Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, March 30, 1901, Page 6

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hey Aveid Nervous Prostration. r are dangerously sick what {s the duty of your physician? He uiete the nervous system, he deadens he pain, and you sleep well. Friends ask, “‘what is the cause?” end the answer comes in pitying tomes, nervous peas reticent Se came ‘wpou you so quietly in the beginning, that 25 were mot aleeeea and when aleep deserted you night after night cat yeur eyes fairly burned in the @erkmees, then you tossed in nervous egeay praying for sleep. Mas. A. HArrLer, You ought to have known that whor you ceased to be regular in your courses, and you grew irritable with- @ut cause, that there was serious trouble somewhere. You ought to know that indigestion, exhaustion, womb displacements, fainting, dizziness, headache, and backache send the nerves wild with effright, and you cannot sleep. Mra. Hartley, of 221 W. Congress St., Chicago, Ill., whose portrait we pub- lish, suffered all these agonies, and was entirely cured by Lydia E. Pink- hham's Vegetable Compound; her whould be a warning to others, beer cure carry conviction to the minds of every suffering woman of the un- failing efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Wegetable Compound. He who climbs needs watch wher the [adder ends. Pile and Fistula Cure. Sample treatment of our Red Cross Pile and Wistala Cure and book explaining cause and cure ef Pilas, sent free to any address for four cents in @tamps. Rea Bros. & Co., Minneapolis, Minn. A truly Christian life has greater ower than all the Christian literature. Wheat Do the Children Drink? Den't give them tea or coffee. Have you isd the new food drink called GRAIN-O? it is delicious and nourishing, and takes the ef coffee. The more Grain-O you give .e children the more health you distribute @hrough their systems. Grain-O is made of re grains, and when properly prepared Gass ft the choice grades of Rlpetany if #3¢ asmuch. All grocers Bc and 25c. Jay Gould's Timely Hint. “f called upon Jay Gould once to ask fara for a rule that would bring me @uccess in my work,” said Edward Boy- er, principal of one of the finest gram- mar schools in New York City. “Every @ue who knew Jay Gould knew that he was a preoccupied man—that his thoughts were usually far away from the present scene. I was introduced to him by a friend, but I felt that he was mcarcely conscious of my presence. We fhad planned to make some startling remark to attract his attention; and, @s I did so, the great financiar looked @t me for a second as ff he saw me for the first time. Then I put my impor- tant question. “What is your business?” he asked, @e quick as a flash. “f am a schoolmaster,” I replied. “Then Iet the other people do the work.” The advice was to the point, and has proved invaluable.—Success. ‘The Meaning in na Squeak. Gas de Smith—Those new boots of yours squeak awfully; perhaps they eta’t paid for yet? Johnny—That’s all nonsense. If there fs anything in that, why don’t my coat, and vest, and my trousers, and my hat squeak, too?—Exchange. NEARLY GONE. Iahan, of Owosso, Narrow Excape— Mira. Saiia A. M Mic ¥ Little Hope. . Has a V The Dector Had Owosso, Mich., March 25.—(Special.) —Elfte Rebekah Lodge, No. 2, I. O. O. los- F., of this town, came very nearly ing their esteemed and capable se ry, Mrs. Julia A. Mallahan. Mrs. Malla- fan caught a severe cold last winter, end ike many others, failed to recog- the dangerous possibilities until it ecttled In her kidneys and left her with very severe bearing down pz end almost constant backache. It al most carried her off. Mrs. Mallahan felis the story this way: “¥ caught a cold last winter, which I { megiected until it settled in my kid- “ meys, causing severe bearing down pains and almost constant bachache. My health had previously been so good that I paid little attention to these symptoms, until the disease had gone ao far that my doctor entertained but ight hope of my recovery. Fortunately, one of our Lodge Mem- rentioned Dodd's K ptlicn of the cur sounded like a fa haif told the do. ‘I bless the them, and have est praise for them. Many ver gaved by the t ney Pils. been in’ © to not a few of t ‘© and other Michigan ns. There seer be no case of kid ouble or backache tat Dodd's Kid: will not cure. They are jvc a box x boxes for $2.50. Buy them fror ur local drug- sist if yo an. If cannot supply yau, send to the Dodds Medicine Com- pany, Buffaio, N. Y. Manifestations of “4m CT as int young man, Dolly? “Well, you quote more poetry than ny Matter. t as your other WOMEN MUST SLEEP, | fhe does, but I think he beats you on meckties.”—Chicago Record. ° e e ° e @ ° e ° @ e ar h In the House. tarium for consumptives reported a St. Paul, March 21.—Representative | Substitute measure to the senate. It Jacobson sprung a decided, sensation in the house yesterday by making the statement that he had in his possession evidence of bribery and corruption in connection .with the recommendation of the committee to refer his bill pro- viding for a 4 per cent gross earnings tax to the new tax,commission, Rep- resentative Washburn, upon the defeat of Mr. acobson’s motion to have the bill placed on general orders, said he had evidences of corruption which he desired to place before the house. Mr. Jacobson, in the course of his remarks in support of his bill, made the sen- sational statement that “one of the most ccrrupt legislatures ever as- sembled in St. Paul has infested the capitol for three weeks.” Exciting scenes followed the charges of Mr. Ja- cobson and Mr. Washburn and de- mands for the appointment of an in- vestigating committee were loud and persistent. A resolution directing the speaker to appoint a committee of five members to investigate the alleged charges was carried unanimously. The committee will be named to-day. The debate on Mr. Jacobson’s meas- ure consumed the entire day. The re- port favorable to the bill was defeated by a vote of 65 to 49. Consideration of the senate resolu- tion providing for adjournment April 5 was postponed until Saturday. In the Senate. The Burrs telephone bill was killed by the senate yesterday, and a substi- tute, granting the same rights without endanger'ng any provision of either the St. Paul or Duluth charters. was introduced in its stead and passed un- der suspension of the rules. The Chilton meat inspection Dill was withdrawn yesterday and a Dill from the senate committee on public health substituted. the former for the payment of fees for in appropriation of $65,000 is made to car- ry inspection into effect during the coming two years. ‘The board of control bill was put over until 2:30 to-day and the amend- ment adopted Tuesday was referred to a coramittee to be redrafted. Among several bills passed was the Lord divorce bill, one of the condi- tions of which is that all divorce cases must be heard in open court. In the House. St. Paul, March 22.—Speaker Dow- ling yesterday named Representatives Mallory, Whitford, Johnson, Wells and Lee as a committee to investigate the charges made by Messrs. Jacobson and Washburn that bribery and corruption had been used in connection with the attempt to refer the gross earnings tax bill to the tax commission. committee is expected to immediately begin the consideration of the evidence in the possession of Messrs. Jacobson and Washburn and sift the ugly charges to the bottom. The opponents of the Jacobson bill are at a assert that Messrs. Washburn must prove their charges or take the consequences. They claim that the bribery charges were made to delay action on the bill. The charges were expected to furnish fuel for in- flaming public sentiment that pressure might be brought to drive sufficient number of the opponents of immediate Jacobson and passage of the Dill into the Jacobson | camp to insure against its reference to the tax commission. Representative Laybourn of St. Louis, who led the fight to secure the reference of the gross earnings tax bill to the tax commission, yesterday submitted an amendment to the report of the majority of the tax committee, providing that the subject matter of the bill be referred to the tax com- mission with the instruction that that body prepare a bill or bills covering the subject of railroad taxation to be submitted to the legislature with the commission's report on the revision of the tax laws. The amendment, after a vigorous debate in which the charges of corruption were again brought to the front by the champions of the bill was adopted by a vote of 60 to 51. The lies on the table, stil] in the pos- session of the house, and may be taken up and pi ed or killed at any time Mr. Jacobson can marshal a majority of the strength present. The hcuse passed ‘the anti-cigarette bill. In the Senate. The Jones and Daly anti-trust bills were passed by the senate after a lengthy debate, the opposition being led by Senator Wilson of Minneapolis. One of these bills is to forbid all pools, trusts and conspiracies in restraint of trade, and the other puts the measure in force for all existing as well as future trusts, and regulates court jurisdiction. The board of control bill over until to-day. Senator Ives introduced a bill short- ening the legislative sessions to eighty was put R paying a sympathetic tribute to the life and work of the late plain Lewis were adopted. Rev. innerd of St. Peter was elected to fill the vacant chaplaincy. The Hickey bill reducing the rate of | interest on state land contracts from 5 to 4 per cent was passed. In the Senate. Paul, March 23, — The board of control bill passed the senate by a vote of 40 to 16, amended to include every state institution except the sol- dier’s heme. Absolute supervision of the affairs of all the state institutions except the soldiers’ home. Absolute supervision of the affairs of all the state institutions except the university, normal schools, schools fog the deef and blind and the state school for in- digent children is given. Over the financial affairs of these the board will have supervisory power. The board of corrections and charities is abolished. Senator Chilton’s marriage bill final- ly ran the gauntlet of the upper house and was passed with only seventeen opposing votes. ‘The special committee on the Daugh- St. “erty bill providing for a state sani- The provisions of | ection are eliminated, and an | The | white heat and vociferously | provides for the immediate appoint- ment of five commissioners to select a site and purchase 1,000 acres, and to report fitting plans for such an estab- lishment to’ the next legislature. The reapportionment bill was report- ed from conference and passed both houses. The only change is that Wa- seca county is left in the First district. In the House. Mr. Hurd’s bill for the maintenance of bicycle sidepaths and the licensing of wheels was yesterday passed with- out amendment by the house. Representative Alley’s bill authoriz- ing the state superintendent of in- struction to reyoke the certificate of teaches for breaches of contract was passed. Representative Alvord, St. Louis, is the author of a bill providing that non- residents shall enjoy only the same rights of exemption in garnishment granted bona fide residents of the state. A bill providing for the vacation of | roads established under common law | dedication unused for a period of one year and their restoration to the own- ers was introduced by Representative Johnson of Hennepin. In the House. St. Paul, March 25.—The thirty-sec- ond session of the Minnesota legisla- |ture will adjourn April 12. The sub- stitute resolution fixing the date of djcurnment adopted in both houses ; Saturday afternoon, carries with it a recommendation for an extra session, to be called by the governor in Febru- | ary, 1902, for the consideration of the j tax ecmmission’s repor The thirty- second session abbreviated by thirteen days of the statute limitation of nine- | ty days will be the first shortened ses- sion in the history of the state. Representative Laybourn, St. Louts, introduced in the house a bill provid- ing for the distribution of 90 per cent | of the total amount of railroad gross | earnings tax received by the state to | counties, cities and villages and or- ganized towns, in lieu of the present | system under which the state retains | the whole amount. | The uniform text book bill, recently | introduced in the senate by Senator | Reeves, was introduced in the house | by Representative Berg, Rosseau. The bill provides for the appointment by the governor of a text book commis- sion, whose duty it shall be to decide | upon a uniform series of text books covering the common branches to be | used in the public schools and to enter into contracts for the purchase of the books decided upon. In the Senate. The legislature is asked to appro- | priate $35,600 for the revision and codi- | fication of the state laws in a bill in- j troduced by Senator Lord. It results from the public hearing several weeks ago, xt which leading members of the bar urged that there is a necessity for such action. A good roads bill, introduced by Sen- ator Johnson, declares that all Minne- ; Sota roadways are regarded as being two rods wide, and makes extensive | provisions for their care and main- tenance. State Treasurer Block’s bill provid- ing for a board of deposit to determine where state funds shall be placed was recommended to pass by the senate. Senator Wilson secured the passage tof a. bill authorizing the tax commis- sion to secure and examine witnesses and to have books and papers affecting its work produced in evidence. In the Senate. St. Paul, March 26—fhe Dunn direct primary election ill, passed by the house, was reported to the senate yes- terday from the committee on elections | without amendment and with the rec- ommendation that it pass. ; Senotor Du Toit introduced a bill | providing that at the next senatorial electicn senators from uneven num- bered districts shall be elected for but two years, the term of all senators thereafter to be as at present—four |years. This bill is designed to permit |half the senate members to hold over lat each election. The Torrey house bill providing for the sale of the state capitol lands in Kandiyohi county was recommended for passage. After killing a similar bill from Sen- |ator Wilson the upper house has rec- | ommended that J. A. Peterson’s con- atitutional revision bill be passed. In the House. A resolution empowering the bribery linvestigating committee to summon | witnesses, administer oaths and later | submit the testimony taken, to the | house, was adopted without opposition, | Representative Hurd introduced a | pil providing for the distribution of | the portraits of the Minnesota state | officials and legislators among them- |selves and various libraries at a cost | to the state of $5,000. | The house practically cleared up the jealendar yesterday. The most impor- | tant measures passed were those per- | mitting voters to vote for all pre | dential electors by making one cross, |and amending the game and fish laws. | "Phe latter makes the closed season for |} woodcock or upland plover from Nov. 1 to Sept. 1; for trout, Sept. 1 to April and for black, gray or Oswego bass, rch 1 to June 1. YOUNG CHOATE RESIGNS. Third Seeretary of London Embassy Retires From Diplomatic Servic Washington, March 27. — The resig- nation of Joseph H. Choate, Jr., son of Ambassador Choate and third secre- tary of the United States embassy at London, has been accepted, to take effect March 31. William C. Eustis of | Washington was appointed to the | place. DEATH OF CHARLES S. MAY. \Lieutenant Governor of Michigan From 1863 to 1865. Kalamazoo, Mich., March 27—Charles S. May, lieutenant governor of Michi- gan from 1863 to 1865, and an eminent member of the Michigan bar, died sud- denly at his home, Island View, Cull Lake, from heart failure. He was sev- enty-one years of age. To Spell Shakespearc’s Name. It has been shown that Shake- speare’s name has been spelled, by re- sponsible writers, in 1,906 different ways. In his own time, his contempo- raries spelled his name in thirty-two different ways. Passing of Yellowstone Park. It is said that the geysers which have made this park famous are gradually de- clining. This brings to mind the fact that decline is the law of the world. Health is the most precious possession in the world, and too great care cannot Be given to it. In the spring, you should renew your strength, revitalize your bl and nerves with the best of all medicines, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, It also cures stomach disorders. Try it. Good Subject Makes Good Talker. McCarthy—Old Brown declares you are the most entertaining talker in the club. What do you usually talk about in his company? McCommick— Old Brown.— Harlem Life. Your picture on a first-class Photo Button, only 10c, from any Photo; same returned un- harmed. Other Photos cheap. Sample button, 2% stamp, Rogan’s Studio, Whitehall, Wis. The Ruling Passion, First Enthusiastic Golfer—I say, will you play another round with me on Thursday? Second Enthusiastic Golfer—Well, I am booked to be married on that day— but it can be postponed.—Punch. Try Grain-O! Try Grain-Ot Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a ackage of GRAIN-O, the new food drink hat takes the place of coffee. ‘The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without dis- tress. 3{ the price of coffee. 1c and 25 ctm per package. Sold by all grocers. For Keeps. ‘Ascum—So you've got a political sit- uation? Do you expect to keep it? Rafferty—Faith, I do, so, an’ what’s more, I ixpict it to kape me.—Phila- delphia Press. Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes, Allen’s Foot- Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE, Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y. Diliatory Discovery. De Sappy—I hadn’t been talking with him five minutes before he called me an ass. She—Why the delay?—Smart Set. PATENTS, List of Patents Issucd Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. William Collier, St. Paul, Minn., end- less adjustable screen; Harry A. Earn- shaw, Minneapolis, Minn., toy bank: John E, Erickson, Stt. Paul, Minn., dovetailing machine; Theodore Fenske, Billings, Mont., bottling machine at- tachment; Franklin M. Gilbert, St. Paul Minn., rectifier for electric currents; Franklin Gilbert, St. Paul, Minn., elec- tric switch; Frederick C. Penney, Minneapolis, Minn., wooden building construction; Dickinson L. Rose, Man- kato, Minn., water distilling apparatus; Otto Teigen, Lowry, Minn., vehicle wheel. Lothrop & Johnson. patent attorneys, 911 & 912 Pioneer Press Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. In most things success depends on knowing how long it takes to succeed. —Montesquieu. UNDER THE SN ; i Ghastly Truths Revealed on the Disap- pearance of Winter’s White Mantle. Deadly dangers lurk in the ground left bare by the departing snow. All winter long there have been accumu- lating deadly disease germs. - These have been protected and kept alive by the covering of snow and now, with the first warm days, these death- bringing microbes are awakened by the rays of the sun, and as the ground dries they are carried to all corners of the community in the dust that is blown everywhere by the spring winds. The human body at this time is par- ticularly susceptible to these germs, especially the germs of fevers. The system has been depleted by the fore- going winter. The blood is sluggish and filled with impurities. The nerves have not recovered from the tension they have been under for the past months. The stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, the liver are all at their worst. It is therefore, not strange that these germs of disease find fertile ground in which to thrive, flourish and develop into deadly ills. Spring is the time of year when one should fear an attack of fever, espe- cially when the system is depleted, one should dread any severe illness. The vitality is at a low ebb. There is less power of resistance to throw off dis- ease, and it is on this account that fatalities are so much greater during the spring months than at any other time of the year. There is but one way to ward off such dangers, and that is to fortify the human body so that it will become im- picenahe to the germs of invading dis- ease, To do this take Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy. It will build you up quickly, it will re-establish your waning appetite, it will give you rest- ful nights of sleep, it will give vim and vigor to the nerves, and it will dispel all existing poisons that have accumulated in the body besides coun- teracting the effects of others that may accumulate. Following is an instance that will fl- lustrate the wonderful power of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve rem- edy. Sheriff Jonas T. Stevens, who is sheriff of Hyde Park, Vt., says:—“I have used Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy especially as a blood purifier. I had a very severe humor on my arms, accompanied by a very bad itching, so severe that I could not sleep nights, causing me great incon- venience by the loss of sleep by the itching. A friend advised me to take Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy, which I did with the most satisfactory results, for the trouble has entirely disappeared, and I can now rest comfortably nights and have none of my former misery from the burn- ing, itching sensations.” Remember Dr. Greene’s advice will be given to any one desiring same ab- solutely’ free if they will write or call upon him at his office, 35 W. 14th St, New York City. “The antiquarian has no use for a thing until time has rendered it use- less. We thank you for trying Wizard Oil for rheumatism or neuralgia, then you will thank us. Ask your druggist. The more checks a spendthrift has the faster he goes. Some articles must be described; White’s Yucatan needs no description; it’s the real thing. Time is like a creditor who allows an ample space to make up accounts, but is inexorable at last. FITS Permanently Cured. Nofits ornervousness afte? rst day's use of Dr. Kiine’s Great Nerve Kestorer, §nd for FREE 82.00 trial bottle and treatiso, Ta, R. H. Kitxk, J.td., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa, The talent of success is nothing more than. doing what you can do well.— Longfellow. Indigestion is a bad companion. Get rid of it by chewing a bar of Adams’ Tutti Frutti after each meal. A man’s shoes may get tight by im- Libing water, but he doesn’t. WE CAN SELL YOUR BUSINESS, Have some attractive openings in all lines. —Iteferences, Odlum-Kurtzman Co. Phoenix Bld Minneapolis. When you speak in your praise you add nothing to your reputation.—Ter- rence. The Grand Trunk Ry. System, in connection with the Lehigh Valley R. R., will on June 2nd put on a new sol- id vestibule train tg New York, leaving Chicago at 11:30 a. m. daily. The equipment is being built especially for this service, and is said to be the best that money and workmanship can turn out. During the Pan-American Exposi- tion this train will also have a Pull- man sleeper for Buffalo, arriving at that point at 6:15 a. m. A good heart is better than all the heads in the world.—Bulwer Lytton. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any vase of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’ Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga- tions made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O,; Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Di ‘ists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mucoussurfaces of the system. Testimoniais sent free. Price ‘ec per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Not Completed. Mrs. Darling—You told me before we were married that you had an income of $3,000 a year. What has become of it? Mr. Darling—Can’t tell you until I get an itemized bill from your dress- maker.—Denver News. ot CONSTIPATED OLD AGE all bowel troubles, headache sliver trouble, CURE i: pains eal and dizziness. en _ other discases ue bewels ‘Tight. Ere fousness, bad breath, on stomach, bloated bowels, foul en your bowels don’t move = xe Constipation hills mere nesses. vigorous with CATHARTIC, ever heard of, Means misery on the eve of life. Nine out of ten old people are constipated because the muscles of their intestines have become weak, worn out and flabby. Constipation is the curse of old age, causes bile and acid poisons to remain in the blood, making the skin yellow and wrinkled, the eyes bleary and causing the “bones to ache.” Keep the bowels strong, healthy and regular and old age loses all its terrors and weak- No reason why grandpa and grandma shouldn’t have bright eyes, and clear, ruddy skin and feel lively and active, if they will only keep their bowels open and CASCARETS CANDY the greatest bowel tonic Try them to-day—a 50c box—a whole month’s treatment—and find that the tortures of constipated old age are PREVENTED BY dicitis, bil i aS wind estion, pimples, low complexion together. It is a 10. A toeday, under an gates to eure or money retundeas GUARANTEE Beery Baer ‘was sold. low it te = ion boxes @ OW.

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