The Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Cherry Co., Neb.) 1896-1898, April 15, 1897, Image 3

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GRUMBLING AT DINGLEYISM
The Dingley tariff tax bill has been
jammed through the House of Rep
resentatives but that was the least
of its trials and tribulations The scru
tiny of the Senate has yet to come and
he weather will be pretty warm at
Washington before the debates in the
upper Louse are likely to terminate
In the meantime the New York
Chamber of Commerce in which the
importing interest is strong and keen
sighted has opened a fire in the rear
upon President McKiulcys favorite
measure and incidentally upon the
policy of the MeKinley administration
This is important as the Chamber
of Commerce has now a quasi repre
sentative in the Presidential Cabinet
in the person of Secretary Bliss It in
dicates serious trouble in the Repub
lican ranks The men who have met
in the Chamber of Commerce and re
solved against the Diugley bill are
those who always furnish the sinews
-of war to the Republican managers
Jisjid whose contributions turned the
scale last November for the Ohio can
didate They have not acted without
i purpose and their purpose will have
weight in embarrassing the administra
tion and perpetuating the schism in the
party in that State The following are
the resolutions adopted by the Cham
ber of Commerce and aimed at Presi
dent MeKinley
Halved Tlisit the Chamber of Commerce
of the State of New York express its earnest
conviction that the tariff bill now before the
House of Represntatives in many of its pro
visions is excessive ami likely to invite re
aetion harmful to business and to the best
interests of the country and that it should
be earefullv revised In the direction of a re
duction of the rates of duty proposed to the
end that a svstem of tariff taxation may be
adopted that shall be reasonably permanent
and that shall insure to the business inter
ests of the country a certain measure of im
munity from early change
Kesolvcd That a copy of the foregoing re
port and resolution be transmitted to each
member of Congress
KeMJlvod That the Chamber of Commerce
of the State of New York Invite the co-operation
of the commercial and trade organiza
tions of other cities and throughout the
country
gresss
in
urging tuese views upon vi-
Barjraina in High Places
Associate ludge Stephen J Field of
the United States Supreme Court an
nounces his purpose to soon place his
resignation of his high office in the
hands of President MeKinley and to
retire from official duties which the
infirmities of age have rendered irk
some The Judge is the senior member
of the court having been appointed to
it as a war Democrat in partisan desig
nation by President Lincoln He is a
brother of the late Cyrus W Field and
was a member of the rather prominent
Endand family of the Fields who
fc rii - fr oirn WOVi nil 11101f
i iitiiviuiiiju vl nv i --
or less active in public life It is under
stood that Judge Field will be succeed
ed in office as judge by Mr McKenna
at present Attorney General of the
United States by President McKinleys
selection so that there will still be one
Pacific Coast judge on that high bench
out of nine members and the under
standing and compact by which the
present Cabinet was made up will not
be broken It was the purpose of Mr
MeKinley to gratify the sugar trust
which had so largely contributed to
Boss Hannas campaign fund by the
appointment of Mr John J McCook
-as Attorney General but the clamor
which was raised against it deterred
him from hasty action It was then
proposed to take McKenna from his
life office as District Judge and put
him into the Cabinet till Judge Field
should as he soon must resign Then
McKenna can have Fields place and
McCook perhaps have McKeunas
11111 Bliss may come back to New York
iigain and all will be satisfactory and
iiappy
Judge Field decided to leave the
bench years ago but waited for Presi
dent Cleveland to precede him in
g office New York Aews
Vigorous Republican Protest
The Boston Transcript is a Repub
lican paper but it is plain spoken in
denouncing the proposed tariff on lum
ber It is simply a measure to pick
the pockets and crush the industry of
a large useful and influential class of
American citizens It is uneconomic
unscientific suicidal The statements
upon which this schedule was made up
are shown to have been insidious and
misleading The result will be to strip
the country not of an annually recur
ring income but of its white pine prin
cipal which at present rates is with
in ten years of exhaustion and also
to ruin a large class of business men
in the country who deserve better
things It does not seem possible that
men claiming to represent the people
Avill permit such a measure to have the
force of law If they do it will cease
to be folly and became iniquity Bos
Ton Transcript
The Barbarians in Washington
The proposed duty on books almost
justifies the declaration of a contem
porary that the legislative branch cf
the national government is in the
hands of barbarians Civilized people
regard knowledge as of importance
and do everything in their power to
promote it They found institutions of
learning They levy taxes to support
them They pass laws to compel chil
dren to go to school But the Republi
cans in Congress take a different view
Rochester Herald
Dinjrleyism Inde Eidicnloui
Even stanch protection journals are
finding independent voice sufficient to
make an audible whimper over Ding
leys tax on art and learning They
looked with approval on schedules that
will send gloom into every humble
household in the land thelirst Satur
day night after the Dingle bill is a
law But they are quite upset by the
fact that Dingley has been completely
logical and has laid his brutal raxes
on the things of the mind as well as
on the things of the body Tho other
schedules are melancholy This anti
education schedule is ridiculous New
York World
Showing Unusually Indecent Ilnsi
The retroactive clause in the Dingley
tariff bill as passed by the House is
simply another defiance of fate by ex
tremists who are intoxicated with a
wholly foruitous grasp of power v If
it were possible to believe that the Sen
ate would adopt this monstrous pro
vision the effect upon trade and upon
customs receipts would be simply para
lyzing The adoption of such an unheard-of
provision simply betrays the
eagerness of the tariff framers to give
the trusts and monopolies an immediate
control of our markets They cannot
wait even to pass the new schedules
of extortion in the usual way New
York World
The Retroactive Tariff Xaw
The retroactive clause of the Dingiey
bill may or may not be unconstitution
al It is certainly absurd unjust and
destructive If enacted it -would be
about the most troublesome statute
that officials were ever called upon to
administer It proposes to put a law
into effect before it is enacted and even
before it is at all certain that it ever
will be enacted It proposes to nullify
existing law in advance of its repeal
It proposes to subject business to bur
dens that existing law does not impose
and to collect taxes again upon goods
that have once paid all the taxes inv
posed by law New York World
Housewives Will Again Be Heard
History will certainly repeat itself in
the matter of tariff stimulated prices
What came to pass in 1S90 was the pre
cursor of the events of 1S97 There was
no more potent factor in enforcing the
sound and wholesome doctrine of the
tariff reformer seven years ago than
the marking up of prices announced by
tradesmen in their newspaper
tisements and the unwelcome discov
ery which the housewives made when
they went to trade that their dollar
would not go as far as formerly De
troit Free Tress
Laws Needed to Keep Senators Honest
The people of the country will not be
very enthusiastic over the resolution
introduced in the Senate by one of the
Senators from Nebraska which is de
signed to forbid Congressmen to spec
ulate in stocks and other properties
whose market value is susceptible to
the influence of legislation The idea
of asking the Senate to enact a law
compelling itself to be honest would be
a good deal more grotesque if the his
tory of the past thirty years had not
been made Sioux City Tribune
The Insane Republican Policy
The political insanity of the Repuo
lican leaders in proceeding at once to
impose additional tariff burdens upon
the people and subordinating every
other governmental concern to this sin
gle line of policy is becoming more and
more apparent The best men in the
Republican party realize the danger
that lies in the Dingley policy but their
warnings are unheeded Whom the
gods would destroy they first make
mad Manchester N H Union
Not Imperious in His Demands
The political ambition of Henry C
Payne of Wisconsin is of the sliding
scale sort First he wanted to be a
member of the Cabinet but there were
others and he was satisfied Then he
wanted a foreign embassy but conclud
ed that he couldnt afford to spend
30000 of his own money every year
simply for the honor of living in Ger
many And now he wants to be a plain
every day Senator from Wisconsin
Springfield Mass Republican
A Dingley Monstrosity
Under the Dingley bill the President
is authorized to impose duties on arti
cles that we not only do not produce at
all but which are now and long have
been on the free list These include
coffee tea and hides In putting a re
taliatory duty on these things the Pres
ident says that something shall pay a
duty which the bill itself declares is
free of duty Here is evidently an ob
vious and ridiculous contradiction
Boston Globe
The House Out of a Job
We are told that the House of Rep
resentatives at Washington expects to
have nothing practically to do while
the Senate is considering the tariff and
that its intention is to adjourn over
three days regularly during that time
It has begun in this way and if the
policy is continued the members will
have ample leisure to engage in their
errand boy duties for their con
stituents Boston Herald
Canada Ready to Kick Back
Two bills have been introduced in
the Dominion Parliament to bar Amer
ican laborers from entering Canada in
search of work Thus the work of re
taliation has begun and the prescrip
tive statesmen who run the Congress
of the United States are reminded
that there are others who can play at
the same game Kansas City Star
ELECTRIC RAILWAYS
Reported Discovery Which Makes
Long Distance Roads Possible
The last obstacle to the gradual sub
stitution of electricity for steam as the
motive power for railway travel seems
to have been removed Engineers who
have been working for years in the
development of electric motors have at
last reported the success of what is
known as the alternating current sys
tem as distinguished from the direct
current system now in universal use on
trolley lines in cities Experiments
with the alternating current system
have demonstrated that it can be used
on long distance electric lines at a cost
much below the installation and opera
tion of steam motors for like distances
The first commercial demonstration
of the feasibility of the new system is
to be made on a line between Battle
Creek and Kalamazoo Mich early in
the present season and contracts have
also been let for a long distance line
between Detroit and Port Huron
Mich to be equipped with the alternat
ing current system The great saving
as between the present and the new
system is in the cost of copper wire for
installation The system now used on
trolley lines everywhere is a low volt
age and direct current requiring an
immense amount of wire that increas
es in amount proportionate to the
length of the line The expense of
this installation has hitherto prevented
active competition with the steam
roads The alternating current system
carries a high voltage on the main feed
wire and at intervals along the line
the current is deflected into transform
ers which reduce the voltage to a uni
form power which is taken up by the
car motors The alternating system
can be installed the engineers say at
a cost which will render it impossible
for steam roads to successfully com
pete
The advantage to the public in a
general substitution of electricity for
steam will be in improved and cheap
er service Smaller trains and more
of them will be the rule as it is cheap
er to run at frequent intervals with
out waiting for heavy loads as the
steam roads do rJie lessened cost of
operation will undoubtedly reduce
fares especially where as in all like
lihood there will be active rivalry be
tween competing roads The engin
eering departments of the steam roads
which maintain special suburban ser
vices are said to be ready to forestall
this competition by equipping their
suburban lines with electricity Some
of the roads running out of Chicago
are expected to make this change dur
ing the present year
It will doubtless be but a question of
time when the trip from Chicago to
New York can be made by daylight in
from eight to ten hours The electrical
engineers say they are now ready to
furnish motors that will develop abs
tained speed of from 100 to 150 miles
an hour The resources of railroad en-
4 gineering must now be concentrated on
lije development of roadbeds and run
niLjr gear that will meet the speed ca
pacity of the electric motors Chicago
Chronicle
Boys and Wildcat
A dispatch from Inez Ky to the
New York Sun relates a stirring adven
ture that lately befell John and Will
iam Anderson fifteen and seventeen
years old who went out with dogs af
ter opossums
They had been out only a short time
when the dogs treed what was suppos
ed to be an opossum By the dim light
of the lantern the boys could see the
animal in the tree and William at once
proceeded to climb it to shake the game
down to the dogs
When he came near the creature it
made a savage spring toward him and
he lost his hold and fell with the beast
to the ground The animal proved to
be a large wildcat and it quickly kill
ed both dogs and then jumped on Will
iam who was lying on the ground with
a broken arm and a wrenched leg
The younger of the boys drew a
knife his only weapon and tackled the
cat which left his brother and came
at him After a hard fight the boy
came off victor but he was badly
scratched and his clothes were almost
entirely gone The boys will be laid
up for some time The wildcat meas
ured over three feet and is the first
one seen in that country for some time
The Vice of Overeating
How much harm is done to health by
our one sided and excessive diet no
one can say Physicians tell us that it
is very great Of the vice of overeat
ing as practiced by the well-to-do class
es in England especially Sir Henry
Thompson a noted English- physician
and authority on this subject says
I have come to the conclusion that
more than half the disease which em
bitters the middle and latter part of
life is due to avoidable errors in diet
and that more mischief in the form of
actual disease of impaired vigor and
shortened life accrues to civilized man
in England and throughout Central Eu
rope from erroneous habits of eating
than from the habitual use of alcoholic
drink considerable as I know that evil
to be Sanitarium
Lightning Made to Order
Many scientists have doubted the ex
istence in fact of globular lightning
attributing the statements of its exist
ence to some kind of optical delusion
Prof Rigi of Bologna however an
nounces that he has produced it artifi
cially and that not only has he suc
ceeded in making its motion slow
enough to be followed by the eye but
lias been able in certain cases to ob
tain luminous masses which actually
remained stationary for sufficient time
to be photographed
No one likes to be told that he is
looking in perfect health for the rea
son that it is a condition which admits
absolutely of no sympathy
ftOTES ON EDUCATION
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO PU
PIL AND TEACHER
Child 9tudy a Mcants Rather than an
End Advantages of the Kinder
gartenHints to Young Teachers
How to Rest Educational Notes
Child Study
Tim Teachers Institute in the follow
ing sensible paragraph emphasizes the
fact that child study is a means rath
en than an end It says The gravest
danger of the present widespread Inter
est in scientific child study is that
teachers are apt to regard the school
as a laboratory for enriching their
knowledge of children and of child na
ture instead of attending to the enrich
ment of the minds of their pupils It is
all very well to say that the child can
not be well taught until his mental
moral and physical make up is well un
derstood But this trying to get better
acquainted must not consume too much
time First it ought to be presupposed
that a person who is appointed as teach
er is already acquainted with the char
acteristics of child nature in a general
way and is capable of readily diagnos
ing individualities of children just as a
licensed phjsician is supposed to be
able to give a diagnosis of the physical
condition Secondly every teacher
ought to have a plan of incidentally
gathering the additional observations
necessary to form a correct judgment
of the peculiarities noticeable in some
pupils After school hours these inci
dentally collected data may be entered
in a special book kept for purposes of
gradually obtaining a record of the
educationalprogress and peculiar needs
of the various pupils Child study
must not be made an end in itself so
far as the teacher is concerned It is
only one means of learning how best to
educate a child How can I best pro
mote the educational growth of the
children This is the question The
scientists who wish to work out a new
psychology of childhood grand as their
bbject is must not be permitted to
substitute their object for that for
which the schools are founded and
maintained the education of our fu
ture citizens Educational Record
Kindergarten Training
I favor with all my heart child train
ing but I believe the kindergarten the
place par excellence for the practice
of it says a writer in the Housekeeper
I can give all my carefully considered
reasons and I am prepared to speak
from experience No such thing was
known when I fitted my oldest children
for school This I could and did do at
home but the one thing I could not do
was to give them the habit of sitting
still for short periods at a time and
this to an active child is the one great
hardship of the first weeks of school
The active little body that has had five
or ten years of freedom suffers intense
ly when compelled to sit upright and
keep quiet as a scholar must do in an
ordinary school
This is one of the great benefits the
child receives from a kindergarten
training He is taught to sit erect in
his cute baby chair with folded arms
for an instant at a time and it is a
pleasure for him to do so Then prob
ably he is called into line and march
ed promptly around to brisk music
just about as long as it is good for him
and then likely as not he is set weav
ing bright strips of paper Not when
he is so restless that every little mus
cle in him aches to move but when he
is so good and tired that he enjoys sit
ting still to weave
In this way does the child uncon
sciously form the habit of sitting quite
still at times forms the habit of repose
in hands and feet as well as body This
once acquired adds more to the childs
comfort than the knowledge of the
multiplication table I was one of the
active little ones kept at home from
the contaminating influences until I
was 8 years old and I shall never for
get the terras of misery I suffered
trying to keep still during my first
school years
Rest
To understand how to rest is of more
importance than to know how to work
The latter can be learned easily the
former it takes years to learn and
some people never learn the art of rest
ing It is simply a change of scenes
and activities Loafing may not be
resting Sleeping is not always rest
ing Sitting down for days with noth
ing to do is not restful A change is
needed to bring into play a different set
of faculties and to turn the life into a
new channel The man who works
hard finds his best rest in playing
hard The man who is burdened with
care finds relief in something that is
active yet free from responsibility
Above all keep good natured and dont
abuse your best friend the stomach
Written Work
Written work will call out qualities
which could not be revealed by viva
voce questions The oral examina
tion is good for intellectual stimulus
for bracing up the student to rapid and
prompt action for deftness and bright
ness But oral answers are necessarily
discontinuous and fragmentary The
pupil receives help and suggestion at
every moment from the play of the
teachers countenance from the an
swers given by his fellows Whatever
of unity and sequence there is in the
treatment of the work is the teachers
work not the pupils and until you
subject him to the test of writing you
have no security that he has grasped
the subject as a whole or that he is
master of the links that bind one part
of that subject to another Fitchs
lectures
Breakin r Dcwn
People break down not so much from
hard work as from -their mental atti
tude toward their occupation or from
some other unwholesome state induced
by environment If you love your
work and understand the higher law
of being so as to draw a constant sup
ply of strength you can labor untiring
ly If you are engaged In work dis
tasteful to you either change your bus
iness or change your attitude toward it
If you cannot realize your ideal 3ou
can idealize your real says a preacher
who is also a philosopher
Hints to Teachers
Do not assume prerogatives which do
not belong to you
Do not take a position for which you
are not competent
Receive their direction as from those
who have the right
Assume that in fact they conform to
the will of the people
Do not try to be a radical reformer
unless you are very young
If you must turn things upside down
resign and take to lecturing
Remember that the school boards
officially represent the people
Do not forget that you are hired to
serve the people not to reform them
Recognize that school boards have
rights which you are bound to respect
As long as you remain in- their em
ploy perform the duties they require of
you
Do not try to enforce opinions in
which you are not seconded by the
board
Show yourself able and willing to do
what you want done and they Avill
rarely fail to do what you want done
Elevate public sentiment by long
continued quiet effective work but do
not attempt it by loud talk or flashy
measures
If you really know how to direct the
affairs of the school better than they
do they will recognize the fact if you
give them time
If the directors will not sustain you
in those measures which are absolutely
essential to your success shake the
dust of their vicinity from your feet as
soon as possible Minnehaha Teacher
Notes
York Pa is to have a new high
school wrhich is to cost 100000
Of the 303 students enrolled at La
fayette College fifty are preparing to
become teachers
In Greece teachers are superannua
ted after twenty one years of service
regardless of age
The University of Paris has 2S0 law
students and 8175 medical students
of the latter 154 are women
In Spain there are 22980 eleinentary
schools The salary of the teacher
ranges from 25 to 100 per annum
Cornell University has 1703 students
enrolled The faculty numbers 175
ten new instructors having been ap
pointed
Several editions of Virgil valued at
50000 have been presented to the
Princeton Library Association by Jun
ius S Morgan of New York
In the Southern States there are thirty-two
colleges and 162 schools of a
high grade devoted to the advanced
education of the negro race
Out of 900 students at Armour in
stitute Chicago more than 450 are
women eager to learn housework as an
art and do away with drudgery Here
are taught different branches of the
domestic arts as a profession milli
nery dressmaking plain sewing pro
fessional nursing home nursing etc
Graduates have been known to cook
their own wedding breakfasts and
many have made their own wedding
trousseaux
Remedy for Freckles
Surgeon Major Wrafter in a letter to
the Calcutta Medical Reporter says a
question has lately been asked there
of a wash or remedy to remove freckles
from a childs face something simple
and harmless it being for a tender
skin
As the term implies ephelis or
freckles are pigmentary spots seated
in the retemucosum usually met with
on the face and backs of the hands in
children having red hair and a deli
cate skin and are without question
produced from prolonged exposure to
the rays of the sun in hot weather as
common experience declares but it is
evident that the solar influence must
act upon a susceptible skin They vary
in size from a pins head to a lentil
and are of a brown color they become
darker during the summer but do not
usually disappear entirely in the win
ter months They are of no pathologi
cal importance and can scarcely be
mistaken for any other cutaneous affec
tion
The following is a perfectly harmless
preparation for removing freckles of
the skin
Take two ounces of lemon juice half
a drachm of powdered borax and one
drachm of white sugarr Mix them
and let them stand a few days in a
glass stoppered bottle till the liquor is
fit for use then rub it on the hands and
face occasionally
How Plants Breathe
One of the prettiest microscopical
studies is the examination of the lungs
of a plant Most people do not know
that a plant has lungs and its lungs
are in its leaves Examined through a
high power microscope every leaf will
show thousands upon thousands of
openings infinitely small of course
but each provided with lips which in
many species are continually opening
and closing These openings lead to
tiny cavities in the body of the leaf
and by the opening and closing of the
cavity air is constantly passing in and
out so that the act of respnation is con
tinually going on and the sap of the
plant in this waj becomes purified
Profitable Betting
The election winnings of a Madison
Ky man a hat and a butcher knife
were exchanged for a horse and ine
horse he sold later for 150
V
The Wonderful Kava Kava Shrub
A New Botanical Discovery Ol
Special Interest to Sufferers from
Diseases of the Kidneys or Blad
der Rheumatism etc A Blessingr
to Humanity
A Free Gift of Great Value to You
Oar readers -will be glad to know that
the new botanical discovery Alkavis
from the wonderful Kava Kava shrub
has proved an assured cure for all dis
eases caused by unc
acid in the blood or
by disordered action
of the Kidneys or
urinaryorgans The
Kava Kava Shrub
or as botanists call
it Piper Methys
iicum grows on the
banks of the Ganges
yy l river uast inoia
STheKjlva Kava Shrub and probably was
Piper Xcthysticum used for centuries
by the natives before its extraordinary
properties became known to civilization
through Christian missionaries In
this respect it resembles the discovery
of quinine from the peruvian bark
made known by the Indians to the early
Jesuit missionaries in South America
and by them brought to civilized man
It is a wonderful discovery with a- rec
ord of I2CO hospital cures in 30 days It
acts directly upon the blood and kid
neys and is a true specific just as qui
nine is in malaria We have the strong
est testimony of many ministers of tho
gospel well known doctors and business
men cured by Alkavis when all other
remedies had failed
In the New York Weekly World of Sept 10th
the testimony of Rev W B aioore D D ol
Washington D C was given describing hia
years of suffering from Kidney disease and
Rheumatism and bis rapid cure by Alkavis
Rev Thomas Smith the Methodist minister at
Cobden Illinois passed nearly one hundred
gravel stones after two weeks use of Alkavis
Rev John HWatson of SunsetTexas a minister
of thego3pel of thirty years service was struck
down at his post of duty by Kidney disease
After hovering between life and death for two
months and all his doctors having failed ha
took Alkavis and wa3 completely restored tcr
liealth and strength and is fulfill inghis duties a J
ministerof the gospel Mr R C Wood a prom
inent attorney of Lowell Indiana was cured of
Rheumatism Kidney and Bladder disease often
years standing by Alkavis Mr Wood describe
himself as being in constant misery often com
pelled to rise ten times during the night on
account of weakness of the bladder Me war
treated by aU BU home -physicians without tha
least benefit and finally completely cured in s
few weeks by Alkavis The testimony is un
doubted and really wonderful Mrs Tames
young of Kent Ohio writes that she had tried
six doctors in vain that she was about to giv
up in despair when she found Alkavis and wa
promptly cured of kidney disease and restored
to health Many other ladies also testify to the
wonderful curative powers of Alkavis in th
various disorders peculiar to womanhood
So far the Church Kidney Cure Com
pany No 410 Fourth Avenue New
York are the only importers of thia
new remedy and they are so anxious to
prove its value that for the sake of intro
duction they will send a free treatment
of Alkavis prepaid by mail to every
reader of this paper who is a Sufferer
from aay form of Kidney or Bladder
disorder Brights Disease Rheuma
tism Dropsy Gravel Pain in Back
Female Complaints or other affliction
due to improper action of the Kidneys
or Urinary Organs We advise all Suf
arers to send their names and address
to the company and receive the Alkavis
free It is sent to you entirely free to
Drove its wonderful curative power
Empress Dislikes tho Wheel
Princess Frederick Leopold of Prus
sia who began bicycling secretly has
been forbidden to continue so doing by
the German Empress on the ground
that it is not ladylike Her majesty
has conceived a violent dislike for bi
cycling and has prevailed upon tho
Emperor to discontinue the practice
Tor Fifty Cents
Over 400000 cured Why not let No-To-Baa
regulate or remove your desire for tobacco
Saved money makes health and manhood Cure
guaranteed 50c and 1 all druggist-
Won the Cup
What are these cups for asked a
well dressed man of a jeweler point
ing to some elegant silver cups on thfr
ounter
These are race cups to be given as
prizes
If thats so suppose you and I race
for one And the stranger with the
cup in hand started the jeweler after
him The stranger won the cup Pick
Me Up
Just try a 10c box of Casareti candy cathartic fla
m liver aud bowel regulator made
No Fixed Rule
You cawnt set down no fixed rule
0 conduct in this life said old Wig i
gins Samson got into trouble cause
he got is hair cut an Absalom got
into trouble cause he didnt
Wffik WM MjOl JPi
Those un
sightly
erup
Humors
tions painful boils annoying pim
ples and other affections which
pear so generally at this season maker
the use of that grand Spring Medi
cine Hoods Sarsaparilla a necessity
The accumulated impurities in the
blood cause very different symptom
with some people The kidneys liver
and bowels are overmatched in theiri
efforts to relieve the clogged system
Dizzy headaches bilious attacks fail
ure of appetite coated tongue lames
back indigestion and that tired feel
ing are some results
From the same cause may also coma
scrofula neuralgia sciatia or rheu
matism
All these troubles and more may prop
erly be called Spring Humors and
just as there is one cause a cure ia
found in just one remedy and that
is Hoods Sarsaparilla
Hoods Sarsaparilla purifies the impure
blood enriches blood which is weak
and thin vitalizes blood which lacks
vitality Thus it reaches every part
of the human system
For your Spring Medicine to prevent
or cure Spring Humors take
Sarsaparilla lt
One True Blood Purifiar Gat enly Hooua
Hnnd Pi11 are the opiy pills to Mm
iiuuu jj r ius
wiUi Hoods SarsaDaillla