Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, October 22, 1904, Page 3

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ee SADIE ROBINSON. Pretty Girt Suffered From Nervousness and Pelvic Catatrh—Found Quick Reliet in a Few Days. NERVOUSNESS AND WEAKNESS CURED BY PE-RU-NA. Miss Sadie Robinson, 4 Rand street, Taiden, Mass., writes: Peruna was recommended to me about a year age n excellent remedy for the troubles peculiar to our sex, and as I found that all that was said of this n sine was true, I am pleased to en- dorse it. «I began to use it about seven months ego tor weakness and nervousness, caused from overwork and sleepless- ness, and found that in a few days I began to grow strong, my appetite in- creased and I began to sleep better, consequently my nervousness passed away and the' weakness in the pelvic organs soon disappeared and I have been well and strong ever since.’” Address Dr. S, B. Hartman, President XN ‘ of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, ©., for free medical advice. All corres- pondence strictly confidential. Instantly stops the pain of Burns and Scalds. Always heals without scars. 2 and Sc by druggists, or mailed on receipt of price by J.W. Cole & Oo., Black River Fafls, Wis vYEAS?7, <caid(Can) BEE FOAM Women who use Yeast Foam are always suc- cessful in the art of bread-mnaking. Their bread is light, sweet as a nut, ard full of nu- triment. The secret of Bread Success lies in Yeast Foam—the yeast that’s made of whole- some malt, hops and corn; the yeast that’s always fresh and ready for use. The secret is in the yeast. Yeast Foam issold by allgrocers at je a package—enough for 40 “How to Make " free, NORTHWESTERN YEAST CO., CHICAGO mms KEEP WESTERN CANADA’S Magnificent Crops for 1904. Western Canada's Wheat Crop this Year Will be 60,- 000,000 Bushels, and Wheat at Pres- entis Worth $1.00a Bushel. The Oat and Barley Crop Will Also Yield Abundantly. Splendid prices for all kinds of grain. cattle d other farm produce for the growing of rich the climate is unsurpassed. Ab 50,000 Americans have settled in West- ern Cauada during the past three year as of free homesteads of 160 acres available in the best agricultural dis- as been said that the United States will se import wheat within a very few » a farm in Canada and become ho will produce it. for information to Superintendent of tion, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized Government Agent—E. T. Holmes, son Street, St. Paul, Minn. _£\¥ GOOD OIL Nay Costs a trifle mora bs ‘ Ss es Safe, reliable. All grocers, 8t. Paul. Minneapolis. CONSUM *' PLEDGES \ REPUBLICAN PARTY HAS DELUD- ED THE FARMER. Legistation Asked for by the National Grange Promised but Not Enacted —Reasons for, Voting for Demo- cratic Candidates. The National Grange at its annual meeting in 1902, decided on the fol- lowing lines of national legislation: “General rural free delivery; postal savings banks; election of United States senators by the people; a con- stitutional amendment giving Con- gress power to regulate and control trusts and other combinations; en- largement of the powers of interstate commerce commission; regulation of the use of shoddy; pure food laws; provision for the extension of markets for products equally with manufac- tured articles; enactment of an anti- trust law clearly defining what acts on the part of any corporation would be detrimental to public welfare; speedy construction of the Nicaragua canal; speedy construction of a ship canal connecting the Mississippi river with the great lakes and the latter with the Atlantic ocean.” Nearly all these reforms have been brought forward by the Democrats in Congress and yoted down by the Re- publicans, the exceptions being rural free delivery, which both parties fav- ored, and the partial enactment of pure food laws. Both parties favor- ed the oceanic canal, though the sub- stitution of the Panama route for the Nicaraguan by the Republicans has been a source of scandal and will probably delay the attainment of that much desired improvement. The Grange this year again de- mands similar legislation as it did in 1902, it will be still further postponed if the Republicans succeed in electing their ticket. At the Congressional election of 1902 the farmers in the Northern states evidently believed the pledge of the Republican candi- dates, that they would enact the leg- islation asked for by the Grange, but although the Congress then elected has had nearly two years to show its good faith and redeem the pledge made to the farmers no such legisla- tion has been accomplished. Will these farmers, who must feel they have been deluded, continue to rely upon Republican promises, or will they kick over the traces and vote for the candidates who. they know will carry out the Grange pro- gram? The record shows that the Democrats introduced bills for the leg- islation demanded, but it was either smothered in committee, or voted down by the Republican majority. To obtain legislation, such as the* Nation- al Grange suggests, it is utterly use- less to rely upon the pledge of a can- didate whose party does not favor it. The candidate, if elected. may hon- estly intend to redeem his promises, but when he takes his seat in Con- gress he finds the three Republican members of the Committee on Rules a barrier over which he cannot climb unless a majority of all the members of his party are on his side. Even then if the leaders decide that the legislation is against the railroads, or other combination of vested inter ests, they postpone action until the corporation lobby have had time to “ecnvert” a minority into a majority. ‘Pnere are other ways that are dark and tricks that are vain for which the Republican machine politician is pecu- liar. The moral of it all is, to vote for the candidates of the party who will not throW these extraordinary ohstacles in the way of legislation the people d Farm Produce and Protection. The farmer who has been he; into believing that the protect tar- iff helps him obtain an enhanced vrice for his produce, should remem- ber that the farmer is an exporter and not a manufacturer threatened, with imports. The farmer must have mar- kets abroad for he raises more than the home market can consume. He dees not fear any competitor from a foreign ¢ountry, so what protection can a tariff on farm products give him? No one is going to send wheat, or meat, or corn, or cotton here to compete with him. After he has sold all the American pecple can consume the surplus must find a market abroad in competition with the sur- plus of other countries. Nearly al- wey! the’ price that the surplus brings abroad fixes the price at home. What the farmer needs is not a ive tariff, but protection from s, elevator combines and cor- porations. "High freight rates and high trust prices for all the farmer buys, eat up his profits and these high freight rates and largeiy increas- ed cost of all he buys is mainly caused by the protective tariff. Steel rails and nearly everything the railroads use are increased in cost one-third by protection and, of course the farmer pays his share of the bills. Farm ma- chinery, tools,. barbed wire, building material, clothes and many more articles that might be mentioned are protected by the tariff so that the manufacturers can charge a_ great deal beyond a reasonable profit. All this, and more, the farmer pays and still some otherwise sensible farmers, vote for the party which is openly in league with those who plunder them. Remember that the Republican na- tional platform and state and con- gressional district platforms pledge the candidates to uphold the protec. ‘tive tariff, so no relief can be expected from a Republican congress or a Re- publican president. ‘ Rebuked its Own Party, Even the most hide-bound Republic- an newspapers occasionally acknowl- edge the way the protective tariff but the prospect of obtaining | | the protected trusts. Now the elec- | tion approaches. and the Republican | as meroury platform and President Roosevelt have both declared that protection must be adhered to, the organs grind out the same tunes. The Chicago Inter Ocean is per- haps the most intensely partisan and truly loyal of al! the Republican or- gans, yet it has evidently felt that the G. O. P. must be stayed in its wayward course of protecting the few at the expense of the many or disaster to the Republican party would be inevitable. The editorial referred to shows that the boasting of President Roosevelt about our pros- perity under Republican policies is only for a part of the people and that the majority are getting worse off through the increased cost of living. The Democrats have so often proved these facts that it is an old tale and thought by many‘ to be exaggerated for partisan purposes, but here comes the bitter, biting blasts from this or- gan of protection which in a sane mo- ment tells the truth when it says: “Yet it may be doubted if one-half the heads of American families are in as favorable a position as they were in 1897. The third party—the majority who are neither capitalists nor able to fortify themselves behind labor union walls—is to-day giving more proportionately than in 1897, while getting only the same. “When capitalists combine to raise prices, reduce expenses, or anticipate profits it is this third party that pays the higher prices. stands the reduc- tion of expenses, and converts the an- | ticipated profits into actual ones.” It is well to ponder on that and consider whence it came, to thorough- ly understand the admissions of the enormity of the crime that the Repub- licans have fastened on those of lim- ited incomes and then further consid- er another paragraph from the same | deliverance: “The plain truth is that fully one- | half the workers of the United States |—the men whose incomes are from $600 to $3,000 a year, the men who are neither in trusts nor labor unions, have not been getting their share of thé national prosperity. They are working for the prosperity of capital and organized labor, but no one is working for them. And under this | burden they are becoming exhausted.” That is as the Inter Ocean says, “the ‘plain truth.” But the men who con- trol the dominant party still shout. “Let well enough alone!” “Stand pat!” “Hands off!” A Lively Trust. The press dispatches report that the beef trust has again advanced the price of choice cuts of beef, although the price of cattle declined and the number of cattle received at the Chi- cago market was beyond the average. The Republican spellbinders who have prepared their orations on the theory that Prestdent Roosevelt has smashed the packers vise their speeches. One of two things must have happened—either the beel packers are defying the administra tion, or they have earned immunity by generous donations to the Republican campaign fund. The beef trust is ac knowledged by the administration tc be a bad trust, or the courts would not have been asked to quash it; yet the proceedings against it and the injunction of the court does not help the meat consumers. What a farce these trust prosecutions are, and will people be content to be fooled all the time? Pledged to Stop Extravagance. In these days of extraordinary ex. travagance in the expenditure of pub: lic money, when millions of dollars are squandered without a thought o! the future, there is a class of politi cians who scoff at the idea that the people care anything about it or that they will endeavor through the ballot to punish a political party that fosters the wasting and plundering of taxes. Judge Parker, jowever, sincerely believes that the people do care about such matte that they are opposed to all maladministration, and earnest: ly desire to have the finances of the: government honestly and economically managed. He does not hesitate, there. fore to criticise unsparingly the gross extravageace that has prevailed in the management of the federal finances for many years, and pledges himself te stop it if he is elected. Good Reasons for a Charige. Republicans who detest Roosevelt- ism, but do not like to ally them. selv@s with the Democrats, should take courage from the example of De Witt Clinton Overbaugh, President of the Grand Hotel company of New York, a lifelong Republican. He was a member of the famous committee of seventy who overthrew Tammany, and is president of the North Side Board o1 Trade. His reason for his change of heart he declares to be that he dislikes the methods of Mr. Roosevelt and cannot trust him to settle the vital questions of national importance such as: “Mo nopolies, strikes, investigation and punishment of dishonest public offi- cials, squandering uselessly the pub lic money, and the rich trust combines which are eating like a cancer intc the very life of the nation, and the tariff to be adjusted properly.” The Issue Reiterated. Shall this be a well regulated gov: ernment or am-erratic, loose govern- ment? Shall it be controlled and head- ed by a man bred and trained to inti- macy and profound veneration for the constitutional methods of administra: tion, or by one who is out of sympathy with constitutional processes, unfitted by temperament to subordinate him: self to his function and intolerant of restraints?—-St. Louis Republic. - combine wil] have to re} NEVER KEPT Vciabaess pie Sele for the benefit of, Beware of Ointments fer Caturce ae i ‘that Contain Mercury, will surely destroy the sense of smell ang pietely ‘the whole when ae it proash | mucous surfaces. Such eg ies should never be used except on prescri 17 Ip- reputable physicians. as the damace the ‘Will do 18 ten fold to the good You can possibly de- ES from them. Hall's Ci ‘hb Cure, /anufactured F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.. contsins no mer cury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the sysiem, In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure You get the Genuine: Tt ie taken internally and made tn Toledo, bio, by EJ. Cheney & Co. | Testimoniale free. 1d by Drugglats. Price, 75c. per bottle. 1's Famtiy Pills for consttpation. Bo! Take It’s Easy. Teacher—What is the meaning of “parvenu?” JohnnyAn upstart. Teacher—Give me’a sentence in which the word is usedt Johnny—When a man sits down on | @ bent pin he gives a violent parvenu. HEAVES IN. HORSES Can be cured with Spohn's Liquid Distemper Cure, it the case ix curable. Alo the best for for horses ‘wind broken” and catarrh and glect. All forms of distemper it cures, and prevents the disease from spreading. ‘All druggists, harness dealers, or delivered by manufacturers. Bottle 50 cents; dozen, #5.00. Agents wanted, Book free. Write SPOHN MEDICAL Co.. Live Stock Doctors, Goshen, Ind. French Heels. “Who was it,” shouted the suffrage | leader—“who was it that did the most | to elevate woman?” | Far down the aisle a little chap blinked his eyes and drawled, “Why, the man that invented those high | French heels.” | And then the meeting adjourned. Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. SAMUEL, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17. 1900. Knows His Business. “Yonder goes a doctor that knows his business.” “Doesn’t strike me that way. He has been doctoring old Moneybags for years, and Moneybags isn’t a bit bet- ter to-day than he was when the doc- tor began at him.” 4 “Just what I say. The doctor knows his business. He gets ten thousand a year from old Moneybags.” Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces fn Aammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. '25ca bottle. Sure Proof. A minister made an interminable call upon a lady of his acquaintance. Her little daughter, who was present, grew weary of his conversation and whispered in an audible tone: “Didn’t he bring his amen him?” with | Murine Eye Remedy cures sore eyes, makes weak eyesstrong. All druggists, 50c. More Than a Match for Him. A country youth in London got into conversation with a seedy looking man in a restaurant, and during the chat he let drop the remark that he would not mind giving half a crown to see a real London sharper. “Well, keep it dark,” said the other, “put I don’t mind telling you that I am one.” “If that’s so, returned the bumpkin, “then I suppose I'll ha’e to gi’e thee ‘arf-crown.” This he did with the re- mark, “But let’s ha’ some o’ thee tales.” Accordingly the supposed sharper related several good yarns, and the | other, being much pleased, said: “Well, thee must be a real London | | sharper. Just thee gi’e me that ‘arf- crown back; I'll gi’e thee five shill- ings.” | Without hesitation the bogus charp- ; er returned the half-crown, holding out | his hand for the promised five shill- | ings, whereupon, to his astonishment, ; the bumpkin rose, pocketed the half- crown and made off with the remark: “Thee’s no sharper, or thee’d ha’ | kept that 'arf-crown when thee ’ad it.” Could Get No Rest. | Freeborn, Minn., October 17 (Spe- cial).—Mr. R. E. Goward, a well-known | man here, is rejoicing in the relief | from suffering he has obtained through using Dodd’s Kidney Pills. His experience is well worth repeating |as it should point the road to health to many another in a similar condi- tion. | “T had an aggravating case of Kid- | ney Trouble,” says Mr. Goward, “that } gave me no rest day or night but | using a few boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills put new life in me and I feel like @ new man. “I am happy to state I have received great and wonderful benefit from Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I would heartily recommend all sufferers from Kidney | Trouble to give Dodd’s Kidney Pills a fair trial as I have every reason to be- lieve it would never be regretted.” Dodd's Kidney Pills make you feel like a new man or woman because they cure the kidneys. Cured kidneys mean pure blood and pure blood means bounding health and energy in every part of the body. A woman proceeds to monopolize the conversation, then wonders man has nothing to say. why a Two severe cases of Ovarian Trouble and two terrible operations avoided. Mrs. and Mrs. Emmons Coleman each tell how they were saved by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s “Dear Mrs. Prinxuam:—I am Vegetable Compound. so pleased with the results obtained from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound that I feel it a d uty and a privilege to write you about it. ” _ “I suffered for more than five years with ovarian troubles, caus- ing an unpleasant discharge, a great weakness, and at times a faintness would come over me which no amount of medicine, diet, or exercise seemed to correct. Your Vegetab le Compound found the weak spot, however, within a few weeks — and saved me from an operation — all my troubles had disappeared, and I found myself once more healthy and well. Words fail to describe the real, true, grateful feeling that is in my heart, and I want to tell every sick and suffering sister. Don’t dally with medicines you know nothing about, but take Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, and take my word for it, you will be a different woman in a short time.”— Mrs. Laura Emmons, Walker- ville, Ont. Another Case of Ovarian Trouble _ Cured Without an Operaticn. of the time. who had been woman, know of It is well to rememember such let to get you to buy something which he the use of your compound, took it faithfully for thrce months, and at the end of that time was glad to find that I was a well Health is nature’s best gift to woman. and if you lose it and can have it restore through Lydia pound I feel tha “Dear Mrs. Pinknam:— For several years I was troubled with ovarian trouble and a painful and inflamed condition, which kept me in bed part I did so dread a surgical operation. “I tried different remedies hoping to get better, but nothing seemed to bring relief until a friend cured of ovarian trouble, through nduced me to try it. I Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- ll suffering women should frs. Lavra BELite Coie. this.” — mAN, Commercial Hotel, Nashville, Tenn. ters as above when some druggist tries says is ‘‘ just as good” That is impos- sible, as no other medicine has such a record of cures as Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound ; accept no other and you will be giad. Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about your sickness you do not with kindness and her advice is understand. She will treat you free. No woman ever regretted writing her and she has helped thousands. Address Lynn, Mass. FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and ~ignatures of $5000 above testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuinenes: e Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co,, Lyow, Maas. ete. on Sold by druggists in If your druggist doc we wil) matt t for ou oi mention tis paper. THE GREAT HEALING REMEDY Positively cures har mals, and chilbluins, frost bites. _ IT HEALS WITHOUT A SCAR. free book "Trac with testimon OLNEY & NicDAID, Mifrs., Clinton, KING GAGTUS OIL ness Sorc collar sores, grease ¢ teats, mange, galls, ts, swellings, eprains. re she ed udde wr tem, ete., on people, omba 15¢ 5 decorated cans. and i0¢ for post tiles. $3 a1 his you atria ce, e Iuformation to Farmers and rt hundreds who have found liniment on earth. Be sure to the greatest la. and will send you prospectus E WART YOuR NAHE and full particulars of NINE SUCCESSFUL COLD, SILVER, COPPER, LEAD, ZINC AND QUICKSILVER Mining Companies, if you wil! send us your name and address, Mining Maps Free. ARBUCKLE-GOODE COMMISSION CO., 325 Olive Street, St. Louis, Me. A married man’s idea of heaven is a place where wives don’t ask their husbands for money. You can’t go abroad on a narrow in- come. MEXICAN Mustang Liniment is a positive cure for Piles. Hurts, the soreness dies out. When St. Jacobs Oil The old\monk cure, strong. straight, sure, tackles ‘ e Sprains, The muscles flex, the kinks untwist, Bruises Price 25c. and 50c. TO KEEP HENS strong and healthy, hurry them through molting, make em, as well as pullets, lay | vhen eggs are high isthe am- i jon of all breeders. Nothing: rth makes hens lay like |B SHERIDANSS Gone {t adds value to all kinds of feed, and supplies what is needed to form eggs. One pack, 25 cts; five, $1.00. can, $1.20; aix, $5.00, express paid. I. 8. JOHNSON '& CO., Boston, Mass. Two-lb. CREAMERY Co ST PAUL, STINTS: When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. TWafMicted with sore eyes, usc ThOMpson’s Eye Water N. W. N. U. —NO. 43— 1904. aus Woodward & Co., Grain Commission, 2. ORDERS FOR FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED Ii ALL MARKETS. -

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