V ii i iuu gin iu iibp u ouji6 ui u laiioiiiyuiBio The Quaker Doctors are Coming to Plattsmouth, and will be at the Opera House commencing a a lick Eielief Admission on Opening Might 3c. Make Your Own Change. A FEW TESTIMONIALS FROM THE PEOPLE OF NORFOLK: 4 Tft Mrs. H. G. Asher, visited her sister, Mrs. George Madsen, on South Fourth street, relieved of tape worm 70 feet long, head and all. Louis Melcher, living between Stanton and Norfolk was relieved of a tape worm 116 feet long. All these parties will testify if desired. It required just one hour und twenty-five minutes to relieve Mr. Nitz of this tape worm of long standing. About the same timo was required to relieve Mrs. Asher. Anybody desiring greater proof of these facts may call on any of the above named persons who have been relieved as if my magic. Anybody is apt to have a tape worm. It comes originally from a germ. You might get the germ through meat or some other food. That the Quaker Doctors were so successful in so short a time in this instance, shows what they can de. Two more people in Norfolk have found relief in this wonderful treatment of the great Quaker Doctors, and attest to the quick and ef fective results of these remarkable men. They are: Gustavo Nitz, well known WUcxsmith; relieved of tape worm 93 feet, 4 inches long, head and all, was al ve and moving when it was bottled and seen by forty or fifty people in Norfolk- A mammoth tape worm head and all was removed with an hour and a half from the stomach ot Jim Unsay , a person well known about town, as the result of treatment given him bo the famous Quaker Doc tors, now here. The tape worm was fifty-six feet in length. The head being re moved, Mr. Linsay will have no more trouble from this source. The tape worm saps all the nutritious poition of all food taken into the stomach. ' The person suffering from an affliction gets no benefit from any food eaton. The worm takes all the real food. Such persons live entirely on heart action. ti 8 w S 0 11 J4 1C IE n 8 8 8 The Quakers believe in the same God as the Hebrews, the same Savior a the Christians, only the way of worship differs. When they go to the meeting house they bow their heads in silent worship making no complaint, removing not their hats to king or ruler, ' thee" or "thou" to friend or foe. They are a God loving and a God fearing people, be lieving in giving their hearts to God and their hands to labor, that the origin of all sin is a lie; if there were no lies there would be no sin. Their communion being "yea, yea, and nay, nay," from more than this there cometh evil. The Quakers are a long lived people. It is no uncommon thing to find men and women in Quaker communicaties in full possession of all their faculties at the age of ninety to a hundred years. Brother Amos Ridenfork, who has charge of the botanical gardens of the Quakers, is ninety-two years old. He attends to the propagation of the roots, herbs, and medical plants in their gardens. The business of raising medical plants was started by the Quakers in 1825, and you cannot go into any drug store in the world but what you will find the Quaker medicine. Quaker extracts and granules used by physicians are made by Quakers. The Quakers do not use mercury or poison that wreck the body and mind, but treat you with nature's own remedies, roots, barks and gums which God gave to mankind. We are told in the Holy Writ that the blood is the life of the flesh thereof. Without good blood you cannot have good health. High-Class Vaudeville! These queer people called Quakers, or the silent worshipers of the Almighty God, have from century to century, retained their religious reputation free from all blemishes by their daily practice of honesty, in tegrity and social purity. History teaches us that in the oiden times these good people were terribly persecuted for their religious belief, but through all the puuish ment bestowed upon them they proved to be the happiest and most con tented class of people on God's footstool, charit3', peace, abstinence, good will and brotherly love are the foundation stones of their faith, their motto being: "Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men." The Shakers are an off branch of Quakers. They do not believe in marriage, nor are they given in marriage. The Quakers believe in unity and holy marriage The Shakers pay their taxes, but do not vote, and hold their property in common. The Quakers are an agricultural sort of people They own large farms, divided into settlements or communities. There are different branches of Quakers, viz: The Hickaites, the Wilbentes and the Ortho dox. Some of the brightest history making men of the wo Id were born and raised Quakers. Among them whom could, me mentioned are Charles Lamb, John Greenleaf Whittier, William Penn, James Witcomb Riley, E'.ias Howe, Samuel J. Tilden, Joseph Cannon and John Cokely Lettson, the president of the first medical society held in the world at London in 1773. Office Hours: 10 a, m. to 12 in and 2 to 5 p. m, The - Plattsmouth - Journal Published Semi-Weekly at Plattsmouth, Nebraska R. A. DATES, Publisher. Entered at the I'OBtoflice at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, as second-class matter. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE From the Milwaukee Journal. ' It is an old saying that there are two sides to every ques tion, and, unlike many old sayings, this particular one is true. Thus there are two sides to the miestion of revision of the tar ilT. Congress, evidently sees the one side, the need for revenue, and the need or seeming need of the manufacturers for pro tection. A poor woman of Milwaukee sees the other side, the need of those who have little to keep soul and hody together on that which they have. In an earnest and pitiful letter to the Journal this woman Rays: My husband gets .f 1 1 per week for eleven and n half hours' work, where others get $18 for the same work. Now say rent is $1.'?, coal $H, food $20 an month, and poor food at that. Count in that with five or six in the family, and where do the doctor, medicine, shoes, clothes, insurance on life, water, gas meter, milkman, N furniture man, paper man, car fare, tickets, hats, in surance on furniture, school hooks and the ,ord knows what else, come from. As for a piece of candy or cake, or a pie or the theater, when you pay your honest debts what can you do with $44 a month? The words of this woman may he somewhat ungrnnunatical hut do they not carry a great truth f Where, indeed, do eight hungry mouths, eight human bodies, find sustenance and cloth ing on $11 a week? Where do they get the rent, the fuel, the medicine the bare necessities of life? The tariff doesn't help them, does it? Let us see. the present tariff on hides and soles causes the people of this country to pay $:'0,000,000 a year more for shoes than is neces sary. If hides be admitted free which seems a bit doubtful shoos may become some cheaper. However there will prob ably be the high rate duty on shoes. The poor, when not too poor, build homes. lut every stick that goes into a home is heavily taxed for the benefit of the lumber interests, and the new tariff bill promises little re lief, as its reductions will, from present indications, be almost entirely on rough and unsawed lumber used by manufacturers. The labor bureau at Washington estimated in 1903 that if a person built a house in that year he would have 1o pay 41 .4 per cent more for his material than in 181)7. Furniture, a little of which the poor must have, carries a duty of 35 per cent both un der the Dingley law and the proposed bill. The poor eat, but they pay a duty on everything that goes into their mouths. Sugar for example, is taxed nearly 2 cents a pound, and the proposed reduction is su minute that it will res ii it in no benefit to the consumer. Dread stuffs are taxed, wh:.t paying a duty of ' cent a poiv.'d, and wheat flour oneof 2" cent a bushel, etc. Meats are taxed and likewise fish, fruits jmuI heaven knows what not. in the words of Franklin Pierce, author of the "Tariff and the Trust.-:" hvt-ry article of clothing on your body from the boots upon your feet to the hat upon your head, with one single exception, osts liorn 50 to l."0 per cent nor? than it would withovt the tr.riff. The trusts sits by your fire and your table, taxes every p'ece of glass, cutlery and pott m v in your house, makes you p:iv tribute on every piece of wool, cotton and furniture in our home and robs you steadily day in nnd day out by its excessive prices. Ken row in ten thousand villages and cities all over this land your wives are in the market with your v iii.es in their hands buying a few comforts in the hape of cotton or woolen goods, sugar, soap, dress goods, carpets, ki.w W4ui oiu ry, lutlery or furniture, ami paying theerefor tro:c. Ml to 200 per cent over the value of the imported article without duties, about every penny of which goes into the treason- of the trusts." Mr. Aid rich's defense of his tariff bill seems to rest mainly on those schedules that have undergone no increase of rates. lie enters to his credit all of the Dingley rates he has left untouched. When we consider his lust for protection, and also his power to gratify that lust, we must concede that Mr. Aldrich has some reason to marvel at his own moderation. But how much less smrg must be the satisfaction of President Taft. He, at all events, is pledged to a revision that shall be materially downward. Also we have long been al lowed to believe, no contradiction of the widespread report having come from the white house, that he had entrusted his pawn ticket to Mr. Aldrich, confident in Mr. Aldrich s as surance that the pledge which so much added to his election will be amply redeemed. Can a tariff bill to which even its author gives onlv negative praise be regarded as a redemption? The people without re spect of party, are apt to say no, with such chorused empha sis that it will be heard over in Africa. Even thus early in his administration Mr. Taft seems to have reached a period that calls for heroic action. If he has no tariff alliance with Mr. Aldrich a word now would be fitly spoken. If he has, a sunderance seems necessary to keep his reputation unscathed. The poor wear clothes. The duty on wool is It cents a pound, while wools and worsteds, blankets and clothing made from wool carries duties ranging from IIU.DT per cent on the cheap worsteds to !4.."2 per cent on the better qualities. Cot ton which we have supported as an infant industry since lSll!, carried in 1005 an, average ad valorem rate of 4'.). 40 per cent. The term cotton includes all manufacturers of cotton, and thus all cotton goods purchased by the poor. The poor wear shoes. In women's ordinary shoes there has been an increase of about 23 per cent over the average price in the years from lS'.M) to 1S!H, and a corresponding in crease in all kinds of boots and shoes. This despite in all the improvements in methods and machinery, which have made shoes cheaper instead of dearer. W. L. Douglass, ex governor of Massasuchsetts, and n large shoe manufacturer, declares that This is the problem which faces the poor woman with her six children and her 11 a week to keep them, her husband and herself together. It is not a (Miestion of infant industry with her, or revenue, or difference between cost of production here and abroad. It is a question of life existence. The tariff has driven prices beyond the reach of her purse, and it has not, seemingly, been (if much service to her husband's labor. She feels that she must have relief or perish. This woman is not one of a hundred; not even one of a thousand. She is one of a vast multidude all over the country to whom high prices have brought privation. She is one of that great throng which is striving to live on an income of less than .H) a year. Congress has paid little attention to her demands, being too much concerned with the maintenance of government and business "prosHrity."I'ut are her views, even though un economic from the business standpoint, entitled to no consid eration. Must she and thousands like her suffer, merely that a few manufacturing industries may prosper and wax fatf Isn't her side of the question the other side as important to the welfare of the United States as that of the excessive pro tected interests? Losing the Saengerfest. Omaha loosses the big musical festival that was to have been held here next year by the Northwestern Saengerfest associa tion, and which' was expected to bring 1)0,000 or 40,000 visitors from all over the northwest to this city. In reaching the de cision to abandon the enterprise the committee, it is stated, was influenced principally by the passage of the 8 o'clock closing law. This announcement will come as a disappointment to many others besides those chiefly concerned. It would have meant a good deal to Omaha to have been privileged to entertain such an army of prosperous visitors as this event would have brought within our gates. And to have these tens of thousands of people come in person and see our state and its resources and inducements would have been of no little benefit to Ne braska, not only in the way of advertising, but in attracting n highly desirable addition to our citizenship. No foreiirn born people make better citizens than do the dormant. They are industrious, thrifty, orderly, intelligent and conservatively progressive In whatever community they are found they are of great assistance in its sound and permanent upbuilding. A (icrmnn musical jubilee is a festivaloccasion. It is a reunion devoted not a'one to music, but to good fellowship and innocent amusement in accordance with the habits and cus toms of generations of (iermans. And, though there are few nations in which tl iere is so little drinking to excess as in (Jer many, from of old the Herman has enjoyed his mug of beer drunk preferably in the evening with his family in the open air of parks or gardens. He can see no wrong in it. and is inclined to look on its arbitrary inhibition as an insult to his intelligence and self-control and an invasion of Ids person -il rights. . It would be a serious mistake, doubtless, to interpret the abandonment of the Omaha saengerfest as springing from nnv spirit of resentment or desire to "punish" the city. It means simply that changed conditions have put such obstacles in the way of the social and numerical success of an immense un dertaking that it was deemed wise to drop it. World Herald