Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 133, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 December 1909 — Page 2

RENSSELAER REHIBMCAir DAILY AND SEMI-WEEgLY. Th* Friday Imm 1« th* Besrnlar Weekly Edition. OAWU& Publishers. SVBSCBIFTIOE sates. Stall?, br-.£hutziar,_ia.. Oenlau a Weak. By KaiL 83.75 a year. Semi-Weekly, i» advance,. Ye*r 31.50. Tuesdny, December 28, 1909.

Attorney-General Makes Ruling About Fees In Auditor’s Office.

According to an opinion received by the auditor of state from the at-torney-general, it is unlawful for a board of county commissioners tcT allow a county auditor pay for preparing books and blanks for the use of township assessors; unlawful for county commissioners to allow special claims of county auditors for services as clerk to the board of commissioners when acting as a board of turnpike directors, as well as unlawful for a county treasurer to pay such claim, if allowed; unlawful for a cowty auditor to charge a township trustee for furnishing lists of land descriptions for assessment purposes, and unlawful for a county auditor to retain for himself fees which have been collected for transcripts supplied purchasers of county or township bonds, all of which are handled by the auditor. The questions on which the opinion was based were submitted by the state board of tax commissioners after it, had been learned by the board that auditors in a number of counties had been collecting one or more of the class of fees referred to in the opinion. According to the attorney-general the following provisions apply to the cases in point: I The county auditor must have each year in readiness for delivery to township assessors all necessary blanks for assessment of personal and real property, and in the absence of a statute enabling the auditor to charge a fee for such service the commissionets can not legally allow a claim for such a fee when it is submitted. The county auditor is required by law to act as clerk to the board of eounty commissioners, and he must act as such clerk when the board is sitting as a board of turnpike directors. There is no statute authorizing the auditor to receive compensation for such clerical services, and it is therefore unlawful for the commissioners to allow such claim when filed. There is no statute requiring the auditor to supply the township assessors with descriptions of lands or of road taxes to “each supervisor’s district,” but even if there was, there being no statute authorizing compensation to the auditor for such list, he is not entitled to such compensation. It becomes the duty of the county auditor, on request of prospective purchasers of bonds, to supply transcripts of proceedings leading to the issuance of the bonds, and such service should be paid for by the bond dealers; but when such pay is collected it does not belong to the audior, under the statute, and must therefore be turned in to the county treasurer.

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

G. A. Buchanan, superintendent of the South Shore railroad since April, 1907, has resigned, to take effect January 1. , Northern Indiana ice packers have began the harvesting of ten-inch ice from the fresh water lakes, furnishin employment in the several coun’fffies to a thousand men. Representative HenrJ'-A. Barnhart has filed with the house committee on Spanish-American war claims a bill for a pension of $l5O a month for the support of John R. Kissinger, of South Bend, who sacrificed himself in the cause of medical science during the army experiments with the yellow fever germ. Kissinger is a cripple and is unable to support his family. In striking similarity to the passing away of eleven brothers and sisters before her, Mrs. Olive E. Bullard, 85 years old, was found dead Monday in bed at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. G. W. Woodworth, of Ft. Wayne. She was the eldest of thirteen children, only one of whom is now living. To every one of the twelve death came very suddenly, almost without warning. Lizzie Sanders, age sixteen, who for two years, since their parents died, has been a mother to four little brothers, is dead at Hammond. She had been ill for some time with tuberculosis, but Insisted on working at a fac'tory up to the last, so that she could buy them Christmas presents. The girl had refused to let the boys go to an orphans’ home, and her life was a sacrifice to their care and comfort. A legal battle of many interests for the possession of the >million-dollar estate of George Rh&dius, who died at Indianapolis Monday, began Tuesday when William Lehnert, a cousin of Rhodius, obtained in the Marion court an order restraining one of the dead man’s attorneys from filing for probate an alleged "pretended” will. The result is that the real boys—the boys which are a real problemrebel at the stuff that is set before them in the public schools, and at the first chance stop going to school. The girls and the girl-boys keep on more or less, and this explains the charge made by the English Mosely commis'sion several years ago, that American schools are effeminate.

When Will Schools Wake Up? Is Asked by Able Writer.

The following article was clipped from a paper and handed to us for publication. It very ably presents the neglected opportunities in the education, of our children: Our schools generally still come a long, long way from meeting the needs of the times; efficient as they are, they hay,e not kept up with the pace of modern progress; they are still actuated by the old medieval idea that literary education is the whole thing; they have not yet become fully aroused to the fact that only one person out of a hundred, say, needs a literary education; while all the rest need training in some practical art or Industry. For example, the Washington schools are counted among the most advanced in the country, yet we know | of a 7th grade teacher who this week assigned as a task for her boys and girls the writing of a fairy story, from their own imagination, on “A Ball Given by the Lily.” Now, imagine a normal, active, manly boy in the 7th grade getting down to writing a story on such a subject as this. He simply can’t do it; it isn’t in him; if he were a “girl-boy” he might do something' at it; but as we don’t want to rear girl-boys in this country, therefore the system which provides such effeminate pabulum for girls and boys alike is all wrong. Our schools require a heroic pruning, not only of the little twigs in the shape of fads, but of whole limbs—so that-a new growth, better adapted to bring forth fruits, can be allowed to develop. Practical training, made to fit the actual boy and the actual girl, must be the object and purpose of the new education; the ancient superstition that education consists in drumming literary refinements into ordinary workday heads must be utterly cast off, and a new gospel must be takeil* up. Everyone knows that all the walks in life which call for these literary attainments are hopelessly overcrowded, while there is an insistent and perpetual demand for men and women of practical abilities, to carry on the productive work of the world. In heaven’s name let us give our children educations that will equip them for the real work of life. Let us force our schools to turn out more farmers, dairymen, foresters, poultrymen, stock-raisers, and artisans of every sort; these are what the world demands. There will always be plenty- and to spare of professional men, real estate agents, clerks, writers, and such-like.

Why, I met a young fellow the other day who is getting $6 a day laying brick on the new national museum building in Washington, while the scientists who will work in the building—for all their college educations —have to work for a third less. We don’t all need to be bricklayers, but the case illustrates the condition. There is always a shortage ,of good practical men and women, and always an overproduction of the other kind, and our schools are recreant to their trust in refusing to recognize this fact and meet it. We know this is rank heresy, so considered by educators, but a generation from now it will not be heresy. The old idea, that there is something aristocratic about a literary education is being knocked ruthlessly in the head; work, practical work, is being exaulted. It is the people of practical attainments who today are independent and who can dictate terms to, shall we say, their betters? Time was when the man with a little book learning had an immense advantage, but that day is past. The thing now is to adjust ourselves to the new situation. To the scrap-heap with the old education; it’s worn out, obsolete, way behind the times. ’ - -

Diphtheria in Chewing Gum.

Dr. J. H. Simonds, head of the bacteriological laboratory of the state board of health, has reported the discovery of a case of diphtheria in the public schools of Richmond, which has been traced to some chewing gum which had been “loaned” to a little girl by a companion, who had recently been released from quarantine for the disease. The discovery was made from bacilli sent to the laboratory by Dr. J. C. Blossom, who tnade an examination of the child’s throat after he had heard of the lending process. It grieves me, friend, to hear my Maker’s name Thus spoken without reverence or shame. Be thou a man; thy noble rank maintain; Appeal to God, but not in words profane; • ... Scorn to be vulgar or thus impolite; Tis neither brave nor wise; ’tis far from right. You would not speak thus knowingly in death; Reflect —your Maker now could stop your breath. For self respect, for friends you should forbear; And God in Heaven commands, “Jhou shalt not swear.” Mr. and Mrs. J. M, Studebaker, of South Blend, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary on Jan. 3 and the function, for which invitations have just been issued, promises to be qne of the largest social events in the history of the city. Invitations number 1,800 and have gone to all parts of this country as well as foreign lands. * Butter Wrappers for sale at The Republican Office.

SPAIN SINCE 1898.

Politically Spain possesses four great guiding forces: “Oonservadores,” “Liberales,” “Republiqanos’’ and “Carlie- 7 tas.” Of these only the Republicans and the Carlists have a clear and definite programme, and it may even be said that only the latter have a real watchword. Indeed, so great Is the diversity of opinion between the Republicans and the Carlists that they are able to effect little, though they control what is numerically a strong minority (thirty) in the Cortes. The Conservatives and Liberals are the governmental parties of to-day, and they, thanks to a system of alternation, or turn about, succeed each other in power in accordance with the royal jyill. But the curious thing about these political aggregations is that they do not have a clear and definite creed or political programme. The„ Conservatives of to-day are the Liberals of yesterday, Tor they, thanks to an evolutionary movement of the Left, found themselves on the Right and were given the name of “reactionaries.” However, the Liberals, who now and then use “radicalism’’ and “anti-clericalism” as watchwords of their party forget their premises when onc e in power and in the majority of cases continue the policy of their predecessors. In spite of all, however, in the general method of administration Spain is being regenerated. Opposition or agreement, for example, has broughtabout guarantees of stability to the public functionaries, thus doing away with the multitude of unemployed persons which each change of government used to bring. The type of “cesante” (dismissed public officer) is becoming more rare every day, and it is to be hoped that this evolution, having thus commenced, will end by completely destroying the type. The life of the provinces has gained a great impetus ill the last few years: Barcelona, Bilbao, Valencia, Zaragoza, Valladolid, &c., are establishing new industries and opening markets withii} and without the kingdom. However, the character distinctive of each of these provinces and the necessity of defending special Interests cause a certain spirit of discord or rivalry to exist between them. Barcelona, for example, an industrial province par excellence, needs to import the greater part of the raw material for its manufacturing, and so a high tariff system would be the ruin of the Catalan region. Valencians, on the other hand, whose greatest resource is agriculture, are comparatively indifferent to tariff questions, for their prosperity depends in great part on rates of exchange. Owing to the depreciation of Spanish currency they are able to sell their products in foreign markets at a premium which offsets the cost of production and handling. This especial nature of the various regions gives them also very marked political tendencies. In the centers of industry the body of laborers is Republican or Socialist (Barcelona and its neighborhood, Madrid, Valencia, Zaragoza, Bilbao, &c.,). The country people on the contrary are for the most part reactionary, although private interests or the pressure of proprietor upon tenant may be determinative of the farmer’s vote. Feared by the great and powerful, frequently of but little education but of a cunning sagacity, an entangler of the clearest questions and an interpreter of the most difficult the “cacique” manages and upsets the government of a province. Mayors, Governors, Deputies, high and low officials, all owe to him their posts and are his Instruments, going from Ministry to Ministry dancing attendance while at home in his little corner the “cacique" with a shrewd imagination prepares the strokes of local politics. The Province of Castellon, which elects seven Deputies, was managed by a kind of committee called the cosi, directed by a person of the middle class. The political education of the citizen is coming more and more into evidence, and with its advance the influence of the “cacique” (political “chief” or “boss") is growing less, so that at present the regions in which the will of the latter dominates are very few. A new political power has been constituted since the loss of the colonies and hi* been greatly augmented In the laet elections: “La solldaridad,” the principle of solidarity. This is the concentration of diverse political tendencies of a section for the defence of its interest* against a policy of centralization. Nowhere has the central ,power been eo hated as in Spain, ail effect without doubt of the heterogeneity of the nation's component parts. A Catalan does not desire to be classed with a Galician or an Andalusian; a Valcncian or e Murcian is very different from a Navarrese or a Basque; and the diversity which exists in the legislative system In regard to privileges accorded to the various provinces has had the hardihood to show itself i« the political system. It is undeniable that there has been a certain abuse of central ism; but it Is also evident that lx) lb the Basque and the Catalan section allsts have made exaggerated demands. If these should be granted national life would become impossl ble; the Sate would turn frdm a cen trallzed into a federal State.—Yak Review.

A French company, Clement-Bay ard, was the first to go Into the sol< business of building airships, and the second concern of this charactei is to be in the United StateA

The Rev. F. L. Hardly, pastor of the First Baptist church of Columbus, Mas recovered .from an attack of hiccoughihg which 1 continued for forty-eight Hours. His friends were alarmed but a physician finally succeeded in stopping the hiccoughs.

MABTEX’S SADE. By virtue of a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Indiana, made and entered on the 15th day of November, 1909, in a suit therein pending, wherein The Provident Life and Trust Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is complainant, and Seth B. Moffitt and others are defendants, being cause No. 10,911, the undersigned Master in Chancery will, on Wednesday, January 19, 1910, offer for sale and sell at public outcry at the door of the court house in the town of Rensselaer, in the county of Jasper and State of Indiana, between the hours of nine o’clock a. m. and five o’clock p. m. of said day to the highest bidder, the following described real estate, situate in the county of Jasper and State of Indiana, namely: The south half (s%) of the southwest quarter (sw (4) of Section twentysix (26); also the east half (e%) of Section twenty-seven (27) except the right of way of the railroad; also the south half (s%) of Section thirty-four (34.) except the right of way of the railroad; also the south half (s%) of the southwest quarter (sw%) of Section thirty-four (34);, also the northwest quarter (nw}£) of the southeast quarter (se}4) of Section thirty-four (34); all in Township thirty -one (31) north, Range seven (7) west in Union Township, said county and state, and containing eight hundred and forty (840) acres, more or less. The said property will be sold without relief from valuation or appraisement laws of the State of Indiana for cash, in the manner prescribed by the laws of the State of Indiana for the Sale of real estate on execution; and such sale will be subject to the approval of said Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Indiana. . EDWARD DANIELS, Master In Chancery. C. S. & G. L. Denny, Solicitors for Complainant. Dec. 21-28-Jan. 4-11-18

PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell at public sale at his residence, the old McDonald place, at Pleasant Ridge, 4 miles east of Rensselaer, commencing at 10 o’clock a. m., on Wednesday, December 29, 1909, The following property: 9 Head of Horses and Colts—Consisting of 1 ’black mare, 9 years old, in foal, wt 1,650; 1 black mare, 11 years old, in foal, wt 1,300; 1 bl-ack mare, 6 years old, wt 1,250; 1 roan mare, 8 years old, in foal, wt 1,400; 1 mule, wt 1,300; 3 colts coming 2 years old; 1 spring colt. 25 Head of Cattle— l 2. milch cows, some fresh now, others 'trill be soon; 2 two-year old heifers; 1 2-year old'steer; 1 2-year old bull; 9 spring steer calves. Farming Implements— 4 wagons, one broad tire good as new, 3 narrow tire; 2 buggies; 2 six-foot binders, one Plano, one Deering with trucks; 2 John Deere gang plows; 2 walking plows; 3 cultivators, 2 walking, one riding; 1 John Deere corn planter with fertilizer attachment and 160 rods of wire; 1 disc; 1 Hoosier seeder; 1 three-section wood harrow; 1 Deering mowing machine; 1 two-horse hay rake; 1 hand corn sheller; 1 feed grinder; 1 manure spreader; 2 bay ladders; 1 set gravel boards; 3 sets gopher attachments; 4 sets work harness; 1 grind stone, large iron kettle, 1 hog house, 1 Old Trusty incubator, 140 egg, T hay gatherer, 1 two-horse weeder. Term*— A credit of 10 months will be given on all sums of over $lO with approved security without interest if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per cent will be charged from date of sale. Al! sums of $lO and under cash in hand. 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $lO. No property to be removed until settled for. CONRAD HILDEBRAND. Fred Phillips, Auctioneer. C. G. Spitler, Clerk. Hot lunch on ground.

PUBLIC SALE. ( The undersigned will sell at public sale at her residence, 3 miles south of Wheatfield, on the old Ferrel Place, commencing at 10 a. m., on Friday, December 31, 1909. Six Head of Cattle —3 milch cows, one with calf by side, others will be fresh soon; 1 coming 2-year-old heifer, with calf; 1 coming 2-year-old Jersey heifer, with calf; 1 yearling heifer, tj. 2 dozed Chickens. I dozen Geese. 1 dozen Ducks. Farm Implements, Etc. —I Oliver chilled plow, 1 garden plow, 1 hand cultivator, 1 one-hone cultivator, 1 garden drill, 1 onion planter, 1 lawn swing, spades, shovels, rakes, hoes, axes, 2 crosscut saws, 1 bucksaw, 1 set carpenter tools, 1 glass hen house, 150 bushels of potatoes. Household Goods—Two sanitary couches, 1 iron bed, 2 bureaus, 6 window shades, 4 lamps, 1 kitchen range as good as new, set dining chairs, set kitchen chairs, 2 kitchen tables, 3 parlor tables, 1 plush couch, 2 good carpets, 1 linoleum, 1 cupboard, 2 rugs good as new, kitchen utensils, etc. Terms —A credit of 11 months will be given on all sums of over $5 with approved security without interest if paid when due; if not paid when due, 8 per cent will be charged from date of sale. All sums of $5 and under, cash In hand. 6 per cent off for cash on sums over $5. No property to be removed until settled for. MRS. E. WILLMEIER. John Greve, Auct. Buzz Marble, Clerk. Hot lunch on grounds.

Real Estate I have opened up an office in Room 5 of the Odd Fellows’ block, where I will conduct a general real estate, loan and insurance business, handling farm and town property and stocks of goods, local and foreign. Will be glad to list your property or to show you what I have for sale and trade. A. S. LaRUE

Wireless Telephone a Possibility Of Not Far Distant Future.

According to General James Allen, chief signal officer of the army, wireless telephony will be used not only in the army and navy, but by the general public within a few years. General Allen, who is an Indiana man, is devoting special attention to the progress inventors are making with the problem of transmitting articulate speech directly through the ait without intervening wires. The ariny appropriation bill of last yea): contained the following item: ' 1 “For the purchase and development of wireless telephone apparatus, $30,000.” This appropriation became available first of last July, and General Allen hopes to get some important results with it. Gongress will be asked at this session to appropriate a similar amount for the fiscal year beginning the first of next July. General Allen says that wireless telephony is today further advanced than wireless telegraphy was ten years ago. Quietly, but with business foresight the great telegraph companies which now do the wire business of this country are planning eventually to make use of the wireless system in handling the commercial and press business of the day. Of course, the companies do not intend to give up their wires until they have to; but they foresee that the time is not far distant when wires will have to be dispensed with, if competition is to be met. General Allen hopes to be able within the next year or two to demonstrate the practicability of the wireless telephone in the field. As soon as the experiments which are now being conducted at Norfolk and elsewhere are completed, some real tests—tests such as would have to be made in case of actual warfare—will be made. While the federal government is .keenly alive to the possibilities of wireless telephony, it is not displaying any more interest in the subject than are numerous capitalists, who are alive to the fact that the time is probably not far distant when the telephone business of the country, new as it is, will be revolutionized. The patent office is greatly interested in the developments from month to month and year to year. It has full knowledge of the spirited race between inventors to get hold of the real thing.

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

Capt. F. H. Sherman, who has been at the Army and Navy hospital at Hot Springs, Ark., for* some time, was assigned Tuesday by the Navy Department to take command of the battle ship Indiana. The Indiana is now in reserve. The B. & O. S. W. posted notices at the Washington, Ind., shops Tuesday that the 400 men employed in the engine department would hereafter work ten hours instead of nine. This increase of time will indirectly affect 700 men. Mrs. G. A. Murray, wife of the editor of the Nappanee News, who was severely injured several weeks ago, and whdse recovery at that time was considered very doubtful, is submittifig to a series of skin grafting operations at a hospital in South Bend. The Metropolitan Paving company will go to court to force payment of about $47,000 for four streets in Ft. Wayne which it paved more than a year ago and which were never accepted by the board of public works. An attempt has been made by the president of the company and attorneys for some time to effect a compromise. The first city election in Rochester was held Tuesday. The democrats elected their candidate /for mayor, while the republicans placed the clerk, two councilmen-at-large and two ward councilmen. Omer B. Smith, democrat, was elected over Dr. C. E. Gould, the republican candidate for city executive, by a majority of 109. W\th the wish expressed fifty-six years ago almost fulfilled, that she and her husband might live all their lives in the home they were then construcjrfng and that they should die together, Mrs. Peter Catherine Mutch, aged 91, died Tuesday a£ the home of her daughter, Mrs. Michael Schesky, in husband, Peter Mutch, aged 93, met death in October. S. Claus, Esq., has drawn oq the United States for between $50,000,000 and $60,000,000- in cash, to say nothing of merchandise, to help make people happy in other countries. That is a conservative estimate by bankers of the total amount that has been sent in small drafts atad money orders as Christmas presents from this country to homes beyond the seas. Exactly $42,430,476 will be spent on vessels of the navy now under construction during the fiscal years 1910 to 1913, inclusive, under the estimates submitted to congress by the navy department. Of this amount $30,732,563 will be for hulls and $11,697,913 for machinery. The total amount during the current fiscal year is estimated at $24,520,755; for 1911 it totals $13,375,220; for 1912 and 1913 it aggregates, $4,534,501. You must not call your wife a cow. You can say birdie, dearie, peachy, kittle, dovle or a raft of other names adopted from the fawnlike animals or sweet tasting fruits. But an Indianapolis judge has decided that the term •“cow” applied to a woman by her husband is objectionable and the judge sentenced Morris Gfeeflspann to pay a, fine of $lO and go to the work house for a year for the use of this and other terms to his frau. Men’s liberties are being infringed uj>on by the courts these days.

Wslnal Cards PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON Night and day call* given prompt attention. Residence phone, 116. Office phone, 177. Bensselaer, Xnffi LB WASHBURN. PHYSICIAN AND BUBGBON Makes a Diseases of the Bensselaer, Ind. DR. R A. TURFLER. ; OSTEOPATHIC physician Rooms I and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Officer—2 rings on 390, rest-* dence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DR. E. N. LOY Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east of court house. OFFICE PHONE 89 Residence College Avenue, Phone 169. Bensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. B. Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of woman and low grades of fever. Office in Williams block. Opposite'Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. Rensselaer, Ind. DR. BL J. LAWS. Physician and Surgeon Office in Forsythe Block. Associated with Dr. Washburn. . Phone No. 48. Residence Phone 117. J. F. Irwin S. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN LAW, BEAD ESTATE AND INSUBANCE. 5 per cent farm loans. Office In Odd Fellows' Block. Bensselaer, Indiana. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS LAW, DOANS AND BEAD ESTATE Loans on farms and city property, gersonal security and cnattel mortgage. ;uy, sell and rent farms and city property. Farm and city fire insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Bensselaer, Indiana. E. P. HONAN ATTOBNET AT DAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Bensselaer, Indiana.

MOSES LEOPOLD ATTOBNET AT DAW ABSTRACTS, BEAD ESTATE, XNSXTBANCE. Up stairs, northwest corner Washington and Van Rensselaer Street*. Bensselaer, Indiana.

Frank Folts Charles G. Spitlsi FOLTZ & SPITLEB (Successors to Thompson & Bros.) ATTORNEYS AT DAW Law, Real Estate, Insurance, Abstracts and Loans. Only set of Abstract books in County. H. L. BBOWN DENTIST Grown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larsh s Drug Store. m-swMi aawtiww "4>ww 1 I A PROMPT, EFFECTIVE ■ I REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OFB ■rheumatism! ■ Lumbago. Sciatica. Neuralgia, I * Kidnf Trouble and £ a Kind, ad Oiaeaaaa. .» ■ Applied externally It affords almost In-B ■ slant relief from pain, while jtermanent ■ ■ results are being effected by taking ft in- ■ ■ ternally. purifying the blood, dissolving ■ ■ the poisonous substance and removing it ■ ■ from the system. B B DR. C. L. GATES B £ Ilancock, Minn., writes: S ■ | ■ could not BtiMMl on her fret. The mom tot they B B put her down on the floor alio would Bertrnm ■ ■ with p<!ng. 1 treated her with and ■ B today Hhe runs around n* well and happy aacan B B be. 1 prescribe ’-5-DUO PS” for mv patients aud B B use It in my practice.” B ■ Lar*r Bottle <‘K nitnpH- <BOO lto.es) B ■ SI.OO. Far Sale by l>rwg*isCa ■ IJWMSOH RijIUMATIC WRI (DOMPANY, I

B Act quickly and gently upon the W ■ digestive organs, carrying off the ■ ■ dt»t urbing element* and establishing ■ S a healthy condition of the liver, ■ ■ Stomach and bowel*. ■ ■ THE BEST REMEDY B >9 Cent* Far Box Wk AT DRIKMIBTS The greatest danger from influenza is of Its resulting in penumonla. This can be obivlated by using Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, as It not only cures influenza, but counteracts any tendency of the disease towards pneumonia. Sold by all dealers. o