Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, March 9, 1907, Page 7

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, ry TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY. & Woman Who Has Suffered Tells ‘How to Find Relief. The thousands of women who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders and other kidney ills, » will find comfort in the words of Mrs. Jane Farrell, of 606 Ocean Ave., Jersey City, N. J., who says: “I reiterate all I = have said before in praise of Doan’s Kid- D ney Pills. I had been having heavy backaches, and my general health was affected when I began using them. My feet were swollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy spells were frequent. Kidney action was irregular and the secre- tions highly colored. To-day, how- ever, I am a well woman, and I am confident that Doan’s Kidney Pills bave made me so, and are keeping me well.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Unpleasant truths always please a lot of people whom they do not con- cern. @TaTE OF OnI0, CITY oF TOLEDO, Lucas Couxrr. re Fraxx J. Cuxney makes oath that be te sentor partner of the firm of F. J. Cuznxy & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State sforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CaTaRRH that cannot be cured by the use of Hai's Caraznn Cours. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in mny pree euce, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. ~— ‘A. 'W. GLEABON, 5 \ f Pores Norary Pustre. Hal ‘atarrh Cure is taken internally and acts direc: e bloud and mucous surfaces of the eystem. for testimonials, free. . Je CHENEY & CO., Toleco, O Soid by all Drugetsti Take Hal)’s Family P! for constipation. Every time some people accept a favor they look for the price mark. SIGK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. ‘They also relieve Dis- ‘tress from Dyspepsia, In- digestion and Too Hearty Eating, A perfect rem- edy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature fitew® a0 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES, L NDS Unexcelled for general farm- NBD ing, stock, dairying, fruits, truck, ry best markets and transpor- arest office for listsand pub> rte.; convenient to th ri Yhio R. R.. Washington, D.C. Chemical Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. Eastern Washington Farm Lands Offer the best advantages for a home or investment. Climate unsurpassed. No 8estructive wind or hail storms. No pests. Oropssure. We offer the best raw and improved lands at low prices and ensy terms, near good towns and markets. Railroad fare refunded to pur- chasers. Low excursion rates. Write at once for illustrated pamphlet and map. THE BIG BEND LAND COMPANY, Should Hens be helped to make a large eld P Why not, as well as nabine cows to give extra ? SHERIOAES Gore is a scientific medicine invented to enable hens get the full benefit from all kinds of food. It’s the pioneer of tonics to make hens lay. In use over forty years. Gne peek ei five, $1 Reger mi n, $1.20; six, $5.00. xpress paid. At all deal I 8. JOHNSON a 'CO., Boston, Maas, To convince any woman that Pax- tine Antiseptic will improve her health do all we claim it. We will send her aheolutely free @ large trial box of Paxtine with book of Tnstruc- tions and genuine testimonials. Send ® your name and address on a postal card, cleanses and heals mucous me m- brane af- fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by femi- nine ills; sore eyes, sore throa’ mouth, by direct local treatment _ Its eur- ativé power over these troubles is extra- ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and ree- ommending it every day. 60 cents at druggists or by mail. ‘Remember, however, 'T COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. THE KR. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. EW WHEAT LANDS IN THE CANADIAN WEST 5.000 sdditional mites }UUU of railway this year have opened up a argely increased terri- tory to the progressive farmers 0! Western Canada and the Gov- ernment of the Domin- ion continues to give ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES FREE to every settler. THE COUNTRY HAS NO SUPERIOR Coal, wood and water in abundance; churches ‘and schools convenient; markets easy of access; taxes low; climate the best in the northern tem- perate zone, Law and order prevails everywhere, For advice and information address the SUPERINTENDENT OF “IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, og” authorized Canadian Government Agent. E. T. HOLMES, 325 Jackson Street, St. Peal, Minnesota. a It is probably safe to say that a careful and discriminating review of the business transacted by congress at its short session, would compe! the ad- mission that this three months’ ses- sion was productive of more important business than has emanated from the federal legislative body at any pre- vious short session in recent years. The chief features of the session May be summarized as follows: The development of distinctively new and important policies in federal appropriations. The passage of the immigration bill and the bill relating to appeals by the government in criminal cases. The resolution relative to the Brownsville episode and the resulting debate thereon, with respect to the in- fluence of that debate upon the dis- cussion of the race question in and out of congress. : While these features of the session stand out in bold relief, there are many other matters which will challenge the attention of the country as being of far reaching magnitude and impor- tance. ‘ *# * With respect to the appropriation pills passed within the ninety days of the session, it should be said that in no previous session has there been crowded into these federal expense budgets so much which makes for ‘wise public policy in dealing with the public moneys. This-is so notably true in the matter of the appropriations for rivers and harbors that the subject de- mands more than passing comment. The policy outlined in the river and harbor appropriation bill of this year is to complete a dozen or more of the largest projects in the international improvements, and to put in the way | projects of early completion other upon which a vast sum of money has been expended during the past quar- ter of a century. All the harbor proj- ects on the Atlantic seaboard, furnish- ing accommodations to the great for- eign and coastwise shipping, are now in a fair way to be completed within a short time. Projects on the Great Lakes and on the Mississippi and its tributaries are so provided for in the bill of this year that assurance is given of the comple- tion within a short time of a vast in- ternal waterway system connecting the upper sections of the Northwest with the gulf, and bringing the coun’ tributary to the Mississippi valley in closer touch with that great artery of commerce which flows through the fat valleys of the Middle West. ‘ The full scope of the important works accomplished by the river and harbor legislation, with respect to the harbors and rivers of the entire coun- try, and the new policy of bringing to speedy completion + most important projects, are certain to make for ma- terial development of the commerce, and industry of the entire country. * * ® In the details of other appropriation , bills policies are put into workable shape which are soon to plant the im- pression of federal laws upon com- merce and industry. This is particu- Jarly true in the matter of the details of the agricultural appropriation Dill, with its provisions for increased in- spection of food addition of plans for grain standards and inspection, and throwing around the trade of the country safeguards to prevent injury from the influences of frauds and adulterations. There are features of the postoffice supply bill, also, which are certain to prove of special value to the people, at least in the direction of pointing the ways to betterments to come. The mail delivery system, so important to the people everywhere, is to be encour- aged through more liberal compensa- tion of carriers, whether in the rural districts, in the cities or on the rail- ‘roads. With respect to the railway carriage, however, the increased cost is incurred in paying the postal clerks, and a diminuation of the aggregate ex- pense of mail carriage is secured by changes in the railway mail pay. x 8 * In the senate a protracted debate was brought about over the race prob- lem, incident to the passage of the resolution of inquiry into the Browns- yille matter. Whatever may be the re- sult of that inquiry, it is not too much to say that the debate on the whole question contributed more than any other single influence that has been in operation for many years to show up how much of cheap and frothy dema- gogy has been indulged in by agitators who have sought to profit by keeping alive the animosities engendered by race differences in the South and throughout the country. It was clearly shown during the de- bate that the race problem has been grossly exaggerated; that there is no call for the violent harangues which have been projected into the senate and out among the people by agitators who have painted the evils which have grown out of race differences in the South in too vivid colors. It will be more difficult in the future for the agi- tators to obtain public attention. In the meanwhile the people will quietly and methodically pursue their way in efforts to find a solution of the real problems involved in the so-called race question. ee The. senate also settled a question that has been before that body for products; with its } REV!EW OF THE WORK OF CONGRESS Important Measures Passed During the Short Session— Immigration Law—The Right of Appeal in | , Criminal Cases. | more than a year, namely the ratifica- tion of the Santo Domingo treaty. By this action the government of the United States is not committed to any more certain duty in looking after the interests of the Latin-American repub- lics of this hemisphere than is incur- red in the avowed national policy of upholding the Monroe doctrine. But what is gained, as is believed, by the ratification of this treaty is tranquillity in Santo Domingo and the aid and encouragement by this govern- | ment to Santo Domingo in pulling her- self out of the mire of debt in which she is involved without any accompa- nying annoyance from foreign nowers. s. * © With respect to general legislation, probably the most important action of the congress just closing was the pas- sage of the immigration bill and the measure conferring upon the federal government the right to appeal in criminal cases. The immigration law just enacted opens the way for improvement in the character of the immigrants that come to these shores. Taken in connection with the policy outlined in the provi- sign relative to the incoming of Orien- tal laborers and the provision for a thorough investigation of conditions surrounding emigrants and the sources of immigration in foreign countries the bill enacted at this session is of tremendous importance to the whole country, industrially and commercial- ly. It is a troublesome problem, this at- tempting to depart from the. ancient rule of asylum for the people of all lands. Time has shown, however, that the United States has, in addition to furnishing homes for the best classes of people, who have come to be Amer- ican citizens of the highest standard and who have contributed to the up- building of the nation in all directions where well directed labor and wealth production under wise laws have add- ed to.the comfort and happiness of this country—in addition to these desirable features the gates which have always opened inward have let in far too many undesirable people, diseased, maimed, degenerates and criminals, who have gone to swell the almshouses and the jails, thus becoming charges ‘upon the well-to-do in this land, as well as detracting from the social or- der and well being of our people. A measure which affords relief from | some of these great evils, as the im- migration law just enacted promises to do, cannot but be of great value to the American people. * * * The criminal laws of the United States are statutes passed by congress. There is no common law relating to crimes so far as the nation is concern- ed. Issues of law in the trial of per- sons charged with violation of the criminal statutes of the United States | have always been taken advantage of by defendants, but no provision exist- ed for the government taking such is- sues of law to the higher courts where the decisions of the judges of the low- er courts were favorable to the defend- ants. The law is changed by the action of the congress at its present session. The government will now have the| right to prosecute appeals or writs of | error on questions of law decided by| the inferior courts to the highest tri- bunal in the land. The defendant in a criminal court has always the protec- tion of his constitutional rights, which may be urged in his favor to the high- est court. « It has been found upon many occa- sions that decisions of the lower fed-} eral courts, touching questions of law, when in favor of the defendant on trial for infraction of a criminal law of the United States, even before the defend- ant has lost the protection of the jeop- ardy right in the constitution of the) country, has appeared to be so erro- neous that the defendant would go un- whipped of justicé. It is now provid-| ed that such issues of law so raised} may be prosecuted by writ of error) sued out by the government to test in the higher courts the soundness of the! legal opinion rendered by the judge in| the lower court. | So many new and complicated stat- utes of a criminal nature have been enacted by congress during the past} few years in the effort of the people to secure redress of grievances by the abolition of railway rebating and kin-| dred wrongdoing by great corporations! that it has come to be recognized that the government must, in the interests; of justice be clothed with the power to| test legal questions in criminal cases by some authority other than the} judges in courts of first instance. This! legislation is supplemental to the acts| of this and previous congresses intend-| ed to restrain the powers of those whose evildoing is, in the main, an| abuse of the use of wealth. oe © Among the other measures passed b) congress at this session is the curren- ey bill, making important changes in the laws relating to banking and the currency of the country. The chiet provision of this law is that the secre- tary of the treasury may now deposit customs receipts, as well as internal revenues, in the national bank deposi- taries. The object of this change is to give wider latitude to the head of the In a Pinch, Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE. ; A powder. It cures painful, smart- ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by all Druggists, 25¢. Accept no sub- stitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad- dress A, S, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. | The man who drinks to cure a cold | usually resorts to the same remedy for ) sunstroke. SHIP YOUR CREAM to Crescent Creamery Co., St. Paul, Minn. Write to-day for tags and prices, There are quarrels and quarrels, but ‘family quarrels are the worst. JOIN OUR EXCURSION TO TEXAS ;Mch. 19. Fine lands. Easy terms. TEXAS INTERNATIONAL LAND CO., St. Paul. Never judge the keenness of a wo- man’s intellect by the sharpness of her tongue. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the pred a tion allays pain, cures wind colic. Men are inclined to shy from a wo- man who plays the angelic role too strong, ONLY ONE “BROMO QUININE” | Thatis LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. Similarly | Damed remedies sometimes deceive. The first and | Sin nud vod lettering. sud boars the elgucrue ot lew . Bl ears ti B.W.GHOVE, 260. eee A New Broom. She (looking away off)—How clear the horizon is! He—Yes; I swept it with my eye. Proof of Merit. The proof of the merits of a plaster 1s the cures it effects, and the volun- tary testimonials of those who have used Allcock’s Plasters during the past sixty years is unimpeachable evidence of their superiority and should convince the most skeptical. Self-praise is no recommendation, but certificates from those who have used them are. , Allcock’s are the original and gen- uine porous plasters and have never been equaled by those who have sought to trade upon their reputation by making plasters with holes in them. Avoid substitutes as you would counterfeit money. As yet the mirror has not been made that will enable a man to see himself as others see him. You_have missed the best if Garfield Tea, Nature’s laxative, has been over- looked; take it to regulate the liver and to overcome constipation. Love never courts the cost—proba- bly because it seldom has the price. Panthers and Grizzly Bears. Furs, Hides, Pelts McMillan Fur & . Minneapolis. Write for prices. But silence isn’t necessarily golden; a talker may have something to say. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES produce the brightest and fastest colors with less work and no muss, Most of the old saws have Jost their teeth. ANegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food br ape ling the Stomachs and Bowels of | INFANTS “CHILDREN Promotes Digestion. Cheerful- : ness and Rest.Contains neither ium,Morphine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. Aperfect Remedy for Consti wou Stomach, Diatrhcen | Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of, NEW YORK. _ Ato months old 35 Doses T3RCENIS ; Your shoe money will go twice as far if you buy the strong, well-made and hard-to-wear-out CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA ‘THE CENTAUR Company, ver SCHOOL SHOES for boys and girls. They are made of the best seasoned upper leather and tough solid soles and have fewer seams than other shoes. Mayer School shoes are shaped to prevent injury to growing children’s feet. They WEAR LIKE IRON Your dealer has them or will get them for you— take no other. on every sole, The Mayer trade-mark is stamped We also make the ‘*Honorbilt’’ shoes for men and **Western Lady” shoes for women, Louisville, Ky. = has given satisfaction to millions. The General Condemnation of So-Called Patent or Secret Medicines of an injurious character, which indulge in extravagant and unfounded pretensions to cure all manner of ills, and the National Legislation Enacted to Restrict Their Sale have established more clearly’ than could have been accomplished in any other way The Value and Importance of Ethical Remedies. Remedies which physicians sanction for family use, as they act most beneficially and are gentle yet prompt in eifect, and called ethical, because they are of Known Excellence and Quality and of Known Component Parts. To gain the full confidence of the Well-Informed of the world and the approval of the most eminent physicians, it is essential that the component parts be known to and approved by them, and, therefore, the California Fig Syrup Company has published for many years past in its advertisements and upon every package a full statement thereof. fect purity and uniformity of product which they demand in a laxative remedy of an ethical character are assured by the California Fig Syrup Company’s original method of manufacture, known to the Company only. There are other ethical remedies approved by physicians, but the product of the California Fig Syrup Company possesses the advantage over all other family laxatives that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts, without disturbing the natural functions or any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known under the name of Syrup of Figs, and has attained to world-wide acceptance as the most excellent of family laxatives, and as its pure laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well known to physicians and the Well-Informed of the world to be the best of natural laxatives, we have adopted the more elaborate name of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, as more fully descriptive of the remedy, but doubtlessly it will always be called for by the shorter name of Syrup of Figs; and to get its beneficial effects, always note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly printed on the front of every package, whether you simply call for Syrup of Figs, or by the full name, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, as Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the one laxative remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company, and the same heretofore known by the name, Syrup of Figs, which The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists throughout the United States in original packages of one size only, the regular price of which is fifty cents per bottle. Every bottle is sold under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with the Secretary of Agriculture, at Washington, D. C., the remedy is not adulterated or mis- branded within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 3oth, 1906. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. San Francisco, Cal. U.S. Ae London, England. The per- New York, N. Y. treasury in. relieving. against .conges- tion of the public money in the govern | ment strong box. WOODWARD @ CO. Minneapolis GRAIN COMMISSION. DEFECTIVE PAGE Duluth) y woNu —no 10— Watson E. Coleman, Patent Attom ney, Washington. D.G. Advice free, Termsiow. Highest ret “recea'se | Thompson's Eye Water 1907

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