will you not let it save your daughter's pride and modesty? My free ten days test treatment will convince you that vour ewe for her was wisely taken and maybe at the yery lime of all others most necessary to prevent, or cure beginning irou Dies of the worst character. Shield your daughtermot her. My treatment is not a man medicine not a oarsn drag or vicious tincture, Dutanure, powerful, yet gcntlo remedial agent vbica cares ana has cured thousands of cases of diseases of women dinturbed part, displacement, enlarged cnanneis, i&iiing or tnewomD, neavy menstrual loss and clotting, painful periods, scanty flow and sharp, darting pains, dull aches, bearinor down feelimr. acbinsr eioin. whitish discharges and the myriad delicate disorders which bring anguish to our womankind. These are the afflictions cared in thousands of authenticated Ciscs by Mrs. M. Summer's Remedy for women cares which are recorded cures that keep cured, in fact and in truth. And in every one or an tnese cases 1 sent tne firoof test treatment complete and free, absoutely, erery penny of the expense was mine, not one eincle cent was tmid for by any oneexcept by me alone. I will do as much for you, ray sister. Just as much for you as for any other no matter who yon are, or where you are, or now poor or how rich, xnat maces no differ ence to me my sister. Give yourself (your ailing bodily self) the benefit of your doubt, my sister, not the buroen or iu tor i wm mase you 11 your nature should have been well hewty robust and plump, with all the color, glow and lif or neaitny womannooa. One line from your hand, to tell me where to send it just your name and the address and the cure will come by return mail all sealed and prepaid plain wrapper. Do not hide your woman-need from me and, snnnK wunin you men 10 suner ana rina aown more and more. You must not do thnt. Only let me hear from you. Do. For I know that you will be well can and shau be. . IZIS. M. SUMMERS, Box ,H,Xotre Dame, Ind, The Original. Foley & Co., Chicago, originated Honey and Tar as a great throat and lung remedy and on account of the merit and' popularity of Foley s Hon ey and Tar many imitations, are off ered for the genuine. Astc for foley s Honey and Tar and refuse any substitutes offered as no other prepara tion will give the same satisfaction. it is mildly laxative. It contains no opiates and is safest for children and delicate persons. For sale by all deal ers. Afflicted With Rheumatism. I wüs and am yet afflicted with rheumatism," says Mr. J. C. Bayne, editor ot the Herald, Addmgton, Indian Territory, "but thanks to Chamberlain's Pain Balm am able once more to attend to business. It is the best of liniments." If troubled with rheumatism give Pain Balm a trial and you are certain to be more than pleased with the prompt relief which it affords. One application relieves the pain. For sale by Fred Wenzler. One would think the Laxative idea in a cough syrup should have been advanced long before it was. It seems the only rational remedy for Coughs and Colds would be to move the bowels and clean the mucous membranes of the throat and lungs at the same trme. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and ar does this. It is the Original Laxative Cough Syrup, the best known remedy for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Whooping Cough, etc. Tastes good and harmless. Sold by Fred Wenzler. Don't frown look pleasant. If you are suffering from indigestion or sour stomach, take Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. Hon. Jake Moore, of Atlanta, Ga., says: "I suffered more than 20 years with indigestion. A friend recommended Kodol. It relieved me in one day and I now enjoy better health than for many years." - Kodol digests what you eat, relieves sour stomach, gas on stomach, belching, etc. Sold by Fred Wenzler. Women's Kidneys. Women arc more often afflicted with kidney disorders than men, but attribute the symptoms to diseases peculiar to their sex, while in reality the kidneys are deranged. Nervousness, headache, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, pain in the back, are signs of kidney trouble that must not be ignored ,or a serious malady will result. Foley's Kidney Cure has restored the health of thousands of weak, nervous, broken down women. It stops irregularities and strengthens the urinary organs. It purifies the blood and benefits the whole sj'stem. For sale by all dealers. It will not cost you a cent to try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets, and. they are excellent for stomach troubles and constipation. Get a free sample at Fred Wenzler's drug store.
gOgflQIT
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Men's
GO.UIENGING AlflRGH
100 lbs Flour $2.30 21 lbs "A" Sugar for..! 00 Shoes.. 50c to $3.00 1 lb Baking Powder. ... .6c Coal Oil 9c Men's wool Sox 20c 25c Hose 15c Women's woolen IIose..20c 10 yds Calico 50c Men's and boys' Caps.. .15c Outing Flannel.. 5, 7 and 9c Stoves $2.50 to ?3.50 50c Overalls 45c Table Oilcloth, per yd.. 13c Men's Pants 75c to $1.75 Paper Pins lc Men's fleece lined Clothes Pins, doz lc Underwear 32c Lamp Chimneys.. .3 and 4c Boys' fleece lined Soap, per cake 4c Underwear 25c Russ' Blueing. 10c pkg . 8c Women's fleece lined Bo?s' ralber Boots. . .$1.75 Underwear 20c PatCRt Medicines. 20 per cent ell.
LIMKVILLE, W
E
Save you money on Garden Seeds if you will give us. chance.' How? Light expenses, reasonable rent, buying larg;e quantities in bulk and our years of experience. We CAN and WILL compete with any reliable firm on the larg est orders. In small quantities that is where we shine. We Always Did put twice as much in our 3c packages as the big city seed house do. " Then too, we're right here no sending off or waiting or paying express charges. You see what you are getting and don't let loose of your money till you get the goods. A great many more people than ever before will want to get their garden, field and flower seeds of us this spring. Special Offer. Write out a list of what garden and flower seeds you want and brinj or mail it to us at once. We will fill it out and put I.' some valuable novelties free that we know will more than please you.'
Do - It
Our object is to get early orders, and this offer is positively good only until March. 10, as after that date we will have all the business we can handle without offering any premiums what soever. HOW TO GET IT. 1, Say here you saw this offer. " 2, and say you want the extras. 3, and DO IT NOW.
FORBES' SEEP STOßE.
Weighty Professional Endorsements.
That the several American medicinal roots, the concentrated glyceric extracts of which make up Dr. Fierce's Golden Medical Discovery, have the strongest kind of endorsement by scores of leading medical writers of all the several schools of practice, a brief glance at the Btandara works on Materia Medica will 6how. Of Golden Seal root, which is one of the prominent inpredients of " Golden Medical Discovery," Dr.Koberts Bartholow, of Jefferson Medical College, says: "Very useful as a stomachic (stomach) tonic and in atonio dyspepsia. Cures gastric (stomach) catarrh and headaches accompanying same." He also mention vatarrh of the gall duct, jaundice and constipation as diseases which the use of Golden Seal root overcomes; also catarrh of the intestines, even when it has proceeded to ulceration, is remarkably benefited by Hydrastis (Golden Seal root). Dr. Grover Coe. of New York, says: "Hydrastis (Golden Seal root) exercises an especial influence over mucous surfaces. Upon the liver it acts with equal certainty and efficacy. As a cholagogue (liver invigorator) it has few equals." Dr. Coe also advises it for affections of the spleen and other abdominal viscera generally, and for scrofulous and glandular diseases, cutaneous eruptions, indigestion, debility t chronio diarrhoea, constipation, also m several affections peculiar to. women, and in all chronic derangements of the liver; also for chronic inflammation of bladder, for which Dr. Coe says "it is one of the most reliable agents of cure." Prof. Hobart A. Hare, M. D., of the University of Ta., says of Golden Seal root that it is nof service in chronic catarrh of the stomach and bowels, following abuse of alcohol, and as a tonic after malarial fever." He further says, it "has a distinct anti-malarial influence." Also "good in all catarrhal conditions, as uterine catarrh, leucorrhcea, etc., and as "a curative agent in chronic dyspepsia." Prof. Laurence Johnson, M. D., of the Medical Department, University City of N. Y., is equally loud in his praise of Golden Seal root, especially for its tonic effects in convalescence from acute diseases and its special tonic influence upon mucous surfaces and upon the gall bladder. Doctors Barton and Tully recommended Golden Seal root as a pure tonic and as an alterative in diseased conditions of the mucous membranes. Prof. John King, M. D., late of Cincinnati, author of the American Dispensatory, gives it a prominent place among medicinal agents, reiterates all the foregoing writers have said about it, as does also Prof. John M. Scudder, M. D., late of Cincinnati. Dr. Scudder says.: "It stimula4 the digestive processes and increases the assimilation of food. By these means the blood is enricfied, the consequent improvement on the glandular and nervous systems are natural results." Dr. Scudder further says, "in relation to its general effect upon the system, there is no medicine in use about which there is such general unanimity of ovinion. It is universally regarded as tne tonic, useful in all debilitated ftates .
Y(i.
Gives rest to tha stomach. Cures indigestion, dyspepsia, tour ctcmich, tired stomach, weak stomach, windy stomach, puffed stomach, nsrvc ctomach and catarrh of the stomach. A guarantsed cure.
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Sol i by Oak Dnifj Store.
3d. FOR 7 DAYS. INDIANA. WILL Now. ft Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D., cf Bennett Medical College, Chicago, say of Golden Seal root: "It is a roo4 superior remedy in catarrhal gasiritia (inflammation, of the stomach), chronio constipation, general debility, in convalescence from protracted fevers, in prostrating night-sweats.. It is an important remedy in disorders of tks tcomb (This agent, Golden Seal root, is an important ingredient of Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription for woman's weaknesses, as well as of tha "Golden Medical Discovery.") Dr. Ellingwood continues, "in all catarrhal conditions it is useful." Much more, did f pace permit could be quoted from prominent authorities as to the wonderful curative properties possessed by Golden Seal root. We want to assure the reader that "Golden Medical Discovery" can be relied upon to do all that is claimed for Golden Seal root in the cure of all the various diseases as set forth in tha above brief extract, for its meet prominent and important ingredient is Golden Seal root. This agent is, however, strongly reinforced, and its curative action greatly enhanced by tha ' addition, in just the right proportion of Queen's root, Stone root, Black ' Cherrybark, Bloodroot, Mandrake root and chemixally pure glvcerine. All of these are happily and harmoniously '" blended into a most perfect pharmaceutical compound, now favorably known throughout moet of the civilized :4 countries of the world. Bear in mind that each and every ingredient entering in the "Discovery" has received the endorsement of the leading medical men of our land; who extol each article named above in the highest terms. What other medicine put up for sale through druggists can show any such professional endorsement ? For dyspepsia, liver troubles, all chronic catarrhal affections of whatever name or nature, lingering coughs, bronchial, throat and lung affections, the "Discovery " can be relied upon as a sovereign remedy. By reading the little book noted below any one will readily see the applicability of the "Golden Medical Discovery" to the cure of all the foregoing list of diseases as well as many other chronic affections, especially those of the heart, kidneys, bladder, skin and blood. A little book of extracts treating of all the several ingredients entering into Dr. Pierce's medicines, being extracts from standard medical works, of the different schools of practice Mill be mailed free to any one asking (by postal card or letter),' for the same, addressed to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., and giving the writer's full post-office address plainly w ritten. In cases of chronic ailments, extended by marked, or persistent, constipation, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet should be taken conjointly with the use of the " Golden Medical Discovery," to regulate the bowels. They act in harmony with the "Discovery." and will pe found to be a most valuable laxative, or, in fuller doses a cleansing cathartic. Podophyllin, the active medicinal fmnciple of Mandrake root, enters argely into the composition of the little sugar-coated "Pellets," in fact is one of their chief ingredients. They regulate the liver, stomach and bowels. ki Li COP M M CUUl.l y
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